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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #69608 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/69608)
diff --git a/old/69608-0.txt b/old/69608-0.txt
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of Weird Tales, Volume 1, Number 4, June,
-1923, by Various
-
-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
-www.gutenberg.org. 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.
-
-Title: Weird Tales, Volume 1, Number 4, June, 1923
- The unique magazine
-
-Author: Various
-
-Editor: Edwin Baird
-
-Release Date: December 22, 2022 [eBook #69608]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: Wouter Franssen and the Online Distributed Proofreading
- Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from
- images generously made available by The Internet Archive)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WEIRD TALES, VOLUME 1, NUMBER
-4, JUNE, 1923 ***
-
-Transcriber’s Note: Stories that were originally split over pages, with
-adverts and/or other stories in between, have been recombined.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: Copy this Sketch]
-
-FREE $80 Drafting Course
-
-There is such an urgent demand for practical, trained Draftsman that I
-am making this special offer in order to enable deserving, ambitious and
-bright men to get into this line of work. I will teach you to become a
-Draftsman and Designer, until you are drawing a salary up to $250.00
-a month. You need not pay me for my personal instruction or for the
-complete set of instruments.
-
-Draftsman’s Pocket Rule Free—To Everyone Sending Sketch
-
-[Illustration: _Send above Sketch and Get This_ Ivorine Pocket Rule
-_FREE_]
-
-To every person of 16 years or older sending a sketch I am going to mail
-free and prepaid the Draftsman’s Ivorine Pocket Rule shown here. This
-will come entirely with my compliments. With it I will send a 6 × 9
-book on “Successful Draftsmanship”. If you are interested in becoming a
-draftsman, if you think you have or may attain drafting ability, sit down
-and copy this drawing, mailing it to me today, writing your name, and
-your address and your age plainly on the sheet of paper containing the
-drawing. There are no conditions requiring you to buy anything. You are
-under no obligations in sending in your sketch. What I want to know is
-how much you are interested in drawing and your sketch will tell me that.
-
-_Positions Paying Up to_ $250 and $300 per Month
-
-I am Chief Draftsman of the Engineers’ Equipment Co. and I know that
-there are thousands of ambitious men who would like to better themselves,
-make more money and secure faster advancement. Positions paying up to
-$250 and $300 per month, which ought to be filled by skilled draftsmen,
-are vacant. I want to find the men who with practical training and
-personal assistance will be qualified to fill these positions. No man
-can hope to share in the great coming prosperity in manufacturing and
-building unless he is properly trained and is able to do first class
-practical work.
-
-I know that this is the time to get ready. That is why I am making the
-above offer. I can now take and train a limited number of students
-personally and I will give to those students a guarantee to give them by
-mail practical drawing room training until they are placed in a permanent
-position with a salary up to $250 and $300 per month. You should act
-promptly on this offer because it is my belief that even though you start
-now the great boom will be well on by the time you are ready to accept a
-position as a skilled draftsman. So write to me at once. Enclose sketch
-or not, as you choose, but find out about the opportunities ahead of you.
-Let me send you the book “Successful Draftsmanship” telling how you may
-take advantage of these opportunities by learning drafting at home.
-
-[Illustration: FREE
-
-this $25 Draftsman’s Working Outfit]
-
-These are regular working instruments—the kind I use myself. I give them
-free to you if you enroll at once. Don’t delay. Send for full information
-today.
-
-Mail Your Drawing at Once—_and Get Ivorine Pocket Rule Absolutely_ Free!
-
-Ambitious men interested in drafting hurry! Don’t wait! This is your
-opportunity to get into this great profession. Accept the offer which
-I am making now. Send in your sketch or request for free book and free
-Ivorine Pocket Rule.
-
- Chief Draftsman, Engineers’ Equipment Co.,
- 1951 Lawrence Av.
- Div. 13-95 Chicago
-
-
-
-
-WEIRD TALES
-
-_The Unique Magazine_
-
-
-EDWIN BAIRD, _Editor_
-
-Published monthly by THE RURAL PUBLISHING CORPORATION, 325 N. Capitol
-Ave., Indianapolis, Ind. Application made for entry as second-class
-matter at the postoffice at Indianapolis, Indiana. Single copies, 25
-cents. Subscription, $3.00 a year in the United States; $3.50 in Canada.
-The publishers are not responsible for manuscripts lost in transit.
-Address all manuscripts and other editorial matters to WEIRD TALES, 854
-N. Clark St., Chicago, Ill. The contents of this magazine are fully
-protected by copyright and publishers are cautioned against using the
-same, either wholly or in part.
-
-Copyright, 1923, by The Rural Publishing Corporation.
-
- VOLUME 1 25 Cents NUMBER 4
-
-
-
-
-_Contents for June, 1923_
-
- _Sixteen Thrilling Short Stories_
- _Two Complete Novelettes_
- _Two Two-Part Stories_
- _Interesting, Odd and Weird Happenings_
-
-
- THE EVENING WOLVES PAUL ELLSWORTH TRIEM 5
- _An Exciting Tale of Weird Events_
-
- DESERT MADNESS HAROLD FREEMAN MINERS 19
- _A Fanciful Novel of the Red Desert_
-
- THE JAILER OF SOULS HAMILTON CRAIGIE 32
- _A Powerful Novel of Sinister Madmen that Mounts to an
- Astounding Climax_
-
- JACK O’ MYSTERY EDWIN MacLAREN 49
- _A Modern Ghost Story_
-
- OSIRIS ADAM HULL SHIRK 55
- _A Weird Tale of an Egyptian Mummy_
-
- THE WELL JULIAN KILMAN 57
- _A Short Story_
-
- THE PHANTOM WOLFHOUND ADELBERT KLINE 60
- _A Spooky Yarn by the Author of “The Thing of a Thousand
- Shapes”_
-
- THE MURDERS IN THE RUE MORGUE EDGAR ALLAN POE 64
- _A Masterpiece of Weird Fiction_
-
- THE MOON TERROR A. G. BIRCH 72
- _Final Thrilling Installment of the Mysterious Chinese
- Moon Worshipers_
-
- THE MAN THE LAW FORGOT WALTER NOBLE BURNS 81
- _A Remarkable Story of the Dead Returned to Life_
-
- THE BLADE OF VENGEANCE GEORGE WARBURTON LEWIS 86
- _A Powerful, Gripping Story Well Told_
-
- THE GRAY DEATH LOUAL B. SUGARMAN 91
- _Horrifying and Incredible Tale of the Amazon Valley_
-
- THE VOICE IN THE FOG HENRY LEVERAGE 95
- _Another Thriller by the Author of “Whispering Wires”_
-
- THE INVISIBLE TERROR HUGH THOMASON 100
- _An Uncanny Tale of the Jungle_
-
- THE ESCAPE HELEN ROWE HENZE 103
- _A Short Story_
-
- THE SIREN TARLETON COLLIER 105
- _A Storiette That Is “Different”_
-
- THE MADMAN HERBERT HIPWELL 107
- _A Night of Horror in the Mortuary_
-
- THE CHAIR DR. HARRY E. MERENESS 109
- _An Electrocution Vividly Described by an Eyewitness_
-
- THE CAULDRON PRESTON LANGLEY HICKEY 111
- _True Adventures of Terror_
-
- THE EYRIE BY THE EDITOR 113
-
-For Advertising Rates in WEIRD TALES apply to YOUNG & WARD, Advertising
-Managers, 168 North Michigan Blvd., Chicago, Ill.
-
- * * * * *
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Finding “The Fountain of Youth”
-
-_A Long-Sought Secret, Vital to Happiness, Has Been Discovered._
-
-_By H. M. Stunz_
-
- _Alas! that spring should vanish with the rose!_
- _That youth’s sweet-scented manuscript should close!_
- —OMAR KHAYYAM.
-
-A secret vital to human happiness has been discovered. An ancient problem
-which, sooner or later, affects the welfare of virtually every man and
-woman, has been solved. As this problem undoubtedly will come to you
-eventually, if it has not come already, I urge you to read this article
-carefully. It may give you information of a value beyond all price.
-
-This newly-revealed secret is not a new “philosophy” of financial
-success. It is not a political panacea. It has to do with something of
-far greater moment to the individual—success and happiness in love and
-marriage—and there is nothing theoretical, imaginative or fantastic
-about it, because it comes from the coldly exact realms of science and
-its value has been proved. It “works.” And because it does work—surely,
-speedily and most delightfully—it is one of the most important
-discoveries made in many years. Thousands already bless it for having
-rescued them from lives of disappointment and misery. Millions will
-rejoice because of it in years to come.
-
-The peculiar value of this discovery is that it removes physical
-handicaps which, in the past, have been considered inevitable and
-irremediable. I refer to the loss of youthful animation and a
-waning of the vital forces. These difficulties have caused untold
-unhappiness—failures, shattered romances, mysterious divorces. True
-happiness does not depend on wealth, position or fame. Primarily, it is
-a matter of health. Not the inefficient, “half-alive” condition which
-ordinarily passes as “health,” but the abundant, vibrant, magnetic
-vitality of superb manhood and womanhood.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Unfortunately, this kind of health is rare. Our civilization, with its
-wear and tear, rapidly depletes the organism and, in a physical sense,
-old age comes on when life should be at its prime.
-
-But this is not a tragedy of our era alone. Ages ago a Persian poet,
-in the world’s most melodious epic of pessimism, voiced humanity’s
-immemorial complaint that “spring should vanish with the rose” and the
-song of youth too soon come to an end. And for centuries before Omar
-Khayyam wrote his immortal verses, science had searched—and in the
-centuries that have passed since then has continued to search—without
-halt, for the fabled “fountain of youth,” an infallible method of
-renewing energy lost or depleted by disease, overwork, worry, excesses or
-advancing age.
-
-Now the long search has been rewarded. A “fountain of youth” has been
-found! Science announces unconditionally that youthful vigor can be
-restored quickly and safely. Lives clouded by weakness can be illumined
-by the sunlight of health and joy. Old age, in a sense, can be kept at
-bay and youth made more glorious than ever. And the discovery which makes
-these amazing results possible is something any man or woman, young or
-old, can easily use in the privacy of the home, unknown to relative,
-friend or acquaintance.
-
-The discovery had its origin in famous European laboratories. Brought to
-America, it was developed into a product that has given most remarkable
-results in thousands of cases, many of which had defied all other
-treatments. In scientific circles the discovery has been known and used
-for several years and has caused unbounded amazement by its quick,
-harmless, gratifying action. Now in convenient tablet form, under the
-name of Korex compound, it is available to the general public.
-
-Any one who finds the youthful stamina ebbing, life losing its charm
-and color or the feebleness of old age coming on too soon, can obtain
-a double-strength treatment of this compound, sufficient for ordinary
-cases, under a positive guarantee that it costs nothing if it fails and
-only $2 if it produces prompt and gratifying results. In average cases,
-the compound often brings about amazing benefits in from twenty-four to
-forty-eight hours.
-
-Simply write in confidence to the Melton Laboratories, 833 Massachusetts
-Bldg., Kansas City, Mo., and this wonder restorative will be mailed to
-you in a plain wrapper. You may enclose $2 or, if you prefer, just send
-your name without money and pay the postman $2 and postage when the
-parcel is delivered. In either case, if you report after a week that the
-Korex compound has not given satisfactory results, your money will be
-refunded immediately. The Melton Laboratories are nationally known and
-thoroughly reliable. Moreover, their offer is fully guaranteed, so no
-one need hesitate to accept it. If you need this remarkable scientific
-rejuvenator, write for it today.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The Cleanest, Yet Most Outspoken, Book Published
-
-There is not a man or woman married or unmarried, who does not need to
-know every word contained in “Sex Conduct in Marriage.” The very numerous
-tragedies which occur every day, show the necessity for plain-spokenness
-and honest discussion of the most vital part of married life.
-
-It is impossible to conceive of the value of the book; it must
-undoubtedly be read to be appreciated, and it is obviously impossible
-to give here a complete summary of its contents. The knowledge is not
-obtainable elsewhere; there is a conspiracy of silence on the essential
-matters concerning sex conduct, and the object of the author has been
-to break the barriers of convention in this respect, recognizing as he
-does that no marriage can be a truly happy one unless both partners are
-free to express the deepest feelings they have for each other without
-degrading themselves or bringing into the world undesired children.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-The author is an idealist who recognizes the sacredness of the sex
-function and the right of children to be loved and desired before they
-are born. Very, very few of us can say truly that we were the outcome of
-the conscious desire of our parents to beget us. They, however, were not
-to blame because they had not the knowledge which would have enabled them
-to control conception.
-
-Let us, then, see that our own marriage conduct brings us happiness and
-enjoyment in itself and for our children.
-
-A Book for Idealists by an Idealist
-
-The greatest necessity to insure happiness in the married condition is to
-know its obligations and privileges, and to have a sound understanding
-of sex conduct. This great book gives this information and is absolutely
-reliable throughout.
-
-Dr. P. L. Clark, B. S., M. D., writing of this book says: “As regards
-sound principles and frank discussion I know no better book on this
-subject than Bernard Bernard’s ‘Sex Conduct in Marriage.’ I strongly
-advise all members of the Health School in need of reliable information
-to read this book.”
-
-“I feel grateful but cheated,” writes one man. “Grateful for the new
-understanding and joy in living that has come to us, cheated that we have
-lived five years without it.”
-
-SEX CONDUCT IN MARRIAGE
-
-By BERNARD BERNARD Editor-in-Chief of “Health and Life”
-
-Answers simply and directly, those intimate questions which Mr. Bernard
-has been called upon to answer innumerable times before, both personally
-and by correspondence. It is a simple, straightforward explanation,
-unclouded by ancient fetish or superstition.
-
-A few of the many headings are:—
-
- When the Sex Function Should Be Used.
- Sex Tragedies in Childhood.
- The Consummation of Marriage.
- The Art of a Beautiful Conception.
- Sex Communion.
- The Scientific Control of Conception.
- Sex Fear Destroyed.
- The Frequency of the Sex Act.
- The Initiation to Matrimony.
- Anatomy and Physiology of the Sex Organs.
- The Spontaneous Expression of Love.
- Why Women Have Been Subjected.
- Men Who Marry in Ignorance.
- Hereditary Passion.
- Marriage a Joy to the End.
-
-Send your check or money order today for only $1.75 and this remarkable
-book will be sent postpaid immediately in a plain wrapper.
-
- Health and Life Publications
- Room 46-333 South Dearborn Street
- CHICAGO
-
- HEALTH AND LIFE PUBLICATIONS
- Room 46-333 S. Dearborn St.,
- Chicago, Illinois.
-
- Please send me, in plain wrapper, postpaid, your book. “Sex
- Conduct in Marriage.” Enclosed $1.75.
-
- Name _________________________
-
- Address ______________________
-
- City _________________________
-
- State ________________________
-
-
-
-
- _The Unique
- Magazine_
-
- WEIRD TALES
-
- _Edited by
- Edwin Baird_
-
- VOLUME ONE
- NUMBER FOUR
-
- 25c a Copy
-
- JUNE, 1923
-
- Subscription $3.00 A YEAR
- $3.50 IN CANADA
-
-
-
-
-_Paul Ellsworth Triem’s Latest Novel_
-
-The Evening Wolves
-
-_An Exciting Tale of Weird Events_
-
-
-_CHAPTER ONE_
-
-AH WING RECEIVES A CLIENT
-
-[Illustration]
-
-A taxicab stopped on the corner, and two people got out. They formed a
-decidedly incongruous pair; for the first to alight was a diminutive
-Chinese boy, scantily dressed, while his companion appeared to be a
-portly white man.
-
-It was impossible to be sure of this fact, however, as this second
-passenger wore a long overcoat, with its ulster collar turned up around
-his face, and a dark cloth cap with the visor drawn down over his
-forehead and eyes.
-
-Evidently the cab driver had been paid in advance, for he swung out from
-the curb as soon as his fares had dismounted, and was soon out of sight.
-The Chinese boy glanced at his companion, then set off silently up a
-street whose central portion was paved with cobblestones.
-
-He seemed to know just where he was going. He paused only once, to cast a
-fleeting glance over his shoulder. Then he resumed his journey.
-
-He had seen that the man in the ulster was following; and now, after
-traversing half a block of squalid, deserted street, the youngster turned
-abruptly into a pestilential-looking alley. This alley lay close to the
-top of a hill, and for a moment the man and the boy, who appeared to be
-his guide, could look down over the roofs to where the gay lights of
-Chinatown twinkled alluringly.
-
-Presently the diminutive Oriental paused just outside a doorway. The
-man who had been following him came up, with a curious suggestion of
-eagerness and suspicion. Looking over the shoulder of the figure before
-him, he was able to make out the entrance to a narrow flight of unlighted
-stairs, which plunged steeply into the earth beneath a dilapidated
-building.
-
-“Do we have to go down there, boy?” the man demanded.
-
-“All a-same down here, master,” the youngster replied. “You come close—I
-show you!”
-
-He began to descend as he spoke; and the man, after a moment of
-hesitation, plunged through the doorway after him. His manner was that of
-one who is taking a horribly unpleasant remedy, hoping to cure a still
-more horrible disease.
-
-The diminutive Chinaman reached the bottom of the stairs and waited for
-his companion. When he felt the man’s heavy hand on his shoulder, he
-turned to his right, advancing cautiously through an almost impenetrable
-darkness.
-
-There was a smell of dry rot in this basement, and around their feet rats
-scampered and squeaked. The man’s hand shook, and his breath came with a
-hissing sound through his clenched teeth.
-
-“Now we go down again, master,” the boy announced presently. He had
-paused and turned again to the right. “You keep close—I show you!”
-
-A step at a time, they descended a second flight of stairs. On either
-side were rough stone walls, powdery with mildew. The man discovered this
-with his free left hand. Strange odors came to him. Abruptly a bell rang,
-somewhere in the bowels of the darkness below them.
-
-The boy stopped in his tracks.
-
-“Now you go down, master,” he commanded. “Ah Wing waiting for you—you go
-slow. Goo’-by!”
-
-He slipped out from under the heavy hand that would have detained him,
-and the man heard him go scampering like one of the rats up the stairs
-and away through the upper corridors.
-
-Terror gripped the man left alone there on the stairs. He felt that he
-was in a trap—and he had been evading traps so long now that they had
-become an obsession with him.
-
-He cried out, hoarsely, and as he did so a door opened below and a flood
-of light shone out.
-
-“Pray continue your descent, Colonel Knight,” a cultured voice commanded
-from somewhere within the lighted room whose door had just opened. “The
-stairs are quite secure, and I am awaiting you!”
-
-With a plunge that hinted at desperation, the man addressed as “Colonel
-Knight” reached the bottom of the stairs and crossed to the door. He
-paused there for a moment, till his eyes adjusted themselves to the
-change in illumination. Then he stepped inside, and heard the heavy door
-close behind him.
-
-The room he had entered was of considerable extent, but was almost
-destitute of furniture. There were bare walls, dusty with green mildew;
-and bare floors, covered with layers of dust and litter. There were two
-chairs, one of which was already occupied.
-
-And as the newcomer’s eyes rested on the occupant of that chair, all his
-doubts and fears returned to him. He had come to this unearthly spot
-to get away from almost certain death. Now he was not certain that the
-remedy would not prove worse than the disease.
-
-The man sitting there, facing him, was dressed like a Chinaman, in silk
-trousers and coat, satin slippers, and black silk cap; but his eyes were
-of a metallic gray, and his high, thin-bridged nose spoke of Nordic
-blood. He would have been tall had he been standing. His hands were lying
-passive in his lap, but they were the hands of a man of great physical
-power.
-
-And above all these details and beyond them was something the man in the
-ulster could not quite define—a radiation of power, as if the intellect
-and will of this strange being seated before him saturated the atmosphere
-of the empty room.
-
-“Pray be seated, Colonel Knight!” the man in the chair said courteously.
-“I am glad to meet you. You have been recommended to me by a former
-student of mine—you know that I take only a few cases. It will be best
-for you to tell me your story, fully and accurately.”
-
-Colonel Knight lowered himself into the empty chair. His eyes still
-peered out through the gap in his collar, and seemed to be fastened on
-the face of the man before him.
-
-Then, slowly and grudgingly he removed his cap and turned down his
-collar, disclosing the pouchy face of a man well advanced into middle
-age. It was a face suggesting daring and resourcefulness, this face of
-Colonel Knight; and for a few moments the two sat staring curiously at
-each other.
-
-“I think I can condense that statement I have to make,” the white man
-said finally. “I am a man of wealth. Five years ago, while traveling in
-Europe, I had the misfortune to attract the attention of the greatest
-gang of international thieves ever organized. Perhaps you have heard of
-them? They were called ‘The Evening Wolves,’ and were led by a man who
-called himself ‘Count von Hondon’.”
-
-He paused for an instant to regard his companion curiously, but the
-Oriental merely bowed and sat impassively waiting.
-
-“These men must have followed me about for some time before they struck.
-Finally they saw their chance. I was packed to leave Paris for Belgium,
-and they undoubtedly figured that I would have much of wealth with me.
-
-“I did—but I had other things they had overlooked. I had my pistols,
-and I am a dead shot. I killed two of the robbers, and the rest fled. I
-supposed that would settle the matter, but I was mistaken. Five members
-of the gang were left alive, and they swore to be revenged upon me. They
-have followed me—”
-
-A bell rang shrilly somewhere close at hand, and Colonel Knight leaped
-from his chair and looked wildly at his companion.
-
-“What was that?” he cried. “That bell rang when I was descending the
-stairs—”
-
-“Someone followed you here,” the other replied, “and is now trying to
-reach us. Pray continue!”
-
-“But that man upon the stairs—”
-
-“We will come to him presently. Let me ask you to finish!”
-
-“There is nothing more! I have been followed for years, and now a
-physical trouble is added—my physician tells me I am going blind. I can’t
-see to run—”
-
-The Chinaman eyed his companion deliberately.
-
-“Why lie to me, my friend?” he demanded presently. “You come to me for
-help, and you wish to steal my ammunition! Now let me reconstruct your
-story for you. You yourself are ‘Count von Hondon.’ You were the leader
-of the master crooks called ‘The Evening Wolves.’ Five years ago you
-and your men made a rich haul, and you decided that a time had come to
-retire, or perhaps to go in by yourself. You departed, taking with you
-the loot; and ever since it has been a running fight.
-
-“Your old comrades could have shot you outright, but that would not
-restore to them the booty you stole. And you have not dared dispose of
-it, because it was the only thing that stood between you and death! You
-see, you can’t lie to me. Every lie carries its trade-mark with it, to
-those who have eyes to see. Now I shall ask you but one question, and let
-me warn you—if you lie now, you will never leave this place alive!”
-
-He stood up and thrust an accusing finger toward the cowering thief.
-
-“Tell me,” said the Chinaman, “the name of the person whom you and your
-men robbed!”
-
-The beady eyes of Colonel Knight, or “Count von Hondon” as he had once
-been known in every capital in Europe, glittered with suspicion and
-fear. His breath caught in his throat, and he unfastened his collar with
-trembling fingers.
-
-“The name,” he said hoarsely, “was—was—”
-
-Ah Wing crossed toward the heavy door and laid his hand upon the knob.
-His metallic eyes blazed, and he looked down with fierce contempt upon
-the man trembling before him.
-
-“Will you answer?” he cried. “Or shall I open this door?”
-
-“It was a woman!” Knight whimpered. “Her name was—Madame Celia—”
-
-He broke off and stared at the Chinaman, towering there before the
-door. Ah Wing had neither spoken nor moved; but there was in the room a
-disturbance as if a great voice had shouted out a curse.
-
-Slowly the Chinaman came back toward his visitor. His face now was the
-impassive face of a carved Buddha.
-
-“Colonel Knight,” he said gently, “the high gods have undoubtedly brought
-you to me. I am the only person in the world who can save you, for I
-work outside of the laws of men. And I will take your case, now that I
-fully understand it. But first I will ask you to show me the Resurrection
-Pendant which you stole from Madame Celia!”
-
-The white man got slowly to his feet, his hands groping at his throat,
-his eyes protruding, his face the color of dough.
-
-“The pendant!” he whispered through ashen lips. “The Resurrection
-Pendant! You know—you have heard?”
-
-“Show me the Pendant,” repeated Ah Wing inexorably. “I know that you
-brought it with you tonight, just as I know that you intended, in case I
-refused to take your case, to try to disappear without returning to your
-hotel. Show me the Pendant!”
-
-With faltering hands and without removing his fearful eyes from the face
-of his companion, the crook reached inside his ulster and drew forth a
-package wrapped in brown paper. This he slowly unfastened, disclosing a
-jewel case. More and more slowly his fingers fumbled with the catch.
-
-There came a sound from the door—a voice that seemed to have difficulty
-in filtering through the heavy panels.
-
-“Come out of that, Count! We got you over a barrel! Come out—”
-
-The massive door shook under a terrific blow, as from a sledge. The man
-in the ulster seemed about to crumple to the floor.
-
-Ah Wing spoke coldly.
-
-“Show me the Pendant!” he repeated. “They cannot break down that door,
-but if you trifle with me I will open it!”
-
-With hurried fingers the terror-stricken crook threw back the cover of
-the jewel case, disclosing a mass of diamonds, intricately and skilfully
-assembled into a great pendant.
-
-
-_CHAPTER TWO_
-
-UNDER CHINATOWN
-
-Ah Wing took a long stride, which brought him close to the man who held
-the jewel case.
-
-The Oriental’s steely eyes were fastened unwaveringly upon the pendant,
-whose history for half a century had been transcribed in suffering
-and death. Misfortune had followed this unique assemblage of perfect
-stones: death and insanity; the breaking of friendships; the treachery
-of children toward parents; the murder of lover by lover. And now the
-mysterious Chinaman seemed to have fallen under the spell of the gems,
-for he was taking in every detail of their perfection.
-
-For a moment the assault upon the door had ceased, but now it was
-continued. Heavy blows fell, and the walls of the subterranean apartment
-shook.
-
-“It will not take your friends long to discover that they cannot reach us
-by that route,” commented Ah Wing tranquilly, turning at last from his
-inspection of the Resurrection Pendant. “The door has a middle sheeting
-of boiler iron. It is bullet proof.”
-
-He reseated himself, motioning for Colonel Knight to do the same.
-Absently he watched the white man close the jewel case, wrap it carefully
-in brown paper, and return it to his ulster pocket.
-
-“And now,” continued the Chinaman, “I will ask you to tell me about these
-men. You say there are five of them? Please describe them to me, one at
-a time. Tell me all that you can remember as to physical and mental
-characteristics—I want every detail you can give me.”
-
-Colonel Knight sat down heavily. It was obvious that the assault upon the
-door was shaking his nerves so that he could hardly command his voice.
-His eyes were the eyes of some hunted thing, which sees itself at the end
-of a blind alley.
-
-With an evident effort, he tore his glance from the quivering panels and
-fastened it on his companion.
-
-“Yes,” he said hollowly, “there are five of these men, and they have been
-chosen from the elite of the criminal world. I myself selected them and
-trained them. Each has his special ability. I will begin with the man
-whom I considered the brainiest of them all—the one who was almost my
-equal in planning and executing a really big robbery. His name is Monte
-Jerome.”
-
-Suddenly the blows on the door ceased; and the room was so still, after
-the ferocious assault, that it seemed to press on the ear drums of the
-speaker. He winced and for a moment was silent. Then, resolutely he
-continued:
-
-“Monte is thirty-five years old. He is less than five feet six, but is
-broad shouldered and powerful. He grew up in the alleys of a large city.
-He fought his way to the leadership of gang after gang, and at the time I
-picked him up was looking for new worlds to conquer. I chose him because
-of four qualities: his physical strength; his native cunning; his lack of
-sentiment—or, as it is usually called, ‘mercy’—and his absolute freedom
-from superstition. Monte believes in neither God, man, nor the devil. He
-was my right-hand man—and it is to his merciless pursuit that I owe my
-condition!”
-
-Ah Wing had drawn a note-book from his pocket and was jotting down data.
-He glanced placidly toward the door, which was again shaking under a rain
-of heavy blows.
-
-“Pray continue!” said he.
-
-Something of the Chinaman’s imperturbability was beginning to influence
-the white man. He went on with greater assurance:
-
-“Next to Monte Jerome in total ability, I always placed the man we called
-‘Doc.’ I never knew his real name. That was not important, as he went
-under many aliases. Doc was my means of approach to the wealthy men
-and women—and particularly the latter—upon whom I specialized. He is a
-university man, and has lived among people of wealth and refinement much
-of his life.
-
-“He has brains, but lacks the quality of ruthlessness so important in
-really successful commercial crime. He is utterly selfish, I believe,
-but certain necessary factors in his profession are revolting to him—and
-he has never made the effort to put down this weakness. Physically he
-is prepossessing: an inch or two over six feet in height, blue eyes,
-light brown hair, splendid carriage; and possessed of the manners of a
-Chesterfield.”
-
-A thin, faint voice came through the door, upon which the tattoo had
-momentarily ceased:
-
-“We’ve got you, Count! Open that door, or we’ll gouge your eyes out when
-we break in!”
-
-Ah Wing waved his hand affably toward the source of this ominous promise.
-
-“And our friend out there?” said he. “Is he one of those whom you have
-described?”
-
-“I was just coming to him,” replied Colonel Knight, raising a shaking
-hand to his forehead and mopping off the beaded perspiration. “That is
-‘Billy the Strangler,’ and I think the ‘Kid’ is with him. Those were my
-Apaches—my gun men—my killers. They are much alike. Both have cunning of
-a low order; and persistence—they are like bloodhounds, once they are put
-on the trail.
-
-“They have been Monte’s most useful tools in his pursuit of me. But both
-are superstitious, and their native bloodthirstiness has grown on them
-till they are little better than homicidal maniacs. The Strangler is tall
-and slim, with high cheek bones and lean arms which seem to be threaded
-with steel wires. The Kid is of medium height, with grey eyes and sandy
-hair.”
-
-The assault on the door had again been discontinued. Suddenly there
-came from directly overhead a sound of splintering boards, accompanied
-by a rain of dust and bits of plaster. Knight sprang up and retreated,
-snarling, toward a corner of the empty room.
-
-“Ah, I have been waiting to see if your old comrades would think of
-that,” he commented. “It gives us a line on their resourcefulness.”
-
-Colonel Knight regarded him with drawn lips, which exposed his yellow
-teeth.
-
-“For God’s sake, what are we to do?” he cried. “Are you armed? You sit
-there like a statue—”
-
-“Pray continue your very interesting description,” suggested Ah Wing.
-“There remains one of your band whom you have not described. I must know
-about him—and then I will deal with this other matter!”
-
-For an instant the thief glared into the face of the man seated across
-from him. What he read there steadied him a little, although the crash
-of splintering boards from above told him that the men he had such good
-reason to fear were meeting with less resistance in this direction than
-they had encountered in their assault upon the door.
-
-“There remains but one,” he said hoarsely. “That is Louie Martin, my gem
-expert. Martin is one of the best judges of diamonds and pearls in the
-world. He is an expert in recutting and remounting stolen jewelry. And
-he has a wide acquaintance among the crooked dealers of this country and
-Europe—”
-
-An extensive area of plaster broke away suddenly and crashed down,
-tumbling about the heads and shoulders of the two occupants of the room.
-At the same instant the end of a heavy gas-pipe crashed through the
-laths, and the voices of the men on the floor above were raised in a
-shout of ferocious triumph.
-
-Ah Wing stood up deliberately and looked toward the ceiling. He seemed
-to be measuring the progress of the men opposed to him. Then, without
-hurrying he crossed the room toward a dimly lighted corner, where he
-stooped and opened a small door in the wall. This door was built in
-segments, like that of a safe; and was hinged with metal plates of
-enormous strength.
-
-Colonel Knight, who cowered directly behind the Chinaman, felt a breath
-of cool, moist air, smelling strongly of earthy decay, blowing up from
-this diminutive doorway.
-
-“Kindly precede me, Colonel,” commanded Ah Wing. “Watch your step—the
-going is rather precipitous!”
-
-Knight stooped and made his way through the opening. He found himself on
-a stairway which went steeply down into utter darkness.
-
-A cloud of white dust filtered up into the light of the electric bulb;
-and, as Ah Wing stood watching, a lithe human figure landed with a crash
-on top of the heap of plaster and splintered boards and laths.
-
-In the same instant the Chinaman passed silently through the small
-doorway, and his companion heard him slipping the bolts into place.
-
-The darkness which had suddenly clutched them was so intense that it
-seemed to have physical substance. A squeaking sound from above brought
-Knight’s face swiftly up. Something cold and reptilian flapped into his
-eyes and, with another _squeak_, was gone.
-
-“Only a bat!” said Ah Wing softly. “Rest your hand on my shoulder and
-feel your way a step at a time. I will turn on my flashlight!”
-
-A conical beam of light drilled through the darkness below them, and Ah
-Wing’s companion saw that they were descending a narrow flight of stone
-steps that seemed to terminate in a panel of utter blackness. The walls
-on each side were damp; and pallid fungi had taken the place of the
-mildew of the cellars above.
-
-“For God’s sake, where are we?” the white man demanded through chattering
-teeth. “This looks like the shaft of a mine!”
-
-“This is part of the underground system which made Chinatown famous,
-before the disaster of 1906,” replied the Oriental. “Few white men have
-ever been down here—particularly of late years!”
-
-He paused. They had reached a narrow landing, from which passages
-branched in half a dozen directions. Another descending stairway yawned
-ahead.
-
-“If I were to leave you here,” smiled Ah Wing, “you would never find
-your way out! You could not go back the way you have come, for there are
-acute-angled branches which would confuse you. Most of them end in masses
-of rubbish, easily dislodged by the unwary! But with me you are safe!”
-
-His voice had an ominous softness. Knight followed down along the second
-flight of stairs. His heart was pounding. Suppose these crumbling walls
-should collapse! Suppose this unearthly being, in whose hands his safety
-lay, decided to rob him!
-
-Ah Wing spoke abruptly:
-
-“We have been following down the face of a hill. Now we reach the level,
-and here we leave these catacombs!”
-
-He turned sharply to the left and led the way along a short passage which
-terminated in a second diminutive door. Ah Wing shot back the bolts and
-motioned for his companion to proceed him into the room beyond.
-
-Knight obeyed. Daylight was there—white, blazing daylight! He blinked as
-he crept through the opening.
-
-Next moment he tried to cry out. An arm had passed in front of his body,
-pinioning him. In the same instant a sinewy hand came close to his face,
-and there was a little tinkle of broken glass—a diminutive globule had
-been broken under his nose.
-
-The thief struggled to turn his head aside, fought to keep from breathing
-in the stupefying fumes; but with a smothering gasp he surrendered.
-
-He breathed deeply, and as he did so a sudden feeling of lightness and
-of expansion came upon him. In the act of wondering stupidly what this
-substance was that the Chinaman had forced upon him, his mind went blank.
-
-Ah Wing continued for a moment to hold his hand over the mouth and
-nostrils of his victim. Then he carried Knight across the room and laid
-him on a divan. Turning deliberately, he pressed an electric button.
-
-Somewhere in the brooding silence of the building, beyond this room, a
-deep throated bell rang clamorously.
-
-
-_CHAPTER THREE_
-
-THE EVENING WOLVES
-
-High in an apartment house, overlooking a street and something of the
-city, Monte Jerome, leader of the Evening Wolves, sat at his ease, a
-cigarette in the corner of his thin, merciless mouth, a telephone within
-reach.
-
-From the back rooms of the apartment came the sound of heavy breathing,
-intermingled with an energetic and unmusical snore. Louie Martin, gem
-expert for the gang, and “Doc,” their society specialist, were sleeping.
-
-Monte listened critically to the heavy breathing. He was an expert in
-such matters, and his seasoned judgment told him that neither of his
-comrades was faking sleep.
-
-With a nod of satisfaction, he stood up and walked soundlessly into the
-corridor connecting the rooms, stopping first in that occupied by “Doc,”
-and then in the back room where Louie Martin was sleeping. In each room
-he paused long enough to make a thorough search of the clothing of the
-sleeping robber.
-
-Monte went expeditiously through all the pockets, and even examined
-the linings. Just a little exhibition of the honor that obtains among
-thieves: Monte Jerome knew that his leadership depended on his ability to
-command his companions’ unwilling respect, and he was taking no chances.
-
-“I got a hunch Doc is thinking of ditching the gang, and going it for
-himself,” Monte murmured as he returned toward the front room. “If he
-thinks—”
-
-The ’phone bell rang suddenly, and the man on duty crossed to the
-instrument.
-
-“Yes?” he said.... “Oh, hello, Billy.... What’s that—Hell’s bells! Got
-away! Get busy and find him—”
-
-The voice of the Strangler came to him over the wire.
-
-“Keep your shirt on, Chief!” it commanded. “You better come down here
-and see for yourself what we was up against!”
-
-Two minutes later Monte was shaking Louie Martin awake.
-
-“Come to life!” Monte grated. “The Count has made his getaway! You get
-into your clothes and tend ’phone! This is one hell of a mess!”
-
-Martin climbed sluggishly and unwillingly out of bed.
-
-“You’ve been running things,” he snarled. “If you’ve got ’em in a mess,
-it’s no one’s fault but your own!”
-
- * * * * *
-
-At a corner on the outskirts of Chinatown, Monte alighted from his taxi.
-This was a special machine, owned and operated by a crook who dealt
-indiscriminately in transportation, dope and bootleg whisky.
-
-Monte commanded this worthy citizen to await his return, and plunged into
-a labyrinth of narrow streets and alleys.
-
-A shrill whistle sounded presently, and he saw the Strangler beckoning
-him from a doorway. Crossing over, Monte followed his henchman into an
-alley, down a flight of narrow stairs, and into an unlighted basement.
-Here they were joined by the “Kid,” who carried an electric torch.
-
-“Come on, Chief,” the “Kid” commanded. “We’ll show you first what we was
-up against—watch your step! If you stub your toe you’ll land in hell!”
-
-They turned and went down another stairway, narrower and steeper than
-the first. At the bottom their way was barred by a heavy door, studded
-with great iron bolts. In one place the wood had been battered away,
-disclosing the gleaming surface of a steel panel.
-
-“We followed the Count here, and thought we had him cornered,” the “Kid”
-drawled, rolling his cigarette from one corner of his mouth to the other
-and regarding Monte through lazy, sardonic eyes. “When we saw we couldn’t
-get through this way, we went up to the floor above and come at him
-through the ceiling. Come along—we’ll show you!”
-
-They went back up one flight of stairs and entered a room which evidently
-had long been unused. Its walls were crumbling, and in the middle a great
-hole had been torn in the floor. The Strangler, who was leading the way,
-crossed over to this opening and unhesitatingly disappeared through it.
-Next moment a yellow light filtered up through the opening.
-
-“Down you go, Chief,” commanded the “Kid.” “This was the door we made!”
-
-Monte made his way down through the opening, landing on the upper of
-two chairs which had been piled precariously together to assist in
-the descent. He was followed by the “Kid,” and the three crooks stood
-examining the room in which Ah Wing and Colonel Knight had held their
-conference.
-
-Monte spoke with a snarl.
-
-“All right, you two!” he cried, “Here is where he was! Where is he now?
-Come across with your alibi!”
-
-His two companions exchanged significant glances and the “Kid” took a
-slouching step closer to Monte.
-
-“Look here, Chief,” said he, “it ain’t gonna be healthy for you to
-talk that way to me! I’m not spielin’ no alibi. What I’m givin’ you is
-straight goods, and you better get that twist out of your mush and act
-like a gentleman!”
-
-He paused; and his two crumpled ears, which spoke of vicissitudes in the
-prize ring, grew red as a rooster’s comb. His glassy gray eyes glared
-unblinkingly at Monte.
-
-The latter was not afraid of either of these men, or of both of them
-together. Monte had the unflinching courage of the perfect animal. But he
-had no notion of breaking up a gang which might prove useful to him.
-
-“All right, boys,” he agreed, more pacifically, although his dark eyes
-continued to glow like coals. “If you can afford to take it easy, you got
-nothing on me! Tell me what happened.”
-
-“That’s more like it,” the “Kid” growled. “Now you’re talking like a
-gentleman, Chief! Well, we follows the Count here, and thinks we has him
-holed up. We can’t bust down that door—this is an old Chink gambling
-hell, and everything is stacked against a fellow that wants to get in.
-But we comes down through the roof—”
-
-Suddenly the “Kid” paused. From somewhere behind there had come a sound
-as of the opening of a door. The eyes of his two companions followed his
-and together they stood, rigid and alert.
-
-Slowly the back wall of the room opened out toward them. Unconsciously,
-the crooks shrank closer together. Their faces were drawn, their figures
-rigid.
-
-The panel swung fully open, and a figure appeared in it. It was the form
-of a tall man, clad in black silk.
-
-The three crooks stood staring at him silently. So unexpected had been
-his appearance that it had affected them with a sort of paralysis. Their
-mouths gaped open and their eyes bulged.
-
-Serenely, the intruder stood looking down upon them; and then, with a
-courteous wave of his hand, he spoke.
-
-“Pardon my intrusion, gentlemen!” said he. “My little affairs can wait—I
-will return later!”
-
-He turned, and next moment the panel had swung silently shut behind him.
-
-Monte Jerome was the first of the three to recover.
-
-“Come on—we’ve got to get him!” he cried.
-
-“That was the Chink we saw spieling with the Count,” the “Kid” cried
-hoarsely. “But, for the love of cripe, how did he get here?”
-
-Monte snarled wolfishly:
-
-“Ask _him_ that! We’ve got to bust through here—”
-
-His compact body landed against the panel. It shook, but refused to yield.
-
-“Come back here! Now, all together!” bellowed Monte.
-
-The three leaped forward and struck the partition.
-
-This time it swung inward, slowly and without a sound. The crooks leaped
-through the opening, and the “Kid” flashed his torch. They were standing
-just inside a vast, windowless room, at whose farther side they had a
-glimpse of sagging timbers and ruined walls. Nowhere was there a sign of
-the man who had eluded them.
-
-“Get a move on!” Monte growled throatily. His lip drew up and he snarled
-at his companions. “A hell of a bunch of crooks, we are! Why didn’t you
-take a shot at him, when you saw he was going to make a getaway?”
-
-The “Kid” glared back.
-
-“Cut out that kind of talk, Chief! You got a gat, and two hands! He
-buffaloed you just like he did us! Be a sport and take your medicine!”
-
-A determined search of the ruined chamber yielded no results. The “Kid”
-dropped to his stomach and wormed his way under the mass of timbers at
-the farther side. He found the beginning of a stone-lined tunnel, which
-dipped abruptly into the earth.
-
-Damp, mouldy air fanned his cheeks; and as he crouched, motionless,
-listening, a distant reverberation came to him from the bowels of the
-earth. It sounded like the clanking of a great iron door.
-
-“Let me out of this!” he growled, as he backed toward his companions. “We
-got a fat chance of following that yellow devil into his hole. You go, if
-you want to!”
-
-Monte shook his head. He had regained his poise, and he had been thinking.
-
-“No use trying to follow,” he admitted. “We got to comb Chinatown for the
-two of them. They can’t live down in that burrow forever. But why did
-this duck show himself? He must have known we were here—he could hear us
-talking!”
-
-The “Kid” smiled craftily.
-
-“Maybe him and the Count left something,” he suggested. “We better have a
-look!”
-
-“No, they didn’t leave nothing. I would have seen it if they had. I got
-an idea the Chink _wanted us to see him_! He stood there with his face
-turned into the light. Well, we got to find him! That’s flat!”
-
-
-_CHAPTER FOUR_
-
-THE MAN IN THE LIGHTED ROOM
-
-The wolves shifted their quarters that night to a rooming-house on the
-edge of Chinatown, and the search for Colonel Knight and his mysterious
-companion, the tall Chinaman, began.
-
-For three days they worked feverishly. Monte Jerome seemed never to
-sleep, and his temper was not at all improved by the ordeal. He drove his
-companions fiercely, and only the fact that they were playing for big
-stakes prevented open rebellion.
-
-On the fourth day Monte and the “Kid,” who were loitering, alert but
-almost hopeless, in the entrance to a building in one of the narrow
-streets of the Oriental quarter, caught sight of a figure disappearing
-through a doorway. It was a tall figure, partly concealed by a light
-overcoat; but both of them leaped forward at the same instant.
-
-“That was the Chink, sure as God made little red apples!” the “Kid”
-snapped.
-
-They crossed the street. Several automobiles were drawn up close to the
-curb, among them a big blue limousine from which the Chinaman had stepped
-a moment before they identified him. Monte approached a well-dressed
-gentleman, who had just come out of the building, and asked him what was
-going on inside.
-
-“This is the fall exhibition of the Iconoclasts,” the stranger explained
-good-naturedly.
-
-He seemed to be sizing up the two crooks.
-
-“I think you boys would enjoy it,” he added mischievously. “The admission
-is only fifty cents.”
-
-Monte and the “Kid” bought tickets, and presently they entered a big
-room with a high ceiling, upon whose walls were hung a number of gaudy
-paintings. The newcomers stared round at the fifty or more spectators who
-were making the rounds of the gallery.
-
-“Hell!” growled the “Kid,” “this ain’t no place for an honest strongarm
-man—Let’s beat it and send for Doc!”
-
-Monte gripped his arm.
-
-“Look!” he said under his breath. “Over there near the corner!”
-
-The “Kid” looked stealthily as directed, and perceived the tall man in
-the gray topcoat. He was standing with his back to them, examining a red
-and yellow daub that looked like an omelette liberally seasoned with
-paprika.
-
-“That’s him!” Monte whispered. “All right, Kid! You have Mike bring the
-cab down to the corner where we was waiting. Then, when this duck beats
-it out of here, I’ll hop in and we’ll follow him!”
-
-Half an hour later the tall man in the gray coat—who in American
-garb looked more like an Oriental than he had when dressed as a
-Chinaman—paused to look deliberately at his watch, and then turned to the
-outer door.
-
-By the time he stepped into the blue limousine, Monte had reached the
-corner and was climbing in beside the driver of the taxi. The “Kid” had
-the window down, and was kneeling with his head close to the driver’s.
-
-“How ’bout it, Mike!” Monte demanded. “Can you keep ’em in sight?”
-
-“Watch me!” snorted the driver. “There ain’t no Chink going can leave me
-behind. Did you see that chauffeur? Got a face like a monkey!”
-
-There was no difficulty, for the present, in keeping the blue limousine
-in sight, however. It went sedately down a side street and took the turn
-toward the ferry. Five minutes later Monte and the Kid saw the cab in
-which they were seated draw in behind the larger car, and roll over the
-landing platform. The limousine was stationed on the right, and the cab
-on the left, of the big boat.
-
-Monte scrambled down, and with a curt command to the other two made his
-way around to where he could see the enclosed car. The man in the gray
-overcoat was sealed inside, with a coffee-brown Chinaman in livery at the
-wheel. Monte kept them in sight till the ferry was approaching the slip.
-Then he hurried back and climbed in again beside the driver.
-
-“Here’s where they’ll try to leave us behind, if they have any idea we’re
-following!” he predicted.
-
-“Let ’em,” growled Mike. “If we don’t get took in by a speed cop, I won’t
-never let no Chink drive away from me! You boys just hang onto your
-bonnets, and watch us!”
-
-The big blue car seemed to have accepted this challenge. The little man
-at the wheel swung out and passed half a dozen slower machines, then took
-the center of the road and held it.
-
-With the coming of evening, a powdery fog swooped down over the ridges to
-the west, and suddenly the tail lights of the limousine shot up in the
-gloom ahead. Notch by notch, the Chinese chauffeur was adding to his
-speed. The lighter car behind bounced and swayed, and Mike spat through
-his teeth.
-
-“Say, that bird must be clear nuts!” he growled. “If we get took in,
-they’ll sentence us to about five life-times! What say, gents? Want to
-let him go?”
-
-“You keep going!” snarled Monte, staring hardeyed into the fog. “If we
-get pinched, I pay for it, see? But don’t you let that bird get away, if
-you want to sleep in your little bed tonight!”
-
-Mike glanced sideways at the man whose elbow touched his. Something
-he saw in the stony face of Monte Jerome caused him to turn all his
-attention to the task in hand.
-
-The tail lights had been growing dim, but now, slowly, the cab began to
-gain. Other cars, headed for the ferry, shot out of the fog and into it,
-honking warning horns at the crazily lurching machine that burned the
-road in pursuit of the blue limousine. The stony faces of the three men
-in the cab never deviated from their straight glare into the gloom ahead.
-
-The speed of the big car was slackening. The driver of the cab grinned
-wryly.
-
-“He knows the ropes. Speed cop in this burg ahead lies awake nights
-thinking up new ways of raising hell for speedy drivers,” he explained.
-“Now we’ll creep up on ’em a little more!”
-
-They passed through the little town and again were in the open country.
-The limousine continued its more leisurely progress, however, and
-presently turned to the right into a dirt road. The cab dropped farther
-behind, at Monte’s command.
-
-“They can’t get away from us on this road. Probably aren’t going far, and
-we don’t want them to spot us. Take it easy!”
-
-The road seemed to be leading gently down, and presently they caught the
-gleam of water on each side. Rushes grew up close to the track; and from
-somewhere in the dusk the cry of a gull sounded like the wailing of a
-lost soul.
-
-Involuntarily, the “Kid” shivered.
-
-“Hell of a country!” he mumbled. “Where you reckon he’s headed for?”
-
-“Wait and see!” snapped Monte. “Hello!—he’s turning in! That must be a
-private road! Stop here!”
-
-He slid from the seat and stood swinging his feet alternately, to restore
-the circulation in them. Then he jerked his head into the darkness.
-
-“Come on, Kid! We got to see what he’s up to!”
-
-The “Kid” clambered out, and the two crooks struck silently up the road.
-They reached the turn and found, as they had guessed, that they were at
-the entrance to a private road.
-
-Instinctively, the two men paused and stared in through the trees. Night
-pressed thick and damp about them. A wind from the southeast brought to
-them the smell of the marshes, and once the booming whistle of a steamer
-sounded. In a lull of the wind, the gulls were screaming.
-
-“This ain’t in my line, Chief!” snarled the “Kid,” glaring into the
-darkness. “I can bump a guy off under the city lights as nifty as the
-next one, but this nature stuff never did set right on my stomach. Let’s
-go back!”
-
-“You go back if you want to!” Monte said menacingly. “But if you do,
-don’t come sniveling around me later on. I’m going in there!”
-
-He struck off along the winding road, and in a moment the “Kid” fell into
-step at his side.
-
-Without a word, the two advanced till suddenly the lights of a building
-shone upon them. They paused for a moment, then began to creep nearer,
-keeping in the shelter of clumps of bushes. In this way they came close
-enough to discern the outlines of a large and well-built house, with a
-broad frontage and two wings extending from the rear.
-
-“For the love of cripe!” whispered the “Kid,” “would you look at them
-windows! Barred, every damn one of them!”
-
-Monte nodded.
-
-“Looks like a private foolish house to me,” he replied in the same
-cautious tone. “Come on—we’ll get around behind and see what we can make
-out!”
-
-The musty darkness of the night, which had settled down around them, was
-now an advantage, as it made it easier for the two Wolves to get close
-to the house without being seen. They crept past the massive front, with
-its broad steps and wide porch, and continued till they came opposite the
-west wing. Most of the windows in this wing were dark, but toward the
-back they saw several lighted panels.
-
-“Come on!” commanded Monte. “I hope that Chink doesn’t keep a dog, but
-plug him if one comes at you!”
-
-On they crept till they were close to the windows. Massive and sinister
-against the light, stood the iron bars which had first caught their
-attention. They crept closer, and finally Monte hauled himself up into a
-gnarly pepper tree whose lacy branches almost touched the nearest of the
-lighted windows.
-
-Next moment he reached down and grasped his companion’s shoulder.
-
-“Come up here!” he grated, speaking half aloud in his excitement. “Don’t
-slip—catch that limb! There you are!”
-
-He assisted the “Kid” to a foothold beside himself, and together they
-stared through the foliage and into the lighted room beyond.
-
-The curtains were drawn aside and the shade rolled up. Seated in full
-view of the two crooks was the man they had been following for five
-years. He wore a dressing-gown, and beside his easy chair was a low table
-on which rested a leather covered box.
-
-Suddenly he turned, raised the cover of the box—and Monte and the “Kid”
-held their breath and stared hungrily. The light was caught and split up
-into a cascade of vivid colors. The man in the dressing-gown seemed to
-have in his clutching hands a fountain of fire.
-
-“The Resurrection Pendant!” snarled the “Kid,” reaching for his pistol.
-“Damn him!”
-
-Monte gripped his companion by the wrist.
-
-“None of that, you fool!” he hissed. “We’ve got to play safe—but the
-Count is caught in a trap! That Chink must have kidnapped him!”
-
-
-_CHAPTER FIVE_
-
-ONE OF AH WING’S DOOR KEEPERS
-
-Colonel Knight awoke and lay staring at the ceiling. It seemed a
-surprisingly long distance from him—and then his glance narrowed.
-
-He turned his head, and suddenly sat up in bed. He had just remembered
-the events preceding his loss of consciousness.
-
-Ponderingly, he examined his surroundings. He was in a big room, with
-a high ceiling. There were two windows at his right and one straight
-ahead, the latter partly open. Several easy chairs, a handsome mahogany
-house desk, and a row of bookcases flanking a fireplace came to him as
-successive details of his environment. A bar of yellow sunlight streamed
-through the end window.
-
-A door behind him opened, and he turned to see a grinning, brown-faced
-Chinese boy approaching his bedside, bearing a breakfast tray.
-
-“Ah Wing say he coming to see you by-m-by,” the newcomer commented
-placidly. “You hab breakfast now.”
-
-He drew up a table and placed the tray in position, then skillfully
-arranged napkin and silverware—which were of the best quality—convenient
-to Colonel Knight’s hand. Afterward he withdrew.
-
-Knight’s head felt clear enough, but, mentally and physically, he was
-relaxed to the point of incoherence. He wanted to think, but couldn’t.
-
-Mechanically, he lifted to his lips the cup of steaming coffee that the
-servant had poured for him. The taste of the hot, bitter fluid—he drank
-it without cream or sugar—helped him pull himself together. He remembered
-everything now: his visit to the mysterious Chinaman; the coming of his
-enemies, and their attack on the basement room; his flight with Ah Wing;
-and the latter’s ruse for bringing Knight fully within his power.
-
-Sharply he turned his head and looked again at the end window; it was
-barred with heavy iron rods, and so were the two windows at the side.
-This room in which he lay was a luxurious prison!
-
-The door opened again, softly, and Colonel Knight turned his head to find
-Ah Wing advancing toward him, dressed in white flannel trousers, silk
-shirt, and serge coat. In such a rig the newcomer looked every inch a
-Chinaman.
-
-“Good morning, Colonel,” Ah Wing greeted his guest courteously. “I am
-glad to see you looking so fresh and rested this morning!”
-
-Knight began to tremble.
-
-“You yellow crook!” he croaked, his hands drawing up into knots. “So that
-was your scheme—to rob me, and then kidnap me? But don’t think you can
-get away with it—”
-
-Ah Wing approached the bed and deftly reached under the nearer of the two
-pillows. From this place of concealment he drew two things: the morocco
-jewel case, and a revolver that Knight remembered having carried in his
-inside coat pocket.
-
-“Here are the principle articles of your property, Colonel Knight,” said
-the master of the house. “The other things you will find after you are
-dressed.”
-
-He paused to watch the man in the bed open the leather box and stare
-hungrily at the flashing jewels. Then he continued.
-
-“There was an ordeal ahead of you, my friend, and you were in no
-condition to go through with it. You needed rest, but your nerves were
-screwed up to the snapping point. There was only one way to get you
-safely out of the city, and I used it.”
-
-“You mean that the Wolves don’t know where I am?” Knight demanded.
-
-“Not yet. I shall remedy that presently.”
-
-Colonel Knight’s voice rose into a snarl:
-
-“Remedy it? You mean you want them to know?”
-
-“Of course I want them to know. I want them here, where I can deal with
-them. But never fear, my friend. Your old enemies will never be able to
-hurt you!”
-
-He paused and looked around the apartment, then turned again to the man
-in the bed.
-
-“These are your quarters. Adjoining your bedroom is the bath. This door
-opens into your sitting-room, and adjoining that is my conservatory,
-which you are at liberty to visit when you choose. There are no
-conditions placed upon your residence here except that you are not to try
-to leave the house without my permission—_and you are to leave the end
-window exactly as it is_. Don’t even lay your hand upon it, or upon the
-sill! This is important!”
-
-Knight stared again at the single end window through which the sun was
-shining. He stared from it to the face of the strange being who continued
-to regard him with the impersonal interest of a Buddha. A sense of
-baffled curiosity arose within him, and he made a nervous, protesting
-movement with one of his puffy hands.
-
-“Who the devil _are_ you, anyway?” he broke out. “Ah Wing! That doesn’t
-mean anything to me—as well say ‘Mr. X!’ You are not a Chinaman. What and
-who are you?”
-
-Ah Wing continued to stare imperturbably down at his guest, but the ghost
-of a smile showed at the corners of his usually expressionless mouth.
-
-“No,” he agreed, “I am not a Chinaman. And I am not a Caucasian. You see
-that, dressed as I am today, I look unmistakably Oriental. Dressed like a
-man of Hong Kong, on the other hand, I look American or English. That has
-been my curse, and perhaps my blessing: the mixing of two irreconcilable
-blood lines has made me an outcast. I have no place in the government of
-any country, and therefore I have organized a government of my own.
-
-“I am the emperor, the president, the king, of an invisible empire. I
-rule by right of intellect and will, and my first failure will be my
-death warrant; for, judged even by the standards of a thief like you,
-Colonel Knight, I am an outlaw—one who is outside the protection of the
-laws of men!”
-
-He laughed, a short, mirthless laugh. As he crossed toward the door he
-said over his shoulder, “Remember about the window. I shall be going out
-from time to time, but if you carry out my instructions to the letter, no
-harm can come to you even in this house of hidden dangers.”
-
-Try as he would, Colonel Knight could find nothing wrong with his
-situation as it had been outlined to him by Ah Wing. He spent most of
-the first day in the room in which he had awakened. From the windows in
-one direction he could see a landscaped lawn and hillside, dotted with
-shrubbery and intersected by winding gravel paths.
-
-From the rear window concerning which he had been so curiously warned
-by the master of the house, he looked out over a bit of lawn bordering
-a kitchen garden. Beyond the garden lay a marshy field, and in the
-distance he made out a canal along which an occasional motor boat chugged
-industriously. No, there was nothing wrong here—he could hardly have
-hoped for a more peaceful place in which to rest and grow strong.
-
-But—there was an air of brooding watchfulness over the silent house. He
-heard an occasional padded footstep passing the door of his sitting-room.
-Once he looked out. At the farther side of an extensive conservatory the
-brown-faced servant who had brought him his breakfast was spraying some
-snaky-looking vines bearing huge orange-colored flowers. Colonel Knight
-closed the door. Something about the place—the quiet and the isolation,
-perhaps, were getting on his nerves.
-
-The second day passed as the first, but toward noon of the third day Ah
-Wing knocked at his door and entered noiselessly. He was dressed in his
-Oriental garb, and again looked like a poorly-disguised white man.
-
-“I will be going out for a few hours this afternoon, Colonel,” he
-explained, regarding the man before him with his habitual unwinking
-stare. “I am taking Lim with me, and I think it will be best for you to
-remain in your quarters.”
-
-Although his words had taken the form of a request, there was back of
-them the force of a command. The white man eyed him suspiciously, but
-presently nodded.
-
-Some time later he heard the _whir_ of a starting motor. Lim had brought
-him his luncheon, and now Knight figured the house would be deserted. He
-smiled. This would be his opportunity to look around a bit. The instincts
-of the crook were strong within him, and he was immensely curious with
-regard to the house of Ah Wing.
-
-He waited an hour after he had heard the car leave the garage—from the
-back window he had caught a glimpse of it: a gray roadster of moderate
-size and power. Now he felt sure that he would not be interrupted.
-
-Crossing to the door of the conservatory, he passed into it. Along one
-side were orchids, Colonel Knight realized vaguely that the collection
-must be priceless. Many of them were growing in diminutive glass rooms,
-upon whose walls he saw heavy drops of moisture.
-
-One pale green blossom near him had weird markings in white and yellow,
-which gave it a disturbing resemblance to a grinning human face. The
-man thrust out a curious finger and touched it: the blossom drew itself
-together like a conscious thing, and he became aware of a sickening
-perfume which in an instant turned him dizzy.
-
-He shrank back and continued his journey. The concrete floor narrowed,
-and at his left he saw a lily pond, upon whose surface great white
-blossoms showed their buttery yellow centers. Between the pads and
-blossoms of the lilies the water showed, deep and dark.
-
-Colonel Knight leaned forward to peer into the pool; then, with a choking
-cry he staggered back, his face drained of blood: an ugly black snout had
-shot up out of the murky depths, and a huge lizard, with short, powerful
-forelegs armed with long claws, stared hungrily up at him.
-
-He found his appetite for exploration losing its edge. He was tempted
-to turn back, but he wanted to settle one point: in case he should want
-to leave this house, how could he best do it? The windows were securely
-barred, but there must be plenty of doors.
-
-A hall opened out from the conservatory, and on either side were rooms,
-variously furnished. He hurried on. Ahead, he saw a door which seemed
-to give upon the outer world. He grasped the knob. The door was locked,
-and the lock was one which a glance told him could be neither picked nor
-smashed.
-
-Turning, he explored the rear of the house. In the east wing he found the
-kitchens and servants’ quarters, but a door which probably communicated
-with the kitchen gardens was locked.
-
-Suddenly his wandering eyes caught the handle of a door in an angle
-of the pantry. He approached it and found that it opened upon a stair
-leading down. A gust of warm, damp air came up through the stairway, and
-for a moment Knight paused, sniffing curiously.
-
-He found himself thinking of a certain sultry afternoon in India, when
-he had gone out into the simmering jungle. There was the same wild smell
-here—
-
-He had his revolver in his hip pocket. That gave him confidence, and he
-must know if it would be possible for him to escape in this direction.
-
-A phrase spoken by Ah Wing came to him—“Even in this house of hidden
-dangers!” But what dangers could there be?
-
-Colonel Knight felt his way down into the basement. He found that it lay
-almost entirely below the level of the grounds, but presently his eyes
-became accustomed to the dusk and he could discern his surroundings.
-
-He was in a broad and deep room, filled with a litter of packing cases,
-discarded articles of furniture, and a few garden tools. At its farther
-side was a door. Slowly and cautiously, the investigator made his way
-toward this.
-
-It opened into a dark and narrow passage. He made his way along this,
-trying the handles of two locked doors, one on the right and the other on
-the left. Then he came to the end of the passage and to another door.
-
-Cautiously, he opened it and looked inside: before him lay a room
-somewhat better lighted than the passage, but absolutely destitute of
-furniture. He crossed the threshold and stood for a long moment looking
-about him. The smell which he had associated with that hot afternoon in
-the jungle came to him almost overpoweringly now, but beyond he saw a
-door with an iron-barred transom. He wanted to try that door.
-
-He had crossed halfway toward it when some subtle sense of danger brought
-him to a stop. He looked back. Nothing.
-
-Then, with a start, he looked up, into the dusky ceiling. Something was
-moving there—he stepped back, drawing in his breath with a sharp hissing
-intake of terror. He backed toward the door. It was taking shape, up
-there among some uncovered beams and pipes—a huge column that seemed to
-have come alive! Slowly it swung down in a great curve.
-
-Colonel Knight stood frozen in his tracks. It was a snake—but such a
-snake! He knew that this was no waking vision, but a horrible reality—
-
-With a choking cry, he turned and ran as he had never run before in his
-life. Behind him he heard a hissing as of sand being poured from an
-elevation into a tin pail. A box was overturned. The thing was gaining
-on him—he turned, and with bulging eyes he saw the python strung out
-along the floor, its great body undulating, its flat head raised, its
-unblinking eyes burning through the dusk.
-
-He could never make the stairs. At the left was a small door. He threw
-himself upon it and clutched the handle—it came open and, without looking
-before him, he threw himself forward. Something struck against the door
-as he jerked it shut, and he could hear that uncanny sand blast louder
-than before.
-
-Groping about him in the utter darkness of this refuge, he found a metal
-contrivance—a wheel, with a metal stem connecting it with a large iron
-pipe. He was in the closet which housed the intake of the water system.
-
-Then he remembered his revolver. It would be of little use to him against
-the horrible thing coiled outside.
-
- * * * * *
-
-When Ah Wing returned to the house, several hours later, he went quietly
-through the hall and conservatory to the door of Colonel Knight’s
-apartment.
-
-Satisfied by a brief inspection that his “guest” was not in his rooms,
-the Chinaman turned and made his way to the basement door. His face was
-as serene as usual, but his eyes shone with a metallic gleam. He opened
-the door and for a moment stood listening.
-
-An angry and prolonged _hiss_, which sounded like a great jet of steam,
-came plainly to him. He stepped into the hallway and deliberately closed
-the door behind him. Then he felt his way down the stairs, pausing within
-a few steps of the bottom to look unwinkingly about.
-
-Something was moving in the dim shadows at the farther side of the room.
-It came slowly toward him, and he could make out the undulating length of
-the python. Ah Wing’s glowing eyes rested unwaveringly on the flat, evil
-head of the great snake, which came toward him more and more slowly.
-
-With a final prolonged _hiss_, the python drew itself up into a huge
-coil. It was a tremendous creature, as large as a man’s body at its
-greatest diameter: but now it seemed to be turning slowly to stone. Its
-beady eyes grew dull, and its swaying head became rigid.
-
-A muffled cry reached the ears of the motionless Chinaman. Without the
-flicker of an eyelid, he continued to stare down at the python.
-
-Presently he descended to the foot of the stairs. The snake was still.
-
-Ah Wing crossed to the closet door and threw it open.
-
-“You can leave your retreat now, Colonel Knight,” he said. “My little
-playmate is temporarily in a condition of catalepsy—but I would not
-advise you to repeat this visit!”
-
-
-_CHAPTER SIX_
-
-LOUIE MARTIN LEARNS THE SECRET OF THE WINDOW
-
-Monte and the “Kid” went back to the city that same evening, but early
-next morning the leader of the Wolves returned to the neighborhood where
-they had picked up the trail of Colonel Knight.
-
-Monte had caught sight of a “For Rent” sign in the upper window of a
-cottage half a mile from the big house, and he wasted no time in hunting
-up the rental agent and signing a lease. By evening he had his men with
-him, and the battle lines were established for the final conflict.
-
-“We got to get all the dope on this Chink and his layout we can,” Monte
-explained to his companions, as they sat smoking in the parlor of their
-new home. “We might try to rush the house, but I don’t like the looks of
-it. Chances are that Chink’s got a machine gun or a bunch of sawed-off
-pump guns there. We’ll have to size things up.”
-
-He paused to stare at his men.
-
-“Any kicks on that? All right, it’s settled. Louie, it’s your turn for
-sentry duty, and you better get over to the Chink’s castle now. At two
-o’clock I’ll send Doc over to relieve you. You might take a look at the
-windows, and see if any of them can be handled without a saw—there may be
-some loose bars!”
-
-Louie Martin, the gem expert, was a little tallow-faced man with a
-straggling, peaked beard and shifty eyes. He had no real appetite for
-this sort of thing, but for personal reasons he was more willing than
-usual to go on duty tonight.
-
-Slipping his automatic into the holster under his arm, he struck off
-along the road toward the house of Ah Wing, whose gables were visible
-from the cottage. A light wind was blowing from the southeast, and he
-could see the mist rising over the marshes. Somewhere from the steamy air
-above a night heron screamed raucously. Involuntarily, Louie shivered.
-
-He was glad to turn his thoughts to his own immediate affairs. Louie
-Martin had made up his mind to strike out for himself. He had always
-admired Colonel Knight—or “Count von Hondon”—for the shrewd stroke of
-business he had done; and Louie was keen enough to perceive that Monte
-Jerome was not equal to the task of holding the Wolves together. At the
-present time there was open dissension among them. One of these days
-one of them would squeal on the others—that was the way this mob stuff
-usually ended.
-
-No, Louie had made up his mind to watch his chance for a crack at the
-jewels—and then a clean getaway.
-
-He reached the private road leading to the Chinaman’s house, paused for
-a moment to listen and reconnoiter, then stealthily struck into the
-grounds. Five minutes later he had skirted the west wing and was peering
-up through the shrubbery at the lighted windows of Colonel Knight’s
-apartment. Their location had been sketched for him by Monte.
-
-“So that’s where the old devil is!” thought Louie. “Let’s just have a
-look-see!”
-
-He climbed into a pepper tree—the same from which Monte and the “Kid” had
-seen Knight—and stared into the room. It was lighted, but there was no
-one in sight. Then, through a vista of open doors, he saw the man whom
-he had been sent to watch, walking slowly about with his hands clasped
-behind him, a cigar between his lips.
-
-“Had a good supper, and now he’s enjoying a smoke!” Louie mumbled
-enviously. “Well, that’s good enough for me, too! Let’s have a look at
-that window!”
-
-He slipped down from the tree and glanced about. At the corner of the
-house was a galvanized iron can, evidently used for lawn clippings. Louie
-lifted this cautiously and carried it over under the end window. Then he
-climbed upon it, raising his head cautiously till he was standing just
-beside the half-open window.
-
-A silent inspection of the bars showed him that they were all securely
-fastened, with one possible exception: the bottom bar seemed to be loose
-in its niche. Louie climbed down, changed the can over to the opposite
-side, and examined the opposite end. Sure enough, it showed a crumble of
-concrete around the bolt which was supposed to hold it in place. With the
-utmost caution, fearing that the loose bar might be connected with an
-alarm system, the crook tested it.
-
-A smile twisted his thin lips. It could be moved in and out of its niche.
-
-A sound came from somewhere close at hand; and with the speed and silence
-of a wolf Louie Martin leaped to the ground, caught up the can, and
-replaced it where he had found it. Next instant he was hidden in a clump
-of flowering shrubs.
-
-From this position he could see the top of a flight of steps leading down
-to the basement of the house of Ah Wing. He stood listening and watching,
-and presently he heard a door open and close, followed by steps ascending
-the stairs. Then some one came up out of the basement, and he saw the
-figure of a tall Chinaman walking deliberately toward the bush in which
-he was hiding. Louie reached under his coat for his pistol—
-
-Ah Wing turned, and Louie saw that he was following a graveled path. And
-he was carrying something in one hand—a contrivance of twisted wires,
-like an iron basket.
-
-As Ah Wing disappeared into the mist, Louie made up his mind. Tonight,
-after Knight had gone to bed, he would strike: he was not to be relieved
-till two o’clock, and that would give him time to put through his coup.
-But now he meant to follow Ah Wing. He needed all the information he
-could secure about the master of this silent house.
-
-The Chinaman had disappeared into the eddying mist, but Louie struck into
-the path and soon came within hearing of the crisp footsteps. Ah Wing
-reached the edge of the grounds and crossed over into a marshy field.
-
-Instinctively, the crook worked closer to the man he was shadowing. There
-was something oddly menacing about this night, with its mist and its
-fitful, salt-laden wind.
-
-Suddenly through the swirling fog there appeared a light, which seemed to
-be suspended ten feet or so above the ground. It was moving slowly along
-in front of them—a murky light, like a blood-red mist.
-
-Then Louie saw that it was the light suspended from the mast of a boat,
-and that the boat itself was moving slowly along before them, almost
-hidden by the banks of the canal. The tide must be out, he thought.
-
-Ah Wing swung on through the night, and presently the man following him
-made out the silhouette of a building, perched above the canal. Louie
-slunk cautiously forward and saw that the boat, whose lantern he had
-previously observed, was making fast at that wharf.
-
-Ah Wing leaped lightly to the sunken deck and disappeared down the
-companionway. Before Louie could decide what he was to do, the Chinaman
-reappeared and climbed back to the wharf. Louie had just time to slip
-into the shelter of a group of piling when the Chinaman passed the corner
-of the building.
-
-And in his hand was another of the wire contrivances, filled with
-squirming, squeaking rats!
-
-The white man felt his stomach doing queer antics. He had heard of
-Chinamen eating rats. Was that what this fellow was up to? What else
-could he want with them?
-
-Ah Wing walked swiftly, and the man behind kept as close as he dared.
-Again they entered the grounds surrounding the big house, and the
-Oriental crossed to the basement stairs and went down. Louie paused in
-the bushes.
-
-“I’m going to gamble,” he whispered suddenly to himself. “I’ll just sneak
-down those steps, and if he tries to come out before I can duck, I’ll
-bean him! I want to know what he’s up to!”
-
-Stealthily, he approached the steps. All that he could see was a murky
-hole, into which the cement stairs disappeared. A step at a time he made
-his way down—
-
-And then he paused, holding himself bent forward, rigid as a man of
-stone. From beyond the door which opened out of this pit came a strange
-sound, the like of which he had never before heard. It was like a jet of
-steam, or like sand sifting into a tin pail from a considerable height.
-
-Then came another sound—the sing-song voice of the Chinaman, crooning
-something in a rhythmic chant. Louie could not understand the words, but
-there was a swing and lilt to the thing that had a curious effect on him:
-_he felt as if he were being rocked to sleep_.
-
-He threw off this mood with a start. There had come another sound—the
-squealing of many rats. And there was a grating noise, as if a heavy
-body were dragging itself about the floor. The rat chorus swelled. The
-creatures evidently had been turned loose, and were racing about the
-floor in an agony of terror.
-
-The chorus thinned. Something was happening to them. Presently the last
-of the rats emitted one long, agonized squeal, and was still.
-
-Louie Martin made his way out of the cellarway and hurried dizzily back
-to the shelter of the bushes. He didn’t know what had been happening
-behind that horrible door, but he knew that it was something which turned
-his flesh to ice. A strange smell had come to him from under the door—
-
-Louie noted with relief that the lights in Colonel Knight’s rooms had
-been snapped off. That meant that the Colonel had gone to bed. Soon he
-would be sleeping, and then Louie could put his plan into execution—that
-would enable him to forget this baffling but vaguely horrible experience.
-
-Somehow, he felt as if great unseen creatures were flying about him,
-striking at him with black, featherless wings. The air seemed to be in
-motion.
-
-He caught himself firmly.
-
-“Got to cut it out!” he mumbled under his breath. “Getting dippy! Likely
-to bite somebody! Got to think about something else!”
-
-He began to think about the jewels; and then his mind shifted, and he
-was thinking of the woman from whom he and his companions had stolen the
-pendant. She had been called “Mother of the Friendless.” The jewels had
-been given to her by a rich patron, to assist in the work of providing
-for the many who were dependent on her for charity.
-
-The wolves had done a clever bit of work that time. They had caught the
-jewels while they were in process of transfer from the original owner to
-the old woman—
-
-Another tangent. Louie was thinking with cold amusement of the fate of
-Madam Celia, the “Mother of the Friendless.” Luck had turned against
-her, with the loss of the jewels. Others who had helped her in her
-earlier years had turned away after that—as if the old woman had suffered
-contamination by accepting this gift, bequeathed by a certain rather
-notorious beauty whose affairs had upset thrones and dynasties.
-
-Yes, a very good joke on the old woman. And she had died in abject
-poverty. That was the way that sort of thing went, Louie realized. One
-was really a fool to do anything for anyone but one’s self.
-
-A sound came through the half-open window of Colonel Knight’s suite—and
-again Louie Martin grinned. The master crook, who had stolen the jewels
-from the “Mother of the Friendless,” was now about to pass them on—only
-he didn’t know it!
-
-Louie brought the metal barrel over under the window and set it, bottom
-up, so as to form a secure means of approach to the room beyond. He had
-thrown off his depression now. But he must work fast.
-
-Cautiously, he stepped upon the barrel and raised his hands to the bottom
-bar. Twisting it slowly and at the same time pulling, he drew both bar
-and bolts from their sockets and tossed them to the ground. He wanted to
-laugh! So this was the wisdom of a Chinaman? He might have known!
-
-There was a stone coping a couple of feet above the top of the thing on
-which he stood. Louie rested his foot on this coping and laid his hands
-on the sill. Lightly he drew himself up against the face of the wall.
-
-He paused to listen. The man within was breathing heavily and regularly.
-
-Louie thrust his head through the opening—nothing in sight to alarm him.
-Then, with a quick spring, he threw his weight upon the sill and was
-halfway through the window—
-
-Half-way, but no farther; for as his weight descended fully upon the
-sill, the upper sash crashed down like the lever of a great engine. The
-thief cried out once, a hideous, choking cry that echoed through the room
-and on into the house of Ah Wing.
-
-Then he was silent, drooping there like one who has been broken on the
-wheel. Blood dripped from his mouth and nostrils, and he had ceased to
-breathe. He was caught like a huge rat in a trap!
-
-
-_CHAPTER SEVEN_
-
-THE DEAD MAN SPEAKS
-
-Somewhere beyond the mist-enshrouded marshes the whistle of a grain ship
-boomed, to be answered a moment later by the metallic scream of a siren.
-Vague and mysterious filaments of sound drifted in with the eddying night
-wind.
-
-“Damn such a country!” the “Kid” snarled, as he turned from the door and
-tramped back into the house. “How long you going to keep us rusticating
-out here, Chief? I’m fed up on nature!”
-
-Monte Jerome scowled at his assistant.
-
-“We’re going to stay here till we get what we came for!” he replied. “If
-Martin doesn’t show up by morning, we got to decide what he’s up to!”
-
-An uncanny silence gripped the four Wolves. Nearly twenty-four hours had
-passed since Louie Martin went on duty, and nothing had been heard from
-him. An uncomfortable idea was developing in the minds of the various
-members of the “mob.”
-
-Suddenly the “Kid” voiced this general suspicion. With a snarl, he
-pointed accusingly at Monte.
-
-“Fact is, Louie ain’t coming back, Chief, and you know it! He’s grabbed
-something—maybe the sparklers—and he’s beat it. Don’t blame him a damn
-bit, neither. We’re going to set around here with our mouths open till
-the dicks get after us. But Louie ain’t coming back, and you just put
-that down in your note-book!”
-
-Monte turned toward the speaker.
-
-“Is that your opinion, you lump-head? Well, keep it till I ask you for
-it. The trouble with you is you’ve been thinking of cutting loose,
-yourself. Louie will show up all right. Don’t you worry about him.”
-
-“Hell of a lot you know about it!” mumbled the “Kid” angrily.
-
-Monte walked slowly toward him, his eyes blazing.
-
-“Trying to start something?” he demanded. “If you are—”
-
-The Strangler intervened at this critical moment. He and the “Kid” had
-had a disagreement earlier in the evening when the latter moved into
-the room left vacant by Louie Martin’s unexplained absence. This was a
-ground-floor room with an abundance of light and sun, and the “Kid,” with
-a loose-lipped grin, announced that his doctor had told him he ought to
-have it. The Strangler had protested; but the “Kid” had possession, and
-made it plain that he meant to hang on.
-
-Now the Strangler sided maliciously with Monte.
-
-“You’re always belly-aching about something, Kid,” he declared. “You
-better lay off and give us a rest. The Chief knows what he is doing!”
-
-Monte paused, thankful for this opportune intervention. He had made
-up his mind to square account with the “Kid” just as soon as the real
-business which held them together was finished, but a show-down now would
-be dangerous to the success of the larger affair.
-
-“Let’s cut it all out, boys!” he suggested pacifically. “I’ll go on duty
-up to two o’clock. Doc, you set the alarm. You’ll relieve me. I’ll try to
-find out something—that Chink may have grabbed Louie. We ought to know
-what has happened before we pull anything!”
-
-He nodded to the others and left the house. The three crooks settled
-down to their usual evening: the “Kid” got out a deck of cards and began
-to play a one-handed game of his own devising; Billy the Strangler drew
-his chair over in front of the fireplace and adjusted his feet on the
-mantle—in this position he would smoke and stare into the coals till he
-grew sleepy—and “Doc” took from the table an illustrated magazine and
-turned to the serial he was reading. Occasionally he glanced covertly at
-one of his companions: “Doc” sensed the coming battle between these two
-gunmen, and had no intention of being caught within the firing lines.
-
-The wind freshened, and they could hear it wailing around the house and
-through the upper windows. The window in the “Kid’s” room rattled and
-banged, and he looked abstractedly up.
-
-“Hell of a night!” he mumbled. “Sounds like all the dead men in this neck
-of the woods was hanging around outside, wheezing to be took in by the
-fire! Listen to that window rattle!”
-
-The Strangler smoked on imperturbably.
-
-From somewhere in the house above there came a sound—low and uncertain at
-first, then rising to a sort of scream. The “Kid” threw down his cards
-and staggered to his feet. The Strangler hauled his long legs down from
-the mantle and reached under his coat for the handle of his automatic.
-“Doc” turned pale—he was too sophisticated to be superstitious, but this
-unearthly cry was a fact rather than a theory.
-
-“What the devil was that?” the “Kid” demanded hoarsely. “Say, if that was
-one of them birds—”
-
-“That must have been it!” “Doc” decided aloud. “A night heron, blown
-against the chimney! What a night to be out in!”
-
-He shivered and picked up his magazine, but the zest had gone out of his
-reading. From the corners of his eyes he observed that the “Kid” was
-gathering up his cards, and that Billy had not again elevated his feet to
-the mantle.
-
-“Well, I guess I’ll be going to _my_ room,” the “Kid” drawled presently,
-emphasizing the possessive pronoun to tantalize the Strangler. “Kind of
-feel like a little snooze would take the wrinkles out of my brains. This
-place sure does give me the willies!”
-
-He slouched into the hall communicating with the back rooms—a kitchen and
-his bedroom—and they heard him shuffling through the darkness. Following
-a moment of silence, his voice sounded in a steady mumble. Then it was
-raised in expostulation.
-
-“Who the hell has been fooling with my light? It won’t turn on!”
-
-Another brief interval of silence, then a bellow of rage and fear from
-the man in the back bedroom.
-
-“Who’s there? Go way from me! Damn—”
-
-They leaped up at the sound of the “Kid’s” stumbling gallop. He burst
-into the room, and they saw that his face was the color of ashes.
-
-“For God’s sake, who’s in that room—my room?” he cried, staring at them
-through straining, glassy eyes. “Come on, you fellows! Here, I’ll take a
-flashlight—the globe must be burned out!”
-
-He snatched up an electric torch and led the way back through the hall,
-the Strangler at his shoulder, “Doc” some distance behind.
-
-“Someone let out a groan when I went inside the door,” the “Kid” was
-explaining. “And then he says right in my ear, ‘This ain’t your room,
-Kid!’ Listen!”
-
-They were within five feet of the bedroom door when the “Kid” paused and
-held up a trembling hand. He was directing the light of the torch upon
-the doorway. And at that moment there came from it a groan, followed by a
-muttered protest.
-
-“_My room!_” a voice within the room said distinctly.
-
-“Holy Mother!” whispered the Strangler. “That sounds like Louie! He must
-be hurt!”
-
-“How in hell would he get in there?” protested the “Kid.” “Come on—let’s
-see!”
-
-They stepped inside the room, and the ray of the flashlight began to
-circle it. Suddenly the circling beam came to a stop.
-
-“In the bed!” gasped the “Kid.” “He’s there, covered up!”
-
-Slowly and unwillingly, an inch at a time as if drawn by some
-irresistible force, the three Wolves crossed the room and approached the
-bed. They could all see the huddled form lying there, covered even to
-the face. There was something about it—an utter absence of motion—that
-terrified them. But they could not turn back.
-
-The “Kid” reached the bedside and for a long moment stood glaring down.
-Then, with shaking fingers, he caught the edge of the bedding and threw
-it back.
-
-In the concentrated light of the lantern, there stared up at them the
-livid face of Louie Martin. His glazed eyes protruded, and there was
-a trickle of blood running from his nostril to the left corner of his
-mouth. And in his face was an expression of frozen horror which stopped
-the hearts even of the hardened crooks who looked down in momentary
-paralysis.
-
-With a scream, the “Kid” dropped the lantern and turned, treading upon
-the toes of the Strangler. Another scream sounded, high and shrill—it
-came from the direction of the bed.
-
-“Why can’t you let me rest?” a quavering voice protested. “This is my
-room—”
-
-They heard no more. The three swore and sobbed as they raced for the
-front room. They slammed doors behind them, and brought up, shaking as if
-in ague, directly under the big, brilliantly lighted chandelier.
-
-“Somebody bumped him off—and he came back to tell us about it!” the “Kid”
-whispered.
-
-
-_CHAPTER EIGHT_
-
-AH WING LISTENS IN
-
-“He’s certainly good and dead!” Monte said, as he stood looking down at
-the body of Louie Martin. “Whatever they did to him, it was a plenty!
-But you boys must be a little bilious—you can see for yourselves that he
-hasn’t been doing any talking for some time. What you heard was the wind,
-blowing around the corners of the house!”
-
-The “Kid” drew the back of his hand across his glistening forehead. He
-was standing near the door.
-
-“Don’t kid yourself, Chief!” he snarled. “We heard him talk—all of us
-did! And there’s another thing: us being bilious wouldn’t account for
-Louie Martin walking in on us here, and climbing into that bed!”
-
-Monte was staring down at the dead man.
-
-“You say you heard the windows back here rattling earlier in the
-evening?” he demanded.
-
-“Sure. Why wouldn’t they? The whole house was rattling!”
-
-Monte nodded. He had his own ideas on this subject, but he didn’t intend
-to spread them before his already demoralized followers.
-
-“Well, the thing we’ve got to decide is what we’re going to do with him,”
-he commented. “We’ve got to handle the whole business ourselves, and say
-nothing. We can’t afford to have the dicks asking questions around here
-just now!”
-
-Tacitly, Monte’s three companions agreed, but there was in their pale
-faces a question which none of them had the courage to voice. Monte
-continued, apparently unconscious of their emotions.
-
-“Billy,” he said, “you get the spade and dig a grave over close to the
-fence. After we get him planted, we’ll move that pile of old bean poles
-over the place. It’s kind of tough, but Louie is dead—and we got to look
-out for ourselves!”
-
-The Strangler went silently out into the dark. They heard him rummaging
-for a spade, and presently the _clink_ of the latter implement came
-industriously to them. The grave was finished by the time the first gray
-light of dawn began to filter down around the cottage, and presently
-the body of the dead crook, wrapped in a blanket, was lowered into it.
-Then the dirt was shoveled back till the cavity would hold no more, and
-the superfluous earth was scattered over the surface of the garden. The
-shifting of a pile of bean poles finished the ceremony.
-
-“I’ll trade rooms with you, Kid,” Monte said to the saturnine strong-arm
-man—who for once looked rather cowed. “I never was afraid of a dead
-man—just so that he was really dead. I guess you’re kind of soured on
-that part of the house!”
-
-“Soured is right,” mumbled the “Kid.” “Say, I wouldn’t sleep in there
-if you was to give me all the sparklers in New York! Just let me get my
-stuff out!”
-
-As he went back toward the room from which the body had recently been
-removed, the “Kid” saw the mocking glance of the Strangler fastened
-upon him. Billy was enjoying his discomfiture. He went into the room
-and turned on the light—the burned-out bulb had been replaced, so that
-now he was able to see into all the corners. He began to gather up his
-property, staring nervously about him the while.
-
-Cautiously, he approached the closet, where he had stored his bathrobe
-and an extra suit, a couple of pairs of shoes and a pearl gray hat. He
-opened the door wide and stepped back. Nothing inside. Hastily he carted
-the clothing out. Then he crossed over to the bureau and opened the
-left-hand upper drawer, in which he had placed his jewelry—some rings and
-tie pins.
-
-The “Kid” drew the drawer fully open and stood looking down into it. Then
-a startled exclamation escaped him, and he bent nearer, staring wide-eyed.
-
-All of his possessions were there; but in addition he saw, close to the
-back of the drawer, a morocco covered box of peculiar design. The “Kid”
-had seen that box once before!
-
-With trembling fingers he undid the clasp and opened the lid. He could
-feel his heart pounding in the top of his head, and his throat seemed
-to contract, so that he fought for breath. The Resurrection Pendant! A
-single glance convinced him of that. But how had it come into this drawer?
-
-The “Kid’s” mind deviated from the line of this natural inquiry. He could
-forget that for the moment—the fact was that here it was. But there was
-no reason why he should share this discovery with the other Wolves. This
-supreme good fortune had come to him, not to them! He quickly shut the
-lid of the case and slid the box into an inside pocket.
-
-He removed his property to Monte’s room, hiding the jewel case under the
-mattress. His blood had turned to liquid fire. He had that for which they
-had all been searching—and it was his alone!...
-
-Monte went on guard that evening, taking “Doc” with him: not that Monte
-was afraid, but he realized that the battle had now entered its final
-and decisive phase. And it was real war. Monte Jerome had no doubt that
-Martin had, in some mysterious way, been done to death in the house of Ah
-Wing.
-
-“You boys better get to bed early,” he said. “Billy, you take the clock
-and set it for half past one. You wake the Kid as soon as you get
-up—we’ll stand double guard from now on!”
-
-The “Kid” hardly heard Monte speaking. He wanted to examine the jewels
-again, wanted to figure out just how he was going to make the break which
-would free him from his comrades.
-
-For a time, after the other two had departed, he sat around smoking and
-cleaning out the barrel of his pistol, which the fogs of this marshy
-neighborhood were corroding. He cleaned barrel and chamber and oiled the
-action, then replaced the clip of cartridges and slipped the gun into a
-side pocket.
-
-“Well,” he mumbled, half aloud, “I guess I’ll be getting to bed. An’ I
-hope to God there won’t be no voices around here tonight!”
-
-The Strangler grunted, and the “Kid” slouched off up the stairs and into
-the room that had been Monte’s. He closed the door carefully, crossed
-over to the light, and then stood listening.
-
-The night wind was stirring around the house, whistling and moaning down
-the chimney; but the “Kid” had an antidote for fear tonight: he went
-over to his bed and fumbled for the jewels. The touch of the smooth
-leather-covered box started his heart to pounding.
-
-He laid the box on the bed and opened it. The light was reflected into
-his eyes from a thousand sharp facets, crimson and blue and white—but
-perhaps the charm was wearing off: the stones did not look as wonderful
-to him tonight as they had in that momentary view he had caught during
-the afternoon.
-
-“And that’s the bunch of sparklers men go dippy about!” the “Kid”
-mumbled. “Hell, I wouldn’t give two bits for the whole bunch, if I
-couldn’t sell ’em! There’s too many of ’em, and they don’t shine so
-terrible much! I saw a big buck nigger on State Street once with a
-solitaire on that would have made them look phoney—and it was glass! Oh,
-well, I should worry. I ain’t going to wear ’em—I’m going to _sell_ ’em!
-I’ll have to play safe—”
-
-At the ghost of a sound from behind, the “Kid” whirled. He had left the
-door closed, but now it was open—and the Strangler stood inside the room,
-grinning.
-
-“So, that was the game!” he cried. “You’re a slick one, Kid, but you
-ain’t slick enough. I been watching you all evening. You ain’t yourself,
-old timer. You’re getting nervous. But I don’t wonder! You grabbed the
-sparklers, but how you done it I don’t know. And you was going to hold
-’em out, was you? Well, well—”
-
-The “Kid’s” lips jerked up into a wolfish smile, but he forced himself
-to go slow. He needed to think this thing out. He knew the Wolves well
-enough to be sure they would hold this affair against him, and sooner
-or later would try to play even. No use to try to explain—they wouldn’t
-understand.
-
-The Strangler was watching him through chilly eyes. Casually, the Kid’s
-hand stole toward his side pocket. Instantly the man standing before him
-acted: with a bellow of rage he jerked out his own hand, which he had
-been holding under his coat: swinging it up he fired, then struck at the
-light globe with the smoking barrel.
-
-To the “Kid” there came the sensation of suffocation and of darkness.
-His own gun was out, but his enemy had disappeared—and he himself was
-sprawled across the bed. That instant of falling had not registered in
-his consciousness: he had been standing, and now he was down; that was
-all he knew.
-
-And he was fighting for breath—a great weight seemed to be crushing in
-his chest. He raised his left hand and gropingly explored the front of
-his shirt: it was already saturated, and from a hole to the left of his
-breast bone more blood was coming in a pulsing current.
-
-“The dirty dog!” muttered the “Kid” thickly, pulling himself erect by
-grasping the foot of the bed. “He’s croaked me—”
-
-Then suddenly the “Kid’s” whirling senses cleared. Billy the Strangler
-had done for him; but he would send Billy on ahead, to tell St. Peter he
-was coming! His yellow teeth came together. He felt something welling up
-in his throat and spat out a mouthful of blood.
-
-“Not—much—time—left!” he muttered.
-
-He dropped to his knees and for a moment everything went blank. Then he
-mastered himself, by a superhuman effort: and began to crawl stealthily
-along toward the dimly-lighted panel of the door. The Strangler had run
-out there after firing—now, undoubtedly, he was waiting till it should
-be safe for him to come back for his booty!
-
-Slowly, the dying crook dragged himself across to the door and out into
-the hall. The training of a lifetime stood him in good stead now: he was
-as soundless as a shadow. He reached the top of the stairs and paused,
-leaning for a moment against the banisters—everything was going black
-before him. Then he pulled himself together with a disregard for his own
-suffering that in a better cause would have been heroic.
-
-Inch by inch, he drew himself forward till he was sitting on the top step
-of the stair. He peered down into the lighted rooms below. Ah! There he
-was! The Strangler stood beyond the big chandelier in the front room, the
-“Kid” could see him plainly through an open door. His face was smiling,
-the crooked smile of a shark.
-
-Resting his automatic across his bent knees, the “Kid” took steady aim at
-the man who had done for him.
-
-“A little higher than the pockets!” he told himself, repeating the old
-gunman’s formula for a killing shot.
-
-Next moment the pistol roared; and the man standing down there in the
-light jerked up his hands and staggered backward. Greedily, the “Kid’s”
-fast glazing eyes drank in every detail of the Strangler’s agony. He knew
-what that look meant—
-
-Billy the Strangler began to pivot on his heels, staring with blind eyes
-into space.
-
-“Where is he?” he cried. “Damn your soul and body—you—”
-
-He pitched forward to his face. And the “Kid,” leaning peacefully back,
-felt himself snatched up into a great red cloud that has descended out of
-the roof upon him.
-
- * * * * *
-
-In an upper room in the house of Ah Wing, the Chinaman sat at an
-instrument that resembled a telephone switchboard. There were on its
-surface eight little globes, each with a plug socket beneath.
-
-Ah Wing had an operator’s head-piece in position, and he seemed to be
-listening attentively to something that came to him over the wires.
-
-There had been voices, loud and angry. He heard the Strangler denouncing
-the “Kid.” Then came the shot—and silence.
-
-Ah Wing waited an appreciable time, then shifted the plug from socket
-to socket. Not a sound from any of the rooms in the distant cottage. He
-returned the plug to its central position and waited.
-
-Presently another shot sounded, and a scream. He heard the Strangler
-curse his enemy.
-
-Without a word, Ah Wing removed the head-piece and glanced up at a chart
-fastened to the wall before him. It contained the names of five men,
-against one of which a black cross had been inscribed.
-
-Now he picked up a pencil and filled in two additional crosses.
-
-There were but two of the Wolves left!
-
-_This Fascinating Story Has An Amazing Climax. It Will Be Concluded in
-the Next Issue of WEIRD TALES. Tell Your Newsdealer To Reserve Your
-Copy._
-
-
-
-
-Snatched from the Grave, Woman Tells of Death
-
-
-A weird adventure befell Mrs. Rafaela Mercurio, an Omaha woman who, after
-apparently dying, awoke in the land of the living instead of the spirit
-world. After her physician had pronounced her dead, her life was restored
-by an injection of adrenalin, administered by Dr. W. A. Gerrie.
-
-To all outward appearance, she was quite dead. There was no indication of
-breathing or heart action. Prayers for the dead were started in the bed
-chamber where her body lay.
-
-Then Dr. Gerrie injected the gland extract in her heart, and after
-several days she showed signs of returning life. Upon regaining
-consciousness, she was confused and puzzled, uncertain, it seemed,
-whether she was alive or dead. Later she described her strange experience.
-
-“I could feel death pulling me,” she said. “I was slipping. I tried to
-find something to hold to, but could not. I felt far away and alone, yet
-it seemed there was something I must do before I slipped entirely away.
-
-“I had just a few minutes. I must straighten out in bed. I must cross
-my hands on my breast. I must smile. My children must know that I died
-in peace. From far away there seemed to be people around me. But their
-voices grew more distant.
-
-“Then there seemed to come to me the comforting words of a priest. They
-added to my peace and content. I was ready for death. I smiled, I think.
-I know I wanted to. It was the last thing I remember.”
-
-And then, days after the first injection of adrenalin, the “dead” woman
-regained consciousness. It was four o’clock in the afternoon.
-
-“I shall never forget that hour,” she said. “I heard the clock strike
-four times—and I realized I was a living person in a living world.”
-
-
-
-
-_A Fanciful Novel of the Red Desert Complete In This Issue_
-
-DESERT MADNESS
-
-_By_ HAROLD FREEMAN MINERS
-
-
-_CHAPTER ONE_
-
-THE GIRL AND THE HANDCUFFS
-
-[Illustration]
-
-For a long moment the man surveyed with tired eyes the queer cleft in the
-canon wall and the beaten trail that led into it.
-
-Finally he addressed the nearest of his two burros in a listless, half
-humorous voice:
-
-“Well, Archibald, it looks interesting—what say we try it?”
-
-Archibald made no reply. Archibald was asleep. Immediately upon the
-halting of the little cavalcade the burro had sunk into a state of
-dejection more apathetic than usual and had promptly gone to sleep. In
-fact, it is doubtful if Archibald had not been asleep the greater part of
-the afternoon.
-
-“You don’t care, eh, Archibald? Well, for that matter, neither do I. But
-let’s consider this matter, old timer. For the last hundred years, more
-or less, we’ve been strolling around this accursed desert, and we have
-made the acquaintance of a few cottontail rabbits, one or two coyotes,
-and a rattlesnake. The rabbits showed their distaste for our society
-by running away; the coyotes did nothing but deride us with mournful
-voices; the rattlesnake certainly showed no desire to be friendly. We’ve
-met no human being; we’ve discovered no fabulously rich gold mine; we’ve
-had our fill of scenery.
-
-“There lies a well-beaten trail, disappearing into the face of solid
-rock. At its end lies mystery, adventure. Possibly romance. Also,
-possibly, cattle rustlers, who may greet us with anything but enthusiasm.
-In which case we’ll throw in our lot with them, and I’ll ride you across
-the desert to eternal glory. The idea intrigues me, Archibald. I think we
-shall investigate.”
-
-At this moment an over-industrious flea must have launched a determined
-attack on one of the few vulnerable parts of Archibald’s anatomy, for he
-suddenly nodded his head vigorously.
-
-“Ah, you agree with me? I knew you would. We will now follow the trail to
-adventure—or a sheep herder’s camp. Let’s go!”
-
-Percy, the second burro, was with difficulty herded into the narrow
-trail. Archibald followed him with great reluctance, but finally the man
-succeeded in driving his tiny pack train into concerted action, and they
-slowly trudged up the narrow defile.
-
-Stanley Ross had been exiled to the desert country because certain
-eminent New York doctors had come to the conclusion that he had
-contracted a disease which yields itself to treatment most readily in the
-dry desert uplands.
-
-Ross had not been breathing the dry air of the desert for a month before
-he was as healthy as a prize fighter. The fact was that Stanley Ross
-had over-indulged in a certain pastime known as “reading the tape,” and
-Nature had gone on a strike. The New York doctors had provided the first
-step toward recovery; the desert had done the rest.
-
-But there had been another hurt that had not healed so readily—or at
-least Ross had so convinced himself. Stanley Ross fondly believed that he
-was heart-broken. The cause was a blonde bit of New York femininity who
-had fancied Ross for a while, but in the end had fancied the millions of
-an oil man more.
-
-So he had stayed on in the West. A healthy restlessness had driven him
-out to explore the uncharted wastes of the vast Red Desert, and the ever
-changing wonders of rock, and sand, and sky, of sagebrush and cactus, of
-sparkling night-heavens had beckoned him on. For months now he had been
-wandering up and down this immeasurable wonderland, obeying every vagary
-of mind, exploring every nook and cranny that caught his itinerant fancy,
-his only companions the two burros which he had so whimsically named.
-
-Mirages had beckoned. Colors so bizarre that no artist had dared to give
-them to canvas had soothed his soul. Grotesqueries of rock and sand and
-canon had intrigued him.
-
-Ross still believed that the old hurt was still present in his bosom.
-Actually he had been having a capital time for months, and the girl no
-longer mattered. However, he had allowed himself gradually to fall into
-a state of whimsical melancholy. What he needed was adventure. He was
-bored, but had he known what lay at the end of the thin twisting trail
-before him his boredom might not have been so acute.
-
-The rock defile, through which the trail led, was narrow, and the walls
-were nearly perpendicular. The passage was twisting, but a tiny trickle
-of water gave promise of a broader canon farther up. The trail, while
-very narrow, was well-defined and worn deep. It looked as though it had
-been in constant use for years.
-
-Ross had progressed along this strange passage for about a quarter mile
-when his attention was suddenly arrested by something on the canon wall.
-Involuntarily, he stopped. Instantly the burros halted as though their
-motive power was automatically turned off whenever their master stopped
-walking.
-
-“Great Horned Toads!” ejaculated Ross in a low voice. “Archibald, do you
-see what I see, or has the sun gone to my head? Has the world slipped
-back three centuries, or is it actually nineteen-twenty-three? ’Tain’t
-possible, Archibald, but nevertheless I see what I see!”
-
-There, not thirty feet distant, was a girl—a pretty girl—and she was
-shackled to four great iron rings, fastened in the canon wall, by means
-of handcuffs, ankle fetters, and four heavy chains!
-
-
-_CHAPTER TWO_
-
-BROKEN SHACKLES AND A MYSTERY
-
-Ross stood spellbound. He could not believe his own eyes.
-
-That he should meet a human being in this vast waste of rock and sand and
-cactus was possible. That he should find a girl chained to a rock, like a
-felon of the black ages, was nothing short of incredible.
-
-There was no denying the girl’s existence, however. She was there, and
-she was in need of help.
-
-His incredulity shattered, Ross was beside the girl in a bound. Even a
-cursory glance showed her to be undeniably pretty, and it also showed her
-to be quite as undeniably in a state of total exhaustion.
-
-At Ross’s approach, the girl raised her head with difficulty. Her eyes
-opened and she smiled slowly. Then her whole body suddenly fell forward
-against the chains that held her. She had fainted.
-
-No stranger situation could be imagined than the finding of a beautiful
-girl chained to a rock in the midst of the great Red Desert. This,
-however, was a matter for future consideration. The girl needed immediate
-attention, and Ross’s first thought was to release her.
-
-When he examined her shackles Ross realized that release was not going to
-be easy. The four rings to which the chains were fastened were secured to
-the canon wall by means of heavy iron staples driven deep into fissures
-in the rock. A test of strength showed that nothing short of a charge of
-dynamite would ever loosen them.
-
-The chains were comparatively heavy and well forged. A file was the only
-solution—and Ross did not possess a file.
-
-Not till he examined the handcuffs did he see any hope of releasing
-the girl. These were not of the ordinary type. They were not the steel
-manacles of the sort used today, but were about two inches wide, heavy in
-construction and made of cast iron. The locking device was old-fashioned.
-They were a type of handcuff that had been obsolete for nearly three
-quarters of a century.
-
-Having satisfied himself that they were really made of cast iron, Ross
-at once realized that it would be a comparatively easy task to free the
-girl. Securing a small rock for a hammer, he braced the girl back against
-the canon wall and held her wrist against the rock. A few well directed
-blows with the improvised hammer easily cracked the rusty cast iron and
-the handcuff fell away in two pieces.
-
-The girl’s wrist had been freed without more than slightly bruising the
-skin. The second handcuff was broken quite as easily. Ross gently lowered
-the girl to the ground.
-
-Releasing her ankles was more difficult. The anklets were of heavier
-construction and harder to break without injuring the girl. However, by
-placing a rock under the anklet and being careful, Ross finally managed
-to shatter the cast iron without more than bruising the girl’s slender
-ankles.
-
-In an instant he had jerked the pack from one of the burros and spread
-his blanket roll out on the ground. Picking up the unconscious girl, he
-placed her on the blankets and improvised a pillow from his coat.
-
-Almost opposite where the girl had been chained the tiny trickle of water
-had formed a miniature pool in the rocks. Seizing a tin cup from his camp
-outfit, Ross hurried to this pool, scooped up a cup of water, and in an
-instant was kneeling at the girl’s side.
-
-Dipping his fingers in the water, he flicked it across her face, then
-carefully bathed her forehead, and then set to chafing her wrists.
-
-It was fully ten minutes before the girl showed any evidence of returning
-consciousness. Then her eyelids began to flutter. Finally she sighed
-deeply, and her eyes slowly opened.
-
-Stanley Ross thought he had never seen such a look of abject terror as
-now appeared in the girl’s eyes. It was as though she had just awakened
-from a terrible dream and was still laboring under its terrorizing
-influence. Such a look might have appeared in the eyes of a slave girl
-when Nero ruled in Rome.
-
-For a moment, consciousness battled with that nightmare that had been
-seething through the girl’s brain and finally won. Her eyes opened wide.
-A half smile slowly crossed her face. Whatever might have inspired her
-terror, the girl evidently recognized in Ross a friend.
-
-Her lips, dry and parched, moved with difficulty, but Ross saw that they
-framed the word “Water!”
-
-Lifting her head, he dampened the girl’s lips from the cup and then
-allowed her to drink her fill. But weakness still held sway over her
-body, and she sank back on the blankets, exhausted. Her eyes closed again.
-
-“Don’t try to talk,” advised Ross. “You just lie there and rest until I
-fix something for you. Then you can tell me about this thing.”
-
-For once in his life, Ross was glad that he had taken another man’s
-advice. When he had started his desert pilgrimage an old prospector
-had advised him to include a few cans of soup in his outfit. Ross had
-demurred, seeing no use in packing superfluous weight, but the old desert
-rat had insisted.
-
-Ross had included the soup. So far, he had had no use for it, but now it
-was to show its worth.
-
-Collecting a few dry sticks from the stubby willows that grew around the
-pool, Ross soon had a tiny fire going. Opening a can of soup, he heated
-it over the fire and carried a cup of it to the girl.
-
-“Oh, that’s so good!” she murmured after she had drained the cup. “Thank
-you.”
-
-“Do you feel like talking?” asked Ross.
-
-For a moment the girl regarded him with frank eyes. Then she shook her
-head wearily.
-
-“Not—not just yet—please. I’m—so—tired.” She sank back onto the blankets.
-
-Realizing that, for the present, rest was the most important thing for
-her, Ross covered the girl with a blanket and set about his camp duties.
-
-He finished unpacking his burros and turned them loose to pick at the
-scanty tufts of grass that grew along the seeping stream. This done, he
-set about preparing his own meal.
-
-It was already dusk, and by the time he had cooked and eaten his supper
-darkness had settled down over the little canon. Washing his few dishes
-in the pool, Ross set them aside and turned his attention to finding
-enough firewood to keep the fire going.
-
-In the darkness this was somewhat of a task, and Ross was absent from the
-camp for some little time. When he returned he saw that his strange guest
-had evidently fallen asleep.
-
-Ross threw some wood on the fire and sat down with his back against a
-rock. Filling his pipe, he lighted it and leaned back to contemplate the
-events of the afternoon and evening.
-
-His first mental reaction on finding the girl had been one of intense
-rage that any one, no matter what the cause or conditions, could be so
-utterly inhuman as to perpetrate such an act. He was still angry now, but
-he had cooled off to the extent that he could consider the affair calmly.
-
-There seemed to be no off-hand explanation whatever. As far as Ross knew,
-there was no human habitation in all this desert waste, yet this trail up
-the little canon had been used frequently and recently, so somewhere up
-the winding trail must lie a solution to the mystery. But what it could
-be, or whether he could ever solve it, Ross could not imagine.
-
-The whole affair was grotesque, bizarre. Why any one should chain a young
-girl to a rock wall in the midst of a heat-scorched desert was utterly
-incomprehensible. The girl was not gross or criminal-looking. On the
-contrary, she was pretty, delicate, and obviously refined. Her clothes
-bespoke a far different environment. How any one could be so inhuman as
-to subject her to such treatment was unfathomable.
-
-Sitting there, smoking and watching the girl, mulling the strangeness of
-the affair over in his mind, Ross could offer himself no explanation. The
-only thing to do, apparently, was to wait for the girl to awaken and
-then wait for her to talk.
-
-At any rate, the adventure which he had craved seemed to be at hand.
-Where it would lead him he had no idea.
-
-The fire gradually burned low. The girl slept on. Ross removed the pipe
-from his mouth. His head nodded. In half an hour the campfire had wasted
-to an ember.
-
-The man’s head had sunk forward onto his breast; his body had relaxed
-comfortably against its support. He, too, was asleep.
-
-Hours crept by....
-
-With a start, Ross awoke. The first faint glow of dawn was creeping down
-into the little canon. It was morning.
-
-Sheepishly, Ross rubbed his eyes, aware that he had allowed the healthy
-fatigue of a day in the desert to conquer his senses and bring sleep when
-he had intended to watch throughout the night.
-
-Gradually the events of the evening before came back to him, and he
-looked across to where he had wrapped the girl in his blankets. The bed
-was empty!
-
-_The girl was gone!_
-
-
-_CHAPTER THREE_
-
-ADVENTURE WITH A VENGEANCE
-
-In an instant Ross was on his feet, the sleep fog automatically cleared
-from his brain.
-
-One glance was enough. The dawn was far enough advanced so that he could
-see both up and down the canon. It was patent that the girl had vanished
-during the darkness.
-
-The whole affair was so utterly impossible, so unreal, so like an Arabian
-Nights adventure, that Ross was almost prone to believe that it had been
-merely a dream, a desert hallucination. Not until his eyes again sought
-the canon wall did he convince himself that he had not been laboring
-under some mental aberration.
-
-There could be no denying his eyes, though. There were the four heavy
-chains fastened to the canon wall, and there were the four broken
-shackles, mute evidence that he had stumbled onto a situation as exotic
-as one of the desert’s own mirages.
-
-No, there could be no question that the girl had actually existed. Nor
-could there be any question that she had disappeared. The only living
-thing in sight was Archibald, who stood with head bowed over the dead
-embers of last night’s fire in his usual state of ignoble dejection.
-
-At first thought it seemed impossible that the girl could have left camp,
-unaided, and it seemed quite as certain that no one could have taken her
-away by force, without rousing Ross.
-
-As he considered it, however, Ross realized that exhaustion would come
-quickly to one chained to the rock and exposed to the sun without food or
-water. Recuperation would probably come quite as quickly. The girl had
-had both water and nourishment the evening before, and it would have been
-quite possible for her to have gained sufficient strength to leave, had
-she so chosen. There seemed to be no other explanation.
-
-“Well, Archibald,” said Ross, falling into his whimsical habit of
-addressing the burro, “when I started this trip I thought that you
-and Percy were the only asses in the party. Now I am convinced there
-are three of us. Here I have just been craving adventure for months.
-Yesterday I blundered right onto the craziest kind of a mystery, and
-then I go to sleep and let the whole thing get away from me! Fools can’t
-think, but I suppose they’ve got to eat,” he finished to himself.
-
-He set about preparing his breakfast, meanwhile pondering the affair. The
-more he pondered the more mysterious it became.
-
-Breakfast finished, he washed his dishes and then stepped over to gather
-up his bed-roll. Instantly he stopped short. There before him, scratched
-in the level sand of the canon floor, was a message:
-
- “_Please go away. There is only great danger if you investigate
- further._”
-
-There could be no denying the sincerity of that message. Coupled with the
-silent testimony of the inhuman shackles, it meant that the girl, whoever
-she might be, was in real peril.
-
-Regaining her strength, she had quietly slipped away in the night, but
-before going she had left behind a warning to the man who had released
-her. It was evident that she did not wish to draw a stranger into a
-danger which she considered hers alone.
-
-The warning, however, reacted on Ross like a red rag on a bull. It was
-a challenge to his manhood, to his thirst for adventure. Somewhere up
-that narrow canon was mystery; and somewhere, too, was a girl in unknown
-danger, a girl who patently enough needed assistance and a friend.
-
-It took but a few minutes to round up the burros and rope on the packs.
-
-“We will now proceed to rescue the fair maiden.”
-
-“Stick ’em up, an’ do it quick!”
-
-Ross whirled at the sound of the gruff voice—and found himself looking
-squarely into the muzzle of an ugly six-shooter. Behind it, was the most
-villainous-looking countenance Ross had ever seen.
-
-“Come on! H’ist ’em up!” again jerked out the owner of the gun.
-
-The situation was too unreal to be taken seriously.
-
-“Ah, Archibald, the plot thickens! First we meet Beauty; now we meet
-the Beast. Point that gun the other way, my friend. It might go off and
-frighten my long-eared friend here. He’s delicate, and I don’t like to
-have his nerves shocked.”
-
-“H’ist them mits before I drill ya!”
-
-Ross felt the muzzle of the gun jammed into his ribs, and a practised
-hand quickly searched his body. His automatic, carried for the sole
-purpose of exterminating rattlesnakes, was transferred to the other’s
-pocket.
-
-The vicious attitude of the gunman was far too real to be taken lightly.
-There was no doubt that he meant business.
-
-“Ya can let ’em down now,” said the gunman, stopping back.
-
-Ross turned and surveyed his captor.
-
-“If you don’t mind telling me,” he asked coldly, “to whom am I indebted
-for this early morning call?”
-
-“Stow the flip gab. All I know is tha big boss said to bring ya in, an’
-I’m bringin’ ya.”
-
-“Then I’m to understand that I’m a captive?”
-
-“Understan’ anythin’ ya please. Now git travelin’.”
-
-Resistance was hopeless. His air of reckless bravado gone, boiling
-inwardly at the indignity forced upon him, Ross swung and trudged off up
-the canon trail.
-
-For perhaps a quarter of a mile the narrow canon cleaved straight through
-the rock. Then it suddenly began a series of intricate turns, as though
-it had attempted a passage and had been baffled and forced to take a new
-direction about every fifty feet.
-
-For a while, Ross stalked on without speaking. Suddenly he turned his
-head and spoke.
-
-“Just where are you taking me, and who is the ‘big boss’?”
-
-“Never mind askin’ dam’ fool questions. Keep movin’!”
-
-After another quarter mile of sharp turns, the canon suddenly broadened,
-and Ross found himself looking out into a basin bounded on all sides by
-high, perpendicular rock walls, smooth and straight.
-
-The basin was oval in shape, and near the center was a group of ’dobe
-buildings, five in number. Toward these the captor directed their
-progress.
-
-As he advanced, Ross looked keenly for signs of life, but though he
-sought every possible nook and cranny with his gaze, he could see neither
-man nor beast. The place seemed to be absolutely deserted.
-
-At the first building, a small ’dobe structure that stood somewhat apart
-from the others, Ross was ordered to halt. Opening a heavy door, the man
-motioned with his gun for him to enter. Ross stepped over the threshold,
-and instantly the door clanged shut behind him.
-
-He heard the heavy bolt drop into place. Then he heard his captor walking
-away.
-
-Then, for the first time, it dawned on Ross that he was actually a
-prisoner, and that he had been captured with some definite object in view.
-
-The room in which he found himself was about twelve feet square. The
-walls were of ’dobe; the floor was of the same material, hard packed and
-smooth. There were two small windows, but both were heavily protected
-with thick iron bars, set deep in the hard-packed ’dobe. The furniture
-consisted of a crude table and chair.
-
-A single test of strength showed Ross that he could never hope to open
-the door. A crowbar or an axe would be necessary for that, and there
-was no implement of any kind in the room. The walls were fully eighteen
-inches thick. Under the fierce heat of the desert the ’dobe had grown as
-hard as cement. Unless he received help from outside, there seemed to be
-no possibility of escape.
-
-Time passed. Finally he ceased his idle wandering about the room and sank
-into the chair.
-
-His pipe and tobacco still remained in his pocket. He took out his pipe,
-lighted it, and fell to considering his strange predicament.
-
-It seemed that ages had passed before he detected approaching footsteps.
-The bolt was raised. The heavy door swung on its hinges. His captor stood
-outside, gun in hand. Behind him was a Chinaman, carrying a tray on which
-was food.
-
-The Chinese entered the room, placed the tray on the table and arranged
-the food. As he was performing this service, he said in a low whisper,
-so low that his companion could not hear, “Missee say Wong flix good
-dlinner.”’
-
-“Come on, Chink, make it snappy!” snapped the man with the gun.
-
-The door slammed. The bolt fell into place. Ross was alone again.
-
-Dubiously, he surveyed the food. The words of the Chinese came back to
-him, “Missee say Wong flix good dlinner.”
-
-So the girl knew that he was a captive. Well, all he could do was wait.
-But who was she? And what did his imprisonment mean?
-
-In the meantime there was no reason for wasting a good dinner. Ross was
-hungry, and in twenty minutes the last scrap of food had disappeared.
-
-Settling back in his chair, he again filled his pipe and prepared to
-await developments with as good grace as possible.
-
-It was hours later that he heard footsteps nearing his prison.
-
-
-_CHAPTER FOUR_
-
-ROSS IS INVITED TO DINE
-
-Ross heard a key in the lock, and a moment later the heavy door swung
-open. It was the gunman again. He was evidently not mindful to take any
-chances with his prisoner, for he again was holding his revolver ready.
-
-“Come on out!” he barked, motioning with the gun for Ross to step out of
-the room. “Tha big boss wants ya.”
-
-“Oh, he does?” returned Ross. “Maybe I’ll find out now what all this is
-about.”
-
-“You’ll find out all right. Mebbe find out more’n ya want.”
-
-“You know, I don’t think I’m going to like you at all. I shouldn’t be
-surprised if I had serious trouble with you yet. But lead on!”
-
-Ross’s persiflage was far from pleasing to the gunman. He glared
-malevolently at Ross for a moment, as if half minded to inflict physical
-punishment, finally thought better of it, and then jerked out, “I ain’t
-leadin’; I’m followin’. Git movin’!”
-
-Ross was conducted to the largest of the group of ’dobe buildings,
-evidently used as a dwelling, and was ushered directly into a bedroom.
-
-He had expected anything except what he now saw. The room was such as
-might have been found in a brown-stone mansion on Fifth Avenue. The
-floor was covered with a deep soft rug. There was a mahogany bed, with a
-spotless white spread, and a dressing-table of the same wood. To one side
-of the latter stood a full-length plate mirror.
-
-“The big boss said ya was to shave, an’ then ya was ta dress fer dinner.
-Yo’ll find all tha togs there on that bed.” The gunman directed Ross’s
-attention to the bed with a flourish of his gun.
-
-Ross looked. The garments on the bed comprised a complete evening
-outfit, from studded shirt to patent-leather pumps.
-
-He was surprised to find that the clothes fit him well. The pumps were a
-trifle tight and the suit was a bit snug, but a half hour later, when he
-surveyed himself in the long pier glass, he was well satisfied.
-
-“All right, keeper, let’s be on our way. I’m curious,” he said.
-
-His captor conducted him down the long veranda, and a moment later he was
-ushered into a large room where a table was laid for dinner.
-
-
-_CHAPTER FIVE_
-
-A STRANGE DINNER
-
-By this time Ross was prepared for almost anything, yet the room that he
-now stepped into was even more astounding than the bedroom.
-
-In the center stood a table arranged for four. It fairly sparkled with
-glassware, silver and spotless linen. At one side of the room stood a
-huge buffet. Its top was well covered with glasses, liquor shakers and
-sundry bottles, the contents of which were obvious.
-
-The occupants of the room chiefly held his attention, though. They were
-three, two men and a woman. Here, at last, he was to know the meaning of
-the strange events of the preceding twenty-four hours.
-
-The two men were standing close together and had evidently been
-conversing. Both were in faultless evening dress. The girl stood apart;
-aloof, so it seemed. Despite her evening dress, Ross instantly recognized
-her as the girl he had found in the canon.
-
-One of the men was young and exceedingly well built. His wide, heavily
-muscled shoulders suggested out-of-the-ordinary strength. His hair was
-wiry and red; its color was amply reflected in his ruddy complexion. The
-face was strong and would have been attractive but for one feature—the
-eyes. The eyes were small, deep-set, and far too close together. They
-might have been said to be piggish. The dull glint in them was not
-reassuring. Ross knew at once that he did not like this man.
-
-It was the second of the two men, however, who was really striking.
-He was, in fact, an amazing figure. His stature was above the average
-height, over six feet, and he was thin to emaciation. Ross thought he
-had never seen so tall and yet so slender a man. He was so thin as to be
-ludicrous, yet there seemed to be a remarkable whipcord strength about
-him.
-
-His face was narrow and as lean as his body. A thin, high nose divided
-a pair of piercing black eyes. It was the eyes that struck instant
-attention. Their everchanging lights fairly gleamed. They seemed to be
-alive with a thousand fires.
-
-The impression was instantly registered with Ross that here was a man who
-was possessed of unusual personal power, or who was stark mad. Those eyes
-could allow of no other conclusion.
-
-As Ross was ushered into the room it was this strange individual who
-instantly stepped forward.
-
-“Ah, our guest has arrived,” he said. His voice was soft as velvet, yet
-it carried an irritating quality that was thin-edged and biting, and
-scarcely concealed. “Step right up, Mr. Waring; dinner will be served at
-once. Wong, the wine.”
-
-From somewhere the Chinese, Wong, had glided forth and, drawing out a
-chair, indicated Ross’s place at the table. Immediately he had filled the
-glasses with a sparkling liquid. Ross recognized it as champagne.
-
-There was no chance to reply. In fact, Ross was too bewildered to think
-of anything adequate to say. In a moment he would be himself again, but
-just now his wits were all at cross purposes.
-
-As the elderly man greeted Ross, the girl and younger man took their
-places at the table as if they had only been waiting his arrival to
-proceed with the meal. As Ross stepped forward, at the servant’s
-indication, his host reached out and lifted the wine glass at his plate.
-
-“We will drink to the health of our guest,” he said evenly.
-
-Automatically, Ross lifted his glass. The others did likewise. For an
-instant the four glasses were held aloft, the lights playing on their
-sparkling depths. Then the elderly man turned to Ross with a rather
-elaborate low bow and said in a voice that was like gray steel:
-
-“Mr. Waring, allow us to drink to your most excellent good health——_for
-tomorrow you hang_!”
-
-The words were like an icy blast. Up to that moment the whole affair had
-been rather ludicrous to Ross. He had realized that he was in danger at
-times, but that this danger would involve the loss of his life he had not
-for a moment imagined.
-
-Now he realized that his very life was at stake; more than that, unless
-he could find some way to extract himself from his predicament, that
-he was sure to forfeit it. There could be no denying the import of the
-toast. Ross did not know why, but he did know that this tall, lean
-stranger with the mad eyes meant to kill him as sure as he stood there.
-
-For a moment, the young New Yorker lost his complacency. He stood with
-the glass poised in his hand, his brain whirling. But this was only for
-a moment. In a second he had regained his poise. Raising the glass to his
-lips, he drained it to the bottom and turned to his host.
-
-“Thank you, sir,” he said carelessly, “for your kind wishes for my good
-health. I hate to dispute you, but I _don’t_ believe you will hang me in
-the morning. And my name is not Waring, either. It happens to be Ross.”
-
-“As you will, Mr. Waring, as you will. Any name would do as well. And
-I assure you I shall have the pleasure of hanging you in the morning.
-Let me warn you, too, Mr. Waring, not to attempt anything. I want this
-dinner peaceful. It is an engagement dinner,” turning with an exaggerated
-bow to the girl, “the occasion of the betrothal of my dear niece to Mr.
-Beebe here. I _know_ you will be interested in that, Mr. Waring. But
-just to forestall any idea you might have of providing any unnecessary
-entertainment I have stationed my friends, Mr. Garfin and Mr. Poole, at
-the door with instructions to shoot if you get unruly. Now, let us eat.”
-
-Ross glanced over his shoulder to find Garfin lounging in the door
-by which he had entered, a malignant smile wrinkling his face. In an
-opposite doorway lounged another individual fully as ugly looking as
-Garfin. This was evidently Poole. Both had guns. It was obvious that for
-the present no break for liberty was possible.
-
-For the most part, that dinner was a nightmare to Ross. Afterward he
-wondered how he had managed to get through it.
-
-After the first effusion, the elderly man made no effort to include Ross
-in the conversation. Glad of this respite, Ross attempted to collect his
-wits and to form some estimate of his predicament and of the people with
-whom he had to deal.
-
-The elderly man carried on a continuous animated conversation, mostly
-with the man whom he had designated as Beebe. Several times he addressed
-himself to Ross, but always in such a manner that it was obvious no
-answer was expected. A number of times he included the girl in his
-conversation, but the only time she made reply was to answer a question,
-and then it was merely to say, “No, Uncle Arthur.”
-
-Once or twice Beebe addressed the elderly man as “Mr. Ward,” so Ross
-concluded that his name was Arthur Ward. The girl’s identity he was not
-able to learn, except that her first name was Virginia.
-
-Beebe ignored Ross and by his attitude seemed to be currying favor with
-Ward. As for the girl, she remained silent, her eyes downcast, palpably
-holding herself aloof. Once or twice Ross caught a fleeting message from
-her eyes. It seemed to him that she was in utter terror, yet in perfect
-control of her nerves.
-
-In those flashing telegrams from her eyes Ross was sure he caught a mute
-appeal for help. If this was a betrothal dinner Ross felt sure that the
-betrothal was without the consent of one of the parties concerned, and he
-was determined then and there not only to effect his own escape but to
-aid the girl as well.
-
-The food was excellent and perfectly served by the Chinese, yet Ross
-could not have told a single item, and he thought the dinner never would
-end. The presence of Garfin and Poole was mute evidence that for the
-present he could do nothing. When the meal finally came to an end and
-Ward pushed back his chair, it brought a feeling of distinct relief to
-the young man. Now at least was the beginning of the end.
-
-“Now, Mr. Waring,” said Ward suavely, “we will repair to my study, where
-I have a few things to say to you before we break up this very pleasant
-little party. I hardly think my niece will care to accompany us.”
-
-They rose from the table, and Ross was ushered into an adjoining room
-which was even more striking in its way than either of the others he had
-been in that evening.
-
-A brisk fire burned on a wide hearth from above which looked down a
-magnificent ram’s head. Other trophies of a similar nature adorned
-the other walls. Interspersed with these were guns, Indian weapons,
-horsehair lariats—in fact, every accoutrement and trophy of the old-time
-West. It was a rather remarkable collection, one which under different
-circumstances would have deeply interested Stanley Ross.
-
-Instantly he knew where those curious antiquated shackles, which had
-bound the girl, had come from. Here were several similar pairs.
-
-Ross was directed to a chair in front of the fire. Ward took another,
-facing him, while Beebe sat down on a wide bench on the far side of the
-fire. Ross waited expectantly.
-
-Ward offered his guest a cigar. Selecting one for himself, he clipped its
-end very deliberately and lit it with aggravating leisure. Finally he
-leaned back in his chair and gazed steadily at Ross with his mad eyes. A
-tiny smile, cynical and cruel, crooked around his thin-lipped mouth.
-
-“I could have had you killed at once, Mr. Waring,” he said deliberately,
-his voice soft and well-modulated, yet biting, burning, “but I did not
-choose to do that. Instead, I wanted to bring you here this evening so
-that you could fully realize just what a serious thing it is, and how
-useless it is to buck Arthur Ward. And then, too, I wanted my niece to
-know that I am to be obeyed absolutely.”
-
-“I suppose, Mr. Ward,” asked Ross, “that it would be quite useless to
-tell you that my name is not Waring at all; that I do not even know
-any one of that name, or that I have never seen your niece, until last
-evening?”
-
-“Quite useless, I can assure you, Mr. Waring. I am absolutely certain of
-your identity. I do not make mistakes.
-
-“Mr. Waring, I never forget an injury. I remember forever, and my one bad
-trait is the fact that I always have revenge. I would have got you in the
-end, Waring, anyway, but your fool stunt of following my niece here saved
-me a lot of trouble. Waring, you should have known that of all people on
-earth you would have the least chance of marrying my niece.
-
-“Tonight you can have the extreme pleasure of reflecting that you will
-hardly be dead before Virginia will be the wife of Beebe.”
-
-“And suppose she refuses?” asked Ross.
-
-“We are a hundred miles from anywhere, Waring. Things could happen that
-would make Virginia glad to marry Beebe—or any one.
-
-“One more thing, Waring, and then we will terminate this interview,”
-Ward went on dispassionately. “I want you to know that this is only the
-beginning. I shall not be satisfied until I have exterminated your entire
-family. It may take me years, but I shall certainly have the pleasure of
-killing your brother and your father. It does not pay to do injury to
-Arthur Ward.
-
-“You will have tonight to reflect on what might have been. In the morning
-I shall hang you.
-
-“That is all I have to say, and since it will be quite useless for you
-to say anything you may as well return to your room. Mr. Garfin and Mr.
-Poole will see that you have safe conduct.”
-
-Ross knew that for the present he would have to submit. Resistance would
-be useless just now. He was one against four. The odds were too great. He
-could only wait, hoping that the night would bring opportunity.
-
-However, before he went he could not resist a last display of
-bravado—bravado which he did not by any means feel.
-
-Rising from his seat, Ross bowed low to Ward.
-
-“Good-night, Mr. Ward. Thank you for a most excellent dinner and a most
-entertaining evening. And let me assure you that you will _not_ hang me
-in the morning.”
-
-Turning on his heel, Ross passed out of the room.
-
-
-_CHAPTER SIX_
-
-A FORLORN HOPE
-
-When Ross stepped out into the darkness his first thought was that he
-would make a dash for liberty. This hope died almost before it was born,
-though, for he felt the muzzle of a revolver pressed close to his ribs
-and Garfin’s rasping voice growled into his ear:
-
-“Make just one move fer a break an’ I’ll plug ya. The boss says he’s
-goin’ to hang ya in the morning, but I’d like to save him tha trouble.”
-
-Ross knew that Garfin was not indulging in idle words. The gunman would
-gladly kill him. Then, too, out in the shadows another form kept them
-close company. He knew this was Poole and that should he succeed in
-worsting Garfin his chance of escaping the second gunman’s bullets was
-very remote. No, the time was not yet.
-
-The three trudged back to Ross’s one-room prison, and it was only a
-minute or two until the door had slammed on him, the bolt had fallen into
-place and the lock snapped its vicious message.
-
-He was once more a prisoner.
-
-Ross sought in the darkness for the crude chair and threw himself down
-into it. He knew that for the time being there was no chance of escape,
-so he gave himself up momentarily to a contemplation of his plight.
-
-Who was this strange girl whom he had rescued, only to have her vanish
-into the night? Why had she not spoken tonight? Why had she given him no
-hint of action? Who was Beebe, that he would accept a betrothal which was
-obviously odious to the girl? And, lastly, who was Ward with his mad eyes?
-
-Who was Waring, and what had he done to merit such malicious vengeance on
-the part of Ward?
-
-These and many other questions Ross asked himself, but he had no
-satisfactory answer to any one of them. Only a jumble of baffling mystery
-presented itself. His brain seethed with impossible solutions, but he had
-to admit that actually he was completely at sea.
-
-Only a few facts stood out which could be accepted as a basis on which to
-work.
-
-He, Ross, had been taken for another man, Waring by name. Ward evidently
-hated Waring intensely and was determined to put him to death for a
-wrong, either fancied or real. There could be no doubt, too, that Ward
-was, in a degree, insane.
-
-What part Beebe was playing Ross could not determine, beyond the facts
-that he was in favor with Ward and that he wanted the girl and would take
-her on whatever terms he could get her.
-
-The girl was obviously in great peril. It could be seen that she hated
-Beebe, but at the same time was powerless to resist any order of her
-uncle. Ross could readily see that she was in a position where death
-might well be preferable to what she was facing.
-
-And, undeniably, there was the fact that he, Ross, was sure to meet death
-in the morning unless he could devise some way out of his dilemma.
-
-The night was far gone when he had finished considering these things.
-It was then that a plan of action first suggested itself to him. As it
-matured in his mind he realized that it was a forlorn hope; but his
-circumstances were so utterly desperate that there seemed nothing to do
-but give it a trial. He knew that its success would depend entirely on
-the element of surprise.
-
-Having once settled in his mind what he should do, Ross threw himself
-down on the crude table and was soon sound asleep.
-
-It was hardly daylight when he awoke, but he did not allow himself to
-drop back to sleep again. He was going to be ready.
-
-It was fully three hours later that he heard approaching footsteps.
-Slipping quietly across the room, Ross flattened himself against the wall
-beside the door and waited.
-
-The footsteps drew nearer and nearer. A key grated in the lock. It
-clicked. The bolt was raised. Slowly the door swung on its hinges.
-
-Like a flash, Ross slipped from his hiding-place and darted through the
-doorway. The only human within sight was Garfin. Like a mad thunderbolt
-Ross bore down upon him.
-
-Taken by surprise, Garfin barely had time to fire before Ross was upon
-him. Too startled to take definite aim, his bullet went wild. With a
-force that was terrific Ross struck him with the full impact of his body.
-The two went down in a tangled heap. Garfin’s gun was knocked from his
-grasp and went spinning a dozen feet away.
-
-Garfin was not without courage of a kind, but all his life he had
-depended on a gun to enforce his arguments. Physical combat had not been
-one of his long suits, and now he found himself no match for his younger
-antagonist.
-
-Stan Ross was far from a weakling physically. Long months afoot in
-the desert had made him as hard as nails. Not so long ago he had been
-known as a football player of some note. Now he used that knowledge of
-rough-and-tumble combat to the fullest extent.
-
-Taking Garfin by surprise, Ross had the initial advantage, and when the
-two went down he was on top. Striking, kicking, using the crushing force
-of his body, he went at the gunman in a demoniacal storm. For an instant
-it looked as though he would beat his enemy into insensibility before he
-could offer any material resistance.
-
-But Garfin was fighting for his life and he knew it. He was not to be
-vanquished so easily. In a moment the two men were threshing and rolling
-on the ground in a fierce struggle.
-
-Youth, however, was not to be denied. Those sledge-hammer blows were
-having a telling effect. Garfin was weakening. Gradually Ross was wearing
-him down.
-
-Ross sought the throat of his enemy. Garfin’s breath came in gasps. His
-eyes were bulging. Gradually Ross brought his knee up until it pressed
-into Garfin’s stomach. A final effort would end the struggle. Slowly
-Garfin’s head bent backward. Then—
-
-A crashing, blinding blow caught Ross on his head. For a brief instant a
-million fires flamed before his eyes. Then utter blackness.
-
-He slumped forward across the body of his antagonist.
-
-
-_CHAPTER SEVEN_
-
-WONG INTERVENES
-
-When Ross returned to consciousness it was with a sense of bewilderment.
-His head seemed alive with shooting pains: his eyes burned intensely; his
-body was sore and stiff.
-
-Gradually he fought the fog from his brain and opened his eyes. He was
-dimly aware that he was back in his prison room, stretched out on the
-table. Painfully he sat up.
-
-And then he saw that he was not alone. There was another person in the
-room. As his eyes pierced the semi-gloom he was aware that the man before
-him was Arthur Ward.
-
-Instantly his brain cleared, and he swung himself around to face his
-jailor.
-
-Ward was standing in the center of the room, his feet wide apart, his
-hands behind his back. A sardonic smile disfigured his face.
-
-“Well,” he inquired, “so you decided not to die?”
-
-“Yes, I decided not to die,” said Ross. “I might remind you, too, that it
-is no longer morning and I have not been hung.”
-
-“No, and you’re not going to be, either. I have prepared a much more
-pleasant death for you.”
-
-“Thanks!”
-
-“Don’t waste your thanks,” replied Ward. “Before you’re through you’ll be
-far from thanking me. You see, Waring, your little outbreak this morning
-set me to thinking. If you had taken things quietly I would have hung
-you, and it would all be over now. But you had to try to escape and that
-set me to thinking that hanging was too pleasant for you. It would be
-over too quickly. There would be no time for reflection. So I devised
-something really fitting for your case.”
-
-While Ward was speaking the man Poole had entered, carrying a wooden box
-which he deposited gingerly in one corner and then quickly withdrew. He
-seemed afraid.
-
-“Yes, Waring,” Ward went on, “I’ve planned a death for you that I like
-much better than hanging. And, damn your rotten soul to eternity,” he
-snarled, “you’ll know what real torture is before you go out!”
-
-With a sudden movement, he whirled, kicked the lid from the box, darted
-through the doorway, and had crashed the door shut before Ross fairly
-realized what he was doing.
-
-Half bewildered, it was a moment before he could attach any meaning to
-Ward’s action. Then it dawned on him that there was a deep significance
-to the box which Poole had brought in. Some sinister portent lay in that
-box of wood.
-
-Fascinated, Ross sat watching the box, realizing that it held his fate,
-scarce knowing what to expect, and certainly not expecting what developed.
-
-For a long minute nothing happened. Ross grew nervous with the strain.
-Then a faint buzzing came from the box. Silence. Again came that strange
-sound. And again. A slithering rustle as of stiff silk rubbed together.
-
-And then Ross’s scalp prickled with horror and his blood fairly froze in
-his veins, for over the edge of the box appeared a hideous, swaying head!
-There came a second! A third! And then a fourth!
-
-_They were huge diamond-back rattlesnakes!_
-
-As Ross recognized the big diamond-backs he knew instantly that he was
-trapped. To step down onto the floor meant death, a horrible, grewsome
-death. To remain on the table—
-
-Instinctively, he drew his feet up onto the table as the big reptiles
-left the box, one by one. He counted eight in all.
-
-Ross gave himself up to black despair. Down there on the floor awaited a
-fate too hideous for words....
-
- * * * * *
-
-It must have been fully two hours later, and dusk was already settling
-down and darkening the room, when Ross heard footsteps.
-
-They approached his prison. For a moment his heart leaped within him at
-the possibility of rescue. But the door did not open. Instead, he heard
-the taunting voice of Ward from outside:
-
-“Oh, you’re safe enough so far, Waring. They can’t get you as long as
-you stay on that table. I planned that. Wasn’t it kind of me to be so
-thoughtful? But there won’t be any food and there won’t be any water, and
-all the time you’ll be going through hell. I planned that, too. And then
-there’ll come a time when you can’t stand it any longer. You’ll either
-fall from the table from weakness, or you’ll go mad and step down onto
-the floor. They’ll always be waiting, Waring. And then they’ll get you,
-damn you!” The voice, rising to a shrill crescendo of passion, ended in a
-burst of wild maniacal laughter.
-
-Receding footsteps told him that Ward had gone away.
-
-As the gloom deepened into utter darkness it seemed to Ross that he would
-go mad. His brain seethed with wild impulses. A hundred times he pictured
-himself lying there on the floor, a bloated, blackened thing. A hundred
-times he went through death. Only that hope which “springs eternal” kept
-him from stepping down onto the floor and making an end of it.
-
-Gradually Ross quieted. He finally settled back against the wall in a
-state of apathy, little knowing or little caring when the end would come.
-
-An hour passed.
-
-Suddenly Ross became aware of an unusual sound. From somewhere in back
-of him came a low “_Hist!_” so low as hardly to be heard. Stealthily, he
-raised himself to the height of the barred window and peered into the
-darkness.
-
-Dimly he could make out a head outlined against the sky. A low, whispered
-voice spoke:
-
-“_You take!_”
-
-Unmistakably it was the voice of Wong. There was a grating sound as of
-something being passed between the bars.
-
-Ross reached out his hand and it closed over cold steel.
-
-An automatic!
-
-“_You take!_” again came the whispered voice.
-
-This time Ross found his hand closing over a cartridge belt.
-
-“Me bring Ga’fin. _You shoot!_”
-
-Like a ghost, the form at the window was gone without a sound.
-
-With the feel of that cold steel in his hand Ross’s spirits rose like a
-tide. All his waning confidence returned. He was instantly his own man
-again, confident, cool, without fear.
-
-Quickly he buckled the belt around his waist. With sure fingers, he made
-certain that the gun was loaded. Slipping off the safety, he knelt on the
-table, facing the door, and waited.
-
-Ross did not know whether he would ever leave that room alive, but he did
-know that the first men to open the door would die.
-
-
-_CHAPTER EIGHT_
-
-“YOU’LL SETTLE WITH ME”
-
-Arthur Ward stood with his back to the big living-room fire, his feet
-wide apart, hands crossed behind his back, head lowered, eyes peering
-from beneath shaggy brows. It was a characteristic attitude and one which
-peculiarly expressed the man’s calculated cruelty.
-
-Beebe was seated on the wide fireplace bench, his feet stretched far in
-front of him. He was slowly smoking, his whole sprawling attitude one of
-indolent approval. Things were shaping themselves quite to the liking of
-Larson Beebe.
-
-The girl, Virginia, was seated in a chair somewhat in front of her uncle.
-The wild look of her eyes and her agitated face told that she was going
-through an ordeal that was breaking her bit by bit.
-
-“But, Uncle Arthur,” she burst out, “surely you can’t mean to do this
-terrible thing. Why, I don’t love Mr. Beebe at all. I scarcely know him,
-and I don’t want to marry anyone.”
-
-“My dear niece,” replied Ward evenly, “love has no part in my scheme of
-things. Hate rules the world, and hate is my creed. Love makes people
-soft and indolent. Hate is the great inspirator. Hate makes the world go
-’round.
-
-“Sentiment has no place whatever in this marriage. It is entirely a
-marriage of convenience. Your personal inclinations have no weight
-whatever. I wish you to marry Beebe; therefore you will do it.”
-
-The girl’s color had heightened as she listened to her uncle’s ultimatum.
-As he finished, a grim expression of defiance settled on his face.
-
-“Well, I won’t!” she answered crisply.
-
-“As you will, Virginia, but if you do not consent to marry Beebe within
-twenty-four hours I shall leave you here alone with him. I imagine after
-a couple of weeks of that you’ll be quite willing to marry him.”
-
-“Oh, you beast!” For an instant, as Ward’s full meaning became clear to
-her, it looked as though the girl would faint.
-
-Then, like a wild beast at bay, she turned on Beebe in a burst of blazing
-fury.
-
-“And you, Larson Beebe, what have you to say? Are you going to be a party
-to this? Are you as much a beast as my uncle?”
-
-Beebe regarded her tolerantly for a moment out of his piggish eyes before
-he spoke. A catlike smile of satisfaction curved his lips. He answered
-slowly, indolently:
-
-“Virginia, I am wild about you. I want you, and I am going to have you.
-As long as you refuse to love me I’m not at all particular how I get you.
-One way suits me as well as another.”
-
-The girl turned back to her uncle. Her hands went out in an imploring
-gesture. For an instant she seemed about to plead. Then she evidently
-thought better of it.
-
-“I suppose you understand, Uncle Arthur,” she asked in a low cold voice,
-“that I will kill myself before I will let this happen?”
-
-“My dear Virginia, you do not seem to understand the situation at all.
-You are absolutely in my power. You cannot kill yourself because I will
-not permit it. I will not give you the chance. You will do exactly as I
-say.”
-
-“_Not yet, Ward! First, you’ll settle with me!_”
-
-Stanley Ross stood in the doorway. But it was not the Stanley Ross,
-urbane, bored, carefree, who, a few days before, had whimsically sought
-adventure up an unknown canon trail. He had found adventure now, and it
-had used him roughly. His face and hands were grimy. His clothes were
-dirty and torn. One sleeve had been almost rent from his shoulder. His
-hair was riotously disheveled and clotted with blood. Down one side of
-his face extended a great splash of dirty dried blood.
-
-In his right hand was an ugly-looking automatic, and in his face and eyes
-was a look of savage fury.
-
-At the sound of Ross’s voice, Ward whirled and whipped out a gun. But
-he was too late, for Ross, with a steadiness and coldness belied by
-the savagery of his face and figure, had fired. A look of unutterable
-amazement overspread the face of Arthur Ward. He wavered on his feet for
-a moment, and then, when a spot of red began to widen on his shirt front,
-he toppled backward, lifeless.
-
-Almost at the same instant a hatchet hurtled through the room and buried
-its blade deep in the wall beside Larson Beebe, missing his head by
-the merest fraction of an inch. Wong was going into action. Beebe slid
-forward from his seat and ducked to temporary safety behind the table.
-
-Ward had not had time to aim, but he had instinctively pulled the
-trigger. The bullet caught Ross on the head and cut a long shallow furrow
-just above his left temple. The wound itself was not serious, but for a
-moment it blinded Ross. That moment was fatal, for as he roused himself
-from the shock he knew that he had forgotten Poole.
-
-Instantly Ross whirled to face the other doorway, but was too late. The
-heavy bullet spun him half around. For an instant he fought to retain his
-balance. Then he pitched forward onto the floor.
-
-Painfully, with almost a superhuman effort, Ross raised himself with one
-hand and deliberately shot Poole through the chest.
-
-Then, mercifully, consciousness was blotted out.
-
-
-_CHAPTER NINE_
-
-VIRGINIA EXPLAINS
-
-When Ross returned to consciousness it was to a blurred, feverish,
-pain-wracked world.
-
-He did not know where he was or what had happened. He only knew that his
-head was bandaged and splitting with pain; that his shoulder was stiff
-and sore, incapable of being moved even the fraction of an inch, and that
-it pained with a dull, throbbing hurt; that his eyes burned and blurred;
-and that his entire body burned with ten thousand fires.
-
-Of one thing more was Ross conscious. That was the girl. When she saw
-that Ross had temporarily come out of the fog she hurried to his side and
-answered the unasked question on his lips by holding a cup of cold water
-to them. She seemed to have been waiting for ages to do just that.
-
-Ross drank gratefully, but when he would have questioned her she laid her
-finger across his lips and said;
-
-“_Sh-h-h-ush!_ Not now. We’ll talk when you feel better. Just now you
-need sleep more than anything else.”
-
-And Stanley Ross obeyed. In an instant he was asleep, a wild, feverish
-sleep that brought no rest.
-
-There followed days of half consciousness, half nightmare; days when Ross
-neither knew nor cared what happened, when wild delirium alternated with
-painful reality.
-
-He was far too ill to make any inquiries about anything that had
-happened. In fact, he was only conscious of the fact that whenever the
-fog lifted the girl always seemed to be present—a ministering angel who
-brought cooling draughts, and soothing applications for his head and
-shoulders.
-
-Finally there came a day when Ross awoke to a sane world. The fever fog
-had departed from his brain. His head no longer throbbed and beat like
-a thousand devils. His shoulder was sore and stiff, but it no longer
-was filled with maddening pain. He was weak, very weak, but the world
-was once more interesting and he was acutely aware of a most prodigious
-appetite.
-
-Ross was aware that he was in the room to which he had been conducted
-by Garfin on the night of the strange dinner. Beyond that, he was not
-interested. He was aware that the girl was still acting as his nurse.
-
-At meal time the Chinese, Wong, came in with a tray. He was still too
-weak to care as to the whereabouts of the others, or what had happened on
-the night of the fight.
-
-He did learn that the girl’s name was Virginia Carver, but that was all.
-
-In less than a week he was sitting out on the long veranda every
-afternoon. With returning strength came returning curiosity. He wanted to
-know the story of this strange habitation in the desert and to learn just
-what had happened on the night Wong had aided him to escape.
-
-Several times he broached the subject to the girl, but each time she put
-him off with the statement that he was not yet strong enough to talk. The
-excuse was obviously becoming threadbare, however, as his health improved.
-
-One afternoon, while Ross was sitting on the veranda, the girl came
-out and took a seat opposite him. It was patent that the time for
-explanations had come.
-
-“I suppose, Mr. Ross,” began Virginia Carver, “that you have been
-wondering just what this whole thing is about, and you certainly are
-entitled to an explanation. I don’t know how I am ever going to thank you
-for what you have done for me. You were very brave.”
-
-“Well, suppose you forget about the thanks, Miss Carver,” said Ross,
-visibly embarrassed. “I _would_ like to know all about this queer affair,
-though. I thought Arabian Nights were ancient history, but I’m about
-ready to believe anything.”
-
-“In order for you to understand I’ll have to take you back about seven
-years,” explained the girl. “At that time my uncle, Arthur Ward, was one
-of the biggest operators in Wall Street. All his life he has been a very
-peculiar man; eccentric; always doing queer things for which there seemed
-no explanation, and never taking any one into his confidence.
-
-“In the Street he was known as a plunger. He made a great deal of money.
-Just how much I have no idea beyond the fact that he was always very
-generous with my mother, his sister. But at one time he must have been
-very wealthy indeed.
-
-“Seven years ago it seems that he plunged too heavily and got caught.
-His fortune was practically wiped out. When everything was settled up he
-was still a wealthy man—that is, he was probably worth a half million
-dollars—but the great bulk of his fortune was gone.
-
-“He fought fiercely to keep from going under. There were days and nights
-at a time when I don’t think he slept at all. He was like a wild man, but
-the combination against him was too great and he went under.
-
-“At first we thought he was going to lose his mind. For weeks he acted
-very queer. Finally he seemed to get a hold on himself and he appeared
-rational.
-
-“He settled up his business, and then suddenly disappeared. He left no
-word where he was going—just dropped out of sight. That was seven years
-ago, and for two years we heard nothing from him. Five years ago I got a
-letter from him asking me to visit him here. I came and found things just
-about as you see them now.
-
-“He seemed perfectly rational and contented. Of course, he was queer and
-erratic, but he had always been that. He seemed to have forgotten Wall
-Street entirely and spent most of his time making a collection of the
-accoutrements of horse and man of the old-time West. I doubt if there is
-a finer collection in existence.
-
-“He did a lot of entertaining, too, for his old friends, inviting them
-out for long visits. Here his eccentricity cropped out, for he insisted
-on going to great lengths to have everything just as it would be in New
-York. There must be fifteen dress suits in the house, and he always asked
-every one to dress for dinner. He imported wines and foods. Wong has been
-with him ever since he has been here and he is an excellent cook.
-
-“I came out every year. He was always very kind to me and has made every
-effort to entertain me. I thought he acted a little more queer each year,
-and I often wondered if he was not a little unbalanced mentally.
-
-“When I came out this year there was a great change. I saw at once
-that he was quite mad. He imagined that he was being persecuted by the
-Warings, and kept Poole and Garfin, New York gunmen, to protect him.
-The Warings were the people who engineered his defeat in Wall Street,
-and Uncle Arthur hated them intensely. He not only imagined they were
-persecuting him, but he also imagined that the younger Waring, whom I
-have never seen, was trying to marry me. This seemed to be an obsession
-with him.
-
-“When I got here I found that Larson Beebe was Uncle Arthur’s guest. I
-had met Mr. Beebe in New York several times, and I detested him. I had
-good reason to. He—well, I have always despised him.
-
-“Just what his hold or influence on Uncle Arthur was I haven’t the
-slightest idea, but I had hardly arrived before Uncle Arthur began to
-insist that I marry him.
-
-“Of course, I refused, and it was then that Uncle Arthur’s insanity came
-to the surface. He had always been kindness itself, but now he suddenly
-became the very incarnation of cruelty. While there was no question but
-that he was entirely mad, yet in his madness his brain was as shrewd and
-cunning as ever.
-
-“When I refused to marry Beebe he began to practice his cruelties on me
-in an effort to break my will. I was utterly at his mercy, for there was
-no way that I could escape. All I could do was submit.
-
-“The culmination of his indignities was to chain me to the rocks where
-you found me. Whether he would have left me there till I was dead I
-hardly know, but I think not. His brain was so unbalanced that it would
-be hard to tell.
-
-“I ran away that night because I knew he would kill you if he found
-you with me. Evidently he had Garfin watching me, or he would not have
-learned that you had released me. He was obsessed with the idea that you
-were the younger Waring.
-
-“The rest of the story you know. I dare not think of what would have
-happened to me if you had not come to my rescue, Mr. Ross.”
-
-“But what really happened the night I escaped?” asked Ross.
-
-“Well—you shot both Uncle Arthur and Poole,” she replied hesitatingly.
-
-“Did I—did I—” he floundered helplessly.
-
-“Yes,” she replied evenly. “Providence helped your aim that night. Wong
-buried them both. No, Mr. Ross,” she finished, as she noted the look on
-his face, “don’t feel that way about it. If you hadn’t killed them they
-would have killed you, and I would have suffered a fate worse than death.
-Under the circumstances I cannot feel sorry.”
-
-“What happened to Beebe?” asked Ross, curious as to the fate of that
-dubious individual.
-
-“That’s a mystery. He simply disappeared that night and we have not seen
-him since. Wong just barely missed him that night with a hatchet. I think
-he is deathly afraid of Wong. At any rate, he is gone. And now, Mr. Ross,
-I want to ask you a question: How did you manage to escape from your
-prison that night? Wong won’t tell me a thing. He just grins when I ask
-him, and I suspect I owe a great deal to Wong.”
-
-“You surely do, Miss Carver,” answered Ross fervently. “That Chinaman is
-a wonder. In some way he got hold of my automatic and cartridge belt. He
-passed them to me through the window, and then, under some pretense, got
-Garfin to come and open the door. Then—well, Garfin won’t ever bother us
-again.”
-
-
-_CHAPTER TEN_
-
-A NEW DANGER
-
-With the passing days, Ross found new strength and new interest. His
-head was already healed and his shoulder, beyond being stiff, no longer
-bothered him. While still somewhat weak, he was able to walk about as he
-pleased.
-
-He found it very pleasant to pass the afternoons away on the long
-veranda. Here he was often joined by Virginia Carver, and the two spent
-hours together that were very pleasant. In fact, Ross suddenly became
-acutely aware that he was taking more than a passing interest in this
-girl.
-
-Virginia Carver was exceedingly lovely. Moreover, she was of a type and
-personality that particularly appealed to Stanley Ross. While she was
-nursing him through his illness he had found her presence very pleasing.
-Now that he was nearly well, her companionship was becoming even more
-delightful, and he realized that, as far as he was concerned, friendship
-was ripening into something more definite. As he continued to improve he
-knew that the time was fast approaching when they would have to leave
-this desert oasis.
-
-He found his mind continually recurring to Larson Beebe. How had he
-managed to disappear so completely that night? Where had he gone? What
-was he doing now? Ross could not dismiss the idea that they would hear
-from Beebe again, and that when they did it would mean trouble.
-
-This conviction was the more firmly fixed in his mind by the actions of
-Virginia Carver. Ross felt sure that the girl was deeply worried over
-something; she seemed anxious and nervous; she appeared to be continually
-watching and listening for something. Intuition told Ross that the cause
-of her perturbation was Beebe.
-
-Intuition again told him that perhaps Wong could throw some light on the
-situation. The next time that the Chinese appeared on the veranda Ross
-stopped him.
-
-“Wong,” he said, “Miss Carver seems to be worried about something. Do you
-know what it is? Is it about Beebe? Do you know where he is?”
-
-Wong’s face betrayed not a single glimmer of comprehension.
-
-“No savvy,” he said.
-
-“Yes, you do savvy, too. What’s wrong here? Where’s Beebe?”
-
-Wong glanced hurriedly up and down the veranda as though he feared some
-one would overhear him. Then he jerked a meaning finger toward the mouth
-of the little canon.
-
-“Him there,” he said in a low voice.
-
-“What do you mean?”
-
-“Him hide in canon. Kill all we go out.”
-
-“We don’t have to go out that way.”
-
-“No other way can go,” explained Wong.
-
-“What! You mean to tell me that’s the only way out of this place? Why
-can’t we go out over the cliffs?”
-
-“No can do,” replied the Chinese, and was gone before Ross could question
-him further.
-
-So that was it! The canon was the only way out of the basin, and Beebe
-was hiding down there, waiting to pot them as they came out. Quite a neat
-little idea! So that was why Virginia Carver was carrying that worried
-look.
-
-Ross went straight to the girl. He found her in the dining-room.
-
-“Miss Carver,” he asked, “why didn’t you tell me that Beebe was down in
-that canon?”
-
-“Well, I couldn’t see any use worrying you with that while you were so
-ill,” she replied, smiling. “And then, too, Mr. Ross, I think you are a
-little inclined to do impulsive things, and it seems to me you have ran
-risks enough on my account.”
-
-Ross ignored this last.
-
-“Then he really is there?” he asked.
-
-“Yes, Mr. Ross, he is, and I am afraid that we are in rather a bad way.
-He has all the advantage.”
-
-“But isn’t there any way out of this place except through that canon?”
-
-“None at all. Uncle Arthur selected this place for that very reason.
-There was a trail up the cliff, but he dynamited that away. Unless we
-develop wings we’ll go out through that canon or not at all.”
-
-Ross pondered for a moment. Finally he asked, “I wonder why he hasn’t
-tried to kill Wong and me at night?”
-
-“There are at least two reasons, I think,” answered the girl. “The first
-is that Larson Beebe is a very cautious man. He will not risk a single
-hair of his head if it is not necessary. If he came up here he might get
-hurt. If he stays there he is perfectly safe and we haven’t a single
-chance of getting by.
-
-“Another thing, I think he is deathly afraid of Wong. He came up in the
-night twice and stole provisions. Since then Wong has been watching. I
-don’t think he ever sleeps.”
-
-“Well, we can outlast him anyway, Miss Carver.”
-
-“But that’s just what we can’t do, Mr. Ross. Our provisions are very
-low.” The girl was gravely serious now. “Unless we can find some
-solution, I’m afraid he is going to starve us out very soon. It looks
-like we were trapped.”
-
-
-_CHAPTER ELEVEN_
-
-WONG HAS AN IDEA
-
-Ross woke the next morning keenly aware of the seriousness of their
-predicament. As soon as breakfast was over he set out to examine the
-walls of the basin.
-
-If he had any hope that there was a means of escape over the cliffs he
-was soon disillusioned. Nowhere was there a break in the walls. They were
-as perpendicular as a plumb-line and as smooth as basalt. Nothing but a
-fly could have scaled those cliffs.
-
-The only way out led through the narrow twisting canon below. And there
-Larson Beebe lay in wait like a cat at a rat-hole. Ross realized that
-there was little or no chance for him or Wong to get through the canon
-alive. Beebe had all the advantage.
-
-Ross returned to the house and sat down on the veranda. He ran over a
-dozen possible schemes for escape, and in the end he had to conclude that
-they were all impossible.
-
-In fact, his only conclusion was that he would give what fortune he
-possessed to have Larson Beebe’s neck within the grasp of his two hands.
-That, however, seemed to be a remote possibility. If anything, the
-situation would be reversed.
-
-Ross had about exhausted his whole range of impossible schemes when Wong
-appeared on the veranda. The Chinese wore an enigmatical smile on his
-usually inscrutable face. It was patent that he was well pleased with
-something.
-
-“You come,” he addressed Ross. “Got something show.”
-
-Ross rose and followed Wong, who led the way to one of the ’dobe
-outbuildings. Opening the door, he motioned Ross to enter.
-
-The room was a work-shop of sorts, but what instantly attracted attention
-were two enormous kites leaning against the wall.
-
-“You see?” inquired Wong.
-
-“Yes, I see,” said Ross, “only I don’t. What’s the idea, Wong?”
-
-“Mlisha Beebe kill everybody we go down canon. No can climb out. Wong
-make klite. Klite climb out.”
-
-“Guess I’m pretty thick, Wong. I don’t get it yet.”
-
-“When Wong little bloy China he fly many klites. Not forget how. Fly
-klite now. Klite lift lope top cliff. We climb lope. Go ’way.”
-
-“By George, Wong, I believe you’ve got it,” cried Ross in admiration.
-“But will it work?”
-
-“Can do” nodded Wong.
-
-“But how will you fasten the rope at the top of the cliff, Wong?”
-
-“Wong good klite flyer. Two klites lift big loop. Drop loop over tree
-top side cliff. Two ends hang dlown. Mlake slip knot. Pull one lope. All
-done.”
-
-“Wong, you’re a wonder! I believe it’ll work. Worth trying anyway.”
-
-“Can do. Try tomollow if wind come.”
-
-Ross hurried away to find Virginia Carver.
-
-“Miss Carver,” he hailed her joyously, “Wong has got a scheme to get us
-out of here, and I believe it will work. He has constructed two enormous
-kites down there in the workshop. He claims they will lift a rope, and
-he says he can drop it over one of those stunted pines at the top of the
-cliff. We climb the rope and leave friend Beebe down in the canon to hold
-the bag. Are you game?”
-
-“Of course I am,” replied the girl, surprised that he should even
-question her gameness.
-
-“I knew you would be. We’re going to try it tomorrow. You had better make
-two packs of food.”
-
-“Two packs? Don’t I carry anything?” asked the girl.
-
-“Miss Carver,” said Ross gravely, “it’s a long way to civilization, and
-it is going to be a big tax on your strength to make it without carrying
-anything.”
-
-“I’ll make it,” said Virginia Carver, as she turned away.
-
-The following morning Ross was eager for the experiment, but it was
-nearly noon before a breeze came up strong enough to lift the kites.
-
-Virginia Carver came out, clad in flannel shirt, whipcord breeches and
-high laced boots. It was a costume well suited to the work ahead, but it
-accentuated the girl’s slimness, made her appear almost frail. There was
-no frailty there, though. Rather was she supple with the suppleness of a
-braided cable, and the girl had the grace of a fine Toledo blade. Once
-again Stanley Ross became acutely aware that Virginia Carver had become
-an exceedingly important interest in his life.
-
-Wong had instructed Ross in his scheme for escape. Ross saw at once that
-he had not intended to lift a rope heavy enough to hold a human being.
-Instead Wong had unearthed from one of the storehouses a very stout light
-line.
-
-The plan was to lift the bight of the line with the two kites and drop
-it over a stunted pine growing out at an angle near the top of the north
-cliff. A heavier rope could then be attached to one end of this and drawn
-up and over the tree, making it possible to climb out.
-
-Ross saw instantly that the plan was all right if the kites could be
-manipulated. That was Wong’s job, and he seemed quite confident.
-
-All three knew that they must work quickly. If Larson Beebe discovered
-their scheme there was no telling what desperate action he might attempt.
-
-Wong and Ross quickly got the first big kite into action. It rose
-readily, but on attaining a height of fifty feet flopped drunkenly. It
-did not fall, however—merely dipped and darted. This did not appear to
-bother Wong at all. He simply gave the kite string to Virginia Carver to
-hold while he quickly flew the second kite with Ross’s help.
-
-Wong and Ross each took command of a kite now. Slowly paying out cord,
-they allowed the kites to rise. When the kites had risen to a height
-of about seventy-five feet the cords attached to the bight of the line
-suddenly became taut and the line began to rise from the ground.
-
-It was then that Ross saw that as a designer of kites Wong most
-emphatically knew his business, for the instant the weight of the
-line was borne by the kites in that instant they ceased their drunken
-plungings and flew steadily.
-
-Ross’s heart leaped within him, for he knew now that Wong’s scheme would
-work and that they were going to circumvent Larson Beebe. Up, up, the
-kites rose. A hundred feet! Two hundred! Five! A thousand!
-
-The two kites were about thirty feet apart, and when it was obvious that
-the line was higher than the cliff wall Wong and Ross began to walk
-slowly forward. Their objective was a single low pine growing at an
-outward angle near the top of the cliff. Aiming carefully at this, Wong
-and Ross brought the kites to a position where an end of the line dangled
-on each side of the tree and against the cliff. The bight of the line was
-slightly above the tree, and the kites were pulling it forward.
-
-“Missee, you grab ropes,” shouted Wong.
-
-Quickly divining what was wanted of her, Virginia Carver grasped the ends
-of the dangling lines.
-
-“Let glo!” shouted Wong again.
-
-Instantly he and Ross released the kite cords. The kites plunged
-drunkenly down out of sight over the top of the cliff. The bight of the
-line dropped neatly over the pine tree and slid down its trunk to the
-roots. The thing was done!
-
-Ross wanted to shout for pure joy. Elation showed in Virginia Carver’s
-every feature. As for Wong, the author of this daring scheme, he merely
-grinned, and went swiftly to work.
-
-Somewhere in one of the buildings Wong had discovered a coil of light
-rope. It had undoubtedly been brought in to be made up into lariats, for
-it was very pliable and exceedingly strong—strong enough to support the
-weight of a heavy man.
-
-One end of this was fastened to a free end of the line over the tree.
-When Wong pulled sharply on the opposite end of the smaller line it
-slipped readily over the tree trunk. In a minute or two the end of the
-rope had been pulled up over the tree trunk and back to the canon floor.
-Thus was the light line replaced by the heavier one.
-
-There was no place to anchor one of the rope ends so Wong simply tied a
-loop in one end of the rope, passed the other end through it, making a
-running noose, and quickly ran it up to the tree. Wong’s kites had proved
-their worth. The means of escape was provided and ready.
-
-“Wong go first,” said the Chinese. Without argument or permission, the
-intrepid Wong was assuming the risk of proving the safety of the rope. By
-way of explanation he added to Ross, “You shoulda no stlong. No can pull
-Missee up, Wong can do.”
-
-Wong grasped the rope in his hands, and with the agility of a cat,
-feet on the canon wall, passed himself, hand over hand, up the face of
-the cliff. It seemed hardly a minute before he was at the top and had
-scrambled over the edge.
-
-In a moment his head reappeared and he called down to Ross to send up the
-food packs, canteens, and blankets. This was but the work of a moment,
-and Wong quickly drew them to the top.
-
-So far everything had gone well, and there was no sign of Beebe. It
-looked as though they were going to make good their escape.
-
-When Wong let the rope down again Ross fashioned a loop in the end of it,
-which he passed over Virginia Carver’s head and secured it under her arms.
-
-“Now, Miss Carver, if you will take hold of the rope with both hands I
-think Wong can pull you up safely,” he said. “If you hit against the
-cliff push yourself away with your feet.”
-
-The girl did not answer him, but she smiled confidently. She accepted her
-part in the escape with what appealed to Stanley Ross as being splendid
-courage.
-
-Slowly but very steadily, Wong began to raise the girl. The little
-Chinese seemed to be made of steel, for, without stopping once or
-increasing or decreasing the speed, he drew Virginia Carver to the top
-of the cliff and helped her over the edge. It was a feat of which a man
-twice his size might have been justly proud.
-
-When the rope came down again Ross lost no time. A hasty glance toward
-the mouth of the tiny canon revealed no sight of Beebe. Grasping the
-rope, Ross began his ascent.
-
-His shoulder bothered him somewhat, but it was not more than two or three
-minutes before he, too, was at the cliff top.
-
-They were free!
-
-
-_CHAPTER TWELVE_
-
-AN ENDING AND A BEGINNING
-
-Stanley Ross drew himself over the edge of the cliff, where Virginia
-Carver and Wong were waiting, and scrambled to his feet. He was exuberant.
-
-“Well, Miss Carver, I guess we’re safe all right, thanks to Wong here,”
-he exulted. “All that remains now is to make tracks away from this
-accursed place.”
-
-“So you think you’re safe, eh?” snarled a cold voice.
-
-Ross whirled to find himself facing Larson Beebe. Beebe was covering him
-steadily with a big automatic, and his deep set, piggish eyes had an
-insane light in them.
-
-Ross’s heart sank within him. He had expected an attack from Beebe from
-below, but that he might be waiting for them on the cliff top never
-entered his head. He was utterly helpless now. Beebe had the drop on him
-and could kill him twice over before he could draw his own gun. Moreover,
-it was certain Beebe intended doing that very thing.
-
-Ross was filled with a sense of futility, impotency. That he was about
-to die he did not consider. He was merely disgusted with himself for
-allowing himself to be checkmated when the game was practically won.
-
-“So you thought you could get away?” Beebe was going on. It was obvious
-that he, too, was nearly insane. “Thought I was asleep, eh? I knew what
-was up as soon as I saw the kites. I could have got you then, but I
-figured the easiest and safest way would be to slip up here and wait
-behind a rock till you were all up. You wouldn’t be looking for me and I
-could pot you easily. Well, I’m here and you’re due for a long journey.
-
-“Thought you could outwit Larson Beebe, eh? I’m just going to shoot you
-and your precious Chink friend here now and kick you over the cliff. Then
-I’m going to take Virginia and——.”
-
-Ross was conscious that Wong’s right hand whipped to the base of his
-skull just above the collar of his blouse. In the same instant it came
-away again and now it held a long, thin, slender glittering blade!
-
-There was another movement of Wong’s hand so swift that he could not
-follow it. Ross only knew that a look of utterably blank amazement had
-overspread Larson Beebe’s face. It was as though Beebe had seen a miracle
-performed before his eyes and could not fathom it.
-
-Then, suddenly, Ross saw what had happened. The hilt of the knife that
-Wong had held was protruding from Larson Beebe’s ribs!
-
-For an instant Beebe wavered on his feet. His fingers relaxed and his gun
-clattered to the rocks. He pitched forward onto his face.
-
-“Can do,” muttered Wong. “One day kick Wong. Not kick again.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-That night the three camped beside a little water-hole several miles
-down the main canon. Around the tiny campfire they made their plans for
-getting out of the desert.
-
-Ross knew the general direction to take, and he felt confident that
-by taking it easy the girl would be able to make the journey on foot.
-Virginia Carver was confident.
-
-The following morning Ross was awakened by footsteps on the rocks. He
-raised up to see two long-eared animals making their way down the trail
-to the water-hole. It was Archibald and Percy!
-
-Ross let out a shout that instantly roused his companions.
-
-“There’s your ship of the desert that’s going to carry you back to
-civilization,” he called, as Virginia raised up from her blankets.
-
-The girl did not comprehend. She gazed at the two animals in astonishment
-for a moment.
-
-“But they’re wild, aren’t they?” she asked.
-
-“Just as wild as two snails,” said Ross. “Those two estimable gentlemen
-brought me into this desert, and they’re going to take us out.”
-
-When breakfast had been finished Ross noticed that Wong was busily
-engaged in rearranging the weight of the packs.
-
-“Never mind the packs, Wong. Friend Archibald here can carry Miss Carver
-and Percy can handle the supplies. You and I will go light, Wong,” Ross
-explained.
-
-“No can do,” replied Wong. “Me no go you.”
-
-“What do you mean, Wong?”
-
-“Wong go that way,” answered the Chinese, pointing to the south.
-
-“You go that way,” asked Ross, perplexed. “Why? You’re going with Miss
-Carver and me.”
-
-Wong shook his head. “Wong kill man. Think not stay in ’Nited States. Go
-Mexiclo.”
-
-“Nonsense, Wong,” said Ross. “Miss Carver and I can easily fix that.”
-
-“Think not. Wong go Mexiclo. Got blother there. Buy li’le res’rant.”
-
-Ross saw that there was no use in trying to dissuade Wong. There was no
-combating such a nature. After a few moments Ross asked:
-
-“Wong, where you going in Mexico?”
-
-“Go Wa’lz.”
-
-“Going to Juarez, eh? What’s your full name?”
-
-“Name? Wong Chen Chek.”
-
-“All right, Wong. In about two months you go to the postoffice and
-inquire for a registered package. You’ll find enough money in it to buy
-the best little restaurant in Juarez.”
-
-Wong grinned. “Thlank you.”
-
-Swinging his pack to his shoulder, he swung down the trail without more
-ado.
-
-“Goo’ bye. Goo’ bye, Missee,” came back to Ross and Virginia Carver.
-
-A half hour later the Chinese disappeared from view far down the canon.
-Ross turned to the girl.
-
-Virginia Carver was gazing far out over the jumble of rocks and sand that
-is the Red Desert to where the mists of the morning were dissolving into
-the shifting haze of the rising sun.
-
-For a moment Ross watched her without speaking. Fresh and vibrant with
-youth, she was lovely beyond words.
-
-“I guess we had best be going now,” he said. Then his voice stumbled,
-“Miss Carver—Virginia—when we get out of here—I’ve—I’ve something to say
-to you.”
-
-For a long moment the girl continued to look far into the colorful haze
-of the desert. Then she turned toward Ross. A peculiarly tender little
-smile wreathed her mouth. Her eyes were swimming pools of unshed tears.
-
-Her voice faltered, “Would—would you mind—saying it now—Stanley?”
-
-
-THE END.
-
-
-
-
-Chicago Man Attacked by Fighting Owl
-
-
-John Casey, night watchman for the Chicago Protective Agency, while
-“walking his beat” one night recently, entered a dark passageway in West
-Madison Street; and then, all at once—
-
-“Something flew at me from the darkness,” he said later, “and knocked
-my cap off and began scratching my face and clawing out my hair by the
-roots. I made a pass at it, but found I was fanning the air. Then I
-saw two blazing eyes, and struck at them. Before I could get out my
-gun the monster jumped on me again. I managed to swing on it with my
-night-stick—and that ended the fight.”
-
-To substantiate his story, Watchman Casey exhibited a dead owl measuring
-thirty-six inches from tip to tip, also numerous cuts and bruises on his
-hands and face.
-
-
-
-
-_A Powerful Novel of Sinister Madmen That Mounts To An Astounding Climax_
-
-The Jailer of Souls
-
-_Complete In This Issue_
-
-_By_ HAMILTON CRAIGIE
-
-
-_CHAPTER ONE_
-
-SOUTHWEST OF THE LAW
-
-[Illustration]
-
-All the way Westward in the smoker the man in the high-crowned, black
-Stetson had taken no part in the conversation. He had appeared to doze,
-slumping in the high-backed seat as the train rushed onward into the
-golden afternoon.
-
-The three men at his back had been busy with an interminable round of
-poker: draw, jack-pot, and stud; deuces wild, and seven-card peak. They
-moved across the aisle now, as the long train slowed for the brief stop
-at Two-Horse Canyon, facing him obliquely and a little to his left.
-
-Twice or thrice they had essayed to draw him into the talk, but
-the man in the black Stetson had been oblivious; he had continued
-taciturn—morose, almost, one might have said. But he had not been asleep;
-rather, he had listened with all his ears as their voices had reached him
-between hands:
-
-“... Yes—Dry Bone—been there myself—they run things pretty much to
-suit _themselves_.... Wide-open.... Sure.... You might call it a dead
-open-and-shut proposition, I’ll tell a man!”
-
-The laugh that followed had come to the man in the black Stetson with a
-curious, grating note:
-
-“Sure-thing gamblers; con-men—it’s a regular crook’s paradise.... And
-there’s that fellow, Rook....”
-
-The eyes of the man in the black Stetson narrowed abruptly at the
-corners; for a moment, as a curtain is drawn swiftly from right to left,
-something arose to peer out of those eyes, glowing, deep-down, like a
-still, festering flame. But it was gone upon the instant—
-
-“... And there’s that fellow, Rook....” the man had said.
-
-Of a sudden he had stopped short as if he had been muzzled; presently his
-voice had come again, dry, matter-of-fact:
-
-“I’ll see that raise, Carpenter, and it’ll cost you just twenty iron men
-to call....”
-
-Plainly, that name, “Rook,” had been taboo; the speaker had been silently
-reminded of it.
-
-The man in the black Stetson—he had been known as Black Steve Annister
-in the back blocks at Wooloomooloof before he had made of that name a
-by-word in the honkatonks and the gambling-hells from San Francisco
-northward to the Wind River country, and beyond it—Black Steve Annister
-was sitting upright now, but he had retired behind a wide-spread copy of
-the _Durango County Gazette_. He was not reading it, however, although he
-was looking through it—at the three men just across the aisle, studying
-them through the pin-pricks he had made in it, himself unseen.
-
-Annister had arrived in New York only the week previous from Sourabaya,
-Java, and he had not waited even overnight before he had begun the long
-journey, broken at Washington for half a day, which had taken him now
-half way southwestward across the State of Texas. Presently the long
-train would cross the Pecos, beyond it the serrated ramparts of the
-Guadalupes; Dry Bone was just between.
-
-Annister, studying the men, frowned abruptly, yawning behind his hand.
-Two of the men he put down for ranchers—sheep men, probably; there was
-about them none of the glamor of that West which lingers even now in the
-person of a cattleman; and these men were negligible.
-
-But the third man would have been noticeable anywhere. He was a bull’s
-bulk of a man, hard-featured, mouth a straight gash above a heavy chin
-barbered to the blood; the observer across the aisle would have said
-“cowman,” and registered a bull’s eye with it, point-blank.
-
-The two who were with him, evidently with interests in common, were
-scarcely friendly with the cowman, if such he was; it was evident in
-their attitude, the constraint which had fallen upon them following that
-mention of “Rook.”
-
-But the man in the black Stetson continued to study the big fellow
-through the holes in his newspaper: the hard face, tanned a rich
-saddle color; the nose, flattened to a smudge of flaring nostril; the
-cauliflower ear.
-
-He had heard the name, “Ellison” once or twice; somewhere, deep down, it
-had set vibrating a chord of memory that brought with it, incongruously
-enough, an altogether different setting: a padded ring under twin,
-blazing arcs; the thud and shuffle of sliding feet; a man, huge, brutish,
-broad, fists like stone mauls, yet, for all his bulk, a very cat for
-quickness....
-
-He put down his paper now—to find those hard eyes boring into his.
-Ellison, or whatever the man’s name was, had shifted in his seat; the
-glance that he turned now upon the stranger in the black Stetson was
-searching, probing. There was a truculence in it, a fierce, bright,
-avid staring, like an animal’s, savage in its very directness, like a
-challenge—which in effect it was.
-
-Annister returned the look, eye for eye, with a bitter, brooding
-insolence in which there was apparent a certain mockery, his eyes in a
-veiled gleaming, like the sun on water. For a long moment their glances
-engaged, in a silent duel, like rapier points; then the giant with the
-cauliflower ear vented a sound between a grunt and a snort, turning to
-the window, his gaze outward across the flat levels of the adjacent
-prairie in a kind of sightless stare.
-
-There had been no reason in it—no logic—that Annister could see, but for
-the moment he had owned to a sudden sense of crisis; it had seemed to him
-for a moment that in the giant’s eyes there had been almost a knowing, an
-understanding look. But the man could have no business with him—of that
-he was certain.
-
-The fellow was just a bully, probably, a big, hulking lump of beef who
-resented, as it might chance, Annister’s undeniably cosmopolitan air;
-the sardonic flicker in the gray-green eyes; the cool, contemptuous
-appraisal. But, after all, it had been the giant who had begun it.
-
-And yet, somehow, Annister was thinking that he had seen him before, and,
-oddly, illogically enough, he found himself liking the man—why, he could
-not have told.
-
-Black Steve Annister, “with the heart of a cougar and the conscience of a
-wolf,” as a disgruntled enemy had at one time phrased it, could have sat
-into that game had he been so minded, with profit to himself, pecuniary
-and otherwise, but he had preferred to play the hand that had been dealt
-him. Later, at Dry Bone, that would be another matter.
-
-Now, his lean, strong, hawklike face darkened abruptly with the thought
-behind his eyes, and then—for Annister had eyes in the back of his
-head—he was suddenly aware that the conductor was advancing along the
-aisle.
-
-The three men opposite had ceased their conversation as if at an order.
-Two or three of the remaining passengers stared curiously, after the
-manner of their kind (they were small tradesmen, merchants, going on
-beyond the border to Tucson), as the conductor halted at Annister’s elbow.
-
-“Excuse me, Mister—Mister—” he began.
-
-“—Annister!” The answer was low, even, controlled, but beneath the silken
-tone there ran a hint of iron.
-
-“Mister Annister,” repeated the conductor. “Will you—just a moment,
-please?”
-
-Annister rose, following the official outward toward the vestibule. And
-as he went he could feel those eyes, avid, curious, boring into his back.
-He permitted himself the ghost of a cold grin as the conductor, turning
-in the entry, laid a respectful hand upon his sleeve.
-
-“I’m—sorry, sir,” he said, low. “You getting off at Dry Bone, aren’t you?”
-
-The words were less a question than a statement of fact. Annister nodded.
-The conductor, a tall, bronzed man who might have been an old-time line
-rider, shot a quick glance over his shoulder. Then he said, his tone
-even, matter-of-fact:
-
-“I—_wouldn’t_—if I was you.”
-
-Annister stared. Then, producing his cigar-case, lighting a long, black
-invincible, the twin to which the conductor had selected, he remarked
-casually:
-
-“They’re good cigars.... In the trenches we smoked ‘Woodbines’—a cross
-between tar-heel and alfalfa; you have a lot of alfalfa out here, eh? And
-the ‘third light,’ as we used to call it, most always got his—three men
-lighting up from the same match, you know.”
-
-His tone abruptly hardened; the glance that he turned upon the conductor
-now was like a lance of flame.
-
-“Well—I’m not superstitious—but—will you tell me _why_?”
-
-It is significant that the conductor was breaking a rigid Company rule by
-joining Annister in a surreptitious cigar. Now he turned guiltily as a
-voice sounded from the corridor at his back:
-
-“Ex-cuse me—but could I trouble you for a light?”
-
-The third man, as Annister could see, was tall and heavily built, with
-broad shoulders and a curiously small head. He had a sharp, acquisitive
-nose, and a mouth tight-lipped and thin. Annister, versed in reading men,
-was abruptly conscious of an instinctive and overmastering repugnance.
-For the man’s eyes were cold and cruel, sleepy-lidded, like a snake’s,
-roving between Annister and the conductor in a furtive scrutiny.
-
-The match was still alight. Annister, his hand steady as a rock, extended
-it to the newcomer, who, with an inarticulate grunt, lighted his
-cigarette, turning, without further speech, backward along the corridor.
-
-Annister waited a moment until he was certain that the man was out of
-earshot. Then:
-
-“The ‘third light,’ eh?” he murmured, his tone abruptly hardened.
-“Well—and why shouldn’t I get off?” he asked, grimly.
-
-The conductor for a moment seemed at a loss.
-
-“It’s like this, Mr. Annister,” he said slowly. “I’m a new man on the S.
-P., but I’ve been hearing a lot—no gossip, you understand—but a conductor
-hears a good deal, by and large.... And this is a cow country, or it used
-to be—pretty wild, in spots. Dry Bone, now—they run things pretty much to
-suit themselves—”
-
-He paused, in a visible embarrassment.
-
-“There’s a party of four back there in the diner—I couldn’t help
-overhearing what they were saying, and—well—I’m just repeating what they
-said, and no offense—”
-
-“That’s all right,” interrupted Annister, evenly. “Go on.”
-
-“Why—they said,” continued the conductor, “that you were an Eastern
-gambler—a—confidence-man—that you were not wanted here in Dry Bone; that
-it wouldn’t be exactly healthy for you if you stopped off—that’s all. I
-thought you’d be wanting to know. And if you’ll take my advice, even if
-you haven’t asked it, I’d say: go on to Tombstone—you can figure it out
-from there.”
-
-“Thanks,” answered Annister shortly. “I’m getting off—at Dry Bone. How
-soon are we due?”
-
-“Fifteen minutes,” replied the conductor, glancing at his watch. “But
-if I was you, sir, I’d stay aboard; it’s a bad crowd there, as I happen
-to know, and they’ve got a branch of the S. S. S. there, only they work
-it to suit themselves: tar-and-feathers is just a picnic with that gang;
-they’re a stemwinding bunch of assassins, I’ll say! So far they’ve
-operated under cover, mostly, and down here in the Southwest—well—it
-ain’t a lot different, in some ways, than it was thirty years ago. You’ll
-see—because they’re—”
-
-“—Southwest of the Law—is that it?” Annister laughed shortly. “Well—much
-obliged, old-timer,” he said. “I won’t forget it. But I’m getting off.”
-
-The long train was slowing for the station stop. Annister, striding to
-his seat, got down his heavy bag. For a moment he stood, considering, his
-gaze, under lowered lids, upon the long coach and its passengers in a
-swift, squinting appraisal.
-
-The three men were gone.
-
-Somehow, they had found out who he was. Well—that made little difference,
-he reflected, grimly, except to force matters to a show-down, and the
-sooner the better.
-
-For there was a man in Dry Bone; Annister had known him in the old time;
-and it was with this man, unless he was greatly mistaken, that his
-business had to do.
-
-He would put it to the touch, then; he would sit into the game, and would
-come heeled, and they could rib up the deck on him, and welcome.
-
-He was turning to the door when, of a sudden, there came to him a second
-warning: there was a swish of skirts, a sudden odor of violets. Annister
-had a glimpse of a blonde head beneath a close-fitting toque, as the girl
-passed him, disappearing in the doorway.
-
-And there, on the flooring at his feet, was a square of white.
-
-Annister, stooping, retrieved it, holding the card upward to the light:
-
- “_Stay on board. Dry Bone is not safe—for you. Be warned—in
- time._”
-
-There was no signature. Annister made a little clucking sound with his
-tongue, his face set like flint. He was alone in the car.
-
-The train had stopped now as, bag in hand, he shouldered through the
-doorway. And then, abruptly, as if materialized out of the air, a face
-grinned into his, lips drawn backward from the teeth in a soundless
-snarl. It was the big man with the cauliflower ear.
-
-“Hombre,” he said, without preamble, in a hoarse, carrying whisper, “take
-an old-timer’s advice: go back—_an’_ set down—you savvy? This place—it
-ain’t exactly healthy for a young fellow like you, I’m tellin’ yu! For if
-you don’t—”
-
-Annister’s cold stare was followed by his voice, low, incisive:
-
-“You’re blocking the doorway,” he said, with a sort of freezing quiet.
-
-The giant’s hard mouth twisted in a sneer; his great paw reaching upward
-with a clawing motion, blunt fingers upon Annister’s shoulder. Then—what
-followed happened with the speed of light.
-
-“You can’t get off here, Mister—” the giant was continuing, when the
-words were blotted out. Annister’s right fist, behind it the full weight
-of his two hundred pounds of iron-hard muscle, curved in a short arc;
-there was a spanking thud. The big man, lifted from his feet, crashed
-into the front door-frame, slumping face downward in an aimless huddle of
-sprawling limbs.
-
-“The hell you say!” grinned Black Steve Annister, leaping lightly to the
-platform, with never a backward glance.
-
-Such was the manner of his coming.
-
-
-_CHAPTER TWO_
-
-THE HAND IN THE DARK
-
-The one hotel in Dry Bone was the Mansion House.
-
-Annister, crossing the lobby, was aware of a veiled hostility in the
-stares directed at him from the group of loungers in the doorway; they
-gave ground grudgingly, as he came in, with a sort of covert truculence.
-
-Here, as he could see, there was a curious mingling of the Old West and
-the New: men, whose attire would have created no remark, say, even in New
-York; others, booted and spurred, cartridge-belted and pistolled—but all,
-as he noticed, with, for headgear, the inevitable Stetson.
-
-Once in his room, and the door locked and bolted, he busied himself for
-a moment with a sheaf of papers, several of them adorned with a huge,
-official seal; they crackled as he put them in an inner pocket. Then,
-dressed as he was, he lay down upon the bed, but not to sleep.
-
-It was late—hard upon midnight—when the sound for which he had waited
-came with the soft _whirring_ of the window-weights. The sound was not
-loud; it would not have awakened him had he been asleep; but Annister
-could hear it plainly enough.
-
-He had removed his shoes upon retiring. Now, in his stocking-feet, he
-approached the window, a black, glimmering oblong against the windy
-night without. As he watched, the faint _whirring_ ceased; a pair of
-hands appeared suddenly out of the darkness, fingers hooked into the
-window-sill.
-
-Annister drew a faint, hissing breath. In the star-shine, for there was
-no moon, the fingers showed in a luminous grayness against the sill,
-clawlike, malformed, like the talons of a beast, which in effect they
-were.
-
-Annister knew them upon the instant, for, in far-off Java, for instance,
-he had seen those hands, or, rather, the same and yet not the same. And
-in that instant he had acted.
-
-Both hands upon the window-sash, he brought it down with a crash upon
-those fingers; there followed a yelp of pain, inhuman, doglike—a groaning
-curse—the slam of a falling ladder—a heavy thud—silence.
-
-Annister smiled grimly in the darkness. Whoever it was, the intruder
-would never be certain as to whether that window had crashed downward
-of its own accord, or not. And leaning in the window, Annister raised
-it cautiously again after a moment. He heard presently the slow drag of
-retreating footsteps; after all, it had not been much of a drop.
-
-Closing and bolting the window, he undressed in the darkness, and with
-the facility of an old campaigner was asleep and snoring beneath the
-blankets between two ticks of the watch.
-
-But in the morning a surprise awaited him.
-
-Always an early riser, he was breakfasting alone in the empty dining-room
-when the waitress brought him a note. Beyond noting that she was pretty,
-and that she did not look like a waitress, Annister, somewhat engrossed
-in the business in hand, for a moment stared at the envelope with
-unseeing eyes.
-
-Then, ripping it open, he took in its contents in one swift, flashing
-glance:
-
- _“My dear Mr. Annister_:
-
- _“I would be very glad to see you at my office at ten this
- morning—if you are able to be there.”_
-
-It was signed simply: “Hamilton Rook.”
-
-Annister grinned fleetingly in answer.
-
-“Well—it’s not another warning, at any rate,” he said, half aloud,
-turning to the consideration of his breakfast bacon. Then, at a low voice
-at his back, he turned:
-
-“Did you—say your coffee needed warming, sir?”
-
-It was the waitress.
-
-Annister had turned the note, face downward, on the table, with a quick
-flirt of his thumb. How long she had been there behind him he could not
-tell, for he had heard no sound.
-
-“Thanks—no,” he said shortly, his hard eyes boring into hers with an
-almost insolent appraisal.
-
-Yes—she was pretty, and more than that, her violet eyes darkening now
-under his abrupt, almost savage scrutiny. And her voice—it was like a
-bell just trembling out of silence. Annister spoke:
-
-“Have you been here long—in Dry Bone, I mean?” he asked.
-
-The waitress smiled, and it was not the smile of a waitress, Annister
-was convinced. Now, with a girl like that for a partner—was his unspoken
-thought—he could—well....
-
-“N-no, sir,” the girl made answer, with a sudden affectation of primness.
-“I came in yesterday, sir—on the same train with you, sir. I—I’ve just
-been—engaged.”
-
-Annister repressed an absurd prompting to ask her how many times she had
-been engaged before, and to whom and at what. Her eyes were assuredly
-hypnotic, with lashes long and delicately fine.
-
-“_Umm_,” he rumbled in answer.
-
-Was it possible, after all, that she had been the girl in the crimson
-toque? And, with the card in his pocket, for a moment he was tempted to
-show it to her. Instead:
-
-“Well—I hope you like it here,” he said. “You’ll know me—the next time?”
-
-And for a moment he could have sworn that in the face of the girl there
-had come all at once a curious, almost a baffling look, at once enigmatic
-and self-revealing. But the entrance of the vanguard of breakfasters
-interrupted.
-
-He watched her for a little as with a swaying, lilting step she moved off
-to minister to the late-comers, his eyes speculative. Then, turning once
-more to the letter, he re-read it as a man reading a cipher:
-
-“_If you are able to be there._” Could there be a double meaning in that?
-For if Rook had sent that midnight visitor, then there were no lengths
-indeed to which he might go—for the hand, like a beast’s paw, upon the
-window-sill, had been, as Annister had known upon the instant, the hand
-of the Thug, the Dacoit, the Strangler.
-
-Warnings, thrice repeated; a hand in the dark; a waitress who was not
-all she seemed; an invitation, suave, and, as Annister conceived it,
-ironic—it was a situation not without its possibilities for action.
-
-And Black Steve Annister loved action. Perhaps, after all, he was to have
-it now, whether he would or no.
-
-Rook he had known aforetime, but he was convinced that the latter would
-not recognize him save as Black Steve Annister, wastrel of the wide
-world, gentleman adventurer-in-waiting to the High Gods of Adventure and
-Derring-do, knight-errant of the highways and byways of Criminopolis,
-scarce a black sheep, indeed, but a wolf of the long trail and of the
-night.
-
-Rook had known him as such in the days when, as jackal for certain vested
-interests, the black-bearded lawyer had run foul of young Annister, just
-then beginning a hectic career of spending which, but three years in the
-past, had abruptly terminated with Annister’s complete disappearance from
-joyous jazz-palace and discreetly gilded temple of high hazard.
-
-For he had dropped out of sight, lost, as a stone is lost, in the
-sea-green waters of oblivion, save for an occasional ripple thereafter
-which proclaimed him blacksander, beachcomber, _chevalier d’industrie_,
-until one memorable evening a twelve-month gone ... but Rook would be
-knowing nothing of that.
-
-Annister had come home from the South Seas to find his father gone, and a
-note: “_Do not look for me, for you are not my son._” And an exhaustive
-inquiry had failed even to suggest the slightest clue.
-
-The elder Annister could have written his check for seven figures, and it
-appeared, following his disappearance, that he had done so; they had come
-in from North and South and East and West, steadily, and, as it seemed,
-with purpose. But as a clue to his whereabouts they had been unavailing.
-
-But, from the moment of his discovery of that note, Black Steve Annister,
-visiting a certain office in a certain side-street not far distant from
-the Capitol, had surprised its guardian with a terse:
-
-“That offer of yours, Childers—I’ve come to take it up.”
-
-The man called Childers had bent a keen look upon his visitor; another
-might have described it as unpleasant, stern.
-
-“Well, you know just what that means, eh?” he had said. “You’ll be merely
-a cog, a link—remember that!”
-
-“Yes,” Annister had answered, and there the interview had ended.
-
-And so Black Steve Annister, serving two masters, had come to Dry Bone,
-and the end, as it might chance, of the long trail leading Westward into
-the setting sun.
-
-He rose from the table now, going out into the pale Spring sunshine on
-his way to the office of Hamilton Rook. He found the building presently;
-it was the court-house; there was a figure of Blind Justice with her
-scales just over the entrance. Annister reflected sardonically that,
-here, in Carter County, distant from a civilization at present as remote
-as the moon, she was probably also deaf—and dumb. And presently, at the
-head of a dark flight, there was the office, with the legend:
-
- HAMILTON ROOK
-
- ATTORNEY AND
- COUNSELLOR-AT-LAW
-
-There was a small sign at the corner of the door; in obedience to its
-invitation to “Walk In,” Annister, his hand upon the knob in a noiseless
-pressure, abruptly flung it wide.
-
-A split second before the opening of that door, and while his hand was on
-the knob, Annister had seen, or thought that he had seen, a swift shadow
-pass suddenly across the ground-glass panel; there was the grating sound
-of a chair being moved backward.
-
-Then, standing in the doorway, Annister’s eyes narrowed; he stood rigid,
-tense.
-
-For the man facing him across the stained and battered desk, lean head
-like a vulture’s set upon wide shoulders; mouth like a straight gash with
-its thin, bloodless lips; cold eyes fixed upon him in a silent, ophidian
-brightness—was—the “third light,” as he had called him—the man whom he
-had met for a moment back there in the smoker of the Transcontinental.
-
-
-_CHAPTER THREE_
-
-BEHIND THE ARRAS
-
-“Mister Annister,” greeted the man at the desk. “You didn’t know me, eh?
-Well—it’s a long time—three years—and my beard—” he passed a bony hand
-across his chin—“I sacrificed that long ago; it is scarcely the fashion.
-Now—” he waved a hand, indicating a chair at his left—“sit down, won’t
-you? We can—talk better so.”
-
-Annister seated himself, his eyes upon the cold eyes just across. That
-the man who sat there had inspired those warnings he had little doubt;
-that he had sent that midnight assassin against him, he was convinced.
-And yet—he was at a loss to find the reason.
-
-Rook was not aware, could not be aware, of a certain fact known only to
-himself, Annister, and a certain man just then twenty-five hundred miles
-distant in that dim office hard by the Capitol; it was beyond the bounds
-of possibility. No—it could scarcely be that, he told himself.
-
-And of a sudden a cold rage shook him so that he trembled; his hands,
-flat upon the desk-top, balled suddenly into fists. This man—this suave,
-secret knave with the eyes of ice, and the implacable, grim mouth—sat
-there now, removed from him merely by the width of the narrow desk. And
-if it were true, that which he suspected, then this man, this jackal,
-this Prince of Plunder with the heart of a hyena and the conscience of a
-wolf—why, he had earned his quittance a hundred times over.
-
-The flat black shape of the automatic hung in a sling under his left
-arm-pit—Annister had forgotten that. He knew merely that he was face
-to face with the man whom he had come twenty-five hundred long miles
-to meet; he saw him now as through a crimson mist. And for the moment
-the careful plan that he had made—that, too, was forgotten, lost in the
-almost overmastering impulse to drive his fist into that face so close to
-his, the cold eyes, the pallid, sneering mouth....
-
-Something of this must have showed in his face, plainly visible to the
-man who faced him across the desk.
-
-There was a semi-twilight in the room even by day. Now the lean head
-thrust forward like a striking snake; there came a sudden, brief
-explosion of movement, a darkening flash, as the hand, holding the heavy
-automatic, swung upward level with his visitor, point-blank.
-
-At such a distance it would be impossible to miss.
-
-There was a curtain just behind him; Annister had noticed it upon
-entering. Now at his back it rippled suddenly along its length as if at
-the passage of a heavy body just behind. The lawyer smiled thinly.
-
-“Ah, my friend,” he said, “it is so easy to be indiscreet! And one must
-meet force with force. This—it is theatrical, if you like—but—it is just
-a little demonstration of my—preparedness. I thought—you see....”
-
-There came a sardonic flicker in the nearset eyes; the voice purred now
-in the semi-darkness like a cat’s:
-
-“I must protect myself.... There are—reasons.... You see, I thought, for
-a moment, that you—ah—meditated a resort to—violence. And violence is
-something that I deplore, my friend; and here I am surrounded by violent
-men, ‘sudden and quick in quarrel,’ as the poet has it; sometimes they
-are difficult to control.”
-
-Annister had himself in hand. The veiled threat with which the lawyer
-had ended bothered him not at all. Now, casually as it seemed, but
-with the lightning riposte of a duellist, his hand reached out; there
-came a sudden wrench, a twist, a snarling oath from Rook; and Annister,
-pocketing the pistol, smiled grimly now in answer.
-
-“Now—‘we can talk better so’!” he mocked. “The balance of power, ha? Now,
-let me tell you something: You left the big town—for your health; that
-was three years ago, wasn’t it? I didn’t recognize you, but it was a
-pretty close shave, at that!”
-
-He laughed, but there was a ring of menace in it. His hard eyes held the
-pale ones of the lawyer with a chill malevolence.
-
-“Rook,” he said, low, “you’re as crooked as a ram’s-horn; you’re a bent
-twig; I wouldn’t trust you this side of hell further than I could see
-you, and not even then. Now—” his voice cracked suddenly in the thick
-silence like the cracking of a whip—“you had the infernal gall to send
-me—here—_after_ you’d have accounted for me—_by the left hand_, ha?
-
-“I left that window open, because, if you want to know, I was expecting
-something of the sort. And now—”
-
-The hand holding the pistol became rigid as a rock.
-
-“—I want the reason _why_—in a holy minute, Mister Hamilton Rook—or else—”
-
-For a heart-beat the face of the lawyer seemed swollen to a poisonous
-whiteness; the veins in his neck and temples stood out in ridges.
-Then—the long, spatulate fingers spread wide with a curious, flicking
-motion, thumbs downward; the curtain bellied outward suddenly as if in
-answer.
-
-Abruptly Annister felt for a heart-beat a something that was like a cold
-wind blowing upon the back of his neck, and it was a wind of death.
-Something slid past his shoulder with the speed of light; talons of
-steel, thumbs downward, pressing at the base of his brain. He heard a
-hoarse, whistling croak—a sound that was nothing human. Then—
-
-There is but one answer to that strangler’s grip, and it is a secret
-known only to a few. Annister had learned it, no matter where, and in the
-learning he had paid....
-
-Now, an infinitesimal split second before the beast paws had encircled
-his throat, his forefinger and thumb had flashed upward, hooked, as steel
-gaff is hooked, between those fingers and his throat.
-
-There followed a straining heave; a cry, inhuman, beastlike, like the
-mewing of a cat. Annister, rising to his feet, leaned abruptly to the
-left—straightened, with one quick, explosive heave of his powerful
-shoulder-muscles—and the body of his antagonist catapulted over his head.
-
-Flung clear of the desk, he landed, heavily, on one shoulder-point,
-twitched a moment, lay still. It was the “flying-mare,” and none but a
-master could have summoned it.
-
-Annister turned the unconscious man over with his foot.
-
-“_Jivero!_” he muttered, between set teeth.
-
-He shivered slightly in the humid air of the warm room. For the man was
-an Ecuadorian savage—a jungle-beast; once, in Quito, Annister had seen
-two or three: flat-faced, rather handsome savages; how or where Rook had
-acquired the fellow only the lawyer could have said.
-
-According to his savage code, he had been faithful—as a tiger is faithful
-to his trainer, his keeper. Annister, brave as he was, would have
-preferred a rattler, a fer-de-lance, for company. He turned now with an
-abrupt movement to Rook, who, slumped in his chair, sat staring at the
-huddled figure of the Indian where he had fallen.
-
-“Now,” said Annister, “I’ve a notion, Mister Hamilton Rook, to shoot
-first, and ask questions afterward.... However, I confess I’m still a
-trifle curious as to your motive—more so, since this second pleasant
-little interlude with your man Friday here. Now—may I ask you—_why_?”
-
-The lawyer’s lips were moving, fumbling together, without sound. Fingers
-trembling, like a man in a fit, at length he lifted dull eyes to his
-interrogator:
-
-“This,” he enunciated thickly, gesturing toward the huddled figure on
-the carpet. “It was to save my—life—that is the truth, Annister—you
-must—believe. The reason—for the others.... I did not know it was you
-there in the smoker; I thought—that is—” he appeared to breathe of a
-sudden like a man who had been running—“we had a report—that you were
-quite another man—one who was—ah—would be antagonistic, in fact, to
-certain operations—and so—”
-
-He spread his hands wide with a little, flicking gesture.
-
-“—That is why—but now, of course, you will understand—?”
-
-“Yes,” answered Annister, bluntly. “I understand. You thought I was—an
-operative, ha? Well—I’m not—that kind of an operative. But—” his manner
-became all at once sharp, incisive; the gaze that he bent upon Rook was
-the shrewd look of a man who sees his opportunity ready to his hand.
-Cunning was in that look, and an infinite guile; the lawyer did not miss
-it.
-
-Here was something that he could deal with. He had known of Annister’s
-reputation as of old; it had been none of the best, certainly, and with
-that knowledge now there came a measure of reassurance. And if he was any
-judge of men, here was one whom he could use: the acquisitive gleaming in
-the eyes; the hard, incisive mouth, the predatory, forward-thrusting tilt
-of the head—if he, Rook, was any judge of men, here was a man whom he
-could use.
-
-Old Travis Annister had disinherited him: the son who had been a waster
-in the far places of the earth—that was an added reason. And at the
-thought there came a pale gleaming in the lawyer’s close-set eyes, like
-the sun on water. Travis Annister ... and Travis Annister had disappeared
-... well, of course, he had heard of it. His voice reached the younger
-man in a purring whisper:
-
-“As I have hinted, Mr. Annister, I am interested in—certain operations;
-shall we call them—speculative? For some time now I have been in need of
-a sort of silent partner, or, rather, the Doctor—”
-
-He caught himself with a _click_ of his strong, white, even teeth.
-Annister’s face continued impassive, save for the keen eyes, veiled now
-under lowered lids. Rook continued:
-
-“Annister,” he said suddenly, as if he had abruptly come to a decision,
-“I’ll lay my cards on the table with you: I need a man, and he can not
-afford to be too—scrupulous, do you understand? The—the doctor tells me
-I have been overdoing it.” He gave a faint, wintry smile. “We are—out of
-the beaten track here—southwest of the law, as you might call it....”
-
-He lowered his voice to a faint, hissing sibilance:
-
-“I will expect you to ask no questions. You have been a cow-man; there
-are certain interests to the north and the north-east of us; I am naming
-no names, understand? There is a good deal of range left, as you know,
-and—now, listen to me....”
-
-His voice went on. For perhaps five minutes Annister listened in a heavy
-silence. And all that time, although the lawyer had not once called a
-spade a spade, the thing that he had unfolded was clear enough:
-
-It was the old story; with something of a novel twist. First, there were
-the outfits scattered north and north-east, as Rook had said. The running
-off of a few cows, for instance, re-branding, and the rest of it—it was
-an old story to Annister—but there was something more. Annister, as he
-listened, realized that the thing was big, worthy, indeed, of the keen,
-devising brain that had evolved it.
-
-A good many of the ranches had, for some time past, been owned and
-operated by the packers themselves; three of these: the Bar T, the Cross
-Circle L, the Flying U, were northward from Dry Bone scarce a hundred
-miles. But there were still other outfits. And, as Annister listened, he
-was hearing again a name, or, rather, a symbol, the name and the symbol
-of masked and hooded violence, and it was “S. S. S.”
-
-Rook, it appeared, was the moving spirit of it, in Dry Bone, at any rate,
-but as the tale unfolded Annister, putting two and two together, supplied
-for that cryptic symbol a name, nation-wide and respected: the name of a
-great Company, an Octopus indeed, which, with Hamilton Rook as its agent,
-planned nothing less than the ruthless despoiling of those independent
-cattle men who, out of a desert of sand and sage, had won a living
-for their stock and for themselves, the rear guard of the order, now,
-as it seemed, indeed, caught in the far-flung tentacles of a monster,
-unscrupulous and without soul.
-
-Annister’s part in it was to be simple. He was to do nothing as yet until
-the lawyer should give the word. But a man was wanted: a gun-fighter; a
-man bred to violence who would not consider too closely the method or the
-means. For, as Rook had said, his eyes upon Annister in a sudden, biting
-scrutiny:
-
-“If, as a first step, say, the owners of these outfits
-should—ah—disappear....”
-
-There was to be no outright violence, it appeared; murder—that was an
-ugly word; but it was of course possible that there might be—resistance.
-But—there would be a fortune in it.
-
-Annister’s part would be comparatively simple. He would merely carry out
-his orders. Rook, eying him now in a close-lipped silence, watched as a
-spider watches from his ambush. Annister would be needing money; if the
-lawyer knew his man, and he thought that he did, here was something that
-would be a lever, and a powerful one.
-
-Annister lifted his head, then he brought his hand, palm downward, to the
-desk-top. It was a movement, slow, even, controlled.
-
-“I’m with you,” he said.
-
-“Good!” exclaimed the lawyer. “Now—I want you to go over to the club;
-there are a few men there I’d like you to meet. _Ha!_”
-
-At his exclamation Annister, turning, followed his rigid, pointing
-finger.
-
-The huddled figure on the carpet had disappeared. There had been no
-sound, no sign. The Indian had vanished.
-
-
-_CHAPTER FOUR_
-
-THE FACE IN THE MOONLIGHT
-
-Annister had thrown in with Rook, but he trusted him no further than he
-would have trusted a cougar, a mountain cat.
-
-At the club, as the afternoon wore on to evening, he had met four or five
-men: Beaton, the county judge, a red-faced tippler with, on the surface,
-a heartiness that was repellant; Lunn, the hotel proprietor, a vast,
-asthmatic man with a small, porcine eye; Daventry, the Land Commissioner,
-whose British accent, Annister noticed, would on occasion flatten to a
-high, nasal whining that was reminiscent of Sag Harbor or Buzzards Bay.
-
-The rest, hard-faced, typical of their environment, Annister put down
-for the usual lesser fry; hangers-on, jackals, as it might chance,
-“house-men,” in the parlance of the “poker-room”—Annister knew the type
-well enough.
-
-They seemed hospitable, but once or twice Annister had thought to detect
-in their glances a grimly curious look: of appraisal, and of something
-more.
-
-There had been a game going, but he had not sat in, nor had the lawyer
-invited him. The visit had been meant, plainly enough, as a sort of
-introduction.
-
-“We’re all here,” Rook had said.
-
-But it was apparent, too, that there were one or two others who were
-absent; Annister heard several references to “Bull”; but for the most
-part there was a silence, beneath which Annister could feel the tension;
-it was like a fine wire, vibrating, deep-down; almost, he might have
-said, a certain grimly quiet anticipation of that which was to come.
-
-Presently the telephone tinkled, loud in the sudden stillness; Annister
-could hear the voice at the other end: harsh, strident, with a bestial
-growl that penetrated outward into the close room.
-
-“He can’t come,” came from the man at the telephone. “Bull—yeah—an’ I
-reckon he seems some disappointed.”
-
-Annister noticed that the tension had all at once relaxed, and with
-it, as he could see, there was plainly visible in the faces about
-him a certain disappointment. It was as if they had been waiting for
-something—something, well, that had not materialized. There was a laugh
-or two; a word stifled in utterance; one or two of the men, glancing at
-Annister and away, gave an almost imperceptible head-shake. Even Rook, as
-Annister could tell, appeared relieved as the newcomer rose, turning to
-the company with a conventional good-night.
-
-For just a split second it seemed to Annister that something _was_ about
-to happen; for a moment he saw, or fancied that he saw, a quick, silent
-signal flash, then, from eye to eye; Lunn, the hotel man, had half risen
-in his chair; out of the tail of his eye, as he was turning toward the
-door, Annister was aware of a quick ripple, a movement, the shadow of
-a sound, like the movement of a conjuror manipulating his cards, white
-hands flashing in a bewildering passade.
-
-But nothing happened.
-
-Leaving, he had walked slowly toward the hotel, turning over in his mind
-the story that had been told him by the lawyer. And there was one more
-question he wanted to ask him: a question that had to do with a square of
-paper that he had come upon among his father’s papers in New York, for
-it had been this chance discovery that had sent him, post-haste, to Dry
-Bone, and the lawyer’s office.
-
-Thinking these things, he was turning the corner to the hotel when, out
-of nowhere as it seemed, a man had passed him, walking with a peculiar,
-dragging shuffle. Seen under the moon for a moment, this man’s face
-had impressed itself upon Annister: it was dark and foreign, with high
-cheek-bones, and—what seemed curiously out of place in Dry Bone—a black
-moustache and professional Van Dyke.
-
-Annister, watching the man, saw him turn into the doorway he had just
-quitted; it was the entrance to the “club”—two rooms above a saddler’s
-shop at the corner of the street.
-
-Halting a moment to look after the man, Annister was wondering idly who
-he might be—certainly not the man called “Bull,” if there was anything
-in a name. And then, abruptly, he was remembering what the lawyer had
-let fall about the “doctor”; perhaps that was who he was; he had had a
-distinctly professional air.
-
-The man’s eyes had lingered upon Annister for a moment, and for a moment
-the latter had been conscious of a curious shock. For it had been as
-if the man had looked _through_ rather than at him; those eyes had
-glowed suddenly in the darkness, gray-green like a cat’s, in an abrupt,
-ferocious, basilisk stare.
-
-Annister, in his day, had seen some queer corners and some tight places;
-in Rangoon, for example, he had penetrated to a certain dark house in a
-dim backwater stinking and dark with the darkness of midnight even at
-high noon.
-
-And it was there, in that dark house, with shuttered windows like blind
-eyes to the night, that he had seen that which it is not good for any
-white man to have seen: the rite of the Suttee; the blood-stone of Siva,
-the Destroyer, reeking with the sacrifice—ay—and more.
-
-And something now, at that time half-perceived and dimly understood,
-came again with the sight of the dark face with its high cheek-bones,
-and black, forking beard; for he had seen a creature with a face and yet
-without a face, mewling and mowing like a cat, now come from horrors, and
-the practitioner had been—
-
-The man who but just now passed him at the corner of the street, the man
-with the dark, foreign visage, and the eyes of death.
-
-
-_CHAPTER FIVE_
-
-PARTNERS OF THE NIGHT
-
-Annister, pausing a moment at the corner of the street, was conscious of
-a feeling of coldness, like a bleak wind of the spirit, as if death, in
-passing, had touched him, and gone on.
-
-For the face of the man whom he had seen had been like the face of a
-damned soul, unhuman, Satanic in its sheer, visible malevolence. So might
-Satan himself have looked, after the Fall.
-
-Somehow, although the man had looked straight ahead, seeming to see
-merely with the glazed, indwelling stare of a sleepwalker, Annister had
-felt those eyes upon him; he was certain that he had been seen—and known.
-But now he had other things to think about.
-
-He had intended going to the hotel. Now, on an impulse he bent his steps
-away from it, turning to the building in which were the offices of Rook.
-
-But he did not enter by the main doorway. There was an alley further
-along; into this he melted with the stealth and caution of an Indian,
-feeling his way forward in the thick darkness to where, as he had marked
-it earlier in the day, there was a rusty fire-escape; its rungs ran
-upward in the darkness; they creaked now under his hand as he went slowly
-up.
-
-Rook’s office was on the second floor. Annister, reaching the window,
-found it locked, but in a matter of seconds had it open, with the soft
-_snick_ of a steel blade between sash and bolt; the thing was done with a
-professional deftness, as if, say, the man who had opened that window had
-done that same thing many times before.
-
-Now, crouched in the darkness by that dim square of window, the intruder
-stood silent, listening, holding his breath. A sound had come to him,
-faint and thin, as if muffled by many thicknesses of walls; it penetrated
-outward from the private office, with the snick and slither of rasping
-steel on steel.
-
-And at the instant that Annister, with a grim smile in the darkness,
-recognized it for what it was, he knew, too, that someone had been
-beforehand with him; someone interested, also, in Hamilton Rook; for the
-sound that he heard now, loud in the singing silence, was the sound of a
-steel drill upon a safe.
-
-Annister had seen that safe; it was scarcely more than a strong-box, a
-sheet steel, but thin; a “can-opener” could have ripped it from end to
-end, easily, in no time at all. Rook must feel secure indeed, he thought,
-to put his trust in so flimsy a repository unless, perhaps, he had other
-means. The Indian, for instance; the savage who, but a few hours ago, had
-missed with his long talons for Annister’s throat by inches.
-
-But somehow Annister did not think that the Jivero would be on guard.
-There was no burglar-alarm protection; he had made certain of that;
-but the man who was now busy with that safe must have come up by the
-stairway; doubtless he was on familiar ground. Perhaps he might be some
-disgruntled confederate of the lawyer’s; well, he’d have a look-see, at
-any rate.
-
-Advancing silently, on the balls of his feet, Annister traversed the
-length of the outer office, peering around the doorway to where, under
-the dim glow of a single drop-light, a figure, back toward Annister,
-knelt before the safe.
-
-The drop-light, carefully shaded, would not be visible from without;
-under its cone-shaped radiance Annister could see merely that the man
-was wearing a cap, pulled low over his forehead; but something in the
-attitude of that kneeling figure: the turn of the head, the deft, darting
-movement of the hand, was strangely familiar.
-
-Annister grinned in the darkness at the same moment that he was aware
-of a curious contraction of the heart. This lone-hand cracksman worked
-evidently without confederates, unless, possibly, he might have a lookout
-posted on the sidewalk below. He spoke, barely above a whisper:
-
-“Hello!” he said. “Pretty careless, aren’t you? Now, do you think
-it’s—safe?”
-
-The figure whirled; the hand, holding an automatic, came upward with the
-speed of light; then dropped limply at her side as the girl surveyed him
-with a stony look.
-
-It was the waitress of the Mansion House.
-
-“Well,” she said, “you’ve caught me, but it looks to me as if I beat
-you to it, Black Steve Annister.... Oh, I’ve heard of you, Mister Black
-Steve.... Well, now you’ve caught me, what are you going to do about it?”
-
-The darkly beautiful face was scornful; the violet eyes, under the light,
-stormy with a something that Annister could not all define.
-
-Annister bit his lip. To find her like this! And, all at once,
-realization came to him with a sudden tightening of the heart.
-
-This girl, waitress or not, crook or not—he had to confess that, in all
-his wanderings up and down the earth, he had never met her like. A girl
-in a thousand, he had decided, back there in the dining-room of the
-Mansion House. What a partner she would make! Now, with a girl like that
-for a partner...!
-
-On a sudden impulse he leaned forward, his eyes upon the safe door; it
-swung outward now; somehow she had opened it.
-
-“Pretty smooth,” he commented. “The combination, after all, ha? You
-worked it. Now, before _we_ have a look, I want to tell you something.
-I—I’m looking for a partner, Miss—ah—Miss—”
-
-“—Allerton,” she told him, in her eyes a sudden, leaping spark, the
-brief, baffling, enigmatic look that he had seen back there in the hotel
-dining-room. But it was gone again even as she spoke:
-
-“All right—partner!” she said, low. “When do we start?”
-
-“Right now!” answered Annister, his gaze upon the girl frankly
-admiring. He had expected the usual feminine evasions, a play for time,
-hesitation—anything but this ready acquiescence in his abrupt proposal.
-
-He was not entirely sure of her; his admiration for her beauty, her
-poise, had nothing to do with the cold judgment whispering now that the
-whole affair might, after all, be a blind, a trap, devious and crooked as
-the devious and crooked turnings of Hamilton Rook.
-
-But with Annister to decide was to act.
-
-Bending, he swung wide the safe door, groping forward with exploring
-hand. His back was toward the girl; consequently he did not see the
-sudden, revealing gleam in the violet eyes, the quick hardening of the
-mouth. Swinging forward his pocket flash, the light danced, glimmering,
-upon a packet of papers, a sheaf of documents. Annister, running over
-them swiftly, gave a quick exclamation, his hand, in a lightning
-movement, palming something which he secreted in an inner pocket.
-
-He turned sidewise to the girl.
-
-“Lord!” he exclaimed disgustedly. “Nothing but papers! Partner, we’re out
-of luck!”
-
-Evidently the girl had been oblivious. Now, however, her quick, flashing
-fingers sorted the contents of that safe as with a practiced hand, to
-leave them, as had Annister, inviolate, save for that oblong of paper
-reposing now in the pocket of his coat.
-
-In the shadow of the entrance it was black dark as they parted. The girl
-did not live in the hotel, she told him; that had been a part of her
-plan. They would meet again, of course. But once in his room, and with
-the shades drawn and the door locked and bolted, Annister, taking the
-paper from his pocket, smoothed it out under the light.
-
-He looked; then looked again, breath indrawn sharply through clenched
-teeth.
-
-For that paper was a canceled check; it had been drawn to “Cash”; and the
-signature, in a hand that he knew upon the instant, was the signature of
-his father, Travis Annister.
-
-
-_CHAPTER SIX_
-
-THE LIVING GHOST
-
-Annister had heard nothing from Rook other than that he had been again
-invited to a further session of the “Club” for that evening.
-
-Alone in his room on the morning following his adventure in Rook’s
-office, his eye had been caught and held by a news item printed on an
-inside page of the _Durango County Gazette_: he had nearly passed it
-over; but now the lines leaped out at him as if they had been blazoned
-across the paper in a double-column spread:
-
- Travis Annister Still Strangely Missing—Retired Capitalist Gone
- Since January—Foul Play Feared
-
-And, separated from it by the width of a single column, he read:
-
- Retired Banker Disappears—Newbold Humiston a Suicide?—Friends
- Fear for Safety
-
-But it was at a third item, tucked away in an obscure corner that
-Annister stifled a quick word in his throat. Newbold Humiston had been a
-friend of his father’s; it was an odd coincidence, to say the least of
-it. And the story went on to say that three other men, all nationally
-known, had, so to speak, between suns, disappeared as completely as if
-the earth had opened and swallowed them.
-
-And that third news item, irrelevant as it might have been, told of an
-incident, odd and unusual enough; it had happened in Palos Verde, distant
-from Dry Bone a long twenty miles of hazardous mountain trail:
-
-A man had come in, in rags and tatters; at first they had thought him
-a desert rat, a prospector, light-headed from starvation, for his
-incoherent babble had proclaimed him no less a personage than Rodman
-Axworthy, prominent banker of Mojave. The sheriff of Palos Verde, on the
-off chance, had wired Mojave, and the word had come back that Axworthy
-had been missing; they were sending a man.
-
-With the arrival of this man, however, the mystery deepened, for it
-appeared that the derelict was indeed Axworthy, and yet not Axworthy at
-all, for whereas the true Axworthy had had a high, aquiline nose and a
-wide, generous mouth, the derelict was snub-nosed, swarthy, where the
-banker had been fair; he was, simply, another man.
-
-But there had been this about it: on the banker’s left forearm,
-underneath, there had been a curious birth-mark; the derelict had
-spoken of it, but upon examination the arm showed smooth and bare. The
-investigator from Mojave had been obviously skeptical until, abruptly,
-the ragged claimant had taken from his pocket a curious, removable
-bridge; a dentist in Mojave who had made it, he said, could identify it.
-It fitted perfectly.
-
-This looked like proof, but the thing was obviously impossible. And then,
-as “Axworthy” was being taken back to Mojave, he went suddenly stark,
-staring crazy, repeating over and over, with reference to the bridge:
-
-“It’s the one thing they didn’t get—the one thing....”
-
-And there the matter rested, save that, upon arrival in Mojave, the
-bridge was found to be missing. The emissary from Mojave seemed to
-remember a dark-faced stranger who had been seated opposite them in the
-train, but that was all; the man had jostled against his charge upon
-alighting; the last proof, if indeed it might be called a proof, was gone.
-
-Annister frowned thoughtfully, his mind upon that canceled check in
-his pocket. And he was remembering one other thing, and that was the
-square of paper which he had found among his father’s effects, for on
-it had been a name, or, rather, two: the name of Hamilton Rook, and
-of another, unknown to Annister. And as to that Axworthy case, it was
-common knowledge that lunatics, for instance, entertained frequently the
-delusion that they were people of importance. There was nothing new in
-that.
-
-Somehow, it seemed to him that he held in his hands the pieces of a
-jig-saw puzzle that, even if put together, made but a patchwork of
-motives and design, which yet, if he could but find the key, would be as
-clear as crystal.
-
-That paper found in his father’s office; the interview with Childers, at
-Washington; the long trip westward; the warning message on the train;
-the big man with the ice-blue eye and the square jaw of a fighter; the
-attack in the hotel; the meeting with Rook, and the meeting with the
-girl; the finding of that canceled check—and, last, the matter of those
-queerly related news items just under his hand—these made a pattern to be
-unraveled only by the warp and woof of Fate.
-
-And the chance meeting with the bearded stranger at the corner of the
-street: consider how he would, Annister’s mind kept turning backward to
-that meeting and those eyes that were like the eyes of a damned soul,
-malignant, cold, in their abysmal, cold cruelty of discarnate Evil.
-
-Discarnate! That was it; that would express it; for the man, as he
-recalled him, seemed somehow less than human; there had been about him
-an aura, an emanation, that was like a tide rising from the depths, from
-darkness unto darkness....
-
-Annister was scarcely superstitious, but he was again conscious of that
-icy chill; he shivered, as a man is said to shiver when, according to an
-ancient superstition, someone is said to be walking over his grave.
-
-He rose, walking to the window, to peer outward into the sunwashed
-street. The coil was tightening; he felt it; and he was but one man
-against many. And knowing what he knew, or suspecting what he suspected,
-it seemed to him all at once that the sunlight had flattened to a
-heatless flaming of pale radiance; there seemed a menace in it, even as
-there seemed a menace in the very air, a waiting, a tension, like a fine
-wire drawn and singing at a pitch too low for sound.
-
-Abruptly he heard a sound; it was like the scratching of a rat in the
-wainscot, faint and thin. His door was locked.
-
-Now, looking at it, the knob turned, slowly, stealthily. He could see it
-turning.
-
-Then, faint but unmistakable, came a knock.
-
-
-_CHAPTER SEVEN_
-
-THROUGH THE DOOR
-
-The knocking was not loud; it was merely a discreet tap; but there was a
-quality of hurry in it.
-
-Annister, moving without sound on the thick pile of the rug, almost with
-the same motion turned the key and flung wide the door.
-
-At first he could see nothing. The corridor, thick-piled with shadows
-even at high noon, showed merely as a darkling glimmer out of which there
-sprang suddenly a face, like a white, glimmering oval; a voice came, with
-a quick, hissing sibilance:
-
-“_Ssh!_ Quiet! I must not be seen! Or else he.... Close the door!”
-
-The girl stepped inward swiftly, her white face turned to the man before
-her in a sort of frozen calm. Annister had a vague impression of having
-seen her somewhere before: that golden head beneath its close-fitting
-toque; the faint, remembered odor of fresh violets; the face, with a
-piquant loveliness just now, however, white and drawn; it was like a
-strain of music, heard and then forgotten.
-
-Closing the heavy door and locking it, he turned swiftly to the girl.
-
-“Well—?” he said, his gaze upon her in a cold, searching scrutiny. “Isn’t
-this a trifle—_sudden_?”
-
-But the girl lifted a stony face.
-
-“I have little time,” she said, with a curious, spent breathlessness,
-as if she had been running. “I am Cleo Ridgley, secretary to Hamilton
-Rook—that is, I _was_; I am his secretary no longer, but he does not know
-about it—yet.”
-
-She paused, again with that hard-held breathing, moistening her stiff
-lips.
-
-“I warned you that day on the train; do you remember? I warned you
-because I knew Hamilton Rook.... I know him even better now. He meant to
-kill you, Mr. Annister, and now he schemes—”
-
-“—To use me—is that it?” interrupted Annister dryly; then, at her slow
-head-shake, he stiffened.
-
-“He would have finished you even after your—agreement—but that is not
-his way. But he will not make use of you in the way that you think.
-That careful plan of which he told you—that was just a blind; there are
-no ranches near enough. The S. S. S.—that, too, was just a part of the
-story. You see, he wants to keep you here, that is all, until such time
-as he thinks it necessary to—remove you. But his real motive, his actual
-plan I know nothing about. I may suspect, but I do not _think_ about it.”
-
-She paused again, her expression rigid, as there sounded a faint,
-half-audible footfall from the corridor without. It passed.
-
-“He would—kill me—if he knew,” she continued tonelessly. “That warning on
-the train—I did that at his order. If he could have frightened you off,
-he would have been satisfied with that, but now, it will be—different,
-I tell you this on my own account. And now—”she laid a slim hand on his
-arm—“don’t go to that rendezvous tonight, Mr. Annister. Ellison will be
-there; you remember him? He was the man who tried to keep you on that
-train.”
-
-She smiled faintly with her lips, but her eyes were sombre.
-
-“Ellison is Rook’s jackal, just as Rook is—”
-
-The sentence was never completed. There came a coughing grunt from just
-outside the door, a streak of flame from the half-open transom just
-above; the girl stiffened, her face went blank; she slid downward to the
-rug, even as Annister, snapping back the lock, had flung wide the door.
-
-Gun out, he burst into the corridor, as, from the shadows at a far
-corner, he fancied that he heard the faint echo of a taunting laugh.
-
-But there was no one there.
-
-Rushing to the stair-head, he found nothing, nobody. The man who had
-fired that shot had used a silencer; he had disappeared, either into one
-of the bed-chambers to right and left, or down the stair. But it was no
-time for speculation. The girl would be needing attention, if, indeed,
-she was not already past all aid.
-
-Annister had wasted no time. But, for a heart-beat, as he raced backward
-along the hall, his eye was caught and held by the quick glint of metal
-from the carpet at his feet. Stooping as he ran, he swept up the object,
-possibly an empty shell; then, on the threshold of his room, recoiled
-with a gasping oath.
-
-For the girl had vanished!
-
-Stunned, Annister stood silent, mechanically unclosing his stiff fingers
-upon the object which they held. He stared at it now, rigid with
-remembrance, and a growing fear.
-
-Oddly twisted and distorted, its dull gold surface glinting dully under
-the light, the thing that he had found lay on his open palm.
-
-_It was a dentist’s bridge._
-
-
-_CHAPTER EIGHT_
-
-ODDS—AND THE MAN
-
-Annister had been absent from that room not longer than ten racing
-seconds. It was unthinkable that the girl had vanished of her own
-volition, even had it been physically possible.
-
-Glancing around the room, he saw that the windows were closed and bolted;
-the flooring was solid, substantial; there could be no ingress save by
-the door through which he had just come.
-
-There was another door; it led to the next room; but Annister, with a
-habit of inbred caution, had tried it, and found it locked. Now, in two
-swift strides, he had covered the space between, had tried that door,
-setting his weight against it as he turned the knob.
-
-Under his weight it gave outward with a sudden slatting clatter. They,
-whoever they might be, had unlocked it; it had been through this
-adjoining room that they had taken the girl.
-
-Annister, glancing swiftly around this room, saw that it was obviously
-unoccupied; the bed had been made up; there was no sort of clue that he
-could see. The invisible assassin had had a key; that was it, of course.
-
-But as to the rest of it, Annister could only speculate. It was an
-impasse, and a mystery.
-
-Going downward to the dining-room, as it was now past noon, he glanced
-toward the desk, but if he had had any thought of reporting the attack
-upon the girl, or her disappearance, he thought better of it; he would
-keep his own counsel; a decision helped by a sight of Lunn, the hotel
-proprietor, who, lounging at the desk, raised his sleepy-lidded, vulture
-gaze at Annister as the latter was turning toward the dining-room.
-
-Annister, in that brief glance, thought to detect in those eyes,
-milky-pale, a veiled, sardonic flicker. If, behind this latest happening,
-there was the fine, Italian hand of Hamilton Rook, Lunn was in cahoots
-with the lawyer, of that there could be little doubt. For, as Annister
-was convinced, there had been a menace in those eyes half turned to his,
-an insolence, a bright, burning truculence, that, as he turned into the
-long dining-hall, brought the swift blood to his cheek in a dark tide.
-
-But at his table another surprise awaited him. Mary Allerton was gone.
-The heavy-handed Swede who served him told him that she had left,
-suddenly, that morning; a message had come for her, it appeared, but the
-substitute could tell him nothing further. Annister let it go at that.
-
-Rising from the table, he went outward to the long bar, a cool, pleasant
-oasis, indeed, in the fierce heat of the drowsy afternoon. He greeted the
-bartender, a tall man with the wide shoulders of a cowman, with a smile.
-
-The man had been friendly; in fact, he had been the sole friend that
-Annister appeared to have made since his arrival in Dry Bone. Now the
-bartender leaned forward, speaking in a whisper behind his hand:
-
-“Watch your step, Mr. Annister,” he said.
-
-Annister gave an almost imperceptible nod. Then, his drink before him
-upon the stained and battered mahogany, he glanced sidewise along the
-rail, to where, at the far end, two men stood together, eying him under
-lowered brows.
-
-To Annister it seemed that there had fallen a sudden quiet. Just prior to
-his entrance he had heard talk and laughter, the _clink_ of glasses, a
-thick, turgid oath. Now there appeared to rise and grow a tension, as of
-something electric in the air; Annister felt it in the white face of the
-knight of the apron, the sudden silence, the rigid figures of the two men
-at the end of the long bar.
-
-Behind him, and a little to his left, three men were seated at a table:
-Bristow, sheriff of Dry Bone, a big man with a bleak, pale eye, and a
-mouth like a straight gash above a heavy chin barbered to the blood. With
-him were two others whom he did not know.
-
-Lunn was nowhere in sight.
-
-The taller of the two men standing at the bar turned, and Annister
-recognized him as Tucson Charlie Westervelt, a gunman with a dangerous
-record. Westervelt was wearing a high-crowned, white Stetson; Annister
-marked it at the distance, beneath it the fierce, hawklike face, turned
-now in his direction, the thin lips set stiffly in a sullen pout.
-
-The old West had passed with the passing of the _remuda_, the trail herd,
-the mining camps; the wide, free range of the long-horned cattle was no
-more; but Dry Bone had not changed save that the loading-pens had gone;
-a cow would be a curiosity. But the lawless spirit of the ancient West
-remained. “Southwest of the Law,” indeed, Dry Bone was a law unto itself,
-and now about him Annister felt the menace; it appeared that he had
-walked into a trap.
-
-The judge, the sheriff—what mockery of law there was—Annister knew that
-it would be against him, either way, attacking or attacked. He was
-certain of it as Westervelt, moving slowly along the bar, halted when
-perhaps three paces distant, elbow raised, right hand extended, clawlike,
-in a stiff, thrusting gesture above his guns.
-
-It was the gesture of the killer, the preliminary for the lightning
-down-thrust of the stiff fingers; Annister knew that well enough. Now the
-gunman’s gaze, sleepy-lidded like a falcon’s, bored into his; his voice
-came with a snarling violence:
-
-“_Mister_ Black Steve Annister,” he said, without preamble. “I understand
-you’re some wizard with a canister, ha? A bad hombre! Musta been a
-little bird done told me, an’ that bird was sure loco, I’ll tell a man!
-But _me_—” his tone hardened to a steely rasp—“I’m not thinkin’ you’re
-such-a-much!”
-
-It was a trap; Annister knew that now, just as behind the gunman he could
-almost see the dark face of Rook, with its sneering grin; the lawyer had
-inspired it.
-
-His automatic hung in a sling under his left arm-pit, but even if he
-could beat Westervelt to the draw, he knew well enough what the result
-would be: a shot in the back, say, from the men sitting just behind,
-or—arrest, and the mockery of a trial to follow it. Either way, he was
-done.
-
-His own eyes held the gunman’s now, glancing neither to the right nor to
-the left. He was conscious of a movement from the three men at the table;
-Westervelt’s companion, a short, bowlegged man, with the pale eyes of an
-Albino, had stepped backward from the bar; Annister felt rather than saw
-his hand move even as his own hand came up and outward with lightning
-speed; flame streaked from his pistol with the motion.
-
-Once in a generation, perhaps, a man arises from the ruck who, by an
-uncanny dexterity of hand and eye, confounds and dazzles the common run
-of men. As a conjurer throws his glass balls in air, swifter than eye can
-follow, so Annister, crouching sidewise from the bar, threw his bullets
-at Westervelt.
-
-The gunman, bending forward at the hips, crashed to the sawdust in a
-slumping fall, as the Albino, firing from the hip, whirled sidewise as
-Annister’s second bullet drilled him through the middle. For the tenth
-of a second, like the sudden stoppage of a cinematograph, the tableau
-endured; then Annister, whirling, had covered Bristow where he sat; the
-two men with him, white-faced, hands pressed flat upon the table-top,
-stared, silent, as Annister spoke:
-
-“You saw, Bristow,” he said, low and even, his eyes upon the cold eyes of
-the sheriff in a bright, steady, inquiring stare. “Now—what about it?”
-
-For a moment a little silence held; then Bristow, moistening his stiff
-lips, nodded, his gaze upon Annister in a sudden, dazed, uncomprehending
-look.
-
-“All right, Mr. Annister,” he said heavily. “They came lookin’ f’r it, I
-reckon.... Well, you were _that_ quick!”
-
-Annister smiled grimly, pocketing his pistol. Westervelt lay where he
-had fallen, a dead man even as he had gone for his gun, lips still
-twisted in a sullen pout. The bowlegged man, stiff fingers clutching his
-heavy pistol, lay, face downward, in the sawdust. The bartender, with an
-admiring glance at Annister, leaned forward as Bristow and the two men
-with him went slowly out.
-
-“They may try to get me for it, Mr. Annister,” he said, “but I’m no man’s
-man; well, not Rook’s, and you can lay to that! Bristow and his friends
-kept out of it, you noticed? Bristow’ll do nothing, _now_; not yet a
-while, at any rate, but—mebbe they sort of savvied me a-watchin’ t’ see
-they didn’t run no whizzer on you!”
-
-He lifted the heavy Colt, where it had lain hidden by the bar-rail,
-thrusting it in its scabbard with a grin.
-
-“Well, sir, I _aimed_ t’ see that they was sittin’ close, _an’_ quiet,
-Mr. Annister,” he said.
-
-“Thanks, old timer,” said Annister. “I’ll not forget.”
-
-But as he went outward into the waning afternoon he was thinking of that
-rendezvous of the night. For Rook would be there, and it had been Rook,
-he was certain, who had engineered that ambush in the Mansion House bar.
-
-
-_CHAPTER NINE_
-
-THE BATTLE IN THE “CLUB”
-
-The time was nearly ripe. The clue of those newspaper items; the canceled
-check; the somewhat repellant evidence of the battered piece of goldwork
-picked up in the corridor of the Mansion House—Annister had been able to
-put two and two together, to find a sum as strange, as odd, say, as five,
-or seven, or even one.
-
-But that name that had trembled on the lips of Rook’s secretary remained
-a secret; with it, Annister was convinced, he would be able to pull those
-threads together with a single jerk, to find them—one.
-
-He had had news from Mojave: the dentist had identified the insane man as
-his patient by means of his chart, but, with that face, the man could not
-be Banker Axworthy—it simply could not be. And yet he was!
-
-It was something of a riddle, and more, even, than that, for the thing
-savored of the supernatural, of necromancy, of a black art that might,
-say, have had for its practitioner a certain personage with the eyes of a
-damned soul and a black, forking beard, curled, like Mephisto’s; Annister
-thought that it might.
-
-Further, the conductor of that train had been able to describe, somewhat
-in detail, the man who had jostled the derelict and his companion; the
-man had been a stranger to the conductor; he had been tall and thin, with
-a small, sandy moustache, and a high-arched, broken nose, and he had been
-wearing the conventional Stetson. The fellow might have been disguised,
-of course, but if Annister could find the black-bearded man, discover his
-identity, he was reasonably certain that he would not draw blank.
-
-It was no certainty, of course, but it was worth the risk, he told
-himself. It would be a desperate hazard that he was about to face, he
-knew. Thinking of his father, together with the remembrance of that
-unholy and unspeakable horror that he had witnessed, born of the stinking
-shadows of that dark street in a city foul and old, its people furtive
-worshipers of strange gods, Annister felt again that crawling chill which
-had assailed him with the passing of the tall man with the eyes of death.
-
-With Annister, to decide was to act. Dispatching a brief telegram in code
-to a certain office in a certain building in Washington, he went now to
-keep his rendezvous with Rook and the rest. It was yet early, scarce
-eight in the evening, and the street was full of life and movement,
-before him, and behind.
-
-And before him and behind, as he went onward, he was conscious that those
-who walked there walked with him, stride for stride; they kept their
-distance, moving without speech, as he turned the corner of the dusty
-street.
-
-If he had had any doubt about it, the doubt became certainty as, wheeling
-sharply to the left, they kept him company now, still with that grim,
-daunting silence: a bodyguard, indeed, but a bodyguard that held him
-prisoner as certainly as if the manacles were on his wrists.
-
-It was not yet dark, but with a rising wind there had come a sky overcast
-and lowering; low down, upon the horizon’s rim to the eastward, the
-violet blaze of the lightning came and went, with, after a little, the
-heavy salvos of the thunder, like the marching of an armed host.
-
-But Annister, his gaze set straight ahead, turned inward at the entrance
-of the saddler’s shop, mounting the stairs, as, behind him he heard the
-heavy door slam shut.
-
-Perhaps it had been the wind, but as Annister went upward he heard, just
-beyond that door, the murmur of voices; they reached him in a sing-song
-mutter against the rising of the wind, in a quick, growling chorus.
-
-There had been something in that snarling speech to daunt a man less
-brave than the man on that narrow stair, but Annister went upward,
-lightly now, to meet whatever waited behind the door set with its
-narrow panel that he could see merely as a dark smudge of shadow in the
-encircling gloom.
-
-He rapped, twice, and the door fell open silently, disclosing the long
-room in which, as he remembered, he had sat, but a few nights in the
-past, to listen as the lawyer and his crowd had waited for the man called
-“Bull.”
-
-The room was brightly lighted. At a long table, midway between door and
-windows, five men were seated: Lunn, his fat face gray with a sort of
-eager pallor, was chewing nervously at an unlighted cigar; he glanced up
-now at Annister’s entrance, turning to a big man on his right. At the
-head of the table, his veiled glance like the stare of a falcon, sat
-Rook, but it was upon the big man next to Lunn that Annister’s glance
-rested with an abrupt interest as the lawyer spoke:
-
-“Welcome to our city, Mr. Annister!” he said, in a voice that reminded
-Annister of molasses dripping from a barrel. “I want you to meet—Mr. Bull
-Ellison; he’s been right anxious to meet you, haven’t you, Bull?”
-
-Annister, in the passage of an eye-flash, understood. This was the man
-whom he had encountered in the vestibule of the smoker, and, of a sudden,
-memory rose up out of the past, and, with it, a picture: a padded ring
-under twin, blazing arcs; the thud and shuffle of sliding feet; a man,
-huge, brutish, broad, fists like stone mauls, yet, for all his bulk, a
-very cat for quickness.
-
-“Bruiser” Ellison, they had called him then; a heavyweight whose very
-brute strength had kept him from the championship; that, and a certain
-easy good nature which was not apparent now in the bleak staring of the
-eyes turned now upon Annister, remorseless, under lowered brows.
-
-Now, as if at a signal, the men about the table rose; the table was
-hauled backward to the wall, leaving a wide, sanded space under the
-lights.
-
-And then, even as Rook spoke, Annister abruptly understood: this gang of
-thieves, as he knew now—“Plunder, Limited,” as Cleo Ridgley had called
-them—Annister knew them now, under the leadership of Rook, for an outfit
-which would stop short of nothing to attain its ends. His eyes, roving
-the long room up and down, searched now for that dark face, with its
-black, forking beard, but he was not really expecting to see it, but
-that, if Rook was the actual leader, Black Beard was “the man higher up,”
-Annister was, somehow, convinced.
-
-They had failed with Westervelt and his _segundo_; now, as the man called
-“Bull” came forward across the floor, Rook spoke:
-
-“Ellison hasn’t forgotten his meeting with you, Annister; he says you
-played him a dirty trick; hit him when he wasn’t looking; that right,
-Bull?” he asked, with a certain sly malice directed at the giant with the
-cauliflower ear.
-
-“And now,” Rook’s purring tones continued, “he wants satisfaction; he’ll
-get it, won’t he, Mister Annister?”
-
-For a moment, as Annister’s eyes bored into his, the lawyer’s face
-showed, like an animal’s, in a Rembrandtesque shading of high light and
-shadow beneath the lights. Stripped of its mask, it was like the face
-of a devil; now the mouth grinned, but without mirth, the lips drawn
-backward from the teeth in a soundless snarl. He laughed suddenly, and
-there was nothing human in it, as Annister, his back to the wall, smiled
-grimly now in answer.
-
-He had been somewhat less than discreet, he reflected; Rook’s purpose
-had shown in his eyes; he, Annister, had walked into a trap from which,
-this time, there could be no escape. He had meant to beard them to their
-faces, wring from Rook an admission as to his father, perhaps more; then
-shoot his way out, if need be.
-
-But now—he would have to fight this giant, a ring veteran of a hundred
-battles, with bare fists, surrounded by an encircling, hostile cordon,
-who, if by any chance he might prove the victor, would see to it that he
-paid for that victory with his life.
-
-Annister knew that it was on the cards that Rook, for instance, would
-shoot him down as remorselessly as a man would squeeze a mosquito, say,
-out of life between thumb and finger. But it was the lawyer’s humor,
-doubtless, to see him manhandled, perhaps killed beneath the drumming
-impact of those iron fists.
-
-Calmly, he removed his coat, bestowing his automatic in the pocket of his
-trousers. He did it openly, turning to face Ellison, who, stripped to
-an athletic undershirt and trousers, regarded Annister with a grinning
-assurance.
-
-He was big; perhaps twenty pounds heavier than Annister, with wide
-shoulders and a deep arching chest; with his forward-thrusting jaw and
-bullet head, with its stiff fell of pig’s-bristles, the long arms like
-a gorilla’s, he towered over his antagonist like a cave bear, a grizzly
-waiting for the kill, and like a cave bear, at Rook’s snarling call of
-“Time!” he was upon the lesser man like a thunderbolt, fists going like
-flails.
-
-Annister, in his day and generation, had absorbed the science of hit,
-stop, and getaway under masters of the art who pronounced him, as an
-amateur, the equal of many a professional performer of the squared
-circle; he was lean and hard, whereas Ellison’s waistline showed, under
-the thin shirt, in folds of fat.
-
-If the onlookers expected to see Annister annihilated by that first,
-furious rush, they were mistaken. Crouching, lightly, on the balls of
-his feet, he drove forward a lightning straight left, full on the point.
-Ellison, coming in, took it, grunting; the blow had traveled a scant six
-inches, but there had been power in it.
-
-It set him back upon his heels, from which, as he rose, raging, he dove
-in with a ripping one-two punch, which, partly blocked by his antagonist,
-yet crashing through the latter’s guard, landed high upon his cheek-bone
-with a spanking thud.
-
-It had been a grazing blow; otherwise, the fight might have ended then
-and there. Annister, backing nimbly before the giant’s rush, realized
-that he must avoid a clinch; at in-fighting the giant would have the
-edge: those mast-like arms and massive shoulders, the huge bulk—they
-would, at close quarters, with the drumming impact of the great fists,
-have spelled a quick ending with the sheer, slugging power of the attack.
-
-He heard Rook snarl as, side-stepping like a sliding ghost, he countered
-with a long, curving left.
-
-So far, he had been holding his own. If he could keep the giant at his
-distance, he might wear him out. For this was not a fight by rounds; a
-professional pugilist, fighting in the pink, would have had bellows to
-mend at the end, say, of five minutes of a give-and-take encounter moving
-at high speed.
-
-Circling, feinting, ducking, Annister kept that long left in his
-adversary’s face, forcing the pace, yet keeping out of harm’s way save
-for an overhand swing, which, landing high up upon his cheek-bone, turned
-him half round with the impact, throwing him off balance to a slumping
-fall.
-
-Up like a flash, however, he ducked, dodged, evading those mighty arms
-that strove desperately to reach him through that impenetrable guard.
-
-A fight with four-ounce gloves can be a bloody affair enough, but with
-nature’s weapons, under London Prize Ring rules, it can be a shambles.
-Armed with the cestus or the mailed fist, Ellison might have wreaked
-havoc as a gladiator of old Rome punished his adversary to the death. As
-it was, Annister, his face a bloody mask, where that socking punch had
-landed, gave Rook and his supporters heart of grace.
-
-“Take him, Bull!”
-
-The screaming advice was in the high voice of Lunn; the others echoed it.
-But if Annister was in desperate case, the giant, sobbing now with the
-fury of his spent strength, was weaving on his feet.
-
-Legs like iron columns upbore that mighty strength, but a pile-driving
-right, behind it the full weight of Annister’s two hundred pounds of
-iron-hard muscle, sinking with an audible “_plop!_” in his adversary’s
-midriff, brought from the giant a quick, gasping grunt.
-
-Ellison’s endurance was almost done. He could “take it,” but, hog-fat
-from a protracted period of easy living, professional fighter as he had
-been, this amateur, with the arching chest of a greyhound and the stamina
-of a lucivee of the long trail, was wearing him down.
-
-Trading punch for punch now, Annister abruptly cut loose with
-pile-driving right and lefts; they volleyed in from every angle; there
-was a cold grin on his lips now as he went round the giant like a cooper
-round a barrel, bombarding him with a bewildering crossfire of hooks and
-swings, jabs and uppercuts.
-
-Annister, at the beginning of the fight, had expected the usual tricks of
-the professional: holding in the clinches; butting; the elbow; the heel
-of the hand against the face; but Ellison had fought fair.
-
-Now, as the giant, boring in against that relentless attack, faltered,
-mouth open, labored breath sucked inward through clenched teeth, Annister
-stepped backward, hands dropping at his sides.
-
-Ellison, almost out, stood, weaving on his feet, fronting his adversary,
-a queer look of surprise in his face, and a something more. Annister,
-strangely enough, as has been mentioned, had, in spite of his encounter
-with Ellison in the smoker, conceived something for the man that had
-been close to liking. Somehow, rough as the man was; crooked, by all the
-signs; the tool of Rook and of his minions, he had the blue eye of a
-fighter—the straight, level look of a man who, though an enemy, would yet
-fight fair.
-
-Annister, breathing heavily, thrust out his hand.
-
-“A draw, ha?” he said. “Well—suppose we let it go at that.”
-
-For a moment Ellison appeared to hesitate; there came again the queer
-look in his eyes, as of surprise, wonder, and a something more. There
-came a grating curse from Lunn; a sudden movement from the onlookers
-roundabout.
-
-Ellison’s great paw closed on the extended hand with a grip of iron, as
-Rook’s voice rose, strident, under the lights:
-
-“Bull—are you crazy? This man—he’s just—a dam’ _dick_!”
-
-
-_CHAPTER TEN_
-
-“IN THE NAME OF THE LAW!”
-
-It was out. Rook, his hand in a lightning stab for Annister’s coat,
-turned over the lapel, holding it forward for all to see.
-
-On it was a small gold badge—the symbol of the Secret Service. The secret
-was a secret no longer.
-
-How long Rook had known of it Annister could not be certain, but now, at
-the growling chorus of swift hate, he whirled. His pistol came up and
-out, as there came a startling interruption, or rather, two.
-
-He heard Ellison’s voice, roaring in the narrow room:
-
-“Hell’s bells, young fellow, I’m with you, and you can lay to that! For
-this once, anyway! You sure can handle yourself!”
-
-He turned to Rook and the rest. “Now—you bums, get goin’! Dick or no
-dick, I’ll play this hand as she lays. Get goin’!”
-
-The great hand, holding a heavy Colt, swung upward on a line with
-Annister’s as the door burst inward with a crash; and, framed in the
-opening, there showed on a sudden the flaming thatch of the bartender,
-Del Kane.
-
-His cowboy yell echoed throughout the room, eyes blazing upon the hotel
-man where he sat.
-
-In two strides, he had joined Annister and Bull; guns on a line, the
-three fronted the five who faced them, silent, tense. Kane’s voice came
-clear:
-
-“I followed you, Mr. Annister; thought they’d try t’ run a whizzer on
-yuh; I’m pullin’ m’ freight after today, anyway; Mister Lunn can have his
-job, an’ welcome! Now—I ben keepin’ cases on Mister Rook, he’s a curly
-wolf, ain’t you, Rook? A real bad hombre, an’ you can lay to that! But he
-ain’t goin’ northwest of nothin’, he ain’t.... Now, you dam’ short-horns,
-show some speed!”
-
-But there was no fight in Rook, Lunn and Company. Glowering, their hands
-in plain sight, weaponless, they sat in a sullen silence, as Annister,
-backing to the doorway, was followed by Ellison and Kane. Outside, under
-pale stars, the giant spoke:
-
-“I don’t aim to be too all-fired honest, Mister Annister,” he said. “I
-throwed in with Mister Rook, that’s so, but he’s played it both ends
-against the middle with me, I guess.... I reckon I’ll be movin’ out o’
-Dry Bone in two—three hours.”
-
-He grinned, wryly, out of the corner of his mouth.
-
-“You sure pack a hefty wallop, young fellow! I wish I could tell you
-somethin’, but that man Rook, he’s as close-mouthed as an Indian, and
-that’s whatever! His game—nobody knows what it is—Lunn, maybe—but they
-sure got a strangle-hold on th’ county; it won’t be healthy for me here
-after tonight.”
-
-The three men separated at the hotel, Annister entering the lobby with
-a curious depression that abruptly deepened to a sudden, crawling fear
-as a call-boy brought him a note. The fear was not for himself, but for
-another, for, although he had never seen the handwriting before, he knew
-it upon the instant.
-
-Ripping open the envelope with fingers that trembled, he read, and at
-what he saw his face paled slowly to a mottled, unhealthy gray:
-
- “_Partner_:
-
- “_If you get this in time, please hurry. I’m in the toils, at
- Dr. Elphinstone’s—it’s the stone house at the right of the road
- leading north from Dry Bone—twenty miles, I think. I’ve bribed
- a man to take this to you, and if he fails me, God help me!—God
- help us all! If you fail me, you’ll never see me again—as Mary
- Allerton, because the Devil’s in charge here, and they call him
- the Jailer of Souls. I’ll be watching for you, at the south
- window—you’ll know it by the red ribbon on the bars. And now—be
- careful. If you get here at night beware of the guards—there
- are three. And if it’s night there’ll be a rope hanging from
- the window—you can feel for it in the dark. Now hurry._
-
- “_MARY ALLERTON (No. 33)._”
-
-“_You’ll never see me again—as Mary Allerton._” Annister was aware again
-of that crawling fear. “_The red ribbon on the bars._” The place was in
-effect a prison, then.
-
-But—“_No. 33_”! Annister’s heart leaped up. He knew the meaning of those
-numerals well enough; he had been blind not to have suspected it. But
-“_Dr. Elphinstone_,” and “_The Jailer of Souls_!”
-
-Who could be the jailer of souls but the Devil? And Annister fancied that
-he had seen the Devil at the corner of that street under the moon, with
-his black, forking beard, and the cold eyes of death.
-
-The trail was warm now, as he thought, but—if he were too late? He put
-the thought from him, turning to the perusal of a telegram in code which
-he had found waiting for him at the desk; translated, it read:
-
- “With you Thursday with four, six, twenty-one, and the others.
- Look for thirty-three.
-
- “CHILDERS.”
-
-But there was no time to be lost. Thursday was tomorrow. He would have to
-take his chance of their finding him, for there was nobody whom he could
-trust. Ellison had gone, even if he might have chanced the giant in so
-delicate a matter; Del Kane, likewise. He must take his chance. Striding
-to the door, he stiffened abruptly at a drumming rap, and a hoarse voice
-in the corridor without:
-
-“Open up in there; open up!”
-
-Annister, a pulse in his temple beating to his hard-held breath, jerked
-back the door, to face—
-
-Bristow, behind him three men whom he recognized as hangers-on at the
-hotel bar. They had something of the look of long-riders, villainous,
-hard-bitten; as one man, they grinned now, but without mirth, as the
-sheriff spoke:
-
-“Annister—I arrest you for the murder of Tucson Charlie Westervelt and
-Bartley Pattison. In th’ name of th’ Law!”
-
-Annister knew that if he resisted they would shoot him down; in fact, he
-knew, too, that was what they wanted; it would be the easiest way. Under
-the menace of the guns, he spread his hands, palms downward, preceding
-the four men down the stairs outward to the jail.
-
-But as the heavy door clanged shut behind him, Annister, his gaze in a
-sightless staring into the north, groaned, in bitterness of spirit.
-
-Mary was needing him: she was in peril, the greater because it was
-unknown—and—he would not be there.
-
-
-_CHAPTER ELEVEN_
-
-THE HOUSE OF FEAR
-
-A house of silence, broken at times by a weird wailing as from the Pit; a
-house of dreams, gray in the moonlight, under the leprous-silvered finger
-of the moon, brooding now, a grim, gray fortress of the damned: the
-stronghold of the Beast.
-
-Dense pines grew about it, so that when the wind wailed among them, like
-the wailing of a lost soul, it met and mingled with an eerie ululation
-rising as if muffled by many thicknesses of walls, to end, after a
-little, with a quick shriek and a sudden hush, with, after a moment, the
-faint echo of a taunting laugh.
-
-That laugh would have struck terror to the swart soul of a lucivee, if
-lucivees have souls, for it was like an eldritch howling, faint and thin;
-like the thin, tinkling laughter of a fiend, without pity and without
-ruth.
-
-Here, in the sanitarium of Doctor Elphinstone, there were secrets within
-secrets, walls within walls, downward, as in Dante’s Seventh Hell, and
-from this monastery of the hopeless there penetrated, on occasion,
-outward from its battlemented walls, wild, frantic laughter, but there
-was nothing demoniac about it, because it was the laughter of the insane.
-
-But that other laughter, like a sound heard in dreams—passers-by, if
-there were any such, hearing it, would shudder, and pass on. For the
-secret of that house of doom was a secret, terrible and grim; a secret,
-for him who might have guessed at it, to be whispered behind locked doors
-and with bated breath. And there had been those who had whispered of
-the lost souls within those walls, and the whisper ran that they were,
-indeed, madmen who had not been always mad, because—they had become such
-_after_ their commitment to the bleak house within the wood.
-
-These were but whispers, merely, for the power upon that house was not
-alone the power of Evil, rising like a dark tide among the pines; for in
-Dry Bone, and beyond it, in Palos Verde and Mojave, it was rumored that
-the strong arm of the Law upheld it, or such law, say, as might have
-issued from the devious hand of Hamilton Rook.
-
-Once—and it was never repeated—a man had come there from the capital; he
-had demanded to see the doctor’s patients; that had been a long time in
-the past.
-
-And as the investigator had stood there, viewing with a faint, creeping
-horror the nondescripts paraded before him, gibbering, mouthing, in an
-inarticulate, furious babble, a man had burst suddenly from the line with
-a strangled cry:
-
-“Jerry—don’t you know me? I’m Humiston—Newbold....”
-
-The voice had been the voice of Humiston, but the face—it had been the
-face of another, totally unlike; there had been no possible resemblance.
-But the man had been—_sane_. The investigator was persuaded of that;
-suffering under a peculiar delusion, indeed, but sane.
-
-The man had rushed forward then, baring his arm; and there, on that thin,
-pitiful flesh that had once been healthy and hard, there ran a curious
-design in red; the investigator sucked in his breath as that tell-tale
-birth-mark sprang, livid, under his gaze. For he had seen it before.
-
-The doctor’s eyes had narrowed to slits; somehow, the man from the
-capital had gained the impression that it was the first time that he had
-seen that mark. But the investigator could do nothing. Birth-marks can be
-duplicated. He had waited then, in a curious indecision as the bearded
-doctor had interposed a suave:
-
-“Well, of course, Commissioner, you’re quite aware, or you should be, how
-it is: these paranoiacs are noted for their delusions—ah—megalocephalic
-tendencies, I should say.... They believe themselves to be—someone else,
-and always a bank president, say, a famous actor, an author, a great
-general.... Now—Mr. Humiston—you knew him, I believe?” Beneath the silken
-tone there ran suddenly a hint of iron, of menace, veiled but actual; the
-investigator felt it. “This patient knew your name, of course,” the suave
-voice had continued. “Poor fellow—we must be gentle with him.”
-
-And there the matter had ended. Curiously enough, the man who had claimed
-to be Banker Humiston had, after that first burst of frenzied speech,
-kept silent. Perhaps that mordant gleaming in the doctor’s eyes had
-telegraphed a warning, a message, a command.
-
-But the investigator went home, oddly shaken, to dream, like Pilate’s
-wife, of a white face with staring eyes which changed, even as he gazed,
-into the face of his friend, Newbold Humiston; to hear, even in his
-dream, a voice, and it was the voice of the living, and of the dead.
-
- * * * * *
-
-In a bare cell, six feet by six—a cubicle in which there was barely
-sufficient head room for a tall man to stand upright—a figure stood
-with its hands clenched upon the bars, staring outward at the grim wood
-visible to the south.
-
-Travis Annister had abode here in this living tomb three weeks now, three
-centuries, in which, as in a nightmare of cold horror, he had been aware
-merely of a face, three-pointed, bearded, the eyes active with a malign
-intelligence, the lips smiling always with the cold smile of death.
-
-Twice a day the small panel in his cell door had slid backward without
-sound, to frame, in the opening, the face of Dr. Elphinstone, like a face
-without a body, and without a soul.
-
-The father of Black Steve Annister knew that it was not a dream that
-would pass, because, on the second day, the head had spoken. Travis
-Annister was scarcely a coward; he had fought like a baited grizzly when
-surprised in his Summer camp by the men who had brought him, under cover
-of the night, to this prison-house beyond the pale.
-
-Now, at the voice, like the slow drip of an acid, Annister stared
-straight before him, with the gaze of a man who has abandoned hope.
-
-“My dear Mr. Annister,” the voice had whispered, “the little matter of
-that check, if you please.... You will make it out to ‘Cash’.... Ah, that
-is good; I perceive you are—wise.”
-
-It had not been the pistol in the lean, clawlike hand; nor the eyes,
-even, brooding upon him with the impersonal, cold staring of a cobra;
-Travis Annister might have refused if it had not been for those sounds
-that he had heard, the sights that he had seen when, taken at midnight
-from his cubicle, he had beheld the administration of the Cone.
-
-And, like Macbeth, with that one sight, and the sight of that which came
-after, he had “supped full of horrors,” until now, at the bidding of that
-toneless voice, he had obeyed. Three times thereafter, at the command of
-his dark jailer, he had paid tribute, nor had he been, of all that lost
-battalion, the single victim; there had been others....
-
-Now, separated from him scarce a dozen feet, a girl with golden hair
-sat, huddled, eyes in a sightless staring upon the stone floor of
-her cell. Cleo Ridgley had not been killed; she had been saved for a
-fate—beside which death would be a little thing—a fate unspeakable, even
-as had—Number Thirty-three.
-
-Mary Allerton, removed from the others by a narrow corridor running
-cross-wise in the cell-block, watched and waited now for the signal of
-the man to whom she had dispatched that message, it seemed, a century in
-the past.
-
-That morning they had found the rope; they had removed it without
-comment, while the ophidian gaze of the dark Doctor had been bent upon
-her with what she fancied had been a queer, speculative look: a look of
-anticipation, and of something more. So far she had been treated decently
-enough; her cell was wide and airy, plainly but comfortably furnished;
-but as to that look in the gray-green eyes of the Master of Black
-Magic—she was not so sure.
-
-There came a sudden movement in the corridor without; a panting, a
-snuffling, and the quick _pad-pad_ of marching feet. Mary, her eye to
-the keyhole of that door, could see but dimly; she made out merely the
-sheeted figures, like grim, gliding ghosts; the figure, rigid, on the
-stretcher, moving, silent, on its rubber-tired wheels. Then, at an odor
-stealing inward through the key-hole, she recoiled.
-
-That perfume had been sickish-sweet, overpowering, dense and yet sharp
-with a faint, acrid sweetness; the odor of ether. And then, although she
-could not see it, a man in the next cell had risen, white-faced, from his
-cot, to sink back limply as the dark hand, holding that inverted cone,
-had swept downward to his face.
-
-A choked gurgle, a strangled, sharp cry, penetrating outward in a vague
-shadow of clamor—and then silence, with the faint whisper of the wind
-among the pines, the brool of the rushing river, the faint, half-audible
-footfalls passing and repassing in that corridor of the dead.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Travis Annister sprang to his feet as the narrow door swung open to press
-backward against the window-bars as the High-Priest of Horror, followed
-by his familiars, cowled and hooded, entered with a slow, silent step.
-The Doctor spoke, and his voice was like a chill wind:
-
-“My friend, I bring you—forgetfulness.... A brief Lethe of hours.... And
-then—ah, then, you will be a _new_ man, a man re-born, my friend....
-Now....”
-
-Annister, his face gray with a sort of hideous strain, stared silent,
-white-lipped, as, at a low-voiced order, the attendants came forward.
-
-The lean hand reached forward; it poised, darted, swooped; and in it was
-the Cone.
-
-
-_CHAPTER TWELVE_
-
-CASTLE DANGEROUS
-
-Alone in his cell beneath the court-house, Black Steve Annister sat in
-silence, gazing northward through the barred window to where, invisible
-in the thick darkness just across the street, the road ran, straight
-as an arrow from the bow, to that dark forest brooding in a changeless
-silence where lay the House of Fear.
-
-Childers would have had his wire long since; but by the time that help
-could come it would be—too late. Annister, fatalistic after a fashion,
-felt this to be the fact even as he hoped against hope.
-
-But they were many, and he was but one. Tomorrow—it would be too late.
-
-Head bowed in his hands, oblivious, at first he had heard it as a thin
-whisper, like a knife blade against the silence; it penetrated inward
-now, with the dull rasp of metal upon metal from without:
-
-“_Sit tight, old-timer; I’m comin’ through!_”
-
-There came a muffled thud, a twist; Annister, reaching forth a hand,
-found it clasped in thick groping fingers. Then, as he thrust head and
-shoulders through the sundered bars, a Shadow uprose, gigantic, against
-the stars; the voice came again, in a quick, rumbling whisper:
-
-“It’s me, old-timer—_Bull_.”
-
-Annister, crawling through the opening, alighted upon soft turf. He heard
-Ellison’s low chuckle as, following the giant, he passed along the lee of
-the building to where, showing merely as a black blot against the night,
-there stood an automobile, its engine just turning over, with the low,
-even purr of harnessed power; at twenty paces it was scarcely audible
-above the rising of the wind.
-
-“Tank’s full,” said Ellison. “Now—”
-
-He turned abruptly as a dim figure rose upward just beyond. For a moment
-Annister set himself for the onslaught; then his hand went out; it
-gripped the hard hand of Del Kane.
-
-“Ellison done told me, Mr. Annister,” he said. “An’ so I come a-fannin’
-an’ a-foggin’ thisaway from Mojave; certain-sure I don’t aim to leave no
-friend of mine hog-tied in no calaboose!”
-
-Annister, his heart warming to these friends, debated with himself; then
-turned to Ellison with a sudden movement.
-
-“Bull,” he said. “I’m putting my cards on the table with you and Del,
-here.”
-
-He told them briefly of the message from Mary, the need of haste; then,
-of his mission, and of the help that was even now due, or would be, with
-the morning. If they were coming with him, northward along that road of
-peril, word must be left behind.
-
-Kane thought a moment; then, wheeling swiftly, with muttered word, he
-disappeared in the darkness, to return presently with the good news that
-he had fixed it with the station-agent. The latter had just come on; he
-was a friend of Kane’s, and no friend of Rook and Company; he would see
-to it, Kane said, that the reinforcements would be warned.
-
-Boarding the car, they swung out cautiously along the silent street,
-under the pale stars, northward along that shadowy road. Presently there
-would be a moon, but just now they went onward in a thick darkness, with,
-just ahead, the dim loom of the road, flowing backward under the wheels,
-which presently ran like a ribbon of pale flame under the bright beam of
-the lights.
-
-A half mile from the town, and Bull, who was driving, opened up, and the
-car leaped forward with the rising drone of the powerful motor, thirty,
-forty, fifty miles an hour; the wind of their passage drove backward like
-a wall as the giant’s voice came now in a rumbling laugh:
-
-“Some little speed-wagon, Mr. Annister, ha?” he said. “An’ that’s
-whatever! It ought to be. The man who owns it—who _did_ own it half an
-hour ago—he’s some particular, I’ll say! Because—it’s Mister Hamilton
-Rook’s!”
-
-Annister laughed grimly in answer, speaking a low word of caution as,
-after perhaps a half hour of their racing onrush the lights glimmered on
-dark trees to right and left.
-
-“Somewhere about here, I think,” he said, low. “Three outside guards, I
-understand. We’d better stop a little way this side, Bull ... that’s it.
-Now, look!”
-
-As the big car slid slowly to a halt, the moon, rising above the trees,
-showed them, perhaps a hundred yards just ahead, a low, rambling, stone
-house, its windows like blind eyes to the night. Upon its roof the
-moonlight lay like snow, and even at that distance it was sinister,
-forbidding, as if the evil that was within had seeped through those
-stones, outward, in a creeping tide.
-
-“Looks like a morgue,” offered Ellison, with a shrug of his great
-shoulders, as the three, alighting, pushed the car before them into the
-wood.
-
-Then, guns out, they went forward slowly among the trees.
-
-Annister had formed no definite plan of attack. The red ribbon at that
-window-bar might or might not be visible under the moon, but, the guards
-eliminated, it seemed to him that, after all, they would have to make
-it an assault in force. Pondering this matter, of a sudden he leaped
-sidewise as a dim figure rose upward almost in his face.
-
-Spread-eagled like a bat against the dimness, the figure bulked, huge,
-against the moon as Annister, bending to one side, brought up his fist in
-a lifting punch, from his shoe-tops.
-
-It was a savage blow; it landed with the sound of a butcher’s cleaver on
-the chopping-block; there came a gasping grunt; the thud of a heavy body,
-as the guard went downward without a sound.
-
-“One!” breathed Ellison, as, trussing their victim with a length of
-stout line brought from the car, they left him, going forward carefully,
-keeping together, circling the house.
-
-But it was not until they were half way round it, with, so far, no sign
-of that signal for which he looked, that they encountered the second
-guard.
-
-He came upon them with a swift, silent onrush, leaping among the trees,
-a great, dun shape, spectral under the moon, fangs bared, as, without a
-sound, the hound drove straight for the giant’s throat.
-
-A shot would bring discovery; they dared not risk it. Annister could see
-the great head, the wide ruff at the neck, the grinning jaws.... Then,
-the giant’s hands had gone up and out; there came a straining heave, a
-wrench, a queer, whistling croak; Ellison, rising from his knees, looked
-downward a moment to where the beast, its jaw broken by that mighty
-strength, lay stretched, lifeless, at his feet.
-
-By now they had come full circle, when, all at once, Annister, peering
-under his hand, sucked in his breath with a whispered oath.
-
-Fair against the bars of a window, low down at their right, there was a
-dark smudge; the ribbon, black under the moon. Annister’s heart leaped up
-in answer, as, with a quick word, he halted his companions in the shadow
-of a tree. A moment they conferred; then Ellison—and Annister could
-almost see his grin in the darkness—spoke beneath his hand:
-
-“Why, that’ll be easy! I’ve got m’ tools; they’re right here in my
-pocket, Mr. Annister! Those bars ought to be easy! For a fair journeyman
-sledge-swinger, it’ll be easy an’ you can lay to that!”
-
-“Good!” whispered Annister in answer. “But—hurry!”
-
-The moonlight lay in a molten flood between them and the house. But
-it was no time now for deliberation. Crossing that bright strip at a
-crouching run, the three were at the window; Annister’s harsh whisper
-hissed in the silence, through those iron bars:
-
-“_Mary!_”
-
-For a heart-beat silence answered him; then, faint and thin, in a faint,
-tremulous, sobbing breath, there came the answer:
-
-“Steve—thank God!”
-
-Annister had spoken the girl’s name without thought. At that high moment
-forms had been futile; that whisper had been wrung from him, deep-down,
-as had her answer. And then the soft rasp of steel on steel told that
-Ellison was at work.
-
-But the giant was working against time. At any moment now might come the
-alarm; they had no means of knowing the number of those within those
-walls; perhaps even now peril, just behind, might be stalking them, out
-of the dark.
-
-And still that soft rasp went on, until, at a low word from the girl, the
-giant, laying down his file, bent, heaved, putting his shoulder into it;
-and the bars sprang outward, bent and twisted in that iron grasp.
-
-Annister, his hand reaching for the hand of the girl, went inward
-silently, to stand a moment, without speech, in the thick darkness of the
-little cell. But it was no time for dalliance.
-
-Kane and Ellison behind him now, he set his shoulder against the door,
-as, Ellison aiding, it splintered outward with a soft, carrying crash.
-Ahead of them, along a dark, narrow corridor, there had come on a sudden
-sound of voices, murmurs; Annister, going toward that sound, saw suddenly
-an open door; light streamed from it as the murmur of voices rose:
-
-“My friend, I bring you—forgetfulness....”
-
-The words came in a sort of hissing sibilance as Annister, reaching that
-doorway, halted a moment as the tableau was burned into his brain:
-
-He saw his father, helpless, his face gray with the hideous terror of
-that which was upon him, in the grasp of two cloaked and hooded figures,
-their dark faces grinning with a bestial mirth.
-
-And before him, hand upraised and holding a curious, funnel-shaped object
-at which the man in the corner shrank backward even as he looked, he saw
-a tall man with a black, forking beard—the same that he had seen that
-evening at the corner of the street; the same that he had seen in that
-dim backwater of Rangoon, the Unspeakable—the man with the dark, foreign
-visage, and the eyes of death.
-
-
-_CHAPTER THIRTEEN_
-
-THE JAILER OF SOULS
-
-Annister’s gun went up and out as the black-bearded man, turning, saw him
-where he stood.
-
-Travis Annister, parchment-pale, took two forward, lurching steps, as
-the doctor, backing stiffly against the wall, hands upraised, called
-something in a high sing-song, savage, inarticulate.
-
-Then—everything seemed to happen at once. A snarling, animal outcry
-echoed from the passage just without; it rose, as there came a far,
-gobbling mutter of voices, and the _pad-pad_ of running feet.
-
-The hooded Familiars, as one man, turned, and the long knives flashed,
-luminous, under the lights, as Kane and Ellison, meeting them half way,
-raised their heavy guns.
-
-Annister, covering the Doctor, froze suddenly in motion as that gobbling
-horror mounted, and then, filling that narrow way like figures in a
-dream, they came: the outcasts, the lost battalion, the Men Who Had no
-Right to Live.
-
-In their van, but running rather as if pursued than as if in answer to
-that snarling call, there came three men, guards by their dress, their
-faces contorted, agonized, upon them the impress of a crawling fear. They
-streamed past that door, pursuers and pursued, as Black Steve Annister,
-finger upon the trigger of his pistol, saw that lean hand sweep upward;
-it flicked the thin lips; the dark face grayed, went blank; the Dark
-Doctor, his gaze in a queer, frozen look upon Eternity, pitched forward
-upon his face.
-
-In some way, as Annister could understand, the madmen had won free,
-but—how?
-
-Turning, he saw a white face at his elbow as there sounded from without
-the staccato explosions of a motor, and a swift, hammering thunder upon
-the great door.
-
-“I am—Newbold Humiston,” said the face, “and I am not mad, or, rather, I
-am but mad north-north-west when the wind is southerly,” he quoted, with
-a ghastly smile. “This devil—” he pointed to the body of Elphinstone—“has
-gone to his own place, but the evil that he did lives after him—in _us_.”
-
-His voice rose to a shriek as there came a rush of feet along the
-corridor: a compact body of men, at their head a tall man at sight of
-whom Stephen Annister flung up a hand.
-
-“Well, Childers,” he said. “I’m glad!”
-
-Childers spoke pantingly, in quick gasps:
-
-“We just made it, old man,” he said. “A day ahead at that. The station
-agent put us on the track. We got ’em all—Lunn, and the rest; all but
-Rook—”
-
-He paused, at Annister’s inquiring look, turning his thumb down with an
-expressive gesture.
-
-“We found him—strangled—in his office ... a queer business....”
-
-Annister gave an exclamation.
-
-“The Indian!” he said. “Well, Rook was the ‘Third Light,’ sure enough!”
-
-Again he was seeing the lean, avid face in the vestibule of the smoker,
-the lighted match; himself, and the conductor, and Rook, the lawyer’s
-pale eyes brooding above the glowing end of his cigarette.... And again,
-as the picture passed, he was aware of the white face at his elbow as
-Mary Allerton, her hand in his, behind her the golden hair and the wide
-eyes of Cleo Ridgley, turned to Childers with a smile that yet had in it
-a hint of tears.
-
-He that had been Newbold Humiston continued:
-
-“The others—they’re quiet now. The guards have gone—to follow _him_—the
-others saw to that.”
-
-He gestured toward the silent figure on the floor.
-
-“His plan was worthy of his master, the Devil, because it was
-diabolically simple: Rook was his procurer and his clearing-house; you
-see, Rook found the victims, and cashed the checks that Elphinstone wrung
-from them; and then, when they had cleaned up, or when they deemed the
-time was ripe, the victims—disappeared. Rook’s secretary they kidnapped
-for revenge; Miss Allerton because she knew much; they suspected that she
-was in the Secret Service. And so—these others disappeared.”
-
-He laughed; the laugh of a dead man risen from the tomb.
-
-“They disappeared—yes—but—they remained, as you see—myself—a living
-ghost!”
-
-“But how?” asked the younger Annister, in the sudden quiet, the
-realization of what his father and Mary had escaped burning like a quick
-fire in his veins. The toneless voice went on:
-
-“Elphinstone was a surgeon, a master.... You’ve heard of Dermatology?
-Well, it’s been done in India, I believe; practiced there to an extent
-unknown here, of course. An anesthetic, and then an operation: new faces
-for old, forged faces; the thing was diabolically simple. And so when
-they, the victims, saw themselves in a mirror, sometimes they went mad,
-for who could prove it? Who would be believed?”
-
-His voice rose, died, gathered strength, as a candle flames at the last
-with a brief spark of life:
-
-“It’s done,” he muttered. “He’s gone—but his work lives after him, even
-as he called himself—the Jailer of Souls!”
-
-
-THE END.
-
-
-
-
-Editor Baffled by Weird Seance
-
-
-Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s lecture tours in the United States have created
-wide discussion and considerable difference of opinion, some persons
-contending that he is really in communication with the spirit world,
-while others declare that he is the victim of tricksters. In order to
-conduct an impartial investigation, J. Malcolm Bird, associate editor
-of The Scientific American, attended several of Sir Arthur’s seances,
-and afterward declared that he had observed psychic phenomena that
-could hardly be explained by any known natural cause. He could discover
-no physical connection between the medium or the spectators and the
-phenomena, and he saw mysterious self-luminous lights, attributed by Sir
-Arthur to ectoplasm, and heard strange noises that defied his efforts to
-establish a natural cause.
-
-“My best judgment would be that both in direction and subject matter much
-of the ‘communicated’ material of the seance would be quite beyond the
-normal ability of the medium,” he said. “The seance entered a phase which
-seems to me to prove, without question, that telepathy or some other
-force with intelligence behind it was at work.
-
-“The trumpet began to talk, loudly and distinctly and coherently, in a
-voice that had not yet been heard.... It was not ordinary ventriloquism,
-because the ventriloquist cannot work in the dark. He doesn’t deceive
-your ears, but rather your eyes, by directing your attention to the point
-whence he wishes you to infer that the sound came. The voice really came
-from the center of the circle.”
-
-
-
-
-JACK O’ MYSTERY
-
-_A Modern Ghost Story_
-
-_By_ EDWIN MacLAREN
-
-
-The limousine came to a glistening stop before an office building in
-Monroe Street, and a handsome woman of thirty, expensively and stylishly
-gowned, emerged from the car and entered the building, her mien
-bespeaking nervousness.
-
-Furtively, as one who fears pursuit, she hastened across the marble
-rotunda, edged hurriedly into an elevator and ascended to the ninth
-floor, where she approached a door bearing upon its opaque glass panel
-the gilt lettering:
-
- BARRY DETECTIVE AGENCY
-
-She paused here for a moment, in an effort to recover her equanimity; and
-then, with a brave assumption of self-assurance, she opened the door and
-entered the room and closed the door behind her.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-The room was quite deserted; but promptly from an adjoining chamber there
-came a lean-faced young man of inquiring blue eyes, who courteously
-greeted her.
-
-“Is Mr. Barry in?” she asked. “Mr. Herbert Barry?”
-
-“I am Herbert Barry,” he said.
-
-“Oh!” Surprised, she eyed the slim young man half incredulously. He
-seemed scarcely more than a boy. “Mrs. Franklin Parker told me about
-you—recommended you very highly. Perhaps that is why,” she added, with a
-smile, “I expected to find an older man.... I suppose most of the people
-who come to see you are in trouble of some sort. _I_ am not in trouble,
-exactly, but—” She glanced around the office. “May I have a word with you
-in privacy?”
-
-He held open the door to the adjoining room. “Suppose we step in here? My
-stenographer is at lunch. There’s no danger of our being disturbed.”
-
-Preceding him into the inner office, she bade him lock the door; and,
-thus assured of their safety from interruption, she sat nervously on
-the edge of a chair and faced him across the flat-top desk. There
-clung to her, somehow, a subtle suggestion of wealth and luxury, and
-her well-chiseled features denoted good breeding. Subtle, too, was the
-delicate odor of violets that fragrantly touched his nostrils as she
-leaned toward him across the desk. Then he noticed she wore a rich
-cluster of the flowers upon her mauve silk waist.
-
-He observed, also, the purplish shadows beneath her large brown eyes,
-her half-frightened, half-worried demeanor and her air of suppressed
-excitement, as though she were struggling to control some inner
-perturbation.
-
-“Perhaps I’ve made a mistake,” she began, “in coming here. I don’t know.
-But I’ve been so perplexed, so utterly mystified, by some strange things
-that have happened lately—Did you ever hear of Willard Clayberg?” she
-broke off suddenly to ask.
-
-Barry knitted his brows. The name had a familiar sound.
-
-“Yes,” he said, after a pause, “I seem to remember him. Wasn’t he the
-North Shore millionaire who went insane last winter and killed his wife
-and himself?”
-
-She nodded. Her elbows were resting on the desk and her slender fingers,
-interlaced beneath her small white chin, were twitching.
-
-“Exactly. They lived, as you probably recall, in a quaint old-fashioned
-home near Hubbard Woods—just the two of them; no children. Following
-the tragedy, the house was closed up and for a long while remained
-unoccupied. Despite the scarcity of dwelling places, nobody apparently
-cared to live there. For one thing, it is not a modern residence, and for
-another—and this really seemed the most serious objection—it had acquired
-a reputation of being ‘haunted.’
-
-“Of course,” she went on, with a nervous little laugh, “you will say—just
-as _I_ said—that such a thing is perfectly absurd. You’d think that no
-normal person would take it seriously. And yet there were so many strange
-things told about the house—creepy stories of weird sounds in the dead
-of night and unearthly things seen through the windows—that people,
-ordinarily level-headed, began to shun the place.
-
-“I have never believed in ghosts, Mr. Barry, and I’ve always ridiculed
-people who did; but now—Do you know my husband, Scott Peyton?”
-
-“I’ve heard of him,” said Barry. “Architect, isn’t he?”
-
-“A very successful one. He has designed some of the finest buildings in
-Chicago. But he’s the most superstitious man alive! He’s a Southerner,
-born in Georgia, and at childhood his negro ‘mammy’ filled his mind with
-all manner of silly superstitions, including a deathly fear of ‘ha’nts.’
-He has never been able to overcome this, although both of us have tried.
-
-“About three weeks ago,” Mrs. Peyton continued, her voice betraying her
-agitation, “he and I were motoring along the North Shore when we espied
-this old Clayberg estate. The quaint charm of the old-fashioned place at
-once enchanted me; and when we alighted and strolled through the grounds
-my enchantment grew. It seemed as if Nature had outdone herself in
-lavishing picturesque beauty there. Mr. Peyton was as fascinated as I.
-
-“We were planning, at that time, to give up our town apartment and buy a
-suburban home; and this seemed to be just the thing we were looking for.
-We inquired of the neighbors concerning it, and it was then we discovered
-its tragic history. When my husband was told of the hideous thing that
-had happened there last winter, and of its evil reputation since, his
-enthusiasm vanished, and I immediately saw he would never consider buying
-it.
-
-“But I had set my heart on having that place; and later—after I had
-pleaded and argued with him in vain—I decided to buy it myself and,
-by compelling him to live there, perhaps cure him permanently of his
-superstitious fear. I saw the agent next day, learned the old home could
-be bought at a bargain, and had my father buy it and deed it to me.
-
-“My husband was furious when I told him what I had done. He declared
-he would never enter the house and urged me to sell it forthwith. But
-I was as firm as he; and finally, after a rather violent argument and
-by taunting him with being a coward, I contrived to get his reluctant
-consent to make our home in the ‘haunted house’.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-“We moved in last Thursday,” said Mrs. Peyton sitting nearer the desk and
-lowering her voice, “and on Thursday night, and every night since then—”
-She exhaled audibly, her lip quivering.
-
-“What happened?” asked Barry.
-
-“It’s been a nightmare!” she exclaimed with sudden vehemence. “Ever since
-that first night the most peculiar things have happened. I don’t know
-what to make of it, or what to think, or do. It’s baffling! I’m not in
-the least superstitious; and yet—”
-
-“Start at the beginning,” suggested Barry, “and tell me exactly what
-happened.”
-
-“Well, the first night we slept in the master’s bedroom—a large front
-room on the second floor—and about midnight I was awakened by my husband,
-who was sitting up in bed, gasping and trembling with terror. Before
-I could speak, he sprang from bed and switched on the light and began
-frantically searching the room, looking into the closets and under the
-bed and peering into the hall.
-
-“‘For heaven’s sake!’ I cried. ‘What’s the matter?’
-
-“He pointed to the corridor door. His hand was trembling and his face was
-as white as paper. For a moment he seemed unable to speak.
-
-“‘It came right through that door!’ he said at last. ‘I woke up just as
-it came in the room—a ghastly-looking old man with white hair and a long
-beard. It didn’t open the door, but came right _through_ it!’
-
-“‘Nonsense!’ I laughed. ‘You’ve been thinking about ghosts until you
-imagine you’re seeing them. Now come back to bed and go to sleep.’
-
-“But he indignantly insisted he had actually seen the thing.
-
-“‘I saw it cross the room,’ he declared, ‘and stop at the bed and stand
-there looking down at me. When I sat up it disappeared—vanished into air.’
-
-“I couldn’t believe such a preposterous thing, of course, but, to humor
-him, I offered to get up and help him search the house.
-
-“‘What good would that do?’ he objected. ‘I tell you the thing was a
-_spirit_!’
-
-“Finally he went back to bed. But he slept no more that night. At
-breakfast next morning I could see he hadn’t closed his eyes.
-
-“On the following night I again was awakened by my husband, who seemed
-even more frightened than before.
-
-“‘It came back again!’ he whispered hoarsely. ‘It was puttering around
-your desk over there.’
-
-“Then he jumped out of bed and ran to the desk and lit the lamp there.
-A moment later he uttered a sharp cry and came hurrying back to my bed,
-with a sheet of writing paper in his hand.
-
-“‘Look at that!’ he exclaimed, and thrust the paper before my eyes.
-
-“I saw written on the paper, in a sprawling hand, the words, ‘_Leave this
-House!_’ and I knew then that somebody had been in the room.
-
-“I got up and tried the door. It was still locked and the key was in the
-hole, just as I had left it. The windows hadn’t been touched, apparently.
-How, then, had the person entered our room?
-
-“My husband, of course, insisted it was not a living being, but a ghost,
-who could pass through a locked door as though it didn’t exist. And, as
-before, he refused to look for it.
-
-“Next day, however, with our cook and houseman, I thoroughly searched the
-house from top to bottom—and found nothing. No trace of anybody having
-entered the house. Nothing wrong anywhere.
-
-“On Saturday night I was awakened again—this time by a frantic knocking
-on our bedroom door. I sat up, startled. My husband was sleeping soundly,
-exhausted after two sleepless nights.
-
-“I slipped quietly from bed, without disturbing him, and tiptoed to the
-door and whispered through the panel:
-
-“‘Who’s there?’
-
-“The cook’s voice answered, and I could tell by her tone she was terribly
-frightened:
-
-“‘It’s me, ma’am. I’m leavin’ this house tonight. I won’t stay here
-another minute!’
-
-“I opened the door and stepped out in the hall—taking care not to awake
-Mr. Peyton—and found Clara fully dressed and holding her traveling-bag.
-It was evident she had dressed in considerable haste, and it was equally
-plain that she was almost paralyzed with fear.
-
-“‘I just seen a spook!’ she gasped. ‘An old man with white hair and
-whiskers. He come right in my room while I was asleep. I woke up and seen
-’im. And he writ somethin’ on my dresser. You c’n see for yerself, ma’am,
-what he writ there.’
-
- * * * * *
-
-“Fearful of awakening my husband, I had drawn her away from the bedroom
-door; and now, with some difficulty, I persuaded her to follow me to her
-room, where I found, written in white chalk across the bureau mirror, the
-command: ‘_Leave here at once!_’
-
-“Clara was determined to obey this ‘message from the dead’ by leaving
-instantly. I couldn’t induce her even to stay until morning. Despite my
-protests and entreaties, she fled from the house and passed the remainder
-of the night, as I later discovered, in the Hubbard Woods railroad
-station, taking an early train for Chicago.
-
-“I tried to keep the occurrence from my husband, inventing an excuse for
-Clara’s hasty departure, but he wormed the truth from me, and of course
-that further harassed his already overwrought nerves. Also, it gave him
-the right to say, ‘I told you so!’
-
-“He renewed his pleading to abandon the house; but I still refused to
-give it up—still refused to admit that it was ‘haunted,’ or that there
-was anything supernatural in what he and Clara had seen.
-
-“It didn’t end there, unhappily. On the very next night—that was night
-before last—the houseman was visited by the mysterious ‘thing.’ He said
-he saw it in his room, after midnight, stooping over his table, that he
-shouted at it and it disappeared. Then, so he told us, he got up and
-struck a light and discovered the ‘ghost’ had been trying to send a
-message to him by arranging some matches on the table.
-
-“He showed us these matches, saying he had left them just as they were
-found. They were so placed as to spell the word, ‘_LEAVE_,’ in capital
-letters. Evidently the ‘ghost’ was frightened away before he could finish
-his sentence. Needless to say, the houseman left us.
-
-“Well, in spite of all these things, I simply couldn’t bring myself to
-believe that the mysterious visitations were supernatural. I was sure
-there must be some logical explanation. But _last_ night—!”
-
-“What happened last night?” asked Barry, as Mrs. Peyton paused.
-
-Mrs. Peyton, still sitting forward in her chair, was searching in her
-reticule. Barry noticed her fingers were unsteady and that her underlip
-was caught between her teeth to still its quivering.
-
-“Last night,” she went on, with a transparent effort at lightness, “_I_
-saw the ‘ghost’! Please don’t smile! I was quite wide awake when I saw
-it—as wide awake as I am this moment—and in full possession of all my
-wits. And I can’t understand yet how it got in my room, or how it got
-out, or even what it was.
-
-“I was alone in the house, too,” she continued, taking a photograph from
-the reticule and placing it, face down, on the desk. “Yesterday afternoon
-Mr. Peyton telephoned from his office that he must stay downtown rather
-late to attend a meeting of building contractors and suggested that I
-come in to the city for dinner, and bring a friend and ‘take in a show,’
-and meet him afterward. But I wasn’t in the mood and told him I’d prefer
-to stay at home.
-
-“‘But I won’t be home before twelve o’clock,’ he said, ‘and I don’t like
-the idea of your being all alone in that house at night, without even a
-servant on the place.’
-
-“I reminded him that the chauffeur and gardener were still with us (they
-sleep in the garage and hadn’t been alarmed by the ‘spook’), and with
-these two and Mitch, our Scotch collie, to guard me I felt perfectly
-safe. As for the ‘ghost,’ I laughingly told him, I really would enjoy
-meeting it and having a chat on its astral adventures.
-
-“He declined to unbend from his seriousness and became irritated when I
-refused to leave the house. We had quite a tiff, but I finally had my
-way, and the best he could get was a promise from me to lock myself in
-before going to bed. He said he would sleep in one of the guest chambers.
-
-“After a pick-up meal in the kitchen, I went upstairs to our room and
-wrote letters until ten o’clock. Then I prepared for bed.
-
-“For a moment I regretted not having done as my husband asked. The house
-_did_ seem eerie; no denying that—big and dark and silent, and not a
-living creature in it except myself.
-
-“But I quickly shook off this feeling, assuring myself there was no such
-thing as a ghost, and, even if there was, that it couldn’t possibly
-harm me. However, remembering my promise, I locked the door and put the
-key under my pillow, and bolted all the windows, and, as an additional
-precaution, I looked under the bed and inspected both closets. And I knew
-_absolutely_, when I put out the light and got into bed, that I was the
-only person in that room.
-
-“I was soon asleep,” said Mrs. Peyton, again feeling in her handbag,
-“and it seemed only a few minutes later—though I know now it was several
-hours—when I found myself wide awake. I suppose it was the lack of fresh
-air that awoke me. I’m accustomed to sleeping with the windows open.
-
-“I was on the point of getting up to open a window when, all at once, my
-blood seemed to freeze. I discovered, quite suddenly, _I was not alone in
-the room_!”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Mrs. Peyton paused and drew from the handbag a sheet of blue linen
-notepaper. Nervously creasing the paper in her slender white fingers, she
-continued, with heightening agitation, her large brown eyes earnestly
-watching the detective’s face: “I won’t deny, Mr. Berry, that I was
-frightened. In fact, I confess that I was so terrified I seemed utterly
-powerless to move or speak. I had always supposed if I ever _should_
-see a ghost I would feel no fear whatever. But now that I found myself
-actually looking at one—or at least looking at what, in that frightful
-moment, I potently _believed_ to be one—I was petrified with terror.
-
-“It was sitting at my desk, right where I’d been sitting all evening, and
-its back was toward me. The moon had risen and was shining through the
-windows, brightening the room with a pale half-light.
-
-“The figure at the desk appeared to be writing. In fact, I could hear the
-scratching of the pen. I could also hear the ticking of a small clock on
-the desk. That’s how still everything was.
-
-“Well, it sat there writing—a blurred, shapeless object in the silvery
-moonlight—for I don’t know how long. It seemed an age! And all the time I
-was conscious—terrifyingly so—that I was alone in that great house with
-it!”
-
-Mrs. Peyton paused and took the photograph from the desk.
-
-“Instinctively, I tried to scream,” she went on, “but my throat was
-parched and I seemed unable to utter a sound. However, I must have made
-some sort of noise, for the thing suddenly turned and looked at me over
-its shoulder. And for the first time, I saw its face.”
-
-“What was the face like?” asked Barry.
-
-She handed him the photograph.
-
-“That’s a picture of it,” she said.
-
-It was a kodak “snapshot” of an aged man with flowing white hair and
-a patriarchal beard. Turning it over, Barry saw written on the back,
-“Willard Clayberg, December, 1922.”
-
-“It’s Mr. Clayberg’s last picture,” said Mrs. Peyton. “I obtained it this
-morning from one of his grandsons. It was taken last winter, shortly
-before the dreadful tragedy at our house.”
-
-“Getting back to last night?” reminded Barry.
-
-“Oh, yes! Well, the thing sat there, quite silent and motionless, staring
-at me through the moonlight. Its face was the same as the one in that
-picture, only, somehow, it didn’t seem _real_. It was peculiarly pallid
-and lifeless—like the face of a dead person.
-
-“Finally I found my voice and cried out: ‘Who are you? What are you doing
-here?’
-
-“Instantly the thing rose from the desk, without making a particle of
-sound, and glided swiftly and silently across the room—and disappeared!
-
-“That seemed to revive my courage—the thought that I had frightened it
-away—and I sprang from bed and ran to the door.
-
-“The door was still locked! I tried the windows. They were still bolted.
-Neither the door nor the windows had been touched. Everything in the
-room, in fact, was just as I had left it upon going to bed.
-
-“Then I crossed to my desk and lit the lamp there and found—this!” Mrs.
-Peyton offered the sheet of note paper, which she had been nervously
-fingering.
-
-Barry unfolded it and read the words scrawled upon its blue surface:
-
- “_Again I warn you to leave this house. This is the last—_”
-
-“When I interrupted him,” explained Mrs. Peyton, “he apparently had just
-written the word, ‘last.’”
-
-Barry nodded and narrowly examined the handwriting. It was old-style
-script, angular and shaky, indicative of a very aged and infirm person.
-
-“Have you the notes received by Mr. Peyton and the cook?”
-
-“No; but I saw them. Both were written in the same hand as that,”
-indicating the sheet of blue paper.
-
-Barry again looked at the photograph, holding it to the light and
-inspecting it closely. Suddenly he asked:
-
-“What sort of clothing did your visitor wear?”
-
-“Why, as I remember, he wore a sort of long gray robe and a queer little
-cap—a skullcap, maybe. But it was all very blurred and indistinct. He
-seemed to be enveloped in a kind of gray mist. With his white hair and
-beard, the effect was quite ‘creepy.’”
-
-“Anything else happen last night?”
-
-“Nothing—except that I passed the rest of the night trying to solve the
-riddle. The first thing I did, after finding the note, was to try the
-door and windows again—and I again made sure they hadn’t been touched. I
-knew positively that nobody could get in the room _except_ through the
-door or windows, so _how_ had the old man entered?
-
-“I was still hunting an answer to that question, and growing more
-perplexed than ever, when I heard a heavy footfall on the front porch;
-then the front door opened and closed with a _bang_, and my husband came
-bounding noisily upstairs. I knew from this he had seen the light at my
-window, even before he called to me reprovingly through the bedroom door:
-‘Haven’t you turned in yet? It’s ’way after one o’clock.’
-
-“It was then I decided to say nothing to him about what happened. And I
-haven’t.
-
-“But this morning, as soon as he’d left for the office, I called on Mrs.
-Parker and told her everything. She suggested that I see you. I hesitated
-at first to do this, because only yesterday I spoke to Mr. Peyton
-about calling in the police or employing a detective to investigate
-the mystery, and he vigorously objected. He really believed the thing
-was supernatural and declared that no living person could overcome it.
-The only thing to do, he said, was to leave the house as the ‘spirit’
-commanded.
-
-“I finally decided, however, to follow Mrs. Parker’s suggestion,
-particularly as she recommended you so highly—and so, quite unknown to my
-husband, here I am!
-
-“And now, Mr. Barry,” said Mrs. Peyton, sitting back in her chair for
-the first time and moving her white hands in a pretty gesture of relief,
-“what do _you_ make of it all?”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Barry, examining the feeble handwriting beneath a reading-glass,
-discerned what appeared to be a startling solution of the mystery; but,
-deeming it best for the moment to say nothing of this, he offered an
-obvious answer to her question:
-
-“From what you have told me, Mrs. Peyton, it would seem that an unknown
-person, concealed in your house, is bent on frightening you away.”
-
-“But I’ve thoroughly searched the house,” she protested, “not once, but
-several times; and I know positively that nobody is hidden there—and that
-nobody has broken in. Besides, even if the old man _was_ in the house, or
-_had_ broken in, how did he enter my room last night?”
-
-“Perhaps, after I’ve inspected the room—”
-
-“Can you do it, without Mr. Peyton knowing?”
-
-“Quite easily, I think, with our help. Since you are in need of servants,
-my presence can readily be explained—”
-
-“Why, of course!” she eagerly interrupted. “Our new houseman! It will
-seem quite plausible, too,” she added, rising and glancing at her watch,
-“particularly since I’ve just engaged a new cook—who is waiting for me
-now, by the way, in my car. We had best start at once, Mr. Barry. It’s
-nearly one, and my husband is usually home before six.”
-
-... A little later, as the Peyton limousine smartly threaded its way
-through the downtown streets, Barry, sitting on the front seat beside
-the chauffeur, planned a procedure that would either substantiate, or
-explode, his tentative explanation of the white-bearded “ghost.”
-
-His first step was taken immediately: At a State Street department store
-he secretly bought a pad of cheap writing paper, a package of ungummed
-envelopes, ten two-cent stamps, a thick lead pencil, a jar of mucilage
-and an oblong carton of sterilized gauze.
-
-Later still, upon reaching the “haunted house,” he saw no cause to revise
-his plan, and no reason to doubt that the solution he already had formed,
-although amazing, was essentially correct.
-
-With the new cook installed in the kitchen, Mrs. Peyton conducted him to
-the second-floor front bedroom—a commodious south chamber—where she had
-seen the “ghost” last night. Barry looked at the small mahogany desk,
-surveyed the white-enameled twin beds, measured their distance from the
-corridor door and carefully examined the lock thereon.
-
-Then, swiftly though systematically, he searched the rest of the house
-and afterward strolled outdoors. Sauntering across the velvety lawns,
-beneath the aged trees, he casually approached the garage some two
-hundred feet from the house. He had found nothing in the house, and now
-saw nothing in the surrounding grounds, to suggest the weird things he
-had heard. Here, to all appearance, was only an old-fashioned suburban
-home dozing peacefully in the mellow sunshine of a midsummer afternoon.
-
-At the garage, which aforetime had been a stable, he engaged in
-back-stairs gossip with Frank Dominick, the chauffeur—in the presence of
-the gardener, John Hart, an uncommunicative person—and learned that both
-were preparing to “give notice.”
-
-“We ain’t actually _seen_ old Clayberg’s ghost—at least not _yet_,” said
-Dominick, “but we’ve heard enough about ’im and I guess he’ll be callin’
-on us next. I guess the only reason we ain’t seen ’im before is because
-we sleep up there,” pointing to the upper floor of the garage. “Take my
-advice, friend, and don’t stay here over night. Am I right, John?”
-
-John Hart, a senile man, shifted his cud of tobacco and expectorated
-lavishly, thus contributing a fresh stain to his ragged white beard.
-
-“You’re right,” said he, and spoke no more.
-
-Returning to the house, Barry was given a white jacket and a pair of blue
-trousers by Mrs. Peyton; and at six o’clock, wearing these garments and
-a servile mien, he was laying the dinner table when the master of the
-house arrived. Barry, with a plate and napkin in his hands, observed him
-through the doorway—a trim-looking man of thirty-five—and remarked the
-harrowing fear that sat upon his countenance.
-
-His haggard eyes, like those of his wife, denoted loss of sleep; and he
-evinced no interest in her “luck in finding two perfect servants.” In the
-same troubled preoccupation, he acknowledged the introduction of Barry,
-who was presented as Thomas Field. Clearly, he was too frightened and
-worried to be conscious of his environment.
-
-Dinner over, Barry went to his room. It was a tiny chamber tucked
-under the eaves at the rear of the top floor, and it was here that his
-predecessor had beheld the “apparition” night before last. Upon the small
-table, where the word, “LEAVE” had been spelled with matches, Barry
-spread the articles which he had bought this afternoon.
-
-Then he drew the table to the window, and lighted the lamp, and sat down
-and began writing letters to mythical persons in Iowa. His door stood
-open, and so did the window, and anybody passing in the hall, or standing
-north of the house, could have watched him at his employment.
-
-For upward of two hours he sat steadily writing, his back to the door,
-his face silhouetted against the window; and when he had written
-five letters, and had stamped and directed them to his imaginary
-correspondents, he uncorked the mucilage pot and sealed the flaps of the
-envelops.
-
-And then, somehow, he awkwardly upset the bottle of mucilage, and the
-stuff oozed stickily over his pencil and paper.
-
-It was at this moment, or perhaps a little earlier, that he heard a
-slight rustle in the hall behind him, as of somebody moving away from his
-door, but, apparently intent only upon cleaning the mucilage from the
-table, he never looked round or gave any sign that he heard.
-
-Presently he extinguished the light and, disrobing in the darkness,
-looked from his window. The old Clayberg stable, now Peyton’s garage,
-loomed like a great dusky shadow in the starlit night; and at a small
-upper window, almost on a direct line with his, a yellow light glowed.
-
-Feeling through the dark, Barry removed the sterilized gauze from the
-carton, snipped off a ten-inch length, and returned the gauze and box to
-his pocket. Then he stretched his length on the narrow iron bed, his face
-to the window, his door ajar.
-
-Wide awake, he lay staring into the darkness, his mind alert, sharpened
-by expectancy.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The moon rose in the southeast, bathing the outdoors in a silvery
-sheen and mitigating, somewhat, the darkness of his room. The minutes
-lengthened into hours; and as the hours dragged slowly by Barry fought
-off the desire to sleep.
-
-The fight became increasingly difficult; and finally—he judged it was
-long past midnight—it seemed as though he could no longer force himself
-to stay awake. His eyelids drooped. He dozed....
-
-And then, all at once, he was wide awake again, his pulse tingling.
-Somebody had entered his room and was standing now at the table, between
-the bed and window, so near that Barry could have touched him by reaching
-forth his hand.
-
-Barry, however, remained motionless, simulating sleep; and beneath
-lowered lids he watched the intruder—a blurred gray figure—take up the
-pencil and start writing on the pad of paper. The moon had climbed to the
-zenith, and by its pale reflection Barry distinguished the salient marks
-of his visitor; the long gray robe, the flowing white hair and beard, the
-white skullcap.
-
-Then the figure put down the pencil and vanished—gliding to the hall as
-swiftly and noiselessly, it seemed, as a shadow leaving the room.
-
-Still Barry did not move. Silence ensued. Then, from some point down the
-hall, came a woman’s piercing scream.
-
-Barry rose, wrapped the lead pencil in the strip of gauze, and enclosed
-it in the cardboard box and replaced the box in his pocket.
-
-Then, wearing coat and trousers, he stepped into the hall and lit a gas
-jet there—just as the new cook, screaming with terror, emerged from her
-room. Hysterical with fright, she frantically flourished a scrap of
-wrapping paper. And when she could speak coherently:
-
-“I just seen a spook in my room—an old man wid white whiskers. I won’t
-stay in this house! He writ somethin’ here—”
-
-She broke off to examine the bit of paper by the fluttering gas flame;
-and when she saw the words written on her paper she uttered another
-terrified shriek and, heedless of her scant attire, fled toward the
-front staircase. She was met at the head of the stairs by Mr. and Mrs.
-Peyton—he in pajamas and bathrobe, she in a peignoir, and both visibly
-alarmed—and to them she told, or tried to tell, the reason for her mad
-flight.
-
-“Now lemme get outa here!” she ended, attempting to brush past them. “He
-told me to leave tonight—and _I’m goin’_!”
-
-Barry, following sleepily in her wake, rubbing his eyes as one newly
-awakened from slumber, heard Peyton saying: “This is dreadful, dreadful!”
-and Mrs. Peyton entreating the cook to “stay at least till morning.”
-
-Unable to persuade the cook to remain, Mrs. Peyton turned appealingly to
-Barry. “Did you see anything in your room, Field?”
-
-“No, mem,” said Barry, hiding a yawn. “I was fast asleep when she woke me
-up, mem.”
-
-This, however, exerted no influence on the cook. Like Clara who went
-before her, she departed immediately for the railroad station, there to
-pass the rest of the night.
-
-Peace at last returned to the house—and Barry returned to his room,
-locked the door and observed on his pad the same angular scrawl, “_Leave
-this house tonight!_” which had frightened her away. Then he went to bed
-and slept soundly until after sunrise.
-
-He was up and dressed at seven o’clock; and when the Peytons came
-downstairs about eight he had an appetizing breakfast awaiting them. As
-soon as her husband had left for his office, Mrs. Peyton, returning from
-the front door, looked at the detective with anxious inquiry in her large
-brown eyes.
-
-“Have you discovered anything at all, Mr. Barry?”
-
-Barry took a crumpled napkin from the breakfast table and folded it
-thoughtfully between his long fingers. He was thinking: “Yes, Mrs.
-Peyton; I’ve discovered the identity of your ‘ghost,’ and you alone have
-the power to ‘kill’ it.” Aloud, however:
-
-“I’ll make a report today,” he promised, and left the room with a stack
-of dishes and the folded napkin.
-
-He deposited the dishes in the kitchen sink. The napkin went into his hip
-pocket. Then he started upstairs for his other clothes. At her bedroom
-door he paused, listening. The door stood open. Mrs. Peyton, downstairs,
-was sitting at the breakfast table, absently crumbling a bit of toast in
-her fingers, a faraway look in her eyes. Barry, at her bedroom door, was
-remarking the small mahogany desk, where, two nights ago, the “ghost” had
-written his warning to her.
-
-In three swift strides he crossed to the desk, searched hurriedly among
-the papers there and neatly pocketed one of these. Then he continued
-to his room. Mrs. Peyton still sat at the breakfast table in a pensive
-reverie, her wistful brown gaze lost in the morning sunshine beyond the
-leaded casements.
-
- * * * * *
-
-An hour later Barry alighted from a train in Chicago and forthwith called
-on a colleague, whose skill in analyzing handwriting and identifying
-finger prints had earned him the title of “expert.” He spent considerable
-time with this man; and then he went to his office and wrote his report
-for Mrs. Peyton.
-
-And when the report was finished he sat gazing at it musingly—somewhat as
-Mrs. Peyton had gazed from her breakfast-room window this morning.
-
-With an energetic shrug, as if to shake off his odd mood, he sealed the
-report in an envelope, and put it in his pocket and started for an office
-building in lower Michigan Avenue.
-
-Presently he entered a room in this building, luxuriously furnished and
-unoccupied, and abruptly halted. In the adjoining room he could hear
-the voices of Scott Peyton and his wife; and since the door between the
-two offices stood partly open, he could also see their faces. Himself
-unobserved, Barry stood silently watching and listening.
-
-“I suppose you’re right, Scott,” she said, standing beside her husband’s
-desk and looking down at him. “After what happened last night, I’m just
-about ready to do as you say—give the house up and move back to town. But
-I do so hate to leave that old place. I wish—”
-
-“Why should you?” he interrupted, scowling at his desk and avoiding her
-eyes.
-
-Mrs. Peyton looked down, biting a corner of her lip and twisting the
-wedding ring of her finger.
-
-“It’s not so much what _I_ want,” she faltered, her voice tremulously
-low, “but—the city is no place—not the _best_ place for our—_Oh, Scott!_”
-she cried passionately, and flung out her hands to him in appeal. “Can’t
-you _see_?”
-
-Scott Peyton looked up and met his wife’s eyes; and the thing he saw in
-their liquid brown depths instantly chased the frown from his face and
-took him to his feet in a swift rush of remorse and gladness.
-
-In the next instant she was sobbing in his arms; and he was tenderly
-patting her shoulders and saying soothingly:
-
-“It’s all right, honey. We won’t give the place up. I don’t think—the
-ghost—will bother us again....”
-
-At this juncture Barry quietly departed.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A little later he again sat at his desk, gazing again at the report he
-had written. And he now knew that this report would never be seen by any
-eye save his.
-
-But while he is sitting here suppose we look over his shoulder and glance
-at the thing before he tears it up:
-
- “In Re Peyton ‘ghost’: ... Using a King Lear costume, which he
- put on and off with lightning agility, the ‘ghost’ hoped, by
- his nocturnal prowling, to frighten Mrs. Peyton into abandoning
- the house as her husband desired.... Following his nightly
- appearances, he quickly removed and concealed his costume, and
- returned to his bed, careful to make no sound. He varied this
- procedure, however, night before last, when he visited Mrs.
- Peyton’s room. Had she left her key in the lock that night,
- instead of hiding it under her pillow, he would have been
- unable to call upon her. As it was, he readily unlocked the
- door and entered. Leaving silently, he hid his costume, then
- left the house and returned, making considerable noise.... The
- finger prints he left in glue last night and those he left on
- his napkin this morning, as well as his real and disguised
- handwriting positively identify the ‘ghost’ as Mrs. Peyton’s
- husband, Scott Peyton.”
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-_Have You Been Reading About King Tut? If so, You’ll be Interested in_
-
-OSIRIS
-
-_The Weird Tale of an Egyptian Mummy_
-
-_By_ ADAM HULL SHIRK
-
- “_Mandrake_”
-
- _By ADAM HULL SHIRK_
-
- _Will appear in the July WEIRD TALES_
-
- _It’s a Strange Yarn of Superstitious Fear_
-
- _Don’t Miss It!_
-
-
-The recent and lamentable death of Sir Richard Parmenter, F. R. G. S.,
-is too fresh in the public’s mind to warrant further reference, and were
-it not that I feel myself capable of throwing light upon the incidents
-contributing to the sudden and apparently unnecessary snuffing out of a
-valuable life, I should refrain from again alluding to it.
-
-It is well known that the physicians at the time decided that valvular
-weakness of the heart must have been responsible for the death of the
-noted Egyptologist, but the statement of his own doctor that Sir Richard
-had never theretofore exhibited indications of such weakness, and that he
-was, to all appearances, in the best of health just prior to his death,
-caused considerable wonder.
-
-I had thought to let the facts remain buried, but, for certain reasons, I
-shall reconsider my determination and tell what I know.
-
-I shall always remember the night on which Sir Richard summoned me, as
-his counselor, to attend him at his apartments in the Albermarle. It
-was a night of storm, and the London streets were a mass of slime and
-slush. A beastly wind had sprung up, and as I left my chambers at the
-Temple it almost took me off my feet. Therefore, it was with no little
-satisfaction that I found a cheery log fire awaiting me in the library of
-my distinguished client’s home, and the nip of brandy he provided was a
-life saver.
-
-I noted, however, that for all his assumption of cheerfulness, something
-was preying upon his mind, and I determined to get at the root of the
-matter without delay:
-
-“How can I serve you, Sir Richard?” I asked, briskly. “I see there is
-something troubling you.”
-
-“Is it as apparent as that?” he asked, trying to appear unconcerned: but
-his strong, homely features belied his effort at calmness.
-
-Before I could reply, he went on:
-
-“But never mind that: I want you to write my will—now.”
-
-“Your will?” My expression of surprise and incredulity was natural,
-for since I had been retained by him I had marked it as one of his few
-idiosyncrasies that he had never made his will. When I had mentioned
-to him the advisability of doing so, he had put it by with a whimsical
-remark about being superstitious.
-
-“I am in earnest,” he declared, “and it will be very simple—just a brief
-form, and I’ll sign it with my man as witness.”
-
-“But why the haste?” I said. “Why not wait till I can have the document
-properly drawn up at my office tomorrow—”
-
-“No; now!” he said, and there was such finality in his tone I had no
-choice.
-
-My concern for my client, whom I really liked and respected immensely,
-prompted me to ask:
-
-“You’re not ill, Sir Richard?”
-
-He shook his head, with the ghost of a smile on his rugged face.
-
-“Physically—no. But—”
-
-He paused, and after a moment he again urged me to proceed with the
-making of the will.
-
-I drew up the document, which was a simple one, leaving the bulk of his
-large properties to his sister in Surrey, with numerous small bequests
-to friends and distant relatives, and a handsome sum and his private
-collection to the British Museum and the Imperial Museum of Egyptology.
-We had in his man, and the document was duly signed, after which he drew
-a long breath of relief and, with a return of something like his natural
-manner, passed me his cigar-case and leaned back in his chair, smoking
-comfortably.
-
-“I’ve a story to tell you, Madden,” he said between puffs, “and it’s a
-queer yarn, too. You’ll think—but never mind. Listen first, and say what
-you like afterward. Only—” he glanced about him with an apprehensive
-expression that fairly set my nerves atingle. “I hope we have time.”
-
-“Time for what?” I asked.
-
-He relaxed again and smiled:
-
-“It’s all right,” he declared. “I’m a bit nervous, I guess, but it’s all
-right. Have another brandy.”
-
-We drank solemnly together. Then he settled back once more and I prepared
-to listen.
-
-“Madden,” said he, “perhaps you’ll smile at what has seemed to me serious
-enough to warrant the steps I have just taken—making my will, I mean—but,
-however you look at it, I want you to know it’s true—every word of it.
-
-“My last trip to Egypt—from which I just returned a fortnight ago—was
-to have been my final one, anyway. I’ve made six trips out there in my
-life, and I’ve collected enough information to fill a dozen volumes.
-Also, I’ve contributed many fine specimens to the museum and corrected
-many misapprehensions concerning the interpretation of some of the
-hieroglyphs. So, all in all, I think I’ve done pretty well.
-
-“This last visit was in many respects the most satisfactory, and indeed
-it witnessed a triumph in my career as an Egyptologist that would be a
-crowning achievement, were it not for—but we won’t speak of that—yet.
-
-“I wonder, Madden, if you know anything about the ancient Egyptian
-religious ceremonies and forms of worship? Anyway, I may tell you that
-the Nile dwellers, as they were called, recognized as their supreme
-deity, Osiris, lord of the underworld. By some he has been identified
-with the Sun and, with the forty assessors of the dead, he was supposed
-to have judged the souls brought before him by Horus in the double halls
-of truth, after their good and evil deeds had been weighed by Anubis.
-
-“The Egyptians reverenced Osiris with as devout worship as the Chinese
-give to Buddha, and the high priests of Osiris were regarded with almost
-as much awe as the deity himself.
-
-“In all our studies and investigations, however, we have never been able
-actually to identify Osiris, but it is now generally conceded that he was
-believed to have lived on earth at one time and that it was only after
-his death that he assumed deific prerogatives. In this respect the modern
-Christian theology may be said to resemble the more ancient form to some
-extent.
-
-“Osiris was pictured on many of the tablets as a creature with the head
-of a bull, though there is some disagreement on this score. In any event,
-his tomb was said to exist near Heliopolis, and it was to investigate
-this tradition that I made my last trip to Egypt.”
-
-Sir Richard paused to relight his cigar and listened to the storm which
-raged without. Again he gave that hasty, apprehensive glance about him,
-then proceeded:
-
-“It would be impossible for me to explain to you, a layman, my
-inordinate joy at finding—by what means and after what tedious labor,
-I won’t stop to tell now—a deserted tomb which I knew, from certain
-hieroglyphic markings I found, was the very one of which I had been in
-search for the best part of half a year.
-
-“Understand that this whole tradition of the tomb of Osiris was regarded
-by my fellow scientists as a myth, and if it had been publicly known that
-I was giving it sufficient credence to spend a lot of time and money
-searching for it I should have been looked upon as a madman and laughed
-out of the societies. This may enable you to appreciate more fully my
-sensations on actually locating at least the tomb. What I should find
-within, I hardly dared conjecture!
-
-“The tomb of a God! Can you imagine it, Madden?
-
-“And yet, if I had only stopped there! If only I had been content to
-pause with the knowledge I already possessed, without proceeding further
-and desecrating with sacrilegious hands that lonely sarcophagus in the
-desert!
-
-“How I succeeded in penetrating this tomb, of the horrors of bats and
-crawling things that failed to stop me—of the almost supernatural awe
-that came upon me—I can not pause to tell. It is enough to say that I
-stood at last beside the tremendous coffin of stone, trembling from an
-unknown dread. And, as I stood there, something white fluttered by me and
-up through the opening into the outer air. A sacred Ibis—but how it had
-penetrated there and how it had lived, I can not say.
-
-“Pour out another brandy, Madden—and throw that other log on the fire,
-too, if you don’t mind. My, how the wind blows! Did you speak?... Pardon
-me—I’m nervous tonight as I said before, very nervous.... Where was I?
-Oh, yes—
-
-“That great sarcophagus stood before me, and on it I saw inscribed the
-sacred scarabæus and the feather of truth, while in the center was the
-word—the one, wonderful name—‘Heseri’—which is the Egyptian for Osiris!
-
-“Insatiable curiosity now took the place of the reverential awe that
-should have possessed me, and with vandal hands I forced the stone lid
-from the casket. One glance I had of a great, bovine face, a _living_
-face, whose eyes looked into the depths of my soul—and then I fled as
-though all the devils of Amenti were at my heels....
-
-“That is all Madden, except that I am nervous—fearfully so. It is so
-unlike me. You know how small a part fear has played in my life. I have
-faced the dreaded simoon; I have been lost among savage tribes, I have
-confronted death in a hundred forms—but _never_ have I felt as I do now.
-I tremble at a sound; my ears trick me into believing that I am always
-hearing some unusual noise; my appetite is failing, and I am feeling my
-age as I have never felt it until.... Good God! Madden! What was that
-sound?... Oh! _look behind you_, Madden! _Look!_...”
-
- * * * * *
-
-And now I come to that portion of my statement that will probably be
-refused credence by those who read; but, as I live, it is the truth.
-
-As Sir Richard uttered his last words, he felt forward to his full length
-upon the hearth rug, even as I turned in obedience to his command. The
-shadows were heavy in the far corner of the spacious room, but I could
-see a great, bulky something that swayed there, something that was a
-part, and yet, seemingly, was independent, of the shadows.
-
-I had a vision of two burning eyes and a black shining muzzle—a heavy,
-misshapen head. A strange, animal-like, fetid odor was in my nostrils.
-
-I shrieked, and, turning, ran madly from the room, stumbled to the stairs
-and fled into the wind-swept night.
-
-
-
-
-Failure to Keep Tab on Quitting Time Kills Two
-
-
-Troy Hocker and Hugh Simpson, linemen for the Oklahoma Gas and Electric
-Company, were repairing wires on top of a pole in Oklahoma one afternoon
-recently. As they worked, they engaged in banter. It was nearly five
-o’clock—their quitting time—but neither looked at his watch. The engineer
-down at the power house saw it was ten minutes past five, time to turn
-on the city’s arc lights. He pulled down the switch and sent 2,300
-volts out to light the city. The men up on the pole ceased their banter.
-Their bodies became stiff. Those on the ground laughed. This must be
-some new prank of the boys. Then someone noticed smoke issuing from
-Hocker’s shoes. Back at the power plant the amperage was fluctuating back
-and forth, and the engineer knew something was amiss. He threw off the
-current—but the men were already dead.
-
-
-
-
-_A New Story by Julian Kilman, Master of Weird Fiction_
-
-THE WELL
-
-
-Jeremiah Hubbard toiled with a team of horses in a piece of ground some
-distance down the road from his dwelling. When it neared five o’clock in
-the autumn afternoon, he unwound the lines from his waist, unhooked the
-traces and started home with his horses.
-
-He was a heavy man, a bit under middle age, with a dish-shaped face and
-narrow-set eyes. He walked with vigor. One of the horses lagged a trifle,
-and he struck it savagely with a short whip.
-
-They came presently to the Eldridge dwelling, abandoned and tumbled down,
-on the opposite side of the road. The farm was being worked on shares by
-a man named Simpson, who lived five miles away and drove a “tin Lizzie.”
-An ancient oak tree, the tremendous circumference of its trunk marred by
-signs of decay, reared splendid gnarled branches skyward.
-
-These branches shaded a disused well—a well that had been the first
-one in Nicholas County, having been dug in the early fifties by the
-pioneering Eldridge family. It went forty feet straight down into the
-residual soil characteristic of the _locale_, but, owing to improved
-drainage, it had become dry. Nothing remained of the old pump-house, save
-the crumbling circle of stonework around the mouth, to give evidence of
-its one-time majesty.
-
-A child of eight ran from the rear of the premises. Hubbard frowned and
-stopped his team.
-
-“You better keep away from there,” he growled, “or you’ll fall into the
-well.”
-
-The girl glanced at him impishly.
-
-“You an’ Missus Hubbard don’t speak to each other, do you?”
-
-Hubbard’s face went black. His whip sprang out and caught the girl about
-the legs. She yelped and ran.
-
-An eighth of a mile farther along the road Hubbard turned in and drove
-his team to a big barn. He fed his stock. It was after six when he
-entered the house. This was a structure that, by comparison with the
-gigantic barn in the rear, seemed pigmy-like.
-
-A sallow, flat-chested woman, with a wisp of hair twisted into a knot,
-took from Hubbard the two pails of milk he carried. She set them in the
-kitchen. The two exchanged no words.
-
-Hubbard strode to the washstand, his boots thumping the floor, and
-performed his ablutions. He rumpled his hair and beard, using much soap
-and water and blowing stertorously. In the dining-room a girl of twelve
-sat with a book. As her father came in she glanced at him timorously.
-
-He gave no heed to her as he slumped down into a chair standing before
-a desk. The desk was littered with papers, among which were typewritten
-sheets of the sort referred to as “pleadings”; there was a title-search
-much bethumbed and black along the edges, where the “set-outs” had been
-scanned with obvious care.
-
-The man adjusted a pair of antiquated spectacles to his dish-face. To do
-this he was compelled to pull the ends of the bows tight back over the
-ears as his nose afforded practically no bridge to support the glasses.
-
-Presently he spoke to the girl:
-
-“Tell your mother to bring on the supper.”
-
-The girl hastened out, and shortly thereafter the mother appeared
-carrying dishes. Food was disposed about the table in silence. The farmer
-ate gustily and in ten minutes finished his meal. Then he addressed his
-daughter, keeping his eyes averted from his wife. “Tell your mother,” he
-said, “that I’ll want breakfast at five o’clock tomorrow morning.”
-
-“Where you goin’, Pa?” asked the girl.
-
-“I’m goin’ to drive to the county seat to see Lawyer Simmons.”
-
-Hubbard’s gaze followed the girl as she helped clear the table.
-
-“Look-a here,” he said. “You been a-talkin’ to that Harper child?”
-
-“No,” returned the daughter, with a trace of spirit. “But I jest saw her
-father over by the fence.”
-
-“What was he a-doin’ there?”
-
-“I didn’t stay. I was afeard he’d catch me watchin’ him.”
-
-Hubbard glowered and reached for his hat.
-
-“I’ll find out,” he snarled.
-
-Walking rapidly, he crossed a field of wheat stubble, keeping his
-eyes fixed sharply ahead. It was dusk, but presently, at the northern
-extremity of his premises, he made out the figure of a man.
-
-“Hey, Harper!” he shouted. “You let that fence be.”
-
-He ran forward swiftly.
-
-The men were now separated by two wire-strand fences that paralleled
-each other only three feet apart. These fences, matching one another for
-a distance of about two hundred yards—each farmer claiming title to the
-fence on the side farthest from his own—represented the basis of the
-litigation over the boundary claim that had gone on between them for four
-years.
-
-The odd spectacle of the twin fences had come to be one of the show
-places in the county. It had been photographed and shown in agricultural
-journals.
-
-“I don’t trust ye, Harper,” announced Hubbard, breathing hard. “You got
-the inside track with Jedge Bissell, an’ the two of you are a-schemin’ to
-beat me.”
-
-A laugh broke from the other.
-
-“I’ll beat you, all right,” he said coolly. “But it won’t be because
-Judge Bissell is unfair.”
-
-His manner enraged Hubbard, who rushed swiftly at the first fence and
-threw himself over. With equal celerity, he clambered over the second
-fence.
-
-Startled at the sudden outburst of temper, Harper had drawn back. He held
-aloft a spade. Hubbard leaped at him. The spade descended.
-
-Harper was slightly-built, however, and the force of the blow did not
-halt the infuriated man, now swinging at him with all his might. They
-clinched. Hubbard’s fingers caught at the throat of the smaller man, and
-the two stumbled to the ground, Hubbard atop. The fall broke his grip.
-With his huge fists he began to hammer the body. He continued until it
-was limp.
-
-Then, his rage suddenly appeased, he drew back and stared at the inert
-figure lying strangely quiet.
-
-“So!” he gasped.
-
-There came the sound of someone singing, the voice floating distinctly
-through the night air. Hubbard recognized it for that of an itinerant
-Free Methodist minister, whose church in Ovid he and his family
-occasionally attended.
-
-The song rolling forth, as the Man of God drove along the highway in his
-rig, was _Jesus, Lover of My Soul_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-For the moment Hubbard shielded his face with an arm as if to ward off an
-invisible thing.
-
-Then, bending over the prostrate form, he ran his hand inside the
-clothing to test the action of the heart. He performed the act
-mechanically, because he knew he had killed his man.
-
-He discovered the handbag. Evidently Harper was on his way to Ovid to
-catch the train to the county seat for the trial on the morrow. This
-meant that he would not be missed by his wife for at least twenty-four
-hours.
-
-The murderer studied his next move. Where to secrete the body? A piece of
-wood lay back of him, but he was aware that it was constantly combed by
-squirrel hunters. He thought of the railroad. Why not an accident? Killed
-by the very train he was bound for?
-
-He started to lug the body toward the track which passed half a mile to
-the north. Realizing, however, that for the time at hand the distance was
-too great, he let the body slide to the ground. Next he stole along the
-twin fences to the highway and peered both ways. No one seemed abroad.
-
-He came back on the dead run, and in twenty minutes he had carried the
-body to the Eldridge premises and flung it down the ancient well.
-
-When he returned he found his wife and daughter together in the parlor,
-where with the itinerant preacher, all three were kneeling on the floor
-in prayer. Hubbard unceremoniously nudged the clergymen.
-
-“That’ll do,” he said.
-
-The minister rose, his tall, lanky figure towering over Hubbard.
-
-“Brother,” he began, in an orotund voice, “come with the Lord—”
-
-“Yes. I know,” returned Hubbard, with a patience that surprised his wife.
-“But I’ve got something to talk over with my family.” He paused. “Here,”
-he added, feeling in his pocket and producing a small coin, “take this
-and go along.”
-
-When the preacher had left, Hubbard called to his daughter.
-
-“Harper was gone when I got over to the fence.”
-
-“What kept you so long?”
-
-“I walked over to the woods. There’s a nest of coons. They’re a-goin’ to
-play havoc with the corn.” He smiled unnaturally. “Look-a here! If we
-can catch ’em, I’ll give you the money their pelts bring.”
-
-Hubbard divined that his acting was poor. Both the girl and his wife were
-frankly regarding him.
-
-“Well!” he shouted. “What’s the matter with ye?”
-
-“Oh, nuthin’, Pa, nuthin’,” whimpered the girl.
-
-“Then go to bed, the two of ye.”
-
-Next morning Hubbard started for the county seat, a ten mile drive. He
-returned that evening and complained that the case had been adjourned
-because Harper had failed to appear in court.
-
-The following day he went back to his field far down the road for more
-ploughing. Twice he was called to the roadside by passersby to discuss
-the disappearance of Harper.
-
-One morning a week later, when he came along the road with his team, he
-discovered the Harper child on the Eldridge premises. She was sitting at
-the edge of the well.
-
-With a suppressed oath, he dropped the lines and half-walked, half-ran,
-to where the little girl sat.
-
-“Didn’t I tell you to stay away from there!” he exploded.
-
-The girl stared at him, but made no move, though her lips quivered.
-Hubbard glanced back to observe the road. Then he caught her arm.
-
-“Go home!” he shouted.
-
-He spun her roughly. She continued to stare at him as she retreated
-homeward.
-
-All that morning Hubbard worked his horses hard. He realized that he was
-eager to go back by the Eldridge dwelling. Promptly at twelve o’clock,
-therefore, he tied his team and started up the road. A flash of relief
-came to him when he did not observe the little girl. It left him cold,
-however.
-
-“Eatin’ dinner,” he mumbled.
-
-He moved off, without looking into the well. Until four o’clock that
-afternoon he labored. On his way home he discovered the girl again seated
-by the well. She was bending over and acting queerly.
-
-Hurrying his horses to the roadside, he looped the lines over one of the
-posts in the old “snake” fence. As he approached, he saw her toss a piece
-of stone down the hole.
-
-Hubbard waited until he was sure of his voice.
-
-“Come with me,” he said.
-
-Gripping the girl he started with her toward her home but a short
-distance away. When they arrived the front door was ajar. A woman, with
-eyes red from weeping, looked at Hubbard in silence.
-
-“Here!” he said gruffly. “This child ought to be kept to home. She’ll
-fall into the well.”
-
-Mrs. Harper merely reached out her arms for her daughter. Hubbard
-remained standing awkwardly.
-
-“Have you heard anything of Harper yet?” he asked.
-
-“I don’t want to talk to you,” replied the woman.
-
-Hubbard turned on his heel. Waiting for him by his horses, was the deputy
-sheriff. The two further discussed the disappearance.
-
-“If you yourself wasn’t so well known, Jeremiah,” finally declared the
-official, “they’d sure be thinkin’ you was in it some way.”
-
-“Why?” grunted the farmer, as he untied the lines.
-
-“Well, everybody knows you an’ Harper been lawin’ it for years over that
-boundary line.”
-
-Hubbard achieved a laugh.
-
-“I’ll tell ye where Harper is. He’s cleared out, that’s what I
-think—deserted his family.”
-
-That night, and many following nights, Hubbard did not sleep. Some weeks
-later a tremendous electric storm broke in the night. One particularly
-heavy clap so startled the wakeful Hubbard that he leaped from his bed
-and dressed. In the pouring rain he started out.
-
-Inevitably his steps took him toward the well. It was black, and he could
-not see at first. But another flash came, and he observed a strange thing:
-
-The huge oak, standing at the side of the well, had been split in two by
-lightning, and one portion of the tree had fallen over the mouth of the
-hole.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Next morning Simpson, the man with the “tin Lizzie,” stopped at Hubbard’s
-place. He was a blunt-spoken, red-faced man whom Hubbard hated.
-
-“That was a bad storm last night,” he said. “The lightning struck the big
-oak tree by the well.”
-
-“What of it?” snapped Hubbard.
-
-“There was a skeleton in the center of that tree,” explained Simpson. “I
-was talking this morning with the sheriff over the telephone. He said
-seventy-five years ago a man was murdered in Ovid, and they never found
-his body. This skeleton must be his.”
-
-Hubbard cleared his throat sharply.
-
-“What did you do with it?”
-
-“The skull and one of the leg bones fell down into the well when I tried
-to gather them up. I want to borrow some rope so I can get down in there.”
-
-For a bare second Hubbard was silent.
-
-“What you ought to do,” he said, gathering himself, “is to fill up that
-hole. It’s dangerous.”
-
-“Yes. That’s so. But I’m goin’ to get that skull first. It’ll be a good
-exhibit. I’m wonderin’ whether we’ll ever find Harper’s skeleton.”
-
-“Wait a moment,” said Hubbard huskily, starting for the barn. “I’ll get
-some rope and help you.”
-
-The two returned to the Eldridge farm. They found there the dead man’s
-child. She had perched herself on the fallen tree.
-
-“Damn fool!” muttered Hubbard. “Her mother lettin’ her play around here!”
-
-A pulley was rigged over the branch and the rope inserted with a board
-for a rest.
-
-“I’ll go down,” vouchsafed Hubbard.
-
-Simpson looked his surprise as he assented.
-
-It took Hubbard five minutes or so to retrieve the missing skeleton
-parts. He brought them up, the leg bone and the grinning skull. He was
-pale when he hauled himself over the edge.
-
-“I’m a-goin’ to fill up that hole myself,” he said.
-
-“All right,” retorted Simpson, handling the skull curiously. “Go to it.”
-
-Word traveled of the finding of the ancient skeleton, and the inhabitants
-began driving thither to see the sight. Simpson, a man of some ingenuity,
-had wired the bleached white bones together and suspended them from one
-of the branches of the fallen tree. The skeleton dangled and swung in the
-wind.
-
-Hubbard, maddened by the delay and publicity, felt himself wearing away.
-He had become obsessed with conviction that if the hole were filled his
-mind would be at rest.
-
-The nights of continued sleeplessness were ragging his nerves, and he was
-by this time unable to remain in bed. He would throw himself down, fully
-dressed, waiting until the others were asleep. Then he would steal out.
-
-At first he had merely walked the roads, swinging his arms and mumbling.
-But as the night progressed his stride would quicken, and frequently he
-would take to running. He would run until his lungs were bursting and
-a slaver fed from his mouth. Late travelers began to catch glimpses of
-the fleeting figure, and the rumor grew that a ghost was haunting the
-locality of the well—that the skeleton walked.
-
-Hubbard grew haggard. But he found himself unable to discontinue his
-nocturnal prowls, some of which took him miles, but all of which
-invariably wound up at one place—the well.
-
-Here, fagged and exhausted, he would sit until the approach of dawn,
-staring at the swinging skeleton, mouthing incoherencies, praying,
-singing hymns beneath his breath, laughing. At the approach of dawn he
-would steal home.
-
-At last, after interest in the skeleton had subsided and Simpson had
-consented to its removal, Hubbard loaded his wagon with stones and small
-boulders and started for the well. That first forenoon he made three
-trips, dumping each time a considerable quantity of stones.
-
-Next morning he worked in an additional trip. He began to experience
-surcease. But on the afternoon of the second day, when he made another
-trip, Simpson came over from his work in an adjoining field.
-
-“I wanted to see you yesterday,” he said, quizzically regarding Hubbard.
-“Mrs. Harper was here. She said her little girl was playin’ around here
-and dropped a pair of andirons down the well.”
-
-“What of it?” Hubbard jerked out.
-
-“You got to get ’em out.”
-
-“Why?”
-
-“Because them andirons is relics.”
-
-“But you gave me permission to fill the hole.”
-
-“I was kiddin’ you,” laughed Simpson. “I’m only rentin’ the farm. I ain’t
-got nothin’ to do with the house and yard.”
-
-Without a word Hubbard turned to his wagon. He got onto the seat and
-drove off. In an hour he came back with the same rope that had been used
-to recover the missing portions of the skeleton. Also, he brought with
-him a farm laborer who did occasional work for him.
-
-Simpson regarded Hubbard amusedly as the latter adjusted once more the
-pulley, arranged a bucket and then hitched his team to the end of the
-rope.
-
-Patiently, bucketful by bucketful, the stones were elevated and dumped.
-Down below in the black interior, Hubbard labored for an hour. At six
-o’clock he had not found the andirons. Twice he had been compelled to
-come up for fresh air.
-
-His last trip up left him so white-faced and weak that he was forced to
-go home.
-
-That night he resorted to sleeping powders. But he lay and tossed,
-wide-eyed, through the dark hours. Sometime after midnight he got up.
-A light was still burning in his wife’s room, and, tiptoeing down the
-hall, he paused at her door. In low voices the mother and daughter were
-conversing. To his heated imagination it seemed certain they were talking
-of Harper’s disappearance.
-
-Mumbling to himself he left the house. He ran down the lane to the
-highway and along this until he came to the Eldridge place. He determined
-not to stop, and succeeded in running by, like a frightened animal.
-
-His gait accelerated. It was one best described as scurrying, as he ran
-crouched and low. He thought he saw some one approaching. This turned
-him. Back he fled with the speed of the wind.
-
-Drawn by an irresistible force, he made straight for the Eldridge
-pathway. He came to the well, the entrance of which gaped at him. For a
-moment he stood, with eyes wide open, staring into the black depths.
-
-Then, screaming, he plunged in head-first.
-
-His cry, long-drawn and eerie, hung quivering on the night air.
-
-In the Hubbard home, a quarter of a mile away, the mother and daughter
-heard it. The two listened with palpitating hearts. They caught one
-another’s hands.
-
-In a hoarse whisper the mother exclaimed:
-
-“_What’s that?_”
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-_Otis Adelbert Kline, Author of “The Thing of a Thousand Shapes,” Spins
-Another “Spooky” Yarn for the Readers of WEIRD TALES_
-
-The Phantom Wolfhound
-
-
-Doctor Dorp reluctantly laid aside the manuscript on which he had been
-working, capped and pocketed his fountain pen, and rose to meet his
-callers.
-
-He was visibly annoyed by this, the third interruption of the afternoon,
-but his look of irritation changed to a welcoming smile when he saw the
-bulky form that was framed in the doorway. He recognized Harry Hoyne of
-the Hoyne Detective Agency, a heavy-set, florid-faced man whose iron gray
-hair and moustache proclaimed him well past middle age.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-The slender, stoop-shouldered individual who accompanied him was a total
-stranger. He had pale, hawklike features, small snaky eyes that glittered
-oddly from cavernous sockets, and long, bony fingers that suggested the
-claws of a bird.
-
-“Hello, Doc,” boomed the detective genially, crushing the hand of his
-host in his great, muscular paw. “Meet Mr. Ritsky.”
-
-The doctor was conscious of a cold, clammy sensation as he took the
-hand of the stranger and acknowledged the introduction. Was it the
-contrast between those chill fingers and the strong warm ones of the
-detective that had caused this feeling? He did not know; but somehow,
-instinctively, he disliked Mr. Ritsky.
-
-“I’ve got a queer case for you, Doc,” said Hoyne, taking a proffered
-cigar and inserting it far back in his cheek, unlighted. “Just your
-specialty—ghosts and all that. I told Mr. Ritsky you’d be the only man
-to unravel the mystery for him. Was over to his house last night and the
-thing got me—too unsubstantial—too damned elusively unreal. And yet I’ll
-swear there was something there. I heard it; but it got away and didn’t
-leave a trace. When it comes to finger prints and things like that you
-know I ain’t exactly a dumb-bell, but I gotta admit this thing, whatever
-it is, had me hopelessly horn-swoggled.”
-
-Ritsky declined a cigar, saying he didn’t dare smoke because of heart
-trouble. The doctor selected one with care, lighted it slowly, puffed it
-with a relish, and settled back with a look of eager anticipation in his
-eyes.
-
-“What happened last night?” he asked.
-
-“Maybe we better begin at the beginning,” said Hoyne. “You see, there’s
-quite a story goes along with this case, and Mr. Ritsky can tell it
-better than I. Don’t be afraid to give him all the dope, Mr. Ritsky. The
-doctor knows all about such things—wrote a book about ’em, in fact. Let’s
-see. What was the name of that book, Doc?”
-
-“‘Investigations of Materialization Phenomena.’”
-
-“Righto! I never can remember it. Anyhow, Mr. Ritsky, tell him your story
-and ask him all the questions you want to. He’s headquarters on this
-stuff.”
-
-Ritsky studied his clawlike hands for a moment, clasping and unclasping
-the bony fingers. Suddenly he looked up.
-
-“Do animals have immortal souls?” he asked, anxiously.
-
-“I’m afraid you have sadly overrated my ability as a recorder of
-scientific facts,” replied the doctor, smiling slightly. “Frankly, I do
-not know. I don’t believe anyone knows. Most people think they haven’t,
-and I incline toward that belief.”
-
-“Then such a thing as a ghost of a—a hound could not be?”
-
-“I would not say that. Nothing is impossible. There are undoubtedly more
-things in heaven and earth, as Shakespeare said, than we have dreamed of
-in our philosophy. However, I would consider a materialization of the
-disembodied spirit of a canine, or any of the other lower animals, as
-highly improbable.”
-
-“But if you saw one with your own eyes—”
-
-“I should probably be inclined to doubt the evidence of my senses. Have
-_you_ seen one?”
-
-“Have I _seen_ one?” groaned Ritsky. “Good Lord, man, I’d give every cent
-I own to be rid of that thing! For two years it’s turned my nights into
-hell! From a perfectly healthy, normal human being I’ve been reduced to a
-physical wreck. Sometimes I think my reason is slipping. The thing will
-either kill me or drive me mad if it is not stopped.”
-
-He buried his face in his hands.
-
-“This is most strange,” said the doctor. “You say the apparition first
-troubled you two years ago?”
-
-“Not in its present form. But it was there, nevertheless. The first
-time I saw it was shortly after I killed that cursed dog. A month, to
-be exact. I shot him on the twenty-first of August, and he, or it, or
-_something_, came back to haunt me on the twenty-first of September.
-
-“How vividly I remember the impressions of that first night of terror!
-How I tried, the next day, to make myself believe it was only a
-dream—that such a thing could not be. I had retired at eleven o’clock,
-and was awakened from a sound sleep some time between one and two in the
-morning by the whining, yapping cry of a dog. As there were no dogs on
-the premises, you can imagine my surprise.
-
-“I was about to get up when something directly over the foot of my bed
-riveted my attention. In the dim light it appeared a grayish white in
-color, and closely resembled the head and pendant ears of a hound. I
-noticed, with horror, that it was moving slowly toward me, and I was
-temporarily paralyzed with fright when it emitted a low, cavernous growl.
-
-“Driving my muscles by a supreme effort of will, I leaped from the bed
-and switched on the light. In the air where I had seen the thing hanging
-there was nothing. The door was bolted and the windows were screened.
-There was nothing unusual in the room, as I found after a thorough
-search. Mystified, I hunted through the entire house from top to bottom,
-but without finding a trace of the thing, whatever if was, that had made
-the sounds.
-
-“From that day to this I have never laid my head on a pillow with a
-feeling of security. At first it visited me at intervals of about a week.
-These intervals were gradually shortened until it came every night. As
-its visits became more frequent the apparition seemed to grow. First it
-sprouted a small body like that of a terrier, all out of proportion to
-the huge head. Each night that body grew a little larger until it assumed
-the full proportions of a Russian wolfhound. Recently it has attempted to
-attack me, but I have always frustrated it by switching on the light.”
-
-“Are you positive that you have not been dreaming all this?” asked the
-doctor.
-
-“Would it be possible for some one else to hear a dream of mine?”
-countered Ritsky. “We have only been able to retain one servant on
-account of those noises. All, with the exception of our housekeeper, who
-is quite deaf, heard the noises and left us as a result.”
-
-“Who are the members of your household?”
-
-“Other than the housekeeper and myself, there is only my niece and ward,
-a girl of twelve.”
-
-“Has she heard the noises?”
-
-“She has never mentioned them.”
-
-“Why not move to another apartment?”
-
-“That would do no good. We have moved five times in the last two years.
-When the thing first started we were living on the estate of my niece
-near Lake Forest. We left the place in charge of care-takers and moved to
-Evanston. The apparition followed us. We moved to Englewood. The thing
-moved with us. We have had three different apartments in Chicago since.
-It came to all of them with equal regularity.”
-
-“Would you mind writing for me the various addresses at which you have
-lived?”
-
-“Not at all, if they will assist in solving this mystery.”
-
-The doctor procured a pencil and a sheet of note paper, and Ritsky put
-down the addresses.
-
-Doctor Dorp scanned them carefully.
-
-“Villa Rogers,” he said. “Then your niece is Olga Rogers, daughter of
-millionaire James Rogers and his beautiful wife, the former Russian
-dancer, both of whom were lost with the _Titanic_?”
-
-“Olga’s mother was my sister. After the sudden death of her parents, the
-court appointed me her guardian and trustee of the estate.”
-
-“I believe that is all the information we need for the present, Mr.
-Ritsky. If you have no objection I will call on you after dinner this
-evening, and if Mr. Hoyne cares to accompany me we will see what we can
-do toward solving this mystery. Please take care that no one in your home
-is apprised of the object of our visit. Say, if you wish, that we are
-going to install some electrical equipment.”
-
-“I’ll be there with bells,” said Hoyne as they rose to go.
-
-
-_II._
-
-Shortly after his guests’ departure, Doctor Dorp was speeding out
-Sheridan Road toward Villa Rogers.
-
-The drive took nearly an hour, and he spent another half-hour in
-questioning the care-takers, man and wife. He returned home with a
-well-filled notebook, and on his arrival he began immediately assembling
-paraphernalia for the evening’s work. This consisted of three cameras
-with specially constructed shutters, several small electrical mechanisms,
-a coil of insulated wire, a flash-gun, and a kit of tools.
-
-After dinner he picked up Hoyne at his home, and they started for the
-“haunted house.”
-
-“You say you investigated this case last night, Hoyne?” asked the doctor.
-
-“I tried to, but there was nothing to it, so far as I could see, except
-the whining of that dog.”
-
-“Where were you when you heard the noises?”
-
-“Ritsky had retired. I slept in a chair in his room. About two o’clock I
-was awakened by a whining noise, not loud, yet distinctly audible. Then
-I heard a yell from Ritsky. He switched on the light a moment later,
-then sat down on the bed, trembling from head to foot, while beads of
-perspiration stood out on his forehead.
-
-“‘Did you see it?’ he asked me.
-
-“‘See what?’ I said.
-
-“‘The hound.’
-
-“I told him I hadn’t seen a thing, but I heard the noise all right.
-Between you and me, though, I did think I saw a white flash for a second
-beside his bed, but I can’t swear to it.”
-
-“We won’t trust our eyes tonight,” said the doctor. “I have three
-eyes in that case that will not be affected by hysteria or register
-hallucinations.”
-
-“Three eyes? What are you talking about?”
-
-“Cameras, of course.”
-
-“But how—”
-
-“Wait until we get there. I’ll show you.”
-
-A few moments later they were admitted to the apartment by the
-housekeeper, a stolid woman of sixty or thereabout. Ritsky presented them
-to his niece, a dreamy-eyed, delicately pretty school girl with silky
-golden curls that glistened against the pale whiteness of her skin.
-
-“If you don’t mind,” said the doctor, “we will look things over now.
-It will take some time to install the wiring and make other necessary
-preparations.”
-
-Ritsky showed them through the apartment, which was roomy, furnished in
-good taste and artistically decorated. The floor plan was quite simple
-and ordinary. First came the large living-room that extended across the
-front of the house. This opened at the right into the dining-room and at
-the center into a hallway which led through to the back of the building.
-Behind the dining-room was the kitchen, and behind that the servant’s
-room. Ritsky’s bedroom was directly across the hall from the dining-room.
-Then came his niece’s bedroom, a spare bedroom and a bathroom. Each of
-the three front bedrooms was equipped with a private bath and large
-clothes-closet.
-
-The doctor began by installing the three cameras in Ritsky’s room,
-fastening them on the wall in such a manner that they faced the bed from
-three directions. After focusing them properly, he set the flash-gun on a
-collapsible tripod and pointed it toward the bed.
-
-The room was lighted by an alabaster bowl that depended from the ceiling
-and could be turned on or off by a switch at the bedside. There were, in
-addition, two wall lights, one on each side of the dresser, and a small
-reading lamp on a table in one corner. These last three lights were
-operated by individual pull-cords.
-
-Ritsky procured a step-ladder for him, and, after switching off the
-drop light, he removed one of the bulbs from the cluster and inserted a
-four-way socket. From this socket he ran wires along the ceiling and
-down the wall to the three cameras and the flash-gun. By the time these
-preparations were completed Miss Rogers and the housekeeper had retired.
-
-Hoyne surveyed the finished job with frank admiration.
-
-“If there’s anything in this room when Ritsky turns the switch those
-three mechanical eyes will sure spot it,” he said enthusiastically.
-
-“Now, Mr. Ritsky,” began the doctor, “I want you to place yourself
-entirely in our hands for the night. Keep cool, fear nothing, and carry
-out my instructions to the letter. I suggest that you go to bed now and
-endeavor to get some sleep. If the apparition troubles you, do just as
-you have done in the past—turn on the light. Do not, however, touch
-the light switch unless the thing appears. The photographic plates,
-when developed, will tell whether you have been suffering from a mere
-hallucination induced by auto-suggestion or if genuine materialization
-phenomena have occurred.”
-
-After closing and bolting the windows they placed the step-ladder in the
-hallway beside Ritsky’s door. Then they obtained a duplicate key from him
-and asked him to lock himself in, removing his key so they might gain
-entrance at any time.
-
-When everything was ready they quietly brought two chairs into the hall
-from the spare bedroom and began their silent vigil.
-
-
-_III._
-
-Both men sat in silence for nearly three hours. The doctor seemed lost in
-thought, and Hoyne nervously masticated his inevitable unlighted cigar.
-The house was quiet, except for the ticking of the hall clock and its
-hourly chiming announcements of the flight of time.
-
-Shortly after the clock struck two they heard a low, scarcely audible
-moan.
-
-“What was that?” whispered the detective, hoarsely.
-
-“Wait!” the doctor replied.
-
-Presently it was repeated, followed by prolonged sobbing.
-
-“It’s Miss Rogers,” said Hoyne, excitedly.
-
-Doctor Dorp rose and softly tiptoed to the door of the child’s bed
-chamber. After listening there for a moment he noiselessly opened the
-door and entered. Presently he returned, leaving the door ajar. The
-sobbing and moaning continued.
-
-“Just as I expected,” he said. “I want you to go in the child’s room,
-keep quiet, and make a mental note of everything you see and hear. Stay
-there until I call you, and be prepared for a startling sight.”
-
-“Wh—what is it?” asked Hoyne, nervously.
-
-“Nothing that will hurt you. What’s the matter? Are you afraid?”
-
-“Afraid, hell!” growled Hoyne. “Can’t a man ask you a question—”
-
-“No time to answer questions now. Get in there and do as I say if you
-want to be of any assistance.”
-
-“All right, Doc. It’s your party.”
-
-The big detective entered the room of the sobbing child and squeezed his
-great bulk into a dainty rocking chair from which he could view her bed.
-She tossed from side to side, moaning as if in pain, and Hoyne, pitying
-her, wondered why the doctor did not awaken her.
-
-Presently she ceased her convulsive movements, clenched her hands, and
-uttered a low, gurgling cry, as a white, filmy mass slowly emerged
-from between her lips. The amazed detective stared with open mouth, so
-frightened that he forgot to chew his cigar. The filmy material continued
-to pour forth for several minutes that seemed like hours to the tense
-watcher. Then it formed a nebulous, wispy cloud above the bed, completely
-detached itself from the girl, and floated out through the half-opened
-door.
-
-Doctor Dorp, standing in the hallway, saw a white, misty thing of
-indefinite outline emerge from the bedroom. It floated through the
-hall and paused directly in front of Ritsky’s door. He approached it
-cautiously and noiselessly, and noticed that it grew rapidly smaller.
-Then he discovered the reason. It was flowing _through the keyhole_!
-
-In a short time it had totally disappeared. He waited breathlessly.
-
-_What was that?_ The whining cry of a hound broke the stillness! He
-mounted the step-ladder in order to view the interior of the room through
-the glass transom. He had scarcely placed his foot on the second step
-when the whining noise changed to a gurgling growl that was followed by a
-shriek of mortal terror and the dull report of the flash-gun.
-
-Leaping down from the ladder, the doctor called Hoyne, and they entered
-the “haunted” bed chamber. The room was brilliantly lighted by the
-alabaster bowl and filled with the sickening fumes of flash-powder.
-
-Hoyne opened the windows and returned to where the doctor was
-thoughtfully viewing Ritsky, who had apparently fainted. He had fallen
-half out of bed, and hung there with one bony arm trailing and his
-emaciated face a picture of abject fear.
-
-“My God!” exclaimed Hoyne. “Look there on his throat and chest. _The
-frothy slaver of a hound!_”
-
-The doctor took a small porcelain dish from his pocket, removed the lid,
-and with the blade of his pocket knife, scraped part of the slimy deposit
-into the receptacle.
-
-“Hadn’t we better try to bring him to?” inquired Hoyne.
-
-After they had lifted him back in bed the doctor leaned over and held his
-ear to the breast of the recumbent man. He took his stethoscope from his
-case and listened again. Then he straightened gravely.
-
-“No earthly power can bring him to,” he said, softly, “_Ritsky is dead!_”
-
-
-_IV._
-
-The detective remained in the house, pending the arrival of the coroner
-and undertaker, while Doctor Dorp hurried home with his paraphernalia and
-the sample of slime he had scraped from the corpse. Hoyne was puzzled by
-the fact that the doctor searched the house and the clothing of the dead
-man before departing.
-
-The detective was kept busy at the Ritsky apartment until nearly ten
-o’clock. After stopping at a restaurant for a bit of breakfast and a cup
-of coffee, he went directly to the doctor’s home.
-
-He found the psychologist in his laboratory, engrossed in a complicated
-chemical experiment. He shook a test tube, which he had been heating over
-a small alcohol lamp, held it up to the light, stood it in a small rack
-in which were a number of others partly filled with liquid, and nodded
-cordially to his friend.
-
-“Morning, Doc.,” greeted Hoyne. “Have you doped out what we are going to
-tell the coroner yet?”
-
-“I knew the direct cause of Ritsky’s death long ago. It was fear. The
-indirect cause, the thing that induced the fear, required careful
-examination and considerable chemical research.”
-
-“And it was—”
-
-“Psychoplasm.”
-
-“I don’t get you, Doc. What is psychoplasm?”
-
-“No doubt you have heard of the substance called ectoplasm, regarding
-which Sir Arthur Conan Doyle has delivered numerous lectures, or an
-identical substance called teleplasm, discovered by Baron Von Schrenck
-Notzing while attending materialization seances with the medium known as
-Eva.
-
-“While the baron was observing and photographing this substance in
-Europe, my friend and colleague, Professor James Braddock, was conducting
-similar investigations in this country. He named the substance
-psychoplasm, and I like the name better than either of the other two, as
-it is undoubtedly created or generated from invisible particles of matter
-through the power of the subjective mind.
-
-“I have examined and analyzed many samples of this substance in the past.
-The plate I now have under the compound microscope, and the different
-chemical determinations I have just completed, show conclusively that
-this is psychoplasm.”
-
-“But how—where did it come from?”
-
-“I learned something of the history of Ritsky and his ward yesterday. Let
-me enlighten you on that score first:
-
-“The man told the truth when he said he was appointed guardian of
-his niece, and also when he said that he had shot a dog. The dog, in
-question, was a Russian wolfhound, a present sent to the girl by her
-parents while they were touring Russia. He was only half grown when he
-arrived, and the two soon became boon companions, frolicking and playing
-about the grounds together or romping through the big house.
-
-“Some time after the death of Olga’s parents, Ritsky, then editor of a
-radical newspaper in New York, took up his abode at Villa Rogers. The
-dog, by that time full grown, took a violent dislike to him and, on one
-occasion, bit him quite severely. When he announced his intention of
-having the animal shot the girl wept violently and swore that she would
-kill herself if Shag, as she had named him, were killed. It seemed that
-she regarded him as a token of the love of her parents who had sailed
-away, never to return.”
-
-“_Shag!_ That’s the name!” broke in Hoyne, excitedly. “After that white
-thing floated out of the room she made noises like a dog and then
-answered them, saying ‘Good old Shag,’ and patting an imaginary head. She
-sure gave me the creeps, though, when she let out that growl.”
-
-“The vengeful Ritsky,” continued the doctor, “was determined that Shag
-should die, and found an opportunity to shoot him with a pistol when
-the girl was in the house. Shortly after, the faithful creature dragged
-himself to the feet of his mistress and died in her arms. He could not
-tell her who had taken his life, but she must have known subjectively,
-and as a result entertained a hatred for her uncle of which she
-objectively knew nothing.
-
-“Most people have potential mediumistic power. How this power is
-developed in certain individuals and remains practically dormant in
-others is a question that has never been satisfactorily explained.
-I personally believe that it is often developed because of intense
-emotional repressions which, unable to find an outlet in a normal
-manner through the objective mind, find expression in abnormal psychic
-manifestations.
-
-“This seemed to be the case with Olga Rogers. She developed the power
-subjectively without objective knowledge that it existed. One of the
-most striking of psychic powers is that of creating or assembling the
-substance called psychoplasm, causing it to assume various forms, and to
-move as if endowed with a mind of its own.
-
-“Olga developed this peculiar power to a remarkable degree. Acting under
-the direction of her subjective intelligence, the substance assumed the
-form of her beloved animal companion and sought revenge on its slayer. We
-arrived a day too late to save the object of her unconscious hatred.”
-
-“Too bad you were not there the night before,” said Hoyne. “The poor
-devil would be alive today if you had been on hand with me the first
-night to dope the thing out.”
-
-“We might have saved him for a prison term or the gallows,” replied the
-doctor, a bit sardonically. “You haven’t seen this, of course.”
-
-He took a small silver pencil from the table and handed it to the
-detective.
-
-“What’s that got to do with—”
-
-“Open it! Unscrew the top. Careful!”
-
-Hoyne unscrewed it gingerly and saw that the chamber, which was made to
-hold extra leads, was filled with a white powder.
-
-“Arsenic,” said the doctor, briefly. “Did you notice the sickly pallor of
-that girl—the dark rings under her eyes? Her loving uncle and guardian
-was slowly poisoning her, increasing the doses from time to time. In
-another month or six weeks she would have been dead, and Ritsky, her
-nearest living relative, would have inherited her immense fortune.”
-
-“Well I’ll be damned!” exploded Hoyne.
-
-Doctor Dorp’s laboratory assistant entered and handed a package of prints
-to his employer.
-
-“Here are the proofs of last night’s photographs,” said the doctor. “Care
-to see them?”
-
-Hoyne took them to the window and scrutinized them carefully.
-
-All showed Ritsky leaning out of bed, his hand on the light switch, his
-face contorted in an expression of intense horror—_and, gripping his
-throat in its ugly jaws, was the white, misshapen phantasm of a huge
-Russian wolfhound_!
-
-
-
-
-MASTERPIECES OF WEIRD FICTION
-
-_No. 2—The Murders in the Rue Morgue_
-
-_By_ EDGAR ALLAN POE
-
- What song the Syrens sang, or what name Achilles assumed when
- he hid himself among women, although puzzling questions are not
- beyond _all_ conjecture.—SIR THOMAS BROWNE, _Urn-Burial_.
-
-
-The mental features discoursed of as the analytical, are, in themselves,
-but little susceptible of analysis. We appreciate them only in their
-effects. We know of them, among other things, that they are always to
-their possessor, when inordinately possessed, a source of the liveliest
-enjoyment. As the strong man exults in his physical ability, delighting
-in such exercises as call his muscles into action, so glories the analyst
-in that moral activity which _disentangles_. He derives pleasure from
-even the most trivial occupations bringing his talents into play. He
-is fond of enigmas, of conundrums, of hieroglyphics; exhibiting in his
-solutions of each a degree of acumen which appears to the ordinary
-apprehension preternatural. His results, brought about by the very soul
-and essence of method have, in truth, the whole air of intuition. The
-faculty of resolution is possibly much invigorated by mathematical study,
-and especially by the highest branch of it which, unjustly, and merely
-on account of its retrograde operations, has been called, as if _par
-excellence_, analysis. Yet to calculate is not in itself to analyze. A
-chess-player, for example, does the one without effort at the other. It
-follows that the game of chess, in its effects upon mental character,
-is greatly misunderstood. I am not now writing a treatise, but simply
-prefacing a somewhat peculiar narrative by observations very much at
-random; I will therefore, take occasion to assert that the higher
-powers of the reflective intellect are more decidedly and more usefully
-tasked by the unostentatious game of draughts than by all the elaborate
-frivolity of chess. In this latter, where the pieces have different and
-_bizarre_ motions, the various and variable values, what is only complex
-is mistaken (a not unusual error) for what is profound. The _attention_
-is here called powerfully into play. If it flag for an instant, an
-oversight is committed, resulting in injury or defeat. The possible moves
-being not only manifold but involute, the chances of such oversights are
-multiplied; and in nine cases out of ten it is the more concentrative
-rather than the more acute player who conquers. In draughts, on the
-contrary, where the moves are _unique_ and have but little variation,
-the probabilities of inadvertence are diminished, and the mere attention
-being left comparatively unemployed, what advantages are obtained by
-either party are obtained by superior _acumen_. To be less abstract—Let
-us suppose a game of draughts where the pieces are reduced to four kings,
-and where, of course, no oversight is to be expected. It is obvious that
-here the victory can be decided (the players being at all equal) only
-by some _recherche_ movement, the result of some strong exertion of
-intellect. Deprived of ordinary resources, the analyst throws himself
-into the spirit of his opponent, identifies himself therewith, and not
-unfrequently sees thus, at a glance, the sole methods (sometimes indeed
-absurdly simple ones) by which he may seduce into error or hurry into
-miscalculation.
-
-Whist has long been noted for its influence upon what is termed the
-calculating power; and men of the highest order of intellect have
-been known to take an apparently unaccountable delight in it, while
-eschewing chess as frivolous. Beyond doubt there is nothing of a
-similar nature so greatly tasking the faculty of analysis. The best
-chess-player in Christendom _may_ be little more than the best player
-of chess; but proficiency in whist implies capacity for success in all
-these more important undertakings where mind struggles with mind. When
-I say proficiency, I mean that perfection in the game which includes a
-comprehension of _all_ the sources whence legitimate advantage may be
-derived. These are not only manifold but multiform, and lie frequently
-among recesses of thought altogether inaccessible to the ordinary
-understanding. To observe attentively is to remember distinctly; and,
-so far, the concentrative chess-player will do very well at whist;
-while the rules of Hoyle (themselves based upon the mere mechanism of
-the game) are sufficiently and generally comprehensible. Thus to have
-a retentive memory, and to proceed by “the book,” are points commonly
-regarded as the sum total of good playing. But it is in matters beyond
-the limits of mere rule that the skill of the analyst is evinced. He
-makes, in silence, a host of observations and inferences. So, perhaps,
-do his companions; and the difference in the extent of the information
-obtained, lies not so much in the validity of the inference as in the
-quality of the observation. The necessary knowledge is that of _what_ to
-observe. Our player confines himself not at all; nor, because the game is
-the object, does he reject deductions from things external to the game.
-He examines the countenance of his partner, comparing it carefully with
-that of each of his opponents. He considers the mode of assorting the
-cards in each hand; often counting trump by trump and honor by honor,
-through the glances bestowed by their holders upon each. He notes every
-variation of face as the play progresses, gathering a fund of thought
-from the differences in the expression of certainty, of surprise, of
-triumph, or chagrin. From the manner of gathering up a trick he judges
-whether the person taking it can make another in the suit. He recognizes
-what is played through feint, by the air with which it is thrown upon the
-table. A casual or inadvertent word; the accidental dropping or turning
-of a card, with the accompanying anxiety or carelessness in regard to
-its concealment; the counting of the tricks, with the order of their
-arrangement; embarrassment, hesitation, eagerness or trepidation—all
-afford, to his apparently intuitive perception, indications of the true
-state of affairs. The first two or three rounds having been played, he is
-in full possession of the contents of each hand, and thenceforward puts
-down his card with as absolute a precision of purpose as if the rest of
-the party had turned outward the faces of their own.
-
-The analytical power should not be confounded with simple ingenuity; for
-while the analyst is necessarily ingenious, the ingenious man is often
-remarkably incapable of analysis. The constructive or combining power,
-by which ingenuity is usually manifested, and to which the phrenologists
-(I believe erroneously) have assigned a separate organ, supposing it a
-primitive faculty, has been so frequently seen in those whose intellect
-bordered otherwise upon idiocy, as to have attracted general observation
-among writers on morals. Between ingenuity and the analytic ability there
-exists a difference far greater, indeed, than that between the fancy and
-the imagination, but of a character very strictly analogous. It will be
-found, in fact, that the ingenious are always fanciful, and the _truly_
-imaginative never otherwise than analytic.
-
-The narrative which follows will appear to the reader somewhat in the
-light of a commentary upon the propositions just advanced.
-
-Residing in Paris during the spring and part of the summer of 18—, I
-there became acquainted with a Monsieur C. Auguste Dupin. This young
-gentleman was of an excellent—indeed of an illustrious family, but, by
-a variety of untoward events, had been reduced to such poverty that the
-energy of his character succumbed beneath it, and he ceased to bestir
-himself in the world, or to care for the retrieval of his fortunes. By
-courtesy of his creditors, there still remained in his possession a small
-remnant of his patrimony; and upon the income arising from this, he
-managed, by means of a rigorous economy, to procure the necessaries of
-life, without troubling himself about its superfluities. Books, indeed,
-were his sole luxuries, and in Paris these are easily obtained.
-
-Our first meeting was at an obscure library in the Rue Montmartre, where
-the accident of our both being in search of the same very rare and very
-remarkable volume, brought us into closer communion. We saw each other
-again and again. I was deeply interested in the little family history
-which he detailed to me with all that candor which a Frenchman indulges
-whenever mere self is the theme. I was astonished, too, at the vast
-extent of his reading; and above all, I felt my soul enkindled within
-me by the wild fervor, and the vivid freshness of his imagination.
-Seeking in Paris the objects I then sought, I felt that the society of
-such a man would be to me a treasure beyond price; and this feeling I
-frankly confided to him. It was at length arranged that we should live
-together during my stay in the city; and as my worldly circumstances were
-somewhat less embarrassed than his own, I was permitted to be at the
-expense of renting, and furnishing in a style which suited the rather
-fantastic gloom of our common temper, a time-eaten and grotesque mansion,
-long deserted through superstitions into which we did not enquire, and
-tottering to its fall in a retired and desolate portion of the Faubourg
-St. Germain.
-
-Had the routine of our life at this place been known to the world, we
-should have been regarded as madmen—although, perhaps, as madmen of a
-harmless nature. Our seclusion was perfect. We admitted no visitors.
-Indeed the locality of our retirement had been carefully kept a secret
-from my own former associates; and it had been many years since Dupin had
-ceased to know or be known in Paris. We existed within ourselves alone.
-
-It was a freak of fancy in my friend (for what else shall I call it?) to
-be enamored of the Night for her own sake; and into this _bizarrerie_, as
-into all his others, I quietly fell; giving myself up to his wild whims
-with a perfect _abandon_. The sable divinity would not herself dwell
-with us always; but we could counterfeit her presence. At the first dawn
-of the morning we closed all the massy shutters of our old building;
-lighted a couple of tapers which, strongly perfumed, threw out only the
-ghastliest and feeblest of rays. By the aid of these we then busied our
-souls in dreams—reading, writing, or conversing, until warned by the
-clock of the advent of the true Darkness. Then we sallied forth into the
-street, arm and arm, continuing the topics of the day, or roaming far and
-wide until a late hour, seeking, amid the wild lights and shadows of the
-populous city, that infinity of mental excitement which quiet observation
-can afford.
-
-At such times I could not help remarking and admiring (although from
-his rich ideality I had been prepared to expect it) a peculiar analytic
-ability in Dupin. He seemed, too, to take an eager delight in its
-exercise—if not exactly in its display—and did not hesitate to confess
-the pleasure thus derived. He boasted to me, with a low chuckling laugh,
-that most men, in respect to himself, wore windows in their bosoms,
-and was wont to follow up such assertions by direct and very startling
-proofs of his intimate knowledge of my own. His manner at these movements
-was frigid and abstract; his eyes were vacant in expression; while his
-voice, usually a rich tenor, rose into a treble which would have sounded
-petulantly but for the deliberateness and entire distinctness of the
-enunciation. Observing him in these moods, I often dwelt meditatively
-upon the old philosophy of the Bi-Part Soul, and amused myself with the
-fancy of a double Dupin—the creative and the resolvent.
-
-Let it not be supposed, from what I have just said, that I am detailing
-any mystery, or penning any romance. What I have described in the
-Frenchman, was merely the result of an excited, or perhaps of a diseased
-intelligence. But of the character of his remarks at the periods in
-question an example will best convey the idea.
-
-We were strolling one night down a long dirty street, in the vicinity of
-the Palais Royal. Being both, apparently, occupied with thought, neither
-of us had spoken a syllable for fifteen minutes at least. All at once
-Dupin broke forth with these words:—
-
-“He is a very little fellow, that’s true, and would do better for the
-Theatre des Varietes.”
-
-“There can be no doubt of that,” I replied unwittingly, and not at first
-observing (so much had I been absorbed in reflection) the extraordinary
-manner in which the speaker had chimed in with my meditations. In an
-instant afterward I recollected myself, and my astonishment was profound.
-
-“Dupin,” said I gravely, “this is beyond my comprehension. I do not
-hesitate to say that I am amazed, and can scarcely credit my senses. How
-was it possible you should know I was thinking of——?” Here I paused, to
-ascertain beyond a doubt whether he really knew of whom I thought.
-
-——“of Chantilly,” said he, “why do you pause? You were remarking to
-yourself that his diminutive figure unfitted him for tragedy.”
-
-This was precisely what had formed the subject of my reflections.
-Chantilly was a _quondam_ cobbler of the Rue St. Denis, who, becoming
-stage-mad, had attempted the _role_ of Xerxes, in Crebillon’s tragedy so
-called, and been notoriously Pasquinaded for his pains.
-
-“Tell me, for Heaven’s sake,” I exclaimed, “the method—if method there
-is—by which you have been enabled to fathom my soul in this matter.” In
-fact, I was even more startled than I would have been willing to express.
-
-“It was the fruiterer,” replied my friend, “who brought you to the
-conclusion that the mender of soles was not of sufficient height for
-Xerxes _et id genus omne_.”
-
-“The fruiterer!—you astonish me—I know no fruiterer whomsoever.”
-
-“The man who ran up against you as we entered the street—it may have been
-fifteen minutes ago.”
-
-I now remembered that, in fact, a fruiterer, carrying upon his head a
-large basket of apples, had nearly thrown me down, by accident, as we
-passed from the Rue C⸺ into the thoroughfare where we stood; but what
-this had to do with Chantilly I could not possibly understand.
-
-There was not a particle of _charlatanerie_ about Dupin. “I will
-explain,” he said, “and that you may comprehend all clearly, we will
-first retrace the course of meditations, from the moment in which I spoke
-to you until that of the _rencontre_ with the fruiterer in question.
-The larger links of the chain run thus—Chantilly, Orion, Dr. Nichols,
-Epicurus, Stereotomy, the street stones, the fruiterer.”
-
-There are few persons who have not, at some period of their lives,
-amused themselves in retracing the steps by which particular conclusions
-of their own minds have been attained. The occupation is often full
-of interest; and he who attempts it for the first time is astonished
-by the apparently illimitable distance and incoherence between the
-starting-point and the goal. What, then, must have been my amazement when
-I heard the Frenchman speak what he had just spoken, and when I could not
-help acknowledging that he had spoken the truth. He continued:
-
-“We had been talking of horses, if I remember aright, just before leaving
-the Rue C⸺. This was the last subject we discussed. As we crossed into
-this street, a fruiterer, with a large basket upon his head, brushing
-quickly past us, thrust you upon a pile of paving-stones collected at a
-spot where the causeway is undergoing repair. You stepped upon one of the
-loose fragments, slipped, slightly strained your ankle, appeared vexed
-or sulky, muttered a few words, turned to look at the pile, and then
-proceeded in silence. I was not particularly attentive to what you did;
-but observation has become with me, of late, a species of necessity.
-
-“You kept your eyes upon the ground—glancing, with a petulant
-expression, at the holes and ruts in the pavement, (so that I saw you
-were still thinking of the stones,) until we reached the little alley
-called Lamartine, which had been paved, by way of experiment, with the
-overlapping and riveted blocks. Here your countenance brightened up,
-and perceiving your lips move, I could not doubt that you murmured the
-word ‘stereotomy,’ a term very affectedly applied to this species of
-pavement. I knew that you could not say to yourself ‘stereotomy’ without
-being brought to think of atomies, and thus of the theories of Epicurus;
-and since, when we discussed this subject not very long ago, I mentioned
-to you how singularly, yet with how little notice, the vague guesses of
-that noble Greek had met with confirmation in the late nebular cosmogony,
-I felt that you could not avoid casting your eyes upward to the great
-_nebula_ in Orion, and I certainly expected that you would do so. You did
-look up; and I was now assured that I had correctly followed your steps.
-But in that bitter tirade upon Chantilly, which appeared in yesterday’s
-‘_Musee_,’ the satirist, making some disgraceful allusions to the
-cobbler’s change of name upon assuming the buskin, quoted a Latin line
-about which we have often conversed. I mean the line
-
- Perdidit antiquum litera prima sonum.
-
-I had told you that this was in reference to Orion, formerly written
-Urion; and, from certain pungencies connected with this explanation, I
-was aware that you could not have forgotten it. It was clear, therefore,
-that you would not fail to combine the two ideas of Orion and Chantilly.
-That you did combine them I saw by the character of the smile which
-passed over your lips. You thought of the poor cobbler’s immolation.
-So far, you had been stooping in your gait; but now I saw you draw
-yourself up to your full height. I was then sure that you reflected upon
-the diminutive figure of Chantilly. At this point I interrupted your
-meditation to remark that as, in fact, he was a very little fellow—that
-Chantilly—he would do better at the _Theatre des Varietes_.”
-
-Not long after this we were looking over an evening edition of the
-“Gazette des Tribunaux,” when the following paragraphs arrested our
-attention.
-
-“EXTRAORDINARY MURDERS.—This morning, about three o’clock, the
-inhabitants of the Quartier St. Roch were aroused from sleep by a
-succession of terrific shrieks, issuing, apparently, from the fourth
-story of a house in the Rue Morgue, known to be in the sole occupancy of
-one Madame L’Espanaye, and her daughter, Mademoiselle Camille L’Espanaye.
-After some delay, occasioned by a fruitless attempt to produce admission
-in the usual manner, the gateway was broken in with a crowbar, and eight
-or ten of the neighbors entered, accompanied by two _gendarmes_. By
-this time the cries had ceased; but, as the party rushed up the first
-flight of stairs, two or more rough voices, in angry contention, were
-distinguished, and seemed to proceed from the upper part of the house.
-As the second landing was reached, these sounds, also, had ceased, and
-everything remained perfectly quiet. The party spread themselves and
-hurried from room to room. Upon arriving at a large back chamber in the
-fourth story, (the door of which, being found locked, with key inside,
-was forced open,) a spectacle presented itself which struck every one
-present not less with horror than with astonishment.
-
-“The apartment was in the wildest disorder—the furniture broken and
-thrown about in all directions. There was only one bedstead; and from
-this the bed had been removed, and thrown into the middle of the floor.
-On a chair lay a razor, besmeared with blood. On the hearth were two or
-three long and thick tresses of grey human hair, also dabbled in blood,
-and seeming to have been pulled out by the roots. Upon the floor were
-found four Napoleons, an ear-ring of topaz, three large silver spoons,
-three smaller of _metal d’ Alger_, and two bags, containing nearly four
-thousand francs in gold. The drawers of a _bureau_, which stood in one
-corner, were open, and had been, apparently, rifled, although many
-articles still remained in them. A small iron safe was discovered under
-the bed (not under the bedstead). It was open, with the key still in the
-door. It had no contents beyond a few old letters, and other papers of
-little consequence.
-
-“Of Madame L’Espanaye no traces were here seen; but an unusual quantity
-of soot being observed in the fire-place, a search was made in the
-chimney, and (horrible to relate!) the corpse of the daughter, head
-downward, was dragged therefrom; it having been thus forced up the narrow
-aperture for a considerable distance. The body was quite warm. Upon
-examining it, many excoriations were perceived, no doubt occasioned by
-the violence with which it had been thrust up and disengaged. Upon the
-face were many severe scratches, and, upon the throat, dark bruises, and
-deep indentations of finger nails, as if the deceased had been throttled
-to death.
-
-“After a thorough investigation of every portion of the house, without
-farther discovery, the party made its way into a small paved yard in the
-rear of the building, where lay the corpse of the old lady, with her
-throat so entirely cut that, upon an attempt to raise her, the head fell
-off. The body, as well as the head, was fearfully mutilated—the former so
-much so as scarcely to retain any semblance of humanity.
-
-“To this horrible mystery there is not as yet, we believe, the slightest
-clew.”
-
-The next day’s paper had these additional particulars.
-
-“The Tragedy in the Rue Morgue. Many individuals have been examined in
-relation to this most extraordinary and frightful affair.” [The word
-‘_affaire_’ has not yet, in France, that levity of import which it
-conveys with us,] “but nothing whatever has transpired to throw light
-upon it. We give below all the material testimony elicited.
-
-“Pauline Dubourg, laundress, deposes that she has known both the deceased
-for three years, having washed for them during that period. The old lady
-and her daughter seemed on good terms—very affectionate towards each
-other. They were excellent pay. Could not speak in regard to their mode
-or means of living. Believed that Madame D. told fortunes for a living.
-Was reputed to have money put by. Never met any persons in the house when
-she called for the clothes or took them home. Was sure that they had no
-servant in employ. There appeared to be no furniture in any part of the
-building except in the fourth story.
-
-“_Pierre Moreau_, tobacconist, deposes that he has been in the habit of
-selling small quantities of tobacco and snuff to Madame L’Espanaye for
-nearly four years. Was born in the neighborhood, and has always resided
-there. The deceased and her daughter had occupied the house in which the
-corpses were found, for more than six years. It was formerly occupied by
-a jeweller, who under-let the upper rooms to various persons. The house
-was the property of Madame L. She became dissatisfied with the abuse of
-the premises by her tenant, and moved into them herself, refusing to let
-any portion. The old lady was childish. Witness had seen the daughter
-some five or six times during the six years. The two lived an exceedingly
-retired life—were reputed to have money. Had heard it said among the
-neighbors that Madame L. told fortunes—did not believe it. Had never seen
-any person enter the door except the old lady and her daughter, a porter
-once or twice, and a physician some eight or ten times.
-
-“Many other persons, neighbors, gave evidence to the same effect. No one
-was spoken of as frequenting the house. It was not known whether there
-were any living connections of Madame L. and her daughter. The shutters
-of the front windows were seldom opened. Those in the rear were always
-closed, with the exception of the large back room, fourth story. The
-house was a good house—not very old.
-
-“Isidore Muset, _gendarme_, deposes that he was called to the house about
-three o’clock in the morning, and found some twenty or thirty persons at
-the gateway, endeavoring to gain admittance. Forced it open, at length,
-with a bayonet—not with a crowbar. Had but little difficulty in getting
-it open, on account of its being a double or folding gate, and bolted
-neither at bottom nor top. The shrieks were continued until the gate
-was forced—and then suddenly ceased. They seemed to be screams of some
-person (or persons) in great agony—were loud and drawn out, not short and
-quick. Witness led the way upstairs. Upon reaching the first landing,
-heard two voices in loud and angry contention—the one a gruff voice, the
-other much shriller—a very strange voice. Could distinguish some words of
-the former, which was that of a Frenchman. Was positive that it was not
-a woman’s voice. Could distinguish the words, ‘_sacre_’ and ‘_diable_.’
-The shrill voice was that of a foreigner. Could not be sure whether it
-was the voice of a man or of a woman. Could not make out what was said,
-but believed the language to be Spanish. The state of the room and of the
-bodies was described by this witness as we described them yesterday.
-
-“_Henri Duval_, a neighbor, and by trade a silversmith, deposes that
-he was one of the party who first entered the house. Corroborates the
-testimony of Muset in general. As soon as they forced an entrance, they
-reclosed the door, to keep out the crowd, which collected very fast,
-notwithstanding the lateness of the hour. The shrill voice, the witness
-thinks, was that of an Italian. Was certain it was not French. Could not
-be sure that it was a man’s voice. It might have been a woman’s. Was not
-acquainted with the Italian language. Could not distinguish the words,
-but was convinced by the intonation that the speaker was an Italian. Knew
-Madame L. and her daughter. Had conversed with both frequently. Was sure
-that the shrill voice was not that of either of the deceased.
-
-“_⸺ Odenheimer, restaurateur._ The witness volunteered his testimony.
-Not speaking French, was examined through an interpreter. Is a native of
-Amsterdam. Was passing the house at the time of the shrieks. They lasted
-for several minutes—probably ten. They were long and loud—very awful and
-distressing. Was one of those who entered the building. Corroborated
-the previous evidence in every respect but one. Was sure that the shrill
-voice was that of a man—of a Frenchman. Could not distinguish the words
-uttered. They were loud and quick—unequal—spoken apparently in fear as
-well as in anger. The voice was harsh—not so much shrill as harsh. Could
-not call it a shrill voice. The gruff voice said repeatedly ‘_sacre_,’
-‘_diable_’ and once ‘_mon Dieu_.’
-
-“_Jules Mignaud_, banker of the firm of Mignaud et Fils, Rue Deloraine.
-Is the elder Mignaud. Madame L’Espanaye had some property. Had opened
-an account with his banking house in the spring of the year ⸺ (eight
-years previously). Made frequent deposits in small sums. Had checked for
-nothing until the third day before her death, when she took out in person
-the sum of 4000 francs. This sum was paid in gold, and a clerk sent home
-with the money.
-
-“_Adolphe Le Bon_, clerk to Mignaud et Fils, deposes that on the day in
-question, about noon, he accompanied Madame L’Espanaye to her residence
-with the 4000 francs, put up in two bags. Upon the door being opened,
-Mademoiselle L. appeared and took from his hands one of the bags, while
-the old lady relieved him of the other. He then bowed and departed. Did
-not see any person in the street at the time. It is a bye-street—very
-lonely.
-
-“_William Bird_, tailor, deposes that he was one of the party who entered
-the house. Is an Englishman. Has lived in Paris two years. Was one of the
-first to ascend the stairs. Heard the voices in contention. The gruff
-voice was that of a Frenchman. Could make out several words, but cannot
-now remember all. Heard distinctly ‘_sacre_’ and ‘_mon Dieu_.’ There was
-a sound at the moment as if of several persons struggling—a scraping and
-scuffling sound. The shrill voice was very loud—louder than the gruff
-one. Is sure that it was not the voice of an Englishman. Appeared to be
-that of a German. Might have been a woman’s voice. Does not understand
-German.
-
-“Four of the above-named witnesses, being recalled, deposed that the
-door of the chamber in which was found the body of Mademoiselle L. was
-locked on the inside when the party reached it. Everything was perfectly
-silent—no groans or noises of any kind. Upon forcing the door no person
-was seen. The windows, both of the back and front room, were down and
-firmly fastened from within. A door between the two rooms was closed,
-but not locked. The door leading from the front room into the passage
-was locked, with the key on the inside. A small room in the front of
-the house, on the fourth story, at the head of the passage, was open,
-the door being ajar. This room was crowded with old beds, boxes, and so
-forth. These were carefully removed and searched. There was not an inch
-of any portion of the house which was not carefully searched. Sweeps
-were sent up and down the chimneys. The house was a four story one, with
-garrets (_mansardes_). A trap-door on the roof was nailed down very
-securely—did not appear to have been opened for years. The time elapsing
-between the hearing of the voices in contention and the breaking open of
-the room door, was variously stated by the witnesses. Some made it as
-short as three minutes—some as long as five. The door was opened with
-difficulty.
-
-“_Alfonso Garcio_, undertaker, deposes that he resides in the Rue Morgue.
-Is a native of Spain. Was one of the party who entered the house. Did not
-proceed upstairs. Is nervous, and was apprehensive of the consequences
-of agitation. Heard the voices in contention. The gruff voice was that of
-a Frenchman. Could not distinguish what was said. The shrill voice was
-that of an Englishman—is sure of this. Does not understand the English
-language, but judges by the intonation.
-
-“_Alberto Montani_, confectioner, deposes that he was among the first to
-ascend the stairs. Heard the voices in question. The gruff voice was that
-of a Frenchman. Distinguished several words. The speaker appeared to be
-expostulating. Could not make out the words of the shrill voice. Spoke
-quick and unevenly. Thinks it the voice of a Russian. Corroborates the
-general testimony. Is an Italian. Never conversed with a native of Russia.
-
-“Several witnesses, recalled, here testified that the chimneys of all the
-rooms on the fourth story were too narrow to admit the passage of a human
-being. By ‘sweeps’ were meant cylindrical sweeping-brushes, such as are
-employed by those who clean chimneys. These brushes were passed up end
-down every flue in the house. There is no back passage by which any one
-could have descended while the party proceeded up stairs. The body of
-Mademoiselle L’Espanaye was so firmly wedged in the chimney that it could
-not be got down until four or five of the party united their strength.
-
-“_Paul Dumas_, physician, deposes that he was called to view the bodies
-about day-break. They were both then lying on the sacking of the bedstead
-in the chamber where Mademoiselle L. was found. The corpse of the young
-lady was much bruised and excoriated. The fact that it had been thrust
-up the chimney would sufficiently account for these appearances. The
-throat was greatly chafed. There were several deep scratches just below
-the chin, together with a series of livid spots which were evidently
-the impression of fingers. The face was fearfully discolored, and the
-eye-balls protruded. The tongue had been partially bitten through.
-A large bruise was discovered upon the pit of the stomach, produced
-apparently, by the pressure of a knee. In the opinion of M. Dumas,
-Mademoiselle L’Espanaye had been throttled to death by some person or
-persons unknown. The corpse of the mother was horribly mutilated. All
-the bones of the right leg and arm were more or less shattered. The left
-_tibia_ much splintered, as well as all the ribs of the left side. Whole
-body dreadfully bruised and discolored. It was not possible to say how
-the injuries had been inflicted. A heavy club of wood, or a broad bar
-of iron—a chair—any large, heavy, and obtuse weapon would have produced
-such results, if wielded by the hands of a very powerful man. No woman
-could have inflicted the blows with any weapon. The head of the deceased,
-when seen by witness, was entirely separated from the body, and was also
-greatly shattered. The throat had evidently been cut with some very sharp
-instrument—probably with a razor.
-
-“_Alexandre Etienne_, surgeon, was called with M. Dumas to view the
-bodies. Corroborated the testimony, and the opinions of M. Dumas.
-
-“Nothing farther of importance was elicited, although several other
-persons were examined. A murder so mysterious, and so perplexing in all
-its particulars, was never before committed in Paris—if indeed a murder
-had been committed at all. The police are entirely at fault—an unusual
-occurrence in affairs of this nature. There is not, however, the shadow
-of a clue apparent.”
-
-The evening edition of the paper stated that the greatest excitement
-still continued in the Quartier St. Roch—that the premises in question
-had been carefully re-searched, and fresh examinations of witnesses
-instituted, but all to no purpose. A postscript, however, mentioned that
-Adolphe Le Bon had been arrested and imprisoned—although nothing appeared
-to criminate him, beyond the facts already detailed.
-
-Dupin seemed singularly interested in the progress of this affair—at
-least so I judged from his manner, for he made no comments. It was only
-after the announcement that Le Bon had been imprisoned, that he asked me
-my opinion respecting the murders.
-
-I could merely agree with all Paris in considering them an insoluble
-mystery. I saw no means by which it would be possible to trace the
-murderer.
-
-“We must not judge of the means,” said Dupin, “by this shell of an
-examination. The Parisian police, so much extolled for _acumen_, are
-cunning, but no more. There is no method in their proceedings, beyond
-the method of the moment. They make a vast parade of measures; but, not
-unfrequently, these are so ill adapted to the object proposed, as to put
-us in mind of Monsieur Jourdain’s calling for his _robe-de-chambre—pour
-mieux entendre la musique_. The results attained by them are not
-unfrequently surprising, but, for the most part, are brought about by
-simple diligence and activity. When these qualities are unavailing, their
-schemes fail. Vidocq, for example, was a good guesser, and a persevering
-man. But, without educated thought, he erred continually by the very
-intensity of his investigations. He impaired his vision by holding the
-object too close. He might see, perhaps, one or two points with unusual
-clearness, but in so doing he, necessarily, lost sight of the matter
-as a whole. Thus there is such a thing as being too profound. Truth is
-not always in a well. In fact, as regards the more important knowledge,
-I do believe that she is invariably superficial. The depth lies in the
-valleys where we seek her, and not upon the mountain tops where she is
-found. The modes and sources of this kind of error are well typified in
-the contemplation of the heavenly bodies. To look at a star by glances—to
-view it in a side-long way, by turning toward it the exterior portions
-of the _retina_ (more susceptible of feeble impressions of light than
-the interior), is to behold the star distinctly—is to have the best
-appreciation of its lustre—a lustre which grows dim just in proportion
-as we turn our vision _fully_ upon it. A greater number of rays actually
-fall upon the eye in the latter case, but, in the former, there is the
-more refined capacity for comprehension. By undue profundity we perplex
-and enfeeble thought; and it is very possible to make even Venus herself
-vanish from the firmament by a scrutiny too sustained, too concentrated,
-or too direct.
-
-“As for these murders, let us enter into some examinations for ourselves,
-before we make up an opinion respecting them. An inquiry will afford us
-amusement,” [I thought this an odd term, so applied, but said nothing]
-“and, besides, Le Bon once rendered me a service for which I am not
-ungrateful. We will go and see the premises with our own eyes. I know
-G⸺, the Prefect of Police, and shall have no difficulty in obtaining the
-necessary permission.”
-
-The permission was obtained, and we proceeded at once to the Rue Morgue.
-This is one of those miserable thoroughfares which intervene between the
-Rue Richelieu and the Rue St. Roch. It was late in the afternoon when we
-reached it; as this quarter is at a great distance from that in which we
-resided. The house was readily found; for there were still many persons
-gazing up at the closed shutters, with an objectless curiosity, from
-the opposite side of the way. It was an ordinary Parisian house, with
-a gateway, on one side of which was a glazed watch-box, with a sliding
-panel in the window, indicating a _loge de concierge_. Before going in
-we walked up the street, turned down an alley, and then, again turning,
-passed in the rear of the building—Dupin, meanwhile, examining the whole
-neighborhood, as well as the house, with a minuteness of attention for
-which I could see no possible object.
-
-Retracing our steps, we came again to the front of the dwelling, rang,
-and, having shown our credentials, were admitted by the agents in charge.
-We went up stairs—into the chamber where the body of Mademoiselle
-L’Espanaye had been found, and where both the deceased still lay. The
-disorders of the room had, as usual, been suffered to exist. I saw
-nothing beyond what had been stated in the “Gazette des Tribunaux.” Dupin
-scrutinised every thing—not excepting the bodies of the victims. We then
-went into the other rooms, and into the yard; a _gendarme_ accompanying
-us throughout. The examination occupied us until dark, when we took our
-departure. On our way home my companion stopped in for a moment at the
-office of one of the daily papers.
-
-I have said that the whims of my friend were manifold, and that _Je les
-menageais_—for this phrase there is no English equivalent. It was his
-humor, now, to decline all conversation on the subject of the murder,
-until about noon the next day. He then asked me, suddenly, if I had
-observed anything _peculiar_ at the scene of the atrocity.
-
-There was something in his manner of emphasizing the word “peculiar,”
-which caused me to shudder, without knowing why.
-
-“No, nothing _peculiar_,” I said; “nothing more, at least, than we both
-saw stated in the paper.”
-
-“The ‘Gazette,’” he replied, “has not entered, I fear, into the unusual
-horror of the thing. But dismiss the idle opinions of this print. It
-appears to me that this mystery is considered insoluble, for the very
-reason which should cause it to be regarded as easy of solution—I mean
-for the _outre_ character of its features. The police are confounded
-by the seeming absence of motive—not for the murder itself—but for
-the atrocity of the murder. They are puzzled, too, by the seeming
-impossibility of reconciling the voices heard in contention, with
-the facts that no one was discovered up stairs but the assassinated
-Mademoiselle L’Espanaye, and that there were no means of egress without
-notice of the party ascending. The wild disorder of the room; the corpse
-thrust, with the head downward, up the chimney; the frightful mutilation
-of the body of the old lady; these considerations, with those just
-mentioned, and others which I need not mention, have sufficed to paralyze
-the powers, by putting completely at fault the boasted _acumen_, of the
-government agents. They have fallen into the gross but common error of
-confounding the unusual with the abstruse. But it is by these deviations
-from the plane of the ordinary, that reason feels its way, if at all, in
-its search for the true. In investigations such as we are now pursuing,
-it should not be so much asked ‘what has occurred,’ as ‘what has occurred
-that has never occurred before.’ In fact, the facility with which I shall
-arrive, or have arrived, at the solution of this mystery, is in the
-direct ratio of its apparent insolubility in the eyes of the police.”
-
-I stared at the speaker in mute astonishment.
-
-“I am now awaiting,” continued he, looking toward the door of our
-apartment—“I am now awaiting a person who, although perhaps not the
-perpetrator of these butcheries, must have been in some measure
-implicated in their perpetration. Of the worst portion of the crimes
-committed, it is probable that he is innocent. I hope that I am right in
-the supposition; for upon it I build my expectation of reading the entire
-riddle. I look for the man here—in this room—every moment. It is true
-that he may not arrive; but the probability is that he will. Should he
-come, it will be necessary to detain him. Here are pistols; and we both
-know how to use them when occasion demands their use.”
-
-I took the pistols, scarcely knowing what I did, or believing what I
-heard, while Dupin went on, very much as if in a soliloquy. I have
-already spoken of his abstract manner at such times. His discourse was
-addressed to myself; but his voice, although by no means loud, had that
-intonation which is commonly employed in speaking to some one at a great
-distance. His eyes, vacant in expression, regarded only the wall.
-
-“That the voices heard in contention,” he said, “by the party upon the
-stairs, were not the voices of the women themselves, was fully proved by
-the evidence. This relieves us of all doubt upon the question whether
-the old lady could have first destroyed the daughter, and afterwards
-have committed suicide. I speak of this point chiefly for the sake of
-method; for the strength of Madame L’Espanaye would have been utterly
-unequal to the task of thrusting her daughter’s corpse up the chimney as
-it was found; and the nature of the wounds upon her own person entirely
-preclude the idea of self-destruction. Murder, then, has been committed
-by some third party; and the voices of this third party were those heard
-in contention. Let me now advert—not to the whole testimony respecting
-these voices—but to what was peculiar in that testimony. Did you observe
-anything peculiar about it?”
-
-I remarked that, while all the witnesses agreed in supposing the gruff
-voice to be that of a Frenchman, there was much disagreement in regard to
-the shrill, or, as one individual termed it, the harsh voice.
-
-“That was the evidence itself,” said Dupin, “but it was not the
-peculiarity of the evidence. You have observed nothing distinctive. Yet
-there was something to be observed. The witnesses, as you remark, agreed
-about the gruff voice; they were here unanimous. But in regard to the
-shrill voice, the peculiarity is—not that they disagreed—but that, while
-an Italian, an Englishman, a Spaniard, a Hollander, and a Frenchman
-attempted to describe it, each one spoke of it as that of a foreigner.
-Each is sure that it was not the voice of one of his own countrymen. Each
-likens it—not to the voice of an individual of any nation with whose
-language he is conversant—but the converse. The Frenchman supposes it
-the voice of a Spaniard, and ‘might have distinguished some words had
-he been acquainted with the Spanish.’ The Dutchman maintains it to have
-been that of a Frenchman; but we find it stated that ‘not understanding
-French this witness was examined through an interpreter.’ The Englishman
-thinks it the voice of a German, and ‘does not understand German.’ The
-Spaniard ‘is sure’ that it was that of an Englishman, but ‘judges by the
-intonation’ altogether, ‘as he has no knowledge of the English.’ The
-Italian believes it the voice of a Russian, but ‘has never conversed
-with a native of Russia.’ A second Frenchman differs, moreover, with the
-first, and is positive that the voice was that of an Italian; but, ‘not
-being cognizant of that tongue,’ is, like the Spaniard, ‘convinced by
-the intonation.’ Now, how strangely unusual must that voice have really
-been, about which such testimony as this could have been elicited!—in
-whose _tones_, even, denizens of the five great divisions of Europe could
-recognize nothing familiar! You will say that it might have been the
-voice of an Asiatic—of an African. Neither Asiatics nor Africans abound
-in Paris; but, without denying the inference, I will now merely call your
-attention to three points. The voice is termed by one witness ‘harsh
-rather than shrill.’ It is represented by two others to have been ‘quick
-and _unequal_.’ No words—no sounds resembling words—were by any witnesses
-mentioned as distinguishable.
-
-“I know not,” continued Dupin, “what impression I may have made, so
-far, upon your own understanding; but I do not hesitate to say that
-legitimate deductions even from this portion of the testimony—the portion
-respecting the gruff and shrill voices—are in themselves sufficient to
-engender a suspicion which should give direction to all farther progress
-in the investigation of the mystery. I said ‘legitimate deductions;’
-but my meaning is not thus fully expressed. I designed to imply that
-the deductions are the sole proper ones, and that the suspicion arises
-_inevitably_ from them as the single result. What the suspicion is
-however, I will not say just yet. I merely wish you to bear in mind that,
-with myself, it was sufficiently forcible to give a definite form—a
-certain tendency—to my inquiries in the chamber.
-
-“Let us now transport ourselves, in fancy, to this chamber. What shall
-we first seek here? The means of egress employed by the murderers. It
-is not too much to say that neither of us believe in praeternatural
-events, Madame and Mademoiselle L’Espanaye were not destroyed by spirits.
-The doers of the deed were material, and escaped materially. Then how?
-Fortunately, there is but one mode of reasoning upon the point, and
-that mode must lead us to a definite decision. Let us examine, each by
-each, the possible means of egress. It is clear that the assassins were
-in the room where Mademoiselle L’Espanaye was found, or at least in the
-room adjoining, when the party ascended the stairs. It is then only from
-these two apartments that we have to seek issues. The police have laid
-bare the floors, the ceilings, and the masonry of the walls, in every
-direction. No secret issues could have escaped their vigilance. But, not
-trusting to their eyes, I examined with my own. There were, then, no
-secret issues. Both doors leading from the rooms into the passage were
-securely locked, with keys inside. Let us turn to the chimneys. These,
-although of ordinary width for some eight or ten feet above the hearths,
-will not admit, throughout their extent, the body of a large cat. The
-impossibility of egress by means already stated, being thus absolute, we
-are reduced to the windows. Through those of the front room no one could
-have escaped without notice from the crowd in the street. The murderers
-must have passed, then, through those of the back room. Now, brought to
-this conclusion in so unequivocal a manner as we are, it is not our part,
-as reasoners, to reject it on account of apparent impossibilities. It is
-only left for us to prove that these apparent ‘impossibilities’ are, in
-reality, not such.
-
-“There are two windows in the chamber. One of them is unobstructed by
-furniture, and is wholly visible. The lower portion of the other is
-hidden from view by the head of the unwieldy bedstead which is thrust
-close up against it. The former was found securely fastened from within.
-It resisted the utmost force of those who endeavored to raise it. A
-large gimlet-hole had been pierced in its frame to the left, and a very
-stout nail was found fitted therein, nearly to the head. Upon examining
-the other window, a similar nail was seen similarly fitted into it; and
-a vigorous attempt to raise this sash, failed also. The police are now
-entirely satisfied that egress had not been in these directions. And,
-_therefore_, it was thought a matter of superogation to withdraw the
-nails and open the windows.
-
-“My own examination was somewhat more particular, and was so for the
-reason I have just given—because here it was, I knew, that all apparent
-impossibilities must be proved to be not such in reality.
-
-“I proceeded to think thus—_a posteriori_. The murderers _did_ escape
-from one of these windows. This being so, they could not have re-fastened
-the sashes from the inside, as they were found fastened—the consideration
-which put a stop, through its obviousness, to the scrutiny of the
-police in this quarter. Yet the sashes _were_ fastened. They must,
-then, have the power of fastening themselves. There was no escape from
-this conclusion. I stepped to the unobstructed casement, withdrew the
-nail with some difficulty, and attempted to raise the sash. It resisted
-all my efforts, as I had anticipated. A concealed spring must, I now
-knew, exist; and this corroboration of my idea convinced me that my
-premises, at least, were correct, however mysterious still appeared the
-circumstances attending the nails. A careful search soon brought to light
-the hidden spring. I pressed it, and, satisfied with the discovery,
-forebore to upraise the sash.
-
-“I now replaced the nail and regulated it attentively. A person passing
-out through this window might have reclosed it, and the spring would
-have caught—but the nail could not have been replaced. The conclusion
-was plain, and again narrowed in the field of my investigations. The
-assassins _must_ have escaped through the other window. Supposing, then,
-the springs upon each sash to be the same, as was probable, there _must_
-be found a difference between the nails, or at least between the modes
-of their fixture. Getting upon the sacking of the bedstead, I looked
-over the headboard minutely at the second casement. Passing my hand down
-behind the board, I readily discovered and pressed the spring, which was,
-as I had supposed, identical in character with its neighbor. I now looked
-at the nail. It was as stout as the other, and apparently fitted in the
-same manner—driven in nearly up to the head.
-
-“You will say that I was puzzled; but, if you think so, you must have
-misunderstood the nature of the inductions. To use a sporting phrase, I
-had not been once ‘at fault.’ The scent had never for an instant been
-lost. There was no flaw in any link of the chain. I had traced the secret
-to its ultimate result—and that result was the _nail_. It had, I say,
-in every respect the appearance of its fellow in the other window; but
-this fact was an absolute nullity (conclusive as it might seem to be)
-when compared with the consideration that here, at this point, terminated
-the clew, ‘There must be something wrong,’ I said, ‘about the nail.’ I
-touched it; and the head, with about a quarter of an inch of the shank,
-came off in my fingers. The rest of the shank was in the gimlet-hole,
-where it had been broken off. The fracture was an old one (for its edges
-were incrusted with rust), and had apparently been accomplished by the
-blow of a hammer, which had partially imbedded, in the top of the bottom
-sash, the head portion of the nail. I now carefully replaced this head
-portion in the indentation whence I had taken it, and the resemblance
-to a perfect nail was complete—the fissure was invisible. Pressing the
-spring, I gently raised the sash for a few inches; the head went up with
-it, remaining firm in its bed. I closed the window, and the semblance of
-the whole nail was again perfect.
-
-“The riddle, so far, was now unriddled. The assassin had escaped through
-the window which looked upon the bed. Dropping of its own accord upon
-his exit (or perhaps purposely closed), it had become fastened by the
-spring and it was the retention of this spring which had been mistaken
-by the police for that of the nail—farther inquiry being thus considered
-unnecessary.
-
-“The next question is that of the mode of descent. Upon this point I
-had been satisfied in my walk with you around the building. About five
-feet and a half from the casement in question there runs a lightning
-rod. From this rod it would have been impossible for anyone to reach
-the window itself, to say nothing of entering it. I observed, however,
-that the shutters of the fourth story were of the peculiar kind called
-by Parisian carpenters _ferrades_—a kind rarely employed at the present
-day, but frequently seen upon very old mansions at Lyons and Bordeaux.
-They are in the form of an ordinary door, (a single, not a folding door)
-except that the upper half is latticed or worked in open trellis—thus
-affording an excellent hold for the hands. In the present instance these
-shutters are fully three feet and a half broad. When we saw them from the
-rear of the house, they were both about half open—that is to say, they
-stood off at right angles from the wall. It is probable that the police,
-as well as myself, examined the back of the tenement; but, if so, in
-looking at these _ferrades_ in the line of their breadth (as they must
-have done), they did not perceive this great breadth itself, or, at all
-events, failed to take it into due consideration. In fact, having once
-satisfied themselves that no egress could have been made in this quarter,
-they would naturally bestow here a very cursory examination. It was clear
-to me, however, that the shutter belonging to the window at the head of
-the bed, would, if swung fully back to the wall, reach to within two feet
-of the lightning-rod. It was also evident that, by exertion of a very
-unusual degree of activity and courage, an entrance into the window, from
-the rod, might have been thus effected. By reaching to the distance of
-two feet and a half (we now suppose the shutter open to its whole extent)
-a robber might have taken a firm grasp upon the trellis-work. Letting go,
-then, his hold upon the rod, placing his feet securely against the wall,
-and springing boldly from it, he might have swung the shutter so as to
-close it, and, if we imagine the window open at the time, might even
-have swung himself into the room.
-
-“I wish you to bear especially in mind that I have spoken of a very
-unusual degree of activity as requisite to success in so hazardous and
-so difficult a feat. It is my design to show you, first, that the thing
-might possibly have been accomplished—but, secondly and _chiefly_, I wish
-to impress upon your understanding the very _extraordinary_—the almost
-praeternatural character of the agility which could have accomplished it.
-
-“You will say, no doubt, using the language of the law, that ‘to make out
-my case’ I should rather undervalue than insist upon a full estimation
-of the activity required in this matter. This may be the practice in
-law, but it is not the usage of reason. My ultimate object is only the
-truth. My immediate purpose is to lead you to place in juxta-position
-that _very unusual_ activity of which I have just spoken, with that _very
-peculiar_ shrill (or harsh) and _unequal_ voice, about whose nationality
-no two persons could be found to agree, and in whose utterance no
-syllabification could be detected.”
-
-At these words a vague and half-formed conception of the meaning of Dupin
-flitted over my mind. I seemed to be upon the verge of comprehension,
-without power to comprehend—as men, at times, find themselves upon the
-brink of remembrance, without being able, in the end, to remember. My
-friend went on with his discourse.
-
-“You will see,” he said, “that I have shifted the question from the mode
-of egress to that of ingress. It was my design to suggest that both were
-effected in the same manner, at the same point. Let us now revert to the
-interior of the room. Let us survey the appearances here. The drawers
-of the bureau, it is said, had been rifled, although many articles of
-apparel still remained within them. The conclusion here is absurd. It is
-a mere guess—a very silly one—and no more. How are we to know that the
-articles found in the drawers were not all these drawers had originally
-contained? Madame L’Espanaye and her daughter lived an exceedingly
-retired life—saw no company—seldom went out—had little use for numerous
-change of habiliment. Those found were at least of as good quality as any
-likely to be possessed by these ladies. If a thief had taken any, why
-did he not take the best—why did he not take all? In a word, why did he
-abandon four thousand francs in gold to encumber himself with a bundle of
-linen? The gold was abandoned. Nearly the whole sum mentioned by Monsieur
-Mignaud, the banker, was discovered, in bags, upon the floor. I wish you,
-therefore, to discard from your thoughts the blundering idea of _motive_,
-engendered in the brains of the police by that portion of the evidence
-which speaks of money delivered at the door of the house. Coincidences
-ten times as remarkable as this (the delivery of the money, and murder
-committed within three days upon the party receiving it), happen to all
-of us every hour of our lives, without attracting even momentary notice.
-Coincidences, in general, are great stumbling-blocks in the way of that
-class of thinkers who have been educated to know nothing of the theory
-of probabilities—that theory to which the most glorious objects of human
-research are indebted for the most glorious of illustration. In the
-present instance, had the gold been gone, the fact of its delivery three
-days before would have formed something more than a coincidence. It would
-have been corroborative of this idea of motive. But, under the real
-circumstances of the case, if we are to suppose gold the motive of this
-outrage, we must also imagine the perpetrator so vacillating an idiot as
-to have abandoned his gold and his motive together.
-
-“Keeping now steadily in mind the points to which I have drawn your
-attention—that peculiar voice, that unusual agility, and that startling
-absence of motive in a murder so singularly atrocious as this—let us
-glance at the butchery itself. Here is a woman strangled to death by
-manual strength, and thrust up a chimney, head downward. Ordinarily
-assassins employ no such modes of murder as this. Least of all, do they
-thus dispose of the murdered. In the manner of thrusting the corpse
-up the chimney, you will admit that there was something excessively
-_outre_—something altogether irreconcilable with our common notions of
-human action, even when we suppose the actors the most depraved of men.
-Think, too, how great must have been that strength which could have
-thrust the body up such an aperture so forcibly that the united vigor of
-several persons was found barely sufficient to drag it down!
-
-“Turn now to other indications of the employment of a vigor most
-marvelous. On the hearth were thick tresses—very thick tresses—of grey
-human hair. These had been torn out by the roots. You are aware of the
-great force necessary in tearing thus from the head even twenty or
-thirty hairs together. You saw the locks in question as well as myself.
-Their roots (a hideous sight!) were clotted with fragments of the flesh
-of the scalp—sure token of the prodigious power which had been exerted
-in uprooting perhaps half a million hairs at a time. The throat of the
-old lady was not merely cut, but the head absolutely severed from the
-body—the instrument was a mere razor. I wish you also to look at the
-brutal ferocity of these deeds. Of the bruises upon the body of Madame
-L’Espanaye I do not speak. Monsieur Dumas, and his worthy coadjutor
-Monsieur Etienne, have pronounced that they were inflicted by some obtuse
-instrument; and so far these gentlemen are very correct. The obtuse
-instrument was clearly the stone pavement in the yard, upon which the
-victim had fallen from the window which looked in upon the bed. This
-idea, however simple it may now seem, escaped the police for the same
-reason that the breadth of the shutters escaped them—because, by the
-affair of the nails, their perceptions have been hermetically sealed
-against the possibility of the windows having ever been opened at all.
-
-“If now, in addition to all these things, you have properly reflected
-upon the odd disorder of the chamber, we have gone so far as to combine
-the ideas of an agility astounding, a strength superhuman, a ferocity
-brutal, a butchery without motive, a _grotesquerie_ in horror absolutely
-alien from humanity, and a voice foreign in tone to the ears of men of
-many nations, and devoid of all distinct or intelligible syllabification.
-What result, then, has ensued? What impression have I made upon your
-fancy?”
-
-I felt a creeping of the flesh as Dupin asked me the question. “A
-madman,” I said, “has done this deed—some raving maniac, escaped from a
-neighboring _Maison de Sante_.”
-
-“In some respects,” he replied, “your idea is not irrelevant. But the
-voices of madmen, even in their wildest paroxysms, are never found to
-tally with that peculiar voice heard upon the stairs. Madmen are of some
-nation, and their language, however incoherent in its words, has always
-the coherence of syllabification. Besides, the hair of a madman is not
-such as I now hold in my hand. I disentangled this little tuft from the
-rigidly clutched fingers of Madame L’Espanaye. Tell me what you can make
-of it.”
-
-“Dupin!” I said, completely unnerved; “this hair is most unusual—this is
-no _human_ hair.”
-
-“I have not asserted that it is,” said he; “but before we decide this
-point, I wish you to glance at the little sketch I have here traced upon
-this paper. It is a _fac-simile_ drawing of what has been described in
-one portion of the testimony as ‘dark bruises, and deep indentations
-of finger nails,’ upon the throat of Mademoiselle L’Espanaye, and in
-another, (by Messrs. Dumas and Etienne,) as a ‘series of livid spots,
-evidently the impression of fingers.’
-
-“You will perceive,” continued my friend, spreading out the paper
-upon the table before us, “that this drawing gives the idea of a firm
-and fixed hold. There is no _slipping_ apparent. Each finger has
-retained—possibly until the death of the victim—the fearful grasp by
-which it originally imbedded itself. Attempt, now, to place all your
-fingers, at the same time, in the respective impressions as you see them.”
-
-I made the attempt in vain.
-
-“We are possibly not giving this matter a fair trial,” he said. “The
-paper is spread out upon a plane surface; but the human throat is
-cylindrical. Here is a billet of wood, the circumference of which is
-about that of the throat. Wrap the drawing around it, and try the
-experiment again.”
-
-I did so; but the difficulty was even more obvious than before.
-
-“This,” I said, “is the mark of no human hand.”
-
-“Read now,” replied Dupin, “this passage from Cuvier.”
-
-It was a minute anatomical and generally descriptive account of the
-large fulvous Ourang-Outang of the East Indian Islands. The gigantic
-stature, the prodigious strength and activity, the wild ferocity, and the
-imitative propensities of these mammalia are sufficiently well known to
-all. I understood the full horrors of the murder at once.
-
-“The description of the digits,” said I, as I made an end of reading,
-“is in exact accordance with this drawing. I see that no animal but
-an Ourang-Outang, of the species here mentioned, could have impressed
-the indentations as you have traced them. This tuft of tawny hair,
-too, is identical in character with that of the beast of Cuvier. But I
-cannot possibly comprehend the particulars of this frightful mystery.
-Besides, there were two voices heard in contention, and one of them was
-unquestionably the voice of a Frenchman.”
-
-“True; and you will remember an expression attributed almost unanimously,
-by the evidence, to this voice—the expression, ‘mon Dieu!’ This,
-under the circumstances, has been justly characterized by one of the
-witnesses (Montani, the confectioner) as an expression of remonstrance
-or expostulation. Upon these two words, therefore, I have mainly built
-my hopes of a full solution of the riddle. A Frenchman was cognizant of
-the murder. It is possible—indeed it is far more than probable—that he
-was innocent of all participation in the bloody transactions which took
-place. The Ourang-Outang may have escaped from him. He may have traced it
-to the chamber; but, under the agitating circumstances which ensued, he
-could never have re-captured it. It is still at large. I will not pursue
-these guesses—for I have no right to call them more—since the shades of
-reflection upon which they are based are scarcely of sufficient depth
-to be appreciable by my own intellect, and since I could not pretend to
-make them intelligible to the understanding of another. We will call them
-guesses then, and speak of them as such. If the Frenchman in question is
-indeed, as I suppose, innocent, of this atrocity, this advertisement,
-which I left last night, upon our return home, at the office of ‘Le
-Monde,’ (a paper devoted to the shipping interest, and much sought by
-sailors,) will bring him to our residence.”
-
-He handed me a paper, and I read thus:
-
- CAUGHT—_In the Bois de Boulogne, early in the morning of the
- ⸺ inst._, (the morning of the murder), _a very large, tawny
- Ourang-Outang of the Bornese species. The owner, who is
- ascertained to be a sailor, belonging to a Maltese vessel, may
- have the animal again, upon identifying it satisfactorily and
- paying a few charges arising from its capture and keeping. Call
- at No. ⸺, Rue ⸺, Faubourg St. Germain—au troisieme._
-
-“How was it possible,” I asked, “that you should know the man to be a
-sailor, and belonging to a Maltese vessel?”
-
-“I do not know it,” said Dupin. “I am not sure of it. Here, however,
-is a small piece of ribbon, which from its form, and from its greasy
-appearance, has evidently been used in tying the hair in one of those
-long queues of which sailors are so fond. Moreover, this knot is one
-which few besides sailors can tie, and is peculiar to the Maltese. I
-picked the ribbon up at the foot of the lightning-rod. It could not have
-belonged to either of the deceased. Now if, after all, I am wrong in my
-induction from this ribbon, that the Frenchman was a sailor belonging
-to a Maltese vessel, still I can have done no harm in saying what I did
-in the advertisement. If I am in error, he will merely suppose that I
-have been misled by some circumstance into which he will not take the
-trouble to inquire. But if I am right, a great point is gained. Cognizant
-although innocent of the murder, the Frenchman will naturally hesitate
-about replying to the advertisement—about demanding the Ourang-Outang. He
-will reason thus:—‘I am innocent; I am poor; my Ourang-Outang is of great
-value—to one in my circumstances a fortune of itself—why should I lose it
-through idle apprehensions of danger? Here it is, within my grasp. It was
-found in the Bois de Boulogne—at a vast distance from the scene of that
-butchery. How can it ever be suspected that a brute beast should have
-done the deed? The police are at fault—they have failed to procure the
-slightest clew. Should they even trace the animal, it would be impossible
-to prove me cognizant of the murder, or to implicate me in guilt on
-account of that cognizance. Above all, I am known. The advertiser
-designates me as the possessor of the beast. I am not sure to what limit
-his knowledge may extend. Should I avoid claiming a property of so great
-value, which it is known that I possess, I will render the animal, at
-least, liable to suspicion. It is not my policy to attract attention
-either to myself or to the beast. I will answer the advertisement, get
-the Ourang-Outang; and keep it close until this matter has blown over.’”
-
-At this moment we heard a step upon the stairs.
-
-“Be ready,” said Dupin, “with your pistols, but neither use them nor show
-them until at a signal from myself.”
-
-The front door of the house had been left open, and the visitor had
-entered, without ringing, and advanced several steps upon the staircase.
-Now, however, he seemed to hesitate. Presently we heard him descending.
-Dupin was moving quickly to the door, when we again heard him coming up.
-He did not turn back a second time, but stepped up with decision and
-rapped at the door of our chamber.
-
-“Come in,” said Dupin, in a cheerful and hearty tone.
-
-A man entered. He was a sailor, evidently,—a tall, stout, and
-muscular-looking person, with a certain dare-devil expression of
-countenance, not altogether unprepossessing. His face, greatly sunburnt,
-was more than half hidden by whisker and _mustachio_. He had with him
-a huge oaken cudgel, but appeared to be otherwise unarmed. He bowed
-awkwardly, and bade us “good evening,” in French accents, which, although
-somewhat Neufchatelish, were still sufficiently indicative of a Parisian
-origin.
-
-“Sit down, my friend,” said Dupin. “I suppose you have called about the
-Ourang-Outang. Upon my word, I almost envy you the possession of him;
-a remarkably fine, and no doubt a very valuable animal. How old do you
-suppose him to be?”
-
-The sailor drew a long breath, with the air of a man relieved of some
-intolerable burden, and then replied, in an assured tone:
-
-“I have no way of telling—but he can’t be more than four or five years
-old. Have you got him here?”
-
-“Oh no; we had no conveniences for keeping him here. He is at a livery
-stable in the Rue Dubourg, just by. You can get him in the morning. Of
-course you are prepared to identify the property?”
-
-“To be sure I am, sir.”
-
-“I shall be sorry to part with him,” said Dupin.
-
-“I don’t mean that you should be at all this trouble for nothing, sir,”
-said the man. “Couldn’t expect it. Am very willing to pay a reward for
-the finding of the animal—that is to say, anything in reason.”
-
-“Well,” replied my friend, “that is all very fair, to be sure. Let me
-think!—what should I have? Oh! I will tell you. My reward shall be this.
-You shall give me all the information in your power about these murders
-in the Rue Morgue.”
-
-Dupin said the last words in a very low tone, and very quietly. Just as
-quietly, too, he walked toward the door, locked it, and put the key in
-his pocket. He then drew a pistol from his bosom and placed it, without
-the least flurry, upon the table.
-
-The sailor’s face flushed up as if he were struggling with suffocation.
-He started to his feet and grasped his cudgel; but the next moment he
-fell back into his seat, trembling violently, and with the countenance
-of death itself. He spoke not a word. I pitied him from the bottom of my
-heart.
-
-“My friend,” said Dupin, in a kind tone, “you are alarming yourself
-unnecessarily—you are indeed. We mean you no harm whatever. I pledge
-you the honor of a gentleman, and of a Frenchman, that we intend you no
-injury. I perfectly well know that you are innocent of the atrocities in
-the Rue Morgue. It will not do, however, to deny that you are in some
-measure implicated in them. From what I have already said, you must know
-that I have had means of information about this matter—means of which
-you could never have dreamed. Now the thing stands thus. You have done
-nothing which you could have avoided—nothing, certainly, which renders
-you culpable. You were not even guilty of robbery, when you might have
-robbed with impunity. You have nothing to conceal. You have no reason for
-concealment. On the other hand, you are bound by every principle of honor
-to confess all you know. An innocent man is now imprisoned, charged with
-that crime of which you can point out the perpetrator.”
-
-The sailor had recovered his presence of mind, in a great measure, while
-Dupin uttered these words; but his original boldness of bearing was all
-gone.
-
-“So help me God,” said he, after a brief pause, “I will tell you all I
-know about this affair;—but I do not expect you to believe one half I
-say—I would be a fool indeed if I did. Still, I am innocent, and I will
-make a clean breast if I die for it.”
-
-What he stated was, in substance, this. He had lately made a voyage
-to the Indian Archipelago. A party, of which he formed one, landed at
-Borneo, and passed into the interior on an excursion of pleasure. Himself
-and a companion had captured the Ourang-Outang. This companion dying,
-the animal fell into his own exclusive possession. After great trouble,
-occasioned by the intractable ferocity of his captive during the home
-voyage, he at length succeeded in lodging it safely at his own residence
-in Paris, where, not to attract toward himself the unpleasant curiosity
-of his neighbors, he kept it carefully secluded, until such time as it
-should recover from a wound in the foot, received from a splinter on
-board ship. His ultimate design was to sell it.
-
-Returning home from some sailor’s frolic on the night, or rather in the
-morning of the murder, he found the beast occupying his own bed-room,
-into which it had broken from a closet adjoining, where it had been, as
-was thought, securely confined. Razor in hand, and fully lathered, it was
-sitting before a looking-glass, attempting the operation of shaving, in
-which it had no doubt previously watched its master through the key-hole
-of the closet. Terrified at the sight of so dangerous a weapon in the
-possession of an animal so ferocious, and so well able to use it, the
-man, for some moments, was at a loss what to do. He had been accustomed,
-however, to quiet the creature, even in its fiercest moods, by the use of
-a whip, and to this he now resorted. Upon sight of it, the Ourang-Outang
-sprang at once through the door of the chamber, down the stairs, and
-thence, through a window, unfortunately open, into the street.
-
-The Frenchman followed in despair; the ape, razor still in hand,
-occasionally stopping to look back and gesticulate at its pursuer, until
-the latter had nearly come up with it. It then again made off. In this
-manner the chase continued for a long time. The streets were profoundly
-quiet, as it was nearly three o’clock in the morning. In passing down
-an alley in the rear of the Rue Morgue, the fugitive’s attention was
-arrested by a light gleaming from the open window of Madame L’Espanaye’s
-chamber, in the fourth story of her house. Rushing to the building, it
-perceived the lightning-rod, clambered up with inconceivable agility,
-grasped the shutter, which was thrown fully back against the wall, and,
-by its means, swung itself directly upon the headboard of the bed. The
-whole feat did not occupy a minute. The shutter was kicked open again by
-the Ourang-Outang as it entered the room.
-
-The sailor, in the meantime, was both rejoiced and perplexed. He had
-strong hopes of now recapturing the brute, as it could scarcely escape
-from the trap into which it had ventured, except by the rod, where it
-might be intercepted as it came down. On the other hand, there was much
-cause for anxiety as to what it might do in the house. This latter
-reflection urged the man still to follow the fugitive. A lightning-rod
-is ascended without difficulty, especially by a sailor; but, when he had
-arrived as high as the window, which lay far to his left, his career was
-stopped; the most that he could accomplish was to reach over so as to
-obtain a glimpse of the interior of the room. At this glimpse he nearly
-fell from his hold through excess of horror. Now it was that those
-hideous shrieks arose upon the night, which had startled from slumber the
-inmates of the Rue Morgue. Madame L’Espanaye and her daughter, habited
-in their night clothes, had apparently been arranging some papers in the
-iron chest already mentioned, which had been wheeled into the middle of
-the room. It was open, and its contents lay beside it on the floor. The
-victims must have been sitting with their backs toward the window; and,
-from the time elapsing between the ingress of the beast and the screams,
-it seems probable that it was not immediately perceived. The flapping-to
-of the shutter would naturally have been attributed to the wind.
-
-As the sailor looked in, the gigantic animal had seized Madame L’Espanaye
-by the hair, (which was loose, as she had been combing it,) and was
-flourishing the razor about her face, in imitation of the motions of a
-barber. The daughter lay prostrate and motionless; she had swooned. The
-screams and struggles of the old lady (during which the hair was torn
-from her head) had the effect of changing the probably pacific purposes
-of the Ourang-Outang into those of wrath. With one determined sweep of
-its muscular arm it nearly severed her head from her body. The sight of
-blood inflamed its anger into frenzy. Gnashing its teeth, and flashing
-fire from its eyes, it flew upon the body of the girl, and imbedded its
-fearful talons in her throat, retaining its grasp until she expired.
-Its wandering and wild glances fell at this moment upon the head of the
-bed, over which the face of its master, rigid with horror, was just
-discernible. The fury of the beast, who no doubt bore still in mind the
-dreaded whip, was instantly converted into fear. Conscious of having
-deserved punishment, it seemed desirous of concealing its bloody deeds,
-and skipped about the chamber in an agony of nervous agitation; throwing
-down and breaking the furniture as it moved, and dragging the bed from
-the bedstead. In conclusion, it seized first the corpse of the daughter,
-and thrust it up the chimney, as it was found; then that of the old lady,
-which it immediately hurled through the window headlong.
-
-As the ape approached the casement with its mutilated burden, the sailor
-shrank aghast to the rod, and, rather gliding than clambering down it,
-hurried at once home—dreading the consequences of the butchery, and
-gladly abandoning, in his terror, all solicitude about the fate of the
-Ourang-Outang. The words heard by the party upon the staircase were the
-Frenchman’s exclamations of horror and affright, commingled with the
-fiendish jabberings of the brute.
-
-I have scarcely anything to add. The Ourang-Outang must have escaped
-from the chamber, by the rod, just before the breaking of the door. It
-must have closed the window as it passed through it. It was subsequently
-caught by the owner himself, who obtained for it a very large sum at the
-_Jardin des Plantes_. Le Bon was instantly released, upon our narration
-of the circumstances (with some comments from Dupin) at the _bureau_
-of the Prefect of Police. This functionary, however well disposed to
-my friend, could not altogether conceal his chagrin at the turn which
-affairs had taken, and was fain to indulge in a sarcasm or two, about the
-propriety of every person minding his own business.
-
-“Let them talk,” said Dupin, who had not thought it necessary to reply.
-“Let him discourse; it will ease his conscience. I am satisfied with
-having defeated him in his own castle. Nevertheless, that he failed in
-the solution of this mystery, is by no means that matter for wonder which
-he supposes it; for, in truth, our friend the Prefect is somewhat too
-cunning to be profound. In his wisdom is no _stamen_. It is all head and
-no body, like the picture of the Goddess Laverna,—or, at best, all head
-and shoulders, like a codfish. But he is a good creature, after all.
-I like him especially for one master stroke of cant, by which he has
-attained his reputation for ingenuity. I mean the way he has ‘_de nier ce
-qui est, et d’expliquer ce qui n’est pas_.’”[A]
-
-[A] Rousseau, Nouvelle Heloise.
-
-
-
-
-Kilted Wraith and Bagpipe Spook Communicate With Spiritualists
-
-
-A most colorful procession of spirits passed before the recent convention
-of the Illinois Spiritualist Association. There was a Highland gentleman
-with kilts of Stewart tartan who came to give a message to “Mary,” and
-who was accompanied by an uncle who played the bagpipe. “Eleanor Ives,”
-a little girl of four, returned to tell her mother that all was well
-in the world beyond. At first, she said, she had hated to go, but now
-she is happy and often visits her mother. Lastly, a colored “mammy” was
-materialized by Mrs. Waite, the medium. She was seen sitting before a
-cabin door smoking an old corncob pipe. She said she had a message for
-her granddaughter.
-
-
-
-
-_Here’s the Final, Thrilling Installment of_
-
-THE MOON TERROR
-
-_By_ A. G. BIRCH
-
- _The first half of this story was published in the May issue
- of WEIRD TALES. A copy will be mailed by the publishers for
- twenty-five cents._
-
- SUMMARY OF THE FIRST INSTALLMENT
-
- The earth is rocked to its foundation, and the end of the world
- is threatened, by a mysterious, unseen power known only as
- “KWO.” At regular intervals, gigantic earthquakes and tidal
- waves visit the earth, destroying great cities and spreading
- terror. Dr. Ferdinand Gresham, American astronomer, attributes
- all this to the Seuen-H’Sin, a Chinese sect with which he is
- familiar. Finally, when the life of the world seems doomed,
- he gains permission from the U. S. Navy Department to proceed
- in the destroyer, Albatross, to the lair of “KWO” and do
- everything possible to stop the world-wide havoc. Accompanied
- by his friend, Arthur (who tells the story), the astronomer
- sails to a lonely spot in the frozen North, where they discover
- the diabolical power plant of “KWO.” It has developed,
- meanwhile, that “KWO” and his sorcerers are moon worshipers and
- are endeavoring to create a second moon by splitting the earth
- in two. In the Moon God’s Temple Dr. Gresham and his friend,
- disguised as Chinese, witness the weird rites of the sect, in
- which a human being is sacrificed, and then their identity is
- discovered. Attacked, they flee back toward their ship, but
- the earth seems suddenly to open, and Arthur is swallowed in a
- black pit.
-
- CHAPTER NINE STARTS FROM THIS POINT
-
-
-_CHAPTER IX_
-
-IN THE SORCERERS’ POWER
-
-What happened immediately after that first drop into the abyss I do not
-know. My only recollection is of hurtling down a steep incline amid a
-smothering avalanche of dirt, of striking heavily upon a rocky ledge, and
-of bounding off again into the inky void as my senses left me.
-
-The next thing I knew was the slow dawn of a sensation of cold; and then
-my eyes fluttered open and I beheld the moon shining upon me through a
-rent in the surrounding blackness. At first I was too dazed to comprehend
-anything that had occurred, but soon, with considerable pain, I raised
-myself upon one elbow and looked about, whereupon understanding gradually
-returned.
-
-The place where I lay was a mud-covered ledge upon one of the steep,
-sloping walls of a huge chasm that had opened in the earth. The gash
-was probably seventy-five feet across at this point, and above me the
-walls soared perhaps a hundred feet. Within arm’s reach the shelf that
-supported me broke off in a precipice. I was half imbedded in soft mud,
-and was soaked to the skin and nearly frozen.
-
-How long I had lain there I could not tell, but I judged it had not been
-more that two or three hours, for the moon still was high in the heavens.
-
-All at once, as I gazed upon the weird scene, my heart leaped with
-anguish at remembrance of my vanished comrade, Dr. Ferdinand Gresham.
-He had dropped before me into the chasm, and therefore must have fallen
-clear of the ledge and plunged into the depths!
-
-Thrusting myself to the edge of the precipice, I peered below. Nothing
-rewarded my gaze except horrifying silence and vapory gloom. The pain of
-the movement was so intense that I fell back almost in a swoon.
-
-Before long, however, I saw that the moon was drawing near the rim of the
-gorge and that I would soon be engulfed in utter darkness, so I turned
-my eyes up the jagged wall in search of some means of escape. After
-considerable study, I thought I could discern a way to the summit.
-
-But just then another surprise caught my gaze: the strip of sky above the
-chasm appeared narrower than when I had first turned my eyes upward. For
-a few moments I attributed this to an optical illusion produced by some
-swiftly-moving clouds overhead; but all at once the hideous truth burst
-upon me—_the crack in the earth was drawing shut_!
-
-Heedless of the pain, I flung myself against the cliff—climbing in utter
-panic, for fear the chasm would close completely before I could get out.
-
-The ascent was difficult and perilous in the extreme. Often rocks
-loosened beneath my fingers, starting miniature avalanches, and I
-flattened myself against the wall in a paroxysm of terror and clung there
-until the danger passed.
-
-For a space that seemed hours long I continued to claw my way upward—with
-the prodigious trap closing steadily upon me. At times I found myself
-below unscalable surfaces, and was obliged to descend a bit and start
-over again in a new direction; and often it seemed as if the pain of my
-injuries would cause me to faint.
-
-When I had come within thirty feet of the top, the climb developed into a
-veritable race with death, for the opposite wall was now almost upon me.
-
-And then, suddenly, I found the way blocked by a sheer, unscalable wall,
-upon which only a fly could have found a foothold! Simultaneously I saw
-that the moon was right at the rim of the chasm, and that in a minute the
-light would vanish.
-
-With the realization of my plight, panic seized me, and I beat my head
-against the wall and shrieked aloud.
-
-And, though I could not guess it then, that very outcry of despair was to
-save my life.
-
-Hardly had my first shriek gone forth before a head appeared directly
-above me, and a voice rang out:
-
-“Here he is, fellows! Quick with that rope!”
-
-With leaping heart, I recognized the voice as Dr. Gresham’s!
-
-An instant later a rope with a loop in the end of it dangled beside me,
-and a number of hands reached out to pull me to safety. Another moment,
-and I was drawn over the brink—not one second too soon, for as I made the
-last dozen feet the closing walls of the pit brushed my body.
-
-Exhausted and trembling, I sank upon the ground, while a number of
-figures crowded about me. These proved to be twenty-five men from the
-_Albatross_, under command of Ensign Wiles Hallock. They were all dressed
-in the dark blue garments of the sorcerers. How they came to be there was
-briefly related by Dr. Gresham.
-
-When the ground had opened beneath us earlier in the evening, the
-astronomer had clutched the roots of a tree, and within a few seconds
-after I had dropped from sight he was back on firm ground. The Chinamen
-who had been pursuing us had either fallen into the gash or had fled in
-terror.
-
-Considerable vapor was rising from the pit, but the scientist noticed
-that this was clearing rapidly, so he decided to linger at the spot
-awhile, with the forlorn hope that I might be found. Soon the vapor
-vanished and, as the moonlight was shining directly into the crack, the
-doctor began a search.
-
-After a time he discerned a figure lying upon a ledge below. Close
-scrutiny revealed that the dark costume characteristic of the Seuen-H’sin
-was torn, displaying an orange garment beneath.
-
-Confident that none of the sorcerers would be wearing two suits at once
-in this fashion, the scientist concluded the figure was mine. For a time
-he doubted whether I lived, but eventually he thought he saw me stir
-feebly, whereupon he began frantic efforts to reach me.
-
-Repeated attempts to descend the precipice failed. Then he tried dropping
-pebbles to arouse me. Again unsuccessful, he risked attracting the
-sorcerers back to the spot by shouting into the chasm.
-
-All his efforts proved futile, so he finally returned to the destroyer
-and obtained this rescue party.
-
-In grateful silence I gripped his hand.
-
-“Now,” the astronomer concluded, “if you are able to walk, we will get
-back to the ship. It is only 1 o’clock, and if we hurry there still is
-time to attack the Seuen-H’sin before daylight. Conditions throughout
-the world are so alarming that we must put this power plant out of
-business without delay!”
-
-“Go ahead!” I assented. “I’m able to hobble along!”
-
-It was less than two miles to the destroyer’s anchorage, they said.
-During the march none of the sorcerers was sighted, with which we began
-to conclude that the cracking of the earth had affected the village on
-the other side of the mountain so that all their lookouts had been called
-in.
-
-But suddenly, when we were less than half a mile from the vessel, the
-stillness of the night was shattered by the shrill blast of a whistle.
-A series of other wild shrieks from the steam chant came in quick
-succession.
-
-“The _Albatross_!” exclaimed Ensign Hallock. “Something’s happening?”
-
-We burst into a run—the whistle still screaming through the night.
-
-All at once the sound ceased, and as the echoes died out among the hills
-we heard the rattle of firearms.
-
-“An attack!” cried Hallock. “The sorcerers have attacked the ship!”
-
-Then, abruptly, the firing, too, died out.
-
-A few moments later we emerged from the ravine onto the bank of the fiord
-and into full view of the destroyer. The passing of the moon into the
-west had brought the vessel within its rays—and the sight that greeted us
-almost froze our blood!
-
-Swarming about the deck were dozens of Chinamen—some with rifles, some
-with knives. They appeared to be completely in control of the ship.
-Numerous pairs of them were coming up from below decks, carrying the
-bodies of the vessel’s crew, which they carelessly tossed overboard.
-Evidently they had taken our companions by surprise and wiped them out!
-
-At this sight Ensign Hallock and his men became frenzied with rage.
-
-“Ready, men!” the officer announced to his followers. “We’re going down
-there and give those murderers something to remember!”
-
-Eagerly the seamen prepared to charge the ship. But Dr. Gresham stopped
-them.
-
-“It’s no use,” he said. “There are hundreds of the sorcerers down
-there—and only a handful of us. You would only be throwing away your
-lives and defeating the whole purpose of this expedition. We must find a
-better way.”
-
-The astronomer’s counsel prevailed. Whereupon we debated what should be
-done. The situation was desperate. Here we were, completely isolated in
-a grim wilderness, hundreds of miles from help, and surrounded by hordes
-of savage fanatics. Soon, no doubt, the sorcerers’ spies would find us.
-And, meanwhile, we were helpless to put an end to the terrors that were
-engulfing the planet and its inhabitants.
-
-So despair gradually took possession of us. Not even the customary
-resourcefulness of Dr. Gresham rose to the emergency.
-
-Suddenly Ensign Hallock gave an exclamation of excitement.
-
-“_The Nippon!_” he burst out. “Let’s turn the tables on the Chinese, and
-seize the _Nippon_! She’s probably got a guard on board, but maybe we can
-take it by surprise!”
-
-“What could we do with her?” I objected. “She needs a large crew—and
-there are only twenty-seven of us!”
-
-“We’ll sail her away, of course!” replied the young naval officer with
-enthusiasm. “There must be fuel on board, for her fires are going. Three
-of the boys here are apprentice engineers. I can do the navigating. And
-the rest of you can take turns stoking the boilers!”
-
-“But how could we slip past the _Albatross_?” asked Dr. Gresham.
-
-Ensign Hallock seemed to have thought of that, too, for he promptly
-answered:
-
-“The _Albatross_ is an oil-burning craft, with the new type of burners
-that came into use since these Chinks have been stowed away here in the
-wilderness. The mechanism for using the oil is quite complicated, and the
-sorcerers are likely to have trouble operating her until they figure out
-the system. If we reach them before they have time to master the thing,
-they will be helpless to stop us!”
-
-The young man’s enthusiasm was contagious. Dr. Gresham begun to give heed.
-
-“Even if we fail to get away in the _Nippon_,” the scientist admitted,
-“she has a powerful wireless outfit: Kwo-Sung-tao has been using it
-to communicate with Washington. With that radio in our hands for ten
-minutes, we can summon help sufficient to annihilate these yellow devils!”
-
-The plan was adopted without further question. And, believing that the
-sorcerers’ easy victory over the _Albatross_ had made them careless,
-perhaps, we struck out in as direct a course as possible for the spot at
-which the _Nippon_ was docked.
-
-In twenty minutes, without sighting any of the enemy, we arrived at the
-edge of the timber behind the wharf.
-
-
-_CHAPTER X_
-
-WE TAKE DESPERATE CHANCES
-
-The great liner lay silent in the moonlight, with no lights visible about
-her, but thin columns of smoke rose lazily from her funnels. A gangplank
-was down.
-
-It was decided that our number should divide into three equal parts. One
-was to go to the bow and board the craft there by climbing up the line
-fastening the ship to the pier; this line was in the shadow except at its
-far end, where the men would emerge upon the deck. The second group was
-to get aboard at the stern by the same means. And the third detachment
-was to advance by the gangplank.
-
-The plan worked without a hitch, and soon we were assembled upon the
-vessel’s main deck. No guard was in sight. Hurriedly, we explored the
-upper decks and all the chambers off them. They were empty.
-
-Then, descending simultaneously by companionways forward, aft and
-amidship, we began to search the body of the vessel. Still no one could
-be found.
-
-And this deserted condition of the ship continued until only the
-stokehold remained to be entered. Here, however, we were certain of
-finding people.
-
-Leaving three men on deck to guard against surprise, the rest of us crept
-into the boiler room.
-
-Only two Chinamen were in the place, leisurely engaged in stoking the
-furnaces. We had them covered with our revolvers before they had any
-warning of our approach.
-
-In spite of the odds against them, one of the Mongolians leaped forward
-and had almost struck one of our men with his shovel before a shot killed
-him in his tracks. The other Chinaman submitted, and he at once was
-securely bound and dumped into a corner.
-
-Dr. Gresham tried to question the prisoner in Chinese, but all the
-information he could get regarding the keeping up of steam on the
-_Nippon_ was: “Maybe leave here soon!”
-
-While the astronomer had been thus engaged, Ensign Hallock and some of
-his men were examining the coal bunkers, and they now reported that the
-vessel was stocked with fuel for a long voyage.
-
-At this juncture, one of the deck watch came to announce that the moon
-was sinking near the mountaintops, and that if we hoped to get far down
-the channel before the light failed we would have to start promptly.
-
-Detailing eighteen men to do the firing—with orders to get more steam
-as rapidly as possible—Ensign Hallock and the rest rushed to the engine
-room, where the three apprentice engineers already were at work. Finding
-everything all right there, the officer proceeded to the steering room,
-while some of us pulled in the gangplank.
-
-The astronomer and myself next started to find the radio plant, to
-get into communication with the Mare Island navy yard. But here
-we encountered a set-back: The wireless plant had been removed!
-Kwo-Sung-tao, we could only surmise, had moved the set to a spot more
-convenient to the village. So, for the present, communication with the
-outside world was impossible.
-
-During this brief period of putting the ship in sailing order, none of
-the sorcerers made an appearance; probably all the men they could spare
-were exploring the captured destroyer.
-
-Soon steam was up; whereupon Ensign Hallock sent Dr. Gresham to the bow
-and myself to the stern to keep a close lookout, and himself ascended to
-the bridge and gave the order to start the engines and cast off. Before
-many moments the leviathan was moving away from the wharf.
-
-The officer had found from the charts that there was a place only half a
-mile or so upstream where the fiord opened into a bay, or amphitheater.
-There, from all indications, room might be had to turn the ship around
-and head her down the channel. For this opening he now set his course.
-
-Although we maintained a very slow speed, it was not long before we
-nosed our way into the bay. Here the walls of the fiord retreated far
-enough to form a considerable body of water; nevertheless, it was plain
-we would have close work turning the _Nippon_ in such a space. It would
-be necessary to steam well over against the north bank, where there no
-longer was any moonlight and the shore line was swallowed up in inky
-blackness.
-
-Redoubling the vigilance of our lookout, we began the maneuver. Slowly,
-Ensign Hallock swung the huge ship around. Twice it was necessary to stop
-and reverse the engines, accomplishing part of the turn by backing. In
-doing so, we had a narrow escape from running into a rocky promontory in
-the dark.
-
-But at last the liner’s head was fairly about and the way seemed clear
-for our dash down the channel past the _Albatross_. As the officer
-signaled for more speed, all of us unconsciously steeled ourselves for
-the climax of our adventure.
-
-But at that instant a deep-toned bell, sounding like the tocsin upon the
-Temple of the Moon God, began tolling in the distance. This was followed
-almost immediately by a series of sharp blasts from the whistle of the
-destroyer.
-
-Now that we had completed the dangerous turn, my duties in the stern were
-finished, so I ran forward, joining Dr. Gresham, and together we climbed
-to the bridge.
-
-“The Chinks must have discovered that their ship is gone!” was the
-greeting the young officer gave us.
-
-He was hardly able to restrain his excitement; the prospect of a brush
-with the sorcerers seemed to give him great joy.
-
-The steam chant and the tolling of the bell continued, as if intended for
-a general alarm.
-
-“Must be getting their gang together!” the ensign remarked. “They’ll be
-laying for us now, but we’ll give them a run for their money!”
-
-The liner now was beginning to get under considerable headway.
-
-“We’re in dangerous quarters until we get out of this stretch of
-darkness!” the officer announced. “Here—you fellows each take a pair of
-glasses! You, doctor, keep watch from the starboard end of the bridge!
-You”—indicating myself—“go to the port side! Watch like hawks!”
-
-We started, but—the command had come too late!
-
-With a dull, long-drawn ripping sound from her interior, the great liner
-suddenly staggered and listed heavily to port! We were thrown off our
-feet.
-
-“_Struck a rock!_” Ensign Hallock shouted, as he leaped up. And instantly
-he began signaling frantically to stop the engines. Almost in the same
-breath he yelled: “Go below—both of you—quick! See what damage has been
-done!”
-
-As we rushed down from the bridge we could tell from the _feel_ of things
-that the vessel’s progress had come to a stop: the _Nippon_ was stuck
-fast!
-
-At the head of the stairs leading to the boiler room we met the seamen,
-who had been doing stoker duty, rushing up.
-
-“You can’t go down there!” they shouted. “The whole bottom’s torn out!”
-
-Nevertheless, we leaped past them and continued below. But near the
-bottom of the stairs we were brought up short. A few lights still were
-burning, and in their feeble rays we could see huge foaming torrents
-pouring into the place. Already the floor was awash to a depth of two or
-three feet, and before we could take our eyes from the sight the flood
-seemed to rise several inches! Any moment the boilers might explode!
-
-Up the steps we dashed madly.
-
-As we reached the deck everyone was hurrying aft. We joined in the rush.
-
-The tolling of the temple bell and the shrieking of the destroyer’s
-whistle continued in the distance: the Seuen-H’sin was preparing to take
-up our pursuit!
-
-Then, before we could make another move, the vessel suddenly lurched
-backward and listed heavily to starboard, with her stern rising high out
-of the water. Then she began to nose forward under the waves.
-
-_The Nippon was sinking!_
-
-
-_CHAPTER XI_
-
-A WILD NIGHT’S WORK
-
-“Lower the boats!” yelled Ensign Hallock.
-
-The coolness, readiness and energy of this young man in any emergency
-were an inspiration.
-
-All of us flew to obey the command, our number dividing between the two
-boats nearest the stern. The liner was sinking so fast that in a few
-moments the boats would be afloat, anyway; nevertheless, we soon had our
-craft in the water.
-
-“Take that canvas covering!” bawled the ensign. “We may need it for a
-sail!”
-
-A sailor dragged the canvas into the boat, and we pushed off from the
-vessel.
-
-The other party had encountered trouble with the davit-blocks, which
-occasioned a slight delay, and Hallock was just getting his boat into the
-water when—
-
-With a terrific crash, the _Nippon’s_ boilers burst!
-
-The huge craft broke in two amidship, the central portion of her decks
-leaping out of the water. The force of the explosion hurled Ensign
-Hallock and his men—lifeboat and all—over the stern amid a hurricane of
-débris, while our own craft was flung bottom-up with great violence,
-scattering us all about in the water.
-
-In an incredibly brief time the _Nippon_ slipped from view under the
-waves, the swiftness of her sinking causing a violent suction that swept
-us into a whirlpool filled with timbers, broken boats and wreckage of all
-sorts.
-
-Something heavy struck me on the head and knocked me almost senseless,
-but I clutched a floating object and hung on in a daze. Presently I heard
-voices calling not far away and, swimming toward them, I found a couple
-of men clinging to the life-boat. Others quickly began to join us—among
-them Dr. Gresham. Soon we had the boat righted and found it undamaged.
-Someone picked up some oars.
-
-Then we began rowing about the scene of the wreck, shouting and keeping a
-lookout for other survivors. In this way we rescued seven more men—one of
-the last of these being Ensign Hallock, who was dazed from a bad cut on
-the head.
-
-After a time, believing further search to be futile, we made our way to
-the north bank of the fiord.
-
-There now were only fifteen of us left—twelve men having perished in the
-explosion. While we were roughly dressing the wounds of the injured,
-we began to hear excited shouts in Chinese from the other side of the
-water, but the width of the fiord here was such as to make the cries
-indistinct. As the voices did not draw nearer, we began to believe that
-the sorcerers possessed no small boats in which to cross to the scene of
-the wreck. This gave us a greater feeling of safety, since the only way
-the sorcerers could get at us for the present was by swimming; and not
-enough of them were likely to try to constitute a serious menace.
-
-In the distance the whistling and bell-ringing had now died out.
-
-Hastily conferring upon what should be done, we decided to stick to the
-lifeboat and drop down the channel, hoping to get out of the country of
-the Seuen-H’sin before daylight. This course seemed feasible, since the
-whole north bank of the fiord—the side opposite the village—was now in
-shadow.
-
-We started at once, rowing along silently, close to the shore.
-Occasionally we heard voices on the south bank, but we made no closer
-acquaintance with the Chinese.
-
-As we drew near the _Albatross_, we muffled our oarlocks with bits of
-cloth torn from our clothing, and took every precaution against making a
-sound.
-
-A few lights were burning upon the destroyer’s deck, but otherwise she
-seemed deserted; possibly the Seuen-H’sin believed we had perished in the
-blowing up of the _Nippon_, and that they had nothing more to fear from
-intruders.
-
-All at once, as we began to drop below the vessel, Ensign Hallock gave
-an order to cease rowing. Drawing us close together so we could hear his
-whispered words, he announced:
-
-“Boys, let’s try to recapture the _Albatross_!”
-
-Then, with repressed excitement, he unfolded a plan.
-
-To our ears the ensign’s words sounded like a proposal of suicide; but
-the situation was appallingly desperate, and the upshot of the matter
-was that we decided to make the attempt.
-
-“Who is to go with you?” I asked Hallock.
-
-Several of the men promptly volunteered, and the ensign selected a
-muscular seaman named Jim Burns.
-
-Agreeing upon a signal that should inform us when to follow them, the
-officer and his partner slipped off most of their clothing and, arming
-themselves only with knives, swam away. In a few seconds they were lost
-from sight.
-
-From Hallock himself, afterward, I learned the story of their daring
-undertaking—although I am certain he greatly minimized the dangers they
-ran.
-
-Reaching the deep shadows beside the destroyer, Hallock and Burns swam
-forward to the anchor chain hanging from the bow. There they waited a
-time, but, hearing not a sound from above, the officer climbed up the
-chain and looked over the edge of the deck. No one was in sight.
-
-He signaled Burns to come after him. Then, clinging to the edge of the
-deck, with their bodies dangling down the side of the hull, out of sight
-of anyone above, they worked their way, hand-over-hand, back to a point
-opposite the after companionway. Still none of the Chinamen was in
-evidence.
-
-The deck was lighted at this point and the rays of other electric
-lamps poured out of the open companionway; nevertheless, the men swung
-themselves up, climbed the rail, and darted to the side of the deck
-house. Leaving Burns here, Hallock crept alone around the corner to the
-companionway.
-
-Just as he reached the open door he almost collided with a Chinaman
-coming up the stairs!
-
-Both were taken completely by surprise, but the ensign recovered
-quickest, and before there was time for an outcry he had the Mongolian by
-the throat and was choking the life out of him.
-
-Soon the fellow crumpled limply upon the deck. Hallock drew his knife to
-finish the business—but at that instant there came the sound of voices
-approaching along the deck.
-
-Seizing the unconscious Chinaman by the arms, Hallock dragged him swiftly
-around the corner of the deck house to where Burns was waiting.
-
-Would the approaching men enter the companionway and go below, or come
-on back to the stern? In the latter case they were bound to discover the
-intruders.
-
-With drawn knives, the two Americans stood ready; the success or failure
-of their whole enterprise depended upon the next few seconds.
-
-But the Chinamen turned down the steps, and their voices soon died out in
-the interior of the vessel.
-
-Thus assured of safety again for the moment, Ensign Hallock ended the
-career of the Mongolian and dragged the body into the deeper shadows
-in the stern. Then the two men advanced together to the companionway.
-Everything appeared quiet below.
-
-Down the stairs they noiselessly crept. At the bottom they could faintly
-hear voices—seemingly many of them—somewhere forward, or else on the next
-lower level. But they did not hesitate. The officer indicated the door of
-a compartment only a dozen feet away. They reached it and got inside.
-
-The room had been converted, during this voyage, into a storeroom.
-Among its miscellaneous contents was a quantity of tear bombs—grenades
-that discharge a gas which makes the victim’s eyes water until he is
-temporarily blinded and helpless. To obtain all these missiles they could
-carry was the work of but a few seconds, after which the Americans dashed
-for the steps and started to the deck.
-
-Just as they got halfway up, a couple of Chinamen appeared suddenly in
-the passage below and caught sight of them. The Celestials uttered loud
-warning cries and darted after the visitors.
-
-Instantly Seaman Burns, who was behind, hurled one of the bombs to the
-floor at the foot of the ladder—and then another and another.
-
-The sorcerers halted a moment, surprised by the missiles—and before they
-could resume their rush they were blinded by tears. Screaming in rage and
-dismay, they retreated down the passage toward the other voices that were
-beginning to respond to their cries.
-
-With this, Burns ran on up to the deck.
-
-“Stay here and hold this stairway!” ordered Hallock. “I’ll go forward to
-the other ladder! Don’t let any of them reach the deck!”
-
-And the officer ran off.
-
-He reached the forward companionway just as half a dozen of the Chinamen
-were crowding toward the foot of the stairs. A couple of the bombs hurled
-among them drove them back. Two more missiles followed; then Hallock
-slammed the door shut and fastened it.
-
-Running to the rail, he signaled us to advance. In two or three minutes
-our rowboat was alongside and we were scrambling up the anchor chain.
-
-On the main deck, under the bridge, formerly had been stored a number of
-rifles, and Hallock now ran to see if these were still there. Luckily
-the Chinamen had not disturbed them, and the officer soon was back with a
-loaded weapon for each man.
-
-“The effect of the tear gas must be wearing off below,” he announced,
-“so we can go down now and clean up those devils! But confine all your
-shooting under decks, where it’s not so likely to be heard on shore!”
-
-“And,” interposed Dr. Gresham, “don’t show a spark of mercy, or we will
-be certain to pay dearly for it later!”
-
-Leaving six men on deck to keep watch, the rest of us divided and went
-down fore and aft. The gas still was strong, but no longer overpowering.
-The Chinese, we found, had groped their way into the engine room. Here we
-came upon them—forty-eight in all.
-
-Upon the scene of slaughter that followed I will draw the veil. Thus the
-Seuen-H’sin had slain our comrades—and we knew that, were our positions
-now reversed, we would meet the same bloody end. Suffice it to say
-that within fifteen minutes the last of the sorcerers’ bodies had been
-disposed of overboard.
-
-Once more we were masters of the _Albatross_!
-
-Our first move, we decided, would be to steam down the channel a few
-miles, where the Mongolians could not immediately get at us. Fortunately,
-two of the apprentice engineers were among the survivors, and they
-undertook to handle the machinery.
-
-At the same time, Hallock and most of the crew went to work setting up
-rapid fire guns in convenient places to repel invasion, and storing
-ammunition and hand grenades on deck. A couple of the larger guns
-likewise were unlimbered, ready for action.
-
-By the time these tasks were completed, steam had been gotten up, and the
-vessel began its retreat down the channel.
-
-Meanwhile, Dr. Gresham and myself hastened to the radio room to summon
-aid from the Mare Island navy yard at San Francisco.
-
-But barely had the astronomer placed the receivers to his ears and
-reached forward to adjust the apparatus, before a startling event
-forestalled his call.
-
-
-_CHAPTER XII_
-
-THE VOICE OF SCIENCE
-
-At the precise instant when Dr. Gresham seated himself at the radio of
-the _Albatross_, the great Consolidated News Syndicate, which dealt with
-newspapers all over the world, was broadcasting a “flash” of terrible
-import:
-
-_An hour ago New York had been wiped out by a stupendous tidal wave!_
-
-Details of the disaster still were lacking.
-
-And then, before the astronomer could lift a hand to send his call, some
-instantaneous and terrific disturbance of the atmosphere blotted out all
-wireless communication!
-
-What this disturbance might be, or what it might portend, seemed to
-arouse in my companion the gravest alarm. His face looked ashen as he sat
-there at the key. Over and over he sought to get Mare Island, but without
-success: the ether was as unresponsive as if his instruments were dead.
-
-Presently he rose without a word and, motioning me to follow, sought
-Ensign Hallock on the bridge. Briefly he told the young officer about the
-destruction of Manhattan, adding:
-
-“Something serious has happened somewhere in the world, since then,
-completely to disorder the atmosphere. It may be the earth’s final
-struggle for existence. Unless the Seuen-H’sin’s power is broken _at
-once_, the end is near! It is too late to wait for reinforcements. We
-must tackle the job ourselves—at any cost! The question is: how are we
-going to do it?”
-
-Hallock thought a few moments, and then replied:
-
-“We can’t bomb the place from an airplane, because we brought no airplane
-bombs. And we can’t shell it with the ship’s guns without knowing its
-exact location. Our planes aren’t equipped with range finders, either—so
-it would do no good to try to locate it from the air.
-
-“That,” he added with decision, “leaves us no choice but a direct attack!”
-
-“Well,” responded Dr. Gresham, “at any cost, we’ve got to try!”
-
-At once we consulted the ship’s charts—and made a discovery.
-
-Not far below our present location, a tributary fiord entered Dean
-Channel from the left, and with sudden hope we saw that this waterway
-twisted back among the mountains for several miles—reaching a point
-in one of its windings where it was not more than six or seven miles
-directly south of the region in which the power plant was hidden.
-
-“There’s our chance!” Hallock announced. “If the sorcerers have missed
-the _Albatross_, they’ll think we are on our way out of the country as
-fast as we can travel. They won’t be expecting us to come back so soon—in
-broad daylight. We can steam up this side channel to the proper spot and
-then march across the mountains until we find the plant.”
-
-“Good!” assented the scientist. “They are less likely to be on guard
-against an attack from that side, anyway!”
-
-Day was now beginning to break, which made further navigation easy. In
-a few minutes we came to the tributary inlet, and swung the vessel in
-between its high, constricted walls.
-
-The ensign was now imbued with marvelous activity. Orders flew thick and
-fast. A couple of the machine guns were made ready for land transport.
-Two light mountain mortars and a quantity of ammunition were brought up
-on deck. A supply of shrapnel hand grenades was distributed among the men.
-
-Our progress through this tortuous waterway necessarily was slow;
-nevertheless, at the end of an hour and a half, the destroyer was stopped
-and we made ready for the final adventure.
-
-It was decided that all fifteen of us should go, because less than that
-number could not carry our equipment up and down the steep mountainsides,
-and three or four men left to guard the ship would be utterly useless in
-the event of an attack.
-
-So, with every nerve alert, we struck out through the trackless
-wilderness.
-
-Three hours later we came upon six large steel conduits which we knew
-must convey the water power to the plant, and in a few minutes we had
-followed these to our goal.
-
-Here we found ourselves upon the brow of a promontory directly behind and
-fully 300 feet above the Seuen-H’sin’s workshop. The promontory ended in
-a sheer precipice, from the outermost curve of which the conduits dropped
-straight down into the powerhouse. This tremendous fall of the six
-streams of water supplied the enormous energy to the turbines. The summit
-of this projecting ridge was fairly level, and for a distance of perhaps
-seventy-five yards at the end the timber had been entirely cleared away.
-
-Extending out from the brow of the precipice, and resting upon the tops
-of the conduits where they plunged downward, was a narrow bridge of iron
-lattice-work which connected all six of the pipes and gave access to the
-bolts which tightened the steel elbows. Through holes in this grating,
-iron ladders fastened between the pipes and the granite cliff back of
-them descended clear to the bottom of the precipice.
-
-A slight rail only three feet high protected the outer edge of this
-grid—a little hand-hold for the workmen in case of a misstep. From this
-dizzy balcony it would be possible to drop a stone almost upon the roof
-of the powerhouse.
-
-After a quick look around, Ensign Hallock chose a spot a little back from
-the cliff to set up the mortars that were to throw explosives upon the
-building. He also prepared to place mines under the conduits. But first
-the machine guns were planted to command the surrounding timber, in case
-of an attack.
-
-There still was no indication that the sorcerers suspected our presence
-in their vicinity; so, inasmuch as Hallock said his preparations would
-take some little time, Dr. Gresham determined to employ the interval in
-getting a closer look at the power plant.
-
-One of the ladders down the precipice, he had noticed, was in such
-a position behind its water main that it could not be seen from the
-building; and he decided to attempt the approach by this means. To my
-delight, he made no objection to my accompanying him.
-
-As we slipped through an opening in the iron bridge and started our dizzy
-descent of the ladder—which seemed to sway beneath our weight—I felt a
-thrill of exultation, in spite of our peril, at the thought that at last
-we were to solve the mystery of the Seuen-H’sin’s terrible power over our
-planet!
-
-The trip was slow and risky, but finally we came abreast of a window in
-the rear wall of the building, and by stretching around the side of the
-thick water main we could see into the place.
-
-The workshop of the sorcerers was a long, low, narrow structure directly
-beside the river. Like the houses back in the Chinese village, it was a
-mere shell of corrugated iron, its steel framework so bolted together
-that it could sway with the earth tremors.
-
-In a row down the centre of the structure were six huge turbines,
-operating electric generators.
-
-Along one side of the room was the largest switchboard I had ever seen,
-while the whole of the other lengthwise wall was flanked with a series of
-massive induction coils, elaborately insulated from each other and from
-the ground. Although I knew little about electricity, I was certain that
-if the combined electrical output of those dynamos were directed through
-that maze of coils, the resulting voltage could only be measured in the
-millions—perhaps hundreds of millions!
-
-From one large, enclosed object, supported on steel uprights over the
-row of induction coils, two electric cables, more than two inches in
-diameter, ran off through the north end of the building. One of these
-ended in a tiny structure about eighty yards from the powerhouse. The
-other ran on up the valley.
-
-But, most curious of all, in the center of the switchboards was an
-apparatus surmounted by a large clock, before which a Chinese attendant
-sat constantly. Precisely every eleven minutes and six seconds a bell on
-this clock clanged sharply, and there was a bright flash in a long glass
-tube, followed by an earth shock.
-
-For some time we clung there in the shadows, while Dr. Gresham studied
-every detail of the amazing workshop. Then, calling my attention to the
-fact that the place outside the powerhouse, where one of the cables
-ended, was hidden from view of the attendants inside by a thick clump of
-trees, the astronomer said he wanted a closer look at this place.
-
-Creeping through the timber, we reached the tiny structure over the
-cable’s end. Not the slightest watch seemed to be kept anywhere about the
-plant. The door to the house was not fastened, so we entered and looked
-hurriedly about.
-
-The room was absolutely empty except for the heavy cable, which came to
-the center of the floor and there connected with a copper post about four
-inches in diameter that ran straight down into the ground.
-
-Without lingering further, we crawled back to the ladder and commenced
-our long climb up the cliff.
-
-Upon reaching the top again, we found the ensign and his men still busy
-with their preparations for the bombardment. Withdrawing far enough to be
-out of their hearing, the astronomer turned to me and remarked:
-
-“Well, what do you think of the scientific achievements of the sorcerers
-now?”
-
-“I don’t know what to think!” I replied. “It’s utterly beyond my
-comprehension!”
-
-The doctor chuckled at my dismay.
-
-“Forgive me,” he said, “for having kept you so long in the dark.
-Until today I could never prove my theories—certain as I was of their
-correctness—and I did not wish to attempt any explanations until I
-was sure of my ground. But now you have seen enough to understand the
-solution of the puzzle.”
-
-To my delight, the scientist was dropping into one of his most
-communicative moods. After a moment he went on:
-
-“To comprehend, even in a general way, what the Seuen-H’sin has done, you
-must understand the principle of resonance.
-
-“Let us start with the swinging pendulum of a clock. What keeps it in
-motion? Nothing but a slight push, delivered at exactly the right time.
-Any swinging object can be kept swinging, even though it weigh many
-tons, if it is given a touch by the finger of a baby at _just the right
-moment_. By the same principle, the amount of swing can be increased
-enormously if the successive pushes are correctly timed.
-
-“But we need not limit our illustration to swinging objects. Everything
-in the word has a natural period of vibration, whether it be a violin
-string, or a battleship, or a forty-story skyscraper.
-
-“Fifty men can capsize a twenty-thousand-ton battleship merely by running
-back and forth from one side of the deck to the other and carefully
-timing their trips to the vessel’s rolling. A child with a tack hammer
-can shake down a forty-story skyscraper if he can discover the natural
-period of the building’s vibration and then tap persistently upon the
-steel framework at the correct interval.
-
-“Even the earth itself has its natural period of vibration.
-
-“If you exploded a ton of dynamite on top of the ground it would blow
-quite a hole and jar the earth for several miles around it; and that
-would be all. But if you set off another ton of dynamite, and then
-another and another, and kept it up continuously—always timing the
-explosions to the period of the earth’s vibration—eventually the jar
-would be felt clear through the globe. And if you still persisted, in
-time you would wreck the world.
-
-“Such is the accumulative power of many little blows correctly timed.
-The principle of timing small impulses to produce large effects is the
-principle of resonance.
-
-“But there are other forces in nature which can produce
-vibration—electricity, for instance, Nikola Tesla demonstrated a number
-of years ago that the globe is resonant to electric waves.
-
-“Now, suppose some person constructed an apparatus that could suddenly
-turn a tremendous flood of electric waves into the earth. That energy
-would go clear through the globe, imparting a tiny impulse to every atom
-of matter of which the sphere is composed—like a push upon the pendulum
-of a clock.
-
-“And suppose that person knew the exact period of the earth’s vibration,
-and sent another bolt, and another and another, into the globe—all
-exactly timed to impart a fresh impulse at the correct moment—to give
-the pendulum another push, so to speak. Then let him pile electric
-impulse upon electric impulse, each at just the right second, until the
-accumulation of them all represented millions of horsepower in electric
-oscillations. In time, _the world would be shaken to pieces_!
-
-“And—impossible as it sounds—that is the very principle the Seuen-H’sin
-is using there beneath your eyes! The dynamos furnish the power, and that
-great battery of induction coils magnifies it to an almost inconceivable
-voltage. By those cables attached to copper plugs, the impulses are
-conveyed to the earth.
-
-“Every blow of that tremendous electric hammer is heavier than the
-preceding one because it has the accumulated power of all the others
-behind it. With every blow the earth grows weaker—less able to stand the
-shock. Continued, the planet’s doom would be inevitable—if it is not
-already so!”
-
-I had been listening to this recital with amazement too profound to admit
-of interruption. When Dr. Gresham finished I sat silent, turning it
-all over in my mind, and reflecting how simple the explanation seemed.
-Finally—
-
-“Was it those electric waves being discharged into the ground,” I asked,
-“that Professor Howard Whiteman in Washington mistook for wireless
-signals from Mars?”
-
-“Precisely!” was the answer.
-
-“And how,” I inquired, “was it possible for the sorcerers to discover
-the exact period of the earth’s vibration? That seems little short of
-superhuman.”
-
-“Doubtless you remember the newspaper accounts published that night
-when we returned from Labrador,” replied the doctor. “They told how the
-electric whispers, when first noticed, occurred exactly two minutes
-apart; then the interval increased one minute each night until the
-signals were separated by more than thirty minutes; afterward the lulls
-altered erratically for some time, until they became fixed at eleven
-minutes and six seconds.”
-
-“Yes,” I assented.
-
-“Well,” continued the scientist, “those variations simply denoted the
-experiment of the Seuen-H’sin to ascertain the period of the globe’s
-vibration. If, after continuing their discharges all one night, their
-seismographs showed no response from the earth, they knew their bolts
-were wrongly timed, and they experimented with another period.
-
-“Eventually they found that their impulses penetrated the earth with a
-speed of approximately 709 miles a minute—in other words, in precisely
-eleven minutes and six seconds the waves passed clear through the
-plant. This, then, was demonstrated to be the length of time that must
-elapse before the pendulum—figuratively speaking—could be given another
-electrical push. You saw just now, on the switchboard down there, the
-clockwork apparatus which times those bolts.”
-
-After a moment’s consideration I remarked:
-
-“Your own electrical equipment on board the _Albatross_—those big
-induction coils and the rest of it—what did you plan to do with that?”
-
-“I had meant to fight the Seuen-H’sin with its own methods,” the
-doctor replied. “I was going to throw a high-power electric current
-into the earth at intervals between those of the sorcerers’—say five
-minutes apart. That would have interfered with the acceleration of the
-vibrations—like setting a second group of men to run across the ship’s
-deck between the trips of the first group. One set of vibrations would
-have neutralized the other.
-
-“But,” Dr. Gresham added, “the time for such methods is past. We must end
-the whole thing immediately—at one stroke!”
-
-Receiving a signal from Ensign Hallock that he was ready, we started to
-rejoin the ship’s party. But before we had gone a dozen steps we were
-rooted to the spot by a new terror!
-
-Off in the east, where the snow-covered peaks lifted into the sky,
-suddenly burst forth an awful crashing sound, as of a colossal
-cannonade—a ponderous and unbroken thunder-roll, terrible as the enormous
-tumult of the day of doom. As our gaze followed the nightmare sounds to
-the edge of the world we beheld the lofty mountains oscillate, crack,
-disjoint, and crumble into seething ruin.
-
-The noise that accompanied this destruction came roaring and booming
-across the intervening miles—a stupendous and unearthly commotion,
-shattering the very atmosphere to fragments.
-
-For a minute Dr. Gresham stood petrified. But as the enormity of the
-cataclysm became evident, an unconscious cry, almost a groan, escaped him:
-
-“Too late! Too late! The beginning of the end!”
-
-Suddenly he wheeled—almost livid with excitement—to the naval officer and
-screamed at the lop of his voice:
-
-“_Fire!_ For God’s sake destroy that power plant! _Fire! FIRE!_”
-
-
-_CHAPTER XIII_
-
-PLAYING OUR FINAL CARD
-
-In their astonishment at the terrible upheaval, Ensign Hallock and his
-men had left their posts and crowded toward the end of the promontory, a
-few feet away from the mortars. At Dr. Gresham’s command to fire, most of
-them leaped to obey the order.
-
-Instantly the woods behind us sprang into life as a horde of Chinamen
-dashed from cover, charging straight at us!
-
-From the size of the attacking force, it was evident our presence had
-been known for some time and our capture delayed until a sufficient
-number of the sorcerers could be assembled to insure our defeat: there
-seemed to be scores of the blue-clad figures. Most of them were armed
-with rifles, although some had only knives and a few iron bars which they
-wielded as clubs.
-
-The distance across the clearing was not much more than 200 feet, and the
-Chinamen advanced at a run—without any outcry.
-
-But before they had traversed a quarter of the space Ensign Hallock
-recovered from his surprise and, with a few terse commands, led his crew
-into action. Dashing to the machine guns, the seamen threw themselves
-flat on the ground; and while some manned these weapons, the rest
-resorted to their revolvers. In two or three seconds the booming of the
-distant cataclysm was augmented by a steady volley of firing.
-
-With deadly effect the machine guns raked the advancing semi-circle of
-Mongolians. As the foremost line began suddenly to melt away, the rest
-of the sorcerers wavered and presently came to a halt. They now were not
-more than a hundred feet from us. At a command, they all dropped down
-upon the ground, the ones with rifles in front, and began to return our
-fire.
-
-I had drawn my revolver and joined in the fight—and so had Dr. Gresham
-beside me. But in our excitement we had remained on our feet, and I now
-heard the astronomer shouting at me:
-
-“Lie down! _Lie down!_”
-
-Even as I dropped, my hat was knocked off by a bullet; but, unharmed, I
-stretched out and continued shooting.
-
-Pausing to slip a fresh magazine of cartridges into my automatic, I
-suddenly became aware that a vast wind was starting to blow out of the
-east; the very air seemed alive and quivering.
-
-The Chinamen still outnumbered us heavily, and all at once I
-realized—chiefly from the lessening of our fire—that their rifle attack
-was beginning to take effect. Glancing about, I saw five or six of the
-seamen lying motionless.
-
-At this juncture one of the machine guns jammed, and while its crew was
-trying to fix it the yellow devils took toll of several more of our men.
-I now saw that only six of us were left to fight.
-
-Simultaneously I became half conscious of a strange, mysterious something
-going on about us—a subtle, ghostly change, not on the earth itself, but
-in the air above—some throbbing, indefinable suggestion of impending
-doom—of the end of things.
-
-Snatching a glance over my shoulder, I saw arising upon the eastern
-horizon a black, monstrous cloud of appalling aspect—a spuming billow of
-sable mist—twisting, flying, lifting into the heavens with tremendous
-speed. And each moment the wind was growing mere violent.
-
-Was this, after all, to be the finish? Was the world—the white man’s
-world, which we had fought so hard to save—to go to smash through these
-yellow devils’ fiendishness? Having come within actual sight of the
-machinery that was the cause of it all, was our task to remain unfinished?
-
-With a terrible cold fury clutching at my heart, I crawled quickly
-forward, discharging my revolver steadily as I went, to lend a hand with
-the disabled machine gun.
-
-But as I reached it Ensign Hallock dropped the weapon, with a gesture of
-uselessness, and moved quickly back to the mortars. Out of the corner
-of my eye I saw him trying to fire the things, and a wave of fierce joy
-seized me.
-
-But the task caused the naval officer to half raise himself from the
-ground, and as he did so I saw him clutch at a bleeding gash on his head
-and fall forward, where he lay still.
-
-An instant later the Chinamen leaped to their feet with a loud cry
-and charged upon us. They, too, were greatly reduced in numbers, but
-there were only four of us now, so nothing remained but an attempt at
-retreat. As we did so we began hurling our hand grenades, all the while
-moving slowly in the only direction we could go—toward the brink of the
-precipice.
-
-Suddenly, above the crack of the rifles and the exploding of the
-grenades, an enormous roaring burst forth in the east—a sinister
-screaming of immeasurable forces, moaning, hooting, shrieking across the
-world—the weird, awful voice of the wounded planet’s stupendous agony.
-
-This new terror attracted so much attention that there was a momentary
-pause in the sorcerers’ onslaught, and in that brief lull I noted that
-our grenades had wrought terrible havoc among the Chinamen, reducing
-their number to a mere handful. Dr. Gresham saw this at the same time,
-and shouted to us to let them have it again with the missiles.
-
-Apparently sensing the purport of this command, the Chinamen sprang
-forward, seeking to engage us at too close range for the grenades to be
-used. But several of the missiles met them almost at their first leap,
-and when the hurricane of shrapnel abated, there remained only three of
-the yellow fiends to continue the attack.
-
-But at the same time I made the grim discovery that on our side Dr.
-Gresham and myself alone survived!
-
-With the realization that it had now come to a hand-to-hand encounter,
-I braced myself to meet the shock as the trio darted forward. I somehow
-felt that nothing mattered any longer, anyway, for so tremendous had
-become the earth-tumult that it seemed impossible the planet could resist
-disruption many minutes more.
-
-Nevertheless, the passions of a wild animal surged within me; a sort of
-madness steeled my muscles.
-
-One powerful, thick-set Chinaman leaped upon Dr. Gresham and the two
-went down in a striking, clawing test of strength. A second later the
-remaining pair hurled themselves upon me.
-
-I whipped out my revolver just as one fellow seized me from the front,
-and, pressing the weapon against his body, I fired. In a moment he
-relaxed his hold and crumpled down at my feet. The other chap now had me
-around the neck from the rear and was shutting off my wind. Round and
-round we staggered, as I vainly sought to loosen his hold. Before long
-everything went black in front of me and I thought I was done for—when I
-heard faintly, in a daze, the crack of a revolver. Quickly the grip about
-my neck fell away.
-
-When I began to come to myself again I saw Ensign Hallock sitting up on
-the ground, his face covered with blood, but wielding the revolver that
-had ended the career of my last adversary.
-
-At the same time I saw that the officer was trying desperately to train
-his weapon upon something behind me. Looking about, I saw Dr. Gresham and
-his opponent rolling over and over on the ground, almost at the edge of
-the precipice, struggling frantically for possession of a knife. Because
-of their rapid changes of position, Hallock dared not shoot, for fear of
-hitting the scientist.
-
-Just then the Chinaman came on top for an instant, and I leaped forward,
-aiming my revolver at him. The trigger snapped, but there was no report.
-The weapon was empty.
-
-Less than a dozen feet now separated me from the wrestlers, when the
-Celestial suddenly jerked the knife free and raised it for a swift stroke.
-
-With all my strength I hurled the empty revolver at the yellow devil. It
-struck him squarely between the eyes. The knife dropped and he clutched
-at his face, at the same time struggling to his feet to meet the new
-attack.
-
-Freed from the struggle, Dr. Gresham’s figure relaxed as in a swoon.
-
-Instantly I was after the Chinaman—without a thought of his bull-like
-strength. I was seeing red. The furious joy of the primeval man
-hunter—the lust for blood—turned my head. My one idea was to kill.
-
-Leaping over the prostrate scientist, I flung myself at the last of the
-sorcerers. He had retreated three or four feet, and now stood at bay upon
-the iron bridge that ran along the top of the water mains, overhanging
-the precipice. As I dashed at him he stepped quickly aside. I missed
-him—and my heart leaped into my throat as I stumbled across the perilous
-eyrie and brought up against the outer rail, which seemed to sway.
-
-I staggered, seized the rod, and saved myself. Far, far below, jagged
-rocks and the roof of the Seuen-H’sin’s powerhouse greeted my gaze.
-
-And at the same time—although I was not conscious of paying attention
-to it—I became sensible of the fact that the monstrous cloud above the
-horizon was soaring swiftly, beating its black wings close to the sun—and
-that a weird twilight, a ghostly gloom, was settling over everything.
-From the distance, too, still came that appalling uproar.
-
-As I recovered my balance the Chinaman bounded at me. But his foot caught
-in the grating and he stumbled to his knees. Instantly I threw myself
-upon him. My knee bored into the small of his back; my fingers sank into
-his throat. _I had him!_ If I could keep my hold a little while the life
-would be strangled from his body.
-
-In spite of his disadvantage, the fellow staggered to his feet. And there
-above the void—upon that narrow steel framework, protected only by its
-leg-high rail—we began a life-and-death struggle.
-
-I hung on, like a mountain lion upon the back of its prey, while the
-Chinaman lurched and twisted this way and that.
-
-Once he staggered against the railing, lost his footing, swung around—and
-I hung out over empty space, a drop of fully 300 feet. I thought the end
-had come—that we would topple off into the void. But his mighty strength
-pulled us back upon the grating—the whole slight structure seeming to
-sway and creak as he did so.
-
-I tightened my grip upon his throat, digging my fingers into his
-windpipe, until I felt the life ebbing out of him in a steady flow. My
-own strength was almost gone, but the primitive desire to kill kept me
-clinging there tenaciously.
-
-At last he began to weaken. In his death throes he lurched about in
-a circle—until his foot slipped through a man-hole above one of the
-ladders, and he fell across the rail with a choking moan. With me hanging
-upon his back he began to slip outward and downward, inch by inch.
-
-I knew the end had come. He was falling—and I was falling with him.
-But thoughts of my own death were smothered in a wild rejoicing. I had
-conquered this yellow fiend! Everything grew blurred before my eyes as we
-sagged toward the final plunge into the gorge.
-
-Suddenly my ankles were seized in a stout grip, and I felt myself being
-dragged back from the sickening void. With this, I loosened my hold upon
-the Chinaman’s throat, and his body went hurtling past me to its doom.
-
-Another instant and I was off the rocking bridge, upon solid ground, and
-Dr. Ferdinand Gresham was shaking me in an effort to restore my senses.
-
-He had recovered from his own fainting spell just in time to save me from
-being dragged over the cliff.
-
-Swiftly I drew myself together. The weird twilight was deepening. But
-a few feet away I beheld Ensign Hallock busy at the mortars and mines,
-preparing to touch them off.
-
-He motioned to us to run. We did so. In a moment his work was finished
-and he took after us.
-
-Back along the ridge we fled, away from the danger of the coming blast.
-
-A couple of hundred yards distant, and about fifty feet below us, a bare
-promontory jutted out from the hillside, affording an unobstructed view
-of the whole region—the crumbling mountains upon the horizon, the power
-plant at the base of the cliff, and the bare space behind us where the
-mines were about to end the career of the sorcerers’ workshop.
-
-We started to descend to this plateau—when suddenly I dragged my
-companions back and pointed excitedly below, exclaiming:
-
-“_Look! Look!_”
-
-There in the center of the promontory, seemingly all alone, stood
-the arch fiend of all this havoc—the high priest of the sorcerers,
-Kwo-Sung-tao!
-
-Apparently the old fellow had chosen this spot whence he could view in
-safety his followers’ attack upon our party. He had not heard my outcry
-behind him, and remained absorbed in the Titanic upheaval of the distant
-mountains.
-
-As I looked down upon his shriveled figure, a wave of savage joy swept
-over me! At last fate was strangely playing into our hands! Quite
-unsuspecting, the most menacing figure of the ages—the master mind of
-diabolical achievement, the would-be “dictator of human destiny”—had been
-cast into our net for final vengeance!
-
-Just then the mortars boomed, and two charges of high explosives went
-hurtling toward the roof of the powerhouse.
-
-Kwo-Sung-tao wheeled and stared off toward the opposite promontory.
-Seeing nothing, he hesitated in alarm. He did not look around in our
-direction.
-
-Another instant and the explosives fell squarely upon the roof of the
-building, and with two frightful detonations—so close together that they
-seemed almost as one—the whole structure burst asunder vanished in a
-flying tornado of débris. For a few moments nothing was visible save a
-tremendous geyser of dirt, steel, concrete and bits of machinery.
-
-While the air was filled with this gust of wreckage, my gaze sped back to
-the leader of the Seuen-H’sin.
-
-The old man stood stock still, petrified by this sudden destruction of
-all his hopes and work. What agony of soul he was enduring in that moment
-I could only guess. His mummified figure suddenly to have shriveled
-unbelievably—to be actually withering before our eyes!
-
-Just then the mines under the water mains went off, ripping the conduits
-to tatters—and the immense hydraulic force, suddenly released, roared
-down the precipice, tearing the ground at the bottom of the gorge away to
-the foundation rock and obliterating the last scrap of wreckage!
-
-Almost at the same moment Dr. Gresham left us and plunged down the
-slope toward the high priest, as if to settle the score with him alone.
-Recovering from our surprise, we followed rapidly.
-
-Apparently sensing the danger, Kwo-Sung-tao suddenly glanced around. As
-he beheld Dr. Gresham he pulled himself together and I saw a look of
-malignity come over his face such as I never before nor since have seen
-upon a human countenance! It was as if he sought to blast his enemy with
-a glance!
-
-The demoniacal fury of that gaze actually caused the astronomer to
-slacken his rush.
-
-Promptly the old sorcerer’s hand darted beneath his robe and came out
-with a revolver. But before the weapon could be aimed I had snatched
-a hand grenade and hurled at the Chinaman. The missile flew over him,
-exploding some feet away; but a bit of its metal must have hit the old
-fellow, inflicting a serious wound, for he dropped the revolver and
-clutched at his side.
-
-As he did so he turned his eyes upon me—and the blood seemed to freeze
-within my veins! Not to my dying day shall I forget the awful power of
-that look!
-
-But only for a second did this last—for I had already drawn another
-grenade and was in the act of hurling it. This time the bomb fell
-directly at the feet of the high priest and burst with deadly force.
-
-Even while the old man’s eyes were boring through me with that unearthly
-fury, Kwo-Sung-tao was blown to fragments!
-
-An instant later the sun vanished, and a ghostly semi-night fell like a
-thunderbolt!
-
- * * * * *
-
-It was several days later when Dr. Ferdinand Gresham, Ensign Hallock and
-myself returned to the Mare Island navy yard at San Francisco.
-
-And there, for the first time, we learned that the world remained intact
-and was out of danger.
-
-When we had ascertained that we three were the only survivors of our
-expedition, we had started wandering over the mountains through the
-semi-darkness until we found the destroyer. Unable to navigate the
-vessel, we had taken the hydroplane, which Hallock knew how to handle,
-and started south. Engine trouble had prolonged our trip.
-
-Back from the grave, as it seemed, we listened with tremendous elation to
-the story of the wounded planet’s convalescence.
-
-That last terrible upheaval, just before the destruction of the
-sorcerers’ power plant, had seemed for a time to be the actual beginning
-of the end. But, instead, it had proved to be the climax—after which the
-earthquakes had begun rapidly to die out. Scientists now declared that
-before long the earth would regain its normal stability.
-
-With our return, the story of the Seuen-H’sin was given to the public.
-So universal became the horror with which that sect was regarded that an
-international expedition proceeded into China and dealt vigorously with
-the sorcerers.
-
-The tremendous changes that had been wrought in the surface of the planet
-presently lost their novelty.
-
-And New York and other cities that had been destroyed, or partially so,
-speedily were rebuilt.
-
-Here I must not omit one other strange incident connected with these
-events.
-
-One evening, nearly two years after our encounter with the sorcerers,
-Dr. Gresham and I were sitting at the window of his New York apartment,
-idly watching the moon rise above the range of housetops to the east of
-Central Park.
-
-Suddenly I began to stare at the disk with rapt interest. Clutching the
-astronomer by the sleeve, I exclaimed excitedly:
-
-“Look there! Odd I never noticed it before! The face of the Man in the
-Moon is the living image of that Chinese devil, Kwo-Sung-tao!”
-
-“Yes!” agreed Dr. Gresham with a shudder. “And it makes my flesh creep
-even to look at it!”
-
-
-THE END
-
-
-
-
-Men Sing Hymn As They Go To Death
-
-
-Marooned on a floating ice cake in the Missouri River, with all hope of
-rescue gone, Harvey McIntosh and his brother, Tom, of Mondamin, Iowa,
-bravely sang, “Nearer My God to Thee,” while the ice floe carried them to
-a swift and certain death. Their friends lined either side of the river,
-but were unable to reach them. Night came on, and from the darkness came
-the strains of the old hymn, which gradually grew fainter and then ended
-in silence.
-
-
-
-
-_In All the World There Was No Man Quite Like This One_
-
-The Man the Law Forgot
-
-_By_ WALTER NOBLE BURNS
-
-
-The jail was silent. Boisterous incoherencies that in the day made the
-vast gloomy pile of stone and iron a bedlam—talk, curses, laughter—were
-stilled.
-
-The prisoners were asleep in their cells. Dusty electric bulbs at sparse
-intervals made a dusky twilight in the long, hushed corridors. Moonlight,
-shimmering through the tall, narrow windows, laid barred, luminous
-lozenges on the stone floors.
-
-From the death cell in “Murderers’ Row,” the voice of Guisseppi rose in
-the still night watches in the _Miserere_. Its first mellow notes broke
-the slumberous silence with dulcet crashes like the breaking of ice
-crystals beneath a silver hammer. Vibrating through the cavernous spaces
-of the sleeping prison, the clear boyish voice lifting the burden of the
-solemn hymn was by turns a tender caress, a flight of white wings up into
-sunny skies, a silver whisper stealing through the glimmering aisles, a
-swift stream of plashing melody, a flaming rush of music.
-
-“_A broken and a contrite heart, O God, thou wilt not despise._” The
-prayer in its draperies of melody filled the cells like a shining
-presence and laid its blessing of hope upon hopeless hearts. From the
-shadow of the gallows, Guisseppi poured forth his soul in music that was
-benediction and farewell.
-
-Bitter memories, like sneering ghosts that elbow one another, crowd
-the road to Gallows Hill. In swift retrospect, Guisseppi reviewed his
-life’s last tragic phase. Young, with healthy blood dancing gay dances
-through his veins, sunny-spirited, spilling over with the happiness and
-hopefulness of irresponsibility, he had not despaired when the death
-sentence was pronounced.
-
-The court’s denial of his lawyer’s motion for a new trial left him with
-undiminished optimism. Yet a while longer hope sustained him when his old
-father and mother kissed him good-by through the bars and set off for the
-state capital to intercede with the governor.
-
-Bowed with years and broken with sorrow, they had pleaded in tears
-and on their knees. The venerable father, lost for words, helplessly
-inarticulate, the mother with her black shawl over her head, white-faced,
-hysterical, both praying for the life of their only son, were a picture
-to melt a heart of stone.
-
-The pathos of it stirred the governor to the depths, but could not make
-him forget that for the moment he stood as the incarnation of the law and
-the inexorable justice that is the theory of the law. With heavy heart
-and misty eyes, he turned away.
-
-So hope at last had died. And between the death of hope and the death
-that awaited him, Guisseppi brooded in the death-cell, bitterly counting
-his numbered days as they slipped one by one into the past, each day
-bringing him that much nearer to certain annihilation. Round and
-round the dial, the hands of the clock on the prison wall went in a
-never-ending funeral march; the _tick-tock, tick-tock_ of the pendulum,
-measuring off the fateful seconds, echoed in his heart like a death knell.
-
-Times without number he repeated to himself that he was not afraid to
-die. Nevertheless the inevitability of death tortured him. At times, in
-sheer terror, he seized the rigid bars of his cell, pounded his fists
-against the iron walls, till the blood spurted from his knuckles. He was
-like a sparrow charmed by a serpent, fluttering vainly to escape, but
-drawing ever nearer to certain death. Black walls of death kept closing
-in upon him inexorably, like a mediaeval torture chamber.
-
-Some men, the experts say, are born criminals; other are made criminals
-by some fortuity or crisis of circumstances. Guisseppi had been a happy,
-healthy, careless boy. His father was a small shopkeeper of the Italian
-quarter who had achieved a certain prosperity. His mother was a typical
-Italian mother, meek, long-suffering, tender, her whole life wrapped up
-in her boy, her husband and her home.
-
-Guisseppi had received a good common school education. He had been a
-choir boy in Santa Michaela Church, and the range and beauty of his
-voice had won him fame even beyond the borders of the colony; musicians
-for whom he had sung had grown enthusiastic over his promise and had
-encouraged him to study for the operatic stage.
-
-The exuberance of youth, and love of gayety and adventure, had been
-responsible for his first misstep. His companions of the streets had
-enticed him into Cardello’s pool room. Cardello, known to the police as
-“The Devil,” had noted with a crafty eye the lively youth’s possibilities
-as a useful member of his gang. His approaches were subtle—genial
-patronage, the pretense of goodfellowship, an intimate glass across a
-table. The descent to Avernus was facile.
-
-Almost before he knew it, Guisseppi was a sworn member of Cardello’s gang
-of reckless young daredevils and a participant in their thrilling nightly
-adventures. Home lessons were forgotten. His mother lost her influence
-over the boy. Even Rosina Stefano, the little beauty of the quarter, who
-had claimed all his boyish devotion since school days, had no power to
-turn him from his downward course.
-
-He had been taken by the police after a robbery in which a citizen had
-been killed. He was condemned to death.
-
-“I forgive everybody,” Guisseppi told his death-watch. “Everybody but
-‘Devil’ Cardello. If it had not been for him, I would be free and happy
-today. He made me a thief. That is his business—teaching young fools to
-rob for him. He did the planning; we did the jobs. We took the chances,
-he took the money. I was in the hold-up when the gang committed murder,
-but I myself killed no man.
-
-“And now the gallows is waiting for me, while Cardello sits in his pool
-room, immune, prosperous, still planning crimes for other young fools. If
-I could sink my fingers in his throat and choke his life out, I could die
-happy. One thing I promise him—if my ghost can come back, I will haunt
-him to his dying day.”
-
-Morning dawned. Father and mother arrived for a final embrace. Rosina
-gave him a last kiss. A priest administered consolation. The sheriff
-came and read the death warrant.
-
-Light, flooding through the barred windows from the newly-risen sun,
-filled the jail with golden radiance as, through the iron corridors, feet
-shuffling drearily, the death march moved in solemn silence toward the
-gallows....
-
- * * * * *
-
-Doctors with stethoscopes watched the final pulsations of ebbing life.
-They pronounced him dead.
-
-The body was wheeled off on a tumbril into the jail morgue and turned
-over to assistants of an undertaker employed by the family. Placing it on
-a stretcher and covering it with a mantle, these hurried it to a motor
-ambulance waiting in the alley. They slid the stretcher into the vehicle
-and slammed the doors. The machine got quickly under way, gathered speed,
-began to fly through the streets.
-
-No sooner had the doors of the ambulance slammed shut than strange things
-began to happen inside. A physician and a nurse who had been secreted in
-the car, fell upon the body with feverish haste, stripped it of clothing,
-dashed alcohol over it from head to foot, began to massage the still warm
-flesh, chafing the wrists, slapping limbs and torso with smart, stinging
-thumps.
-
-Then, to conserve what little heat remained, they bundled the body in
-heavy blankets kept warm in a fireless contrivance. And all the while the
-ambulance, its gong clanging madly, was plunging at wild speed across the
-city, swaying from side to side, turning corners on two wheels.
-
-It drew up at last in front of a small undertaking shop on a back street,
-and the body was hurried inside. Laid upon a table, it looked as if
-carved from ivory. The coal-black hair curled about the white brow in
-glossy abandon. The long black lashes of the nearly-shut eyes left deep
-shadows on the cold pallor of the cheeks. No tint of blood, no sign of
-life appeared.
-
-Quickly a pulmotor was applied. Oxygen was pumped into the lungs while
-the body was again vigorously rubbed with alcohol. Guisseppi’s father and
-mother and close relatives stood about in an excited group, eyes wide
-with feverish interest, their hearts in their mouths. Doctors and nurses
-worked with dynamic energy.
-
-No sign of rekindled life rewarded them. Their drastic efforts seemed
-lost labor. The boy’s soul, apparently, had journeyed far into the dark
-places beyond life’s pale and was not to be lured back to its fleshly
-habitation.
-
-Still they persisted, hoping against hope.
-
-“_Per dio!_” suddenly exclaimed a physician. “Do you see that?”
-
-A faint flush appeared in Guisseppi’s cheek.
-
-“He lives again!” burst in a tense whisper from the bloodless lips of the
-father.
-
-The tiny stain spread, tinging the marble flesh.
-
-“My boy, my darling boy!” cried the mother, wringing her hands in
-delirious joy.
-
-Guisseppi’s chest began to rise and fall slowly, with an almost
-imperceptible movement of respiration. The suspicion of a smile hovered
-for a moment at the corners of his mouth.
-
-He opened his eyes. _He lived!_
-
-
-_II._
-
-“Devil” Cardello sat at his desk in a corner of his pool room. The
-morning was young; no customers had yet arrived to play pool or
-billiards. Basco, the porter, pail and mop in hand, stood for a moment
-gossiping.
-
-“They say he died game,” remarked Basco.
-
-“They all do,” sneered Cardello.
-
-“And kept his mouth shut.”
-
-“No; he spilled everything. But the police didn’t believe him. That’s all
-that saved me.”
-
-“I heard he said his ghost would come back to haunt you.”
-
-“Ho! That’s a good one,” laughed Cardello. “The devil has got him on a
-spit over the fire and will keep him turning. I should worry about the
-little fool’s ghost!”
-
-A whisper of sound from the direction of the billiard tables caused both
-men to glance up.
-
-There stood Guisseppi a few paces away, surveying them in silence, a
-blue-steel revolver in his hand!
-
-“Mother of God!” screamed Basco, dropping his pail and mop, and dashing
-into the street.
-
-Cardello’s eyes bulged from their sockets. His face went as white as
-paper. Panic, terror, pulled his lips back in a ghastly grin from his
-chattering teeth. He rose heavily to his feet and stood swaying.
-
-“Guisseppi!” he breathed scarcely above a whisper. “_Guisseppi!_”
-
-Guisseppi’s lips curled.
-
-“Yes,” he replied. “The boy you ruined, betrayed, sent to death on the
-gallows.”
-
-“No, no, Guisseppi. The _police_ got you. I was your friend.”
-
-“Liar! But for you, I would be happy; my father and mother would not bear
-the black disgrace of a son hanged on the gallows.”
-
-“Why have you come back from the dead, Guisseppi? Why should you haunt
-your old pal?”
-
-“I have a score to settle with you.”
-
-“In the name of God the Father, go back to the grave! Leave me in peace.”
-
-Guisseppi raised his weapon.
-
-“I have come to kill you,” he said.
-
-Cardello fell upon his knees.
-
-“Spare me, Guisseppi!” he screamed, stretching out imploring arms.
-“Mercy, Guisseppi, mercy! Don’t—”
-
-There was a crash—a leap of fire.
-
-A wisp of blue smoke drifted above a billiard table.
-
-
-_III._
-
-The police dragnet for the slayer of Cardello was far flung, and zest
-was added to the man hunt by the offer of $1,000 reward. Throughout the
-Italian quarter, Basco spread the story of Guisseppi’s recrudescence and
-his ghostly revenge.
-
-The superstitious residents accepted the weird tale with simple faith.
-Fear of the phantom became rife. Children remained indoors after dark.
-Pedestrians quickened their pace when passing lonely spots at night.
-Turning a corner suddenly, they half-expected to come face to face with
-Guisseppi’s ghost, wry-necked from the hangman’s noose.
-
-Policeman Rafferty, traveling beat in the neighborhood of Death Corners,
-was told time and again that Guisseppi’s ghost had murdered Cardello.
-Yes, it was true. Basco had seen the phantom. Others in the colony had
-seen it slipping like a shadow through some deserted street at night.
-There was no doubt that Guisseppi had come back from the dead.
-
-Policeman Rafferty laughed. When had ghosts started in bumping off live
-folks? That was what he would like to know. How could the poor simpletons
-believe such stuff? Funny lot of jobbies, these dagoes!
-
-But when Policeman Rafferty had heard the story of Guisseppi’s ghost for
-the thousandth time, he scratched his head and did a little thinking, not
-forgetting the $1,000 reward. Guisseppi was dead. Of course. He had been
-hanged, and the newspapers had been full of the stories of his execution.
-So Guisseppi couldn’t have killed Cardello. That was out of the question.
-But could it be possible that dead Guisseppi had a living double? Hah!
-
-Policeman Rafferty got in touch with his favorite stool-pigeon without
-delay. Shortly thereafter, that worthy laid before him a piece of
-information which Policeman Rafferty was welcome to for just what it
-was worth and no more. Guisseppi’s ghost had been seen oftenest in the
-immediate neighborhood of Guisseppi’s father’s residence. If the fool
-copper thought he could put a pinch over on a ghost, he might do well to
-search Guisseppi’s old home.
-
-So Policeman Rafferty eased himself one day through a narrow passageway,
-burst in suddenly at the kitchen door and started to search the premises.
-
-He found Guisseppi whiffing a cigaret in a front room.
-
- * * * * *
-
-“Yes, I killed Cardello,” said Guisseppi quietly. “I’ll go with you.”
-
-“But who are you?” asked the policeman. “You can’t be Guisseppi. They
-topped that boy on the gallows.”
-
-“I’m Guisseppi, all right. They brought me back to life with a pulmotor.”
-
-Policeman Rafferty’s jaw dropped.
-
-“Back to life?”
-
-“Yes. I was as dead as stone. I was gone absolutely for an hour.”
-
-“Gone? Gone where?”
-
-“I don’t know. Somewhere. I remember standing on the trap. Then it seemed
-I was falling for a long time, falling—from a star—or a high mountain
-top—through miles of emptiness into midnight blackness. There wasn’t
-any pain. I seemed to land on a deep soft cushion of feathers. I could
-_feel_ the darkness. It seemed to whirl and billow round me. I couldn’t
-see myself—or feel myself. But I knew, somehow, I was there in the heart
-of the darkness. I suddenly found myself on a broad road stretching away
-into night.”
-
-“Must ha’ been the road to hell,” remarked Policeman Rafferty.
-
-“Maybe so. Along this road, I glided with the swiftness of a bird on the
-wing. I didn’t know where I was going—”
-
-“You were bound for hell,” said Rafferty.
-
-“I heard music away off in the dark; wonderful orchestra music, violins,
-’cellos, wind pipes. It grew louder. I never heard such beautiful music.
-Through the solid blackness ahead, I saw a great mountain peak standing
-up, red and shining, against the sky.
-
-“Around me came a glare of bright lights. I was blinded by streaks and
-splashes of color, darting, rolling, weaving into each other, changing
-all the time. Reds, purples, greens, blues, rolled over me in great,
-flashing waves. Flaring colors swirled around me in blazing whirlwinds.
-I was drowned in gorgeousness. It was as if a cyclone had wrecked a
-thousand rainbows and buried me beneath their ruins.”
-
-“What were these lights?”
-
-“Search me. I don’t know. I heard a loud, clear call out of the distance.
-I pushed through the storm of colors. Across a dark plain, I reached the
-shining, red mountain. I climbed up until I stood on the peak. I felt
-fine. Something struck me as a joke. I began laughing. Then, bending
-close above me, I saw the faces of my mother and father and the doctors.”
-
-“Well, Guisseppi,” said Policeman Rafferty, “gettin’ hung once would ha’
-been an elegant sufficiency for most men. They’d be leery about takin’ a
-second chance. You must be stuck on dropping through a trap—eh?”
-
-“Yes, they’ll hang me again, all right. That’s a cinch. You might think
-me a fool for walking with my eyes open right into this second scrape—”
-
-“A hog,” corrected Rafferty.
-
-“I don’t know. I came back from the dead to kill Cardello. And I killed
-him. I hated that fellow. I’d like to have tortured the life out of him,
-killed him by inches. His cries of agony would have been wine to me. It’s
-hell to be hanged. I ought to know. But I can go back to the gallows now
-with a light heart. I got Cardello, and I’m ready to take my medicine.”
-
-Policeman Rafferty bit a generous chew from his plug of tobacco.
-
-“You Eye-talians,” he remarked reflectively, “are a nutty bunch.”
-
-
-_IV._
-
-The court room was crowded. Guisseppi’s strange story had been spread to
-the four winds by the newspapers, and everybody was eager to see this man
-who had passed through the mystic portals of death.
-
-“My client will plead guilty to the Cardello murder,” said Guisseppi’s
-lawyer. “I take it your honor will agree with me that having paid the
-penalty of the law for his former crime, he can not again be hanged for
-that old offense.”
-
-“I do agree with you,” replied the judge. “The sentence was that on a
-certain day at a certain hour, he be hanged by the neck until dead. This
-sentence was carried out. He was hanged. He was officially pronounced
-dead. It is not for me to say whether death was absolute. Perhaps a spark
-of life remained which was fanned back to full flame. Possibly his soul
-actually left the body and was recalled by some cryptic means we do not
-fully understand.
-
-“But, whatever the truth, his return to life creates a unique situation.
-I know of no precedent of which the law ever has taken cognizance. So
-far as I know, this case is the first of its kind in history. Since the
-sentence pronounced upon this man has been carried out legally in every
-detail, it is my decision that he can not again be hanged for the crime
-for which he already has paid the penalty.”
-
-“There is one other point which your honor failed to consider,” said
-Guisseppi’s lawyer. “It is an axiom of law that a man can not, for the
-same crime, be placed in jeopardy twice. A man can be placed in no
-greater jeopardy than when, with a hangman’s noose around his neck, he
-is dropped through the trap-door of a gallows. So, whether Guisseppi was
-actually dead or whether a faint flicker of life remained, he is forever
-immune from further punishment for the crime for which he was placed in
-this great jeopardy.”
-
-“Your point may be well taken,” replied the judge.
-
-“Now, your honor, we come to the Cardello murder charge. It is at the
-prisoner’s own desire and against my better judgment that I enter a
-plea of guilty and throw him upon the mercy of the court. There are
-perhaps some extenuating circumstances. But he is willing to take
-whatever punishment the court may see fit to inflict. In view of all
-the circumstances of this extraordinary case, I make a special plea for
-mercy.”
-
-“I will answer your plea,” returned the judge, “by ordering the case
-stricken from the docket and the prisoner discharged from custody.”
-
-A murmur of amazement broke the tense hush of the crowded chamber.
-Guisseppi’s lawyer gasped.
-
-“Am I to understand, your honor—”
-
-“This is not mercy but law,” the judge continued. “This man is legally
-dead. He is without the pale of all law. A dead man can commit no
-crime. No provision in the whole range of jurisprudence recognizes the
-possibility of a dead man’s committing a crime. No man, in the purview of
-the law, can return from the dead. If we assume that this man was dead,
-he will remain dead forever in the eyes of the law. If by a miracle he
-has returned to life and committed murder, there is no punishment within
-the scope of the statutes that can be decreed against him.
-
-“He is the super-outlaw of all history. Forever beyond the reach of law,
-the statutes are powerless to deal with him or punish him in any way. If
-he should shoot down every member of the jury that convicted him, if he
-should walk into court and kill the judge before whom his case was tried,
-the law could do nothing to him. He could spend his days as a bandit,
-robbing, plundering, murdering, and the law could not touch him. Legally
-he is a ghost, a shadow, an apparition, with no more reality than the
-beings in a dream. So far as the law is concerned, he does not exist. He
-can no more be imprisoned, hanged, punished or restricted in his actions
-than a phantom that exists only in the imagination.”
-
-“A most wonderful construction of the law,” declared Guisseppi’s attorney
-in happy bewilderment at the turn of events.
-
-“It is less a construction of law as it exists than an admission there
-is no law applicable to a man legally dead yet actually alive, a man who
-under the law does not exist. This boy, physically alive but legally
-dead, has murdered a man with deliberate purpose and malice aforethought.
-There is no doubt about that. If the law recognized his existence, he
-should be hanged. Justice demands that he be executed. But he is in some
-fourth-dimensional legal state beyond the reach of justice. The law is
-powerless to deal with him. As the administrator of the law, my hands are
-tied. There is nothing left for me but to set him at liberty.”
-
-Despite the decision of the court that under the law he had no existence,
-Guisseppi left the chamber smiling and happy, acutely conscious of joyous
-life in every fibre of his being.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Policeman Rafferty was filled with righteous anger when he learned that
-he could not collect the $1,000 reward. In answer to his indignant
-questions, he was told the reward was offered for the arrest of “the
-person or persons guilty of the murder of Cardello,” and since Guisseppi
-was neither a person or anything else that the law recognized as
-existing, he was not guilty of the crime.
-
-Moreover, it was hinted to him that in capturing Guisseppi, he had
-arrested nobody. In the end, Policeman Rafferty had to laugh in spite of
-himself.
-
-“The money’s mine, all right,” he said philosophically. “Only I don’t get
-it.”
-
-
-_V._
-
-Rosina Stefano sat alone in the little parlor of her home in one of the
-quaint side-streets of the Italian quarters, picturesque with its jumble
-of weather-stained frame dwellings and exotic little shops.
-
-It was a chill, dreary night outside. A piping wind made fantastic noises
-about eaves and gables, and shook the windows as with ghostly hands. A
-lamp, burning under a blue shade, filled the chamber with eerie shadows.
-A coal fire was dying to embers in the open grate. There was a knock at
-the door.
-
-“_Entre!_”
-
-Guisseppi threw open the door and stood upon the threshold smiling.
-
-“Rosina!”
-
-The girl rose from her chair and stared fixedly at him out of frightened
-eyes. With a quick gesture, as if for protection against some
-supernatural menace, she made the sign of the cross.
-
-“I have come back to you, Rosina.” Guisseppi took a step toward her and
-threw open his arms.
-
-Rosina shrank back.
-
-“Do you not still love me?”
-
-Her lips framed a “No” for answer in a terror-stricken whisper.
-
-“Come, my little sweetheart, embrace me.”
-
-“No, no, Guisseppi!” Her voice was a tremulous cry. “You are dead!”
-
-“Dead? Certainly I am not dead. I am alive and well, and I love you just
-as I always loved you.”
-
-“You are only a ghost.”
-
-“Don’t be foolish, little one. Do I look like a ghost? Me? Come into my
-arms and see how strong they are. Lay your head on my breast and feel the
-beating of my heart. And every beat of my heart is for you.”
-
-Rosina stood motionless. There flashed through her mind old grewsome
-stories of vampires that lured their victims into their power with love
-traps and sucked their blood. Momentary horror froze her blood.
-
-“O Guisseppi,” she exclaimed, “why have you risen from the dead? Why do
-you come back to haunt me?”
-
-“Poor girl, do not talk like that. I tell you I am alive—tingling to my
-finger tips with life and love for you. If I were dead, I should still
-love you. Death could not kill my love for you. Have you forgotten
-everything? I thought you loved me. You have often told me so. I believed
-you would always love me, be true to me forever. Now I find you changed
-and cold.”
-
-“I did love you, Guisseppi. To the depths of my being I loved you.” Her
-words came in a passionate torrent in her liquid native tongue. “You were
-my earth and heaven, my life, my soul’s salvation. All day my thoughts
-were of you. I dreamed of you at night. There was nothing I would not
-have done for you. There was nothing I would not have given you. I could
-have lived for you always. I could have died for you. Did I not come to
-see you every day in jail? Did I not bring you constantly dishes I had
-cooked myself with utmost care? Was not I close beside you in the court
-room every day of the long trial?
-
-“I did everything to soothe and comfort you through all those terrible
-days. Was it nothing that I remained constant when you were locked in a
-cell condemned to death? I was true to the very trap-door of the hangman.
-What greater proof could a woman give of her love than to remain true to
-a man sentenced as a felon to the eternal disgrace of the gallows?”
-
-She paused for a moment, erect, motionless, her face aflame, seemingly
-transfigured like the wonder woman of a vision.
-
-“Ah, yes,” she went on; “then there was no one like my Guisseppi; no
-eyes so bright, no lips so tender, no face so dear. You were my god. Can
-I ever forget the songs you used to sing to me in the happy days before
-‘Devil’ Cardello crossed your life. Your voice was divine. Every note
-thrilled me. I loved it. To me it was the music of the stars. Nothing
-in all the world was so beautiful as your voice. But now your voice has
-changed. There is no longer any music in it. As you speak to me, it seems
-a voice from the sepulchre.”
-
-Guisseppi raised an arresting hand. He threw back his head. He smiled
-again.
-
-“My voice has changed? Listen, _cara mia_.”
-
-Slowly he began to sing an old Italian serenade. The ballad told of a
-knight of old who had bade a lily-white maid farewell and gone off to the
-wars and who, wounded and left for dead on the battlefield, was nursed
-back to life and returned to find his lady unchanged in her devotion
-against rivals and temptations.
-
-Soft in the opening cadences, Guisseppi’s voice grew in volume and power.
-It brought out in shades and nuances of wonderful beauty all the charm
-and romance of the ancient tale—the sadness of farewell, the clash of
-battle, the wounded soldier’s dreams of his sweetheart as life seemed
-ebbing, the gladness of his homecoming, his happiness in reunited love.
-
-Into the music, Guisseppi threw all the ardor and passion of his own
-love. There were notes like tears in his voice when, in minor strain,
-he sang the sorrows and dreams of the soldier; and the final crescendo
-passage, vivid with renewed love, was a burst of joyous melody straight
-from his heart.
-
-“_And you loved me still the same!_” The words rose like incense from an
-altar. They fluttered about Rosina’s ears like a shower of rose leaves.
-
-The girl listened, spellbound. Never in happier days had she heard
-Guisseppi sing with such compelling sweetness. There seemed a new and
-wonderful quality in his voice. With his magical music, he was like a
-conjurer bending her spirit to his subtle enchantments.
-
-On a golden cloud, she was transported to the sunny shores of Italy. A
-cavalier sang the serenade in the moonlight to his mandolin and, leaning
-from her latticed balcony, she dropped a rose to him. The bay of Naples
-spread its crinkled azure before her. Against the dark, star-spangled
-crystal of the night, sculptured Vesuvius upheld its canopy of smoke.
-
-As the music steeped her senses, she fancied she could feel its golden
-filaments being drawn about her, binding her more and more closely in a
-fairy chain. As if under the charm of melodious hypnotism, her old love
-returned. All the tenderness and passion of her heart went out again to
-Guisseppi. The siren influence of his voice was transforming her. Her
-strength of will was crumbling. She stood swaying, helpless, her eyes
-glowing with rekindled love.
-
-Suddenly the song ended. The spell was broken. Rosina passed a languid
-hand over her eyes as if to brush away a film of sleep. She seemed to
-wake from a trance. Guisseppi stood before her radiant, smiling.
-
-“Now will you believe I am alive? Could a dead man sing like that?”
-
-A look of awe overspread Rosina’s face.
-
-“You never sang like that before.”
-
-“This is the first time my life and happiness were ever at stake on a
-song.”
-
-“The Guisseppi I used to know could not sing like that. You are not
-Guisseppi. You are a spirit. Some demon has taught you how to sing so
-beautifully. You have come back with this new devil’s voice of yours to
-lure my soul to hell.”
-
-“Ah, Rosina, how can you delude yourself with such foolish fancies. Do
-you not see me here solid in flesh and blood?”
-
-“I see you, but I know you are only a shadow from the grave.”
-
-“If your eyes deceive you, your ears can not. You have heard me sing.”
-
-“That was some devil’s necromancy.”
-
-Guisseppi fell on his knees before her and stretched out his arms in
-supplication.
-
-“I love you, Rosina. That is all I can say. The hangman’s noose was not
-able to strangle my love for you. Your love is more to me now than it
-ever was before. The world has turned cold to me. You are my only hope,
-my refuge. I need you. I want you with all my soul.”
-
-The girl shook her head sorrowfully. Her eyes rested upon him with
-sadness that was touched with renunciation.
-
-“It can never be,” she said firmly. “How you are here, I do not know.
-You are dead; of that I am sure. My love for you was buried in the grave
-that was dug for you. You are not the boy I once loved. You are something
-strange and different. I am afraid of you. It is only with horror that I
-could fancy the kisses of a dead man on my lips. The thought of a ghost’s
-endearments fills me with loathing. Go back to the dead. I can love and
-reverence those who are gone, but there is no love anywhere in all the
-world for the dead returned from the grave.”
-
-She turned away and stood with her head bowed in her hands.
-
-Slowly Guisseppi struggled to his feet. He staggered weakly against the
-wall and buried his face in his arms.
-
-“And you, Rosina!” he sobbed.
-
-This was the final, crushing blow. He felt now that he was indeed
-dead—dead at the grave of his lost love.
-
-
-_VI._
-
-A taxicab stood in the narrow street near Rosina’s home, its driver ready
-at the wheel, its engine purring. Behind the drawn blinds, sat Guisseppi,
-aflame with excitement, peering eagerly through the curtains from time to
-time.
-
-Guisseppi was desperate. There was no place for the dead among the
-living. He had learned that clearly. As a “living dead man,” all his
-experiences had been tragic. He regretted his resuscitation. He longed
-for the peace of the grave.
-
-His old friends had fallen away from him. Many believed him a spirit
-damned, who, by some strange dispensation, was spared to life for yet a
-little while to make more exquisite the final agony reserved for him.
-Others were intelligent enough to know the truth, but even these were
-repelled by a certain unwholesomeness, a savor of the sepulchre, that
-seemed to cling about him.
-
-The girls he had known in his old, gay days would have nothing to do
-with him. As handsome as ever, as romantic, with a voice as musical and
-appealing, he was in their imagination enveloped in an atmosphere of the
-charnel-house, and the curse of hell was branded on his brow.
-
-His relatives held aloof. Between him and even his mother and father he
-was conscious that a thin shadow had gradually crept, and the tenderness
-of their love had been cooled by a ghostly fear of this eerie son who had
-been down among the dead and read with dead eyes the mysteries beyond the
-tomb.
-
-He had been unable to find employment. It was as if every business house
-had up a sign, “No dead men need apply.”
-
-In despair and desperation, he fell into his old ways of banditry. He
-soon had placed to his record a long series of bold robberies. For
-several of his first lawless exploits, the police arrested him. But
-invariably the judges before whom he was arraigned set him at liberty.
-
-So after a while the police refused to arrest him. What was the use? This
-ghost-man would only be set free again.
-
-... While Guisseppi sat hidden from view behind the curtains of his
-taxicab, ruminating upon the bitterness of his fate, Rosina emerged from
-her home. Trim and dainty with pink cheeks and sparkling eyes, the young
-beauty was subtly suggestive of flowers and fragrance as she tripped
-along the street in the warm sunshine.
-
-As she came abreast of the taxicab, Guisseppi stepped out, caught her in
-his arms, and swung her into the car. The girl’s wild screams shrilled
-through the slumberous stillness of the quarter and filled the streets
-with excited throngs as the cab plunged madly forward, dashed around a
-corner and was soon lost to sight. In a distant part of the city, the
-car halted before a weather-stained building. Within the dingy doorway
-Guisseppi disappeared, bearing the kidnapped maiden in his arms.
-
-A little later, Guisseppi appeared before the marriage license clerk in
-the city hall.
-
-“I’m sorry,” said the clerk, “but I can not give you a marriage license.”
-
-“Why not?”
-
-“You are dead. You can not marry.”
-
-“But I’m _going_ to marry!” shouted Guisseppi defiantly.
-
-“Impossible. If I went through the formality of filling out a license
-for you, no minister or priest would perform the wedding service. The
-marriage altar, orange blossoms, the happiness of domestic love are not
-for the dead.”
-
-“But I’m _alive_! I am only _legally_ dead.”
-
-The clerk smiled tolerantly. With a pencil he drew a circle on a sheet of
-paper.
-
-“Here,” said he, “is a cipher. It is the symbol of nothing, but, as a
-circular pencil mark, it is still something.”
-
-He erased every trace of the pencil and exhibited the blank piece of
-paper.
-
-“This,” he explained, “illustrates your status. In human affairs, you
-are a cipher with the rim rubbed out. A man legally dead is less than
-nothing.”
-
-
-_VII._
-
-Luigi Romano, who had succeeded Guisseppi in Rosina’s affections, was
-among the first to hear of the abduction.
-
-Blazing with passion, he laid his plans with quick decision and took the
-trail. Without great difficulty, he traced the route of the taxicab,
-block by block, to its destination.
-
-Depressed by his fruitless mission in search of a marriage license,
-Guisseppi was hurrying toward the building in which Rosina was
-imprisoned. His eyes were bent upon the ground in deep thought. His face
-was white and drawn.
-
-Luigi stepped from the shelter of a doorway with a sawed-off shotgun in
-his hands....
-
- * * * * *
-
-When the police arrived, a little crowd of Italians had gathered.
-
-They shrugged their shoulders and spread their palms. Nobody had seen
-anything; nobody had heard anything; nobody knew anything. But one thing
-was plain—the dead man, sprawled on the sidewalk, was dead this time to
-stay dead.
-
-“O yes,” said Attorney Malato, who had looked after Luigi’s case, “they
-arrested Luigi all right. But they turned him loose. Why not? This boy
-Guisseppi could not be punished by the law, but neither could he claim
-in the slightest degree the protection of the law. Since he had no legal
-life, it was no crime to kill him. He was a legal problem, and Luigi
-solved it in about the only way it could be solved—with a sawed-off
-shotgun.”’
-
- * * * * *
-
-It is often wondered why the earth is round instead of being some other
-shape. This is because of the attraction of gravity, which tends to pull
-everything toward the center of the world. It can be seen that even if
-the earth was originally some other shape, in the course of a few years
-this influence would have pulled it into its present shape.
-
-
-
-
-_A Gripping, Powerful Story by a Man Who Always Tells a Good Tale_
-
-The Blade of Vengeance
-
-_By_ George Warburton Lewis
-
-
-The outcome was all the more regrettable because Henry Fayne had staked
-so much on the success of his great venture. He had renounced innumerable
-bachelor friendships for Leanor, only to discover within a year of the
-celebrated social event, which had been their wedding, that he was linked
-for life to a captivating adventuress.
-
-It was a hard blow. Only by desperate efforts, long sustained, had he
-been able to take himself in hand and force out of his thoughts the ugly
-images that obsessed him.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Leanor’s perfidy was a thing of which even his best friends never could
-have convinced him; yet now he knew it to be true—aye, knew it because
-she herself had boasted of it!
-
-Fayne had striven hard to shut so hideous a specter out of his vision,
-partly because of a haunting fear that the thing which the discovery had
-set throbbing in his brain would get the better of him, that he would
-hurt somebody, or himself.
-
-He had been an unusually well-balanced man, but it was only after many a
-stern struggle with the pulsating thing that hammered in his head that he
-surrendered the corpse of his outraged love to the divorce court and the
-gossip-mongers, and went sadly back to his bachelor haunts in the hope
-of forgetting. But he was appalled to find that he no longer fitted in.
-
-The friends of the free and easy days of his celibacy were sincere enough
-in their pity for him, though in no way disposed to put themselves out
-seeking reclamation. In short, they might as well have said in chorus:
-
-“You couldn’t have expected us to forewarn you; you’d have quit us cold.
-You had to discover it for yourself, and the operation of finding out has
-simply rendered you impossible as one of the old crowd. Sorry, old man,
-but, after all, it’s better that you should know.”
-
-So Henry Fayne brooded, lost his nerve, and then, all of a
-sudden—disappeared.
-
-The old circle knew his set and cynical face no more. There were rumors
-of mental breakdown and suicide, and there was one report (little
-credited, however) that the unfortunate fellow had drifted down into the
-wilds of South America and become an eccentric and a recluse.
-
-Leanor tired, in time, of the murderous velocity of her social chariot,
-dumped the winged vehicle on the trash-heap and went abroad, accompanied
-by a less rich and more ambitious retinue of high livers.
-
-Like vari-colored butterflies, five years winged overhead, years by
-no means lacking in color and variety for Leanor. Exacting as were
-her tastes, she could scarcely have desired a more changeful, a more
-exquisitely exhilarating life.
-
-Only once in a blue moon did she think of Henry. Thoughts of him, like
-all other memories of her meteoric past, had been crowded into oblivion
-by the inrush of the more intimate and actual.
-
-Henry had been very good to her, she had to admit, but he had been none
-the less impossible. The outcome had been inevitable from the beginning.
-He was fifteen years her senior. She knew that she could never have
-held her volatile self down to a life of self-sacrifice and suffering
-with Henry. The idea was no less absurd than the mating of an esthetic
-humming-bird with some sedate old owl.
-
-When she consented to marry Henry she had entertained no such
-preposterous thought as exacting of him a compliance with the
-ridiculously restricted code of ethics he subsequently set for her.
-Indeed, she would have grown old and ugly with nothing accomplished,
-unseeking and unsought. Too, there would have been lamentably fewer
-notches on her ivory fan than the half-decade last past had yielded.
-
-As the wretched venture had turned out, however, she was still under
-thirty and was, to employ the homely simile of her latest masculine
-objective, “as pretty as a peach.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-At the Pacific entrance of the Grand Canal, where the town of Bandora
-drowses like a sprawling lizard on the sun-baked clay, word went round
-that the millionaire adventuress was yachting down the west coast,
-homeward bound.
-
-Everybody who read the public prints knew about Leanor, so at least one
-element at Bandora awaited her arrival with curious interest. And the
-curious were to be gratified, for since pretty Leanor habitually did the
-unexpected, she only proved her consistency when, upon her arrival, she
-capriciously decided to tarry a fortnight, with the two-fold object of
-having a look at the great waterway and exploring historic Batoga Island,
-only a couple of hours distant.
-
-Should the mighty monument to engineering skill prove uninteresting,
-there remained the secret caves of Batoga, among them _La Guaca de San
-Pedro_, by allegation the identical haunted, bat-inhabited cavern in
-which buccaneering old Henry Morgan had once stored all of his ill-gotten
-gains and maybe imprisoned the unfortunate nuns captured at Porto Bello!
-And then, too, there was the celebrated Devil’s Channel, which, according
-to widely circulated and much-believed stories, sucked small craft down
-into its omnivorous maw like some insatiable demon lying in wait.
-
-Leanor devoted but little time to the prodigious engineering feat. After
-all, it was man-made, and what was man if not a purveyor to feminine
-caprices? Mere men were cheap. The adventuress knew, because she had
-bought and sold many of them. She had bartered the very souls of some.
-
-She had bought them all with make-believe affection and disposed of them
-at a hundred per cent discount. She treated them much as one treats
-cast-off garments, experiencing only minor difficulties in disengaging
-herself from some of the more persistent.
-
-A genuine Sybarite, Leanor’s appetite for entities masculine had at last
-cloyed, and she now turned impatiently to inscrutable old Nature to make
-up the deficiency.
-
-She went to Batoga, a verdant, mighty mountain, greenly shaggy, as yet
-unshorn by advancing civilization. It might have been a little separate
-world, set down by nature in a sleeping sea of sapphire. Here, indeed,
-was something different.
-
-She was wild with delight as soon as her dainty feet touched the
-shell-paved beach. Really, this wonderland was too splendidly perfect to
-share with her unpoetic company of paid buffoons! She sent the whole lot
-of them bagging back to Bandora, decided to employ a guide, a boatman, or
-a native maid, contingent upon her special needs, right on the ground.
-
-It was due to this whim of Leanor’s that I myself wandered into the cast,
-came to know Leanor and likewise the story I am telling you here. I had
-just come through a notably obstinate case of dengue in the sanitarium.
-My thin knees, in fact, were still somewhat wobbly, and I was urging
-them back to normal by means of a leisurely stroll across the rolling
-pasture-land. On a grassy, wind-swept hillside I came all unexpectedly
-upon Leanor.
-
-Evidently she had thought to refresh her jaded wits by a revel in wild
-flowers. She was seated on a shelf of rock that rimmed the hill-crown,
-culling unworthy floral specimens. A single upward glance, and then her
-eyes dropped back to her flowers in a world-bored manner which I somehow
-felt a quick impulse to resent. At least I could annoy her. That was any
-fool’s privilege.
-
-“Gathering flowers?” I interrogated, just as though that fact were not as
-obvious as the blue sky itself.
-
-For answer, my front-line fortifications were instantly swept by an
-ocular onslaught well calculated to obliterate. I smiled back engagingly
-at the source of the tempest.
-
-“Some hill, this,” I suggested, emitting a windy sigh after the exertion
-of its ascent.
-
-And then I saw that my second drive had broken through her first-line
-trench on a front of about a quarter of an inch. Disdain died slowly out
-of her face—a face still unaccountably fresh and girlish—and something
-like pity at my apparent lack of sophistication took its place.
-
-“You really think it a high hill?” she asked, faintly smiling and gazing
-at me steadily as though she doubted my sanity.
-
-I noted that her hazel eyes seemed to swim in seas of a wonderfully
-sparkling liquid.
-
-“Well,” I qualified, affecting funereal gravity, “it’s higher than _some_
-hills.”
-
-Her amused smile expanded perceptibly.
-
-“Really, now, have you ever seen very many hills?”
-
-“N-no,” I reluctantly confessed, “not so _very_ many.”
-
-“What induced you to measure this one?”
-
-“Well, I was shadowing somebody,” I said quietly. At last she had given
-me an opening.
-
-“Whom, pray?” she demanded, her smile brightening expectantly.
-
-“_You_—if you don’t mind,” I announced.
-
-“_Me!_” She laughed deliriously for a moment.
-
-“It’s hardly a laughing matter,” I said, with forced seriousness when she
-was still. “I’ve been working on this case for years.”
-
-She sobered with a suddenness that suggested ugly thoughts, perchance
-remembering something of her kaleidoscopic past. The hazel eyes saddened
-a little. It was evident that she was rummaging among happenings which it
-gave her small pleasure to review. I waited. Maybe I was not quite the
-yokel she had thought me.
-
-“Do you mean you’re a detective?” she presently asked.
-
-“I mean just that, madam,” I said evenly.
-
-“By whom are you employed?” she questioned tentatively.
-
-“By Henry Fayne,” I casually replied.
-
-“That is the lie of an impostor,” quickly asserted the woman; “Henry
-Fayne is dead.”
-
-She rose from the stone shelf and prepared to desert me. Anyhow, I had
-won my point. I had succeeded in annoying her.
-
-But I concluded I could hardly let the matter so end, even as affecting a
-woman like Leanor. Nobody can afford to be openly rude.
-
-“Wait,” I said; “let’s be good sportsmen. You tilted at me and I
-retaliated. Honors are even. Why not forget it?”
-
-She was greatly relieved; and besides, forgetfulness, of all things, was
-what she sought. After a moment, deep wells of laughter again glistened
-in her splendid eyes. These and the smiling young mouth somehow seemed to
-give the lie to the fiasco she had made of life. What a pity, I thought,
-that she had chosen to fritter away her life in this fatuous, futile
-fashion.
-
-I had thought that I should feel only contempt for such a woman as
-Leanor, but as we walked down the hill she told me something that
-penetrated a hitherto unknown weak spot in my armor. So I all but pitied
-the woman I had prepared to despise.
-
-As if to take strength from them, she kept her eyes on the wild flowers
-she had gathered, as she pronounced the well-nigh unbelievable words I
-now set down.
-
-The craze for the blinding white lights, and the delusion of equally
-white wines, were surfeited. The gilt and tinsel of the truly tawdry had
-palled. The mask of allurement had fallen from the forbidding face of
-the artificial and empty. Life itself had become for Leanor a vacant and
-meaningless thing. She had seen too much of it in too brief a space.
-
-She concluded with a seeming contradiction, a veiled regret that her
-frenzied explorations had exhausted all too soon the world’s meager store
-of things worth while, and there was a bitterness in her voice which
-contrasted unpleasantly with her youth and beauty as she said plainly,
-though with little visible emotion, that she had reached a point where
-life itself often repelled and nauseated her.
-
-We had reached the sanitarium by this time, an interruption not unwelcome
-in the circumstances, and I left the strange woman alone with her tardy
-regrets and sought my own quarters, sympathetic and depressed, yet
-thanking my lucky stars for the happy dispensation that had made me an
-adventurer instead of an “adventuress.”
-
-That evening, Leanor and I planned a trip to Devil’s Channel, and
-I strolled down to the beach in search of such a shallow-draught
-_cayuco_ as could maneuver its way over the reefs that barred larger
-craft. _Boteros_ of divers nationalities abounded, and among the many
-my questioning gaze finally met that of a vagabondish-looking fellow
-countryman in a frayed sailor garb. In odd contrast to his raiment, and
-swinging from his belt in a sheath which his short coat for an instant
-did not quite conceal, I caught a single glimpse of a heavy hunting knife
-with an ornamented stag-horn handle.
-
-His name was Sisson, he told me, but he spoke Spanish like a native. His
-uncarded beard was a thing long forgotten of razors. He was unmistakably
-another of those easily identified tramps of the tropics who, in an
-unguarded moment, unaccountably lose their grip on themselves and
-thenceforward go sliding unresistingly down to a not unwelcome oblivion.
-
-Sisson did not importune me, as did all the other boatmen; he did not
-even offer me his services; and it was because of this evidence of
-some lingering vestige of pride, coupled with the fact that he had an
-eminently suitable _cayuco_, that I decided to employ him.
-
- * * * * *
-
-At the narrow gateway of Devil’s Channel the water is so shallow, and
-there so frequently occur tiny submerged sand-bars, that only the
-minutest of sea craft can skim over the gleaming rifts and gain entrance.
-This was confirmed for the nth time when I felt the specially made keel
-of our tiny _cayuco_ scrape the shiny sand in warning that we were at
-last entering the canyon-like waterway.
-
-Leanor and I were both playing our splendid oarsman with well-nigh every
-imaginable question about the gloomy, spooky-looking channel before us.
-
-“Aren’t we nearing _the place_ yet?” Leanor presently asked.
-
-“Farther in,” drawled Sisson, the bearded giant of a boatman, glancing
-carelessly at the ascending cliffs on either side.
-
-Twisting my body round in the wee native _cayuco_, I noted that the
-perpendicular walls of the shadowy strait that lay before us seemed
-drawing together with every pull of Sisson’s great arms. Leanor’s pretty
-face was radiant with expectation. Though bored of the world, there was
-at least one more thrill for her ahead.
-
-Five minutes slipped by. Sisson rowed on steadily.
-
-“There she is!” the boatman said suddenly, for the first time evincing
-something like a normal human interest in life. One of his huge, hairy
-hands was indicating an alkali spot on the face of the right-hand wall a
-stone’s throw ahead. “Just opposite that white spot is where _it always
-happens_.”
-
-He released his oars and let them trail in the still water. It looked
-peculiarly lifeless. Our small shell gradually slowed.
-
-“Seems to be all smooth sailing here today, though,” I ventured.
-
-“Overrated, for the benefit of tourists,” opined Sisson. “The water’s
-eaten out a little tunnel under the west wall, but there’s no real danger
-if you know the chart.”
-
-“How many did you say were drowned when that launch went down?” again
-asked Leanor. Her great dark eyes were sparkling again now with a keen
-new interest in life—or was it the nearness to potential death?
-
-“Eleven,” drawled Sisson. “The engineer jumped for it and made a
-landing on that bench of slate over there, and right there”—he smiled
-reminiscently—“he sat for seventy-two hours, with ‘water, water
-everywhere, nor any drop’—”
-
-“And is it true that none of the life-preservers they were putting on
-when the launch sank was ever found?” Leanor also wanted to know.
-
-“True enough,” said Sisson, “but that’s not unnatural. Drowning men lay
-hold of whatever they can and never, _never_ turn loose. Why, I’ve seen
-the clawlike fingers of skeletons locked around sticks that wouldn’t bear
-up a cockroach!”
-
-“Did you say it was a relatively calm day?” I questioned the boatman idly.
-
-“Sure. Calm as it is right now,” he answered.
-
-I observed casually that the oarsman was gazing fixedly at Leanor. Even
-on him, perhaps, beauty was not entirely lost. Doubtless, too, he had
-heard the gossip her arrival had set going along the wharves at Batoga.
-Meanwhile Leanor had made a discovery.
-
-“Why, we’re still making headway!” she broke out suddenly. “I—I thought
-we had stopped.”
-
-Sisson glanced down at the water, and his tanned brow broke up in
-vertical wrinkles of consternation. The look in his deepset eyes, though,
-did not, oddly enough, seem to match the perplexity written on his
-corrugated brow.
-
-Our craft was sliding rapidly forward as though propelled by the oars.
-The phenomenon was due to a current; that much was certain, for we were
-moving with a flotsam of dead leaves and seaweed.
-
-Again I screwed my body half round in the cramped bow and shot a glance
-ahead. God! we were shooting toward the dread spot on the alkali cliff as
-though drawn to it by an unseen magnet. I could see, too, that our speed
-was rapidly increasing.
-
-Sisson snatched up the trailing oars and put his giant’s strength against
-the invisible something that seemed dragging us by the keel, but all
-he did was to plough two futile furrows in the strange whirlpool. Our
-_cayuco_ glided on.
-
-The _blasé_ adventuress was never more beautiful. For the time, at least,
-life, warm and pulsating, had come back and clasped her in a joyous
-embrace. Her lips were parted in a smile of seemingly inexpressible
-delight. There was not the remotest suggestion of surprise or fear in her
-girlish face.
-
-She put her helm over only when I shouted to her in wide-eyed alarm, but
-the keen, finlike keel of our specially built _cayuco_ obviously did not
-respond. Oblique in the channel, we slithered over, ever nearer to the
-west wall, the unseen agent of destruction towing us with awful certainty
-toward the vortex. Still the surface of the water, moving with us,
-looked as motionless as a mill-pond! It was uncanny, nothing less.
-
-I peered into the bluishly transparent depths, fascinated with wonder,
-and then, of a sudden, I saw that which alone might prove our salvation.
-Apparently we were in a writhing, powerful current, racing atop the
-seemingly placid undersea or sub-surface waters of the channel. I
-could make out many small objects spinning merrily about as they flew,
-submerging, toward the whirlpool.
-
-We carried six life-belts. Two of these I snatched from their fastenings,
-slipped one about Leanor, and with the other but partly adjusted—for
-there remained no time—myself plunged out of our—as it were—bewitched
-craft in the direction of the west wall.
-
-To my surprise I swam easily. When I made a deep stroke, however, I could
-feel strange suctorial forces tugging at my finger-tips. But for the
-moment I was safe.
-
-I glanced about to see if Leanor had followed my lead. She was not in the
-water. I turned on my back and saw, to my utter amazement, that neither
-she nor Sisson had left the _cayuco_.
-
-This was unaccountable indeed. And it was now clear that it was too late
-for them to jump, for the light boat had already begun to spin round in a
-circle at a point exactly opposite the alkali spot! Faster and faster it
-flew, the diameter of the ring in which it raced swiftly narrowing.
-
-As I swam, my shoulder collided with some obstruction. It was the west
-wall. I clambered up a couple of feet and sat dripping on a slime-covered
-shelf of slate, the identical slab on which the engineer of the sunken
-launch had thirsted.
-
-I was powerless to help my companions. I could only sit and stare in near
-unbelief. Why—_Why_ had they not abandoned the tiny craft with me? I saw
-now that neither had even so much as got hold of a life-belt. Why—?
-
-_My God!_ What was this I beheld? Sisson had advanced to the stern of the
-flying cockleshell where Leanor still sat motionless, unexcited, smiling.
-The charmed look of expectancy was still in her perfect face.
-
-Sisson’s voice, suddenly risen high, chilled me to the marrow. It might
-have been the voice of some martyr on the scaffold. He did not reveal
-his identity to Leanor. It was not necessary. Something—I dare not say
-what—enabled her in that awful moment of tragedy to know _her divorced
-husband_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The exquisite torture of recollection had shriveled Henry Fayne’s
-mentality and left him a semi-maniac, yet here, after all the cynical,
-embittering years was the physical, the carnate Henry Fayne, the
-long-discarded plaything of feminine caprice. His suffering was fearfully
-recorded in the seamed and bearded mask of his altered features.
-
-The smile did not leave Leanor’s face. The madman’s voice rose in a
-shrill, terrible cry. He babbled and sputtered in consuming rage, but
-I caught the current of his wild harangue. He had waited all the years
-for this opportunity; he had followed her from Bandora, had laid all his
-plans with infinite nicety to avenge the wreck which Leanor had made of
-his life.
-
-But the woman laughed defiantly, tensely; laughed derisively, full in the
-bearded face.
-
-“You have waited too long, Henry,” she said, evenly yet with a note of
-triumph in her tone; “I’ve worn threadbare every allurement of life.
-Today I came here seeking my last adventure—a sensation at once new and
-ultimate—_death_!”
-
-It was here that the miracle supervened.
-
-Chagrin, fierce and awful, distorted the hairy vagabond’s face, and,
-balancing himself precariously in the crazily whirling dugout, he
-raised a great clenched fist. I once had seen a laughing man struck
-by lightning. As the rending voltage shot through him the muscles of
-his face had relaxed slowly, queerly, as if from incredulity, just as
-the furious, drawn face of Henry Fayne relaxed now. The menacing fist
-unclinched and fell limply at his side.
-
-Of all the examples of thwarted vengeance I had ever seen on the stage,
-or off, this episode from real life was the most dramatic.
-
-The boat had circled swiftly in to the center of the vortex and now spun
-crazily for a moment as though on a fixed pivot, like a weather-vane.
-Then it capriciously resumed its first tactics, only it now raced
-inversely in a rapidly widening circle, running well down in the water,
-as though from some powerful submarine attraction.
-
-That the spurious boatman was a victim of some hopeless form of insanity
-I was certain when I saw him drop to his knees and extend both his great
-hands in evident entreaty to the woman who had stripped him of his
-honor and, driven him, a driveling idio-maniac, into exile. Leanor sat
-impassive, but the madman continued to supplicate.
-
-Never did my credulity undergo so mighty a strain as when, after a
-moment, the woman reached out and locked her slim hands in his. It was a
-strange picture, believe me! From my uncertain perch on the slimy ledge
-of slate, I stared, thrilling deep in my being at this futile truce on
-the brink of eternity.
-
-Its revolutions greatly widened and its speed diminished, the tiny boat
-suddenly swerved from its circular course, bobbed upward as though a
-great weight had been detached from its keel and then drifted like some
-spent thing of life toward the west wall, where I crouched dumbfounded,
-my breath hissing in my nostrils, my lungs heaving.
-
-Only now am I coming to the crux of this story of which the foregoing
-forms a necessary prelude.
-
-Back at Batoga that same night, in an obscure corner of the wide cool
-porch of the palm-environed sanitarium, Henry Fayne and Leanor, after
-a long heart-to-heart talk alone, agreed to forgive and forget. Later
-in the evening Fayne went down to the contiguous village to assemble
-his meager belongings. They would be interesting souvenirs with which
-to decorate the walls of the rehabilitated home. I found Leanor sitting
-where he had left her on the porch, smiling enigmatically.
-
-“Can I act, or not?” she asked me rather abruptly as I came up.
-
-“Act?” I groped; “what do you mean?”
-
-She sat there, smiling mysteriously in the white moonlight, until I
-at length prevailed upon her to pour into my incredulous ears how it
-had flashed upon her, in the crucial moment at the whirlpool, that she
-must convince Fayne that to destroy one who seeks death would give no
-satisfaction to a seeker after vengeance. She had made him see that the
-most effective way of wreaking his revenge would be to prevent her taking
-her own life and force her to live with him again as in the old days.
-What, indeed, could be greater punishment than that?
-
-So once again the wily adventuress had tricked poor Henry Fayne. It had
-been a close thing, but her lightning wits had saved her to look forward
-enchantedly to the prospect of other adventures. Though she had, in
-fact, tired of life, she had weakened before death; yet the fortitude
-of skillful artifice underlying that physical fear bespoke such a
-resourcefulness as I had never before seen in any woman.
-
-She had spoken more truth than she knew when she said that Henry Fayne
-was dead, for, mentally, he no longer existed.
-
-But Leanor had one more card to play. When she had outlined her campaign,
-I sat aghast at the frank inhumanity of her plans for the morrow. She
-had already made arrangements with the native officials of the nearby
-village. She was to appear in court and testify, and I was to be summoned
-to give evidence before the committing judge. Henry Fayne was to be
-ruthlessly chucked into the Acorn Insane Asylum!
-
-After Leanor had retired to her apartment I lingered a while in the
-fragrant night to smoke a cigar and meditate, for I was badly upset by
-her pitiless resolve. As I sat reviewing the strange events of the day,
-the dark figure of a man, half bent and retreating rapidly among the
-dappled shadows of the palms, startled me unpleasantly.
-
-At my first glimpse of the skulker, some sixth sense told me that he had
-been eavesdropping Leanor and me from under the elevated porch on which I
-sat. As soon as the flitting shadow had melted into the gloom I slipped
-off the porch and investigated.
-
-My half-formed suspicion was confirmed. The eavesdropper’s footprints
-were quite distinct. He had crouched directly under the chairs which the
-adventuress and I had occupied.
-
-I did not retire until an hour later. An indescribable feeling of dread
-had, though for no adequate reason, begun to weigh upon my spirits and to
-nag my nerves.
-
-The first faint glimmer of dawn was in the east when something touched
-me softly on the shoulder. I remembered that I had left my porch window
-open, and sprang up in a sudden flurry of alarm, but my nerves slackened
-quickly when the intruder, a black Jamaican, showed me his watchman’s
-badge.
-
-The old negro was afraid something had happened. He had heard stealthy
-footfalls upstairs, and somebody’s bedroom door was wide open. On looking
-into the room he had seen—!
-
-But at this point in his story he choked, overcome. He was an excitable
-and superstitious old black at best, but now he was fairly beside himself
-with a terror for which he had no explanation. The occupant of the room,
-I surmised, had gone out on the porch, properly enough, to smoke an
-early morning cigar. But the old watchman would not be reassured until I
-consented to accompany him up to the second floor.
-
-I noted, as we advanced along the corridor, that a door stood ajar. I
-tapped tentatively. No answer. I repeated the summons, louder. Still no
-answer. I walked in.
-
-The moonlight that flooded the porch outside filtered in, subdued,
-through the lace-curtained windows. It revealed a bed. In the center
-of the bed was the figure of a woman—all in snow white save a single
-dark-hued covering of some sort which sprawled across the full bosom.
-
-A nameless something made me fumble rather hurriedly for the electric
-switch. The bright light showed what I had dreaded, almost expected. The
-dark-colored garment was not a garment at all. It was blood.
-
-It dyed the white bosom repellently and, still welling from its fountain,
-was fast forming a ragged little pool on the bedcovering. Fair over the
-victim’s heart, the ornamented stag-horn handle of a heavy hunting-knife,
-none of the blade visible, stood up like a sinister monument, somehow
-increasingly familiar to my gaze; and after an instant’s reflection I
-could have sworn—so plainly did my eyes visualize the motive for this
-horror—that I beheld a single word scrawled in crimson along the mottled
-staghorn handle:
-
-“_VENGEANCE!_”
-
-
-
-
-Air Transportation Between Chicago and New York To Be Established
-
-
-Chicagoans will soon be able to run down to New York on business early
-one morning and be back home in time for breakfast the next day, if
-the plans for dirigible service between the two cities carry through.
-A number of prominent Americans are members of a corporation that is
-building several huge, helium-filled balloons in the Schutte-Lanz
-Company’s plant in Germany, according to Benedict Crowell, former
-secretary of war, who is the president of the new corporation. The
-airships will carry passengers and freight, it was announced.
-
-
-
-
-_It Was a Frightful, Incredible Thing, Found in the Amazon Valley_
-
-THE GRAY DEATH
-
-_By_ LOUAL B. SUGARMAN
-
-
-Unwaveringly, my guest sustained my perplexed and angry stare. Silently,
-he withstood the battering words I launched at him.
-
-He appeared quite unmoved by my reproaches, save for a dull red flush
-that crept up and flooded his face, as now and then I grew particularly
-bitter and biting in my tirade.
-
-At length I ceased. It was like hitting into a mass of feathers—there was
-no resistance to my blows. He had made no attempt to justify himself.
-After a momentous silence, he spoke his first word since we had entered
-the room.
-
-“I’m sorry, my friend; more sorry than you can imagine, but—I couldn’t
-help it. I simply could not touch her hand. The shock—so suddenly to come
-upon her—to see her as she was—I tell you, I forgot myself. Please convey
-to your wife my most abject apologies, will you? I am sorry, for I know I
-should have liked her very much. But—now I must go.”
-
-“You can’t go out in this storm,” I answered. “It’s out of the question.
-I’m sorry, too; sorry that you acted as you did—and more than sorry that
-I spoke to you as I did, just now. But I was angry. Can you blame me? I’d
-been waiting for this moment ever since I heard from you that you had
-come back from the Amazon—the moment when you, my best friend, and my
-wife were to meet. And then—why, damn it, man, I can’t understand it! To
-pull back, to shrink away as you did; even to refuse to take her hand or
-acknowledge the introduction! It was unbelievably rude. It hurt her, and
-it hurt me.”
-
-“I know it, and that is why I am so very sorry about it all. I can’t
-excuse myself, but I can tell you a story that may explain.”
-
-I saw, however, that for some reason he was reluctant to talk.
-
-“You need not,” I said. “Let’s drop the whole matter, and in the morning
-you can make your amends to Laura.”
-
-Anthony shook his head.
-
-“It’s not pleasant to talk about, but that was not my reason for
-hesitating. I was afraid you would not believe me if I did tell you.
-Sometimes truth strains one’s credulity too much. But I will tell you. It
-may do me good to talk about it, and, anyhow, it will explain why I acted
-as I did.
-
-“Your wife came in just after we entered. She had not yet removed her
-veil or gloves. They were gray. So was her dress. Her shoes—everything
-was gray. And she stood there, her hand outstretched—all in that color—a
-body covered with gray. I can’t help shuddering. _I can’t stand gray!_
-It’s the color of death. Can your nerves stand the dark?”
-
-I rose and switched off the lights. The room was plunged into darkness,
-save for the flicker of the flames in the fireplace and the intermittent
-flashes of lightning. The rain beat through the leafless branches outside
-with a monotonous, slithering _swish_ and rattled like ghostly fingers
-against the windows.
-
-“The light makes it hard to talk—of unbelievable things. One needs the
-darkness to hear of hell.”
-
-He paused. The _swir-r-r_ of the rain crept into the stillness of the
-room. My companion sighed. The firelight shone on his face, which floated
-in the darkness—a disembodied face, grown suddenly haggard.
-
-“A good night for this story, with the wind crying like a lost soul in
-the night. How I hate that sound! Ah, well!”
-
-There was a moment of silence.
-
-“It was not like this, though, that night when we started up the Amazon.
-No. Then it was warm and soft, and the stars seemed so near. The air was
-filled with scent of a thousand tropical blossoms. They grew rank on the
-shore.
-
-“There were four of us—two natives, myself and Von Housmann. It is of
-him I am going to tell you. He was a German—and a good man. A great
-naturalist, and a true friend. He sucked the poison from my leg once,
-when a snake had bitten me. I thanked him and said I’d repay him some
-day. I did—sooner than I had thought—with a bullet! I could not bear to
-see him suffer.”
-
-The man sat there, gazing into the flames—and I listened to the dripping
-rain fingering the bare boughs and _tap-tap-tapping_ on the roof above.
-
-My friend looked up.
-
-“I was seeing his face in the flames. God help him!... We had traveled
-for days—weeks—how long does not matter. We had camped and moved on; we
-had stopped to gather specimens—always deeper into that evil undergrowth.
-And as we moved on, Von Housmann and I grew close; one either grows to
-love or hate in such circumstances, and Sigmund was not the sort of man
-one would hate. I tell you, I loved that man!
-
-“One day we struck into a new place. We had long before left the tracks
-of other expeditions. We _trekked_ along, unmindful of the exotic beauty
-of our surroundings, when I saw our native, who was up ahead, stop short
-and sniff the air.
-
-“We stopped, too, and then I noticed what the keener, more primitive
-sense of our guide had detected first.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-“It was an odor. A strange odor, indefinable and sickening. It was filled
-with foreboding—evil. It smelt—_gray_! I can not describe it any other
-way. It smelt dead. It made me think of decay—decay, and mould and—ugly
-things. I shuddered. I looked at Von Housmann, and I saw that he, too,
-had noticed it.
-
-“‘What is that smell?’ I asked.
-
-“He shook his head.
-
-“‘Ach, dot iss new. I haf not smelled it before. But—I do not lige it. It
-iss not goot. Smells is goot or bat—und dot is not goot. I say, I do not
-lige dot smell.’
-
-“Neither did I. We went ahead, cautiously now. A curious sense pervaded
-the air. It puzzled me. Then it struck me: _silence_. Silence, as though
-the music of the spheres had suddenly been snuffed out. It was the utter
-cessation of the interminable chirping and chattering of the birds and
-monkeys and other small animals.
-
-“We had become so accustomed to that multitudinous babel that its
-absence was disturbing. It was—eerie. Yes, that’s the word. It made that
-first impression of lifelessness more intense. Not death, you understand.
-Even death has in it a thought of life, an element of being. But this was
-just—lifelessness.
-
-“The gray odor had become so strong it was wellnigh unbearable. Then we
-saw our guides running back to us. They rebelled. They refused to go
-beyond the line of trees ahead. They said it was _tabu_.
-
-“That ended it. No promise, no threat, nothing would move them. Do you
-know what a savage’s _tabu_ is? It is stronger than death. And this place
-was _tabu_. So we left them there with our stuff, and Sigmund and I went
-on alone. We reached the farthest line of trees and stopped on the edge
-of a clearing.
-
-“I can’t describe that sight to you. But I can see it—good God, how I
-can still see it! Sometimes I wake up in the night with that nightmarish
-picture in my eyes, and my nostrils filled with that ghoulish stench.
-
-“It was a field of gray; almost, I might have said, a field of _living_
-gray. And yet, it did not give the impression of life. It moved, although
-there was not a breath of wind; not a leaf on the trees quivered, but
-that mass of gray wiggled and crawled and undulated as though it were a
-huge gray shroud that was thrown over some monstrous jelly-like Thing.
-
-“And that Thing was writhing and twisting. The gray mass extended as far
-as I could see ahead; to the right the sandy shore of the river stopped
-it; and to the left and in front of us it terminated at a distance of a
-few yards away from the trees where a belt of sand intervened.
-
-“I don’t know how long we stood there, my friend Von Housmann and I. It
-fascinated us. At last he spoke.
-
-“‘_Heilige Mütter. Was kommt da?_ Vat in der name off all dot iss holy do
-you call dot? Nefer haf I seen such before. Eferyvere I haf traffeled,
-but nefer haf I seen a sight lige dot. I tell you, it makes my flesh
-crawl!’
-
-“‘It makes me sick to look at it,’ I answered. ‘It looks like—like living
-corruption.’
-
-“The old German shook his head. He was baffled. We knew we were looking
-upon something that no living mortal had ever gazed upon before. And our
-flesh crawled, as we watched that Thing writhing beneath its blanket of
-gray.
-
-“We walked slowly and cautiously across the strip of sand to the edge of
-the gray patch. As I bent over, the pungency of the odor bit into the
-membrane of my nostrils like an acid, and my eyes smarted.
-
-“And then I saw something that drove all other thoughts from my mind.
-The mass was a mosslike growth of tiny gray fungi. They were shaped like
-miniature mushrooms, but out of the top of each grew a countless number
-of antennae that twisted and writhed around ceaselessly in the air.
-
-“They seemed to be feeling and groping around for something, and it was
-this incessant movement that gave to the patch that quivering undulation
-which I had noticed before. I stared until my eyes ached.
-
-“‘What do you make of it?’ I asked my friend.
-
-“‘_Ach_, I do not know. It iss incompbrehensible. I haf nefer seen such
-a—a t’ing in my whole, long life. It iss, I should say, some sort off
-a fungoid growt’. Ya, it iss clearly dot. But der species—um, dot iss
-_not_ so clear. Und dose liddle feelers; on a fungus dot iss new. It iss
-unheard off. See, der _veddammte_ t’ings iss lige lifting fingers; dey
-svay und tvist lige dey vas feeling for somet’ings, not? I am egseedingly
-curious. Und, I am baffled—und, my frient, I do not lige dot.’
-
-“Impatiently, he reached out a stick he was carrying: a newlycut, stout
-cudgel of dried wood. He stirred around with it in the growth at his
-feet. And then a cry broke from his lips.
-
-“‘_Ach, du lieber Gott—gnadig Gott im Himmel! Sieh’ da!_’
-
-“I looked where he was pointing. His hand trembled violently. And little
-wonder! The stick, for about twelve inches up, was a mass of gray!
-
-“And as I watched, I saw, steadily growing before my eyes, that awful
-gray creep up and surround the wood. I’m not exaggerating; I tell you,
-in less time than it takes to tell, it had almost reached Von Housmann’s
-hand. He threw it from him with an exclamation of horror.
-
-“It fell in the gray growth and instantly vanished. It seemed to melt
-away.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-“Sigmund looked at me. He was pale. At last he sighed.
-
-“‘So-o-o! Ve learn. On vood it grows. I might haf guessed. Dot iss der
-reason dot no trees are here. It destroys dem. But so _schnell_; _ach_,
-lige fire it growed. My frendt, I lige dot stuff lesser _als_ before. It
-is not healt’y. But vat vill it not eat?’
-
-“I handed him my rifle. He took it, and with the muzzle poked the growth.
-Man, my hair fairly stood on end! Do you know anything about fungi? No?
-Well, I have never known or heard of any vegetable growth that would
-attack blue steel. But that stuff, I tell you, that rifle barrel sprouted
-a crop of that gray moss as readily and as quickly as had the wood!
-
-“I grabbed the gun and lifted it out of the patch. Already several inches
-of steel had been eaten—literally _eaten_—off. I held it up and watched
-that damnable gray crawl along the barrel. It just seemed to melt the
-metal. It melted like sealing wax, and great gray flakes dropped off to
-the ground.
-
-“Nearer and near it came; to the rear sight, the trigger-guard, the
-hammer. It was uncanny—like a dream. I stood there, paralyzed. I could
-not believe what my eyes told me was true. I looked at Sigmund. His mouth
-was open and his face was white as death. I laughed at his face. That
-seemed to tear away the mist. He yelled and pointed, and I looked down.
-
-“Not two inches from my hand was that mass. I could see those feelers
-reaching out toward my hand and I was sick. Instinctively, I threw the
-gun from me; aimlessly, blindly. It fell on the sand belt outside the
-gray mass.
-
-“Hardly had it struck the sand before the growth had reached the butt,
-and then there was nothing to be seen but a tiny patch of that gray,
-poisonous Thing. And as we looked, it began to melt. Gradually, steadily,
-it was disappearing.
-
-“‘Quick, quick,’ shouted Von Housmann, and we ran over to the spot. By
-bending over, we could see what was happening.
-
-“The feelers, or antennae, which we had noticed before, had vanished, but
-instead, at the bases of each individual plant, were similar tendrils.
-But more of them—thousands and thousands of them all feeling and groping
-frantically about. And as they swayed and twisted and brushed the sand,
-one by one they shriveled up and seemed to withdraw into the parent body.
-
-“And gradually this nucleus itself shrank and withered, until it was no
-more than a tiny gray speck on the sand. Soon that was all that was left;
-a lot of tiny whitish particles, much lighter in color than the original
-plant, scattered around on the sand.
-
-“I looked at Von Housmann, and he looked at me. After a long interval, he
-spoke. He spoke slowly, almost as though it were a painful effort.
-
-“‘Ant’ony, ve haf seen a—miracle. From vat, or how, or ven, dot
-hell-growt’ sprang, I do not know. I do not know how many, many years it
-has stood here; may be it has been for centuries. But I do know this: if
-dot sand was not here—vell, I shudder to t’ink off vat vould be today.’
-
-“I stared.
-
-“‘You do not understand? _Ach_, so! You haf vat happened to dot stick?
-Und to dot gun of steel? So! Look, now.’
-
-“He took off his hat and went over to the border of the patch. He
-touched—just barely touched the brim of the hat to the gray matter and
-held it up. Already a growth was moving up the linen. He nodded, then
-threw it away, onto the sand. Speechless, we watched it fade away under
-the merciless attack of that horrible stuff, and then, in turn, the gray
-fungoid growth wither and disappear.
-
-“‘Now do you understand? Do you see vat I meant? Vood, steel,
-linen—eferyt’ing vat it touches it _eats_. It grows fast—like flame in
-dry sticks. All-consuming. Aber—_siest du_—dot sand—ven it touched dot,
-it died. It starved. Und see! Look close—more closer still at dot sand.
-Do you see anything odd about it?’
-
-“I shook my head. It looked very fine and light, but I could not see
-anything unusual.
-
-“‘No? Iss it not glass, dot sand? Look at it und at der sand vere dot
-T’ing has not been, and see if it is not so different.’
-
-“I picked up some sand from under my foot. And then I saw what _he_ had
-seen at once. The sand in my hand was coarser, dirtier—in short, like
-any fine-grained sand you may have seen. But the sand where the Grey had
-fallen was clear, glasslike. It was almost transparent, and I saw that
-what was there was a mass of silicon particles. I nodded.
-
-“‘Yes,’ I said, ‘I see now. That stuff has eaten out every particle of
-mineral, of dirt and dust, but not the silicon!’
-
-“‘Egsactly! Und dot iss vat has safed us from—Gott only knows vot! I
-do not know what dot stuff vill eat, but I _do_ know it vill not eat
-silicon. Vy? _I_ do not know. Dot iss yet a mystery. So—it starts,—_ach_,
-dot too, I do not know—but it starts somewhere. Und it eats und grows,
-und grows and eats, and eferyt’ing vot it touches it consumes—egcept
-sand. Sand stops it.
-
-“‘It eats out der stuff in der sand, but not der silica, und starves and
-dies. It is a miracle. If der sand vas not here—_ach, Gott!_—it vould
-keep on going until—vell—I do not know! I haf nefer seen dot before. I
-am intrigued, und I am going to take dot stuff—oh, only a liddle bit—und
-I shall not rest until I haf learned something about it. Und, because I
-haf seen it does not lige sand, I vill make for it a cage—a liddle box of
-glass, und study it lige it vas a bug. Not?’
-
-“We returned to where our natives still stood with our packs. We quickly
-fitted together some microscopic slides into a rough box and bound it
-about with string. With it, we returned to the edge of the gray patch.
-Von Housmann knelt down and carefully scooped up a bit of the fungus with
-a glass spatula he had brought along. He dumped this into his box and
-waited. In five minutes it had disappeared. He looked up blankly.
-
-“‘You forget, Sigmund,’ I said, smiling at his woeful expression. ‘It
-starves on silicon. It won’t live in glass.’
-
-“‘_Ach. Dumkopf!_ Of course! I haf forgot dot. But, ve vill fool dot
-hell-plant. He goes yet on hunger-strike—no? Ve try now dot forcible
-feeding.’
-
-“He took out his knife and cut from a near-by tree several small
-splinters.
-
-“Ve vill feed him, so. Dot vood, it vill be for him a greadt feast, und
-he shall eat und eat, und we vill study him und see vot we vill see.’
-
-“Laughing, he bent over and shook out the tiny gray residue which was in
-the box. He dropped in a sliver of wood and was bending over to refill
-his box when I felt a sting on my foot. I looked down, and my heart stood
-still.
-
-“On my shoe, just in between the laces, was a spot of gray. I could not
-move. I was cold. I can not describe how I felt, but I seemed turned to
-stone. My flesh quivered and shrank and I was sick—very sick. Sigmund
-looked up, startled, and then he looked at my feet.
-
-“The next thing I knew I was on my back, my foot in his hand. One slash
-of his knife across the thongs which laced my boot, and he jerked it off.
-
-“The biting grew worse. I heard him gasp, and then I felt a sharp pain.
-My head swam and I must have fainted. I regained consciousness—I don’t
-know how soon after—and I found myself back under the trees. I looked
-at my foot, which was throbbing and burning like fire. It was swathed
-in a bandage that Von Housmann had taken from his emergency kit and was
-wrapping around the instep. It was deeply stained with blood. I moved,
-and he looked up. He smiled when he saw I was conscious.
-
-“‘Dot was a close shave—yes? It had just eaten into der shoe as I pulled
-it off und one spot—lige a bencil dot—on your skin vas gray. So I cut it
-out and all around it, und so you haf a hole in your foot, but—you haf
-your foot. Now so! You lie here, und I get der niggers and ve take you to
-bed.’
-
-“A tent was soon erected and I was carried into it. For two days I lay
-there, delirious half the time. Sigmund never left my side. He even
-slept there. He was insistent that it was his fault. He said one of the
-apparently dead fungi had dropped on my shoe and had revived there. That
-is, the plant, instead of dying, had shriveled up, but the life-nucleus
-was still strong. I shudder even now when I think of what might have been.
-
-“At the end of the third day I was able to hobble about a little with
-the aid of a cane. That afternoon Sigmund came to me and asked if I
-would care to go with him to fill his little glass box. I refused, and
-he laughed. It was the last time I ever heard him laugh. I begged him to
-leave that stuff alone.
-
-“Still laughing, he made some light reply and left me. I lay in my cot.
-I was filled with forebodings. The heat was intense, and I must have
-dropped off to sleep. I dreamed horrible, troublesome, weird dreams. I
-awoke, bathed in a cold sweat. I felt sure something was wrong, that some
-one was calling for me. I got to my feet and left my tent. No one was in
-sight. I tried to laugh at my premonition. I bitterly regretted that I
-had allowed my friend to override my persuasions.
-
-“Hurrying as much as was possible, I started toward the clearing. My
-wound throbbed and ached. It tortured me. I seemed weighed down. Once I
-stumbled in my eagerness. It was horrible. Like a nightmare.
-
-“I must have covered half the distance when I heard a scream. What
-a shriek it was! I wake up nights even now hearing it. It was
-unrecognizable. Like some unearthly animal. Just that one scream. My
-stick hindered me. I threw it away and ran.
-
-“My blood was cold in my veins, but I felt not one twinge of pain in my
-_foot_. At last I came to the edge of the clearing. And there—God, it
-makes me sick even now to think of it.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-The speaker paused; his face was chalky, and he shuddered and buried his
-face in his hands. I think he was crying.
-
-Outside, the wind still howled, dully, monotonously, eerily. Sometimes it
-would shriek and scream. Then my friend’s voice again—level, dead, cold.
-
-“I looked out; I saw Sigmund standing on the sand. I can see him as
-plainly as though he were here now. His face was ashen. He was looking
-down. At his feet were the fragments of the glass box he had made.
-
-“He was holding out his hands, looking at them. They were gray. And they
-writhed and twisted, but his arms were still. He was not even trembling.
-My tongue clove to the roof of my mouth, and my throat was dry—but at
-last I called to him.
-
-“‘Sigmund—Sigmund!’ I cried. ‘For God’s sake—’
-
-“He looked up, and, I tell you, I never want to see such a face again!
-I can never forget it. The face of a soul in torture. He looked at me
-and held out his arms. His hands were gone—flaked off in large, gray,
-writhing drops to the sand at his feet!
-
-“He tried to smile, but couldn’t.
-
-“Another gray—Thing—dropped off. I was dizzy with sickness. It was
-unbelievable. And then he spoke. His voice was well-nigh unrecognizable.
-It croaked and broke:
-
-“‘Done for, my friendt. I feel it eating to my heart. Be merciful and
-help me. _Shoot_—quick, through the foreheadt!’
-
-“His words beat through the stupor clouding my brain, I started toward
-him—hands out-stretched. I could not speak.
-
-“‘_Um Gottes Willen, bleibt da!_ Stop! Stop!’
-
-“The words brought me up to a stop.
-
-“‘Sigmund! My friend! What—?’
-
-“‘Do not come near me! Vould you also be so tormented? Vat dot Gray
-touches it consumes. Do not argue, I say, but _shoot!_ _Heilige Mütter!_
-Vy do you not shoot?’
-
-“His voice rose into a shriek of agony. What was left of one arm had
-sloughed off—the other was almost gone. A little mound of gray grew
-larger at his feet. His flesh was consumed; skin, blood and bone,
-absorbed by that vile gray Thing, and he shrieked in agony and prayer.
-Both arms were gone, and the stuff at his feet had already begun to cut
-through his boots.
-
-“I shot him—between his eyes. I saw him fall, and I fainted. When I came
-to, there was only a mound of tiny gray fungi, greedily reaching their
-hellish tentacles for sustenance and slowly shriveling up into tiny light
-gray specks of dust on a glossy patch of sand.”
-
-
-
-
-Savants No Longer Know All Things
-
-
-“Men in the business of knowing things have taken a tip from the
-plumbers, carpenters and plasterers,” announced Friar McCollister, one
-of the University of Chicago literati. “No longer is it possible to go
-to a hoary old gentleman with a pile of books and a skull on his desk
-and ask him any question, from the date of the birth of Copernicus to
-the conjugations of the verb ‘to know’ in Sanscrit, and get an answer.
-The scholar nowadays has learned to say what the plumber says when you
-ask him to fix the hole he has made in the wall: ‘That is not in my
-department.’ I found this out the other day when I tried to get some
-information on the discovery of a human skull three million years old.
-
-“First, I went to the information office of the University. There I
-encountered a sprightly young man who turned out to be a professor of
-sociology. But he didn’t know anything about men three million years old.
-He only studied living men, he said. ‘Better go over to Haskell Museum,’
-he told me. ‘They have some skulls and mummies over there.’
-
-“I ran up three flights of stairs and into a dusty old room where I saw
-a Dr. Edgerton. He was copying strange characters out of a book yellow
-with age. When I put my question he replied that the only ancients he
-knew were Egyptian mummies. He said I should see an anthropologist. Back
-to the information office to see where they kept the anthropologists.
-
-“They sent me up to Walker Museum, where a bland young man said, ‘Freddie
-Starr is not in, but you don’t want an anthropologist, anyway. You want
-to see an ethnologist.’
-
-“When I found one, after dogging him all over the campus, he told me that
-the matter really belonged in the department of geology. From there they
-sent me to see the department of paleontology. At last I located it in
-a cubby-hole of a museum which I didn’t even know was there, although I
-have been on the campus three years.
-
-“‘But, my dear sir,’ replied the head of the department to my
-question, ‘that is not in my department. What you want is a vertebrate
-paleontologist, and I am only a plain paleontologist. At present we have
-no vertebrate paleontologist at the University. The last one died a few
-years ago.’
-
-“Well, I gave up my search,” said Mr. McCollister. “This age of
-specialization is too much for me.”
-
-
-
-
-Ancient Legend Recalled When Misfortune Attends Tut’s Discoverers
-
-
-There is an old legend to the effect that whoever molests the final
-resting-place of a Pharaoh will be afflicted with the curse of the
-ancient rulers; and recent events have revived this superstition.
-
-After thirty-three years of patient, ceaseless toil, Howard Carter, the
-now famous Egyptologist, discovered the tomb of a powerful Pharaoh. He
-was a very sincere man, and devoted to his life work all of his energy.
-Just when success and reward for his labor was within his grasp, he was
-stricken down with a baffling disease. His condition became very serious
-and physicians said that if he lived he would probably be an invalid for
-a long time. Shortly before Carter’s illness, Lord Carnarvon, who was
-financing the expedition, and who was personally supervising the work,
-suddenly died.
-
-Nobody seems to know just what killed him. Some attribute his death to
-the effects of an insect bite, some say that he was poisoned by some
-ancient death-potion with which he came in contact while in the tomb, and
-others declare that his death was the vengeance of King Tut-Ankh-Amen.
-
-If such a legend could be credited anywhere, the Theban valley would
-be that place. By day nothing disturbs the place except the sound of
-the pick-axes and shovels of the native workmen. By night the stillness
-is broken only by the hooting of owls and the cries of jackals and
-wild-cats. The spectator is awed by the solemnity of the great,
-precipitous sandstone cliffs that stand sentinel on either side of the
-valley. In the midst of the silence and solitude one feels himself
-standing on the brink of two worlds, gazing into a vista of the unknown.
-
-
-
-
-_The Author of “Whispering Wires” Offers Another Thriller to WEIRD TALES
-Readers_—
-
-The Voice in the Fog
-
-_By_ HENRY LEVERAGE
-
-
-The _Seriphus_ was a ten thousand ton, straight bow ocean tanker, and
-her history was the common one of Clyde-built ships—a voyage here and
-a passage there, charters by strange oil companies, petrol for Brazil,
-crude petroleum that went to Asia (for anointment purposes among the
-heathen) and once there was a hurried call to some unpronounceable Aegean
-port where the _Seriphus_ acted against the Turks in their flare-up after
-the Great War.
-
-The ordinary and usual—the up and down the trade routes—passed away from
-the _Seriphus_ when Ezra Morgan, senior captain in the service of William
-Henningay and Son, took over the tanker and drove her bow into strange
-Eastern seas, loading with oil at California and discharging cargo in a
-hundred unknown ports.
-
-Of Ezra Morgan it was said that he had the daring of a Norseman and
-the thrift of a Maine Yankee; he worked the _Seriphus_ for everything
-the tanker could give William Henningay and Son; he ranted against the
-outlandish people of the Orient and traded with them, on the side, for
-all that he could gain for his own personal benefit.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Trading skippers and engineers with an inclination toward increasing
-wage by rum-running and smuggling were common in the Eastern service.
-Ezra Morgan’s rival in that direction aboard the _Seriphus_ ruled the
-engine-room and took pride in declaring that every passage was a gold
-mine for the skipper and himself.
-
-The chief engineer of the _Seriphus_ saw no glory in steam, save
-dollars; he mopped up oil to save money. His name was Paul Richter—a
-brutal-featured man given to boasting about his daughter, ashore, and
-what a lady he was making of her.
-
-Paul Richter—whom Morgan hated and watched—was far too skilled in
-anything pertaining to steam and its ramifications to be removed from his
-position aboard the _Seriphus_. Henningay, Senior, believed in opposing
-forces on his many tankers—it led to rivalry and efficiency, instead of
-closeheadedness and scheming against owners.
-
-The _Seriphus_, after a round passage to Laichau Bay, which is in the
-Gulf of Pechili, returned to San Francisco and was dry-docked near
-Oakland, for general overhauling.
-
-Richter, after making an exact and detailed report to Henningay, Jr.,
-visited the opera, banked certain money he had made on the round-passage,
-then went south to his daughter’s home. He found trouble in the house;
-Hylda, his daughter, had a heart affair with a marine electrician,
-Gathright by name, a young man with a meager wage and unbounded ambition.
-
-Through the Seven Seas, from the time of his Bavarian wife’s death, from
-cancer of the breast, Richter, chief engineer of the _Seriphus_, had
-sweated, slaved, saved and smuggled contraband from port in order to say:
-
-“This is my daughter! _Look at her!_”
-
-Now, as Richter discovered, Hylda, twenty-seven years of age, somewhat
-prim and musical, had given her promise to an electrician whom the
-engineer believed was not fit to dust her shoes. Richter, used to
-breaking and thrashing coolie oilers, ordered Gathright from the house
-and locked up his daughter.
-
-She cried for seven days. Gathright was seen in town. Richter’s rage gave
-way to an engineer’s calculation.
-
-“What for I study in University and college? Why do I hold certificates?
-I fix Gathright!”
-
-No oil was smoother than Richter’s well-laid plan; he sent Hylda away and
-met Gathright.
-
-“All right about my daughter,” he told the electrician. “You go one
-voyage with me—we’ll see Henningay—I’ll fix you up so that you can draw
-one hundred and fifty dollars in wage, with a rating as electrician
-aboard the _Seriphus_.”
-
-Gathright went with Richter to San Francisco. They recrossed the Bay,
-without seeing Henningay, Jr., and, at dusk, climbed over the shoring
-timbers and went aboard the _Seriphus_. Richter’s voice awoke echoes in
-the deserted ship and dry-dock:
-
-“Come, I show you my dynamo and motors. We go to the boiler-room first,
-where the pumps are.”
-
-The boiler-room, forward the engine-room of the tanker, was a place
-of many snakelike pipes, valves, sea-plates and oily seepage from the
-feedtanks. The _Seriphus_ was a converted oil-burner, having been built
-before crude petroleum was used for steaming purposes. Three double-end
-Scotch boilers made the steam that drove the tanker’s triple-expansion
-engine.
-
-Richter knew the way down to the boiler-room, blindfolded. He struck
-matches, however, to guide Gathright, and remarked that the newer ships
-of Henningay’s fleet had a storage-battery reserve for lighting purposes
-when the dynamo ceased running.
-
-Gathright, somewhat suspicious of Hylda’s father, took care to keep
-two steps behind the chief-engineer. They reached and ducked under
-the bulkhead beam where the door connected the engine-room with the
-boiler-room. Richter found a flashlamp, snapped it on, swung its rays
-around and about as if showing Gathright his new duties.
-
-“There’s a motor-driven feed-pump,” he said. “Something’s the matter with
-the motor’s commutator. It sparks under load—can you fix it up?”
-
-There was a professional challenge in the chief engineer’s voice;
-Gathright forgot caution, got down on his knees, leaned toward the motor
-and ran one finger over the commutator bars. They seemed polished and
-free from carbon.
-
-Richter reversed his grip on the flashlamp, swung once, twice, and
-smashed the battery-end of the lamp down on Gathright’s head, just over
-the top of the electrician’s right ear.
-
-Gathright fell as if pole-axed and dropped with his hands twitching on a
-metal plate.
-
-Striking a match, Richter surveyed the electrical engineer.
-
-“Good!” he grunted. “Now I put you where nobody’ll ever look—unless I
-give the order.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-A stump of candle, stuck by wax to a feed-pipe, allowed Richter
-illumination sufficient to work by. Swearing, sweating, listening once,
-he fitted a spanner to bolt-heads on a man-plate in the spare boiler and
-removed the stubborn bolts until the plate clanged at his feet.
-
-Gathright was a slender man, easy to insert through the man-hole; Richter
-had no trouble at all lifting the electrician and thrusting him out of
-sight.
-
-It seemed to the engineer, as he hesitated, that Hylda’s lover moaned
-once and filled the boiler with a hollow sound.
-
-Hesitation passed; and Richter swallowed his superstitious fears, put
-back the man-hole plate, bolted it tighter than it ever was before,
-almost stripping the threads, and stepped back, mopping his brow with the
-sleeve of a shore-coat.
-
-There was nothing very unusual in Richter’s further actions that evening.
-The ship-keeper, who came aboard at daylight, long before the dry-dock
-men began work, noticed a wet shore-hose, a thin plume of steam aft the
-tanker’s squat funnel, and there was a trailing line of smoke drifting
-aslant the _Seriphus’_ littered deck.
-
-“Been testing that spare boiler,” explained Richter, when the ship-keeper
-ducked through the bulkhead door. “I think it’s tight an’ unscaled, but
-th’ starboard one will need new tubes and general cleaning. Get me some
-soap—I want to wash up.”
-
-Richter dried his hands on a towel, tossed it toward the motor-driven
-feed-pump, then, when he left the boiler-room, his glance ranged from the
-tightly-bolted man-hole cover up to a gauge on a steam-pipe. The gauge
-read seventy-pounds—sufficient to parboil a heavier man than Hylda’s
-lover.
-
-“I think that was a good job,” concluded the first engineer of the
-_Seriphus_.
-
-The second engineer of the tanker, a Scot with a burr on his voice like a
-file rasping the edge of a plate, stood watching Richter balance himself
-as the stout chief came along a shoring-beam.
-
-“I mark ye ha’ steam up,” commented the Scotchman, when Richter climbed
-over the dry dock’s wall.
-
-“Yes, in the spareboiler.”
-
-Mr. S. V. Fergerson tapped a pipe on his heel.
-
-“I made an inspection, myself, of that, not later than yesterday
-forenoon. She was tight as a drum an’ free from scale. I left th’
-man-hole—”
-
-“Damn badly gasketed!” growled Richter.
-
-Fergerson started to explain something; but the chief was in a hurry to
-get away from sight of the _Seriphus_. There was a memory on the tanker
-that required a drink or two in order to bring forgetfulness. Richter
-gave the Scot an order that admitted of no answering back.
-
-“Go aboard an’ blow off steam! That boiler’s all right!”
-
-A roar, when Richter strode past the dry-dock’s sheds, caused him to
-wheel around and listen. Fergerson, according to orders, was blowing off
-the steam from the spare boiler.
-
-Something, perhaps water or waste, clogged the pipe; and the escaping
-vapor whistled, sputtered, and rose to a high piercing note that sounded
-to the chief’s irritated nerves like the cry of a soul in agony. The note
-died, resumed its piercing screeching. Richter’s arm and hand shook when
-he mopped his brow and drew a wet sleeve down with an angry motion.
-
-In fancy the noise that came from the _Seriphus’_ starboard side, echoed
-and deflated by the hollow dock, was Gathright calling for Hylda. Richter
-covered his ears and staggered away.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Ezra Morgan hastened such repairs as were required for making the
-_Seriphus_ ready for sea; the tanker left the dry-dock, steamed out the
-Golden Gate, and took aboard oil at a Southern California port.
-
-All tanks, a well-lashed deck load of cased-lubricant—consigned to a
-railroad in Manchuri—petroleum for the furnaces, brought the _Seriphus_
-down to the Plimsoll Mark; she drove from shore and crossed the Pacific
-where, at three God-forsaken Eastern roadsteads, she unloaded and made
-agents for the oil-purchasers happy with shipments delivered on time.
-
-The romance of caravan routes, and pale kerosene lamps burning in
-Tartar tents, escaped both Ezra Morgan and Richter; they went about
-their business of changing American and English minted gold for certain
-contrabands much wanted in the States. The chief engineer favored
-gum-opium as a road to riches; Ezra dealt in liquors and silks, uncut
-gems and rare laces.
-
-Fortunately for the chief engineer’s peace of mind, the spare, double-end
-Scotch boiler was not used on the Russian voyage. Gathright was forgotten
-and Hylda, safe in an eastern music school, was not likely to take up
-with another objectionable lover. Richter, relieved of a weight, went
-about the engine-room and boiler-room humming a score of tunes, all set
-to purring dynamos, clanking pumps, and musical cross-heads.
-
-At mid-Pacific, on a second voyage—this time to an oilless country, if
-ever there were one, Mindanao—a frightened water-tender came through
-the bulkhead door propelled by scalding steam, and there was much to do
-aboard the _Seriphus_. The port boiler had blown out a tube; the spare,
-midship boiler was filled with fresh water and the oil-jets started.
-
-Richter, stripped to the waist, it being one hundred and seventeen
-degrees hot on deck, drove his force to superhuman effort. Ezra Morgan,
-seven hours after the accident, had the steam and speed he ordered, in no
-uncertain tones, through the bridge speaking-tube.
-
-Fergerson, a quiet man always, had occasion, the next day, to enter the
-chief’s cabin, where Richter sat writing a letter to Hylda, which he
-expected to post via a homeward bound ship. Richter glared at the second
-engineer.
-
-“That spare boiler—” began Fergerson.
-
-“What of it?”
-
-“Well, mon, it’s been foamin’ an’ a gauge-glass broke, an’ there’s
-something wrong wi’ it.”
-
-“We can’t repair th’ port boiler until we reach Mindanao.”
-
-Fergerson turned to go.
-
-“Ye have m’ report,” he said acidly. “That boiler’s bewitched, or
-somethin’.”
-
-“Go aft!” snarled Richter, who resumed writing his letter.
-
-He hesitated once, chewed on the end of the pen, tried to frame the words
-he wanted to say to Hylda. Then he went on:
-
- “—_expect to return to San Francisco within thirty-five days.
- Keep up your music—forget Gathright—I’ll get you a good man,
- with straight shoulders and a big fortune, when I come back and
- have time to look around._”
-
-Richter succeeded in posting the letter, along with the Captain’s mail,
-when the _Seriphus_ spoke a Government collier that afternoon and sheered
-close enough to toss a package aboard. Ezra Morgan leaned over the
-bridge-rail and eyed the smudge of smoke and plume of steam that came
-from the tanker’s squat funnel. He called for Richter, who climbed the
-bridge-ladder to the captain’s side.
-
-“We’re only logging nine, point five knots,” said Ezra Morgan. “Your
-steam is low—it’s getting lower. What’s th’ matter? Saving oil?”
-
-“That spare boiler is foaming,” the chief explained.
-
-“Damn you and your spare boiler! What business had you leaving San
-Francisco with a defective boiler? Your report to Mr. Henningay stated
-that everything was all right in engine-room and boiler-room.”
-
-“Foam comes from soap or—something else in the water.”
-
-“Something else—”
-
-Richter got away from Ezra Morgan on a pretense of going below to the
-boiler-room. Instead of going below, however, he went aft and leaned
-over the taffrail. Somehow or other, he feared that spare boiler and the
-consequence of conscience.
-
-Limping, with three-quarters of the necessary steam pressure, the
-_Seriphus_ reached Mindanao and was forced to return to California
-without repairs to the port boiler. While repairs, new tubes and
-tube-sheet were put in place by boilersmiths, Richter saw his daughter,
-who had come west from music school.
-
-The change in her was pronounced; she spoke not at all of Gathright,
-whose disappearance she could not understand; and Richter, keen where his
-daughter was concerned, realized that her thinness and preoccupation was
-on account of the missing electrician.
-
-“I get you a fine fellow,” he promised Hylda.
-
-He brought several eligible marine engineers to the house. Hylda snubbed
-them and cried in secret.
-
-An urgent telegram called Richter back to the _Seriphus_. He made two
-long voyages, one down Chili-way, the other half around the world, before
-the tanker’s bow was turned toward California. Much time had elapsed from
-the night he had thrust Gathright into the spare boiler and turned on the
-oil-jets beneath its many tubes. Once, in Valparaiso, an under engineer
-pointed out red rust leaking from the gauge-glass of the spare boiler.
-
-“Looks like blood,” commented this engineer.
-
-Richter scoffed, but that afternoon he drank himself stupid on kummel,
-obtained from an engineer’s club ashore. Another time, just after the
-tanker left the port of Aden on her homebound passage, a stowaway crawled
-out from beneath the cold boiler and gave Richter the fright of his life.
-
-“Why, mon,” said Fergerson, who was present in the boiler-room, “that’s
-only a poor wisp o’ an Arab.”
-
-“I thought it was a ghost,” blabbered Richter.
-
-Barometer pressure rose when the _Seriphus_ neared mid-Pacific. Ezra
-Morgan predicted a typhoon before the tanker was on the longitude of
-Guam. Long rollers came slicing across the _Seriphus’_ bow, drenched the
-forecastle, filled the ventilators and flooded the boiler-room.
-
-Richter went below, braced himself in the rolling engine-room, listened
-to his engines clanking their sturdy song, then waddled over the gratings
-and ducked below the beam that marked the bulkhead door. An oiler in high
-rubber-boots lunged toward the chief engineer.
-
-“There’s something inside th’ spare boiler!” shouted the man. “Th’
-boiler-room crew won’t work, sir.”
-
-Richter waded toward a frightened group all of whom were staring at
-the spare boiler. A hollow rattling sounded when the tanker heaved and
-pitched—as if some one were knocking bony knuckles against the stubborn
-iron plates.
-
-“A loose bolt,” whispered Richter. “Keep th’ steam to th’ mark, or I’ll
-wipe a Stillson across th’ backs of all of you,” he added in a voice that
-they could hear and understand.
-
-Superstition, due to the menacing storm and high barometer, the uncanny
-noises in the racked boiler-room, Richter’s bullying manner, put fear in
-the hearts of the deck crew. Oil-pipes clogged, pumps refused to work,
-valves stuck and could scarcely be moved.
-
-“I’ve noo doot,” Fergerson told his Chief, “there’s a ghost taken up its
-abode wi’ us.”
-
-Richter drank quart after quart of trade-gin.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The barometer became unsteady, the sky hazy, the air melting hot, and a
-low, rugged cloud bank appeared over the _Seriphus’_ port bow.
-
-Down fell the barometer, a half-inch, almost, and the avalanche of rain
-and wind that struck the freighter was as if Thor was hammering her iron
-plates.
-
-Ezra Morgan, unable to escape from the typhoon’s center, prepared to ride
-out the storm by bringing the _Seriphus_ up until she had the sea on the
-bow, and he had held her there by going half speed ahead. A night of
-terror ruled the tanker; the decks were awash, stays snapped, spume rose
-and dashed over the squat funnel aft the bridge.
-
-Morning, red-hued, with greenish patches, revealed a harrowed ocean,
-waves of tidal height, and astern lay a battered hulk—a freighter,
-dismasted, smashed, going down slowly by the bow.
-
-“A Japanese tramp,” said Ezra Morgan. “Some _Marau_ or other, out of the
-Carolines bound for Yokohama.”
-
-Richter, stupid from trade-gin, was on the bridge with the Yankee skipper.
-
-“We can’t help her,” the engineer said heavily. “I think we got all we
-can do to save ourselves.”
-
-Ezra Morgan entertained another opinion. The storm had somewhat subsided,
-and the wind was lighter, but the waves were higher than ever he had
-known them. They broke over the doomed freighter like surf on a reef.
-
-“Yon’s a distress signal flying,” said Ezra Morgan. “There’s a few seamen
-aft that look like drowned rats. We’ll go before th’ sea—I’ll put th’ sea
-abart th’ beam, an’ we’ll outboard oil enough to lower a small-boat an’
-take those men off that freighter.”
-
-The maneuver was executed, the screw turned slowly, oil was poured
-through the waste-pipes and spread magically down the wind until the
-freighter’s deck, from aft the forehouse, could be seen above the waves.
-
-Over the patch of comparative calm oars dipped, and a mate, in charge of
-the small boat lowered from the _Seriphus_, succeeded in getting off the
-survivors who were clinging to the freighter’s taffrail.
-
-The small boat lived in a sea that had foundered big ships. It returned
-to the tanker’s bow; and the four men, bruised, broken, all half-dead
-from immersion, were hoisted to the forepeak and taken aft. Two were
-Japanese sailors and two were Americans—a wireless operator and an
-engineer. The engineer had a broken leg which required setting, and the
-wireless operator was in a bad fix; wreckage had stove in his features,
-and twisted his limbs.
-
-Ezra Morgan was a rough and ready surgeon-doctor; he turned the
-_Seriphus_ over to the first-mate and made a sick room out of Richter’s
-cabin. The chief protested.
-
-“Get below to your damn steam!” roared Ezra Morgan. “You hated to see me
-bring aboard these poor seamen; you said I wasted fuel oil; your breath
-smells like a gin-mill. Below with you, sir!”
-
-The engine-room and boiler-room of the tanker, she being in water
-ballast, was not unlike an inferno; the first-mate, acting on Ezra
-Morgan’s instructions, drove the _Seriphus_ at three-quarter speed into a
-series of head-on waves; the ship rolled and yawed, tossed, settled down
-astern, then her screw raced in mingled foam and brine.
-
-Richter’s stomach belched gas; he became sea-sick, climbed into a
-foul-smelling “ditty-box” of a cabin, aft the engine-room, and attempted
-to sleep off the effect of the gin. Picture-post-cards, mostly of
-actresses, a glaring electric over the bunk, oil and water swishing the
-metal deck below, and the irritating clank of irregular-running engines
-drove sleep away from him.
-
-Fergerson, the silent second-engineer, came into the “ditty-box” at eight
-bells, or four o’clock. Fergerson’s thumb jerked forward.
-
-“I’ll have t’ use that spare boiler,” said he.
-
-“What’s th’ matter, now?”
-
-“Feed-pipes clogged in starb’ard one, sir.”
-
-“Use it,” said Richter.
-
-Steam was gotten up on the spare, double-end Scotch boiler; the
-starboard boiler was allowed to cool; Fergerson, despite the tanker’s
-rolling motion, succeeded in satisfying Ezra Morgan by keeping up the
-three-quarter speed set by the skipper.
-
-Richter sobered when the last of the trade-gin was gone; the _Seriphus_
-was between Guam and ’Frisco; the heavy seas encountered were the
-afterkick of the simoon.
-
-Rolling drunkenly, from habit, the chief went on the bridge and asked
-about getting back his comfortable cabin aft. Ezra Morgan gave him no
-satisfaction.
-
-“Better stay near your boilers,” advised the captain. “Everything’s gone
-to hell, sir, since you changed from kummel to gin!”
-
-“Are not th’ injured seamen well yet?”
-
-“Th’ wireless chap’s doing all right—but th’ engineer of that Japanese
-freighter is hurt internally. You can’t have that cabin, this side of San
-Francisco.”
-
-“What were two Americans doing in that cheap service?”
-
-Ezra Morgan glanced sharply at Richter.
-
-“Everybody isn’t money mad—like you. There’s many a good engineer, and
-mate, too, in th’ Japanese Merchant Marine. Nippon can teach us a thing
-or two—particularly about keeping Scotch boilers up to th’ steaming
-point.”
-
-This cut direct sent Richter off the bridge; he encountered a bandaged
-and goggled survivor of the freighter’s wreck at the head of the
-engine-room ladder. The wireless operator, leaning on a crutch whittled
-by a bo’sain, avoided Richter, who pushed him roughly aside and descended
-the ladder, backward.
-
-White steam, lurid oaths, Scotch anathema from the direction of the
-boiler-room, indicated more trouble. Fergerson came from forward and
-bumped into Richter, so thick was the escaping vapor.
-
-“Out o’ my way, mon,” the second engineer started to say, then clamped
-his teeth on his tongue.
-
-“What’s happened, now!” queried Richter.
-
-“It’s that wicked spare boiler—she’s aleak an’ foamin’, an’ there’s water
-in th’ fire-boxes.”
-
-Richter inclined his bullet shaped head; he heard steam hissing and
-oilers cursing the day they had signed on the _Seriphus_. A blast when a
-gasket gave way, hurtled scorched men between Richter and Fergerson; a
-whine sounded from the direction of the boiler-room, the whine rose to an
-unearthly roar: Richter saw a blanket of white vapor floating about the
-engine’s cylinders. This vapor, to his muddled fancy, seemed to contain
-the figure of a man wrapped in a winding shroud.
-
-He clapped both hands over his eyes, hearing above the noise of escaping
-steam a call so distinct it chilled his blood.
-
-“_Hylda!_”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Now there was that in the ghostly voice that brought Richter’s
-gin-swollen brain to the realization of the thing he had done in
-disposing of Gathright by bolting him in the spare boiler.
-
-No good luck had followed that action; Hylda was still disconsolate;
-trade and smuggling was at a low ebb; there was talk, aboard and ashore,
-of reducing engineers’ and skippers’ wage to the bone.
-
-Richter had a Teutonic stubbornness; Ezra Morgan had certainly turned
-against his chief engineer; the thing to do was to lay the ghostly
-voice, make what repairs were necessary in the boiler-room, and give the
-tanker’s engines the steam they needed in order to make a quick return
-passage to San Francisco and please the Henningays.
-
-An insane rage mastered Richter—the same red-vision he had experienced
-when he threw Gathright out of his daughter’s house. He lowered his
-bullet head, brushed the curling vapors from his eyes, and plunged
-through the bulkhead door, bringing up in scalding steam before the after
-end of the midship, or spare boiler.
-
-Grotesquely loomed all three boilers. They resembled humped-camels
-kneeling in a narrow shed by some misty river. Steam in quantity came
-hissing from the central camel; out of the furnace-doors, from a
-feed-pipe’s packing, around a flange where the gauge-glass was riveted.
-
-The _Seriphus_ climbed a long Pacific roller, steadied, then rocked in
-the trough between seas; iron plates, gratings, flue-cleaners, scrapers,
-clattered around Richter who felt the flesh on neck and wrist rising into
-water blisters.
-
-No one had thought to close the globe-valve in the oil supply line, or to
-extinguish the fires beneath the spare and leaking boiler. Richter groped
-through a steam cloud, searching for the hand-wheel on the pipe line. All
-the metal he touched was simmering hot.
-
-A breath of sea air came down a ventilator; Richter gulped this air and
-tried to locate the globe-valve with the iron wheel. Vision cleared, he
-saw the red and open mouth of the central camel—the flannel-like flames
-and he heard through toothed-bars a voice calling, “Hylda!”
-
-Fergerson and a water tender dragged their chief from the boiler room by
-the heels; blistered, with the skin peeled from his features, Richter’s
-eyes resembled hot coals in their madness. Blabbering nonsense, the
-engineer gave one understandable order:
-
-“Put out th’ fire, draw th’ water, search inside th’ spare boiler—there’s
-something there, damit!”
-
-Ezra Morgan came below, while the spare boiler was cooling, and entered
-Richter’s temporary cabin—the “ditty-box” with the play actresses’
-pictures glued everywhere. Fergerson had applied rude doctoring—gauze
-bandages soaked in petroleum—on face and arms.
-
-“What’s th’ matter, man?” asked Ezra Morgan. “Have you gone mad?”
-
-“I heard some one calling my daughter, Hylda.”
-
-“Where do you keep your gin?”
-
-“It’s gone! Th’ voice was there inside th’ spare boiler. Did Fergerson
-look; did he find a skeleton, or—”
-
-Ezra Morgan pinched Richter’s left arm, jabbed home a hypodermic
-containing morphine, and left the chief engineer to sleep out his
-delusions. Fergerson came to the “ditty-box” some watches later. Richter
-sat up.
-
-“What was in th’ spare boiler?” asked the chief.
-
-“Scale, soda, a soapy substance.”
-
-“Nothing else?”
-
-“Why, mon, that’s enough to make her foam.”
-
-Richter dropped back on the bunk and closed his lashless eyes.
-
-“Suppose a man, a stowaway, had crawled through th’ aft man-hole, an’
-died inside th’ boiler? Would that make it foam—make th’ soapy substance?”
-
-“When could any stowaway do that?”
-
-Richter framed his answer craftily: “Say it was done when th’ _Seriphus_
-was at Oakland that time th’ boilers were repaired in dry-dock.”
-
-Fergerson drew on his memory. “Th’ time, mon, ye went aboard an’ tested
-th’ spare boiler? Th’ occasion when ye took th’ trouble to rig up a
-shore-hose in order to fill th’ boiler wi’ water?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“Did ye ha’ a man-hole plate off th’ boiler?”
-
-“I removed th’ after-end plate, then went for th’ hose. We had no steam
-up, you remember, and our feed-pumps are motor-driven.”
-
-“Ye think a mon might ha’ crawled through to th’ boiler during your
-absence?”
-
-“Yes!”
-
-“Ye may b’ right—but if one did he could ha’ escaped by th’ fore man-hole
-plate. I had that off, an’ wondered who put it back again so carelessly.
-Ye know th’ boiler is a double-ender—wi’ twa man-holes.”
-
-Richter was too numbed to show surprise. Fergerson left the “ditty-box”
-and pulled shut the door. The tanker, under reduced steam, made slow
-headway toward San Francisco.
-
-One morning, a day out from soundings, the chief engineer awoke, felt
-around in the gloom, and attempted to switch on the electric light.
-
-He got up and threw his legs over the edge of the bunk. A man sat leaning
-against the after plate. Richter blinked; the man, from the goggles on
-him and the crutch that lay across his knees, was the wireless operator
-who had been rescued from a sea grave.
-
-“No need for light,” said the visitor in a familiar voice. “You can guess
-who I am, Richter.”
-
-“A ghost!” said the chief. “Gathright’s ghost! Come to haunt me!”
-
-“Not exactly to haunt you. I assure you I am living flesh—somewhat
-twisted, but living. I got out of that midship boiler, while you were
-bolting me in so securely. I waited until you went on deck for a hose,
-and replaced the after man-hole cover. I was stunned and lay hidden
-aboard for two days. Then I looked for Hylda. She was gone. I shipped as
-electrician for a port in Japan. I knocked around a bit—at radio work for
-the Japanese. It was chance that the _Seriphus_ should have picked me up
-from the _Nippon Maru_.”
-
-“That voice calling for Hylda,” cried Richter.
-
-“Was a little reminder that I sent through the boiler-room ventilator; I
-knew you were down there, Richter.”
-
-The marine engineer switched on the electric light.
-
-“What do you want?” he whined to Gathright.
-
-“Hylda—your daughter!”
-
-Paul Richter covered his eyes.
-
-“If she will atone for the harm I have done you, Gathright, she is yours
-with her father’s blessing.”
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-The Invisible Terror
-
-_An Uncanny Tale of the Jungle_
-
-_By_ HUGH THOMASON
-
-
-Old man Jess Benson, cattleman and mine owner, rode across the high
-plateau, which divided the rich grazing lands between Rock Valley and
-Slater Canyon, and let his horse pick its way down the steep slope to
-Slater Creek. Here, as the sorrel slaked its thirst, the big man in the
-saddle filled and lighted his pipe, while his eyes roved slowly through
-the sprinkle of cottonwoods which fringed the creek.
-
-About fifty feet upstream, close to a large bowlder and partly behind
-a clump of stunted plum bushes, half a dozen magpies were quarreling
-over something that the rider could not clearly distinguish. He could
-merely see a dark blotch behind the bushes—the carcass of a cow or steer
-probably—and he watched the beautiful black-and-white birds speculatively
-as they uttered their shrill, raucous cries, and fluttered about the
-thicket.
-
-Since there was a possibility, however, that the dead animal might be
-carrying his own brand, Benson finally turned his horse in the direction
-of the birds. Half a minute later, having reached a spot from which he
-could command a clear view of the thing that lay behind the bushes, his
-tanned cheeks went ashen, and he swung himself to the ground with an
-exclamation of horrified surprise.
-
-Close to the thicket, and five or six feet from the rock, the body of a
-man was huddled in the horrible posture of one who has met a violent end.
-
-He was lying partly on his side, one leg drawn up, the other
-outstretched, while both arms were bent under him. His face and neck were
-terribly torn and mangled, and his flannel shirt had been ripped half
-off his body, which was bruised and covered with wounds. Several paces
-away was a trampled felt hat, and the muzzle of a revolver peeped from
-beneath the body, its butt evidently clutched in the stiffened fingers of
-one hand. For a dozen feet the ground was torn and trampled, as though a
-terrible struggle had taken place.
-
-For several minutes Benson stood still and eyed the ghastly thing in
-horrified fascination. Long experience as a range rider told him that
-the body and the signs of conflict about it could not be more than
-forty-eight hours old—the thing had happened since a heavy rain of two
-days before—and it slowly dawned on the cattleman that the dead man was
-Nathan Smith, a neighbor of his, who owned a small farm some five or six
-miles away.
-
-For some time he studied the body and the surrounding soil very
-carefully, noting especially that the soft earth was covered with large,
-doglike tracks; then he went to his horse and untied his slicker from the
-back of the saddle. With this garment he managed to cover the body so
-that the magpies could no longer reach it. Then he mounted his horse and
-rode off toward Elktooth, ten miles away.
-
-Sheriff Parker and Doctor Morse, the coroner, happened to be together
-in the latter’s office when Benson entered and told his story. Both men
-listened without any particular comment, and at the end the sheriff got
-to his feet.
-
-“I’ll run you out in the car, Horace,” he informed the coroner. “We can
-reach the spot easily enough by following the old road up the creek. From
-what Benson says, the thing does not look like a crime exactly—it seems
-more like the work of wolves, though I never heard of any attacking a man
-in this region; but you can never tell. At any rate, we’d better look
-into it as soon as we can.”
-
-It was about an hour later when the three men got out of the machine
-and walked the few feet which separated them from the scene of the
-tragedy. Lifting the slicker, Doctor Morse stooped over the gruesome
-object beneath it, while Sheriff Parker gazed at the trodden ground with
-interest. While the coroner made his examination, the little officer
-paced around the thicket, eying the tracks thoughtfully; more than once
-he stooped to apply a pocket rule to some especially distinct impression,
-and twice he whistled softly to himself. By the time the doctor’s
-examination had ended, he was turning a speculative eye toward a dim
-trail which led off at right angles through the cottonwoods.
-
-Returning from washing his hands at the edge of the stream, Doctor Morse
-looked at his friend in contemplative silence, as he lighted a cigar and
-puffed at it nervously.
-
-“Well?” the sheriff questioned, at length. “What was it? What killed him,
-Horace?”
-
-“Bless me if I know, Bert. I never saw anything like this before in all
-my experience. It was an animal of some kind, I should say; a wolf,
-perhaps, although, as you said, the few wolves we have hereabouts have
-never been known to attack humans. But the man is frightfully mangled,
-his jugular vein is quite torn out of him. Had his gun in his hand,
-too. It’s empty. He must have fought the thing hard, whatever it was. I
-wonder—could it have been the ‘plague’?”
-
-Sheriff Parker nodded in an absent way, his eyes still fixed on the faint
-trail through the trees and weeds.
-
-“I think it was,” he said. “This spot is only a little way removed from
-where the creature has been in the habit of roaming, and poor Smith, I
-suppose, was caught here after dark. These tracks match those we found
-near Moore, and they look pretty fresh. How long should you say he has
-been dead?”
-
-“Killed early last night, I should judge,” was the doctor’s answer. “He
-died hard, too, poor chap. Look at that ground.”
-
-Jess Benson, with horror written all over his honest features, had been
-staring at the two men as they talked. Big, burly, outdoor giant that he
-was, he seemed to be in the grip of a kind of terror—or was it awe?—that
-made him incapable of speech.
-
-“Heavens, what an end!” he burst out at length. “What are we going to do,
-sheriff? How’ll we ever get the thing that killed him?”
-
-Sheriff Parker made no answer. He merely continued to search the ground
-around the body for a few minutes longer, as though he wished to make
-doubly sure that his suspicions were correct; then he helped the others
-wrap the body in a blanket and stow it in the car. Five minutes later,
-save for the trampled ground and some dull-brown, ominous stains on the
-grass, there was no sign of the tragedy apparent.
-
-Two hours later, seated at his own desk with a cigar between his teeth,
-Sheriff Parker squinted through his glasses at Doctor Morse, who sat
-opposite.
-
-“I tell you, Horace,” the sheriff was saying, “it is such a thing as
-never has been known before. If I had not been studying the results of
-this creature’s work for the past six weeks, I could not believe that
-such a thing could be. Still, it _must_ be so! Poor Jack Moore, he was
-the first victim; we were morally certain that the thing got him; then
-that strange waving of the alfalfa in Pollard’s meadow, and now this. I
-tell you, it’s awful, Horace!”
-
-“It is; it’s more than that, Bert; it’s unnatural.” Doctor Morse puffed
-jerkily at his cigar. “And yet, science tells us that there are sounds
-the ear cannot detect, why not colors the eye cannot see? Take the only
-time the beast, or the ‘plague,’ as we have begun to call it, appeared
-in daylight. I mean that uncanny agitation in Pollard’s hayfield that
-afternoon, when some heavy creature thrashed about there. It could be
-heard, and the alfalfa moved, but the thing itself could not be _seen_,
-though three different people stood watching.”
-
-“You are quite right, Horace; and I have already spent a great many
-sleepless nights milling over that ‘neutral color’ theory. Recently I
-have read that at the end of the solar spectrum there are things known as
-actinic rays. They represent colors—integral colors in the composition
-of light—which we are unable to discern with the naked eye. The human
-eye is, after all, an imperfect instrument. Undoubtedly there are colors
-which we cannot see, and this beast, this scourge of the neighborhood, is
-of some such color.”
-
-“Aside from its color,” the coroner mused, “the creature is tangible
-enough. It leaves a track in the ground larger by far than that of a
-full-grown timber wolf, and it certainly can fight. Benson says his
-hounds were soundly thrashed by it last week, you know, and there is
-Smith. He was a very powerful man, and armed, but, so far as we know,
-the thing killed him and got away unscathed. The man’s body looked as
-if it had been struck by a train. The chest and sides might have been
-beaten in with a sledge, his clothes were torn to shreds, and as for his
-throat—well, the less said about that the better.”
-
-Sheriff Parker said nothing for several minutes. Getting to his feet, he
-began to pace slowly back and forth across the room, fingers interlaced
-behind his back and head bowed in the way he sometimes affected when in
-deep thought.
-
-He was struggling with a problem the like of which he had never before
-tackled; and as he watched him, the coroner, in his turn, strove to
-devise some method of wiping out the creature which was terrorizing the
-entire valley.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Almost six weeks before, Jack Moore, a stock inspector, whose duties
-often carried him far out into the thinly settled portions of the
-country, had been found dead under circumstances similar in every way to
-those surrounding Smith’s end.
-
-At first, the authorities and general public had attributed the death
-to timber wolves, for the sole reason that they could attribute it to
-nothing else. The tracks about the body, though exceedingly large, were
-shaped like a wolf’s, and the body itself had been torn and mangled as by
-some carniverous animal.
-
-Soon after Moore’s death came the killing of a dozen sheep in their
-pasture, and, on the heels of this, Judson Pollard, a prosperous farmer
-whose word was beyond dispute, with two of his hired men, had seen
-something rush through an alfalfa meadow—something that they could not
-make out, though it was broad daylight, and they could see the tall hay
-wave and shake, and could even hear the creature as it thrashed about
-there.
-
-Then Jess Benson’s hounds, a pack of fourteen, which had never met its
-match in numerous encounters with wolves and coyotes, had been soundly
-whipped, and three of its number killed outright in a fight with some
-animal which their owner could not see, although he had witnessed the
-fight from a distance.
-
-Now, as a climax to the whole business, had come Nathan Smith’s horrible
-death; and no man could say who or what would be the next victim.
-No wonder the entire county could talk of little else, and that the
-creature, whatever it was, had been named the “plague”!
-
-As he thought over all these things for the hundredth time, Sheriff
-Parker cudgeled his brain in an effort to form some plan for trapping and
-killing the beast. He knew that there must be a way, somehow, to make an
-end of the terror, even though the most skillful trappers and hunters in
-the district had failed to discover it. The animal’s range was known. It
-seemed, for the most part, to frequent the country between Slater Creek
-and White Horse Mountain, probably because this region contained plenty
-of timber and natural shelter; and it was in this region that it must
-be cornered. For many years the little sheriff had studied the crimes of
-men, and few criminals had ever had just cause to boast of outwitting
-him; but this was a different task.
-
-“Horace,” the sheriff burst out finally, coming to an abrupt halt in
-front of his friend, “this butchery has gone far enough. We must put an
-end to it. What do you say to trying this very night? The beast seems to
-roam mostly at night, and tonight will be moonlight. We’ll try to trap it
-at the Black Pool.”
-
-Doctor Morse stared at the speaker in surprise.
-
-“The Black Pool?” he repeated. “Are you crazy, Bert? To be sure, we have
-discovered, so far as possible at any rate, that the beast seems to
-frequent the pool more than any other one spot; but how can we trap it?
-That has already been tried more than once.”
-
-“True, Horace; but we shall try in a different way. This thing, whatever
-it is, though it can’t be seen, can be felt and heard; therefore it must
-have a solid body, so to speak. It leaves a distinct trail, you know, and
-its victims are proof enough that it is a creature of flesh and blood. My
-scheme is to _make_ it visible—then, if we are lucky, we can shoot it.”
-
-The coroner jumped to his feet in his excitement.
-
-“I see what you mean!” he cried. “Why haven’t we thought of that before?
-But how, Bert—how will you do it?”
-
-“That remains to be seen.” Sheriff Parker smiled oddly as he looked at
-his companion. “If you are willing to risk the thing with me, I think I
-have a plan that will work. We’ll leave here in the car about four this
-afternoon; that will get us to the pool in plenty of time to set our
-trap before dark. Bring along your repeating shotgun—a heavy charge of
-buckshot is far more certain after dark than a rifle ball, and we can’t
-afford to miss.”
-
-Doctor Morse nodded understandingly.
-
-“I shall not fail you, Bert,” he said.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Early dusk found the two men in the sheriff’s car slowly picking their
-way over the stony trail which led to the Black Pool. In the bottom
-of the tonneau was a ten-gallon keg, three or four short boards, and
-something wrapped in burlap, while the back seat held a pair of repeating
-shot guns and a box of cartridges. A hundred yards from the pool, at the
-foot of a little hill, Sheriff Parker killed his engine and stepped out
-onto the ground.
-
-“We’d better leave the car here,” he remarked. “It is best not to make
-any more disturbance in the immediate vicinity of the pool than we can
-help, and we can easily carry what we need from here. But let’s look
-around a bit first.”
-
-Together, carrying their loaded guns in the manner of men who wish to
-be prepared against any sudden emergency, they made their way through a
-fringe of trees to the edge of the black, still water, which gave the
-pool its name. Even by daylight the place was far from cheerful. The
-pool, about seventy feet in diameter, was entirely surrounded by trees
-which grew to within a few feet of its oily surface.
-
-There was no sign of life about the place, not even a frog croaked, and
-the muddy banks bore mute testimony that none of the many cattle which
-roamed that region had been there to drink for many days. In one place
-only was the mud broken by fresh tracks; and when his eyes fell on this
-spot, the sheriff smiled grimly.
-
-“You see them, Horace,” he said, pointing. “The thing has been here
-recently—its trail is as plain as day; this must be its drinking place.
-Now for our little trap.”
-
-Returning to the car, the two men first carried the keg to the foot of
-a large tree which stood only a few yards from where the “plague” had
-approached the pool; then they got the boards and the other articles,
-which, on being unwrapped, proved to be a brass hand pump, with a long
-spray nozzle, and about a dozen feet of hose.
-
-Doctor Morse regarded this contrivance with considerable perplexity. He
-could not see of what use it could be in the task that lay ahead of them;
-but when he expressed his puzzlement, his companion laughed softly.
-
-“It’s really very simple,” he explained, “although it is merely an
-experiment of my own, and may not work as I hope it will. The keg is full
-of whitewash, and this pump will throw a steady stream for over thirty
-feet. If we can get the brute within range, my idea is to spray him with
-whitewash until we can see enough of him to shoot at. White always shows
-up fairly well in the dark. Catch the idea?”
-
-Doctor Morse gazed at his friend in surprised admiration for an instant;
-then he impulsively caught his hand in a hard grip.
-
-“You’re a wonder, Bert!” he exclaimed. “I don’t see how you ever thought
-of it, but the scheme looks good to me. I am honestly beginning to think
-we have a chance. But what are those boards for?”
-
-“For a platform on the tree yonder,” replied the sheriff, nodding toward
-a cotton wood. “For obvious reasons I thought it would be safer to do
-our watching from above ground, and with these boards we can construct
-a support that will enable us to stay in the tree with some degree of
-safety. Of course, the thing may be able to climb, for all we know, but
-we must chance that. The tree is within easy range of the water, and
-those tall ferns and weeds, if we watch them closely, should give us
-warning of the beast’s approach. Now let’s get busy, for it will be dark
-before we know it.”
-
-At the end of half an hour, just as it was actually growing dark within
-the shadows of the trees, the two men had built a substantial platform in
-a fork of the cottonwood, some ten feet from the ground, and established
-themselves upon it. Sheriff Parker’s gun lay beside him, while he grasped
-the nozzle of the high-pressure pump in his hands; but the coroner’s
-weapon was ready for instant use.
-
-Swiftly the day turned into night, and for an hour it was as dark as
-pitch at the edge of the pool; then the moon, surrounded by myriads of
-stars, slowly climbed up over the hill-tops beyond the water. With eyes
-riveted upon the ferns, from the movements of which they expected to be
-warned of the beast’s approach, the two men waited tensely.
-
-For a long time nothing happened. From the blank darkness around them
-came merely the familiar noises of night in the wilderness—the long,
-wailing howl of a distant coyote; the chirping drone of the tireless
-insects in the trees; strange cries of night birds, so different from
-those of the birds of the day; the “plop” of muskrats diving in the still
-water, and all the mysterious chorus of small sounds that one never
-notices until after night has fallen.
-
-Seated on their narrow platform, the watchers were soon very
-uncomfortable, for the mosquitoes were numerous and hungry, and the men
-dared not smoke for fear the smell of tobacco would give warning to the
-thing they sought. Doctor Morse, eyes fixed on the top of a ridge which
-could be seen through a break in the trees, and beyond which the stars
-and the moon seemed to be grouped, was half dozing, when suddenly he
-straightened up with a little start.
-
-A curious thing had taken place! The stars, rising above the crest of the
-ridge, _had successively disappeared from right to left_!
-
-Each was blotted out for but an instant, and not more than two or three
-at the same time, but along half the length of the ridge, all that were
-within a few degrees of the crest were eclipsed. Something had passed
-along between them and the coroner’s line of vision; but he could not see
-it, and the stars were not close enough together to define its shape.
-After a second of tense watching, Doctor Morse reached out and gripped
-the sheriff by the arm.
-
-“Did you see it?” he whispered. “It’s coming, I think.”
-
-“Yes; but be quiet, for your life!” Sheriff Parker leaned forward and
-shifted his grip on the hose nozzle.
-
-For several minutes all was silent, then came a faint patter of stealthy
-feet, and something like the sniffing of a hound sounded below them,
-while the ferns waved violently, although there was no breeze. Almost
-immediately came the sounds of lapping in the water—sounds exactly like
-those made by a thirsty dog when drinking.
-
-Taking careful aim with the nozzle, Sheriff Parker suddenly pumped out
-a steady stream of whitewash which began to splash and spatter on the
-edge of the pool and surface of the water. And, as the milky liquid
-began to fall, the two watchers saw a strange and wonderful thing. In
-a spot, which ten seconds before had been merely opaque darkness, _an
-outline grew up and took shape out of the ground_; a strange, monstrous,
-misshapen thing, squat and hairy, not unlike a huge wolf in general
-appearance, but broader and more powerful than any wolf either man had
-ever seen.
-
-For an instant after the whitewash began to fall upon it, the thing
-turned a big-jawed, hairy face in the direction of the tree; then, with a
-horrible snarl of fury, which both men plainly heard, it charged toward
-them.
-
-“Shoot! _Shoot_, Horace!” Sheriff Parker yelled, dropping the useless
-nozzle and grabbing his gun.
-
-The two heavy guns, charged with double loads of buckshot, roared out
-almost together. There was a coughing snarl from the thing on the ground,
-which save for a white patch or two, was almost invisible again, and the
-sound of convulsive struggling; then the sheriff fired a second time.
-Almost immediately there was a heavy splash in the water; then absolute
-silence.
-
-Doctor Morse wiped the cold sweat from his forehead with a shaking hand.
-
-“Did we get it?” he asked in a low tone.
-
-“Yes, I’m almost sure of it.” Sheriff Parker, though tremendously
-excited, began to lower himself to the ground. “No animal of the wolf
-type could stand up against three charges of buckshot at less than a
-dozen yards,” he declared. “I believe it is dead, Horace.”
-
-When they warily approached the edge of the pool, however, the two
-men could find no sign of the thing they had shot at, beyond a number
-of footprints in the soft ground, and, in one spot, very close to the
-water, a large splotch of crimson, which made the little sheriff chuckle
-exultantly.
-
-“He was hard hit, and he’s sunk in the pool,” he declared positively,
-“sunk in water that no man has ever yet found the bottom of—a fitting
-end for such a beast, although I won’t deny that I should have enjoyed
-a close look at the body. But it’s too late now, and, at any rate, the
-brute is dead. Let’s be getting home, Horace.”
-
-
-
-
-Seek Solution To Sahara Desert Mystery
-
-
-An attempt is being made this Spring to penetrate the heart of the great
-Sahara Desert and solve the mystery that envelops the savage Tribe of
-Tauregx, a band of wild Arabs who have never recognized any civilized
-authority. Both men and women members of the tribe always keep their
-faces veiled in black. The region where they dwell is known as the Land
-of Terror. The Chicago Tribune organized the expedition, which is making
-the 2,000-mile journey across the hot sands on camels.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Light is the fastest-moving thing in the universe. It travels at the
-speed of 186,326 miles a second. This tremendous speed would carry a
-person around the earth seven times in one second!
-
-
-
-
-_HELEN ROWE HENZE Spins a Compelling Yarn_
-
-THE ESCAPE
-
-
-“Are you sure?”
-
-The doctor nodded briefly. “Very sure, and the quicker the better!”
-
-Donaldson gripped the back of the chair beside him till his knuckles
-showed white.
-
-“There’s nothing to be afraid of,” the doctor spoke a trifle
-contemptuously. “Appendicitis is quite commonplace. We operate for it as
-many as a hundred times a year at the hospital.”
-
-Donaldson rose slowly to his feet.
-
-“I’ll let you know sometime soon,” he said, staring about him vaguely.
-
-“All right. But I’d advise you to have it done quickly.”
-
-Donaldson shuffled toward the door.
-
-“I’ll let you know,” he murmured, and went out.
-
-He descended to the street. He was a man of average height, and rather
-thin. He was dressed respectably in clothes of a few years back, but
-still good. One felt that he was careful of them, timidly careful.
-His blue eyes wandered in odd moments from one object to another, and
-his thin lips tried to maintain a firm line, but drooped weakly, if,
-perchance, he forgot. Then he twitched them up, reining them hard, trying
-to appear casual, indifferent. But his step would drop into its habitual
-short uncertainty, his shoulders slump down a bit, his eyes begin their
-covert roving, his whole figure expressing a desire to occupy as small a
-space as possible, as though his soul and body were squeezed in with a
-wish to be inconspicuous.
-
-As he emerged from the doctor’s office, his pale eyes shifted as he
-gazed at the moving throng on the street. Why couldn’t it have been some
-one else? Here they were, all so gay, so unconscious of him and the
-shadow that hung over him. Unconscious! That was the word which had so
-terrified his mind for ten long years. And that was what the anesthetic
-meant—unconsciousness!
-
-Donaldson threaded his way along and turned into a little side street
-until he came to his house. He let himself in with his key. The bare
-hall resounded dismally to his footsteps. The gaunt, shadowy room gave
-him only a chilly welcome. When Mrs. Saunders had kept house for him, it
-had been more cheerful. There was not that deathlike stillness when he
-came in. That had been several years ago, and since then his fear had
-increased through long keeping, like some great, lank brute, gnawing in
-the darkness. It was a sly, suspicious fear that shunned companionship.
-He had lived for ten years all alone, except for Mrs. Saunders, the
-housekeeper, but finally even her presence had become too much, and he
-had sent her away.
-
-He began stupidly preparing dinner. There was some ham, cheese, a half
-loaf of bread, and a few potatoes which he peeled, standing by the sink.
-There was also a small pie that one of the neighbors had sent him a few
-days ago. Kindly people they were, unable to understand Donaldson’s
-solitary life, and who took pity on him and occasionally sent him little
-bits of pastry or jelly to freshen his meal.
-
-Once, when he was sick with a cold, the husband had brought him over half
-a tumbler of whisky, but Donaldson had shuddered and held up his arms as
-if to ward off the other, crying, “None of that! Go away! Let me alone!”
-
-And the neighbor had withdrawn, attributing this strange behavior to the
-sickness. But no, Donaldson’s fear of whisky was almost equal to that of
-the beastlike fear that dogged his footsteps or lurked in the shadows
-ahead of him.
-
-Ever since that terrible, unforgettable night when he had drunk it for
-the first and last time, he had had a wild terror of it. Even the sight
-of it recalled more vividly the white, strained face of his wife as she
-fell to the floor, and the red mark of the fender across her temple.
-He remembered how he had gone away and brought Jack Dingler home with
-him a few hours later, and they had found her. The neighbors had been
-so sympathetic toward him in his calamity. Even the same neighbors that
-brought him the whisky and went home saying sorrowfully, “Poor Mr.
-Donaldson. He’s never been quite himself since the missus was murdered.
-It seems to have turned his mind.”
-
-They were right. His mind was turned. John Donaldson knew what it was
-to be afraid. For ten terrible years, fear had skulked behind him. His
-composure and his self-reliance vanished. He had become a coward with
-the ever-present fear that in some way, by some word or action, he would
-reveal his secret. He had kept ever alert. Fear, the driving power that
-would not let him slumber. He always kept his door bolted at night, and
-the room next to his empty, for fear that he might talk in his sleep.
-
-That was his greatest dread, that sometime, in an unconscious state, he
-would talk. He learned to take the greatest precautions in regard to his
-personal safety. He never went on long journeys, nor took an unnecessary
-risk. And now—appendicitis!
-
- * * * * *
-
-One night, a week later, Donaldson woke up with a start, his body wet
-with perspiration. He had been dreaming a terrible dream. It seemed as
-though he saw the white face of his wife with the red mark across the
-temple, only she was standing up and looking at him with an unfamiliar,
-ghastly expression in her eyes, and behind her, looking over her
-shoulder, was a satyr’s face, long and yellow.
-
-Then this figure stepped out and came toward him, holding chains in its
-hands. Chains for him, Donaldson! He had had dreams like this before,
-varying slightly in detail sometimes, but always with the same terrible
-suggestion. And always he had waked up as he did now, wet and cold, with
-the same monstrous fear clutching him, pricking him like a thousand
-needles, drawing up his flesh, paralyzing him with a queer, uncanny
-thrill.
-
-He wondered if he had talked in his sleep. Of course, there was no one to
-hear, still he wondered. It was something he could never know, an awful,
-threatening uncertainty that hung over him, that would always hang over
-him.
-
-And those chains! He had a mental vision of himself in the penal stone
-quarries, chained to an iron ball.
-
-He looked at his watch. It was later than he had thought—six o’clock.
-He got out of bed and dressed quickly. He knew from experience the only
-way to work off the stultifying effect of his dreams. It was physical
-action, to walk and walk until he tired himself out. Then his mind would
-be loosed from this crazy, nervous terror, and he would relapse into the
-steady, dogged fear from which he knew no respite.
-
-He opened the door and stepped into the street. The morning sun was
-beginning to lighten the grey, deserted court. Some one across the way
-closed a window. Donaldson straightened up, tightening his lips. Even
-this early they might see him. He must appear casual, like a man of
-leisure out for a morning stroll.
-
-But it was an effort, for an unreasoning fear possessed him. He wanted to
-run. Something behind him seemed to urge his footsteps faster. It seemed
-to him that his feet actually were going faster than the rest of his
-body, as though they obeyed the will of that something behind him, while
-he himself was really moving only at a moderate gait.
-
-He had a detached sense of two entities. One was John Donaldson as he
-appeared to the world, a slender, inconspicuous man, walking somewhat
-timidly along the street, and the other was the coward, the terrified
-being, running from the thing that followed him; alert, cunning to
-outwit his pursuer. Once, from an irresistible impulse, he dodged into
-an alley-way. Then, suddenly ashamed and realizing, he came out again,
-walking boldly, his eyes fixed on a passing horse, trying to appear
-unconcerned.
-
-Toward noon he returned, and, remembering he had had no breakfast and
-that there was nothing to eat in the house, stopped at the corner grocery
-store. The grocer was waiting on another customer when Donaldson came in,
-but he looked up and nodded.
-
-“Be with you in a minute, Mr. Donaldson.” And then, “Why, what’s the
-matter? Are you sick?”
-
-Donaldson had sat down suddenly on a flour-barrel, clutching his side,
-his face gone grey with pain. The grocer ran to get a glass of water.
-
-“Here, better drink this! What’s the matter? Can I help you?”
-
-But Donaldson only shook his head over his knees, unable to speak. They
-got him home a little later, when the pain had eased a little, and sent a
-doctor in to see him. Donaldson did not want a doctor, but the grocer was
-frightened by his pale face and paid no attention to his protests.
-
-The verdict was what Donaldson had anticipated, appendicitis and the
-necessity of an immediate operation. He heard it, lying on the bed, from
-a strange doctor, with a feeling, in spite of the pain in his side, that
-it must be another man under sentence. He could not take that anesthetic!
-The pain might kill him; then let him die! It would be better than
-those awful chains. For he knew that once unconscious, the truth would
-come out, that all the poison which had been maddening him for years
-would flow from his lips in self-exposure, once he was placed under an
-anesthetic. How many times had he already related it in the stillness of
-the night? What of his secret could the walls of his room not tell? They
-must have heard it over and over.
-
-The doctor repeated his statement and Donaldson nodded.
-
-“Yes,” he said mechanically. He must appease this man, lest a refusal
-make him too insistent. When the doctor was gone, he was safe again. He
-would get well. Everybody had these attacks; they meant nothing.
-
-“I’ll be back to see you tonight,” said the doctor, as he prepared to
-leave.
-
-“No,” said Donaldson, “don’t come. I’ll be all right.”
-
-“I’ll be here,” answered the doctor, and went out.
-
-Suddenly a great fatigue came over the sick man, an overwhelming
-drowsiness, a desire for sleep, one of the primal, insistent, compelling
-things that would not be denied.
-
-When he awoke it was quite dark. He did not know the time. Lights shone
-in the houses across the street. The ticking of the clock was the only
-noise to be heard. The darkness of the room seemed palpable, as though
-it floated over and around him, breathing. Then the clock struck eight.
-Donaldson remembered. The doctor was coming back. He might return any
-minute. Only he must not! There were footsteps on the walk. It was he,
-and the door was unlocked! Donaldson rose and started toward it. He had
-forgotten his side. He was only conscious of a difficulty in moving, like
-in a nightmare, as though weights were dragging on his feet. The doctor
-was on the porch. Donaldson struggled. What was holding his feet?
-
-“Don’t come in,” he gasped. “I’m all right!”
-
-Then came the pain, like a sudden knife-blade, piercing him. He screamed,
-one awful, uncontrollable yell, and pitched forward.
-
- * * * * *
-
-There was a queer, unfamiliar smell, and stillness. Not the empty
-stillness of his own house, but the stillness of human beings and hushed
-movements.
-
-Nausea possessed him. He opened his eyes for a moment and then closed
-them. He was in a white-walled room, darkened. Against the drawn blind he
-could feel the sunlight beating. A ray of it came in between the shade
-and the window-jamb and struck the opposite wall. It was broad day.
-Suddenly, quick and clear as an arrow released from a taut bow-string,
-Donaldson’s mind leaped up into consciousness.
-
-He was in a hospital, and it was over—the operation. It was the
-anesthetic which had nauseated him. What had he said? Had he betrayed
-himself? Yet here he was, lying quietly in this room. However, they
-couldn’t take him away while he was sick.
-
-They were waiting—waiting till he got well to put the chains on him! He
-knew it. That was why they were so quiet, not to make him suspicious. He
-would ask the nurse. She could tell him whether he had talked.
-
-But the nurse was not there. She did not know he was awake. Well, he
-would wait and ask her. Maybe he hadn’t talked. People didn’t always. The
-sun streamed against the blind. Light, hope! It might be that he would
-see it again, free! That he would walk along the streets in the open day.
-
-The door opened and the nurse entered. She came to his bedside. He would
-smile at her easily, indifferently. She would think his question a casual
-one.
-
-“Nurse,” he began. His voice sounded far away, weaker than it should have.
-
-The nurse smiled. “How is my patient? Feeling better?”
-
-“Nurse,” he strove valiantly to make his voice strong, casual. He even
-smiled weakly. “Did I—er—talk under the ether?”
-
-“No, not a word. Now rest quietly and I’ll come back after a while.” And
-she went out.
-
-Donaldson sighed. He was still safe. She had told him so. She would not
-deceive a sick man. And yet—wouldn’t she? He remembered reading somewhere
-that patients were always told they had not talked, lest the knowledge
-excite them and hinder their recovery.
-
-That was why she had said it. They wanted him to get well, so they could
-put the chains on him. Hadn’t she hesitated a bit before she answered? He
-had thought she looked at him a bit suspiciously. Now he was sure of it.
-And that was why. They didn’t want him to know they knew. They wanted to
-be sure they’d get him.
-
-Just then Donaldson’s thoughts were interrupted by a noise on the street.
-Some vehicle clattering over the pavement and the sound of a bell. The
-door was standing slightly ajar. Two nurses were passing in the hall, and
-Donaldson’s straining ear caught their voices:
-
-“What is all the noise about?” asked one.
-
-“I don’t know,” replied the other. “It sounds like a police patrol.”
-
-They were after him! What should he do? He threw back the bedclothes. His
-mind was working like lightning. They would never get him. He slipped to
-the floor. How he got to the door he never knew. Fear lends strength. He
-closed it and stumbled back across the floor, half-falling against the
-bed.
-
-He knew what he was going to do. He pulled up the bed-clothes from the
-foot of the bed with feverish haste. The sheet—that was what he wanted!
-He ripped open the hem a few inches, turning it back so that he could get
-the raw edge of the material. Then he tore off a strip the whole length
-of the sheet. He laughed excitedly. They’d never get him!
-
-By this time, the cut in his side had re-opened, but he did not notice
-it. He knew nothing but his one mad purpose. His senses seemed to have
-deserted him. It was as though he were in a dream. He felt as though
-his mind were standing off, directing his body to do these things, and
-as though he were putting a senseless and inanimate other half of him
-through certain prescribed motions.
-
-He tied one end of the strip to one of the iron bed-posts, then he
-climbed into bed and lay down. He circled the other end of the strip
-around his neck. The head of the bed was looped between the posts with
-scrolls of white iron-work. He lifted his knees and pushed with his feet
-till his head was through one of these openings, hanging down in the
-space between the bed and the corner of the room. His neck was now in a
-straight line between the bed-posts, bent backward, and as he breathed,
-he emitted from his lips little hoarse noises that seemed to struggle out
-protestingly from his strained throat. He knew that he could not strangle
-himself to death, for as soon as unconsciousness came, he would relax his
-hold. If he could tie the other end! That was sure and safe.
-
-The blood rushed to his head. He pulled the knot tight, very tight, and
-gasped. He felt as though he were drowning. His temples throbbed, and his
-ears beat as though the waves were knocking against the inside of his
-head, now roaring, now singing with queer, unearthly hum. He relaxed his
-hand, and the noose slackened.
-
-There! That was not so bad, but the blood rushed back from his brain, and
-the waves swirled around him now and made him fearfully dizzy. He felt
-like a little brig, tossed in the valley of a tempestuous sea, beaten,
-dazed, apathetic.
-
-He recovered somewhat. The police! They must be on their way up! The
-waves were calling. Their restless surging hammered upon his brain,
-dulling its sensibility. There was peace beneath those waves. Unchanging
-peace!
-
-But he must hurry. A cloud rose before his eyes, grey and inviting. He
-seemed to forget. What was he going to do? Where was that peace? Peace,
-something he had not known for aeons, aching, endless aeons of time.
-Where was it? Ah, yes! Beneath the waves, those heaving, restless,
-insistent waves.
-
-“I’m coming,” he murmured thickly. His tongue seemed swollen. There was
-need of haste. He shook himself to clear his mind for the final effort.
-Then he pulled the noose tight with all his strength, and tied it quickly
-to the right-hand bedpost.
-
-The waves seemed to open and he was going down. He saw a faint,
-opalescent light beneath him. There was something precious down there. It
-was peace.
-
-“I’m coming,” he muttered, struggling, his arms stretched out toward it.
-“I’m coming!”
-
-
-
-
-THE SIREN
-
-_A Storiette That Is “Different”_
-
-_By_ TARLETON COLLIER
-
-
-With an abrupt jerk, Joe Wilson, from lying on a cot in the little
-tent, lifted himself on his elbow in an attitude of intent listening.
-There was no sound except the hum of a sleepy breeze through the pines,
-the sleepier contralto of a mocking bird, and the purring undertone of
-rippling water.
-
-“That’s her!” he whispered. With an effort he sat erect, and again told
-himself: “That’s her!”
-
-All at once there came the crackle of voices without, the sound of
-thudding footsteps. Joe flung himself back on the cot and closed his eyes
-with furious energy as the flap of the tent was lifted and the engineer
-and the doctor peered within.
-
-“He’s asleep,” said the engineer in a low voice.
-
-“_Hm!_” said the doctor. He was a wizened little man with spectacles.
-Then he let the flap drop, and his voice came to Joe brusquely through
-the canvas. “Well, we’ll come back. I want to talk to him. He’s probably
-not very sick, but—by God, man, you’ve got to keep your men from the
-water around here, or you’ll never finish your railroad!”
-
-They were walking away as he spoke, and to Joe the voice seemed to fade.
-
-“I tell you ... polluted ... fever....”
-
-Then they were gone, the sound of them swallowed up in the ripple of the
-little creek over the rocks. With a start, Joe again was erect, his eyes
-furtive, glancing about the little canvas chamber. He tiptoed to the
-flap, and lifted it a bare inch, peering out upon the receding figures of
-the two men as they passed beneath a water-oak.
-
-With no less caution he crept to the other end of the tent, and stepped
-through the flap into the open. For a moment he stood irresolute, his
-eyes closed, as if he were dizzy.
-
-“Keep away from the water, you fool!” he whispered.
-
-There was no other sound of life in the woods now; the breeze had died
-and the mocking bird was silent. Only the prattle of a nearby stream over
-its rocky bed....
-
-With a stumbling, nervous stride that was almost a run, Joe Wilson went
-toward the sound of the water, and at last he plunged through a thick
-clump of willows and stood stiff, half-crouching, at the top of a bank of
-damp green moss that sloped steeply to a little stream with pools like
-black wells, still and silent. Only the silver shallows between pools
-rippled with life.
-
-At the foot of the bank was a shelf of rock, splotched green with moss,
-reaching into the stream barely an inch above the water. Upon it Joe’s
-glance rested, as if held by a power outside himself. He drew back into
-the willows, his sunken eyes closed in his pale face; then, with a sudden
-spring, he was over the bank and perched upon the rock.
-
-Something like a smile lighted his face, as if with the leap he had
-settled a troublesome matter. He sat down as easily and comfortably as he
-might, his legs doubled, his hands clasped about his knees; and stared
-intently into the black pool at his feet.
-
-And then, between a closing and an opening of his eyes, a woman was there
-where he had looked for her.
-
-There was no sense of suddenness about the apparition; only, when he
-closed his eyes against a dizziness, there was the water and nothing
-else; when he opened them, an instant later, she was standing in the
-midst of the pool, almost where he could touch her. And it was as if she
-had been there all the while.
-
-The water reached a little above her ankles. Her legs were bare to the
-knees, clothed above that, and her body as well, in a soft clinging
-garment of white that seemed a part of her; white throat and arms were
-bare. Her face was alive with a pleasant smile; her eyes, of green and
-gray together, were alive and pleasant, too.
-
-“You are late,” she said. There was something of the stream’s bright
-ripple in her voice.
-
-Joe Wilson could only smile, in answer; then his smile faded and his face
-was scornful and somewhat stubborn.
-
-“Yes,” he said, “and I came near not coming at all. I swore I wouldn’t.”
-
-“But you came,” she said, still smiling.
-
-“Only to tell you that this is the last time.”
-
-Her smile, merrier now, was accompanied by a sound that might have been
-the gurgle of a little whirlpool in the rapids, or it might have been a
-low note of laughter.
-
-“You didn’t mean it, then, that you love me,” she chided, coming nearer.
-It was not by a step that she moved, or by any perceptible effort. The
-space between them all at once was lessened, nothing else.
-
-Joe had lost his careless air and posture. He was on his knees, a fury in
-his words.
-
-“I didn’t mean it? You can’t say that. I have become less than a man, I
-love you so. You bring me here every day to do as you will, and I would
-die if I didn’t come, I love you so. For you I have broken my word to my
-friends back there in camp. And I don’t know who you are or _what_ you
-are.”
-
-Again that gentle sound that might have been a sudden swirl of the water,
-or her laughter. Then she was nearer, and her pleasant eyes looked into
-his, mockery in them.
-
-“You don’t know who I am?” she asked softly. “And yet I am yours.”
-
-The stubborn lines in Joe’s face vanished. A quick throb of blood choked
-into a gulp the word he would have spoken, and he stretched out his arms.
-She was suddenly beyond his reach.
-
-“Yours,” she said again, and that she laughed there was no doubt this
-time.
-
-Joe’s eyes were hungry. Joe leaned forward upon his stiffened arms, and
-stared at her like a wistful dog.
-
-“I don’t know who you are,” he whispered. “I don’t know who you are.”
-
-“I am whoever you want me to be,” she said.
-
-“I’ll call you Sadie,” he said.
-
-“Sadie?” Her lids drooped, veiling her eyes, but their narrow glimmer was
-keenly alive.
-
-“Yes, there is a girl—”
-
-Between two words she was close before him at the edge of the rock.
-
-“I am yours,” she said in a fierce, low voice. “What do you care for any
-girl? I am all woman, and you have me. What do you care for the world?
-You have me.”
-
-He felt her breath on his face. There was warmth and fragrance in it.
-Her white beauty was greater than that of the dogwood blossoms showering
-there through the gloom under a sudden breeze; and a dizziness struck
-him, so that the trees swam before his eyes.
-
-“I have you,” he repeated thickly, rising to his feet.
-
-“And the girl ... Sadie?” she asked.
-
-“You are Sadie. Only you. I have forgotten....” He put out his arms, but
-she was beyond his reach again, her eyes mysterious.
-
-With outstretched arms, he begged her to return.
-
-“I love you,” he said.
-
-For a full breath she looked at him gravely. Then, “We shall see,” she
-said, plunging her hands into the stream. As she arose, her hands were
-cupped and brimming with water. She moved toward him, smiling.
-
-Terror gathered in Joe’s white face.
-
-“Drink,” she tempted him.
-
-He whispered “No,” and the refusal seemed to strengthen him, for when she
-said again, “Drink,” he shouted it: “_No!_”
-
-She dropped her hands, and the water went splashing back into the stream;
-and, smiling still, she came nearer until she was beside him upon the
-rock, her wet feet glistening silver upon its greenish-brown surface. Her
-eyes held fast his wide, frightened stare.
-
-“Why?” she asked him, when she was so close that he was aware of the
-warmth and fragrance of her person.
-
-He answered her steadily:
-
-“I will not, that’s why. I must not. I have told you I must not, every
-day that I have come here, and yet I have always drunk this water. It has
-made me less than a man. It has made me break my word and my own rules.”
-
-Once more her eyes were grave. “You must not?” she asked. Her voice might
-have been that of the purring shallows. There was no escaping her gaze,
-and before it his eyes wavered and shifted. His shoulders drooped.
-
-“You will not?” the purring voice went on. “Not for me, and you say you
-love me? It is so little that I ask.”
-
-There was pain in his voice as he cried, “Don’t ... Sadie! I have
-promised ... the rule....”
-
-It was she whose figure drooped now, and her face that was mournful. “But
-you have broken the rules before this for me,” she murmured.
-
-“I came today to say that I would no more.”
-
-“But it is so little I ask. And I—am—yours.”
-
-He pleaded: “_Don’t!_”
-
-With sudden abandon, she flung herself against him, and for the first
-time his arms closed about her. She yielded to his fierce embrace, her
-head against his breast.
-
-“You do not love me,” she whispered.
-
-“Sadie...!” His arms tightened with his cry, and a red mist blinded him
-as he felt her warm, vital body closer against him.
-
-She lifted her face and looked at him.
-
-“You will?” she asked, smiling.
-
-“No,” he said, almost with a moan.
-
-She kissed him. “To drink, only to drink,” she said softly. “It is so
-little. I have given you myself ... isn’t that something?”
-
-With one arm she clung to him as tightly as he held her; the other arm
-was free, and with her hand she stroked his face. Her kisses were hot
-upon his lips. His eyes were closed, and he swayed with a dizziness that
-was mightier than any other he had known.
-
-“Only to drink,” she said. “Do you not care for me, and I have given you
-myself? What are those men in the camp to you, they and their rules? You
-will not drink ... yet I give you ... this....”
-
-Her lips met his in an eternity of giving and taking.
-
-“No!” he said again, but his voice quivered and broke, with the plain
-message of surrender.
-
-With a little cry, she knelt at the edge of the pool, her arms still
-about him so that he was forced to kneel with her. She plunged her hands
-into the water, and lifted them to him with their silver freight.
-
-With an eager, moaning sound, he drank the cool water; and as he did so
-the red mist before his eyes thickened, and his ears roared with the
-thunder of blood within. To drink became then his passion, and he cupped
-his own hands, filled them with water, and drank.
-
-For a moment the mist cleared and the roaring ceased, and he saw that he
-was alone on the rock.
-
-“Sadie!” he called.
-
-The answering sound might have been only the prattle of the stream, or it
-might have been low laughter.
-
-The thought came to him that perhaps she had fled to the bank, and with
-prodigious labor he clambered up the tiny slope. She was not there. He
-parted the soft-flowing curtain of the willows, and though the fronds
-were so light a bird might have flown through them, he gasped with the
-effort it cost him.
-
-Staggering into the sunlight beyond the fringe of trees, he found that
-she was not there, either. He tried to run, but only stumbled, lifting
-himself painfully to stagger onward. Then the mist of his delirium closed
-upon him, and the blood at his ear drums pounded and a tumult came out of
-earth and sky to overwhelm him.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The doctor and engineer, going fishing, stumbled upon his crumpled form
-an hour later. The former, a wizened, spectacled little man, bent over
-him and studied him with eyes that seemed to see everything. He studied
-the young fellow’s pulse, loosened his shirt, stared into the pupils of
-his eyes. At last he turned to the other, frowning, and said:
-
-“Fever, and maybe that damn’ typhoid. He’s the sickest man I ever saw.”
-
-Then his voice rose with a flare of anger.
-
-“Say, can’t you keep these fools away from this water?” he asked.
-“There’s death in it.”
-
-
-
-
-Men, Lost at Sea, Live Through Week of Horror
-
-
-A harrowing adventure that probably will never leave their minds befell
-two fishermen of Freeport, L. I., who passed a week in the open sea in
-a small motor boat, without water or provisions. Caught in a blizzard
-off the Long Island coast, something went wrong with their compass and
-they headed out to sea, where they drifted for nearly a week before the
-schooner, Catherine M., saw their signals of distress and picked them
-up. The two men—Capt. Bergen Smith and Harry Matthews—had only a small
-supply of water and a few raw potatoes. On this they lived for the first
-two days. Then Matthews lost control of himself, drank sea water and
-became delirious. Raving in delirium, he urged Smith to split a bottle of
-iodine in a suicide pact. Their boat began to leak, and they ripped the
-lining from their overcoats to calk the seams. Finally, after a number of
-ships had passed without seeing them, they were rescued, more dead than
-alive, by the schooner.
-
-
-
-
-_A Night of Horror in the Mortuary_
-
-THE MADMAN
-
-_By_ HERBERT HIPWELL
-
-
-Peter Stubbs has snow-white hair, and he is only twenty-eight. He mutters
-to himself as he pursues his lowly task of sweeping the streets in our
-little university town. Children gibe at him and goad him to rage and
-tears.
-
-Peter once had raven black hair and was as fine and strong a young fellow
-as ever led the town forces in their frequent battles with our students.
-That was before the one night he spent as caretaker of our medical
-school. Only two of us know the real story of that night and why Peter
-was taken from the building next morning, a gibbering and white-haired
-idiot.
-
-We have remained silent for various and selfish reasons, but I can no
-longer keep to myself the story of that awful night.
-
-Our medical college is a lonely, ramshackle old building. The town
-has grown away from it. It is surrounded by musty old junk yards and
-infrequently used railway sidings, and it is miles from the fine old
-group of buildings which form the rest of the university.
-
-There has always been difficulty in getting a suitable caretaker for it.
-None of the many engaged could be relied on to come early enough to get
-the fires going properly and to keep the walks clear of snow. Our new
-dean, Dr. Towney, thought he had solved the problem by deciding to have a
-caretaker live permanently on the premises.
-
-Peter Stubbs, on learning of this, applied for the post and had no
-difficulty in obtaining it. The dean showed him around the building and
-explained the duties required of him. A more imaginative man might have
-been a little chilled by the gaunt skeletons arranged in the cases of
-some of our classrooms. Certainly he would not have been pleased with
-the sleeping quarters picked out for him. The only room available was a
-closetlike place directly connected with our mortuary.
-
-Frequently, bodies would be there overnight, awaiting the purposes of the
-college. Most persons would not welcome these as night-time neighbors,
-but Peter scoffed and said he would as soon sleep there as in a brightly
-lighted hotel.
-
-Chic Channing and I heard his foolish boast, and Chic and I had old
-scores to pay with Peter.
-
-His sturdy fist had left a blue circle around my eye for a week, and
-Chic was minus a tooth as a result of a hot encounter between Peter’s
-followers and us freshmen.
-
-Chic jumped at this brilliant opening for reprisal.
-
-“Are you game for a little ghost-walking?” he whispered to me, as Peter
-and the Dean passed to another part of the building.
-
-I asked for details.
-
-“It’s the chance of a lifetime if we have the nerve,” he declared. “Let’s
-sneak back into the building tonight, crawl on to a couple of slabs in
-the mortuary and cover ourselves with sheets. We’ll look enough like
-corpses to fool Peter if he looks in. Then, when Peter goes to bed and it
-gets good and lonely, we can come to life with a few gentle moans, get
-Peter aroused, and then do a little ghost dance for his benefit. After
-we have him frightened stiff we can take off the sheets and give him the
-laugh. The story will get around quick enough, and poor old Peter won’t
-be troubling us freshies any more.”
-
-I could scent trouble in the wild scheme, and I hastily began to offer
-objections.
-
-“Peter knows there aren’t any bodies in there now,” I said.
-
-“That’s all right,” Chic replied. “I heard the dean tell him that a
-couple might arrive late today. In fact, I know there will be one there
-for certain. One of the inmates at the government hospital for the insane
-died today, a poor beggar who was so wild they had to keep him locked up
-tight all the time. He had no friends, so the body is to come here and
-the undertaker has already gone for it.”
-
-I was still unconvinced, but I had no plausible excuses. I felt my eye,
-which was still sore from Peter’s bruising, and I assented to the crazy
-plan.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Chic was right about the body. The undertaker’s car drew up to the
-college just as we were leaving. We were the last students to go, and the
-dean was the only other person there.
-
-He asked our aid in bringing the body to the mortuary, and we laid it on
-a cold marble slab. Peter arrived from supper, to begin his first night’s
-stay, just as the dean and we were leaving.
-
-True to my promise, I met Chic near the college about ten o’clock and we
-prepared to carry out our plan. My courage was oozing already. One of
-those wan yellow moons was the only light around the dreary building, and
-every rustle of a leaf or a disturbed pebble began to send shivers up my
-spine. But I couldn’t turn back.
-
-Silently, we pried open one of the loosely locked basement windows. Then
-we crept up dark stairs and through the classrooms, where I imagined I
-could see the skeletons standing out like white patches in the murky
-darkness.
-
-We reached the mortuary room and groped our way in. I almost cried out as
-my hand suddenly came in contact with the dead maniac, but I recovered
-myself. Chic groped in the corners until he found two immense white
-sheets.
-
-We climbed upon adjacent slabs, and stretched out on our backs and pulled
-the coverings over us. I managed to keep a small corner raised so that I
-had a partial view of the room as my eyes grew accustomed to the darkness.
-
-The stillness grew intense. We heard the long, dreary hoot of a freight
-engine. I shivered involuntarily and thought of the real corpse a few
-feet away.
-
-Footsteps echoed in the building. Peter was making a round of inspection
-before retiring. He switched on the lights in the mortuary and gave a
-little whistle of surprise at the three still, white figures lying there.
-
-Then he began to whistle again, a little tremulously. Evidently he was
-not feeling as bold as when he accepted his post. He went to his little
-room, but was soon back again.
-
-In his hand he held a small coil of rope, apparently a clothesline. He
-unwound it, and then, very gingerly, he approached the slab on which I
-lay.
-
-I felt a light blow as one end of the rope fell across me. Peter was
-going to take no chances on midnight ghosts. _He was going to tie us all
-firmly to the slabs!_
-
-Whistling to keep up his courage, he proceeded with his task. In a few
-minutes I was firmly bound. I could not have moved if I dared.
-
-Then he cut away the remaining piece of rope and proceeded to truss up
-Chic in the same way. He had to struggle to make the two ends of the cord
-meet.
-
-There was none left for the real corpse, and, though he hunted diligently
-in all parts of the room, he could find no more.
-
-He surveyed the two of us, bound firmly to the slabs, and evidently felt
-reassured. He decided to take a chance on the third body remaining still
-and retired to his room, closing the door and leaving us alone in the
-creepy, moonlit mortuary.
-
-How I cursed Chic as I lay there unable to move, listening to the
-gradually deepening breathing of Peter as he dropped into a sound sleep.
-What if he should leave us bound until the professors arrived in the
-morning? What a fine row there would be!
-
-These, and other unpleasant thoughts running through my mind, were
-suddenly checked by a slight sound which turned me cold from head to
-foot. Horrified, I gazed through the small chink in my covering. I could
-not believe my eyes.
-
-_The corpse of the maniac had moved!_
-
- * * * * *
-
-There came a faint rustle of his covering shroud, and the body moved
-again ever so slightly. I wanted to shriek in terror, but I was paralyzed.
-
-The shroud moved again, this time more noticeably. My scalp tightened,
-and I could feel the gooseflesh rising all over my body.
-
-Then, with one sudden motion, the maniac sat bolt upright and threw the
-shroud from him.
-
-He was clothed only in a long, hospital nightgown. His thin hair stood up
-in tangled wisps, and his eyes blazed like those of a cat in a dark room.
-
-Slowly he surveyed his surroundings, and then burst into the most hideous
-laughter I have ever heard. His big, yellow teeth seemed like the fangs
-of a wild animal. I could imagine them rending my flesh.
-
-The echo of his hideous mirth had hardly died away when Peter burst from
-his room, clad in his night clothes. His knees almost gave way as he took
-in the dreadful scene. Horror was apparent in every line of his body, and
-I had an inexplicable desire to laugh. But by a supreme effort I fought
-off this hysteria.
-
-Quite calmly the madman swung his legs down from the slab and sat there
-on its edge, transfixing poor Peter with his terrible gaze. He chuckled.
-
-Peter commenced to back toward his room. In an instant the madman was at
-him.
-
-Then commenced a wild chase around the room, of which I could only catch
-fleeting glimpses as they passed on one side of my slab. Once the maniac
-rested bony hands on my body as he prepared for a new rush at Peter, whom
-I could hear breathing near by.
-
-Bound hand and foot, Chic and I were unable to make a move, even if
-terror had not prevented us.
-
-Untiringly, cunningly, the madman pursued his prey. Peter dodged and
-squirmed in terror. Perspiration poured from his face. But his efforts
-were futile. He was penned in a corner, at last, where a door led
-directly to a stairway in the corridor.
-
-Step by step, the madman approached him, his long fingers outstretched
-like talons, and a low, gleeful laugh came from his lips. Peter backed
-desperately away from him, as though he hoped to press through the great
-oaken door. The maniac’s fingers were almost at his throat, when the door
-swung back suddenly and Peter tumbled from the room, his body bumping and
-thudding on the stairs outside.
-
-Startled by the sudden disappearance of his victim, the madman halted
-a moment. The door automatically swung shut again, firmly this time.
-Apparently, it had not been tightly closed before.
-
-The insane creature flung himself at it. It repelled him. He shrieked and
-tore at it, but to no avail, and he finally turned away.
-
-His eyes, now wilder than ever, swept the room. They rested on our bound
-figures. Swiftly, he passed over to where I lay. The rope puzzled him,
-and he was still for a moment.
-
-Suddenly he grasped it and snapped it as though it had been thread. I was
-free, but I did not move. I waited for him to seize me, but his footsteps
-shuffled away. He was beside Chic now. I heard the rope which bound him
-snap.
-
-In desperation, I rolled from the slab and rose trembling to my feet. The
-noise attracted the crazed being. He turned and faced me.
-
-His features were distorted into a horrible grin. His sharp, cruel teeth
-gnashed as if in expectation of a bloody feast. He leaped at me, clearing
-the slab, on which I had lain, at one bound.
-
-I was too weak to dodge, but I tried grimly to clinch with him, as I had
-seen groggy boxers do when they were sparring for time. I was in his
-arms. His eyes blazed not a foot from mine. Foam flecked his mouth. His
-weight pressed against me. It grew heavier and heavier.
-
-Then my overwrought nerves gave way, and I became unconscious.
-
- * * * * *
-
-When I awoke I was outside in the cool night air. Chic was bathing my
-brow with muddy water from a roadside pool. The madman had collapsed at
-the same moment as I had. In a daze, Chic had laid him again on the slab
-and had dragged me from the building.
-
-Poor Peter we forgot, until he was found the next morning, haggard,
-white-haired and unable to utter an intelligible word.
-
-Too vivid an imagination, wrought into a frenzy by the uncanny
-surroundings, was the way the doctors diagnosed his strange case. Chic
-and I were too dazed to shatter the theory.
-
-As for the madman, he had really died, after the short spell of suspended
-animation and temporary revival. I know this because his gaunt skeleton
-was one of the principal decorations at our graduation dance.
-
-But, even with this assurance, I sometimes wake at night in a cold sweat,
-and feel for the butt of the revolver under my pillow.
-
-
-
-
-Arrest Woman Accused of Witchcraft
-
-
-Popular rumors of a sorceress in the Logan Square district of Chicago
-led to the arrest of Mrs. Emily Elhert for practising medicine without a
-license. The woman styled herself a spiritualist and claimed the ability
-to heal any disease. She would make mysterious passes over her patients,
-and applied an evil-smelling salve, the composition of which is not
-known. Each visit cost the patient two dollars, and Mrs. Elhert is said
-to have made very good money until the police interfered with her career.
-
-
-
-
-_An Electrocution, Vividly Described By An Eye Witness_
-
-THE CHAIR
-
-_By_ DR. HARRY E. MERENESS
-
-_Former Physician at Sing Sing Prison_
-
- Dr. Harry E. Mereness, who wrote this realistic description
- of an electrocution, was attending physician at Sing Sing
- Prison for six years, and during that period he attended, in
- his official capacity, sixty-seven executions in the Electric
- Chair—a record that has never been equaled. Among the many
- noted executions he witnessed were those of Lieut. Becker of
- the New York Police Department and the four gunmen in the
- Rosenthal case. Prior to their death, he attended the prisoners
- in the condemned cells.
-
- “The average prisoner, approaching the moment of execution,”
- says Dr. Mereness, “is in a mental haze or wild delirium
- produced by the fear of death. In two instances, however, this
- was lacking. Both men, after being strapped in the chair, said:
- ‘Good-by, Doc!’”
-
-
-The minute hand on my watch indicates 5:44 a. m. I am standing in a
-direct line with the chair.
-
-My gaze is directed to the left side of the room and down a short,
-narrow, heavily-walled corridor that forms the communication between the
-condemned cells and the execution chamber. There are a number of guards
-standing quietly about, and on my right, back of a rope stretched across
-the room, sit the witnesses.
-
-There is a tension in the very air of the chamber. Absolute quiet
-prevails. A few seconds pass, eternally long they are.
-
-Then comes a sound—a muffled “Good-by, all.” The sound reaches the ears
-of the witnesses, and involuntarily they straighten up on their stools;
-there is some scuffling of feet, and one witness, possibly a trifle more
-nervous than the rest, clears his throat. Everyone is now keenly alert.
-
-I hear the chant of the priest—the response of the condemned man—the low,
-quavering and broken response, “Have mercy on me.”
-
-The little procession now enters the corridor. I see the condemned
-man—stocking-footed, and with his right trouser leg flapping, grimly
-ludicrous, for it has been slit up to the knee in order to facilitate the
-application of the leg electrode. He is between the deputy warden and his
-assistant, each supporting an arm as they slowly enter the death chamber.
-
-At the sight of the fateful and fatal chair, the condemned man
-involuntarily shrinks back, but the guards are prepared for this, and
-their hold becomes a little firmer. There is no halt in their step, and
-but five paces away, inanimate, portentous and ominous—the chair!
-
-[Illustration: _Copyright 1910 by Harry Hirschfeld._]
-
-After the first sight—after that sharp, quivering intake of breath—the
-gaze of the condemned man shifts about the room. His expression haunts
-one. You feel that it is both all-seeing and unseeing. The fear of
-death—a definite emotion—is here portrayed in a fashion that but few have
-beheld. There is utter finality in that look.
-
-His eyes rest upon you. You feel that he sees you, but that you are
-simply one of the images in the general make-up of the last picture that
-is conveyed to his brain. There is no recognition in the glance—just
-a vague, hopeless and apparently vacant stare, but one which you feel
-discerns the sharp outlines of the persons and objects in the room,
-without recognizing features or details.
-
-To me, that quick survey of his surroundings, that final glance of the
-unfortunate being on the very threshold of his meeting with his God,
-is the most harrowing of all the gruesome details connected with the
-administration of man-made Law’s decree.
-
-My watch indicates 5:45 a. m. The condemned man is seated in the Chair.
-The guards work quickly, two at either side and one at the head of the
-Chair. The arm straps are buckled fast, the leg straps next, then the
-face strap, which has an opening for the chin, and the upper part of
-which mercifully blindfolds the eyes.
-
-The cap, a soft, pliable thing made of a fine copper mesh and lined with
-sponge, which has been moistened in salt water, is placed upon the head
-and moulded to fit its contour. To a binding-post on the cap is adjusted
-the heavy wire that conveys the terrific current from the dynamo in a
-distant part of the prison. To the bare right leg, another electrode is
-applied and connected up.
-
-A full minute has elapsed since I heard the “Good-by, all.” The guards
-have completed their task. My notes now read: “Entered 5:44:10. Chair and
-strapped 5:45:00.”
-
-“Lamb of God who taketh away the sins of the world have mercy on me,”
-chants the priest. And: “Have mercy on me,” comes the broken, almost
-inaudible and inarticulate response.
-
-I retain my position, note-book and watch in my left hand. I am standing
-on the right side of, and in the same direct line with, the Chair. The
-Chair and its occupant, the electrician and myself, form a right angle. I
-occupy the angle, for at the ends of the lines, which make up that angle,
-are the two things that demand my undivided attention—the electrician and
-the condemned. From my point of vantage I can see them both. My eyes are
-on the condemned man.
-
-I feel the eyes of the electrician upon me. I have a new, bright yellow
-pencil—freshly sharpened. It is quite necessary for my notes. I hold it
-vertically on my note-book, and watch the occupant of the Chair. The
-overwhelming mental tension, coupled with the knowledge of the proximity
-of death, has a fearsome reaction upon the Chair’s victim. With each
-rapid inspiration, there is a slight elevation of the shoulders, and as
-expiration takes place the shoulders sag. This is the very instant I have
-awaited—the lungs are practically free from air. I dip my pencil quickly
-from the vertical toward the horizontal.
-
-There is a sudden _click_, the body in the Chair straightens, and from
-the mouth comes a low, sibilant _hiss_; the straps creak, and you feel
-that if the straps should break the body would be catapulted over the
-rope and amidst the witnesses.
-
-For ten seconds the high current of eighteen hundred and fifty volts and
-eight to nine amperes is on; then, for forty seconds, the voltage is
-dropped to two hundred.
-
-During this period the body sags perceptibly; at the end of forty seconds
-the current is again increased, and the body again straightens and
-strains against the straps. After the final ten seconds of the fatal
-minute, the current is switched off.
-
-The body in the Chair actually shrinks before your very eyes! I step
-up to the Chair; a guard tears open the shirt and bares the chest. As
-I place my stethoscope over the heart I am conscious that the body is
-intensely hot. I know from experience that the heat generated by the
-rapidity of the passage of the current has raised the temperature from
-sub-normal to between 120 and 130 degrees.
-
-I hear a racing, tumultuous _rat-a-tat-tat_—possibly I can count the
-heart beats. I lift the face strap, and with thumb and forefinger
-separate the lids. The eyes are glazed, but the pupils are small. I feel
-the great arteries in the neck. I continue to get a pulsation that tells
-me that the vital forces have not yet ceased.
-
-My notes now read: “First contact—one minute—5:45:10—5:46:10.”
-
-I step off the rubber mat and nod to the electrician; the current is
-again thrown on, this time for five seconds. When I now listen over the
-heart, I am reminded of a clock that is running down; the heart beats
-are fainter—they become slower—they commence to skip—I fail to feel the
-pulsation in the neck—there is a heavier glaze over the eyes—the pupils,
-small and contracted a moment before, are now widely dilated. The head
-rests on the shoulders, and the face is directed toward the chandelier
-with its many lights, but there is no reaction of the pupil as the bright
-light strikes the eye—it remains wide and big. The muscles of the face
-are set, and saliva drools from the angles of the mouth.
-
-I again place my stethoscope upon the chest, but no sound reaches my ear.
-I listen for five—for ten—for twenty seconds. There is nothing; all the
-vital reactions have disappeared.
-
-Physicians among the witnesses are invited to listen; they take their
-time, for there is no reason for hurry now. After the last one finishes I
-make a final examination. It is as before—nothing.
-
-My notes now state: “Second contact—5 seconds—5:47:00. Pronounced dead at
-5:52:00.”
-
-I turn toward the Warden and say, “I pronounce this man dead.”
-
-The law has been obeyed.
-
-The general attitude of tenseness is relieved. The guards quickly
-unbuckle the straps and carry the body to the autopsy room, and after
-placing it upon the stone-topped table begin to remove the clothes. The
-hum of conversation becomes general. The witnesses are departing.
-
-I commence the autopsy, feeling that my report will be, “Autopsy upon the
-body of ⸺ No. ⸺, convicted of murder, first degree and today executed at
-this prison, showed all organs and tissues to be normal.”
-
-As I begin my long sweeping incision, the thought always strikes me:
-“This must also be done because it is the Law,” and the invariable
-question comes, “Is it really the Law, or is it to insure the carrying
-out of the Law?”
-
-In other words, if the Chair fails, the post mortem succeeds.
-
- * * * * *
-
-There is little left to tell. The evening papers will state that
-“So-and-so, convicted of first degree murder and sentenced to death, was
-electrocuted at Sing Sing Prison early this morning.” They will rehearse
-the grewsome history of the crime and will tell how the murderer, with
-firm step, entered the execution chamber at 5:44:10 a. m., and was
-strapped in the chair at 5:45:00 a. m.
-
-These details are quite correct. I can vouch for them, for I let the
-reporters take my notes, which are official, and they copy the data and
-embody it in their stories.
-
-They invariably dress up the “first contact,” however, so their stories
-read about like this, “At 5:45:10 Warden Blank threw the switch, pressed
-the button, or dropped his handkerchief, as a signal” (it is always one
-of these three).
-
-Well, I’m rather glad that they credit it to the Warden, and I really
-feel better that I and my new, bright yellow pencil, freshly sharpened,
-have been overlooked.
-
-
-
-
-Rare Music Disappears Mysteriously
-
-
-Caslav Albrecht, a Chicago violinist, recently made a trip to Europe and
-brought back about thirty-five rare pieces of violin manuscript, which
-cannot be duplicated. Many of the compositions were original copies and
-the whole is valued at $5,000. The music disappeared at a party given by
-Frank Steiner, another musician, which Albrecht attended. He says he had
-the music with him when he came, and left it in the cloak-room during the
-festivities, and that it was gone when he was ready to leave for home.
-Although Albrecht was sure the manuscripts were merely mislaid, no trace
-of them could be found.
-
-
-
-
-The Cauldron
-
-_True Adventures of Terror_
-
-CONDUCTED BY PRESTON LANGLEY HICKEY
-
- While most of the material in =WEIRD TALES= is, of course,
- fiction, we are of the belief that there are innumerable
- persons who have lived through experiences as weird, terrible
- and horrifying as anything ever chronicled by a fictionist.
- This belief, and the fact that =WEIRD TALES= deals exclusively
- with the bizarre and unusual, has resulted in the establishment
- of =THE CAULDRON=.
-
- Readers who have had a hand in strange adventures, or who have
- been victims of experiences of a startling and terrifying
- nature, are cordially invited to send accounts of them to
- =THE CAULDRON=. A concrete idea of what is desired may be
- ascertained by reading this month’s contributions. Manuscripts
- may be as horrible and hair-raising as it is in the power of
- the author to make them, but they must be clean from a moral
- standpoint. Those accepted will be paid for at our usual rate.
- Tell your story clearly and briefly. Double-spaced, typewritten
- manuscripts are preferred, but those in long hand will be
- considered if legibly written. No manuscript will be returned
- unless accompanied by a stamped and self addressed envelope.
-
-
-THE GHOST OF DEATH
-
-Editor of The Cauldron: There are those who are as firmly convinced in
-the existence of ghosts as they are that day follows night. I have heard
-intelligent men and women discuss ghosts seriously and tell of this
-and that spiritualistic seance that they attended where, before their
-very eyes, misty forms of long departed dead have been materialized
-before their very eyes. To me all this appears more or less ridiculous.
-During the past fifteen years I have made a very thorough study of the
-“phenomena” of spiritualism, and my findings have resulted in my becoming
-skeptical on this subject. It is because of my emphatic disbelief in the
-supernatural, as far as its direct relation to human man is concerned,
-that I submit the following as one of the most inexplicable and
-terrifying things that has ever occurred to me:
-
-During the summer of 1906, my wife and I were residing in the township
-of North Lamoine, Maine, a fishing village situated on Frenchman’s Bay,
-an arm of the Atlantic which extends some miles inland. Our first born,
-then twenty months old, had not been well for some time, and we thought
-perhaps a summer in the open country close to the sea would be beneficial.
-
-For a time the little one appeared to rally, but failed to put on the
-weight or to assume the healthy look that a normal baby of her age
-should. Then came a day when my wife struck terror to my heart by telling
-me that she had a premonition that something would happen—that the child
-would not live.
-
-I scoffed at the notion and cheered her as best I could, but there was a
-great weight on my heart. I had begun to feel the same way, and the fact
-that my wife mentioned it only intensified my grief.
-
-Just two days after this conversation there occurred the manifestation
-of which I write. My work kept me up later than usual, and it was not
-until after midnight that I finally retired. Worn out as I was from the
-activities of the day, and though late the hour, it was some time before
-I could compose myself to sleep.
-
-The baby, who slept with my wife at the other end of the room, moaned. A
-heavy electrical storm raged outside—the wind lashing the rain against
-the window panes in unabating fury—and my thoughts were in a turmoil.
-
-Finally I began to doze and, I believe, was about to fall asleep when,
-with a start, I found myself staring wide eyed at the ceiling. No one had
-spoken, and, save for the baby’s moans and the storm, there had been no
-sound, but something had impelled me to open my eyes. A moment later a
-cold perspiration broke out over my body.
-
-At first, nothing was visible and then, even in the almost pitch darkness
-of the room, a filmy though strangely luminous grayish white object began
-to take form close to the ceiling just above my wife’s bed. It became
-clearer and clearer until finally it moved.
-
-As rigid as a marble statue I lay. Though not exactly afraid, to have
-saved my life I don’t believe I could have moved at that moment.
-Gradually this indescribable object began to settle over the other bed.
-Just as it seemed to merge itself with the faint whiteness of the covers,
-the baby cried out, to be followed an instant later by a piercing scream
-from my wife.
-
-“Back! back!” she gasped. “No! no! you shall not! For God’s sake _back_!”
-
-I remained motionless but an instant, long enough, however, to see the
-specter gather itself into a compact form, flash upward and disappear.
-Then, with a mighty effort, I pulled myself together and bounded out of
-bed.
-
-“Oh,” my wife cried, sitting up, “did you see it?”
-
-“See what, dear?” I asked.
-
-“Just now something white seemed to come down, with arms outstretched, as
-if to take little Helen away. I am sure I was not asleep.”
-
-“You must have been,” I answered. “I was wide awake all along and did not
-see anything. The room is quite empty.”
-
-“Ugh,” she shuddered, “what a terrible dream!”
-
-There was no sleep for me the rest of that night. For hours I sat in the
-living-room, trying to fathom the mystery that I had beheld. I knew it
-could not have been imagination, for my wife had seen it also. There was
-no accounting for it.
-
-And I am just as much in the dark now as I was then. God only knows what
-it was that my wife and I saw that night! Perhaps it was a matriculated
-spirit from the Valley of Death, after all.
-
-In any event, Baby Helen died the next day.
-
- OWEN KING.
-
-Editor of The Cauldron: During the street car strike in Denver in 1919, I
-was a reporter on the _Times_. On the night when the strikers and “Black
-Jack” Jerome’s “breakers” met in deadly conflict, I was assigned to the
-East Denver barns, in which Jerome’s men were fortified.
-
-Toward midnight, the strikers stormed _en masse_ and, during the melée,
-I dropped with a bullet in my chest. Regaining consciousness, I found
-myself in the City Hospital. Kneeling beside my bed was my wife—Estelle.
-I tried to move.
-
-“Lie still, dear,” she said, rising. “You must keep very quiet. They are
-going to probe for the bullet.”
-
-Upon reaching the operating room, the ether instantly choked me
-into unconsciousness. Then occurred the strangest thing I have ever
-experienced. I seemed suddenly transported into a great hall, with tall,
-shining pillars. All around me were people clothed in white. From afar
-came the sound of soft music.
-
-But what attracted me was a raised section at one end on which sat a
-benevolent-looking old gentleman. In his eyes there seemed to be all the
-sorrow and suffering of a wicked world’s countless centuries. He beckoned
-to me. When I had come before him he spoke, and in his voice there was
-the golden ring of perfectly tuned chimes.
-
-“My son,” he said, “you have been brought to judgment. At present you are
-no longer a part of the earth’s sphere. Back there science is fighting
-for your life. Whether science succeeds is determined by this court of
-justice. What have you to say for yourself?”
-
-I trembled and became afraid. Where was I? Was I dead and in some
-spiritual sphere far removed from the earth?
-
-Then I spoke. I recall, distinctly, that I rambled on at great length,
-attempting to make a good impression. As I spoke he listened intently,
-occasionally nodding his head slowly and sadly.
-
-When I finished, he resumed:
-
-“Words and actions mean nothing here,” he said. “In passing judgment we
-consider only motives. They are everything. Remember that. It is the
-motives behind all actions that are important.”
-
-So saying, he turned to an aged man, who was writing in a book, and
-asked: “Any prayers?”
-
-“Yes, a young woman kneels at his bed.”
-
-“You shall return to earthly existence for a time then,” the judge said,
-raising his hands. “Heed well my words.”
-
-Then I saw a great light swell from some invisible source, and, as I
-looked, there seemed to be ragged scars in his palms that ran red.
-
-When finally I opened my eyes I was again in my little bed, with Estelle
-and the doctor standing by. Eventually I recovered from my serious wound.
-
-The weird vision that I had while on the operating table, though, has
-always been a great mystery to me. Dreams are nothing unusual for me, but
-this was so entirely different from anything that I have ever experienced
-before! I have spoken of it many times and to many people. They have not
-laughed, but have listened in astonishment.
-
-What was it, I wonder? Was it the effect of the anesthetic upon my
-weakened system? Was it the wild distortion of my brain or, when life is
-flickering on the brink of eternity, are we actually brought face to face
-with our Creator? Will this question ever be answered in life? I wonder!
-
- OTIS TREVOR.
-
-
-THE DEATH PLUNGE
-
-Editor of The Cauldron: I am an expert riveter. When beams are hoisted
-into place on buildings I hang suspended in space on a swinglike seat and
-rivet the sections together. Had I followed any other pursuit I probably
-would never have had the distinction of being the only man to fall twelve
-stories and live. It was during the construction of an eighteen story
-bank building that I experienced this extraordinary adventure.
-
-I was working in front on the twelfth story. At this particular time I
-was directly under the crane which hoisted the great girders. Happening
-to glance down, I saw an exceptionally large load coming up. There were
-five. It is seldom that more than three are hoisted at once. I watched
-them ascend, interested in the process of landing so many. When they had
-almost reached the level of the fifteenth story, the roof-man gave the
-signal to slow down. Mistaking his motions, the crane operator pulled his
-reverse and the great beams swung inward.
-
-Seeing that collision between the front of the structure and the beams
-was unavoidable, I attempted to get out of the way in the event anything
-happened. I was not quick enough. With a crash, the girders smashed into
-the building right over the heavy rope from which I hung, cutting it as
-though it were string.
-
-Things happened so fast then that my memory of them is confused.
-Instantly I was precipitated downward. I do not know what sensations
-a drowning man experiences, but have heard that a whole life time is
-flashed across the victim’s mind. That is just what happened in my case.
-Everything I ever did came before me in those terrifying moments.
-
-Though stricken with horror, I tried to keep my mind clear. Far below me
-I could see clusters of people gazing at me, horror stricken, as I fell,
-turning over and over.
-
-In a moment’s time I was within four stories of the pavement. My breath
-was almost gone. Insane with the thought of the terrible fate that
-awaited me, I shut my eyes. Then, with a great roaring in my ears, I
-struck, and, though almost dead, knew that it wasn’t the street. For an
-instant I was aware of great pain and then ... nothingness.
-
-Within an hour I had regained consciousness. Fate was with me that day.
-Just as I fell a big open truck, piled high with cardboard boxes, had
-stopped beneath me. In this I landed; my fall was broken by these boxes,
-and I escaped a most horrible death.
-
-Upon examination, it was found that I suffered four fractured ribs, a
-compound fracture of the left leg, two breaks in my right arm and a break
-in my left wrist in addition to severe cuts about the body and head. That
-is my story. I call it a narrow escape.
-
- JOHN BURKHOLZ.
-
-
-
-
-THE EYRIE
-
-
-The time has come to talk of cats and Chinamen, and rattlesnakes and
-skulls—and why it is these things abound in yarns for WEIRD TALES.
-Particularly cats and Chinamen. Believe it or not, every second
-manuscript we open (and that’s placing the average rather low) is
-concerned with one or the other, or both, of these.
-
-Why is this? Is it because a cat and a Chinaman suggest the mysticism of
-the Orient, and thus seem excellent “props” for weird fiction? Or is it
-merely because both mind their own business, imperturbably pursue their
-destinies, and thereby create the impression that there’s some deep-laid
-mystery here? We ask you that.
-
-Whatever the reason, it’s an odd and curious fact that when an author
-sets out to tell a weird tale his mind turns, as if instinctively, to
-cats and Chinamen. And then, for good measure, he not infrequently throws
-in a few rattlesnakes and a skull or two.
-
-Sometimes the result is interesting. And sometimes it is awful! And
-again, sometimes, it is a ludicrous thing, unconsciously funny.
-
-We have no prejudices against Chinese characters in fiction, and we have
-none whatever against cats. For that matter, we haven’t any prejudices
-of any sort. We’ve published a good many stories about Chinese, and
-quite a large number about cats, and not a few that featured skulls and
-rattlesnakes. You’ll find some in this June issue.
-
-But we didn’t accept those stories because of the aforementioned
-features, nor yet in spite of them. We accepted them solely because they
-were GOOD stories. We observe one rule, and one rule only, in selecting
-stories for your entertainment. We think we’ve mentioned this before,
-but we’ll say again that our only requirement is: The thing MUST be
-interesting!
-
-If a story interests us it will likewise interest others, or so we
-believe. And if it doesn’t—Thumbs Down! And it doesn’t matter a good gosh
-darn whether the hero, or villain, has yellow skin and oblique eyelids,
-or flaxen hair and sky-blue eyes, or whether or not a green-eyed cat
-howls atop a grinning skull. The story’s the thing!
-
-All the same, though, we would like to know why all these cats and
-Chinamen are slinking mysteriously through our manuscripts. We read eight
-before breakfast this morning (chosen quite at random), and we hope to
-die if there wasn’t a Chinaman in every last one of them!
-
- * * * * *
-
-And still the letters pour in from delighted readers—plenty of them!
-Manifestly, it is quite impossible to print more than a fractional part
-of them here, but we can’t refrain from quoting at least three that
-concern Paul Suter’s story, “Beyond the Door,” which appeared in the
-April WEIRD TALES.
-
-We take it you remember this story and will therefore be interested in
-these comments. The first letter comes from R. E. Lambert, secretary of
-the Washington Square College of New York University, New York, and reads
-as follows:
-
- “Dear sir: Just as Woodrow Wilson used to say during his most
- trying days in the presidency that when he wanted to get his
- mind completely off his work he would turn to a detective
- story, so I turn for my own relaxation to the horror story.
-
- “I suppose it would take exhaustive questioning by a
- psychoanalyst to discover why this sort of literature appeals
- to me, but the fact is it does so appeal. While there are
- hundreds of others like me in this respect, I doubt whether
- the number is great enough to make such a venture as yours a
- considerable financial success—therefore, the more praise to
- you for your courage in launching WEIRD TALES.
-
- “What particularly impelled me to write this letter is the
- story in the current issue, entitled ‘Beyond the Door.’
- One reason why I single this one from such a congeries of
- thrilling, weird tales is that, with all its mystery and
- suggestion of the supernatural, the dénouement and everything
- that leads up to it are discovered at the end to be logically
- and physically ‘possible.’ So often, in mystery stories, we
- are called upon to accept much that simply is not naturally
- possible, and we turn from them, duly horrified, but
- unpersuaded that the tale is more than a figment of a morbid
- imagination.
-
- “From the standpoint of construction, I have read few stories
- that so faithfully adhere to the trinity of short story
- tradition—unity, coherence and mass. Especially on the score of
- unity, the most important of the trinity, do I find this tale
- worthy of much praise. Not a situation, not a paragraph, nor
- a sentence, but which has a direct bearing on the unfoldment
- of the plot. And I find no single instance where the choice of
- words seems to have resulted from a straining for effect. Of
- how many stories, whether horrific or any other kind, can this
- truly be said?
-
- “Then, too, very few tales are really brought home to the
- reader’s own intimate experience of life. Yet here we shudder
- at the terrors created by a guilty conscience, and approve,
- while we shudder, of the terrible punishment that is meted out
- for the wrong-doing. How very real it thus becomes to all of us!
-
- “Finally, the author dares to do, and admirably succeeds in
- doing, what so few writers of fiction attempt—and mostly bungle
- when they do attempt. I refer to the linking of his story in
- the closing paragraphs to man’s inevitable, age-old uncertainty
- as to what is to come in the hereafter. This alone elevates
- ‘Beyond the Door’ out of the ordinary run of fiction.
-
- “Here’s wishing you a well-merited success!”
-
-The next one was written by Rev. Andrew Wallace MacNeill, minister of the
-Bethlehem Congregational Church, International Falls, Minnesota:
-
- “Gentlemen: I have read with much interest and pleasure the
- April number of your new magazine, which I believe will make
- a distinctive and acceptable place for itself in magazine
- literature.
-
- “I am particularly interested in the story by a new writer,
- Paul Suter, ‘Beyond the Door’ proving exceptionally appealing
- and gripping. I hope you will publish more work by this writer,
- as I believe if he maintains the standard of this story your
- readers will make quite a popular response.”
-
-And the third letter, which arrived in the same mail that brought the
-first two, came from the author himself:
-
- “Dear Mr. Baird: I take it that even editors enjoy an
- occasional pat on the back, in the midst of the many
- black looks they receive, so I am presuming to express my
- appreciation of the way in which you printed my story, ‘Beyond
- the Door,’ in your April issue.
-
- “There is a story which might easily have been rendered
- monotonous by unintelligent press work—because the effect of
- slowly undermining horror, which I had to attain, is akin to
- monotony. You avoided that pitfall by change of type—and (this
- to me is the remarkable thing) I can tell by the way in which
- you ran in those changes that you got absolutely every subtle
- suggestion which I concealed in that story—and I buried quite
- a lot of them there. You must have read my manuscript with a
- microscope. May I take the liberty of expressing my opinion
- that as an editor you are emphatically THERE?
-
- “Cordially yours,
-
- “J. Paul Suter.”
-
-We almost dislike to print this last one—it’s too much like pinning a
-medal on our coat—but we can plead, in extenuation, that the excellence
-of Mr. Suter’s story was not due to our editing, or printer’s directions,
-or anything of the sort, but solely to his splendid craftsmanship. He
-wrote a good story and we published it, and no amount of editing could
-have made it any better.
-
-If you failed to read “Beyond the Door” we earnestly recommend that you
-do so now. In either case, don’t miss his next story. It is called “The
-Guard of Honor,” and is fully as “creepy” as the first—and you will find
-it in the next issue of WEIRD TALES.
-
-Suter is a coming writer. No doubt of that. And since he tells us, “I
-would rather write horror stories than anything else,” we hope to publish
-the best of his work.
-
- * * * * *
-
-We’ve ransacked a bale of Letters to the Editor in an effort to find some
-not sweet with praise! and we’ve found only two, and here they are:
-
- “Dear sir: I have purchased two copies of your new magazine,
- have read the stories, and also the praise liberally supplied
- by friends and readers. I think it is time to offer a few words
- of criticism, since applause and praise of this kind does
- not mean much. The public lauds any new effort; it applauds
- anything, even moving pictures.
-
- “The stories you have printed so far can be grouped under
- three general headings: Ghost Stories, Snake Stories, Insanity
- Stories. In your first issue you printed a story called ‘Ooze’
- which approached the type of semi-scientific stories that are
- liked intensely by all those who are fond of the unusual,
- and if you would publish at least one story of this type in
- each issue of your magazine I am sure that your efforts would
- register larger sales.”—Conrad A. Brandt, 563 West 150th Street
- New York City.
-
- “My dear Mr. Baird: At last it arrived—that second volume. If
- you play that slow trick again on us we shall send one of our
- aviators to Chicago to get the so strenuously desired copy.
-
- “Allow me to tell you which story in the April number I liked
- best and which I hate best. ‘The Scar’ by Dr. Carl Ramus was
- a gem. Plausible, scientifically correct, well told, no words
- wasted. ‘The Whispering Thing’ is the acme of foolish, silly,
- nonsensical, high-school girl, bucket-of-blood story. If you
- waste more paper on such rotten stuff I predict failure in
- caps.”—Adeline Jugol, Covina Apartments, Los Angeles.
-
-Ouch!
-
-Luckily, though, not all our readers disrelished “The Whispering Thing.”
-For instance:
-
- “Dear sir: Having recently read the second issue of WEIRD
- TALES, I cannot refrain from expressing my congratulations
- on your rare fiction taste as an editor. I enjoyed reading
- the novelette by Harold Ward, but the authors who wrote ‘The
- Whispering Thing’ have an imagination which is extraordinary. I
- happened to read this story late at night, and I began to look
- for ‘spooks.’ Talk about horror and terror combined! This story
- is nothing short of a marvel.
-
- “I sincerely believe that you have an innate tendency for
- selecting stories of this type, and if you keep this class
- of stories running you will, without the least doubt, be a
- success.”—O. R. Hamilton, 4002 Avenue F, Austin, Texas.
-
-With regard to the poetic effusion that follows, we’re not sure whether
-“Witch Hazel” is spoofing us or having a spasm of ecstasy. At any rate,
-we’ll take a chance and print the thing just as she wrote it:
-
- “Dear Editor: No words can express how much I enjoy your
- magazine. Here is what I think of it:
-
- “Oh, what is more pleasure than a show,
- A party, bon bons, or even a beau?
- Well, here’s the answer (all readers take heed);
- WEIRD TALES and a nice quiet place to read!
-
- “It’s my favorite magazine, and I can hardly wait for
- each number to come out. I think it is the most wonderful
- magazine in the world, as it is so different, so extremely
- interesting—but there! I can never say enough in its praise.
- As my little verse says, ‘I like it better than anything,’ and
- I’ve often said I wished some editor would publish just such a
- magazine, and thank you, Mr. Baird (you Good Fairy) for doing
- so. I can hardly wait for the next issue. Thank you for filling
- a long felt need, and good luck!”—Witch Hazel of St. Louis.
-
-We’ve scores of flattering letters here, but we’re not going to print
-them all [prolonged and loud applause], because, for one thing, we
-haven’t space, and, for another, we have a sneaking suspicion that our
-delight in reading them is not always shared by others. So we’ll run only
-five or six more, and call it a day.
-
- “My dear Mr. Baird: I don’t mind admitting that I was a little
- leary about WEIRD TALES when I first heard of it. The fact of
- the matter is, I picked up the first copy with a good deal of
- prejudice against it. The reason for this prejudice is clear
- enough. I have always had a healthy respect for mystery stories
- and believe they are the hardest kind to write—and to judge.
-
- “For this reason I am moved to write you and tell you how very
- much my view point has changed. You have not only sold me, you
- have enthused me. There is no question about your future. I’ve
- talked to many friends who have read the March issue, and I
- know.”—A. M. Oliver, 148 North Portage Path, Akron, Ohio.
-
- “Dear sir: I asked my newsdealer for something different in the
- magazine line today, and he handed me a copy of the April WEIRD
- TALES. I’ve read many so-called mystery stories, but none can
- compare with those I found in your magazine. It is something
- altogether new and most fascinating. I especially enjoyed
- ‘The Snake Fiend’ and ‘The Conquering Will.’ Those sort of
- stories appeal to me. For anybody that is looking for something
- different I heartily advise your magazine. May you prosper!”—P.
- W. Burrows, Kearney, Nebraska.
-
- “Dear sirs: ... I was in the business section of Des Moines
- one evening recently when my eye fell upon a copy of WEIRD
- TALES. Struck by its unusual appearance, I bought one. When
- I arrived home it was rather early, and I sat down to read.
- Well, I had not finished a half dozen pages before I knew I had
- found a marvelous book—in fact, my ideal magazine. Before I had
- finished the second story I was as much in its power as our
- detective friend seems to be in the power of ‘The Whispering
- Thing.’...
-
- “But here I have been taking up your time with praise of the
- Wonder Magazine and haven’t spoken of the most vital thing—the
- thing which makes such mighty entertainment possible. Please
- find enclosed three dollars for which please enter me for a
- year’s subscription to WEIRD TALES, beginning with your third
- issue.”—J. C. Wolquist, 1544 Walker Street, Des Moines, Iowa.
-
- “Dear Mr. Baird: Three weeks ago I bought a copy of WEIRD
- TALES, and I am shaking yet, as you probably can tell by
- my scribbling!... The first story I read was ‘The Thing of
- a Thousand Shapes.’ It happened to be eleven-thirty when I
- finished the first installment, and I went to bed quaking in
- every limb, firmly resolved never to lay eyes on another copy
- of WEIRD TALES.
-
- “A few days later I passed a news stand. There, glaring into my
- eyes, was the interesting cover of WEIRD TALES. I was about to
- turn away when curiosity whispered in my ear, ‘What happened to
- Billy?’
-
- “Being a woman, curiosity, of course, won, and home I went,
- with the copy tucked snugly under my arm.... And now I look
- on WEIRD TALES as a friend indeed. I daren’t let my little
- brother get the magazine before he does his lessons, or they
- would never get done, while such an absorbing magazine is
- around.”—Miss Marguerite Nicholson, 635 North Frazier Street,
- Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
-
- “Dear Mr. Baird: Congratulations! Your new magazine is simply
- splendid. I have often wondered just when I would be able to go
- to a news stand and buy a real magazine. Now all my worry has
- ceased.... There is one trouble with it, and that is that it
- doesn’t come weekly or semi-monthly.”—M. Nawrocki, 854 Robinson
- Avenue, Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
-
- “Dear Mr. Baird: ... I have thoroughly enjoyed DETECTIVE TALES,
- every issue of it, and believe that there is more good reading
- matter in it than in any other magazine published, and when I
- saw a copy of WEIRD TALES at the news stand, with your name or
- it, I could not resist getting it. And it has lived up to my
- expectations. I could not put the magazine down until I had
- finished every story, and that was about three o’clock the next
- morning.”...—Mary Sharon, 1912 Main Street, Galena, Kansas.
-
-And it’s now three o’clock in the afternoon, and the printer is calling
-for copy, and—
-
-That’ll be all.
-
- THE EDITOR.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Margaret Sanger dares to tell the truth about Birth Control
-
-[Illustration: Margaret Sanger]
-
-For centuries the world has played a game of “hush” about the one most
-important fact of marriage. Even today tens of thousands of women are
-doomed to a life of hopeless, helpless drudgery—and their children are
-doomed to privation and neglect because the mother simply can not give so
-many of them the proper care or support.
-
-Words alone can not tell the terrible sacrifice in wasted bodies and
-blasted lives that has been exacted from women every year. Words alone
-can not express the untold suffering tens of thousands of women—and
-children—must endure every year. That is why Margaret Sanger, herself a
-mother, and President of the American Birth Control League, dares to tell
-the truth about this important subject.
-
-Will you ever write a letter like this?
-
-Only these agony-laden letters can tell the story of woman’s sacrifice
-in all its anguish. These are but a few of thousands sent every day to
-Margaret Sanger by unhappy mothers who have turned to her for help in
-their greatest need, revealing to her the nameless fears and terrors that
-clutch at their hearts. Read these letters, and know for yourself what
-women still suffer:
-
- “It is terrible to think of bringing these little bodies and
- souls into the world, without means or strength to care for
- them. I know that this must be the last one, for it would be
- better for me to go than to bring more neglected babies into
- the world.”
-
- “My baby is only 10 months old, and the oldest of my four
- children is 7. I am so discouraged I want to die. Ignorance on
- this all-important subject has put me where I am.”
-
-“Why is it,” Mrs. Sanger asks, “that the women of Australia, New Zealand,
-Holland, France, and many other nations are permitted to know the
-truths that can save them from this terrible suffering, while the women
-of America must still endure the agonies to which they are needlessly
-condemned?” Margaret Sanger considers it a slur upon the intelligence
-of American womankind to deny to them the knowledge which has brought
-freedom, health, happiness, and life itself, to the women of other
-nations. That is why she has braved the storms of denunciation, why
-she has fought through every court in the land for her right to arouse
-woman-kind.
-
-In her revolutionary book, Margaret Sanger, internationally famous for
-her ceaseless activities in behalf of women and hailed as the liberator
-of her sex, shows the way out for tired, struggling womankind. With utter
-frankness she tears down the veil of silence that has always surrounded
-the subject of birth control. It is a startling revelation of a new truth
-that will open the eyes of women everywhere.
-
- Is the Husband or Wife to Blame?
-
- [Illustration]
-
- Whose is the blame for the tragedy of too many children—husband
- or wife?
-
- Margaret Sanger, the great Birth Control advocate, comes with a
- message vital to every married man and woman.
-
-In her wonderful book Mrs. Sanger shows how women can and will rise
-above the forces that have ruined their beauty—that drag them down—that
-wreck their mental and physical strength—that make them an easy prey for
-death—that disqualify them for society, for self-improvement—and finally
-shut them out from the thing they cherish most, their husband’s love.
-
-In blazing this revolutionary trail to the new freedom of women, this
-daring and heroic author points out that women who can not afford to
-have more than one or two children, should not do so. It is a crime to
-herself, a crime to her children, a crime to society.
-
-A Priceless Possession
-
-Now Margaret Sanger’s message to all women, contained in “Woman and the
-New Race,” is made available to the public. A special edition of this
-vital book has been published in response to the overwhelming demand.
-Order your copy of this wonderful book at once, at the special edition
-price of only $2. Then, if after reading it you do not treasure it as a
-priceless possession, return it to us and your money will be refunded.
-
-It is not even necessary to send a penny now. Just the coupon will bring
-your copy of “Woman and the New Race.” It is bound in handsome, durable
-gray cloth, printed in clear readable type, on good quality book paper
-and contains 234 pages, sent to you in a plain wrapper. When the book is
-delivered at your home, pay the postman the special low price of $2 plus
-the few cents postage. But mail the coupon at once. Tear it off before
-you turn this page.
-
- PARTIAL LIST OF CONTENTS
-
- * Woman’s Error and Her Debt.
- Cries of Despair
- * When Should a Woman Avoid Having Children?
- Two Classes of Women.
- Birth Control—a Parent’s Problem or Woman’s.
- * Continence—Is it Practicable or Desirable?
- Woman and the New Morality.
- * Are Preventive Means Certain?
- Legislating Women’s Morals.
- * Contraceptives or Abortion.
- Progress We Have Made.
-
- * Any one of these chapters is alone worth many times the price
- of the book.
-
- TRUTH PUBLISHING COMPANY
- Dept. T-506 1658 Broadway
- New York City
-
- Truth Publishing Company
- Dept. T-506, 1658 Broadway
- New York City
-
- Please send me in plain wrapper, Margaret Sanger’s new book,
- “Woman and the New Race.” I am enclosing no money, but will
- give the postman who delivers the book to me $2 plus postage.
-
- Name __________________________________
-
- Address _______________________________
-
- City __________________ State _________
-
- (Orders from countries outside the United States, must be
- accompanied by money order.)
-
- * * * * *
-
-[Illustration: WANTED! U.S. RAILWAY MAIL CLERKS]
-
-Get $1600 to $2300 a Year
-
-MEN—BOYS 18 OR OVER SHOULD MAIL COUPON IMMEDIATELY
-
-STEADY WORK
-
-PAID VACATIONS
-
-NO LAYOFFS
-
-Common Education Sufficient
-
-Travel—See the Country
-
- FRANKLIN INSTITUTE,
- Dept. T257, Rochester, N. Y.
-
- Sirs: Send me, without charge, (1) sample Railway Postal
- Clerk Examination questions; (2) tell me how to get a U. S.
- Government job; (3) send list of Government jobs obtainable.
-
- Name ________________________________________
-
- Address _____________________________________
-
- * * * * *
-
-BE SURE AND GET YOUR COPY OF WEIRD TALES EVERY MONTH
-
- * * * * *
-
-I Will Give You a Chance To Earn $200 a Week
-
-Right now, today, I offer you an opportunity to be your own boss—to work
-just as many hours a day as you please—to start when you want to and quit
-when you want to—and earn $200 a week.
-
-These Are Facts
-
-Does that sound too good to be true? If it does, then let me tell you
-what J. R. Head did in a small town in Kansas. Head lives in a town of
-631 people. He was sick, broke, out of a job. He accepted my offer. I
-gave him the same chance I am now offering you. At this new work he has
-made as high as $69.50 for one day’s work.
-
-[Illustration: J. R. HEAD]
-
-You can do every bit as well as he did. If that isn’t enough, then let me
-tell you about E. A. Sweet of Michigan. He was an electrical engineer and
-didn’t know anything about selling. In his first month’s spare time he
-earned $243. Inside of six months he was making between $600 and $1,200 a
-month.
-
-W. J. McCrary is another I want to tell you about. His regular job paid
-him $2.00 a day, but this wonderful new work has enabled him to make
-$9,000 a year.
-
-Yes, and right this very minute you are being offered the same
-proposition that has made these men so successful. Do you want it? Do you
-want to earn $40.00 a day?
-
-A Clean, High-Grade Dignified Business
-
-Have you ever heard of Comer All-Weather Coats? They are advertised in
-all the leading magazines. A good-looking, stylish coat that’s good for
-summer or winter—that keeps out wind, rain or snow, a coat that everybody
-should have, made of fine materials for men, women and children, and
-sells for less than the price of an ordinary coat.
-
-Now, Comer Coats are not sold in stores. All our orders come through
-our own representatives. Within the next few months we will pay
-representatives more than three hundred thousand dollars for sending us
-orders.
-
-And now I am offering you the chance to become our representative in your
-territory and get _your_ share of that three hundred thousand dollars.
-All you do is to take orders. We do the rest. We deliver. We collect and
-you get your money the same day you take the order.
-
-You can see how simple it is. We furnish you with a complete outfit and
-tell you how to get the business in your territory. We help you to get
-started. If you send us only six average orders a day, which you can
-easily get, you will make $100 a week.
-
-Maybe You Are Worth $1,000 a Month
-
-Well, here is your chance to find out, for this is the same proposition
-that enabled George Garon to make a clear profit of $40.00 in his first
-day’s work—the same proposition that gave R. W. Krieger $20.00 net profit
-in a half hour. It is the same opportunity that gave A. B. Spencer $625
-cash for one month’s spare time.
-
-If you mail the coupon at the bottom of this ad I will show you the
-easiest, quickest, simplest plan for making money that you ever heard
-of. If you are interested in a chance to earn $200 a week and can devote
-all your time or only an hour or so a day to my proposition, write your
-name down below, cut out the coupon and mail it to me at once. You take
-no risk, and this may be the one outstanding opportunity of your life to
-earn more money than you ever thought possible.
-
-Find Out Now!
-
-Remember, it doesn’t cost you a penny. You don’t agree to anything and
-you will have a chance to go right out and make big money. Do it. Don’t
-wait. Get full details. Mail the coupon now.
-
- C. E. COMER, THE COMER MFG. CO.
- Dept. 11-C, Dayton, Ohio
-
- _JUST MAIL THIS NOW!_
-
- THE COMER MFG. CO., Dept. 11-C, Dayton, Ohio
-
- Please tell me how I can make $200 a week as your
- representative. Send me complete details of your offer without
- any obligation to me whatsoever.
-
- _Name_ __________________________________________
-
- _Address_ _______________________________________
-
- * * * * *
-
-[Illustration: For Boys and Girls Also]
-
-Do You Need This Help?
-
-Check off at the right the use that most interests you and I will send
-you my booklet and personal advice.
-
-The Natural Body Brace overcomes WEAKNESS and ORGANIC ailments of men and
-women. Develops erect, graceful figure. Brings restful relief, comfort,
-health, strength and ability to do things. IT HAS HELPED NEARLY 200,000.
-
-Read what users say: “Helped relieve strocious pains and overcame
-permanently a spinal curvature.” “Lifted me physically out of darkest
-depths of suffering after everything else had failed.” “Gives one an
-upright, perfect form.” “I wore it for strengthening a weak back—it
-certainly accomplished its purpose.” “Comfortable as a dream.” “Worth all
-the money in the world.”
-
-Wear It 30 Days Free at my expense. Write me in confidence for my
-booklet. Check chart at right. I will at once write you my personal
-advice and give you our liberal proposition.
-
- HOWARD C. RASH, President, Natural Body Brace Co.
- 400 Rash Building, Salina, Kansas
-
- □ Weak back
- □ Better figure
- □ Pregnancy
- □ Round shoulders
- □ Rupture
- □ Constipation
- □ Nervousness
- □ Enlarged abdomen
- □ Weak lungs
- □ Stomach trouble
- □ Misplaced organs
-
- * * * * *
-
-Agents
-
-[Illustration]
-
-YE GODS!
-
-_Some Summer Seller! Made $215 today_—_Writes Bentley_
-
-The big opportunity of a generation—the one big chance for quick big
-profits to agents. Wonderful OLIVER Oil-Gas Burner turns any range into a
-Real Gas Stove—does away with dirty coal and wood. Burns 95% air, 5% oil.
-On and off at turn of valve. Every woman wants the Oliver for freedom
-from drudgery of roasting Summer Kitchens. Season starting.
-
-FREE FORDS J. Carnegey is making $1,000 profit a month—W. M. Russell.
-$650 a month—Berger. $250 a week! During the past two months we paid out
-over $135,000 in salesmen’s commissions! Oliver Burners sell themselves.
-Every demonstration a sale. Get your Free Territory and Free Sample
-Offer quick. Clean up big this Summer. Spare or full time. Free Fords to
-producers. Write or telegraph for full details. Address me personally.
-
- B. M. Oliver, President
-
- OLIVER OIL-GAS BURNER & MACHINE CO.
- 2416-R Oliver Bldg., St. Louis, Mo.
-
- * * * * *
-
-[Illustration: _LEARN RADIO_]
-
-Here’s your opportunity. Radio needs you. Win success in this fascinating
-field. Trained men in demand at highest salaries. Learn at home, in your
-spare time.
-
-Be a Radio Expert
-
-I will train you, quickly and easily to design, construct, install,
-operate, repair, maintain, and sell all forms of Radio apparatus. My new
-methods are the most successful in existence. Learn to earn
-
-$1,800 to $10,000 a Year
-
-FREE Wonderful, home-construction, tube receiving set, of latest design.
-Write for “Radio Facts” free. Engineer Mohaupt.
-
- American Electrical Association
- Dept. 176 4513 Ravenswood Ave., Chicago
-
- * * * * *
-
-How You Can Make Money In Your Spare Time
-
-By Learning to Play Your Favorite Musical Instrument this New Easy Way
-
-[Illustration]
-
-“I bought a house and a lot, and paid $1,100 toward it; all earned
-through teaching piano,” writes Mrs. Mary A. Olsen, 3715 Wadsworth St.,
-Los Angeles, Cal. “I would not take $1,000 for my financial and social
-gain through your lessons. I don’t know how you can give so much for so
-little. I think your method is just wonderful.”
-
-Mrs. Olsen is only one of more than three hundred thousand men, women
-and young people who have become accomplished musicians through this
-wonderful new method. All the intricate “mysteries” of music have been
-reduced to a system of amazing simplicity. Every step is made as clear
-as A. B. C. You don’t have to know anything whatever about music. You
-learn to play your favorite instrument right in your own home, quickly,
-easily and without endless study and practice. Long before you now think
-it could ever be possible, you will actually play well enough to be in
-demand as a well-paid entertainer, teacher or musician.
-
-A delighted 17-year-old girl, Miss Jessie Theall of North Houston, Tex.
-writes, “My first six entertainments that I played the violin for, paid
-me $39.25 besides all the pleasure of playing for my friends.”
-
-$10 to $40 in Two Hours
-
-A busy mother, Mrs. Anna M. Lewis of Northfield, Ohio, recently learned
-to play the violin in just the few odd moments she could spare from her
-household duties, and now earns many welcome dollars to help clothe and
-educate her four children. “At weddings and church socials I get from
-$10 to $40 for a couple of hours playing,” she writes. “I am invited
-everywhere, and my home is so much happier.”
-
-The new way is fun—not drudgery. You’ll begin to play melodies almost
-from the start. You don’t have to pin yourself down to regular hours and
-regular classes. You practice whenever you can, and learn as quickly as
-you please.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Save Months of Time
-
-“I have learned to play better than many a conservatory student in easily
-one-eighth the time,” writes Miss Kitty Breany, 154 Warren St., Paterson,
-N. J. “The lessons are so interesting that they seem like play. A lady I
-know spent $400 for a private teacher, but her playing cannot begin to
-compare with mine.”
-
-You can do what Miss Breany has done. Youngsters of from 10 to 12 years
-have done it, and people as old as sixty have found new interest and
-enjoyment in learning to play a musical instrument. You don’t have to
-listen while others entertain. You can be the talented person who is the
-center of attraction; who holds the audience fascinated; who wins the
-applause—and the dollars.
-
-Plays in Orchestra and Band
-
-“I am solo clarinet in a twenty-piece band, (mostly old players),”
-writes Gerald O. Cairus, 20 High St., Walton, N. Y. “Also am member of
-an eighteen-piece orchestra, whose director has studied in all the large
-conservatories of America and Germany. He was astonished when I told him
-how I learned to play.”
-
-“In three months I was playing saxophone in the High School orchestra.
-The fourth month I organized a profitable dance orchestra,” writes George
-Johnson, 402 Newton St., Salisbury, Md. “And now, at college, I play in
-concerts of the Musical Club in New York, Philadelphia, Atlantic City,
-etc.”
-
-Three Months From Today You, Too, Can Play
-
-Is it the piano that you wish to play, or the organ, violin, guitar,
-harp or cello? Do you want to learn to sing from notes? Are you eager
-to play “jazz” on the banjo, clarinet, Saxophone, trombone, or the drum
-and traps? Does the cornet call to you, or the flute or piccolo? Would
-you love to learn the ukulele (the Hawaiian steel guitar)? Choose your
-favorite—and play it three months from today.
-
-You will learn by notes—the only practical way for you to learn. There
-are no “numbers” and no “tricks” in this marvelous method. You learn to
-read your notes just as you are able to read the letters that make a
-word, and you will be able to recognize and play them so that they will
-make a melody. You learn harmonies like you learn phrases and expressions
-of speech and you learn time like you learn pronunciation.
-
-Learn to Play Any Instrument
-
- Piano
- Organ
- Violin
- Drums and Traps
- Banjo
- Tenor Banjo
- Mandolin
- Clarinet
- Flute
- Saxophone
- ’Cello
- Harmony and Composition
- Sight Singing
- Guitar
- Ukulele
- Hawaiian Steel Guitar
- Harp
- Cornet
- Piccolo
- Trombone
- Voice and Speech Culture
- Automatic Finger Control
-
-Free Book Explains All About This New Method
-
-Send for this free, valuable book, “Music Lessons in Your Own Home.” It
-costs you nothing. You obligate yourself in no way whatever. Everyone
-interested in music ought to read the story of this wonderful new
-simplified method.
-
-It will tell you how you can make music a delightful hobby or a
-money-maker for your spare hours; how you can take the first steps to a
-profitable musical career if you are dissatisfied with your present life
-work; how you can be a social favorite, and go everywhere or have fun at
-home; how you can do these delightful things quickly, easily and at a
-cost so low that it will surprise you.
-
-Special Short-Time Offer
-
-This Free Book also tells about a Special Short-time Offer now being made
-to music-lovers. Mail the coupon at once for your copy. Remember, it
-obligates you in no way whatever. It is FREE! Act now before the supply
-is exhausted!
-
- U.S. SCHOOL OF MUSIC
- 406 Brunswick Building
- New York City
-
-_Please write Name and Address plainly so that there will be no
-difficulty in booklet reaching you._
-
- U. S. SCHOOL OF MUSIC
- 406 Brunswick Bldg., New York City
-
- Please send me your free book, “Music Lessons in Your Own
- Home,” and particulars of your special offer. I am interested
- in the following course:
-
- ______________________________________
- Name of Instrument or Course
-
- Name _________________________________
- (Please Write Plainly)
-
- Address ______________________________
-
- City __________________ State ________
-
-Every Music Lover Should Have this Amazing FREE Book
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Hundreds of happy musicians all over America have helped to write this
-absorbing, inspiring book. You will read the fact-stories of dozens of
-people situated just as you are today. Their actual personal experiences
-are wonderful proofs to you that your success can be equally great. You
-will be amazed and delighted to see how marvelously the New Method has
-reduced the intricacies of music to such astonishing ease and simplicity.
-The book is FREE—but you should send for it right away before all copies
-may be gone!
-
- * * * * *
-
-_COOK AND BAKE_
-
-_With Amazing New Invention_
-
-[Illustration]
-
-No More Sweltering Kitchens in Summer—No More Fires to Build—No More
-Dirty Heavy Coal—No More Ashes—No more unsightly Scuttles—No More Smelly,
-Sooty Oil Stoves to Clutter Kitchens. No More Slavery to a Hot Kitchen
-Stove.
-
-_Makes Your Range A Gas Stove_
-
-Here is the amazing new invention. The Oliver Oil-Gas Burner—that in one
-minute, makes your present coal or wood range into a real gas stove that
-turns on and off with a valve. Gives much or little heat—only when you
-want it—at a twist of your wrist. Just like using city gas.
-
-_Wonderful Baking_
-
-Bake right in your good old oven—better and quicker than ever before.
-Don’t waste fuel and get yourself all out of sorts by nursing a hot fire
-all day just for cooking and baking. With this wonderful invention you
-simply turn a valve, strike a match, and light your fire. In a jiffy the
-oven is at a fine even temperature—any degree you want. Put in your roast
-or baking—put on your stew or vegetables. Go away and forget them. Come
-back when they are done, turn the valve—fire is out instantly—and you
-leave your kitchen cool and sweet all day long.
-
-_Burns 95% Air, 5% Oil_ Fits Any Stove
-
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-[Illustration: _Aren’t they foolish to envy wonderful dancing ability
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- E. P. MORRIS,
- 3497 Elgin Ave.,
- Winnipeg, Manitoba, Can.
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-I am delighted with the lessons. People are amazed at the ease with which
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- Guler, Wash.
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- 4471 Monroe Street, Chicago, Ill.
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- ARMOND MAROHL,
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- HILDA WERTH,
- Hampton, Neb.
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-Learn Without Partner or Music
-
-[Illustration: _This is Arthur Murray, Dancing instructor to the
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-With Arthur Murray’s remarkable correspondence method, you don’t need any
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-Arthur Murray is recognized as America’s foremost authority on social
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-Special Free Proof Offer
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-Private instruction in Mr. Murray’s studio would cost you $10 for each
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-The Correct Dancing Position—How to Gain Confidence—How to Follow
-Successfully—The Art of Making Your Feet Look Attractive—The Correct
-Walk in the Fox Trot—The Basic Principles in Waltzing—How to Waltz
-Backward—The Secret of Leading—The Chasse in the Fox Trot—The Forward
-Waltz Step—How to Leave One Partner to Dance with Another—How to Learn
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-Know—How to Develop Your Sense of Rhythm—Etiquette of the Ballroom.
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-Send No Money—Not One Cent
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-You positively can not fail to become a perfect dancer if you follow the
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- Studio 766 290 Broadway New York
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- 290 Broadway, New York
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- To prove that you can teach me to dance in one evening at home
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- Name _________________________________________
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-<p style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Weird Tales, Volume 1, Number 4, June, 1923, by Various</p>
-<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
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-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: Weird Tales, Volume 1, Number 4, June, 1923</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:0; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:1em;'>The unique magazine</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Various</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Editor: Edwin Baird</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: December 22, 2022 [eBook #69608]</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:left'>Produced by: Wouter Franssen and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)</p>
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WEIRD TALES, VOLUME 1, NUMBER 4, JUNE, 1923 ***</div>
-
-<div class="transnote">
-Transcriber’s Note: Stories that were originally split over pages, with
-adverts and/or other stories in between, have been recombined.
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_1"></a>[1]</span></p>
-
-<div class="figleft illowp37" id="ad01" style="max-width: 12.5em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/ad01.jpg" alt="Copy this Sketch">
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-<p class="center larger"><span class="larger">FREE</span><br>
-$80 Drafting Course</p>
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-Rule Free—<span class="smaller">To Everyone Sending Sketch</span></p>
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- Pocket Rule FREE">
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">To every person of 16 years or older sending a sketch I am going to mail
-free and prepaid the Draftsman’s Ivorine Pocket Rule shown here. This
-will come entirely with my compliments. With it I will send a 6 × 9
-book on “Successful Draftsmanship”. If you are interested in becoming a
-draftsman, if you think you have or may attain drafting ability, sit down
-and copy this drawing, mailing it to me today, writing your name, and
-your address and your age plainly on the sheet of paper containing the
-drawing. There are no conditions requiring you to buy anything. You are
-under no obligations in sending in your sketch. What I want to know is
-how much you are interested in drawing and your sketch will tell me that.</p>
-
-<p class="center larger"><span class="smaller"><i>Positions Paying Up to</i></span><br>
-$250 <span class="u">and</span> $300 per Month</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">I am Chief Draftsman of the Engineers’ Equipment Co. and I know that
-there are thousands of ambitious men who would like to better themselves,
-make more money and secure faster advancement. Positions paying up to
-$250 and $300 per month, which ought to be filled by skilled draftsmen,
-are vacant. I want to find the men who with practical training and
-personal assistance will be qualified to fill these positions. No man
-can hope to share in the great coming prosperity in manufacturing and
-building unless he is properly trained and is able to do first class
-practical work.</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">I know that this is the time to get ready. That is why I am making the
-above offer. I can now take and train a limited number of students
-personally and I will give to those students a guarantee to give them by
-mail practical drawing room training until they are placed in a permanent
-position with a salary up to $250 and $300 per month. You should act
-promptly on this offer because it is my belief that even though you start
-now the great boom will be well on by the time you are ready to accept a
-position as a skilled draftsman. So write to me at once. Enclose sketch
-or not, as you choose, but find out about the opportunities ahead of you.
-Let me send you the book “Successful Draftsmanship” telling how you may
-take advantage of these opportunities by learning drafting at home.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp100" id="ad03" style="max-width: 21.875em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/ad03.jpg" alt="">
-</div>
-
-<p class="center larger"><span class="largest">FREE</span> this $25 Draftsman’s<br>
-Working Outfit</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">These are regular working instruments—the kind I use myself. I give them
-free to you if you enroll at once. Don’t delay. Send for full information
-today.</p>
-
-<p class="center larger">Mail Your
-Drawing at Once—<i>and Get Ivorine
-Pocket Rule Absolutely</i> <span class="u">Free!</span></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">Ambitious men interested in drafting hurry! Don’t wait! This is your
-opportunity to get into this great profession. Accept the offer which
-I am making now. Send in your sketch or request for free book and free
-Ivorine Pocket Rule.</p>
-
-<p class="center">Chief Draftsman, Engineers’ Equipment Co.,<br>
-1951 Lawrence Av.<br>
-Div. 13-95 Chicago</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter tp-outer">
-
-<div class="tp-inner">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_2"></a>[2]</span></p>
-
-<h1>WEIRD TALES</h1>
-
-<p class="center larger"><i>The Unique Magazine</i></p>
-
-<p class="center">EDWIN BAIRD, <i>Editor</i></p>
-
-<p class="smaller">Published monthly by THE RURAL PUBLISHING CORPORATION, 325 N. Capitol Ave., Indianapolis, Ind. Application
-made for entry as second-class matter at the postoffice at Indianapolis, Indiana. Single copies, 25 cents. Subscription, $3.00
-a year in the United States; $3.50 in Canada. The publishers are not responsible for manuscripts lost in transit. Address all
-manuscripts and other editorial matters to WEIRD TALES, 854 N. Clark St., Chicago, Ill. The contents of this magazine
-are fully protected by copyright and publishers are cautioned against using the same, either wholly or in part.</p>
-
-<p class="center smaller">Copyright, 1923, by The Rural Publishing Corporation.</p>
-
-<div class="masthead">
-
-<p class="center">VOLUME 1 <span class="spacer">25 Cents</span> NUMBER 4</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak"><i>Contents for June, 1923</i></h2>
-
-<p class="center larger"><i>Sixteen Thrilling Short Stories</i><br>
-<i>Two Complete Novelettes</i><br>
-<i>Two Two-Part Stories</i><br>
-<i>Interesting, Odd and Weird Happenings</i></p>
-
-<table>
- <tr>
- <td>THE EVENING WOLVES</td>
- <td>PAUL ELLSWORTH TRIEM</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#THE_EVENING_WOLVES">5</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2"><i>An Exciting Tale of Weird Events</i></td>
- <td class="tdpg"></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>DESERT MADNESS</td>
- <td>HAROLD FREEMAN MINERS</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#DESERT_MADNESS">19</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2"><i>A Fanciful Novel of the Red Desert</i></td>
- <td class="tdpg"></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>THE JAILER OF SOULS</td>
- <td>HAMILTON CRAIGIE</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#THE_JAILER_OF_SOULS">32</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2"><i>A Powerful Novel of Sinister Madmen that Mounts to an Astounding Climax</i></td>
- <td class="tdpg"></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>JACK O’ MYSTERY</td>
- <td>EDWIN MacLAREN</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#JACK_O_MYSTERY">49</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2"><i>A Modern Ghost Story</i></td>
- <td class="tdpg"></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>OSIRIS</td>
- <td>ADAM HULL SHIRK</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#OSIRIS">55</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2"><i>A Weird Tale of an Egyptian Mummy</i></td>
- <td class="tdpg"></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>THE WELL</td>
- <td>JULIAN KILMAN</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#THE_WELL">57</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2"><i>A Short Story</i></td>
- <td class="tdpg"></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>THE PHANTOM WOLFHOUND</td>
- <td>ADELBERT KLINE</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#THE_PHANTOM_WOLFHOUND">60</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2"><i>A Spooky Yarn by the Author of “The Thing of a Thousand Shapes”</i></td>
- <td class="tdpg"></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>THE MURDERS IN THE RUE MORGUE</td>
- <td>EDGAR ALLAN POE</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#THE_MURDERS_IN_THE_RUE_MORGUE">64</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2"><i>A Masterpiece of Weird Fiction</i></td>
- <td class="tdpg"></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>THE MOON TERROR</td>
- <td>A. G. BIRCH</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#THE_MOON_TERROR">72</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2"><i>Final Thrilling Installment of the Mysterious Chinese Moon Worshipers</i></td>
- <td class="tdpg"></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>THE MAN THE LAW FORGOT</td>
- <td>WALTER NOBLE BURNS</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#THE_MAN_THE_LAW_FORGOT">81</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2"><i>A Remarkable Story of the Dead Returned to Life</i></td>
- <td class="tdpg"></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>THE BLADE OF VENGEANCE</td>
- <td>GEORGE WARBURTON LEWIS</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#THE_BLADE_OF_VENGEANCE">86</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2"><i>A Powerful, Gripping Story Well Told</i></td>
- <td class="tdpg"></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>THE GRAY DEATH</td>
- <td>LOUAL B. SUGARMAN</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#THE_GRAY_DEATH">91</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2"><i>Horrifying and Incredible Tale of the Amazon Valley</i></td>
- <td class="tdpg"></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>THE VOICE IN THE FOG</td>
- <td>HENRY LEVERAGE</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#THE_VOICE_IN_THE_FOG">95</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2"><i>Another Thriller by the Author of “Whispering Wires”</i></td>
- <td class="tdpg"></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>THE INVISIBLE TERROR</td>
- <td>HUGH THOMASON</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#THE_INVISIBLE_TERROR">100</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2"><i>An Uncanny Tale of the Jungle</i></td>
- <td class="tdpg"></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>THE ESCAPE</td>
- <td>HELEN ROWE HENZE</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#THE_ESCAPE">103</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2"><i>A Short Story</i></td>
- <td class="tdpg"></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>THE SIREN</td>
- <td>TARLETON COLLIER</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#THE_SIREN">105</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2"><i>A Storiette That Is “Different”</i></td>
- <td class="tdpg"></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>THE MADMAN</td>
- <td>HERBERT HIPWELL</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#THE_MADMAN">107</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2"><i>A Night of Horror in the Mortuary</i></td>
- <td class="tdpg"></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>THE CHAIR</td>
- <td>DR. HARRY E. MERENESS</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#THE_CHAIR">109</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2"><i>An Electrocution Vividly Described by an Eyewitness</i></td>
- <td class="tdpg"></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>THE CAULDRON</td>
- <td>PRESTON LANGLEY HICKEY</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#THE_CAULDRON">111</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2"><i>True Adventures of Terror</i></td>
- <td class="tdpg"></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>THE EYRIE</td>
- <td>BY THE EDITOR</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#THE_EYRIE">113</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="center">For Advertising Rates in WEIRD TALES apply to YOUNG &amp; WARD, Advertising Managers, 168 North Michigan Blvd., Chicago, Ill.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_3"></a>[3]</span></p>
-
-<div class="ad">
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp100" id="ad04" style="max-width: 43.75em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/ad04.jpg" alt="">
-</div>
-
-<p class="center largest">Finding “The Fountain of Youth”</p>
-
-<p class="center larger"><i>A Long-Sought Secret, Vital to Happiness, Has Been Discovered.</i></p>
-
-<p class="center larger"><i>By H. M. Stunz</i></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0"><i>Alas! that spring should vanish with the rose!</i></div>
- <div class="verse indent0"><i>That youth’s sweet-scented manuscript should close!</i></div>
- <div class="verse right">—OMAR KHAYYAM.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>A secret vital to human happiness has been discovered. An ancient problem
-which, sooner or later, affects the welfare of virtually every man and
-woman, has been solved. As this problem undoubtedly will come to you
-eventually, if it has not come already, I urge you to read this article
-carefully. It may give you information of a value beyond all price.</p>
-
-<p>This newly-revealed secret is not a new “philosophy” of financial
-success. It is not a political panacea. It has to do with something of
-far greater moment to the individual—success and happiness in love and
-marriage—and there is nothing theoretical, imaginative or fantastic
-about it, because it comes from the coldly exact realms of science and
-its value has been proved. It “works.” And because it does work—surely,
-speedily and most delightfully—it is one of the most important
-discoveries made in many years. Thousands already bless it for having
-rescued them from lives of disappointment and misery. Millions will
-rejoice because of it in years to come.</p>
-
-<p>The peculiar value of this discovery is that it removes physical
-handicaps which, in the past, have been considered inevitable and
-irremediable. I refer to the loss of youthful animation and a
-waning of the vital forces. These difficulties have caused untold
-unhappiness—failures, shattered romances, mysterious divorces. True
-happiness does not depend on wealth, position or fame. Primarily, it is
-a matter of health. Not the inefficient, “half-alive” condition which
-ordinarily passes as “health,” but the abundant, vibrant, magnetic
-vitality of superb manhood and womanhood.</p>
-
-<div class="figleft illowp75" id="ad05" style="max-width: 18.75em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/ad05.jpg" alt="">
-</div>
-
-<p>Unfortunately, this kind of health is rare. Our civilization, with its
-wear and tear, rapidly depletes the organism and, in a physical sense,
-old age comes on when life should be at its prime.</p>
-
-<p>But this is not a tragedy of our era alone. Ages ago a Persian poet,
-in the world’s most melodious epic of pessimism, voiced humanity’s
-immemorial complaint that “spring should vanish with the rose” and the
-song of youth too soon come to an end. And for centuries before Omar
-Khayyam wrote his immortal verses, science had searched—and in the
-centuries that have passed since then has continued to search—without
-halt, for the fabled “fountain of youth,” an infallible method of
-renewing energy lost or depleted by disease, overwork, worry, excesses or
-advancing age.</p>
-
-<p>Now the long search has been rewarded. A “fountain of youth” has been
-found! Science announces unconditionally that youthful vigor can be
-restored quickly and safely. Lives clouded by weakness can be illumined
-by the sunlight of health and joy. Old age, in a sense, can be kept at
-bay and youth made more glorious than ever. And the discovery which makes
-these amazing results possible is something any man or woman, young or
-old, can easily use in the privacy of the home, unknown to relative,
-friend or acquaintance.</p>
-
-<p>The discovery had its origin in famous European laboratories. Brought to
-America, it was developed into a product that has given most remarkable
-results in thousands of cases, many of which had defied all other
-treatments. In scientific circles the discovery has been known and used
-for several years and has caused unbounded amazement by its quick,
-harmless, gratifying action. Now in convenient tablet form, under the
-name of Korex compound, it is available to the general public.</p>
-
-<p>Any one who finds the youthful stamina ebbing, life losing its charm
-and color or the feebleness of old age coming on too soon, can obtain
-a double-strength treatment of this compound, sufficient for ordinary
-cases, under a positive guarantee that it costs nothing if it fails and
-only $2 if it produces prompt and gratifying results. In average cases,
-the compound often brings about amazing benefits in from twenty-four to
-forty-eight hours.</p>
-
-<p>Simply write in confidence to the Melton Laboratories, 833 Massachusetts
-Bldg., Kansas City, Mo., and this wonder restorative will be mailed to
-you in a plain wrapper. You may enclose $2 or, if you prefer, just send
-your name without money and pay the postman $2 and postage when the
-parcel is delivered. In either case, if you report after a week that the
-Korex compound has not given satisfactory results, your money will be
-refunded immediately. The Melton Laboratories are nationally known and
-thoroughly reliable. Moreover, their offer is fully guaranteed, so no
-one need hesitate to accept it. If you need this remarkable scientific
-rejuvenator, write for it today.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_4"></a>[4]</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="ad">
-
-<p class="center largest">The Cleanest, Yet Most Outspoken, Book Published</p>
-
-<p>There is not a man or woman married or unmarried, who does not need to
-know every word contained in “Sex Conduct in Marriage.” The very numerous
-tragedies which occur every day, show the necessity for plain-spokenness
-and honest discussion of the most vital part of married life.</p>
-
-<p>It is impossible to conceive of the value of the book; it must
-undoubtedly be read to be appreciated, and it is obviously impossible
-to give here a complete summary of its contents. The knowledge is not
-obtainable elsewhere; there is a conspiracy of silence on the essential
-matters concerning sex conduct, and the object of the author has been
-to break the barriers of convention in this respect, recognizing as he
-does that no marriage can be a truly happy one unless both partners are
-free to express the deepest feelings they have for each other without
-degrading themselves or bringing into the world undesired children.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp58" id="ad06" style="max-width: 21.875em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/ad06.jpg" alt="">
-</div>
-
-<p>The author is an idealist who recognizes the sacredness of the sex
-function and the right of children to be loved and desired before they
-are born. Very, very few of us can say truly that we were the outcome of
-the conscious desire of our parents to beget us. They, however, were not
-to blame because they had not the knowledge which would have enabled them
-to control conception.</p>
-
-<p>Let us, then, see that our own marriage conduct brings us happiness and
-enjoyment in itself and for our children.</p>
-
-<p class="center larger">A Book for Idealists by an Idealist</p>
-
-<p>The greatest necessity to insure happiness in the married condition is to
-know its obligations and privileges, and to have a sound understanding
-of sex conduct. This great book gives this information and is absolutely
-reliable throughout.</p>
-
-<p>Dr. P. L. Clark, B. S., M. D., writing of this book says: “As regards
-sound principles and frank discussion I know no better book on this
-subject than Bernard Bernard’s ‘Sex Conduct in Marriage.’ I strongly
-advise all members of the Health School in need of reliable information
-to read this book.”</p>
-
-<p>“I feel grateful but cheated,” writes one man. “Grateful for the new
-understanding and joy in living that has come to us, cheated that we have
-lived five years without it.”</p>
-
-<p class="center larger">SEX CONDUCT IN MARRIAGE</p>
-
-<p class="center">By BERNARD BERNARD<br>
-Editor-in-Chief of “Health and Life”</p>
-
-<p>Answers simply and directly, those intimate questions which Mr. Bernard
-has been called upon to answer innumerable times before, both personally
-and by correspondence. It is a simple, straightforward explanation,
-unclouded by ancient fetish or superstition.</p>
-
-<p class="center">A few of the many headings are:—</p>
-
-<ul>
-<li>When the Sex Function Should Be Used.</li>
-<li>Sex Tragedies in Childhood.</li>
-<li>The Consummation of Marriage.</li>
-<li>The Art of a Beautiful Conception.</li>
-<li>Sex Communion.</li>
-<li>The Scientific Control of Conception.</li>
-<li>Sex Fear Destroyed.</li>
-<li>The Frequency of the Sex Act.</li>
-<li>The Initiation to Matrimony.</li>
-<li>Anatomy and Physiology of the Sex Organs.</li>
-<li>The Spontaneous Expression of Love.</li>
-<li>Why Women Have Been Subjected.</li>
-<li>Men Who Marry in Ignorance.</li>
-<li>Hereditary Passion.</li>
-<li>Marriage a Joy to the End.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<p>Send your check or money order today for only $1.75 and this remarkable
-book will be sent postpaid immediately in a plain wrapper.</p>
-
-<p class="center larger">Health and Life Publications<br>
-Room 46-333 South Dearborn Street<br>
-CHICAGO</p>
-
-<div class="coupon">
-
-<p class="center">HEALTH AND LIFE PUBLICATIONS<br>
-Room 46-333 S. Dearborn St.,<br>
-Chicago, Illinois.</p>
-
-<p>Please send me, in plain wrapper, postpaid, your book. “Sex
-Conduct in Marriage.” Enclosed $1.75.</p>
-
-<div class="form">Name</div>
-
-<div class="form">Address</div>
-
-<div class="form">City</div>
-
-<div class="form">State</div>
-
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_5"></a>[5]</span></p>
-
-<div class="tp-outer">
-
-<table>
- <tr>
- <td><p class="center"><i>The Unique<br>Magazine</i></p></td>
- <td><p class="center larger">WEIRD TALES</p></td>
- <td><p class="center"><i>Edited by<br>Edwin Baird</i></p></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-</div>
-
-<table style="max-width: none; white-space: nowrap;">
- <tr>
- <td><p class="noindent smaller">VOLUME ONE<br>NUMBER FOUR</p></td>
- <td><p class="noindent">25c a Copy</p></td>
- <td><p class="center">JUNE, 1923</p></td>
- <td><p class="right">Subscription</p></td>
- <td><p class="noindent smaller">$3.00 A YEAR<br>$3.50 IN CANADA</p></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p class="center larger"><i>Paul Ellsworth Triem’s Latest Novel</i></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="THE_EVENING_WOLVES">The Evening
-Wolves</h2>
-
-<p class="center larger"><i>An Exciting Tale of Weird Events</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<h3><i>CHAPTER ONE</i><br>
-AH WING RECEIVES A CLIENT</h3>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp75" id="illus1" style="max-width: 35.9375em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/illus1.jpg" alt="">
-</div>
-
-<p>A taxicab stopped on the corner,
-and two people got out.
-They formed a decidedly incongruous
-pair; for the first to alight was a
-diminutive Chinese boy, scantily dressed,
-while his companion appeared to be a
-portly white man.</p>
-
-<p>It was impossible to be sure of this
-fact, however, as this second passenger
-wore a long overcoat, with its ulster
-collar turned up around his face, and
-a dark cloth cap with the visor drawn
-down over his forehead and eyes.</p>
-
-<p>Evidently the cab driver had been
-paid in advance, for he swung out from
-the curb as soon as his fares had dismounted,
-and was soon out of sight. The
-Chinese boy glanced at his companion,
-then set off silently up a street whose
-central portion was paved with cobblestones.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_6"></a>[6]</span></p>
-
-<p>He seemed to know just where he was
-going. He paused only once, to cast a
-fleeting glance over his shoulder. Then
-he resumed his journey.</p>
-
-<p>He had seen that the man in the ulster
-was following; and now, after traversing
-half a block of squalid, deserted
-street, the youngster turned abruptly
-into a pestilential-looking alley. This
-alley lay close to the top of a hill, and
-for a moment the man and the boy, who
-appeared to be his guide, could look
-down over the roofs to where the gay
-lights of Chinatown twinkled alluringly.</p>
-
-<p>Presently the diminutive Oriental
-paused just outside a doorway. The man
-who had been following him came up,
-with a curious suggestion of eagerness
-and suspicion. Looking over the
-shoulder of the figure before him, he was
-able to make out the entrance to a narrow
-flight of unlighted stairs, which
-plunged steeply into the earth beneath
-a dilapidated building.</p>
-
-<p>“Do we have to go down there, boy?”
-the man demanded.</p>
-
-<p>“All a-same down here, master,” the
-youngster replied. “You come close—I
-show you!”</p>
-
-<p>He began to descend as he spoke; and
-the man, after a moment of hesitation,
-plunged through the doorway after him.
-His manner was that of one who is taking
-a horribly unpleasant remedy, hoping
-to cure a still more horrible disease.</p>
-
-<p>The diminutive Chinaman reached the
-bottom of the stairs and waited for his
-companion. When he felt the man’s
-heavy hand on his shoulder, he turned
-to his right, advancing cautiously
-through an almost impenetrable darkness.</p>
-
-<p>There was a smell of dry rot in this
-basement, and around their feet rats
-scampered and squeaked. The man’s
-hand shook, and his breath came with a
-hissing sound through his clenched teeth.</p>
-
-<p>“Now we go down again, master,”
-the boy announced presently. He had
-paused and turned again to the right.
-“You keep close—I show you!”</p>
-
-<p>A step at a time, they descended a
-second flight of stairs. On either side
-were rough stone walls, powdery with
-mildew. The man discovered this with
-his free left hand. Strange odors came
-to him. Abruptly a bell rang, somewhere
-in the bowels of the darkness below them.</p>
-
-<p>The boy stopped in his tracks.</p>
-
-<p>“Now you go down, master,” he commanded.
-“Ah Wing waiting for you—you
-go slow. Goo’-by!”</p>
-
-<p>He slipped out from under the heavy
-hand that would have detained him, and
-the man heard him go scampering like
-one of the rats up the stairs and away
-through the upper corridors.</p>
-
-<p>Terror gripped the man left alone
-there on the stairs. He felt that he was
-in a trap—and he had been evading
-traps so long now that they had become
-an obsession with him.</p>
-
-<p>He cried out, hoarsely, and as he did so
-a door opened below and a flood of light
-shone out.</p>
-
-<p>“Pray continue your descent, Colonel
-Knight,” a cultured voice commanded
-from somewhere within the lighted room
-whose door had just opened. “The stairs
-are quite secure, and I am awaiting
-you!”</p>
-
-<p>With a plunge that hinted at desperation,
-the man addressed as “Colonel
-Knight” reached the bottom of the stairs
-and crossed to the door. He paused
-there for a moment, till his eyes adjusted
-themselves to the change in illumination.
-Then he stepped inside, and
-heard the heavy door close behind him.</p>
-
-<p>The room he had entered was of considerable
-extent, but was almost destitute
-of furniture. There were bare walls,
-dusty with green mildew; and bare
-floors, covered with layers of dust and
-litter. There were two chairs, one of
-which was already occupied.</p>
-
-<p>And as the newcomer’s eyes rested on
-the occupant of that chair, all his doubts
-and fears returned to him. He had come
-to this unearthly spot to get away from
-almost certain death. Now he was not
-certain that the remedy would not prove
-worse than the disease.</p>
-
-<p>The man sitting there, facing him, was
-dressed like a Chinaman, in silk trousers
-and coat, satin slippers, and black silk
-cap; but his eyes were of a metallic gray,
-and his high, thin-bridged nose spoke of
-Nordic blood. He would have been tall
-had he been standing. His hands were
-lying passive in his lap, but they were
-the hands of a man of great physical
-power.</p>
-
-<p>And above all these details and beyond
-them was something the man in the
-ulster could not quite define—a radiation
-of power, as if the intellect and will
-of this strange being seated before him
-saturated the atmosphere of the empty
-room.</p>
-
-<p>“Pray be seated, Colonel Knight!”
-the man in the chair said courteously.
-“I am glad to meet you. You have been
-recommended to me by a former student
-of mine—you know that I take only a
-few cases. It will be best for you to tell
-me your story, fully and accurately.”</p>
-
-<p>Colonel Knight lowered himself into
-the empty chair. His eyes still peered
-out through the gap in his collar, and
-seemed to be fastened on the face of the
-man before him.</p>
-
-<p>Then, slowly and grudgingly he removed
-his cap and turned down his
-collar, disclosing the pouchy face of a
-man well advanced into middle age. It
-was a face suggesting daring and resourcefulness,
-this face of Colonel
-Knight; and for a few moments the two
-sat staring curiously at each other.</p>
-
-<p>“I think I can condense that statement
-I have to make,” the white man said
-finally. “I am a man of wealth. Five
-years ago, while traveling in Europe, I
-had the misfortune to attract the attention
-of the greatest gang of international
-thieves ever organized. Perhaps you
-have heard of them? They were called
-‘The Evening Wolves,’ and were led by
-a man who called himself ‘Count von
-Hondon’.”</p>
-
-<p>He paused for an instant to regard
-his companion curiously, but the Oriental
-merely bowed and sat impassively
-waiting.</p>
-
-<p>“These men must have followed me
-about for some time before they struck.
-Finally they saw their chance. I was
-packed to leave Paris for Belgium, and
-they undoubtedly figured that I would
-have much of wealth with me.</p>
-
-<p>“I did—but I had other things they
-had overlooked. I had my pistols, and
-I am a dead shot. I killed two of the
-robbers, and the rest fled. I supposed
-that would settle the matter, but I was
-mistaken. Five members of the gang
-were left alive, and they swore to be
-revenged upon me. They have followed
-me—”</p>
-
-<p>A bell rang shrilly somewhere close at
-hand, and Colonel Knight leaped from
-his chair and looked wildly at his companion.</p>
-
-<p>“What was that?” he cried. “That
-bell rang when I was descending the
-stairs—”</p>
-
-<p>“Someone followed you here,” the
-other replied, “and is now trying to
-reach us. Pray continue!”</p>
-
-<p>“But that man upon the stairs—”</p>
-
-<p>“We will come to him presently. Let
-me ask you to finish!”</p>
-
-<p>“There is nothing more! I have been
-followed for years, and now a physical
-trouble is added—my physician tells me
-I am going blind. I can’t see to run—”</p>
-
-<p>The Chinaman eyed his companion
-deliberately.</p>
-
-<p>“Why lie to me, my friend?” he demanded
-presently. “You come to me
-for help, and you wish to steal my ammunition!
-Now let me reconstruct your
-story for you. You yourself are ‘Count
-von Hondon.’ You were the leader of
-the master crooks called ‘The Evening
-Wolves.’ Five years ago you and your
-men made a rich haul, and you decided
-that a time had come to retire, or perhaps
-to go in by yourself. You departed,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_7"></a>[7]</span>
-taking with you the loot; and ever since
-it has been a running fight.</p>
-
-<p>“Your old comrades could have shot
-you outright, but that would not restore
-to them the booty you stole. And you
-have not dared dispose of it, because it
-was the only thing that stood between
-you and death! You see, you can’t lie
-to me. Every lie carries its trade-mark
-with it, to those who have eyes to see.
-Now I shall ask you but one question,
-and let me warn you—if you lie now,
-you will never leave this place alive!”</p>
-
-<p>He stood up and thrust an accusing
-finger toward the cowering thief.</p>
-
-<p>“Tell me,” said the Chinaman, “the
-name of the person whom you and your
-men robbed!”</p>
-
-<p>The beady eyes of Colonel Knight, or
-“Count von Hondon” as he had once
-been known in every capital in Europe,
-glittered with suspicion and fear. His
-breath caught in his throat, and he unfastened
-his collar with trembling
-fingers.</p>
-
-<p>“The name,” he said hoarsely, “was—was—”</p>
-
-<p>Ah Wing crossed toward the heavy
-door and laid his hand upon the knob.
-His metallic eyes blazed, and he looked
-down with fierce contempt upon the man
-trembling before him.</p>
-
-<p>“Will you answer?” he cried. “Or
-shall I open this door?”</p>
-
-<p>“It was a woman!” Knight whimpered.
-“Her name was—Madame
-Celia—”</p>
-
-<p>He broke off and stared at the Chinaman,
-towering there before the door. Ah
-Wing had neither spoken nor moved; but
-there was in the room a disturbance as if
-a great voice had shouted out a curse.</p>
-
-<p>Slowly the Chinaman came back
-toward his visitor. His face now was
-the impassive face of a carved Buddha.</p>
-
-<p>“Colonel Knight,” he said gently,
-“the high gods have undoubtedly
-brought you to me. I am the only person
-in the world who can save you, for I
-work outside of the laws of men. And
-I will take your case, now that I fully
-understand it. But first I will ask you
-to show me the Resurrection Pendant
-which you stole from Madame Celia!”</p>
-
-<p>The white man got slowly to his feet,
-his hands groping at his throat, his eyes
-protruding, his face the color of dough.</p>
-
-<p>“The pendant!” he whispered
-through ashen lips. “The Resurrection
-Pendant! You know—you have heard?”</p>
-
-<p>“Show me the Pendant,” repeated Ah
-Wing inexorably. “I know that you
-brought it with you tonight, just as I
-know that you intended, in case I refused
-to take your case, to try to disappear
-without returning to your hotel.
-Show me the Pendant!”</p>
-
-<p>With faltering hands and without removing
-his fearful eyes from the face
-of his companion, the crook reached inside
-his ulster and drew forth a package
-wrapped in brown paper. This he slowly
-unfastened, disclosing a jewel case. More
-and more slowly his fingers fumbled with
-the catch.</p>
-
-<p>There came a sound from the door—a
-voice that seemed to have difficulty in
-filtering through the heavy panels.</p>
-
-<p>“Come out of that, Count! We got
-you over a barrel! Come out—”</p>
-
-<p>The massive door shook under a terrific
-blow, as from a sledge. The man in
-the ulster seemed about to crumple to
-the floor.</p>
-
-<p>Ah Wing spoke coldly.</p>
-
-<p>“Show me the Pendant!” he repeated.
-“They cannot break down that door, but
-if you trifle with me I will open it!”</p>
-
-<p>With hurried fingers the terror-stricken
-crook threw back the cover of
-the jewel case, disclosing a mass of diamonds,
-intricately and skilfully assembled
-into a great pendant.</p>
-
-<h3><i>CHAPTER TWO</i><br>
-UNDER CHINATOWN</h3>
-
-<p>Ah Wing took a long stride, which
-brought him close to the man who
-held the jewel case.</p>
-
-<p>The Oriental’s steely eyes were fastened
-unwaveringly upon the pendant,
-whose history for half a century had
-been transcribed in suffering and death.
-Misfortune had followed this unique assemblage
-of perfect stones: death and
-insanity; the breaking of friendships;
-the treachery of children toward parents;
-the murder of lover by lover. And
-now the mysterious Chinaman seemed to
-have fallen under the spell of the gems,
-for he was taking in every detail of their
-perfection.</p>
-
-<p>For a moment the assault upon the
-door had ceased, but now it was continued.
-Heavy blows fell, and the walls
-of the subterranean apartment shook.</p>
-
-<p>“It will not take your friends long to
-discover that they cannot reach us by
-that route,” commented Ah Wing
-tranquilly, turning at last from his inspection
-of the Resurrection Pendant.
-“The door has a middle sheeting of
-boiler iron. It is bullet proof.”</p>
-
-<p>He reseated himself, motioning for
-Colonel Knight to do the same. Absently
-he watched the white man close the
-jewel case, wrap it carefully in brown
-paper, and return it to his ulster pocket.</p>
-
-<p>“And now,” continued the Chinaman,
-“I will ask you to tell me about these
-men. You say there are five of them?
-Please describe them to me, one at a
-time. Tell me all that you can remember
-as to physical and mental characteristics—I
-want every detail you can give
-me.”</p>
-
-<p>Colonel Knight sat down heavily. It
-was obvious that the assault upon the
-door was shaking his nerves so that he
-could hardly command his voice. His
-eyes were the eyes of some hunted thing,
-which sees itself at the end of a blind
-alley.</p>
-
-<p>With an evident effort, he tore his
-glance from the quivering panels and
-fastened it on his companion.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” he said hollowly, “there are
-five of these men, and they have been
-chosen from the elite of the criminal
-world. I myself selected them and
-trained them. Each has his special
-ability. I will begin with the man whom
-I considered the brainiest of them all—the
-one who was almost my equal in
-planning and executing a really big
-robbery. His name is Monte Jerome.”</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly the blows on the door
-ceased; and the room was so still, after
-the ferocious assault, that it seemed to
-press on the ear drums of the speaker.
-He winced and for a moment was silent.
-Then, resolutely he continued:</p>
-
-<p>“Monte is thirty-five years old. He is
-less than five feet six, but is broad
-shouldered and powerful. He grew up
-in the alleys of a large city. He fought
-his way to the leadership of gang after
-gang, and at the time I picked him up
-was looking for new worlds to conquer.
-I chose him because of four qualities: his
-physical strength; his native cunning;
-his lack of sentiment—or, as it is usually
-called, ‘mercy’—and his absolute freedom
-from superstition. Monte believes
-in neither God, man, nor the devil. He
-was my right-hand man—and it is to
-his merciless pursuit that I owe my condition!”</p>
-
-<p>Ah Wing had drawn a note-book from
-his pocket and was jotting down data.
-He glanced placidly toward the door,
-which was again shaking under a rain
-of heavy blows.</p>
-
-<p>“Pray continue!” said he.</p>
-
-<p>Something of the Chinaman’s imperturbability
-was beginning to influence
-the white man. He went on with greater
-assurance:</p>
-
-<p>“Next to Monte Jerome in total
-ability, I always placed the man we
-called ‘Doc.’ I never knew his real
-name. That was not important, as he
-went under many aliases. Doc was my
-means of approach to the wealthy men
-and women—and particularly the latter—upon
-whom I specialized. He is a
-university man, and has lived among
-people of wealth and refinement much
-of his life.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_8"></a>[8]</span></p>
-
-<p>“He has brains, but lacks the quality
-of ruthlessness so important in really
-successful commercial crime. He is utterly
-selfish, I believe, but certain necessary
-factors in his profession are revolting to
-him—and he has never made the effort
-to put down this weakness. Physically
-he is prepossessing: an inch or two over
-six feet in height, blue eyes, light brown
-hair, splendid carriage; and possessed
-of the manners of a Chesterfield.”</p>
-
-<p>A thin, faint voice came through the
-door, upon which the tattoo had momentarily
-ceased:</p>
-
-<p>“We’ve got you, Count! Open that
-door, or we’ll gouge your eyes out when
-we break in!”</p>
-
-<p>Ah Wing waved his hand affably
-toward the source of this ominous
-promise.</p>
-
-<p>“And our friend out there?” said he.
-“Is he one of those whom you have described?”</p>
-
-<p>“I was just coming to him,” replied
-Colonel Knight, raising a shaking hand
-to his forehead and mopping off the
-beaded perspiration. “That is ‘Billy
-the Strangler,’ and I think the ‘Kid’ is
-with him. Those were my Apaches—my
-gun men—my killers. They are much
-alike. Both have cunning of a low order;
-and persistence—they are like bloodhounds,
-once they are put on the trail.</p>
-
-<p>“They have been Monte’s most useful
-tools in his pursuit of me. But both
-are superstitious, and their native bloodthirstiness
-has grown on them till they
-are little better than homicidal maniacs.
-The Strangler is tall and slim, with high
-cheek bones and lean arms which seem
-to be threaded with steel wires. The Kid
-is of medium height, with grey eyes and
-sandy hair.”</p>
-
-<p>The assault on the door had again been
-discontinued. Suddenly there came from
-directly overhead a sound of splintering
-boards, accompanied by a rain of dust
-and bits of plaster. Knight sprang up
-and retreated, snarling, toward a corner
-of the empty room.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, I have been waiting to see if
-your old comrades would think of that,”
-he commented. “It gives us a line on
-their resourcefulness.”</p>
-
-<p>Colonel Knight regarded him with
-drawn lips, which exposed his yellow
-teeth.</p>
-
-<p>“For God’s sake, what are we to do?”
-he cried. “Are you armed? You sit
-there like a statue—”</p>
-
-<p>“Pray continue your very interesting
-description,” suggested Ah Wing.
-“There remains one of your band whom
-you have not described. I must know
-about him—and then I will deal with
-this other matter!”</p>
-
-<p>For an instant the thief glared into
-the face of the man seated across from
-him. What he read there steadied him a
-little, although the crash of splintering
-boards from above told him that the men
-he had such good reason to fear were
-meeting with less resistance in this direction
-than they had encountered in their
-assault upon the door.</p>
-
-<p>“There remains but one,” he said
-hoarsely. “That is Louie Martin, my
-gem expert. Martin is one of the best
-judges of diamonds and pearls in the
-world. He is an expert in recutting
-and remounting stolen jewelry. And he
-has a wide acquaintance among the
-crooked dealers of this country and
-Europe—”</p>
-
-<p>An extensive area of plaster broke
-away suddenly and crashed down,
-tumbling about the heads and shoulders
-of the two occupants of the room. At
-the same instant the end of a heavy gas-pipe
-crashed through the laths, and the
-voices of the men on the floor above
-were raised in a shout of ferocious
-triumph.</p>
-
-<p>Ah Wing stood up deliberately and
-looked toward the ceiling. He seemed
-to be measuring the progress of the men
-opposed to him. Then, without hurrying
-he crossed the room toward a dimly
-lighted corner, where he stooped and
-opened a small door in the wall. This
-door was built in segments, like that of
-a safe; and was hinged with metal plates
-of enormous strength.</p>
-
-<p>Colonel Knight, who cowered directly
-behind the Chinaman, felt a breath of
-cool, moist air, smelling strongly of
-earthy decay, blowing up from this
-diminutive doorway.</p>
-
-<p>“Kindly precede me, Colonel,” commanded
-Ah Wing. “Watch your step—the
-going is rather precipitous!”</p>
-
-<p>Knight stooped and made his way
-through the opening. He found himself
-on a stairway which went steeply down
-into utter darkness.</p>
-
-<p>A cloud of white dust filtered up into
-the light of the electric bulb; and, as Ah
-Wing stood watching, a lithe human
-figure landed with a crash on top of the
-heap of plaster and splintered boards
-and laths.</p>
-
-<p>In the same instant the Chinaman
-passed silently through the small doorway,
-and his companion heard him slipping
-the bolts into place.</p>
-
-<p>The darkness which had suddenly
-clutched them was so intense that it
-seemed to have physical substance. A
-squeaking sound from above brought
-Knight’s face swiftly up. Something cold
-and reptilian flapped into his eyes and,
-with another <i>squeak</i>, was gone.</p>
-
-<p>“Only a bat!” said Ah Wing softly.
-“Rest your hand on my shoulder and
-feel your way a step at a time. I will
-turn on my flashlight!”</p>
-
-<p>A conical beam of light drilled
-through the darkness below them, and
-Ah Wing’s companion saw that they
-were descending a narrow flight of stone
-steps that seemed to terminate in a panel
-of utter blackness. The walls on each
-side were damp; and pallid fungi had
-taken the place of the mildew of the
-cellars above.</p>
-
-<p>“For God’s sake, where are we?” the
-white man demanded through chattering
-teeth. “This looks like the shaft of a
-mine!”</p>
-
-<p>“This is part of the underground
-system which made Chinatown famous,
-before the disaster of 1906,” replied the
-Oriental. “Few white men have ever
-been down here—particularly of late
-years!”</p>
-
-<p>He paused. They had reached a narrow
-landing, from which passages
-branched in half a dozen directions.
-Another descending stairway yawned
-ahead.</p>
-
-<p>“If I were to leave you here,” smiled
-Ah Wing, “you would never find your
-way out! You could not go back the
-way you have come, for there are acute-angled
-branches which would confuse
-you. Most of them end in masses of
-rubbish, easily dislodged by the unwary!
-But with me you are safe!”</p>
-
-<p>His voice had an ominous softness.
-Knight followed down along the second
-flight of stairs. His heart was pounding.
-Suppose these crumbling walls
-should collapse! Suppose this unearthly
-being, in whose hands his safety lay, decided
-to rob him!</p>
-
-<p>Ah Wing spoke abruptly:</p>
-
-<p>“We have been following down the
-face of a hill. Now we reach the level,
-and here we leave these catacombs!”</p>
-
-<p>He turned sharply to the left and led
-the way along a short passage which
-terminated in a second diminutive door.
-Ah Wing shot back the bolts and motioned
-for his companion to proceed him
-into the room beyond.</p>
-
-<p>Knight obeyed. Daylight was there—white,
-blazing daylight! He blinked as
-he crept through the opening.</p>
-
-<p>Next moment he tried to cry out. An
-arm had passed in front of his body,
-pinioning him. In the same instant a
-sinewy hand came close to his face, and
-there was a little tinkle of broken glass—a
-diminutive globule had been broken
-under his nose.</p>
-
-<p>The thief struggled to turn his head
-aside, fought to keep from breathing in
-the stupefying fumes; but with a smothering
-gasp he surrendered.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_9"></a>[9]</span></p>
-
-<p>He breathed deeply, and as he did so
-a sudden feeling of lightness and of expansion
-came upon him. In the act of
-wondering stupidly what this substance
-was that the Chinaman had forced upon
-him, his mind went blank.</p>
-
-<p>Ah Wing continued for a moment to
-hold his hand over the mouth and nostrils
-of his victim. Then he carried
-Knight across the room and laid him on
-a divan. Turning deliberately, he
-pressed an electric button.</p>
-
-<p>Somewhere in the brooding silence of
-the building, beyond this room, a deep
-throated bell rang clamorously.</p>
-
-<h3><i>CHAPTER THREE</i><br>
-THE EVENING WOLVES</h3>
-
-<p>High in an apartment house, overlooking
-a street and something of
-the city, Monte Jerome, leader of the
-Evening Wolves, sat at his ease, a
-cigarette in the corner of his thin, merciless
-mouth, a telephone within reach.</p>
-
-<p>From the back rooms of the apartment
-came the sound of heavy breathing,
-intermingled with an energetic and
-unmusical snore. Louie Martin, gem expert
-for the gang, and “Doc,” their
-society specialist, were sleeping.</p>
-
-<p>Monte listened critically to the heavy
-breathing. He was an expert in such
-matters, and his seasoned judgment told
-him that neither of his comrades was
-faking sleep.</p>
-
-<p>With a nod of satisfaction, he stood
-up and walked soundlessly into the corridor
-connecting the rooms, stopping first
-in that occupied by “Doc,” and then
-in the back room where Louie Martin was
-sleeping. In each room he paused long
-enough to make a thorough search of the
-clothing of the sleeping robber.</p>
-
-<p>Monte went expeditiously through all
-the pockets, and even examined the linings.
-Just a little exhibition of the
-honor that obtains among thieves: Monte
-Jerome knew that his leadership depended
-on his ability to command his
-companions’ unwilling respect, and he
-was taking no chances.</p>
-
-<p>“I got a hunch Doc is thinking of
-ditching the gang, and going it for himself,”
-Monte murmured as he returned
-toward the front room. “If he
-thinks—”</p>
-
-<p>The ’phone bell rang suddenly, and
-the man on duty crossed to the instrument.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes?” he said.... “Oh, hello,
-Billy.... What’s that—Hell’s bells!
-Got away! Get busy and find him—”</p>
-
-<p>The voice of the Strangler came to him
-over the wire.</p>
-
-<p>“Keep your shirt on, Chief!” it commanded.
-“You better come down here
-and see for yourself what we was up
-against!”</p>
-
-<p>Two minutes later Monte was shaking
-Louie Martin awake.</p>
-
-<p>“Come to life!” Monte grated. “The
-Count has made his getaway! You get
-into your clothes and tend ’phone! This
-is one hell of a mess!”</p>
-
-<p>Martin climbed sluggishly and unwillingly
-out of bed.</p>
-
-<p>“You’ve been running things,” he
-snarled. “If you’ve got ’em in a mess,
-it’s no one’s fault but your own!”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb">
-
-<p>At a corner on the outskirts of
-Chinatown, Monte alighted from his
-taxi. This was a special machine, owned
-and operated by a crook who dealt indiscriminately
-in transportation, dope
-and bootleg whisky.</p>
-
-<p>Monte commanded this worthy citizen
-to await his return, and plunged into a
-labyrinth of narrow streets and alleys.</p>
-
-<p>A shrill whistle sounded presently,
-and he saw the Strangler beckoning him
-from a doorway. Crossing over, Monte
-followed his henchman into an alley,
-down a flight of narrow stairs, and into
-an unlighted basement. Here they were
-joined by the “Kid,” who carried an
-electric torch.</p>
-
-<p>“Come on, Chief,” the “Kid” commanded.
-“We’ll show you first what we
-was up against—watch your step! If
-you stub your toe you’ll land in hell!”</p>
-
-<p>They turned and went down another
-stairway, narrower and steeper than the
-first. At the bottom their way was barred
-by a heavy door, studded with great iron
-bolts. In one place the wood had been
-battered away, disclosing the gleaming
-surface of a steel panel.</p>
-
-<p>“We followed the Count here, and
-thought we had him cornered,” the
-“Kid” drawled, rolling his cigarette
-from one corner of his mouth to the other
-and regarding Monte through lazy, sardonic
-eyes. “When we saw we couldn’t
-get through this way, we went up to the
-floor above and come at him through the
-ceiling. Come along—we’ll show you!”</p>
-
-<p>They went back up one flight of stairs
-and entered a room which evidently had
-long been unused. Its walls were crumbling,
-and in the middle a great hole had
-been torn in the floor. The Strangler,
-who was leading the way, crossed over
-to this opening and unhesitatingly disappeared
-through it. Next moment a
-yellow light filtered up through the opening.</p>
-
-<p>“Down you go, Chief,” commanded
-the “Kid.” “This was the door we
-made!”</p>
-
-<p>Monte made his way down through the
-opening, landing on the upper of two
-chairs which had been piled precariously
-together to assist in the descent. He was
-followed by the “Kid,” and the three
-crooks stood examining the room in
-which Ah Wing and Colonel Knight had
-held their conference.</p>
-
-<p>Monte spoke with a snarl.</p>
-
-<p>“All right, you two!” he cried, “Here
-is where he was! Where is he now?
-Come across with your alibi!”</p>
-
-<p>His two companions exchanged significant
-glances and the “Kid” took a
-slouching step closer to Monte.</p>
-
-<p>“Look here, Chief,” said he, “it ain’t
-gonna be healthy for you to talk that
-way to me! I’m not spielin’ no alibi.
-What I’m givin’ you is straight goods,
-and you better get that twist out of your
-mush and act like a gentleman!”</p>
-
-<p>He paused; and his two crumpled
-ears, which spoke of vicissitudes in the
-prize ring, grew red as a rooster’s comb.
-His glassy gray eyes glared unblinkingly
-at Monte.</p>
-
-<p>The latter was not afraid of either of
-these men, or of both of them together.
-Monte had the unflinching courage of
-the perfect animal. But he had no notion
-of breaking up a gang which might prove
-useful to him.</p>
-
-<p>“All right, boys,” he agreed, more
-pacifically, although his dark eyes continued
-to glow like coals. “If you can
-afford to take it easy, you got nothing on
-me! Tell me what happened.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s more like it,” the “Kid”
-growled. “Now you’re talking like a
-gentleman, Chief! Well, we follows the
-Count here, and thinks we has him
-holed up. We can’t bust down that door—this
-is an old Chink gambling hell,
-and everything is stacked against a fellow
-that wants to get in. But we comes
-down through the roof—”</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly the “Kid” paused. From
-somewhere behind there had come a
-sound as of the opening of a door. The
-eyes of his two companions followed his
-and together they stood, rigid and alert.</p>
-
-<p>Slowly the back wall of the room
-opened out toward them. Unconsciously,
-the crooks shrank closer together.
-Their faces were drawn, their figures
-rigid.</p>
-
-<p>The panel swung fully open, and a
-figure appeared in it. It was the form
-of a tall man, clad in black silk.</p>
-
-<p>The three crooks stood staring at him
-silently. So unexpected had been his appearance
-that it had affected them with
-a sort of paralysis. Their mouths gaped
-open and their eyes bulged.</p>
-
-<p>Serenely, the intruder stood looking
-down upon them; and then, with a
-courteous wave of his hand, he spoke.</p>
-
-<p>“Pardon my intrusion, gentlemen!”
-said he. “My little affairs can wait—I
-will return later!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_10"></a>[10]</span></p>
-
-<p>He turned, and next moment the panel
-had swung silently shut behind him.</p>
-
-<p>Monte Jerome was the first of the
-three to recover.</p>
-
-<p>“Come on—we’ve got to get him!”
-he cried.</p>
-
-<p>“That was the Chink we saw spieling
-with the Count,” the “Kid” cried
-hoarsely. “But, for the love of cripe,
-how did he get here?”</p>
-
-<p>Monte snarled wolfishly:</p>
-
-<p>“Ask <i>him</i> that! We’ve got to bust
-through here—”</p>
-
-<p>His compact body landed against the
-panel. It shook, but refused to yield.</p>
-
-<p>“Come back here! Now, all together!”
-bellowed Monte.</p>
-
-<p>The three leaped forward and struck
-the partition.</p>
-
-<p>This time it swung inward, slowly and
-without a sound. The crooks leaped
-through the opening, and the “Kid”
-flashed his torch. They were standing
-just inside a vast, windowless room, at
-whose farther side they had a glimpse of
-sagging timbers and ruined walls. Nowhere
-was there a sign of the man who
-had eluded them.</p>
-
-<p>“Get a move on!” Monte growled
-throatily. His lip drew up and he
-snarled at his companions. “A hell of
-a bunch of crooks, we are! Why didn’t
-you take a shot at him, when you saw he
-was going to make a getaway?”</p>
-
-<p>The “Kid” glared back.</p>
-
-<p>“Cut out that kind of talk, Chief! You
-got a gat, and two hands! He buffaloed
-you just like he did us! Be a sport and
-take your medicine!”</p>
-
-<p>A determined search of the ruined
-chamber yielded no results. The “Kid”
-dropped to his stomach and wormed his
-way under the mass of timbers at the
-farther side. He found the beginning
-of a stone-lined tunnel, which dipped
-abruptly into the earth.</p>
-
-<p>Damp, mouldy air fanned his cheeks;
-and as he crouched, motionless, listening,
-a distant reverberation came to him from
-the bowels of the earth. It sounded like
-the clanking of a great iron door.</p>
-
-<p>“Let me out of this!” he growled, as
-he backed toward his companions. “We
-got a fat chance of following that yellow
-devil into his hole. You go, if you want
-to!”</p>
-
-<p>Monte shook his head. He had regained
-his poise, and he had been
-thinking.</p>
-
-<p>“No use trying to follow,” he admitted.
-“We got to comb Chinatown for
-the two of them. They can’t live down in
-that burrow forever. But why did this
-duck show himself? He must have known
-we were here—he could hear us talking!”</p>
-
-<p>The “Kid” smiled craftily.</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe him and the Count left something,”
-he suggested. “We better have a
-look!”</p>
-
-<p>“No, they didn’t leave nothing. I
-would have seen it if they had. I got an
-idea the Chink <i>wanted us to see him</i>! He
-stood there with his face turned into the
-light. Well, we got to find him! That’s
-flat!”</p>
-
-<h3><i>CHAPTER FOUR</i><br>
-THE MAN IN THE LIGHTED ROOM</h3>
-
-<p>The wolves shifted their quarters
-that night to a rooming-house on the
-edge of Chinatown, and the search for
-Colonel Knight and his mysterious companion,
-the tall Chinaman, began.</p>
-
-<p>For three days they worked feverishly.
-Monte Jerome seemed never to sleep, and
-his temper was not at all improved by
-the ordeal. He drove his companions
-fiercely, and only the fact that they were
-playing for big stakes prevented open
-rebellion.</p>
-
-<p>On the fourth day Monte and the
-“Kid,” who were loitering, alert but
-almost hopeless, in the entrance to a
-building in one of the narrow streets of
-the Oriental quarter, caught sight of a
-figure disappearing through a doorway.
-It was a tall figure, partly concealed by
-a light overcoat; but both of them
-leaped forward at the same instant.</p>
-
-<p>“That was the Chink, sure as God
-made little red apples!” the “Kid”
-snapped.</p>
-
-<p>They crossed the street. Several automobiles
-were drawn up close to the curb,
-among them a big blue limousine from
-which the Chinaman had stepped a moment
-before they identified him. Monte
-approached a well-dressed gentleman,
-who had just come out of the building,
-and asked him what was going on inside.</p>
-
-<p>“This is the fall exhibition of the
-Iconoclasts,” the stranger explained
-good-naturedly.</p>
-
-<p>He seemed to be sizing up the two
-crooks.</p>
-
-<p>“I think you boys would enjoy it,”
-he added mischievously. “The admission
-is only fifty cents.”</p>
-
-<p>Monte and the “Kid” bought tickets,
-and presently they entered a big room
-with a high ceiling, upon whose walls
-were hung a number of gaudy paintings.
-The newcomers stared round at the fifty
-or more spectators who were making the
-rounds of the gallery.</p>
-
-<p>“Hell!” growled the “Kid,” “this
-ain’t no place for an honest strongarm
-man—Let’s beat it and send for Doc!”</p>
-
-<p>Monte gripped his arm.</p>
-
-<p>“Look!” he said under his breath.
-“Over there near the corner!”</p>
-
-<p>The “Kid” looked stealthily as directed,
-and perceived the tall man in the
-gray topcoat. He was standing with his
-back to them, examining a red and yellow
-daub that looked like an omelette
-liberally seasoned with paprika.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s him!” Monte whispered. “All
-right, Kid! You have Mike bring the
-cab down to the corner where we was
-waiting. Then, when this duck beats
-it out of here, I’ll hop in and we’ll
-follow him!”</p>
-
-<p>Half an hour later the tall man in the
-gray coat—who in American garb looked
-more like an Oriental than he had when
-dressed as a Chinaman—paused to look
-deliberately at his watch, and then
-turned to the outer door.</p>
-
-<p>By the time he stepped into the blue
-limousine, Monte had reached the corner
-and was climbing in beside the driver of
-the taxi. The “Kid” had the window
-down, and was kneeling with his head
-close to the driver’s.</p>
-
-<p>“How ’bout it, Mike!” Monte demanded.
-“Can you keep ’em in sight?”</p>
-
-<p>“Watch me!” snorted the driver.
-“There ain’t no Chink going can leave
-me behind. Did you see that chauffeur?
-Got a face like a monkey!”</p>
-
-<p>There was no difficulty, for the present,
-in keeping the blue limousine in
-sight, however. It went sedately down a
-side street and took the turn toward the
-ferry. Five minutes later Monte and the
-Kid saw the cab in which they were
-seated draw in behind the larger car, and
-roll over the landing platform. The
-limousine was stationed on the right,
-and the cab on the left, of the big boat.</p>
-
-<p>Monte scrambled down, and with a
-curt command to the other two made his
-way around to where he could see the
-enclosed car. The man in the gray overcoat
-was sealed inside, with a coffee-brown
-Chinaman in livery at the wheel.
-Monte kept them in sight till the ferry
-was approaching the slip. Then he hurried
-back and climbed in again beside
-the driver.</p>
-
-<p>“Here’s where they’ll try to leave us
-behind, if they have any idea we’re following!”
-he predicted.</p>
-
-<p>“Let ’em,” growled Mike. “If we
-don’t get took in by a speed cop, I won’t
-never let no Chink drive away from me!
-You boys just hang onto your bonnets,
-and watch us!”</p>
-
-<p>The big blue car seemed to have accepted
-this challenge. The little man at
-the wheel swung out and passed half a
-dozen slower machines, then took the
-center of the road and held it.</p>
-
-<p>With the coming of evening, a powdery
-fog swooped down over the ridges
-to the west, and suddenly the tail lights
-of the limousine shot up in the gloom<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_11"></a>[11]</span>
-ahead. Notch by notch, the Chinese
-chauffeur was adding to his speed. The
-lighter car behind bounced and swayed,
-and Mike spat through his teeth.</p>
-
-<p>“Say, that bird must be clear nuts!”
-he growled. “If we get took in, they’ll
-sentence us to about five life-times!
-What say, gents? Want to let him go?”</p>
-
-<p>“You keep going!” snarled Monte,
-staring hardeyed into the fog. “If we
-get pinched, I pay for it, see? But don’t
-you let that bird get away, if you want
-to sleep in your little bed tonight!”</p>
-
-<p>Mike glanced sideways at the man
-whose elbow touched his. Something he
-saw in the stony face of Monte Jerome
-caused him to turn all his attention to
-the task in hand.</p>
-
-<p>The tail lights had been growing dim,
-but now, slowly, the cab began to gain.
-Other cars, headed for the ferry, shot
-out of the fog and into it, honking warning
-horns at the crazily lurching
-machine that burned the road in pursuit
-of the blue limousine. The stony faces
-of the three men in the cab never deviated
-from their straight glare into the
-gloom ahead.</p>
-
-<p>The speed of the big car was slackening.
-The driver of the cab grinned
-wryly.</p>
-
-<p>“He knows the ropes. Speed cop in
-this burg ahead lies awake nights thinking
-up new ways of raising hell for
-speedy drivers,” he explained. “Now
-we’ll creep up on ’em a little more!”</p>
-
-<p>They passed through the little town
-and again were in the open country. The
-limousine continued its more leisurely
-progress, however, and presently turned
-to the right into a dirt road. The cab
-dropped farther behind, at Monte’s
-command.</p>
-
-<p>“They can’t get away from us on
-this road. Probably aren’t going far,
-and we don’t want them to spot us. Take
-it easy!”</p>
-
-<p>The road seemed to be leading gently
-down, and presently they caught the
-gleam of water on each side. Rushes
-grew up close to the track; and from
-somewhere in the dusk the cry of a gull
-sounded like the wailing of a lost soul.</p>
-
-<p>Involuntarily, the “Kid” shivered.</p>
-
-<p>“Hell of a country!” he mumbled.
-“Where you reckon he’s headed for?”</p>
-
-<p>“Wait and see!” snapped Monte.
-“Hello!—he’s turning in! That must
-be a private road! Stop here!”</p>
-
-<p>He slid from the seat and stood swinging
-his feet alternately, to restore the
-circulation in them. Then he jerked his
-head into the darkness.</p>
-
-<p>“Come on, Kid! We got to see what
-he’s up to!”</p>
-
-<p>The “Kid” clambered out, and the
-two crooks struck silently up the road.
-They reached the turn and found, as
-they had guessed, that they were at the
-entrance to a private road.</p>
-
-<p>Instinctively, the two men paused and
-stared in through the trees. Night
-pressed thick and damp about them. A
-wind from the southeast brought to them
-the smell of the marshes, and once the
-booming whistle of a steamer sounded.
-In a lull of the wind, the gulls were
-screaming.</p>
-
-<p>“This ain’t in my line, Chief!”
-snarled the “Kid,” glaring into the
-darkness. “I can bump a guy off under
-the city lights as nifty as the next one,
-but this nature stuff never did set right
-on my stomach. Let’s go back!”</p>
-
-<p>“You go back if you want to!” Monte
-said menacingly. “But if you do, don’t
-come sniveling around me later on. I’m
-going in there!”</p>
-
-<p>He struck off along the winding road,
-and in a moment the “Kid” fell into
-step at his side.</p>
-
-<p>Without a word, the two advanced till
-suddenly the lights of a building shone
-upon them. They paused for a moment,
-then began to creep nearer, keeping in
-the shelter of clumps of bushes. In this
-way they came close enough to discern
-the outlines of a large and well-built
-house, with a broad frontage and two
-wings extending from the rear.</p>
-
-<p>“For the love of cripe!” whispered
-the “Kid,” “would you look at them
-windows! Barred, every damn one of
-them!”</p>
-
-<p>Monte nodded.</p>
-
-<p>“Looks like a private foolish house to
-me,” he replied in the same cautious
-tone. “Come on—we’ll get around behind
-and see what we can make out!”</p>
-
-<p>The musty darkness of the night,
-which had settled down around them,
-was now an advantage, as it made it
-easier for the two Wolves to get close to
-the house without being seen. They
-crept past the massive front, with its
-broad steps and wide porch, and continued
-till they came opposite the west
-wing. Most of the windows in this wing
-were dark, but toward the back they saw
-several lighted panels.</p>
-
-<p>“Come on!” commanded Monte. “I
-hope that Chink doesn’t keep a dog, but
-plug him if one comes at you!”</p>
-
-<p>On they crept till they were close to
-the windows. Massive and sinister
-against the light, stood the iron bars
-which had first caught their attention.
-They crept closer, and finally Monte
-hauled himself up into a gnarly pepper
-tree whose lacy branches almost touched
-the nearest of the lighted windows.</p>
-
-<p>Next moment he reached down and
-grasped his companion’s shoulder.</p>
-
-<p>“Come up here!” he grated, speaking
-half aloud in his excitement. “Don’t slip—catch
-that limb! There you are!”</p>
-
-<p>He assisted the “Kid” to a foothold
-beside himself, and together they stared
-through the foliage and into the lighted
-room beyond.</p>
-
-<p>The curtains were drawn aside and
-the shade rolled up. Seated in full view
-of the two crooks was the man they had
-been following for five years. He wore
-a dressing-gown, and beside his easy
-chair was a low table on which rested
-a leather covered box.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly he turned, raised the cover
-of the box—and Monte and the “Kid”
-held their breath and stared hungrily.
-The light was caught and split up into
-a cascade of vivid colors. The man in
-the dressing-gown seemed to have in his
-clutching hands a fountain of fire.</p>
-
-<p>“The Resurrection Pendant!” snarled
-the “Kid,” reaching for his pistol.
-“Damn him!”</p>
-
-<p>Monte gripped his companion by the
-wrist.</p>
-
-<p>“None of that, you fool!” he hissed.
-“We’ve got to play safe—but the Count
-is caught in a trap! That Chink must
-have kidnapped him!”</p>
-
-<h3><i>CHAPTER FIVE</i><br>
-ONE OF AH WING’S DOOR KEEPERS</h3>
-
-<p>Colonel Knight awoke and lay
-staring at the ceiling. It seemed a
-surprisingly long distance from him—and
-then his glance narrowed.</p>
-
-<p>He turned his head, and suddenly sat
-up in bed. He had just remembered the
-events preceding his loss of consciousness.</p>
-
-<p>Ponderingly, he examined his surroundings.
-He was in a big room, with a
-high ceiling. There were two windows
-at his right and one straight ahead, the
-latter partly open. Several easy chairs,
-a handsome mahogany house desk, and a
-row of bookcases flanking a fireplace
-came to him as successive details of his
-environment. A bar of yellow sunlight
-streamed through the end window.</p>
-
-<p>A door behind him opened, and he
-turned to see a grinning, brown-faced
-Chinese boy approaching his bedside,
-bearing a breakfast tray.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah Wing say he coming to see you
-by-m-by,” the newcomer commented
-placidly. “You hab breakfast now.”</p>
-
-<p>He drew up a table and placed the
-tray in position, then skillfully arranged
-napkin and silverware—which were of
-the best quality—convenient to Colonel
-Knight’s hand. Afterward he withdrew.</p>
-
-<p>Knight’s head felt clear enough, but,
-mentally and physically, he was relaxed<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_12"></a>[12]</span>
-to the point of incoherence. He wanted
-to think, but couldn’t.</p>
-
-<p>Mechanically, he lifted to his lips the
-cup of steaming coffee that the servant
-had poured for him. The taste of the
-hot, bitter fluid—he drank it without
-cream or sugar—helped him pull himself
-together. He remembered everything
-now: his visit to the mysterious
-Chinaman; the coming of his enemies,
-and their attack on the basement room;
-his flight with Ah Wing; and the latter’s
-ruse for bringing Knight fully within
-his power.</p>
-
-<p>Sharply he turned his head and looked
-again at the end window; it was barred
-with heavy iron rods, and so were the
-two windows at the side. This room in
-which he lay was a luxurious prison!</p>
-
-<p>The door opened again, softly, and
-Colonel Knight turned his head to find
-Ah Wing advancing toward him, dressed
-in white flannel trousers, silk shirt, and
-serge coat. In such a rig the newcomer
-looked every inch a Chinaman.</p>
-
-<p>“Good morning, Colonel,” Ah Wing
-greeted his guest courteously. “I am
-glad to see you looking so fresh and
-rested this morning!”</p>
-
-<p>Knight began to tremble.</p>
-
-<p>“You yellow crook!” he croaked, his
-hands drawing up into knots. “So that
-was your scheme—to rob me, and then
-kidnap me? But don’t think you can
-get away with it—”</p>
-
-<p>Ah Wing approached the bed and
-deftly reached under the nearer of the
-two pillows. From this place of concealment
-he drew two things: the morocco
-jewel case, and a revolver that Knight
-remembered having carried in his inside
-coat pocket.</p>
-
-<p>“Here are the principle articles of
-your property, Colonel Knight,” said
-the master of the house. “The other
-things you will find after you are
-dressed.”</p>
-
-<p>He paused to watch the man in the
-bed open the leather box and stare
-hungrily at the flashing jewels. Then
-he continued.</p>
-
-<p>“There was an ordeal ahead of you,
-my friend, and you were in no condition
-to go through with it. You needed rest,
-but your nerves were screwed up to the
-snapping point. There was only one
-way to get you safely out of the city, and
-I used it.”</p>
-
-<p>“You mean that the Wolves don’t
-know where I am?” Knight demanded.</p>
-
-<p>“Not yet. I shall remedy that presently.”</p>
-
-<p>Colonel Knight’s voice rose into a
-snarl:</p>
-
-<p>“Remedy it? You mean you want
-them to know?”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course I want them to know. I
-want them here, where I can deal with
-them. But never fear, my friend. Your
-old enemies will never be able to hurt
-you!”</p>
-
-<p>He paused and looked around the
-apartment, then turned again to the man
-in the bed.</p>
-
-<p>“These are your quarters. Adjoining
-your bedroom is the bath. This door
-opens into your sitting-room, and adjoining
-that is my conservatory, which
-you are at liberty to visit when you
-choose. There are no conditions placed
-upon your residence here except that you
-are not to try to leave the house without
-my permission—<i>and you are to leave the
-end window exactly as it is</i>. Don’t even
-lay your hand upon it, or upon the sill!
-This is important!”</p>
-
-<p>Knight stared again at the single end
-window through which the sun was
-shining. He stared from it to the face
-of the strange being who continued to
-regard him with the impersonal interest
-of a Buddha. A sense of baffled curiosity
-arose within him, and he made a
-nervous, protesting movement with one
-of his puffy hands.</p>
-
-<p>“Who the devil <i>are</i> you, anyway?”
-he broke out. “Ah Wing! That doesn’t
-mean anything to me—as well say ‘Mr.
-X!’ You are not a Chinaman. What
-and who are you?”</p>
-
-<p>Ah Wing continued to stare imperturbably
-down at his guest, but the
-ghost of a smile showed at the corners
-of his usually expressionless mouth.</p>
-
-<p>“No,” he agreed, “I am not a Chinaman.
-And I am not a Caucasian. You
-see that, dressed as I am today, I look
-unmistakably Oriental. Dressed like a
-man of Hong Kong, on the other hand, I
-look American or English. That has been
-my curse, and perhaps my blessing: the
-mixing of two irreconcilable blood lines
-has made me an outcast. I have no place
-in the government of any country, and
-therefore I have organized a government
-of my own.</p>
-
-<p>“I am the emperor, the president, the
-king, of an invisible empire. I rule by
-right of intellect and will, and my first
-failure will be my death warrant; for,
-judged even by the standards of a thief
-like you, Colonel Knight, I am an outlaw—one
-who is outside the protection of
-the laws of men!”</p>
-
-<p>He laughed, a short, mirthless laugh.
-As he crossed toward the door he said
-over his shoulder, “Remember about the
-window. I shall be going out from time
-to time, but if you carry out my instructions
-to the letter, no harm can come to
-you even in this house of hidden
-dangers.”</p>
-
-<p>Try as he would, Colonel Knight could
-find nothing wrong with his situation as
-it had been outlined to him by Ah Wing.
-He spent most of the first day in the
-room in which he had awakened. From
-the windows in one direction he could see
-a landscaped lawn and hillside, dotted
-with shrubbery and intersected by winding
-gravel paths.</p>
-
-<p>From the rear window concerning
-which he had been so curiously warned
-by the master of the house, he looked
-out over a bit of lawn bordering a
-kitchen garden. Beyond the garden lay
-a marshy field, and in the distance he
-made out a canal along which an occasional
-motor boat chugged industriously.
-No, there was nothing wrong here—he
-could hardly have hoped for a more
-peaceful place in which to rest and grow
-strong.</p>
-
-<p>But—there was an air of brooding
-watchfulness over the silent house. He
-heard an occasional padded footstep
-passing the door of his sitting-room.
-Once he looked out. At the farther side
-of an extensive conservatory the brown-faced
-servant who had brought him his
-breakfast was spraying some snaky-looking
-vines bearing huge orange-colored
-flowers. Colonel Knight closed
-the door. Something about the place—the
-quiet and the isolation, perhaps, were
-getting on his nerves.</p>
-
-<p>The second day passed as the first, but
-toward noon of the third day Ah Wing
-knocked at his door and entered noiselessly.
-He was dressed in his Oriental
-garb, and again looked like a poorly-disguised
-white man.</p>
-
-<p>“I will be going out for a few hours
-this afternoon, Colonel,” he explained,
-regarding the man before him with his
-habitual unwinking stare. “I am taking
-Lim with me, and I think it will be best
-for you to remain in your quarters.”</p>
-
-<p>Although his words had taken the
-form of a request, there was back of
-them the force of a command. The white
-man eyed him suspiciously, but presently
-nodded.</p>
-
-<p>Some time later he heard the <i>whir</i> of
-a starting motor. Lim had brought him
-his luncheon, and now Knight figured
-the house would be deserted. He smiled.
-This would be his opportunity to look
-around a bit. The instincts of the crook
-were strong within him, and he was immensely
-curious with regard to the house
-of Ah Wing.</p>
-
-<p>He waited an hour after he had heard
-the car leave the garage—from the back
-window he had caught a glimpse of it:
-a gray roadster of moderate size and
-power. Now he felt sure that he would
-not be interrupted.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_13"></a>[13]</span></p>
-
-<p>Crossing to the door of the conservatory,
-he passed into it. Along one side
-were orchids, Colonel Knight realized
-vaguely that the collection must be priceless.
-Many of them were growing in
-diminutive glass rooms, upon whose
-walls he saw heavy drops of moisture.</p>
-
-<p>One pale green blossom near him had
-weird markings in white and yellow,
-which gave it a disturbing resemblance
-to a grinning human face. The man
-thrust out a curious finger and touched
-it: the blossom drew itself together like
-a conscious thing, and he became aware
-of a sickening perfume which in an instant
-turned him dizzy.</p>
-
-<p>He shrank back and continued his
-journey. The concrete floor narrowed,
-and at his left he saw a lily pond, upon
-whose surface great white blossoms
-showed their buttery yellow centers. Between
-the pads and blossoms of the lilies
-the water showed, deep and dark.</p>
-
-<p>Colonel Knight leaned forward to peer
-into the pool; then, with a choking cry
-he staggered back, his face drained of
-blood: an ugly black snout had shot up
-out of the murky depths, and a huge
-lizard, with short, powerful forelegs
-armed with long claws, stared hungrily
-up at him.</p>
-
-<p>He found his appetite for exploration
-losing its edge. He was tempted to turn
-back, but he wanted to settle one point:
-in case he should want to leave this
-house, how could he best do it? The
-windows were securely barred, but there
-must be plenty of doors.</p>
-
-<p>A hall opened out from the conservatory,
-and on either side were rooms,
-variously furnished. He hurried on.
-Ahead, he saw a door which seemed to
-give upon the outer world. He grasped
-the knob. The door was locked, and the
-lock was one which a glance told him
-could be neither picked nor smashed.</p>
-
-<p>Turning, he explored the rear of the
-house. In the east wing he found the
-kitchens and servants’ quarters, but a
-door which probably communicated with
-the kitchen gardens was locked.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly his wandering eyes caught
-the handle of a door in an angle of the
-pantry. He approached it and found
-that it opened upon a stair leading down.
-A gust of warm, damp air came up
-through the stairway, and for a moment
-Knight paused, sniffing curiously.</p>
-
-<p>He found himself thinking of a certain
-sultry afternoon in India, when he had
-gone out into the simmering jungle.
-There was the same wild smell here—</p>
-
-<p>He had his revolver in his hip pocket.
-That gave him confidence, and he must
-know if it would be possible for him to
-escape in this direction.</p>
-
-<p>A phrase spoken by Ah Wing came to
-him—“Even in this house of hidden
-dangers!” But what dangers could
-there be?</p>
-
-<p>Colonel Knight felt his way down into
-the basement. He found that it lay
-almost entirely below the level of the
-grounds, but presently his eyes became
-accustomed to the dusk and he could
-discern his surroundings.</p>
-
-<p>He was in a broad and deep room,
-filled with a litter of packing cases, discarded
-articles of furniture, and a few
-garden tools. At its farther side was a
-door. Slowly and cautiously, the investigator
-made his way toward this.</p>
-
-<p>It opened into a dark and narrow
-passage. He made his way along this,
-trying the handles of two locked doors,
-one on the right and the other on the
-left. Then he came to the end of the
-passage and to another door.</p>
-
-<p>Cautiously, he opened it and looked
-inside: before him lay a room somewhat
-better lighted than the passage, but absolutely
-destitute of furniture. He
-crossed the threshold and stood for a
-long moment looking about him. The
-smell which he had associated with that
-hot afternoon in the jungle came to him
-almost overpoweringly now, but beyond
-he saw a door with an iron-barred transom.
-He wanted to try that door.</p>
-
-<p>He had crossed halfway toward it
-when some subtle sense of danger
-brought him to a stop. He looked back.
-Nothing.</p>
-
-<p>Then, with a start, he looked up, into
-the dusky ceiling. Something was moving
-there—he stepped back, drawing in
-his breath with a sharp hissing intake of
-terror. He backed toward the door. It
-was taking shape, up there among some
-uncovered beams and pipes—a huge
-column that seemed to have come alive!
-Slowly it swung down in a great curve.</p>
-
-<p>Colonel Knight stood frozen in his
-tracks. It was a snake—but such a
-snake! He knew that this was no waking
-vision, but a horrible reality—</p>
-
-<p>With a choking cry, he turned and ran
-as he had never run before in his life.
-Behind him he heard a hissing as of sand
-being poured from an elevation into a
-tin pail. A box was overturned. The
-thing was gaining on him—he turned,
-and with bulging eyes he saw the python
-strung out along the floor, its great body
-undulating, its flat head raised, its unblinking
-eyes burning through the dusk.</p>
-
-<p>He could never make the stairs. At
-the left was a small door. He threw
-himself upon it and clutched the handle—it
-came open and, without looking before
-him, he threw himself forward.
-Something struck against the door as he
-jerked it shut, and he could hear that
-uncanny sand blast louder than before.</p>
-
-<p>Groping about him in the utter darkness
-of this refuge, he found a metal contrivance—a
-wheel, with a metal stem
-connecting it with a large iron pipe. He
-was in the closet which housed the intake
-of the water system.</p>
-
-<p>Then he remembered his revolver. It
-would be of little use to him against
-the horrible thing coiled outside.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb">
-
-<p>When Ah Wing returned to the
-house, several hours later, he went
-quietly through the hall and conservatory
-to the door of Colonel Knight’s
-apartment.</p>
-
-<p>Satisfied by a brief inspection that his
-“guest” was not in his rooms, the Chinaman
-turned and made his way to the
-basement door. His face was as serene
-as usual, but his eyes shone with a
-metallic gleam. He opened the door and
-for a moment stood listening.</p>
-
-<p>An angry and prolonged <i>hiss</i>, which
-sounded like a great jet of steam, came
-plainly to him. He stepped into the
-hallway and deliberately closed the door
-behind him. Then he felt his way down
-the stairs, pausing within a few steps of
-the bottom to look unwinkingly about.</p>
-
-<p>Something was moving in the dim
-shadows at the farther side of the room.
-It came slowly toward him, and he could
-make out the undulating length of the
-python. Ah Wing’s glowing eyes
-rested unwaveringly on the flat, evil head
-of the great snake, which came toward
-him more and more slowly.</p>
-
-<p>With a final prolonged <i>hiss</i>, the python
-drew itself up into a huge coil. It was
-a tremendous creature, as large as a
-man’s body at its greatest diameter: but
-now it seemed to be turning slowly to
-stone. Its beady eyes grew dull, and its
-swaying head became rigid.</p>
-
-<p>A muffled cry reached the ears of the
-motionless Chinaman. Without the
-flicker of an eyelid, he continued to stare
-down at the python.</p>
-
-<p>Presently he descended to the foot of
-the stairs. The snake was still.</p>
-
-<p>Ah Wing crossed to the closet door and
-threw it open.</p>
-
-<p>“You can leave your retreat now,
-Colonel Knight,” he said. “My little
-playmate is temporarily in a condition
-of catalepsy—but I would not advise you
-to repeat this visit!”</p>
-
-<h3><i>CHAPTER SIX</i><br>
-LOUIE MARTIN LEARNS THE SECRET OF THE WINDOW</h3>
-
-<p>Monte and the “Kid” went
-back to the city that same evening,
-but early next morning the leader
-of the Wolves returned to the neighborhood<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_14"></a>[14]</span>
-where they had picked up the trail
-of Colonel Knight.</p>
-
-<p>Monte had caught sight of a “For
-Rent” sign in the upper window of a
-cottage half a mile from the big house,
-and he wasted no time in hunting up the
-rental agent and signing a lease. By
-evening he had his men with him, and
-the battle lines were established for the
-final conflict.</p>
-
-<p>“We got to get all the dope on this
-Chink and his layout we can,” Monte
-explained to his companions, as they sat
-smoking in the parlor of their new home.
-“We might try to rush the house, but I
-don’t like the looks of it. Chances are
-that Chink’s got a machine gun or a
-bunch of sawed-off pump guns there.
-We’ll have to size things up.”</p>
-
-<p>He paused to stare at his men.</p>
-
-<p>“Any kicks on that? All right, it’s
-settled. Louie, it’s your turn for sentry
-duty, and you better get over to the
-Chink’s castle now. At two o’clock I’ll
-send Doc over to relieve you. You might
-take a look at the windows, and see if
-any of them can be handled without a
-saw—there may be some loose bars!”</p>
-
-<p>Louie Martin, the gem expert, was a
-little tallow-faced man with a straggling,
-peaked beard and shifty eyes. He had
-no real appetite for this sort of thing,
-but for personal reasons he was more
-willing than usual to go on duty tonight.</p>
-
-<p>Slipping his automatic into the holster
-under his arm, he struck off along the
-road toward the house of Ah Wing,
-whose gables were visible from the cottage.
-A light wind was blowing from
-the southeast, and he could see the mist
-rising over the marshes. Somewhere
-from the steamy air above a night heron
-screamed raucously. Involuntarily, Louie
-shivered.</p>
-
-<p>He was glad to turn his thoughts to
-his own immediate affairs. Louie Martin
-had made up his mind to strike out for
-himself. He had always admired Colonel
-Knight—or “Count von Hondon”—for
-the shrewd stroke of business he had
-done; and Louie was keen enough to
-perceive that Monte Jerome was not
-equal to the task of holding the Wolves
-together. At the present time there
-was open dissension among them. One
-of these days one of them would squeal
-on the others—that was the way this
-mob stuff usually ended.</p>
-
-<p>No, Louie had made up his mind to
-watch his chance for a crack at the
-jewels—and then a clean getaway.</p>
-
-<p>He reached the private road leading to
-the Chinaman’s house, paused for a moment
-to listen and reconnoiter, then
-stealthily struck into the grounds. Five
-minutes later he had skirted the west
-wing and was peering up through the
-shrubbery at the lighted windows of
-Colonel Knight’s apartment. Their
-location had been sketched for him by
-Monte.</p>
-
-<p>“So that’s where the old devil is!”
-thought Louie. “Let’s just have a look-see!”</p>
-
-<p>He climbed into a pepper tree—the
-same from which Monte and the “Kid”
-had seen Knight—and stared into the
-room. It was lighted, but there was no
-one in sight. Then, through a vista of
-open doors, he saw the man whom he had
-been sent to watch, walking slowly about
-with his hands clasped behind him, a
-cigar between his lips.</p>
-
-<p>“Had a good supper, and now he’s
-enjoying a smoke!” Louie mumbled enviously.
-“Well, that’s good enough for
-me, too! Let’s have a look at that
-window!”</p>
-
-<p>He slipped down from the tree and
-glanced about. At the corner of the
-house was a galvanized iron can, evidently
-used for lawn clippings. Louie
-lifted this cautiously and carried it over
-under the end window. Then he climbed
-upon it, raising his head cautiously till
-he was standing just beside the half-open
-window.</p>
-
-<p>A silent inspection of the bars showed
-him that they were all securely fastened,
-with one possible exception: the bottom
-bar seemed to be loose in its niche. Louie
-climbed down, changed the can over to
-the opposite side, and examined the opposite
-end. Sure enough, it showed a
-crumble of concrete around the bolt
-which was supposed to hold it in place.
-With the utmost caution, fearing that
-the loose bar might be connected with an
-alarm system, the crook tested it.</p>
-
-<p>A smile twisted his thin lips. It could
-be moved in and out of its niche.</p>
-
-<p>A sound came from somewhere close
-at hand; and with the speed and silence
-of a wolf Louie Martin leaped to the
-ground, caught up the can, and replaced
-it where he had found it. Next instant
-he was hidden in a clump of flowering
-shrubs.</p>
-
-<p>From this position he could see the
-top of a flight of steps leading down to
-the basement of the house of Ah Wing.
-He stood listening and watching, and
-presently he heard a door open and close,
-followed by steps ascending the stairs.
-Then some one came up out of the basement,
-and he saw the figure of a tall
-Chinaman walking deliberately toward
-the bush in which he was hiding. Louie
-reached under his coat for his pistol—</p>
-
-<p>Ah Wing turned, and Louie saw that
-he was following a graveled path. And
-he was carrying something in one hand—a
-contrivance of twisted wires, like an
-iron basket.</p>
-
-<p>As Ah Wing disappeared into the
-mist, Louie made up his mind. Tonight,
-after Knight had gone to bed, he would
-strike: he was not to be relieved till
-two o’clock, and that would give him
-time to put through his coup. But now
-he meant to follow Ah Wing. He needed
-all the information he could secure about
-the master of this silent house.</p>
-
-<p>The Chinaman had disappeared into
-the eddying mist, but Louie struck into
-the path and soon came within hearing
-of the crisp footsteps. Ah Wing reached
-the edge of the grounds and crossed over
-into a marshy field.</p>
-
-<p>Instinctively, the crook worked closer
-to the man he was shadowing. There
-was something oddly menacing about
-this night, with its mist and its fitful,
-salt-laden wind.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly through the swirling fog
-there appeared a light, which seemed to
-be suspended ten feet or so above the
-ground. It was moving slowly along in
-front of them—a murky light, like a
-blood-red mist.</p>
-
-<p>Then Louie saw that it was the light
-suspended from the mast of a boat, and
-that the boat itself was moving slowly
-along before them, almost hidden by the
-banks of the canal. The tide must be
-out, he thought.</p>
-
-<p>Ah Wing swung on through the night,
-and presently the man following him
-made out the silhouette of a building,
-perched above the canal. Louie slunk
-cautiously forward and saw that the
-boat, whose lantern he had previously
-observed, was making fast at that
-wharf.</p>
-
-<p>Ah Wing leaped lightly to the sunken
-deck and disappeared down the companionway.
-Before Louie could decide
-what he was to do, the Chinaman reappeared
-and climbed back to the wharf.
-Louie had just time to slip into the
-shelter of a group of piling when the
-Chinaman passed the corner of the building.</p>
-
-<p>And in his hand was another of the
-wire contrivances, filled with squirming,
-squeaking rats!</p>
-
-<p>The white man felt his stomach doing
-queer antics. He had heard of Chinamen
-eating rats. Was that what this
-fellow was up to? What else could he
-want with them?</p>
-
-<p>Ah Wing walked swiftly, and the man
-behind kept as close as he dared. Again
-they entered the grounds surrounding
-the big house, and the Oriental crossed
-to the basement stairs and went down.
-Louie paused in the bushes.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m going to gamble,” he whispered
-suddenly to himself. “I’ll just sneak
-down those steps, and if he tries to come<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_15"></a>[15]</span>
-out before I can duck, I’ll bean him! I
-want to know what he’s up to!”</p>
-
-<p>Stealthily, he approached the steps.
-All that he could see was a murky hole,
-into which the cement stairs disappeared.
-A step at a time he made his way down—</p>
-
-<p>And then he paused, holding himself
-bent forward, rigid as a man of stone.
-From beyond the door which opened out
-of this pit came a strange sound, the like
-of which he had never before heard. It
-was like a jet of steam, or like sand
-sifting into a tin pail from a considerable
-height.</p>
-
-<p>Then came another sound—the sing-song
-voice of the Chinaman, crooning
-something in a rhythmic chant. Louie
-could not understand the words, but
-there was a swing and lilt to the thing
-that had a curious effect on him: <i>he felt
-as if he were being rocked to sleep</i>.</p>
-
-<p>He threw off this mood with a start.
-There had come another sound—the
-squealing of many rats. And there was
-a grating noise, as if a heavy body were
-dragging itself about the floor. The rat
-chorus swelled. The creatures evidently
-had been turned loose, and were racing
-about the floor in an agony of terror.</p>
-
-<p>The chorus thinned. Something was
-happening to them. Presently the last of
-the rats emitted one long, agonized
-squeal, and was still.</p>
-
-<p>Louie Martin made his way out of
-the cellarway and hurried dizzily back to
-the shelter of the bushes. He didn’t
-know what had been happening behind
-that horrible door, but he knew that it
-was something which turned his flesh to
-ice. A strange smell had come to him
-from under the door—</p>
-
-<p>Louie noted with relief that the
-lights in Colonel Knight’s rooms had
-been snapped off. That meant that the
-Colonel had gone to bed. Soon he would
-be sleeping, and then Louie could put
-his plan into execution—that would enable
-him to forget this baffling but
-vaguely horrible experience.</p>
-
-<p>Somehow, he felt as if great unseen
-creatures were flying about him, striking
-at him with black, featherless wings. The
-air seemed to be in motion.</p>
-
-<p>He caught himself firmly.</p>
-
-<p>“Got to cut it out!” he mumbled
-under his breath. “Getting dippy!
-Likely to bite somebody! Got to think
-about something else!”</p>
-
-<p>He began to think about the jewels;
-and then his mind shifted, and he was
-thinking of the woman from whom he
-and his companions had stolen the pendant.
-She had been called “Mother of
-the Friendless.” The jewels had been
-given to her by a rich patron, to assist
-in the work of providing for the many
-who were dependent on her for charity.</p>
-
-<p>The wolves had done a clever bit of
-work that time. They had caught the
-jewels while they were in process of
-transfer from the original owner to the
-old woman—</p>
-
-<p>Another tangent. Louie was thinking
-with cold amusement of the fate of
-Madam Celia, the “Mother of the
-Friendless.” Luck had turned against
-her, with the loss of the jewels. Others
-who had helped her in her earlier years
-had turned away after that—as if the
-old woman had suffered contamination
-by accepting this gift, bequeathed by a
-certain rather notorious beauty whose
-affairs had upset thrones and dynasties.</p>
-
-<p>Yes, a very good joke on the old
-woman. And she had died in abject
-poverty. That was the way that sort of
-thing went, Louie realized. One was
-really a fool to do anything for anyone
-but one’s self.</p>
-
-<p>A sound came through the half-open
-window of Colonel Knight’s suite—and
-again Louie Martin grinned. The master
-crook, who had stolen the jewels from
-the “Mother of the Friendless,” was
-now about to pass them on—only he
-didn’t know it!</p>
-
-<p>Louie brought the metal barrel over
-under the window and set it, bottom up,
-so as to form a secure means of approach
-to the room beyond. He had thrown off
-his depression now. But he must work
-fast.</p>
-
-<p>Cautiously, he stepped upon the barrel
-and raised his hands to the bottom bar.
-Twisting it slowly and at the same time
-pulling, he drew both bar and bolts
-from their sockets and tossed them to
-the ground. He wanted to laugh! So
-this was the wisdom of a Chinaman? He
-might have known!</p>
-
-<p>There was a stone coping a couple of
-feet above the top of the thing on which
-he stood. Louie rested his foot on this
-coping and laid his hands on the sill.
-Lightly he drew himself up against the
-face of the wall.</p>
-
-<p>He paused to listen. The man within
-was breathing heavily and regularly.</p>
-
-<p>Louie thrust his head through the
-opening—nothing in sight to alarm him.
-Then, with a quick spring, he threw his
-weight upon the sill and was halfway
-through the window—</p>
-
-<p>Half-way, but no farther; for as his
-weight descended fully upon the sill,
-the upper sash crashed down like the
-lever of a great engine. The thief cried
-out once, a hideous, choking cry that
-echoed through the room and on into the
-house of Ah Wing.</p>
-
-<p>Then he was silent, drooping there
-like one who has been broken on the
-wheel. Blood dripped from his mouth
-and nostrils, and he had ceased to
-breathe. He was caught like a huge rat
-in a trap!</p>
-
-<h3><i>CHAPTER SEVEN</i><br>
-THE DEAD MAN SPEAKS</h3>
-
-<p>Somewhere beyond the mist-enshrouded
-marshes the whistle of a
-grain ship boomed, to be answered a
-moment later by the metallic scream of a
-siren. Vague and mysterious filaments
-of sound drifted in with the eddying
-night wind.</p>
-
-<p>“Damn such a country!” the “Kid”
-snarled, as he turned from the door and
-tramped back into the house. “How
-long you going to keep us rusticating out
-here, Chief? I’m fed up on nature!”</p>
-
-<p>Monte Jerome scowled at his assistant.</p>
-
-<p>“We’re going to stay here till we get
-what we came for!” he replied. “If
-Martin doesn’t show up by morning, we
-got to decide what he’s up to!”</p>
-
-<p>An uncanny silence gripped the four
-Wolves. Nearly twenty-four hours had
-passed since Louie Martin went on duty,
-and nothing had been heard from him.
-An uncomfortable idea was developing
-in the minds of the various members of
-the “mob.”</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly the “Kid” voiced this general
-suspicion. With a snarl, he pointed
-accusingly at Monte.</p>
-
-<p>“Fact is, Louie ain’t coming back,
-Chief, and you know it! He’s grabbed
-something—maybe the sparklers—and
-he’s beat it. Don’t blame him a damn
-bit, neither. We’re going to set around
-here with our mouths open till the dicks
-get after us. But Louie ain’t coming
-back, and you just put that down in your
-note-book!”</p>
-
-<p>Monte turned toward the speaker.</p>
-
-<p>“Is that your opinion, you lump-head?
-Well, keep it till I ask you for it. The
-trouble with you is you’ve been thinking
-of cutting loose, yourself. Louie will
-show up all right. Don’t you worry
-about him.”</p>
-
-<p>“Hell of a lot you know about it!”
-mumbled the “Kid” angrily.</p>
-
-<p>Monte walked slowly toward him, his
-eyes blazing.</p>
-
-<p>“Trying to start something?” he demanded.
-“If you are—”</p>
-
-<p>The Strangler intervened at this
-critical moment. He and the “Kid” had
-had a disagreement earlier in the evening
-when the latter moved into the
-room left vacant by Louie Martin’s unexplained
-absence. This was a ground-floor
-room with an abundance of light
-and sun, and the “Kid,” with a loose-lipped
-grin, announced that his doctor
-had told him he ought to have it. The
-Strangler had protested; but the “Kid”<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_16"></a>[16]</span>
-had possession, and made it plain that he
-meant to hang on.</p>
-
-<p>Now the Strangler sided maliciously
-with Monte.</p>
-
-<p>“You’re always belly-aching about
-something, Kid,” he declared. “You
-better lay off and give us a rest. The
-Chief knows what he is doing!”</p>
-
-<p>Monte paused, thankful for this opportune
-intervention. He had made up
-his mind to square account with the
-“Kid” just as soon as the real business
-which held them together was finished,
-but a show-down now would be dangerous
-to the success of the larger affair.</p>
-
-<p>“Let’s cut it all out, boys!” he suggested
-pacifically. “I’ll go on duty up
-to two o’clock. Doc, you set the alarm.
-You’ll relieve me. I’ll try to find out
-something—that Chink may have
-grabbed Louie. We ought to know what
-has happened before we pull anything!”</p>
-
-<p>He nodded to the others and left the
-house. The three crooks settled down to
-their usual evening: the “Kid” got out
-a deck of cards and began to play a one-handed
-game of his own devising; Billy
-the Strangler drew his chair over in
-front of the fireplace and adjusted his
-feet on the mantle—in this position he
-would smoke and stare into the coals
-till he grew sleepy—and “Doc” took
-from the table an illustrated magazine
-and turned to the serial he was reading.
-Occasionally he glanced covertly at one
-of his companions: “Doc” sensed the
-coming battle between these two gunmen,
-and had no intention of being
-caught within the firing lines.</p>
-
-<p>The wind freshened, and they could
-hear it wailing around the house and
-through the upper windows. The window
-in the “Kid’s” room rattled and
-banged, and he looked abstractedly up.</p>
-
-<p>“Hell of a night!” he mumbled.
-“Sounds like all the dead men in this
-neck of the woods was hanging around
-outside, wheezing to be took in by the
-fire! Listen to that window rattle!”</p>
-
-<p>The Strangler smoked on imperturbably.</p>
-
-<p>From somewhere in the house above
-there came a sound—low and uncertain
-at first, then rising to a sort of scream.
-The “Kid” threw down his cards and
-staggered to his feet. The Strangler
-hauled his long legs down from the
-mantle and reached under his coat for
-the handle of his automatic. “Doc”
-turned pale—he was too sophisticated to
-be superstitious, but this unearthly cry
-was a fact rather than a theory.</p>
-
-<p>“What the devil was that?” the
-“Kid” demanded hoarsely. “Say, if
-that was one of them birds—”</p>
-
-<p>“That must have been it!” “Doc”
-decided aloud. “A night heron, blown
-against the chimney! What a night to
-be out in!”</p>
-
-<p>He shivered and picked up his magazine,
-but the zest had gone out of his
-reading. From the corners of his eyes
-he observed that the “Kid” was gathering
-up his cards, and that Billy had not
-again elevated his feet to the mantle.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I guess I’ll be going to <i>my</i>
-room,” the “Kid” drawled presently,
-emphasizing the possessive pronoun to
-tantalize the Strangler. “Kind of feel
-like a little snooze would take the
-wrinkles out of my brains. This place
-sure does give me the willies!”</p>
-
-<p>He slouched into the hall communicating
-with the back rooms—a kitchen and
-his bedroom—and they heard him shuffling
-through the darkness. Following a
-moment of silence, his voice sounded in
-a steady mumble. Then it was raised in
-expostulation.</p>
-
-<p>“Who the hell has been fooling with
-my light? It won’t turn on!”</p>
-
-<p>Another brief interval of silence, then
-a bellow of rage and fear from the man
-in the back bedroom.</p>
-
-<p>“Who’s there? Go way from me!
-Damn—”</p>
-
-<p>They leaped up at the sound of the
-“Kid’s” stumbling gallop. He burst into
-the room, and they saw that his face was
-the color of ashes.</p>
-
-<p>“For God’s sake, who’s in that room—my
-room?” he cried, staring at them
-through straining, glassy eyes. “Come
-on, you fellows! Here, I’ll take a
-flashlight—the globe must be burned
-out!”</p>
-
-<p>He snatched up an electric torch and
-led the way back through the hall, the
-Strangler at his shoulder, “Doc” some
-distance behind.</p>
-
-<p>“Someone let out a groan when I went
-inside the door,” the “Kid” was explaining.
-“And then he says right in
-my ear, ‘This ain’t your room, Kid!’
-Listen!”</p>
-
-<p>They were within five feet of the bedroom
-door when the “Kid” paused and
-held up a trembling hand. He was directing
-the light of the torch upon the
-doorway. And at that moment there
-came from it a groan, followed by a
-muttered protest.</p>
-
-<p>“<i>My room!</i>” a voice within the room
-said distinctly.</p>
-
-<p>“Holy Mother!” whispered the
-Strangler. “That sounds like Louie! He
-must be hurt!”</p>
-
-<p>“How in hell would he get in there?”
-protested the “Kid.” “Come on—let’s
-see!”</p>
-
-<p>They stepped inside the room, and the
-ray of the flashlight began to circle it.
-Suddenly the circling beam came to a
-stop.</p>
-
-<p>“In the bed!” gasped the “Kid.”
-“He’s there, covered up!”</p>
-
-<p>Slowly and unwillingly, an inch at a
-time as if drawn by some irresistible
-force, the three Wolves crossed the room
-and approached the bed. They could all
-see the huddled form lying there, covered
-even to the face. There was something
-about it—an utter absence of
-motion—that terrified them. But they
-could not turn back.</p>
-
-<p>The “Kid” reached the bedside and
-for a long moment stood glaring down.
-Then, with shaking fingers, he caught
-the edge of the bedding and threw it
-back.</p>
-
-<p>In the concentrated light of the lantern,
-there stared up at them the livid
-face of Louie Martin. His glazed eyes
-protruded, and there was a trickle of
-blood running from his nostril to the left
-corner of his mouth. And in his face
-was an expression of frozen horror
-which stopped the hearts even of the
-hardened crooks who looked down in
-momentary paralysis.</p>
-
-<p>With a scream, the “Kid” dropped
-the lantern and turned, treading upon
-the toes of the Strangler. Another
-scream sounded, high and shrill—it came
-from the direction of the bed.</p>
-
-<p>“Why can’t you let me rest?” a
-quavering voice protested. “This is my
-room—”</p>
-
-<p>They heard no more. The three swore
-and sobbed as they raced for the front
-room. They slammed doors behind
-them, and brought up, shaking as if in
-ague, directly under the big, brilliantly
-lighted chandelier.</p>
-
-<p>“Somebody bumped him off—and he
-came back to tell us about it!” the
-“Kid” whispered.</p>
-
-<h3><i>CHAPTER EIGHT</i><br>
-AH WING LISTENS IN</h3>
-
-<p>“He’s certainly good and
-dead!” Monte said, as he stood
-looking down at the body of Louie
-Martin. “Whatever they did to him, it
-was a plenty! But you boys must be a
-little bilious—you can see for yourselves
-that he hasn’t been doing any talking for
-some time. What you heard was the
-wind, blowing around the corners of the
-house!”</p>
-
-<p>The “Kid” drew the back of his hand
-across his glistening forehead. He was
-standing near the door.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t kid yourself, Chief!” he
-snarled. “We heard him talk—all of
-us did! And there’s another thing: us
-being bilious wouldn’t account for Louie
-Martin walking in on us here, and climbing
-into that bed!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_17"></a>[17]</span></p>
-
-<p>Monte was staring down at the dead
-man.</p>
-
-<p>“You say you heard the windows back
-here rattling earlier in the evening?”
-he demanded.</p>
-
-<p>“Sure. Why wouldn’t they? The
-whole house was rattling!”</p>
-
-<p>Monte nodded. He had his own ideas
-on this subject, but he didn’t intend to
-spread them before his already demoralized
-followers.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, the thing we’ve got to decide
-is what we’re going to do with him,”
-he commented. “We’ve got to handle
-the whole business ourselves, and say
-nothing. We can’t afford to have the
-dicks asking questions around here just
-now!”</p>
-
-<p>Tacitly, Monte’s three companions
-agreed, but there was in their pale faces
-a question which none of them had the
-courage to voice. Monte continued, apparently
-unconscious of their emotions.</p>
-
-<p>“Billy,” he said, “you get the spade
-and dig a grave over close to the fence.
-After we get him planted, we’ll move
-that pile of old bean poles over the
-place. It’s kind of tough, but Louie is
-dead—and we got to look out for ourselves!”</p>
-
-<p>The Strangler went silently out into
-the dark. They heard him rummaging
-for a spade, and presently the <i>clink</i> of
-the latter implement came industriously
-to them. The grave was finished by the
-time the first gray light of dawn began
-to filter down around the cottage, and
-presently the body of the dead crook,
-wrapped in a blanket, was lowered into
-it. Then the dirt was shoveled back till
-the cavity would hold no more, and the
-superfluous earth was scattered over the
-surface of the garden. The shifting of
-a pile of bean poles finished the ceremony.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll trade rooms with you, Kid,”
-Monte said to the saturnine strong-arm
-man—who for once looked rather cowed.
-“I never was afraid of a dead man—just
-so that he was really dead. I guess
-you’re kind of soured on that part of
-the house!”</p>
-
-<p>“Soured is right,” mumbled the
-“Kid.” “Say, I wouldn’t sleep in
-there if you was to give me all the
-sparklers in New York! Just let me get
-my stuff out!”</p>
-
-<p>As he went back toward the room from
-which the body had recently been removed,
-the “Kid” saw the mocking
-glance of the Strangler fastened upon
-him. Billy was enjoying his discomfiture.
-He went into the room and turned
-on the light—the burned-out bulb had
-been replaced, so that now he was able
-to see into all the corners. He began to
-gather up his property, staring nervously
-about him the while.</p>
-
-<p>Cautiously, he approached the closet,
-where he had stored his bathrobe and an
-extra suit, a couple of pairs of shoes and
-a pearl gray hat. He opened the door
-wide and stepped back. Nothing inside.
-Hastily he carted the clothing out. Then
-he crossed over to the bureau and opened
-the left-hand upper drawer, in which he
-had placed his jewelry—some rings and
-tie pins.</p>
-
-<p>The “Kid” drew the drawer fully
-open and stood looking down into it.
-Then a startled exclamation escaped him,
-and he bent nearer, staring wide-eyed.</p>
-
-<p>All of his possessions were there; but
-in addition he saw, close to the back of
-the drawer, a morocco covered box of
-peculiar design. The “Kid” had seen
-that box once before!</p>
-
-<p>With trembling fingers he undid the
-clasp and opened the lid. He could feel
-his heart pounding in the top of his head,
-and his throat seemed to contract, so that
-he fought for breath. The Resurrection
-Pendant! A single glance convinced
-him of that. But how had it come into
-this drawer?</p>
-
-<p>The “Kid’s” mind deviated from the
-line of this natural inquiry. He could
-forget that for the moment—the fact
-was that here it was. But there was no
-reason why he should share this discovery
-with the other Wolves. This
-supreme good fortune had come to him,
-not to them! He quickly shut the lid
-of the case and slid the box into an
-inside pocket.</p>
-
-<p>He removed his property to Monte’s
-room, hiding the jewel case under the
-mattress. His blood had turned to
-liquid fire. He had that for which they
-had all been searching—and it was his
-alone!...</p>
-
-<p>Monte went on guard that evening,
-taking “Doc” with him: not that Monte
-was afraid, but he realized that the battle
-had now entered its final and decisive
-phase. And it was real war. Monte
-Jerome had no doubt that Martin had, in
-some mysterious way, been done to death
-in the house of Ah Wing.</p>
-
-<p>“You boys better get to bed early,”
-he said. “Billy, you take the clock and
-set it for half past one. You wake the
-Kid as soon as you get up—we’ll stand
-double guard from now on!”</p>
-
-<p>The “Kid” hardly heard Monte
-speaking. He wanted to examine the
-jewels again, wanted to figure out just
-how he was going to make the break
-which would free him from his comrades.</p>
-
-<p>For a time, after the other two had
-departed, he sat around smoking and
-cleaning out the barrel of his pistol,
-which the fogs of this marshy neighborhood
-were corroding. He cleaned barrel
-and chamber and oiled the action, then
-replaced the clip of cartridges and
-slipped the gun into a side pocket.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” he mumbled, half aloud, “I
-guess I’ll be getting to bed. An’ I hope
-to God there won’t be no voices around
-here tonight!”</p>
-
-<p>The Strangler grunted, and the “Kid”
-slouched off up the stairs and into the
-room that had been Monte’s. He closed
-the door carefully, crossed over to the
-light, and then stood listening.</p>
-
-<p>The night wind was stirring around
-the house, whistling and moaning down
-the chimney; but the “Kid” had an
-antidote for fear tonight: he went over
-to his bed and fumbled for the jewels.
-The touch of the smooth leather-covered
-box started his heart to pounding.</p>
-
-<p>He laid the box on the bed and opened
-it. The light was reflected into his eyes
-from a thousand sharp facets, crimson
-and blue and white—but perhaps the
-charm was wearing off: the stones did
-not look as wonderful to him tonight
-as they had in that momentary view he
-had caught during the afternoon.</p>
-
-<p>“And that’s the bunch of sparklers
-men go dippy about!” the “Kid” mumbled.
-“Hell, I wouldn’t give two bits
-for the whole bunch, if I couldn’t sell
-’em! There’s too many of ’em, and they
-don’t shine so terrible much! I saw a
-big buck nigger on State Street once
-with a solitaire on that would have made
-them look phoney—and it was glass!
-Oh, well, I should worry. I ain’t going
-to wear ’em—I’m going to <i>sell</i> ’em! I’ll
-have to play safe—”</p>
-
-<p>At the ghost of a sound from behind,
-the “Kid” whirled. He had left the
-door closed, but now it was open—and
-the Strangler stood inside the room,
-grinning.</p>
-
-<p>“So, that was the game!” he cried.
-“You’re a slick one, Kid, but you ain’t
-slick enough. I been watching you all
-evening. You ain’t yourself, old timer.
-You’re getting nervous. But I don’t
-wonder! You grabbed the sparklers, but
-how you done it I don’t know. And you
-was going to hold ’em out, was you?
-Well, well—”</p>
-
-<p>The “Kid’s” lips jerked up into a
-wolfish smile, but he forced himself to go
-slow. He needed to think this thing out.
-He knew the Wolves well enough to be
-sure they would hold this affair against
-him, and sooner or later would try to
-play even. No use to try to explain—they
-wouldn’t understand.</p>
-
-<p>The Strangler was watching him
-through chilly eyes. Casually, the Kid’s
-hand stole toward his side pocket. Instantly
-the man standing before him<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_18"></a>[18]</span>
-acted: with a bellow of rage he jerked
-out his own hand, which he had been
-holding under his coat: swinging it up
-he fired, then struck at the light globe
-with the smoking barrel.</p>
-
-<p>To the “Kid” there came the sensation
-of suffocation and of darkness. His
-own gun was out, but his enemy had
-disappeared—and he himself was
-sprawled across the bed. That instant
-of falling had not registered in his consciousness:
-he had been standing, and
-now he was down; that was all he knew.</p>
-
-<p>And he was fighting for breath—a
-great weight seemed to be crushing in
-his chest. He raised his left hand and
-gropingly explored the front of his
-shirt: it was already saturated, and from
-a hole to the left of his breast bone more
-blood was coming in a pulsing current.</p>
-
-<p>“The dirty dog!” muttered the
-“Kid” thickly, pulling himself erect by
-grasping the foot of the bed. “He’s
-croaked me—”</p>
-
-<p>Then suddenly the “Kid’s” whirling
-senses cleared. Billy the Strangler had
-done for him; but he would send Billy
-on ahead, to tell St. Peter he was coming!
-His yellow teeth came together.
-He felt something welling up in his
-throat and spat out a mouthful of blood.</p>
-
-<p>“Not—much—time—left!” he muttered.</p>
-
-<p>He dropped to his knees and for a
-moment everything went blank. Then
-he mastered himself, by a superhuman
-effort: and began to crawl stealthily
-along toward the dimly-lighted panel of
-the door. The Strangler had run out
-there after firing—now, undoubtedly, he
-was waiting till it should be safe for him
-to come back for his booty!</p>
-
-<p>Slowly, the dying crook dragged himself
-across to the door and out into the
-hall. The training of a lifetime stood
-him in good stead now: he was as soundless
-as a shadow. He reached the top
-of the stairs and paused, leaning for a
-moment against the banisters—everything
-was going black before him. Then
-he pulled himself together with a disregard
-for his own suffering that in a
-better cause would have been heroic.</p>
-
-<p>Inch by inch, he drew himself forward
-till he was sitting on the top step of the
-stair. He peered down into the lighted
-rooms below. Ah! There he was! The
-Strangler stood beyond the big chandelier
-in the front room, the “Kid” could
-see him plainly through an open door.
-His face was smiling, the crooked smile
-of a shark.</p>
-
-<p>Resting his automatic across his bent
-knees, the “Kid” took steady aim at the
-man who had done for him.</p>
-
-<p>“A little higher than the pockets!”
-he told himself, repeating the old gunman’s
-formula for a killing shot.</p>
-
-<p>Next moment the pistol roared; and
-the man standing down there in the
-light jerked up his hands and staggered
-backward. Greedily, the “Kid’s” fast
-glazing eyes drank in every detail of
-the Strangler’s agony. He knew what
-that look meant—</p>
-
-<p>Billy the Strangler began to pivot on
-his heels, staring with blind eyes into
-space.</p>
-
-<p>“Where is he?” he cried. “Damn
-your soul and body—you—”</p>
-
-<p>He pitched forward to his face. And
-the “Kid,” leaning peacefully back, felt
-himself snatched up into a great red
-cloud that has descended out of the roof
-upon him.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb">
-
-<p>In an upper room in the house of Ah
-Wing, the Chinaman sat at an instrument
-that resembled a telephone
-switchboard. There were on its surface
-eight little globes, each with a plug
-socket beneath.</p>
-
-<p>Ah Wing had an operator’s head-piece
-in position, and he seemed to be listening
-attentively to something that came to
-him over the wires.</p>
-
-<p>There had been voices, loud and angry.
-He heard the Strangler denouncing the
-“Kid.” Then came the shot—and
-silence.</p>
-
-<p>Ah Wing waited an appreciable time,
-then shifted the plug from socket to
-socket. Not a sound from any of the
-rooms in the distant cottage. He returned
-the plug to its central position
-and waited.</p>
-
-<p>Presently another shot sounded, and a
-scream. He heard the Strangler curse
-his enemy.</p>
-
-<p>Without a word, Ah Wing removed
-the head-piece and glanced up at a chart
-fastened to the wall before him. It contained
-the names of five men, against one
-of which a black cross had been inscribed.</p>
-
-<p>Now he picked up a pencil and filled
-in two additional crosses.</p>
-
-<p>There were but two of the Wolves left!</p>
-
-<p class="center"><i>This Fascinating Story Has An Amazing Climax. It Will Be Concluded in the Next
-Issue of WEIRD TALES. Tell Your Newsdealer To Reserve Your Copy.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">Snatched from the Grave, Woman Tells of Death</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>A weird adventure befell Mrs. Rafaela Mercurio, an
-Omaha woman who, after apparently dying, awoke in
-the land of the living instead of the spirit world. After her
-physician had pronounced her dead, her life was restored by
-an injection of adrenalin, administered by Dr. W. A. Gerrie.</p>
-
-<p>To all outward appearance, she was quite dead. There
-was no indication of breathing or heart action. Prayers for
-the dead were started in the bed chamber where her body
-lay.</p>
-
-<p>Then Dr. Gerrie injected the gland extract in her heart,
-and after several days she showed signs of returning life.
-Upon regaining consciousness, she was confused and puzzled,
-uncertain, it seemed, whether she was alive or dead.
-Later she described her strange experience.</p>
-
-<p>“I could feel death pulling me,” she said. “I was slipping.
-I tried to find something to hold to, but could not. I felt far
-away and alone, yet it seemed there was something I must
-do before I slipped entirely away.</p>
-
-<p>“I had just a few minutes. I must straighten out in bed.
-I must cross my hands on my breast. I must smile. My
-children must know that I died in peace. From far away
-there seemed to be people around me. But their voices grew
-more distant.</p>
-
-<p>“Then there seemed to come to me the comforting words
-of a priest. They added to my peace and content. I was
-ready for death. I smiled, I think. I know I wanted to. It
-was the last thing I remember.”</p>
-
-<p>And then, days after the first injection of adrenalin, the
-“dead” woman regained consciousness. It was four o’clock
-in the afternoon.</p>
-
-<p>“I shall never forget that hour,” she said. “I heard the
-clock strike four times—and I realized I was a living person
-in a living world.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_19"></a>[19]</span></p>
-
-<p class="center larger"><i>A Fanciful Novel of the Red Desert
-Complete In This Issue</i></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="DESERT_MADNESS">DESERT MADNESS</h2>
-
-<p class="center larger"><i>By</i> HAROLD FREEMAN MINERS</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<h3><i>CHAPTER ONE</i><br>
-THE GIRL AND THE HANDCUFFS</h3>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp75" id="illus2" style="max-width: 35.9375em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/illus2.jpg" alt="">
-</div>
-
-<p>For a long moment the man
-surveyed with tired eyes the queer
-cleft in the canon wall and the
-beaten trail that led into it.</p>
-
-<p>Finally he addressed the nearest of his
-two burros in a listless, half humorous
-voice:</p>
-
-<p>“Well, Archibald, it looks interesting—what
-say we try it?”</p>
-
-<p>Archibald made no reply. Archibald
-was asleep. Immediately upon the halting
-of the little cavalcade the burro had
-sunk into a state of dejection more
-apathetic than usual and had promptly
-gone to sleep. In fact, it is doubtful if
-Archibald had not been asleep the
-greater part of the afternoon.</p>
-
-<p>“You don’t care, eh, Archibald?
-Well, for that matter, neither do I. But
-let’s consider this matter, old timer. For
-the last hundred years, more or less,
-we’ve been strolling around this accursed
-desert, and we have made the acquaintance
-of a few cottontail rabbits, one or
-two coyotes, and a rattlesnake. The rabbits
-showed their distaste for our society
-by running away; the coyotes did nothing<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_20"></a>[20]</span>
-but deride us with mournful voices;
-the rattlesnake certainly showed no desire
-to be friendly. We’ve met no human
-being; we’ve discovered no fabulously
-rich gold mine; we’ve had our fill of
-scenery.</p>
-
-<p>“There lies a well-beaten trail, disappearing
-into the face of solid rock. At
-its end lies mystery, adventure. Possibly
-romance. Also, possibly, cattle rustlers,
-who may greet us with anything but
-enthusiasm. In which case we’ll throw
-in our lot with them, and I’ll ride you
-across the desert to eternal glory. The
-idea intrigues me, Archibald. I think
-we shall investigate.”</p>
-
-<p>At this moment an over-industrious
-flea must have launched a determined
-attack on one of the few vulnerable parts
-of Archibald’s anatomy, for he suddenly
-nodded his head vigorously.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, you agree with me? I knew you
-would. We will now follow the trail to
-adventure—or a sheep herder’s camp.
-Let’s go!”</p>
-
-<p>Percy, the second burro, was with difficulty
-herded into the narrow trail.
-Archibald followed him with great reluctance,
-but finally the man succeeded
-in driving his tiny pack train into concerted
-action, and they slowly trudged
-up the narrow defile.</p>
-
-<p>Stanley Ross had been exiled to the
-desert country because certain eminent
-New York doctors had come to the conclusion
-that he had contracted a disease
-which yields itself to treatment most
-readily in the dry desert uplands.</p>
-
-<p>Ross had not been breathing the dry
-air of the desert for a month before he
-was as healthy as a prize fighter. The
-fact was that Stanley Ross had over-indulged
-in a certain pastime known as
-“reading the tape,” and Nature had
-gone on a strike. The New York doctors
-had provided the first step toward
-recovery; the desert had done the rest.</p>
-
-<p>But there had been another hurt that
-had not healed so readily—or at least
-Ross had so convinced himself. Stanley
-Ross fondly believed that he was heart-broken.
-The cause was a blonde bit of
-New York femininity who had fancied
-Ross for a while, but in the end had fancied
-the millions of an oil man more.</p>
-
-<p>So he had stayed on in the West. A
-healthy restlessness had driven him out
-to explore the uncharted wastes of the
-vast Red Desert, and the ever changing
-wonders of rock, and sand, and sky, of
-sagebrush and cactus, of sparkling night-heavens
-had beckoned him on. For
-months now he had been wandering up
-and down this immeasurable wonderland,
-obeying every vagary of mind, exploring
-every nook and cranny that
-caught his itinerant fancy, his only companions
-the two burros which he had so
-whimsically named.</p>
-
-<p>Mirages had beckoned. Colors so bizarre
-that no artist had dared to give
-them to canvas had soothed his soul.
-Grotesqueries of rock and sand and
-canon had intrigued him.</p>
-
-<p>Ross still believed that the old hurt
-was still present in his bosom. Actually
-he had been having a capital time for
-months, and the girl no longer mattered.
-However, he had allowed himself gradually
-to fall into a state of whimsical
-melancholy. What he needed was adventure.
-He was bored, but had he
-known what lay at the end of the thin
-twisting trail before him his boredom
-might not have been so acute.</p>
-
-<p>The rock defile, through which the
-trail led, was narrow, and the walls were
-nearly perpendicular. The passage was
-twisting, but a tiny trickle of water gave
-promise of a broader canon farther up.
-The trail, while very narrow, was well-defined
-and worn deep. It looked as
-though it had been in constant use for
-years.</p>
-
-<p>Ross had progressed along this strange
-passage for about a quarter mile when
-his attention was suddenly arrested by
-something on the canon wall. Involuntarily,
-he stopped. Instantly the burros
-halted as though their motive power was
-automatically turned off whenever their
-master stopped walking.</p>
-
-<p>“Great Horned Toads!” ejaculated
-Ross in a low voice. “Archibald, do you
-see what I see, or has the sun gone to my
-head? Has the world slipped back three
-centuries, or is it actually nineteen-twenty-three?
-’Tain’t possible, Archibald,
-but nevertheless I see what I see!”</p>
-
-<p>There, not thirty feet distant, was a
-girl—a pretty girl—and she was shackled
-to four great iron rings, fastened in the
-canon wall, by means of handcuffs, ankle
-fetters, and four heavy chains!</p>
-
-<h3><i>CHAPTER TWO</i><br>
-BROKEN SHACKLES AND A MYSTERY</h3>
-
-<p>Ross stood spellbound. He could
-not believe his own eyes.</p>
-
-<p>That he should meet a human being in
-this vast waste of rock and sand and
-cactus was possible. That he should find
-a girl chained to a rock, like a felon of
-the black ages, was nothing short of incredible.</p>
-
-<p>There was no denying the girl’s existence,
-however. She was there, and she
-was in need of help.</p>
-
-<p>His incredulity shattered, Ross was
-beside the girl in a bound. Even a cursory
-glance showed her to be undeniably
-pretty, and it also showed her to be quite
-as undeniably in a state of total exhaustion.</p>
-
-<p>At Ross’s approach, the girl raised her
-head with difficulty. Her eyes opened
-and she smiled slowly. Then her whole
-body suddenly fell forward against the
-chains that held her. She had fainted.</p>
-
-<p>No stranger situation could be imagined
-than the finding of a beautiful girl
-chained to a rock in the midst of the
-great Red Desert. This, however, was
-a matter for future consideration. The
-girl needed immediate attention, and
-Ross’s first thought was to release her.</p>
-
-<p>When he examined her shackles Ross
-realized that release was not going to be
-easy. The four rings to which the chains
-were fastened were secured to the canon
-wall by means of heavy iron staples
-driven deep into fissures in the rock. A
-test of strength showed that nothing
-short of a charge of dynamite would
-ever loosen them.</p>
-
-<p>The chains were comparatively heavy
-and well forged. A file was the only solution—and
-Ross did not possess a file.</p>
-
-<p>Not till he examined the handcuffs did
-he see any hope of releasing the girl.
-These were not of the ordinary type.
-They were not the steel manacles of the
-sort used today, but were about two
-inches wide, heavy in construction and
-made of cast iron. The locking device
-was old-fashioned. They were a type of
-handcuff that had been obsolete for
-nearly three quarters of a century.</p>
-
-<p>Having satisfied himself that they were
-really made of cast iron, Ross at once
-realized that it would be a comparatively
-easy task to free the girl. Securing a
-small rock for a hammer, he braced the
-girl back against the canon wall and
-held her wrist against the rock. A few
-well directed blows with the improvised
-hammer easily cracked the rusty cast
-iron and the handcuff fell away in two
-pieces.</p>
-
-<p>The girl’s wrist had been freed without
-more than slightly bruising the skin.
-The second handcuff was broken quite as
-easily. Ross gently lowered the girl to
-the ground.</p>
-
-<p>Releasing her ankles was more difficult.
-The anklets were of heavier construction
-and harder to break without
-injuring the girl. However, by placing
-a rock under the anklet and being careful,
-Ross finally managed to shatter the
-cast iron without more than bruising the
-girl’s slender ankles.</p>
-
-<p>In an instant he had jerked the pack
-from one of the burros and spread his
-blanket roll out on the ground. Picking
-up the unconscious girl, he placed her on
-the blankets and improvised a pillow
-from his coat.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_21"></a>[21]</span></p>
-
-<p>Almost opposite where the girl had
-been chained the tiny trickle of water
-had formed a miniature pool in the
-rocks. Seizing a tin cup from his camp
-outfit, Ross hurried to this pool, scooped
-up a cup of water, and in an instant was
-kneeling at the girl’s side.</p>
-
-<p>Dipping his fingers in the water, he
-flicked it across her face, then carefully
-bathed her forehead, and then set to
-chafing her wrists.</p>
-
-<p>It was fully ten minutes before the
-girl showed any evidence of returning
-consciousness. Then her eyelids began
-to flutter. Finally she sighed deeply,
-and her eyes slowly opened.</p>
-
-<p>Stanley Ross thought he had never
-seen such a look of abject terror as now
-appeared in the girl’s eyes. It was as
-though she had just awakened from a
-terrible dream and was still laboring under
-its terrorizing influence. Such a look
-might have appeared in the eyes of a
-slave girl when Nero ruled in Rome.</p>
-
-<p>For a moment, consciousness battled
-with that nightmare that had been seething
-through the girl’s brain and finally
-won. Her eyes opened wide. A half
-smile slowly crossed her face. Whatever
-might have inspired her terror, the girl
-evidently recognized in Ross a friend.</p>
-
-<p>Her lips, dry and parched, moved with
-difficulty, but Ross saw that they framed
-the word “Water!”</p>
-
-<p>Lifting her head, he dampened the
-girl’s lips from the cup and then allowed
-her to drink her fill. But weakness
-still held sway over her body, and
-she sank back on the blankets, exhausted.
-Her eyes closed again.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t try to talk,” advised Ross.
-“You just lie there and rest until I fix
-something for you. Then you can tell
-me about this thing.”</p>
-
-<p>For once in his life, Ross was glad that
-he had taken another man’s advice.
-When he had started his desert pilgrimage
-an old prospector had advised him
-to include a few cans of soup in his outfit.
-Ross had demurred, seeing no use
-in packing superfluous weight, but the
-old desert rat had insisted.</p>
-
-<p>Ross had included the soup. So far,
-he had had no use for it, but now it was
-to show its worth.</p>
-
-<p>Collecting a few dry sticks from the
-stubby willows that grew around the
-pool, Ross soon had a tiny fire going.
-Opening a can of soup, he heated it over
-the fire and carried a cup of it to the
-girl.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, that’s so good!” she murmured
-after she had drained the cup. “Thank
-you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you feel like talking?” asked
-Ross.</p>
-
-<p>For a moment the girl regarded him
-with frank eyes. Then she shook her
-head wearily.</p>
-
-<p>“Not—not just yet—please. I’m—so—tired.”
-She sank back onto the
-blankets.</p>
-
-<p>Realizing that, for the present, rest
-was the most important thing for her,
-Ross covered the girl with a blanket and
-set about his camp duties.</p>
-
-<p>He finished unpacking his burros and
-turned them loose to pick at the scanty
-tufts of grass that grew along the seeping
-stream. This done, he set about preparing
-his own meal.</p>
-
-<p>It was already dusk, and by the time
-he had cooked and eaten his supper darkness
-had settled down over the little
-canon. Washing his few dishes in the
-pool, Ross set them aside and turned his
-attention to finding enough firewood to
-keep the fire going.</p>
-
-<p>In the darkness this was somewhat of
-a task, and Ross was absent from the
-camp for some little time. When he returned
-he saw that his strange guest had
-evidently fallen asleep.</p>
-
-<p>Ross threw some wood on the fire and
-sat down with his back against a rock.
-Filling his pipe, he lighted it and leaned
-back to contemplate the events of the
-afternoon and evening.</p>
-
-<p>His first mental reaction on finding the
-girl had been one of intense rage that
-any one, no matter what the cause or conditions,
-could be so utterly inhuman as
-to perpetrate such an act. He was still
-angry now, but he had cooled off to the
-extent that he could consider the affair
-calmly.</p>
-
-<p>There seemed to be no off-hand explanation
-whatever. As far as Ross
-knew, there was no human habitation in
-all this desert waste, yet this trail up the
-little canon had been used frequently and
-recently, so somewhere up the winding
-trail must lie a solution to the mystery.
-But what it could be, or whether he
-could ever solve it, Ross could not imagine.</p>
-
-<p>The whole affair was grotesque, bizarre.
-Why any one should chain a
-young girl to a rock wall in the midst of
-a heat-scorched desert was utterly incomprehensible.
-The girl was not gross or
-criminal-looking. On the contrary, she
-was pretty, delicate, and obviously refined.
-Her clothes bespoke a far different
-environment. How any one could be
-so inhuman as to subject her to such
-treatment was unfathomable.</p>
-
-<p>Sitting there, smoking and watching
-the girl, mulling the strangeness of the
-affair over in his mind, Ross could offer
-himself no explanation. The only thing
-to do, apparently, was to wait for the
-girl to awaken and then wait for her to
-talk.</p>
-
-<p>At any rate, the adventure which he
-had craved seemed to be at hand. Where
-it would lead him he had no idea.</p>
-
-<p>The fire gradually burned low. The
-girl slept on. Ross removed the pipe
-from his mouth. His head nodded. In
-half an hour the campfire had wasted
-to an ember.</p>
-
-<p>The man’s head had sunk forward
-onto his breast; his body had relaxed
-comfortably against its support. He,
-too, was asleep.</p>
-
-<p>Hours crept by....</p>
-
-<p>With a start, Ross awoke. The first
-faint glow of dawn was creeping down
-into the little canon. It was morning.</p>
-
-<p>Sheepishly, Ross rubbed his eyes,
-aware that he had allowed the healthy
-fatigue of a day in the desert to conquer
-his senses and bring sleep when he
-had intended to watch throughout the
-night.</p>
-
-<p>Gradually the events of the evening
-before came back to him, and he looked
-across to where he had wrapped the girl
-in his blankets. The bed was empty!</p>
-
-<p><i>The girl was gone!</i></p>
-
-<h3><i>CHAPTER THREE</i><br>
-ADVENTURE WITH A VENGEANCE</h3>
-
-<p>In an instant Ross was on his feet,
-the sleep fog automatically cleared
-from his brain.</p>
-
-<p>One glance was enough. The dawn
-was far enough advanced so that he
-could see both up and down the canon.
-It was patent that the girl had vanished
-during the darkness.</p>
-
-<p>The whole affair was so utterly impossible,
-so unreal, so like an Arabian
-Nights adventure, that Ross was almost
-prone to believe that it had been merely
-a dream, a desert hallucination. Not
-until his eyes again sought the canon
-wall did he convince himself that he had
-not been laboring under some mental
-aberration.</p>
-
-<p>There could be no denying his eyes,
-though. There were the four heavy
-chains fastened to the canon wall, and
-there were the four broken shackles,
-mute evidence that he had stumbled onto
-a situation as exotic as one of the desert’s
-own mirages.</p>
-
-<p>No, there could be no question that the
-girl had actually existed. Nor could
-there be any question that she had disappeared.
-The only living thing in sight
-was Archibald, who stood with head
-bowed over the dead embers of last
-night’s fire in his usual state of ignoble
-dejection.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_22"></a>[22]</span></p>
-
-<p>At first thought it seemed impossible
-that the girl could have left camp, unaided,
-and it seemed quite as certain that
-no one could have taken her away by
-force, without rousing Ross.</p>
-
-<p>As he considered it, however, Ross
-realized that exhaustion would come
-quickly to one chained to the rock and
-exposed to the sun without food or water.
-Recuperation would probably come quite
-as quickly. The girl had had both water
-and nourishment the evening before, and
-it would have been quite possible for her
-to have gained sufficient strength to
-leave, had she so chosen. There seemed
-to be no other explanation.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, Archibald,” said Ross, falling
-into his whimsical habit of addressing
-the burro, “when I started this trip I
-thought that you and Percy were the
-only asses in the party. Now I am convinced
-there are three of us. Here I
-have just been craving adventure for
-months. Yesterday I blundered right
-onto the craziest kind of a mystery, and
-then I go to sleep and let the whole thing
-get away from me! Fools can’t think,
-but I suppose they’ve got to eat,” he
-finished to himself.</p>
-
-<p>He set about preparing his breakfast,
-meanwhile pondering the affair. The
-more he pondered the more mysterious
-it became.</p>
-
-<p>Breakfast finished, he washed his
-dishes and then stepped over to gather
-up his bed-roll. Instantly he stopped
-short. There before him, scratched in
-the level sand of the canon floor, was a
-message:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“<i>Please go away. There is only
-great danger if you investigate
-further.</i>”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>There could be no denying the sincerity
-of that message. Coupled with the
-silent testimony of the inhuman shackles,
-it meant that the girl, whoever she might
-be, was in real peril.</p>
-
-<p>Regaining her strength, she had quietly
-slipped away in the night, but before
-going she had left behind a warning to
-the man who had released her. It was
-evident that she did not wish to draw
-a stranger into a danger which she considered
-hers alone.</p>
-
-<p>The warning, however, reacted on Ross
-like a red rag on a bull. It was a challenge
-to his manhood, to his thirst for
-adventure. Somewhere up that narrow
-canon was mystery; and somewhere, too,
-was a girl in unknown danger, a girl
-who patently enough needed assistance
-and a friend.</p>
-
-<p>It took but a few minutes to round up
-the burros and rope on the packs.</p>
-
-<p>“We will now proceed to rescue the
-fair maiden.”</p>
-
-<p>“Stick ’em up, an’ do it quick!”</p>
-
-<p>Ross whirled at the sound of the
-gruff voice—and found himself looking
-squarely into the muzzle of an ugly six-shooter.
-Behind it, was the most villainous-looking
-countenance Ross had ever
-seen.</p>
-
-<p>“Come on! H’ist ’em up!” again
-jerked out the owner of the gun.</p>
-
-<p>The situation was too unreal to be
-taken seriously.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, Archibald, the plot thickens!
-First we meet Beauty; now we meet the
-Beast. Point that gun the other way,
-my friend. It might go off and frighten
-my long-eared friend here. He’s delicate,
-and I don’t like to have his nerves
-shocked.”</p>
-
-<p>“H’ist them mits before I drill ya!”</p>
-
-<p>Ross felt the muzzle of the gun
-jammed into his ribs, and a practised
-hand quickly searched his body. His
-automatic, carried for the sole purpose
-of exterminating rattlesnakes, was transferred
-to the other’s pocket.</p>
-
-<p>The vicious attitude of the gunman
-was far too real to be taken lightly.
-There was no doubt that he meant business.</p>
-
-<p>“Ya can let ’em down now,” said
-the gunman, stopping back.</p>
-
-<p>Ross turned and surveyed his captor.</p>
-
-<p>“If you don’t mind telling me,” he
-asked coldly, “to whom am I indebted
-for this early morning call?”</p>
-
-<p>“Stow the flip gab. All I know is tha
-big boss said to bring ya in, an’ I’m
-bringin’ ya.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then I’m to understand that I’m a
-captive?”</p>
-
-<p>“Understan’ anythin’ ya please. Now
-git travelin’.”</p>
-
-<p>Resistance was hopeless. His air of
-reckless bravado gone, boiling inwardly
-at the indignity forced upon him, Ross
-swung and trudged off up the canon
-trail.</p>
-
-<p>For perhaps a quarter of a mile the
-narrow canon cleaved straight through
-the rock. Then it suddenly began a
-series of intricate turns, as though it had
-attempted a passage and had been baffled
-and forced to take a new direction about
-every fifty feet.</p>
-
-<p>For a while, Ross stalked on without
-speaking. Suddenly he turned his head
-and spoke.</p>
-
-<p>“Just where are you taking me, and
-who is the ‘big boss’?”</p>
-
-<p>“Never mind askin’ dam’ fool questions.
-Keep movin’!”</p>
-
-<p>After another quarter mile of sharp
-turns, the canon suddenly broadened,
-and Ross found himself looking out into
-a basin bounded on all sides by high,
-perpendicular rock walls, smooth and
-straight.</p>
-
-<p>The basin was oval in shape, and near
-the center was a group of ’dobe buildings,
-five in number. Toward these the
-captor directed their progress.</p>
-
-<p>As he advanced, Ross looked keenly
-for signs of life, but though he sought
-every possible nook and cranny with his
-gaze, he could see neither man nor beast.
-The place seemed to be absolutely
-deserted.</p>
-
-<p>At the first building, a small ’dobe
-structure that stood somewhat apart
-from the others, Ross was ordered to
-halt. Opening a heavy door, the man
-motioned with his gun for him to enter.
-Ross stepped over the threshold, and instantly
-the door clanged shut behind him.</p>
-
-<p>He heard the heavy bolt drop into
-place. Then he heard his captor walking
-away.</p>
-
-<p>Then, for the first time, it dawned on
-Ross that he was actually a prisoner, and
-that he had been captured with some
-definite object in view.</p>
-
-<p>The room in which he found himself
-was about twelve feet square. The walls
-were of ’dobe; the floor was of the same
-material, hard packed and smooth. There
-were two small windows, but both were
-heavily protected with thick iron bars,
-set deep in the hard-packed ’dobe. The
-furniture consisted of a crude table and
-chair.</p>
-
-<p>A single test of strength showed Ross
-that he could never hope to open the
-door. A crowbar or an axe would be
-necessary for that, and there was no
-implement of any kind in the room. The
-walls were fully eighteen inches thick.
-Under the fierce heat of the desert the
-’dobe had grown as hard as cement.
-Unless he received help from outside,
-there seemed to be no possibility of
-escape.</p>
-
-<p>Time passed. Finally he ceased his
-idle wandering about the room and sank
-into the chair.</p>
-
-<p>His pipe and tobacco still remained in
-his pocket. He took out his pipe, lighted
-it, and fell to considering his strange
-predicament.</p>
-
-<p>It seemed that ages had passed before
-he detected approaching footsteps. The
-bolt was raised. The heavy door swung
-on its hinges. His captor stood outside,
-gun in hand. Behind him was a Chinaman,
-carrying a tray on which was food.</p>
-
-<p>The Chinese entered the room, placed
-the tray on the table and arranged the
-food. As he was performing this service,
-he said in a low whisper, so low that his
-companion could not hear, “Missee say
-Wong flix good dlinner.”’</p>
-
-<p>“Come on, Chink, make it snappy!”
-snapped the man with the gun.</p>
-
-<p>The door slammed. The bolt fell into
-place. Ross was alone again.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_23"></a>[23]</span></p>
-
-<p>Dubiously, he surveyed the food. The
-words of the Chinese came back to him,
-“Missee say Wong flix good dlinner.”</p>
-
-<p>So the girl knew that he was a captive.
-Well, all he could do was wait. But who
-was she? And what did his imprisonment
-mean?</p>
-
-<p>In the meantime there was no reason
-for wasting a good dinner. Ross was
-hungry, and in twenty minutes the last
-scrap of food had disappeared.</p>
-
-<p>Settling back in his chair, he again
-filled his pipe and prepared to await
-developments with as good grace as possible.</p>
-
-<p>It was hours later that he heard footsteps
-nearing his prison.</p>
-
-<h3><i>CHAPTER FOUR</i><br>
-ROSS IS INVITED TO DINE</h3>
-
-<p>Ross heard a key in the lock, and a
-moment later the heavy door swung
-open. It was the gunman again. He was
-evidently not mindful to take any
-chances with his prisoner, for he again
-was holding his revolver ready.</p>
-
-<p>“Come on out!” he barked, motioning
-with the gun for Ross to step out of the
-room. “Tha big boss wants ya.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, he does?” returned Ross. “Maybe
-I’ll find out now what all this is
-about.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll find out all right. Mebbe find
-out more’n ya want.”</p>
-
-<p>“You know, I don’t think I’m going
-to like you at all. I shouldn’t be surprised
-if I had serious trouble with you
-yet. But lead on!”</p>
-
-<p>Ross’s persiflage was far from pleasing
-to the gunman. He glared malevolently
-at Ross for a moment, as if half
-minded to inflict physical punishment,
-finally thought better of it, and then
-jerked out, “I ain’t leadin’; I’m followin’.
-Git movin’!”</p>
-
-<p>Ross was conducted to the largest of
-the group of ’dobe buildings, evidently
-used as a dwelling, and was ushered directly
-into a bedroom.</p>
-
-<p>He had expected anything except what
-he now saw. The room was such as might
-have been found in a brown-stone mansion
-on Fifth Avenue. The floor was
-covered with a deep soft rug. There
-was a mahogany bed, with a spotless
-white spread, and a dressing-table of
-the same wood. To one side of the latter
-stood a full-length plate mirror.</p>
-
-<p>“The big boss said ya was to shave,
-an’ then ya was ta dress fer dinner.
-Yo’ll find all tha togs there on that bed.”
-The gunman directed Ross’s attention to
-the bed with a flourish of his gun.</p>
-
-<p>Ross looked. The garments on the bed
-comprised a complete evening outfit,
-from studded shirt to patent-leather
-pumps.</p>
-
-<p>He was surprised to find that the
-clothes fit him well. The pumps were a
-trifle tight and the suit was a bit snug,
-but a half hour later, when he surveyed
-himself in the long pier glass, he was
-well satisfied.</p>
-
-<p>“All right, keeper, let’s be on our way.
-I’m curious,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>His captor conducted him down the
-long veranda, and a moment later he was
-ushered into a large room where a table
-was laid for dinner.</p>
-
-<h3><i>CHAPTER FIVE</i><br>
-A STRANGE DINNER</h3>
-
-<p>By this time Ross was prepared
-for almost anything, yet the room
-that he now stepped into was even more
-astounding than the bedroom.</p>
-
-<p>In the center stood a table arranged
-for four. It fairly sparkled with glassware,
-silver and spotless linen. At one
-side of the room stood a huge buffet. Its
-top was well covered with glasses, liquor
-shakers and sundry bottles, the contents
-of which were obvious.</p>
-
-<p>The occupants of the room chiefly
-held his attention, though. They were
-three, two men and a woman. Here, at
-last, he was to know the meaning of the
-strange events of the preceding twenty-four
-hours.</p>
-
-<p>The two men were standing close together
-and had evidently been conversing.
-Both were in faultless evening
-dress. The girl stood apart; aloof, so it
-seemed. Despite her evening dress, Ross
-instantly recognized her as the girl he
-had found in the canon.</p>
-
-<p>One of the men was young and exceedingly
-well built. His wide, heavily
-muscled shoulders suggested out-of-the-ordinary
-strength. His hair was wiry
-and red; its color was amply reflected in
-his ruddy complexion. The face was
-strong and would have been attractive
-but for one feature—the eyes. The eyes
-were small, deep-set, and far too close
-together. They might have been said to
-be piggish. The dull glint in them was
-not reassuring. Ross knew at once that
-he did not like this man.</p>
-
-<p>It was the second of the two men, however,
-who was really striking. He was,
-in fact, an amazing figure. His stature
-was above the average height, over six
-feet, and he was thin to emaciation. Ross
-thought he had never seen so tall and
-yet so slender a man. He was so thin
-as to be ludicrous, yet there seemed to
-be a remarkable whipcord strength about
-him.</p>
-
-<p>His face was narrow and as lean as
-his body. A thin, high nose divided a
-pair of piercing black eyes. It was the
-eyes that struck instant attention. Their
-everchanging lights fairly gleamed. They
-seemed to be alive with a thousand fires.</p>
-
-<p>The impression was instantly registered
-with Ross that here was a man who
-was possessed of unusual personal power,
-or who was stark mad. Those eyes could
-allow of no other conclusion.</p>
-
-<p>As Ross was ushered into the room it
-was this strange individual who instantly
-stepped forward.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, our guest has arrived,” he said.
-His voice was soft as velvet, yet it carried
-an irritating quality that was thin-edged
-and biting, and scarcely concealed.
-“Step right up, Mr. Waring; dinner will
-be served at once. Wong, the wine.”</p>
-
-<p>From somewhere the Chinese, Wong,
-had glided forth and, drawing out a
-chair, indicated Ross’s place at the table.
-Immediately he had filled the glasses
-with a sparkling liquid. Ross recognized
-it as champagne.</p>
-
-<p>There was no chance to reply. In fact,
-Ross was too bewildered to think of anything
-adequate to say. In a moment he
-would be himself again, but just now
-his wits were all at cross purposes.</p>
-
-<p>As the elderly man greeted Ross, the
-girl and younger man took their places
-at the table as if they had only been
-waiting his arrival to proceed with the
-meal. As Ross stepped forward, at the
-servant’s indication, his host reached out
-and lifted the wine glass at his plate.</p>
-
-<p>“We will drink to the health of our
-guest,” he said evenly.</p>
-
-<p>Automatically, Ross lifted his glass.
-The others did likewise. For an instant
-the four glasses were held aloft, the
-lights playing on their sparkling depths.
-Then the elderly man turned to Ross
-with a rather elaborate low bow and said
-in a voice that was like gray steel:</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Waring, allow us to drink to
-your most excellent good health——<i>for
-tomorrow you hang</i>!”</p>
-
-<p>The words were like an icy blast. Up
-to that moment the whole affair had been
-rather ludicrous to Ross. He had realized
-that he was in danger at times, but
-that this danger would involve the loss
-of his life he had not for a moment
-imagined.</p>
-
-<p>Now he realized that his very life was
-at stake; more than that, unless he could
-find some way to extract himself from
-his predicament, that he was sure to
-forfeit it. There could be no denying
-the import of the toast. Ross did not
-know why, but he did know that this tall,
-lean stranger with the mad eyes meant
-to kill him as sure as he stood there.</p>
-
-<p>For a moment, the young New Yorker
-lost his complacency. He stood with the
-glass poised in his hand, his brain whirling.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_24"></a>[24]</span>
-But this was only for a moment.
-In a second he had regained his poise.
-Raising the glass to his lips, he drained it
-to the bottom and turned to his host.</p>
-
-<p>“Thank you, sir,” he said carelessly,
-“for your kind wishes for my good
-health. I hate to dispute you, but I <i>don’t</i>
-believe you will hang me in the morning.
-And my name is not Waring, either. It
-happens to be Ross.”</p>
-
-<p>“As you will, Mr. Waring, as you
-will. Any name would do as well. And
-I assure you I shall have the pleasure of
-hanging you in the morning. Let me
-warn you, too, Mr. Waring, not to attempt
-anything. I want this dinner
-peaceful. It is an engagement dinner,”
-turning with an exaggerated bow to the
-girl, “the occasion of the betrothal of
-my dear niece to Mr. Beebe here. I <i>know</i>
-you will be interested in that, Mr. Waring.
-But just to forestall any idea you
-might have of providing any unnecessary
-entertainment I have stationed my
-friends, Mr. Garfin and Mr. Poole, at the
-door with instructions to shoot if you
-get unruly. Now, let us eat.”</p>
-
-<p>Ross glanced over his shoulder to find
-Garfin lounging in the door by which he
-had entered, a malignant smile wrinkling
-his face. In an opposite doorway
-lounged another individual fully as ugly
-looking as Garfin. This was evidently
-Poole. Both had guns. It was obvious
-that for the present no break for liberty
-was possible.</p>
-
-<p>For the most part, that dinner was a
-nightmare to Ross. Afterward he wondered
-how he had managed to get
-through it.</p>
-
-<p>After the first effusion, the elderly
-man made no effort to include Ross in
-the conversation. Glad of this respite,
-Ross attempted to collect his wits and to
-form some estimate of his predicament
-and of the people with whom he had to
-deal.</p>
-
-<p>The elderly man carried on a continuous
-animated conversation, mostly with
-the man whom he had designated as
-Beebe. Several times he addressed himself
-to Ross, but always in such a manner
-that it was obvious no answer was
-expected. A number of times he included
-the girl in his conversation, but
-the only time she made reply was to
-answer a question, and then it was merely
-to say, “No, Uncle Arthur.”</p>
-
-<p>Once or twice Beebe addressed the
-elderly man as “Mr. Ward,” so Ross
-concluded that his name was Arthur
-Ward. The girl’s identity he was not
-able to learn, except that her first name
-was Virginia.</p>
-
-<p>Beebe ignored Ross and by his attitude
-seemed to be currying favor with Ward.
-As for the girl, she remained silent, her
-eyes downcast, palpably holding herself
-aloof. Once or twice Ross caught a
-fleeting message from her eyes. It seemed
-to him that she was in utter terror, yet
-in perfect control of her nerves.</p>
-
-<p>In those flashing telegrams from her
-eyes Ross was sure he caught a mute
-appeal for help. If this was a betrothal
-dinner Ross felt sure that the betrothal
-was without the consent of one of the
-parties concerned, and he was determined
-then and there not only to effect
-his own escape but to aid the girl as
-well.</p>
-
-<p>The food was excellent and perfectly
-served by the Chinese, yet Ross could
-not have told a single item, and he
-thought the dinner never would end. The
-presence of Garfin and Poole was mute
-evidence that for the present he could
-do nothing. When the meal finally came
-to an end and Ward pushed back his
-chair, it brought a feeling of distinct
-relief to the young man. Now at least
-was the beginning of the end.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, Mr. Waring,” said Ward
-suavely, “we will repair to my study,
-where I have a few things to say to you
-before we break up this very pleasant
-little party. I hardly think my niece
-will care to accompany us.”</p>
-
-<p>They rose from the table, and Ross
-was ushered into an adjoining room
-which was even more striking in its way
-than either of the others he had been
-in that evening.</p>
-
-<p>A brisk fire burned on a wide hearth
-from above which looked down a magnificent
-ram’s head. Other trophies of
-a similar nature adorned the other walls.
-Interspersed with these were guns, Indian
-weapons, horsehair lariats—in fact,
-every accoutrement and trophy of the
-old-time West. It was a rather remarkable
-collection, one which under different
-circumstances would have deeply interested
-Stanley Ross.</p>
-
-<p>Instantly he knew where those curious
-antiquated shackles, which had bound
-the girl, had come from. Here were
-several similar pairs.</p>
-
-<p>Ross was directed to a chair in front
-of the fire. Ward took another, facing
-him, while Beebe sat down on a wide
-bench on the far side of the fire. Ross
-waited expectantly.</p>
-
-<p>Ward offered his guest a cigar. Selecting
-one for himself, he clipped its end
-very deliberately and lit it with aggravating
-leisure. Finally he leaned back
-in his chair and gazed steadily at Ross
-with his mad eyes. A tiny smile, cynical
-and cruel, crooked around his thin-lipped
-mouth.</p>
-
-<p>“I could have had you killed at once,
-Mr. Waring,” he said deliberately, his
-voice soft and well-modulated, yet biting,
-burning, “but I did not choose to do
-that. Instead, I wanted to bring you
-here this evening so that you could fully
-realize just what a serious thing it is,
-and how useless it is to buck Arthur
-Ward. And then, too, I wanted my
-niece to know that I am to be obeyed
-absolutely.”</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose, Mr. Ward,” asked Ross,
-“that it would be quite useless to tell
-you that my name is not Waring at all;
-that I do not even know any one of that
-name, or that I have never seen your
-niece, until last evening?”</p>
-
-<p>“Quite useless, I can assure you, Mr.
-Waring. I am absolutely certain of your
-identity. I do not make mistakes.</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Waring, I never forget an injury.
-I remember forever, and my one
-bad trait is the fact that I always have
-revenge. I would have got you in the
-end, Waring, anyway, but your fool
-stunt of following my niece here saved
-me a lot of trouble. Waring, you should
-have known that of all people on earth
-you would have the least chance of
-marrying my niece.</p>
-
-<p>“Tonight you can have the extreme
-pleasure of reflecting that you will
-hardly be dead before Virginia will be
-the wife of Beebe.”</p>
-
-<p>“And suppose she refuses?” asked
-Ross.</p>
-
-<p>“We are a hundred miles from anywhere,
-Waring. Things could happen
-that would make Virginia glad to marry
-Beebe—or any one.</p>
-
-<p>“One more thing, Waring, and then
-we will terminate this interview,” Ward
-went on dispassionately. “I want you to
-know that this is only the beginning. I
-shall not be satisfied until I have exterminated
-your entire family. It may take
-me years, but I shall certainly have the
-pleasure of killing your brother and
-your father. It does not pay to do injury
-to Arthur Ward.</p>
-
-<p>“You will have tonight to reflect on
-what might have been. In the morning
-I shall hang you.</p>
-
-<p>“That is all I have to say, and since
-it will be quite useless for you to say
-anything you may as well return to your
-room. Mr. Garfin and Mr. Poole will
-see that you have safe conduct.”</p>
-
-<p>Ross knew that for the present he
-would have to submit. Resistance would
-be useless just now. He was one against
-four. The odds were too great. He
-could only wait, hoping that the night
-would bring opportunity.</p>
-
-<p>However, before he went he could
-not resist a last display of bravado—bravado
-which he did not by any means
-feel.</p>
-
-<p>Rising from his seat, Ross bowed low
-to Ward.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_25"></a>[25]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Good-night, Mr. Ward. Thank you
-for a most excellent dinner and a most
-entertaining evening. And let me assure
-you that you will <i>not</i> hang me in the
-morning.”</p>
-
-<p>Turning on his heel, Ross passed out
-of the room.</p>
-
-<h3><i>CHAPTER SIX</i><br>
-A FORLORN HOPE</h3>
-
-<p>When Ross stepped out into the
-darkness his first thought was that
-he would make a dash for liberty. This
-hope died almost before it was born,
-though, for he felt the muzzle of a revolver
-pressed close to his ribs and Garfin’s
-rasping voice growled into his ear:</p>
-
-<p>“Make just one move fer a break an’
-I’ll plug ya. The boss says he’s goin’
-to hang ya in the morning, but I’d like
-to save him tha trouble.”</p>
-
-<p>Ross knew that Garfin was not indulging
-in idle words. The gunman would
-gladly kill him. Then, too, out in the
-shadows another form kept them close
-company. He knew this was Poole and
-that should he succeed in worsting Garfin
-his chance of escaping the second
-gunman’s bullets was very remote. No,
-the time was not yet.</p>
-
-<p>The three trudged back to Ross’s one-room
-prison, and it was only a minute or
-two until the door had slammed on him,
-the bolt had fallen into place and the
-lock snapped its vicious message.</p>
-
-<p>He was once more a prisoner.</p>
-
-<p>Ross sought in the darkness for the
-crude chair and threw himself down into
-it. He knew that for the time being
-there was no chance of escape, so he
-gave himself up momentarily to a contemplation
-of his plight.</p>
-
-<p>Who was this strange girl whom he
-had rescued, only to have her vanish
-into the night? Why had she not spoken
-tonight? Why had she given him no
-hint of action? Who was Beebe, that
-he would accept a betrothal which was
-obviously odious to the girl? And, lastly,
-who was Ward with his mad eyes?</p>
-
-<p>Who was Waring, and what had he
-done to merit such malicious vengeance
-on the part of Ward?</p>
-
-<p>These and many other questions Ross
-asked himself, but he had no satisfactory
-answer to any one of them. Only a
-jumble of baffling mystery presented itself.
-His brain seethed with impossible
-solutions, but he had to admit that actually
-he was completely at sea.</p>
-
-<p>Only a few facts stood out which could
-be accepted as a basis on which to work.</p>
-
-<p>He, Ross, had been taken for another
-man, Waring by name. Ward evidently
-hated Waring intensely and was determined
-to put him to death for a wrong,
-either fancied or real. There could be
-no doubt, too, that Ward was, in a degree,
-insane.</p>
-
-<p>What part Beebe was playing Ross
-could not determine, beyond the facts
-that he was in favor with Ward and
-that he wanted the girl and would take
-her on whatever terms he could get her.</p>
-
-<p>The girl was obviously in great peril.
-It could be seen that she hated Beebe,
-but at the same time was powerless to
-resist any order of her uncle. Ross could
-readily see that she was in a position
-where death might well be preferable to
-what she was facing.</p>
-
-<p>And, undeniably, there was the fact
-that he, Ross, was sure to meet death in
-the morning unless he could devise some
-way out of his dilemma.</p>
-
-<p>The night was far gone when he had
-finished considering these things. It was
-then that a plan of action first suggested
-itself to him. As it matured in his mind
-he realized that it was a forlorn hope;
-but his circumstances were so utterly
-desperate that there seemed nothing to
-do but give it a trial. He knew that its
-success would depend entirely on the
-element of surprise.</p>
-
-<p>Having once settled in his mind what
-he should do, Ross threw himself down
-on the crude table and was soon sound
-asleep.</p>
-
-<p>It was hardly daylight when he awoke,
-but he did not allow himself to drop back
-to sleep again. He was going to be
-ready.</p>
-
-<p>It was fully three hours later that he
-heard approaching footsteps. Slipping
-quietly across the room, Ross flattened
-himself against the wall beside the door
-and waited.</p>
-
-<p>The footsteps drew nearer and nearer.
-A key grated in the lock. It clicked.
-The bolt was raised. Slowly the door
-swung on its hinges.</p>
-
-<p>Like a flash, Ross slipped from his
-hiding-place and darted through the
-doorway. The only human within sight
-was Garfin. Like a mad thunderbolt
-Ross bore down upon him.</p>
-
-<p>Taken by surprise, Garfin barely had
-time to fire before Ross was upon
-him. Too startled to take definite aim,
-his bullet went wild. With a force that
-was terrific Ross struck him with the
-full impact of his body. The two went
-down in a tangled heap. Garfin’s gun
-was knocked from his grasp and went
-spinning a dozen feet away.</p>
-
-<p>Garfin was not without courage of a
-kind, but all his life he had depended
-on a gun to enforce his arguments.
-Physical combat had not been one of his
-long suits, and now he found himself no
-match for his younger antagonist.</p>
-
-<p>Stan Ross was far from a weakling
-physically. Long months afoot in the
-desert had made him as hard as nails.
-Not so long ago he had been known as a
-football player of some note. Now he
-used that knowledge of rough-and-tumble
-combat to the fullest extent.</p>
-
-<p>Taking Garfin by surprise, Ross had
-the initial advantage, and when the two
-went down he was on top. Striking, kicking,
-using the crushing force of his body,
-he went at the gunman in a demoniacal
-storm. For an instant it looked as
-though he would beat his enemy into
-insensibility before he could offer any
-material resistance.</p>
-
-<p>But Garfin was fighting for his life
-and he knew it. He was not to be vanquished
-so easily. In a moment the two
-men were threshing and rolling on the
-ground in a fierce struggle.</p>
-
-<p>Youth, however, was not to be denied.
-Those sledge-hammer blows were having
-a telling effect. Garfin was weakening.
-Gradually Ross was wearing him down.</p>
-
-<p>Ross sought the throat of his enemy.
-Garfin’s breath came in gasps. His eyes
-were bulging. Gradually Ross brought
-his knee up until it pressed into Garfin’s
-stomach. A final effort would end the
-struggle. Slowly Garfin’s head bent
-backward. Then—</p>
-
-<p>A crashing, blinding blow caught Ross
-on his head. For a brief instant a million
-fires flamed before his eyes. Then
-utter blackness.</p>
-
-<p>He slumped forward across the body
-of his antagonist.</p>
-
-<h3><i>CHAPTER SEVEN</i><br>
-WONG INTERVENES</h3>
-
-<p>When Ross returned to consciousness
-it was with a sense of bewilderment.
-His head seemed alive with
-shooting pains: his eyes burned intensely;
-his body was sore and stiff.</p>
-
-<p>Gradually he fought the fog from his
-brain and opened his eyes. He was
-dimly aware that he was back in his
-prison room, stretched out on the table.
-Painfully he sat up.</p>
-
-<p>And then he saw that he was not alone.
-There was another person in the room.
-As his eyes pierced the semi-gloom he
-was aware that the man before him was
-Arthur Ward.</p>
-
-<p>Instantly his brain cleared, and he
-swung himself around to face his jailor.</p>
-
-<p>Ward was standing in the center of
-the room, his feet wide apart, his hands
-behind his back. A sardonic smile disfigured
-his face.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” he inquired, “so you decided
-not to die?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I decided not to die,” said Ross.
-“I might remind you, too, that it is no<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_26"></a>[26]</span>
-longer morning and I have not been
-hung.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, and you’re not going to be,
-either. I have prepared a much more
-pleasant death for you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thanks!”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t waste your thanks,” replied
-Ward. “Before you’re through you’ll
-be far from thanking me. You see, Waring,
-your little outbreak this morning
-set me to thinking. If you had taken
-things quietly I would have hung you,
-and it would all be over now. But you
-had to try to escape and that set me to
-thinking that hanging was too pleasant
-for you. It would be over too quickly.
-There would be no time for reflection.
-So I devised something really fitting for
-your case.”</p>
-
-<p>While Ward was speaking the man
-Poole had entered, carrying a wooden
-box which he deposited gingerly in one
-corner and then quickly withdrew. He
-seemed afraid.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, Waring,” Ward went on, “I’ve
-planned a death for you that I like much
-better than hanging. And, damn your
-rotten soul to eternity,” he snarled,
-“you’ll know what real torture is before
-you go out!”</p>
-
-<p>With a sudden movement, he whirled,
-kicked the lid from the box, darted
-through the doorway, and had crashed
-the door shut before Ross fairly realized
-what he was doing.</p>
-
-<p>Half bewildered, it was a moment before
-he could attach any meaning to
-Ward’s action. Then it dawned on him
-that there was a deep significance to the
-box which Poole had brought in. Some
-sinister portent lay in that box of wood.</p>
-
-<p>Fascinated, Ross sat watching the box,
-realizing that it held his fate, scarce
-knowing what to expect, and certainly
-not expecting what developed.</p>
-
-<p>For a long minute nothing happened.
-Ross grew nervous with the strain. Then
-a faint buzzing came from the box.
-Silence. Again came that strange sound.
-And again. A slithering rustle as of
-stiff silk rubbed together.</p>
-
-<p>And then Ross’s scalp prickled with
-horror and his blood fairly froze in his
-veins, for over the edge of the box appeared
-a hideous, swaying head! There
-came a second! A third! And then a
-fourth!</p>
-
-<p><i>They were huge diamond-back rattlesnakes!</i></p>
-
-<p>As Ross recognized the big diamond-backs
-he knew instantly that he was
-trapped. To step down onto the floor
-meant death, a horrible, grewsome death.
-To remain on the table—</p>
-
-<p>Instinctively, he drew his feet up onto
-the table as the big reptiles left the box,
-one by one. He counted eight in all.</p>
-
-<p>Ross gave himself up to black despair.
-Down there on the floor awaited a fate
-too hideous for words....</p>
-
-<hr class="tb">
-
-<p>It must have been fully two hours
-later, and dusk was already settling
-down and darkening the room, when
-Ross heard footsteps.</p>
-
-<p>They approached his prison. For a
-moment his heart leaped within him at
-the possibility of rescue. But the door
-did not open. Instead, he heard the
-taunting voice of Ward from outside:</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, you’re safe enough so far, Waring.
-They can’t get you as long as you
-stay on that table. I planned that. Wasn’t
-it kind of me to be so thoughtful?
-But there won’t be any food and there
-won’t be any water, and all the time
-you’ll be going through hell. I planned
-that, too. And then there’ll come a
-time when you can’t stand it any longer.
-You’ll either fall from the table from
-weakness, or you’ll go mad and step
-down onto the floor. They’ll always be
-waiting, Waring. And then they’ll get
-you, damn you!” The voice, rising to a
-shrill crescendo of passion, ended in a
-burst of wild maniacal laughter.</p>
-
-<p>Receding footsteps told him that
-Ward had gone away.</p>
-
-<p>As the gloom deepened into utter darkness
-it seemed to Ross that he would go
-mad. His brain seethed with wild impulses.
-A hundred times he pictured
-himself lying there on the floor, a
-bloated, blackened thing. A hundred
-times he went through death. Only that
-hope which “springs eternal” kept him
-from stepping down onto the floor and
-making an end of it.</p>
-
-<p>Gradually Ross quieted. He finally
-settled back against the wall in a state
-of apathy, little knowing or little caring
-when the end would come.</p>
-
-<p>An hour passed.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly Ross became aware of an
-unusual sound. From somewhere in back
-of him came a low “<i>Hist!</i>” so low as
-hardly to be heard. Stealthily, he raised
-himself to the height of the barred window
-and peered into the darkness.</p>
-
-<p>Dimly he could make out a head outlined
-against the sky. A low, whispered
-voice spoke:</p>
-
-<p>“<i>You take!</i>”</p>
-
-<p>Unmistakably it was the voice of
-Wong. There was a grating sound as of
-something being passed between the bars.</p>
-
-<p>Ross reached out his hand and it
-closed over cold steel.</p>
-
-<p>An automatic!</p>
-
-<p>“<i>You take!</i>” again came the whispered
-voice.</p>
-
-<p>This time Ross found his hand closing
-over a cartridge belt.</p>
-
-<p>“Me bring Ga’fin. <i>You shoot!</i>”</p>
-
-<p>Like a ghost, the form at the window
-was gone without a sound.</p>
-
-<p>With the feel of that cold steel in his
-hand Ross’s spirits rose like a tide. All
-his waning confidence returned. He was
-instantly his own man again, confident,
-cool, without fear.</p>
-
-<p>Quickly he buckled the belt around
-his waist. With sure fingers, he made
-certain that the gun was loaded. Slipping
-off the safety, he knelt on the table, facing
-the door, and waited.</p>
-
-<p>Ross did not know whether he would
-ever leave that room alive, but he did
-know that the first men to open the door
-would die.</p>
-
-<h3><i>CHAPTER EIGHT</i><br>
-“YOU’LL SETTLE WITH ME”</h3>
-
-<p>Arthur Ward stood with his back
-to the big living-room fire, his feet
-wide apart, hands crossed behind his
-back, head lowered, eyes peering from
-beneath shaggy brows. It was a characteristic
-attitude and one which peculiarly
-expressed the man’s calculated cruelty.</p>
-
-<p>Beebe was seated on the wide fireplace
-bench, his feet stretched far in front of
-him. He was slowly smoking, his whole
-sprawling attitude one of indolent approval.
-Things were shaping themselves
-quite to the liking of Larson
-Beebe.</p>
-
-<p>The girl, Virginia, was seated in a
-chair somewhat in front of her uncle.
-The wild look of her eyes and her agitated
-face told that she was going
-through an ordeal that was breaking her
-bit by bit.</p>
-
-<p>“But, Uncle Arthur,” she burst out,
-“surely you can’t mean to do this terrible
-thing. Why, I don’t love Mr. Beebe
-at all. I scarcely know him, and I don’t
-want to marry anyone.”</p>
-
-<p>“My dear niece,” replied Ward evenly,
-“love has no part in my scheme of
-things. Hate rules the world, and hate
-is my creed. Love makes people soft and
-indolent. Hate is the great inspirator.
-Hate makes the world go ’round.</p>
-
-<p>“Sentiment has no place whatever in
-this marriage. It is entirely a marriage
-of convenience. Your personal inclinations
-have no weight whatever. I wish
-you to marry Beebe; therefore you will
-do it.”</p>
-
-<p>The girl’s color had heightened as she
-listened to her uncle’s ultimatum. As he
-finished, a grim expression of defiance
-settled on his face.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I won’t!” she answered
-crisply.</p>
-
-<p>“As you will, Virginia, but if you do
-not consent to marry Beebe within
-twenty-four hours I shall leave you here
-alone with him. I imagine after a couple<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_27"></a>[27]</span>
-of weeks of that you’ll be quite willing
-to marry him.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, you beast!” For an instant, as
-Ward’s full meaning became clear to
-her, it looked as though the girl would
-faint.</p>
-
-<p>Then, like a wild beast at bay, she
-turned on Beebe in a burst of blazing
-fury.</p>
-
-<p>“And you, Larson Beebe, what have
-you to say? Are you going to be a
-party to this? Are you as much a beast
-as my uncle?”</p>
-
-<p>Beebe regarded her tolerantly for a
-moment out of his piggish eyes before he
-spoke. A catlike smile of satisfaction
-curved his lips. He answered slowly,
-indolently:</p>
-
-<p>“Virginia, I am wild about you. I
-want you, and I am going to have you.
-As long as you refuse to love me I’m not
-at all particular how I get you. One
-way suits me as well as another.”</p>
-
-<p>The girl turned back to her uncle. Her
-hands went out in an imploring gesture.
-For an instant she seemed about to plead.
-Then she evidently thought better of it.</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose you understand, Uncle
-Arthur,” she asked in a low cold voice,
-“that I will kill myself before I will let
-this happen?”</p>
-
-<p>“My dear Virginia, you do not seem to
-understand the situation at all. You are
-absolutely in my power. You cannot
-kill yourself because I will not permit it.
-I will not give you the chance. You will
-do exactly as I say.”</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Not yet, Ward! First, you’ll settle
-with me!</i>”</p>
-
-<p>Stanley Ross stood in the doorway.
-But it was not the Stanley Ross, urbane,
-bored, carefree, who, a few days before,
-had whimsically sought adventure up an
-unknown canon trail. He had found
-adventure now, and it had used him
-roughly. His face and hands were grimy.
-His clothes were dirty and torn. One
-sleeve had been almost rent from his
-shoulder. His hair was riotously disheveled
-and clotted with blood. Down
-one side of his face extended a great
-splash of dirty dried blood.</p>
-
-<p>In his right hand was an ugly-looking
-automatic, and in his face and eyes was
-a look of savage fury.</p>
-
-<p>At the sound of Ross’s voice, Ward
-whirled and whipped out a gun. But he
-was too late, for Ross, with a steadiness
-and coldness belied by the savagery of
-his face and figure, had fired. A look
-of unutterable amazement overspread
-the face of Arthur Ward. He wavered
-on his feet for a moment, and then, when
-a spot of red began to widen on his
-shirt front, he toppled backward, lifeless.</p>
-
-<p>Almost at the same instant a hatchet
-hurtled through the room and buried its
-blade deep in the wall beside Larson
-Beebe, missing his head by the merest
-fraction of an inch. Wong was going
-into action. Beebe slid forward from his
-seat and ducked to temporary safety behind
-the table.</p>
-
-<p>Ward had not had time to aim, but he
-had instinctively pulled the trigger. The
-bullet caught Ross on the head and cut a
-long shallow furrow just above his left
-temple. The wound itself was not serious,
-but for a moment it blinded Ross.
-That moment was fatal, for as he roused
-himself from the shock he knew that he
-had forgotten Poole.</p>
-
-<p>Instantly Ross whirled to face the
-other doorway, but was too late. The
-heavy bullet spun him half around. For
-an instant he fought to retain his balance.
-Then he pitched forward onto the
-floor.</p>
-
-<p>Painfully, with almost a superhuman
-effort, Ross raised himself with one hand
-and deliberately shot Poole through the
-chest.</p>
-
-<p>Then, mercifully, consciousness was
-blotted out.</p>
-
-<h3><i>CHAPTER NINE</i><br>
-VIRGINIA EXPLAINS</h3>
-
-<p>When Ross returned to consciousness
-it was to a blurred, feverish,
-pain-wracked world.</p>
-
-<p>He did not know where he was or
-what had happened. He only knew that
-his head was bandaged and splitting
-with pain; that his shoulder was stiff
-and sore, incapable of being moved even
-the fraction of an inch, and that it
-pained with a dull, throbbing hurt; that
-his eyes burned and blurred; and that
-his entire body burned with ten thousand
-fires.</p>
-
-<p>Of one thing more was Ross conscious.
-That was the girl. When she saw that
-Ross had temporarily come out of the fog
-she hurried to his side and answered the
-unasked question on his lips by holding
-a cup of cold water to them. She seemed
-to have been waiting for ages to do just
-that.</p>
-
-<p>Ross drank gratefully, but when he
-would have questioned her she laid her
-finger across his lips and said;</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Sh-h-h-ush!</i> Not now. We’ll talk
-when you feel better. Just now you
-need sleep more than anything else.”</p>
-
-<p>And Stanley Ross obeyed. In an instant
-he was asleep, a wild, feverish sleep
-that brought no rest.</p>
-
-<p>There followed days of half consciousness,
-half nightmare; days when Ross
-neither knew nor cared what happened,
-when wild delirium alternated with painful
-reality.</p>
-
-<p>He was far too ill to make any inquiries
-about anything that had happened.
-In fact, he was only conscious
-of the fact that whenever the fog lifted
-the girl always seemed to be present—a
-ministering angel who brought cooling
-draughts, and soothing applications for
-his head and shoulders.</p>
-
-<p>Finally there came a day when Ross
-awoke to a sane world. The fever fog
-had departed from his brain. His head
-no longer throbbed and beat like a
-thousand devils. His shoulder was sore
-and stiff, but it no longer was filled with
-maddening pain. He was weak, very
-weak, but the world was once more interesting
-and he was acutely aware of a
-most prodigious appetite.</p>
-
-<p>Ross was aware that he was in the
-room to which he had been conducted by
-Garfin on the night of the strange dinner.
-Beyond that, he was not interested.
-He was aware that the girl was still
-acting as his nurse.</p>
-
-<p>At meal time the Chinese, Wong, came
-in with a tray. He was still too weak to
-care as to the whereabouts of the others,
-or what had happened on the night of
-the fight.</p>
-
-<p>He did learn that the girl’s name was
-Virginia Carver, but that was all.</p>
-
-<p>In less than a week he was sitting out
-on the long veranda every afternoon.
-With returning strength came returning
-curiosity. He wanted to know the story
-of this strange habitation in the desert
-and to learn just what had happened on
-the night Wong had aided him to escape.</p>
-
-<p>Several times he broached the subject
-to the girl, but each time she put him
-off with the statement that he was not
-yet strong enough to talk. The excuse
-was obviously becoming threadbare, however,
-as his health improved.</p>
-
-<p>One afternoon, while Ross was sitting
-on the veranda, the girl came out and
-took a seat opposite him. It was patent
-that the time for explanations had come.</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose, Mr. Ross,” began Virginia
-Carver, “that you have been wondering
-just what this whole thing is about, and
-you certainly are entitled to an explanation.
-I don’t know how I am ever going
-to thank you for what you have done for
-me. You were very brave.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, suppose you forget about the
-thanks, Miss Carver,” said Ross, visibly
-embarrassed. “I <i>would</i> like to know all
-about this queer affair, though. I
-thought Arabian Nights were ancient
-history, but I’m about ready to believe
-anything.”</p>
-
-<p>“In order for you to understand I’ll
-have to take you back about seven
-years,” explained the girl. “At that<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_28"></a>[28]</span>
-time my uncle, Arthur Ward, was one
-of the biggest operators in Wall Street.
-All his life he has been a very peculiar
-man; eccentric; always doing queer
-things for which there seemed no explanation,
-and never taking any one into
-his confidence.</p>
-
-<p>“In the Street he was known as a
-plunger. He made a great deal of
-money. Just how much I have no idea
-beyond the fact that he was always very
-generous with my mother, his sister. But
-at one time he must have been very
-wealthy indeed.</p>
-
-<p>“Seven years ago it seems that he
-plunged too heavily and got caught. His
-fortune was practically wiped out. When
-everything was settled up he was still
-a wealthy man—that is, he was probably
-worth a half million dollars—but the
-great bulk of his fortune was gone.</p>
-
-<p>“He fought fiercely to keep from going
-under. There were days and nights
-at a time when I don’t think he slept at
-all. He was like a wild man, but the
-combination against him was too great
-and he went under.</p>
-
-<p>“At first we thought he was going to
-lose his mind. For weeks he acted very
-queer. Finally he seemed to get a hold
-on himself and he appeared rational.</p>
-
-<p>“He settled up his business, and then
-suddenly disappeared. He left no word
-where he was going—just dropped out
-of sight. That was seven years ago, and
-for two years we heard nothing from
-him. Five years ago I got a letter from
-him asking me to visit him here. I came
-and found things just about as you see
-them now.</p>
-
-<p>“He seemed perfectly rational and
-contented. Of course, he was queer and
-erratic, but he had always been that. He
-seemed to have forgotten Wall Street entirely
-and spent most of his time making
-a collection of the accoutrements of
-horse and man of the old-time West. I
-doubt if there is a finer collection in
-existence.</p>
-
-<p>“He did a lot of entertaining, too, for
-his old friends, inviting them out for
-long visits. Here his eccentricity
-cropped out, for he insisted on going to
-great lengths to have everything just
-as it would be in New York. There must
-be fifteen dress suits in the house, and
-he always asked every one to dress for
-dinner. He imported wines and foods.
-Wong has been with him ever since he
-has been here and he is an excellent cook.</p>
-
-<p>“I came out every year. He was always
-very kind to me and has made
-every effort to entertain me. I thought
-he acted a little more queer each year,
-and I often wondered if he was not a
-little unbalanced mentally.</p>
-
-<p>“When I came out this year there was
-a great change. I saw at once that he
-was quite mad. He imagined that he was
-being persecuted by the Warings, and
-kept Poole and Garfin, New York gunmen,
-to protect him. The Warings were
-the people who engineered his defeat in
-Wall Street, and Uncle Arthur hated
-them intensely. He not only imagined
-they were persecuting him, but he also
-imagined that the younger Waring,
-whom I have never seen, was trying to
-marry me. This seemed to be an obsession
-with him.</p>
-
-<p>“When I got here I found that Larson
-Beebe was Uncle Arthur’s guest. I had
-met Mr. Beebe in New York several
-times, and I detested him. I had good
-reason to. He—well, I have always despised
-him.</p>
-
-<p>“Just what his hold or influence on
-Uncle Arthur was I haven’t the slightest
-idea, but I had hardly arrived before
-Uncle Arthur began to insist that I
-marry him.</p>
-
-<p>“Of course, I refused, and it was then
-that Uncle Arthur’s insanity came to the
-surface. He had always been kindness
-itself, but now he suddenly became the
-very incarnation of cruelty. While there
-was no question but that he was entirely
-mad, yet in his madness his brain was
-as shrewd and cunning as ever.</p>
-
-<p>“When I refused to marry Beebe he
-began to practice his cruelties on me in
-an effort to break my will. I was utterly
-at his mercy, for there was no way
-that I could escape. All I could do was
-submit.</p>
-
-<p>“The culmination of his indignities
-was to chain me to the rocks where you
-found me. Whether he would have left
-me there till I was dead I hardly know,
-but I think not. His brain was so unbalanced
-that it would be hard to tell.</p>
-
-<p>“I ran away that night because I knew
-he would kill you if he found you with
-me. Evidently he had Garfin watching
-me, or he would not have learned that
-you had released me. He was obsessed
-with the idea that you were the younger
-Waring.</p>
-
-<p>“The rest of the story you know. I
-dare not think of what would have
-happened to me if you had not come to
-my rescue, Mr. Ross.”</p>
-
-<p>“But what really happened the night
-I escaped?” asked Ross.</p>
-
-<p>“Well—you shot both Uncle Arthur
-and Poole,” she replied hesitatingly.</p>
-
-<p>“Did I—did I—” he floundered helplessly.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” she replied evenly. “Providence
-helped your aim that night. Wong
-buried them both. No, Mr. Ross,” she
-finished, as she noted the look on his
-face, “don’t feel that way about it. If
-you hadn’t killed them they would have
-killed you, and I would have suffered a
-fate worse than death. Under the circumstances
-I cannot feel sorry.”</p>
-
-<p>“What happened to Beebe?” asked
-Ross, curious as to the fate of that dubious
-individual.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s a mystery. He simply disappeared
-that night and we have not seen
-him since. Wong just barely missed him
-that night with a hatchet. I think he
-is deathly afraid of Wong. At any rate,
-he is gone. And now, Mr. Ross, I want
-to ask you a question: How did you
-manage to escape from your prison that
-night? Wong won’t tell me a thing. He
-just grins when I ask him, and I suspect
-I owe a great deal to Wong.”</p>
-
-<p>“You surely do, Miss Carver,” answered
-Ross fervently. “That Chinaman
-is a wonder. In some way he got hold
-of my automatic and cartridge belt. He
-passed them to me through the window,
-and then, under some pretense, got Garfin
-to come and open the door. Then—well,
-Garfin won’t ever bother us again.”</p>
-
-<h3><i>CHAPTER TEN</i><br>
-A NEW DANGER</h3>
-
-<p>With the passing days, Ross found
-new strength and new interest. His
-head was already healed and his
-shoulder, beyond being stiff, no longer
-bothered him. While still somewhat
-weak, he was able to walk about as he
-pleased.</p>
-
-<p>He found it very pleasant to pass the
-afternoons away on the long veranda.
-Here he was often joined by Virginia
-Carver, and the two spent hours together
-that were very pleasant. In fact, Ross
-suddenly became acutely aware that he
-was taking more than a passing interest
-in this girl.</p>
-
-<p>Virginia Carver was exceedingly lovely.
-Moreover, she was of a type and
-personality that particularly appealed
-to Stanley Ross. While she was nursing
-him through his illness he had found her
-presence very pleasing. Now that he was
-nearly well, her companionship was becoming
-even more delightful, and he
-realized that, as far as he was concerned,
-friendship was ripening into something
-more definite. As he continued to improve
-he knew that the time was fast
-approaching when they would have to
-leave this desert oasis.</p>
-
-<p>He found his mind continually recurring
-to Larson Beebe. How had he managed
-to disappear so completely that
-night? Where had he gone? What was
-he doing now? Ross could not dismiss
-the idea that they would hear from Beebe
-again, and that when they did it would
-mean trouble.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_29"></a>[29]</span></p>
-
-<p>This conviction was the more firmly
-fixed in his mind by the actions of
-Virginia Carver. Ross felt sure that the
-girl was deeply worried over something;
-she seemed anxious and nervous; she appeared
-to be continually watching and
-listening for something. Intuition told
-Ross that the cause of her perturbation
-was Beebe.</p>
-
-<p>Intuition again told him that perhaps
-Wong could throw some light on the
-situation. The next time that the Chinese
-appeared on the veranda Ross stopped
-him.</p>
-
-<p>“Wong,” he said, “Miss Carver seems
-to be worried about something. Do you
-know what it is? Is it about Beebe? Do
-you know where he is?”</p>
-
-<p>Wong’s face betrayed not a single
-glimmer of comprehension.</p>
-
-<p>“No savvy,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, you do savvy, too. What’s
-wrong here? Where’s Beebe?”</p>
-
-<p>Wong glanced hurriedly up and down
-the veranda as though he feared some
-one would overhear him. Then he jerked
-a meaning finger toward the mouth of
-the little canon.</p>
-
-<p>“Him there,” he said in a low voice.</p>
-
-<p>“What do you mean?”</p>
-
-<p>“Him hide in canon. Kill all we go
-out.”</p>
-
-<p>“We don’t have to go out that way.”</p>
-
-<p>“No other way can go,” explained
-Wong.</p>
-
-<p>“What! You mean to tell me that’s
-the only way out of this place? Why
-can’t we go out over the cliffs?”</p>
-
-<p>“No can do,” replied the Chinese, and
-was gone before Ross could question him
-further.</p>
-
-<p>So that was it! The canon was the
-only way out of the basin, and Beebe was
-hiding down there, waiting to pot them
-as they came out. Quite a neat little idea!
-So that was why Virginia Carver was
-carrying that worried look.</p>
-
-<p>Ross went straight to the girl. He
-found her in the dining-room.</p>
-
-<p>“Miss Carver,” he asked, “why
-didn’t you tell me that Beebe was down
-in that canon?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I couldn’t see any use worrying
-you with that while you were so ill,”
-she replied, smiling. “And then, too,
-Mr. Ross, I think you are a little inclined
-to do impulsive things, and it seems to
-me you have ran risks enough on my
-account.”</p>
-
-<p>Ross ignored this last.</p>
-
-<p>“Then he really is there?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, Mr. Ross, he is, and I am afraid
-that we are in rather a bad way. He has
-all the advantage.”</p>
-
-<p>“But isn’t there any way out of this
-place except through that canon?”</p>
-
-<p>“None at all. Uncle Arthur selected
-this place for that very reason. There
-was a trail up the cliff, but he dynamited
-that away. Unless we develop wings
-we’ll go out through that canon or not
-at all.”</p>
-
-<p>Ross pondered for a moment. Finally
-he asked, “I wonder why he hasn’t tried
-to kill Wong and me at night?”</p>
-
-<p>“There are at least two reasons, I
-think,” answered the girl. “The first is
-that Larson Beebe is a very cautious
-man. He will not risk a single hair of
-his head if it is not necessary. If he came
-up here he might get hurt. If he stays
-there he is perfectly safe and we haven’t
-a single chance of getting by.</p>
-
-<p>“Another thing, I think he is deathly
-afraid of Wong. He came up in the
-night twice and stole provisions. Since
-then Wong has been watching. I don’t
-think he ever sleeps.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, we can outlast him anyway,
-Miss Carver.”</p>
-
-<p>“But that’s just what we can’t do, Mr.
-Ross. Our provisions are very low.” The
-girl was gravely serious now. “Unless
-we can find some solution, I’m afraid he
-is going to starve us out very soon. It
-looks like we were trapped.”</p>
-
-<h3><i>CHAPTER ELEVEN</i><br>
-WONG HAS AN IDEA</h3>
-
-<p>Ross woke the next morning keenly
-aware of the seriousness of their
-predicament. As soon as breakfast was
-over he set out to examine the walls of
-the basin.</p>
-
-<p>If he had any hope that there was a
-means of escape over the cliffs he was
-soon disillusioned. Nowhere was there
-a break in the walls. They were as perpendicular
-as a plumb-line and as
-smooth as basalt. Nothing but a fly
-could have scaled those cliffs.</p>
-
-<p>The only way out led through the narrow
-twisting canon below. And there
-Larson Beebe lay in wait like a cat at a
-rat-hole. Ross realized that there was
-little or no chance for him or Wong to
-get through the canon alive. Beebe had
-all the advantage.</p>
-
-<p>Ross returned to the house and sat
-down on the veranda. He ran over a
-dozen possible schemes for escape, and
-in the end he had to conclude that they
-were all impossible.</p>
-
-<p>In fact, his only conclusion was that
-he would give what fortune he possessed
-to have Larson Beebe’s neck within the
-grasp of his two hands. That, however,
-seemed to be a remote possibility. If
-anything, the situation would be reversed.</p>
-
-<p>Ross had about exhausted his whole
-range of impossible schemes when Wong
-appeared on the veranda. The Chinese
-wore an enigmatical smile on his usually
-inscrutable face. It was patent that he
-was well pleased with something.</p>
-
-<p>“You come,” he addressed Ross. “Got
-something show.”</p>
-
-<p>Ross rose and followed Wong, who led
-the way to one of the ’dobe outbuildings.
-Opening the door, he motioned Ross to
-enter.</p>
-
-<p>The room was a work-shop of sorts,
-but what instantly attracted attention
-were two enormous kites leaning against
-the wall.</p>
-
-<p>“You see?” inquired Wong.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I see,” said Ross, “only I don’t.
-What’s the idea, Wong?”</p>
-
-<p>“Mlisha Beebe kill everybody we go
-down canon. No can climb out. Wong
-make klite. Klite climb out.”</p>
-
-<p>“Guess I’m pretty thick, Wong. I
-don’t get it yet.”</p>
-
-<p>“When Wong little bloy China he fly
-many klites. Not forget how. Fly klite
-now. Klite lift lope top cliff. We climb
-lope. Go ’way.”</p>
-
-<p>“By George, Wong, I believe you’ve
-got it,” cried Ross in admiration. “But
-will it work?”</p>
-
-<p>“Can do” nodded Wong.</p>
-
-<p>“But how will you fasten the rope at
-the top of the cliff, Wong?”</p>
-
-<p>“Wong good klite flyer. Two klites
-lift big loop. Drop loop over tree top
-side cliff. Two ends hang dlown. Mlake
-slip knot. Pull one lope. All done.”</p>
-
-<p>“Wong, you’re a wonder! I believe
-it’ll work. Worth trying anyway.”</p>
-
-<p>“Can do. Try tomollow if wind
-come.”</p>
-
-<p>Ross hurried away to find Virginia
-Carver.</p>
-
-<p>“Miss Carver,” he hailed her joyously,
-“Wong has got a scheme to get us
-out of here, and I believe it will work.
-He has constructed two enormous kites
-down there in the workshop. He claims
-they will lift a rope, and he says he can
-drop it over one of those stunted pines
-at the top of the cliff. We climb the
-rope and leave friend Beebe down in the
-canon to hold the bag. Are you game?”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course I am,” replied the girl,
-surprised that he should even question
-her gameness.</p>
-
-<p>“I knew you would be. We’re going
-to try it tomorrow. You had better
-make two packs of food.”</p>
-
-<p>“Two packs? Don’t I carry anything?”
-asked the girl.</p>
-
-<p>“Miss Carver,” said Ross gravely,
-“it’s a long way to civilization, and it is
-going to be a big tax on your strength
-to make it without carrying anything.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll make it,” said Virginia Carver,
-as she turned away.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_30"></a>[30]</span></p>
-
-<p>The following morning Ross was eager
-for the experiment, but it was nearly
-noon before a breeze came up strong
-enough to lift the kites.</p>
-
-<p>Virginia Carver came out, clad in
-flannel shirt, whipcord breeches and high
-laced boots. It was a costume well suited
-to the work ahead, but it accentuated the
-girl’s slimness, made her appear almost
-frail. There was no frailty there, though.
-Rather was she supple with the suppleness
-of a braided cable, and the girl had
-the grace of a fine Toledo blade. Once
-again Stanley Ross became acutely
-aware that Virginia Carver had become
-an exceedingly important interest in his
-life.</p>
-
-<p>Wong had instructed Ross in his
-scheme for escape. Ross saw at once that
-he had not intended to lift a rope heavy
-enough to hold a human being. Instead
-Wong had unearthed from one of the
-storehouses a very stout light line.</p>
-
-<p>The plan was to lift the bight of the
-line with the two kites and drop it over
-a stunted pine growing out at an angle
-near the top of the north cliff. A
-heavier rope could then be attached to
-one end of this and drawn up and over
-the tree, making it possible to climb out.</p>
-
-<p>Ross saw instantly that the plan was
-all right if the kites could be manipulated.
-That was Wong’s job, and he
-seemed quite confident.</p>
-
-<p>All three knew that they must work
-quickly. If Larson Beebe discovered
-their scheme there was no telling what
-desperate action he might attempt.</p>
-
-<p>Wong and Ross quickly got the first
-big kite into action. It rose readily, but
-on attaining a height of fifty feet
-flopped drunkenly. It did not fall, however—merely
-dipped and darted. This
-did not appear to bother Wong at all.
-He simply gave the kite string to Virginia
-Carver to hold while he quickly
-flew the second kite with Ross’s help.</p>
-
-<p>Wong and Ross each took command of
-a kite now. Slowly paying out cord, they
-allowed the kites to rise. When the
-kites had risen to a height of about
-seventy-five feet the cords attached to
-the bight of the line suddenly became
-taut and the line began to rise from the
-ground.</p>
-
-<p>It was then that Ross saw that as a
-designer of kites Wong most emphatically
-knew his business, for the instant
-the weight of the line was borne by the
-kites in that instant they ceased their
-drunken plungings and flew steadily.</p>
-
-<p>Ross’s heart leaped within him, for he
-knew now that Wong’s scheme would
-work and that they were going to circumvent
-Larson Beebe. Up, up, the kites
-rose. A hundred feet! Two hundred!
-Five! A thousand!</p>
-
-<p>The two kites were about thirty feet
-apart, and when it was obvious that the
-line was higher than the cliff wall Wong
-and Ross began to walk slowly forward.
-Their objective was a single low pine
-growing at an outward angle near the
-top of the cliff. Aiming carefully at this,
-Wong and Ross brought the kites to a
-position where an end of the line dangled
-on each side of the tree and against
-the cliff. The bight of the line was
-slightly above the tree, and the kites
-were pulling it forward.</p>
-
-<p>“Missee, you grab ropes,” shouted
-Wong.</p>
-
-<p>Quickly divining what was wanted of
-her, Virginia Carver grasped the ends
-of the dangling lines.</p>
-
-<p>“Let glo!” shouted Wong again.</p>
-
-<p>Instantly he and Ross released the
-kite cords. The kites plunged drunkenly
-down out of sight over the top
-of the cliff. The bight of the line
-dropped neatly over the pine tree and
-slid down its trunk to the roots. The
-thing was done!</p>
-
-<p>Ross wanted to shout for pure joy.
-Elation showed in Virginia Carver’s
-every feature. As for Wong, the author
-of this daring scheme, he merely
-grinned, and went swiftly to work.</p>
-
-<p>Somewhere in one of the buildings
-Wong had discovered a coil of light
-rope. It had undoubtedly been brought
-in to be made up into lariats, for it was
-very pliable and exceedingly strong—strong
-enough to support the weight of a
-heavy man.</p>
-
-<p>One end of this was fastened to a free
-end of the line over the tree. When
-Wong pulled sharply on the opposite
-end of the smaller line it slipped readily
-over the tree trunk. In a minute or two
-the end of the rope had been pulled up
-over the tree trunk and back to the
-canon floor. Thus was the light line replaced
-by the heavier one.</p>
-
-<p>There was no place to anchor one of
-the rope ends so Wong simply tied a
-loop in one end of the rope, passed the
-other end through it, making a running
-noose, and quickly ran it up to the tree.
-Wong’s kites had proved their worth.
-The means of escape was provided and
-ready.</p>
-
-<p>“Wong go first,” said the Chinese.
-Without argument or permission, the intrepid
-Wong was assuming the risk of
-proving the safety of the rope. By way
-of explanation he added to Ross, “You
-shoulda no stlong. No can pull Missee
-up, Wong can do.”</p>
-
-<p>Wong grasped the rope in his hands,
-and with the agility of a cat, feet on the
-canon wall, passed himself, hand over
-hand, up the face of the cliff. It seemed
-hardly a minute before he was at the
-top and had scrambled over the edge.</p>
-
-<p>In a moment his head reappeared and
-he called down to Ross to send up the
-food packs, canteens, and blankets. This
-was but the work of a moment, and
-Wong quickly drew them to the top.</p>
-
-<p>So far everything had gone well, and
-there was no sign of Beebe. It looked
-as though they were going to make good
-their escape.</p>
-
-<p>When Wong let the rope down again
-Ross fashioned a loop in the end of it,
-which he passed over Virginia Carver’s
-head and secured it under her arms.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, Miss Carver, if you will take
-hold of the rope with both hands I think
-Wong can pull you up safely,” he said.
-“If you hit against the cliff push yourself
-away with your feet.”</p>
-
-<p>The girl did not answer him, but she
-smiled confidently. She accepted her
-part in the escape with what appealed to
-Stanley Ross as being splendid courage.</p>
-
-<p>Slowly but very steadily, Wong began
-to raise the girl. The little Chinese
-seemed to be made of steel, for, without
-stopping once or increasing or decreasing
-the speed, he drew Virginia Carver
-to the top of the cliff and helped her
-over the edge. It was a feat of which a
-man twice his size might have been justly
-proud.</p>
-
-<p>When the rope came down again Ross
-lost no time. A hasty glance toward the
-mouth of the tiny canon revealed no
-sight of Beebe. Grasping the rope, Ross
-began his ascent.</p>
-
-<p>His shoulder bothered him somewhat,
-but it was not more than two or three
-minutes before he, too, was at the cliff
-top.</p>
-
-<p>They were free!</p>
-
-<h3><i>CHAPTER TWELVE</i><br>
-AN ENDING AND A BEGINNING</h3>
-
-<p>Stanley Ross drew himself over
-the edge of the cliff, where Virginia
-Carver and Wong were waiting, and
-scrambled to his feet. He was exuberant.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, Miss Carver, I guess we’re
-safe all right, thanks to Wong here,” he
-exulted. “All that remains now is to
-make tracks away from this accursed
-place.”</p>
-
-<p>“So you think you’re safe, eh?”
-snarled a cold voice.</p>
-
-<p>Ross whirled to find himself facing
-Larson Beebe. Beebe was covering him
-steadily with a big automatic, and his
-deep set, piggish eyes had an insane
-light in them.</p>
-
-<p>Ross’s heart sank within him. He had
-expected an attack from Beebe from below,
-but that he might be waiting for<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_31"></a>[31]</span>
-them on the cliff top never entered his
-head. He was utterly helpless now. Beebe
-had the drop on him and could kill
-him twice over before he could draw his
-own gun. Moreover, it was certain Beebe
-intended doing that very thing.</p>
-
-<p>Ross was filled with a sense of futility,
-impotency. That he was about to die he
-did not consider. He was merely disgusted
-with himself for allowing himself
-to be checkmated when the game
-was practically won.</p>
-
-<p>“So you thought you could get
-away?” Beebe was going on. It was
-obvious that he, too, was nearly insane.
-“Thought I was asleep, eh? I knew
-what was up as soon as I saw the kites.
-I could have got you then, but I figured
-the easiest and safest way would be to
-slip up here and wait behind a rock till
-you were all up. You wouldn’t be looking
-for me and I could pot you easily.
-Well, I’m here and you’re due for a
-long journey.</p>
-
-<p>“Thought you could outwit Larson
-Beebe, eh? I’m just going to shoot you
-and your precious Chink friend here
-now and kick you over the cliff. Then
-I’m going to take Virginia and——.”</p>
-
-<p>Ross was conscious that Wong’s right
-hand whipped to the base of his skull
-just above the collar of his blouse. In the
-same instant it came away again and
-now it held a long, thin, slender glittering
-blade!</p>
-
-<p>There was another movement of
-Wong’s hand so swift that he could not
-follow it. Ross only knew that a look
-of utterably blank amazement had overspread
-Larson Beebe’s face. It was as
-though Beebe had seen a miracle performed
-before his eyes and could not
-fathom it.</p>
-
-<p>Then, suddenly, Ross saw what had
-happened. The hilt of the knife that
-Wong had held was protruding from
-Larson Beebe’s ribs!</p>
-
-<p>For an instant Beebe wavered on his
-feet. His fingers relaxed and his gun
-clattered to the rocks. He pitched forward
-onto his face.</p>
-
-<p>“Can do,” muttered Wong. “One day
-kick Wong. Not kick again.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb">
-
-<p>That night the three camped beside
-a little water-hole several miles
-down the main canon. Around the tiny
-campfire they made their plans for getting
-out of the desert.</p>
-
-<p>Ross knew the general direction to
-take, and he felt confident that by taking
-it easy the girl would be able to make
-the journey on foot. Virginia Carver
-was confident.</p>
-
-<p>The following morning Ross was
-awakened by footsteps on the rocks. He
-raised up to see two long-eared animals
-making their way down the trail to the
-water-hole. It was Archibald and
-Percy!</p>
-
-<p>Ross let out a shout that instantly
-roused his companions.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s your ship of the desert
-that’s going to carry you back to civilization,”
-he called, as Virginia raised up
-from her blankets.</p>
-
-<p>The girl did not comprehend. She
-gazed at the two animals in astonishment
-for a moment.</p>
-
-<p>“But they’re wild, aren’t they?” she
-asked.</p>
-
-<p>“Just as wild as two snails,” said
-Ross. “Those two estimable gentlemen
-brought me into this desert, and they’re
-going to take us out.”</p>
-
-<p>When breakfast had been finished
-Ross noticed that Wong was busily engaged
-in rearranging the weight of the
-packs.</p>
-
-<p>“Never mind the packs, Wong. Friend
-Archibald here can carry Miss Carver
-and Percy can handle the supplies. You
-and I will go light, Wong,” Ross explained.</p>
-
-<p>“No can do,” replied Wong. “Me no
-go you.”</p>
-
-<p>“What do you mean, Wong?”</p>
-
-<p>“Wong go that way,” answered the
-Chinese, pointing to the south.</p>
-
-<p>“You go that way,” asked Ross, perplexed.
-“Why? You’re going with Miss
-Carver and me.”</p>
-
-<p>Wong shook his head. “Wong kill
-man. Think not stay in ’Nited States.
-Go Mexiclo.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nonsense, Wong,” said Ross. “Miss
-Carver and I can easily fix that.”</p>
-
-<p>“Think not. Wong go Mexiclo. Got
-blother there. Buy li’le res’rant.”</p>
-
-<p>Ross saw that there was no use in trying
-to dissuade Wong. There was no
-combating such a nature. After a few
-moments Ross asked:</p>
-
-<p>“Wong, where you going in Mexico?”</p>
-
-<p>“Go Wa’lz.”</p>
-
-<p>“Going to Juarez, eh? What’s your
-full name?”</p>
-
-<p>“Name? Wong Chen Chek.”</p>
-
-<p>“All right, Wong. In about two
-months you go to the postoffice and inquire
-for a registered package. You’ll
-find enough money in it to buy the best
-little restaurant in Juarez.”</p>
-
-<p>Wong grinned. “Thlank you.”</p>
-
-<p>Swinging his pack to his shoulder, he
-swung down the trail without more ado.</p>
-
-<p>“Goo’ bye. Goo’ bye, Missee,” came
-back to Ross and Virginia Carver.</p>
-
-<p>A half hour later the Chinese disappeared
-from view far down the canon.
-Ross turned to the girl.</p>
-
-<p>Virginia Carver was gazing far out
-over the jumble of rocks and sand that
-is the Red Desert to where the mists of
-the morning were dissolving into the
-shifting haze of the rising sun.</p>
-
-<p>For a moment Ross watched her without
-speaking. Fresh and vibrant with
-youth, she was lovely beyond words.</p>
-
-<p>“I guess we had best be going now,”
-he said. Then his voice stumbled, “Miss
-Carver—Virginia—when we get out of
-here—I’ve—I’ve something to say to
-you.”</p>
-
-<p>For a long moment the girl continued
-to look far into the colorful haze of the
-desert. Then she turned toward Ross.
-A peculiarly tender little smile wreathed
-her mouth. Her eyes were swimming
-pools of unshed tears.</p>
-
-<p>Her voice faltered, “Would—would
-you mind—saying it now—Stanley?”</p>
-
-<h3>THE END.</h3>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">Chicago Man Attacked by Fighting Owl</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>John Casey, night watchman for the Chicago Protective
-Agency, while “walking his beat” one night recently,
-entered a dark passageway in West Madison Street; and
-then, all at once—</p>
-
-<p>“Something flew at me from the darkness,” he said later,
-“and knocked my cap off and began scratching my face and
-clawing out my hair by the roots. I made a pass at it, but
-found I was fanning the air. Then I saw two blazing eyes,
-and struck at them. Before I could get out my gun the monster
-jumped on me again. I managed to swing on it with
-my night-stick—and that ended the fight.”</p>
-
-<p>To substantiate his story, Watchman Casey exhibited a
-dead owl measuring thirty-six inches from tip to tip, also
-numerous cuts and bruises on his hands and face.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_32"></a>[32]</span></p>
-
-<p class="center larger"><i>A Powerful Novel of Sinister Madmen That
-Mounts To An Astounding Climax</i></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="THE_JAILER_OF_SOULS">The Jailer of Souls</h2>
-
-<p class="center larger"><i>Complete In This Issue</i></p>
-
-<p class="center larger"><i>By</i> HAMILTON CRAIGIE</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<h3><i>CHAPTER ONE</i><br>
-SOUTHWEST OF THE LAW</h3>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp86" id="illus3" style="max-width: 35.9375em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/illus3.jpg" alt="">
-</div>
-
-<p>All the way Westward in the
-smoker the man in the high-crowned,
-black Stetson had
-taken no part in the conversation. He
-had appeared to doze, slumping in the
-high-backed seat as the train rushed onward
-into the golden afternoon.</p>
-
-<p>The three men at his back had been
-busy with an interminable round of
-poker: draw, jack-pot, and stud; deuces
-wild, and seven-card peak. They moved
-across the aisle now, as the long train
-slowed for the brief stop at Two-Horse
-Canyon, facing him obliquely and a little
-to his left.</p>
-
-<p>Twice or thrice they had essayed to
-draw him into the talk, but the man in
-the black Stetson had been oblivious; he
-had continued taciturn—morose, almost,
-one might have said. But he had not
-been asleep; rather, he had listened with
-all his ears as their voices had reached
-him between hands:</p>
-
-<p>“... Yes—Dry Bone—been there
-myself—they run things pretty much to
-suit <i>themselves</i>.... Wide-open....
-Sure.... You might call it a dead<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_33"></a>[33]</span>
-open-and-shut proposition, I’ll tell a
-man!”</p>
-
-<p>The laugh that followed had come to
-the man in the black Stetson with a
-curious, grating note:</p>
-
-<p>“Sure-thing gamblers; con-men—it’s
-a regular crook’s paradise.... And
-there’s that fellow, Rook....”</p>
-
-<p>The eyes of the man in the black Stetson
-narrowed abruptly at the corners;
-for a moment, as a curtain is drawn
-swiftly from right to left, something
-arose to peer out of those eyes, glowing,
-deep-down, like a still, festering flame.
-But it was gone upon the instant—</p>
-
-<p>“... And there’s that fellow, Rook....”
-the man had said.</p>
-
-<p>Of a sudden he had stopped short as
-if he had been muzzled; presently his
-voice had come again, dry, matter-of-fact:</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll see that raise, Carpenter, and
-it’ll cost you just twenty iron men to
-call....”</p>
-
-<p>Plainly, that name, “Rook,” had been
-taboo; the speaker had been silently reminded
-of it.</p>
-
-<p>The man in the black Stetson—he had
-been known as Black Steve Annister in
-the back blocks at Wooloomooloof before
-he had made of that name a by-word in
-the honkatonks and the gambling-hells
-from San Francisco northward to the
-Wind River country, and beyond it—Black
-Steve Annister was sitting upright
-now, but he had retired behind a
-wide-spread copy of the <i>Durango County
-Gazette</i>. He was not reading it, however,
-although he was looking through
-it—at the three men just across the
-aisle, studying them through the pin-pricks
-he had made in it, himself unseen.</p>
-
-<p>Annister had arrived in New York
-only the week previous from Sourabaya,
-Java, and he had not waited even overnight
-before he had begun the long
-journey, broken at Washington for half
-a day, which had taken him now half
-way southwestward across the State of
-Texas. Presently the long train would
-cross the Pecos, beyond it the serrated
-ramparts of the Guadalupes; Dry Bone
-was just between.</p>
-
-<p>Annister, studying the men, frowned
-abruptly, yawning behind his hand. Two
-of the men he put down for ranchers—sheep
-men, probably; there was about
-them none of the glamor of that West
-which lingers even now in the person of
-a cattleman; and these men were negligible.</p>
-
-<p>But the third man would have been
-noticeable anywhere. He was a bull’s
-bulk of a man, hard-featured, mouth a
-straight gash above a heavy chin barbered
-to the blood; the observer across
-the aisle would have said “cowman,”
-and registered a bull’s eye with it, point-blank.</p>
-
-<p>The two who were with him, evidently
-with interests in common, were scarcely
-friendly with the cowman, if such he
-was; it was evident in their attitude,
-the constraint which had fallen upon
-them following that mention of “Rook.”</p>
-
-<p>But the man in the black Stetson continued
-to study the big fellow through
-the holes in his newspaper: the hard
-face, tanned a rich saddle color; the
-nose, flattened to a smudge of flaring
-nostril; the cauliflower ear.</p>
-
-<p>He had heard the name, “Ellison”
-once or twice; somewhere, deep down, it
-had set vibrating a chord of memory
-that brought with it, incongruously
-enough, an altogether different setting:
-a padded ring under twin, blazing arcs;
-the thud and shuffle of sliding feet; a
-man, huge, brutish, broad, fists like
-stone mauls, yet, for all his bulk, a very
-cat for quickness....</p>
-
-<p>He put down his paper now—to find
-those hard eyes boring into his. Ellison,
-or whatever the man’s name was, had
-shifted in his seat; the glance that he
-turned now upon the stranger in the
-black Stetson was searching, probing.
-There was a truculence in it, a fierce,
-bright, avid staring, like an animal’s,
-savage in its very directness, like a challenge—which
-in effect it was.</p>
-
-<p>Annister returned the look, eye for
-eye, with a bitter, brooding insolence in
-which there was apparent a certain
-mockery, his eyes in a veiled gleaming,
-like the sun on water. For a long moment
-their glances engaged, in a silent
-duel, like rapier points; then the giant
-with the cauliflower ear vented a sound
-between a grunt and a snort, turning to
-the window, his gaze outward across the
-flat levels of the adjacent prairie in a
-kind of sightless stare.</p>
-
-<p>There had been no reason in it—no
-logic—that Annister could see, but for
-the moment he had owned to a sudden
-sense of crisis; it had seemed to him for
-a moment that in the giant’s eyes there
-had been almost a knowing, an understanding
-look. But the man could have
-no business with him—of that he was
-certain.</p>
-
-<p>The fellow was just a bully, probably,
-a big, hulking lump of beef who resented,
-as it might chance, Annister’s undeniably
-cosmopolitan air; the sardonic
-flicker in the gray-green eyes; the cool,
-contemptuous appraisal. But, after all,
-it had been the giant who had begun it.</p>
-
-<p>And yet, somehow, Annister was
-thinking that he had seen him before,
-and, oddly, illogically enough, he found
-himself liking the man—why, he could
-not have told.</p>
-
-<p>Black Steve Annister, “with the heart
-of a cougar and the conscience of a
-wolf,” as a disgruntled enemy had at
-one time phrased it, could have sat into
-that game had he been so minded, with
-profit to himself, pecuniary and otherwise,
-but he had preferred to play the
-hand that had been dealt him. Later,
-at Dry Bone, that would be another
-matter.</p>
-
-<p>Now, his lean, strong, hawklike face
-darkened abruptly with the thought behind
-his eyes, and then—for Annister
-had eyes in the back of his head—he was
-suddenly aware that the conductor was
-advancing along the aisle.</p>
-
-<p>The three men opposite had ceased
-their conversation as if at an order.
-Two or three of the remaining passengers
-stared curiously, after the manner
-of their kind (they were small tradesmen,
-merchants, going on beyond the
-border to Tucson), as the conductor
-halted at Annister’s elbow.</p>
-
-<p>“Excuse me, Mister—Mister—” he
-began.</p>
-
-<p>“—Annister!” The answer was low,
-even, controlled, but beneath the silken
-tone there ran a hint of iron.</p>
-
-<p>“Mister Annister,” repeated the conductor.
-“Will you—just a moment,
-please?”</p>
-
-<p>Annister rose, following the official
-outward toward the vestibule. And as
-he went he could feel those eyes, avid,
-curious, boring into his back. He permitted
-himself the ghost of a cold grin
-as the conductor, turning in the entry,
-laid a respectful hand upon his sleeve.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m—sorry, sir,” he said, low. “You
-getting off at Dry Bone, aren’t you?”</p>
-
-<p>The words were less a question than
-a statement of fact. Annister nodded.
-The conductor, a tall, bronzed man who
-might have been an old-time line rider,
-shot a quick glance over his shoulder.
-Then he said, his tone even, matter-of-fact:</p>
-
-<p>“I—<i>wouldn’t</i>—if I was you.”</p>
-
-<p>Annister stared. Then, producing his
-cigar-case, lighting a long, black invincible,
-the twin to which the conductor
-had selected, he remarked casually:</p>
-
-<p>“They’re good cigars.... In the
-trenches we smoked ‘Woodbines’—a
-cross between tar-heel and alfalfa; you
-have a lot of alfalfa out here, eh? And
-the ‘third light,’ as we used to call it,
-most always got his—three men lighting
-up from the same match, you know.”</p>
-
-<p>His tone abruptly hardened; the
-glance that he turned upon the conductor
-now was like a lance of flame.</p>
-
-<p>“Well—I’m not superstitious—but—will
-you tell me <i>why</i>?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_34"></a>[34]</span></p>
-
-<p>It is significant that the conductor was
-breaking a rigid Company rule by
-joining Annister in a surreptitious cigar.
-Now he turned guiltily as a voice sounded
-from the corridor at his back:</p>
-
-<p>“Ex-cuse me—but could I trouble
-you for a light?”</p>
-
-<p>The third man, as Annister could see,
-was tall and heavily built, with broad
-shoulders and a curiously small head.
-He had a sharp, acquisitive nose, and a
-mouth tight-lipped and thin. Annister,
-versed in reading men, was abruptly
-conscious of an instinctive and overmastering
-repugnance. For the man’s eyes
-were cold and cruel, sleepy-lidded, like
-a snake’s, roving between Annister and
-the conductor in a furtive scrutiny.</p>
-
-<p>The match was still alight. Annister,
-his hand steady as a rock, extended it to
-the newcomer, who, with an inarticulate
-grunt, lighted his cigarette, turning,
-without further speech, backward along
-the corridor.</p>
-
-<p>Annister waited a moment until he
-was certain that the man was out of
-earshot. Then:</p>
-
-<p>“The ‘third light,’ eh?” he murmured,
-his tone abruptly hardened.
-“Well—and why shouldn’t I get off?”
-he asked, grimly.</p>
-
-<p>The conductor for a moment seemed
-at a loss.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s like this, Mr. Annister,” he said
-slowly. “I’m a new man on the S. P.,
-but I’ve been hearing a lot—no gossip,
-you understand—but a conductor hears
-a good deal, by and large.... And this
-is a cow country, or it used to be—pretty
-wild, in spots. Dry Bone, now—they
-run things pretty much to suit themselves—”</p>
-
-<p>He paused, in a visible embarrassment.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s a party of four back there
-in the diner—I couldn’t help overhearing
-what they were saying, and—well—I’m
-just repeating what they said, and
-no offense—”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s all right,” interrupted Annister,
-evenly. “Go on.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why—they said,” continued the
-conductor, “that you were an Eastern
-gambler—a—confidence-man—that you
-were not wanted here in Dry Bone; that
-it wouldn’t be exactly healthy for you
-if you stopped off—that’s all. I thought
-you’d be wanting to know. And if
-you’ll take my advice, even if you
-haven’t asked it, I’d say: go on to
-Tombstone—you can figure it out from
-there.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thanks,” answered Annister shortly.
-“I’m getting off—at Dry Bone. How
-soon are we due?”</p>
-
-<p>“Fifteen minutes,” replied the conductor,
-glancing at his watch. “But if
-I was you, sir, I’d stay aboard; it’s a
-bad crowd there, as I happen to know,
-and they’ve got a branch of the S. S. S.
-there, only they work it to suit themselves:
-tar-and-feathers is just a picnic
-with that gang; they’re a stemwinding
-bunch of assassins, I’ll say! So far
-they’ve operated under cover, mostly,
-and down here in the Southwest—well—it
-ain’t a lot different, in some ways,
-than it was thirty years ago. You’ll see—because
-they’re—”</p>
-
-<p>“—Southwest of the Law—is that
-it?” Annister laughed shortly. “Well—much
-obliged, old-timer,” he said. “I
-won’t forget it. But I’m getting off.”</p>
-
-<p>The long train was slowing for the
-station stop. Annister, striding to his
-seat, got down his heavy bag. For a
-moment he stood, considering, his gaze,
-under lowered lids, upon the long coach
-and its passengers in a swift, squinting
-appraisal.</p>
-
-<p>The three men were gone.</p>
-
-<p>Somehow, they had found out who he
-was. Well—that made little difference,
-he reflected, grimly, except to force matters
-to a show-down, and the sooner the
-better.</p>
-
-<p>For there was a man in Dry Bone;
-Annister had known him in the old time;
-and it was with this man, unless he was
-greatly mistaken, that his business had
-to do.</p>
-
-<p>He would put it to the touch, then; he
-would sit into the game, and would come
-heeled, and they could rib up the deck
-on him, and welcome.</p>
-
-<p>He was turning to the door when, of
-a sudden, there came to him a second
-warning: there was a swish of skirts, a
-sudden odor of violets. Annister had a
-glimpse of a blonde head beneath a
-close-fitting toque, as the girl passed
-him, disappearing in the doorway.</p>
-
-<p>And there, on the flooring at his feet,
-was a square of white.</p>
-
-<p>Annister, stooping, retrieved it, holding
-the card upward to the light:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“<i>Stay on board. Dry Bone is not
-safe—for you. Be warned—in
-time.</i>”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>There was no signature. Annister
-made a little clucking sound with his
-tongue, his face set like flint. He was
-alone in the car.</p>
-
-<p>The train had stopped now as, bag in
-hand, he shouldered through the doorway.
-And then, abruptly, as if materialized
-out of the air, a face grinned
-into his, lips drawn backward from the
-teeth in a soundless snarl. It was the
-big man with the cauliflower ear.</p>
-
-<p>“Hombre,” he said, without preamble,
-in a hoarse, carrying whisper, “take
-an old-timer’s advice: go back—<i>an’</i> set
-down—you savvy? This place—it ain’t
-exactly healthy for a young fellow like
-you, I’m tellin’ yu! For if you don’t—”</p>
-
-<p>Annister’s cold stare was followed by
-his voice, low, incisive:</p>
-
-<p>“You’re blocking the doorway,” he
-said, with a sort of freezing quiet.</p>
-
-<p>The giant’s hard mouth twisted in a
-sneer; his great paw reaching upward
-with a clawing motion, blunt fingers
-upon Annister’s shoulder. Then—what
-followed happened with the speed of
-light.</p>
-
-<p>“You can’t get off here, Mister—”
-the giant was continuing, when the
-words were blotted out. Annister’s
-right fist, behind it the full weight of
-his two hundred pounds of iron-hard
-muscle, curved in a short arc; there was
-a spanking thud. The big man, lifted
-from his feet, crashed into the front
-door-frame, slumping face downward in
-an aimless huddle of sprawling limbs.</p>
-
-<p>“The hell you say!” grinned Black
-Steve Annister, leaping lightly to the
-platform, with never a backward glance.</p>
-
-<p>Such was the manner of his coming.</p>
-
-<h3><i>CHAPTER TWO</i><br>
-THE HAND IN THE DARK</h3>
-
-<p>The one hotel in Dry Bone was
-the Mansion House.</p>
-
-<p>Annister, crossing the lobby, was
-aware of a veiled hostility in the stares
-directed at him from the group of loungers
-in the doorway; they gave ground
-grudgingly, as he came in, with a sort of
-covert truculence.</p>
-
-<p>Here, as he could see, there was a
-curious mingling of the Old West and
-the New: men, whose attire would have
-created no remark, say, even in New
-York; others, booted and spurred, cartridge-belted
-and pistolled—but all, as he
-noticed, with, for headgear, the inevitable
-Stetson.</p>
-
-<p>Once in his room, and the door locked
-and bolted, he busied himself for a moment
-with a sheaf of papers, several of
-them adorned with a huge, official seal;
-they crackled as he put them in an inner
-pocket. Then, dressed as he was, he lay
-down upon the bed, but not to sleep.</p>
-
-<p>It was late—hard upon midnight—when
-the sound for which he had waited
-came with the soft <i>whirring</i> of the window-weights.
-The sound was not loud;
-it would not have awakened him had he
-been asleep; but Annister could hear it
-plainly enough.</p>
-
-<p>He had removed his shoes upon retiring.
-Now, in his stocking-feet, he approached
-the window, a black, glimmering
-oblong against the windy night without.
-As he watched, the faint <i>whirring</i><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_35"></a>[35]</span>
-ceased; a pair of hands appeared suddenly
-out of the darkness, fingers hooked
-into the window-sill.</p>
-
-<p>Annister drew a faint, hissing breath.
-In the star-shine, for there was no moon,
-the fingers showed in a luminous grayness
-against the sill, clawlike, malformed,
-like the talons of a beast, which
-in effect they were.</p>
-
-<p>Annister knew them upon the instant,
-for, in far-off Java, for instance, he had
-seen those hands, or, rather, the same
-and yet not the same. And in that instant
-he had acted.</p>
-
-<p>Both hands upon the window-sash, he
-brought it down with a crash upon those
-fingers; there followed a yelp of pain,
-inhuman, doglike—a groaning curse—the
-slam of a falling ladder—a heavy
-thud—silence.</p>
-
-<p>Annister smiled grimly in the darkness.
-Whoever it was, the intruder
-would never be certain as to whether
-that window had crashed downward of
-its own accord, or not. And leaning in
-the window, Annister raised it cautiously
-again after a moment. He heard presently
-the slow drag of retreating footsteps;
-after all, it had not been much of
-a drop.</p>
-
-<p>Closing and bolting the window, he
-undressed in the darkness, and with the
-facility of an old campaigner was asleep
-and snoring beneath the blankets between
-two ticks of the watch.</p>
-
-<p>But in the morning a surprise awaited
-him.</p>
-
-<p>Always an early riser, he was breakfasting
-alone in the empty dining-room
-when the waitress brought him a note.
-Beyond noting that she was pretty, and
-that she did not look like a waitress, Annister,
-somewhat engrossed in the business
-in hand, for a moment stared at
-the envelope with unseeing eyes.</p>
-
-<p>Then, ripping it open, he took in its
-contents in one swift, flashing glance:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p><i>“My dear Mr. Annister</i>:</p>
-
-<p><i>“I would be very glad to see you
-at my office at ten this morning—if
-you are able to be there.”</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>It was signed simply: “Hamilton
-Rook.”</p>
-
-<p>Annister grinned fleetingly in answer.</p>
-
-<p>“Well—it’s not another warning, at
-any rate,” he said, half aloud, turning
-to the consideration of his breakfast bacon.
-Then, at a low voice at his back, he
-turned:</p>
-
-<p>“Did you—say your coffee needed
-warming, sir?”</p>
-
-<p>It was the waitress.</p>
-
-<p>Annister had turned the note, face
-downward, on the table, with a quick
-flirt of his thumb. How long she had
-been there behind him he could not tell,
-for he had heard no sound.</p>
-
-<p>“Thanks—no,” he said shortly, his
-hard eyes boring into hers with an almost
-insolent appraisal.</p>
-
-<p>Yes—she was pretty, and more than
-that, her violet eyes darkening now under
-his abrupt, almost savage scrutiny.
-And her voice—it was like a bell just
-trembling out of silence. Annister
-spoke:</p>
-
-<p>“Have you been here long—in Dry
-Bone, I mean?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p>The waitress smiled, and it was not
-the smile of a waitress, Annister was
-convinced. Now, with a girl like that
-for a partner—was his unspoken
-thought—he could—well....</p>
-
-<p>“N-no, sir,” the girl made answer,
-with a sudden affectation of primness.
-“I came in yesterday, sir—on the same
-train with you, sir. I—I’ve just been—engaged.”</p>
-
-<p>Annister repressed an absurd prompting
-to ask her how many times she had
-been engaged before, and to whom and
-at what. Her eyes were assuredly hypnotic,
-with lashes long and delicately
-fine.</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Umm</i>,” he rumbled in answer.</p>
-
-<p>Was it possible, after all, that she had
-been the girl in the crimson toque? And,
-with the card in his pocket, for a moment
-he was tempted to show it to her.
-Instead:</p>
-
-<p>“Well—I hope you like it here,” he
-said. “You’ll know me—the next
-time?”</p>
-
-<p>And for a moment he could have
-sworn that in the face of the girl there
-had come all at once a curious, almost
-a baffling look, at once enigmatic and
-self-revealing. But the entrance of the
-vanguard of breakfasters interrupted.</p>
-
-<p>He watched her for a little as with a
-swaying, lilting step she moved off to
-minister to the late-comers, his eyes
-speculative. Then, turning once more to
-the letter, he re-read it as a man reading
-a cipher:</p>
-
-<p>“<i>If you are able to be there.</i>” Could
-there be a double meaning in that? For
-if Rook had sent that midnight visitor,
-then there were no lengths indeed to
-which he might go—for the hand, like
-a beast’s paw, upon the window-sill, had
-been, as Annister had known upon the
-instant, the hand of the Thug, the Dacoit,
-the Strangler.</p>
-
-<p>Warnings, thrice repeated; a hand in
-the dark; a waitress who was not all she
-seemed; an invitation, suave, and, as
-Annister conceived it, ironic—it was a
-situation not without its possibilities for
-action.</p>
-
-<p>And Black Steve Annister loved action.
-Perhaps, after all, he was to have
-it now, whether he would or no.</p>
-
-<p>Rook he had known aforetime, but he
-was convinced that the latter would not
-recognize him save as Black Steve Annister,
-wastrel of the wide world, gentleman
-adventurer-in-waiting to the
-High Gods of Adventure and Derring-do,
-knight-errant of the highways and
-byways of Criminopolis, scarce a black
-sheep, indeed, but a wolf of the long
-trail and of the night.</p>
-
-<p>Rook had known him as such in the
-days when, as jackal for certain vested
-interests, the black-bearded lawyer had
-run foul of young Annister, just then
-beginning a hectic career of spending
-which, but three years in the past, had
-abruptly terminated with Annister’s
-complete disappearance from joyous
-jazz-palace and discreetly gilded temple
-of high hazard.</p>
-
-<p>For he had dropped out of sight, lost,
-as a stone is lost, in the sea-green waters
-of oblivion, save for an occasional
-ripple thereafter which proclaimed him
-blacksander, beachcomber, <i>chevalier
-d’industrie</i>, until one memorable evening
-a twelve-month gone ... but Rook
-would be knowing nothing of that.</p>
-
-<p>Annister had come home from the
-South Seas to find his father gone, and
-a note: “<i>Do not look for me, for you
-are not my son.</i>” And an exhaustive inquiry
-had failed even to suggest the
-slightest clue.</p>
-
-<p>The elder Annister could have written
-his check for seven figures, and it
-appeared, following his disappearance,
-that he had done so; they had come in
-from North and South and East and
-West, steadily, and, as it seemed, with
-purpose. But as a clue to his whereabouts
-they had been unavailing.</p>
-
-<p>But, from the moment of his discovery
-of that note, Black Steve Annister,
-visiting a certain office in a certain side-street
-not far distant from the Capitol,
-had surprised its guardian with a terse:</p>
-
-<p>“That offer of yours, Childers—I’ve
-come to take it up.”</p>
-
-<p>The man called Childers had bent a
-keen look upon his visitor; another
-might have described it as unpleasant,
-stern.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you know just what that
-means, eh?” he had said. “You’ll be
-merely a cog, a link—remember that!”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” Annister had answered, and
-there the interview had ended.</p>
-
-<p>And so Black Steve Annister, serving
-two masters, had come to Dry Bone, and
-the end, as it might chance, of the long
-trail leading Westward into the setting
-sun.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_36"></a>[36]</span></p>
-
-<p>He rose from the table now, going out
-into the pale Spring sunshine on his way
-to the office of Hamilton Rook. He
-found the building presently; it was
-the court-house; there was a figure of
-Blind Justice with her scales just over
-the entrance. Annister reflected sardonically
-that, here, in Carter County, distant
-from a civilization at present as remote
-as the moon, she was probably also
-deaf—and dumb. And presently, at the
-head of a dark flight, there was the office,
-with the legend:</p>
-
-<p class="center">HAMILTON ROOK</p>
-
-<p class="center">ATTORNEY AND<br>
-COUNSELLOR-AT-LAW</p>
-
-<p>There was a small sign at the corner
-of the door; in obedience to its invitation
-to “Walk In,” Annister, his hand
-upon the knob in a noiseless pressure,
-abruptly flung it wide.</p>
-
-<p>A split second before the opening of
-that door, and while his hand was on the
-knob, Annister had seen, or thought that
-he had seen, a swift shadow pass suddenly
-across the ground-glass panel;
-there was the grating sound of a chair
-being moved backward.</p>
-
-<p>Then, standing in the doorway, Annister’s
-eyes narrowed; he stood rigid,
-tense.</p>
-
-<p>For the man facing him across the
-stained and battered desk, lean head
-like a vulture’s set upon wide shoulders;
-mouth like a straight gash with its thin,
-bloodless lips; cold eyes fixed upon him
-in a silent, ophidian brightness—was—the
-“third light,” as he had called him—the
-man whom he had met for a moment
-back there in the smoker of the
-Transcontinental.</p>
-
-<h3><i>CHAPTER THREE</i><br>
-BEHIND THE ARRAS</h3>
-
-<p>“Mister Annister,” greeted the
-man at the desk. “You didn’t
-know me, eh? Well—it’s a long time—three
-years—and my beard—” he
-passed a bony hand across his chin—“I
-sacrificed that long ago; it is scarcely
-the fashion. Now—” he waved a hand,
-indicating a chair at his left—“sit down,
-won’t you? We can—talk better so.”</p>
-
-<p>Annister seated himself, his eyes upon
-the cold eyes just across. That the man
-who sat there had inspired those warnings
-he had little doubt; that he had
-sent that midnight assassin against him,
-he was convinced. And yet—he was at
-a loss to find the reason.</p>
-
-<p>Rook was not aware, could not be
-aware, of a certain fact known only to
-himself, Annister, and a certain man
-just then twenty-five hundred miles distant
-in that dim office hard by the Capitol;
-it was beyond the bounds of possibility.
-No—it could scarcely be that, he
-told himself.</p>
-
-<p>And of a sudden a cold rage shook
-him so that he trembled; his hands, flat
-upon the desk-top, balled suddenly into
-fists. This man—this suave, secret
-knave with the eyes of ice, and the implacable,
-grim mouth—sat there now,
-removed from him merely by the width
-of the narrow desk. And if it were true,
-that which he suspected, then this man,
-this jackal, this Prince of Plunder with
-the heart of a hyena and the conscience
-of a wolf—why, he had earned his quittance
-a hundred times over.</p>
-
-<p>The flat black shape of the automatic
-hung in a sling under his left arm-pit—Annister
-had forgotten that. He knew
-merely that he was face to face with the
-man whom he had come twenty-five hundred
-long miles to meet; he saw him
-now as through a crimson mist. And
-for the moment the careful plan that he
-had made—that, too, was forgotten, lost
-in the almost overmastering impulse to
-drive his fist into that face so close to
-his, the cold eyes, the pallid, sneering
-mouth....</p>
-
-<p>Something of this must have showed
-in his face, plainly visible to the man
-who faced him across the desk.</p>
-
-<p>There was a semi-twilight in the room
-even by day. Now the lean head thrust
-forward like a striking snake; there
-came a sudden, brief explosion of movement,
-a darkening flash, as the hand,
-holding the heavy automatic, swung upward
-level with his visitor, point-blank.</p>
-
-<p>At such a distance it would be impossible
-to miss.</p>
-
-<p>There was a curtain just behind him;
-Annister had noticed it upon entering.
-Now at his back it rippled suddenly
-along its length as if at the passage of
-a heavy body just behind. The lawyer
-smiled thinly.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, my friend,” he said, “it is so
-easy to be indiscreet! And one must
-meet force with force. This—it is theatrical,
-if you like—but—it is just a little
-demonstration of my—preparedness.
-I thought—you see....”</p>
-
-<p>There came a sardonic flicker in the
-nearset eyes; the voice purred now in
-the semi-darkness like a cat’s:</p>
-
-<p>“I must protect myself.... There
-are—reasons.... You see, I thought,
-for a moment, that you—ah—meditated
-a resort to—violence. And violence is
-something that I deplore, my friend;
-and here I am surrounded by violent
-men, ‘sudden and quick in quarrel,’ as
-the poet has it; sometimes they are difficult
-to control.”</p>
-
-<p>Annister had himself in hand. The
-veiled threat with which the lawyer had
-ended bothered him not at all. Now,
-casually as it seemed, but with the lightning
-riposte of a duellist, his hand
-reached out; there came a sudden
-wrench, a twist, a snarling oath from
-Rook; and Annister, pocketing the pistol,
-smiled grimly now in answer.</p>
-
-<p>“Now—‘we can talk better so’!” he
-mocked. “The balance of power, ha?
-Now, let me tell you something: You
-left the big town—for your health; that
-was three years ago, wasn’t it? I didn’t
-recognize you, but it was a pretty close
-shave, at that!”</p>
-
-<p>He laughed, but there was a ring of
-menace in it. His hard eyes held the
-pale ones of the lawyer with a chill malevolence.</p>
-
-<p>“Rook,” he said, low, “you’re as
-crooked as a ram’s-horn; you’re a bent
-twig; I wouldn’t trust you this side of
-hell further than I could see you, and
-not even then. Now—” his voice
-cracked suddenly in the thick silence like
-the cracking of a whip—“you had the
-infernal gall to send me—here—<i>after</i>
-you’d have accounted for me—<i>by the
-left hand</i>, ha?</p>
-
-<p>“I left that window open, because, if
-you want to know, I was expecting something
-of the sort. And now—”</p>
-
-<p>The hand holding the pistol became
-rigid as a rock.</p>
-
-<p>“—I want the reason <i>why</i>—in a holy
-minute, Mister Hamilton Rook—or
-else—”</p>
-
-<p>For a heart-beat the face of the lawyer
-seemed swollen to a poisonous whiteness;
-the veins in his neck and temples
-stood out in ridges. Then—the long,
-spatulate fingers spread wide with a
-curious, flicking motion, thumbs downward;
-the curtain bellied outward suddenly
-as if in answer.</p>
-
-<p>Abruptly Annister felt for a heart-beat
-a something that was like a cold
-wind blowing upon the back of his neck,
-and it was a wind of death. Something
-slid past his shoulder with the speed of
-light; talons of steel, thumbs downward,
-pressing at the base of his brain. He
-heard a hoarse, whistling croak—a sound
-that was nothing human. Then—</p>
-
-<p>There is but one answer to that strangler’s
-grip, and it is a secret known only
-to a few. Annister had learned it, no
-matter where, and in the learning he had
-paid....</p>
-
-<p>Now, an infinitesimal split second before
-the beast paws had encircled his
-throat, his forefinger and thumb had
-flashed upward, hooked, as steel gaff is
-hooked, between those fingers and his
-throat.</p>
-
-<p>There followed a straining heave; a
-cry, inhuman, beastlike, like the mewing
-of a cat. Annister, rising to his feet,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_37"></a>[37]</span>
-leaned abruptly to the left—straightened,
-with one quick, explosive heave of
-his powerful shoulder-muscles—and the
-body of his antagonist catapulted over
-his head.</p>
-
-<p>Flung clear of the desk, he landed,
-heavily, on one shoulder-point, twitched
-a moment, lay still. It was the “flying-mare,”
-and none but a master could
-have summoned it.</p>
-
-<p>Annister turned the unconscious man
-over with his foot.</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Jivero!</i>” he muttered, between set
-teeth.</p>
-
-<p>He shivered slightly in the humid air
-of the warm room. For the man was an
-Ecuadorian savage—a jungle-beast;
-once, in Quito, Annister had seen two or
-three: flat-faced, rather handsome savages;
-how or where Rook had acquired
-the fellow only the lawyer could have
-said.</p>
-
-<p>According to his savage code, he had
-been faithful—as a tiger is faithful to
-his trainer, his keeper. Annister, brave
-as he was, would have preferred a rattler,
-a fer-de-lance, for company. He
-turned now with an abrupt movement
-to Rook, who, slumped in his chair, sat
-staring at the huddled figure of the Indian
-where he had fallen.</p>
-
-<p>“Now,” said Annister, “I’ve a notion,
-Mister Hamilton Rook, to shoot
-first, and ask questions afterward....
-However, I confess I’m still a trifle curious
-as to your motive—more so, since
-this second pleasant little interlude with
-your man Friday here. Now—may I
-ask you—<i>why</i>?”</p>
-
-<p>The lawyer’s lips were moving, fumbling
-together, without sound. Fingers
-trembling, like a man in a fit, at length
-he lifted dull eyes to his interrogator:</p>
-
-<p>“This,” he enunciated thickly, gesturing
-toward the huddled figure on the
-carpet. “It was to save my—life—that
-is the truth, Annister—you must—believe.
-The reason—for the others....
-I did not know it was you there in the
-smoker; I thought—that is—” he appeared
-to breathe of a sudden like a
-man who had been running—“we had a
-report—that you were quite another
-man—one who was—ah—would be antagonistic,
-in fact, to certain operations—and
-so—”</p>
-
-<p>He spread his hands wide with a little,
-flicking gesture.</p>
-
-<p>“—That is why—but now, of course,
-you will understand—?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” answered Annister, bluntly.
-“I understand. You thought I was—an
-operative, ha? Well—I’m not—that
-kind of an operative. But—” his manner
-became all at once sharp, incisive;
-the gaze that he bent upon Rook was the
-shrewd look of a man who sees his opportunity
-ready to his hand. Cunning
-was in that look, and an infinite guile;
-the lawyer did not miss it.</p>
-
-<p>Here was something that he could deal
-with. He had known of Annister’s reputation
-as of old; it had been none of
-the best, certainly, and with that
-knowledge now there came a measure of
-reassurance. And if he was any judge
-of men, here was one whom he could
-use: the acquisitive gleaming in the
-eyes; the hard, incisive mouth, the predatory,
-forward-thrusting tilt of the
-head—if he, Rook, was any judge of
-men, here was a man whom he could use.</p>
-
-<p>Old Travis Annister had disinherited
-him: the son who had been a waster in
-the far places of the earth—that was an
-added reason. And at the thought there
-came a pale gleaming in the lawyer’s
-close-set eyes, like the sun on water.
-Travis Annister ... and Travis Annister
-had disappeared ... well, of course,
-he had heard of it. His voice reached
-the younger man in a purring whisper:</p>
-
-<p>“As I have hinted, Mr. Annister, I
-am interested in—certain operations;
-shall we call them—speculative? For
-some time now I have been in need of
-a sort of silent partner, or, rather, the
-Doctor—”</p>
-
-<p>He caught himself with a <i>click</i> of his
-strong, white, even teeth. Annister’s
-face continued impassive, save for the
-keen eyes, veiled now under lowered lids.
-Rook continued:</p>
-
-<p>“Annister,” he said suddenly, as if
-he had abruptly come to a decision, “I’ll
-lay my cards on the table with you: I
-need a man, and he can not afford to be
-too—scrupulous, do you understand?
-The—the doctor tells me I have been
-overdoing it.” He gave a faint, wintry
-smile. “We are—out of the beaten
-track here—southwest of the law, as you
-might call it....”</p>
-
-<p>He lowered his voice to a faint, hissing
-sibilance:</p>
-
-<p>“I will expect you to ask no questions.
-You have been a cow-man; there
-are certain interests to the north and the
-north-east of us; I am naming no names,
-understand? There is a good deal of
-range left, as you know, and—now,
-listen to me....”</p>
-
-<p>His voice went on. For perhaps five
-minutes Annister listened in a heavy silence.
-And all that time, although the
-lawyer had not once called a spade a
-spade, the thing that he had unfolded
-was clear enough:</p>
-
-<p>It was the old story; with something
-of a novel twist. First, there were the
-outfits scattered north and north-east, as
-Rook had said. The running off of a few
-cows, for instance, re-branding, and the
-rest of it—it was an old story to
-Annister—but there was something more.
-Annister, as he listened, realized that
-the thing was big, worthy, indeed, of
-the keen, devising brain that had
-evolved it.</p>
-
-<p>A good many of the ranches had, for
-some time past, been owned and operated
-by the packers themselves; three of
-these: the Bar T, the Cross Circle L, the
-Flying U, were northward from Dry
-Bone scarce a hundred miles. But there
-were still other outfits. And, as Annister
-listened, he was hearing again a
-name, or, rather, a symbol, the name and
-the symbol of masked and hooded violence,
-and it was “S. S. S.”</p>
-
-<p>Rook, it appeared, was the moving
-spirit of it, in Dry Bone, at any rate,
-but as the tale unfolded Annister, putting
-two and two together, supplied for
-that cryptic symbol a name, nation-wide
-and respected: the name of a great Company,
-an Octopus indeed, which, with
-Hamilton Rook as its agent, planned
-nothing less than the ruthless despoiling
-of those independent cattle men who,
-out of a desert of sand and sage, had
-won a living for their stock and for
-themselves, the rear guard of the order,
-now, as it seemed, indeed, caught in the
-far-flung tentacles of a monster, unscrupulous
-and without soul.</p>
-
-<p>Annister’s part in it was to be simple.
-He was to do nothing as yet until the
-lawyer should give the word. But a man
-was wanted: a gun-fighter; a man bred
-to violence who would not consider too
-closely the method or the means. For,
-as Rook had said, his eyes upon Annister
-in a sudden, biting scrutiny:</p>
-
-<p>“If, as a first step, say, the owners of
-these outfits should—ah—disappear....”</p>
-
-<p>There was to be no outright violence,
-it appeared; murder—that was an ugly
-word; but it was of course possible that
-there might be—resistance. But—there
-would be a fortune in it.</p>
-
-<p>Annister’s part would be comparatively
-simple. He would merely carry out
-his orders. Rook, eying him now in a
-close-lipped silence, watched as a spider
-watches from his ambush. Annister
-would be needing money; if the lawyer
-knew his man, and he thought that he
-did, here was something that would be
-a lever, and a powerful one.</p>
-
-<p>Annister lifted his head, then he
-brought his hand, palm downward, to the
-desk-top. It was a movement, slow, even,
-controlled.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m with you,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>“Good!” exclaimed the lawyer. “Now—I
-want you to go over to the club;
-there are a few men there I’d like you
-to meet. <i>Ha!</i>”</p>
-
-<p>At his exclamation Annister, turning,
-followed his rigid, pointing finger.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_38"></a>[38]</span></p>
-
-<p>The huddled figure on the carpet had
-disappeared. There had been no sound,
-no sign. The Indian had vanished.</p>
-
-<h3><i>CHAPTER FOUR</i><br>
-THE FACE IN THE MOONLIGHT</h3>
-
-<p>Annister had thrown in with Rook,
-but he trusted him no further than
-he would have trusted a cougar, a mountain
-cat.</p>
-
-<p>At the club, as the afternoon wore on
-to evening, he had met four or five
-men: Beaton, the county judge, a
-red-faced tippler with, on the surface, a
-heartiness that was repellant; Lunn, the
-hotel proprietor, a vast, asthmatic man
-with a small, porcine eye; Daventry, the
-Land Commissioner, whose British
-accent, Annister noticed, would on occasion
-flatten to a high, nasal whining that
-was reminiscent of Sag Harbor or Buzzards
-Bay.</p>
-
-<p>The rest, hard-faced, typical of their
-environment, Annister put down for the
-usual lesser fry; hangers-on, jackals, as
-it might chance, “house-men,” in the
-parlance of the “poker-room”—Annister
-knew the type well enough.</p>
-
-<p>They seemed hospitable, but once or
-twice Annister had thought to detect in
-their glances a grimly curious look: of
-appraisal, and of something more.</p>
-
-<p>There had been a game going, but he
-had not sat in, nor had the lawyer invited
-him. The visit had been meant,
-plainly enough, as a sort of introduction.</p>
-
-<p>“We’re all here,” Rook had said.</p>
-
-<p>But it was apparent, too, that there
-were one or two others who were absent;
-Annister heard several references to
-“Bull”; but for the most part there was
-a silence, beneath which Annister could
-feel the tension; it was like a fine wire,
-vibrating, deep-down; almost, he might
-have said, a certain grimly quiet anticipation
-of that which was to come.</p>
-
-<p>Presently the telephone tinkled, loud
-in the sudden stillness; Annister could
-hear the voice at the other end: harsh,
-strident, with a bestial growl that
-penetrated outward into the close room.</p>
-
-<p>“He can’t come,” came from the man
-at the telephone. “Bull—yeah—an’ I
-reckon he seems some disappointed.”</p>
-
-<p>Annister noticed that the tension had
-all at once relaxed, and with it, as he
-could see, there was plainly visible in the
-faces about him a certain disappointment.
-It was as if they had been waiting
-for something—something, well, that
-had not materialized. There was a laugh
-or two; a word stifled in utterance; one
-or two of the men, glancing at Annister
-and away, gave an almost imperceptible
-head-shake. Even Rook, as Annister
-could tell, appeared relieved as the newcomer
-rose, turning to the company with
-a conventional good-night.</p>
-
-<p>For just a split second it seemed to
-Annister that something <i>was</i> about to
-happen; for a moment he saw, or fancied
-that he saw, a quick, silent signal flash,
-then, from eye to eye; Lunn, the hotel
-man, had half risen in his chair; out of
-the tail of his eye, as he was turning
-toward the door, Annister was aware of
-a quick ripple, a movement, the shadow
-of a sound, like the movement of a conjuror
-manipulating his cards, white
-hands flashing in a bewildering passade.</p>
-
-<p>But nothing happened.</p>
-
-<p>Leaving, he had walked slowly toward
-the hotel, turning over in his mind the
-story that had been told him by the
-lawyer. And there was one more question
-he wanted to ask him: a question
-that had to do with a square of paper
-that he had come upon among his
-father’s papers in New York, for it had
-been this chance discovery that had sent
-him, post-haste, to Dry Bone, and the
-lawyer’s office.</p>
-
-<p>Thinking these things, he was turning
-the corner to the hotel when, out of nowhere
-as it seemed, a man had passed
-him, walking with a peculiar, dragging
-shuffle. Seen under the moon for a moment,
-this man’s face had impressed itself
-upon Annister: it was dark and
-foreign, with high cheek-bones, and—what
-seemed curiously out of place in
-Dry Bone—a black moustache and professional
-Van Dyke.</p>
-
-<p>Annister, watching the man, saw him
-turn into the doorway he had just
-quitted; it was the entrance to the
-“club”—two rooms above a saddler’s
-shop at the corner of the street.</p>
-
-<p>Halting a moment to look after the
-man, Annister was wondering idly who
-he might be—certainly not the man
-called “Bull,” if there was anything in
-a name. And then, abruptly, he was
-remembering what the lawyer had let
-fall about the “doctor”; perhaps that
-was who he was; he had had a distinctly
-professional air.</p>
-
-<p>The man’s eyes had lingered upon
-Annister for a moment, and for a moment
-the latter had been conscious of a
-curious shock. For it had been as if the
-man had looked <i>through</i> rather than at
-him; those eyes had glowed suddenly in
-the darkness, gray-green like a cat’s, in
-an abrupt, ferocious, basilisk stare.</p>
-
-<p>Annister, in his day, had seen some
-queer corners and some tight places; in
-Rangoon, for example, he had penetrated
-to a certain dark house in a dim backwater
-stinking and dark with the darkness
-of midnight even at high noon.</p>
-
-<p>And it was there, in that dark house,
-with shuttered windows like blind eyes
-to the night, that he had seen that which
-it is not good for any white man to have
-seen: the rite of the Suttee; the blood-stone
-of Siva, the Destroyer, reeking
-with the sacrifice—ay—and more.</p>
-
-<p>And something now, at that time half-perceived
-and dimly understood, came
-again with the sight of the dark face
-with its high cheek-bones, and black,
-forking beard; for he had seen a creature
-with a face and yet without a face, mewling
-and mowing like a cat, now come
-from horrors, and the practitioner had
-been—</p>
-
-<p>The man who but just now passed him
-at the corner of the street, the man with
-the dark, foreign visage, and the eyes
-of death.</p>
-
-<h3><i>CHAPTER FIVE</i><br>
-PARTNERS OF THE NIGHT</h3>
-
-<p>Annister, pausing a moment at the
-corner of the street, was conscious
-of a feeling of coldness, like a bleak wind
-of the spirit, as if death, in passing, had
-touched him, and gone on.</p>
-
-<p>For the face of the man whom he had
-seen had been like the face of a damned
-soul, unhuman, Satanic in its sheer,
-visible malevolence. So might Satan
-himself have looked, after the Fall.</p>
-
-<p>Somehow, although the man had
-looked straight ahead, seeming to see
-merely with the glazed, indwelling stare
-of a sleepwalker, Annister had felt those
-eyes upon him; he was certain that he
-had been seen—and known. But now he
-had other things to think about.</p>
-
-<p>He had intended going to the hotel.
-Now, on an impulse he bent his steps
-away from it, turning to the building in
-which were the offices of Rook.</p>
-
-<p>But he did not enter by the main doorway.
-There was an alley further along;
-into this he melted with the stealth and
-caution of an Indian, feeling his way
-forward in the thick darkness to where,
-as he had marked it earlier in the day,
-there was a rusty fire-escape; its rungs
-ran upward in the darkness; they
-creaked now under his hand as he went
-slowly up.</p>
-
-<p>Rook’s office was on the second floor.
-Annister, reaching the window, found it
-locked, but in a matter of seconds had it
-open, with the soft <i>snick</i> of a steel blade
-between sash and bolt; the thing was
-done with a professional deftness, as if,
-say, the man who had opened that window
-had done that same thing many
-times before.</p>
-
-<p>Now, crouched in the darkness by that
-dim square of window, the intruder stood
-silent, listening, holding his breath. A<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_39"></a>[39]</span>
-sound had come to him, faint and thin,
-as if muffled by many thicknesses of
-walls; it penetrated outward from the
-private office, with the snick and slither
-of rasping steel on steel.</p>
-
-<p>And at the instant that Annister, with
-a grim smile in the darkness, recognized
-it for what it was, he knew, too, that
-someone had been beforehand with him;
-someone interested, also, in Hamilton
-Rook; for the sound that he heard now,
-loud in the singing silence, was the sound
-of a steel drill upon a safe.</p>
-
-<p>Annister had seen that safe; it was
-scarcely more than a strong-box, a sheet
-steel, but thin; a “can-opener” could
-have ripped it from end to end, easily,
-in no time at all. Rook must feel secure
-indeed, he thought, to put his trust in so
-flimsy a repository unless, perhaps, he
-had other means. The Indian, for instance;
-the savage who, but a few hours
-ago, had missed with his long talons for
-Annister’s throat by inches.</p>
-
-<p>But somehow Annister did not think
-that the Jivero would be on guard. There
-was no burglar-alarm protection; he had
-made certain of that; but the man who
-was now busy with that safe must have
-come up by the stairway; doubtless he
-was on familiar ground. Perhaps he
-might be some disgruntled confederate
-of the lawyer’s; well, he’d have a look-see,
-at any rate.</p>
-
-<p>Advancing silently, on the balls of his
-feet, Annister traversed the length of the
-outer office, peering around the doorway
-to where, under the dim glow of a single
-drop-light, a figure, back toward Annister,
-knelt before the safe.</p>
-
-<p>The drop-light, carefully shaded,
-would not be visible from without; under
-its cone-shaped radiance Annister could
-see merely that the man was wearing a
-cap, pulled low over his forehead; but
-something in the attitude of that kneeling
-figure: the turn of the head, the
-deft, darting movement of the hand, was
-strangely familiar.</p>
-
-<p>Annister grinned in the darkness at
-the same moment that he was aware of
-a curious contraction of the heart. This
-lone-hand cracksman worked evidently
-without confederates, unless, possibly, he
-might have a lookout posted on the sidewalk
-below. He spoke, barely above a
-whisper:</p>
-
-<p>“Hello!” he said. “Pretty careless,
-aren’t you? Now, do you think it’s—safe?”</p>
-
-<p>The figure whirled; the hand, holding
-an automatic, came upward with the
-speed of light; then dropped limply at
-her side as the girl surveyed him with a
-stony look.</p>
-
-<p>It was the waitress of the Mansion
-House.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” she said, “you’ve caught me,
-but it looks to me as if I beat you to it,
-Black Steve Annister.... Oh, I’ve heard
-of you, Mister Black Steve.... Well,
-now you’ve caught me, what are you
-going to do about it?”</p>
-
-<p>The darkly beautiful face was scornful;
-the violet eyes, under the light,
-stormy with a something that Annister
-could not all define.</p>
-
-<p>Annister bit his lip. To find her like
-this! And, all at once, realization came
-to him with a sudden tightening of the
-heart.</p>
-
-<p>This girl, waitress or not, crook or
-not—he had to confess that, in all his
-wanderings up and down the earth, he
-had never met her like. A girl in a thousand,
-he had decided, back there in the
-dining-room of the Mansion House. What
-a partner she would make! Now, with a
-girl like that for a partner...!</p>
-
-<p>On a sudden impulse he leaned forward,
-his eyes upon the safe door; it
-swung outward now; somehow she had
-opened it.</p>
-
-<p>“Pretty smooth,” he commented.
-“The combination, after all, ha? You
-worked it. Now, before <i>we</i> have a look,
-I want to tell you something. I—I’m
-looking for a partner, Miss—ah—Miss—”</p>
-
-<p>“—Allerton,” she told him, in her
-eyes a sudden, leaping spark, the brief,
-baffling, enigmatic look that he had seen
-back there in the hotel dining-room. But
-it was gone again even as she spoke:</p>
-
-<p>“All right—partner!” she said, low.
-“When do we start?”</p>
-
-<p>“Right now!” answered Annister, his
-gaze upon the girl frankly admiring. He
-had expected the usual feminine evasions,
-a play for time, hesitation—anything
-but this ready acquiescence in his
-abrupt proposal.</p>
-
-<p>He was not entirely sure of her; his
-admiration for her beauty, her poise,
-had nothing to do with the cold judgment
-whispering now that the whole
-affair might, after all, be a blind, a trap,
-devious and crooked as the devious and
-crooked turnings of Hamilton Rook.</p>
-
-<p>But with Annister to decide was to
-act.</p>
-
-<p>Bending, he swung wide the safe door,
-groping forward with exploring hand.
-His back was toward the girl; consequently
-he did not see the sudden, revealing
-gleam in the violet eyes, the
-quick hardening of the mouth. Swinging
-forward his pocket flash, the light
-danced, glimmering, upon a packet of
-papers, a sheaf of documents. Annister,
-running over them swiftly, gave a quick
-exclamation, his hand, in a lightning
-movement, palming something which he
-secreted in an inner pocket.</p>
-
-<p>He turned sidewise to the girl.</p>
-
-<p>“Lord!” he exclaimed disgustedly.
-“Nothing but papers! Partner, we’re
-out of luck!”</p>
-
-<p>Evidently the girl had been oblivious.
-Now, however, her quick, flashing fingers
-sorted the contents of that safe as with
-a practiced hand, to leave them, as had
-Annister, inviolate, save for that oblong
-of paper reposing now in the pocket of
-his coat.</p>
-
-<p>In the shadow of the entrance it was
-black dark as they parted. The girl did
-not live in the hotel, she told him; that
-had been a part of her plan. They would
-meet again, of course. But once in his
-room, and with the shades drawn and
-the door locked and bolted, Annister,
-taking the paper from his pocket,
-smoothed it out under the light.</p>
-
-<p>He looked; then looked again, breath
-indrawn sharply through clenched teeth.</p>
-
-<p>For that paper was a canceled check;
-it had been drawn to “Cash”; and the
-signature, in a hand that he knew upon
-the instant, was the signature of his
-father, Travis Annister.</p>
-
-<h3><i>CHAPTER SIX</i><br>
-THE LIVING GHOST</h3>
-
-<p>Annister had heard nothing from
-Rook other than that he had been
-again invited to a further session of the
-“Club” for that evening.</p>
-
-<p>Alone in his room on the morning following
-his adventure in Rook’s office, his
-eye had been caught and held by a news
-item printed on an inside page of the
-<i>Durango County Gazette</i>: he had nearly
-passed it over; but now the lines leaped
-out at him as if they had been blazoned
-across the paper in a double-column
-spread:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>Travis Annister Still Strangely
-Missing—Retired Capitalist Gone
-Since January—Foul Play
-Feared</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>And, separated from it by the width
-of a single column, he read:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>Retired Banker Disappears—Newbold
-Humiston a Suicide?—Friends
-Fear for Safety</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>But it was at a third item, tucked
-away in an obscure corner that Annister
-stifled a quick word in his throat. Newbold
-Humiston had been a friend of his
-father’s; it was an odd coincidence, to
-say the least of it. And the story went on
-to say that three other men, all nationally
-known, had, so to speak, between
-suns, disappeared as completely as if the
-earth had opened and swallowed them.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_40"></a>[40]</span></p>
-
-<p>And that third news item, irrelevant
-as it might have been, told of an incident,
-odd and unusual enough; it had happened
-in Palos Verde, distant from Dry
-Bone a long twenty miles of hazardous
-mountain trail:</p>
-
-<p>A man had come in, in rags and
-tatters; at first they had thought him a
-desert rat, a prospector, light-headed
-from starvation, for his incoherent
-babble had proclaimed him no less a
-personage than Rodman Axworthy,
-prominent banker of Mojave. The
-sheriff of Palos Verde, on the off chance,
-had wired Mojave, and the word had
-come back that Axworthy had been missing;
-they were sending a man.</p>
-
-<p>With the arrival of this man, however,
-the mystery deepened, for it appeared
-that the derelict was indeed Axworthy,
-and yet not Axworthy at all, for whereas
-the true Axworthy had had a high,
-aquiline nose and a wide, generous
-mouth, the derelict was snub-nosed,
-swarthy, where the banker had been
-fair; he was, simply, another man.</p>
-
-<p>But there had been this about it: on
-the banker’s left forearm, underneath,
-there had been a curious birth-mark; the
-derelict had spoken of it, but upon examination
-the arm showed smooth and
-bare. The investigator from Mojave had
-been obviously skeptical until, abruptly,
-the ragged claimant had taken from his
-pocket a curious, removable bridge; a
-dentist in Mojave who had made it, he
-said, could identify it. It fitted perfectly.</p>
-
-<p>This looked like proof, but the thing
-was obviously impossible. And then, as
-“Axworthy” was being taken back to
-Mojave, he went suddenly stark, staring
-crazy, repeating over and over, with
-reference to the bridge:</p>
-
-<p>“It’s the one thing they didn’t get—the
-one thing....”</p>
-
-<p>And there the matter rested, save that,
-upon arrival in Mojave, the bridge was
-found to be missing. The emissary from
-Mojave seemed to remember a dark-faced
-stranger who had been seated opposite
-them in the train, but that was all;
-the man had jostled against his charge
-upon alighting; the last proof, if indeed
-it might be called a proof, was gone.</p>
-
-<p>Annister frowned thoughtfully, his
-mind upon that canceled check in his
-pocket. And he was remembering one
-other thing, and that was the square of
-paper which he had found among his
-father’s effects, for on it had been a
-name, or, rather, two: the name of
-Hamilton Rook, and of another, unknown
-to Annister. And as to that Axworthy
-case, it was common knowledge
-that lunatics, for instance, entertained
-frequently the delusion that they were
-people of importance. There was nothing
-new in that.</p>
-
-<p>Somehow, it seemed to him that he
-held in his hands the pieces of a jig-saw
-puzzle that, even if put together, made
-but a patchwork of motives and design,
-which yet, if he could but find the key,
-would be as clear as crystal.</p>
-
-<p>That paper found in his father’s office;
-the interview with Childers, at Washington;
-the long trip westward; the
-warning message on the train; the big
-man with the ice-blue eye and the square
-jaw of a fighter; the attack in the hotel;
-the meeting with Rook, and the meeting
-with the girl; the finding of that canceled
-check—and, last, the matter of those
-queerly related news items just under
-his hand—these made a pattern to be
-unraveled only by the warp and woof of
-Fate.</p>
-
-<p>And the chance meeting with the
-bearded stranger at the corner of the
-street: consider how he would, Annister’s
-mind kept turning backward to
-that meeting and those eyes that were
-like the eyes of a damned soul, malignant,
-cold, in their abysmal, cold cruelty
-of discarnate Evil.</p>
-
-<p>Discarnate! That was it; that would
-express it; for the man, as he recalled
-him, seemed somehow less than human;
-there had been about him an aura, an
-emanation, that was like a tide rising
-from the depths, from darkness unto
-darkness....</p>
-
-<p>Annister was scarcely superstitious,
-but he was again conscious of that icy
-chill; he shivered, as a man is said to
-shiver when, according to an ancient
-superstition, someone is said to be walking
-over his grave.</p>
-
-<p>He rose, walking to the window, to
-peer outward into the sunwashed street.
-The coil was tightening; he felt it; and
-he was but one man against many. And
-knowing what he knew, or suspecting
-what he suspected, it seemed to him all
-at once that the sunlight had flattened to
-a heatless flaming of pale radiance; there
-seemed a menace in it, even as there
-seemed a menace in the very air, a waiting,
-a tension, like a fine wire drawn and
-singing at a pitch too low for sound.</p>
-
-<p>Abruptly he heard a sound; it was
-like the scratching of a rat in the wainscot,
-faint and thin. His door was
-locked.</p>
-
-<p>Now, looking at it, the knob turned,
-slowly, stealthily. He could see it turning.</p>
-
-<p>Then, faint but unmistakable, came a
-knock.</p>
-
-<h3><i>CHAPTER SEVEN</i><br>
-THROUGH THE DOOR</h3>
-
-<p>The knocking was not loud; it
-was merely a discreet tap; but there
-was a quality of hurry in it.</p>
-
-<p>Annister, moving without sound on
-the thick pile of the rug, almost with the
-same motion turned the key and flung
-wide the door.</p>
-
-<p>At first he could see nothing. The
-corridor, thick-piled with shadows even
-at high noon, showed merely as a darkling
-glimmer out of which there sprang
-suddenly a face, like a white, glimmering
-oval; a voice came, with a quick, hissing
-sibilance:</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Ssh!</i> Quiet! I must not be seen!
-Or else he.... Close the door!”</p>
-
-<p>The girl stepped inward swiftly, her
-white face turned to the man before her
-in a sort of frozen calm. Annister had
-a vague impression of having seen her
-somewhere before: that golden head
-beneath its close-fitting toque; the faint,
-remembered odor of fresh violets; the
-face, with a piquant loveliness just now,
-however, white and drawn; it was like
-a strain of music, heard and then forgotten.</p>
-
-<p>Closing the heavy door and locking it,
-he turned swiftly to the girl.</p>
-
-<p>“Well—?” he said, his gaze upon her
-in a cold, searching scrutiny. “Isn’t
-this a trifle—<i>sudden</i>?”</p>
-
-<p>But the girl lifted a stony face.</p>
-
-<p>“I have little time,” she said, with a
-curious, spent breathlessness, as if she
-had been running. “I am Cleo Ridgley,
-secretary to Hamilton Rook—that is, I
-<i>was</i>; I am his secretary no longer, but
-he does not know about it—yet.”</p>
-
-<p>She paused, again with that hard-held
-breathing, moistening her stiff lips.</p>
-
-<p>“I warned you that day on the train;
-do you remember? I warned you because
-I knew Hamilton Rook.... I know him
-even better now. He meant to kill you,
-Mr. Annister, and now he schemes—”</p>
-
-<p>“—To use me—is that it?” interrupted
-Annister dryly; then, at her slow
-head-shake, he stiffened.</p>
-
-<p>“He would have finished you even
-after your—agreement—but that is not
-his way. But he will not make use of
-you in the way that you think. That
-careful plan of which he told you—that
-was just a blind; there are no ranches
-near enough. The S. S. S.—that, too,
-was just a part of the story. You see,
-he wants to keep you here, that is all,
-until such time as he thinks it necessary
-to—remove you. But his real motive,
-his actual plan I know nothing about. I
-may suspect, but I do not <i>think</i> about
-it.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_41"></a>[41]</span></p>
-
-<p>She paused again, her expression rigid,
-as there sounded a faint, half-audible
-footfall from the corridor without. It
-passed.</p>
-
-<p>“He would—kill me—if he knew,”
-she continued tonelessly. “That warning
-on the train—I did that at his order. If
-he could have frightened you off, he
-would have been satisfied with that, but
-now, it will be—different, I tell you
-this on my own account. And now—”she
-laid a slim hand on his arm—“don’t
-go to that rendezvous tonight, Mr.
-Annister. Ellison will be there; you remember
-him? He was the man who tried
-to keep you on that train.”</p>
-
-<p>She smiled faintly with her lips, but
-her eyes were sombre.</p>
-
-<p>“Ellison is Rook’s jackal, just as Rook
-is—”</p>
-
-<p>The sentence was never completed.
-There came a coughing grunt from just
-outside the door, a streak of flame from
-the half-open transom just above; the
-girl stiffened, her face went blank; she
-slid downward to the rug, even as Annister,
-snapping back the lock, had flung
-wide the door.</p>
-
-<p>Gun out, he burst into the corridor,
-as, from the shadows at a far corner,
-he fancied that he heard the faint echo
-of a taunting laugh.</p>
-
-<p>But there was no one there.</p>
-
-<p>Rushing to the stair-head, he found
-nothing, nobody. The man who had fired
-that shot had used a silencer; he had
-disappeared, either into one of the bed-chambers
-to right and left, or down the
-stair. But it was no time for speculation.
-The girl would be needing attention, if,
-indeed, she was not already past all aid.</p>
-
-<p>Annister had wasted no time. But,
-for a heart-beat, as he raced backward
-along the hall, his eye was caught and
-held by the quick glint of metal from
-the carpet at his feet. Stooping as he
-ran, he swept up the object, possibly
-an empty shell; then, on the threshold of
-his room, recoiled with a gasping oath.</p>
-
-<p>For the girl had vanished!</p>
-
-<p>Stunned, Annister stood silent, mechanically
-unclosing his stiff fingers
-upon the object which they held. He
-stared at it now, rigid with remembrance,
-and a growing fear.</p>
-
-<p>Oddly twisted and distorted, its dull
-gold surface glinting dully under the
-light, the thing that he had found lay on
-his open palm.</p>
-
-<p><i>It was a dentist’s bridge.</i></p>
-
-<h3><i>CHAPTER EIGHT</i><br>
-ODDS—AND THE MAN</h3>
-
-<p>Annister had been absent from that
-room not longer than ten racing
-seconds. It was unthinkable that the
-girl had vanished of her own volition,
-even had it been physically possible.</p>
-
-<p>Glancing around the room, he saw that
-the windows were closed and bolted; the
-flooring was solid, substantial; there
-could be no ingress save by the door
-through which he had just come.</p>
-
-<p>There was another door; it led to the
-next room; but Annister, with a habit
-of inbred caution, had tried it, and found
-it locked. Now, in two swift strides, he
-had covered the space between, had tried
-that door, setting his weight against it
-as he turned the knob.</p>
-
-<p>Under his weight it gave outward with
-a sudden slatting clatter. They, whoever
-they might be, had unlocked it; it
-had been through this adjoining room
-that they had taken the girl.</p>
-
-<p>Annister, glancing swiftly around this
-room, saw that it was obviously unoccupied;
-the bed had been made up;
-there was no sort of clue that he could
-see. The invisible assassin had had a
-key; that was it, of course.</p>
-
-<p>But as to the rest of it, Annister could
-only speculate. It was an impasse, and
-a mystery.</p>
-
-<p>Going downward to the dining-room, as
-it was now past noon, he glanced toward
-the desk, but if he had had any thought
-of reporting the attack upon the girl,
-or her disappearance, he thought better
-of it; he would keep his own counsel; a
-decision helped by a sight of Lunn, the
-hotel proprietor, who, lounging at the
-desk, raised his sleepy-lidded, vulture
-gaze at Annister as the latter was turning
-toward the dining-room.</p>
-
-<p>Annister, in that brief glance, thought
-to detect in those eyes, milky-pale, a
-veiled, sardonic flicker. If, behind this
-latest happening, there was the fine,
-Italian hand of Hamilton Rook, Lunn
-was in cahoots with the lawyer, of that
-there could be little doubt. For, as
-Annister was convinced, there had been
-a menace in those eyes half turned to
-his, an insolence, a bright, burning
-truculence, that, as he turned into the
-long dining-hall, brought the swift blood
-to his cheek in a dark tide.</p>
-
-<p>But at his table another surprise
-awaited him. Mary Allerton was gone.
-The heavy-handed Swede who served
-him told him that she had left, suddenly,
-that morning; a message had come for
-her, it appeared, but the substitute could
-tell him nothing further. Annister let
-it go at that.</p>
-
-<p>Rising from the table, he went outward
-to the long bar, a cool, pleasant
-oasis, indeed, in the fierce heat of the
-drowsy afternoon. He greeted the bartender,
-a tall man with the wide shoulders
-of a cowman, with a smile.</p>
-
-<p>The man had been friendly; in fact,
-he had been the sole friend that Annister
-appeared to have made since his arrival
-in Dry Bone. Now the bartender
-leaned forward, speaking in a whisper
-behind his hand:</p>
-
-<p>“Watch your step, Mr. Annister,” he
-said.</p>
-
-<p>Annister gave an almost imperceptible
-nod. Then, his drink before him upon the
-stained and battered mahogany, he
-glanced sidewise along the rail, to where,
-at the far end, two men stood together,
-eying him under lowered brows.</p>
-
-<p>To Annister it seemed that there had
-fallen a sudden quiet. Just prior to his
-entrance he had heard talk and laughter,
-the <i>clink</i> of glasses, a thick, turgid oath.
-Now there appeared to rise and grow a
-tension, as of something electric in the
-air; Annister felt it in the white face
-of the knight of the apron, the sudden
-silence, the rigid figures of the two men
-at the end of the long bar.</p>
-
-<p>Behind him, and a little to his left,
-three men were seated at a table: Bristow,
-sheriff of Dry Bone, a big man with
-a bleak, pale eye, and a mouth like a
-straight gash above a heavy chin barbered
-to the blood. With him were two
-others whom he did not know.</p>
-
-<p>Lunn was nowhere in sight.</p>
-
-<p>The taller of the two men standing at
-the bar turned, and Annister recognized
-him as Tucson Charlie Westervelt, a gunman
-with a dangerous record. Westervelt
-was wearing a high-crowned, white
-Stetson; Annister marked it at the distance,
-beneath it the fierce, hawklike
-face, turned now in his direction, the
-thin lips set stiffly in a sullen pout.</p>
-
-<p>The old West had passed with the
-passing of the <i>remuda</i>, the trail herd, the
-mining camps; the wide, free range of
-the long-horned cattle was no more; but
-Dry Bone had not changed save that the
-loading-pens had gone; a cow would be
-a curiosity. But the lawless spirit of
-the ancient West remained. “Southwest
-of the Law,” indeed, Dry Bone was
-a law unto itself, and now about him
-Annister felt the menace; it appeared
-that he had walked into a trap.</p>
-
-<p>The judge, the sheriff—what mockery
-of law there was—Annister knew that it
-would be against him, either way, attacking
-or attacked. He was certain of it as
-Westervelt, moving slowly along the bar,
-halted when perhaps three paces distant,
-elbow raised, right hand extended, clawlike,
-in a stiff, thrusting gesture above
-his guns.</p>
-
-<p>It was the gesture of the killer, the
-preliminary for the lightning down-thrust
-of the stiff fingers; Annister knew
-that well enough. Now the gunman’s
-gaze, sleepy-lidded like a falcon’s,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_42"></a>[42]</span>
-bored into his; his voice came with a
-snarling violence:</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Mister</i> Black Steve Annister,” he
-said, without preamble. “I understand
-you’re some wizard with a canister, ha?
-A bad hombre! Musta been a little bird
-done told me, an’ that bird was sure
-loco, I’ll tell a man! But <i>me</i>—” his
-tone hardened to a steely rasp—“I’m
-not thinkin’ you’re such-a-much!”</p>
-
-<p>It was a trap; Annister knew that now,
-just as behind the gunman he could almost
-see the dark face of Rook, with its
-sneering grin; the lawyer had inspired
-it.</p>
-
-<p>His automatic hung in a sling under
-his left arm-pit, but even if he could
-beat Westervelt to the draw, he knew
-well enough what the result would be:
-a shot in the back, say, from the men
-sitting just behind, or—arrest, and the
-mockery of a trial to follow it. Either
-way, he was done.</p>
-
-<p>His own eyes held the gunman’s now,
-glancing neither to the right nor to the
-left. He was conscious of a movement
-from the three men at the table; Westervelt’s
-companion, a short, bowlegged
-man, with the pale eyes of an Albino,
-had stepped backward from the bar;
-Annister felt rather than saw his hand
-move even as his own hand came up and
-outward with lightning speed; flame
-streaked from his pistol with the motion.</p>
-
-<p>Once in a generation, perhaps, a man
-arises from the ruck who, by an uncanny
-dexterity of hand and eye, confounds
-and dazzles the common run of men. As
-a conjurer throws his glass balls in air,
-swifter than eye can follow, so Annister,
-crouching sidewise from the bar, threw
-his bullets at Westervelt.</p>
-
-<p>The gunman, bending forward at the
-hips, crashed to the sawdust in a slumping
-fall, as the Albino, firing from the
-hip, whirled sidewise as Annister’s
-second bullet drilled him through the
-middle. For the tenth of a second, like
-the sudden stoppage of a cinematograph,
-the tableau endured; then Annister,
-whirling, had covered Bristow where he
-sat; the two men with him, white-faced,
-hands pressed flat upon the table-top,
-stared, silent, as Annister spoke:</p>
-
-<p>“You saw, Bristow,” he said, low and
-even, his eyes upon the cold eyes of the
-sheriff in a bright, steady, inquiring
-stare. “Now—what about it?”</p>
-
-<p>For a moment a little silence held;
-then Bristow, moistening his stiff lips,
-nodded, his gaze upon Annister in a
-sudden, dazed, uncomprehending look.</p>
-
-<p>“All right, Mr. Annister,” he said
-heavily. “They came lookin’ f’r it, I
-reckon.... Well, you were <i>that</i> quick!”</p>
-
-<p>Annister smiled grimly, pocketing his
-pistol. Westervelt lay where he had
-fallen, a dead man even as he had gone
-for his gun, lips still twisted in a sullen
-pout. The bowlegged man, stiff fingers
-clutching his heavy pistol, lay, face
-downward, in the sawdust. The bartender,
-with an admiring glance at Annister,
-leaned forward as Bristow and the
-two men with him went slowly out.</p>
-
-<p>“They may try to get me for it, Mr.
-Annister,” he said, “but I’m no man’s
-man; well, not Rook’s, and you can lay
-to that! Bristow and his friends kept out
-of it, you noticed? Bristow’ll do nothing,
-<i>now</i>; not yet a while, at any rate,
-but—mebbe they sort of savvied me
-a-watchin’ t’ see they didn’t run no
-whizzer on you!”</p>
-
-<p>He lifted the heavy Colt, where it had
-lain hidden by the bar-rail, thrusting it
-in its scabbard with a grin.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, sir, I <i>aimed</i> t’ see that they
-was sittin’ close, <i>an’</i> quiet, Mr. Annister,”
-he said.</p>
-
-<p>“Thanks, old timer,” said Annister.
-“I’ll not forget.”</p>
-
-<p>But as he went outward into the waning
-afternoon he was thinking of that
-rendezvous of the night. For Rook would
-be there, and it had been Rook, he was
-certain, who had engineered that ambush
-in the Mansion House bar.</p>
-
-<h3><i>CHAPTER NINE</i><br>
-THE BATTLE IN THE “CLUB”</h3>
-
-<p>The time was nearly ripe. The clue
-of those newspaper items; the canceled
-check; the somewhat repellant evidence
-of the battered piece of goldwork
-picked up in the corridor of the Mansion
-House—Annister had been able to put
-two and two together, to find a sum as
-strange, as odd, say, as five, or seven, or
-even one.</p>
-
-<p>But that name that had trembled on
-the lips of Rook’s secretary remained a
-secret; with it, Annister was convinced,
-he would be able to pull those threads
-together with a single jerk, to find them—one.</p>
-
-<p>He had had news from Mojave: the
-dentist had identified the insane man as
-his patient by means of his chart, but,
-with that face, the man could not be
-Banker Axworthy—it simply could not
-be. And yet he was!</p>
-
-<p>It was something of a riddle, and more,
-even, than that, for the thing savored of
-the supernatural, of necromancy, of a
-black art that might, say, have had for
-its practitioner a certain personage with
-the eyes of a damned soul and a black,
-forking beard, curled, like Mephisto’s;
-Annister thought that it might.</p>
-
-<p>Further, the conductor of that train
-had been able to describe, somewhat in
-detail, the man who had jostled the derelict
-and his companion; the man had
-been a stranger to the conductor; he
-had been tall and thin, with a small,
-sandy moustache, and a high-arched,
-broken nose, and he had been wearing
-the conventional Stetson. The fellow
-might have been disguised, of course, but
-if Annister could find the black-bearded
-man, discover his identity, he was reasonably
-certain that he would not draw
-blank.</p>
-
-<p>It was no certainty, of course, but it
-was worth the risk, he told himself. It
-would be a desperate hazard that he was
-about to face, he knew. Thinking of his
-father, together with the remembrance of
-that unholy and unspeakable horror that
-he had witnessed, born of the stinking
-shadows of that dark street in a city foul
-and old, its people furtive worshipers of
-strange gods, Annister felt again that
-crawling chill which had assailed him
-with the passing of the tall man with the
-eyes of death.</p>
-
-<p>With Annister, to decide was to act.
-Dispatching a brief telegram in code to
-a certain office in a certain building in
-Washington, he went now to keep his
-rendezvous with Rook and the rest. It
-was yet early, scarce eight in the evening,
-and the street was full of life and
-movement, before him, and behind.</p>
-
-<p>And before him and behind, as he
-went onward, he was conscious that
-those who walked there walked with him,
-stride for stride; they kept their distance,
-moving without speech, as he
-turned the corner of the dusty street.</p>
-
-<p>If he had had any doubt about it, the
-doubt became certainty as, wheeling
-sharply to the left, they kept him company
-now, still with that grim, daunting
-silence: a bodyguard, indeed, but a bodyguard
-that held him prisoner as certainly
-as if the manacles were on his wrists.</p>
-
-<p>It was not yet dark, but with a rising
-wind there had come a sky overcast and
-lowering; low down, upon the horizon’s
-rim to the eastward, the violet blaze of
-the lightning came and went, with, after
-a little, the heavy salvos of the thunder,
-like the marching of an armed host.</p>
-
-<p>But Annister, his gaze set straight
-ahead, turned inward at the entrance of
-the saddler’s shop, mounting the stairs,
-as, behind him he heard the heavy door
-slam shut.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps it had been the wind, but as
-Annister went upward he heard, just
-beyond that door, the murmur of voices;
-they reached him in a sing-song mutter
-against the rising of the wind, in a quick,
-growling chorus.</p>
-
-<p>There had been something in that
-snarling speech to daunt a man less
-brave than the man on that narrow stair,
-but Annister went upward, lightly now,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_43"></a>[43]</span>
-to meet whatever waited behind the door
-set with its narrow panel that he could
-see merely as a dark smudge of shadow
-in the encircling gloom.</p>
-
-<p>He rapped, twice, and the door fell
-open silently, disclosing the long room
-in which, as he remembered, he had sat,
-but a few nights in the past, to listen
-as the lawyer and his crowd had waited
-for the man called “Bull.”</p>
-
-<p>The room was brightly lighted. At a
-long table, midway between door and
-windows, five men were seated: Lunn,
-his fat face gray with a sort of eager
-pallor, was chewing nervously at an unlighted
-cigar; he glanced up now at
-Annister’s entrance, turning to a big
-man on his right. At the head of the
-table, his veiled glance like the stare of
-a falcon, sat Rook, but it was upon the
-big man next to Lunn that Annister’s
-glance rested with an abrupt interest
-as the lawyer spoke:</p>
-
-<p>“Welcome to our city, Mr. Annister!”
-he said, in a voice that reminded Annister
-of molasses dripping from a barrel.
-“I want you to meet—Mr. Bull Ellison;
-he’s been right anxious to meet you,
-haven’t you, Bull?”</p>
-
-<p>Annister, in the passage of an eye-flash,
-understood. This was the man
-whom he had encountered in the vestibule
-of the smoker, and, of a sudden,
-memory rose up out of the past, and,
-with it, a picture: a padded ring under
-twin, blazing arcs; the thud and shuffle
-of sliding feet; a man, huge, brutish,
-broad, fists like stone mauls, yet, for all
-his bulk, a very cat for quickness.</p>
-
-<p>“Bruiser” Ellison, they had called
-him then; a heavyweight whose very
-brute strength had kept him from the
-championship; that, and a certain easy
-good nature which was not apparent now
-in the bleak staring of the eyes turned
-now upon Annister, remorseless, under
-lowered brows.</p>
-
-<p>Now, as if at a signal, the men about
-the table rose; the table was hauled
-backward to the wall, leaving a wide,
-sanded space under the lights.</p>
-
-<p>And then, even as Rook spoke, Annister
-abruptly understood: this gang of
-thieves, as he knew now—“Plunder,
-Limited,” as Cleo Ridgley had called
-them—Annister knew them now, under
-the leadership of Rook, for an outfit
-which would stop short of nothing to
-attain its ends. His eyes, roving the
-long room up and down, searched now
-for that dark face, with its black, forking
-beard, but he was not really expecting
-to see it, but that, if Rook was the
-actual leader, Black Beard was “the
-man higher up,” Annister was, somehow,
-convinced.</p>
-
-<p>They had failed with Westervelt and
-his <i>segundo</i>; now, as the man called
-“Bull” came forward across the floor,
-Rook spoke:</p>
-
-<p>“Ellison hasn’t forgotten his meeting
-with you, Annister; he says you played
-him a dirty trick; hit him when he
-wasn’t looking; that right, Bull?” he
-asked, with a certain sly malice directed
-at the giant with the cauliflower ear.</p>
-
-<p>“And now,” Rook’s purring tones
-continued, “he wants satisfaction; he’ll
-get it, won’t he, Mister Annister?”</p>
-
-<p>For a moment, as Annister’s eyes
-bored into his, the lawyer’s face showed,
-like an animal’s, in a Rembrandtesque
-shading of high light and shadow beneath
-the lights. Stripped of its mask, it was
-like the face of a devil; now the mouth
-grinned, but without mirth, the lips
-drawn backward from the teeth in a
-soundless snarl. He laughed suddenly,
-and there was nothing human in it, as
-Annister, his back to the wall, smiled
-grimly now in answer.</p>
-
-<p>He had been somewhat less than discreet,
-he reflected; Rook’s purpose had
-shown in his eyes; he, Annister, had
-walked into a trap from which, this time,
-there could be no escape. He had meant
-to beard them to their faces, wring from
-Rook an admission as to his father, perhaps
-more; then shoot his way out, if
-need be.</p>
-
-<p>But now—he would have to fight this
-giant, a ring veteran of a hundred
-battles, with bare fists, surrounded by an
-encircling, hostile cordon, who, if by any
-chance he might prove the victor, would
-see to it that he paid for that victory
-with his life.</p>
-
-<p>Annister knew that it was on the cards
-that Rook, for instance, would shoot him
-down as remorselessly as a man would
-squeeze a mosquito, say, out of life between
-thumb and finger. But it was
-the lawyer’s humor, doubtless, to see him
-manhandled, perhaps killed beneath the
-drumming impact of those iron fists.</p>
-
-<p>Calmly, he removed his coat, bestowing
-his automatic in the pocket of his
-trousers. He did it openly, turning to
-face Ellison, who, stripped to an athletic
-undershirt and trousers, regarded Annister
-with a grinning assurance.</p>
-
-<p>He was big; perhaps twenty pounds
-heavier than Annister, with wide shoulders
-and a deep arching chest; with his
-forward-thrusting jaw and bullet head,
-with its stiff fell of pig’s-bristles, the
-long arms like a gorilla’s, he towered
-over his antagonist like a cave bear, a
-grizzly waiting for the kill, and like a
-cave bear, at Rook’s snarling call of
-“Time!” he was upon the lesser man
-like a thunderbolt, fists going like flails.</p>
-
-<p>Annister, in his day and generation,
-had absorbed the science of hit, stop, and
-getaway under masters of the art who
-pronounced him, as an amateur, the
-equal of many a professional performer
-of the squared circle; he was lean and
-hard, whereas Ellison’s waistline showed,
-under the thin shirt, in folds of fat.</p>
-
-<p>If the onlookers expected to see Annister
-annihilated by that first, furious
-rush, they were mistaken. Crouching,
-lightly, on the balls of his feet, he drove
-forward a lightning straight left, full
-on the point. Ellison, coming in, took it,
-grunting; the blow had traveled a scant
-six inches, but there had been power
-in it.</p>
-
-<p>It set him back upon his heels, from
-which, as he rose, raging, he dove in with
-a ripping one-two punch, which, partly
-blocked by his antagonist, yet crashing
-through the latter’s guard, landed high
-upon his cheek-bone with a spanking
-thud.</p>
-
-<p>It had been a grazing blow; otherwise,
-the fight might have ended then and
-there. Annister, backing nimbly before
-the giant’s rush, realized that he must
-avoid a clinch; at in-fighting the giant
-would have the edge: those mast-like
-arms and massive shoulders, the huge
-bulk—they would, at close quarters, with
-the drumming impact of the great fists,
-have spelled a quick ending with the
-sheer, slugging power of the attack.</p>
-
-<p>He heard Rook snarl as, side-stepping
-like a sliding ghost, he countered with
-a long, curving left.</p>
-
-<p>So far, he had been holding his own.
-If he could keep the giant at his distance,
-he might wear him out. For this
-was not a fight by rounds; a professional
-pugilist, fighting in the pink, would have
-had bellows to mend at the end, say, of
-five minutes of a give-and-take encounter
-moving at high speed.</p>
-
-<p>Circling, feinting, ducking, Annister
-kept that long left in his adversary’s
-face, forcing the pace, yet keeping out
-of harm’s way save for an overhand
-swing, which, landing high up upon his
-cheek-bone, turned him half round with
-the impact, throwing him off balance to
-a slumping fall.</p>
-
-<p>Up like a flash, however, he ducked,
-dodged, evading those mighty arms that
-strove desperately to reach him through
-that impenetrable guard.</p>
-
-<p>A fight with four-ounce gloves can be
-a bloody affair enough, but with nature’s
-weapons, under London Prize Ring rules,
-it can be a shambles. Armed with the
-cestus or the mailed fist, Ellison might
-have wreaked havoc as a gladiator of old
-Rome punished his adversary to the
-death. As it was, Annister, his face a
-bloody mask, where that socking punch<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_44"></a>[44]</span>
-had landed, gave Rook and his supporters
-heart of grace.</p>
-
-<p>“Take him, Bull!”</p>
-
-<p>The screaming advice was in the high
-voice of Lunn; the others echoed it. But
-if Annister was in desperate case, the
-giant, sobbing now with the fury of his
-spent strength, was weaving on his feet.</p>
-
-<p>Legs like iron columns upbore that
-mighty strength, but a pile-driving right,
-behind it the full weight of Annister’s
-two hundred pounds of iron-hard muscle,
-sinking with an audible “<i>plop!</i>” in his
-adversary’s midriff, brought from the
-giant a quick, gasping grunt.</p>
-
-<p>Ellison’s endurance was almost done.
-He could “take it,” but, hog-fat from a
-protracted period of easy living, professional
-fighter as he had been, this amateur,
-with the arching chest of a greyhound
-and the stamina of a lucivee of the
-long trail, was wearing him down.</p>
-
-<p>Trading punch for punch now, Annister
-abruptly cut loose with pile-driving
-right and lefts; they volleyed in from
-every angle; there was a cold grin on
-his lips now as he went round the giant
-like a cooper round a barrel, bombarding
-him with a bewildering crossfire of
-hooks and swings, jabs and uppercuts.</p>
-
-<p>Annister, at the beginning of the fight,
-had expected the usual tricks of the professional:
-holding in the clinches; butting;
-the elbow; the heel of the hand
-against the face; but Ellison had fought
-fair.</p>
-
-<p>Now, as the giant, boring in against
-that relentless attack, faltered, mouth
-open, labored breath sucked inward
-through clenched teeth, Annister stepped
-backward, hands dropping at his sides.</p>
-
-<p>Ellison, almost out, stood, weaving on
-his feet, fronting his adversary, a queer
-look of surprise in his face, and a something
-more. Annister, strangely enough,
-as has been mentioned, had, in spite of
-his encounter with Ellison in the smoker,
-conceived something for the man that
-had been close to liking. Somehow, rough
-as the man was; crooked, by all the
-signs; the tool of Rook and of his minions,
-he had the blue eye of a fighter—the
-straight, level look of a man who,
-though an enemy, would yet fight fair.</p>
-
-<p>Annister, breathing heavily, thrust
-out his hand.</p>
-
-<p>“A draw, ha?” he said. “Well—suppose
-we let it go at that.”</p>
-
-<p>For a moment Ellison appeared to
-hesitate; there came again the queer look
-in his eyes, as of surprise, wonder, and
-a something more. There came a grating
-curse from Lunn; a sudden movement
-from the onlookers roundabout.</p>
-
-<p>Ellison’s great paw closed on the extended
-hand with a grip of iron, as
-Rook’s voice rose, strident, under the
-lights:</p>
-
-<p>“Bull—are you crazy? This man—he’s
-just—a dam’ <i>dick</i>!”</p>
-
-<h3><i>CHAPTER TEN</i><br>
-“IN THE NAME OF THE LAW!”</h3>
-
-<p>It was out. Rook, his hand in a
-lightning stab for Annister’s coat,
-turned over the lapel, holding it forward
-for all to see.</p>
-
-<p>On it was a small gold badge—the
-symbol of the Secret Service. The
-secret was a secret no longer.</p>
-
-<p>How long Rook had known of it
-Annister could not be certain, but now,
-at the growling chorus of swift hate, he
-whirled. His pistol came up and out,
-as there came a startling interruption,
-or rather, two.</p>
-
-<p>He heard Ellison’s voice, roaring in
-the narrow room:</p>
-
-<p>“Hell’s bells, young fellow, I’m with
-you, and you can lay to that! For this
-once, anyway! You sure can handle
-yourself!”</p>
-
-<p>He turned to Rook and the rest.
-“Now—you bums, get goin’! Dick or
-no dick, I’ll play this hand as she lays.
-Get goin’!”</p>
-
-<p>The great hand, holding a heavy Colt,
-swung upward on a line with Annister’s
-as the door burst inward with a crash;
-and, framed in the opening, there
-showed on a sudden the flaming thatch
-of the bartender, Del Kane.</p>
-
-<p>His cowboy yell echoed throughout
-the room, eyes blazing upon the hotel
-man where he sat.</p>
-
-<p>In two strides, he had joined Annister
-and Bull; guns on a line, the three
-fronted the five who faced them, silent,
-tense. Kane’s voice came clear:</p>
-
-<p>“I followed you, Mr. Annister;
-thought they’d try t’ run a whizzer on
-yuh; I’m pullin’ m’ freight after today,
-anyway; Mister Lunn can have his job,
-an’ welcome! Now—I ben keepin’ cases
-on Mister Rook, he’s a curly wolf, ain’t
-you, Rook? A real bad hombre, an’ you
-can lay to that! But he ain’t goin’
-northwest of nothin’, he ain’t.... Now,
-you dam’ short-horns, show some
-speed!”</p>
-
-<p>But there was no fight in Rook, Lunn
-and Company. Glowering, their hands
-in plain sight, weaponless, they sat in a
-sullen silence, as Annister, backing to
-the doorway, was followed by Ellison
-and Kane. Outside, under pale stars,
-the giant spoke:</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t aim to be too all-fired honest,
-Mister Annister,” he said. “I throwed
-in with Mister Rook, that’s so, but he’s
-played it both ends against the middle
-with me, I guess.... I reckon I’ll be
-movin’ out o’ Dry Bone in two—three
-hours.”</p>
-
-<p>He grinned, wryly, out of the corner
-of his mouth.</p>
-
-<p>“You sure pack a hefty wallop, young
-fellow! I wish I could tell you somethin’,
-but that man Rook, he’s as close-mouthed
-as an Indian, and that’s whatever! His
-game—nobody knows what it is—Lunn,
-maybe—but they sure got a strangle-hold
-on th’ county; it won’t be healthy
-for me here after tonight.”</p>
-
-<p>The three men separated at the hotel,
-Annister entering the lobby with a curious
-depression that abruptly deepened to
-a sudden, crawling fear as a call-boy
-brought him a note. The fear was not
-for himself, but for another, for, although
-he had never seen the handwriting
-before, he knew it upon the instant.</p>
-
-<p>Ripping open the envelope with fingers
-that trembled, he read, and at what he
-saw his face paled slowly to a mottled,
-unhealthy gray:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“<i>Partner</i>:</p>
-
-<p>“<i>If you get this in time, please
-hurry. I’m in the toils, at Dr. Elphinstone’s—it’s
-the stone house at
-the right of the road leading north
-from Dry Bone—twenty miles, I
-think. I’ve bribed a man to take
-this to you, and if he fails me, God
-help me!—God help us all! If you
-fail me, you’ll never see me again—as
-Mary Allerton, because the
-Devil’s in charge here, and they
-call him the Jailer of Souls. I’ll be
-watching for you, at the south window—you’ll
-know it by the red ribbon
-on the bars. And now—be
-careful. If you get here at night
-beware of the guards—there are
-three. And if it’s night there’ll be
-a rope hanging from the window—you
-can feel for it in the dark. Now
-hurry.</i></p>
-
-<p class="right">“<i>MARY ALLERTON (No. 33).</i>”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>“<i>You’ll never see me again—as Mary
-Allerton.</i>” Annister was aware again of
-that crawling fear. “<i>The red ribbon on
-the bars.</i>” The place was in effect a
-prison, then.</p>
-
-<p>But—“<i>No. 33</i>”! Annister’s heart
-leaped up. He knew the meaning of
-those numerals well enough; he had been
-blind not to have suspected it. But
-“<i>Dr. Elphinstone</i>,” and “<i>The Jailer of
-Souls</i>!”</p>
-
-<p>Who could be the jailer of souls but
-the Devil? And Annister fancied that
-he had seen the Devil at the corner of
-that street under the moon, with his
-black, forking beard, and the cold eyes
-of death.</p>
-
-<p>The trail was warm now, as he
-thought, but—if he were too late? He<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_45"></a>[45]</span>
-put the thought from him, turning to
-the perusal of a telegram in code which
-he had found waiting for him at the
-desk; translated, it read:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“With you Thursday with four,
-six, twenty-one, and the others.
-Look for thirty-three.</p>
-
-<p class="right">“CHILDERS.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>But there was no time to be lost.
-Thursday was tomorrow. He would
-have to take his chance of their finding
-him, for there was nobody whom he
-could trust. Ellison had gone, even if
-he might have chanced the giant in so
-delicate a matter; Del Kane, likewise.
-He must take his chance. Striding to
-the door, he stiffened abruptly at a
-drumming rap, and a hoarse voice in the
-corridor without:</p>
-
-<p>“Open up in there; open up!”</p>
-
-<p>Annister, a pulse in his temple beating
-to his hard-held breath, jerked back the
-door, to face—</p>
-
-<p>Bristow, behind him three men whom
-he recognized as hangers-on at the hotel
-bar. They had something of the look of
-long-riders, villainous, hard-bitten; as
-one man, they grinned now, but without
-mirth, as the sheriff spoke:</p>
-
-<p>“Annister—I arrest you for the murder
-of Tucson Charlie Westervelt and
-Bartley Pattison. In th’ name of th’
-Law!”</p>
-
-<p>Annister knew that if he resisted they
-would shoot him down; in fact, he knew,
-too, that was what they wanted; it
-would be the easiest way. Under the
-menace of the guns, he spread his hands,
-palms downward, preceding the four
-men down the stairs outward to the jail.</p>
-
-<p>But as the heavy door clanged shut
-behind him, Annister, his gaze in a
-sightless staring into the north, groaned,
-in bitterness of spirit.</p>
-
-<p>Mary was needing him: she was in
-peril, the greater because it was unknown—and—he
-would not be there.</p>
-
-<h3><i>CHAPTER ELEVEN</i><br>
-THE HOUSE OF FEAR</h3>
-
-<p>A house of silence, broken at
-times by a weird wailing as from the
-Pit; a house of dreams, gray in the
-moonlight, under the leprous-silvered
-finger of the moon, brooding now, a
-grim, gray fortress of the damned: the
-stronghold of the Beast.</p>
-
-<p>Dense pines grew about it, so that
-when the wind wailed among them, like
-the wailing of a lost soul, it met and
-mingled with an eerie ululation rising as
-if muffled by many thicknesses of walls,
-to end, after a little, with a quick shriek
-and a sudden hush, with, after a moment,
-the faint echo of a taunting
-laugh.</p>
-
-<p>That laugh would have struck terror
-to the swart soul of a lucivee, if lucivees
-have souls, for it was like an eldritch
-howling, faint and thin; like the thin,
-tinkling laughter of a fiend, without pity
-and without ruth.</p>
-
-<p>Here, in the sanitarium of Doctor Elphinstone,
-there were secrets within secrets,
-walls within walls, downward, as
-in Dante’s Seventh Hell, and from this
-monastery of the hopeless there penetrated,
-on occasion, outward from its
-battlemented walls, wild, frantic laughter,
-but there was nothing demoniac
-about it, because it was the laughter of
-the insane.</p>
-
-<p>But that other laughter, like a sound
-heard in dreams—passers-by, if there
-were any such, hearing it, would shudder,
-and pass on. For the secret of that
-house of doom was a secret, terrible and
-grim; a secret, for him who might have
-guessed at it, to be whispered behind
-locked doors and with bated breath. And
-there had been those who had whispered
-of the lost souls within those walls, and
-the whisper ran that they were, indeed,
-madmen who had not been always mad,
-because—they had become such <i>after</i>
-their commitment to the bleak house
-within the wood.</p>
-
-<p>These were but whispers, merely, for
-the power upon that house was not alone
-the power of Evil, rising like a dark
-tide among the pines; for in Dry Bone,
-and beyond it, in Palos Verde and Mojave,
-it was rumored that the strong arm
-of the Law upheld it, or such law, say,
-as might have issued from the devious
-hand of Hamilton Rook.</p>
-
-<p>Once—and it was never repeated—a
-man had come there from the capital; he
-had demanded to see the doctor’s patients;
-that had been a long time in the
-past.</p>
-
-<p>And as the investigator had stood
-there, viewing with a faint, creeping
-horror the nondescripts paraded before
-him, gibbering, mouthing, in an inarticulate,
-furious babble, a man had burst
-suddenly from the line with a strangled
-cry:</p>
-
-<p>“Jerry—don’t you know me? I’m
-Humiston—Newbold....”</p>
-
-<p>The voice had been the voice of Humiston,
-but the face—it had been the face
-of another, totally unlike; there had been
-no possible resemblance. But the man
-had been—<i>sane</i>. The investigator was
-persuaded of that; suffering under a peculiar
-delusion, indeed, but sane.</p>
-
-<p>The man had rushed forward then,
-baring his arm; and there, on that thin,
-pitiful flesh that had once been healthy
-and hard, there ran a curious design in
-red; the investigator sucked in his
-breath as that tell-tale birth-mark
-sprang, livid, under his gaze. For he
-had seen it before.</p>
-
-<p>The doctor’s eyes had narrowed to
-slits; somehow, the man from the capital
-had gained the impression that it was
-the first time that he had seen that mark.
-But the investigator could do nothing.
-Birth-marks can be duplicated. He had
-waited then, in a curious indecision as
-the bearded doctor had interposed a
-suave:</p>
-
-<p>“Well, of course, Commissioner, you’re
-quite aware, or you should be, how it is:
-these paranoiacs are noted for their delusions—ah—megalocephalic
-tendencies,
-I should say.... They believe themselves
-to be—someone else, and always
-a bank president, say, a famous actor, an
-author, a great general.... Now—Mr.
-Humiston—you knew him, I believe?”
-Beneath the silken tone there ran suddenly
-a hint of iron, of menace, veiled
-but actual; the investigator felt it.
-“This patient knew your name, of
-course,” the suave voice had continued.
-“Poor fellow—we must be gentle with
-him.”</p>
-
-<p>And there the matter had ended.
-Curiously enough, the man who had
-claimed to be Banker Humiston had, after
-that first burst of frenzied speech, kept
-silent. Perhaps that mordant gleaming
-in the doctor’s eyes had telegraphed a
-warning, a message, a command.</p>
-
-<p>But the investigator went home, oddly
-shaken, to dream, like Pilate’s wife, of
-a white face with staring eyes which
-changed, even as he gazed, into the face
-of his friend, Newbold Humiston; to
-hear, even in his dream, a voice, and it
-was the voice of the living, and of the
-dead.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb">
-
-<p>In a bare cell, six feet by six—a
-cubicle in which there was barely
-sufficient head room for a tall man to
-stand upright—a figure stood with its
-hands clenched upon the bars, staring
-outward at the grim wood visible to the
-south.</p>
-
-<p>Travis Annister had abode here in this
-living tomb three weeks now, three centuries,
-in which, as in a nightmare of
-cold horror, he had been aware merely
-of a face, three-pointed, bearded, the
-eyes active with a malign intelligence,
-the lips smiling always with the cold
-smile of death.</p>
-
-<p>Twice a day the small panel in his
-cell door had slid backward without
-sound, to frame, in the opening, the face
-of Dr. Elphinstone, like a face without
-a body, and without a soul.</p>
-
-<p>The father of Black Steve Annister
-knew that it was not a dream that would<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_46"></a>[46]</span>
-pass, because, on the second day, the
-head had spoken. Travis Annister was
-scarcely a coward; he had fought like a
-baited grizzly when surprised in his
-Summer camp by the men who had
-brought him, under cover of the night, to
-this prison-house beyond the pale.</p>
-
-<p>Now, at the voice, like the slow drip
-of an acid, Annister stared straight before
-him, with the gaze of a man who has
-abandoned hope.</p>
-
-<p>“My dear Mr. Annister,” the voice
-had whispered, “the little matter of that
-check, if you please.... You will make
-it out to ‘Cash’.... Ah, that is good; I
-perceive you are—wise.”</p>
-
-<p>It had not been the pistol in the lean,
-clawlike hand; nor the eyes, even, brooding
-upon him with the impersonal, cold
-staring of a cobra; Travis Annister
-might have refused if it had not been
-for those sounds that he had heard, the
-sights that he had seen when, taken at
-midnight from his cubicle, he had beheld
-the administration of the Cone.</p>
-
-<p>And, like Macbeth, with that one sight,
-and the sight of that which came after,
-he had “supped full of horrors,” until
-now, at the bidding of that toneless
-voice, he had obeyed. Three times thereafter,
-at the command of his dark jailer,
-he had paid tribute, nor had he been, of
-all that lost battalion, the single victim;
-there had been others....</p>
-
-<p>Now, separated from him scarce a
-dozen feet, a girl with golden hair sat,
-huddled, eyes in a sightless staring upon
-the stone floor of her cell. Cleo Ridgley
-had not been killed; she had been
-saved for a fate—beside which death
-would be a little thing—a fate unspeakable,
-even as had—Number Thirty-three.</p>
-
-<p>Mary Allerton, removed from the others
-by a narrow corridor running cross-wise
-in the cell-block, watched and waited
-now for the signal of the man to
-whom she had dispatched that message,
-it seemed, a century in the past.</p>
-
-<p>That morning they had found the
-rope; they had removed it without comment,
-while the ophidian gaze of the
-dark Doctor had been bent upon her with
-what she fancied had been a queer, speculative
-look: a look of anticipation, and
-of something more. So far she had been
-treated decently enough; her cell was
-wide and airy, plainly but comfortably
-furnished; but as to that look in the
-gray-green eyes of the Master of Black
-Magic—she was not so sure.</p>
-
-<p>There came a sudden movement in the
-corridor without; a panting, a snuffling,
-and the quick <i>pad-pad</i> of marching feet.
-Mary, her eye to the keyhole of that
-door, could see but dimly; she made
-out merely the sheeted figures, like grim,
-gliding ghosts; the figure, rigid, on the
-stretcher, moving, silent, on its rubber-tired
-wheels. Then, at an odor stealing
-inward through the key-hole, she recoiled.</p>
-
-<p>That perfume had been sickish-sweet,
-overpowering, dense and yet sharp with
-a faint, acrid sweetness; the odor of
-ether. And then, although she could not
-see it, a man in the next cell had risen,
-white-faced, from his cot, to sink back
-limply as the dark hand, holding that
-inverted cone, had swept downward to
-his face.</p>
-
-<p>A choked gurgle, a strangled, sharp
-cry, penetrating outward in a vague
-shadow of clamor—and then silence,
-with the faint whisper of the wind
-among the pines, the brool of the rushing
-river, the faint, half-audible footfalls
-passing and repassing in that corridor
-of the dead.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb">
-
-<p>Travis Annister sprang to his
-feet as the narrow door swung open
-to press backward against the window-bars
-as the High-Priest of Horror, followed
-by his familiars, cowled and hooded,
-entered with a slow, silent step. The
-Doctor spoke, and his voice was like a
-chill wind:</p>
-
-<p>“My friend, I bring you—forgetfulness....
-A brief Lethe of hours....
-And then—ah, then, you will be a <i>new</i>
-man, a man re-born, my friend....
-Now....”</p>
-
-<p>Annister, his face gray with a sort of
-hideous strain, stared silent, white-lipped,
-as, at a low-voiced order, the attendants
-came forward.</p>
-
-<p>The lean hand reached forward; it
-poised, darted, swooped; and in it was
-the Cone.</p>
-
-<h3><i>CHAPTER TWELVE</i><br>
-CASTLE DANGEROUS</h3>
-
-<p>Alone in his cell beneath the
-court-house, Black Steve Annister
-sat in silence, gazing northward through
-the barred window to where, invisible in
-the thick darkness just across the street,
-the road ran, straight as an arrow from
-the bow, to that dark forest brooding in
-a changeless silence where lay the House
-of Fear.</p>
-
-<p>Childers would have had his wire long
-since; but by the time that help could
-come it would be—too late. Annister,
-fatalistic after a fashion, felt this to be
-the fact even as he hoped against hope.</p>
-
-<p>But they were many, and he was but
-one. Tomorrow—it would be too late.</p>
-
-<p>Head bowed in his hands, oblivious,
-at first he had heard it as a thin whisper,
-like a knife blade against the silence; it
-penetrated inward now, with the dull
-rasp of metal upon metal from without:</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Sit tight, old-timer; I’m comin’
-through!</i>”</p>
-
-<p>There came a muffled thud, a twist;
-Annister, reaching forth a hand, found
-it clasped in thick groping fingers. Then,
-as he thrust head and shoulders through
-the sundered bars, a Shadow uprose,
-gigantic, against the stars; the voice
-came again, in a quick, rumbling whisper:</p>
-
-<p>“It’s me, old-timer—<i>Bull</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>Annister, crawling through the opening,
-alighted upon soft turf. He heard
-Ellison’s low chuckle as, following the
-giant, he passed along the lee of the
-building to where, showing merely as a
-black blot against the night, there stood
-an automobile, its engine just turning
-over, with the low, even purr of harnessed
-power; at twenty paces it was
-scarcely audible above the rising of the
-wind.</p>
-
-<p>“Tank’s full,” said Ellison. “Now—”</p>
-
-<p>He turned abruptly as a dim figure
-rose upward just beyond. For a moment
-Annister set himself for the onslaught;
-then his hand went out; it
-gripped the hard hand of Del Kane.</p>
-
-<p>“Ellison done told me, Mr. Annister,”
-he said. “An’ so I come a-fannin’
-an’ a-foggin’ thisaway from Mojave;
-certain-sure I don’t aim to leave no
-friend of mine hog-tied in no calaboose!”</p>
-
-<p>Annister, his heart warming to these
-friends, debated with himself; then
-turned to Ellison with a sudden movement.</p>
-
-<p>“Bull,” he said. “I’m putting my cards
-on the table with you and Del, here.”</p>
-
-<p>He told them briefly of the message
-from Mary, the need of haste; then, of
-his mission, and of the help that was
-even now due, or would be, with the
-morning. If they were coming with him,
-northward along that road of peril,
-word must be left behind.</p>
-
-<p>Kane thought a moment; then, wheeling
-swiftly, with muttered word, he disappeared
-in the darkness, to return
-presently with the good news that he had
-fixed it with the station-agent. The latter
-had just come on; he was a friend
-of Kane’s, and no friend of Rook and
-Company; he would see to it, Kane said,
-that the reinforcements would be
-warned.</p>
-
-<p>Boarding the car, they swung out cautiously
-along the silent street, under the
-pale stars, northward along that shadowy
-road. Presently there would be a
-moon, but just now they went onward
-in a thick darkness, with, just ahead,
-the dim loom of the road, flowing backward
-under the wheels, which presently
-ran like a ribbon of pale flame under
-the bright beam of the lights.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_47"></a>[47]</span></p>
-
-<p>A half mile from the town, and Bull,
-who was driving, opened up, and the
-car leaped forward with the rising drone
-of the powerful motor, thirty, forty, fifty
-miles an hour; the wind of their passage
-drove backward like a wall as the
-giant’s voice came now in a rumbling
-laugh:</p>
-
-<p>“Some little speed-wagon, Mr. Annister,
-ha?” he said. “An’ that’s whatever!
-It ought to be. The man who owns it—who
-<i>did</i> own it half an hour ago—he’s
-some particular, I’ll say! Because—it’s
-Mister Hamilton Rook’s!”</p>
-
-<p>Annister laughed grimly in answer,
-speaking a low word of caution as, after
-perhaps a half hour of their racing onrush
-the lights glimmered on dark trees
-to right and left.</p>
-
-<p>“Somewhere about here, I think,” he
-said, low. “Three outside guards, I
-understand. We’d better stop a little
-way this side, Bull ... that’s it.
-Now, look!”</p>
-
-<p>As the big car slid slowly to a halt,
-the moon, rising above the trees, showed
-them, perhaps a hundred yards just
-ahead, a low, rambling, stone house, its
-windows like blind eyes to the night.
-Upon its roof the moonlight lay like
-snow, and even at that distance it was
-sinister, forbidding, as if the evil that
-was within had seeped through those
-stones, outward, in a creeping tide.</p>
-
-<p>“Looks like a morgue,” offered Ellison,
-with a shrug of his great shoulders,
-as the three, alighting, pushed the car
-before them into the wood.</p>
-
-<p>Then, guns out, they went forward
-slowly among the trees.</p>
-
-<p>Annister had formed no definite plan
-of attack. The red ribbon at that window-bar
-might or might not be visible
-under the moon, but, the guards eliminated,
-it seemed to him that, after all,
-they would have to make it an assault
-in force. Pondering this matter, of a
-sudden he leaped sidewise as a dim figure
-rose upward almost in his face.</p>
-
-<p>Spread-eagled like a bat against the
-dimness, the figure bulked, huge, against
-the moon as Annister, bending to one
-side, brought up his fist in a lifting
-punch, from his shoe-tops.</p>
-
-<p>It was a savage blow; it landed with
-the sound of a butcher’s cleaver on the
-chopping-block; there came a gasping
-grunt; the thud of a heavy body, as the
-guard went downward without a sound.</p>
-
-<p>“One!” breathed Ellison, as, trussing
-their victim with a length of stout line
-brought from the car, they left him,
-going forward carefully, keeping together,
-circling the house.</p>
-
-<p>But it was not until they were half
-way round it, with, so far, no sign of
-that signal for which he looked, that
-they encountered the second guard.</p>
-
-<p>He came upon them with a swift, silent
-onrush, leaping among the trees, a
-great, dun shape, spectral under the
-moon, fangs bared, as, without a sound,
-the hound drove straight for the giant’s
-throat.</p>
-
-<p>A shot would bring discovery; they
-dared not risk it. Annister could see the
-great head, the wide ruff at the neck,
-the grinning jaws.... Then, the giant’s
-hands had gone up and out; there came
-a straining heave, a wrench, a queer,
-whistling croak; Ellison, rising from his
-knees, looked downward a moment to
-where the beast, its jaw broken by that
-mighty strength, lay stretched, lifeless,
-at his feet.</p>
-
-<p>By now they had come full circle,
-when, all at once, Annister, peering under
-his hand, sucked in his breath with
-a whispered oath.</p>
-
-<p>Fair against the bars of a window,
-low down at their right, there was a dark
-smudge; the ribbon, black under the
-moon. Annister’s heart leaped up in
-answer, as, with a quick word, he halted
-his companions in the shadow of a tree.
-A moment they conferred; then Ellison—and
-Annister could almost see his grin
-in the darkness—spoke beneath his hand:</p>
-
-<p>“Why, that’ll be easy! I’ve got m’
-tools; they’re right here in my pocket,
-Mr. Annister! Those bars ought to be
-easy! For a fair journeyman sledge-swinger,
-it’ll be easy an’ you can lay to
-that!”</p>
-
-<p>“Good!” whispered Annister in answer.
-“But—hurry!”</p>
-
-<p>The moonlight lay in a molten flood
-between them and the house. But it was
-no time now for deliberation. Crossing
-that bright strip at a crouching run, the
-three were at the window; Annister’s
-harsh whisper hissed in the silence,
-through those iron bars:</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Mary!</i>”</p>
-
-<p>For a heart-beat silence answered him;
-then, faint and thin, in a faint, tremulous,
-sobbing breath, there came the
-answer:</p>
-
-<p>“Steve—thank God!”</p>
-
-<p>Annister had spoken the girl’s name
-without thought. At that high moment
-forms had been futile; that whisper had
-been wrung from him, deep-down, as
-had her answer. And then the soft rasp
-of steel on steel told that Ellison was at
-work.</p>
-
-<p>But the giant was working against
-time. At any moment now might come
-the alarm; they had no means of knowing
-the number of those within those
-walls; perhaps even now peril, just behind,
-might be stalking them, out of the
-dark.</p>
-
-<p>And still that soft rasp went on, until,
-at a low word from the girl, the giant,
-laying down his file, bent, heaved, putting
-his shoulder into it; and the bars
-sprang outward, bent and twisted in
-that iron grasp.</p>
-
-<p>Annister, his hand reaching for the
-hand of the girl, went inward silently,
-to stand a moment, without speech, in
-the thick darkness of the little cell. But
-it was no time for dalliance.</p>
-
-<p>Kane and Ellison behind him now, he
-set his shoulder against the door, as,
-Ellison aiding, it splintered outward
-with a soft, carrying crash. Ahead of
-them, along a dark, narrow corridor,
-there had come on a sudden sound of
-voices, murmurs; Annister, going toward
-that sound, saw suddenly an open
-door; light streamed from it as the murmur
-of voices rose:</p>
-
-<p>“My friend, I bring you—forgetfulness....”</p>
-
-<p>The words came in a sort of hissing
-sibilance as Annister, reaching that
-doorway, halted a moment as the tableau
-was burned into his brain:</p>
-
-<p>He saw his father, helpless, his face
-gray with the hideous terror of that
-which was upon him, in the grasp of two
-cloaked and hooded figures, their dark
-faces grinning with a bestial mirth.</p>
-
-<p>And before him, hand upraised and
-holding a curious, funnel-shaped object
-at which the man in the corner shrank
-backward even as he looked, he saw a
-tall man with a black, forking beard—the
-same that he had seen that evening
-at the corner of the street; the same that
-he had seen in that dim backwater of
-Rangoon, the Unspeakable—the man
-with the dark, foreign visage, and the
-eyes of death.</p>
-
-<h3><i>CHAPTER THIRTEEN</i><br>
-THE JAILER OF SOULS</h3>
-
-<p>Annister’s gun went up and out
-as the black-bearded man, turning,
-saw him where he stood.</p>
-
-<p>Travis Annister, parchment-pale, took
-two forward, lurching steps, as the doctor,
-backing stiffly against the wall,
-hands upraised, called something in a
-high sing-song, savage, inarticulate.</p>
-
-<p>Then—everything seemed to happen
-at once. A snarling, animal outcry
-echoed from the passage just without; it
-rose, as there came a far, gobbling mutter
-of voices, and the <i>pad-pad</i> of running
-feet.</p>
-
-<p>The hooded Familiars, as one man,
-turned, and the long knives flashed, luminous,
-under the lights, as Kane and
-Ellison, meeting them half way, raised
-their heavy guns.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_48"></a>[48]</span></p>
-
-<p>Annister, covering the Doctor, froze
-suddenly in motion as that gobbling horror
-mounted, and then, filling that narrow
-way like figures in a dream, they
-came: the outcasts, the lost battalion,
-the Men Who Had no Right to Live.</p>
-
-<p>In their van, but running rather as
-if pursued than as if in answer to that
-snarling call, there came three men,
-guards by their dress, their faces contorted,
-agonized, upon them the impress
-of a crawling fear. They streamed past
-that door, pursuers and pursued, as
-Black Steve Annister, finger upon the
-trigger of his pistol, saw that lean hand
-sweep upward; it flicked the thin lips;
-the dark face grayed, went blank; the
-Dark Doctor, his gaze in a queer, frozen
-look upon Eternity, pitched forward
-upon his face.</p>
-
-<p>In some way, as Annister could understand,
-the madmen had won free,
-but—how?</p>
-
-<p>Turning, he saw a white face at his
-elbow as there sounded from without the
-staccato explosions of a motor, and a
-swift, hammering thunder upon the
-great door.</p>
-
-<p>“I am—Newbold Humiston,” said the
-face, “and I am not mad, or, rather, I
-am but mad north-north-west when the
-wind is southerly,” he quoted, with a
-ghastly smile. “This devil—” he pointed
-to the body of Elphinstone—“has gone
-to his own place, but the evil that he did
-lives after him—in <i>us</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>His voice rose to a shriek as there came
-a rush of feet along the corridor: a compact
-body of men, at their head a tall
-man at sight of whom Stephen Annister
-flung up a hand.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, Childers,” he said. “I’m
-glad!”</p>
-
-<p>Childers spoke pantingly, in quick
-gasps:</p>
-
-<p>“We just made it, old man,” he said.
-“A day ahead at that. The station agent
-put us on the track. We got ’em all—Lunn,
-and the rest; all but Rook—”</p>
-
-<p>He paused, at Annister’s inquiring
-look, turning his thumb down with an expressive
-gesture.</p>
-
-<p>“We found him—strangled—in his
-office ... a queer business....”</p>
-
-<p>Annister gave an exclamation.</p>
-
-<p>“The Indian!” he said. “Well, Rook
-was the ‘Third Light,’ sure enough!”</p>
-
-<p>Again he was seeing the lean, avid
-face in the vestibule of the smoker, the
-lighted match; himself, and the conductor,
-and Rook, the lawyer’s pale eyes
-brooding above the glowing end of his
-cigarette.... And again, as the picture
-passed, he was aware of the white face
-at his elbow as Mary Allerton, her hand
-in his, behind her the golden hair and
-the wide eyes of Cleo Ridgley, turned
-to Childers with a smile that yet had in
-it a hint of tears.</p>
-
-<p>He that had been Newbold Humiston
-continued:</p>
-
-<p>“The others—they’re quiet now. The
-guards have gone—to follow <i>him</i>—the
-others saw to that.”</p>
-
-<p>He gestured toward the silent figure on
-the floor.</p>
-
-<p>“His plan was worthy of his master,
-the Devil, because it was diabolically
-simple: Rook was his procurer and his
-clearing-house; you see, Rook found the
-victims, and cashed the checks that Elphinstone
-wrung from them; and then,
-when they had cleaned up, or when they
-deemed the time was ripe, the victims—disappeared.
-Rook’s secretary they kidnapped
-for revenge; Miss Allerton because
-she knew much; they suspected
-that she was in the Secret Service. And
-so—these others disappeared.”</p>
-
-<p>He laughed; the laugh of a dead man
-risen from the tomb.</p>
-
-<p>“They disappeared—yes—but—they
-remained, as you see—myself—a living
-ghost!”</p>
-
-<p>“But how?” asked the younger Annister,
-in the sudden quiet, the realization
-of what his father and Mary had
-escaped burning like a quick fire in his
-veins. The toneless voice went on:</p>
-
-<p>“Elphinstone was a surgeon, a master....
-You’ve heard of Dermatology?
-Well, it’s been done in India, I believe;
-practiced there to an extent unknown
-here, of course. An anesthetic, and
-then an operation: new faces for old,
-forged faces; the thing was diabolically
-simple. And so when they, the victims,
-saw themselves in a mirror, sometimes
-they went mad, for who could prove it?
-Who would be believed?”</p>
-
-<p>His voice rose, died, gathered
-strength, as a candle flames at the last
-with a brief spark of life:</p>
-
-<p>“It’s done,” he muttered. “He’s
-gone—but his work lives after him, even
-as he called himself—the Jailer of
-Souls!”</p>
-
-<h3>THE END.</h3>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">Editor Baffled by Weird Seance</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s lecture tours in the
-United States have created wide discussion and considerable
-difference of opinion, some persons contending that
-he is really in communication with the spirit world, while
-others declare that he is the victim of tricksters. In order
-to conduct an impartial investigation, J. Malcolm Bird, associate
-editor of The Scientific American, attended several of
-Sir Arthur’s seances, and afterward declared that he had
-observed psychic phenomena that could hardly be explained
-by any known natural cause. He could discover no physical
-connection between the medium or the spectators and the
-phenomena, and he saw mysterious self-luminous lights,
-attributed by Sir Arthur to ectoplasm, and heard strange
-noises that defied his efforts to establish a natural cause.</p>
-
-<p>“My best judgment would be that both in direction and
-subject matter much of the ‘communicated’ material of the
-seance would be quite beyond the normal ability of the medium,”
-he said. “The seance entered a phase which seems
-to me to prove, without question, that telepathy or some
-other force with intelligence behind it was at work.</p>
-
-<p>“The trumpet began to talk, loudly and distinctly and
-coherently, in a voice that had not yet been heard....
-It was not ordinary ventriloquism, because the ventriloquist
-cannot work in the dark. He doesn’t deceive your ears, but
-rather your eyes, by directing your attention to the point
-whence he wishes you to infer that the sound came. The
-voice really came from the center of the circle.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_49"></a>[49]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="JACK_O_MYSTERY">JACK O’ MYSTERY</h2>
-
-<p class="center larger"><i>A Modern Ghost Story</i></p>
-
-<p class="center larger"><i>By</i> EDWIN MacLAREN</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The limousine came to a
-glistening stop before an office
-building in Monroe Street, and a
-handsome woman of thirty, expensively
-and stylishly gowned, emerged from the
-car and entered the building, her mien
-bespeaking nervousness.</p>
-
-<p>Furtively, as one who fears pursuit,
-she hastened across the marble rotunda,
-edged hurriedly into an elevator and
-ascended to the ninth floor, where she
-approached a door bearing upon its
-opaque glass panel the gilt lettering:</p>
-
-<p class="center">BARRY DETECTIVE AGENCY</p>
-
-<p>She paused here for a moment, in an
-effort to recover her equanimity; and
-then, with a brave assumption of self-assurance,
-she opened the door and entered
-the room and closed the door behind
-her.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp71" id="illus4" style="max-width: 35.9375em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/illus4.jpg" alt="">
-</div>
-
-<p>The room was quite deserted; but
-promptly from an adjoining chamber
-there came a lean-faced young man of
-inquiring blue eyes, who courteously
-greeted her.</p>
-
-<p>“Is Mr. Barry in?” she asked. “Mr.
-Herbert Barry?”</p>
-
-<p>“I am Herbert Barry,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh!” Surprised, she eyed the slim
-young man half incredulously. He
-seemed scarcely more than a boy. “Mrs.
-Franklin Parker told me about you—recommended
-you very highly. Perhaps
-that is why,” she added, with a smile,
-“I expected to find an older man....
-I suppose most of the people who come
-to see you are in trouble of some sort.
-<i>I</i> am not in trouble, exactly, but—”
-She glanced around the office. “May I
-have a word with you in privacy?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_50"></a>[50]</span></p>
-
-<p>He held open the door to the adjoining
-room. “Suppose we step in here? My
-stenographer is at lunch. There’s no
-danger of our being disturbed.”</p>
-
-<p>Preceding him into the inner office, she
-bade him lock the door; and, thus assured
-of their safety from interruption,
-she sat nervously on the edge of a chair
-and faced him across the flat-top desk.
-There clung to her, somehow, a subtle
-suggestion of wealth and luxury, and her
-well-chiseled features denoted good
-breeding. Subtle, too, was the delicate
-odor of violets that fragrantly touched
-his nostrils as she leaned toward him
-across the desk. Then he noticed she
-wore a rich cluster of the flowers upon
-her mauve silk waist.</p>
-
-<p>He observed, also, the purplish shadows
-beneath her large brown eyes, her
-half-frightened, half-worried demeanor
-and her air of suppressed excitement, as
-though she were struggling to control
-some inner perturbation.</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps I’ve made a mistake,” she
-began, “in coming here. I don’t know.
-But I’ve been so perplexed, so utterly
-mystified, by some strange things that
-have happened lately—Did you ever
-hear of Willard Clayberg?” she broke
-off suddenly to ask.</p>
-
-<p>Barry knitted his brows. The name
-had a familiar sound.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” he said, after a pause, “I
-seem to remember him. Wasn’t he the
-North Shore millionaire who went insane
-last winter and killed his wife and
-himself?”</p>
-
-<p>She nodded. Her elbows were resting
-on the desk and her slender fingers,
-interlaced beneath her small white chin,
-were twitching.</p>
-
-<p>“Exactly. They lived, as you probably
-recall, in a quaint old-fashioned
-home near Hubbard Woods—just the
-two of them; no children. Following
-the tragedy, the house was closed up and
-for a long while remained unoccupied.
-Despite the scarcity of dwelling places,
-nobody apparently cared to live there.
-For one thing, it is not a modern residence,
-and for another—and this really
-seemed the most serious objection—it
-had acquired a reputation of being
-‘haunted.’</p>
-
-<p>“Of course,” she went on, with a
-nervous little laugh, “you will say—just
-as <i>I</i> said—that such a thing is perfectly
-absurd. You’d think that no normal
-person would take it seriously. And yet
-there were so many strange things told
-about the house—creepy stories of weird
-sounds in the dead of night and unearthly
-things seen through the windows—that
-people, ordinarily level-headed, began
-to shun the place.</p>
-
-<p>“I have never believed in ghosts, Mr.
-Barry, and I’ve always ridiculed people
-who did; but now—Do you know my
-husband, Scott Peyton?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve heard of him,” said Barry.
-“Architect, isn’t he?”</p>
-
-<p>“A very successful one. He has designed
-some of the finest buildings in
-Chicago. But he’s the most superstitious
-man alive! He’s a Southerner, born
-in Georgia, and at childhood his negro
-‘mammy’ filled his mind with all manner
-of silly superstitions, including a deathly
-fear of ‘ha’nts.’ He has never been
-able to overcome this, although both of
-us have tried.</p>
-
-<p>“About three weeks ago,” Mrs. Peyton
-continued, her voice betraying her
-agitation, “he and I were motoring
-along the North Shore when we espied
-this old Clayberg estate. The quaint
-charm of the old-fashioned place at once
-enchanted me; and when we alighted
-and strolled through the grounds my enchantment
-grew. It seemed as if Nature
-had outdone herself in lavishing picturesque
-beauty there. Mr. Peyton was as
-fascinated as I.</p>
-
-<p>“We were planning, at that time, to
-give up our town apartment and buy a
-suburban home; and this seemed to be
-just the thing we were looking for. We
-inquired of the neighbors concerning it,
-and it was then we discovered its tragic
-history. When my husband was told of
-the hideous thing that had happened
-there last winter, and of its evil reputation
-since, his enthusiasm vanished, and
-I immediately saw he would never consider
-buying it.</p>
-
-<p>“But I had set my heart on having
-that place; and later—after I had
-pleaded and argued with him in vain—I
-decided to buy it myself and, by compelling
-him to live there, perhaps cure
-him permanently of his superstitious
-fear. I saw the agent next day, learned
-the old home could be bought at a bargain,
-and had my father buy it and deed
-it to me.</p>
-
-<p>“My husband was furious when I told
-him what I had done. He declared he
-would never enter the house and urged
-me to sell it forthwith. But I was as
-firm as he; and finally, after a rather
-violent argument and by taunting him
-with being a coward, I contrived to get
-his reluctant consent to make our home
-in the ‘haunted house’.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb">
-
-<p>“We moved in last Thursday,”
-said Mrs. Peyton sitting nearer
-the desk and lowering her voice, “and on
-Thursday night, and every night since
-then—” She exhaled audibly, her lip
-quivering.</p>
-
-<p>“What happened?” asked Barry.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s been a nightmare!” she exclaimed
-with sudden vehemence. “Ever
-since that first night the most peculiar
-things have happened. I don’t know
-what to make of it, or what to think, or
-do. It’s baffling! I’m not in the least
-superstitious; and yet—”</p>
-
-<p>“Start at the beginning,” suggested
-Barry, “and tell me exactly what happened.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, the first night we slept in the
-master’s bedroom—a large front room
-on the second floor—and about midnight
-I was awakened by my husband, who
-was sitting up in bed, gasping and trembling
-with terror. Before I could speak,
-he sprang from bed and switched on the
-light and began frantically searching the
-room, looking into the closets and under
-the bed and peering into the hall.</p>
-
-<p>“‘For heaven’s sake!’ I cried.
-‘What’s the matter?’</p>
-
-<p>“He pointed to the corridor door. His
-hand was trembling and his face was as
-white as paper. For a moment he seemed
-unable to speak.</p>
-
-<p>“‘It came right through that door!’
-he said at last. ‘I woke up just as it
-came in the room—a ghastly-looking old
-man with white hair and a long beard.
-It didn’t open the door, but came right
-<i>through</i> it!’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Nonsense!’ I laughed. ‘You’ve
-been thinking about ghosts until you
-imagine you’re seeing them. Now come
-back to bed and go to sleep.’</p>
-
-<p>“But he indignantly insisted he had
-actually seen the thing.</p>
-
-<p>“‘I saw it cross the room,’ he declared,
-‘and stop at the bed and stand
-there looking down at me. When I sat
-up it disappeared—vanished into air.’</p>
-
-<p>“I couldn’t believe such a preposterous
-thing, of course, but, to humor him,
-I offered to get up and help him search
-the house.</p>
-
-<p>“‘What good would that do?’ he objected.
-‘I tell you the thing was a
-<i>spirit</i>!’</p>
-
-<p>“Finally he went back to bed. But
-he slept no more that night. At breakfast
-next morning I could see he hadn’t
-closed his eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“On the following night I again was
-awakened by my husband, who seemed
-even more frightened than before.</p>
-
-<p>“‘It came back again!’ he whispered
-hoarsely. ‘It was puttering around
-your desk over there.’</p>
-
-<p>“Then he jumped out of bed and ran
-to the desk and lit the lamp there. A
-moment later he uttered a sharp cry
-and came hurrying back to my bed, with
-a sheet of writing paper in his hand.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Look at that!’ he exclaimed, and
-thrust the paper before my eyes.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_51"></a>[51]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I saw written on the paper, in a
-sprawling hand, the words, ‘<i>Leave this
-House!</i>’ and I knew then that somebody
-had been in the room.</p>
-
-<p>“I got up and tried the door. It was
-still locked and the key was in the hole,
-just as I had left it. The windows
-hadn’t been touched, apparently. How,
-then, had the person entered our room?</p>
-
-<p>“My husband, of course, insisted it
-was not a living being, but a ghost, who
-could pass through a locked door as
-though it didn’t exist. And, as before,
-he refused to look for it.</p>
-
-<p>“Next day, however, with our cook
-and houseman, I thoroughly searched
-the house from top to bottom—and
-found nothing. No trace of anybody
-having entered the house. Nothing
-wrong anywhere.</p>
-
-<p>“On Saturday night I was awakened
-again—this time by a frantic knocking
-on our bedroom door. I sat up, startled.
-My husband was sleeping soundly, exhausted
-after two sleepless nights.</p>
-
-<p>“I slipped quietly from bed, without
-disturbing him, and tiptoed to the door
-and whispered through the panel:</p>
-
-<p>“‘Who’s there?’</p>
-
-<p>“The cook’s voice answered, and I
-could tell by her tone she was terribly
-frightened:</p>
-
-<p>“‘It’s me, ma’am. I’m leavin’ this
-house tonight. I won’t stay here another
-minute!’</p>
-
-<p>“I opened the door and stepped out
-in the hall—taking care not to awake Mr.
-Peyton—and found Clara fully dressed
-and holding her traveling-bag. It was
-evident she had dressed in considerable
-haste, and it was equally plain that she
-was almost paralyzed with fear.</p>
-
-<p>“‘I just seen a spook!’ she gasped.
-‘An old man with white hair and
-whiskers. He come right in my room
-while I was asleep. I woke up and seen
-’im. And he writ somethin’ on my
-dresser. You c’n see for yerself, ma’am,
-what he writ there.’</p>
-
-<hr class="tb">
-
-<p>“Fearful of awakening my husband,
-I had drawn her away from
-the bedroom door; and now, with some
-difficulty, I persuaded her to follow me
-to her room, where I found, written in
-white chalk across the bureau mirror,
-the command: ‘<i>Leave here at once!</i>’</p>
-
-<p>“Clara was determined to obey this
-‘message from the dead’ by leaving instantly.
-I couldn’t induce her even to
-stay until morning. Despite my protests
-and entreaties, she fled from the house
-and passed the remainder of the night,
-as I later discovered, in the Hubbard
-Woods railroad station, taking an early
-train for Chicago.</p>
-
-<p>“I tried to keep the occurrence from
-my husband, inventing an excuse for
-Clara’s hasty departure, but he wormed
-the truth from me, and of course that
-further harassed his already overwrought
-nerves. Also, it gave him the
-right to say, ‘I told you so!’</p>
-
-<p>“He renewed his pleading to abandon
-the house; but I still refused to give it
-up—still refused to admit that it was
-‘haunted,’ or that there was anything
-supernatural in what he and Clara had
-seen.</p>
-
-<p>“It didn’t end there, unhappily. On
-the very next night—that was night before
-last—the houseman was visited by
-the mysterious ‘thing.’ He said he saw
-it in his room, after midnight, stooping
-over his table, that he shouted at it and
-it disappeared. Then, so he told us, he
-got up and struck a light and discovered
-the ‘ghost’ had been trying to send a
-message to him by arranging some
-matches on the table.</p>
-
-<p>“He showed us these matches, saying
-he had left them just as they were found.
-They were so placed as to spell the word,
-‘<i>LEAVE</i>,’ in capital letters. Evidently
-the ‘ghost’ was frightened away before
-he could finish his sentence. Needless
-to say, the houseman left us.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, in spite of all these things, I
-simply couldn’t bring myself to believe
-that the mysterious visitations were supernatural.
-I was sure there must be
-some logical explanation. But <i>last</i>
-night—!”</p>
-
-<p>“What happened last night?” asked
-Barry, as Mrs. Peyton paused.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Peyton, still sitting forward in
-her chair, was searching in her reticule.
-Barry noticed her fingers were unsteady
-and that her underlip was caught between
-her teeth to still its quivering.</p>
-
-<p>“Last night,” she went on, with a
-transparent effort at lightness, “<i>I</i> saw
-the ‘ghost’! Please don’t smile! I was
-quite wide awake when I saw it—as wide
-awake as I am this moment—and in full
-possession of all my wits. And I can’t
-understand yet how it got in my room,
-or how it got out, or even what it was.</p>
-
-<p>“I was alone in the house, too,” she
-continued, taking a photograph from the
-reticule and placing it, face down, on
-the desk. “Yesterday afternoon Mr.
-Peyton telephoned from his office that
-he must stay downtown rather late to
-attend a meeting of building contractors
-and suggested that I come in to the city
-for dinner, and bring a friend and ‘take
-in a show,’ and meet him afterward. But
-I wasn’t in the mood and told him I’d
-prefer to stay at home.</p>
-
-<p>“‘But I won’t be home before twelve
-o’clock,’ he said, ‘and I don’t like the
-idea of your being all alone in that house
-at night, without even a servant on the
-place.’</p>
-
-<p>“I reminded him that the chauffeur
-and gardener were still with us (they
-sleep in the garage and hadn’t been
-alarmed by the ‘spook’), and with these
-two and Mitch, our Scotch collie, to
-guard me I felt perfectly safe. As for
-the ‘ghost,’ I laughingly told him, I
-really would enjoy meeting it and having
-a chat on its astral adventures.</p>
-
-<p>“He declined to unbend from his
-seriousness and became irritated when I
-refused to leave the house. We had
-quite a tiff, but I finally had my way,
-and the best he could get was a promise
-from me to lock myself in before going
-to bed. He said he would sleep in one
-of the guest chambers.</p>
-
-<p>“After a pick-up meal in the kitchen,
-I went upstairs to our room and wrote
-letters until ten o’clock. Then I prepared
-for bed.</p>
-
-<p>“For a moment I regretted not having
-done as my husband asked. The
-house <i>did</i> seem eerie; no denying that—big
-and dark and silent, and not a
-living creature in it except myself.</p>
-
-<p>“But I quickly shook off this feeling,
-assuring myself there was no such thing
-as a ghost, and, even if there was, that
-it couldn’t possibly harm me. However,
-remembering my promise, I locked the
-door and put the key under my pillow,
-and bolted all the windows, and, as an
-additional precaution, I looked under
-the bed and inspected both closets. And
-I knew <i>absolutely</i>, when I put out the
-light and got into bed, that I was the
-only person in that room.</p>
-
-<p>“I was soon asleep,” said Mrs. Peyton,
-again feeling in her handbag, “and
-it seemed only a few minutes later—though
-I know now it was several hours—when
-I found myself wide awake. I
-suppose it was the lack of fresh air that
-awoke me. I’m accustomed to sleeping
-with the windows open.</p>
-
-<p>“I was on the point of getting up to
-open a window when, all at once, my
-blood seemed to freeze. I discovered,
-quite suddenly, <i>I was not alone in the
-room</i>!”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb">
-
-<p>Mrs. Peyton paused and drew
-from the handbag a sheet of blue
-linen notepaper. Nervously creasing the
-paper in her slender white fingers, she
-continued, with heightening agitation,
-her large brown eyes earnestly watching
-the detective’s face: “I won’t deny,
-Mr. Berry, that I was frightened. In
-fact, I confess that I was so terrified I
-seemed utterly powerless to move or
-speak. I had always supposed if I ever
-<i>should</i> see a ghost I would feel no fear<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_52"></a>[52]</span>
-whatever. But now that I found myself
-actually looking at one—or at least
-looking at what, in that frightful moment,
-I potently <i>believed</i> to be one—I
-was petrified with terror.</p>
-
-<p>“It was sitting at my desk, right
-where I’d been sitting all evening, and
-its back was toward me. The moon had
-risen and was shining through the
-windows, brightening the room with a
-pale half-light.</p>
-
-<p>“The figure at the desk appeared to
-be writing. In fact, I could hear the
-scratching of the pen. I could also hear
-the ticking of a small clock on the desk.
-That’s how still everything was.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, it sat there writing—a blurred,
-shapeless object in the silvery moonlight—for
-I don’t know how long. It seemed
-an age! And all the time I was conscious—terrifyingly
-so—that I was alone in that great house with it!”</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Peyton paused and took the photograph
-from the desk.</p>
-
-<p>“Instinctively, I tried to scream,” she
-went on, “but my throat was parched
-and I seemed unable to utter a sound.
-However, I must have made some sort
-of noise, for the thing suddenly turned
-and looked at me over its shoulder. And
-for the first time, I saw its face.”</p>
-
-<p>“What was the face like?” asked
-Barry.</p>
-
-<p>She handed him the photograph.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s a picture of it,” she said.</p>
-
-<p>It was a kodak “snapshot” of an aged
-man with flowing white hair and a patriarchal
-beard. Turning it over, Barry
-saw written on the back, “Willard Clayberg,
-December, 1922.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s Mr. Clayberg’s last picture,”
-said Mrs. Peyton. “I obtained it this
-morning from one of his grandsons. It
-was taken last winter, shortly before the
-dreadful tragedy at our house.”</p>
-
-<p>“Getting back to last night?” reminded
-Barry.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, yes! Well, the thing sat there,
-quite silent and motionless, staring at
-me through the moonlight. Its face was
-the same as the one in that picture,
-only, somehow, it didn’t seem <i>real</i>. It
-was peculiarly pallid and lifeless—like
-the face of a dead person.</p>
-
-<p>“Finally I found my voice and cried
-out: ‘Who are you? What are you doing
-here?’</p>
-
-<p>“Instantly the thing rose from the
-desk, without making a particle of
-sound, and glided swiftly and silently
-across the room—and disappeared!</p>
-
-<p>“That seemed to revive my courage—the
-thought that I had frightened it
-away—and I sprang from bed and ran
-to the door.</p>
-
-<p>“The door was still locked! I tried
-the windows. They were still bolted.
-Neither the door nor the windows had
-been touched. Everything in the room, in
-fact, was just as I had left it upon going
-to bed.</p>
-
-<p>“Then I crossed to my desk and lit
-the lamp there and found—this!” Mrs.
-Peyton offered the sheet of note paper,
-which she had been nervously fingering.</p>
-
-<p>Barry unfolded it and read the words
-scrawled upon its blue surface:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“<i>Again I warn you to leave this
-house. This is the last—</i>”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>“When I interrupted him,” explained
-Mrs. Peyton, “he apparently had just
-written the word, ‘last.’”</p>
-
-<p>Barry nodded and narrowly examined
-the handwriting. It was old-style
-script, angular and shaky, indicative of
-a very aged and infirm person.</p>
-
-<p>“Have you the notes received by Mr.
-Peyton and the cook?”</p>
-
-<p>“No; but I saw them. Both were
-written in the same hand as that,” indicating
-the sheet of blue paper.</p>
-
-<p>Barry again looked at the photograph,
-holding it to the light and inspecting it
-closely. Suddenly he asked:</p>
-
-<p>“What sort of clothing did your visitor
-wear?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, as I remember, he wore a sort
-of long gray robe and a queer little cap—a
-skullcap, maybe. But it was all very
-blurred and indistinct. He seemed to
-be enveloped in a kind of gray mist.
-With his white hair and beard, the effect
-was quite ‘creepy.’”</p>
-
-<p>“Anything else happen last night?”</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing—except that I passed the
-rest of the night trying to solve the riddle.
-The first thing I did, after finding
-the note, was to try the door and windows
-again—and I again made sure
-they hadn’t been touched. I knew positively
-that nobody could get in the
-room <i>except</i> through the door or windows,
-so <i>how</i> had the old man entered?</p>
-
-<p>“I was still hunting an answer to that
-question, and growing more perplexed
-than ever, when I heard a heavy footfall
-on the front porch; then the front
-door opened and closed with a <i>bang</i>, and
-my husband came bounding noisily upstairs.
-I knew from this he had seen
-the light at my window, even before he
-called to me reprovingly through the
-bedroom door: ‘Haven’t you turned in
-yet? It’s ’way after one o’clock.’</p>
-
-<p>“It was then I decided to say nothing
-to him about what happened. And I
-haven’t.</p>
-
-<p>“But this morning, as soon as he’d
-left for the office, I called on Mrs.
-Parker and told her everything. She
-suggested that I see you. I hesitated
-at first to do this, because only
-yesterday I spoke to Mr. Peyton about
-calling in the police or employing a detective
-to investigate the mystery, and
-he vigorously objected. He really believed
-the thing was supernatural and
-declared that no living person could
-overcome it. The only thing to do, he
-said, was to leave the house as the
-‘spirit’ commanded.</p>
-
-<p>“I finally decided, however, to follow
-Mrs. Parker’s suggestion, particularly
-as she recommended you so highly—and
-so, quite unknown to my husband, here
-I am!</p>
-
-<p>“And now, Mr. Barry,” said Mrs.
-Peyton, sitting back in her chair for the
-first time and moving her white hands in
-a pretty gesture of relief, “what do <i>you</i>
-make of it all?”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb">
-
-<p>Barry, examining the feeble handwriting
-beneath a reading-glass,
-discerned what appeared to be a startling
-solution of the mystery; but, deeming
-it best for the moment to say nothing
-of this, he offered an obvious answer
-to her question:</p>
-
-<p>“From what you have told me, Mrs.
-Peyton, it would seem that an unknown
-person, concealed in your house, is bent
-on frightening you away.”</p>
-
-<p>“But I’ve thoroughly searched the
-house,” she protested, “not once, but
-several times; and I know positively
-that nobody is hidden there—and that
-nobody has broken in. Besides, even if
-the old man <i>was</i> in the house, or <i>had</i>
-broken in, how did he enter my room
-last night?”</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps, after I’ve inspected the
-room—”</p>
-
-<p>“Can you do it, without Mr. Peyton
-knowing?”</p>
-
-<p>“Quite easily, I think, with our help.
-Since you are in need of servants, my
-presence can readily be explained—”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, of course!” she eagerly interrupted.
-“Our new houseman! It will
-seem quite plausible, too,” she added,
-rising and glancing at her watch, “particularly
-since I’ve just engaged a new
-cook—who is waiting for me now, by
-the way, in my car. We had best start
-at once, Mr. Barry. It’s nearly one, and
-my husband is usually home before six.”</p>
-
-<p>... A little later, as the Peyton
-limousine smartly threaded its way
-through the downtown streets, Barry,
-sitting on the front seat beside the chauffeur,
-planned a procedure that would
-either substantiate, or explode, his tentative
-explanation of the white-bearded
-“ghost.”</p>
-
-<p>His first step was taken immediately:
-At a State Street department store he
-secretly bought a pad of cheap writing
-paper, a package of ungummed envelopes,
-ten two-cent stamps, a thick lead<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_53"></a>[53]</span>
-pencil, a jar of mucilage and an oblong
-carton of sterilized gauze.</p>
-
-<p>Later still, upon reaching the “haunted
-house,” he saw no cause to revise his
-plan, and no reason to doubt that the
-solution he already had formed, although
-amazing, was essentially correct.</p>
-
-<p>With the new cook installed in the
-kitchen, Mrs. Peyton conducted him to
-the second-floor front bedroom—a commodious
-south chamber—where she had
-seen the “ghost” last night. Barry
-looked at the small mahogany desk, surveyed
-the white-enameled twin beds,
-measured their distance from the corridor
-door and carefully examined the
-lock thereon.</p>
-
-<p>Then, swiftly though systematically,
-he searched the rest of the house and
-afterward strolled outdoors. Sauntering
-across the velvety lawns, beneath
-the aged trees, he casually approached
-the garage some two hundred feet from
-the house. He had found nothing in the
-house, and now saw nothing in the surrounding
-grounds, to suggest the weird
-things he had heard. Here, to all appearance,
-was only an old-fashioned suburban
-home dozing peacefully in the
-mellow sunshine of a midsummer afternoon.</p>
-
-<p>At the garage, which aforetime had
-been a stable, he engaged in back-stairs
-gossip with Frank Dominick, the chauffeur—in
-the presence of the gardener,
-John Hart, an uncommunicative person—and
-learned that both were preparing
-to “give notice.”</p>
-
-<p>“We ain’t actually <i>seen</i> old Clayberg’s
-ghost—at least not <i>yet</i>,” said
-Dominick, “but we’ve heard enough
-about ’im and I guess he’ll be callin’ on
-us next. I guess the only reason we
-ain’t seen ’im before is because we sleep
-up there,” pointing to the upper floor
-of the garage. “Take my advice, friend,
-and don’t stay here over night. Am I
-right, John?”</p>
-
-<p>John Hart, a senile man, shifted his
-cud of tobacco and expectorated lavishly,
-thus contributing a fresh stain to his
-ragged white beard.</p>
-
-<p>“You’re right,” said he, and spoke
-no more.</p>
-
-<p>Returning to the house, Barry was
-given a white jacket and a pair of blue
-trousers by Mrs. Peyton; and at six
-o’clock, wearing these garments and a
-servile mien, he was laying the dinner
-table when the master of the house arrived.
-Barry, with a plate and napkin
-in his hands, observed him through the
-doorway—a trim-looking man of thirty-five—and
-remarked the harrowing fear
-that sat upon his countenance.</p>
-
-<p>His haggard eyes, like those of his
-wife, denoted loss of sleep; and he
-evinced no interest in her “luck in finding
-two perfect servants.” In the same
-troubled preoccupation, he acknowledged
-the introduction of Barry, who
-was presented as Thomas Field. Clearly,
-he was too frightened and worried to
-be conscious of his environment.</p>
-
-<p>Dinner over, Barry went to his room.
-It was a tiny chamber tucked under the
-eaves at the rear of the top floor, and
-it was here that his predecessor had beheld
-the “apparition” night before last.
-Upon the small table, where the word,
-“LEAVE” had been spelled with
-matches, Barry spread the articles which
-he had bought this afternoon.</p>
-
-<p>Then he drew the table to the window,
-and lighted the lamp, and sat down and
-began writing letters to mythical persons
-in Iowa. His door stood open, and
-so did the window, and anybody passing
-in the hall, or standing north of the
-house, could have watched him at his employment.</p>
-
-<p>For upward of two hours he sat
-steadily writing, his back to the door, his
-face silhouetted against the window;
-and when he had written five letters,
-and had stamped and directed them to
-his imaginary correspondents, he uncorked
-the mucilage pot and sealed the
-flaps of the envelops.</p>
-
-<p>And then, somehow, he awkwardly upset
-the bottle of mucilage, and the stuff
-oozed stickily over his pencil and paper.</p>
-
-<p>It was at this moment, or perhaps a
-little earlier, that he heard a slight
-rustle in the hall behind him, as of somebody
-moving away from his door, but,
-apparently intent only upon cleaning
-the mucilage from the table, he never
-looked round or gave any sign that he
-heard.</p>
-
-<p>Presently he extinguished the light
-and, disrobing in the darkness, looked
-from his window. The old Clayberg
-stable, now Peyton’s garage, loomed like
-a great dusky shadow in the starlit
-night; and at a small upper window, almost
-on a direct line with his, a yellow
-light glowed.</p>
-
-<p>Feeling through the dark, Barry removed
-the sterilized gauze from the carton,
-snipped off a ten-inch length, and
-returned the gauze and box to his
-pocket. Then he stretched his length on
-the narrow iron bed, his face to the window,
-his door ajar.</p>
-
-<p>Wide awake, he lay staring into the
-darkness, his mind alert, sharpened by
-expectancy.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb">
-
-<p>The moon rose in the southeast,
-bathing the outdoors in a silvery
-sheen and mitigating, somewhat, the
-darkness of his room. The minutes
-lengthened into hours; and as the hours
-dragged slowly by Barry fought off the
-desire to sleep.</p>
-
-<p>The fight became increasingly difficult;
-and finally—he judged it was long
-past midnight—it seemed as though he
-could no longer force himself to
-stay awake. His eyelids drooped. He
-dozed....</p>
-
-<p>And then, all at once, he was wide
-awake again, his pulse tingling. Somebody
-had entered his room and was
-standing now at the table, between the
-bed and window, so near that Barry
-could have touched him by reaching
-forth his hand.</p>
-
-<p>Barry, however, remained motionless,
-simulating sleep; and beneath lowered
-lids he watched the intruder—a blurred
-gray figure—take up the pencil and
-start writing on the pad of paper. The
-moon had climbed to the zenith, and by
-its pale reflection Barry distinguished
-the salient marks of his visitor; the long
-gray robe, the flowing white hair and
-beard, the white skullcap.</p>
-
-<p>Then the figure put down the pencil
-and vanished—gliding to the hall as
-swiftly and noiselessly, it seemed, as a
-shadow leaving the room.</p>
-
-<p>Still Barry did not move. Silence
-ensued. Then, from some point down the
-hall, came a woman’s piercing scream.</p>
-
-<p>Barry rose, wrapped the lead pencil
-in the strip of gauze, and enclosed it
-in the cardboard box and replaced the
-box in his pocket.</p>
-
-<p>Then, wearing coat and trousers, he
-stepped into the hall and lit a gas jet
-there—just as the new cook, screaming
-with terror, emerged from her room.
-Hysterical with fright, she frantically
-flourished a scrap of wrapping paper.
-And when she could speak coherently:</p>
-
-<p>“I just seen a spook in my room—an
-old man wid white whiskers. I won’t
-stay in this house! He writ somethin’
-here—”</p>
-
-<p>She broke off to examine the bit of
-paper by the fluttering gas flame; and
-when she saw the words written on her
-paper she uttered another terrified
-shriek and, heedless of her scant attire,
-fled toward the front staircase. She
-was met at the head of the stairs by Mr.
-and Mrs. Peyton—he in pajamas and
-bathrobe, she in a peignoir, and both
-visibly alarmed—and to them she told,
-or tried to tell, the reason for her mad
-flight.</p>
-
-<p>“Now lemme get outa here!” she ended,
-attempting to brush past them. “He
-told me to leave tonight—and <i>I’m
-goin’</i>!”</p>
-
-<p>Barry, following sleepily in her wake,
-rubbing his eyes as one newly awakened
-from slumber, heard Peyton saying:
-“This is dreadful, dreadful!” and Mrs.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_54"></a>[54]</span>
-Peyton entreating the cook to “stay at
-least till morning.”</p>
-
-<p>Unable to persuade the cook to remain,
-Mrs. Peyton turned appealingly
-to Barry. “Did you see anything in
-your room, Field?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, mem,” said Barry, hiding a
-yawn. “I was fast asleep when she woke
-me up, mem.”</p>
-
-<p>This, however, exerted no influence on
-the cook. Like Clara who went before
-her, she departed immediately for the
-railroad station, there to pass the rest of
-the night.</p>
-
-<p>Peace at last returned to the house—and
-Barry returned to his room, locked
-the door and observed on his pad the
-same angular scrawl, “<i>Leave this house
-tonight!</i>” which had frightened her
-away. Then he went to bed and slept
-soundly until after sunrise.</p>
-
-<p>He was up and dressed at seven
-o’clock; and when the Peytons came
-downstairs about eight he had an appetizing
-breakfast awaiting them. As soon
-as her husband had left for his office,
-Mrs. Peyton, returning from the front
-door, looked at the detective with anxious
-inquiry in her large brown eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“Have you discovered anything at
-all, Mr. Barry?”</p>
-
-<p>Barry took a crumpled napkin from
-the breakfast table and folded it thoughtfully
-between his long fingers. He was
-thinking: “Yes, Mrs. Peyton; I’ve discovered
-the identity of your ‘ghost,’ and
-you alone have the power to ‘kill’ it.”
-Aloud, however:</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll make a report today,” he
-promised, and left the room with a stack
-of dishes and the folded napkin.</p>
-
-<p>He deposited the dishes in the kitchen
-sink. The napkin went into his hip
-pocket. Then he started upstairs for
-his other clothes. At her bedroom door
-he paused, listening. The door stood
-open. Mrs. Peyton, downstairs, was sitting
-at the breakfast table, absently
-crumbling a bit of toast in her fingers,
-a faraway look in her eyes. Barry, at
-her bedroom door, was remarking the
-small mahogany desk, where, two nights
-ago, the “ghost” had written his warning
-to her.</p>
-
-<p>In three swift strides he crossed to the
-desk, searched hurriedly among the
-papers there and neatly pocketed one of
-these. Then he continued to his room.
-Mrs. Peyton still sat at the breakfast
-table in a pensive reverie, her wistful
-brown gaze lost in the morning sunshine
-beyond the leaded casements.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb">
-
-<p>An hour later Barry alighted from
-a train in Chicago and forthwith
-called on a colleague, whose skill in analyzing
-handwriting and identifying
-finger prints had earned him the title of
-“expert.” He spent considerable time
-with this man; and then he went to his
-office and wrote his report for Mrs. Peyton.</p>
-
-<p>And when the report was finished he
-sat gazing at it musingly—somewhat as
-Mrs. Peyton had gazed from her breakfast-room
-window this morning.</p>
-
-<p>With an energetic shrug, as if to shake
-off his odd mood, he sealed the report
-in an envelope, and put it in his pocket
-and started for an office building in
-lower Michigan Avenue.</p>
-
-<p>Presently he entered a room in this
-building, luxuriously furnished and unoccupied,
-and abruptly halted. In the
-adjoining room he could hear the voices
-of Scott Peyton and his wife; and since
-the door between the two offices stood
-partly open, he could also see their
-faces. Himself unobserved, Barry stood
-silently watching and listening.</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose you’re right, Scott,” she
-said, standing beside her husband’s
-desk and looking down at him. “After
-what happened last night, I’m just
-about ready to do as you say—give the
-house up and move back to town. But
-I do so hate to leave that old place. I
-wish—”</p>
-
-<p>“Why should you?” he interrupted,
-scowling at his desk and avoiding her
-eyes.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Peyton looked down, biting a
-corner of her lip and twisting the wedding
-ring of her finger.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s not so much what <i>I</i> want,” she
-faltered, her voice tremulously low,
-“but—the city is no place—not the <i>best</i>
-place for our—<i>Oh, Scott!</i>” she cried
-passionately, and flung out her hands to
-him in appeal. “Can’t you <i>see</i>?”</p>
-
-<p>Scott Peyton looked up and met his
-wife’s eyes; and the thing he saw in
-their liquid brown depths instantly
-chased the frown from his face and took
-him to his feet in a swift rush of remorse
-and gladness.</p>
-
-<p>In the next instant she was sobbing in
-his arms; and he was tenderly patting
-her shoulders and saying soothingly:</p>
-
-<p>“It’s all right, honey. We won’t give
-the place up. I don’t think—the ghost—will
-bother us again....”</p>
-
-<p>At this juncture Barry quietly departed.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb">
-
-<p>A little later he again sat at
-his desk, gazing again at the report
-he had written. And he now knew that
-this report would never be seen by any
-eye save his.</p>
-
-<p>But while he is sitting here suppose
-we look over his shoulder and glance at
-the thing before he tears it up:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“In Re Peyton ‘ghost’: ...
-Using a King Lear costume, which
-he put on and off with lightning
-agility, the ‘ghost’ hoped, by his
-nocturnal prowling, to frighten
-Mrs. Peyton into abandoning the
-house as her husband desired....
-Following his nightly appearances,
-he quickly removed and concealed
-his costume, and returned to his
-bed, careful to make no sound. He
-varied this procedure, however,
-night before last, when he visited
-Mrs. Peyton’s room. Had she left
-her key in the lock that night, instead
-of hiding it under her pillow,
-he would have been unable to call
-upon her. As it was, he readily
-unlocked the door and entered.
-Leaving silently, he hid his costume,
-then left the house and returned,
-making considerable noise....
-The finger prints he left in
-glue last night and those he left on
-his napkin this morning, as well as
-his real and disguised handwriting
-positively identify the ‘ghost’ as
-Mrs. Peyton’s husband, Scott Peyton.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp100" id="footer1" style="max-width: 25em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/footer1.jpg" alt="">
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_55"></a>[55]</span></p>
-
-<p class="center larger"><i>Have You Been Reading About King Tut?
-If so, You’ll be Interested in</i></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="OSIRIS">OSIRIS</h2>
-
-<p class="center larger"><i>The Weird Tale of an Egyptian Mummy</i></p>
-
-<p class="center larger"><i>By</i> ADAM HULL SHIRK</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="box">
-
-<p class="center larger">“<i>Mandrake</i>”</p>
-
-<p class="center"><i>By<br>
-ADAM HULL SHIRK</i></p>
-
-<p class="center"><i>Will appear in the July
-WEIRD TALES</i></p>
-
-<p class="center"><i>It’s a Strange Yarn of
-Superstitious Fear</i></p>
-
-<p class="center larger"><i>Don’t Miss It!</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-
-<p>The recent and lamentable death
-of Sir Richard Parmenter, F. R.
-G. S., is too fresh in the public’s
-mind to warrant further reference, and
-were it not that I feel myself capable
-of throwing light upon the incidents contributing
-to the sudden and apparently
-unnecessary snuffing out of a valuable
-life, I should refrain from again alluding
-to it.</p>
-
-<p>It is well known that the physicians
-at the time decided that valvular weakness
-of the heart must have been responsible
-for the death of the noted Egyptologist,
-but the statement of his own
-doctor that Sir Richard had never theretofore
-exhibited indications of such
-weakness, and that he was, to all appearances,
-in the best of health just
-prior to his death, caused considerable
-wonder.</p>
-
-<p>I had thought to let the facts remain
-buried, but, for certain reasons, I shall
-reconsider my determination and tell
-what I know.</p>
-
-<p>I shall always remember the night on
-which Sir Richard summoned me, as
-his counselor, to attend him at his apartments
-in the Albermarle. It was a night
-of storm, and the London streets were a
-mass of slime and slush. A beastly wind
-had sprung up, and as I left my chambers
-at the Temple it almost took me off
-my feet. Therefore, it was with no little
-satisfaction that I found a cheery log
-fire awaiting me in the library of my
-distinguished client’s home, and the nip
-of brandy he provided was a life saver.</p>
-
-<p>I noted, however, that for all his
-assumption of cheerfulness, something
-was preying upon his mind, and I determined
-to get at the root of the matter
-without delay:</p>
-
-<p>“How can I serve you, Sir Richard?”
-I asked, briskly. “I see there is something
-troubling you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Is it as apparent as that?” he asked,
-trying to appear unconcerned: but his
-strong, homely features belied his effort
-at calmness.</p>
-
-<p>Before I could reply, he went on:</p>
-
-<p>“But never mind that: I want you to
-write my will—now.”</p>
-
-<p>“Your will?” My expression of surprise
-and incredulity was natural, for
-since I had been retained by him I had
-marked it as one of his few idiosyncrasies
-that he had never made his will. When
-I had mentioned to him the advisability
-of doing so, he had put it by with a
-whimsical remark about being superstitious.</p>
-
-<p>“I am in earnest,” he declared, “and
-it will be very simple—just a brief form,
-and I’ll sign it with my man as witness.”</p>
-
-<p>“But why the haste?” I said. “Why
-not wait till I can have the document
-properly drawn up at my office tomorrow—”</p>
-
-<p>“No; now!” he said, and there was
-such finality in his tone I had no choice.</p>
-
-<p>My concern for my client, whom I
-really liked and respected immensely,
-prompted me to ask:</p>
-
-<p>“You’re not ill, Sir Richard?”</p>
-
-<p>He shook his head, with the ghost of
-a smile on his rugged face.</p>
-
-<p>“Physically—no. But—”</p>
-
-<p>He paused, and after a moment he
-again urged me to proceed with the
-making of the will.</p>
-
-<p>I drew up the document, which was
-a simple one, leaving the bulk of his
-large properties to his sister in Surrey,
-with numerous small bequests to friends
-and distant relatives, and a handsome
-sum and his private collection to the
-British Museum and the Imperial
-Museum of Egyptology. We had in his
-man, and the document was duly signed,
-after which he drew a long breath of
-relief and, with a return of something
-like his natural manner, passed me his
-cigar-case and leaned back in his chair,
-smoking comfortably.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve a story to tell you, Madden,”
-he said between puffs, “and it’s a queer
-yarn, too. You’ll think—but never
-mind. Listen first, and say what you
-like afterward. Only—” he glanced
-about him with an apprehensive expression
-that fairly set my nerves atingle.
-“I hope we have time.”</p>
-
-<p>“Time for what?” I asked.</p>
-
-<p>He relaxed again and smiled:</p>
-
-<p>“It’s all right,” he declared. “I’m a
-bit nervous, I guess, but it’s all right.
-Have another brandy.”</p>
-
-<p>We drank solemnly together. Then he
-settled back once more and I prepared
-to listen.</p>
-
-<p>“Madden,” said he, “perhaps you’ll
-smile at what has seemed to me serious
-enough to warrant the steps I have just
-taken—making my will, I mean—but,
-however you look at it, I want you to
-know it’s true—every word of it.</p>
-
-<p>“My last trip to Egypt—from which
-I just returned a fortnight ago—was to
-have been my final one, anyway. I’ve
-made six trips out there in my life, and
-I’ve collected enough information to fill
-a dozen volumes. Also, I’ve contributed
-many fine specimens to the museum and
-corrected many misapprehensions concerning
-the interpretation of some of the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_56"></a>[56]</span>
-hieroglyphs. So, all in all, I think I’ve
-done pretty well.</p>
-
-<p>“This last visit was in many respects
-the most satisfactory, and indeed it witnessed
-a triumph in my career as an
-Egyptologist that would be a crowning
-achievement, were it not for—but we
-won’t speak of that—yet.</p>
-
-<p>“I wonder, Madden, if you know anything
-about the ancient Egyptian religious
-ceremonies and forms of worship?
-Anyway, I may tell you that the Nile
-dwellers, as they were called, recognized
-as their supreme deity, Osiris, lord of the
-underworld. By some he has been
-identified with the Sun and, with the
-forty assessors of the dead, he was supposed
-to have judged the souls brought
-before him by Horus in the double halls
-of truth, after their good and evil deeds
-had been weighed by Anubis.</p>
-
-<p>“The Egyptians reverenced Osiris
-with as devout worship as the Chinese
-give to Buddha, and the high priests of
-Osiris were regarded with almost as
-much awe as the deity himself.</p>
-
-<p>“In all our studies and investigations,
-however, we have never been able actually
-to identify Osiris, but it is now generally
-conceded that he was believed to
-have lived on earth at one time and that
-it was only after his death that he assumed
-deific prerogatives. In this respect
-the modern Christian theology
-may be said to resemble the more ancient
-form to some extent.</p>
-
-<p>“Osiris was pictured on many of the
-tablets as a creature with the head of a
-bull, though there is some disagreement
-on this score. In any event, his tomb
-was said to exist near Heliopolis, and it
-was to investigate this tradition that I
-made my last trip to Egypt.”</p>
-
-<p>Sir Richard paused to relight his cigar
-and listened to the storm which raged
-without. Again he gave that hasty, apprehensive
-glance about him, then proceeded:</p>
-
-<p>“It would be impossible for me to explain
-to you, a layman, my inordinate
-joy at finding—by what means and after
-what tedious labor, I won’t stop to tell
-now—a deserted tomb which I knew,
-from certain hieroglyphic markings I
-found, was the very one of which I had
-been in search for the best part of half
-a year.</p>
-
-<p>“Understand that this whole tradition
-of the tomb of Osiris was regarded by
-my fellow scientists as a myth, and if it
-had been publicly known that I was
-giving it sufficient credence to spend a
-lot of time and money searching for it
-I should have been looked upon as a
-madman and laughed out of the societies.
-This may enable you to appreciate more
-fully my sensations on actually locating
-at least the tomb. What I should find
-within, I hardly dared conjecture!</p>
-
-<p>“The tomb of a God! Can you imagine
-it, Madden?</p>
-
-<p>“And yet, if I had only stopped there!
-If only I had been content to pause with
-the knowledge I already possessed, without
-proceeding further and desecrating
-with sacrilegious hands that lonely
-sarcophagus in the desert!</p>
-
-<p>“How I succeeded in penetrating this
-tomb, of the horrors of bats and crawling
-things that failed to stop me—of the
-almost supernatural awe that came upon
-me—I can not pause to tell. It is
-enough to say that I stood at last beside
-the tremendous coffin of stone, trembling
-from an unknown dread. And, as I
-stood there, something white fluttered by
-me and up through the opening into the
-outer air. A sacred Ibis—but how it
-had penetrated there and how it had
-lived, I can not say.</p>
-
-<p>“Pour out another brandy, Madden—and
-throw that other log on the fire, too,
-if you don’t mind. My, how the wind
-blows! Did you speak?... Pardon
-me—I’m nervous tonight as I said before,
-very nervous.... Where was I?
-Oh, yes—</p>
-
-<p>“That great sarcophagus stood before
-me, and on it I saw inscribed the sacred
-scarabæus and the feather of truth, while
-in the center was the word—the one,
-wonderful name—‘Heseri’—which is
-the Egyptian for Osiris!</p>
-
-<p>“Insatiable curiosity now took the
-place of the reverential awe that should
-have possessed me, and with vandal
-hands I forced the stone lid from the
-casket. One glance I had of a great,
-bovine face, a <i>living</i> face, whose eyes
-looked into the depths of my soul—and
-then I fled as though all the devils of
-Amenti were at my heels....</p>
-
-<p>“That is all Madden, except that I
-am nervous—fearfully so. It is so unlike
-me. You know how small a part fear
-has played in my life. I have faced the
-dreaded simoon; I have been lost among
-savage tribes, I have confronted death
-in a hundred forms—but <i>never</i> have I
-felt as I do now. I tremble at a sound;
-my ears trick me into believing that I
-am always hearing some unusual noise;
-my appetite is failing, and I am feeling
-my age as I have never felt it until....
-Good God! Madden! What was that
-sound?... Oh! <i>look behind you</i>, Madden!
-<i>Look!</i>...”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb">
-
-<p>And now I come to that portion of my
-statement that will probably be refused
-credence by those who read; but,
-as I live, it is the truth.</p>
-
-<p>As Sir Richard uttered his last words,
-he felt forward to his full length upon
-the hearth rug, even as I turned in obedience
-to his command. The shadows
-were heavy in the far corner of the
-spacious room, but I could see a great,
-bulky something that swayed there,
-something that was a part, and yet,
-seemingly, was independent, of the
-shadows.</p>
-
-<p>I had a vision of two burning eyes
-and a black shining muzzle—a heavy,
-misshapen head. A strange, animal-like,
-fetid odor was in my nostrils.</p>
-
-<p>I shrieked, and, turning, ran madly
-from the room, stumbled to the stairs
-and fled into the wind-swept night.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">Failure to Keep Tab on Quitting Time Kills Two</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Troy Hocker and Hugh Simpson, linemen for the Oklahoma
-Gas and Electric Company, were repairing wires on
-top of a pole in Oklahoma one afternoon recently. As they
-worked, they engaged in banter. It was nearly five o’clock—their
-quitting time—but neither looked at his watch. The
-engineer down at the power house saw it was ten minutes
-past five, time to turn on the city’s arc lights. He pulled
-down the switch and sent 2,300 volts out to light the city.
-The men up on the pole ceased their banter. Their bodies
-became stiff. Those on the ground laughed. This must be
-some new prank of the boys. Then someone noticed smoke
-issuing from Hocker’s shoes. Back at the power plant the
-amperage was fluctuating back and forth, and the engineer
-knew something was amiss. He threw off the current—but
-the men were already dead.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_57"></a>[57]</span></p>
-
-<p class="center larger"><i>A New Story by Julian Kilman,
-Master of Weird Fiction</i></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="THE_WELL">THE WELL</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Jeremiah Hubbard toiled with
-a team of horses in a piece of
-ground some distance down the
-road from his dwelling. When it neared
-five o’clock in the autumn afternoon, he
-unwound the lines from his waist, unhooked
-the traces and started home with
-his horses.</p>
-
-<p>He was a heavy man, a bit under middle
-age, with a dish-shaped face and
-narrow-set eyes. He walked with vigor.
-One of the horses lagged a trifle, and he
-struck it savagely with a short whip.</p>
-
-<p>They came presently to the Eldridge
-dwelling, abandoned and tumbled down,
-on the opposite side of the road. The
-farm was being worked on shares by a
-man named Simpson, who lived five
-miles away and drove a “tin Lizzie.”
-An ancient oak tree, the tremendous circumference
-of its trunk marred by signs
-of decay, reared splendid gnarled
-branches skyward.</p>
-
-<p>These branches shaded a disused
-well—a well that had been the first one
-in Nicholas County, having been dug in
-the early fifties by the pioneering Eldridge
-family. It went forty feet straight
-down into the residual soil characteristic
-of the <i>locale</i>, but, owing to improved
-drainage, it had become dry. Nothing
-remained of the old pump-house, save
-the crumbling circle of stonework
-around the mouth, to give evidence of
-its one-time majesty.</p>
-
-<p>A child of eight ran from the rear of
-the premises. Hubbard frowned and
-stopped his team.</p>
-
-<p>“You better keep away from there,”
-he growled, “or you’ll fall into the
-well.”</p>
-
-<p>The girl glanced at him impishly.</p>
-
-<p>“You an’ Missus Hubbard don’t
-speak to each other, do you?”</p>
-
-<p>Hubbard’s face went black. His whip
-sprang out and caught the girl about the
-legs. She yelped and ran.</p>
-
-<p>An eighth of a mile farther along the
-road Hubbard turned in and drove his
-team to a big barn. He fed his stock.
-It was after six when he entered the
-house. This was a structure that, by
-comparison with the gigantic barn in the
-rear, seemed pigmy-like.</p>
-
-<p>A sallow, flat-chested woman, with a
-wisp of hair twisted into a knot, took
-from Hubbard the two pails of milk he
-carried. She set them in the kitchen.
-The two exchanged no words.</p>
-
-<p>Hubbard strode to the washstand, his
-boots thumping the floor, and performed
-his ablutions. He rumpled his hair and
-beard, using much soap and water and
-blowing stertorously. In the dining-room
-a girl of twelve sat with a book.
-As her father came in she glanced at him
-timorously.</p>
-
-<p>He gave no heed to her as he slumped
-down into a chair standing before a
-desk. The desk was littered with papers,
-among which were typewritten sheets of
-the sort referred to as “pleadings”;
-there was a title-search much bethumbed
-and black along the edges,
-where the “set-outs” had been scanned
-with obvious care.</p>
-
-<p>The man adjusted a pair of antiquated
-spectacles to his dish-face. To do this
-he was compelled to pull the ends of the
-bows tight back over the ears as his
-nose afforded practically no bridge to
-support the glasses.</p>
-
-<p>Presently he spoke to the girl:</p>
-
-<p>“Tell your mother to bring on the
-supper.”</p>
-
-<p>The girl hastened out, and shortly
-thereafter the mother appeared carrying
-dishes. Food was disposed about the
-table in silence. The farmer ate gustily
-and in ten minutes finished his meal.
-Then he addressed his daughter, keeping
-his eyes averted from his wife. “Tell
-your mother,” he said, “that I’ll want
-breakfast at five o’clock tomorrow morning.”</p>
-
-<p>“Where you goin’, Pa?” asked the
-girl.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m goin’ to drive to the county seat
-to see Lawyer Simmons.”</p>
-
-<p>Hubbard’s gaze followed the girl as
-she helped clear the table.</p>
-
-<p>“Look-a here,” he said. “You been
-a-talkin’ to that Harper child?”</p>
-
-<p>“No,” returned the daughter, with a
-trace of spirit. “But I jest saw her father
-over by the fence.”</p>
-
-<p>“What was he a-doin’ there?”</p>
-
-<p>“I didn’t stay. I was afeard he’d
-catch me watchin’ him.”</p>
-
-<p>Hubbard glowered and reached for
-his hat.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll find out,” he snarled.</p>
-
-<p>Walking rapidly, he crossed a field of
-wheat stubble, keeping his eyes fixed
-sharply ahead. It was dusk, but presently,
-at the northern extremity of his
-premises, he made out the figure of a
-man.</p>
-
-<p>“Hey, Harper!” he shouted. “You
-let that fence be.”</p>
-
-<p>He ran forward swiftly.</p>
-
-<p>The men were now separated by two
-wire-strand fences that paralleled each
-other only three feet apart. These fences,
-matching one another for a distance of
-about two hundred yards—each farmer
-claiming title to the fence on the side
-farthest from his own—represented the
-basis of the litigation over the boundary
-claim that had gone on between them for
-four years.</p>
-
-<p>The odd spectacle of the twin fences
-had come to be one of the show places in
-the county. It had been photographed
-and shown in agricultural journals.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t trust ye, Harper,” announced
-Hubbard, breathing hard.
-“You got the inside track with Jedge
-Bissell, an’ the two of you are a-schemin’
-to beat me.”</p>
-
-<p>A laugh broke from the other.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll beat you, all right,” he said coolly.
-“But it won’t be because Judge
-Bissell is unfair.”</p>
-
-<p>His manner enraged Hubbard, who
-rushed swiftly at the first fence and
-threw himself over. With equal celerity,
-he clambered over the second fence.</p>
-
-<p>Startled at the sudden outburst of
-temper, Harper had drawn back. He
-held aloft a spade. Hubbard leaped at
-him. The spade descended.</p>
-
-<p>Harper was slightly-built, however,
-and the force of the blow did not halt
-the infuriated man, now swinging at him
-with all his might. They clinched. Hubbard’s
-fingers caught at the throat of
-the smaller man, and the two stumbled
-to the ground, Hubbard atop. The fall
-broke his grip. With his huge fists he
-began to hammer the body. He continued
-until it was limp.</p>
-
-<p>Then, his rage suddenly appeased, he
-drew back and stared at the inert figure
-lying strangely quiet.</p>
-
-<p>“So!” he gasped.</p>
-
-<p>There came the sound of someone
-singing, the voice floating distinctly<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_58"></a>[58]</span>
-through the night air. Hubbard recognized
-it for that of an itinerant Free
-Methodist minister, whose church in
-Ovid he and his family occasionally attended.</p>
-
-<p>The song rolling forth, as the
-Man of God drove along the highway
-in his rig, was <i>Jesus, Lover of My Soul</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb">
-
-<p>For the moment Hubbard shielded
-his face with an arm as if to ward off
-an invisible thing.</p>
-
-<p>Then, bending over the prostrate
-form, he ran his hand inside the clothing
-to test the action of the heart. He
-performed the act mechanically, because
-he knew he had killed his man.</p>
-
-<p>He discovered the handbag. Evidently
-Harper was on his way to Ovid to
-catch the train to the county seat for
-the trial on the morrow. This meant
-that he would not be missed by his wife
-for at least twenty-four hours.</p>
-
-<p>The murderer studied his next move.
-Where to secrete the body? A piece of
-wood lay back of him, but he was aware
-that it was constantly combed by
-squirrel hunters. He thought of the
-railroad. Why not an accident? Killed
-by the very train he was bound for?</p>
-
-<p>He started to lug the body toward the
-track which passed half a mile to the
-north. Realizing, however, that for the
-time at hand the distance was too great,
-he let the body slide to the ground. Next
-he stole along the twin fences to the
-highway and peered both ways. No one
-seemed abroad.</p>
-
-<p>He came back on the dead run, and
-in twenty minutes he had carried the
-body to the Eldridge premises and flung
-it down the ancient well.</p>
-
-<p>When he returned he found his wife
-and daughter together in the parlor,
-where with the itinerant preacher, all
-three were kneeling on the floor in
-prayer. Hubbard unceremoniously
-nudged the clergymen.</p>
-
-<p>“That’ll do,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>The minister rose, his tall, lanky figure
-towering over Hubbard.</p>
-
-<p>“Brother,” he began, in an orotund
-voice, “come with the Lord—”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. I know,” returned Hubbard,
-with a patience that surprised his wife.
-“But I’ve got something to talk over
-with my family.” He paused. “Here,”
-he added, feeling in his pocket and producing
-a small coin, “take this and go
-along.”</p>
-
-<p>When the preacher had left, Hubbard
-called to his daughter.</p>
-
-<p>“Harper was gone when I got over
-to the fence.”</p>
-
-<p>“What kept you so long?”</p>
-
-<p>“I walked over to the woods. There’s
-a nest of coons. They’re a-goin’ to play
-havoc with the corn.” He smiled unnaturally.
-“Look-a here! If we can
-catch ’em, I’ll give you the money their
-pelts bring.”</p>
-
-<p>Hubbard divined that his acting was
-poor. Both the girl and his wife were
-frankly regarding him.</p>
-
-<p>“Well!” he shouted. “What’s the
-matter with ye?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, nuthin’, Pa, nuthin’,” whimpered
-the girl.</p>
-
-<p>“Then go to bed, the two of ye.”</p>
-
-<p>Next morning Hubbard started for
-the county seat, a ten mile drive. He returned
-that evening and complained
-that the case had been adjourned because
-Harper had failed to appear in
-court.</p>
-
-<p>The following day he went back to his
-field far down the road for more ploughing.
-Twice he was called to the roadside
-by passersby to discuss the disappearance
-of Harper.</p>
-
-<p>One morning a week later, when he
-came along the road with his team, he
-discovered the Harper child on the Eldridge
-premises. She was sitting at the
-edge of the well.</p>
-
-<p>With a suppressed oath, he dropped
-the lines and half-walked, half-ran, to
-where the little girl sat.</p>
-
-<p>“Didn’t I tell you to stay away from
-there!” he exploded.</p>
-
-<p>The girl stared at him, but made no
-move, though her lips quivered. Hubbard
-glanced back to observe the road.
-Then he caught her arm.</p>
-
-<p>“Go home!” he shouted.</p>
-
-<p>He spun her roughly. She continued
-to stare at him as she retreated homeward.</p>
-
-<p>All that morning Hubbard worked
-his horses hard. He realized that he
-was eager to go back by the Eldridge
-dwelling. Promptly at twelve o’clock,
-therefore, he tied his team and started
-up the road. A flash of relief came to
-him when he did not observe the little
-girl. It left him cold, however.</p>
-
-<p>“Eatin’ dinner,” he mumbled.</p>
-
-<p>He moved off, without looking into
-the well. Until four o’clock that afternoon
-he labored. On his way home he
-discovered the girl again seated by the
-well. She was bending over and acting
-queerly.</p>
-
-<p>Hurrying his horses to the roadside,
-he looped the lines over one of the posts
-in the old “snake” fence. As he approached,
-he saw her toss a piece of
-stone down the hole.</p>
-
-<p>Hubbard waited until he was sure of
-his voice.</p>
-
-<p>“Come with me,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>Gripping the girl he started with her
-toward her home but a short distance
-away. When they arrived the front
-door was ajar. A woman, with eyes red
-from weeping, looked at Hubbard in silence.</p>
-
-<p>“Here!” he said gruffly. “This child
-ought to be kept to home. She’ll fall
-into the well.”</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Harper merely reached out her
-arms for her daughter. Hubbard remained
-standing awkwardly.</p>
-
-<p>“Have you heard anything of Harper
-yet?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t want to talk to you,” replied
-the woman.</p>
-
-<p>Hubbard turned on his heel. Waiting
-for him by his horses, was the deputy
-sheriff. The two further discussed the
-disappearance.</p>
-
-<p>“If you yourself wasn’t so well
-known, Jeremiah,” finally declared the
-official, “they’d sure be thinkin’ you
-was in it some way.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why?” grunted the farmer, as he
-untied the lines.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, everybody knows you an’ Harper
-been lawin’ it for years over that
-boundary line.”</p>
-
-<p>Hubbard achieved a laugh.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll tell ye where Harper is. He’s
-cleared out, that’s what I think—deserted
-his family.”</p>
-
-<p>That night, and many following
-nights, Hubbard did not sleep. Some
-weeks later a tremendous electric storm
-broke in the night. One particularly
-heavy clap so startled the wakeful Hubbard
-that he leaped from his bed and
-dressed. In the pouring rain he started
-out.</p>
-
-<p>Inevitably his steps took him toward
-the well. It was black, and he could not
-see at first. But another flash came, and
-he observed a strange thing:</p>
-
-<p>The huge oak, standing at the side of
-the well, had been split in two by lightning,
-and one portion of the tree had
-fallen over the mouth of the hole.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb">
-
-<p>Next morning Simpson, the man
-with the “tin Lizzie,” stopped at
-Hubbard’s place. He was a blunt-spoken,
-red-faced man whom Hubbard
-hated.</p>
-
-<p>“That was a bad storm last night,”
-he said. “The lightning struck the big
-oak tree by the well.”</p>
-
-<p>“What of it?” snapped Hubbard.</p>
-
-<p>“There was a skeleton in the center
-of that tree,” explained Simpson. “I
-was talking this morning with the
-sheriff over the telephone. He said
-seventy-five years ago a man was murdered
-in Ovid, and they never found his
-body. This skeleton must be his.”</p>
-
-<p>Hubbard cleared his throat sharply.</p>
-
-<p>“What did you do with it?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_59"></a>[59]</span></p>
-
-<p>“The skull and one of the leg bones
-fell down into the well when I tried to
-gather them up. I want to borrow some
-rope so I can get down in there.”</p>
-
-<p>For a bare second Hubbard was silent.</p>
-
-<p>“What you ought to do,” he said,
-gathering himself, “is to fill up that
-hole. It’s dangerous.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. That’s so. But I’m goin’ to
-get that skull first. It’ll be a good exhibit.
-I’m wonderin’ whether we’ll
-ever find Harper’s skeleton.”</p>
-
-<p>“Wait a moment,” said Hubbard
-huskily, starting for the barn. “I’ll get
-some rope and help you.”</p>
-
-<p>The two returned to the Eldridge
-farm. They found there the dead man’s
-child. She had perched herself on the
-fallen tree.</p>
-
-<p>“Damn fool!” muttered Hubbard.
-“Her mother lettin’ her play around
-here!”</p>
-
-<p>A pulley was rigged over the branch
-and the rope inserted with a board for
-a rest.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll go down,” vouchsafed Hubbard.</p>
-
-<p>Simpson looked his surprise as he assented.</p>
-
-<p>It took Hubbard five minutes or so
-to retrieve the missing skeleton parts.
-He brought them up, the leg bone and
-the grinning skull. He was pale when
-he hauled himself over the edge.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m a-goin’ to fill up that hole myself,”
-he said.</p>
-
-<p>“All right,” retorted Simpson, handling
-the skull curiously. “Go to it.”</p>
-
-<p>Word traveled of the finding of the
-ancient skeleton, and the inhabitants began
-driving thither to see the sight.
-Simpson, a man of some ingenuity, had
-wired the bleached white bones together
-and suspended them from one of the
-branches of the fallen tree. The skeleton
-dangled and swung in the wind.</p>
-
-<p>Hubbard, maddened by the delay and
-publicity, felt himself wearing away. He
-had become obsessed with conviction that
-if the hole were filled his mind would
-be at rest.</p>
-
-<p>The nights of continued sleeplessness
-were ragging his nerves, and he was by
-this time unable to remain in bed. He
-would throw himself down, fully
-dressed, waiting until the others were
-asleep. Then he would steal out.</p>
-
-<p>At first he had merely walked the
-roads, swinging his arms and mumbling.
-But as the night progressed his stride
-would quicken, and frequently he would
-take to running. He would run until his
-lungs were bursting and a slaver fed
-from his mouth. Late travelers began
-to catch glimpses of the fleeting figure,
-and the rumor grew that a ghost was
-haunting the locality of the well—that
-the skeleton walked.</p>
-
-<p>Hubbard grew haggard. But he
-found himself unable to discontinue his
-nocturnal prowls, some of which took
-him miles, but all of which invariably
-wound up at one place—the well.</p>
-
-<p>Here, fagged and exhausted, he would
-sit until the approach of dawn, staring
-at the swinging skeleton, mouthing incoherencies,
-praying, singing hymns beneath
-his breath, laughing. At the approach
-of dawn he would steal home.</p>
-
-<p>At last, after interest in the skeleton
-had subsided and Simpson had consented
-to its removal, Hubbard loaded his
-wagon with stones and small boulders
-and started for the well. That first forenoon
-he made three trips, dumping each
-time a considerable quantity of stones.</p>
-
-<p>Next morning he worked in an additional
-trip. He began to experience surcease.
-But on the afternoon of the second
-day, when he made another trip,
-Simpson came over from his work in an
-adjoining field.</p>
-
-<p>“I wanted to see you yesterday,” he
-said, quizzically regarding Hubbard.
-“Mrs. Harper was here. She said her
-little girl was playin’ around here and
-dropped a pair of andirons down the
-well.”</p>
-
-<p>“What of it?” Hubbard jerked out.</p>
-
-<p>“You got to get ’em out.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why?”</p>
-
-<p>“Because them andirons is relics.”</p>
-
-<p>“But you gave me permission to fill
-the hole.”</p>
-
-<p>“I was kiddin’ you,” laughed Simpson.
-“I’m only rentin’ the farm. I ain’t
-got nothin’ to do with the house and
-yard.”</p>
-
-<p>Without a word Hubbard turned to
-his wagon. He got onto the seat and
-drove off. In an hour he came back
-with the same rope that had been used
-to recover the missing portions of the
-skeleton. Also, he brought with him a
-farm laborer who did occasional work
-for him.</p>
-
-<p>Simpson regarded Hubbard amusedly
-as the latter adjusted once more the pulley,
-arranged a bucket and then hitched
-his team to the end of the rope.</p>
-
-<p>Patiently, bucketful by bucketful, the
-stones were elevated and dumped. Down
-below in the black interior, Hubbard
-labored for an hour. At six o’clock he
-had not found the andirons. Twice he
-had been compelled to come up for fresh
-air.</p>
-
-<p>His last trip up left him so white-faced
-and weak that he was forced to
-go home.</p>
-
-<p>That night he resorted to sleeping
-powders. But he lay and tossed, wide-eyed,
-through the dark hours. Sometime
-after midnight he got up. A light
-was still burning in his wife’s room,
-and, tiptoeing down the hall, he paused
-at her door. In low voices the mother
-and daughter were conversing. To his
-heated imagination it seemed certain
-they were talking of Harper’s disappearance.</p>
-
-<p>Mumbling to himself he left the house.
-He ran down the lane to the highway
-and along this until he came to the Eldridge
-place. He determined not to stop,
-and succeeded in running by, like a
-frightened animal.</p>
-
-<p>His gait accelerated. It was one best
-described as scurrying, as he ran
-crouched and low. He thought he saw
-some one approaching. This turned
-him. Back he fled with the speed of the
-wind.</p>
-
-<p>Drawn by an irresistible force, he
-made straight for the Eldridge pathway.
-He came to the well, the entrance of
-which gaped at him. For a moment he
-stood, with eyes wide open, staring into
-the black depths.</p>
-
-<p>Then, screaming, he plunged in head-first.</p>
-
-<p>His cry, long-drawn and eerie, hung
-quivering on the night air.</p>
-
-<p>In the Hubbard home, a quarter of a
-mile away, the mother and daughter
-heard it. The two listened with palpitating
-hearts. They caught one another’s
-hands.</p>
-
-<p>In a hoarse whisper the mother exclaimed:</p>
-
-<p>“<i>What’s that?</i>”</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp100" id="footer2" style="max-width: 25em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/footer2.jpg" alt="">
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_60"></a>[60]</span></p>
-
-<p class="center larger"><i>Otis Adelbert Kline, Author of “The Thing of a Thousand Shapes,” Spins
-Another “Spooky” Yarn for the Readers of WEIRD TALES</i></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="THE_PHANTOM_WOLFHOUND">The Phantom Wolfhound</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Doctor Dorp reluctantly laid
-aside the manuscript on which
-he had been working, capped
-and pocketed his fountain pen, and rose
-to meet his callers.</p>
-
-<p>He was visibly annoyed by this, the
-third interruption of the afternoon, but
-his look of irritation changed to a welcoming
-smile when he saw the bulky
-form that was framed in the doorway.
-He recognized Harry Hoyne of the
-Hoyne Detective Agency, a heavy-set,
-florid-faced man whose iron
-gray hair and moustache proclaimed
-him well past middle
-age.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp82" id="illus5" style="max-width: 35.9375em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/illus5.jpg" alt="">
-</div>
-
-<p>The slender, stoop-shouldered individual
-who accompanied him was a total
-stranger. He had pale, hawklike features,
-small snaky eyes that glittered
-oddly from cavernous sockets, and long,
-bony fingers that suggested the claws of
-a bird.</p>
-
-<p>“Hello, Doc,” boomed the detective
-genially, crushing the hand of his host
-in his great, muscular paw. “Meet Mr.
-Ritsky.”</p>
-
-<p>The doctor was conscious of a cold,
-clammy sensation as he took the hand of
-the stranger and acknowledged the introduction.
-Was it the contrast between
-those chill fingers and the strong warm
-ones of the detective that had caused this
-feeling? He did not know; but somehow,
-instinctively, he disliked Mr.
-Ritsky.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve got a queer case for you, Doc,”
-said Hoyne, taking a proffered cigar and
-inserting it far back in his cheek, unlighted.
-“Just your specialty—ghosts
-and all that. I told Mr. Ritsky you’d be
-the only man to unravel the mystery for
-him. Was over to his house last night
-and the thing got me—too unsubstantial—too
-damned elusively unreal. And yet
-I’ll swear there was something there. I
-heard it; but it got away and didn’t
-leave a trace. When it comes to finger
-prints and things like that you know I
-ain’t exactly a dumb-bell, but I gotta
-admit this thing, whatever it is, had me
-hopelessly horn-swoggled.”</p>
-
-<p>Ritsky declined a cigar, saying he
-didn’t dare smoke because of heart
-trouble. The doctor selected one with
-care, lighted it slowly, puffed it with a
-relish, and settled back with a look of
-eager anticipation in his eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“What happened last night?” he
-asked.</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe we better begin at the beginning,”
-said Hoyne. “You see, there’s
-quite a story goes along with this case,
-and Mr. Ritsky can tell it better than I.
-Don’t be afraid to give him all the dope,
-Mr. Ritsky. The doctor knows all about
-such things—wrote a book about ’em, in
-fact. Let’s see. What was the name
-of that book, Doc?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_61"></a>[61]</span></p>
-
-<p>“‘Investigations of Materialization
-Phenomena.’”</p>
-
-<p>“Righto! I never can remember it.
-Anyhow, Mr. Ritsky, tell him your story
-and ask him all the questions you want
-to. He’s headquarters on this stuff.”</p>
-
-<p>Ritsky studied his clawlike hands for a
-moment, clasping and unclasping the
-bony fingers. Suddenly he looked up.</p>
-
-<p>“Do animals have immortal souls?”
-he asked, anxiously.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m afraid you have sadly overrated
-my ability as a recorder of scientific
-facts,” replied the doctor, smiling
-slightly. “Frankly, I do not know. I
-don’t believe anyone knows. Most people
-think they haven’t, and I incline toward
-that belief.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then such a thing as a ghost of a—a
-hound could not be?”</p>
-
-<p>“I would not say that. Nothing is
-impossible. There are undoubtedly more
-things in heaven and earth, as Shakespeare
-said, than we have dreamed of in
-our philosophy. However, I would consider
-a materialization of the disembodied
-spirit of a canine, or any of the
-other lower animals, as highly improbable.”</p>
-
-<p>“But if you saw one with your own
-eyes—”</p>
-
-<p>“I should probably be inclined to
-doubt the evidence of my senses. Have
-<i>you</i> seen one?”</p>
-
-<p>“Have I <i>seen</i> one?” groaned Ritsky.
-“Good Lord, man, I’d give every cent I
-own to be rid of that thing! For two
-years it’s turned my nights into hell!
-From a perfectly healthy, normal human
-being I’ve been reduced to a physical
-wreck. Sometimes I think my reason is
-slipping. The thing will either kill me
-or drive me mad if it is not stopped.”</p>
-
-<p>He buried his face in his hands.</p>
-
-<p>“This is most strange,” said the
-doctor. “You say the apparition first
-troubled you two years ago?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not in its present form. But it was
-there, nevertheless. The first time I saw
-it was shortly after I killed that cursed
-dog. A month, to be exact. I shot him
-on the twenty-first of August, and he, or
-it, or <i>something</i>, came back to haunt me
-on the twenty-first of September.</p>
-
-<p>“How vividly I remember the impressions
-of that first night of terror!
-How I tried, the next day, to make myself
-believe it was only a dream—that
-such a thing could not be. I had retired
-at eleven o’clock, and was awakened
-from a sound sleep some time between
-one and two in the morning by
-the whining, yapping cry of a dog. As
-there were no dogs on the premises, you
-can imagine my surprise.</p>
-
-<p>“I was about to get up when something
-directly over the foot of my bed
-riveted my attention. In the dim light
-it appeared a grayish white in color, and
-closely resembled the head and pendant
-ears of a hound. I noticed, with horror,
-that it was moving slowly toward me,
-and I was temporarily paralyzed with
-fright when it emitted a low, cavernous
-growl.</p>
-
-<p>“Driving my muscles by a supreme
-effort of will, I leaped from the bed and
-switched on the light. In the air where
-I had seen the thing hanging there was
-nothing. The door was bolted and the
-windows were screened. There was nothing
-unusual in the room, as I found after
-a thorough search. Mystified, I hunted
-through the entire house from top to
-bottom, but without finding a trace of
-the thing, whatever if was, that had
-made the sounds.</p>
-
-<p>“From that day to this I have never
-laid my head on a pillow with a feeling
-of security. At first it visited me at intervals
-of about a week. These intervals
-were gradually shortened until it came
-every night. As its visits became more
-frequent the apparition seemed to grow.
-First it sprouted a small body like that
-of a terrier, all out of proportion to
-the huge head. Each night that body
-grew a little larger until it assumed the
-full proportions of a Russian wolfhound.
-Recently it has attempted to attack me,
-but I have always frustrated it by
-switching on the light.”</p>
-
-<p>“Are you positive that you have not
-been dreaming all this?” asked the
-doctor.</p>
-
-<p>“Would it be possible for some one
-else to hear a dream of mine?” countered
-Ritsky. “We have only been able
-to retain one servant on account of
-those noises. All, with the exception of
-our housekeeper, who is quite deaf,
-heard the noises and left us as a result.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who are the members of your household?”</p>
-
-<p>“Other than the housekeeper and myself,
-there is only my niece and ward, a
-girl of twelve.”</p>
-
-<p>“Has she heard the noises?”</p>
-
-<p>“She has never mentioned them.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why not move to another apartment?”</p>
-
-<p>“That would do no good. We have
-moved five times in the last two years.
-When the thing first started we were
-living on the estate of my niece near
-Lake Forest. We left the place in
-charge of care-takers and moved to
-Evanston. The apparition followed us.
-We moved to Englewood. The thing
-moved with us. We have had three
-different apartments in Chicago since. It
-came to all of them with equal regularity.”</p>
-
-<p>“Would you mind writing for me the
-various addresses at which you have
-lived?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not at all, if they will assist in solving
-this mystery.”</p>
-
-<p>The doctor procured a pencil and a
-sheet of note paper, and Ritsky put down
-the addresses.</p>
-
-<p>Doctor Dorp scanned them carefully.</p>
-
-<p>“Villa Rogers,” he said. “Then your
-niece is Olga Rogers, daughter of millionaire
-James Rogers and his beautiful
-wife, the former Russian dancer, both
-of whom were lost with the <i>Titanic</i>?”</p>
-
-<p>“Olga’s mother was my sister. After
-the sudden death of her parents, the
-court appointed me her guardian and
-trustee of the estate.”</p>
-
-<p>“I believe that is all the information
-we need for the present, Mr. Ritsky. If
-you have no objection I will call on you
-after dinner this evening, and if Mr.
-Hoyne cares to accompany me we will
-see what we can do toward solving this
-mystery. Please take care that no one
-in your home is apprised of the object
-of our visit. Say, if you wish, that we
-are going to install some electrical equipment.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll be there with bells,” said Hoyne
-as they rose to go.</p>
-
-<h3><i>II.</i></h3>
-
-<p>Shortly after his guests’ departure,
-Doctor Dorp was speeding out
-Sheridan Road toward Villa Rogers.</p>
-
-<p>The drive took nearly an hour, and he
-spent another half-hour in questioning
-the care-takers, man and wife. He returned
-home with a well-filled notebook,
-and on his arrival he began immediately
-assembling paraphernalia for the evening’s
-work. This consisted of three
-cameras with specially constructed shutters,
-several small electrical mechanisms,
-a coil of insulated wire, a flash-gun, and
-a kit of tools.</p>
-
-<p>After dinner he picked up Hoyne at
-his home, and they started for the
-“haunted house.”</p>
-
-<p>“You say you investigated this case
-last night, Hoyne?” asked the doctor.</p>
-
-<p>“I tried to, but there was nothing to
-it, so far as I could see, except the whining
-of that dog.”</p>
-
-<p>“Where were you when you heard the
-noises?”</p>
-
-<p>“Ritsky had retired. I slept in a
-chair in his room. About two o’clock I
-was awakened by a whining noise, not
-loud, yet distinctly audible. Then I
-heard a yell from Ritsky. He switched
-on the light a moment later, then sat
-down on the bed, trembling from head to
-foot, while beads of perspiration stood
-out on his forehead.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Did you see it?’ he asked me.</p>
-
-<p>“‘See what?’ I said.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_62"></a>[62]</span></p>
-
-<p>“‘The hound.’</p>
-
-<p>“I told him I hadn’t seen a thing, but
-I heard the noise all right. Between you
-and me, though, I did think I saw a
-white flash for a second beside his bed,
-but I can’t swear to it.”</p>
-
-<p>“We won’t trust our eyes tonight,”
-said the doctor. “I have three eyes in
-that case that will not be affected by
-hysteria or register hallucinations.”</p>
-
-<p>“Three eyes? What are you talking
-about?”</p>
-
-<p>“Cameras, of course.”</p>
-
-<p>“But how—”</p>
-
-<p>“Wait until we get there. I’ll show
-you.”</p>
-
-<p>A few moments later they were admitted
-to the apartment by the housekeeper,
-a stolid woman of sixty or thereabout.
-Ritsky presented them to his
-niece, a dreamy-eyed, delicately pretty
-school girl with silky golden curls that
-glistened against the pale whiteness of
-her skin.</p>
-
-<p>“If you don’t mind,” said the doctor,
-“we will look things over now. It will
-take some time to install the wiring and
-make other necessary preparations.”</p>
-
-<p>Ritsky showed them through the
-apartment, which was roomy, furnished
-in good taste and artistically decorated.
-The floor plan was quite simple and ordinary.
-First came the large living-room
-that extended across the front of the
-house. This opened at the right into the
-dining-room and at the center into a
-hallway which led through to the back
-of the building. Behind the dining-room
-was the kitchen, and behind that
-the servant’s room. Ritsky’s bedroom
-was directly across the hall from the
-dining-room. Then came his niece’s bedroom,
-a spare bedroom and a bathroom.
-Each of the three front bedrooms was
-equipped with a private bath and large
-clothes-closet.</p>
-
-<p>The doctor began by installing the
-three cameras in Ritsky’s room, fastening
-them on the wall in such a manner
-that they faced the bed from three directions.
-After focusing them properly,
-he set the flash-gun on a collapsible
-tripod and pointed it toward the bed.</p>
-
-<p>The room was lighted by an alabaster
-bowl that depended from the ceiling and
-could be turned on or off by a switch at
-the bedside. There were, in addition,
-two wall lights, one on each side of the
-dresser, and a small reading lamp on a
-table in one corner. These last three
-lights were operated by individual pull-cords.</p>
-
-<p>Ritsky procured a step-ladder for him,
-and, after switching off the drop light,
-he removed one of the bulbs from the
-cluster and inserted a four-way socket.
-From this socket he ran wires along the
-ceiling and down the wall to the three
-cameras and the flash-gun. By the time
-these preparations were completed Miss
-Rogers and the housekeeper had retired.</p>
-
-<p>Hoyne surveyed the finished job with
-frank admiration.</p>
-
-<p>“If there’s anything in this room
-when Ritsky turns the switch those three
-mechanical eyes will sure spot it,” he
-said enthusiastically.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, Mr. Ritsky,” began the doctor,
-“I want you to place yourself entirely
-in our hands for the night. Keep cool,
-fear nothing, and carry out my instructions
-to the letter. I suggest that you
-go to bed now and endeavor to get some
-sleep. If the apparition troubles you,
-do just as you have done in the past—turn
-on the light. Do not, however,
-touch the light switch unless the thing
-appears. The photographic plates, when
-developed, will tell whether you have
-been suffering from a mere hallucination
-induced by auto-suggestion or if
-genuine materialization phenomena have
-occurred.”</p>
-
-<p>After closing and bolting the windows
-they placed the step-ladder in the hallway
-beside Ritsky’s door. Then they
-obtained a duplicate key from him and
-asked him to lock himself in, removing
-his key so they might gain entrance at
-any time.</p>
-
-<p>When everything was ready they
-quietly brought two chairs into the hall
-from the spare bedroom and began their
-silent vigil.</p>
-
-<h3><i>III.</i></h3>
-
-<p>Both men sat in silence for nearly
-three hours. The doctor seemed lost
-in thought, and Hoyne nervously masticated
-his inevitable unlighted cigar. The
-house was quiet, except for the ticking
-of the hall clock and its hourly chiming
-announcements of the flight of time.</p>
-
-<p>Shortly after the clock struck two they
-heard a low, scarcely audible moan.</p>
-
-<p>“What was that?” whispered the detective,
-hoarsely.</p>
-
-<p>“Wait!” the doctor replied.</p>
-
-<p>Presently it was repeated, followed by
-prolonged sobbing.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s Miss Rogers,” said Hoyne, excitedly.</p>
-
-<p>Doctor Dorp rose and softly tiptoed
-to the door of the child’s bed chamber.
-After listening there for a moment he
-noiselessly opened the door and entered.
-Presently he returned, leaving the door
-ajar. The sobbing and moaning continued.</p>
-
-<p>“Just as I expected,” he said. “I
-want you to go in the child’s room, keep
-quiet, and make a mental note of everything
-you see and hear. Stay there
-until I call you, and be prepared for
-a startling sight.”</p>
-
-<p>“Wh—what is it?” asked Hoyne,
-nervously.</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing that will hurt you. What’s
-the matter? Are you afraid?”</p>
-
-<p>“Afraid, hell!” growled Hoyne.
-“Can’t a man ask you a question—”</p>
-
-<p>“No time to answer questions now.
-Get in there and do as I say if you want
-to be of any assistance.”</p>
-
-<p>“All right, Doc. It’s your party.”</p>
-
-<p>The big detective entered the room of
-the sobbing child and squeezed his great
-bulk into a dainty rocking chair from
-which he could view her bed. She
-tossed from side to side, moaning as if in
-pain, and Hoyne, pitying her, wondered
-why the doctor did not awaken her.</p>
-
-<p>Presently she ceased her convulsive
-movements, clenched her hands, and
-uttered a low, gurgling cry, as a white,
-filmy mass slowly emerged from between
-her lips. The amazed detective stared
-with open mouth, so frightened that he
-forgot to chew his cigar. The filmy
-material continued to pour forth for
-several minutes that seemed like hours to
-the tense watcher. Then it formed a
-nebulous, wispy cloud above the bed,
-completely detached itself from the girl,
-and floated out through the half-opened
-door.</p>
-
-<p>Doctor Dorp, standing in the hallway,
-saw a white, misty thing of indefinite
-outline emerge from the bedroom. It
-floated through the hall and paused directly
-in front of Ritsky’s door. He approached
-it cautiously and noiselessly,
-and noticed that it grew rapidly smaller.
-Then he discovered the reason. It was
-flowing <i>through the keyhole</i>!</p>
-
-<p>In a short time it had totally disappeared.
-He waited breathlessly.</p>
-
-<p><i>What was that?</i> The whining cry of
-a hound broke the stillness! He mounted
-the step-ladder in order to view the interior
-of the room through the glass
-transom. He had scarcely placed his
-foot on the second step when the whining
-noise changed to a gurgling growl
-that was followed by a shriek of mortal
-terror and the dull report of the flash-gun.</p>
-
-<p>Leaping down from the ladder, the
-doctor called Hoyne, and they entered
-the “haunted” bed chamber. The room
-was brilliantly lighted by the alabaster
-bowl and filled with the sickening fumes
-of flash-powder.</p>
-
-<p>Hoyne opened the windows and returned
-to where the doctor was thoughtfully
-viewing Ritsky, who had apparently
-fainted. He had fallen half out of
-bed, and hung there with one bony arm
-trailing and his emaciated face a picture
-of abject fear.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_63"></a>[63]</span></p>
-
-<p>“My God!” exclaimed Hoyne. “Look
-there on his throat and chest. <i>The
-frothy slaver of a hound!</i>”</p>
-
-<p>The doctor took a small porcelain dish
-from his pocket, removed the lid, and
-with the blade of his pocket knife,
-scraped part of the slimy deposit into
-the receptacle.</p>
-
-<p>“Hadn’t we better try to bring him
-to?” inquired Hoyne.</p>
-
-<p>After they had lifted him back in bed
-the doctor leaned over and held his ear
-to the breast of the recumbent man. He
-took his stethoscope from his case and
-listened again. Then he straightened
-gravely.</p>
-
-<p>“No earthly power can bring him to,”
-he said, softly, “<i>Ritsky is dead!</i>”</p>
-
-<h3><i>IV.</i></h3>
-
-<p>The detective remained in the
-house, pending the arrival of the
-coroner and undertaker, while Doctor
-Dorp hurried home with his paraphernalia
-and the sample of slime he had
-scraped from the corpse. Hoyne was
-puzzled by the fact that the doctor
-searched the house and the clothing of
-the dead man before departing.</p>
-
-<p>The detective was kept busy at the
-Ritsky apartment until nearly ten
-o’clock. After stopping at a restaurant
-for a bit of breakfast and a cup of coffee,
-he went directly to the doctor’s home.</p>
-
-<p>He found the psychologist in his laboratory,
-engrossed in a complicated
-chemical experiment. He shook a test
-tube, which he had been heating over a
-small alcohol lamp, held it up to the
-light, stood it in a small rack in which
-were a number of others partly filled
-with liquid, and nodded cordially to his
-friend.</p>
-
-<p>“Morning, Doc.,” greeted Hoyne.
-“Have you doped out what we are going
-to tell the coroner yet?”</p>
-
-<p>“I knew the direct cause of Ritsky’s
-death long ago. It was fear. The indirect
-cause, the thing that induced the
-fear, required careful examination and
-considerable chemical research.”</p>
-
-<p>“And it was—”</p>
-
-<p>“Psychoplasm.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t get you, Doc. What is
-psychoplasm?”</p>
-
-<p>“No doubt you have heard of the substance
-called ectoplasm, regarding which
-Sir Arthur Conan Doyle has delivered
-numerous lectures, or an identical substance
-called teleplasm, discovered by
-Baron Von Schrenck Notzing while attending
-materialization seances with the
-medium known as Eva.</p>
-
-<p>“While the baron was observing and
-photographing this substance in Europe,
-my friend and colleague, Professor
-James Braddock, was conducting similar
-investigations in this country. He
-named the substance psychoplasm, and I
-like the name better than either of the
-other two, as it is undoubtedly created
-or generated from invisible particles of
-matter through the power of the subjective
-mind.</p>
-
-<p>“I have examined and analyzed many
-samples of this substance in the past.
-The plate I now have under the compound
-microscope, and the different
-chemical determinations I have just
-completed, show conclusively that this
-is psychoplasm.”</p>
-
-<p>“But how—where did it come from?”</p>
-
-<p>“I learned something of the history
-of Ritsky and his ward yesterday. Let
-me enlighten you on that score first:</p>
-
-<p>“The man told the truth when he said
-he was appointed guardian of his niece,
-and also when he said that he had shot
-a dog. The dog, in question, was a
-Russian wolfhound, a present sent to
-the girl by her parents while they were
-touring Russia. He was only half grown
-when he arrived, and the two soon became
-boon companions, frolicking and
-playing about the grounds together or
-romping through the big house.</p>
-
-<p>“Some time after the death of Olga’s
-parents, Ritsky, then editor of a radical
-newspaper in New York, took up his
-abode at Villa Rogers. The dog, by that
-time full grown, took a violent dislike to
-him and, on one occasion, bit him quite
-severely. When he announced his intention
-of having the animal shot the girl
-wept violently and swore that she would
-kill herself if Shag, as she had named
-him, were killed. It seemed that she
-regarded him as a token of the love of
-her parents who had sailed away, never
-to return.”</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Shag!</i> That’s the name!” broke in
-Hoyne, excitedly. “After that white
-thing floated out of the room she made
-noises like a dog and then answered
-them, saying ‘Good old Shag,’ and patting
-an imaginary head. She sure gave
-me the creeps, though, when she let out
-that growl.”</p>
-
-<p>“The vengeful Ritsky,” continued the
-doctor, “was determined that Shag
-should die, and found an opportunity to
-shoot him with a pistol when the girl
-was in the house. Shortly after, the
-faithful creature dragged himself to the
-feet of his mistress and died in her arms.
-He could not tell her who had taken his
-life, but she must have known subjectively,
-and as a result entertained a hatred
-for her uncle of which she objectively
-knew nothing.</p>
-
-<p>“Most people have potential mediumistic
-power. How this power is developed
-in certain individuals and remains
-practically dormant in others is a question
-that has never been satisfactorily
-explained. I personally believe that it
-is often developed because of intense
-emotional repressions which, unable to
-find an outlet in a normal manner
-through the objective mind, find expression
-in abnormal psychic manifestations.</p>
-
-<p>“This seemed to be the case with Olga
-Rogers. She developed the power subjectively
-without objective knowledge
-that it existed. One of the most striking
-of psychic powers is that of creating
-or assembling the substance called
-psychoplasm, causing it to assume various
-forms, and to move as if endowed
-with a mind of its own.</p>
-
-<p>“Olga developed this peculiar power
-to a remarkable degree. Acting under
-the direction of her subjective intelligence,
-the substance assumed the form
-of her beloved animal companion and
-sought revenge on its slayer. We arrived
-a day too late to save the object
-of her unconscious hatred.”</p>
-
-<p>“Too bad you were not there the night
-before,” said Hoyne. “The poor devil
-would be alive today if you had been on
-hand with me the first night to dope the
-thing out.”</p>
-
-<p>“We might have saved him for a
-prison term or the gallows,” replied the
-doctor, a bit sardonically. “You haven’t
-seen this, of course.”</p>
-
-<p>He took a small silver pencil from the
-table and handed it to the detective.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s that got to do with—”</p>
-
-<p>“Open it! Unscrew the top. Careful!”</p>
-
-<p>Hoyne unscrewed it gingerly and saw
-that the chamber, which was made to
-hold extra leads, was filled with a white
-powder.</p>
-
-<p>“Arsenic,” said the doctor, briefly.
-“Did you notice the sickly pallor of that
-girl—the dark rings under her eyes?
-Her loving uncle and guardian was
-slowly poisoning her, increasing the
-doses from time to time. In another
-month or six weeks she would have been
-dead, and Ritsky, her nearest living relative,
-would have inherited her immense
-fortune.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well I’ll be damned!” exploded
-Hoyne.</p>
-
-<p>Doctor Dorp’s laboratory assistant entered
-and handed a package of prints
-to his employer.</p>
-
-<p>“Here are the proofs of last night’s
-photographs,” said the doctor. “Care
-to see them?”</p>
-
-<p>Hoyne took them to the window and
-scrutinized them carefully.</p>
-
-<p>All showed Ritsky leaning out of bed,
-his hand on the light switch, his face
-contorted in an expression of intense
-horror—<i>and, gripping his throat in its
-ugly jaws, was the white, misshapen
-phantasm of a huge Russian wolfhound</i>!</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_64"></a>[64]</span></p>
-
-<p class="center larger">MASTERPIECES OF WEIRD FICTION</p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="THE_MURDERS_IN_THE_RUE_MORGUE"><i>No. 2—The Murders in the Rue Morgue</i></h2>
-
-<p class="center larger"><i>By</i> EDGAR ALLAN POE</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>What song the Syrens sang, or what name
-Achilles assumed when he hid himself among women,
-although puzzling questions are not beyond <i>all</i> conjecture.—<span class="smcap">Sir
-Thomas Browne</span>, <i>Urn-Burial</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The mental features discoursed of as
-the analytical, are, in themselves, but
-little susceptible of analysis. We appreciate
-them only in their effects. We
-know of them, among other things, that they
-are always to their possessor, when inordinately
-possessed, a source of the liveliest enjoyment.
-As the strong man exults in his physical ability,
-delighting in such exercises as call his
-muscles into action, so glories the analyst in
-that moral activity which <i>disentangles</i>. He derives
-pleasure from even the most trivial occupations
-bringing his talents into play. He is
-fond of enigmas, of conundrums, of hieroglyphics;
-exhibiting in his solutions of each a
-degree of acumen which appears to the ordinary
-apprehension preternatural. His results,
-brought about by the very soul and essence of
-method have, in truth, the whole air of intuition.
-The faculty of resolution is possibly much
-invigorated by mathematical study, and especially
-by the highest branch of it which, unjustly,
-and merely on account of its retrograde
-operations, has been called, as if <i>par excellence</i>,
-analysis. Yet to calculate is not in itself to
-analyze. A chess-player, for example, does the
-one without effort at the other. It follows
-that the game of chess, in its effects upon
-mental character, is greatly misunderstood. I
-am not now writing a treatise, but simply
-prefacing a somewhat peculiar narrative by
-observations very much at random; I will
-therefore, take occasion to assert that the
-higher powers of the reflective intellect are
-more decidedly and more usefully tasked by
-the unostentatious game of draughts than by
-all the elaborate frivolity of chess. In this
-latter, where the pieces have different and
-<i>bizarre</i> motions, the various and variable
-values, what is only complex is mistaken (a
-not unusual error) for what is profound. The
-<i>attention</i> is here called powerfully into play.
-If it flag for an instant, an oversight is committed,
-resulting in injury or defeat. The possible
-moves being not only manifold but involute,
-the chances of such oversights are
-multiplied; and in nine cases out of ten it is
-the more concentrative rather than the more
-acute player who conquers. In draughts, on
-the contrary, where the moves are <i>unique</i> and
-have but little variation, the probabilities of
-inadvertence are diminished, and the mere
-attention being left comparatively unemployed,
-what advantages are obtained by either party
-are obtained by superior <i>acumen</i>. To be less
-abstract—Let us suppose a game of draughts
-where the pieces are reduced to four kings, and
-where, of course, no oversight is to be expected.
-It is obvious that here the victory can be decided
-(the players being at all equal) only by
-some <i>recherche</i> movement, the result of some
-strong exertion of intellect. Deprived of ordinary
-resources, the analyst throws himself into
-the spirit of his opponent, identifies himself
-therewith, and not unfrequently sees thus, at
-a glance, the sole methods (sometimes indeed
-absurdly simple ones) by which he may seduce
-into error or hurry into miscalculation.</p>
-
-<p>Whist has long been noted for its influence
-upon what is termed the calculating power;
-and men of the highest order of intellect have
-been known to take an apparently unaccountable
-delight in it, while eschewing chess as
-frivolous. Beyond doubt there is nothing of
-a similar nature so greatly tasking the faculty
-of analysis. The best chess-player in Christendom
-<i>may</i> be little more than the best player
-of chess; but proficiency in whist implies
-capacity for success in all these more important
-undertakings where mind struggles with mind.
-When I say proficiency, I mean that perfection
-in the game which includes a comprehension
-of <i>all</i> the sources whence legitimate advantage
-may be derived. These are not only
-manifold but multiform, and lie frequently
-among recesses of thought altogether inaccessible
-to the ordinary understanding. To observe
-attentively is to remember distinctly; and, so
-far, the concentrative chess-player will do very
-well at whist; while the rules of Hoyle (themselves
-based upon the mere mechanism of the
-game) are sufficiently and generally comprehensible.
-Thus to have a retentive memory,
-and to proceed by “the book,” are points commonly
-regarded as the sum total of good playing.
-But it is in matters beyond the limits
-of mere rule that the skill of the analyst is
-evinced. He makes, in silence, a host of observations
-and inferences. So, perhaps, do his
-companions; and the difference in the extent of
-the information obtained, lies not so much in
-the validity of the inference as in the quality
-of the observation. The necessary knowledge
-is that of <i>what</i> to observe. Our player confines
-himself not at all; nor, because the game
-is the object, does he reject deductions from
-things external to the game. He examines the
-countenance of his partner, comparing it carefully
-with that of each of his opponents. He
-considers the mode of assorting the cards in
-each hand; often counting trump by trump and
-honor by honor, through the glances bestowed
-by their holders upon each. He notes every
-variation of face as the play progresses, gathering
-a fund of thought from the differences in
-the expression of certainty, of surprise, of
-triumph, or chagrin. From the manner of
-gathering up a trick he judges whether the
-person taking it can make another in the suit.
-He recognizes what is played through feint,
-by the air with which it is thrown upon the
-table. A casual or inadvertent word; the accidental
-dropping or turning of a card, with the
-accompanying anxiety or carelessness in regard
-to its concealment; the counting of the tricks,
-with the order of their arrangement; embarrassment,
-hesitation, eagerness or trepidation—all
-afford, to his apparently intuitive perception,
-indications of the true state of affairs.
-The first two or three rounds having been
-played, he is in full possession of the contents
-of each hand, and thenceforward puts down
-his card with as absolute a precision of purpose
-as if the rest of the party had turned
-outward the faces of their own.</p>
-
-<p>The analytical power should not be confounded
-with simple ingenuity; for while the
-analyst is necessarily ingenious, the ingenious
-man is often remarkably incapable of analysis.
-The constructive or combining power, by which
-ingenuity is usually manifested, and to which
-the phrenologists (I believe erroneously) have
-assigned a separate organ, supposing it a primitive
-faculty, has been so frequently seen in
-those whose intellect bordered otherwise upon
-idiocy, as to have attracted general observation
-among writers on morals. Between ingenuity
-and the analytic ability there exists a difference
-far greater, indeed, than that between the
-fancy and the imagination, but of a character
-very strictly analogous. It will be found, in
-fact, that the ingenious are always fanciful,
-and the <i>truly</i> imaginative never otherwise than
-analytic.</p>
-
-<p>The narrative which follows will appear to
-the reader somewhat in the light of a commentary
-upon the propositions just advanced.</p>
-
-<p>Residing in Paris during the spring and part
-of the summer of 18—, I there became acquainted
-with a Monsieur C. Auguste Dupin.
-This young gentleman was of an excellent—indeed
-of an illustrious family, but, by a
-variety of untoward events, had been reduced
-to such poverty that the energy of his character
-succumbed beneath it, and he ceased to
-bestir himself in the world, or to care for
-the retrieval of his fortunes. By courtesy of
-his creditors, there still remained in his possession
-a small remnant of his patrimony; and
-upon the income arising from this, he managed,
-by means of a rigorous economy, to procure the
-necessaries of life, without troubling himself
-about its superfluities. Books, indeed, were his
-sole luxuries, and in Paris these are easily obtained.</p>
-
-<p>Our first meeting was at an obscure library
-in the Rue Montmartre, where the accident of
-our both being in search of the same very
-rare and very remarkable volume, brought us
-into closer communion. We saw each other
-again and again. I was deeply interested in
-the little family history which he detailed to
-me with all that candor which a Frenchman
-indulges whenever mere self is the theme. I
-was astonished, too, at the vast extent of his
-reading; and above all, I felt my soul enkindled
-within me by the wild fervor, and the
-vivid freshness of his imagination. Seeking in
-Paris the objects I then sought, I felt that
-the society of such a man would be to me a
-treasure beyond price; and this feeling I<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_65"></a>[65]</span>
-frankly confided to him. It was at length
-arranged that we should live together during
-my stay in the city; and as my worldly circumstances
-were somewhat less embarrassed
-than his own, I was permitted to be at the
-expense of renting, and furnishing in a style
-which suited the rather fantastic gloom of our
-common temper, a time-eaten and grotesque
-mansion, long deserted through superstitions
-into which we did not enquire, and tottering
-to its fall in a retired and desolate portion of
-the Faubourg St. Germain.</p>
-
-<p>Had the routine of our life at this place
-been known to the world, we should have been
-regarded as madmen—although, perhaps, as
-madmen of a harmless nature. Our seclusion
-was perfect. We admitted no visitors. Indeed
-the locality of our retirement had been carefully
-kept a secret from my own former associates;
-and it had been many years since
-Dupin had ceased to know or be known in
-Paris. We existed within ourselves alone.</p>
-
-<p>It was a freak of fancy in my friend (for
-what else shall I call it?) to be enamored of
-the Night for her own sake; and into this
-<i>bizarrerie</i>, as into all his others, I quietly fell;
-giving myself up to his wild whims with a
-perfect <i>abandon</i>. The sable divinity would
-not herself dwell with us always; but we
-could counterfeit her presence. At the first
-dawn of the morning we closed all the massy
-shutters of our old building; lighted a couple
-of tapers which, strongly perfumed, threw out
-only the ghastliest and feeblest of rays. By
-the aid of these we then busied our souls in
-dreams—reading, writing, or conversing, until
-warned by the clock of the advent of the
-true Darkness. Then we sallied forth into
-the street, arm and arm, continuing the topics
-of the day, or roaming far and wide until a late
-hour, seeking, amid the wild lights and shadows
-of the populous city, that infinity of mental
-excitement which quiet observation can
-afford.</p>
-
-<p>At such times I could not help remarking
-and admiring (although from his rich ideality
-I had been prepared to expect it) a peculiar
-analytic ability in Dupin. He seemed, too, to
-take an eager delight in its exercise—if not
-exactly in its display—and did not hesitate to
-confess the pleasure thus derived. He boasted
-to me, with a low chuckling laugh, that most
-men, in respect to himself, wore windows in
-their bosoms, and was wont to follow up such
-assertions by direct and very startling proofs
-of his intimate knowledge of my own. His
-manner at these movements was frigid and
-abstract; his eyes were vacant in expression;
-while his voice, usually a rich tenor, rose into
-a treble which would have sounded petulantly
-but for the deliberateness and entire distinctness
-of the enunciation. Observing him in
-these moods, I often dwelt meditatively upon
-the old philosophy of the Bi-Part Soul, and
-amused myself with the fancy of a double
-Dupin—the creative and the resolvent.</p>
-
-<p>Let it not be supposed, from what I have just
-said, that I am detailing any mystery, or
-penning any romance. What I have described
-in the Frenchman, was merely the result of an
-excited, or perhaps of a diseased intelligence.
-But of the character of his remarks at the
-periods in question an example will best convey
-the idea.</p>
-
-<p>We were strolling one night down a long
-dirty street, in the vicinity of the Palais Royal.
-Being both, apparently, occupied with thought,
-neither of us had spoken a syllable for fifteen
-minutes at least. All at once Dupin broke
-forth with these words:—</p>
-
-<p>“He is a very little fellow, that’s true, and
-would do better for the Theatre des Varietes.”</p>
-
-<p>“There can be no doubt of that,” I replied
-unwittingly, and not at first observing (so
-much had I been absorbed in reflection) the
-extraordinary manner in which the speaker
-had chimed in with my meditations. In an
-instant afterward I recollected myself, and
-my astonishment was profound.</p>
-
-<p>“Dupin,” said I gravely, “this is beyond my
-comprehension. I do not hesitate to say that
-I am amazed, and can scarcely credit my senses.
-How was it possible you should know I was
-thinking of——?” Here I paused, to ascertain
-beyond a doubt whether he really knew
-of whom I thought.</p>
-
-<p>——“of Chantilly,” said he, “why do you
-pause? You were remarking to yourself that
-his diminutive figure unfitted him for tragedy.”</p>
-
-<p>This was precisely what had formed the
-subject of my reflections. Chantilly was a
-<i>quondam</i> cobbler of the Rue St. Denis, who,
-becoming stage-mad, had attempted the <i>role</i>
-of Xerxes, in Crebillon’s tragedy so called, and
-been notoriously Pasquinaded for his pains.</p>
-
-<p>“Tell me, for Heaven’s sake,” I exclaimed,
-“the method—if method there is—by which
-you have been enabled to fathom my soul in
-this matter.” In fact, I was even more startled
-than I would have been willing to express.</p>
-
-<p>“It was the fruiterer,” replied my friend,
-“who brought you to the conclusion that the
-mender of soles was not of sufficient height
-for Xerxes <i>et id genus omne</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>“The fruiterer!—you astonish me—I know
-no fruiterer whomsoever.”</p>
-
-<p>“The man who ran up against you as we
-entered the street—it may have been fifteen
-minutes ago.”</p>
-
-<p>I now remembered that, in fact, a fruiterer,
-carrying upon his head a large basket of
-apples, had nearly thrown me down, by accident,
-as we passed from the Rue C⸺ into
-the thoroughfare where we stood; but what
-this had to do with Chantilly I could not
-possibly understand.</p>
-
-<p>There was not a particle of <i>charlatanerie</i>
-about Dupin. “I will explain,” he said, “and
-that you may comprehend all clearly, we will
-first retrace the course of meditations, from the
-moment in which I spoke to you until that of
-the <i>rencontre</i> with the fruiterer in question.
-The larger links of the chain run thus—Chantilly,
-Orion, Dr. Nichols, Epicurus, Stereotomy,
-the street stones, the fruiterer.”</p>
-
-<p>There are few persons who have not, at
-some period of their lives, amused themselves
-in retracing the steps by which particular conclusions
-of their own minds have been attained.
-The occupation is often full of interest;
-and he who attempts it for the first
-time is astonished by the apparently illimitable
-distance and incoherence between the starting-point
-and the goal. What, then, must
-have been my amazement when I heard the
-Frenchman speak what he had just spoken, and
-when I could not help acknowledging that he
-had spoken the truth. He continued:</p>
-
-<p>“We had been talking of horses, if I remember
-aright, just before leaving the Rue C⸺.
-This was the last subject we discussed. As
-we crossed into this street, a fruiterer, with
-a large basket upon his head, brushing quickly
-past us, thrust you upon a pile of paving-stones
-collected at a spot where the causeway
-is undergoing repair. You stepped upon one
-of the loose fragments, slipped, slightly strained
-your ankle, appeared vexed or sulky, muttered
-a few words, turned to look at the pile,
-and then proceeded in silence. I was not
-particularly attentive to what you did; but
-observation has become with me, of late, a
-species of necessity.</p>
-
-<p>“You kept your eyes upon the ground—glancing,
-with a petulant expression, at the
-holes and ruts in the pavement, (so that I saw
-you were still thinking of the stones,) until
-we reached the little alley called Lamartine,
-which had been paved, by way of experiment,
-with the overlapping and riveted blocks. Here
-your countenance brightened up, and perceiving
-your lips move, I could not doubt that you
-murmured the word ‘stereotomy,’ a term very
-affectedly applied to this species of pavement.
-I knew that you could not say to yourself
-‘stereotomy’ without being brought to think of
-atomies, and thus of the theories of Epicurus;
-and since, when we discussed this subject not
-very long ago, I mentioned to you how singularly,
-yet with how little notice, the vague
-guesses of that noble Greek had met with confirmation
-in the late nebular cosmogony, I
-felt that you could not avoid casting your eyes
-upward to the great <i>nebula</i> in Orion, and I
-certainly expected that you would do so. You
-did look up; and I was now assured that I had
-correctly followed your steps. But in that
-bitter tirade upon Chantilly, which appeared
-in yesterday’s ‘<i>Musee</i>,’ the satirist, making
-some disgraceful allusions to the cobbler’s
-change of name upon assuming the buskin,
-quoted a Latin line about which we have
-often conversed. I mean the line</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Perdidit antiquum litera prima sonum.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>I had told you that this was in reference to
-Orion, formerly written Urion; and, from certain
-pungencies connected with this explanation,
-I was aware that you could not have
-forgotten it. It was clear, therefore, that you
-would not fail to combine the two ideas of
-Orion and Chantilly. That you did combine
-them I saw by the character of the smile
-which passed over your lips. You thought of
-the poor cobbler’s immolation. So far, you had
-been stooping in your gait; but now I saw
-you draw yourself up to your full height. I
-was then sure that you reflected upon the
-diminutive figure of Chantilly. At this point
-I interrupted your meditation to remark that
-as, in fact, he was a very little fellow—that
-Chantilly—he would do better at the <i>Theatre
-des Varietes</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>Not long after this we were looking over
-an evening edition of the “Gazette des Tribunaux,”
-when the following paragraphs arrested
-our attention.</p>
-
-<p>“EXTRAORDINARY MURDERS.—This
-morning, about three o’clock, the inhabitants of
-the Quartier St. Roch were aroused from sleep
-by a succession of terrific shrieks, issuing, apparently,
-from the fourth story of a house in
-the Rue Morgue, known to be in the sole occupancy
-of one Madame L’Espanaye, and her
-daughter, Mademoiselle Camille L’Espanaye.
-After some delay, occasioned by a fruitless
-attempt to produce admission in the usual
-manner, the gateway was broken in with a
-crowbar, and eight or ten of the neighbors
-entered, accompanied by two <i>gendarmes</i>. By
-this time the cries had ceased; but, as the
-party rushed up the first flight of stairs, two
-or more rough voices, in angry contention,
-were distinguished, and seemed to proceed from
-the upper part of the house. As the second
-landing was reached, these sounds, also, had
-ceased, and everything remained perfectly
-quiet. The party spread themselves and hurried
-from room to room. Upon arriving at a
-large back chamber in the fourth story, (the
-door of which, being found locked, with key
-inside, was forced open,) a spectacle presented<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_66"></a>[66]</span>
-itself which struck every one present not less
-with horror than with astonishment.</p>
-
-<p>“The apartment was in the wildest disorder—the
-furniture broken and thrown about in
-all directions. There was only one bedstead;
-and from this the bed had been removed, and
-thrown into the middle of the floor. On a chair
-lay a razor, besmeared with blood. On the
-hearth were two or three long and thick
-tresses of grey human hair, also dabbled in
-blood, and seeming to have been pulled out by
-the roots. Upon the floor were found four
-Napoleons, an ear-ring of topaz, three large
-silver spoons, three smaller of <i>metal d’ Alger</i>,
-and two bags, containing nearly four thousand
-francs in gold. The drawers of a <i>bureau</i>,
-which stood in one corner, were open, and had
-been, apparently, rifled, although many articles
-still remained in them. A small iron safe was
-discovered under the bed (not under the bedstead).
-It was open, with the key still in
-the door. It had no contents beyond a few
-old letters, and other papers of little consequence.</p>
-
-<p>“Of Madame L’Espanaye no traces were here
-seen; but an unusual quantity of soot being
-observed in the fire-place, a search was made
-in the chimney, and (horrible to relate!) the
-corpse of the daughter, head downward, was
-dragged therefrom; it having been thus forced
-up the narrow aperture for a considerable distance.
-The body was quite warm. Upon examining
-it, many excoriations were perceived,
-no doubt occasioned by the violence with which
-it had been thrust up and disengaged. Upon
-the face were many severe scratches, and, upon
-the throat, dark bruises, and deep indentations
-of finger nails, as if the deceased had been
-throttled to death.</p>
-
-<p>“After a thorough investigation of every
-portion of the house, without farther discovery,
-the party made its way into a small paved
-yard in the rear of the building, where lay the
-corpse of the old lady, with her throat so
-entirely cut that, upon an attempt to raise
-her, the head fell off. The body, as well as
-the head, was fearfully mutilated—the former
-so much so as scarcely to retain any semblance
-of humanity.</p>
-
-<p>“To this horrible mystery there is not as yet,
-we believe, the slightest clew.”</p>
-
-<p>The next day’s paper had these additional
-particulars.</p>
-
-<p>“The Tragedy in the Rue Morgue. Many
-individuals have been examined in relation to
-this most extraordinary and frightful affair.”
-[The word ‘<i>affaire</i>’ has not yet, in France, that
-levity of import which it conveys with us,]
-“but nothing whatever has transpired to throw
-light upon it. We give below all the material
-testimony elicited.</p>
-
-<p>“Pauline Dubourg, laundress, deposes that
-she has known both the deceased for three
-years, having washed for them during that
-period. The old lady and her daughter seemed
-on good terms—very affectionate towards each
-other. They were excellent pay. Could not
-speak in regard to their mode or means of
-living. Believed that Madame D. told fortunes
-for a living. Was reputed to have money put
-by. Never met any persons in the house when
-she called for the clothes or took them home.
-Was sure that they had no servant in employ.
-There appeared to be no furniture in any part
-of the building except in the fourth story.</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Pierre Moreau</i>, tobacconist, deposes that he
-has been in the habit of selling small quantities
-of tobacco and snuff to Madame L’Espanaye
-for nearly four years. Was born in the neighborhood,
-and has always resided there. The
-deceased and her daughter had occupied the
-house in which the corpses were found, for
-more than six years. It was formerly occupied
-by a jeweller, who under-let the upper
-rooms to various persons. The house was the
-property of Madame L. She became dissatisfied
-with the abuse of the premises by her
-tenant, and moved into them herself, refusing
-to let any portion. The old lady was childish.
-Witness had seen the daughter some five or six
-times during the six years. The two lived an
-exceedingly retired life—were reputed to have
-money. Had heard it said among the neighbors
-that Madame L. told fortunes—did not believe
-it. Had never seen any person enter the door
-except the old lady and her daughter, a porter
-once or twice, and a physician some eight or
-ten times.</p>
-
-<p>“Many other persons, neighbors, gave evidence
-to the same effect. No one was spoken
-of as frequenting the house. It was not known
-whether there were any living connections of
-Madame L. and her daughter. The shutters
-of the front windows were seldom opened.
-Those in the rear were always closed, with
-the exception of the large back room, fourth
-story. The house was a good house—not very
-old.</p>
-
-<p>“Isidore Muset, <i>gendarme</i>, deposes that he
-was called to the house about three o’clock
-in the morning, and found some twenty or
-thirty persons at the gateway, endeavoring to
-gain admittance. Forced it open, at length,
-with a bayonet—not with a crowbar. Had
-but little difficulty in getting it open, on
-account of its being a double or folding gate,
-and bolted neither at bottom nor top. The
-shrieks were continued until the gate was
-forced—and then suddenly ceased. They
-seemed to be screams of some person (or persons)
-in great agony—were loud and drawn
-out, not short and quick. Witness led the way
-upstairs. Upon reaching the first landing,
-heard two voices in loud and angry contention—the
-one a gruff voice, the other much shriller—a
-very strange voice. Could distinguish
-some words of the former, which was that of
-a Frenchman. Was positive that it was not
-a woman’s voice. Could distinguish the words,
-‘<i>sacre</i>’ and ‘<i>diable</i>.’ The shrill voice was that
-of a foreigner. Could not be sure whether it
-was the voice of a man or of a woman. Could
-not make out what was said, but believed the
-language to be Spanish. The state of the
-room and of the bodies was described by this
-witness as we described them yesterday.</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Henri Duval</i>, a neighbor, and by trade a
-silversmith, deposes that he was one of the
-party who first entered the house. Corroborates
-the testimony of Muset in general. As
-soon as they forced an entrance, they reclosed
-the door, to keep out the crowd, which collected
-very fast, notwithstanding the lateness of the
-hour. The shrill voice, the witness thinks, was
-that of an Italian. Was certain it was not
-French. Could not be sure that it was a man’s
-voice. It might have been a woman’s. Was
-not acquainted with the Italian language.
-Could not distinguish the words, but was convinced
-by the intonation that the speaker
-was an Italian. Knew Madame L. and her
-daughter. Had conversed with both frequently.
-Was sure that the shrill voice was not that
-of either of the deceased.</p>
-
-<p>“<i>⸺ Odenheimer, restaurateur.</i> The witness
-volunteered his testimony. Not speaking
-French, was examined through an interpreter.
-Is a native of Amsterdam. Was passing the
-house at the time of the shrieks. They lasted
-for several minutes—probably ten. They were
-long and loud—very awful and distressing.
-Was one of those who entered the building.
-Corroborated the previous evidence in every
-respect but one. Was sure that the shrill
-voice was that of a man—of a Frenchman.
-Could not distinguish the words uttered. They
-were loud and quick—unequal—spoken apparently
-in fear as well as in anger. The
-voice was harsh—not so much shrill as harsh.
-Could not call it a shrill voice. The gruff voice
-said repeatedly ‘<i>sacre</i>,’ ‘<i>diable</i>’ and once ‘<i>mon
-Dieu</i>.’</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Jules Mignaud</i>, banker of the firm of
-Mignaud et Fils, Rue Deloraine. Is the elder
-Mignaud. Madame L’Espanaye had some property.
-Had opened an account with his banking
-house in the spring of the year ⸺ (eight
-years previously). Made frequent deposits in
-small sums. Had checked for nothing until
-the third day before her death, when she took
-out in person the sum of 4000 francs. This sum
-was paid in gold, and a clerk sent home with
-the money.</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Adolphe Le Bon</i>, clerk to Mignaud et Fils,
-deposes that on the day in question, about
-noon, he accompanied Madame L’Espanaye to
-her residence with the 4000 francs, put up in
-two bags. Upon the door being opened,
-Mademoiselle L. appeared and took from his
-hands one of the bags, while the old lady
-relieved him of the other. He then bowed and
-departed. Did not see any person in the street
-at the time. It is a bye-street—very lonely.</p>
-
-<p>“<i>William Bird</i>, tailor, deposes that he was
-one of the party who entered the house. Is
-an Englishman. Has lived in Paris two years.
-Was one of the first to ascend the stairs.
-Heard the voices in contention. The gruff
-voice was that of a Frenchman. Could make
-out several words, but cannot now remember
-all. Heard distinctly ‘<i>sacre</i>’ and ‘<i>mon Dieu</i>.’
-There was a sound at the moment as if of
-several persons struggling—a scraping and
-scuffling sound. The shrill voice was very loud—louder
-than the gruff one. Is sure that it
-was not the voice of an Englishman. Appeared
-to be that of a German. Might have been
-a woman’s voice. Does not understand German.</p>
-
-<p>“Four of the above-named witnesses, being
-recalled, deposed that the door of the chamber
-in which was found the body of Mademoiselle
-L. was locked on the inside when the party
-reached it. Everything was perfectly silent—no
-groans or noises of any kind. Upon forcing
-the door no person was seen. The windows,
-both of the back and front room, were down
-and firmly fastened from within. A door between
-the two rooms was closed, but not
-locked. The door leading from the front room
-into the passage was locked, with the key on
-the inside. A small room in the front of the
-house, on the fourth story, at the head of the
-passage, was open, the door being ajar. This
-room was crowded with old beds, boxes, and
-so forth. These were carefully removed and
-searched. There was not an inch of any portion
-of the house which was not carefully
-searched. Sweeps were sent up and down the
-chimneys. The house was a four story one,
-with garrets (<i>mansardes</i>). A trap-door on the
-roof was nailed down very securely—did not
-appear to have been opened for years. The
-time elapsing between the hearing of the
-voices in contention and the breaking open
-of the room door, was variously stated by the
-witnesses. Some made it as short as three
-minutes—some as long as five. The door was
-opened with difficulty.</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Alfonso Garcio</i>, undertaker, deposes that
-he resides in the Rue Morgue. Is a native of
-Spain. Was one of the party who entered
-the house. Did not proceed upstairs. Is<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_67"></a>[67]</span>
-nervous, and was apprehensive of the consequences
-of agitation. Heard the voices in
-contention. The gruff voice was that of a
-Frenchman. Could not distinguish what was
-said. The shrill voice was that of an Englishman—is
-sure of this. Does not understand
-the English language, but judges by the intonation.</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Alberto Montani</i>, confectioner, deposes
-that he was among the first to ascend the
-stairs. Heard the voices in question. The
-gruff voice was that of a Frenchman. Distinguished
-several words. The speaker appeared
-to be expostulating. Could not make
-out the words of the shrill voice. Spoke
-quick and unevenly. Thinks it the voice of a
-Russian. Corroborates the general testimony.
-Is an Italian. Never conversed with a native
-of Russia.</p>
-
-<p>“Several witnesses, recalled, here testified
-that the chimneys of all the rooms on the fourth
-story were too narrow to admit the passage
-of a human being. By ‘sweeps’ were meant
-cylindrical sweeping-brushes, such as are employed
-by those who clean chimneys. These
-brushes were passed up end down every flue
-in the house. There is no back passage by
-which any one could have descended while
-the party proceeded up stairs. The body of
-Mademoiselle L’Espanaye was so firmly
-wedged in the chimney that it could not be
-got down until four or five of the party united
-their strength.</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Paul Dumas</i>, physician, deposes that he
-was called to view the bodies about day-break.
-They were both then lying on the
-sacking of the bedstead in the chamber where
-Mademoiselle L. was found. The corpse of the
-young lady was much bruised and excoriated.
-The fact that it had been thrust up the chimney
-would sufficiently account for these appearances.
-The throat was greatly chafed.
-There were several deep scratches just below
-the chin, together with a series of livid spots
-which were evidently the impression of fingers.
-The face was fearfully discolored, and
-the eye-balls protruded. The tongue had been
-partially bitten through. A large bruise was
-discovered upon the pit of the stomach, produced
-apparently, by the pressure of a knee. In
-the opinion of M. Dumas, Mademoiselle L’Espanaye
-had been throttled to death by some person
-or persons unknown. The corpse of the
-mother was horribly mutilated. All the bones
-of the right leg and arm were more or less
-shattered. The left <i>tibia</i> much splintered, as
-well as all the ribs of the left side. Whole
-body dreadfully bruised and discolored. It was
-not possible to say how the injuries had been
-inflicted. A heavy club of wood, or a broad
-bar of iron—a chair—any large, heavy, and
-obtuse weapon would have produced such results,
-if wielded by the hands of a very powerful
-man. No woman could have inflicted the
-blows with any weapon. The head of the deceased,
-when seen by witness, was entirely
-separated from the body, and was also greatly
-shattered. The throat had evidently been cut
-with some very sharp instrument—probably
-with a razor.</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Alexandre Etienne</i>, surgeon, was called with
-M. Dumas to view the bodies. Corroborated
-the testimony, and the opinions of M. Dumas.</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing farther of importance was elicited,
-although several other persons were examined.
-A murder so mysterious, and so perplexing in
-all its particulars, was never before committed
-in Paris—if indeed a murder had been committed
-at all. The police are entirely at fault—an
-unusual occurrence in affairs of this nature.
-There is not, however, the shadow of a
-clue apparent.”</p>
-
-<p>The evening edition of the paper stated that
-the greatest excitement still continued in the
-Quartier St. Roch—that the premises in question
-had been carefully re-searched, and fresh
-examinations of witnesses instituted, but all
-to no purpose. A postscript, however, mentioned
-that Adolphe Le Bon had been arrested
-and imprisoned—although nothing appeared to
-criminate him, beyond the facts already detailed.</p>
-
-<p>Dupin seemed singularly interested in the
-progress of this affair—at least so I judged
-from his manner, for he made no comments.
-It was only after the announcement that Le
-Bon had been imprisoned, that he asked me
-my opinion respecting the murders.</p>
-
-<p>I could merely agree with all Paris in considering
-them an insoluble mystery. I saw no
-means by which it would be possible to trace
-the murderer.</p>
-
-<p>“We must not judge of the means,” said Dupin,
-“by this shell of an examination. The
-Parisian police, so much extolled for <i>acumen</i>,
-are cunning, but no more. There is no method
-in their proceedings, beyond the method of the
-moment. They make a vast parade of measures;
-but, not unfrequently, these are so ill
-adapted to the object proposed, as to put us
-in mind of Monsieur Jourdain’s calling for his
-<i>robe-de-chambre—pour mieux entendre la musique</i>.
-The results attained by them are not unfrequently
-surprising, but, for the most part,
-are brought about by simple diligence and activity.
-When these qualities are unavailing,
-their schemes fail. Vidocq, for example, was
-a good guesser, and a persevering man. But,
-without educated thought, he erred continually
-by the very intensity of his investigations. He
-impaired his vision by holding the object too
-close. He might see, perhaps, one or two
-points with unusual clearness, but in so doing
-he, necessarily, lost sight of the matter as a
-whole. Thus there is such a thing as being
-too profound. Truth is not always in a well.
-In fact, as regards the more important knowledge,
-I do believe that she is invariably superficial.
-The depth lies in the valleys where
-we seek her, and not upon the mountain tops
-where she is found. The modes and sources of
-this kind of error are well typified in the contemplation
-of the heavenly bodies. To look at a
-star by glances—to view it in a side-long way,
-by turning toward it the exterior portions of
-the <i>retina</i> (more susceptible of feeble impressions
-of light than the interior), is to behold
-the star distinctly—is to have the best appreciation
-of its lustre—a lustre which grows dim
-just in proportion as we turn our vision <i>fully</i>
-upon it. A greater number of rays actually
-fall upon the eye in the latter case, but, in
-the former, there is the more refined capacity
-for comprehension. By undue profundity we
-perplex and enfeeble thought; and it is very
-possible to make even Venus herself vanish
-from the firmament by a scrutiny too sustained,
-too concentrated, or too direct.</p>
-
-<p>“As for these murders, let us enter into
-some examinations for ourselves, before we
-make up an opinion respecting them. An inquiry
-will afford us amusement,” [I thought
-this an odd term, so applied, but said nothing]
-“and, besides, Le Bon once rendered me a service
-for which I am not ungrateful. We will
-go and see the premises with our own eyes.
-I know G⸺, the Prefect of Police, and
-shall have no difficulty in obtaining the necessary
-permission.”</p>
-
-<p>The permission was obtained, and we proceeded
-at once to the Rue Morgue. This is
-one of those miserable thoroughfares which
-intervene between the Rue Richelieu and the
-Rue St. Roch. It was late in the afternoon
-when we reached it; as this quarter is at a
-great distance from that in which we resided.
-The house was readily found; for there were
-still many persons gazing up at the closed
-shutters, with an objectless curiosity, from
-the opposite side of the way. It was an ordinary
-Parisian house, with a gateway, on one
-side of which was a glazed watch-box, with a
-sliding panel in the window, indicating a <i>loge
-de concierge</i>. Before going in we walked up
-the street, turned down an alley, and then,
-again turning, passed in the rear of the building—Dupin,
-meanwhile, examining the whole
-neighborhood, as well as the house, with a
-minuteness of attention for which I could see
-no possible object.</p>
-
-<p>Retracing our steps, we came again to the
-front of the dwelling, rang, and, having shown
-our credentials, were admitted by the agents
-in charge. We went up stairs—into the chamber
-where the body of Mademoiselle L’Espanaye
-had been found, and where both the
-deceased still lay. The disorders of the room
-had, as usual, been suffered to exist. I saw
-nothing beyond what had been stated in the
-“Gazette des Tribunaux.” Dupin scrutinised
-every thing—not excepting the bodies of the
-victims. We then went into the other rooms,
-and into the yard; a <i>gendarme</i> accompanying
-us throughout. The examination occupied us
-until dark, when we took our departure. On
-our way home my companion stopped in for a
-moment at the office of one of the daily
-papers.</p>
-
-<p>I have said that the whims of my friend
-were manifold, and that <i>Je les menageais</i>—for
-this phrase there is no English equivalent. It
-was his humor, now, to decline all conversation
-on the subject of the murder, until about
-noon the next day. He then asked me, suddenly,
-if I had observed anything <i>peculiar</i> at
-the scene of the atrocity.</p>
-
-<p>There was something in his manner of emphasizing
-the word “peculiar,” which caused
-me to shudder, without knowing why.</p>
-
-<p>“No, nothing <i>peculiar</i>,” I said; “nothing
-more, at least, than we both saw stated in the
-paper.”</p>
-
-<p>“The ‘Gazette,’” he replied, “has not entered,
-I fear, into the unusual horror of the
-thing. But dismiss the idle opinions of this
-print. It appears to me that this mystery
-is considered insoluble, for the very reason
-which should cause it to be regarded as easy
-of solution—I mean for the <i>outre</i> character of
-its features. The police are confounded by
-the seeming absence of motive—not for the
-murder itself—but for the atrocity of the murder.
-They are puzzled, too, by the seeming
-impossibility of reconciling the voices heard in
-contention, with the facts that no one was
-discovered up stairs but the assassinated Mademoiselle
-L’Espanaye, and that there were no
-means of egress without notice of the party
-ascending. The wild disorder of the room;
-the corpse thrust, with the head downward,
-up the chimney; the frightful mutilation of
-the body of the old lady; these considerations,
-with those just mentioned, and others
-which I need not mention, have sufficed to
-paralyze the powers, by putting completely at
-fault the boasted <i>acumen</i>, of the government
-agents. They have fallen into the gross but
-common error of confounding the unusual with
-the abstruse. But it is by these deviations
-from the plane of the ordinary, that reason
-feels its way, if at all, in its search for the
-true. In investigations such as we are now<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_68"></a>[68]</span>
-pursuing, it should not be so much asked
-‘what has occurred,’ as ‘what has occurred that
-has never occurred before.’ In fact, the facility
-with which I shall arrive, or have arrived,
-at the solution of this mystery, is in the direct
-ratio of its apparent insolubility in the
-eyes of the police.”</p>
-
-<p>I stared at the speaker in mute astonishment.</p>
-
-<p>“I am now awaiting,” continued he, looking
-toward the door of our apartment—“I am now
-awaiting a person who, although perhaps not
-the perpetrator of these butcheries, must have
-been in some measure implicated in their perpetration.
-Of the worst portion of the crimes
-committed, it is probable that he is innocent.
-I hope that I am right in the supposition;
-for upon it I build my expectation of
-reading the entire riddle. I look for the man
-here—in this room—every moment. It is true
-that he may not arrive; but the probability
-is that he will. Should he come, it will be
-necessary to detain him. Here are pistols;
-and we both know how to use them when occasion
-demands their use.”</p>
-
-<p>I took the pistols, scarcely knowing what I
-did, or believing what I heard, while Dupin
-went on, very much as if in a soliloquy. I
-have already spoken of his abstract manner
-at such times. His discourse was addressed to
-myself; but his voice, although by no means
-loud, had that intonation which is commonly
-employed in speaking to some one at a great
-distance. His eyes, vacant in expression, regarded
-only the wall.</p>
-
-<p>“That the voices heard in contention,” he
-said, “by the party upon the stairs, were not
-the voices of the women themselves, was fully
-proved by the evidence. This relieves us of all
-doubt upon the question whether the old lady
-could have first destroyed the daughter, and
-afterwards have committed suicide. I speak
-of this point chiefly for the sake of method;
-for the strength of Madame L’Espanaye would
-have been utterly unequal to the task of
-thrusting her daughter’s corpse up the chimney
-as it was found; and the nature of the wounds
-upon her own person entirely preclude the
-idea of self-destruction. Murder, then, has
-been committed by some third party; and the
-voices of this third party were those heard in
-contention. Let me now advert—not to the
-whole testimony respecting these voices—but
-to what was peculiar in that testimony. Did
-you observe anything peculiar about it?”</p>
-
-<p>I remarked that, while all the witnesses
-agreed in supposing the gruff voice to be that
-of a Frenchman, there was much disagreement
-in regard to the shrill, or, as one individual
-termed it, the harsh voice.</p>
-
-<p>“That was the evidence itself,” said Dupin,
-“but it was not the peculiarity of the evidence.
-You have observed nothing distinctive. Yet
-there was something to be observed. The witnesses,
-as you remark, agreed about the gruff
-voice; they were here unanimous. But in
-regard to the shrill voice, the peculiarity is—not
-that they disagreed—but that, while an
-Italian, an Englishman, a Spaniard, a Hollander,
-and a Frenchman attempted to describe
-it, each one spoke of it as that of a foreigner.
-Each is sure that it was not the voice of one
-of his own countrymen. Each likens it—not
-to the voice of an individual of any nation
-with whose language he is conversant—but the
-converse. The Frenchman supposes it the
-voice of a Spaniard, and ‘might have distinguished
-some words had he been acquainted
-with the Spanish.’ The Dutchman maintains
-it to have been that of a Frenchman; but we
-find it stated that ‘not understanding French
-this witness was examined through an interpreter.’
-The Englishman thinks it the voice of
-a German, and ‘does not understand German.’
-The Spaniard ‘is sure’ that it was that of an
-Englishman, but ‘judges by the intonation’
-altogether, ‘as he has no knowledge of the
-English.’ The Italian believes it the voice of a
-Russian, but ‘has never conversed with a native
-of Russia.’ A second Frenchman differs,
-moreover, with the first, and is positive that
-the voice was that of an Italian; but, ‘not being
-cognizant of that tongue,’ is, like the
-Spaniard, ‘convinced by the intonation.’ Now,
-how strangely unusual must that voice have
-really been, about which such testimony as this
-could have been elicited!—in whose <i>tones</i>, even,
-denizens of the five great divisions of Europe
-could recognize nothing familiar! You will
-say that it might have been the voice of an
-Asiatic—of an African. Neither Asiatics nor
-Africans abound in Paris; but, without denying
-the inference, I will now merely call your
-attention to three points. The voice is termed
-by one witness ‘harsh rather than shrill.’ It
-is represented by two others to have been
-‘quick and <i>unequal</i>.’ No words—no sounds resembling
-words—were by any witnesses mentioned
-as distinguishable.</p>
-
-<p>“I know not,” continued Dupin, “what impression
-I may have made, so far, upon your
-own understanding; but I do not hesitate to
-say that legitimate deductions even from this
-portion of the testimony—the portion respecting
-the gruff and shrill voices—are in themselves
-sufficient to engender a suspicion which
-should give direction to all farther progress in
-the investigation of the mystery. I said ‘legitimate
-deductions;’ but my meaning is not
-thus fully expressed. I designed to imply that
-the deductions are the sole proper ones, and
-that the suspicion arises <i>inevitably</i> from them
-as the single result. What the suspicion is
-however, I will not say just yet. I merely wish
-you to bear in mind that, with myself, it was
-sufficiently forcible to give a definite form—a
-certain tendency—to my inquiries in the
-chamber.</p>
-
-<p>“Let us now transport ourselves, in fancy,
-to this chamber. What shall we first seek
-here? The means of egress employed by the
-murderers. It is not too much to say that
-neither of us believe in praeternatural events,
-Madame and Mademoiselle L’Espanaye were
-not destroyed by spirits. The doers of the
-deed were material, and escaped materially.
-Then how? Fortunately, there is but one mode
-of reasoning upon the point, and that mode
-must lead us to a definite decision. Let us
-examine, each by each, the possible means of
-egress. It is clear that the assassins were in
-the room where Mademoiselle L’Espanaye was
-found, or at least in the room adjoining, when
-the party ascended the stairs. It is then only
-from these two apartments that we have to
-seek issues. The police have laid bare the
-floors, the ceilings, and the masonry of the
-walls, in every direction. No secret issues
-could have escaped their vigilance. But, not
-trusting to their eyes, I examined with my
-own. There were, then, no secret issues. Both
-doors leading from the rooms into the passage
-were securely locked, with keys inside. Let us
-turn to the chimneys. These, although of ordinary
-width for some eight or ten feet above
-the hearths, will not admit, throughout their
-extent, the body of a large cat. The impossibility
-of egress by means already stated, being
-thus absolute, we are reduced to the windows.
-Through those of the front room no
-one could have escaped without notice from
-the crowd in the street. The murderers must
-have passed, then, through those of the back
-room. Now, brought to this conclusion in so
-unequivocal a manner as we are, it is not our
-part, as reasoners, to reject it on account of
-apparent impossibilities. It is only left for us
-to prove that these apparent ‘impossibilities’
-are, in reality, not such.</p>
-
-<p>“There are two windows in the chamber.
-One of them is unobstructed by furniture, and
-is wholly visible. The lower portion of the
-other is hidden from view by the head of the
-unwieldy bedstead which is thrust close up
-against it. The former was found securely
-fastened from within. It resisted the utmost
-force of those who endeavored to raise it. A
-large gimlet-hole had been pierced in its frame
-to the left, and a very stout nail was found
-fitted therein, nearly to the head. Upon examining
-the other window, a similar nail was
-seen similarly fitted into it; and a vigorous
-attempt to raise this sash, failed also. The
-police are now entirely satisfied that egress
-had not been in these directions. And, <i>therefore</i>,
-it was thought a matter of superogation
-to withdraw the nails and open the windows.</p>
-
-<p>“My own examination was somewhat more
-particular, and was so for the reason I have
-just given—because here it was, I knew, that
-all apparent impossibilities must be proved to
-be not such in reality.</p>
-
-<p>“I proceeded to think thus—<i>a posteriori</i>.
-The murderers <i>did</i> escape from one of these windows.
-This being so, they could not have re-fastened
-the sashes from the inside, as they
-were found fastened—the consideration which
-put a stop, through its obviousness, to the
-scrutiny of the police in this quarter. Yet
-the sashes <i>were</i> fastened. They must, then,
-have the power of fastening themselves. There
-was no escape from this conclusion. I stepped
-to the unobstructed casement, withdrew the
-nail with some difficulty, and attempted to
-raise the sash. It resisted all my efforts, as
-I had anticipated. A concealed spring must, I
-now knew, exist; and this corroboration of my
-idea convinced me that my premises, at least,
-were correct, however mysterious still appeared
-the circumstances attending the nails.
-A careful search soon brought to light the
-hidden spring. I pressed it, and, satisfied with
-the discovery, forebore to upraise the sash.</p>
-
-<p>“I now replaced the nail and regulated it
-attentively. A person passing out through
-this window might have reclosed it, and the
-spring would have caught—but the nail could
-not have been replaced. The conclusion was
-plain, and again narrowed in the field of my
-investigations. The assassins <i>must</i> have escaped
-through the other window. Supposing,
-then, the springs upon each sash to be the
-same, as was probable, there <i>must</i> be found
-a difference between the nails, or at least between
-the modes of their fixture. Getting upon
-the sacking of the bedstead, I looked over the
-headboard minutely at the second casement.
-Passing my hand down behind the board, I
-readily discovered and pressed the spring,
-which was, as I had supposed, identical in
-character with its neighbor. I now looked at
-the nail. It was as stout as the other, and
-apparently fitted in the same manner—driven
-in nearly up to the head.</p>
-
-<p>“You will say that I was puzzled; but, if
-you think so, you must have misunderstood
-the nature of the inductions. To use a sporting
-phrase, I had not been once ‘at fault.’ The
-scent had never for an instant been lost. There
-was no flaw in any link of the chain. I had
-traced the secret to its ultimate result—and
-that result was the <i>nail</i>. It had, I say, in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_69"></a>[69]</span>
-every respect the appearance of its fellow in
-the other window; but this fact was an absolute
-nullity (conclusive as it might seem to
-be) when compared with the consideration
-that here, at this point, terminated the clew,
-‘There must be something wrong,’ I said,
-‘about the nail.’ I touched it; and the head,
-with about a quarter of an inch of the shank,
-came off in my fingers. The rest of the shank
-was in the gimlet-hole, where it had been
-broken off. The fracture was an old one (for
-its edges were incrusted with rust), and had
-apparently been accomplished by the blow of a
-hammer, which had partially imbedded, in the
-top of the bottom sash, the head portion of
-the nail. I now carefully replaced this head
-portion in the indentation whence I had taken
-it, and the resemblance to a perfect nail was
-complete—the fissure was invisible. Pressing
-the spring, I gently raised the sash for a few
-inches; the head went up with it, remaining
-firm in its bed. I closed the window, and
-the semblance of the whole nail was again
-perfect.</p>
-
-<p>“The riddle, so far, was now unriddled. The
-assassin had escaped through the window
-which looked upon the bed. Dropping of its
-own accord upon his exit (or perhaps purposely
-closed), it had become fastened by the
-spring and it was the retention of this spring
-which had been mistaken by the police for
-that of the nail—farther inquiry being thus
-considered unnecessary.</p>
-
-<p>“The next question is that of the mode of
-descent. Upon this point I had been satisfied
-in my walk with you around the building.
-About five feet and a half from the casement
-in question there runs a lightning rod. From
-this rod it would have been impossible for
-anyone to reach the window itself, to say
-nothing of entering it. I observed, however,
-that the shutters of the fourth story were
-of the peculiar kind called by Parisian carpenters
-<i>ferrades</i>—a kind rarely employed at
-the present day, but frequently seen upon
-very old mansions at Lyons and Bordeaux.
-They are in the form of an ordinary door, (a
-single, not a folding door) except that the
-upper half is latticed or worked in open trellis—thus
-affording an excellent hold for the
-hands. In the present instance these shutters
-are fully three feet and a half broad. When
-we saw them from the rear of the house, they
-were both about half open—that is to say,
-they stood off at right angles from the wall.
-It is probable that the police, as well as myself,
-examined the back of the tenement; but,
-if so, in looking at these <i>ferrades</i> in the line of
-their breadth (as they must have done), they
-did not perceive this great breadth itself, or,
-at all events, failed to take it into due consideration.
-In fact, having once satisfied
-themselves that no egress could have been
-made in this quarter, they would naturally bestow
-here a very cursory examination. It was
-clear to me, however, that the shutter belonging
-to the window at the head of the bed,
-would, if swung fully back to the wall, reach
-to within two feet of the lightning-rod. It
-was also evident that, by exertion of a very
-unusual degree of activity and courage, an entrance
-into the window, from the rod, might
-have been thus effected. By reaching to the
-distance of two feet and a half (we now suppose
-the shutter open to its whole extent) a
-robber might have taken a firm grasp upon
-the trellis-work. Letting go, then, his hold
-upon the rod, placing his feet securely against
-the wall, and springing boldly from it, he
-might have swung the shutter so as to close
-it, and, if we imagine the window open at the
-time, might even have swung himself into the
-room.</p>
-
-<p>“I wish you to bear especially in mind that
-I have spoken of a very unusual degree of
-activity as requisite to success in so hazardous
-and so difficult a feat. It is my design to
-show you, first, that the thing might possibly
-have been accomplished—but, secondly and
-<i>chiefly</i>, I wish to impress upon your understanding
-the very <i>extraordinary</i>—the almost
-praeternatural character of the agility which
-could have accomplished it.</p>
-
-<p>“You will say, no doubt, using the language
-of the law, that ‘to make out my case’ I
-should rather undervalue than insist upon a
-full estimation of the activity required in this
-matter. This may be the practice in law, but
-it is not the usage of reason. My ultimate object
-is only the truth. My immediate purpose
-is to lead you to place in juxta-position that
-<i>very unusual</i> activity of which I have just
-spoken, with that <i>very peculiar</i> shrill (or
-harsh) and <i>unequal</i> voice, about whose nationality
-no two persons could be found to
-agree, and in whose utterance no syllabification
-could be detected.”</p>
-
-<p>At these words a vague and half-formed
-conception of the meaning of Dupin flitted
-over my mind. I seemed to be upon the verge
-of comprehension, without power to comprehend—as
-men, at times, find themselves upon
-the brink of remembrance, without being able,
-in the end, to remember. My friend went on
-with his discourse.</p>
-
-<p>“You will see,” he said, “that I have shifted
-the question from the mode of egress to that
-of ingress. It was my design to suggest that
-both were effected in the same manner, at
-the same point. Let us now revert to the
-interior of the room. Let us survey the appearances
-here. The drawers of the bureau, it
-is said, had been rifled, although many articles
-of apparel still remained within them.
-The conclusion here is absurd. It is a mere
-guess—a very silly one—and no more. How
-are we to know that the articles found in the
-drawers were not all these drawers had originally
-contained? Madame L’Espanaye and her
-daughter lived an exceedingly retired life—saw
-no company—seldom went out—had little use
-for numerous change of habiliment. Those
-found were at least of as good quality as any
-likely to be possessed by these ladies. If a
-thief had taken any, why did he not take the
-best—why did he not take all? In a word,
-why did he abandon four thousand francs in
-gold to encumber himself with a bundle of
-linen? The gold was abandoned. Nearly the
-whole sum mentioned by Monsieur Mignaud,
-the banker, was discovered, in bags, upon the
-floor. I wish you, therefore, to discard from
-your thoughts the blundering idea of <i>motive</i>,
-engendered in the brains of the police by that
-portion of the evidence which speaks of money
-delivered at the door of the house. Coincidences
-ten times as remarkable as this (the
-delivery of the money, and murder committed
-within three days upon the party receiving it),
-happen to all of us every hour of our lives,
-without attracting even momentary notice.
-Coincidences, in general, are great stumbling-blocks
-in the way of that class of thinkers who
-have been educated to know nothing of the
-theory of probabilities—that theory to which
-the most glorious objects of human research
-are indebted for the most glorious of illustration.
-In the present instance, had the gold
-been gone, the fact of its delivery three days
-before would have formed something more
-than a coincidence. It would have been corroborative
-of this idea of motive. But, under
-the real circumstances of the case, if we are
-to suppose gold the motive of this outrage,
-we must also imagine the perpetrator so vacillating
-an idiot as to have abandoned his gold
-and his motive together.</p>
-
-<p>“Keeping now steadily in mind the points
-to which I have drawn your attention—that
-peculiar voice, that unusual agility, and that
-startling absence of motive in a murder so
-singularly atrocious as this—let us glance at
-the butchery itself. Here is a woman strangled
-to death by manual strength, and thrust
-up a chimney, head downward. Ordinarily
-assassins employ no such modes of murder as
-this. Least of all, do they thus dispose of
-the murdered. In the manner of thrusting the
-corpse up the chimney, you will admit that
-there was something excessively <i>outre</i>—something
-altogether irreconcilable with our common
-notions of human action, even when we
-suppose the actors the most depraved of men.
-Think, too, how great must have been that
-strength which could have thrust the body up
-such an aperture so forcibly that the united
-vigor of several persons was found barely sufficient
-to drag it down!</p>
-
-<p>“Turn now to other indications of the employment
-of a vigor most marvelous. On the
-hearth were thick tresses—very thick tresses—of
-grey human hair. These had been torn out
-by the roots. You are aware of the great
-force necessary in tearing thus from the head
-even twenty or thirty hairs together. You saw
-the locks in question as well as myself. Their
-roots (a hideous sight!) were clotted with
-fragments of the flesh of the scalp—sure token
-of the prodigious power which had been exerted
-in uprooting perhaps half a million hairs
-at a time. The throat of the old lady was
-not merely cut, but the head absolutely severed
-from the body—the instrument was a
-mere razor. I wish you also to look at the
-brutal ferocity of these deeds. Of the bruises
-upon the body of Madame L’Espanaye I do not speak.
-Monsieur Dumas, and his worthy coadjutor
-Monsieur Etienne, have pronounced
-that they were inflicted by some obtuse instrument;
-and so far these gentlemen are
-very correct. The obtuse instrument was
-clearly the stone pavement in the yard, upon
-which the victim had fallen from the window
-which looked in upon the bed. This idea, however
-simple it may now seem, escaped the
-police for the same reason that the breadth
-of the shutters escaped them—because, by the
-affair of the nails, their perceptions have been
-hermetically sealed against the possibility of
-the windows having ever been opened at all.</p>
-
-<p>“If now, in addition to all these things, you
-have properly reflected upon the odd disorder
-of the chamber, we have gone so far as to
-combine the ideas of an agility astounding, a
-strength superhuman, a ferocity brutal, a
-butchery without motive, a <i>grotesquerie</i> in
-horror absolutely alien from humanity, and a
-voice foreign in tone to the ears of men of
-many nations, and devoid of all distinct or intelligible
-syllabification. What result, then,
-has ensued? What impression have I made
-upon your fancy?”</p>
-
-<p>I felt a creeping of the flesh as Dupin asked
-me the question. “A madman,” I said, “has
-done this deed—some raving maniac, escaped
-from a neighboring <i>Maison de Sante</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>“In some respects,” he replied, “your idea is
-not irrelevant. But the voices of madmen,
-even in their wildest paroxysms, are never
-found to tally with that peculiar voice heard
-upon the stairs. Madmen are of some nation,
-and their language, however incoherent in its
-words, has always the coherence of syllabification.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_70"></a>[70]</span>
-Besides, the hair of a madman is not
-such as I now hold in my hand. I disentangled
-this little tuft from the rigidly clutched fingers
-of Madame L’Espanaye. Tell me what
-you can make of it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Dupin!” I said, completely unnerved; “this
-hair is most unusual—this is no <i>human</i> hair.”</p>
-
-<p>“I have not asserted that it is,” said he;
-“but before we decide this point, I wish you
-to glance at the little sketch I have here
-traced upon this paper. It is a <i>fac-simile</i> drawing
-of what has been described in one portion
-of the testimony as ‘dark bruises, and deep
-indentations of finger nails,’ upon the throat
-of Mademoiselle L’Espanaye, and in another,
-(by Messrs. Dumas and Etienne,) as a ‘series
-of livid spots, evidently the impression of
-fingers.’</p>
-
-<p>“You will perceive,” continued my friend,
-spreading out the paper upon the table before
-us, “that this drawing gives the idea
-of a firm and fixed hold. There is no <i>slipping</i>
-apparent. Each finger has retained—possibly
-until the death of the victim—the fearful
-grasp by which it originally imbedded itself.
-Attempt, now, to place all your fingers, at
-the same time, in the respective impressions as
-you see them.”</p>
-
-<p>I made the attempt in vain.</p>
-
-<p>“We are possibly not giving this matter a
-fair trial,” he said. “The paper is spread out
-upon a plane surface; but the human throat
-is cylindrical. Here is a billet of wood, the
-circumference of which is about that of the
-throat. Wrap the drawing around it, and
-try the experiment again.”</p>
-
-<p>I did so; but the difficulty was even more
-obvious than before.</p>
-
-<p>“This,” I said, “is the mark of no human hand.”</p>
-
-<p>“Read now,” replied Dupin, “this passage from Cuvier.”</p>
-
-<p>It was a minute anatomical and generally
-descriptive account of the large fulvous
-Ourang-Outang of the East Indian Islands.
-The gigantic stature, the prodigious strength
-and activity, the wild ferocity, and the imitative
-propensities of these mammalia are sufficiently
-well known to all. I understood the
-full horrors of the murder at once.</p>
-
-<p>“The description of the digits,” said I, as I
-made an end of reading, “is in exact accordance
-with this drawing. I see that no animal
-but an Ourang-Outang, of the species here mentioned,
-could have impressed the indentations as
-you have traced them. This tuft of tawny
-hair, too, is identical in character with that
-of the beast of Cuvier. But I cannot possibly
-comprehend the particulars of this frightful
-mystery. Besides, there were two voices heard
-in contention, and one of them was unquestionably
-the voice of a Frenchman.”</p>
-
-<p>“True; and you will remember an expression
-attributed almost unanimously, by the
-evidence, to this voice—the expression, ‘mon
-Dieu!’ This, under the circumstances, has
-been justly characterized by one of the witnesses
-(Montani, the confectioner) as an expression
-of remonstrance or expostulation. Upon
-these two words, therefore, I have mainly built
-my hopes of a full solution of the riddle. A
-Frenchman was cognizant of the murder. It
-is possible—indeed it is far more than probable—that
-he was innocent of all participation
-in the bloody transactions which took place.
-The Ourang-Outang may have escaped from
-him. He may have traced it to the chamber;
-but, under the agitating circumstances which
-ensued, he could never have re-captured it.
-It is still at large. I will not pursue these
-guesses—for I have no right to call them
-more—since the shades of reflection upon
-which they are based are scarcely of sufficient
-depth to be appreciable by my own intellect,
-and since I could not pretend to make them
-intelligible to the understanding of another.
-We will call them guesses then, and speak of
-them as such. If the Frenchman in question
-is indeed, as I suppose, innocent, of this
-atrocity, this advertisement, which I left last
-night, upon our return home, at the office of
-‘Le Monde,’ (a paper devoted to the shipping
-interest, and much sought by sailors,) will
-bring him to our residence.”</p>
-
-<p>He handed me a paper, and I read thus:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>CAUGHT—<i>In the Bois de Boulogne,
-early in the morning of the ⸺ inst.</i>,
-(the morning of the murder), <i>a very
-large, tawny Ourang-Outang of the Bornese
-species. The owner, who is ascertained
-to be a sailor, belonging to a Maltese
-vessel, may have the animal again,
-upon identifying it satisfactorily and paying
-a few charges arising from its capture
-and keeping. Call at No. ⸺, Rue ⸺,
-Faubourg St. Germain—au troisieme.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>“How was it possible,” I asked, “that you
-should know the man to be a sailor, and belonging
-to a Maltese vessel?”</p>
-
-<p>“I do not know it,” said Dupin. “I am not
-sure of it. Here, however, is a small piece of
-ribbon, which from its form, and from its
-greasy appearance, has evidently been used in
-tying the hair in one of those long queues of
-which sailors are so fond. Moreover, this
-knot is one which few besides sailors can tie,
-and is peculiar to the Maltese. I picked the
-ribbon up at the foot of the lightning-rod. It
-could not have belonged to either of the deceased.
-Now if, after all, I am wrong in my
-induction from this ribbon, that the Frenchman
-was a sailor belonging to a Maltese vessel,
-still I can have done no harm in saying
-what I did in the advertisement. If I am in
-error, he will merely suppose that I have been
-misled by some circumstance into which he
-will not take the trouble to inquire. But if
-I am right, a great point is gained. Cognizant
-although innocent of the murder, the Frenchman
-will naturally hesitate about replying to
-the advertisement—about demanding the
-Ourang-Outang. He will reason thus:—‘I am
-innocent; I am poor; my Ourang-Outang is of
-great value—to one in my circumstances a
-fortune of itself—why should I lose it through
-idle apprehensions of danger? Here it is, within
-my grasp. It was found in the Bois de Boulogne—at
-a vast distance from the scene of
-that butchery. How can it ever be suspected
-that a brute beast should have done the deed?
-The police are at fault—they have failed to
-procure the slightest clew. Should they even
-trace the animal, it would be impossible to
-prove me cognizant of the murder, or to implicate
-me in guilt on account of that cognizance.
-Above all, I am known. The advertiser
-designates me as the possessor of the
-beast. I am not sure to what limit his knowledge
-may extend. Should I avoid claiming a
-property of so great value, which it is known
-that I possess, I will render the animal, at
-least, liable to suspicion. It is not my policy
-to attract attention either to myself or to the
-beast. I will answer the advertisement, get
-the Ourang-Outang; and keep it close until this
-matter has blown over.’”</p>
-
-<p>At this moment we heard a step upon the
-stairs.</p>
-
-<p>“Be ready,” said Dupin, “with your pistols,
-but neither use them nor show them until at
-a signal from myself.”</p>
-
-<p>The front door of the house had been left
-open, and the visitor had entered, without
-ringing, and advanced several steps upon the
-staircase. Now, however, he seemed to hesitate.
-Presently we heard him descending.
-Dupin was moving quickly to the door, when
-we again heard him coming up. He did not
-turn back a second time, but stepped up with
-decision and rapped at the door of our
-chamber.</p>
-
-<p>“Come in,” said Dupin, in a cheerful and
-hearty tone.</p>
-
-<p>A man entered. He was a sailor, evidently,—a
-tall, stout, and muscular-looking person,
-with a certain dare-devil expression of countenance,
-not altogether unprepossessing. His
-face, greatly sunburnt, was more than half
-hidden by whisker and <i>mustachio</i>. He had
-with him a huge oaken cudgel, but appeared
-to be otherwise unarmed. He bowed awkwardly,
-and bade us “good evening,” in French accents,
-which, although somewhat Neufchatelish,
-were still sufficiently indicative of a Parisian
-origin.</p>
-
-<p>“Sit down, my friend,” said Dupin. “I suppose
-you have called about the Ourang-Outang.
-Upon my word, I almost envy you the
-possession of him; a remarkably fine, and no
-doubt a very valuable animal. How old do
-you suppose him to be?”</p>
-
-<p>The sailor drew a long breath, with the air
-of a man relieved of some intolerable burden,
-and then replied, in an assured tone:</p>
-
-<p>“I have no way of telling—but he can’t be
-more than four or five years old. Have you
-got him here?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh no; we had no conveniences for keeping
-him here. He is at a livery stable in the Rue
-Dubourg, just by. You can get him in the
-morning. Of course you are prepared to identify
-the property?”</p>
-
-<p>“To be sure I am, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“I shall be sorry to part with him,” said
-Dupin.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t mean that you should be at all
-this trouble for nothing, sir,” said the man.
-“Couldn’t expect it. Am very willing to pay a
-reward for the finding of the animal—that is
-to say, anything in reason.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” replied my friend, “that is all very
-fair, to be sure. Let me think!—what should
-I have? Oh! I will tell you. My reward shall
-be this. You shall give me all the information
-in your power about these murders in the Rue
-Morgue.”</p>
-
-<p>Dupin said the last words in a very low
-tone, and very quietly. Just as quietly, too,
-he walked toward the door, locked it, and put
-the key in his pocket. He then drew a pistol
-from his bosom and placed it, without the
-least flurry, upon the table.</p>
-
-<p>The sailor’s face flushed up as if he were
-struggling with suffocation. He started to his
-feet and grasped his cudgel; but the next
-moment he fell back into his seat, trembling
-violently, and with the countenance of death
-itself. He spoke not a word. I pitied him
-from the bottom of my heart.</p>
-
-<p>“My friend,” said Dupin, in a kind tone,
-“you are alarming yourself unnecessarily—you
-are indeed. We mean you no harm whatever.
-I pledge you the honor of a gentleman, and of
-a Frenchman, that we intend you no injury.
-I perfectly well know that you are innocent
-of the atrocities in the Rue Morgue. It will
-not do, however, to deny that you are in some
-measure implicated in them. From what I
-have already said, you must know that I have
-had means of information about this matter—means
-of which you could never have
-dreamed. Now the thing stands thus. You<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_71"></a>[71]</span>
-have done nothing which you could have
-avoided—nothing, certainly, which renders you
-culpable. You were not even guilty of robbery,
-when you might have robbed with impunity.
-You have nothing to conceal. You
-have no reason for concealment. On the other
-hand, you are bound by every principle of honor
-to confess all you know. An innocent man is
-now imprisoned, charged with that crime of
-which you can point out the perpetrator.”</p>
-
-<p>The sailor had recovered his presence of mind,
-in a great measure, while Dupin uttered these
-words; but his original boldness of bearing
-was all gone.</p>
-
-<p>“So help me God,” said he, after a brief
-pause, “I will tell you all I know about this
-affair;—but I do not expect you to believe one
-half I say—I would be a fool indeed if I did.
-Still, I am innocent, and I will make a clean
-breast if I die for it.”</p>
-
-<p>What he stated was, in substance, this. He
-had lately made a voyage to the Indian
-Archipelago. A party, of which he formed
-one, landed at Borneo, and passed into the interior
-on an excursion of pleasure. Himself
-and a companion had captured the Ourang-Outang.
-This companion dying, the animal
-fell into his own exclusive possession. After
-great trouble, occasioned by the intractable
-ferocity of his captive during the home voyage,
-he at length succeeded in lodging it safely at
-his own residence in Paris, where, not to attract
-toward himself the unpleasant curiosity of his
-neighbors, he kept it carefully secluded, until
-such time as it should recover from a wound
-in the foot, received from a splinter on board
-ship. His ultimate design was to sell it.</p>
-
-<p>Returning home from some sailor’s frolic on
-the night, or rather in the morning of the
-murder, he found the beast occupying his own
-bed-room, into which it had broken from a
-closet adjoining, where it had been, as was
-thought, securely confined. Razor in hand, and
-fully lathered, it was sitting before a looking-glass,
-attempting the operation of shaving, in
-which it had no doubt previously watched its
-master through the key-hole of the closet.
-Terrified at the sight of so dangerous a
-weapon in the possession of an animal so
-ferocious, and so well able to use it, the man,
-for some moments, was at a loss what to do.
-He had been accustomed, however, to quiet
-the creature, even in its fiercest moods, by the
-use of a whip, and to this he now resorted.
-Upon sight of it, the Ourang-Outang sprang at
-once through the door of the chamber, down
-the stairs, and thence, through a window, unfortunately
-open, into the street.</p>
-
-<p>The Frenchman followed in despair; the ape,
-razor still in hand, occasionally stopping to
-look back and gesticulate at its pursuer, until
-the latter had nearly come up with it. It
-then again made off. In this manner the chase
-continued for a long time. The streets were
-profoundly quiet, as it was nearly three
-o’clock in the morning. In passing down an
-alley in the rear of the Rue Morgue, the
-fugitive’s attention was arrested by a light
-gleaming from the open window of Madame
-L’Espanaye’s chamber, in the fourth story of
-her house. Rushing to the building, it perceived
-the lightning-rod, clambered up with inconceivable
-agility, grasped the shutter, which
-was thrown fully back against the wall, and,
-by its means, swung itself directly upon the
-headboard of the bed. The whole feat did not
-occupy a minute. The shutter was kicked
-open again by the Ourang-Outang as it entered
-the room.</p>
-
-<p>The sailor, in the meantime, was both rejoiced
-and perplexed. He had strong hopes of
-now recapturing the brute, as it could scarcely
-escape from the trap into which it had ventured,
-except by the rod, where it might be intercepted
-as it came down. On the other hand,
-there was much cause for anxiety as to what
-it might do in the house. This latter reflection
-urged the man still to follow the fugitive. A
-lightning-rod is ascended without difficulty,
-especially by a sailor; but, when he had
-arrived as high as the window, which lay far
-to his left, his career was stopped; the most
-that he could accomplish was to reach over so
-as to obtain a glimpse of the interior of the
-room. At this glimpse he nearly fell from his
-hold through excess of horror. Now it was
-that those hideous shrieks arose upon the night,
-which had startled from slumber the inmates
-of the Rue Morgue. Madame L’Espanaye and
-her daughter, habited in their night clothes,
-had apparently been arranging some papers in
-the iron chest already mentioned, which had
-been wheeled into the middle of the room. It
-was open, and its contents lay beside it on the
-floor. The victims must have been sitting with
-their backs toward the window; and, from the
-time elapsing between the ingress of the beast
-and the screams, it seems probable that it was
-not immediately perceived. The flapping-to of
-the shutter would naturally have been attributed
-to the wind.</p>
-
-<p>As the sailor looked in, the gigantic animal
-had seized Madame L’Espanaye by the hair,
-(which was loose, as she had been combing it,)
-and was flourishing the razor about her face,
-in imitation of the motions of a barber. The
-daughter lay prostrate and motionless; she
-had swooned. The screams and struggles of
-the old lady (during which the hair was torn
-from her head) had the effect of changing
-the probably pacific purposes of the Ourang-Outang
-into those of wrath. With one determined
-sweep of its muscular arm it nearly
-severed her head from her body. The sight of
-blood inflamed its anger into frenzy. Gnashing
-its teeth, and flashing fire from its eyes,
-it flew upon the body of the girl, and imbedded
-its fearful talons in her throat, retaining
-its grasp until she expired. Its wandering
-and wild glances fell at this moment upon
-the head of the bed, over which the face of
-its master, rigid with horror, was just discernible.
-The fury of the beast, who no doubt
-bore still in mind the dreaded whip, was instantly
-converted into fear. Conscious of having
-deserved punishment, it seemed desirous
-of concealing its bloody deeds, and skipped
-about the chamber in an agony of nervous
-agitation; throwing down and breaking the
-furniture as it moved, and dragging the bed
-from the bedstead. In conclusion, it seized
-first the corpse of the daughter, and thrust
-it up the chimney, as it was found; then that
-of the old lady, which it immediately hurled
-through the window headlong.</p>
-
-<p>As the ape approached the casement with its
-mutilated burden, the sailor shrank aghast
-to the rod, and, rather gliding than clambering
-down it, hurried at once home—dreading the
-consequences of the butchery, and gladly
-abandoning, in his terror, all solicitude about
-the fate of the Ourang-Outang. The words
-heard by the party upon the staircase were
-the Frenchman’s exclamations of horror and
-affright, commingled with the fiendish jabberings
-of the brute.</p>
-
-<p>I have scarcely anything to add. The
-Ourang-Outang must have escaped from the
-chamber, by the rod, just before the breaking
-of the door. It must have closed the window
-as it passed through it. It was subsequently
-caught by the owner himself, who obtained
-for it a very large sum at the <i>Jardin des
-Plantes</i>. Le Bon was instantly released, upon
-our narration of the circumstances (with some
-comments from Dupin) at the <i>bureau</i> of the
-Prefect of Police. This functionary, however
-well disposed to my friend, could not altogether
-conceal his chagrin at the turn which
-affairs had taken, and was fain to indulge in
-a sarcasm or two, about the propriety of every
-person minding his own business.</p>
-
-<p>“Let them talk,” said Dupin, who had not
-thought it necessary to reply. “Let him discourse;
-it will ease his conscience. I am satisfied
-with having defeated him in his own
-castle. Nevertheless, that he failed in the
-solution of this mystery, is by no means that
-matter for wonder which he supposes it; for,
-in truth, our friend the Prefect is somewhat
-too cunning to be profound. In his wisdom
-is no <i>stamen</i>. It is all head and no body, like
-the picture of the Goddess Laverna,—or, at
-best, all head and shoulders, like a codfish.
-But he is a good creature, after all. I like
-him especially for one master stroke of cant,
-by which he has attained his reputation for
-ingenuity. I mean the way he has ‘<i>de nier ce
-qui est, et d’expliquer ce qui n’est pas</i>.’”<a id="FNanchor_1" href="#Footnote_1" class="fnanchor">[A]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnotes">
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a id="Footnote_1" href="#FNanchor_1" class="label">[A]</a> Rousseau, Nouvelle Heloise.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">Kilted Wraith and Bagpipe Spook Communicate
-With Spiritualists</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>A most colorful procession of spirits passed before the
-recent convention of the Illinois Spiritualist Association.
-There was a Highland gentleman with kilts of Stewart
-tartan who came to give a message to “Mary,” and who
-was accompanied by an uncle who played the bagpipe.
-“Eleanor Ives,” a little girl of four, returned to tell her
-mother that all was well in the world beyond. At first, she
-said, she had hated to go, but now she is happy and often
-visits her mother. Lastly, a colored “mammy” was materialized
-by Mrs. Waite, the medium. She was seen sitting
-before a cabin door smoking an old corncob pipe. She said
-she had a message for her granddaughter.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_72"></a>[72]</span></p>
-
-<p class="center larger"><i>Here’s the Final, Thrilling Installment of</i></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="THE_MOON_TERROR">THE MOON TERROR</h2>
-
-<p class="center larger"><i>By</i> A. G. BIRCH</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="box">
-
-<p><i>The first half of this story was published
-in the May issue of WEIRD TALES. A copy
-will be mailed by the publishers for twenty-five
-cents.</i></p>
-
-<p class="center">SUMMARY OF THE FIRST INSTALLMENT</p>
-
-<p>The earth is rocked to its foundation, and the end of the world is
-threatened, by a mysterious, unseen power known only as “KWO.” At
-regular intervals, gigantic earthquakes and tidal waves visit the earth,
-destroying great cities and spreading terror. Dr. Ferdinand Gresham,
-American astronomer, attributes all this to the Seuen-H’Sin, a Chinese
-sect with which he is familiar. Finally, when the life of the world seems
-doomed, he gains permission from the U. S. Navy Department to proceed in
-the destroyer, Albatross, to the lair of “KWO” and do everything possible
-to stop the world-wide havoc. Accompanied by his friend, Arthur (who
-tells the story), the astronomer sails to a lonely spot in the frozen
-North, where they discover the diabolical power plant of “KWO.” It has
-developed, meanwhile, that “KWO” and his sorcerers are moon worshipers
-and are endeavoring to create a second moon by splitting the earth in
-two. In the Moon God’s Temple Dr. Gresham and his friend, disguised as
-Chinese, witness the weird rites of the sect, in which a human being is
-sacrificed, and then their identity is discovered. Attacked, they flee
-back toward their ship, but the earth seems suddenly to open, and Arthur
-is swallowed in a black pit.</p>
-
-<p class="center">CHAPTER NINE STARTS FROM THIS POINT</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<h3><i>CHAPTER IX</i><br>
-IN THE SORCERERS’ POWER</h3>
-
-<p>What happened immediately
-after that first drop into the
-abyss I do not know. My only
-recollection is of hurtling down a steep
-incline amid a smothering avalanche of
-dirt, of striking heavily upon a rocky
-ledge, and of bounding off again into the
-inky void as my senses left me.</p>
-
-<p>The next thing I knew was the slow
-dawn of a sensation of cold; and then
-my eyes fluttered open and I beheld the
-moon shining upon me through a rent
-in the surrounding blackness. At first
-I was too dazed to comprehend anything
-that had occurred, but soon, with considerable
-pain, I raised myself upon one
-elbow and looked about, whereupon understanding
-gradually returned.</p>
-
-<p>The place where I lay was a mud-covered
-ledge upon one of the steep,
-sloping walls of a huge chasm that had
-opened in the earth. The gash was probably
-seventy-five feet across at this
-point, and above me the walls soared
-perhaps a hundred feet. Within arm’s
-reach the shelf that supported me broke
-off in a precipice. I was half imbedded
-in soft mud, and was soaked to the skin
-and nearly frozen.</p>
-
-<p>How long I had lain there I could not
-tell, but I judged it had not been more
-that two or three hours, for the moon
-still was high in the heavens.</p>
-
-<p>All at once, as I gazed upon the weird
-scene, my heart leaped with anguish at
-remembrance of my vanished comrade,
-Dr. Ferdinand Gresham. He had
-dropped before me into the chasm, and
-therefore must have fallen clear of the
-ledge and plunged into the depths!</p>
-
-<p>Thrusting myself to the edge of the
-precipice, I peered below. Nothing rewarded
-my gaze except horrifying silence
-and vapory gloom. The pain of
-the movement was so intense that I fell
-back almost in a swoon.</p>
-
-<p>Before long, however, I saw that the
-moon was drawing near the rim of the
-gorge and that I would soon be engulfed
-in utter darkness, so I turned my eyes
-up the jagged wall in search of some
-means of escape. After considerable
-study, I thought I could discern a way
-to the summit.</p>
-
-<p>But just then another surprise caught
-my gaze: the strip of sky above the
-chasm appeared narrower than when I
-had first turned my eyes upward. For
-a few moments I attributed this to an
-optical illusion produced by some swiftly-moving
-clouds overhead; but all at
-once the hideous truth burst upon me—<i>the
-crack in the earth was drawing shut</i>!</p>
-
-<p>Heedless of the pain, I flung myself
-against the cliff—climbing in utter
-panic, for fear the chasm would close
-completely before I could get out.</p>
-
-<p>The ascent was difficult and perilous
-in the extreme. Often rocks loosened
-beneath my fingers, starting miniature
-avalanches, and I flattened myself
-against the wall in a paroxysm of terror
-and clung there until the danger passed.</p>
-
-<p>For a space that seemed hours long
-I continued to claw my way upward—with
-the prodigious trap closing steadily
-upon me. At times I found myself below
-unscalable surfaces, and was obliged to
-descend a bit and start over again in a
-new direction; and often it seemed as if
-the pain of my injuries would cause me
-to faint.</p>
-
-<p>When I had come within thirty feet
-of the top, the climb developed into a
-veritable race with death, for the opposite
-wall was now almost upon me.</p>
-
-<p>And then, suddenly, I found the way
-blocked by a sheer, unscalable wall, upon
-which only a fly could have found a
-foothold! Simultaneously I saw that the
-moon was right at the rim of the chasm,
-and that in a minute the light would
-vanish.</p>
-
-<p>With the realization of my plight,
-panic seized me, and I beat my head
-against the wall and shrieked aloud.</p>
-
-<p>And, though I could not guess it then,
-that very outcry of despair was to save
-my life.</p>
-
-<p>Hardly had my first shriek gone forth
-before a head appeared directly above
-me, and a voice rang out:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_73"></a>[73]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Here he is, fellows! Quick with that
-rope!”</p>
-
-<p>With leaping heart, I recognized the
-voice as Dr. Gresham’s!</p>
-
-<p>An instant later a rope with a loop
-in the end of it dangled beside me, and
-a number of hands reached out to pull
-me to safety. Another moment, and I
-was drawn over the brink—not one
-second too soon, for as I made the last
-dozen feet the closing walls of the pit
-brushed my body.</p>
-
-<p>Exhausted and trembling, I sank upon
-the ground, while a number of figures
-crowded about me. These proved to be
-twenty-five men from the <i>Albatross</i>,
-under command of Ensign Wiles Hallock.
-They were all dressed in the dark
-blue garments of the sorcerers. How
-they came to be there was briefly related
-by Dr. Gresham.</p>
-
-<p>When the ground had opened beneath
-us earlier in the evening, the astronomer
-had clutched the roots of a tree, and
-within a few seconds after I had dropped
-from sight he was back on firm ground.
-The Chinamen who had been pursuing
-us had either fallen into the gash or had
-fled in terror.</p>
-
-<p>Considerable vapor was rising from
-the pit, but the scientist noticed that
-this was clearing rapidly, so he decided
-to linger at the spot awhile, with the
-forlorn hope that I might be found. Soon
-the vapor vanished and, as the moonlight
-was shining directly into the crack, the
-doctor began a search.</p>
-
-<p>After a time he discerned a figure lying
-upon a ledge below. Close scrutiny
-revealed that the dark costume characteristic
-of the Seuen-H’sin was torn, displaying
-an orange garment beneath.</p>
-
-<p>Confident that none of the sorcerers
-would be wearing two suits at once in
-this fashion, the scientist concluded the
-figure was mine. For a time he doubted
-whether I lived, but eventually he
-thought he saw me stir feebly, whereupon
-he began frantic efforts to reach
-me.</p>
-
-<p>Repeated attempts to descend the precipice
-failed. Then he tried dropping
-pebbles to arouse me. Again unsuccessful,
-he risked attracting the sorcerers
-back to the spot by shouting into the
-chasm.</p>
-
-<p>All his efforts proved futile, so he
-finally returned to the destroyer and obtained
-this rescue party.</p>
-
-<p>In grateful silence I gripped his hand.</p>
-
-<p>“Now,” the astronomer concluded,
-“if you are able to walk, we will get
-back to the ship. It is only 1 o’clock,
-and if we hurry there still is time to attack
-the Seuen-H’sin before daylight.
-Conditions throughout the world are so
-alarming that we must put this power
-plant out of business without delay!”</p>
-
-<p>“Go ahead!” I assented. “I’m able
-to hobble along!”</p>
-
-<p>It was less than two miles to the destroyer’s
-anchorage, they said. During
-the march none of the sorcerers was
-sighted, with which we began to conclude
-that the cracking of the earth had
-affected the village on the other side of
-the mountain so that all their lookouts
-had been called in.</p>
-
-<p>But suddenly, when we were less than
-half a mile from the vessel, the stillness
-of the night was shattered by the
-shrill blast of a whistle. A series of
-other wild shrieks from the steam chant
-came in quick succession.</p>
-
-<p>“The <i>Albatross</i>!” exclaimed Ensign
-Hallock. “Something’s happening?”</p>
-
-<p>We burst into a run—the whistle still
-screaming through the night.</p>
-
-<p>All at once the sound ceased, and as
-the echoes died out among the hills we
-heard the rattle of firearms.</p>
-
-<p>“An attack!” cried Hallock. “The
-sorcerers have attacked the ship!”</p>
-
-<p>Then, abruptly, the firing, too, died
-out.</p>
-
-<p>A few moments later we emerged
-from the ravine onto the bank of the
-fiord and into full view of the destroyer.
-The passing of the moon into the west
-had brought the vessel within its rays—and
-the sight that greeted us almost
-froze our blood!</p>
-
-<p>Swarming about the deck were dozens
-of Chinamen—some with rifles, some
-with knives. They appeared to be completely
-in control of the ship. Numerous
-pairs of them were coming up from below
-decks, carrying the bodies of the
-vessel’s crew, which they carelessly
-tossed overboard. Evidently they had
-taken our companions by surprise and
-wiped them out!</p>
-
-<p>At this sight Ensign Hallock and his
-men became frenzied with rage.</p>
-
-<p>“Ready, men!” the officer announced
-to his followers. “We’re going down
-there and give those murderers something
-to remember!”</p>
-
-<p>Eagerly the seamen prepared to
-charge the ship. But Dr. Gresham
-stopped them.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s no use,” he said. “There are
-hundreds of the sorcerers down there—and
-only a handful of us. You would
-only be throwing away your lives and
-defeating the whole purpose of this expedition.
-We must find a better way.”</p>
-
-<p>The astronomer’s counsel prevailed.
-Whereupon we debated what should be
-done. The situation was desperate.
-Here we were, completely isolated in a
-grim wilderness, hundreds of miles from
-help, and surrounded by hordes of savage
-fanatics. Soon, no doubt, the sorcerers’
-spies would find us. And, meanwhile,
-we were helpless to put an end
-to the terrors that were engulfing the
-planet and its inhabitants.</p>
-
-<p>So despair gradually took possession
-of us. Not even the customary resourcefulness
-of Dr. Gresham rose to the
-emergency.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly Ensign Hallock gave an exclamation
-of excitement.</p>
-
-<p>“<i>The Nippon!</i>” he burst out. “Let’s
-turn the tables on the Chinese, and seize
-the <i>Nippon</i>! She’s probably got a guard
-on board, but maybe we can take it by
-surprise!”</p>
-
-<p>“What could we do with her?” I objected.
-“She needs a large crew—and
-there are only twenty-seven of us!”</p>
-
-<p>“We’ll sail her away, of course!” replied
-the young naval officer with enthusiasm.
-“There must be fuel on
-board, for her fires are going. Three of
-the boys here are apprentice engineers.
-I can do the navigating. And the rest
-of you can take turns stoking the boilers!”</p>
-
-<p>“But how could we slip past the <i>Albatross</i>?”
-asked Dr. Gresham.</p>
-
-<p>Ensign Hallock seemed to have
-thought of that, too, for he promptly
-answered:</p>
-
-<p>“The <i>Albatross</i> is an oil-burning
-craft, with the new type of burners that
-came into use since these Chinks have
-been stowed away here in the wilderness.
-The mechanism for using the oil
-is quite complicated, and the sorcerers
-are likely to have trouble operating her
-until they figure out the system. If we
-reach them before they have time to
-master the thing, they will be helpless
-to stop us!”</p>
-
-<p>The young man’s enthusiasm was contagious.
-Dr. Gresham begun to give
-heed.</p>
-
-<p>“Even if we fail to get away in the
-<i>Nippon</i>,” the scientist admitted, “she
-has a powerful wireless outfit: Kwo-Sung-tao
-has been using it to communicate
-with Washington. With that radio
-in our hands for ten minutes, we can
-summon help sufficient to annihilate
-these yellow devils!”</p>
-
-<p>The plan was adopted without further
-question. And, believing that the sorcerers’
-easy victory over the <i>Albatross</i>
-had made them careless, perhaps, we
-struck out in as direct a course as possible
-for the spot at which the <i>Nippon</i>
-was docked.</p>
-
-<p>In twenty minutes, without sighting
-any of the enemy, we arrived at the edge
-of the timber behind the wharf.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_74"></a>[74]</span></p>
-
-<h3><i>CHAPTER X</i><br>
-WE TAKE DESPERATE CHANCES</h3>
-
-<p>The great liner lay silent in
-the moonlight, with no lights visible
-about her, but thin columns of
-smoke rose lazily from her funnels. A
-gangplank was down.</p>
-
-<p>It was decided that our number
-should divide into three equal parts.
-One was to go to the bow and board the
-craft there by climbing up the line
-fastening the ship to the pier; this line
-was in the shadow except at its far end,
-where the men would emerge upon the
-deck. The second group was to get
-aboard at the stern by the same means.
-And the third detachment was to advance
-by the gangplank.</p>
-
-<p>The plan worked without a hitch, and
-soon we were assembled upon the vessel’s
-main deck. No guard was in sight.
-Hurriedly, we explored the upper decks
-and all the chambers off them. They
-were empty.</p>
-
-<p>Then, descending simultaneously by
-companionways forward, aft and amidship,
-we began to search the body of the
-vessel. Still no one could be found.</p>
-
-<p>And this deserted condition of the
-ship continued until only the stokehold
-remained to be entered. Here, however,
-we were certain of finding people.</p>
-
-<p>Leaving three men on deck to guard
-against surprise, the rest of us crept into
-the boiler room.</p>
-
-<p>Only two Chinamen were in the place,
-leisurely engaged in stoking the furnaces.
-We had them covered with our
-revolvers before they had any warning
-of our approach.</p>
-
-<p>In spite of the odds against them, one
-of the Mongolians leaped forward and
-had almost struck one of our men with
-his shovel before a shot killed him in
-his tracks. The other Chinaman submitted,
-and he at once was securely
-bound and dumped into a corner.</p>
-
-<p>Dr. Gresham tried to question the
-prisoner in Chinese, but all the information
-he could get regarding the keeping
-up of steam on the <i>Nippon</i> was: “Maybe
-leave here soon!”</p>
-
-<p>While the astronomer had been thus
-engaged, Ensign Hallock and some of
-his men were examining the coal bunkers,
-and they now reported that the vessel
-was stocked with fuel for a long
-voyage.</p>
-
-<p>At this juncture, one of the deck
-watch came to announce that the moon
-was sinking near the mountaintops, and
-that if we hoped to get far down the
-channel before the light failed we would
-have to start promptly.</p>
-
-<p>Detailing eighteen men to do the firing—with
-orders to get more steam as
-rapidly as possible—Ensign Hallock and
-the rest rushed to the engine room,
-where the three apprentice engineers already
-were at work. Finding everything
-all right there, the officer proceeded
-to the steering room, while some of
-us pulled in the gangplank.</p>
-
-<p>The astronomer and myself next started
-to find the radio plant, to get into
-communication with the Mare Island
-navy yard. But here we encountered a
-set-back: The wireless plant had been
-removed! Kwo-Sung-tao, we could only
-surmise, had moved the set to a spot
-more convenient to the village. So, for
-the present, communication with the
-outside world was impossible.</p>
-
-<p>During this brief period of putting
-the ship in sailing order, none of the
-sorcerers made an appearance; probably
-all the men they could spare were exploring
-the captured destroyer.</p>
-
-<p>Soon steam was up; whereupon Ensign
-Hallock sent Dr. Gresham to the
-bow and myself to the stern to keep a
-close lookout, and himself ascended to
-the bridge and gave the order to start the
-engines and cast off. Before many moments
-the leviathan was moving away
-from the wharf.</p>
-
-<p>The officer had found from the charts
-that there was a place only half a mile
-or so upstream where the fiord opened
-into a bay, or amphitheater. There, from
-all indications, room might be had to
-turn the ship around and head her down
-the channel. For this opening he now
-set his course.</p>
-
-<p>Although we maintained a very slow
-speed, it was not long before we nosed
-our way into the bay. Here the walls of
-the fiord retreated far enough to form
-a considerable body of water; nevertheless,
-it was plain we would have close
-work turning the <i>Nippon</i> in such a
-space. It would be necessary to steam
-well over against the north bank, where
-there no longer was any moonlight and
-the shore line was swallowed up in inky
-blackness.</p>
-
-<p>Redoubling the vigilance of our lookout,
-we began the maneuver. Slowly,
-Ensign Hallock swung the huge ship
-around. Twice it was necessary to stop
-and reverse the engines, accomplishing
-part of the turn by backing. In doing
-so, we had a narrow escape from running
-into a rocky promontory in the
-dark.</p>
-
-<p>But at last the liner’s head was fairly
-about and the way seemed clear for our
-dash down the channel past the <i>Albatross</i>.
-As the officer signaled for more
-speed, all of us unconsciously steeled
-ourselves for the climax of our adventure.</p>
-
-<p>But at that instant a deep-toned bell,
-sounding like the tocsin upon the Temple
-of the Moon God, began tolling in
-the distance. This was followed almost
-immediately by a series of sharp blasts
-from the whistle of the destroyer.</p>
-
-<p>Now that we had completed the dangerous
-turn, my duties in the stern were
-finished, so I ran forward, joining Dr.
-Gresham, and together we climbed to the
-bridge.</p>
-
-<p>“The Chinks must have discovered
-that their ship is gone!” was the greeting
-the young officer gave us.</p>
-
-<p>He was hardly able to restrain his excitement;
-the prospect of a brush with
-the sorcerers seemed to give him great
-joy.</p>
-
-<p>The steam chant and the tolling of
-the bell continued, as if intended for a
-general alarm.</p>
-
-<p>“Must be getting their gang together!”
-the ensign remarked. “They’ll
-be laying for us now, but we’ll give
-them a run for their money!”</p>
-
-<p>The liner now was beginning to get
-under considerable headway.</p>
-
-<p>“We’re in dangerous quarters until
-we get out of this stretch of darkness!”
-the officer announced. “Here—you fellows
-each take a pair of glasses! You,
-doctor, keep watch from the starboard
-end of the bridge! You”—indicating
-myself—“go to the port side! Watch
-like hawks!”</p>
-
-<p>We started, but—the command had
-come too late!</p>
-
-<p>With a dull, long-drawn ripping
-sound from her interior, the great liner
-suddenly staggered and listed heavily to
-port! We were thrown off our feet.</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Struck a rock!</i>” Ensign Hallock
-shouted, as he leaped up. And instantly
-he began signaling frantically to stop
-the engines. Almost in the same breath
-he yelled: “Go below—both of you—quick!
-See what damage has been
-done!”</p>
-
-<p>As we rushed down from the bridge
-we could tell from the <i>feel</i> of things that
-the vessel’s progress had come to a stop:
-the <i>Nippon</i> was stuck fast!</p>
-
-<p>At the head of the stairs leading to
-the boiler room we met the seamen, who
-had been doing stoker duty, rushing up.</p>
-
-<p>“You can’t go down there!” they
-shouted. “The whole bottom’s torn
-out!”</p>
-
-<p>Nevertheless, we leaped past them and
-continued below. But near the bottom
-of the stairs we were brought up short.
-A few lights still were burning, and in
-their feeble rays we could see huge
-foaming torrents pouring into the place.
-Already the floor was awash to a depth
-of two or three feet, and before we could
-take our eyes from the sight the flood<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_75"></a>[75]</span>
-seemed to rise several inches! Any moment
-the boilers might explode!</p>
-
-<p>Up the steps we dashed madly.</p>
-
-<p>As we reached the deck everyone was
-hurrying aft. We joined in the rush.</p>
-
-<p>The tolling of the temple bell and the
-shrieking of the destroyer’s whistle continued
-in the distance: the Seuen-H’sin
-was preparing to take up our pursuit!</p>
-
-<p>Then, before we could make another
-move, the vessel suddenly lurched backward
-and listed heavily to starboard,
-with her stern rising high out of the
-water. Then she began to nose forward
-under the waves.</p>
-
-<p><i>The Nippon was sinking!</i></p>
-
-<h3><i>CHAPTER XI</i><br>
-A WILD NIGHT’S WORK</h3>
-
-<p>“Lower the boats!” yelled
-Ensign Hallock.</p>
-
-<p>The coolness, readiness and energy of
-this young man in any emergency were
-an inspiration.</p>
-
-<p>All of us flew to obey the command,
-our number dividing between the two
-boats nearest the stern. The liner was
-sinking so fast that in a few moments
-the boats would be afloat, anyway;
-nevertheless, we soon had our craft in
-the water.</p>
-
-<p>“Take that canvas covering!” bawled
-the ensign. “We may need it for a sail!”</p>
-
-<p>A sailor dragged the canvas into the
-boat, and we pushed off from the vessel.</p>
-
-<p>The other party had encountered
-trouble with the davit-blocks, which occasioned
-a slight delay, and Hallock was
-just getting his boat into the water
-when—</p>
-
-<p>With a terrific crash, the <i>Nippon’s</i>
-boilers burst!</p>
-
-<p>The huge craft broke in two amidship,
-the central portion of her decks
-leaping out of the water. The force of
-the explosion hurled Ensign Hallock and
-his men—lifeboat and all—over the stern
-amid a hurricane of débris, while our
-own craft was flung bottom-up with
-great violence, scattering us all about in
-the water.</p>
-
-<p>In an incredibly brief time the <i>Nippon</i>
-slipped from view under the waves,
-the swiftness of her sinking causing a
-violent suction that swept us into a
-whirlpool filled with timbers, broken
-boats and wreckage of all sorts.</p>
-
-<p>Something heavy struck me on the
-head and knocked me almost senseless,
-but I clutched a floating object and hung
-on in a daze. Presently I heard voices
-calling not far away and, swimming toward
-them, I found a couple of men
-clinging to the life-boat. Others quickly
-began to join us—among them Dr.
-Gresham. Soon we had the boat righted
-and found it undamaged. Someone
-picked up some oars.</p>
-
-<p>Then we began rowing about the scene
-of the wreck, shouting and keeping a
-lookout for other survivors. In this way
-we rescued seven more men—one of the
-last of these being Ensign Hallock, who
-was dazed from a bad cut on the head.</p>
-
-<p>After a time, believing further search
-to be futile, we made our way to the
-north bank of the fiord.</p>
-
-<p>There now were only fifteen of us left—twelve
-men having perished in the explosion.
-While we were roughly dressing
-the wounds of the injured, we began
-to hear excited shouts in Chinese from
-the other side of the water, but the
-width of the fiord here was such as to
-make the cries indistinct. As the voices
-did not draw nearer, we began to believe
-that the sorcerers possessed no small
-boats in which to cross to the scene of
-the wreck. This gave us a greater feeling
-of safety, since the only way the
-sorcerers could get at us for the present
-was by swimming; and not enough of
-them were likely to try to constitute a
-serious menace.</p>
-
-<p>In the distance the whistling and bell-ringing
-had now died out.</p>
-
-<p>Hastily conferring upon what should
-be done, we decided to stick to the lifeboat
-and drop down the channel, hoping
-to get out of the country of the Seuen-H’sin
-before daylight. This course
-seemed feasible, since the whole north
-bank of the fiord—the side opposite the
-village—was now in shadow.</p>
-
-<p>We started at once, rowing along silently,
-close to the shore. Occasionally
-we heard voices on the south bank, but
-we made no closer acquaintance with the
-Chinese.</p>
-
-<p>As we drew near the <i>Albatross</i>, we
-muffled our oarlocks with bits of cloth
-torn from our clothing, and took every
-precaution against making a sound.</p>
-
-<p>A few lights were burning upon the
-destroyer’s deck, but otherwise she
-seemed deserted; possibly the Seuen-H’sin
-believed we had perished in the
-blowing up of the <i>Nippon</i>, and that they
-had nothing more to fear from intruders.</p>
-
-<p>All at once, as we began to drop below
-the vessel, Ensign Hallock gave an
-order to cease rowing. Drawing us close
-together so we could hear his whispered
-words, he announced:</p>
-
-<p>“Boys, let’s try to recapture the <i>Albatross</i>!”</p>
-
-<p>Then, with repressed excitement, he
-unfolded a plan.</p>
-
-<p>To our ears the ensign’s words sounded
-like a proposal of suicide; but the
-situation was appallingly desperate, and
-the upshot of the matter was that we
-decided to make the attempt.</p>
-
-<p>“Who is to go with you?” I asked
-Hallock.</p>
-
-<p>Several of the men promptly volunteered,
-and the ensign selected a muscular
-seaman named Jim Burns.</p>
-
-<p>Agreeing upon a signal that should inform
-us when to follow them, the officer
-and his partner slipped off most of their
-clothing and, arming themselves only
-with knives, swam away. In a few seconds
-they were lost from sight.</p>
-
-<p>From Hallock himself, afterward, I
-learned the story of their daring undertaking—although
-I am certain he greatly
-minimized the dangers they ran.</p>
-
-<p>Reaching the deep shadows beside the
-destroyer, Hallock and Burns swam forward
-to the anchor chain hanging from
-the bow. There they waited a time, but,
-hearing not a sound from above, the officer
-climbed up the chain and looked
-over the edge of the deck. No one was
-in sight.</p>
-
-<p>He signaled Burns to come after him.
-Then, clinging to the edge of the deck,
-with their bodies dangling down the side
-of the hull, out of sight of anyone above,
-they worked their way, hand-over-hand,
-back to a point opposite the after companionway.
-Still none of the Chinamen
-was in evidence.</p>
-
-<p>The deck was lighted at this point and
-the rays of other electric lamps poured
-out of the open companionway; nevertheless,
-the men swung themselves up,
-climbed the rail, and darted to the side
-of the deck house. Leaving Burns here,
-Hallock crept alone around the corner to
-the companionway.</p>
-
-<p>Just as he reached the open door he
-almost collided with a Chinaman coming
-up the stairs!</p>
-
-<p>Both were taken completely by surprise,
-but the ensign recovered quickest,
-and before there was time for an
-outcry he had the Mongolian by the
-throat and was choking the life out of
-him.</p>
-
-<p>Soon the fellow crumpled limply upon
-the deck. Hallock drew his knife to
-finish the business—but at that instant
-there came the sound of voices approaching
-along the deck.</p>
-
-<p>Seizing the unconscious Chinaman by
-the arms, Hallock dragged him swiftly
-around the corner of the deck house to
-where Burns was waiting.</p>
-
-<p>Would the approaching men enter the
-companionway and go below, or come on
-back to the stern? In the latter case
-they were bound to discover the intruders.</p>
-
-<p>With drawn knives, the two Americans
-stood ready; the success or failure<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_76"></a>[76]</span>
-of their whole enterprise depended upon
-the next few seconds.</p>
-
-<p>But the Chinamen turned down the
-steps, and their voices soon died out in
-the interior of the vessel.</p>
-
-<p>Thus assured of safety again for the
-moment, Ensign Hallock ended the
-career of the Mongolian and dragged
-the body into the deeper shadows in the
-stern. Then the two men advanced together
-to the companionway. Everything
-appeared quiet below.</p>
-
-<p>Down the stairs they noiselessly crept.
-At the bottom they could faintly hear
-voices—seemingly many of them—somewhere
-forward, or else on the next
-lower level. But they did not hesitate.
-The officer indicated the door of a compartment
-only a dozen feet away. They
-reached it and got inside.</p>
-
-<p>The room had been converted, during
-this voyage, into a storeroom. Among
-its miscellaneous contents was a quantity
-of tear bombs—grenades that discharge
-a gas which makes the victim’s
-eyes water until he is temporarily blinded
-and helpless. To obtain all these
-missiles they could carry was the work
-of but a few seconds, after which the
-Americans dashed for the steps and
-started to the deck.</p>
-
-<p>Just as they got halfway up, a couple
-of Chinamen appeared suddenly in the
-passage below and caught sight of them.
-The Celestials uttered loud warning
-cries and darted after the visitors.</p>
-
-<p>Instantly Seaman Burns, who was behind,
-hurled one of the bombs to the
-floor at the foot of the ladder—and then
-another and another.</p>
-
-<p>The sorcerers halted a moment, surprised
-by the missiles—and before they
-could resume their rush they were blinded
-by tears. Screaming in rage and dismay,
-they retreated down the passage toward
-the other voices that were beginning
-to respond to their cries.</p>
-
-<p>With this, Burns ran on up to the deck.</p>
-
-<p>“Stay here and hold this stairway!”
-ordered Hallock. “I’ll go forward to
-the other ladder! Don’t let any of
-them reach the deck!”</p>
-
-<p>And the officer ran off.</p>
-
-<p>He reached the forward companionway
-just as half a dozen of the Chinamen
-were crowding toward the foot of
-the stairs. A couple of the bombs hurled
-among them drove them back. Two more
-missiles followed; then Hallock slammed
-the door shut and fastened it.</p>
-
-<p>Running to the rail, he signaled us to
-advance. In two or three minutes our
-rowboat was alongside and we were
-scrambling up the anchor chain.</p>
-
-<p>On the main deck, under the bridge,
-formerly had been stored a number of
-rifles, and Hallock now ran to see if
-these were still there. Luckily the
-Chinamen had not disturbed them, and
-the officer soon was back with a loaded
-weapon for each man.</p>
-
-<p>“The effect of the tear gas must be
-wearing off below,” he announced, “so
-we can go down now and clean up those
-devils! But confine all your shooting
-under decks, where it’s not so likely to
-be heard on shore!”</p>
-
-<p>“And,” interposed Dr. Gresham,
-“don’t show a spark of mercy, or we
-will be certain to pay dearly for it
-later!”</p>
-
-<p>Leaving six men on deck to keep
-watch, the rest of us divided and went
-down fore and aft. The gas still was
-strong, but no longer overpowering. The
-Chinese, we found, had groped their way
-into the engine room. Here we came
-upon them—forty-eight in all.</p>
-
-<p>Upon the scene of slaughter that followed
-I will draw the veil. Thus the
-Seuen-H’sin had slain our comrades—and
-we knew that, were our positions
-now reversed, we would meet the same
-bloody end. Suffice it to say that within
-fifteen minutes the last of the sorcerers’
-bodies had been disposed of overboard.</p>
-
-<p>Once more we were masters of the
-<i>Albatross</i>!</p>
-
-<p>Our first move, we decided, would be
-to steam down the channel a few miles,
-where the Mongolians could not immediately
-get at us. Fortunately, two of
-the apprentice engineers were among the
-survivors, and they undertook to handle
-the machinery.</p>
-
-<p>At the same time, Hallock and most
-of the crew went to work setting up
-rapid fire guns in convenient places to
-repel invasion, and storing ammunition
-and hand grenades on deck. A couple
-of the larger guns likewise were unlimbered,
-ready for action.</p>
-
-<p>By the time these tasks were completed,
-steam had been gotten up, and the
-vessel began its retreat down the channel.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile, Dr. Gresham and myself
-hastened to the radio room to summon
-aid from the Mare Island navy
-yard at San Francisco.</p>
-
-<p>But barely had the astronomer placed
-the receivers to his ears and reached
-forward to adjust the apparatus, before
-a startling event forestalled his call.</p>
-
-<h3><i>CHAPTER XII</i><br>
-THE VOICE OF SCIENCE</h3>
-
-<p>At the precise instant when Dr.
-Gresham seated himself at the radio
-of the <i>Albatross</i>, the great Consolidated
-News Syndicate, which dealt with newspapers
-all over the world, was broadcasting
-a “flash” of terrible import:</p>
-
-<p><i>An hour ago New York had been
-wiped out by a stupendous tidal wave!</i></p>
-
-<p>Details of the disaster still were lacking.</p>
-
-<p>And then, before the astronomer could
-lift a hand to send his call, some instantaneous
-and terrific disturbance of the
-atmosphere blotted out all wireless communication!</p>
-
-<p>What this disturbance might be, or
-what it might portend, seemed to arouse
-in my companion the gravest alarm. His
-face looked ashen as he sat there at the
-key. Over and over he sought to get
-Mare Island, but without success: the
-ether was as unresponsive as if his instruments
-were dead.</p>
-
-<p>Presently he rose without a word and,
-motioning me to follow, sought Ensign
-Hallock on the bridge. Briefly he told
-the young officer about the destruction
-of Manhattan, adding:</p>
-
-<p>“Something serious has happened
-somewhere in the world, since then,
-completely to disorder the atmosphere.
-It may be the earth’s final struggle for
-existence. Unless the Seuen-H’sin’s power
-is broken <i>at once</i>, the end is near! It
-is too late to wait for reinforcements.
-We must tackle the job ourselves—at
-any cost! The question is: how are we
-going to do it?”</p>
-
-<p>Hallock thought a few moments, and
-then replied:</p>
-
-<p>“We can’t bomb the place from an
-airplane, because we brought no airplane
-bombs. And we can’t shell it with
-the ship’s guns without knowing its exact
-location. Our planes aren’t equipped
-with range finders, either—so it would
-do no good to try to locate it from the
-air.</p>
-
-<p>“That,” he added with decision,
-“leaves us no choice but a direct attack!”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” responded Dr. Gresham, “at
-any cost, we’ve got to try!”</p>
-
-<p>At once we consulted the ship’s charts—and
-made a discovery.</p>
-
-<p>Not far below our present location, a
-tributary fiord entered Dean Channel
-from the left, and with sudden hope we
-saw that this waterway twisted back
-among the mountains for several miles—reaching
-a point in one of its windings
-where it was not more than six or seven
-miles directly south of the region in
-which the power plant was hidden.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s our chance!” Hallock announced.
-“If the sorcerers have missed
-the <i>Albatross</i>, they’ll think we are on our
-way out of the country as fast as we
-can travel. They won’t be expecting us
-to come back so soon—in broad daylight.
-We can steam up this side channel to
-the proper spot and then march across
-the mountains until we find the plant.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_77"></a>[77]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Good!” assented the scientist. “They
-are less likely to be on guard against
-an attack from that side, anyway!”</p>
-
-<p>Day was now beginning to break,
-which made further navigation easy. In
-a few minutes we came to the tributary
-inlet, and swung the vessel in between
-its high, constricted walls.</p>
-
-<p>The ensign was now imbued with
-marvelous activity. Orders flew thick
-and fast. A couple of the machine guns
-were made ready for land transport.
-Two light mountain mortars and a
-quantity of ammunition were brought
-up on deck. A supply of shrapnel hand
-grenades was distributed among the men.</p>
-
-<p>Our progress through this tortuous
-waterway necessarily was slow; nevertheless,
-at the end of an hour and a half,
-the destroyer was stopped and we made
-ready for the final adventure.</p>
-
-<p>It was decided that all fifteen of us
-should go, because less than that number
-could not carry our equipment up and
-down the steep mountainsides, and three
-or four men left to guard the ship would
-be utterly useless in the event of an
-attack.</p>
-
-<p>So, with every nerve alert, we struck
-out through the trackless wilderness.</p>
-
-<p>Three hours later we came upon six
-large steel conduits which we knew must
-convey the water power to the plant, and
-in a few minutes we had followed these
-to our goal.</p>
-
-<p>Here we found ourselves upon the
-brow of a promontory directly behind
-and fully 300 feet above the Seuen-H’sin’s
-workshop. The promontory ended
-in a sheer precipice, from the outermost
-curve of which the conduits dropped
-straight down into the powerhouse.
-This tremendous fall of the six streams
-of water supplied the enormous energy
-to the turbines. The summit of this projecting
-ridge was fairly level, and for
-a distance of perhaps seventy-five yards
-at the end the timber had been entirely
-cleared away.</p>
-
-<p>Extending out from the brow of the
-precipice, and resting upon the tops of
-the conduits where they plunged downward,
-was a narrow bridge of iron
-lattice-work which connected all six of
-the pipes and gave access to the bolts
-which tightened the steel elbows.
-Through holes in this grating, iron ladders
-fastened between the pipes and the
-granite cliff back of them descended
-clear to the bottom of the precipice.</p>
-
-<p>A slight rail only three feet high protected
-the outer edge of this grid—a
-little hand-hold for the workmen in case
-of a misstep. From this dizzy balcony
-it would be possible to drop a stone almost
-upon the roof of the powerhouse.</p>
-
-<p>After a quick look around, Ensign
-Hallock chose a spot a little back from
-the cliff to set up the mortars that were
-to throw explosives upon the building.
-He also prepared to place mines under
-the conduits. But first the machine guns
-were planted to command the surrounding
-timber, in case of an attack.</p>
-
-<p>There still was no indication that the
-sorcerers suspected our presence in their
-vicinity; so, inasmuch as Hallock said
-his preparations would take some little
-time, Dr. Gresham determined to employ
-the interval in getting a closer look at
-the power plant.</p>
-
-<p>One of the ladders down the precipice,
-he had noticed, was in such a position
-behind its water main that it could not
-be seen from the building; and he decided
-to attempt the approach by this
-means. To my delight, he made no objection
-to my accompanying him.</p>
-
-<p>As we slipped through an opening in
-the iron bridge and started our dizzy
-descent of the ladder—which seemed to
-sway beneath our weight—I felt a thrill
-of exultation, in spite of our peril, at
-the thought that at last we were to solve
-the mystery of the Seuen-H’sin’s terrible
-power over our planet!</p>
-
-<p>The trip was slow and risky, but finally
-we came abreast of a window in the
-rear wall of the building, and by
-stretching around the side of the thick
-water main we could see into the place.</p>
-
-<p>The workshop of the sorcerers was a
-long, low, narrow structure directly beside
-the river. Like the houses back in
-the Chinese village, it was a mere shell
-of corrugated iron, its steel framework
-so bolted together that it could sway with
-the earth tremors.</p>
-
-<p>In a row down the centre of the structure
-were six huge turbines, operating
-electric generators.</p>
-
-<p>Along one side of the room was the
-largest switchboard I had ever seen,
-while the whole of the other lengthwise
-wall was flanked with a series of massive
-induction coils, elaborately insulated
-from each other and from the ground.
-Although I knew little about electricity,
-I was certain that if the combined
-electrical output of those dynamos were
-directed through that maze of coils, the
-resulting voltage could only be measured
-in the millions—perhaps hundreds of
-millions!</p>
-
-<p>From one large, enclosed object, supported
-on steel uprights over the row of
-induction coils, two electric cables, more
-than two inches in diameter, ran off
-through the north end of the building.
-One of these ended in a tiny structure
-about eighty yards from the powerhouse.
-The other ran on up the valley.</p>
-
-<p>But, most curious of all, in the center
-of the switchboards was an apparatus
-surmounted by a large clock, before
-which a Chinese attendant sat constantly.
-Precisely every eleven minutes and
-six seconds a bell on this clock clanged
-sharply, and there was a bright flash
-in a long glass tube, followed by an
-earth shock.</p>
-
-<p>For some time we clung there in the
-shadows, while Dr. Gresham studied
-every detail of the amazing workshop.
-Then, calling my attention to the fact
-that the place outside the powerhouse,
-where one of the cables ended, was
-hidden from view of the attendants inside
-by a thick clump of trees, the astronomer
-said he wanted a closer look at this
-place.</p>
-
-<p>Creeping through the timber, we
-reached the tiny structure over the
-cable’s end. Not the slightest watch
-seemed to be kept anywhere about the
-plant. The door to the house was not
-fastened, so we entered and looked hurriedly
-about.</p>
-
-<p>The room was absolutely empty except
-for the heavy cable, which came to the
-center of the floor and there connected
-with a copper post about four inches in
-diameter that ran straight down into the
-ground.</p>
-
-<p>Without lingering further, we crawled
-back to the ladder and commenced our
-long climb up the cliff.</p>
-
-<p>Upon reaching the top again, we
-found the ensign and his men still busy
-with their preparations for the bombardment.
-Withdrawing far enough to be
-out of their hearing, the astronomer
-turned to me and remarked:</p>
-
-<p>“Well, what do you think of the
-scientific achievements of the sorcerers
-now?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know what to think!” I replied.
-“It’s utterly beyond my comprehension!”</p>
-
-<p>The doctor chuckled at my dismay.</p>
-
-<p>“Forgive me,” he said, “for having
-kept you so long in the dark. Until today
-I could never prove my theories—certain
-as I was of their correctness—and I did
-not wish to attempt any explanations
-until I was sure of my ground. But now
-you have seen enough to understand the
-solution of the puzzle.”</p>
-
-<p>To my delight, the scientist was dropping
-into one of his most communicative
-moods. After a moment he went on:</p>
-
-<p>“To comprehend, even in a general
-way, what the Seuen-H’sin has done, you
-must understand the principle of resonance.</p>
-
-<p>“Let us start with the swinging pendulum
-of a clock. What keeps it in
-motion? Nothing but a slight push, delivered
-at exactly the right time. Any<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_78"></a>[78]</span>
-swinging object can be kept swinging,
-even though it weigh many tons, if it
-is given a touch by the finger of a baby
-at <i>just the right moment</i>. By the same
-principle, the amount of swing can be
-increased enormously if the successive
-pushes are correctly timed.</p>
-
-<p>“But we need not limit our illustration
-to swinging objects. Everything in
-the word has a natural period of vibration,
-whether it be a violin string, or
-a battleship, or a forty-story skyscraper.</p>
-
-<p>“Fifty men can capsize a twenty-thousand-ton
-battleship merely by running
-back and forth from one side of the
-deck to the other and carefully timing
-their trips to the vessel’s rolling. A
-child with a tack hammer can shake
-down a forty-story skyscraper if he can
-discover the natural period of the building’s
-vibration and then tap persistently
-upon the steel framework at the correct
-interval.</p>
-
-<p>“Even the earth itself has its natural
-period of vibration.</p>
-
-<p>“If you exploded a ton of dynamite on
-top of the ground it would blow quite
-a hole and jar the earth for several miles
-around it; and that would be all. But
-if you set off another ton of dynamite,
-and then another and another, and kept
-it up continuously—always timing the
-explosions to the period of the earth’s
-vibration—eventually the jar would be
-felt clear through the globe. And if you
-still persisted, in time you would wreck
-the world.</p>
-
-<p>“Such is the accumulative power of
-many little blows correctly timed. The
-principle of timing small impulses to
-produce large effects is the principle of
-resonance.</p>
-
-<p>“But there are other forces in nature
-which can produce vibration—electricity,
-for instance, Nikola Tesla demonstrated
-a number of years ago that the
-globe is resonant to electric waves.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, suppose some person constructed
-an apparatus that could suddenly
-turn a tremendous flood of electric
-waves into the earth. That energy would
-go clear through the globe, imparting a
-tiny impulse to every atom of matter
-of which the sphere is composed—like a
-push upon the pendulum of a clock.</p>
-
-<p>“And suppose that person knew the
-exact period of the earth’s vibration, and
-sent another bolt, and another and
-another, into the globe—all exactly
-timed to impart a fresh impulse at the
-correct moment—to give the pendulum
-another push, so to speak. Then let him
-pile electric impulse upon electric impulse,
-each at just the right second, until
-the accumulation of them all represented
-millions of horsepower in electric oscillations.
-In time, <i>the world would be
-shaken to pieces</i>!</p>
-
-<p>“And—impossible as it sounds—that
-is the very principle the Seuen-H’sin is
-using there beneath your eyes! The
-dynamos furnish the power, and that
-great battery of induction coils magnifies
-it to an almost inconceivable voltage.
-By those cables attached to copper plugs,
-the impulses are conveyed to the earth.</p>
-
-<p>“Every blow of that tremendous electric
-hammer is heavier than the preceding
-one because it has the accumulated
-power of all the others behind it. With
-every blow the earth grows weaker—less
-able to stand the shock. Continued, the
-planet’s doom would be inevitable—if it
-is not already so!”</p>
-
-<p>I had been listening to this recital
-with amazement too profound to admit
-of interruption. When Dr. Gresham
-finished I sat silent, turning it all over
-in my mind, and reflecting how simple
-the explanation seemed. Finally—</p>
-
-<p>“Was it those electric waves being
-discharged into the ground,” I asked,
-“that Professor Howard Whiteman in
-Washington mistook for wireless signals
-from Mars?”</p>
-
-<p>“Precisely!” was the answer.</p>
-
-<p>“And how,” I inquired, “was it possible
-for the sorcerers to discover the
-exact period of the earth’s vibration?
-That seems little short of superhuman.”</p>
-
-<p>“Doubtless you remember the newspaper
-accounts published that night
-when we returned from Labrador,” replied
-the doctor. “They told how the
-electric whispers, when first noticed, occurred
-exactly two minutes apart; then
-the interval increased one minute each
-night until the signals were separated
-by more than thirty minutes; afterward
-the lulls altered erratically for some
-time, until they became fixed at eleven
-minutes and six seconds.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” I assented.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” continued the scientist, “those
-variations simply denoted the experiment
-of the Seuen-H’sin to ascertain the
-period of the globe’s vibration. If, after
-continuing their discharges all one night,
-their seismographs showed no response
-from the earth, they knew their bolts
-were wrongly timed, and they experimented
-with another period.</p>
-
-<p>“Eventually they found that their impulses
-penetrated the earth with a speed
-of approximately 709 miles a minute—in
-other words, in precisely eleven minutes
-and six seconds the waves passed clear
-through the plant. This, then, was
-demonstrated to be the length of time
-that must elapse before the pendulum—figuratively
-speaking—could be given
-another electrical push. You saw just
-now, on the switchboard down there, the
-clockwork apparatus which times those
-bolts.”</p>
-
-<p>After a moment’s consideration I remarked:</p>
-
-<p>“Your own electrical equipment on
-board the <i>Albatross</i>—those big induction
-coils and the rest of it—what did you
-plan to do with that?”</p>
-
-<p>“I had meant to fight the Seuen-H’sin
-with its own methods,” the doctor replied.
-“I was going to throw a high-power
-electric current into the earth at
-intervals between those of the sorcerers’—say
-five minutes apart. That would
-have interfered with the acceleration of
-the vibrations—like setting a second
-group of men to run across the ship’s
-deck between the trips of the first group.
-One set of vibrations would have
-neutralized the other.</p>
-
-<p>“But,” Dr. Gresham added, “the
-time for such methods is past. We must
-end the whole thing immediately—at one
-stroke!”</p>
-
-<p>Receiving a signal from Ensign Hallock
-that he was ready, we started to
-rejoin the ship’s party. But before we
-had gone a dozen steps we were rooted
-to the spot by a new terror!</p>
-
-<p>Off in the east, where the snow-covered
-peaks lifted into the sky, suddenly burst
-forth an awful crashing sound, as of a
-colossal cannonade—a ponderous and unbroken
-thunder-roll, terrible as the enormous
-tumult of the day of doom. As
-our gaze followed the nightmare sounds
-to the edge of the world we beheld the
-lofty mountains oscillate, crack, disjoint,
-and crumble into seething ruin.</p>
-
-<p>The noise that accompanied this destruction
-came roaring and booming
-across the intervening miles—a stupendous
-and unearthly commotion, shattering
-the very atmosphere to fragments.</p>
-
-<p>For a minute Dr. Gresham stood
-petrified. But as the enormity of the
-cataclysm became evident, an unconscious
-cry, almost a groan, escaped him:</p>
-
-<p>“Too late! Too late! The beginning
-of the end!”</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly he wheeled—almost livid
-with excitement—to the naval officer and
-screamed at the lop of his voice:</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Fire!</i> For God’s sake destroy that
-power plant! <i>Fire! FIRE!</i>”</p>
-
-<h3><i>CHAPTER XIII</i><br>
-PLAYING OUR FINAL CARD</h3>
-
-<p>In their astonishment at the
-terrible upheaval, Ensign Hallock
-and his men had left their posts and
-crowded toward the end of the promontory,
-a few feet away from the mortars.
-At Dr. Gresham’s command to fire, most
-of them leaped to obey the order.</p>
-
-<p>Instantly the woods behind us sprang<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_79"></a>[79]</span>
-into life as a horde of Chinamen dashed
-from cover, charging straight at us!</p>
-
-<p>From the size of the attacking force,
-it was evident our presence had been
-known for some time and our capture
-delayed until a sufficient number of the
-sorcerers could be assembled to insure
-our defeat: there seemed to be scores of
-the blue-clad figures. Most of them were
-armed with rifles, although some had
-only knives and a few iron bars which
-they wielded as clubs.</p>
-
-<p>The distance across the clearing was
-not much more than 200 feet, and the
-Chinamen advanced at a run—without
-any outcry.</p>
-
-<p>But before they had traversed a
-quarter of the space Ensign Hallock recovered
-from his surprise and, with a
-few terse commands, led his crew into
-action. Dashing to the machine guns,
-the seamen threw themselves flat on the
-ground; and while some manned these
-weapons, the rest resorted to their revolvers.
-In two or three seconds the booming
-of the distant cataclysm was augmented
-by a steady volley of firing.</p>
-
-<p>With deadly effect the machine guns
-raked the advancing semi-circle of Mongolians.
-As the foremost line began suddenly
-to melt away, the rest of the sorcerers
-wavered and presently came to a
-halt. They now were not more than a
-hundred feet from us. At a command,
-they all dropped down upon the ground,
-the ones with rifles in front, and began
-to return our fire.</p>
-
-<p>I had drawn my revolver and joined
-in the fight—and so had Dr. Gresham
-beside me. But in our excitement we
-had remained on our feet, and I now
-heard the astronomer shouting at me:</p>
-
-<p>“Lie down! <i>Lie down!</i>”</p>
-
-<p>Even as I dropped, my hat was
-knocked off by a bullet; but, unharmed,
-I stretched out and continued shooting.</p>
-
-<p>Pausing to slip a fresh magazine of
-cartridges into my automatic, I suddenly
-became aware that a vast wind was
-starting to blow out of the east; the very
-air seemed alive and quivering.</p>
-
-<p>The Chinamen still outnumbered us
-heavily, and all at once I realized—chiefly
-from the lessening of our fire—that
-their rifle attack was beginning to
-take effect. Glancing about, I saw five or
-six of the seamen lying motionless.</p>
-
-<p>At this juncture one of the machine
-guns jammed, and while its crew was
-trying to fix it the yellow devils took
-toll of several more of our men. I now
-saw that only six of us were left to
-fight.</p>
-
-<p>Simultaneously I became half conscious
-of a strange, mysterious something
-going on about us—a subtle, ghostly
-change, not on the earth itself, but in the
-air above—some throbbing, indefinable
-suggestion of impending doom—of the
-end of things.</p>
-
-<p>Snatching a glance over my shoulder,
-I saw arising upon the eastern horizon
-a black, monstrous cloud of appalling
-aspect—a spuming billow of sable mist—twisting,
-flying, lifting into the heavens
-with tremendous speed. And each moment
-the wind was growing mere
-violent.</p>
-
-<p>Was this, after all, to be the finish?
-Was the world—the white man’s world,
-which we had fought so hard to save—to
-go to smash through these yellow
-devils’ fiendishness? Having come within
-actual sight of the machinery that was
-the cause of it all, was our task to remain
-unfinished?</p>
-
-<p>With a terrible cold fury clutching
-at my heart, I crawled quickly forward,
-discharging my revolver steadily as I
-went, to lend a hand with the disabled
-machine gun.</p>
-
-<p>But as I reached it Ensign Hallock
-dropped the weapon, with a gesture of
-uselessness, and moved quickly back to
-the mortars. Out of the corner of my
-eye I saw him trying to fire the things,
-and a wave of fierce joy seized me.</p>
-
-<p>But the task caused the naval officer
-to half raise himself from the ground,
-and as he did so I saw him clutch at a
-bleeding gash on his head and fall forward,
-where he lay still.</p>
-
-<p>An instant later the Chinamen leaped
-to their feet with a loud cry and charged
-upon us. They, too, were greatly reduced
-in numbers, but there were only four of
-us now, so nothing remained but an
-attempt at retreat. As we did so we
-began hurling our hand grenades, all
-the while moving slowly in the only
-direction we could go—toward the brink
-of the precipice.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly, above the crack of the rifles
-and the exploding of the grenades, an
-enormous roaring burst forth in the east—a
-sinister screaming of immeasurable
-forces, moaning, hooting, shrieking
-across the world—the weird, awful voice
-of the wounded planet’s stupendous
-agony.</p>
-
-<p>This new terror attracted so much attention
-that there was a momentary
-pause in the sorcerers’ onslaught, and
-in that brief lull I noted that our grenades
-had wrought terrible havoc among
-the Chinamen, reducing their number to
-a mere handful. Dr. Gresham saw this
-at the same time, and shouted to us to
-let them have it again with the missiles.</p>
-
-<p>Apparently sensing the purport of
-this command, the Chinamen sprang
-forward, seeking to engage us at too
-close range for the grenades to be used.
-But several of the missiles met them
-almost at their first leap, and when the
-hurricane of shrapnel abated, there remained
-only three of the yellow fiends to
-continue the attack.</p>
-
-<p>But at the same time I made the grim
-discovery that on our side Dr. Gresham
-and myself alone survived!</p>
-
-<p>With the realization that it had now
-come to a hand-to-hand encounter, I
-braced myself to meet the shock as the
-trio darted forward. I somehow felt
-that nothing mattered any longer, anyway,
-for so tremendous had become the
-earth-tumult that it seemed impossible
-the planet could resist disruption many
-minutes more.</p>
-
-<p>Nevertheless, the passions of a wild
-animal surged within me; a sort of madness
-steeled my muscles.</p>
-
-<p>One powerful, thick-set Chinaman
-leaped upon Dr. Gresham and the two
-went down in a striking, clawing test of
-strength. A second later the remaining
-pair hurled themselves upon me.</p>
-
-<p>I whipped out my revolver just as one
-fellow seized me from the front, and,
-pressing the weapon against his body, I
-fired. In a moment he relaxed his hold
-and crumpled down at my feet. The
-other chap now had me around the neck
-from the rear and was shutting off my
-wind. Round and round we staggered, as
-I vainly sought to loosen his hold. Before
-long everything went black in front
-of me and I thought I was done for—when
-I heard faintly, in a daze, the
-crack of a revolver. Quickly the grip
-about my neck fell away.</p>
-
-<p>When I began to come to myself again
-I saw Ensign Hallock sitting up on the
-ground, his face covered with blood, but
-wielding the revolver that had ended the
-career of my last adversary.</p>
-
-<p>At the same time I saw that the officer
-was trying desperately to train his
-weapon upon something behind me.
-Looking about, I saw Dr. Gresham and
-his opponent rolling over and over on
-the ground, almost at the edge of the
-precipice, struggling frantically for possession
-of a knife. Because of their rapid
-changes of position, Hallock dared
-not shoot, for fear of hitting the
-scientist.</p>
-
-<p>Just then the Chinaman came on top
-for an instant, and I leaped forward,
-aiming my revolver at him. The trigger
-snapped, but there was no report. The
-weapon was empty.</p>
-
-<p>Less than a dozen feet now separated
-me from the wrestlers, when the Celestial
-suddenly jerked the knife free and
-raised it for a swift stroke.</p>
-
-<p>With all my strength I hurled the
-empty revolver at the yellow devil. It
-struck him squarely between the eyes.
-The knife dropped and he clutched at<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_80"></a>[80]</span>
-his face, at the same time struggling to
-his feet to meet the new attack.</p>
-
-<p>Freed from the struggle, Dr. Gresham’s
-figure relaxed as in a swoon.</p>
-
-<p>Instantly I was after the Chinaman—without
-a thought of his bull-like
-strength. I was seeing red. The furious
-joy of the primeval man hunter—the
-lust for blood—turned my head. My
-one idea was to kill.</p>
-
-<p>Leaping over the prostrate scientist, I
-flung myself at the last of the sorcerers.
-He had retreated three or four feet, and
-now stood at bay upon the iron bridge
-that ran along the top of the water
-mains, overhanging the precipice. As
-I dashed at him he stepped quickly aside.
-I missed him—and my heart leaped into
-my throat as I stumbled across the
-perilous eyrie and brought up against
-the outer rail, which seemed to sway.</p>
-
-<p>I staggered, seized the rod, and saved
-myself. Far, far below, jagged rocks
-and the roof of the Seuen-H’sin’s powerhouse
-greeted my gaze.</p>
-
-<p>And at the same time—although I was
-not conscious of paying attention to it—I
-became sensible of the fact that the
-monstrous cloud above the horizon was
-soaring swiftly, beating its black wings
-close to the sun—and that a weird twilight,
-a ghostly gloom, was settling over
-everything. From the distance, too, still
-came that appalling uproar.</p>
-
-<p>As I recovered my balance the Chinaman
-bounded at me. But his foot caught
-in the grating and he stumbled to his
-knees. Instantly I threw myself upon
-him. My knee bored into the small of
-his back; my fingers sank into his throat.
-<i>I had him!</i> If I could keep my hold a
-little while the life would be strangled
-from his body.</p>
-
-<p>In spite of his disadvantage, the fellow
-staggered to his feet. And there above
-the void—upon that narrow steel framework,
-protected only by its leg-high rail—we
-began a life-and-death struggle.</p>
-
-<p>I hung on, like a mountain lion upon
-the back of its prey, while the Chinaman
-lurched and twisted this way and that.</p>
-
-<p>Once he staggered against the railing,
-lost his footing, swung around—and I
-hung out over empty space, a drop of
-fully 300 feet. I thought the end had
-come—that we would topple off into the
-void. But his mighty strength pulled
-us back upon the grating—the whole
-slight structure seeming to sway and
-creak as he did so.</p>
-
-<p>I tightened my grip upon his throat,
-digging my fingers into his windpipe,
-until I felt the life ebbing out of him in
-a steady flow. My own strength was
-almost gone, but the primitive desire to
-kill kept me clinging there tenaciously.</p>
-
-<p>At last he began to weaken. In his
-death throes he lurched about in a circle—until
-his foot slipped through a man-hole
-above one of the ladders, and he
-fell across the rail with a choking moan.
-With me hanging upon his back he began
-to slip outward and downward, inch by
-inch.</p>
-
-<p>I knew the end had come. He was
-falling—and I was falling with him. But
-thoughts of my own death were smothered
-in a wild rejoicing. I had conquered
-this yellow fiend! Everything
-grew blurred before my eyes as we
-sagged toward the final plunge into the
-gorge.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly my ankles were seized in a
-stout grip, and I felt myself being
-dragged back from the sickening void.
-With this, I loosened my hold upon the
-Chinaman’s throat, and his body went
-hurtling past me to its doom.</p>
-
-<p>Another instant and I was off the rocking
-bridge, upon solid ground, and Dr.
-Ferdinand Gresham was shaking me in
-an effort to restore my senses.</p>
-
-<p>He had recovered from his own fainting
-spell just in time to save me from
-being dragged over the cliff.</p>
-
-<p>Swiftly I drew myself together. The
-weird twilight was deepening. But a
-few feet away I beheld Ensign Hallock
-busy at the mortars and mines, preparing
-to touch them off.</p>
-
-<p>He motioned to us to run. We did so.
-In a moment his work was finished and
-he took after us.</p>
-
-<p>Back along the ridge we fled, away
-from the danger of the coming blast.</p>
-
-<p>A couple of hundred yards distant,
-and about fifty feet below us, a bare
-promontory jutted out from the hillside,
-affording an unobstructed view of the
-whole region—the crumbling mountains
-upon the horizon, the power plant at the
-base of the cliff, and the bare space
-behind us where the mines were about to
-end the career of the sorcerers’ workshop.</p>
-
-<p>We started to descend to this plateau—when
-suddenly I dragged my companions
-back and pointed excitedly below,
-exclaiming:</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Look! Look!</i>”</p>
-
-<p>There in the center of the promontory,
-seemingly all alone, stood the arch fiend
-of all this havoc—the high priest of the
-sorcerers, Kwo-Sung-tao!</p>
-
-<p>Apparently the old fellow had chosen
-this spot whence he could view in safety
-his followers’ attack upon our party. He
-had not heard my outcry behind him,
-and remained absorbed in the Titanic
-upheaval of the distant mountains.</p>
-
-<p>As I looked down upon his shriveled
-figure, a wave of savage joy swept over
-me! At last fate was strangely playing
-into our hands! Quite unsuspecting, the
-most menacing figure of the ages—the
-master mind of diabolical achievement,
-the would-be “dictator of human destiny”—had
-been cast into our net for
-final vengeance!</p>
-
-<p>Just then the mortars boomed, and
-two charges of high explosives went
-hurtling toward the roof of the powerhouse.</p>
-
-<p>Kwo-Sung-tao wheeled and stared off
-toward the opposite promontory. Seeing
-nothing, he hesitated in alarm. He did
-not look around in our direction.</p>
-
-<p>Another instant and the explosives fell
-squarely upon the roof of the building,
-and with two frightful detonations—so
-close together that they seemed almost
-as one—the whole structure burst asunder
-vanished in a flying tornado of
-débris. For a few moments nothing was
-visible save a tremendous geyser of dirt,
-steel, concrete and bits of machinery.</p>
-
-<p>While the air was filled with this gust
-of wreckage, my gaze sped back to the
-leader of the Seuen-H’sin.</p>
-
-<p>The old man stood stock still, petrified
-by this sudden destruction of all his
-hopes and work. What agony of soul
-he was enduring in that moment I could
-only guess. His mummified figure suddenly
-to have shriveled unbelievably—to
-be actually withering before our eyes!</p>
-
-<p>Just then the mines under the water
-mains went off, ripping the conduits to
-tatters—and the immense hydraulic
-force, suddenly released, roared down
-the precipice, tearing the ground at the
-bottom of the gorge away to the foundation
-rock and obliterating the last scrap
-of wreckage!</p>
-
-<p>Almost at the same moment Dr. Gresham
-left us and plunged down the slope
-toward the high priest, as if to settle the
-score with him alone. Recovering from
-our surprise, we followed rapidly.</p>
-
-<p>Apparently sensing the danger, Kwo-Sung-tao
-suddenly glanced around. As
-he beheld Dr. Gresham he pulled himself
-together and I saw a look of malignity
-come over his face such as I never
-before nor since have seen upon a human
-countenance! It was as if he sought to
-blast his enemy with a glance!</p>
-
-<p>The demoniacal fury of that gaze actually
-caused the astronomer to slacken
-his rush.</p>
-
-<p>Promptly the old sorcerer’s hand
-darted beneath his robe and came out
-with a revolver. But before the weapon
-could be aimed I had snatched a hand
-grenade and hurled at the Chinaman.
-The missile flew over him, exploding
-some feet away; but a bit of its metal
-must have hit the old fellow, inflicting a
-serious wound, for he dropped the revolver
-and clutched at his side.</p>
-
-<p>As he did so he turned his eyes upon
-me—and the blood seemed to freeze within
-my veins! Not to my dying day shall
-I forget the awful power of that look!</p>
-
-<p>But only for a second did this last—for
-I had already drawn another grenade
-and was in the act of hurling it. This
-time the bomb fell directly at the feet of
-the high priest and burst with deadly
-force.</p>
-
-<p>Even while the old man’s eyes were
-boring through me with that unearthly
-fury, Kwo-Sung-tao was blown to fragments!</p>
-
-<p>An instant later the sun vanished, and
-a ghostly semi-night fell like a thunderbolt!</p>
-
-<hr class="tb">
-
-<p>It was several days later when Dr.
-Ferdinand Gresham, Ensign Hallock
-and myself returned to the Mare Island
-navy yard at San Francisco.</p>
-
-<p>And there, for the first time, we
-learned that the world remained intact
-and was out of danger.</p>
-
-<p>When we had ascertained that we
-three were the only survivors of our expedition,
-we had started wandering over
-the mountains through the semi-darkness
-until we found the destroyer. Unable
-to navigate the vessel, we had taken the
-hydroplane, which Hallock knew how to
-handle, and started south. Engine
-trouble had prolonged our trip.</p>
-
-<p>Back from the grave, as it seemed, we
-listened with tremendous elation to the
-story of the wounded planet’s convalescence.</p>
-
-<p>That last terrible upheaval, just before
-the destruction of the sorcerers’
-power plant, had seemed for a time to be
-the actual beginning of the end. But,
-instead, it had proved to be the climax—after
-which the earthquakes had begun
-rapidly to die out. Scientists now declared
-that before long the earth would
-regain its normal stability.</p>
-
-<p>With our return, the story of the
-Seuen-H’sin was given to the public. So
-universal became the horror with which
-that sect was regarded that an international
-expedition proceeded into China
-and dealt vigorously with the sorcerers.</p>
-
-<p>The tremendous changes that had been
-wrought in the surface of the planet
-presently lost their novelty.</p>
-
-<p>And New York and other cities that
-had been destroyed, or partially so,
-speedily were rebuilt.</p>
-
-<p>Here I must not omit one other
-strange incident connected with these
-events.</p>
-
-<p>One evening, nearly two years after
-our encounter with the sorcerers, Dr.
-Gresham and I were sitting at the window
-of his New York apartment, idly
-watching the moon rise above the range
-of housetops to the east of Central Park.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly I began to stare at the disk
-with rapt interest. Clutching the astronomer
-by the sleeve, I exclaimed excitedly:</p>
-
-<p>“Look there! Odd I never noticed it
-before! The face of the Man in the
-Moon is the living image of that Chinese
-devil, Kwo-Sung-tao!”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes!” agreed Dr. Gresham with a
-shudder. “And it makes my flesh creep
-even to look at it!”</p>
-
-<h3>THE END</h3>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">Men Sing Hymn As They
-Go To Death</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Marooned on a floating ice cake
-in the Missouri River, with all
-hope of rescue gone, Harvey McIntosh
-and his brother, Tom, of Mondamin,
-Iowa, bravely sang, “Nearer My God
-to Thee,” while the ice floe carried
-them to a swift and certain death. Their
-friends lined either side of the river,
-but were unable to reach them. Night
-came on, and from the darkness came
-the strains of the old hymn, which
-gradually grew fainter and then ended
-in silence.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_81"></a>[81]</span></p>
-
-<p class="center larger"><i>In All the World There Was No
-Man Quite Like This One</i></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="THE_MAN_THE_LAW_FORGOT">The Man the Law Forgot</h2>
-
-<p class="center larger"><i>By</i> WALTER NOBLE BURNS</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The jail was silent. Boisterous
-incoherencies that in the day
-made the vast gloomy pile of
-stone and iron a bedlam—talk, curses,
-laughter—were stilled.</p>
-
-<p>The prisoners were asleep in their
-cells. Dusty electric bulbs at sparse intervals
-made a dusky twilight in the
-long, hushed corridors. Moonlight,
-shimmering through the tall, narrow
-windows, laid barred, luminous lozenges
-on the stone floors.</p>
-
-<p>From the death cell in “Murderers’
-Row,” the voice of Guisseppi rose in
-the still night watches in the <i>Miserere</i>.
-Its first mellow notes broke the slumberous
-silence with dulcet crashes like the
-breaking of ice crystals beneath a silver
-hammer. Vibrating through the cavernous
-spaces of the sleeping prison, the
-clear boyish voice lifting the burden of
-the solemn hymn was by turns a tender
-caress, a flight of white wings up into
-sunny skies, a silver whisper stealing
-through the glimmering aisles, a swift
-stream of plashing melody, a flaming
-rush of music.</p>
-
-<p>“<i>A broken and a contrite heart, O
-God, thou wilt not despise.</i>” The prayer
-in its draperies of melody filled the
-cells like a shining presence and laid
-its blessing of hope upon hopeless hearts.
-From the shadow of the gallows,
-Guisseppi poured forth his soul in music
-that was benediction and farewell.</p>
-
-<p>Bitter memories, like sneering ghosts
-that elbow one another, crowd the road
-to Gallows Hill. In swift retrospect,
-Guisseppi reviewed his life’s last tragic
-phase. Young, with healthy blood dancing
-gay dances through his veins, sunny-spirited,
-spilling over with the happiness
-and hopefulness of irresponsibility, he
-had not despaired when the death sentence
-was pronounced.</p>
-
-<p>The court’s denial of his lawyer’s motion
-for a new trial left him with undiminished
-optimism. Yet a while longer
-hope sustained him when his old father
-and mother kissed him good-by through
-the bars and set off for the state capital
-to intercede with the governor.</p>
-
-<p>Bowed with years and broken with
-sorrow, they had pleaded in tears and
-on their knees. The venerable father,
-lost for words, helplessly inarticulate,
-the mother with her black shawl over her
-head, white-faced, hysterical, both praying
-for the life of their only son, were
-a picture to melt a heart of stone.</p>
-
-<p>The pathos of it stirred the governor
-to the depths, but could not make him
-forget that for the moment he stood as
-the incarnation of the law and the inexorable
-justice that is the theory of
-the law. With heavy heart and misty
-eyes, he turned away.</p>
-
-<p>So hope at last had died. And between
-the death of hope and the death
-that awaited him, Guisseppi brooded in
-the death-cell, bitterly counting his
-numbered days as they slipped one by
-one into the past, each day bringing him
-that much nearer to certain annihilation.
-Round and round the dial, the hands of
-the clock on the prison wall went in a
-never-ending funeral march; the <i>tick-tock,
-tick-tock</i> of the pendulum, measuring
-off the fateful seconds, echoed in his
-heart like a death knell.</p>
-
-<p>Times without number he repeated to
-himself that he was not afraid to die.
-Nevertheless the inevitability of death
-tortured him. At times, in sheer terror,
-he seized the rigid bars of his cell,
-pounded his fists against the iron walls,
-till the blood spurted from his knuckles.
-He was like a sparrow charmed by a
-serpent, fluttering vainly to escape, but
-drawing ever nearer to certain death.
-Black walls of death kept closing in upon
-him inexorably, like a mediaeval torture
-chamber.</p>
-
-<p>Some men, the experts say, are born
-criminals; other are made criminals by
-some fortuity or crisis of circumstances.
-Guisseppi had been a happy, healthy,
-careless boy. His father was a small
-shopkeeper of the Italian quarter who
-had achieved a certain prosperity. His
-mother was a typical Italian mother,
-meek, long-suffering, tender, her whole
-life wrapped up in her boy, her husband
-and her home.</p>
-
-<p>Guisseppi had received a good common
-school education. He had been a choir
-boy in Santa Michaela Church, and the
-range and beauty of his voice had won
-him fame even beyond the borders of the
-colony; musicians for whom he had sung
-had grown enthusiastic over his promise
-and had encouraged him to study for
-the operatic stage.</p>
-
-<p>The exuberance of youth, and love of
-gayety and adventure, had been responsible
-for his first misstep. His companions
-of the streets had enticed him into
-Cardello’s pool room. Cardello, known
-to the police as “The Devil,” had noted
-with a crafty eye the lively youth’s possibilities
-as a useful member of his gang.
-His approaches were subtle—genial
-patronage, the pretense of goodfellowship,
-an intimate glass across a table.
-The descent to Avernus was facile.</p>
-
-<p>Almost before he knew it, Guisseppi
-was a sworn member of Cardello’s gang
-of reckless young daredevils and a
-participant in their thrilling nightly
-adventures. Home lessons were forgotten.
-His mother lost her influence
-over the boy. Even Rosina Stefano, the
-little beauty of the quarter, who had
-claimed all his boyish devotion since
-school days, had no power to turn him
-from his downward course.</p>
-
-<p>He had been taken by the police after
-a robbery in which a citizen had been
-killed. He was condemned to death.</p>
-
-<p>“I forgive everybody,” Guisseppi
-told his death-watch. “Everybody but
-‘Devil’ Cardello. If it had not been
-for him, I would be free and happy
-today. He made me a thief. That is his
-business—teaching young fools to rob
-for him. He did the planning; we did
-the jobs. We took the chances, he took
-the money. I was in the hold-up when
-the gang committed murder, but I myself
-killed no man.</p>
-
-<p>“And now the gallows is waiting for
-me, while Cardello sits in his pool room,
-immune, prosperous, still planning
-crimes for other young fools. If I could
-sink my fingers in his throat and choke
-his life out, I could die happy. One
-thing I promise him—if my ghost can
-come back, I will haunt him to his dying
-day.”</p>
-
-<p>Morning dawned. Father and mother
-arrived for a final embrace. Rosina gave
-him a last kiss. A priest administered<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_82"></a>[82]</span>
-consolation. The sheriff came and read
-the death warrant.</p>
-
-<p>Light, flooding through the barred
-windows from the newly-risen sun, filled
-the jail with golden radiance as, through
-the iron corridors, feet shuffling drearily,
-the death march moved in solemn silence
-toward the gallows....</p>
-
-<hr class="tb">
-
-<p>Doctors with stethoscopes watched
-the final pulsations of ebbing life.
-They pronounced him dead.</p>
-
-<p>The body was wheeled off on a tumbril
-into the jail morgue and turned over to
-assistants of an undertaker employed by
-the family. Placing it on a stretcher
-and covering it with a mantle, these
-hurried it to a motor ambulance waiting
-in the alley. They slid the stretcher into
-the vehicle and slammed the doors. The
-machine got quickly under way, gathered
-speed, began to fly through the
-streets.</p>
-
-<p>No sooner had the doors of the ambulance
-slammed shut than strange
-things began to happen inside. A physician
-and a nurse who had been
-secreted in the car, fell upon the body
-with feverish haste, stripped it of clothing,
-dashed alcohol over it from head to
-foot, began to massage the still warm
-flesh, chafing the wrists, slapping limbs
-and torso with smart, stinging thumps.</p>
-
-<p>Then, to conserve what little heat remained,
-they bundled the body in heavy
-blankets kept warm in a fireless contrivance.
-And all the while the ambulance,
-its gong clanging madly, was
-plunging at wild speed across the city,
-swaying from side to side, turning corners
-on two wheels.</p>
-
-<p>It drew up at last in front of a small
-undertaking shop on a back street, and
-the body was hurried inside. Laid upon
-a table, it looked as if carved from ivory.
-The coal-black hair curled about the
-white brow in glossy abandon. The long
-black lashes of the nearly-shut eyes left
-deep shadows on the cold pallor of the
-cheeks. No tint of blood, no sign of life
-appeared.</p>
-
-<p>Quickly a pulmotor was applied.
-Oxygen was pumped into the lungs while
-the body was again vigorously rubbed
-with alcohol. Guisseppi’s father and
-mother and close relatives stood about in
-an excited group, eyes wide with feverish
-interest, their hearts in their mouths.
-Doctors and nurses worked with dynamic
-energy.</p>
-
-<p>No sign of rekindled life rewarded
-them. Their drastic efforts seemed lost
-labor. The boy’s soul, apparently, had
-journeyed far into the dark places beyond
-life’s pale and was not to be lured
-back to its fleshly habitation.</p>
-
-<p>Still they persisted, hoping against
-hope.</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Per dio!</i>” suddenly exclaimed a
-physician. “Do you see that?”</p>
-
-<p>A faint flush appeared in Guisseppi’s
-cheek.</p>
-
-<p>“He lives again!” burst in a tense
-whisper from the bloodless lips of the
-father.</p>
-
-<p>The tiny stain spread, tinging the
-marble flesh.</p>
-
-<p>“My boy, my darling boy!” cried the
-mother, wringing her hands in delirious
-joy.</p>
-
-<p>Guisseppi’s chest began to rise and
-fall slowly, with an almost imperceptible
-movement of respiration. The suspicion
-of a smile hovered for a moment at the
-corners of his mouth.</p>
-
-<p>He opened his eyes. <i>He lived!</i></p>
-
-<h3><i>II.</i></h3>
-
-<p>“Devil” Cardello sat at his
-desk in a corner of his pool room.
-The morning was young; no customers
-had yet arrived to play pool or billiards.
-Basco, the porter, pail and mop in hand,
-stood for a moment gossiping.</p>
-
-<p>“They say he died game,” remarked
-Basco.</p>
-
-<p>“They all do,” sneered Cardello.</p>
-
-<p>“And kept his mouth shut.”</p>
-
-<p>“No; he spilled everything. But the
-police didn’t believe him. That’s all
-that saved me.”</p>
-
-<p>“I heard he said his ghost would come
-back to haunt you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ho! That’s a good one,” laughed
-Cardello. “The devil has got him on a
-spit over the fire and will keep him
-turning. I should worry about the little
-fool’s ghost!”</p>
-
-<p>A whisper of sound from the direction
-of the billiard tables caused both men
-to glance up.</p>
-
-<p>There stood Guisseppi a few paces
-away, surveying them in silence, a blue-steel
-revolver in his hand!</p>
-
-<p>“Mother of God!” screamed Basco,
-dropping his pail and mop, and dashing
-into the street.</p>
-
-<p>Cardello’s eyes bulged from their
-sockets. His face went as white as paper.
-Panic, terror, pulled his lips back in a
-ghastly grin from his chattering teeth.
-He rose heavily to his feet and stood
-swaying.</p>
-
-<p>“Guisseppi!” he breathed scarcely
-above a whisper. “<i>Guisseppi!</i>”</p>
-
-<p>Guisseppi’s lips curled.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” he replied. “The boy you
-ruined, betrayed, sent to death on the
-gallows.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, no, Guisseppi. The <i>police</i> got
-you. I was your friend.”</p>
-
-<p>“Liar! But for you, I would be
-happy; my father and mother would not
-bear the black disgrace of a son hanged
-on the gallows.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why have you come back from the
-dead, Guisseppi? Why should you
-haunt your old pal?”</p>
-
-<p>“I have a score to settle with you.”</p>
-
-<p>“In the name of God the Father, go
-back to the grave! Leave me in peace.”</p>
-
-<p>Guisseppi raised his weapon.</p>
-
-<p>“I have come to kill you,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>Cardello fell upon his knees.</p>
-
-<p>“Spare me, Guisseppi!” he screamed,
-stretching out imploring arms. “Mercy,
-Guisseppi, mercy! Don’t—”</p>
-
-<p>There was a crash—a leap of fire.</p>
-
-<p>A wisp of blue smoke drifted above a
-billiard table.</p>
-
-<h3><i>III.</i></h3>
-
-<p>The police dragnet for the
-slayer of Cardello was far flung,
-and zest was added to the man hunt by
-the offer of $1,000 reward. Throughout
-the Italian quarter, Basco spread the
-story of Guisseppi’s recrudescence and
-his ghostly revenge.</p>
-
-<p>The superstitious residents accepted
-the weird tale with simple faith. Fear
-of the phantom became rife. Children
-remained indoors after dark. Pedestrians
-quickened their pace when passing
-lonely spots at night. Turning a corner
-suddenly, they half-expected to come
-face to face with Guisseppi’s ghost, wry-necked
-from the hangman’s noose.</p>
-
-<p>Policeman Rafferty, traveling beat in
-the neighborhood of Death Corners, was
-told time and again that Guisseppi’s
-ghost had murdered Cardello. Yes, it
-was true. Basco had seen the phantom.
-Others in the colony had seen it slipping
-like a shadow through some deserted
-street at night. There was no doubt that
-Guisseppi had come back from the dead.</p>
-
-<p>Policeman Rafferty laughed. When
-had ghosts started in bumping off live
-folks? That was what he would like to
-know. How could the poor simpletons
-believe such stuff? Funny lot of jobbies,
-these dagoes!</p>
-
-<p>But when Policeman Rafferty had
-heard the story of Guisseppi’s ghost for
-the thousandth time, he scratched his
-head and did a little thinking, not forgetting
-the $1,000 reward. Guisseppi
-was dead. Of course. He had been
-hanged, and the newspapers had been
-full of the stories of his execution. So
-Guisseppi couldn’t have killed Cardello.
-That was out of the question. But could
-it be possible that dead Guisseppi had
-a living double? Hah!</p>
-
-<p>Policeman Rafferty got in touch with
-his favorite stool-pigeon without delay.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_83"></a>[83]</span>
-Shortly thereafter, that worthy laid before
-him a piece of information which
-Policeman Rafferty was welcome to for
-just what it was worth and no more.
-Guisseppi’s ghost had been seen oftenest
-in the immediate neighborhood of
-Guisseppi’s father’s residence. If the
-fool copper thought he could put a pinch
-over on a ghost, he might do well to
-search Guisseppi’s old home.</p>
-
-<p>So Policeman Rafferty eased himself
-one day through a narrow passageway,
-burst in suddenly at the kitchen door
-and started to search the premises.</p>
-
-<p>He found Guisseppi whiffing a cigaret
-in a front room.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb">
-
-<p>“Yes, I killed Cardello,” said Guisseppi
-quietly. “I’ll go with you.”</p>
-
-<p>“But who are you?” asked the policeman.
-“You can’t be Guisseppi. They
-topped that boy on the gallows.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m Guisseppi, all right. They
-brought me back to life with a pulmotor.”</p>
-
-<p>Policeman Rafferty’s jaw dropped.</p>
-
-<p>“Back to life?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. I was as dead as stone. I
-was gone absolutely for an hour.”</p>
-
-<p>“Gone? Gone where?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know. Somewhere. I remember
-standing on the trap. Then it
-seemed I was falling for a long time,
-falling—from a star—or a high mountain
-top—through miles of emptiness
-into midnight blackness. There wasn’t
-any pain. I seemed to land on a deep
-soft cushion of feathers. I could <i>feel</i>
-the darkness. It seemed to whirl and
-billow round me. I couldn’t see myself—or
-feel myself. But I knew, somehow,
-I was there in the heart of the darkness.
-I suddenly found myself on a broad road
-stretching away into night.”</p>
-
-<p>“Must ha’ been the road to hell,” remarked
-Policeman Rafferty.</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe so. Along this road, I glided
-with the swiftness of a bird on the wing.
-I didn’t know where I was going—”</p>
-
-<p>“You were bound for hell,” said
-Rafferty.</p>
-
-<p>“I heard music away off in the dark;
-wonderful orchestra music, violins,
-’cellos, wind pipes. It grew louder. I
-never heard such beautiful music.
-Through the solid blackness ahead, I saw
-a great mountain peak standing up, red
-and shining, against the sky.</p>
-
-<p>“Around me came a glare of bright
-lights. I was blinded by streaks and
-splashes of color, darting, rolling, weaving
-into each other, changing all the
-time. Reds, purples, greens, blues,
-rolled over me in great, flashing waves.
-Flaring colors swirled around me in
-blazing whirlwinds. I was drowned in
-gorgeousness. It was as if a cyclone
-had wrecked a thousand rainbows and
-buried me beneath their ruins.”</p>
-
-<p>“What were these lights?”</p>
-
-<p>“Search me. I don’t know. I heard
-a loud, clear call out of the distance. I
-pushed through the storm of colors.
-Across a dark plain, I reached the shining,
-red mountain. I climbed up until I
-stood on the peak. I felt fine. Something
-struck me as a joke. I began
-laughing. Then, bending close above
-me, I saw the faces of my mother and
-father and the doctors.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, Guisseppi,” said Policeman
-Rafferty, “gettin’ hung once would ha’
-been an elegant sufficiency for most men.
-They’d be leery about takin’ a second
-chance. You must be stuck on dropping
-through a trap—eh?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, they’ll hang me again, all right.
-That’s a cinch. You might think me a
-fool for walking with my eyes open right
-into this second scrape—”</p>
-
-<p>“A hog,” corrected Rafferty.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know. I came back from
-the dead to kill Cardello. And I killed
-him. I hated that fellow. I’d like to
-have tortured the life out of him, killed
-him by inches. His cries of agony would
-have been wine to me. It’s hell to be
-hanged. I ought to know. But I can
-go back to the gallows now with a light
-heart. I got Cardello, and I’m ready to
-take my medicine.”</p>
-
-<p>Policeman Rafferty bit a generous
-chew from his plug of tobacco.</p>
-
-<p>“You Eye-talians,” he remarked reflectively,
-“are a nutty bunch.”</p>
-
-<h3><i>IV.</i></h3>
-
-<p>The court room was crowded.
-Guisseppi’s strange story had been
-spread to the four winds by the newspapers,
-and everybody was eager to see
-this man who had passed through the
-mystic portals of death.</p>
-
-<p>“My client will plead guilty to the
-Cardello murder,” said Guisseppi’s
-lawyer. “I take it your honor will agree
-with me that having paid the penalty of
-the law for his former crime, he can not
-again be hanged for that old offense.”</p>
-
-<p>“I do agree with you,” replied the
-judge. “The sentence was that on a
-certain day at a certain hour, he be
-hanged by the neck until dead. This
-sentence was carried out. He was
-hanged. He was officially pronounced
-dead. It is not for me to say whether
-death was absolute. Perhaps a spark of
-life remained which was fanned back to
-full flame. Possibly his soul actually
-left the body and was recalled by some
-cryptic means we do not fully understand.</p>
-
-<p>“But, whatever the truth, his return
-to life creates a unique situation. I
-know of no precedent of which the law
-ever has taken cognizance. So far as I
-know, this case is the first of its kind in
-history. Since the sentence pronounced
-upon this man has been carried out
-legally in every detail, it is my decision
-that he can not again be hanged for the
-crime for which he already has paid the
-penalty.”</p>
-
-<p>“There is one other point which your
-honor failed to consider,” said Guisseppi’s
-lawyer. “It is an axiom of law
-that a man can not, for the same crime,
-be placed in jeopardy twice. A man can
-be placed in no greater jeopardy than
-when, with a hangman’s noose around
-his neck, he is dropped through the trap-door
-of a gallows. So, whether Guisseppi
-was actually dead or whether a
-faint flicker of life remained, he is forever
-immune from further punishment
-for the crime for which he was placed
-in this great jeopardy.”</p>
-
-<p>“Your point may be well taken,” replied
-the judge.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, your honor, we come to the
-Cardello murder charge. It is at the
-prisoner’s own desire and against my
-better judgment that I enter a plea of
-guilty and throw him upon the mercy of
-the court. There are perhaps some extenuating
-circumstances. But he is willing
-to take whatever punishment the
-court may see fit to inflict. In view of
-all the circumstances of this extraordinary
-case, I make a special plea for
-mercy.”</p>
-
-<p>“I will answer your plea,” returned
-the judge, “by ordering the case stricken
-from the docket and the prisoner discharged
-from custody.”</p>
-
-<p>A murmur of amazement broke the
-tense hush of the crowded chamber.
-Guisseppi’s lawyer gasped.</p>
-
-<p>“Am I to understand, your honor—”</p>
-
-<p>“This is not mercy but law,” the
-judge continued. “This man is legally
-dead. He is without the pale of all law.
-A dead man can commit no crime. No
-provision in the whole range of jurisprudence
-recognizes the possibility of a
-dead man’s committing a crime. No man,
-in the purview of the law, can return
-from the dead. If we assume that this
-man was dead, he will remain dead forever
-in the eyes of the law. If by a
-miracle he has returned to life and committed
-murder, there is no punishment
-within the scope of the statutes that can
-be decreed against him.</p>
-
-<p>“He is the super-outlaw of all history.
-Forever beyond the reach of law, the
-statutes are powerless to deal with him
-or punish him in any way. If he should
-shoot down every member of the jury<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_84"></a>[84]</span>
-that convicted him, if he should walk
-into court and kill the judge before
-whom his case was tried, the law could
-do nothing to him. He could spend his
-days as a bandit, robbing, plundering,
-murdering, and the law could not touch
-him. Legally he is a ghost, a shadow,
-an apparition, with no more reality than
-the beings in a dream. So far as the
-law is concerned, he does not exist. He
-can no more be imprisoned, hanged,
-punished or restricted in his actions than
-a phantom that exists only in the imagination.”</p>
-
-<p>“A most wonderful construction of
-the law,” declared Guisseppi’s attorney
-in happy bewilderment at the turn of
-events.</p>
-
-<p>“It is less a construction of law as it
-exists than an admission there is no law
-applicable to a man legally dead yet
-actually alive, a man who under the law
-does not exist. This boy, physically alive
-but legally dead, has murdered a man
-with deliberate purpose and malice
-aforethought. There is no doubt about
-that. If the law recognized his existence,
-he should be hanged. Justice demands
-that he be executed. But he is in some
-fourth-dimensional legal state beyond
-the reach of justice. The law is powerless
-to deal with him. As the administrator
-of the law, my hands are tied.
-There is nothing left for me but to set
-him at liberty.”</p>
-
-<p>Despite the decision of the court that
-under the law he had no existence,
-Guisseppi left the chamber smiling and
-happy, acutely conscious of joyous life
-in every fibre of his being.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb">
-
-<p>Policeman Rafferty was filled
-with righteous anger when he
-learned that he could not collect the
-$1,000 reward. In answer to his indignant
-questions, he was told the reward
-was offered for the arrest of “the person
-or persons guilty of the murder of
-Cardello,” and since Guisseppi was
-neither a person or anything else that
-the law recognized as existing, he was
-not guilty of the crime.</p>
-
-<p>Moreover, it was hinted to him that in
-capturing Guisseppi, he had arrested
-nobody. In the end, Policeman Rafferty
-had to laugh in spite of himself.</p>
-
-<p>“The money’s mine, all right,” he said
-philosophically. “Only I don’t get it.”</p>
-
-<h3><i>V.</i></h3>
-
-<p>Rosina Stefano sat alone in the
-little parlor of her home in one of
-the quaint side-streets of the Italian
-quarters, picturesque with its jumble of
-weather-stained frame dwellings and
-exotic little shops.</p>
-
-<p>It was a chill, dreary night outside.
-A piping wind made fantastic noises
-about eaves and gables, and shook the
-windows as with ghostly hands. A lamp,
-burning under a blue shade, filled the
-chamber with eerie shadows. A coal fire
-was dying to embers in the open grate.
-There was a knock at the door.</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Entre!</i>”</p>
-
-<p>Guisseppi threw open the door and
-stood upon the threshold smiling.</p>
-
-<p>“Rosina!”</p>
-
-<p>The girl rose from her chair and
-stared fixedly at him out of frightened
-eyes. With a quick gesture, as if for
-protection against some supernatural
-menace, she made the sign of the cross.</p>
-
-<p>“I have come back to you, Rosina.”
-Guisseppi took a step toward her and
-threw open his arms.</p>
-
-<p>Rosina shrank back.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you not still love me?”</p>
-
-<p>Her lips framed a “No” for answer in
-a terror-stricken whisper.</p>
-
-<p>“Come, my little sweetheart, embrace
-me.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, no, Guisseppi!” Her voice was
-a tremulous cry. “You are dead!”</p>
-
-<p>“Dead? Certainly I am not dead. I
-am alive and well, and I love you just
-as I always loved you.”</p>
-
-<p>“You are only a ghost.”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t be foolish, little one. Do I
-look like a ghost? Me? Come into my
-arms and see how strong they are. Lay
-your head on my breast and feel the
-beating of my heart. And every beat of
-my heart is for you.”</p>
-
-<p>Rosina stood motionless. There
-flashed through her mind old grewsome
-stories of vampires that lured their
-victims into their power with love traps
-and sucked their blood. Momentary
-horror froze her blood.</p>
-
-<p>“O Guisseppi,” she exclaimed, “why
-have you risen from the dead? Why do
-you come back to haunt me?”</p>
-
-<p>“Poor girl, do not talk like that. I
-tell you I am alive—tingling to my
-finger tips with life and love for you.
-If I were dead, I should still love you.
-Death could not kill my love for you.
-Have you forgotten everything? I
-thought you loved me. You have often
-told me so. I believed you would always
-love me, be true to me forever. Now I
-find you changed and cold.”</p>
-
-<p>“I did love you, Guisseppi. To the
-depths of my being I loved you.” Her
-words came in a passionate torrent in
-her liquid native tongue. “You were
-my earth and heaven, my life, my soul’s
-salvation. All day my thoughts were of
-you. I dreamed of you at night. There
-was nothing I would not have done for
-you. There was nothing I would not
-have given you. I could have lived for
-you always. I could have died for you.
-Did I not come to see you every day in
-jail? Did I not bring you constantly
-dishes I had cooked myself with utmost
-care? Was not I close beside you in the
-court room every day of the long trial?</p>
-
-<p>“I did everything to soothe and comfort
-you through all those terrible days.
-Was it nothing that I remained constant
-when you were locked in a cell condemned
-to death? I was true to the
-very trap-door of the hangman. What
-greater proof could a woman give of her
-love than to remain true to a man sentenced
-as a felon to the eternal disgrace
-of the gallows?”</p>
-
-<p>She paused for a moment, erect, motionless,
-her face aflame, seemingly transfigured
-like the wonder woman of a
-vision.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, yes,” she went on; “then there
-was no one like my Guisseppi; no eyes
-so bright, no lips so tender, no face so
-dear. You were my god. Can I ever
-forget the songs you used to sing to me
-in the happy days before ‘Devil’ Cardello
-crossed your life. Your voice was divine.
-Every note thrilled me. I loved it. To
-me it was the music of the stars. Nothing
-in all the world was so beautiful as
-your voice. But now your voice has
-changed. There is no longer any music
-in it. As you speak to me, it seems a
-voice from the sepulchre.”</p>
-
-<p>Guisseppi raised an arresting hand.
-He threw back his head. He smiled
-again.</p>
-
-<p>“My voice has changed? Listen, <i>cara
-mia</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>Slowly he began to sing an old Italian
-serenade. The ballad told of a knight
-of old who had bade a lily-white maid
-farewell and gone off to the wars and
-who, wounded and left for dead on the
-battlefield, was nursed back to life and
-returned to find his lady unchanged in
-her devotion against rivals and temptations.</p>
-
-<p>Soft in the opening cadences, Guisseppi’s
-voice grew in volume and power.
-It brought out in shades and nuances
-of wonderful beauty all the charm and
-romance of the ancient tale—the sadness
-of farewell, the clash of battle, the
-wounded soldier’s dreams of his sweetheart
-as life seemed ebbing, the gladness
-of his homecoming, his happiness in reunited
-love.</p>
-
-<p>Into the music, Guisseppi threw all
-the ardor and passion of his own love.
-There were notes like tears in his voice
-when, in minor strain, he sang the sorrows
-and dreams of the soldier; and the
-final crescendo passage, vivid with renewed
-love, was a burst of joyous melody
-straight from his heart.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_85"></a>[85]</span></p>
-
-<p>“<i>And you loved me still the same!</i>”
-The words rose like incense from an
-altar. They fluttered about Rosina’s ears
-like a shower of rose leaves.</p>
-
-<p>The girl listened, spellbound. Never
-in happier days had she heard Guisseppi
-sing with such compelling sweetness.
-There seemed a new and wonderful
-quality in his voice. With his magical
-music, he was like a conjurer bending
-her spirit to his subtle enchantments.</p>
-
-<p>On a golden cloud, she was transported
-to the sunny shores of Italy. A
-cavalier sang the serenade in the moonlight
-to his mandolin and, leaning from
-her latticed balcony, she dropped a rose
-to him. The bay of Naples spread its
-crinkled azure before her. Against the
-dark, star-spangled crystal of the night,
-sculptured Vesuvius upheld its canopy
-of smoke.</p>
-
-<p>As the music steeped her senses, she
-fancied she could feel its golden filaments
-being drawn about her, binding
-her more and more closely in a fairy
-chain. As if under the charm of melodious
-hypnotism, her old love returned.
-All the tenderness and passion of her
-heart went out again to Guisseppi. The
-siren influence of his voice was transforming
-her. Her strength of will was
-crumbling. She stood swaying, helpless,
-her eyes glowing with rekindled love.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly the song ended. The spell
-was broken. Rosina passed a languid
-hand over her eyes as if to brush away
-a film of sleep. She seemed to wake from
-a trance. Guisseppi stood before her
-radiant, smiling.</p>
-
-<p>“Now will you believe I am alive?
-Could a dead man sing like that?”</p>
-
-<p>A look of awe overspread Rosina’s
-face.</p>
-
-<p>“You never sang like that before.”</p>
-
-<p>“This is the first time my life and
-happiness were ever at stake on a song.”</p>
-
-<p>“The Guisseppi I used to know could
-not sing like that. You are not Guisseppi.
-You are a spirit. Some demon
-has taught you how to sing so beautifully.
-You have come back with this
-new devil’s voice of yours to lure my
-soul to hell.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, Rosina, how can you delude
-yourself with such foolish fancies. Do
-you not see me here solid in flesh and
-blood?”</p>
-
-<p>“I see you, but I know you are only
-a shadow from the grave.”</p>
-
-<p>“If your eyes deceive you, your ears
-can not. You have heard me sing.”</p>
-
-<p>“That was some devil’s necromancy.”</p>
-
-<p>Guisseppi fell on his knees before her
-and stretched out his arms in supplication.</p>
-
-<p>“I love you, Rosina. That is all I
-can say. The hangman’s noose was not
-able to strangle my love for you. Your
-love is more to me now than it ever was
-before. The world has turned cold to
-me. You are my only hope, my refuge.
-I need you. I want you with all my
-soul.”</p>
-
-<p>The girl shook her head sorrowfully.
-Her eyes rested upon him with sadness
-that was touched with renunciation.</p>
-
-<p>“It can never be,” she said firmly.
-“How you are here, I do not know. You
-are dead; of that I am sure. My love
-for you was buried in the grave that
-was dug for you. You are not the boy
-I once loved. You are something strange
-and different. I am afraid of you. It
-is only with horror that I could fancy
-the kisses of a dead man on my lips. The
-thought of a ghost’s endearments fills
-me with loathing. Go back to the dead.
-I can love and reverence those who are
-gone, but there is no love anywhere in
-all the world for the dead returned from
-the grave.”</p>
-
-<p>She turned away and stood with her
-head bowed in her hands.</p>
-
-<p>Slowly Guisseppi struggled to his feet.
-He staggered weakly against the wall
-and buried his face in his arms.</p>
-
-<p>“And you, Rosina!” he sobbed.</p>
-
-<p>This was the final, crushing blow. He
-felt now that he was indeed dead—dead
-at the grave of his lost love.</p>
-
-<h3><i>VI.</i></h3>
-
-<p>A taxicab stood in the narrow
-street near Rosina’s home, its driver
-ready at the wheel, its engine purring.
-Behind the drawn blinds, sat Guisseppi,
-aflame with excitement, peering eagerly
-through the curtains from time to time.</p>
-
-<p>Guisseppi was desperate. There was
-no place for the dead among the living.
-He had learned that clearly. As a “living
-dead man,” all his experiences had
-been tragic. He regretted his resuscitation.
-He longed for the peace of the
-grave.</p>
-
-<p>His old friends had fallen away from
-him. Many believed him a spirit
-damned, who, by some strange dispensation,
-was spared to life for yet a little
-while to make more exquisite the final
-agony reserved for him. Others were
-intelligent enough to know the truth, but
-even these were repelled by a certain
-unwholesomeness, a savor of the sepulchre,
-that seemed to cling about him.</p>
-
-<p>The girls he had known in his old, gay
-days would have nothing to do with him.
-As handsome as ever, as romantic, with
-a voice as musical and appealing, he was
-in their imagination enveloped in an atmosphere
-of the charnel-house, and the
-curse of hell was branded on his brow.</p>
-
-<p>His relatives held aloof. Between him
-and even his mother and father he was
-conscious that a thin shadow had gradually
-crept, and the tenderness of their
-love had been cooled by a ghostly fear of
-this eerie son who had been down among
-the dead and read with dead eyes the
-mysteries beyond the tomb.</p>
-
-<p>He had been unable to find employment.
-It was as if every business house
-had up a sign, “No dead men need
-apply.”</p>
-
-<p>In despair and desperation, he fell
-into his old ways of banditry. He soon
-had placed to his record a long series of
-bold robberies. For several of his first
-lawless exploits, the police arrested him.
-But invariably the judges before whom
-he was arraigned set him at liberty.</p>
-
-<p>So after a while the police refused to
-arrest him. What was the use? This
-ghost-man would only be set free again.</p>
-
-<p>... While Guisseppi sat hidden from
-view behind the curtains of his taxicab,
-ruminating upon the bitterness of his
-fate, Rosina emerged from her home.
-Trim and dainty with pink cheeks and
-sparkling eyes, the young beauty was
-subtly suggestive of flowers and fragrance
-as she tripped along the street in
-the warm sunshine.</p>
-
-<p>As she came abreast of the taxicab,
-Guisseppi stepped out, caught her in his
-arms, and swung her into the car. The
-girl’s wild screams shrilled through the
-slumberous stillness of the quarter and
-filled the streets with excited throngs as
-the cab plunged madly forward, dashed
-around a corner and was soon lost to
-sight. In a distant part of the city, the
-car halted before a weather-stained
-building. Within the dingy doorway
-Guisseppi disappeared, bearing the kidnapped
-maiden in his arms.</p>
-
-<p>A little later, Guisseppi appeared before
-the marriage license clerk in the
-city hall.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m sorry,” said the clerk, “but I
-can not give you a marriage license.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why not?”</p>
-
-<p>“You are dead. You can not marry.”</p>
-
-<p>“But I’m <i>going</i> to marry!” shouted
-Guisseppi defiantly.</p>
-
-<p>“Impossible. If I went through the
-formality of filling out a license for you,
-no minister or priest would perform the
-wedding service. The marriage altar,
-orange blossoms, the happiness of
-domestic love are not for the dead.”</p>
-
-<p>“But I’m <i>alive</i>! I am only <i>legally</i>
-dead.”</p>
-
-<p>The clerk smiled tolerantly. With a
-pencil he drew a circle on a sheet of
-paper.</p>
-
-<p>“Here,” said he, “is a cipher. It is
-the symbol of nothing, but, as a circular
-pencil mark, it is still something.”</p>
-
-<p>He erased every trace of the pencil
-and exhibited the blank piece of paper.</p>
-
-<p>“This,” he explained, “illustrates
-your status. In human affairs, you are
-a cipher with the rim rubbed out. A
-man legally dead is less than nothing.”</p>
-
-<h3><i>VII.</i></h3>
-
-<p>Luigi Romano, who had succeeded
-Guisseppi in Rosina’s affections,
-was among the first to hear of the abduction.</p>
-
-<p>Blazing with passion, he laid his plans
-with quick decision and took the trail.
-Without great difficulty, he traced the
-route of the taxicab, block by block, to
-its destination.</p>
-
-<p>Depressed by his fruitless mission in
-search of a marriage license, Guisseppi
-was hurrying toward the building in
-which Rosina was imprisoned. His eyes
-were bent upon the ground in deep
-thought. His face was white and drawn.</p>
-
-<p>Luigi stepped from the shelter of a
-doorway with a sawed-off shotgun in his
-hands....</p>
-
-<hr class="tb">
-
-<p>When the police arrived, a little
-crowd of Italians had gathered.</p>
-
-<p>They shrugged their shoulders and
-spread their palms. Nobody had seen
-anything; nobody had heard anything;
-nobody knew anything. But one thing
-was plain—the dead man, sprawled on
-the sidewalk, was dead this time to stay
-dead.</p>
-
-<p>“O yes,” said Attorney Malato, who
-had looked after Luigi’s case, “they
-arrested Luigi all right. But they
-turned him loose. Why not? This boy
-Guisseppi could not be punished by the
-law, but neither could he claim in the
-slightest degree the protection of the
-law. Since he had no legal life, it was
-no crime to kill him. He was a legal
-problem, and Luigi solved it in about
-the only way it could be solved—with a
-sawed-off shotgun.”’</p>
-
-<hr class="tb">
-
-<p>It is often wondered why the earth is
-round instead of being some other
-shape. This is because of the attraction
-of gravity, which tends to pull everything
-toward the center of the world.
-It can be seen that even if the earth was
-originally some other shape, in the
-course of a few years this influence
-would have pulled it into its present
-shape.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_86"></a>[86]</span></p>
-
-<p class="center larger"><i>A Gripping, Powerful Story by a Man Who
-Always Tells a Good Tale</i></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="THE_BLADE_OF_VENGEANCE">The Blade of Vengeance</h2>
-
-<p class="center larger"><i>By</i> George Warburton Lewis</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The outcome was all the more
-regrettable because Henry Fayne
-had staked so much on the success
-of his great venture. He had renounced
-innumerable bachelor friendships for
-Leanor, only to discover within a year
-of the celebrated social event, which had
-been their wedding, that he was linked
-for life to a captivating adventuress.</p>
-
-<p>It was a hard blow. Only by desperate
-efforts, long sustained, had he been able
-to take himself in hand and force out
-of his thoughts the ugly images that
-obsessed him.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp63" id="illus6" style="max-width: 35.9375em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/illus6.jpg" alt="">
-</div>
-
-<p>Leanor’s perfidy was a thing of which
-even his best friends never could have
-convinced him; yet now he knew it to
-be true—aye, knew it because she herself
-had boasted of it!</p>
-
-<p>Fayne had striven hard to shut so
-hideous a specter out of his vision, partly
-because of a haunting fear that the
-thing which the discovery had set
-throbbing in his brain would get the
-better of him, that he would hurt somebody,
-or himself.</p>
-
-<p>He had been an unusually well-balanced
-man, but it was only after many
-a stern struggle with the pulsating thing
-that hammered in his head that he surrendered
-the corpse of his outraged love
-to the divorce court and the gossip-mongers,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_87"></a>[87]</span>
-and went sadly back to his bachelor
-haunts in the hope of forgetting. But he
-was appalled to find that he no longer
-fitted in.</p>
-
-<p>The friends of the free and easy days
-of his celibacy were sincere enough in
-their pity for him, though in no way disposed
-to put themselves out seeking
-reclamation. In short, they might as
-well have said in chorus:</p>
-
-<p>“You couldn’t have expected us to
-forewarn you; you’d have quit us cold.
-You had to discover it for yourself, and
-the operation of finding out has simply
-rendered you impossible as one of the
-old crowd. Sorry, old man, but, after
-all, it’s better that you should know.”</p>
-
-<p>So Henry Fayne brooded, lost his
-nerve, and then, all of a sudden—disappeared.</p>
-
-<p>The old circle knew his set and
-cynical face no more. There were
-rumors of mental breakdown and
-suicide, and there was one report (little
-credited, however) that the unfortunate
-fellow had drifted down into the wilds of
-South America and become an eccentric
-and a recluse.</p>
-
-<p>Leanor tired, in time, of the murderous
-velocity of her social chariot,
-dumped the winged vehicle on the trash-heap
-and went abroad, accompanied by
-a less rich and more ambitious retinue
-of high livers.</p>
-
-<p>Like vari-colored butterflies, five years
-winged overhead, years by no means
-lacking in color and variety for Leanor.
-Exacting as were her tastes, she could
-scarcely have desired a more changeful,
-a more exquisitely exhilarating life.</p>
-
-<p>Only once in a blue moon did she
-think of Henry. Thoughts of him, like
-all other memories of her meteoric past,
-had been crowded into oblivion by the
-inrush of the more intimate and actual.</p>
-
-<p>Henry had been very good to her,
-she had to admit, but he had been none
-the less impossible. The outcome had
-been inevitable from the beginning. He
-was fifteen years her senior. She knew
-that she could never have held her volatile
-self down to a life of self-sacrifice
-and suffering with Henry. The idea was
-no less absurd than the mating of an
-esthetic humming-bird with some sedate
-old owl.</p>
-
-<p>When she consented to marry Henry
-she had entertained no such preposterous
-thought as exacting of him a compliance
-with the ridiculously restricted
-code of ethics he subsequently set for
-her. Indeed, she would have grown old
-and ugly with nothing accomplished,
-unseeking and unsought. Too, there
-would have been lamentably fewer
-notches on her ivory fan than the half-decade
-last past had yielded.</p>
-
-<p>As the wretched venture had turned
-out, however, she was still under thirty
-and was, to employ the homely simile of
-her latest masculine objective, “as
-pretty as a peach.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb">
-
-<p>At the Pacific entrance of the
-Grand Canal, where the town of
-Bandora drowses like a sprawling lizard
-on the sun-baked clay, word went round
-that the millionaire adventuress was
-yachting down the west coast, homeward
-bound.</p>
-
-<p>Everybody who read the public prints
-knew about Leanor, so at least one element
-at Bandora awaited her arrival
-with curious interest. And the curious
-were to be gratified, for since pretty
-Leanor habitually did the unexpected,
-she only proved her consistency when,
-upon her arrival, she capriciously decided
-to tarry a fortnight, with the two-fold
-object of having a look at the great
-waterway and exploring historic Batoga
-Island, only a couple of hours distant.</p>
-
-<p>Should the mighty monument to engineering
-skill prove uninteresting,
-there remained the secret caves of Batoga,
-among them <i>La Guaca de San Pedro</i>,
-by allegation the identical haunted, bat-inhabited
-cavern in which buccaneering
-old Henry Morgan had once stored all
-of his ill-gotten gains and maybe imprisoned
-the unfortunate nuns captured
-at Porto Bello! And then, too, there
-was the celebrated Devil’s Channel,
-which, according to widely circulated
-and much-believed stories, sucked small
-craft down into its omnivorous maw like
-some insatiable demon lying in wait.</p>
-
-<p>Leanor devoted but little time to the
-prodigious engineering feat. After all,
-it was man-made, and what was man if
-not a purveyor to feminine caprices?
-Mere men were cheap. The adventuress
-knew, because she had bought and sold
-many of them. She had bartered the
-very souls of some.</p>
-
-<p>She had bought them all with make-believe
-affection and disposed of them at
-a hundred per cent discount. She treated
-them much as one treats cast-off garments,
-experiencing only minor difficulties
-in disengaging herself from some of
-the more persistent.</p>
-
-<p>A genuine Sybarite, Leanor’s appetite
-for entities masculine had at last cloyed,
-and she now turned impatiently to inscrutable
-old Nature to make up the deficiency.</p>
-
-<p>She went to Batoga, a verdant, mighty
-mountain, greenly shaggy, as yet unshorn
-by advancing civilization. It
-might have been a little separate world,
-set down by nature in a sleeping sea of
-sapphire. Here, indeed, was something
-different.</p>
-
-<p>She was wild with delight as soon as
-her dainty feet touched the shell-paved
-beach. Really, this wonderland was too
-splendidly perfect to share with her unpoetic
-company of paid buffoons! She
-sent the whole lot of them bagging back
-to Bandora, decided to employ a guide,
-a boatman, or a native maid, contingent
-upon her special needs, right on the
-ground.</p>
-
-<p>It was due to this whim of Leanor’s
-that I myself wandered into the cast,
-came to know Leanor and likewise the
-story I am telling you here. I had just
-come through a notably obstinate case of
-dengue in the sanitarium. My thin
-knees, in fact, were still somewhat wobbly,
-and I was urging them back to
-normal by means of a leisurely stroll
-across the rolling pasture-land. On a
-grassy, wind-swept hillside I came all
-unexpectedly upon Leanor.</p>
-
-<p>Evidently she had thought to refresh
-her jaded wits by a revel in wild flowers.
-She was seated on a shelf of rock that
-rimmed the hill-crown, culling unworthy
-floral specimens. A single upward
-glance, and then her eyes dropped back
-to her flowers in a world-bored manner
-which I somehow felt a quick impulse to
-resent. At least I could annoy her. That
-was any fool’s privilege.</p>
-
-<p>“Gathering flowers?” I interrogated,
-just as though that fact were not as obvious
-as the blue sky itself.</p>
-
-<p>For answer, my front-line fortifications
-were instantly swept by an ocular
-onslaught well calculated to obliterate. I
-smiled back engagingly at the source of
-the tempest.</p>
-
-<p>“Some hill, this,” I suggested, emitting
-a windy sigh after the exertion of
-its ascent.</p>
-
-<p>And then I saw that my second drive
-had broken through her first-line trench
-on a front of about a quarter of an inch.
-Disdain died slowly out of her face—a
-face still unaccountably fresh and girlish—and
-something like pity at my apparent
-lack of sophistication took its
-place.</p>
-
-<p>“You really think it a high hill?” she
-asked, faintly smiling and gazing at me
-steadily as though she doubted my
-sanity.</p>
-
-<p>I noted that her hazel eyes seemed to
-swim in seas of a wonderfully sparkling
-liquid.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” I qualified, affecting funereal
-gravity, “it’s higher than <i>some</i> hills.”</p>
-
-<p>Her amused smile expanded perceptibly.</p>
-
-<p>“Really, now, have you ever seen
-very many hills?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_88"></a>[88]</span></p>
-
-<p>“N-no,” I reluctantly confessed,
-“not so <i>very</i> many.”</p>
-
-<p>“What induced you to measure this
-one?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I was shadowing somebody,”
-I said quietly. At last she had given me
-an opening.</p>
-
-<p>“Whom, pray?” she demanded, her
-smile brightening expectantly.</p>
-
-<p>“<i>You</i>—if you don’t mind,” I announced.</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Me!</i>” She laughed deliriously for a
-moment.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s hardly a laughing matter,” I
-said, with forced seriousness when she
-was still. “I’ve been working on this
-case for years.”</p>
-
-<p>She sobered with a suddenness that
-suggested ugly thoughts, perchance remembering
-something of her kaleidoscopic
-past. The hazel eyes saddened a
-little. It was evident that she was rummaging
-among happenings which it gave
-her small pleasure to review. I waited.
-Maybe I was not quite the yokel she had
-thought me.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you mean you’re a detective?”
-she presently asked.</p>
-
-<p>“I mean just that, madam,” I said
-evenly.</p>
-
-<p>“By whom are you employed?” she
-questioned tentatively.</p>
-
-<p>“By Henry Fayne,” I casually replied.</p>
-
-<p>“That is the lie of an impostor,”
-quickly asserted the woman; “Henry
-Fayne is dead.”</p>
-
-<p>She rose from the stone shelf and prepared
-to desert me. Anyhow, I had won
-my point. I had succeeded in annoying
-her.</p>
-
-<p>But I concluded I could hardly let
-the matter so end, even as affecting a
-woman like Leanor. Nobody can afford
-to be openly rude.</p>
-
-<p>“Wait,” I said; “let’s be good
-sportsmen. You tilted at me and I retaliated.
-Honors are even. Why not
-forget it?”</p>
-
-<p>She was greatly relieved; and besides,
-forgetfulness, of all things, was what
-she sought. After a moment, deep wells
-of laughter again glistened in her splendid
-eyes. These and the smiling young
-mouth somehow seemed to give the lie to
-the fiasco she had made of life. What
-a pity, I thought, that she had chosen
-to fritter away her life in this fatuous,
-futile fashion.</p>
-
-<p>I had thought that I should feel only
-contempt for such a woman as Leanor,
-but as we walked down the hill she told
-me something that penetrated a hitherto
-unknown weak spot in my armor. So
-I all but pitied the woman I had prepared
-to despise.</p>
-
-<p>As if to take strength from them, she
-kept her eyes on the wild flowers she
-had gathered, as she pronounced the
-well-nigh unbelievable words I now set
-down.</p>
-
-<p>The craze for the blinding white
-lights, and the delusion of equally white
-wines, were surfeited. The gilt and tinsel
-of the truly tawdry had palled. The
-mask of allurement had fallen from the
-forbidding face of the artificial and
-empty. Life itself had become for Leanor
-a vacant and meaningless thing.
-She had seen too much of it in too brief
-a space.</p>
-
-<p>She concluded with a seeming contradiction,
-a veiled regret that her frenzied
-explorations had exhausted all too
-soon the world’s meager store of things
-worth while, and there was a bitterness
-in her voice which contrasted unpleasantly
-with her youth and beauty as
-she said plainly, though with little visible
-emotion, that she had reached a
-point where life itself often repelled and
-nauseated her.</p>
-
-<p>We had reached the sanitarium by
-this time, an interruption not unwelcome
-in the circumstances, and I left the
-strange woman alone with her tardy regrets
-and sought my own quarters, sympathetic
-and depressed, yet thanking my
-lucky stars for the happy dispensation
-that had made me an adventurer instead
-of an “adventuress.”</p>
-
-<p>That evening, Leanor and I planned
-a trip to Devil’s Channel, and I strolled
-down to the beach in search of such a
-shallow-draught <i>cayuco</i> as could maneuver
-its way over the reefs that barred
-larger craft. <i>Boteros</i> of divers nationalities
-abounded, and among the many my
-questioning gaze finally met that of a
-vagabondish-looking fellow countryman
-in a frayed sailor garb. In odd contrast
-to his raiment, and swinging from his
-belt in a sheath which his short coat for
-an instant did not quite conceal, I
-caught a single glimpse of a heavy hunting
-knife with an ornamented stag-horn
-handle.</p>
-
-<p>His name was Sisson, he told me, but
-he spoke Spanish like a native. His
-uncarded beard was a thing long forgotten
-of razors. He was unmistakably
-another of those easily identified tramps
-of the tropics who, in an unguarded moment,
-unaccountably lose their grip on
-themselves and thenceforward go sliding
-unresistingly down to a not unwelcome
-oblivion.</p>
-
-<p>Sisson did not importune me, as did
-all the other boatmen; he did not even
-offer me his services; and it was because
-of this evidence of some lingering
-vestige of pride, coupled with the fact
-that he had an eminently suitable
-<i>cayuco</i>, that I decided to employ him.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb">
-
-<p>At the narrow gateway of Devil’s
-Channel the water is so shallow,
-and there so frequently occur tiny submerged
-sand-bars, that only the minutest
-of sea craft can skim over the gleaming
-rifts and gain entrance. This was
-confirmed for the nth time when I felt
-the specially made keel of our tiny
-<i>cayuco</i> scrape the shiny sand in warning
-that we were at last entering the canyon-like
-waterway.</p>
-
-<p>Leanor and I were both playing our
-splendid oarsman with well-nigh every
-imaginable question about the gloomy,
-spooky-looking channel before us.</p>
-
-<p>“Aren’t we nearing <i>the place</i> yet?”
-Leanor presently asked.</p>
-
-<p>“Farther in,” drawled Sisson, the
-bearded giant of a boatman, glancing
-carelessly at the ascending cliffs on either
-side.</p>
-
-<p>Twisting my body round in the wee
-native <i>cayuco</i>, I noted that the perpendicular
-walls of the shadowy strait that
-lay before us seemed drawing together
-with every pull of Sisson’s great arms.
-Leanor’s pretty face was radiant with
-expectation. Though bored of the world,
-there was at least one more thrill for her
-ahead.</p>
-
-<p>Five minutes slipped by. Sisson
-rowed on steadily.</p>
-
-<p>“There she is!” the boatman said
-suddenly, for the first time evincing
-something like a normal human interest
-in life. One of his huge, hairy hands was
-indicating an alkali spot on the face of
-the right-hand wall a stone’s throw
-ahead. “Just opposite that white spot
-is where <i>it always happens</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>He released his oars and let them trail
-in the still water. It looked peculiarly
-lifeless. Our small shell gradually
-slowed.</p>
-
-<p>“Seems to be all smooth sailing here
-today, though,” I ventured.</p>
-
-<p>“Overrated, for the benefit of tourists,”
-opined Sisson. “The water’s
-eaten out a little tunnel under the west
-wall, but there’s no real danger if you
-know the chart.”</p>
-
-<p>“How many did you say were
-drowned when that launch went down?”
-again asked Leanor. Her great dark
-eyes were sparkling again now with a
-keen new interest in life—or was it the
-nearness to potential death?</p>
-
-<p>“Eleven,” drawled Sisson. “The engineer
-jumped for it and made a landing
-on that bench of slate over there,
-and right there”—he smiled reminiscently—“he
-sat for seventy-two hours,
-with ‘water, water everywhere, nor any
-drop’—”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_89"></a>[89]</span></p>
-
-<p>“And is it true that none of the life-preservers
-they were putting on when
-the launch sank was ever found?” Leanor
-also wanted to know.</p>
-
-<p>“True enough,” said Sisson, “but
-that’s not unnatural. Drowning men
-lay hold of whatever they can and never,
-<i>never</i> turn loose. Why, I’ve seen the
-clawlike fingers of skeletons locked
-around sticks that wouldn’t bear up a
-cockroach!”</p>
-
-<p>“Did you say it was a relatively calm
-day?” I questioned the boatman idly.</p>
-
-<p>“Sure. Calm as it is right now,”
-he answered.</p>
-
-<p>I observed casually that the oarsman
-was gazing fixedly at Leanor. Even on
-him, perhaps, beauty was not entirely
-lost. Doubtless, too, he had heard the
-gossip her arrival had set going along
-the wharves at Batoga. Meanwhile Leanor
-had made a discovery.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, we’re still making headway!”
-she broke out suddenly. “I—I thought
-we had stopped.”</p>
-
-<p>Sisson glanced down at the water, and
-his tanned brow broke up in vertical
-wrinkles of consternation. The look in
-his deepset eyes, though, did not, oddly
-enough, seem to match the perplexity
-written on his corrugated brow.</p>
-
-<p>Our craft was sliding rapidly forward
-as though propelled by the oars.
-The phenomenon was due to a current;
-that much was certain, for we were
-moving with a flotsam of dead leaves
-and seaweed.</p>
-
-<p>Again I screwed my body half round
-in the cramped bow and shot a glance
-ahead. God! we were shooting toward
-the dread spot on the alkali cliff as
-though drawn to it by an unseen magnet.
-I could see, too, that our speed was
-rapidly increasing.</p>
-
-<p>Sisson snatched up the trailing oars
-and put his giant’s strength against the
-invisible something that seemed dragging
-us by the keel, but all he did was
-to plough two futile furrows in the
-strange whirlpool. Our <i>cayuco</i> glided
-on.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>blasé</i> adventuress was never more
-beautiful. For the time, at least, life,
-warm and pulsating, had come back and
-clasped her in a joyous embrace. Her
-lips were parted in a smile of seemingly
-inexpressible delight. There was not the
-remotest suggestion of surprise or fear
-in her girlish face.</p>
-
-<p>She put her helm over only when I
-shouted to her in wide-eyed alarm, but
-the keen, finlike keel of our specially
-built <i>cayuco</i> obviously did not respond.
-Oblique in the channel, we slithered
-over, ever nearer to the west wall, the
-unseen agent of destruction towing us
-with awful certainty toward the vortex.
-Still the surface of the water, moving
-with us, looked as motionless as a mill-pond!
-It was uncanny, nothing less.</p>
-
-<p>I peered into the bluishly transparent
-depths, fascinated with wonder, and
-then, of a sudden, I saw that which
-alone might prove our salvation. Apparently
-we were in a writhing, powerful
-current, racing atop the seemingly
-placid undersea or sub-surface waters
-of the channel. I could make out many
-small objects spinning merrily about as
-they flew, submerging, toward the whirlpool.</p>
-
-<p>We carried six life-belts. Two of
-these I snatched from their fastenings,
-slipped one about Leanor, and with the
-other but partly adjusted—for there remained
-no time—myself plunged out of
-our—as it were—bewitched craft in the
-direction of the west wall.</p>
-
-<p>To my surprise I swam easily. When
-I made a deep stroke, however, I could
-feel strange suctorial forces tugging at
-my finger-tips. But for the moment I
-was safe.</p>
-
-<p>I glanced about to see if Leanor had
-followed my lead. She was not in the
-water. I turned on my back and saw, to
-my utter amazement, that neither she
-nor Sisson had left the <i>cayuco</i>.</p>
-
-<p>This was unaccountable indeed. And
-it was now clear that it was too late for
-them to jump, for the light boat had already
-begun to spin round in a circle at
-a point exactly opposite the alkali spot!
-Faster and faster it flew, the diameter
-of the ring in which it raced swiftly
-narrowing.</p>
-
-<p>As I swam, my shoulder collided with
-some obstruction. It was the west wall.
-I clambered up a couple of feet and sat
-dripping on a slime-covered shelf of
-slate, the identical slab on which the engineer
-of the sunken launch had
-thirsted.</p>
-
-<p>I was powerless to help my companions.
-I could only sit and stare in
-near unbelief. Why—<i>Why</i> had they
-not abandoned the tiny craft with me?
-I saw now that neither had even so much
-as got hold of a life-belt. Why—?</p>
-
-<p><i>My God!</i> What was this I beheld?
-Sisson had advanced to the stern of the
-flying cockleshell where Leanor still sat
-motionless, unexcited, smiling. The
-charmed look of expectancy was still in
-her perfect face.</p>
-
-<p>Sisson’s voice, suddenly risen high,
-chilled me to the marrow. It might have
-been the voice of some martyr on the
-scaffold. He did not reveal his identity
-to Leanor. It was not necessary. Something—I
-dare not say what—enabled
-her in that awful moment of tragedy to
-know <i>her divorced husband</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb">
-
-<p>The exquisite torture of recollection
-had shriveled Henry
-Fayne’s mentality and left him a semi-maniac,
-yet here, after all the cynical,
-embittering years was the physical, the
-carnate Henry Fayne, the long-discarded
-plaything of feminine caprice. His
-suffering was fearfully recorded in the
-seamed and bearded mask of his altered
-features.</p>
-
-<p>The smile did not leave Leanor’s face.
-The madman’s voice rose in a shrill,
-terrible cry. He babbled and sputtered
-in consuming rage, but I caught the
-current of his wild harangue. He had
-waited all the years for this opportunity;
-he had followed her from Bandora,
-had laid all his plans with infinite nicety
-to avenge the wreck which Leanor had
-made of his life.</p>
-
-<p>But the woman laughed defiantly,
-tensely; laughed derisively, full in the
-bearded face.</p>
-
-<p>“You have waited too long, Henry,”
-she said, evenly yet with a note of triumph
-in her tone; “I’ve worn threadbare
-every allurement of life. Today I
-came here seeking my last adventure—a
-sensation at once new and ultimate—<i>death</i>!”</p>
-
-<p>It was here that the miracle supervened.</p>
-
-<p>Chagrin, fierce and awful, distorted
-the hairy vagabond’s face, and, balancing
-himself precariously in the crazily
-whirling dugout, he raised a great
-clenched fist. I once had seen a laughing
-man struck by lightning. As the
-rending voltage shot through him the
-muscles of his face had relaxed slowly,
-queerly, as if from incredulity, just as
-the furious, drawn face of Henry Fayne
-relaxed now. The menacing fist unclinched
-and fell limply at his side.</p>
-
-<p>Of all the examples of thwarted vengeance
-I had ever seen on the stage, or
-off, this episode from real life was the
-most dramatic.</p>
-
-<p>The boat had circled swiftly in to the
-center of the vortex and now spun crazily
-for a moment as though on a fixed pivot,
-like a weather-vane. Then it capriciously
-resumed its first tactics, only it
-now raced inversely in a rapidly widening
-circle, running well down in the water,
-as though from some powerful submarine
-attraction.</p>
-
-<p>That the spurious boatman was a victim
-of some hopeless form of insanity I
-was certain when I saw him drop to his
-knees and extend both his great hands
-in evident entreaty to the woman who
-had stripped him of his honor and,
-driven him, a driveling idio-maniac, into
-exile. Leanor sat impassive, but the
-madman continued to supplicate.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_90"></a>[90]</span></p>
-
-<p>Never did my credulity undergo so
-mighty a strain as when, after a moment,
-the woman reached out and locked her
-slim hands in his. It was a strange
-picture, believe me! From my uncertain
-perch on the slimy ledge of slate, I
-stared, thrilling deep in my being at
-this futile truce on the brink of eternity.</p>
-
-<p>Its revolutions greatly widened and
-its speed diminished, the tiny boat suddenly
-swerved from its circular course,
-bobbed upward as though a great weight
-had been detached from its keel and then
-drifted like some spent thing of life toward
-the west wall, where I crouched
-dumbfounded, my breath hissing in my
-nostrils, my lungs heaving.</p>
-
-<p>Only now am I coming to the crux
-of this story of which the foregoing
-forms a necessary prelude.</p>
-
-<p>Back at Batoga that same night, in an
-obscure corner of the wide cool porch of
-the palm-environed sanitarium, Henry
-Fayne and Leanor, after a long heart-to-heart
-talk alone, agreed to forgive and
-forget. Later in the evening Fayne
-went down to the contiguous village to
-assemble his meager belongings. They
-would be interesting souvenirs with
-which to decorate the walls of the rehabilitated
-home. I found Leanor sitting
-where he had left her on the porch,
-smiling enigmatically.</p>
-
-<p>“Can I act, or not?” she asked me
-rather abruptly as I came up.</p>
-
-<p>“Act?” I groped; “what do you
-mean?”</p>
-
-<p>She sat there, smiling mysteriously in
-the white moonlight, until I at length
-prevailed upon her to pour into my incredulous
-ears how it had flashed upon
-her, in the crucial moment at the whirlpool,
-that she must convince Fayne that
-to destroy one who seeks death would
-give no satisfaction to a seeker after
-vengeance. She had made him see that
-the most effective way of wreaking his
-revenge would be to prevent her taking
-her own life and force her to live with
-him again as in the old days. What, indeed,
-could be greater punishment than
-that?</p>
-
-<p>So once again the wily adventuress
-had tricked poor Henry Fayne. It had
-been a close thing, but her lightning
-wits had saved her to look forward enchantedly
-to the prospect of other adventures.
-Though she had, in fact, tired
-of life, she had weakened before death;
-yet the fortitude of skillful artifice
-underlying that physical fear bespoke
-such a resourcefulness as I had never before
-seen in any woman.</p>
-
-<p>She had spoken more truth than she
-knew when she said that Henry Fayne
-was dead, for, mentally, he no longer
-existed.</p>
-
-<p>But Leanor had one more card to
-play. When she had outlined her campaign,
-I sat aghast at the frank inhumanity
-of her plans for the morrow. She
-had already made arrangements with
-the native officials of the nearby village.
-She was to appear in court and testify,
-and I was to be summoned to give evidence
-before the committing judge.
-Henry Fayne was to be ruthlessly
-chucked into the Acorn Insane Asylum!</p>
-
-<p>After Leanor had retired to her apartment
-I lingered a while in the fragrant
-night to smoke a cigar and meditate, for
-I was badly upset by her pitiless resolve.
-As I sat reviewing the strange events of
-the day, the dark figure of a man, half
-bent and retreating rapidly among the
-dappled shadows of the palms, startled
-me unpleasantly.</p>
-
-<p>At my first glimpse of the skulker,
-some sixth sense told me that he had
-been eavesdropping Leanor and me from
-under the elevated porch on which I
-sat. As soon as the flitting shadow had
-melted into the gloom I slipped off the
-porch and investigated.</p>
-
-<p>My half-formed suspicion was confirmed.
-The eavesdropper’s footprints
-were quite distinct. He had crouched directly
-under the chairs which the adventuress
-and I had occupied.</p>
-
-<p>I did not retire until an hour later.
-An indescribable feeling of dread had,
-though for no adequate reason, begun
-to weigh upon my spirits and to nag my
-nerves.</p>
-
-<p>The first faint glimmer of dawn was
-in the east when something touched me
-softly on the shoulder. I remembered
-that I had left my porch window open,
-and sprang up in a sudden flurry of
-alarm, but my nerves slackened quickly
-when the intruder, a black Jamaican,
-showed me his watchman’s badge.</p>
-
-<p>The old negro was afraid something
-had happened. He had heard stealthy
-footfalls upstairs, and somebody’s bedroom
-door was wide open. On looking
-into the room he had seen—!</p>
-
-<p>But at this point in his story he
-choked, overcome. He was an excitable
-and superstitious old black at best, but
-now he was fairly beside himself with a
-terror for which he had no explanation.
-The occupant of the room, I surmised,
-had gone out on the porch, properly
-enough, to smoke an early morning
-cigar. But the old watchman would not
-be reassured until I consented to accompany
-him up to the second floor.</p>
-
-<p>I noted, as we advanced along the
-corridor, that a door stood ajar. I tapped
-tentatively. No answer. I repeated the
-summons, louder. Still no answer. I
-walked in.</p>
-
-<p>The moonlight that flooded the porch
-outside filtered in, subdued, through the
-lace-curtained windows. It revealed a
-bed. In the center of the bed was
-the figure of a woman—all in snow white
-save a single dark-hued covering of some
-sort which sprawled across the full
-bosom.</p>
-
-<p>A nameless something made me fumble
-rather hurriedly for the electric
-switch. The bright light showed what
-I had dreaded, almost expected. The
-dark-colored garment was not a garment
-at all. It was blood.</p>
-
-<p>It dyed the white bosom repellently
-and, still welling from its fountain, was
-fast forming a ragged little pool on the
-bedcovering. Fair over the victim’s
-heart, the ornamented stag-horn handle
-of a heavy hunting-knife, none of the
-blade visible, stood up like a sinister
-monument, somehow increasingly familiar
-to my gaze; and after an instant’s
-reflection I could have sworn—so plainly
-did my eyes visualize the motive for this
-horror—that I beheld a single word
-scrawled in crimson along the mottled
-staghorn handle:</p>
-
-<p>“<i>VENGEANCE!</i>”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">Air Transportation Between Chicago and New York
-To Be Established</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Chicagoans will soon be able to run down to New York
-on business early one morning and be back home in
-time for breakfast the next day, if the plans for dirigible
-service between the two cities carry through. A number of
-prominent Americans are members of a corporation that is
-building several huge, helium-filled balloons in the Schutte-Lanz
-Company’s plant in Germany, according to Benedict
-Crowell, former secretary of war, who is the president of
-the new corporation. The airships will carry passengers and
-freight, it was announced.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_91"></a>[91]</span></p>
-
-<p class="center larger"><i>It Was a Frightful, Incredible Thing,
-Found in the Amazon Valley</i></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="THE_GRAY_DEATH">THE GRAY DEATH</h2>
-
-<p class="center larger"><i>By</i> LOUAL B. SUGARMAN</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Unwaveringly, my guest sustained
-my perplexed and angry
-stare. Silently, he withstood the
-battering words I launched at him.</p>
-
-<p>He appeared quite unmoved by my
-reproaches, save for a dull red flush that
-crept up and flooded his face, as now and
-then I grew particularly bitter and biting
-in my tirade.</p>
-
-<p>At length I ceased. It was like hitting
-into a mass of feathers—there was no
-resistance to my blows. He had made
-no attempt to justify himself. After a
-momentous silence, he spoke his first
-word since we had entered the room.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m sorry, my friend; more sorry
-than you can imagine, but—I couldn’t
-help it. I simply could not touch her
-hand. The shock—so suddenly to come
-upon her—to see her as she was—I tell
-you, I forgot myself. Please convey to
-your wife my most abject apologies, will
-you? I am sorry, for I know I should
-have liked her very much. But—now I
-must go.”</p>
-
-<p>“You can’t go out in this storm,” I
-answered. “It’s out of the question.
-I’m sorry, too; sorry that you acted as
-you did—and more than sorry that I
-spoke to you as I did, just now. But I
-was angry. Can you blame me? I’d
-been waiting for this moment ever since
-I heard from you that you had come
-back from the Amazon—the moment
-when you, my best friend, and my wife
-were to meet. And then—why, damn
-it, man, I can’t understand it! To pull
-back, to shrink away as you did; even
-to refuse to take her hand or acknowledge
-the introduction! It was unbelievably
-rude. It hurt her, and it hurt
-me.”</p>
-
-<p>“I know it, and that is why I am so
-very sorry about it all. I can’t excuse
-myself, but I can tell you a story that
-may explain.”</p>
-
-<p>I saw, however, that for some reason
-he was reluctant to talk.</p>
-
-<p>“You need not,” I said. “Let’s drop
-the whole matter, and in the morning
-you can make your amends to Laura.”</p>
-
-<p>Anthony shook his head.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s not pleasant to talk about, but
-that was not my reason for hesitating.
-I was afraid you would not believe me
-if I did tell you. Sometimes truth
-strains one’s credulity too much. But
-I will tell you. It may do me good to
-talk about it, and, anyhow, it will explain
-why I acted as I did.</p>
-
-<p>“Your wife came in just after we entered.
-She had not yet removed her veil
-or gloves. They were gray. So was
-her dress. Her shoes—everything was
-gray. And she stood there, her hand
-outstretched—all in that color—a body
-covered with gray. I can’t help shuddering.
-<i>I can’t stand gray!</i> It’s the
-color of death. Can your nerves stand
-the dark?”</p>
-
-<p>I rose and switched off the lights. The
-room was plunged into darkness, save
-for the flicker of the flames in the fireplace
-and the intermittent flashes of
-lightning. The rain beat through the
-leafless branches outside with a monotonous,
-slithering <i>swish</i> and rattled like
-ghostly fingers against the windows.</p>
-
-<p>“The light makes it hard to talk—of
-unbelievable things. One needs the
-darkness to hear of hell.”</p>
-
-<p>He paused. The <i>swir-r-r</i> of the rain
-crept into the stillness of the room. My
-companion sighed. The firelight shone
-on his face, which floated in the darkness—a
-disembodied face, grown suddenly
-haggard.</p>
-
-<p>“A good night for this story, with the
-wind crying like a lost soul in the night.
-How I hate that sound! Ah, well!”</p>
-
-<p>There was a moment of silence.</p>
-
-<p>“It was not like this, though, that
-night when we started up the Amazon.
-No. Then it was warm and soft, and
-the stars seemed so near. The air was
-filled with scent of a thousand tropical
-blossoms. They grew rank on the shore.</p>
-
-<p>“There were four of us—two natives,
-myself and Von Housmann. It is of
-him I am going to tell you. He was a
-German—and a good man. A great
-naturalist, and a true friend. He sucked
-the poison from my leg once, when a
-snake had bitten me. I thanked him
-and said I’d repay him some day. I
-did—sooner than I had thought—with
-a bullet! I could not bear to see him
-suffer.”</p>
-
-<p>The man sat there, gazing into the
-flames—and I listened to the dripping
-rain fingering the bare boughs and <i>tap-tap-tapping</i>
-on the roof above.</p>
-
-<p>My friend looked up.</p>
-
-<p>“I was seeing his face in the flames.
-God help him!... We had traveled for
-days—weeks—how long does not matter.
-We had camped and moved on; we had
-stopped to gather specimens—always
-deeper into that evil undergrowth. And
-as we moved on, Von Housmann and I
-grew close; one either grows to love or
-hate in such circumstances, and Sigmund
-was not the sort of man one would
-hate. I tell you, I loved that man!</p>
-
-<p>“One day we struck into a new place.
-We had long before left the tracks of
-other expeditions. We <i>trekked</i> along,
-unmindful of the exotic beauty of our
-surroundings, when I saw our native,
-who was up ahead, stop short and sniff
-the air.</p>
-
-<p>“We stopped, too, and then I noticed
-what the keener, more primitive sense of
-our guide had detected first.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb">
-
-<p>“It was an odor. A strange odor, indefinable
-and sickening. It was
-filled with foreboding—evil. It smelt—<i>gray</i>!
-I can not describe it any other
-way. It smelt dead. It made me think
-of decay—decay, and mould and—ugly
-things. I shuddered. I looked at Von
-Housmann, and I saw that he, too, had
-noticed it.</p>
-
-<p>“‘What is that smell?’ I asked.</p>
-
-<p>“He shook his head.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Ach, dot iss new. I haf not smelled
-it before. But—I do not lige it. It iss
-not goot. Smells is goot or bat—und
-dot is not goot. I say, I do not lige dot
-smell.’</p>
-
-<p>“Neither did I. We went ahead,
-cautiously now. A curious sense pervaded
-the air. It puzzled me. Then it
-struck me: <i>silence</i>. Silence, as though
-the music of the spheres had suddenly
-been snuffed out. It was the utter cessation
-of the interminable chirping and
-chattering of the birds and monkeys and
-other small animals.</p>
-
-<p>“We had become so accustomed to
-that multitudinous babel that its absence<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_92"></a>[92]</span>
-was disturbing. It was—eerie. Yes,
-that’s the word. It made that first impression
-of lifelessness more intense. Not
-death, you understand. Even death has
-in it a thought of life, an element of being.
-But this was just—lifelessness.</p>
-
-<p>“The gray odor had become so strong
-it was wellnigh unbearable. Then we
-saw our guides running back to us. They
-rebelled. They refused to go beyond
-the line of trees ahead. They said it
-was <i>tabu</i>.</p>
-
-<p>“That ended it. No promise, no
-threat, nothing would move them. Do
-you know what a savage’s <i>tabu</i> is? It
-is stronger than death. And this place
-was <i>tabu</i>. So we left them there with
-our stuff, and Sigmund and I went on
-alone. We reached the farthest line of
-trees and stopped on the edge of a
-clearing.</p>
-
-<p>“I can’t describe that sight to you.
-But I can see it—good God, how I can
-still see it! Sometimes I wake up in the
-night with that nightmarish picture in
-my eyes, and my nostrils filled with that
-ghoulish stench.</p>
-
-<p>“It was a field of gray; almost, I
-might have said, a field of <i>living</i> gray.
-And yet, it did not give the impression
-of life. It moved, although there was
-not a breath of wind; not a leaf on the
-trees quivered, but that mass of gray
-wiggled and crawled and undulated as
-though it were a huge gray shroud that
-was thrown over some monstrous jelly-like
-Thing.</p>
-
-<p>“And that Thing was writhing and
-twisting. The gray mass extended as far
-as I could see ahead; to the right the
-sandy shore of the river stopped it; and
-to the left and in front of us it terminated
-at a distance of a few yards away
-from the trees where a belt of sand
-intervened.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know how long we stood
-there, my friend Von Housmann and I.
-It fascinated us. At last he spoke.</p>
-
-<p>“‘<i>Heilige Mütter. Was kommt da?</i>
-Vat in der name off all dot iss holy do
-you call dot? Nefer haf I seen such before.
-Eferyvere I haf traffeled, but
-nefer haf I seen a sight lige dot. I tell
-you, it makes my flesh crawl!’</p>
-
-<p>“‘It makes me sick to look at it,’ I
-answered. ‘It looks like—like living corruption.’</p>
-
-<p>“The old German shook his head. He
-was baffled. We knew we were looking
-upon something that no living mortal
-had ever gazed upon before. And our
-flesh crawled, as we watched that Thing
-writhing beneath its blanket of gray.</p>
-
-<p>“We walked slowly and cautiously
-across the strip of sand to the edge of the
-gray patch. As I bent over, the pungency
-of the odor bit into the membrane
-of my nostrils like an acid, and my eyes
-smarted.</p>
-
-<p>“And then I saw something that
-drove all other thoughts from my
-mind. The mass was a mosslike growth
-of tiny gray fungi. They were shaped
-like miniature mushrooms, but out of
-the top of each grew a countless number
-of antennae that twisted and writhed
-around ceaselessly in the air.</p>
-
-<p>“They seemed to be feeling and
-groping around for something, and it
-was this incessant movement that gave
-to the patch that quivering undulation
-which I had noticed before. I stared
-until my eyes ached.</p>
-
-<p>“‘What do you make of it?’ I asked
-my friend.</p>
-
-<p>“‘<i>Ach</i>, I do not know. It iss incompbrehensible.
-I haf nefer seen such a—a
-t’ing in my whole, long life. It iss, I
-should say, some sort off a fungoid
-growt’. Ya, it iss clearly dot. But der
-species—um, dot iss <i>not</i> so clear. Und
-dose liddle feelers; on a fungus dot iss
-new. It iss unheard off. See, der <i>veddammte</i>
-t’ings iss lige lifting fingers;
-dey svay und tvist lige dey vas feeling
-for somet’ings, not? I am egseedingly
-curious. Und, I am baffled—und, my
-frient, I do not lige dot.’</p>
-
-<p>“Impatiently, he reached out a stick
-he was carrying: a newlycut, stout cudgel
-of dried wood. He stirred around with
-it in the growth at his feet. And then a
-cry broke from his lips.</p>
-
-<p>“‘<i>Ach, du lieber Gott—gnadig Gott
-im Himmel! Sieh’ da!</i>’</p>
-
-<p>“I looked where he was pointing. His
-hand trembled violently. And little
-wonder! The stick, for about twelve
-inches up, was a mass of gray!</p>
-
-<p>“And as I watched, I saw, steadily
-growing before my eyes, that awful gray
-creep up and surround the wood. I’m
-not exaggerating; I tell you, in less time
-than it takes to tell, it had almost
-reached Von Housmann’s hand. He
-threw it from him with an exclamation
-of horror.</p>
-
-<p>“It fell in the gray growth and instantly
-vanished. It seemed to melt
-away.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb">
-
-<p>“Sigmund looked at me. He was
-pale. At last he sighed.</p>
-
-<p>“‘So-o-o! Ve learn. On vood it
-grows. I might haf guessed. Dot iss
-der reason dot no trees are here. It destroys
-dem. But so <i>schnell</i>; <i>ach</i>, lige
-fire it growed. My frendt, I lige dot
-stuff lesser <i>als</i> before. It is not healt’y.
-But vat vill it not eat?’</p>
-
-<p>“I handed him my rifle. He took it,
-and with the muzzle poked the growth.
-Man, my hair fairly stood on end! Do
-you know anything about fungi? No?
-Well, I have never known or heard of
-any vegetable growth that would attack
-blue steel. But that stuff, I tell you,
-that rifle barrel sprouted a crop of that
-gray moss as readily and as quickly as
-had the wood!</p>
-
-<p>“I grabbed the gun and lifted it out of
-the patch. Already several inches of
-steel had been eaten—literally <i>eaten</i>—off.
-I held it up and watched that damnable
-gray crawl along the barrel. It
-just seemed to melt the metal. It melted
-like sealing wax, and great gray flakes
-dropped off to the ground.</p>
-
-<p>“Nearer and near it came; to the rear
-sight, the trigger-guard, the hammer. It
-was uncanny—like a dream. I stood
-there, paralyzed. I could not believe
-what my eyes told me was true. I looked
-at Sigmund. His mouth was open and
-his face was white as death. I laughed
-at his face. That seemed to tear away
-the mist. He yelled and pointed, and
-I looked down.</p>
-
-<p>“Not two inches from my hand was
-that mass. I could see those feelers
-reaching out toward my hand and I
-was sick. Instinctively, I threw the gun
-from me; aimlessly, blindly. It fell on
-the sand belt outside the gray mass.</p>
-
-<p>“Hardly had it struck the sand before
-the growth had reached the butt, and
-then there was nothing to be seen but a
-tiny patch of that gray, poisonous
-Thing. And as we looked, it began to
-melt. Gradually, steadily, it was disappearing.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Quick, quick,’ shouted Von Housmann,
-and we ran over to the spot. By
-bending over, we could see what was
-happening.</p>
-
-<p>“The feelers, or antennae, which we
-had noticed before, had vanished, but instead,
-at the bases of each individual
-plant, were similar tendrils. But more
-of them—thousands and thousands of
-them all feeling and groping frantically
-about. And as they swayed and twisted
-and brushed the sand, one by one
-they shriveled up and seemed to withdraw
-into the parent body.</p>
-
-<p>“And gradually this nucleus itself
-shrank and withered, until it was no
-more than a tiny gray speck on the sand.
-Soon that was all that was left; a lot of
-tiny whitish particles, much lighter in
-color than the original plant, scattered
-around on the sand.</p>
-
-<p>“I looked at Von Housmann, and he
-looked at me. After a long interval, he
-spoke. He spoke slowly, almost as
-though it were a painful effort.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Ant’ony, ve haf seen a—miracle.
-From vat, or how, or ven, dot hell-growt’
-sprang, I do not know. I do not
-know how many, many years it has stood
-here; may be it has been for centuries.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_93"></a>[93]</span>
-But I do know this: if dot sand was not
-here—vell, I shudder to t’ink off vat
-vould be today.’</p>
-
-<p>“I stared.</p>
-
-<p>“‘You do not understand? <i>Ach</i>, so!
-You haf vat happened to dot stick? Und
-to dot gun of steel? So! Look, now.’</p>
-
-<p>“He took off his hat and went over to
-the border of the patch. He touched—just
-barely touched the brim of the hat
-to the gray matter and held it up. Already
-a growth was moving up the
-linen. He nodded, then threw it away,
-onto the sand. Speechless, we watched
-it fade away under the merciless attack
-of that horrible stuff, and then, in turn,
-the gray fungoid growth wither and disappear.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Now do you understand? Do you
-see vat I meant? Vood, steel, linen—eferyt’ing
-vat it touches it <i>eats</i>. It
-grows fast—like flame in dry sticks. All-consuming.
-Aber—<i>siest du</i>—dot sand—ven
-it touched dot, it died. It starved.
-Und see! Look close—more closer still at
-dot sand. Do you see anything odd
-about it?’</p>
-
-<p>“I shook my head. It looked very
-fine and light, but I could not see anything
-unusual.</p>
-
-<p>“‘No? Iss it not glass, dot sand?
-Look at it und at der sand vere dot
-T’ing has not been, and see if it is not
-so different.’</p>
-
-<p>“I picked up some sand from under
-my foot. And then I saw what <i>he</i> had
-seen at once. The sand in my hand was
-coarser, dirtier—in short, like any fine-grained
-sand you may have seen. But
-the sand where the Grey had fallen was
-clear, glasslike. It was almost transparent,
-and I saw that what was there
-was a mass of silicon particles. I
-nodded.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Yes,’ I said, ‘I see now. That
-stuff has eaten out every particle of mineral,
-of dirt and dust, but not the
-silicon!’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Egsactly! Und dot iss vat has
-safed us from—Gott only knows vot! I
-do not know what dot stuff vill eat, but
-I <i>do</i> know it vill not eat silicon. Vy? <i>I</i>
-do not know. Dot iss yet a mystery.
-So—it starts,—<i>ach</i>, dot too, I do not
-know—but it starts somewhere. Und it
-eats und grows, und grows and eats, and
-eferyt’ing vot it touches it consumes—egcept
-sand. Sand stops it.</p>
-
-<p>“‘It eats out der stuff in der sand,
-but not der silica, und starves and dies.
-It is a miracle. If der sand vas not here—<i>ach,
-Gott!</i>—it vould keep on going
-until—vell—I do not know! I haf nefer
-seen dot before. I am intrigued, und
-I am going to take dot stuff—oh, only
-a liddle bit—und I shall not rest until
-I haf learned something about it. Und,
-because I haf seen it does not lige sand,
-I vill make for it a cage—a liddle box
-of glass, und study it lige it vas a bug.
-Not?’</p>
-
-<p>“We returned to where our natives
-still stood with our packs. We quickly
-fitted together some microscopic slides
-into a rough box and bound it about
-with string. With it, we returned to the
-edge of the gray patch. Von Housmann
-knelt down and carefully scooped up a
-bit of the fungus with a glass spatula he
-had brought along. He dumped this
-into his box and waited. In five minutes
-it had disappeared. He looked up
-blankly.</p>
-
-<p>“‘You forget, Sigmund,’ I said,
-smiling at his woeful expression. ‘It
-starves on silicon. It won’t live in glass.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘<i>Ach. Dumkopf!</i> Of course! I
-haf forgot dot. But, ve vill fool dot hell-plant.
-He goes yet on hunger-strike—no?
-Ve try now dot forcible feeding.’</p>
-
-<p>“He took out his knife and cut from
-a near-by tree several small splinters.</p>
-
-<p>“Ve vill feed him, so. Dot vood, it
-vill be for him a greadt feast, und he
-shall eat und eat, und we vill study him
-und see vot we vill see.’</p>
-
-<p>“Laughing, he bent over and shook
-out the tiny gray residue which was in
-the box. He dropped in a sliver of
-wood and was bending over to refill his
-box when I felt a sting on my foot. I
-looked down, and my heart stood still.</p>
-
-<p>“On my shoe, just in between the
-laces, was a spot of gray. I could not
-move. I was cold. I can not describe
-how I felt, but I seemed turned to stone.
-My flesh quivered and shrank and I was
-sick—very sick. Sigmund looked up,
-startled, and then he looked at my feet.</p>
-
-<p>“The next thing I knew I was on my
-back, my foot in his hand. One slash of
-his knife across the thongs which laced
-my boot, and he jerked it off.</p>
-
-<p>“The biting grew worse. I heard him
-gasp, and then I felt a sharp pain. My
-head swam and I must have fainted. I
-regained consciousness—I don’t know
-how soon after—and I found myself
-back under the trees. I looked at my
-foot, which was throbbing and burning
-like fire. It was swathed in a bandage
-that Von Housmann had taken from his
-emergency kit and was wrapping around
-the instep. It was deeply stained with
-blood. I moved, and he looked up. He
-smiled when he saw I was conscious.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Dot was a close shave—yes? It had
-just eaten into der shoe as I pulled it
-off und one spot—lige a bencil dot—on
-your skin vas gray. So I cut it out and
-all around it, und so you haf a hole in
-your foot, but—you haf your foot. Now
-so! You lie here, und I get der niggers
-and ve take you to bed.’</p>
-
-<p>“A tent was soon erected and I was
-carried into it. For two days I lay
-there, delirious half the time. Sigmund
-never left my side. He even slept there.
-He was insistent that it was his fault.
-He said one of the apparently dead fungi
-had dropped on my shoe and had revived
-there. That is, the plant, instead
-of dying, had shriveled up, but the life-nucleus
-was still strong. I shudder even
-now when I think of what might have
-been.</p>
-
-<p>“At the end of the third day I was
-able to hobble about a little with the aid
-of a cane. That afternoon Sigmund
-came to me and asked if I would care
-to go with him to fill his little glass box.
-I refused, and he laughed. It was the
-last time I ever heard him laugh. I begged
-him to leave that stuff alone.</p>
-
-<p>“Still laughing, he made some light
-reply and left me. I lay in my cot. I
-was filled with forebodings. The heat
-was intense, and I must have dropped
-off to sleep. I dreamed horrible, troublesome,
-weird dreams. I awoke, bathed
-in a cold sweat. I felt sure something
-was wrong, that some one was calling
-for me. I got to my feet and left my
-tent. No one was in sight. I tried to
-laugh at my premonition. I bitterly regretted
-that I had allowed my friend to
-override my persuasions.</p>
-
-<p>“Hurrying as much as was possible,
-I started toward the clearing. My wound
-throbbed and ached. It tortured me. I
-seemed weighed down. Once I stumbled
-in my eagerness. It was horrible. Like
-a nightmare.</p>
-
-<p>“I must have covered half the distance
-when I heard a scream. What a
-shriek it was! I wake up nights even
-now hearing it. It was unrecognizable.
-Like some unearthly animal. Just that
-one scream. My stick hindered me. I
-threw it away and ran.</p>
-
-<p>“My blood was cold in my veins, but
-I felt not one twinge of pain in my
-<i>foot</i>. At last I came to the edge of the
-clearing. And there—God, it makes me
-sick even now to think of it.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb">
-
-<p>The speaker paused; his face was
-chalky, and he shuddered and
-buried his face in his hands. I think he
-was crying.</p>
-
-<p>Outside, the wind still howled, dully,
-monotonously, eerily. Sometimes it
-would shriek and scream. Then my
-friend’s voice again—level, dead, cold.</p>
-
-<p>“I looked out; I saw Sigmund standing
-on the sand. I can see him as plainly
-as though he were here now. His
-face was ashen. He was looking down.
-At his feet were the fragments of the
-glass box he had made.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_94"></a>[94]</span></p>
-
-<p>“He was holding out his hands, looking
-at them. They were gray. And they
-writhed and twisted, but his arms were
-still. He was not even trembling. My
-tongue clove to the roof of my mouth,
-and my throat was dry—but at last I
-called to him.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Sigmund—Sigmund!’ I cried. ‘For
-God’s sake—’</p>
-
-<p>“He looked up, and, I tell you, I
-never want to see such a face again! I
-can never forget it. The face of a soul
-in torture. He looked at me and held
-out his arms. His hands were gone—flaked
-off in large, gray, writhing drops
-to the sand at his feet!</p>
-
-<p>“He tried to smile, but couldn’t.</p>
-
-<p>“Another gray—Thing—dropped off.
-I was dizzy with sickness. It was unbelievable.
-And then he spoke. His
-voice was well-nigh unrecognizable. It
-croaked and broke:</p>
-
-<p>“‘Done for, my friendt. I feel it
-eating to my heart. Be merciful and
-help me. <i>Shoot</i>—quick, through the
-foreheadt!’</p>
-
-<p>“His words beat through the stupor
-clouding my brain, I started toward
-him—hands out-stretched. I could not
-speak.</p>
-
-<p>“‘<i>Um Gottes Willen, bleibt da!</i>
-Stop! Stop!’</p>
-
-<p>“The words brought me up to a stop.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Sigmund! My friend! What—?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Do not come near me! Vould you
-also be so tormented? Vat dot Gray
-touches it consumes. Do not argue, I
-say, but <i>shoot!</i> <i>Heilige Mütter!</i> Vy do
-you not shoot?’</p>
-
-<p>“His voice rose into a shriek of agony.
-What was left of one arm had sloughed
-off—the other was almost gone. A little
-mound of gray grew larger at his feet.
-His flesh was consumed; skin, blood and
-bone, absorbed by that vile gray Thing,
-and he shrieked in agony and prayer.
-Both arms were gone, and the stuff at
-his feet had already begun to cut
-through his boots.</p>
-
-<p>“I shot him—between his eyes. I saw
-him fall, and I fainted. When I came to,
-there was only a mound of tiny gray
-fungi, greedily reaching their hellish
-tentacles for sustenance and slowly
-shriveling up into tiny light gray specks
-of dust on a glossy patch of sand.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">Savants No Longer Know All Things</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>“Men in the business of knowing things have taken a
-tip from the plumbers, carpenters and plasterers,”
-announced Friar McCollister, one of the University of Chicago
-literati. “No longer is it possible to go to a hoary old
-gentleman with a pile of books and a skull on his desk and
-ask him any question, from the date of the birth of Copernicus
-to the conjugations of the verb ‘to know’ in Sanscrit,
-and get an answer. The scholar nowadays has learned to
-say what the plumber says when you ask him to fix the hole
-he has made in the wall: ‘That is not in my department.’ I
-found this out the other day when I tried to get some information
-on the discovery of a human skull three million
-years old.</p>
-
-<p>“First, I went to the information office of the University.
-There I encountered a sprightly young man who turned out
-to be a professor of sociology. But he didn’t know anything
-about men three million years old. He only studied
-living men, he said. ‘Better go over to Haskell Museum,’ he
-told me. ‘They have some skulls and mummies over there.’</p>
-
-<p>“I ran up three flights of stairs and into a dusty old room
-where I saw a Dr. Edgerton. He was copying strange characters
-out of a book yellow with age. When I put my question
-he replied that the only ancients he knew were Egyptian
-mummies. He said I should see an anthropologist. Back to
-the information office to see where they kept the anthropologists.</p>
-
-<p>“They sent me up to Walker Museum, where a bland
-young man said, ‘Freddie Starr is not in, but you don’t want
-an anthropologist, anyway. You want to see an ethnologist.’</p>
-
-<p>“When I found one, after dogging him all over the campus,
-he told me that the matter really belonged in the department
-of geology. From there they sent me to see the
-department of paleontology. At last I located it in a cubby-hole
-of a museum which I didn’t even know was there, although
-I have been on the campus three years.</p>
-
-<p>“‘But, my dear sir,’ replied the head of the department to
-my question, ‘that is not in my department. What you want
-is a vertebrate paleontologist, and I am only a plain paleontologist.
-At present we have no vertebrate paleontologist
-at the University. The last one died a few years ago.’</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I gave up my search,” said Mr. McCollister. “This
-age of specialization is too much for me.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">Ancient Legend Recalled When Misfortune Attends
-Tut’s Discoverers</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>There is an old legend to the effect that whoever molests
-the final resting-place of a Pharaoh will be afflicted with
-the curse of the ancient rulers; and recent events have revived
-this superstition.</p>
-
-<p>After thirty-three years of patient, ceaseless toil, Howard
-Carter, the now famous Egyptologist, discovered the tomb of
-a powerful Pharaoh. He was a very sincere man, and devoted
-to his life work all of his energy. Just when success
-and reward for his labor was within his grasp, he was
-stricken down with a baffling disease. His condition became
-very serious and physicians said that if he lived he would
-probably be an invalid for a long time. Shortly before
-Carter’s illness, Lord Carnarvon, who was financing the expedition,
-and who was personally supervising the work,
-suddenly died.</p>
-
-<p>Nobody seems to know just what killed him. Some attribute
-his death to the effects of an insect bite, some say that
-he was poisoned by some ancient death-potion with which he
-came in contact while in the tomb, and others declare that
-his death was the vengeance of King Tut-Ankh-Amen.</p>
-
-<p>If such a legend could be credited anywhere, the Theban
-valley would be that place. By day nothing disturbs the
-place except the sound of the pick-axes and shovels of the
-native workmen. By night the stillness is broken only by
-the hooting of owls and the cries of jackals and wild-cats.
-The spectator is awed by the solemnity of the great, precipitous
-sandstone cliffs that stand sentinel on either side of
-the valley. In the midst of the silence and solitude one
-feels himself standing on the brink of two worlds, gazing
-into a vista of the unknown.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_95"></a>[95]</span></p>
-
-<p class="center larger"><i>The Author of “Whispering Wires” Offers Another
-Thriller to WEIRD TALES Readers</i>—</p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="THE_VOICE_IN_THE_FOG">The Voice in the Fog</h2>
-
-<p class="center larger"><i>By</i> HENRY LEVERAGE</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The <i>Seriphus</i> was a ten thousand
-ton, straight bow ocean
-tanker, and her history was the
-common one of Clyde-built ships—a voyage
-here and a passage there, charters
-by strange oil companies, petrol for Brazil,
-crude petroleum that went to Asia
-(for anointment purposes among the
-heathen) and once there was a hurried
-call to some unpronounceable Aegean
-port where the <i>Seriphus</i> acted against
-the Turks in their flare-up after the
-Great War.</p>
-
-<p>The ordinary and usual—the up and
-down the trade routes—passed away
-from the <i>Seriphus</i> when Ezra Morgan,
-senior captain in the service of William
-Henningay and Son, took over the
-tanker and drove her bow into strange
-Eastern seas, loading with oil at California
-and discharging cargo in a hundred
-unknown ports.</p>
-
-<p>Of Ezra Morgan it was said that he
-had the daring of a Norseman and the
-thrift of a Maine Yankee; he worked the
-<i>Seriphus</i> for everything the tanker
-could give William Henningay and Son;
-he ranted against the outlandish people
-of the Orient and traded with them, on
-the side, for all that he could gain for
-his own personal benefit.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp63" id="illus7" style="max-width: 35.9375em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/illus7.jpg" alt="">
-</div>
-
-<p>Trading skippers and engineers with
-an inclination toward increasing wage
-by rum-running and smuggling were
-common in the Eastern service. Ezra
-Morgan’s rival in that direction aboard
-the <i>Seriphus</i> ruled the engine-room and
-took pride in declaring that every passage
-was a gold mine for the skipper and
-himself.</p>
-
-<p>The chief engineer of the <i>Seriphus</i>
-saw no glory in steam, save dollars; he
-mopped up oil to save money. His name
-was Paul Richter—a brutal-featured
-man given to boasting about his daughter,
-ashore, and what a lady he was
-making of her.</p>
-
-<p>Paul Richter—whom Morgan hated
-and watched—was far too skilled in anything
-pertaining to steam and its ramifications
-to be removed from his position
-aboard the <i>Seriphus</i>. Henningay, Senior,
-believed in opposing forces on his many
-tankers—it led to rivalry and efficiency,
-instead of closeheadedness and scheming
-against owners.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_96"></a>[96]</span></p>
-
-<p>The <i>Seriphus</i>, after a round passage
-to Laichau Bay, which is in the Gulf of
-Pechili, returned to San Francisco and
-was dry-docked near Oakland, for general
-overhauling.</p>
-
-<p>Richter, after making an exact and
-detailed report to Henningay, Jr., visited
-the opera, banked certain money he
-had made on the round-passage, then
-went south to his daughter’s home. He
-found trouble in the house; Hylda, his
-daughter, had a heart affair with a marine
-electrician, Gathright by name, a
-young man with a meager wage and unbounded
-ambition.</p>
-
-<p>Through the Seven Seas, from the
-time of his Bavarian wife’s death, from
-cancer of the breast, Richter, chief engineer
-of the <i>Seriphus</i>, had sweated,
-slaved, saved and smuggled contraband
-from port in order to say:</p>
-
-<p>“This is my daughter! <i>Look at her!</i>”</p>
-
-<p>Now, as Richter discovered, Hylda,
-twenty-seven years of age, somewhat
-prim and musical, had given her promise
-to an electrician whom the engineer believed
-was not fit to dust her shoes.
-Richter, used to breaking and thrashing
-coolie oilers, ordered Gathright from the
-house and locked up his daughter.</p>
-
-<p>She cried for seven days. Gathright
-was seen in town. Richter’s rage gave
-way to an engineer’s calculation.</p>
-
-<p>“What for I study in University
-and college? Why do I hold certificates?
-I fix Gathright!”</p>
-
-<p>No oil was smoother than Richter’s
-well-laid plan; he sent Hylda away and
-met Gathright.</p>
-
-<p>“All right about my daughter,” he
-told the electrician. “You go one voyage
-with me—we’ll see Henningay—I’ll
-fix you up so that you can draw one
-hundred and fifty dollars in wage, with
-a rating as electrician aboard the <i>Seriphus</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>Gathright went with Richter to San
-Francisco. They recrossed the Bay, without
-seeing Henningay, Jr., and, at
-dusk, climbed over the shoring timbers
-and went aboard the <i>Seriphus</i>. Richter’s
-voice awoke echoes in the deserted ship
-and dry-dock:</p>
-
-<p>“Come, I show you my dynamo and
-motors. We go to the boiler-room first,
-where the pumps are.”</p>
-
-<p>The boiler-room, forward the engine-room
-of the tanker, was a place of many
-snakelike pipes, valves, sea-plates and
-oily seepage from the feedtanks. The
-<i>Seriphus</i> was a converted oil-burner,
-having been built before crude petroleum
-was used for steaming purposes.
-Three double-end Scotch boilers made
-the steam that drove the tanker’s triple-expansion
-engine.</p>
-
-<p>Richter knew the way down to the
-boiler-room, blindfolded. He struck
-matches, however, to guide Gathright,
-and remarked that the newer ships of
-Henningay’s fleet had a storage-battery
-reserve for lighting purposes when
-the dynamo ceased running.</p>
-
-<p>Gathright, somewhat suspicious of
-Hylda’s father, took care to keep two
-steps behind the chief-engineer. They
-reached and ducked under the bulkhead
-beam where the door connected the engine-room
-with the boiler-room. Richter
-found a flashlamp, snapped it on, swung
-its rays around and about as if showing
-Gathright his new duties.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s a motor-driven feed-pump,”
-he said. “Something’s the matter with
-the motor’s commutator. It sparks under
-load—can you fix it up?”</p>
-
-<p>There was a professional challenge in
-the chief engineer’s voice; Gathright
-forgot caution, got down on his knees,
-leaned toward the motor and ran one
-finger over the commutator bars. They
-seemed polished and free from carbon.</p>
-
-<p>Richter reversed his grip on the flashlamp,
-swung once, twice, and smashed
-the battery-end of the lamp down on
-Gathright’s head, just over the top of
-the electrician’s right ear.</p>
-
-<p>Gathright fell as if pole-axed and
-dropped with his hands twitching on a
-metal plate.</p>
-
-<p>Striking a match, Richter surveyed
-the electrical engineer.</p>
-
-<p>“Good!” he grunted. “Now I put
-you where nobody’ll ever look—unless
-I give the order.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb">
-
-<p>A stump of candle, stuck by wax to
-a feed-pipe, allowed Richter illumination
-sufficient to work by. Swearing,
-sweating, listening once, he fitted
-a spanner to bolt-heads on a man-plate
-in the spare boiler and removed the
-stubborn bolts until the plate clanged
-at his feet.</p>
-
-<p>Gathright was a slender man, easy to
-insert through the man-hole; Richter
-had no trouble at all lifting the electrician
-and thrusting him out of sight.</p>
-
-<p>It seemed to the engineer, as he hesitated,
-that Hylda’s lover moaned once
-and filled the boiler with a hollow sound.</p>
-
-<p>Hesitation passed; and Richter swallowed
-his superstitious fears, put back
-the man-hole plate, bolted it tighter than
-it ever was before, almost stripping the
-threads, and stepped back, mopping his
-brow with the sleeve of a shore-coat.</p>
-
-<p>There was nothing very unusual in
-Richter’s further actions that evening.
-The ship-keeper, who came aboard at
-daylight, long before the dry-dock men
-began work, noticed a wet shore-hose, a
-thin plume of steam aft the tanker’s
-squat funnel, and there was a trailing
-line of smoke drifting aslant the <i>Seriphus’</i>
-littered deck.</p>
-
-<p>“Been testing that spare boiler,” explained
-Richter, when the ship-keeper
-ducked through the bulkhead door. “I
-think it’s tight an’ unscaled, but th’
-starboard one will need new tubes and
-general cleaning. Get me some soap—I
-want to wash up.”</p>
-
-<p>Richter dried his hands on a towel,
-tossed it toward the motor-driven feed-pump,
-then, when he left the boiler-room,
-his glance ranged from the tightly-bolted
-man-hole cover up to a gauge on
-a steam-pipe. The gauge read seventy-pounds—sufficient
-to parboil a heavier
-man than Hylda’s lover.</p>
-
-<p>“I think that was a good job,” concluded
-the first engineer of the <i>Seriphus</i>.</p>
-
-<p>The second engineer of the tanker, a
-Scot with a burr on his voice like a file
-rasping the edge of a plate, stood watching
-Richter balance himself as the stout
-chief came along a shoring-beam.</p>
-
-<p>“I mark ye ha’ steam up,” commented
-the Scotchman, when Richter climbed
-over the dry dock’s wall.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, in the spareboiler.”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. S. V. Fergerson tapped a pipe on
-his heel.</p>
-
-<p>“I made an inspection, myself, of
-that, not later than yesterday forenoon.
-She was tight as a drum an’ free from
-scale. I left th’ man-hole—”</p>
-
-<p>“Damn badly gasketed!” growled
-Richter.</p>
-
-<p>Fergerson started to explain something;
-but the chief was in a hurry to
-get away from sight of the <i>Seriphus</i>.
-There was a memory on the tanker that
-required a drink or two in order to
-bring forgetfulness. Richter gave the
-Scot an order that admitted of no answering back.</p>
-
-<p>“Go aboard an’ blow off steam! That
-boiler’s all right!”</p>
-
-<p>A roar, when Richter strode past the
-dry-dock’s sheds, caused him to wheel
-around and listen. Fergerson, according
-to orders, was blowing off the steam from
-the spare boiler.</p>
-
-<p>Something, perhaps water or waste,
-clogged the pipe; and the escaping vapor
-whistled, sputtered, and rose to a
-high piercing note that sounded to the
-chief’s irritated nerves like the cry of
-a soul in agony. The note died, resumed
-its piercing screeching. Richter’s arm
-and hand shook when he mopped his
-brow and drew a wet sleeve down with
-an angry motion.</p>
-
-<p>In fancy the noise that came from the
-<i>Seriphus’</i> starboard side, echoed and deflated
-by the hollow dock, was Gathright
-calling for Hylda. Richter covered his
-ears and staggered away.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_97"></a>[97]</span></p>
-
-<hr class="tb">
-
-<p>Ezra Morgan hastened such repairs
-as were required for making
-the <i>Seriphus</i> ready for sea; the tanker
-left the dry-dock, steamed out the
-Golden Gate, and took aboard oil at a
-Southern California port.</p>
-
-<p>All tanks, a well-lashed deck load of
-cased-lubricant—consigned to a railroad
-in Manchuri—petroleum for the furnaces,
-brought the <i>Seriphus</i> down to the
-Plimsoll Mark; she drove from shore
-and crossed the Pacific where, at three
-God-forsaken Eastern roadsteads, she
-unloaded and made agents for the oil-purchasers
-happy with shipments delivered
-on time.</p>
-
-<p>The romance of caravan routes, and
-pale kerosene lamps burning in Tartar
-tents, escaped both Ezra Morgan and
-Richter; they went about their business
-of changing American and English
-minted gold for certain contrabands
-much wanted in the States. The chief
-engineer favored gum-opium as a road
-to riches; Ezra dealt in liquors and silks,
-uncut gems and rare laces.</p>
-
-<p>Fortunately for the chief engineer’s
-peace of mind, the spare, double-end
-Scotch boiler was not used on the Russian
-voyage. Gathright was forgotten
-and Hylda, safe in an eastern music
-school, was not likely to take up with
-another objectionable lover. Richter,
-relieved of a weight, went about the engine-room
-and boiler-room humming a
-score of tunes, all set to purring dynamos,
-clanking pumps, and musical cross-heads.</p>
-
-<p>At mid-Pacific, on a second voyage—this
-time to an oilless country, if ever
-there were one, Mindanao—a frightened
-water-tender came through the bulkhead
-door propelled by scalding steam, and
-there was much to do aboard the <i>Seriphus</i>.
-The port boiler had blown out a
-tube; the spare, midship boiler was filled
-with fresh water and the oil-jets started.</p>
-
-<p>Richter, stripped to the waist, it being
-one hundred and seventeen degrees
-hot on deck, drove his force to superhuman
-effort. Ezra Morgan, seven hours
-after the accident, had the steam and
-speed he ordered, in no uncertain tones,
-through the bridge speaking-tube.</p>
-
-<p>Fergerson, a quiet man always, had
-occasion, the next day, to enter the
-chief’s cabin, where Richter sat writing
-a letter to Hylda, which he expected to
-post via a homeward bound ship. Richter
-glared at the second engineer.</p>
-
-<p>“That spare boiler—” began Fergerson.</p>
-
-<p>“What of it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, mon, it’s been foamin’ an’ a
-gauge-glass broke, an’ there’s something
-wrong wi’ it.”</p>
-
-<p>“We can’t repair th’ port boiler until
-we reach Mindanao.”</p>
-
-<p>Fergerson turned to go.</p>
-
-<p>“Ye have m’ report,” he said acidly.
-“That boiler’s bewitched, or somethin’.”</p>
-
-<p>“Go aft!” snarled Richter, who resumed
-writing his letter.</p>
-
-<p>He hesitated once, chewed on the end
-of the pen, tried to frame the words he
-wanted to say to Hylda. Then he
-went on:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“—<i>expect to return to San Francisco
-within thirty-five days. Keep
-up your music—forget Gathright—I’ll
-get you a good man, with
-straight shoulders and a big fortune,
-when I come back and have
-time to look around.</i>”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Richter succeeded in posting the letter,
-along with the Captain’s mail, when
-the <i>Seriphus</i> spoke a Government collier
-that afternoon and sheered close
-enough to toss a package aboard. Ezra
-Morgan leaned over the bridge-rail and
-eyed the smudge of smoke and plume of
-steam that came from the tanker’s
-squat funnel. He called for Richter,
-who climbed the bridge-ladder to the
-captain’s side.</p>
-
-<p>“We’re only logging nine, point five
-knots,” said Ezra Morgan. “Your steam
-is low—it’s getting lower. What’s th’
-matter? Saving oil?”</p>
-
-<p>“That spare boiler is foaming,” the
-chief explained.</p>
-
-<p>“Damn you and your spare boiler!
-What business had you leaving San
-Francisco with a defective boiler? Your
-report to Mr. Henningay stated that
-everything was all right in engine-room
-and boiler-room.”</p>
-
-<p>“Foam comes from soap or—something
-else in the water.”</p>
-
-<p>“Something else—”</p>
-
-<p>Richter got away from Ezra Morgan
-on a pretense of going below to the
-boiler-room. Instead of going below,
-however, he went aft and leaned over
-the taffrail. Somehow or other, he
-feared that spare boiler and the consequence
-of conscience.</p>
-
-<p>Limping, with three-quarters of the
-necessary steam pressure, the <i>Seriphus</i>
-reached Mindanao and was forced to return
-to California without repairs to
-the port boiler. While repairs, new
-tubes and tube-sheet were put in place
-by boilersmiths, Richter saw his daughter,
-who had come west from music
-school.</p>
-
-<p>The change in her was pronounced;
-she spoke not at all of Gathright, whose
-disappearance she could not understand;
-and Richter, keen where his daughter
-was concerned, realized that her thinness
-and preoccupation was on account
-of the missing electrician.</p>
-
-<p>“I get you a fine fellow,” he promised
-Hylda.</p>
-
-<p>He brought several eligible marine
-engineers to the house. Hylda snubbed
-them and cried in secret.</p>
-
-<p>An urgent telegram called Richter
-back to the <i>Seriphus</i>. He made two long
-voyages, one down Chili-way, the other
-half around the world, before the tanker’s
-bow was turned toward California.
-Much time had elapsed from the night
-he had thrust Gathright into the spare
-boiler and turned on the oil-jets beneath
-its many tubes. Once, in Valparaiso,
-an under engineer pointed out
-red rust leaking from the gauge-glass of
-the spare boiler.</p>
-
-<p>“Looks like blood,” commented this
-engineer.</p>
-
-<p>Richter scoffed, but that afternoon he
-drank himself stupid on kummel, obtained
-from an engineer’s club ashore.
-Another time, just after the tanker left
-the port of Aden on her homebound passage,
-a stowaway crawled out from beneath
-the cold boiler and gave Richter
-the fright of his life.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, mon,” said Fergerson, who
-was present in the boiler-room, “that’s
-only a poor wisp o’ an Arab.”</p>
-
-<p>“I thought it was a ghost,” blabbered
-Richter.</p>
-
-<p>Barometer pressure rose when the
-<i>Seriphus</i> neared mid-Pacific. Ezra Morgan
-predicted a typhoon before the
-tanker was on the longitude of Guam.
-Long rollers came slicing across the
-<i>Seriphus’</i> bow, drenched the forecastle,
-filled the ventilators and flooded the
-boiler-room.</p>
-
-<p>Richter went below, braced himself in
-the rolling engine-room, listened to his
-engines clanking their sturdy song, then
-waddled over the gratings and ducked
-below the beam that marked the bulkhead
-door. An oiler in high rubber-boots
-lunged toward the chief engineer.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s something inside th’ spare
-boiler!” shouted the man. “Th’ boiler-room
-crew won’t work, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>Richter waded toward a frightened
-group all of whom were staring at the
-spare boiler. A hollow rattling sounded
-when the tanker heaved and pitched—as
-if some one were knocking bony
-knuckles against the stubborn iron
-plates.</p>
-
-<p>“A loose bolt,” whispered Richter.
-“Keep th’ steam to th’ mark, or I’ll
-wipe a Stillson across th’ backs of all
-of you,” he added in a voice that they
-could hear and understand.</p>
-
-<p>Superstition, due to the menacing
-storm and high barometer, the uncanny<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_98"></a>[98]</span>
-noises in the racked boiler-room, Richter’s
-bullying manner, put fear in the
-hearts of the deck crew. Oil-pipes clogged,
-pumps refused to work, valves stuck
-and could scarcely be moved.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve noo doot,” Fergerson told his
-Chief, “there’s a ghost taken up its
-abode wi’ us.”</p>
-
-<p>Richter drank quart after quart of
-trade-gin.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb">
-
-<p>The barometer became unsteady,
-the sky hazy, the air melting
-hot, and a low, rugged cloud bank
-appeared over the <i>Seriphus’</i> port bow.</p>
-
-<p>Down fell the barometer, a half-inch,
-almost, and the avalanche of rain and
-wind that struck the freighter was as if
-Thor was hammering her iron plates.</p>
-
-<p>Ezra Morgan, unable to escape from
-the typhoon’s center, prepared to ride
-out the storm by bringing the <i>Seriphus</i>
-up until she had the sea on the bow, and
-he had held her there by going half
-speed ahead. A night of terror ruled
-the tanker; the decks were awash, stays
-snapped, spume rose and dashed over
-the squat funnel aft the bridge.</p>
-
-<p>Morning, red-hued, with greenish
-patches, revealed a harrowed ocean,
-waves of tidal height, and astern lay a
-battered hulk—a freighter, dismasted,
-smashed, going down slowly by the bow.</p>
-
-<p>“A Japanese tramp,” said Ezra Morgan.
-“Some <i>Marau</i> or other, out of the
-Carolines bound for Yokohama.”</p>
-
-<p>Richter, stupid from trade-gin, was
-on the bridge with the Yankee skipper.</p>
-
-<p>“We can’t help her,” the engineer
-said heavily. “I think we got all we
-can do to save ourselves.”</p>
-
-<p>Ezra Morgan entertained another
-opinion. The storm had somewhat subsided,
-and the wind was lighter, but the
-waves were higher than ever he had
-known them. They broke over the
-doomed freighter like surf on a reef.</p>
-
-<p>“Yon’s a distress signal flying,” said
-Ezra Morgan. “There’s a few seamen
-aft that look like drowned rats. We’ll
-go before th’ sea—I’ll put th’ sea abart
-th’ beam, an’ we’ll outboard oil enough
-to lower a small-boat an’ take those men
-off that freighter.”</p>
-
-<p>The maneuver was executed, the screw
-turned slowly, oil was poured through
-the waste-pipes and spread magically
-down the wind until the freighter’s deck,
-from aft the forehouse, could be seen
-above the waves.</p>
-
-<p>Over the patch of comparative calm
-oars dipped, and a mate, in charge of
-the small boat lowered from the <i>Seriphus</i>,
-succeeded in getting off the survivors
-who were clinging to the freighter’s
-taffrail.</p>
-
-<p>The small boat lived in a sea that had
-foundered big ships. It returned to the
-tanker’s bow; and the four men, bruised,
-broken, all half-dead from immersion,
-were hoisted to the forepeak and taken
-aft. Two were Japanese sailors and two
-were Americans—a wireless operator
-and an engineer. The engineer had a
-broken leg which required setting, and
-the wireless operator was in a bad fix;
-wreckage had stove in his features,
-and twisted his limbs.</p>
-
-<p>Ezra Morgan was a rough and ready
-surgeon-doctor; he turned the <i>Seriphus</i>
-over to the first-mate and made a sick
-room out of Richter’s cabin. The chief
-protested.</p>
-
-<p>“Get below to your damn steam!”
-roared Ezra Morgan. “You hated to
-see me bring aboard these poor seamen;
-you said I wasted fuel oil; your breath
-smells like a gin-mill. Below with you,
-sir!”</p>
-
-<p>The engine-room and boiler-room of
-the tanker, she being in water ballast,
-was not unlike an inferno; the first-mate,
-acting on Ezra Morgan’s instructions,
-drove the <i>Seriphus</i> at three-quarter
-speed into a series of head-on waves;
-the ship rolled and yawed, tossed, settled
-down astern, then her screw raced
-in mingled foam and brine.</p>
-
-<p>Richter’s stomach belched gas; he became
-sea-sick, climbed into a foul-smelling
-“ditty-box” of a cabin, aft the engine-room,
-and attempted to sleep off
-the effect of the gin. Picture-post-cards,
-mostly of actresses, a glaring electric
-over the bunk, oil and water swishing
-the metal deck below, and the irritating
-clank of irregular-running engines drove
-sleep away from him.</p>
-
-<p>Fergerson, the silent second-engineer,
-came into the “ditty-box” at eight bells,
-or four o’clock. Fergerson’s thumb
-jerked forward.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll have t’ use that spare boiler,”
-said he.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s th’ matter, now?”</p>
-
-<p>“Feed-pipes clogged in starb’ard one,
-sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“Use it,” said Richter.</p>
-
-<p>Steam was gotten up on the spare,
-double-end Scotch boiler; the starboard
-boiler was allowed to cool; Fergerson,
-despite the tanker’s rolling motion, succeeded
-in satisfying Ezra Morgan by
-keeping up the three-quarter speed set
-by the skipper.</p>
-
-<p>Richter sobered when the last of the
-trade-gin was gone; the <i>Seriphus</i> was
-between Guam and ’Frisco; the heavy
-seas encountered were the afterkick of
-the simoon.</p>
-
-<p>Rolling drunkenly, from habit, the
-chief went on the bridge and asked
-about getting back his comfortable cabin
-aft. Ezra Morgan gave him no satisfaction.</p>
-
-<p>“Better stay near your boilers,” advised
-the captain. “Everything’s gone
-to hell, sir, since you changed from
-kummel to gin!”</p>
-
-<p>“Are not th’ injured seamen well
-yet?”</p>
-
-<p>“Th’ wireless chap’s doing all right—but
-th’ engineer of that Japanese
-freighter is hurt internally. You can’t
-have that cabin, this side of San Francisco.”</p>
-
-<p>“What were two Americans doing in
-that cheap service?”</p>
-
-<p>Ezra Morgan glanced sharply at
-Richter.</p>
-
-<p>“Everybody isn’t money mad—like
-you. There’s many a good engineer,
-and mate, too, in th’ Japanese Merchant
-Marine. Nippon can teach us a thing
-or two—particularly about keeping
-Scotch boilers up to th’ steaming point.”</p>
-
-<p>This cut direct sent Richter off the
-bridge; he encountered a bandaged and
-goggled survivor of the freighter’s
-wreck at the head of the engine-room
-ladder. The wireless operator, leaning
-on a crutch whittled by a bo’sain, avoided
-Richter, who pushed him roughly
-aside and descended the ladder, backward.</p>
-
-<p>White steam, lurid oaths, Scotch anathema
-from the direction of the boiler-room,
-indicated more trouble. Fergerson
-came from forward and bumped into
-Richter, so thick was the escaping vapor.</p>
-
-<p>“Out o’ my way, mon,” the second
-engineer started to say, then clamped
-his teeth on his tongue.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s happened, now!” queried
-Richter.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s that wicked spare boiler—she’s
-aleak an’ foamin’, an’ there’s water in
-th’ fire-boxes.”</p>
-
-<p>Richter inclined his bullet shaped
-head; he heard steam hissing and oilers
-cursing the day they had signed on the
-<i>Seriphus</i>. A blast when a gasket gave
-way, hurtled scorched men between
-Richter and Fergerson; a whine sounded
-from the direction of the boiler-room,
-the whine rose to an unearthly roar:
-Richter saw a blanket of white vapor
-floating about the engine’s cylinders.
-This vapor, to his muddled fancy, seemed
-to contain the figure of a man wrapped
-in a winding shroud.</p>
-
-<p>He clapped both hands over his eyes,
-hearing above the noise of escaping
-steam a call so distinct it chilled his
-blood.</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Hylda!</i>”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_99"></a>[99]</span></p>
-
-<hr class="tb">
-
-<p>Now there was that in the ghostly
-voice that brought Richter’s gin-swollen
-brain to the realization of the
-thing he had done in disposing of Gathright
-by bolting him in the spare boiler.</p>
-
-<p>No good luck had followed that action;
-Hylda was still disconsolate; trade
-and smuggling was at a low ebb; there
-was talk, aboard and ashore, of reducing
-engineers’ and skippers’ wage to the
-bone.</p>
-
-<p>Richter had a Teutonic stubbornness;
-Ezra Morgan had certainly turned
-against his chief engineer; the thing to
-do was to lay the ghostly voice, make
-what repairs were necessary in the
-boiler-room, and give the tanker’s engines
-the steam they needed in order to
-make a quick return passage to San
-Francisco and please the Henningays.</p>
-
-<p>An insane rage mastered Richter—the
-same red-vision he had experienced
-when he threw Gathright out of his
-daughter’s house. He lowered his bullet
-head, brushed the curling vapors
-from his eyes, and plunged through the
-bulkhead door, bringing up in scalding
-steam before the after end of the midship,
-or spare boiler.</p>
-
-<p>Grotesquely loomed all three boilers.
-They resembled humped-camels kneeling
-in a narrow shed by some misty river.
-Steam in quantity came hissing from the
-central camel; out of the furnace-doors,
-from a feed-pipe’s packing, around a
-flange where the gauge-glass was riveted.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Seriphus</i> climbed a long Pacific
-roller, steadied, then rocked in the
-trough between seas; iron plates, gratings,
-flue-cleaners, scrapers, clattered
-around Richter who felt the flesh on
-neck and wrist rising into water blisters.</p>
-
-<p>No one had thought to close the globe-valve
-in the oil supply line, or to extinguish
-the fires beneath the spare and
-leaking boiler. Richter groped through
-a steam cloud, searching for the hand-wheel
-on the pipe line. All the metal
-he touched was simmering hot.</p>
-
-<p>A breath of sea air came down a ventilator;
-Richter gulped this air and tried
-to locate the globe-valve with the iron
-wheel. Vision cleared, he saw the red
-and open mouth of the central camel—the
-flannel-like flames and he heard
-through toothed-bars a voice calling,
-“Hylda!”</p>
-
-<p>Fergerson and a water tender dragged
-their chief from the boiler room by
-the heels; blistered, with the skin peeled
-from his features, Richter’s eyes resembled
-hot coals in their madness. Blabbering
-nonsense, the engineer gave one
-understandable order:</p>
-
-<p>“Put out th’ fire, draw th’ water,
-search inside th’ spare boiler—there’s
-something there, damit!”</p>
-
-<p>Ezra Morgan came below, while the
-spare boiler was cooling, and entered
-Richter’s temporary cabin—the “ditty-box”
-with the play actresses’ pictures
-glued everywhere. Fergerson had applied
-rude doctoring—gauze bandages
-soaked in petroleum—on face and arms.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s th’ matter, man?” asked
-Ezra Morgan. “Have you gone mad?”</p>
-
-<p>“I heard some one calling my daughter,
-Hylda.”</p>
-
-<p>“Where do you keep your gin?”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s gone! Th’ voice was there inside
-th’ spare boiler. Did Fergerson
-look; did he find a skeleton, or—”</p>
-
-<p>Ezra Morgan pinched Richter’s left
-arm, jabbed home a hypodermic containing
-morphine, and left the chief engineer
-to sleep out his delusions. Fergerson
-came to the “ditty-box” some
-watches later. Richter sat up.</p>
-
-<p>“What was in th’ spare boiler?”
-asked the chief.</p>
-
-<p>“Scale, soda, a soapy substance.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing else?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, mon, that’s enough to make
-her foam.”</p>
-
-<p>Richter dropped back on the bunk
-and closed his lashless eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“Suppose a man, a stowaway, had
-crawled through th’ aft man-hole, an’
-died inside th’ boiler? Would that make
-it foam—make th’ soapy substance?”</p>
-
-<p>“When could any stowaway do
-that?”</p>
-
-<p>Richter framed his answer craftily:
-“Say it was done when th’ <i>Seriphus</i> was
-at Oakland that time th’ boilers were
-repaired in dry-dock.”</p>
-
-<p>Fergerson drew on his memory. “Th’
-time, mon, ye went aboard an’ tested th’
-spare boiler? Th’ occasion when ye took
-th’ trouble to rig up a shore-hose in
-order to fill th’ boiler wi’ water?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Did ye ha’ a man-hole plate off th’
-boiler?”</p>
-
-<p>“I removed th’ after-end plate, then
-went for th’ hose. We had no steam up,
-you remember, and our feed-pumps are
-motor-driven.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ye think a mon might ha’ crawled
-through to th’ boiler during your absence?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes!”</p>
-
-<p>“Ye may b’ right—but if one did he
-could ha’ escaped by th’ fore man-hole
-plate. I had that off, an’ wondered who
-put it back again so carelessly. Ye know
-th’ boiler is a double-ender—wi’ twa
-man-holes.”</p>
-
-<p>Richter was too numbed to show surprise.
-Fergerson left the “ditty-box”
-and pulled shut the door. The tanker,
-under reduced steam, made slow headway
-toward San Francisco.</p>
-
-<p>One morning, a day out from soundings,
-the chief engineer awoke, felt
-around in the gloom, and attempted to
-switch on the electric light.</p>
-
-<p>He got up and threw his legs over the
-edge of the bunk. A man sat leaning
-against the after plate. Richter blinked;
-the man, from the goggles on him and
-the crutch that lay across his knees, was
-the wireless operator who had been rescued
-from a sea grave.</p>
-
-<p>“No need for light,” said the visitor
-in a familiar voice. “You can guess
-who I am, Richter.”</p>
-
-<p>“A ghost!” said the chief. “Gathright’s
-ghost! Come to haunt me!”</p>
-
-<p>“Not exactly to haunt you. I assure
-you I am living flesh—somewhat twisted,
-but living. I got out of that midship
-boiler, while you were bolting me
-in so securely. I waited until you went
-on deck for a hose, and replaced the
-after man-hole cover. I was stunned
-and lay hidden aboard for two days.
-Then I looked for Hylda. She was gone.
-I shipped as electrician for a port in
-Japan. I knocked around a bit—at radio
-work for the Japanese. It was
-chance that the <i>Seriphus</i> should have
-picked me up from the <i>Nippon Maru</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>“That voice calling for Hylda,” cried
-Richter.</p>
-
-<p>“Was a little reminder that I sent
-through the boiler-room ventilator; I
-knew you were down there, Richter.”</p>
-
-<p>The marine engineer switched on the
-electric light.</p>
-
-<p>“What do you want?” he whined to
-Gathright.</p>
-
-<p>“Hylda—your daughter!”</p>
-
-<p>Paul Richter covered his eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“If she will atone for the harm I have
-done you, Gathright, she is yours with
-her father’s blessing.”</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp100" id="footer3" style="max-width: 43.75em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/footer3.jpg" alt="">
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_100"></a>[100]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="THE_INVISIBLE_TERROR">The Invisible Terror</h2>
-
-<p class="center larger"><i>An Uncanny Tale of the Jungle</i></p>
-
-<p class="center larger"><i>By</i> HUGH THOMASON</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Old man Jess Benson, cattleman
-and mine owner, rode across the
-high plateau, which divided the
-rich grazing lands between Rock Valley
-and Slater Canyon, and let his horse
-pick its way down the steep slope to
-Slater Creek. Here, as the sorrel slaked
-its thirst, the big man in the saddle
-filled and lighted his pipe, while his eyes
-roved slowly through the sprinkle of cottonwoods
-which fringed the creek.</p>
-
-<p>About fifty feet upstream, close to a
-large bowlder and partly behind a clump
-of stunted plum bushes, half a dozen
-magpies were quarreling over something
-that the rider could not clearly distinguish.
-He could merely see a dark blotch
-behind the bushes—the carcass of a cow
-or steer probably—and he watched the
-beautiful black-and-white birds speculatively
-as they uttered their shrill, raucous
-cries, and fluttered about the
-thicket.</p>
-
-<p>Since there was a possibility, however,
-that the dead animal might be carrying
-his own brand, Benson finally turned his
-horse in the direction of the birds. Half
-a minute later, having reached a spot
-from which he could command a clear
-view of the thing that lay behind the
-bushes, his tanned cheeks went ashen,
-and he swung himself to the ground with
-an exclamation of horrified surprise.</p>
-
-<p>Close to the thicket, and five or six feet
-from the rock, the body of a man was
-huddled in the horrible posture of one
-who has met a violent end.</p>
-
-<p>He was lying partly on his side, one
-leg drawn up, the other outstretched,
-while both arms were bent under him.
-His face and neck were terribly torn and
-mangled, and his flannel shirt had been
-ripped half off his body, which was
-bruised and covered with wounds.
-Several paces away was a trampled felt
-hat, and the muzzle of a revolver peeped
-from beneath the body, its butt evidently
-clutched in the stiffened fingers of one
-hand. For a dozen feet the ground was
-torn and trampled, as though a terrible
-struggle had taken place.</p>
-
-<p>For several minutes Benson stood still
-and eyed the ghastly thing in horrified
-fascination. Long experience as a range
-rider told him that the body and the
-signs of conflict about it could not be
-more than forty-eight hours old—the
-thing had happened since a heavy rain
-of two days before—and it slowly
-dawned on the cattleman that the dead
-man was Nathan Smith, a neighbor of
-his, who owned a small farm some five or
-six miles away.</p>
-
-<p>For some time he studied the body
-and the surrounding soil very carefully,
-noting especially that the soft earth was
-covered with large, doglike tracks; then
-he went to his horse and untied his
-slicker from the back of the saddle. With
-this garment he managed to cover the
-body so that the magpies could no longer
-reach it. Then he mounted his horse
-and rode off toward Elktooth, ten miles
-away.</p>
-
-<p>Sheriff Parker and Doctor Morse, the
-coroner, happened to be together in the
-latter’s office when Benson entered and
-told his story. Both men listened without
-any particular comment, and at the
-end the sheriff got to his feet.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll run you out in the car, Horace,”
-he informed the coroner. “We can
-reach the spot easily enough by following
-the old road up the creek. From
-what Benson says, the thing does not
-look like a crime exactly—it seems more
-like the work of wolves, though I never
-heard of any attacking a man in this
-region; but you can never tell. At any
-rate, we’d better look into it as soon
-as we can.”</p>
-
-<p>It was about an hour later when the
-three men got out of the machine and
-walked the few feet which separated
-them from the scene of the tragedy.
-Lifting the slicker, Doctor Morse stooped
-over the gruesome object beneath it,
-while Sheriff Parker gazed at the trodden
-ground with interest. While the coroner
-made his examination, the little officer
-paced around the thicket, eying the
-tracks thoughtfully; more than once he
-stooped to apply a pocket rule to some
-especially distinct impression, and twice
-he whistled softly to himself. By the
-time the doctor’s examination had ended,
-he was turning a speculative eye toward
-a dim trail which led off at right angles
-through the cottonwoods.</p>
-
-<p>Returning from washing his hands at
-the edge of the stream, Doctor Morse
-looked at his friend in contemplative
-silence, as he lighted a cigar and puffed
-at it nervously.</p>
-
-<p>“Well?” the sheriff questioned, at
-length. “What was it? What killed
-him, Horace?”</p>
-
-<p>“Bless me if I know, Bert. I never
-saw anything like this before in all my
-experience. It was an animal of some
-kind, I should say; a wolf, perhaps, although,
-as you said, the few wolves we
-have hereabouts have never been known
-to attack humans. But the man is
-frightfully mangled, his jugular vein
-is quite torn out of him. Had his gun
-in his hand, too. It’s empty. He must
-have fought the thing hard, whatever it
-was. I wonder—could it have been the
-‘plague’?”</p>
-
-<p>Sheriff Parker nodded in an absent
-way, his eyes still fixed on the faint
-trail through the trees and weeds.</p>
-
-<p>“I think it was,” he said. “This spot
-is only a little way removed from where
-the creature has been in the habit of
-roaming, and poor Smith, I suppose, was
-caught here after dark. These tracks
-match those we found near Moore, and
-they look pretty fresh. How long should
-you say he has been dead?”</p>
-
-<p>“Killed early last night, I should
-judge,” was the doctor’s answer. “He
-died hard, too, poor chap. Look at that
-ground.”</p>
-
-<p>Jess Benson, with horror written all
-over his honest features, had been staring
-at the two men as they talked. Big,
-burly, outdoor giant that he was, he
-seemed to be in the grip of a kind of
-terror—or was it awe?—that made him
-incapable of speech.</p>
-
-<p>“Heavens, what an end!” he burst
-out at length. “What are we going to
-do, sheriff? How’ll we ever get the
-thing that killed him?”</p>
-
-<p>Sheriff Parker made no answer. He
-merely continued to search the ground
-around the body for a few minutes
-longer, as though he wished to make
-doubly sure that his suspicions were correct;
-then he helped the others wrap the
-body in a blanket and stow it in the car.
-Five minutes later, save for the trampled
-ground and some dull-brown, ominous
-stains on the grass, there was no sign of
-the tragedy apparent.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_101"></a>[101]</span></p>
-
-<p>Two hours later, seated at his own
-desk with a cigar between his teeth,
-Sheriff Parker squinted through his
-glasses at Doctor Morse, who sat opposite.</p>
-
-<p>“I tell you, Horace,” the sheriff was
-saying, “it is such a thing as never has
-been known before. If I had not been
-studying the results of this creature’s
-work for the past six weeks, I could not
-believe that such a thing could be. Still,
-it <i>must</i> be so! Poor Jack Moore, he was
-the first victim; we were morally certain
-that the thing got him; then that strange
-waving of the alfalfa in Pollard’s meadow,
-and now this. I tell you, it’s
-awful, Horace!”</p>
-
-<p>“It is; it’s more than that, Bert; it’s
-unnatural.” Doctor Morse puffed jerkily
-at his cigar. “And yet, science
-tells us that there are sounds the ear
-cannot detect, why not colors the eye
-cannot see? Take the only time the
-beast, or the ‘plague,’ as we have begun
-to call it, appeared in daylight. I mean
-that uncanny agitation in Pollard’s
-hayfield that afternoon, when some
-heavy creature thrashed about there. It
-could be heard, and the alfalfa moved,
-but the thing itself could not be <i>seen</i>,
-though three different people stood
-watching.”</p>
-
-<p>“You are quite right, Horace; and I
-have already spent a great many sleepless
-nights milling over that ‘neutral
-color’ theory. Recently I have read
-that at the end of the solar spectrum
-there are things known as actinic rays.
-They represent colors—integral colors in
-the composition of light—which we are
-unable to discern with the naked eye.
-The human eye is, after all, an imperfect
-instrument. Undoubtedly there are
-colors which we cannot see, and this
-beast, this scourge of the neighborhood,
-is of some such color.”</p>
-
-<p>“Aside from its color,” the coroner
-mused, “the creature is tangible enough.
-It leaves a track in the ground larger
-by far than that of a full-grown timber
-wolf, and it certainly can fight. Benson
-says his hounds were soundly thrashed
-by it last week, you know, and there is
-Smith. He was a very powerful man,
-and armed, but, so far as we know, the
-thing killed him and got away unscathed.
-The man’s body looked as if
-it had been struck by a train. The chest
-and sides might have been beaten in with
-a sledge, his clothes were torn to shreds,
-and as for his throat—well, the less said
-about that the better.”</p>
-
-<p>Sheriff Parker said nothing for several
-minutes. Getting to his feet, he began
-to pace slowly back and forth across the
-room, fingers interlaced behind his back
-and head bowed in the way he sometimes
-affected when in deep thought.</p>
-
-<p>He was struggling with a problem the
-like of which he had never before
-tackled; and as he watched him, the coroner,
-in his turn, strove to devise some
-method of wiping out the creature which
-was terrorizing the entire valley.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb">
-
-<p>Almost six weeks before, Jack
-Moore, a stock inspector, whose
-duties often carried him far out into the
-thinly settled portions of the country,
-had been found dead under circumstances
-similar in every way to those
-surrounding Smith’s end.</p>
-
-<p>At first, the authorities and general
-public had attributed the death to timber
-wolves, for the sole reason that they
-could attribute it to nothing else. The
-tracks about the body, though exceedingly
-large, were shaped like a wolf’s, and
-the body itself had been torn and
-mangled as by some carniverous animal.</p>
-
-<p>Soon after Moore’s death came the
-killing of a dozen sheep in their pasture,
-and, on the heels of this, Judson Pollard,
-a prosperous farmer whose word was
-beyond dispute, with two of his hired
-men, had seen something rush through
-an alfalfa meadow—something that they
-could not make out, though it was broad
-daylight, and they could see the tall hay
-wave and shake, and could even hear the
-creature as it thrashed about there.</p>
-
-<p>Then Jess Benson’s hounds, a pack of
-fourteen, which had never met its match
-in numerous encounters with wolves and
-coyotes, had been soundly whipped, and
-three of its number killed outright in a
-fight with some animal which their
-owner could not see, although he had
-witnessed the fight from a distance.</p>
-
-<p>Now, as a climax to the whole business,
-had come Nathan Smith’s horrible
-death; and no man could say who or
-what would be the next victim. No
-wonder the entire county could talk of
-little else, and that the creature, whatever
-it was, had been named the
-“plague”!</p>
-
-<p>As he thought over all these things for
-the hundredth time, Sheriff Parker
-cudgeled his brain in an effort to form
-some plan for trapping and killing the
-beast. He knew that there must be a
-way, somehow, to make an end of the
-terror, even though the most skillful
-trappers and hunters in the district had
-failed to discover it. The animal’s range
-was known. It seemed, for the most
-part, to frequent the country between
-Slater Creek and White Horse Mountain,
-probably because this region contained
-plenty of timber and natural
-shelter; and it was in this region that
-it must be cornered. For many years
-the little sheriff had studied the crimes
-of men, and few criminals had ever had
-just cause to boast of outwitting him;
-but this was a different task.</p>
-
-<p>“Horace,” the sheriff burst out finally,
-coming to an abrupt halt in front
-of his friend, “this butchery has gone
-far enough. We must put an end to it.
-What do you say to trying this very
-night? The beast seems to roam mostly
-at night, and tonight will be moonlight.
-We’ll try to trap it at the Black Pool.”</p>
-
-<p>Doctor Morse stared at the speaker in
-surprise.</p>
-
-<p>“The Black Pool?” he repeated. “Are
-you crazy, Bert? To be sure, we have
-discovered, so far as possible at any rate,
-that the beast seems to frequent the pool
-more than any other one spot; but how
-can we trap it? That has already been
-tried more than once.”</p>
-
-<p>“True, Horace; but we shall try in a
-different way. This thing, whatever it
-is, though it can’t be seen, can be felt
-and heard; therefore it must have a solid
-body, so to speak. It leaves a distinct
-trail, you know, and its victims are proof
-enough that it is a creature of flesh and
-blood. My scheme is to <i>make</i> it visible—then,
-if we are lucky, we can shoot it.”</p>
-
-<p>The coroner jumped to his feet in his
-excitement.</p>
-
-<p>“I see what you mean!” he cried.
-“Why haven’t we thought of that before?
-But how, Bert—how will you do
-it?”</p>
-
-<p>“That remains to be seen.” Sheriff
-Parker smiled oddly as he looked at his
-companion. “If you are willing to risk
-the thing with me, I think I have a
-plan that will work. We’ll leave here
-in the car about four this afternoon; that
-will get us to the pool in plenty of time
-to set our trap before dark. Bring along
-your repeating shotgun—a heavy charge
-of buckshot is far more certain after
-dark than a rifle ball, and we can’t
-afford to miss.”</p>
-
-<p>Doctor Morse nodded understandingly.</p>
-
-<p>“I shall not fail you, Bert,” he said.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb">
-
-<p>Early dusk found the two men in
-the sheriff’s car slowly picking their
-way over the stony trail which led to
-the Black Pool. In the bottom of the
-tonneau was a ten-gallon keg, three or
-four short boards, and something
-wrapped in burlap, while the back seat
-held a pair of repeating shot guns and a
-box of cartridges. A hundred yards
-from the pool, at the foot of a little
-hill, Sheriff Parker killed his engine and
-stepped out onto the ground.</p>
-
-<p>“We’d better leave the car here,” he
-remarked. “It is best not to make any<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_102"></a>[102]</span>
-more disturbance in the immediate vicinity
-of the pool than we can help, and we
-can easily carry what we need from here.
-But let’s look around a bit first.”</p>
-
-<p>Together, carrying their loaded guns
-in the manner of men who wish to be
-prepared against any sudden emergency,
-they made their way through a fringe of
-trees to the edge of the black, still water,
-which gave the pool its name. Even by
-daylight the place was far from cheerful.
-The pool, about seventy feet in diameter,
-was entirely surrounded by trees which
-grew to within a few feet of its oily
-surface.</p>
-
-<p>There was no sign of life about the
-place, not even a frog croaked, and the
-muddy banks bore mute testimony that
-none of the many cattle which roamed
-that region had been there to drink for
-many days. In one place only was the
-mud broken by fresh tracks; and when
-his eyes fell on this spot, the sheriff
-smiled grimly.</p>
-
-<p>“You see them, Horace,” he said,
-pointing. “The thing has been here recently—its
-trail is as plain as day; this
-must be its drinking place. Now for our
-little trap.”</p>
-
-<p>Returning to the car, the two men first
-carried the keg to the foot of a large
-tree which stood only a few yards from
-where the “plague” had approached the
-pool; then they got the boards and the
-other articles, which, on being unwrapped,
-proved to be a brass hand
-pump, with a long spray nozzle, and
-about a dozen feet of hose.</p>
-
-<p>Doctor Morse regarded this contrivance
-with considerable perplexity. He
-could not see of what use it could be in
-the task that lay ahead of them; but
-when he expressed his puzzlement, his
-companion laughed softly.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s really very simple,” he explained,
-“although it is merely an experiment
-of my own, and may not work
-as I hope it will. The keg is full of
-whitewash, and this pump will throw a
-steady stream for over thirty feet. If
-we can get the brute within range, my
-idea is to spray him with whitewash
-until we can see enough of him to shoot
-at. White always shows up fairly well
-in the dark. Catch the idea?”</p>
-
-<p>Doctor Morse gazed at his friend in
-surprised admiration for an instant;
-then he impulsively caught his hand in a
-hard grip.</p>
-
-<p>“You’re a wonder, Bert!” he exclaimed.
-“I don’t see how you ever
-thought of it, but the scheme looks good
-to me. I am honestly beginning to think
-we have a chance. But what are those
-boards for?”</p>
-
-<p>“For a platform on the tree yonder,”
-replied the sheriff, nodding toward a
-cotton wood. “For obvious reasons I
-thought it would be safer to do our
-watching from above ground, and with
-these boards we can construct a support
-that will enable us to stay in the tree
-with some degree of safety. Of course,
-the thing may be able to climb, for all
-we know, but we must chance that. The
-tree is within easy range of the water,
-and those tall ferns and weeds, if we
-watch them closely, should give us warning
-of the beast’s approach. Now let’s
-get busy, for it will be dark before we
-know it.”</p>
-
-<p>At the end of half an hour, just
-as it was actually growing dark within
-the shadows of the trees, the two men
-had built a substantial platform in a
-fork of the cottonwood, some ten feet
-from the ground, and established themselves
-upon it. Sheriff Parker’s gun lay
-beside him, while he grasped the nozzle
-of the high-pressure pump in his hands;
-but the coroner’s weapon was ready for
-instant use.</p>
-
-<p>Swiftly the day turned into night, and
-for an hour it was as dark as pitch at
-the edge of the pool; then the moon,
-surrounded by myriads of stars, slowly
-climbed up over the hill-tops beyond the
-water. With eyes riveted upon the
-ferns, from the movements of which they
-expected to be warned of the beast’s
-approach, the two men waited tensely.</p>
-
-<p>For a long time nothing happened.
-From the blank darkness around them
-came merely the familiar noises of night
-in the wilderness—the long, wailing
-howl of a distant coyote; the chirping
-drone of the tireless insects in the trees;
-strange cries of night birds, so different
-from those of the birds of the day; the
-“plop” of muskrats diving in the still
-water, and all the mysterious chorus of
-small sounds that one never notices until
-after night has fallen.</p>
-
-<p>Seated on their narrow platform, the
-watchers were soon very uncomfortable,
-for the mosquitoes were numerous and
-hungry, and the men dared not smoke
-for fear the smell of tobacco would give
-warning to the thing they sought. Doctor
-Morse, eyes fixed on the top of a ridge
-which could be seen through a break in
-the trees, and beyond which the stars
-and the moon seemed to be grouped, was
-half dozing, when suddenly he straightened
-up with a little start.</p>
-
-<p>A curious thing had taken place! The
-stars, rising above the crest of the ridge,
-<i>had successively disappeared from right
-to left</i>!</p>
-
-<p>Each was blotted out for but an instant,
-and not more than two or three
-at the same time, but along half the
-length of the ridge, all that were within
-a few degrees of the crest were
-eclipsed. Something had passed along
-between them and the coroner’s line of
-vision; but he could not see it, and the
-stars were not close enough together to
-define its shape. After a second of
-tense watching, Doctor Morse reached
-out and gripped the sheriff by the arm.</p>
-
-<p>“Did you see it?” he whispered. “It’s
-coming, I think.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes; but be quiet, for your life!”
-Sheriff Parker leaned forward and
-shifted his grip on the hose nozzle.</p>
-
-<p>For several minutes all was silent,
-then came a faint patter of stealthy feet,
-and something like the sniffing of a
-hound sounded below them, while the
-ferns waved violently, although there
-was no breeze. Almost immediately came
-the sounds of lapping in the water—sounds
-exactly like those made by a
-thirsty dog when drinking.</p>
-
-<p>Taking careful aim with the nozzle,
-Sheriff Parker suddenly pumped out a
-steady stream of whitewash which began
-to splash and spatter on the edge of the
-pool and surface of the water. And, as
-the milky liquid began to fall, the two
-watchers saw a strange and wonderful
-thing. In a spot, which ten seconds before
-had been merely opaque darkness,
-<i>an outline grew up and took shape out
-of the ground</i>; a strange, monstrous,
-misshapen thing, squat and hairy, not
-unlike a huge wolf in general appearance,
-but broader and more powerful
-than any wolf either man had ever seen.</p>
-
-<p>For an instant after the whitewash
-began to fall upon it, the thing turned a
-big-jawed, hairy face in the direction of
-the tree; then, with a horrible snarl of
-fury, which both men plainly heard, it
-charged toward them.</p>
-
-<p>“Shoot! <i>Shoot</i>, Horace!” Sheriff
-Parker yelled, dropping the useless
-nozzle and grabbing his gun.</p>
-
-<p>The two heavy guns, charged with
-double loads of buckshot, roared out almost
-together. There was a coughing
-snarl from the thing on the ground,
-which save for a white patch or two, was
-almost invisible again, and the sound of
-convulsive struggling; then the sheriff
-fired a second time. Almost immediately
-there was a heavy splash in the water;
-then absolute silence.</p>
-
-<p>Doctor Morse wiped the cold sweat
-from his forehead with a shaking hand.</p>
-
-<p>“Did we get it?” he asked in a low
-tone.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I’m almost sure of it.” Sheriff
-Parker, though tremendously excited,
-began to lower himself to the ground.
-“No animal of the wolf type could stand
-up against three charges of buckshot
-at less than a dozen yards,” he declared.
-“I believe it is dead, Horace.”</p>
-
-<p>When they warily approached the
-edge of the pool, however, the two men
-could find no sign of the thing they had
-shot at, beyond a number of footprints
-in the soft ground, and, in one spot, very
-close to the water, a large splotch of
-crimson, which made the little sheriff
-chuckle exultantly.</p>
-
-<p>“He was hard hit, and he’s sunk in
-the pool,” he declared positively, “sunk
-in water that no man has ever yet found
-the bottom of—a fitting end for such a
-beast, although I won’t deny that I
-should have enjoyed a close look at the
-body. But it’s too late now, and, at
-any rate, the brute is dead. Let’s be
-getting home, Horace.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">Seek Solution To Sahara Desert Mystery</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>An attempt is being made this Spring
-to penetrate the heart of the great
-Sahara Desert and solve the mystery
-that envelops the savage Tribe of
-Tauregx, a band of wild Arabs who
-have never recognized any civilized authority.
-Both men and women members
-of the tribe always keep their faces
-veiled in black. The region where they
-dwell is known as the Land of Terror.
-The Chicago Tribune organized the expedition,
-which is making the 2,000-mile
-journey across the hot sands on
-camels.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb">
-
-<p>Light is the fastest-moving thing in
-the universe. It travels at the speed of
-186,326 miles a second. This tremendous
-speed would carry a person
-around the earth seven times in one
-second!</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_103"></a>[103]</span></p>
-
-<p class="center larger"><i>HELEN ROWE HENZE Spins a Compelling Yarn</i></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="THE_ESCAPE">THE ESCAPE</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>“Are you sure?”</p>
-
-<p>The doctor nodded briefly.
-“Very sure, and the quicker
-the better!”</p>
-
-<p>Donaldson gripped the back of the
-chair beside him till his knuckles showed
-white.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s nothing to be afraid of,”
-the doctor spoke a trifle contemptuously.
-“Appendicitis is quite commonplace. We
-operate for it as many as a hundred
-times a year at the hospital.”</p>
-
-<p>Donaldson rose slowly to his feet.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll let you know sometime soon,” he
-said, staring about him vaguely.</p>
-
-<p>“All right. But I’d advise you to
-have it done quickly.”</p>
-
-<p>Donaldson shuffled toward the door.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll let you know,” he murmured,
-and went out.</p>
-
-<p>He descended to the street. He was a
-man of average height, and rather thin.
-He was dressed respectably in clothes of
-a few years back, but still good. One
-felt that he was careful of them, timidly
-careful. His blue eyes wandered in odd
-moments from one object to another, and
-his thin lips tried to maintain a firm
-line, but drooped weakly, if, perchance,
-he forgot. Then he twitched them up,
-reining them hard, trying to appear
-casual, indifferent. But his step would
-drop into its habitual short uncertainty,
-his shoulders slump down a bit, his eyes
-begin their covert roving, his whole figure
-expressing a desire to occupy as
-small a space as possible, as though his
-soul and body were squeezed in with a
-wish to be inconspicuous.</p>
-
-<p>As he emerged from the doctor’s office,
-his pale eyes shifted as he gazed at
-the moving throng on the street. Why
-couldn’t it have been some one else?
-Here they were, all so gay, so unconscious
-of him and the shadow that hung
-over him. Unconscious! That was the
-word which had so terrified his mind for
-ten long years. And that was what the
-anesthetic meant—unconsciousness!</p>
-
-<p>Donaldson threaded his way along and
-turned into a little side street until he
-came to his house. He let himself in
-with his key. The bare hall resounded
-dismally to his footsteps. The gaunt,
-shadowy room gave him only a chilly
-welcome. When Mrs. Saunders had kept
-house for him, it had been more cheerful.
-There was not that deathlike stillness
-when he came in. That had been several
-years ago, and since then his fear
-had increased through long keeping,
-like some great, lank brute, gnawing in
-the darkness. It was a sly, suspicious
-fear that shunned companionship. He
-had lived for ten years all alone, except
-for Mrs. Saunders, the housekeeper, but
-finally even her presence had become too
-much, and he had sent her away.</p>
-
-<p>He began stupidly preparing dinner.
-There was some ham, cheese, a half loaf
-of bread, and a few potatoes which he
-peeled, standing by the sink. There was
-also a small pie that one of the neighbors
-had sent him a few days ago.
-Kindly people they were, unable to understand
-Donaldson’s solitary life, and
-who took pity on him and occasionally
-sent him little bits of pastry or jelly to
-freshen his meal.</p>
-
-<p>Once, when he was sick with a cold,
-the husband had brought him over half
-a tumbler of whisky, but Donaldson had
-shuddered and held up his arms as if to
-ward off the other, crying, “None of
-that! Go away! Let me alone!”</p>
-
-<p>And the neighbor had withdrawn, attributing
-this strange behavior to the
-sickness. But no, Donaldson’s fear of
-whisky was almost equal to that of the
-beastlike fear that dogged his footsteps
-or lurked in the shadows ahead of him.</p>
-
-<p>Ever since that terrible, unforgettable
-night when he had drunk it for the first
-and last time, he had had a wild terror
-of it. Even the sight of it recalled more
-vividly the white, strained face of his
-wife as she fell to the floor, and the red
-mark of the fender across her temple.
-He remembered how he had gone away
-and brought Jack Dingler home with him
-a few hours later, and they had found
-her. The neighbors had been so sympathetic
-toward him in his calamity. Even
-the same neighbors that brought him
-the whisky and went home saying sorrowfully,
-“Poor Mr. Donaldson. He’s
-never been quite himself since the missus
-was murdered. It seems to have turned
-his mind.”</p>
-
-<p>They were right. His mind was
-turned. John Donaldson knew what it
-was to be afraid. For ten terrible years,
-fear had skulked behind him. His composure
-and his self-reliance vanished.
-He had become a coward with the ever-present
-fear that in some way, by some
-word or action, he would reveal his secret.
-He had kept ever alert. Fear,
-the driving power that would not let
-him slumber. He always kept his door
-bolted at night, and the room next to
-his empty, for fear that he might talk
-in his sleep.</p>
-
-<p>That was his greatest dread, that
-sometime, in an unconscious state, he
-would talk. He learned to take the
-greatest precautions in regard to his personal
-safety. He never went on long
-journeys, nor took an unnecessary risk.
-And now—appendicitis!</p>
-
-<hr class="tb">
-
-<p>One night, a week later, Donaldson
-woke up with a start, his body
-wet with perspiration. He had been
-dreaming a terrible dream. It seemed
-as though he saw the white face of his
-wife with the red mark across the temple,
-only she was standing up and looking
-at him with an unfamiliar, ghastly
-expression in her eyes, and behind her,
-looking over her shoulder, was a satyr’s
-face, long and yellow.</p>
-
-<p>Then this figure stepped out and came
-toward him, holding chains in its hands.
-Chains for him, Donaldson! He had had
-dreams like this before, varying slightly
-in detail sometimes, but always with the
-same terrible suggestion. And always he
-had waked up as he did now, wet and
-cold, with the same monstrous fear
-clutching him, pricking him like a thousand
-needles, drawing up his flesh, paralyzing
-him with a queer, uncanny thrill.</p>
-
-<p>He wondered if he had talked in his
-sleep. Of course, there was no one to
-hear, still he wondered. It was something
-he could never know, an awful,
-threatening uncertainty that hung over
-him, that would always hang over him.</p>
-
-<p>And those chains! He had a mental
-vision of himself in the penal stone quarries,
-chained to an iron ball.</p>
-
-<p>He looked at his watch. It was later
-than he had thought—six o’clock. He
-got out of bed and dressed quickly. He
-knew from experience the only way to
-work off the stultifying effect of his
-dreams. It was physical action, to walk
-and walk until he tired himself out.
-Then his mind would be loosed from this
-crazy, nervous terror, and he would relapse
-into the steady, dogged fear from
-which he knew no respite.</p>
-
-<p>He opened the door and stepped into
-the street. The morning sun was beginning
-to lighten the grey, deserted court.
-Some one across the way closed a window.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_104"></a>[104]</span>
-Donaldson straightened up,
-tightening his lips. Even this early they
-might see him. He must appear casual,
-like a man of leisure out for a morning
-stroll.</p>
-
-<p>But it was an effort, for an unreasoning
-fear possessed him. He wanted to
-run. Something behind him seemed to
-urge his footsteps faster. It seemed to
-him that his feet actually were going
-faster than the rest of his body, as
-though they obeyed the will of that
-something behind him, while he himself
-was really moving only at a moderate
-gait.</p>
-
-<p>He had a detached sense of two
-entities. One was John Donaldson as he
-appeared to the world, a slender, inconspicuous
-man, walking somewhat timidly
-along the street, and the other was the
-coward, the terrified being, running
-from the thing that followed him;
-alert, cunning to outwit his pursuer.
-Once, from an irresistible impulse, he
-dodged into an alley-way. Then, suddenly
-ashamed and realizing, he came
-out again, walking boldly, his eyes fixed
-on a passing horse, trying to appear unconcerned.</p>
-
-<p>Toward noon he returned, and, remembering
-he had had no breakfast and
-that there was nothing to eat in the
-house, stopped at the corner grocery
-store. The grocer was waiting on another
-customer when Donaldson came in, but
-he looked up and nodded.</p>
-
-<p>“Be with you in a minute, Mr. Donaldson.”
-And then, “Why, what’s the
-matter? Are you sick?”</p>
-
-<p>Donaldson had sat down suddenly on
-a flour-barrel, clutching his side, his
-face gone grey with pain. The grocer
-ran to get a glass of water.</p>
-
-<p>“Here, better drink this! What’s the
-matter? Can I help you?”</p>
-
-<p>But Donaldson only shook his head
-over his knees, unable to speak. They
-got him home a little later, when the
-pain had eased a little, and sent a doctor
-in to see him. Donaldson did not
-want a doctor, but the grocer was frightened
-by his pale face and paid no attention
-to his protests.</p>
-
-<p>The verdict was what Donaldson had
-anticipated, appendicitis and the necessity
-of an immediate operation. He
-heard it, lying on the bed, from a
-strange doctor, with a feeling, in spite
-of the pain in his side, that it must be
-another man under sentence. He could
-not take that anesthetic! The pain might
-kill him; then let him die! It would be
-better than those awful chains. For he
-knew that once unconscious, the truth
-would come out, that all the poison
-which had been maddening him for
-years would flow from his lips in self-exposure,
-once he was placed under an
-anesthetic. How many times had he already
-related it in the stillness of the
-night? What of his secret could the
-walls of his room not tell? They must
-have heard it over and over.</p>
-
-<p>The doctor repeated his statement and
-Donaldson nodded.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” he said mechanically. He
-must appease this man, lest a refusal
-make him too insistent. When the doctor
-was gone, he was safe again. He would
-get well. Everybody had these attacks;
-they meant nothing.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll be back to see you tonight,”
-said the doctor, as he prepared to leave.</p>
-
-<p>“No,” said Donaldson, “don’t come.
-I’ll be all right.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll be here,” answered the doctor,
-and went out.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly a great fatigue came over
-the sick man, an overwhelming drowsiness,
-a desire for sleep, one of the primal,
-insistent, compelling things that
-would not be denied.</p>
-
-<p>When he awoke it was quite dark. He
-did not know the time. Lights shone in
-the houses across the street. The ticking
-of the clock was the only noise to be
-heard. The darkness of the room seemed
-palpable, as though it floated over and
-around him, breathing. Then the clock
-struck eight. Donaldson remembered.
-The doctor was coming back. He might
-return any minute. Only he must not!
-There were footsteps on the walk. It
-was he, and the door was unlocked!
-Donaldson rose and started toward it.
-He had forgotten his side. He was only
-conscious of a difficulty in moving, like
-in a nightmare, as though weights were
-dragging on his feet. The doctor was
-on the porch. Donaldson struggled.
-What was holding his feet?</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t come in,” he gasped. “I’m
-all right!”</p>
-
-<p>Then came the pain, like a sudden
-knife-blade, piercing him. He screamed,
-one awful, uncontrollable yell, and
-pitched forward.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb">
-
-<p>There was a queer, unfamiliar
-smell, and stillness. Not the empty
-stillness of his own house, but the stillness
-of human beings and hushed movements.</p>
-
-<p>Nausea possessed him. He opened his
-eyes for a moment and then closed them.
-He was in a white-walled room, darkened.
-Against the drawn blind he could
-feel the sunlight beating. A ray of it
-came in between the shade and the window-jamb
-and struck the opposite wall.
-It was broad day. Suddenly, quick and
-clear as an arrow released from a taut
-bow-string, Donaldson’s mind leaped up
-into consciousness.</p>
-
-<p>He was in a hospital, and it was over—the
-operation. It was the anesthetic
-which had nauseated him. What had he
-said? Had he betrayed himself? Yet
-here he was, lying quietly in this room.
-However, they couldn’t take him away
-while he was sick.</p>
-
-<p>They were waiting—waiting till he
-got well to put the chains on him! He
-knew it. That was why they were so
-quiet, not to make him suspicious. He
-would ask the nurse. She could tell him
-whether he had talked.</p>
-
-<p>But the nurse was not there. She did
-not know he was awake. Well, he would
-wait and ask her. Maybe he hadn’t
-talked. People didn’t always. The sun
-streamed against the blind. Light,
-hope! It might be that he would see it
-again, free! That he would walk along
-the streets in the open day.</p>
-
-<p>The door opened and the nurse entered.
-She came to his bedside. He
-would smile at her easily, indifferently.
-She would think his question a casual
-one.</p>
-
-<p>“Nurse,” he began. His voice sounded
-far away, weaker than it should
-have.</p>
-
-<p>The nurse smiled. “How is my patient?
-Feeling better?”</p>
-
-<p>“Nurse,” he strove valiantly to make
-his voice strong, casual. He even smiled
-weakly. “Did I—er—talk under the
-ether?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, not a word. Now rest quietly
-and I’ll come back after a while.” And
-she went out.</p>
-
-<p>Donaldson sighed. He was still safe.
-She had told him so. She would not deceive
-a sick man. And yet—wouldn’t
-she? He remembered reading somewhere
-that patients were always told
-they had not talked, lest the knowledge
-excite them and hinder their recovery.</p>
-
-<p>That was why she had said it. They
-wanted him to get well, so they could
-put the chains on him. Hadn’t she hesitated
-a bit before she answered? He
-had thought she looked at him a bit
-suspiciously. Now he was sure of it. And
-that was why. They didn’t want him
-to know they knew. They wanted to be
-sure they’d get him.</p>
-
-<p>Just then Donaldson’s thoughts were
-interrupted by a noise on the street.
-Some vehicle clattering over the pavement
-and the sound of a bell. The door
-was standing slightly ajar. Two nurses
-were passing in the hall, and Donaldson’s
-straining ear caught their voices:</p>
-
-<p>“What is all the noise about?” asked
-one.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know,” replied the other.
-“It sounds like a police patrol.”</p>
-
-<p>They were after him! What should
-he do? He threw back the bedclothes.
-His mind was working like lightning.
-They would never get him. He slipped
-to the floor. How he got to the door he
-never knew. Fear lends strength. He
-closed it and stumbled back across the
-floor, half-falling against the bed.</p>
-
-<p>He knew what he was going to do.
-He pulled up the bed-clothes from the
-foot of the bed with feverish haste. The
-sheet—that was what he wanted! He
-ripped open the hem a few inches, turning
-it back so that he could get the raw
-edge of the material. Then he tore off
-a strip the whole length of the sheet. He
-laughed excitedly. They’d never get
-him!</p>
-
-<p>By this time, the cut in his side had
-re-opened, but he did not notice it. He
-knew nothing but his one mad purpose.
-His senses seemed to have deserted him.
-It was as though he were in a dream.
-He felt as though his mind were standing
-off, directing his body to do these
-things, and as though he were putting
-a senseless and inanimate other half of
-him through certain prescribed motions.</p>
-
-<p>He tied one end of the strip to one
-of the iron bed-posts, then he climbed
-into bed and lay down. He circled the
-other end of the strip around his neck.
-The head of the bed was looped between
-the posts with scrolls of white iron-work.
-He lifted his knees and pushed with his
-feet till his head was through one of
-these openings, hanging down in the
-space between the bed and the corner
-of the room. His neck was now in a
-straight line between the bed-posts, bent
-backward, and as he breathed, he emitted
-from his lips little hoarse noises that
-seemed to struggle out protestingly from
-his strained throat. He knew that he
-could not strangle himself to death, for
-as soon as unconsciousness came, he
-would relax his hold. If he could tie the
-other end! That was sure and safe.</p>
-
-<p>The blood rushed to his head. He
-pulled the knot tight, very tight, and
-gasped. He felt as though he were
-drowning. His temples throbbed, and
-his ears beat as though the waves were
-knocking against the inside of his head,
-now roaring, now singing with queer,
-unearthly hum. He relaxed his hand,
-and the noose slackened.</p>
-
-<p>There! That was not so bad, but the
-blood rushed back from his brain, and
-the waves swirled around him now and
-made him fearfully dizzy. He felt like
-a little brig, tossed in the valley of a
-tempestuous sea, beaten, dazed, apathetic.</p>
-
-<p>He recovered somewhat. The police!
-They must be on their way up! The
-waves were calling. Their restless surging
-hammered upon his brain, dulling
-its sensibility. There was peace beneath
-those waves. Unchanging peace!</p>
-
-<p>But he must hurry. A cloud rose before
-his eyes, grey and inviting. He
-seemed to forget. What was he going to
-do? Where was that peace? Peace,
-something he had not known for aeons,
-aching, endless aeons of time. Where
-was it? Ah, yes! Beneath the waves,
-those heaving, restless, insistent waves.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m coming,” he murmured thickly.
-His tongue seemed swollen. There was
-need of haste. He shook himself to clear
-his mind for the final effort. Then he
-pulled the noose tight with all his
-strength, and tied it quickly to the right-hand
-bedpost.</p>
-
-<p>The waves seemed to open and he was
-going down. He saw a faint, opalescent
-light beneath him. There was something
-precious down there. It was peace.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m coming,” he muttered, struggling,
-his arms stretched out toward it.
-“I’m coming!”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_105"></a>[105]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="THE_SIREN">THE SIREN</h2>
-
-<p class="center larger"><i>A Storiette That Is “Different”</i></p>
-
-<p class="center larger"><i>By</i> TARLETON COLLIER</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>With an abrupt jerk, Joe
-Wilson, from lying on a cot in
-the little tent, lifted himself on
-his elbow in an attitude of intent listening.
-There was no sound except the
-hum of a sleepy breeze through the
-pines, the sleepier contralto of a mocking
-bird, and the purring undertone of rippling
-water.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s her!” he whispered. With an
-effort he sat erect, and again told himself:
-“That’s her!”</p>
-
-<p>All at once there came the crackle of
-voices without, the sound of thudding
-footsteps. Joe flung himself back on the
-cot and closed his eyes with furious energy
-as the flap of the tent was lifted
-and the engineer and the doctor peered
-within.</p>
-
-<p>“He’s asleep,” said the engineer in
-a low voice.</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Hm!</i>” said the doctor. He was a
-wizened little man with spectacles. Then
-he let the flap drop, and his voice came
-to Joe brusquely through the canvas.
-“Well, we’ll come back. I want to talk
-to him. He’s probably not very sick,
-but—by God, man, you’ve got to keep
-your men from the water around here,
-or you’ll never finish your railroad!”</p>
-
-<p>They were walking away as he spoke,
-and to Joe the voice seemed to fade.</p>
-
-<p>“I tell you ... polluted ... fever....”</p>
-
-<p>Then they were gone, the sound of
-them swallowed up in the ripple of the
-little creek over the rocks. With a start,
-Joe again was erect, his eyes furtive,
-glancing about the little canvas chamber.
-He tiptoed to the flap, and lifted it a
-bare inch, peering out upon the receding
-figures of the two men as they passed
-beneath a water-oak.</p>
-
-<p>With no less caution he crept to the
-other end of the tent, and stepped
-through the flap into the open. For a
-moment he stood irresolute, his eyes
-closed, as if he were dizzy.</p>
-
-<p>“Keep away from the water, you
-fool!” he whispered.</p>
-
-<p>There was no other sound of life in
-the woods now; the breeze had died and
-the mocking bird was silent. Only the
-prattle of a nearby stream over its
-rocky bed....</p>
-
-<p>With a stumbling, nervous stride that
-was almost a run, Joe Wilson went toward
-the sound of the water, and at
-last he plunged through a thick clump
-of willows and stood stiff, half-crouching,
-at the top of a bank of damp green
-moss that sloped steeply to a little
-stream with pools like black wells, still
-and silent. Only the silver shallows between
-pools rippled with life.</p>
-
-<p>At the foot of the bank was a shelf
-of rock, splotched green with moss,
-reaching into the stream barely an inch
-above the water. Upon it Joe’s glance
-rested, as if held by a power outside
-himself. He drew back into the willows,
-his sunken eyes closed in his pale face;
-then, with a sudden spring, he was over
-the bank and perched upon the rock.</p>
-
-<p>Something like a smile lighted his
-face, as if with the leap he had settled a
-troublesome matter. He sat down as
-easily and comfortably as he might, his
-legs doubled, his hands clasped about his
-knees; and stared intently into the black
-pool at his feet.</p>
-
-<p>And then, between a closing and an
-opening of his eyes, a woman was there
-where he had looked for her.</p>
-
-<p>There was no sense of suddenness
-about the apparition; only, when he
-closed his eyes against a dizziness, there
-was the water and nothing else; when
-he opened them, an instant later, she was
-standing in the midst of the pool, almost
-where he could touch her. And it was
-as if she had been there all the while.</p>
-
-<p>The water reached a little above her
-ankles. Her legs were bare to the
-knees, clothed above that, and her body
-as well, in a soft clinging garment of
-white that seemed a part of her; white
-throat and arms were bare. Her face
-was alive with a pleasant smile; her
-eyes, of green and gray together, were
-alive and pleasant, too.</p>
-
-<p>“You are late,” she said. There was
-something of the stream’s bright ripple
-in her voice.</p>
-
-<p>Joe Wilson could only smile, in answer;
-then his smile faded and his face
-was scornful and somewhat stubborn.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” he said, “and I came near not
-coming at all. I swore I wouldn’t.”</p>
-
-<p>“But you came,” she said, still smiling.</p>
-
-<p>“Only to tell you that this is the last
-time.”</p>
-
-<p>Her smile, merrier now, was accompanied
-by a sound that might have
-been the gurgle of a little whirlpool in
-the rapids, or it might have been a low
-note of laughter.</p>
-
-<p>“You didn’t mean it, then, that you
-love me,” she chided, coming nearer. It
-was not by a step that she moved, or by
-any perceptible effort. The space between
-them all at once was lessened,
-nothing else.</p>
-
-<p>Joe had lost his careless air and posture.
-He was on his knees, a fury in
-his words.</p>
-
-<p>“I didn’t mean it? You can’t say
-that. I have become less than a man, I
-love you so. You bring me here every
-day to do as you will, and I would die
-if I didn’t come, I love you so. For
-you I have broken my word to my
-friends back there in camp. And I don’t
-know who you are or <i>what</i> you are.”</p>
-
-<p>Again that gentle sound that might
-have been a sudden swirl of the water,
-or her laughter. Then she was nearer,
-and her pleasant eyes looked into his,
-mockery in them.</p>
-
-<p>“You don’t know who I am?” she
-asked softly. “And yet I am yours.”</p>
-
-<p>The stubborn lines in Joe’s face vanished.
-A quick throb of blood choked
-into a gulp the word he would have
-spoken, and he stretched out his arms.
-She was suddenly beyond his reach.</p>
-
-<p>“Yours,” she said again, and that she
-laughed there was no doubt this time.</p>
-
-<p>Joe’s eyes were hungry. Joe leaned
-forward upon his stiffened arms, and
-stared at her like a wistful dog.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know who you are,” he
-whispered. “I don’t know who you are.”</p>
-
-<p>“I am whoever you want me to be,”
-she said.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll call you Sadie,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>“Sadie?” Her lids drooped, veiling
-her eyes, but their narrow glimmer was
-keenly alive.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, there is a girl—”</p>
-
-<p>Between two words she was close before
-him at the edge of the rock.</p>
-
-<p>“I am yours,” she said in a fierce, low
-voice. “What do you care for any girl?
-I am all woman, and you have me. What
-do you care for the world? You have
-me.”</p>
-
-<p>He felt her breath on his face. There
-was warmth and fragrance in it. Her<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_106"></a>[106]</span>
-white beauty was greater than that of
-the dogwood blossoms showering there
-through the gloom under a sudden
-breeze; and a dizziness struck him, so
-that the trees swam before his eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“I have you,” he repeated thickly,
-rising to his feet.</p>
-
-<p>“And the girl ... Sadie?” she
-asked.</p>
-
-<p>“You are Sadie. Only you. I have
-forgotten....” He put out his arms,
-but she was beyond his reach again, her
-eyes mysterious.</p>
-
-<p>With outstretched arms, he begged her
-to return.</p>
-
-<p>“I love you,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>For a full breath she looked at him
-gravely. Then, “We shall see,” she
-said, plunging her hands into the stream.
-As she arose, her hands were cupped
-and brimming with water. She moved
-toward him, smiling.</p>
-
-<p>Terror gathered in Joe’s white face.</p>
-
-<p>“Drink,” she tempted him.</p>
-
-<p>He whispered “No,” and the refusal
-seemed to strengthen him, for when she
-said again, “Drink,” he shouted it:
-“<i>No!</i>”</p>
-
-<p>She dropped her hands, and the water
-went splashing back into the stream;
-and, smiling still, she came nearer until
-she was beside him upon the rock, her
-wet feet glistening silver upon its greenish-brown
-surface. Her eyes held fast
-his wide, frightened stare.</p>
-
-<p>“Why?” she asked him, when she
-was so close that he was aware of the
-warmth and fragrance of her person.</p>
-
-<p>He answered her steadily:</p>
-
-<p>“I will not, that’s why. I must not.
-I have told you I must not, every day
-that I have come here, and yet I have
-always drunk this water. It has made
-me less than a man. It has made me
-break my word and my own rules.”</p>
-
-<p>Once more her eyes were grave. “You
-must not?” she asked. Her voice might
-have been that of the purring shallows.
-There was no escaping her gaze, and before
-it his eyes wavered and shifted.
-His shoulders drooped.</p>
-
-<p>“You will not?” the purring voice
-went on. “Not for me, and you say
-you love me? It is so little that I ask.”</p>
-
-<p>There was pain in his voice as he
-cried, “Don’t ... Sadie! I have
-promised ... the rule....”</p>
-
-<p>It was she whose figure drooped now,
-and her face that was mournful. “But
-you have broken the rules before this for
-me,” she murmured.</p>
-
-<p>“I came today to say that I would no
-more.”</p>
-
-<p>“But it is so little I ask. And I—am—yours.”</p>
-
-<p>He pleaded: “<i>Don’t!</i>”</p>
-
-<p>With sudden abandon, she flung herself
-against him, and for the first time
-his arms closed about her. She yielded
-to his fierce embrace, her head against
-his breast.</p>
-
-<p>“You do not love me,” she whispered.</p>
-
-<p>“Sadie...!” His arms tightened
-with his cry, and a red mist blinded him
-as he felt her warm, vital body closer
-against him.</p>
-
-<p>She lifted her face and looked at him.</p>
-
-<p>“You will?” she asked, smiling.</p>
-
-<p>“No,” he said, almost with a moan.</p>
-
-<p>She kissed him. “To drink, only to
-drink,” she said softly. “It is so little.
-I have given you myself ... isn’t that
-something?”</p>
-
-<p>With one arm she clung to him as
-tightly as he held her; the other arm
-was free, and with her hand she stroked
-his face. Her kisses were hot upon his
-lips. His eyes were closed, and he
-swayed with a dizziness that was
-mightier than any other he had known.</p>
-
-<p>“Only to drink,” she said. “Do you
-not care for me, and I have given you
-myself? What are those men in the camp
-to you, they and their rules? You will
-not drink ... yet I give you ...
-this....”</p>
-
-<p>Her lips met his in an eternity of
-giving and taking.</p>
-
-<p>“No!” he said again, but his voice
-quivered and broke, with the plain
-message of surrender.</p>
-
-<p>With a little cry, she knelt at the edge
-of the pool, her arms still about him so
-that he was forced to kneel with her.
-She plunged her hands into the water,
-and lifted them to him with their silver
-freight.</p>
-
-<p>With an eager, moaning sound, he
-drank the cool water; and as he did so
-the red mist before his eyes thickened,
-and his ears roared with the thunder of
-blood within. To drink became then his
-passion, and he cupped his own hands,
-filled them with water, and drank.</p>
-
-<p>For a moment the mist cleared and
-the roaring ceased, and he saw that he
-was alone on the rock.</p>
-
-<p>“Sadie!” he called.</p>
-
-<p>The answering sound might have been
-only the prattle of the stream, or it
-might have been low laughter.</p>
-
-<p>The thought came to him that perhaps
-she had fled to the bank, and with
-prodigious labor he clambered up the
-tiny slope. She was not there. He
-parted the soft-flowing curtain of the
-willows, and though the fronds were so
-light a bird might have flown through
-them, he gasped with the effort it cost
-him.</p>
-
-<p>Staggering into the sunlight beyond
-the fringe of trees, he found that she was
-not there, either. He tried to run, but
-only stumbled, lifting himself painfully
-to stagger onward. Then the mist of
-his delirium closed upon him, and the
-blood at his ear drums pounded and a
-tumult came out of earth and sky to
-overwhelm him.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb">
-
-<p>The doctor and engineer, going
-fishing, stumbled upon his crumpled
-form an hour later. The former, a
-wizened, spectacled little man, bent over
-him and studied him with eyes that
-seemed to see everything. He studied
-the young fellow’s pulse, loosened his
-shirt, stared into the pupils of his eyes.
-At last he turned to the other, frowning,
-and said:</p>
-
-<p>“Fever, and maybe that damn’ typhoid.
-He’s the sickest man I ever
-saw.”</p>
-
-<p>Then his voice rose with a flare of
-anger.</p>
-
-<p>“Say, can’t you keep these fools away
-from this water?” he asked. “There’s
-death in it.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">Men, Lost at Sea, Live Through Week of Horror</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>A harrowing adventure that probably will never leave
-their minds befell two fishermen of Freeport, L. I., who
-passed a week in the open sea in a small motor boat, without
-water or provisions. Caught in a blizzard off the Long Island
-coast, something went wrong with their compass and they
-headed out to sea, where they drifted for nearly a week before
-the schooner, Catherine M., saw their signals of distress
-and picked them up. The two men—Capt. Bergen Smith and
-Harry Matthews—had only a small supply of water and a
-few raw potatoes. On this they lived for the first two days.
-Then Matthews lost control of himself, drank sea water and
-became delirious. Raving in delirium, he urged Smith to
-split a bottle of iodine in a suicide pact. Their boat began to
-leak, and they ripped the lining from their overcoats to calk
-the seams. Finally, after a number of ships had passed without
-seeing them, they were rescued, more dead than alive,
-by the schooner.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_107"></a>[107]</span></p>
-
-<p class="center larger"><i>A Night of Horror in the Mortuary</i></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="THE_MADMAN">THE MADMAN</h2>
-
-<p class="center larger"><i>By</i> HERBERT HIPWELL</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Peter Stubbs has snow-white
-hair, and he is only twenty-eight.
-He mutters to himself as he pursues
-his lowly task of sweeping the
-streets in our little university town.
-Children gibe at him and goad him to
-rage and tears.</p>
-
-<p>Peter once had raven black hair and
-was as fine and strong a young fellow as
-ever led the town forces in their frequent
-battles with our students. That was before
-the one night he spent as caretaker
-of our medical school. Only two of us
-know the real story of that night and
-why Peter was taken from the building
-next morning, a gibbering and white-haired
-idiot.</p>
-
-<p>We have remained silent for various
-and selfish reasons, but I can no longer
-keep to myself the story of that awful
-night.</p>
-
-<p>Our medical college is a lonely, ramshackle
-old building. The town has
-grown away from it. It is surrounded
-by musty old junk yards and infrequently
-used railway sidings, and it is
-miles from the fine old group of buildings
-which form the rest of the university.</p>
-
-<p>There has always been difficulty in
-getting a suitable caretaker for it. None
-of the many engaged could be relied on
-to come early enough to get the fires
-going properly and to keep the walks
-clear of snow. Our new dean, Dr.
-Towney, thought he had solved the problem
-by deciding to have a caretaker live
-permanently on the premises.</p>
-
-<p>Peter Stubbs, on learning of this, applied
-for the post and had no difficulty
-in obtaining it. The dean showed him
-around the building and explained the
-duties required of him. A more imaginative
-man might have been a little
-chilled by the gaunt skeletons arranged
-in the cases of some of our classrooms.
-Certainly he would not have been
-pleased with the sleeping quarters
-picked out for him. The only room
-available was a closetlike place directly
-connected with our mortuary.</p>
-
-<p>Frequently, bodies would be there
-overnight, awaiting the purposes of the
-college. Most persons would not welcome
-these as night-time neighbors, but
-Peter scoffed and said he would as soon
-sleep there as in a brightly lighted hotel.</p>
-
-<p>Chic Channing and I heard his foolish
-boast, and Chic and I had old scores to
-pay with Peter.</p>
-
-<p>His sturdy fist had left a blue circle
-around my eye for a week, and Chic was
-minus a tooth as a result of a hot encounter
-between Peter’s followers and us
-freshmen.</p>
-
-<p>Chic jumped at this brilliant opening
-for reprisal.</p>
-
-<p>“Are you game for a little ghost-walking?”
-he whispered to me, as Peter and
-the Dean passed to another part of the
-building.</p>
-
-<p>I asked for details.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s the chance of a lifetime if we
-have the nerve,” he declared. “Let’s
-sneak back into the building tonight,
-crawl on to a couple of slabs in the
-mortuary and cover ourselves with
-sheets. We’ll look enough like corpses
-to fool Peter if he looks in. Then, when
-Peter goes to bed and it gets good and
-lonely, we can come to life with a few
-gentle moans, get Peter aroused, and
-then do a little ghost dance for his
-benefit. After we have him frightened
-stiff we can take off the sheets and give
-him the laugh. The story will get
-around quick enough, and poor old
-Peter won’t be troubling us freshies any
-more.”</p>
-
-<p>I could scent trouble in the wild
-scheme, and I hastily began to offer
-objections.</p>
-
-<p>“Peter knows there aren’t any bodies
-in there now,” I said.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s all right,” Chic replied. “I
-heard the dean tell him that a couple
-might arrive late today. In fact, I know
-there will be one there for certain. One
-of the inmates at the government hospital
-for the insane died today, a poor
-beggar who was so wild they had to keep
-him locked up tight all the time. He
-had no friends, so the body is to come
-here and the undertaker has already
-gone for it.”</p>
-
-<p>I was still unconvinced, but I had no
-plausible excuses. I felt my eye, which
-was still sore from Peter’s bruising, and
-I assented to the crazy plan.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb">
-
-<p>Chic was right about the body. The
-undertaker’s car drew up to the
-college just as we were leaving. We were
-the last students to go, and the dean
-was the only other person there.</p>
-
-<p>He asked our aid in bringing the body
-to the mortuary, and we laid it on a
-cold marble slab. Peter arrived from
-supper, to begin his first night’s stay,
-just as the dean and we were leaving.</p>
-
-<p>True to my promise, I met Chic near
-the college about ten o’clock and we prepared
-to carry out our plan. My courage
-was oozing already. One of those
-wan yellow moons was the only light
-around the dreary building, and every
-rustle of a leaf or a disturbed pebble
-began to send shivers up my spine. But
-I couldn’t turn back.</p>
-
-<p>Silently, we pried open one of the
-loosely locked basement windows. Then
-we crept up dark stairs and through the
-classrooms, where I imagined I could
-see the skeletons standing out like white
-patches in the murky darkness.</p>
-
-<p>We reached the mortuary room and
-groped our way in. I almost cried out
-as my hand suddenly came in contact
-with the dead maniac, but I recovered
-myself. Chic groped in the corners
-until he found two immense white sheets.</p>
-
-<p>We climbed upon adjacent slabs, and
-stretched out on our backs and pulled the
-coverings over us. I managed to keep
-a small corner raised so that I had a
-partial view of the room as my eyes
-grew accustomed to the darkness.</p>
-
-<p>The stillness grew intense. We heard
-the long, dreary hoot of a freight engine.
-I shivered involuntarily and
-thought of the real corpse a few feet
-away.</p>
-
-<p>Footsteps echoed in the building.
-Peter was making a round of inspection
-before retiring. He switched on the
-lights in the mortuary and gave a little
-whistle of surprise at the three still,
-white figures lying there.</p>
-
-<p>Then he began to whistle again, a little
-tremulously. Evidently he was not feeling
-as bold as when he accepted his post.
-He went to his little room, but was soon
-back again.</p>
-
-<p>In his hand he held a small coil of
-rope, apparently a clothesline. He unwound<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_108"></a>[108]</span>
-it, and then, very gingerly, he
-approached the slab on which I lay.</p>
-
-<p>I felt a light blow as one end of the
-rope fell across me. Peter was going
-to take no chances on midnight ghosts.
-<i>He was going to tie us all firmly to the
-slabs!</i></p>
-
-<p>Whistling to keep up his courage, he
-proceeded with his task. In a few
-minutes I was firmly bound. I could
-not have moved if I dared.</p>
-
-<p>Then he cut away the remaining piece
-of rope and proceeded to truss up Chic
-in the same way. He had to struggle to
-make the two ends of the cord meet.</p>
-
-<p>There was none left for the real
-corpse, and, though he hunted diligently
-in all parts of the room, he could find
-no more.</p>
-
-<p>He surveyed the two of us, bound
-firmly to the slabs, and evidently felt
-reassured. He decided to take a chance
-on the third body remaining still and
-retired to his room, closing the door and
-leaving us alone in the creepy, moonlit
-mortuary.</p>
-
-<p>How I cursed Chic as I lay there unable
-to move, listening to the gradually
-deepening breathing of Peter as he
-dropped into a sound sleep. What if
-he should leave us bound until the professors
-arrived in the morning? What
-a fine row there would be!</p>
-
-<p>These, and other unpleasant thoughts
-running through my mind, were suddenly
-checked by a slight sound which
-turned me cold from head to foot. Horrified,
-I gazed through the small chink in
-my covering. I could not believe my
-eyes.</p>
-
-<p><i>The corpse of the maniac had moved!</i></p>
-
-<hr class="tb">
-
-<p>There came a faint rustle of his
-covering shroud, and the body
-moved again ever so slightly. I wanted
-to shriek in terror, but I was paralyzed.</p>
-
-<p>The shroud moved again, this time
-more noticeably. My scalp tightened,
-and I could feel the gooseflesh rising all
-over my body.</p>
-
-<p>Then, with one sudden motion, the
-maniac sat bolt upright and threw the
-shroud from him.</p>
-
-<p>He was clothed only in a long, hospital
-nightgown. His thin hair stood up
-in tangled wisps, and his eyes blazed like
-those of a cat in a dark room.</p>
-
-<p>Slowly he surveyed his surroundings,
-and then burst into the most hideous
-laughter I have ever heard. His big,
-yellow teeth seemed like the fangs of a
-wild animal. I could imagine them rending
-my flesh.</p>
-
-<p>The echo of his hideous mirth had
-hardly died away when Peter burst from
-his room, clad in his night clothes. His
-knees almost gave way as he took in the
-dreadful scene. Horror was apparent
-in every line of his body, and I had an
-inexplicable desire to laugh. But by a
-supreme effort I fought off this hysteria.</p>
-
-<p>Quite calmly the madman swung his
-legs down from the slab and sat there
-on its edge, transfixing poor Peter with
-his terrible gaze. He chuckled.</p>
-
-<p>Peter commenced to back toward his
-room. In an instant the madman was
-at him.</p>
-
-<p>Then commenced a wild chase around
-the room, of which I could only catch
-fleeting glimpses as they passed on one
-side of my slab. Once the maniac rested
-bony hands on my body as he prepared
-for a new rush at Peter, whom I could
-hear breathing near by.</p>
-
-<p>Bound hand and foot, Chic and I were
-unable to make a move, even if terror
-had not prevented us.</p>
-
-<p>Untiringly, cunningly, the madman
-pursued his prey. Peter dodged and
-squirmed in terror. Perspiration poured
-from his face. But his efforts were
-futile. He was penned in a corner, at
-last, where a door led directly to a stairway
-in the corridor.</p>
-
-<p>Step by step, the madman approached
-him, his long fingers outstretched like
-talons, and a low, gleeful laugh came
-from his lips. Peter backed desperately
-away from him, as though he hoped to
-press through the great oaken door. The
-maniac’s fingers were almost at his
-throat, when the door swung back suddenly
-and Peter tumbled from the room,
-his body bumping and thudding on the
-stairs outside.</p>
-
-<p>Startled by the sudden disappearance
-of his victim, the madman halted a
-moment. The door automatically swung
-shut again, firmly this time. Apparently,
-it had not been tightly closed before.</p>
-
-<p>The insane creature flung himself at
-it. It repelled him. He shrieked and
-tore at it, but to no avail, and he finally
-turned away.</p>
-
-<p>His eyes, now wilder than ever, swept
-the room. They rested on our bound
-figures. Swiftly, he passed over to
-where I lay. The rope puzzled him, and
-he was still for a moment.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly he grasped it and snapped
-it as though it had been thread. I was
-free, but I did not move. I waited for
-him to seize me, but his footsteps
-shuffled away. He was beside Chic now.
-I heard the rope which bound him snap.</p>
-
-<p>In desperation, I rolled from the slab
-and rose trembling to my feet. The
-noise attracted the crazed being. He
-turned and faced me.</p>
-
-<p>His features were distorted into a
-horrible grin. His sharp, cruel teeth
-gnashed as if in expectation of a bloody
-feast. He leaped at me, clearing the
-slab, on which I had lain, at one bound.</p>
-
-<p>I was too weak to dodge, but I tried
-grimly to clinch with him, as I had seen
-groggy boxers do when they were sparring
-for time. I was in his arms. His
-eyes blazed not a foot from mine. Foam
-flecked his mouth. His weight pressed
-against me. It grew heavier and
-heavier.</p>
-
-<p>Then my overwrought nerves gave
-way, and I became unconscious.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb">
-
-<p>When I awoke I was outside in the
-cool night air. Chic was bathing
-my brow with muddy water from a roadside
-pool. The madman had collapsed at
-the same moment as I had. In a daze,
-Chic had laid him again on the slab and
-had dragged me from the building.</p>
-
-<p>Poor Peter we forgot, until he was
-found the next morning, haggard, white-haired
-and unable to utter an intelligible
-word.</p>
-
-<p>Too vivid an imagination, wrought
-into a frenzy by the uncanny surroundings,
-was the way the doctors diagnosed
-his strange case. Chic and I were too
-dazed to shatter the theory.</p>
-
-<p>As for the madman, he had really
-died, after the short spell of suspended
-animation and temporary revival. I
-know this because his gaunt skeleton
-was one of the principal decorations at
-our graduation dance.</p>
-
-<p>But, even with this assurance, I sometimes
-wake at night in a cold sweat, and
-feel for the butt of the revolver under
-my pillow.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">Arrest Woman Accused of Witchcraft</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Popular rumors of a sorceress in the Logan Square
-district of Chicago led to the arrest of Mrs. Emily
-Elhert for practising medicine without a license. The
-woman styled herself a spiritualist and claimed the ability
-to heal any disease. She would make mysterious passes
-over her patients, and applied an evil-smelling salve,
-the composition of which is not known. Each visit cost
-the patient two dollars, and Mrs. Elhert is said to have
-made very good money until the police interfered with
-her career.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_109"></a>[109]</span></p>
-
-<p class="center larger"><i>An Electrocution, Vividly Described
-By An Eye Witness</i></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="THE_CHAIR">THE CHAIR</h2>
-
-<p class="center larger"><i>By</i> DR. HARRY E. MERENESS</p>
-
-<p class="center larger"><i>Former Physician at Sing Sing Prison</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="box">
-
-<p>Dr. Harry E. Mereness, who wrote this realistic description of an electrocution, was attending physician
-at Sing Sing Prison for six years, and during that period he attended, in his official capacity, sixty-seven executions
-in the Electric Chair—a record that has never been equaled. Among the many noted executions he witnessed
-were those of Lieut. Becker of the New York Police Department and the four gunmen in the Rosenthal case. Prior
-to their death, he attended the prisoners in the condemned cells.</p>
-
-<p>“The average prisoner, approaching the moment of execution,” says Dr. Mereness, “is in a mental haze or wild
-delirium produced by the fear of death. In two instances, however, this was lacking. Both men, after being strapped
-in the chair, said: ‘Good-by, Doc!’”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The minute hand on my watch
-indicates 5:44 a. m. I am standing
-in a direct line with the chair.</p>
-
-<p>My gaze is directed to the left side of
-the room and down a short, narrow,
-heavily-walled corridor that forms the
-communication between the condemned
-cells and the execution chamber. There
-are a number of guards standing quietly
-about, and on my right, back of a rope
-stretched across the room, sit the witnesses.</p>
-
-<p>There is a tension in the very air of
-the chamber. Absolute quiet prevails.
-A few seconds pass, eternally long they
-are.</p>
-
-<p>Then comes a sound—a muffled
-“Good-by, all.” The sound reaches the
-ears of the witnesses, and involuntarily
-they straighten up on their stools; there
-is some scuffling of feet, and one witness,
-possibly a trifle more nervous than the
-rest, clears his throat. Everyone is now
-keenly alert.</p>
-
-<p>I hear the chant of the priest—the
-response of the condemned man—the
-low, quavering and broken response,
-“Have mercy on me.”</p>
-
-<p>The little procession now enters the
-corridor. I see the condemned man—stocking-footed,
-and with his right trouser
-leg flapping, grimly ludicrous, for it
-has been slit up to the knee in order to
-facilitate the application of the leg electrode.
-He is between the deputy warden
-and his assistant, each supporting an
-arm as they slowly enter the death
-chamber.</p>
-
-<p>At the sight of the fateful and fatal
-chair, the condemned man involuntarily
-shrinks back, but the guards are prepared
-for this, and their hold becomes
-a little firmer. There is no halt in their
-step, and but five paces away, inanimate,
-portentous and ominous—the chair!</p>
-
-<div class="figleft illowp39" id="illus8" style="max-width: 15.625em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/illus8.jpg" alt="">
- <p class="caption"><i>Copyright 1910 by Harry Hirschfeld.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>After the first sight—after that sharp,
-quivering intake of breath—the gaze of
-the condemned man shifts about the
-room. His expression haunts one. You
-feel that it is both all-seeing and unseeing.
-The fear of death—a definite emotion—is
-here portrayed in a fashion that
-but few have beheld. There is utter
-finality in that look.</p>
-
-<p>His eyes rest upon you. You feel that
-he sees you, but that you are simply one
-of the images in the general make-up of
-the last picture that is conveyed to his
-brain. There is no recognition in the
-glance—just a vague, hopeless and apparently
-vacant stare, but one which you
-feel discerns the sharp outlines of the
-persons and objects in the room, without
-recognizing features or details.</p>
-
-<p>To me, that quick survey of his surroundings,
-that final glance of the unfortunate
-being on the very threshold of
-his meeting with his God, is the most
-harrowing of all the gruesome details
-connected with the administration of
-man-made Law’s decree.</p>
-
-<p>My watch indicates 5:45 a. m. The
-condemned man is seated in the Chair.
-The guards work quickly, two at either
-side and one at the head of the Chair.
-The arm straps are buckled fast, the leg
-straps next, then the face strap, which
-has an opening for the chin, and the upper
-part of which mercifully blindfolds
-the eyes.</p>
-
-<p>The cap, a soft, pliable thing made of
-a fine copper mesh and lined with
-sponge, which has been moistened in
-salt water, is placed upon the head and
-moulded to fit its contour. To a binding-post
-on the cap is adjusted the
-heavy wire that conveys the terrific current
-from the dynamo in a distant part<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_110"></a>[110]</span>
-of the prison. To the bare right leg, another
-electrode is applied and connected
-up.</p>
-
-<p>A full minute has elapsed since I
-heard the “Good-by, all.” The guards
-have completed their task. My notes now
-read: “Entered 5:44:10. Chair and
-strapped 5:45:00.”</p>
-
-<p>“Lamb of God who taketh away the
-sins of the world have mercy on me,”
-chants the priest. And: “Have mercy
-on me,” comes the broken, almost inaudible
-and inarticulate response.</p>
-
-<p>I retain my position, note-book and
-watch in my left hand. I am standing
-on the right side of, and in the same
-direct line with, the Chair. The Chair
-and its occupant, the electrician and myself,
-form a right angle. I occupy the
-angle, for at the ends of the lines, which
-make up that angle, are the two things
-that demand my undivided attention—the
-electrician and the condemned. From
-my point of vantage I can see them both.
-My eyes are on the condemned man.</p>
-
-<p>I feel the eyes of the electrician upon
-me. I have a new, bright yellow pencil—freshly
-sharpened. It is quite necessary
-for my notes. I hold it vertically on my
-note-book, and watch the occupant of the
-Chair. The overwhelming mental tension,
-coupled with the knowledge of the
-proximity of death, has a fearsome reaction
-upon the Chair’s victim. With
-each rapid inspiration, there is a slight
-elevation of the shoulders, and as expiration
-takes place the shoulders sag.
-This is the very instant I have awaited—the
-lungs are practically free from air.
-I dip my pencil quickly from the vertical
-toward the horizontal.</p>
-
-<p>There is a sudden <i>click</i>, the body in
-the Chair straightens, and from the
-mouth comes a low, sibilant <i>hiss</i>; the
-straps creak, and you feel that if the
-straps should break the body would be
-catapulted over the rope and amidst
-the witnesses.</p>
-
-<p>For ten seconds the high current of
-eighteen hundred and fifty volts and
-eight to nine amperes is on; then, for
-forty seconds, the voltage is dropped to
-two hundred.</p>
-
-<p>During this period the body sags perceptibly;
-at the end of forty seconds the
-current is again increased, and the body
-again straightens and strains against the
-straps. After the final ten seconds of the
-fatal minute, the current is switched off.</p>
-
-<p>The body in the Chair actually shrinks
-before your very eyes! I step up to the
-Chair; a guard tears open the shirt and
-bares the chest. As I place my stethoscope
-over the heart I am conscious that
-the body is intensely hot. I know from
-experience that the heat generated by
-the rapidity of the passage of the current
-has raised the temperature from
-sub-normal to between 120 and 130
-degrees.</p>
-
-<p>I hear a racing, tumultuous <i>rat-a-tat-tat</i>—possibly
-I can count the heart beats.
-I lift the face strap, and with thumb and
-forefinger separate the lids. The eyes
-are glazed, but the pupils are small. I
-feel the great arteries in the neck. I continue
-to get a pulsation that tells me that
-the vital forces have not yet ceased.</p>
-
-<p>My notes now read: “First contact—one
-minute—5:45:10—5:46:10.”</p>
-
-<p>I step off the rubber mat and nod to
-the electrician; the current is again
-thrown on, this time for five seconds.
-When I now listen over the heart, I am
-reminded of a clock that is running
-down; the heart beats are fainter—they
-become slower—they commence to skip—I
-fail to feel the pulsation in the neck—there
-is a heavier glaze over the eyes—the
-pupils, small and contracted a moment
-before, are now widely dilated. The
-head rests on the shoulders, and the face
-is directed toward the chandelier with
-its many lights, but there is no reaction
-of the pupil as the bright light strikes
-the eye—it remains wide and big. The
-muscles of the face are set, and saliva
-drools from the angles of the mouth.</p>
-
-<p>I again place my stethoscope upon the
-chest, but no sound reaches my ear. I
-listen for five—for ten—for twenty
-seconds. There is nothing; all the vital
-reactions have disappeared.</p>
-
-<p>Physicians among the witnesses are invited
-to listen; they take their time, for
-there is no reason for hurry now. After
-the last one finishes I make a final examination.
-It is as before—nothing.</p>
-
-<p>My notes now state: “Second contact—5
-seconds—5:47:00. Pronounced dead
-at 5:52:00.”</p>
-
-<p>I turn toward the Warden and say, “I
-pronounce this man dead.”</p>
-
-<p>The law has been obeyed.</p>
-
-<p>The general attitude of tenseness is
-relieved. The guards quickly unbuckle
-the straps and carry the body to the
-autopsy room, and after placing it upon
-the stone-topped table begin to remove
-the clothes. The hum of conversation
-becomes general. The witnesses are departing.</p>
-
-<p>I commence the autopsy, feeling that
-my report will be, “Autopsy upon the
-body of ⸺ No. ⸺, convicted of
-murder, first degree and today executed
-at this prison, showed all organs and
-tissues to be normal.”</p>
-
-<p>As I begin my long sweeping incision,
-the thought always strikes me: “This
-must also be done because it is the Law,”
-and the invariable question comes, “Is it
-really the Law, or is it to insure the
-carrying out of the Law?”</p>
-
-<p>In other words, if the Chair fails, the
-post mortem succeeds.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb">
-
-<p>There is little left to tell. The
-evening papers will state that “So-and-so,
-convicted of first degree murder
-and sentenced to death, was electrocuted
-at Sing Sing Prison early this morning.”
-They will rehearse the grewsome history
-of the crime and will tell how the murderer,
-with firm step, entered the execution
-chamber at 5:44:10 a. m., and was
-strapped in the chair at 5:45:00 a. m.</p>
-
-<p>These details are quite correct. I can
-vouch for them, for I let the reporters
-take my notes, which are official, and
-they copy the data and embody it in
-their stories.</p>
-
-<p>They invariably dress up the “first
-contact,” however, so their stories read
-about like this, “At 5:45:10 Warden
-Blank threw the switch, pressed the
-button, or dropped his handkerchief, as
-a signal” (it is always one of these
-three).</p>
-
-<p>Well, I’m rather glad that they credit
-it to the Warden, and I really feel better
-that I and my new, bright yellow pencil,
-freshly sharpened, have been overlooked.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">Rare Music Disappears Mysteriously</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Caslav Albrecht, a Chicago violinist, recently made
-a trip to Europe and brought back about thirty-five
-rare pieces of violin manuscript, which cannot be duplicated.
-Many of the compositions were original copies
-and the whole is valued at $5,000. The music disappeared
-at a party given by Frank Steiner, another musician,
-which Albrecht attended. He says he had the music with him
-when he came, and left it in the cloak-room during the
-festivities, and that it was gone when he was ready to
-leave for home. Although Albrecht was sure the manuscripts
-were merely mislaid, no trace of them could be
-found.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter box">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_111"></a>[111]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="THE_CAULDRON">The Cauldron</h2>
-
-<p class="center larger"><i class="u">True Adventures of Terror</i></p>
-
-<p class="center larger"><span class="smaller">CONDUCTED BY</span><br>
-PRESTON LANGLEY HICKEY</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="box">
-
-<p>While most of the material in <b>WEIRD TALES</b> is, of course, fiction, we are of the belief that there are innumerable
-persons who have lived through experiences as weird, terrible and horrifying as anything ever chronicled
-by a fictionist. This belief, and the fact that <b>WEIRD TALES</b> deals exclusively with the bizarre and unusual, has
-resulted in the establishment of <b>THE CAULDRON</b>.</p>
-
-<p>Readers who have had a hand in strange adventures, or who have been victims of experiences of a startling and
-terrifying nature, are cordially invited to send accounts of them to <b>THE CAULDRON</b>. A concrete idea of what is
-desired may be ascertained by reading this month’s contributions. Manuscripts may be as horrible and hair-raising
-as it is in the power of the author to make them, but they must be clean from a moral standpoint. Those accepted
-will be paid for at our usual rate. Tell your story clearly and briefly. Double-spaced, typewritten manuscripts are
-preferred, but those in long hand will be considered if legibly written. No manuscript will be returned unless
-accompanied by a stamped and self addressed envelope.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<h3>THE GHOST OF DEATH</h3>
-
-<p>Editor of The Cauldron: There are those
-who are as firmly convinced in the existence
-of ghosts as they are that day follows night.
-I have heard intelligent men and women discuss
-ghosts seriously and tell of this and that
-spiritualistic seance that they attended where,
-before their very eyes, misty forms of long departed
-dead have been materialized before their
-very eyes. To me all this appears more or
-less ridiculous. During the past fifteen years
-I have made a very thorough study of the
-“phenomena” of spiritualism, and my findings
-have resulted in my becoming skeptical on this
-subject. It is because of my emphatic disbelief
-in the supernatural, as far as its direct
-relation to human man is concerned, that I
-submit the following as one of the most inexplicable
-and terrifying things that has ever
-occurred to me:</p>
-
-<p>During the summer of 1906, my wife and I
-were residing in the township of North Lamoine,
-Maine, a fishing village situated on
-Frenchman’s Bay, an arm of the Atlantic which
-extends some miles inland. Our first born,
-then twenty months old, had not been well for
-some time, and we thought perhaps a summer
-in the open country close to the sea would be
-beneficial.</p>
-
-<p>For a time the little one appeared to rally,
-but failed to put on the weight or to assume
-the healthy look that a normal baby of her
-age should. Then came a day when my wife
-struck terror to my heart by telling me that
-she had a premonition that something would
-happen—that the child would not live.</p>
-
-<p>I scoffed at the notion and cheered her as
-best I could, but there was a great weight
-on my heart. I had begun to feel the same
-way, and the fact that my wife mentioned it
-only intensified my grief.</p>
-
-<p>Just two days after this conversation there
-occurred the manifestation of which I write.
-My work kept me up later than usual, and
-it was not until after midnight that I finally
-retired. Worn out as I was from the activities
-of the day, and though late the hour, it
-was some time before I could compose myself
-to sleep.</p>
-
-<p>The baby, who slept with my wife at the
-other end of the room, moaned. A heavy electrical
-storm raged outside—the wind lashing
-the rain against the window panes in unabating
-fury—and my thoughts were in a turmoil.</p>
-
-<p>Finally I began to doze and, I believe, was
-about to fall asleep when, with a start, I
-found myself staring wide eyed at the ceiling.
-No one had spoken, and, save for the baby’s
-moans and the storm, there had been no sound,
-but something had impelled me to open my eyes.
-A moment later a cold perspiration broke out
-over my body.</p>
-
-<p>At first, nothing was visible and then, even
-in the almost pitch darkness of the room, a
-filmy though strangely luminous grayish white
-object began to take form close to the ceiling
-just above my wife’s bed. It became clearer
-and clearer until finally it moved.</p>
-
-<p>As rigid as a marble statue I lay. Though
-not exactly afraid, to have saved my life I
-don’t believe I could have moved at that
-moment. Gradually this indescribable object
-began to settle over the other bed. Just as it
-seemed to merge itself with the faint whiteness
-of the covers, the baby cried out, to be
-followed an instant later by a piercing scream
-from my wife.</p>
-
-<p>“Back! back!” she gasped. “No! no! you
-shall not! For God’s sake <i>back</i>!”</p>
-
-<p>I remained motionless but an instant, long
-enough, however, to see the specter gather
-itself into a compact form, flash upward and
-disappear. Then, with a mighty effort, I
-pulled myself together and bounded out of bed.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh,” my wife cried, sitting up, “did you
-see it?”</p>
-
-<p>“See what, dear?” I asked.</p>
-
-<p>“Just now something white seemed to come
-down, with arms outstretched, as if to take
-little Helen away. I am sure I was not
-asleep.”</p>
-
-<p>“You must have been,” I answered. “I was
-wide awake all along and did not see anything.
-The room is quite empty.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ugh,” she shuddered, “what a terrible
-dream!”</p>
-
-<p>There was no sleep for me the rest of that
-night. For hours I sat in the living-room,
-trying to fathom the mystery that I had beheld.
-I knew it could not have been imagination,
-for my wife had seen it also. There was
-no accounting for it.</p>
-
-<p>And I am just as much in the dark now as
-I was then. God only knows what it was that
-my wife and I saw that night! Perhaps it was
-a matriculated spirit from the Valley of Death,
-after all.</p>
-
-<p>In any event, Baby Helen died the next
-day.</p>
-
-<p class="right">OWEN KING.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb">
-
-<p>Editor of The Cauldron: During the street
-car strike in Denver in 1919, I was a reporter
-on the <i>Times</i>. On the night when the
-strikers and “Black Jack” Jerome’s “breakers”
-met in deadly conflict, I was assigned to the
-East Denver barns, in which Jerome’s men
-were fortified.</p>
-
-<p>Toward midnight, the strikers stormed <i>en
-masse</i> and, during the melée, I dropped with
-a bullet in my chest. Regaining consciousness,
-I found myself in the City Hospital. Kneeling
-beside my bed was my wife—Estelle. I
-tried to move.</p>
-
-<p>“Lie still, dear,” she said, rising. “You
-must keep very quiet. They are going to
-probe for the bullet.”</p>
-
-<p>Upon reaching the operating room, the ether
-instantly choked me into unconsciousness. Then
-occurred the strangest thing I have ever experienced.
-I seemed suddenly transported into
-a great hall, with tall, shining pillars. All
-around me were people clothed in white. From
-afar came the sound of soft music.</p>
-
-<p>But what attracted me was a raised section
-at one end on which sat a benevolent-looking
-old gentleman. In his eyes there seemed to be
-all the sorrow and suffering of a wicked world’s
-countless centuries. He beckoned to me.
-When I had come before him he spoke, and in
-his voice there was the golden ring of perfectly
-tuned chimes.</p>
-
-<p>“My son,” he said, “you have been brought
-to judgment. At present you are no longer
-a part of the earth’s sphere. Back there science
-is fighting for your life. Whether science
-succeeds is determined by this court of justice.
-What have you to say for yourself?”</p>
-
-<p>I trembled and became afraid. Where was
-I? Was I dead and in some spiritual sphere
-far removed from the earth?</p>
-
-<p>Then I spoke. I recall, distinctly, that I
-rambled on at great length, attempting to make
-a good impression. As I spoke he listened
-intently, occasionally nodding his head slowly
-and sadly.</p>
-
-<p>When I finished, he resumed:</p>
-
-<p>“Words and actions mean nothing here,” he
-said. “In passing judgment we consider only
-motives. They are everything. Remember that.
-It is the motives behind all actions that are
-important.”</p>
-
-<p>So saying, he turned to an aged man, who
-was writing in a book, and asked: “Any
-prayers?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, a young woman kneels at his bed.”</p>
-
-<p>“You shall return to earthly existence for
-a time then,” the judge said, raising his hands.
-“Heed well my words.”</p>
-
-<p>Then I saw a great light swell from some
-invisible source, and, as I looked, there seemed
-to be ragged scars in his palms that ran red.</p>
-
-<p>When finally I opened my eyes I was again
-in my little bed, with Estelle and the doctor
-standing by. Eventually I recovered from my
-serious wound.</p>
-
-<p>The weird vision that I had while on the
-operating table, though, has always been a
-great mystery to me. Dreams are nothing unusual
-for me, but this was so entirely different
-from anything that I have ever experienced
-before! I have spoken of it many times and
-to many people. They have not laughed, but
-have listened in astonishment.</p>
-
-<p>What was it, I wonder? Was it the effect
-of the anesthetic upon my weakened system?
-Was it the wild distortion of my brain or, when
-life is flickering on the brink of eternity, are
-we actually brought face to face with our
-Creator? Will this question ever be answered
-in life? I wonder!</p>
-
-<p class="right">OTIS TREVOR.</p>
-
-<h3>THE DEATH PLUNGE</h3>
-
-<p>Editor of The Cauldron: I am an expert
-riveter. When beams are hoisted into place on
-buildings I hang suspended in space on a
-swinglike seat and rivet the sections together.
-Had I followed any other pursuit I probably
-would never have had the distinction of being
-the only man to fall twelve stories and live.
-It was during the construction of an eighteen
-story bank building that I experienced this
-extraordinary adventure.</p>
-
-<p>I was working in front on the twelfth story.
-At this particular time I was directly under
-the crane which hoisted the great girders.
-Happening to glance down, I saw an exceptionally
-large load coming up. There were
-five. It is seldom that more than three are
-hoisted at once. I watched them ascend, interested
-in the process of landing so many.
-When they had almost reached the level of
-the fifteenth story, the roof-man gave the
-signal to slow down. Mistaking his motions,
-the crane operator pulled his reverse and the
-great beams swung inward.</p>
-
-<p>Seeing that collision between the front of
-the structure and the beams was unavoidable,
-I attempted to get out of the way in the
-event anything happened. I was not quick
-enough. With a crash, the girders smashed
-into the building right over the heavy rope
-from which I hung, cutting it as though it were
-string.</p>
-
-<p>Things happened so fast then that my memory
-of them is confused. Instantly I was precipitated
-downward. I do not know what
-sensations a drowning man experiences, but
-have heard that a whole life time is flashed
-across the victim’s mind. That is just what
-happened in my case. Everything I ever did
-came before me in those terrifying moments.</p>
-
-<p>Though stricken with horror, I tried to keep
-my mind clear. Far below me I could see clusters
-of people gazing at me, horror stricken,
-as I fell, turning over and over.</p>
-
-<p>In a moment’s time I was within four stories
-of the pavement. My breath was almost gone.
-Insane with the thought of the terrible fate
-that awaited me, I shut my eyes. Then, with a
-great roaring in my ears, I struck, and, though
-almost dead, knew that it wasn’t the street.
-For an instant I was aware of great pain and
-then ... nothingness.</p>
-
-<p>Within an hour I had regained consciousness.
-Fate was with me that day. Just as I fell a
-big open truck, piled high with cardboard
-boxes, had stopped beneath me. In this I
-landed; my fall was broken by these boxes, and
-I escaped a most horrible death.</p>
-
-<p>Upon examination, it was found that I suffered
-four fractured ribs, a compound fracture
-of the left leg, two breaks in my right arm and
-a break in my left wrist in addition to severe
-cuts about the body and head. That is my
-story. I call it a narrow escape.</p>
-
-<p class="right">JOHN BURKHOLZ.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter box">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_112"></a>[112]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="THE_EYRIE">THE EYRIE</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<div>
-<img class="dropcap" src="images/dropcap-t.jpg" width="100" height="100" alt="">
-</div>
-
-<p class="dropcap">The time has come to talk of cats and Chinamen,
-and rattlesnakes and skulls—and why it is these
-things abound in yarns for WEIRD TALES.
-Particularly cats and Chinamen. Believe it or
-not, every second manuscript we open (and
-that’s placing the average rather low) is concerned with one
-or the other, or both, of these.</p>
-
-<p>Why is this? Is it because a cat and a Chinaman suggest
-the mysticism of the Orient, and thus seem excellent
-“props” for weird fiction? Or is it merely because both
-mind their own business, imperturbably pursue their destinies,
-and thereby create the impression that there’s some
-deep-laid mystery here? We ask you that.</p>
-
-<p>Whatever the reason, it’s an odd and curious fact that
-when an author sets out to tell a weird tale his mind turns,
-as if instinctively, to cats and Chinamen. And then, for good
-measure, he not infrequently throws in a few rattlesnakes
-and a skull or two.</p>
-
-<p>Sometimes the result is interesting. And sometimes it is
-awful! And again, sometimes, it is a ludicrous thing, unconsciously
-funny.</p>
-
-<p>We have no prejudices against Chinese characters in fiction,
-and we have none whatever against cats. For that
-matter, we haven’t any prejudices of any sort. We’ve published
-a good many stories about Chinese, and quite a large
-number about cats, and not a few that featured skulls and
-rattlesnakes. You’ll find some in this June issue.</p>
-
-<p>But we didn’t accept those stories because of the aforementioned
-features, nor yet in spite of them. We accepted
-them solely because they were GOOD stories. We observe
-one rule, and one rule only, in selecting stories for your
-entertainment. We think we’ve mentioned this before, but
-we’ll say again that our only requirement is: The thing
-MUST be interesting!</p>
-
-<p>If a story interests us it will likewise interest others, or
-so we believe. And if it doesn’t—Thumbs Down! And it
-doesn’t matter a good gosh darn whether the hero, or villain,
-has yellow skin and oblique eyelids, or flaxen hair and sky-blue
-eyes, or whether or not a green-eyed cat howls atop a
-grinning skull. The story’s the thing!</p>
-
-<p>All the same, though, we would like to know why all these
-cats and Chinamen are slinking mysteriously through our
-manuscripts. We read eight before breakfast this morning
-(chosen quite at random), and we hope to die if there wasn’t
-a Chinaman in every last one of them!</p>
-
-<hr class="tb">
-
-<p>And still the letters pour in from delighted readers—plenty
-of them! Manifestly, it is quite impossible to
-print more than a fractional part of them here, but we can’t
-refrain from quoting at least three that concern Paul Suter’s
-story, “Beyond the Door,” which appeared in the April
-WEIRD TALES.</p>
-
-<p>We take it you remember this story and will therefore be
-interested in these comments. The first letter comes from
-R. E. Lambert, secretary of the Washington Square College
-of New York University, New York, and reads as follows:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“Dear sir: Just as Woodrow Wilson used to say during
-his most trying days in the presidency that when he wanted
-to get his mind completely off his work he would turn to a
-detective story, so I turn for my own relaxation to the horror
-story.</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose it would take exhaustive questioning by a
-psychoanalyst to discover why this sort of literature appeals
-to me, but the fact is it does so appeal. While there are
-hundreds of others like me in this respect, I doubt whether
-the number is great enough to make such a venture as yours
-a considerable financial success—therefore, the more praise
-to you for your courage in launching WEIRD TALES.</p>
-
-<p>“What particularly impelled me to write this letter is the
-story in the current issue, entitled ‘Beyond the Door.’ One
-reason why I single this one from such a congeries of thrilling,
-weird tales is that, with all its mystery and suggestion
-of the supernatural, the dénouement and everything that
-leads up to it are discovered at the end to be logically and
-physically ‘possible.’ So often, in mystery stories, we are
-called upon to accept much that simply is not naturally possible,
-and we turn from them, duly horrified, but unpersuaded
-that the tale is more than a figment of a morbid
-imagination.</p>
-
-<p>“From the standpoint of construction, I have read few
-stories that so faithfully adhere to the trinity of short story
-tradition—unity, coherence and mass. Especially on the
-score of unity, the most important of the trinity, do I find
-this tale worthy of much praise. Not a situation, not a paragraph,
-nor a sentence, but which has a direct bearing on the
-unfoldment of the plot. And I find no single instance where
-the choice of words seems to have resulted from a straining
-for effect. Of how many stories, whether horrific or any
-other kind, can this truly be said?</p>
-
-<p>“Then, too, very few tales are really brought home to the
-reader’s own intimate experience of life. Yet here we
-shudder at the terrors created by a guilty conscience, and
-approve, while we shudder, of the terrible punishment that
-is meted out for the wrong-doing. How very real it thus
-becomes to all of us!</p>
-
-<p>“Finally, the author dares to do, and admirably succeeds
-in doing, what so few writers of fiction attempt—and mostly
-bungle when they do attempt. I refer to the linking of his
-story in the closing paragraphs to man’s inevitable, age-old
-uncertainty as to what is to come in the hereafter. This
-alone elevates ‘Beyond the Door’ out of the ordinary run
-of fiction.</p>
-
-<p>“Here’s wishing you a well-merited success!”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The next one was written by Rev. Andrew Wallace MacNeill,
-minister of the Bethlehem Congregational Church,
-International Falls, Minnesota:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“Gentlemen: I have read with much interest and pleasure
-the April number of your new magazine, which I believe
-will make a distinctive and acceptable place for itself in
-magazine literature.</p>
-
-<p>“I am particularly interested in the story by a new writer,
-Paul Suter, ‘Beyond the Door’ proving exceptionally appealing
-and gripping. I hope you will publish more work by
-this writer, as I believe if he maintains the standard of this
-story your readers will make quite a popular response.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_113"></a>[113]</span></p>
-
-<p>And the third letter, which arrived in the same mail that
-brought the first two, came from the author himself:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“Dear Mr. Baird: I take it that even editors enjoy an
-occasional pat on the back, in the midst of the many black
-looks they receive, so I am presuming to express my appreciation
-of the way in which you printed my story, ‘Beyond
-the Door,’ in your April issue.</p>
-
-<p>“There is a story which might easily have been rendered
-monotonous by unintelligent press work—because the effect
-of slowly undermining horror, which I had to attain, is akin
-to monotony. You avoided that pitfall by change of type—and
-(this to me is the remarkable thing) I can tell by the
-way in which you ran in those changes that you got absolutely
-every subtle suggestion which I concealed in that
-story—and I buried quite a lot of them there. You must
-have read my manuscript with a microscope. May I take the
-liberty of expressing my opinion that as an editor you are
-emphatically THERE?</p>
-
-<p class="center">“Cordially yours,</p>
-
-<p class="right">“J. Paul Suter.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>We almost dislike to print this last one—it’s too much
-like pinning a medal on our coat—but we can plead, in extenuation,
-that the excellence of Mr. Suter’s story was not
-due to our editing, or printer’s directions, or anything of
-the sort, but solely to his splendid craftsmanship. He wrote
-a good story and we published it, and no amount of editing
-could have made it any better.</p>
-
-<p>If you failed to read “Beyond the Door” we earnestly
-recommend that you do so now. In either case, don’t miss
-his next story. It is called “The Guard of Honor,” and is
-fully as “creepy” as the first—and you will find it in the
-next issue of WEIRD TALES.</p>
-
-<p>Suter is a coming writer. No doubt of that. And since
-he tells us, “I would rather write horror stories than anything
-else,” we hope to publish the best of his work.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb">
-
-<p>We’ve ransacked a bale of Letters to the Editor in an
-effort to find some not sweet with praise! and we’ve
-found only two, and here they are:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“Dear sir: I have purchased two copies of your new
-magazine, have read the stories, and also the praise liberally
-supplied by friends and readers. I think it is time to offer
-a few words of criticism, since applause and praise of this
-kind does not mean much. The public lauds any new effort;
-it applauds anything, even moving pictures.</p>
-
-<p>“The stories you have printed so far can be grouped under
-three general headings: Ghost Stories, Snake Stories, Insanity
-Stories. In your first issue you printed a story called
-‘Ooze’ which approached the type of semi-scientific stories
-that are liked intensely by all those who are fond of the
-unusual, and if you would publish at least one story of this
-type in each issue of your magazine I am sure that your
-efforts would register larger sales.”—Conrad A. Brandt, 563
-West 150th Street New York City.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“My dear Mr. Baird: At last it arrived—that second
-volume. If you play that slow trick again on us we shall
-send one of our aviators to Chicago to get the so strenuously
-desired copy.</p>
-
-<p>“Allow me to tell you which story in the April number
-I liked best and which I hate best. ‘The Scar’ by Dr. Carl
-Ramus was a gem. Plausible, scientifically correct, well
-told, no words wasted. ‘The Whispering Thing’ is the acme
-of foolish, silly, nonsensical, high-school girl, bucket-of-blood
-story. If you waste more paper on such rotten stuff
-I predict failure in caps.”—Adeline Jugol, Covina Apartments,
-Los Angeles.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Ouch!</p>
-
-<p>Luckily, though, not all our readers disrelished “The
-Whispering Thing.” For instance:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“Dear sir: Having recently read the second issue of
-WEIRD TALES, I cannot refrain from expressing my congratulations
-on your rare fiction taste as an editor. I enjoyed
-reading the novelette by Harold Ward, but the authors
-who wrote ‘The Whispering Thing’ have an imagination
-which is extraordinary. I happened to read this story late
-at night, and I began to look for ‘spooks.’ Talk about horror
-and terror combined! This story is nothing short of a
-marvel.</p>
-
-<p>“I sincerely believe that you have an innate tendency
-for selecting stories of this type, and if you keep this class
-of stories running you will, without the least doubt, be a
-success.”—O. R. Hamilton, 4002 Avenue F, Austin, Texas.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>With regard to the poetic effusion that follows, we’re not
-sure whether “Witch Hazel” is spoofing us or having a
-spasm of ecstasy. At any rate, we’ll take a chance and
-print the thing just as she wrote it:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“Dear Editor: No words can express how much I enjoy
-your magazine. Here is what I think of it:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Oh, what is more pleasure than a show,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">A party, bon bons, or even a beau?</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Well, here’s the answer (all readers take heed);</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">WEIRD TALES and a nice quiet place to read!</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>“It’s my favorite magazine, and I can hardly wait for
-each number to come out. I think it is the most wonderful
-magazine in the world, as it is so different, so extremely
-interesting—but there! I can never say enough in its praise.
-As my little verse says, ‘I like it better than anything,’ and
-I’ve often said I wished some editor would publish just such
-a magazine, and thank you, Mr. Baird (you Good Fairy) for
-doing so. I can hardly wait for the next issue. Thank you
-for filling a long felt need, and good luck!”—Witch Hazel
-of St. Louis.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>We’ve scores of flattering letters here, but we’re not
-going to print them all [prolonged and loud applause],
-because, for one thing, we haven’t space, and, for another,
-we have a sneaking suspicion that our delight in reading
-them is not always shared by others. So we’ll run only five
-or six more, and call it a day.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“My dear Mr. Baird: I don’t mind admitting that I was
-a little leary about WEIRD TALES when I first heard of it.
-The fact of the matter is, I picked up the first copy with
-a good deal of prejudice against it. The reason for this prejudice
-is clear enough. I have always had a healthy respect
-for mystery stories and believe they are the hardest kind to
-write—and to judge.</p>
-
-<p>“For this reason I am moved to write you and tell you
-how very much my view point has changed. You have not
-only sold me, you have enthused me. There is no question
-about your future. I’ve talked to many friends who have
-read the March issue, and I know.”—A. M. Oliver, 148 North
-Portage Path, Akron, Ohio.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“Dear sir: I asked my newsdealer for something different
-in the magazine line today, and he handed me a copy of the
-April WEIRD TALES. I’ve read many so-called mystery
-stories, but none can compare with those I found in your
-magazine. It is something altogether new and most fascinating.
-I especially enjoyed ‘The Snake Fiend’ and ‘The<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_114"></a>[114]</span>
-Conquering Will.’ Those sort of stories appeal to me. For
-anybody that is looking for something different I heartily
-advise your magazine. May you prosper!”—P. W. Burrows,
-Kearney, Nebraska.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“Dear sirs: ... I was in the business section of Des
-Moines one evening recently when my eye fell upon a copy
-of WEIRD TALES. Struck by its unusual appearance, I
-bought one. When I arrived home it was rather early, and I
-sat down to read. Well, I had not finished a half dozen pages
-before I knew I had found a marvelous book—in fact, my
-ideal magazine. Before I had finished the second story I was
-as much in its power as our detective friend seems to be in
-the power of ‘The Whispering Thing.’...</p>
-
-<p>“But here I have been taking up your time with praise of
-the Wonder Magazine and haven’t spoken of the most vital
-thing—the thing which makes such mighty entertainment
-possible. Please find enclosed three dollars for which please
-enter me for a year’s subscription to WEIRD TALES, beginning
-with your third issue.”—J. C. Wolquist, 1544 Walker
-Street, Des Moines, Iowa.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“Dear Mr. Baird: Three weeks ago I bought a copy of
-WEIRD TALES, and I am shaking yet, as you probably can
-tell by my scribbling!... The first story I read was
-‘The Thing of a Thousand Shapes.’ It happened to be eleven-thirty
-when I finished the first installment, and I went to bed
-quaking in every limb, firmly resolved never to lay eyes on
-another copy of WEIRD TALES.</p>
-
-<p>“A few days later I passed a news stand. There, glaring
-into my eyes, was the interesting cover of WEIRD TALES.
-I was about to turn away when curiosity whispered in my
-ear, ‘What happened to Billy?’</p>
-
-<p>“Being a woman, curiosity, of course, won, and home I
-went, with the copy tucked snugly under my arm....
-And now I look on WEIRD TALES as a friend indeed. I
-daren’t let my little brother get the magazine before he does
-his lessons, or they would never get done, while such an absorbing
-magazine is around.”—Miss Marguerite Nicholson,
-635 North Frazier Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“Dear Mr. Baird: Congratulations! Your new magazine
-is simply splendid. I have often wondered just when I
-would be able to go to a news stand and buy a real magazine.
-Now all my worry has ceased.... There is one
-trouble with it, and that is that it doesn’t come weekly or
-semi-monthly.”—M. Nawrocki, 854 Robinson Avenue, Milwaukee,
-Wisconsin.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“Dear Mr. Baird: ... I have thoroughly enjoyed
-DETECTIVE TALES, every issue of it, and believe that
-there is more good reading matter in it than in any other
-magazine published, and when I saw a copy of WEIRD
-TALES at the news stand, with your name or it, I could not
-resist getting it. And it has lived up to my expectations.
-I could not put the magazine down until I had finished every
-story, and that was about three o’clock the next morning.”...—Mary
-Sharon, 1912 Main Street, Galena, Kansas.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>And it’s now three o’clock in the afternoon, and the
-printer is calling for copy, and—</p>
-
-<p>That’ll be all.</p>
-
-<p class="right">THE EDITOR.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_115"></a>[115]</span></p>
-
-<div class="ad">
-
-<p class="center largest">Margaret Sanger dares to tell
-the truth about Birth Control</p>
-
-<div class="figleft illowp60" id="ad07" style="max-width: 12.5em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/ad07.jpg" alt="">
- <p class="caption">Margaret Sanger</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>For centuries the world has played a game
-of “hush” about the one most important
-fact of marriage. Even today tens of thousands
-of women are doomed to a life of hopeless,
-helpless drudgery—and their children are
-doomed to privation and neglect because
-the mother simply can not give
-so many of them the proper care or
-support.</p>
-
-<p>Words alone can not tell the terrible
-sacrifice in wasted bodies and blasted
-lives that has been exacted from women
-every year. Words alone can not
-express the untold suffering tens of
-thousands of women—and children—must
-endure every year. That is why
-Margaret Sanger, herself a mother,
-and President of the American Birth
-Control League, dares to tell the
-truth about this important subject.</p>
-
-<p class="center larger">Will you ever write a letter like this?</p>
-
-<p>Only these agony-laden letters can tell the story
-of woman’s sacrifice in all its anguish. These are
-but a few of thousands sent every day to Margaret
-Sanger by unhappy mothers who have turned to
-her for help in their greatest need, revealing to her
-the nameless fears and terrors that clutch at their
-hearts. Read these letters, and know for yourself
-what women still suffer:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“It is terrible to think of bringing these little
-bodies and souls into the world, without means
-or strength to care for them. I know that this
-must be the last one, for it would be better for
-me to go than to bring more neglected babies
-into the world.”</p>
-
-<p>“My baby is only 10 months old, and the oldest
-of my four children is 7. I am so discouraged
-I want to die. Ignorance on this all-important
-subject has put me where I am.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>“Why is it,” Mrs. Sanger asks, “that the women
-of Australia, New Zealand, Holland, France, and
-many other nations are permitted to know the
-truths that can save them from this terrible suffering,
-while the women of America must still endure
-the agonies to which they are needlessly condemned?”
-Margaret Sanger considers it a slur
-upon the intelligence of American womankind to
-deny to them the knowledge which has brought
-freedom, health, happiness, and life itself, to the
-women of other nations. That is why she has
-braved the storms of denunciation, why she has
-fought through every court in the land for her
-right to arouse woman-kind.</p>
-
-<p>In her revolutionary book, Margaret Sanger, internationally
-famous for her ceaseless activities in
-behalf of women and hailed as the liberator of her
-sex, shows the way out for tired, struggling womankind.
-With utter frankness she tears down the veil
-of silence that has always surrounded the subject
-of birth control. It is a startling revelation of a
-new truth that will open the eyes of women everywhere.</p>
-
-<div class="box">
-
-<p class="center larger">Is the Husband or
-Wife to Blame?</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp75" id="ad08" style="max-width: 12.5em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/ad08.jpg" alt="">
-</div>
-
-<p>Whose is the blame for
-the tragedy of too many
-children—husband or
-wife?</p>
-
-<p>Margaret Sanger,
-the great Birth
-Control advocate,
-comes with a
-message vital to
-every married
-man and woman.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>In her wonderful book Mrs. Sanger shows how
-women can and will rise above the forces that have
-ruined their beauty—that drag them
-down—that wreck their mental and
-physical strength—that make them an
-easy prey for death—that disqualify
-them for society, for self-improvement—and
-finally shut them out from the thing
-they cherish most, their husband’s love.</p>
-
-<p>In blazing this revolutionary trail to
-the new freedom of women, this daring
-and heroic author points out that women
-who can not afford to have more than
-one or two children, should not do so.
-It is a crime to herself, a crime to her
-children, a crime to society.</p>
-
-<p class="center larger">A Priceless Possession</p>
-
-<p>Now Margaret Sanger’s message to all
-women, contained in “Woman and the
-New Race,” is made available to the public. A
-special edition of this vital book has been published
-in response to the overwhelming demand. Order
-your copy of this wonderful book at once, at the
-special edition price of only $2. Then, if after
-reading it you do not
-treasure it as a priceless
-possession, return
-it to us and your
-money will be refunded.</p>
-
-<p>It is not even necessary
-to send a penny
-now. Just the coupon
-will bring your copy
-of “Woman and the
-New Race.” It is
-bound in handsome,
-durable gray cloth,
-printed in clear readable
-type, on good
-quality book paper
-and contains 234
-pages, sent to you in
-a plain wrapper. When
-the book is delivered
-at your home, pay the
-postman the special
-low price of $2 plus
-the few cents postage.
-But mail the coupon
-at once. Tear it off before
-you turn this page.</p>
-
-<div class="box">
-
-<p class="center">PARTIAL LIST OF
-CONTENTS</p>
-
-<ul>
-<li>* Woman’s Error and Her Debt.</li>
-<li>Cries of Despair</li>
-<li>* When Should a Woman Avoid Having Children?</li>
-<li>Two Classes of Women.</li>
-<li>Birth Control—a Parent’s Problem or Woman’s.</li>
-<li>* Continence—Is it Practicable or Desirable?</li>
-<li>Woman and the New Morality.</li>
-<li>* Are Preventive Means Certain?</li>
-<li>Legislating Women’s Morals.</li>
-<li>* Contraceptives or Abortion.</li>
-<li>Progress We Have Made.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<p>* Any one of these chapters
-is alone worth
-many times the price of
-the book.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="center">TRUTH PUBLISHING COMPANY<br>
-Dept. T-506 1658 Broadway<br>
-New York City</p>
-
-<div class="coupon">
-
-<p class="center">Truth Publishing Company<br>
-Dept. T-506, 1658 Broadway<br>
-New York City</p>
-
-<p>Please send me in plain wrapper, Margaret
-Sanger’s new book, “Woman and the New
-Race.” I am enclosing no money, but will give
-the postman who delivers the book to me $2
-plus postage.</p>
-
-<div class="form">Name</div>
-
-<div class="form">Address</div>
-
-<div class="form">City</div>
-
-<div class="form">State</div>
-
-<p>(Orders from countries outside the United
-States, must be accompanied by money order.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="ad">
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp100" id="ad09" style="max-width: 43.75em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/ad09.jpg" alt="">
-</div>
-
-<p class="center largest">WANTED! U.S. RAILWAY MAIL CLERKS</p>
-
-<p class="center larger">Get $1600 to $2300 a Year</p>
-
-<p class="center">MEN—BOYS 18 OR OVER SHOULD
-MAIL COUPON IMMEDIATELY</p>
-
-<p class="center">STEADY WORK <span class="spacer">PAID VACATIONS</span> NO LAYOFFS</p>
-
-<p class="center">Common Education Sufficient</p>
-
-<p class="center">Travel—See the Country</p>
-
-<div class="coupon">
-
-<p class="center">FRANKLIN INSTITUTE,<br>
-Dept. T257, Rochester, N. Y.</p>
-
-<p>Sirs: Send me, without charge, (1) sample
-Railway Postal Clerk Examination questions;
-(2) tell me how to get a U. S. Government
-job; (3) send list of Government jobs obtainable.</p>
-
-<div class="form">Name</div>
-
-<div class="form">Address</div>
-
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="ad">
-
-<p class="center">BE SURE AND GET YOUR COPY OF WEIRD TALES EVERY MONTH</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_116"></a>[116]</span></p>
-
-<div class="ad">
-
-<p class="center largest">I Will Give You a Chance
-To Earn $200 a Week</p>
-
-<p>Right now, today, I offer you an opportunity
-to be your own boss—to work just
-as many hours a day as you please—to start
-when you want to and quit when you want to—and
-earn $200 a week.</p>
-
-<p class="center larger">These Are Facts</p>
-
-<p>Does that sound too good to be
-true? If it does, then let me tell you
-what J. R. Head did in a small town
-in Kansas. Head lives in a town of
-631 people. He was sick, broke, out
-of a job. He accepted my offer. I
-gave him the same chance I am now
-offering you. At this new work he
-has made as high as $69.50 for one
-day’s work.</p>
-
-<div class="figleft illowp50" id="ad10" style="max-width: 6.25em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/ad10.jpg" alt="">
- <p class="caption">J. R. HEAD</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>You can do every bit as well as he
-did. If that isn’t enough, then let me
-tell you about E. A. Sweet of Michigan.
-He was an electrical engineer
-and didn’t know anything about selling.
-In his first month’s spare time he
-earned $243. Inside of six months he
-was making between $600 and $1,200 a month.</p>
-
-<p>W. J. McCrary is another I want to tell
-you about. His regular job paid him $2.00 a
-day, but this wonderful new work has enabled
-him to make $9,000 a year.</p>
-
-<p>Yes, and right this very minute you are being
-offered the same proposition that has made
-these men so successful. Do you want it? Do
-you want to earn $40.00 a day?</p>
-
-<p class="center larger">A Clean, High-Grade
-Dignified Business</p>
-
-<p>Have you ever heard of Comer All-Weather
-Coats? They are advertised in all the leading
-magazines. A good-looking, stylish coat that’s
-good for summer or winter—that keeps out
-wind, rain or snow, a coat that everybody
-should have, made of fine materials for men,
-women and children, and sells for less than the
-price of an ordinary coat.</p>
-
-<p>Now, Comer Coats are not sold in stores.
-All our orders come through our own representatives.
-Within the next few months we will pay
-representatives more than three hundred thousand
-dollars for sending us orders.</p>
-
-<p>And now I am offering you the chance to become
-our representative in your territory and
-get <i>your</i> share of that three hundred thousand
-dollars. All you do is to take orders. We do
-the rest. We deliver. We collect and you get
-your money the same day you take the order.</p>
-
-<p>You can see how simple it is. We furnish
-you with a complete outfit and tell you how to
-get the business in your territory. We help
-you to get started. If you send us
-only six average orders a day, which
-you can easily get, you will make $100
-a week.</p>
-
-<p class="center larger">Maybe You Are Worth $1,000 a Month</p>
-
-<p>Well, here is your chance to find out,
-for this is the same proposition that
-enabled George Garon to make a clear
-profit of $40.00 in his first day’s work—the
-same proposition that gave R.
-W. Krieger $20.00 net profit in a half
-hour. It is the same opportunity that
-gave A. B. Spencer $625 cash for one
-month’s spare time.</p>
-
-<p>If you mail the coupon at the bottom
-of this ad I will show you the
-easiest, quickest, simplest plan for making
-money that you ever heard of. If you are interested
-in a chance to earn $200 a week and
-can devote all your time or only an hour or so
-a day to my proposition, write your name down
-below, cut out the coupon and mail it to me at
-once. You take no risk, and this may be the
-one outstanding opportunity of your life to earn
-more money than you ever thought possible.</p>
-
-<p class="center larger">Find Out Now!</p>
-
-<p>Remember, it doesn’t cost you a penny. You
-don’t agree to anything and you will have a
-chance to go right out and make big money.
-Do it. Don’t wait. Get full details. Mail the
-coupon now.</p>
-
-<p class="center">C. E. COMER, THE COMER MFG. CO.<br>
-Dept. 11-C, Dayton, Ohio</p>
-
-<div class="coupon">
-
-<div class="masthead">
-
-<p class="center"><i>JUST MAIL THIS NOW!</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="center">THE COMER MFG. CO., Dept. 11-C, Dayton, Ohio</p>
-
-<p>Please tell me how I can make $200 a week as your
-representative. Send me complete details of your
-offer without any obligation to me whatsoever.</p>
-
-<div class="form"><i>Name</i></div>
-
-<div class="form"><i>Address</i></div>
-
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="ad">
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp100" id="ad11" style="max-width: 31.25em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/ad11.jpg" alt="">
- <p class="caption">For Boys and Girls Also</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center largest">Do You Need This Help?</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">Check off at the right the use that most interests you and
-I will send you my booklet and personal advice.</p>
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="larger">The Natural Body Brace</span>
-overcomes WEAKNESS and ORGANIC ailments of men
-and women. Develops erect, graceful figure. Brings
-restful relief, comfort, health, strength and ability to do
-things. IT HAS HELPED NEARLY 200,000.</p>
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="larger">Read what users say:</span> “Helped relieve strocious
-pains and overcame permanently
-a spinal curvature.” “Lifted me physically out of darkest
-depths of suffering after everything else had failed.”
-“Gives one an upright, perfect form.” “I wore it for strengthening
-a weak back—it certainly accomplished its purpose.”
-“Comfortable as a dream.” “Worth all the money in the world.”</p>
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="larger">Wear It 30 Days Free</span> at my expense. Write me in confidence for
-my booklet. Check chart at right. I will at once write you
-my personal advice and give you our liberal proposition.</p>
-
-<p class="center">HOWARD C. RASH, President, Natural Body Brace Co.<br>
-400 Rash Building, Salina, Kansas</p>
-
-<div class="box">
-
-<ul>
-<li>□ Weak back</li>
-<li>□ Better figure</li>
-<li>□ Pregnancy</li>
-<li>□ Round shoulders</li>
-<li>□ Rupture</li>
-<li>□ Constipation</li>
-<li>□ Nervousness</li>
-<li>□ Enlarged abdomen</li>
-<li>□ Weak lungs</li>
-<li>□ Stomach trouble</li>
-<li>□ Misplaced organs</li>
-</ul>
-
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="ad">
-
-<p class="center largest">Agents</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp80" id="ad12" style="max-width: 21.875em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/ad12.jpg" alt="">
-</div>
-
-<p class="center larger">YE GODS!<br>
-<i>Some Summer
-Seller! Made $215
-today</i>—<i>Writes Bentley</i></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">The big opportunity of a generation—the one big chance
-for quick big profits to agents. Wonderful OLIVER
-Oil-Gas Burner turns any range into a Real Gas Stove—does
-away with dirty coal and wood. Burns 95% air, 5% oil.
-On and off at turn of valve. Every woman wants the Oliver for freedom
-from drudgery of roasting Summer Kitchens. Season starting.</p>
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="larger">FREE FORDS</span> J. Carnegey is making $1,000 profit a month—W. M. Russell. $650 a month—Berger.
-$250 a week! During the past two months we paid out over
-$135,000 in salesmen’s commissions! Oliver Burners sell themselves.
-Every demonstration a sale. Get your Free Territory and
-Free Sample Offer quick. Clean up big this Summer. Spare or full
-time. Free Fords to producers. Write or telegraph for full details.
-Address me personally.</p>
-
-<p class="right">B. M. Oliver, President</p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="larger">OLIVER</span> OIL-GAS BURNER &amp; MACHINE CO.<br>
-2416-R Oliver Bldg., St. Louis, Mo.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="ad">
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp87" id="ad13" style="max-width: 21.875em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/ad13.jpg" alt="">
-</div>
-
-<p class="center largest"><i>LEARN RADIO</i></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">Here’s your opportunity. Radio needs
-you. Win success in this fascinating field.
-Trained men in demand at highest salaries.
-Learn at home, in your spare time.</p>
-
-<p class="center largest">Be a Radio Expert</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">I will train you, quickly and easily to design,
-construct, install, operate, repair, maintain, and
-sell all forms of Radio apparatus. My new methods
-are the most successful in existence. Learn to earn</p>
-
-<p class="center larger">$1,800 to $10,000 a Year</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">FREE Wonderful, home-construction, tube
-receiving set, of latest design.
-Write for “Radio Facts” free. Engineer Mohaupt.</p>
-
-<p class="center">American Electrical Association<br>
-Dept. 176 4513 Ravenswood Ave., Chicago</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_117"></a>[117]</span></p>
-
-<div class="ad">
-
-<p class="center largest">How You Can Make Money
-In Your Spare Time</p>
-
-<p class="center larger">By Learning to Play Your Favorite Musical
-Instrument this New Easy Way</p>
-
-<div class="figright illowp75" id="ad14" style="max-width: 21.875em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/ad14.jpg" alt="">
-</div>
-
-<p>“I bought a house and a lot, and paid
-$1,100 toward it; all earned through teaching
-piano,” writes Mrs. Mary A. Olsen, 3715
-Wadsworth St., Los Angeles, Cal. “I would
-not take $1,000 for my financial and social
-gain through your lessons. I don’t know how
-you can give so much for so little. I think
-your method is just wonderful.”</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Olsen is only one of more than three
-hundred thousand men, women and young people
-who have become accomplished musicians
-through this wonderful new method. All the
-intricate “mysteries” of music have been
-reduced to a system of amazing simplicity.
-Every step is made as clear as A. B. C. You
-don’t have to know anything whatever about
-music. You learn to play your favorite instrument
-right in your own home, quickly,
-easily and without endless study and practice.
-Long before you now think it could ever be
-possible, you will actually play well enough to
-be in demand as a well-paid entertainer, teacher
-or musician.</p>
-
-<p>A delighted 17-year-old girl, Miss Jessie
-Theall of North Houston, Tex. writes, “My
-first six entertainments that I played the violin
-for, paid me $39.25 besides all the pleasure of
-playing for my friends.”</p>
-
-<p class="center larger">$10 to $40 in Two Hours</p>
-
-<p>A busy mother, Mrs. Anna M. Lewis of
-Northfield, Ohio, recently learned to play the
-violin in just the few odd moments she could
-spare from her household duties, and now earns
-many welcome dollars to help clothe and educate
-her four children. “At weddings and
-church socials I get from $10
-to $40 for a couple of hours
-playing,” she writes. “I am
-invited everywhere, and my
-home is so much happier.”</p>
-
-<p>The new way is fun—not
-drudgery. You’ll begin to play
-melodies almost from the start.
-You don’t have to pin yourself
-down to regular hours and
-regular classes. You practice
-whenever you can, and learn as
-quickly as you please.</p>
-
-<div class="figleft illowp66" id="ad15" style="max-width: 12.5em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/ad15.jpg" alt="">
-</div>
-
-<p class="center larger">Save Months of
-Time</p>
-
-<p>“I have learned to play
-better than many a conservatory
-student in easily one-eighth the time,”
-writes Miss Kitty Breany, 154 Warren St.,
-Paterson, N. J. “The lessons are so interesting
-that they seem like play. A lady I know spent
-$400 for a private teacher, but her playing cannot
-begin to compare with mine.”</p>
-
-<p>You can do what Miss Breany has
-done. Youngsters of from 10 to 12
-years have done it, and people as
-old as sixty have found new interest
-and enjoyment in learning to play
-a musical instrument. You don’t have to
-listen while others entertain. You can be the
-talented person who is the center of attraction;
-who holds the audience fascinated; who wins
-the applause—and the dollars.</p>
-
-<p class="center larger">Plays in Orchestra
-and Band</p>
-
-<p>“I am solo clarinet in a
-twenty-piece band, (mostly old
-players),” writes Gerald O.
-Cairus, 20 High St., Walton,
-N. Y. “Also am member of
-an eighteen-piece orchestra,
-whose director has studied in
-all the large conservatories of
-America and Germany. He
-was astonished when I told him
-how I learned to play.”</p>
-
-<p>“In three months I was
-playing saxophone in the High
-School orchestra. The fourth
-month I organized a profitable
-dance orchestra,” writes George
-Johnson, 402 Newton St., Salisbury, Md.
-“And now, at college, I play in concerts of
-the Musical Club in New York, Philadelphia,
-Atlantic City, etc.”</p>
-
-<p class="center larger">Three Months From Today
-You, Too, Can Play</p>
-
-<p>Is it the piano that you
-wish to play, or the organ,
-violin, guitar, harp or cello?
-Do you want to learn to sing
-from notes? Are you eager to
-play “jazz” on the banjo,
-clarinet, Saxophone, trombone,
-or the drum and traps? Does
-the cornet call to you, or the
-flute or piccolo? Would you
-love to learn the ukulele (the
-Hawaiian steel guitar)? Choose
-your favorite—and play it
-three months from today.</p>
-
-<p>You will learn by notes—the
-only practical way for you to learn. There are
-no “numbers” and no “tricks” in this marvelous
-method. You learn to read your notes
-just as you are able to read the letters that
-make a word, and you will be able to recognize
-and play them so that they
-will make a melody. You learn
-harmonies like you learn
-phrases and expressions of
-speech and you learn time like
-you learn pronunciation.</p>
-
-<div class="box">
-
-<p class="center larger">Learn to Play
-Any
-Instrument</p>
-
-<table>
-<tr>
-<td>
-<ul>
-<li>Piano</li>
-<li>Organ</li>
-<li>Violin</li>
-<li>Drums and Traps</li>
-<li>Banjo</li>
-<li>Tenor Banjo</li>
-<li>Mandolin</li>
-<li>Clarinet</li>
-<li>Flute</li>
-<li>Saxophone</li>
-<li>’Cello</li>
-</ul>
-</td>
-<td>
-<ul>
-<li>Harmony and Composition</li>
-<li>Sight Singing</li>
-<li>Guitar</li>
-<li>Ukulele</li>
-<li>Hawaiian Steel Guitar</li>
-<li>Harp</li>
-<li>Cornet</li>
-<li>Piccolo</li>
-<li>Trombone</li>
-<li>Voice and Speech Culture</li>
-<li>Automatic Finger Control</li>
-</ul>
-</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="center larger">Free Book Explains
-All About This New
-Method</p>
-
-<p>Send for this free, valuable
-book, “Music Lessons in Your
-Own Home.” It costs you
-nothing. You obligate yourself
-in no way whatever. Everyone
-interested in music ought to
-read the story of this wonderful
-new simplified method.</p>
-
-<p>It will tell you how you can make music a
-delightful hobby or a money-maker for your
-spare hours; how you can take the first steps to
-a profitable musical career if you are dissatisfied
-with your present life work; how you can
-be a social favorite, and go everywhere or have
-fun at home; how you can do these delightful
-things quickly, easily and at a cost so low
-that it will surprise you.</p>
-
-<p class="center larger">Special Short-Time Offer</p>
-
-<p>This Free Book also tells about a Special
-Short-time Offer now being made to music-lovers.
-Mail the coupon at once for your copy.
-Remember, it obligates you in no way whatever.
-It is FREE! Act now before the supply
-is exhausted!</p>
-
-<p class="center">U.S. SCHOOL OF MUSIC<br>
-406 Brunswick Building<br>
-New York City</p>
-
-<p class="center"><i>Please write Name and Address plainly so that
-there will be no difficulty in booklet reaching you.</i></p>
-
-<div class="coupon">
-
-<p class="center">U. S. SCHOOL OF MUSIC<br>
-406 Brunswick Bldg., New York City</p>
-
-<p>Please send me your free book, “Music
-Lessons in Your Own Home,” and particulars
-of your special offer. I am interested
-in the following course:</p>
-
-<div class="form">Name of Instrument or Course</div>
-
-<div class="form">Name</div>
-
-<p class="center smaller">(Please Write Plainly)</p>
-
-<div class="form">Address</div>
-
-<div class="form">City</div>
-
-<div class="form">State</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="center larger">Every Music Lover Should Have
-this Amazing FREE Book</p>
-
-<div class="figleft illowp54" id="ad16" style="max-width: 12.5em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/ad16.jpg" alt="">
-</div>
-
-<p>Hundreds of happy musicians all over America have helped
-to write this absorbing, inspiring book. You will read the fact-stories
-of dozens of people situated just as you are today.
-Their actual personal experiences are wonderful proofs to you
-that your success can be equally great. You will be amazed
-and delighted to see how marvelously the New Method has
-reduced the intricacies of music to such astonishing ease and
-simplicity. The book is FREE—but you should send for it right
-away before all copies may be gone!</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_118"></a>[118]</span></p>
-
-<div class="ad">
-
-<p class="center largest"><i><span class="smcap">Cook and Bake</span></i></p>
-
-<p class="center larger"><i>With Amazing
-New Invention</i></p>
-
-<div class="figright illowp90" id="ad17" style="max-width: 9.375em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/ad17.jpg" alt="">
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">No More Sweltering Kitchens in
-Summer—No More Fires to Build—No
-More Dirty Heavy Coal—No
-More Ashes—No more unsightly
-Scuttles—No More Smelly, Sooty Oil
-Stoves to Clutter Kitchens. No More
-Slavery to a Hot Kitchen Stove.</p>
-
-<p class="center larger"><i>Makes Your Range A Gas Stove</i></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">Here is the amazing new invention. The Oliver Oil-Gas
-Burner—that in one minute, makes your present coal or
-wood range into a real gas stove that turns on and off
-with a valve. Gives much or little heat—only when you
-want it—at a twist of your wrist. Just like using city gas.</p>
-
-<p class="center larger"><i>Wonderful Baking</i></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">Bake right in your
-good old oven—better
-and quicker than ever before. Don’t waste fuel and get yourself
-all out of sorts by nursing a hot fire all day just for
-cooking and baking. With this wonderful invention you
-simply turn a valve, strike a match, and light your fire.
-In a jiffy the oven is at a fine even temperature—any degree
-you want. Put in your roast or baking—put on your stew
-or vegetables. Go away and forget them. Come back when
-they are done, turn the valve—fire is out instantly—and
-you leave your kitchen cool and sweet all day long.</p>
-
-<p class="center larger"><i>Burns 95% Air, 5% Oil</i> Fits Any Stove</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">Mr. Oliver’s wonderful invention is made in sixteen models—fits
-any kind of cook stove or range without changes or
-drilling. You set it in your firebox in one minute. Presto!
-You have a gas stove. Absolutely
-safe, it lasts a lifetime. 150,000 in use.</p>
-
-<p class="center larger"><i>30 Days Free Trial</i></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">You don’t have to be satisfied with
-reading about the Oliver. You can
-test it for 30 days—bake with it in
-your own oven—on Mr. Oliver’s Free
-Trial Offer. Write at once—don’t delay—and
-you will be in time to receive
-Mr. Oliver’s Special Low Introductory
-Price and 30 Day Free Trial Offer,
-together with his attractive Free
-Booklet, “New Kind of Heat.” No obligation,
-send a postcard, now, before
-you turn the page. Know the blessing
-of this amazing invention.</p>
-
-<div class="box">
-
-<p class="center larger">AGENTS</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">Earn $40 to $50 a
-week spare time,
-$250 a week full
-time. Territory managers
-making $5,000
-to $15,000 a year.</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">I give Fords to my
-producers. Big Summer
-season is just
-starting. Address me
-personally, Mr. B. M.
-Oliver, Pres., at address
-shown below
-for sales plan and
-Exclusive Territory.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="center">OLIVER OIL-GAS BURNER &amp; MACHINE CO.,<br>
-2416-F Oliver Building. St. Louis, Mo.<br>
-Canadian Offices: 2416-F Webster Building, Toronto</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="ad">
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp52" id="ad18" style="max-width: 21.875em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/ad18.jpg" alt="">
-</div>
-
-<p class="center largest">2 TIRES FOR $9.95</p>
-
-<p class="center">(SIZE 28 × 3)</p>
-
-<p class="center larger">FREE TUBE WITH
-EACH TIRE</p>
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="larger">Standard Tire Prices Smashed Again!</span>—and
-some sensational cut, too! Think of it—two
-tires for almost the price of one and a FREE inner
-tube with each tire. <i>No double treads or sewed
-tires.</i> Thousands of customers are getting maximum
-mileage out of these tires, and you, too, can get up to</p>
-
-<p class="center largest">10,000 MILES</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">Here’s your opportunity—if you act at once. This is
-a special lot selected for this record-breaking sale.
-Order today—right now. They’re going fast.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><i>Compare These Amazing Reductions
-on Two Tires of Same Size</i></p>
-
-<table>
- <tr>
- <td>SIZE</td>
- <td class="tdr">1 TIRE</td>
- <td class="tdr">2 TIRES</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>28 × 3</td>
- <td class="tdr">$6.75</td>
- <td class="tdr">$9.95</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>30 × 3</td>
- <td class="tdr">7.25</td>
- <td class="tdr">11.95</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>30 × 3½</td>
- <td class="tdr">8.25</td>
- <td class="tdr">13.95</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>32 × 3½</td>
- <td class="tdr">9.45</td>
- <td class="tdr">15.95</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>31 × 4</td>
- <td class="tdr">10.65</td>
- <td class="tdr">17.45</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>32 × 4</td>
- <td class="tdr">11.85</td>
- <td class="tdr">19.75</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>33 × 4</td>
- <td class="tdr">12.45</td>
- <td class="tdr">20.90</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>34 × 4</td>
- <td class="tdr">13.25</td>
- <td class="tdr">21.95</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="center">Prices on larger sizes quoted on request. Prices f. o. b. Chicago.</p>
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="larger">SEND NO MONEY!</span>
-We ship subject to examination, by
-Express before payment of C. O. D.
-charge, or by Parcel Post after payment of C. O. D. charge.
-Examine tires on arrival, and if not absolutely satisfied,
-return same unused and your money will be promptly refunded.
-Specify straight side or clincher. ACT NOW.</p>
-
-<p class="center">ROCKWELL TIRE COMPANY<br>
-1506 S. Michigan Ave., Dept. 40-F Chicago, Ill.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="ad">
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp100" id="ad19" style="max-width: 21.875em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/ad19.jpg" alt="">
- <p class="caption">10 shot <span class="spacer">&#160;</span> 1 Year Guarantee</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center larger">32 Cal.
-Military
-Automatic</p>
-
-<p class="center larger">$9.75</p>
-
-<p class="center larger">Send No Money</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">Your opportunity to get
-a $25.00 regular brand
-new military blue steel Automatic for only $9.75.
-Never before sold near this price. Shoots 10 shots.
-Has double safety. Extra magazine free if you
-order at once. Shoots standard cartridges. Send
-no money. Order by number. Pay your postman
-prices plus postage on arrival.</p>
-
-<div class="box">
-
-<p class="center"><i>Free Catalog
-on request</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<table>
- <tr>
- <td>No. M120x—32 Cal. Military Model. Extra Magazine Free. $9.75</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>No. M110x—25 Cal. 7 shot Automatic 7.95</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="center">ONE YEAR GUARANTEE</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">Each automatic is sold with an ironclad guarantee of perfect service
-for one year or money back after examination if not satisfied.</p>
-
-<p class="center">PARAMOUNT TRADING CO., 34 W. 28th St., Dept. M, N.Y.C.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="ad">
-
-<p class="center largest">25 Song Parodies 25c</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp100" id="ad20" style="max-width: 21.875em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/ad20.jpg" alt="">
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">Be a parlor entertainer. Make a hit
-with the crowd. 25 parodies including
-“Georgette,” “Hot Lips,” “The Sheik,”
-“Three O’clock In The Morning,” “Tomorrow,”
-and all the big hits mailed on
-receipt of 25c in stamps, special get-acquainted
-price. TRUMAN BROWN, 6283
-Delmar, St. Louis, Mo.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="ad">
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp52" id="ad21" style="max-width: 21.875em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/ad21.jpg" alt="">
- <p class="caption">No. 77 X1 No. 77 X2 No. 77 X3</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center largest"><span class="u">Dazzling Kimberlites</span></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">Cannot be told from genuine diamonds. A new
-discovery makes Kimberlites the brightest, snappiest,
-most beautiful stones on the market. Full
-of rainbow fire and will stand any test. Ladies’
-Square Top and Basket Tiffany are set in pure
-Sterling Silver. Gents’ engraved Belcher in 14k
-shell, engraved green gold. State size and order by
-number. Exceptionally low prices to introduce.</p>
-
-<table>
- <tr>
- <td>Ladies’ Square Top</td>
- <td class="tdr">$2.85</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Ladies’ Basket Tiffany</td>
- <td class="tdr">2.60</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Gents’ Heavy Belcher</td>
- <td class="tdr">2.70</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="center larger"><i>SEND NO MONEY</i></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">Just pay the postman when your ring arrives, our
-special price, plus a few cents postage. Your money
-back at once if you are not highly pleased after
-examination. ORDER NOW. Novelty catalog free.</p>
-
-<p class="center">AMERICAN NOVELTY CO.<br>
-2455-57 Archer Avenue CHICAGO</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="ad">
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp100" id="ad22" style="max-width: 21.875em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/ad22.jpg" alt="">
-</div>
-
-<p class="center largest">SEXUAL KNOWLEDGE</p>
-
-<p class="center">320 PAGES, ILLUSTRATED, CLOTH</p>
-
-<p class="center">By Winfield Scott Hall, M. D., Ph. D.</p>
-
-<p class="center larger">SEX FACTS MADE PLAIN</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="max-width: 22em;">
-
-<p class="noindent">What every young man and<br>
-<span style="margin-left: 4em;">Every young woman should know;</span><br>
-What every young husband and<br>
-<span style="margin-left: 4em;">Every young wife should know;</span><br>
-What every parent should know.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="center smaller"><span class="larger">$1.00</span><br>
-POSTPAID</p>
-
-<p class="center">Mailed in
-plain wrapper.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><i>Table contents and commendations on request</i></p>
-
-<p class="center">AMERICAN PUB. CO., 677 Winston Bldg., Philadelphia</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_119"></a>[119]</span></p>
-
-<div class="ad">
-
-<p class="center largest">Free Proof</p>
-
-<p class="center larger">You Can Learn to Dance
-In One Evening at Home!</p>
-
-<p>Why be a wallflower? Why miss most of the real
-fun when you can so easily learn to dance in a
-single evening right in the privacy of your own home?</p>
-
-<div class="figright illowp52" id="ad23" style="max-width: 21.875em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/ad23.jpg" alt="">
- <p class="caption"><i>Aren’t they foolish to envy wonderful dancing
- ability when they could so easily and quickly learn to dance in their
- own home?</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Week end parties—little social affairs—formal
-and informal occasions—regular
-dances—the phonograph
-or orchestra going with toe-tickling
-music—couples whirling around, dancing
-the very latest steps—everybody happy,
-carefree, and having a fine time!</p>
-
-<p>It’s a shame for you not to know how to
-dance, when it is so easy to learn. Arthur
-Murray, America’s greatest dancing teacher,
-has perfected a wonderful new method that
-enables you to learn any of the very latest
-dances in a few minutes—and to learn all of
-them in a few hours.</p>
-
-<p>Even if you don’t know one step from
-another, you can very quickly learn to dance
-in a single evening through this method.
-You don’t need to leave your home to learn—you
-can master any dance in your own
-room after a few practice steps. And you
-can now prove it—at Arthur Murray’s expense.
-He will teach you to dance in one
-evening or your lessons won’t cost you a
-cent. Then, at the very next affair when
-dancing begins, you can step right out with
-absolute confidence that every movement
-you make is perfectly correct, whether you
-are dancing the Fox Trot, One
-Step, Waltz, or any of the
-newer steps.</p>
-
-<div class="box">
-
-<p class="center larger">Here’s What a Few Say:</p>
-
-<p>I am well satisfied that your way of teaching
-is best. I have taken lessons from dancing
-teachers in Huntington, W. Va., Chattanooga,
-Tenn., and Birmingham, Ala. Your instructions
-are better than the personal teachers, and thru
-your methods I am becoming a good dancer. I
-will do all in my power to get new pupils for
-you.</p>
-
-<p class="right">J. T. BERRY,<br>
-Anniston, Ala.</p>
-
-<p>I want to tell you how wonderful your course
-is. I was taught by other dancing teachers, but
-I prefer your lessons because I accomplished
-more and learned more quickly thru your lessons
-than by other teachers. I am now enjoying
-myself very much, and advise all those who
-want to know the correct way of dancing to
-take your lessons. I am enjoying many pleasant
-hours.</p>
-
-<p class="right">E. P. MORRIS,<br>
-3497 Elgin Ave.,<br>
-Winnipeg, Manitoba, Can.</p>
-
-<p>I am delighted with the lessons. People are
-amazed at the ease with which one grasps the
-idea from your directions. I feel grateful to
-you.</p>
-
-<p class="right">GRACE THREFALL<br>
-Guler, Wash.</p>
-
-<p>I have made use of all the instructions sent
-me and am well pleased with the course.</p>
-
-<p class="right">BEULAH ROGERS,<br>
-4471 Monroe Street, Chicago, Ill.</p>
-
-<p>Your course has given me a good knowledge
-of dancing. I am getting along fine.</p>
-
-<p class="right">WILLIAM KOLICH,<br>
-Elizabeth, N. J.</p>
-
-<p>I know your lessons pretty well. I attended
-a dance Thursday and got a compliment on my
-dancing. You know I never danced before and
-when I got into the ballroom I was the equal
-of them all. They sure were surprised.</p>
-
-<p class="right">ARMOND MAROHL,<br>
-Mayville, Wis.</p>
-
-<p>I must say that your dancing course is just
-simply great! Last night was the first time I
-danced. I even danced with the best dancers
-around here, and they all marveled at how well
-I danced.</p>
-
-<p class="right">HILDA WERTH,<br>
-Hampton, Neb.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="center larger">Learn Without Partner
-or Music</p>
-
-<div class="figleft illowp50" id="ad24" style="max-width: 12.5em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/ad24.jpg" alt="">
- <p class="caption"><i>This is Arthur Murray, Dancing instructor to the Vanderbilts and
- many other fashionable people. He has taught more than 90,000
- people how to dance, through his learn-at-home methods.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>With Arthur Murray’s
-remarkable
-correspondence
-method, you don’t
-need any one to explain
-the simple instructions—neither
-do you actually require
-music. After
-you have learned the
-steps alone in your
-own room, you can
-dance perfectly with
-any one. It will also
-be quite easy for you
-to dance in correct
-time on any floor to
-any orchestra or
-phonograph music.</p>
-
-<p>Arthur Murray is
-recognized as America’s
-foremost authority
-on social
-dancing. Such people
-as the Vanderbilts,
-Ex-Governor
-Locke Craig, of
-North Carolina, as
-well as scores of
-other socially prominent
-people, chose Mr. Murray as their
-dancing instructor. In fact, dancing teachers
-the world over take lessons from him.
-And more than 90,000 people have successfully
-learned to become wonderful dancers
-through his learn-at-home system.</p>
-
-<p class="center larger">Special Free Proof Offer</p>
-
-<p>Private instruction in Mr. Murray’s studio
-would cost you $10 for each lesson. But
-through his new method of teaching dancing
-in your own home, you get the same high-class
-instruction at a ridiculously low price.
-And if you aren’t delighted, it doesn’t cost
-you a penny.</p>
-
-<p>Here is Mr. Murray’s special offer—made
-for a limited time and the right is reserved
-to withdraw it at any time without notice.
-He will send you the following sixteen lessons
-for five days’ free trial.</p>
-
-<p>The Correct Dancing Position—How to
-Gain Confidence—How to Follow Successfully—The
-Art of Making Your Feet Look
-Attractive—The Correct Walk in the Fox
-Trot—The Basic Principles in Waltzing—How
-to Waltz Backward—The Secret of
-Leading—The Chasse in the Fox Trot—The
-Forward Waltz Step—How to Leave One
-Partner to Dance with Another—How to
-Learn and Also Teach Your Child to Dance—What
-the Advanced Dancer Should Know—How
-to Develop Your Sense of Rhythm—Etiquette
-of the Ballroom.</p>
-
-<p class="center larger">Send No Money—Not One Cent</p>
-
-<p>All you need to do to get these
-sixteen lessons is to simply fill in
-and mail the coupon and the complete
-sixteen lessons will be promptly
-sent. When the postman hands
-them to you, just deposit $1.00 with
-him, plus a few cents postage, in full
-payment. Then examine the system
-carefully for five days, follow the
-easy instructions and prove to yourself
-that you have found the quickest,
-easiest, most delightful method
-to learn to dance. If, within 5 days
-you desire to do so, return the course and
-your dollar will be promptly refunded to
-you. But if you decide to keep the course—as
-you surely will—it is yours without any
-further payment.</p>
-
-<p>You positively can not fail to become a
-perfect dancer if you follow the few easy
-instructions. In fact your satisfaction is
-guaranteed. Remember, you send no money
-in advance, just sign and mail the coupon
-and the complete sixteen-lesson course will
-come to you by return mail. But mail the
-coupon now—you may never see this offer
-again.</p>
-
-<p class="center">ARTHUR MURRAY<br>
-Studio 766 290 Broadway New York</p>
-
-<div class="coupon">
-
-<p class="center">ARTHUR MURRAY, Studio 766<br>
-290 Broadway, New York</p>
-
-<p>To prove that you can teach me to dance in one
-evening at home you may send the sixteen-lesson
-course and when the postman hands it to me I will
-deposit $1.00 with him (plus a few cents postage)
-in full payment. If within five days I decide to
-return the course I may do so and you will refund
-my money promptly and without question.</p>
-
-<div class="form">Name</div>
-
-<div class="form">Address</div>
-
-<div class="form">City</div>
-
-<div class="form">State</div>
-
-<div class="form">Would You Like to Teach Dancing?</div>
-
-<p><i>If apt to be out when postman calls you may send
-one dollar with coupon.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_120"></a>[120]</span></p>
-
-<div class="ad">
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp87" id="ad25" style="max-width: 21.875em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/ad25.jpg" alt="">
-</div>
-
-<p class="center larger">GET THIS WONDERFUL RING. If You
-Can Tell It From a Genuine Diamond Send It Back</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">These amazing, beautiful CORODITE diamonds positively match
-genuine diamonds in every way—same blazing flash and dazzling
-play of living rainbow fire. They, alone, stand the diamond tests,
-including terrific acid test of direct comparison. Life time experts
-need all their experience to see any difference. Prove this yourself.</p>
-
-<p class="center larger">Wear a Corodite Diamond 7 Days Free</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">Make this test. You risk nothing. Wear a genuine Corodite and
-a diamond side by side on the same finger for 7 days. If you
-or your friends can tell the difference, send it back; you won’t
-be out a single penny. That’s fair enough. If you keep the ring,
-the price printed here is all you pay. No installments. Remember,
-Corodites alone have the same cutting as genuine stones.</p>
-
-<table>
- <tr>
- <td>No. 3—Ladies’ Solitaire 14K Gold S. Ring</td>
- <td class="tdr">$2.84</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>No. 4—Ladies’ Hand-Carved Basket Setting, plat. finish</td>
- <td class="tdr">$3.96</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>No. 5—Ladies’ Solitaire Bridal Blossom Engraved</td>
- <td class="tdr">$3.54</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>No. 6—Gents’ Massive Hand-Carved Green Gold Gypsy</td>
- <td class="tdr">$4.39</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>No. 7—Gents’ Heavy Belcher 14K Gold S. Ring</td>
- <td class="tdr">$3.68</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="noindent">Carat size gems. Beautiful mountings of most modern design.
-Chains of gold or latest white platinum finish. Unqualified 20-year
-guarantee. Handsome art-leather case free with each ring.</p>
-
-<p class="center larger">SEND NO MONEY</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">Keep your money right at home. Just
-send name, address and number of ring
-wanted and size as shown by slip of paper, fitting end to end
-around finger joint. Your ring will come by return mail. When
-ring arrives deposit amount shown above with postman. If
-you decide not to keep ring after 7 days’ wear, send it back
-and your money will be immediately returned. Send today.</p>
-
-<p class="center">E. RICHWINE CO.<br>
-19 W. Jackson Blvd., Dept. 516 Chicago. Ill.<br>
-<i>Sole Importers Genuine Corodite Diamonds</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="ad">
-
-<p class="center largest">SEND NO MONEY</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp100" id="ad26" style="max-width: 18.75em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/ad26.jpg" alt="">
- <p class="caption">THE WESTERNER</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center">Regular Swing Out Hand
-Ejecting Left-Hand
-Wheeler Revolver</p>
-
-<table>
- <tr>
- <td>32.20 Cal.</td>
- <td>7 Shot</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>38 Cal.</td>
- <td>6 Shot</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="center larger">$14.50</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">A powerful seven-shot gun; made specially
-for Rangers, mountaineers and men
-working in unprotected places, requiring a safe and
-efficient weapon. Quick as a flash, with great penetrating
-power and true marksmanship. Carry this
-gun with you, and you will feel fully protected.
-Made of best blue steel, rifled barrel. Hammer
-with safety. Fires regular 32.20 or 38 caliber ammunition.</p>
-
-<p>SEND NO MONEY: Simply send us your name
-and address, stating caliber desired. We mail immediately.
-You pay postman on arrival, our low
-price plus few cents postage.</p>
-
-<p class="center">THE UNWIN TRADING CO.<br>
-55 Broadway New York</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="ad">
-
-<p class="center largest">SEX</p>
-
-<div class="figleft illowp85" id="ad27" style="max-width: 12.5em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/ad27.jpg" alt="WHERE KNOWLEDGE MEANS HAPPINESS">
- <p class="caption"><i>From “Where Knowledge Means Happiness” Copyright 1921</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Facts other sex books don’t
-dare discuss are plainly told in
-“Where Knowledge Means
-Happiness.” Creates a new kind
-of married love. One reader says:
-<i>It contains more real information
-than all other sex books put together.</i></p>
-
-<p>Sent in plain cover, <i>by return
-mail</i>, for $1.00 cash, money order,
-check or stamps.</p>
-
-<p class="center">DEPT. 228, COUNSEL SERVICE, 257 W. 71st St., New York</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="ad">
-
-<p class="center largest">Pimples</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">Your skin can be quickly cleared of Pimples, Blackheads,
-Acne Eruptions on the face or body, Barbers
-Itch, Eczema, Enlarged Pores, Oily or Shiny Skin.</p>
-
-<p class="center larger">FREE</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">Write today for my FREE Booklet, “<span class="smcap">A
-Clear-Tone Skin</span>,” telling how I cured
-myself after being afflicted for 15 years.
-$1000 cash says I can clear your skin of the above blemishes.</p>
-
-<p class="center">E. S. GIVENS, 137 Chemical Bldg., Kansas City. Mo.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="ad box">
-
-<p class="noindent">MEN over 18, willing to travel. Make secret investigations.
-Reports. Salary and expenses. Experience unnecessary.
-Write J. Ganor, Former Govt. Detective, St. Louis.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="ad">
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp95" id="ad28" style="max-width: 21.875em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/ad28.jpg" alt="Hundreds of Physicians
- recommend VI-REX VIOLET RAYS LETTERS ON REQUEST">
-</div>
-
-<p class="center larger">Health-Vigor<br>
-SUCCESS</p>
-
-<p class="center larger">FREE<br>
-BOOK</p>
-
-<p class="center larger"><span class="smaller"><i>By means of Marvelous</i></span><br>
-VIOLET RAYS</p>
-
-<p class="center larger"><i>Use it Yourself at Home</i></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">This wonderful FREE book describes the marvelous strange
-new force, simply tells how Violet Rays revitalizes every
-cell and works apparent miracles in overcoming pain
-and sickness. Pleasant to use in your home.</p>
-
-<p>Physicians and plain home folks explain how Violet Rays
-has made them well, strong and happy. 60 pages, illustrated,
-actual photographs, scientific charts and diagrams. It’s FREE</p>
-
-<p class="center larger">QUICK RESULTS—No Medicine</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">Violet Rays work quickly, you feel results at once, it’s scientific,
-goes after the cause. That’s why results are quick and
-permanent. Dr. Duncan, Kewanee, Ill. writes, “Violet Rays
-is the finest thing I ever used ... to relieve pain, treatments
-are so pleasant all my patients like it.” Use it yourself at
-home, save Doctor’s bills. See list of ailments Violet Rays
-treats successfully, and many others, not space to list. Success
-depends on health, this book shows the way.</p>
-
-<p class="center larger">Beauty Aid</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">Brings natural, magnetic beauty of
-health, no dieting, exercise or drugs.</p>
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-<p class="center larger">Earn Cash</p>
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-<p class="noindent">Men, women, without experience
-earn liberal profits in spare time
-showing Violet Rays to neighbors.
-Proves results first demonstration,
-sells on sight. Get attractive offer
-and wholesale prices now.</p>
-
-<p class="center">Send For FREE BOOK</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">Explains how Nikola Tesla discovered
-Violet Rays, how it works,
-why it heals. Tells what doctors
-and plain folks accomplish in conquering
-pain, disease and nervous
-troubles with Violet Rays.</p>
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-<p class="center">REVEALS MARVELOUS
-SCIENTIFIC DISCOVERY</p>
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-<p class="noindent">Shows charts of human body, explains
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