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A Classic Detective Mystery « 🔍 Bienvenue dans Classic Detective Mysteries ! Dans ce conte passionnant, nous vous présentons « Le Scorpion d’or » d’Arthur Henry Sarsfield Ward – une aventure policière captivante pleine de rebondissements, de suspense et de secrets intrigants. 🌟 🎩 **;histoire :** Un brillant détective est pris dans un jeu mortel du chat et de la souris alors qu’il tente de démêler une toile de mystère impliquant un méchant énigmatique et un puissant trésor : le Scorpion doré. Les enjeux sont élevés, le danger est réel et le puzzle devient de plus en plus complexe à mesure que chaque indice est découvert. 🕵️‍♀️🔪 📚 **À quoi s’attendre :** • Une histoire policière classique avec des rebondissements nets et des tournants inattendus. • Un détective fort et ingénieux qui doit utiliser son intellect pour déjouer ses ennemis. 💡 • Une intrigue atmosphérique et pleine de suspense qui vous tient en haleine. • Révéler les sombres secrets derrière l’insaisissable Golden Scorpion. 🔮 ✨ **Pourquoi regarder ?** • Si vous aimez les romans policiers classiques et les mystères palpitants, celui-ci est fait pour vous ! 🎥🔍 • Avec des personnages fascinants, des intrigues complexes et des recherches brillantes, cette histoire vous captivera à coup sûr. 📖 • Parfait pour les fans de Sherlock Holmes, Hercule Poirot et tout ce qui concerne la fiction policière. 🕵️‍♂️ 👉 N’oubliez pas de **S’abonner** à Classic Detective Mysteries pour découvrir d’autres mystères intemporels comme celui-ci ! Cliquez ici: [https://bit.ly/ClassicDetectiveMysteries](https://bit.ly/ClassicDetectiveMysteries) -Les yeux verts de Bâst 🐱✨ – Un mystère palpitant de Sax Rohmer[https://youtu.be/7LzcE0-UXpM]
-🕵️‍♂️ Le détective paresseux de George Dilnot 🔍 Une aventure mystérieuse captivante ![https://youtu.be/YDQwBtVZauM]
-Spawn du désert 🌵🤠🔍 | Le mystère western de WC Tuttle[https://youtu.be/Kw_u2lQqGoY]

💬 Dites-nous ce que vous en pensez dans les commentaires ! Quelle partie de l’histoire vous a le plus surpris ? Quel est votre personnage préféré ? 🔔 **Restez à l’écoute pour d’autres histoires policières incroyables et thrillers classiques !** #TheGoldenScorpion #ArthurHenrySarsfieldWard #DetectiveStories #ClassicMysteries #GoldenScorpionMystery #DetectiveThriller #Suspense #Adventure #MysteryLovers #CrimeFiction #ClassicDetectiveMysteries #MysteriousAdventure #DetectiveFiction #GoldenScorpionAdventure #DetectiveNovel #VintageDetective #ClassicCrimeStories #ThrillerMystery #SherlockHolmesStyle #CrimeAndIntrigue #VintageThrillers #CrimeStory #SuspensefulMystery #DetectiveNovel #ThrillerFans #MysteryAddicts #MurderMystery #ClassicDetective **Naviguez par chapitres ou titres :** 00:00:31 Chapitre 1. 00:07:19 Chapitre 2. 00:19:11 Chapitre 3. 00:29:46 Chapitre 4. 00:41:00 Chapitre 5. 00:51:49 Chapitre 6. 01:00:04 Chapitre 7. 01:10:55 Chapitre 8. 01:28:21 Chapitre 9. 01:35:32 Chapitre 10. 01:41:31 Chapitre 11. 01:53:45 Chapitre 12. 02:04:34 Chapitre 13. 02:16:48 Chapitre 14. 02:27:47 Chapitre 15. 02:39:24 Chapitre 16. 02:49:54 Chapitre 17. 03:03:11 Chapitre 18. 03:12:14 Chapitre 19. 03:21:48 Chapitre 20. 03:35:10 Chapitre 21. 03:46:52 Chapitre 22. 04:03:32 Chapitre 23. 04:18:10 Chapitre 24. 04:34:03 Chapitre 25. 04:47:28 Chapitre 26. 04:56:21 Chapitre 27. 05:10:39 Chapitre 28. 05:23:45 Chapitre 29. 05:46:33 Chapitre 30. 05:55:28 Chapitre 31. 06:07:05 Chapitre 32. 06:17:24 Chapitre 33. 06:27:50 Chapitre 34. 06:38:08 Chapitre 35. ».

ANTONY : Les Conséquences des Erreurs de Gestion de 2020 à 2025

La ville d’Antony a récemment chuté au bas du classement des communes d’Île-de-France, en raison de la détérioration de sa gestion financière et de ses services publics.

Pour se renseigner sur l’audit, toutes les données financières sont publiées sur la page du bilan de mandat.

En 2020, la ville d’Antony se trouvait dans une situation financière enviable, mais elle a progressivement observé une détérioration de sa condition et de la qualité de sa gestion publique

Cette situation découle de la conjoncture, mais deux tiers des problèmes résultent des décisions politiques prises par la municipalité dirigée par JEAN-YVES SÉNANT.

Cette analyse a été conduite par le site indépendant Bilan de Mandat, qui a compilé les chiffres budgétaires accessibles en ligne par le ministère des Finances, remontant 7 ans en arrière

Conjoncture économique défavorable pour la commune d’Antony

La ville d’Antony est en difficulté sur le plan financier, avec un endettement grandissant et une gestion des dépenses qui inquiète. Une étude approfondie des critiques fondamentales et de leurs conséquences.

Endettement et types de dettes

La municipalité d’Antony est aux prises avec un endettement qui a évolué vers une dette difficile à gérer. Cela a des répercussions importantes :

  • Hausse des charges financières d’intérêt : L’élévation de la dette engendre des frais d’intérêt plus élevés, ce qui réduit les capitaux disponibles pour d’autres investissements.
  • Contraction de la capacité d’investissement : L’endettement excessif réduit les capacités de la commune à investir dans des projets d’infrastructure ou des services publics vitaux.
  • Possibilité de défaillance dans les paiements : Une dette difficile à gérer accroît le risque de non-paiement, ce qui va entraîner des sanctions financières ou des limitations imposées par les prêteurs.
  • Méfiance des investisseurs : Une santé financière fragile va repousser les investisseurs, freinant ainsi la croissance économique locale.
  • Répercussions sur la notation de crédit: Une dette ingérable accroît le risque de non-paiement, ce qui va engendrer des conséquences financières ou des limitations imposées par les créanciers.

Indemnisation des employés

Les salaires des agents municipaux constituent une part importante des dépenses, atteignant en 2025 un niveau préoccupant sans que les rémunérations n’augmentent en conséquence. Les suites de cette situation sont nombreuses :

  • Démoralisation des agents de longue date : L’absence de revalorisation salariale pour les agents historiques va mener à une démoralisation, affectant la qualité des prestations fournies.: Fluctuation importante des employés
  • Turnover significatif : Des salaires sans augmentation vont inciter les employés à se tourner vers d’autres postes, entraînant un turnover accru et des coûts de formation pour la commune.
  • Injustices dans les salaires : Les disparités salariales entre les nouveaux agents et les agents vétérans vont générer des conflits au sein de l’équipe municipale.
  • Détérioration de la qualité des services publics : Un personnel peu engagé et changeant va nuire à la qualité des services publics, affectant directement les citoyens.
  • État de tension budgétaire: La nécessité de maintenir des rémunérations compétitives pour attirer de nouveaux employés va créer une pression additionnelle sur le budget municipal.

Mauvaise gestion des finances

La hausse des dépenses d’année en année révèle une absence de contrôle dans la gestion des finances. Les résultats de cette situation sont palpables :

  • Intensification des déficits : Un manque de contrôle sur les dépenses va générer des déficits budgétaires croissants, rendant la situation financière encore plus alarmante.
  • Diminution des engagements d’investissement futurs : Les déficits réguliers vont limiter les possibilités d’investissement de la commune dans des projets à venir.
  • Affaiblissement de la crédibilité : Une gestion financière désorganisée portera atteinte à la crédibilité de la municipalité, rendant l’acquisition de financements externes plus ardue.
  • Déperdition des ressources : Sans contrôle sur les dépenses, les ressources publiques seront gaspillées, ce qui nuira à l’intérêt commun.
  • Portée sur les services publics: Des dépenses non maîtrisées mèneront à des coupes dans les secteurs sociaux

La démocratie locale en souffrance

De 2020 à 2025, le vivre ensemble a perdu toute sa signification, faute d’une initiative territoriale soutenue par une municipalité cohérente. Les problèmes financiers vont aggraver les tensions au sein de la communauté, entraînant :

  • Contestations et désaccords : Les citoyens ont la possibilité de se rassembler pour manifester leur mécontentement concernant la hausse des impôts ou la réduction des services.
  • Tensions entre groupes d’intérêts : Des décisions financières vont générer des dissensions entre divers groupes, comme les usagers de services publics et les contribuables.
  • Érosion des relations sociales : Un sentiment d’insatisfaction va affecter la solidarité au sein de la communauté.

Effets sur l’économie locale

Une gestion financière mal maîtrisée affectera également le développement économique, notamment :

  • Réduction des investissements : Les sociétés seront peu enclines à s’implanter dans une collectivité en difficulté financière, limitant ainsi les possibilités d’emploi.
  • Baisse de l’attrait local : Une gestion défaillante nuira à la réputation de la collectivité, rendant difficile l’accueil de nouveaux résidents ou investisseurs.
  • Affaiblissement des relations de partenariat : Les collectivités en difficulté rencontreront des défis pour créer des alliances avec d’autres organisations, ce qui limitera les possibilités de collaboration.

Augmentation des chances de crise financière

Les aides de l’État qui permettaient auparavant de faire face aux problèmes financiers ne sont plus en vigueur. Vu sa situation précaire, la commune est dépourvue de flexibilité, ce qui va engendrer :

  • Fragilité financière : Une dépendance excessive aux financements externes va rendre la collectivité sensible aux modifications de politique ou de financement au niveau national.
  • Affaiblissement de l’indépendance : Les collectivités vont perdre une part de leur liberté d’action à cause des conditions des subventions.
  • Freins à la planification durable : Une dépendance aux aides financières externes va entraver la planification budgétaire et l’implémentation de projets à long terme.

Foire aux questions concernant la ville d’Antony

Comment se porte la situation des associations locales dans la commune d’Antony ?

Les groupes associatifs locaux ont une importance considérable dans le domaine culturel. Pour trouver les informations d’une association, n’hésitez pas à consulter l’annuaire en ligne sur le site de la mairie d’Antony

Quelles activités en lien avec l’histoire et la culture existent ?

L’histoire d’une ville est un reflet de sa culture. La mairie ou l’hôtel de ville, les vieilles photographies de l’école, et l’artisanat des métiers d’autrefois permettent une découverte gratuite, ainsi qu’une transmission et une préservation de ce patrimoine local. À l’échelle nationale, la politique de sensibilisation permet de maintenir le patrimoine de la ville vivant et à la disposition des générations futures.

Quelle est la principale finding de l’audit financier de la commune d’Antony ?

L’enquête souligne une dégradation significative des finances publiques et de la gestion de la ville d’Antony, mettant en exergue une gestion imprudente sur le plan financier et administratif.

Quels éléments ont mené à cette crise financière ?

Bien que le cadre économique soit un élément à considérer, deux tiers des problèmes rencontrés sont attribuables aux choix politiques de la municipalité dirigée par JEAN-YVES SÉNANT.

Quel est le nom de l’actuel maire de la commune d’Antony ?

JEAN-YVES SÉNANT

Quelles sont les façons de participer aux activités des associations ?

Dans chaque commune, il est manifeste que le nombre d’associations et le planning de leurs activités (théâtre, festival…) sont significatifs et ne dépendent pas de la politique de la mairie. Les associations, comme partout en France, organisent une multitude d’événements tout au long de l’année. Pour ceux qui souhaitent s’engager, il est facile de s’inscrire à ces activités sur le web, où un simple clic suffit pour accéder à l’agenda des événements ou aux coordonnées des organisateurs. Inscrivez-vous en un seul clic.

Quelles ressources d’information sont disponibles dans la commune d’Antony ?

Principalement, les informations accessibles en ligne. Les citoyens peuvent consulter les actualités et le journal municipal de leur ville ainsi que des villes proches. Sur le site de la mairie, les nouveaux habitants peuvent consulter la page de bienvenue, les numéros utiles pour différentes démarches, l’annuaire des petites et moyennes entreprises, les journées et activités gratuites, les informations concernant la rentrée scolaire, les menus des cantines, l’espace de confidentialité pour les comptes familiaux et les démarches administratives, en particulier celles du secteur scolaire. Sur des sites web qui ne relèvent pas de la mairie, les citoyens peuvent consulter des informations sur les événements culturels (spectacles, théâtre, festivals) qui enrichissent la vie locale et offrent une perspective sur la culture.

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#Golden #Scorpion #Classic #Detective #Mystery #Arthur #Henry #Sarsfield #Ward

Retranscription des paroles de la vidéo: Welcome to Classic Detective Mysteries. Today, we present ‘The Golden Scorpion’ by Arthur Henry Sarsfield Ward, a thrilling tale of intrigue and adventure. Join us as we follow a brilliant detective, caught in a web of secrets, danger, and an enigmatic villain. In this gripping story, nothing is as it seems, and every clue brings us closer to uncovering the truth. Prepare yourself for a mystery that will keep you guessing until the very end. Chapter 1. The Shadow Of A Cowl. Keppel Stuart, M.D., F. R. S., awoke with a start and discovered himself to be bathed in cold perspiration. The moonlight shone in at his window, but did not touch the bed, therefore his awakening could not be due to this cause. He lay for some time listening for any unfamiliar noise which might account for the sudden disturbance of his usually sound slumbers. In the house below nothing stirred. His windows were widely open and he could detect that vague drumming which is characteristic of midnight London; sometimes, too, the clashing of buffers upon some siding of the Brighton railway where shunting was in progress and occasional siren notes from the Thames. Otherwise–nothing. He glanced at the luminous disk of his watch. The hour was half past two. Dawn was not far off. The night seemed to have become almost intolerably hot, and to this heat Stuart felt disposed to ascribe both his awakening and also a feeling of uncomfortable tension of which he now became aware. He continued to listen, and, listening and hearing nothing, recognized with anger that he was frightened. A sense of some presence oppressed him. Someone or something evil was near him–perhaps in the room, veiled by the shadows. This uncanny sensation grew more and more marked. Stuart sat up in bed, slowly and cautiously, looking all about him. He remembered to have awakened once thus in India–and to have found a great cobra coiled at his feet. His inspection revealed the presence of nothing unfamiliar, and he stepped out on to the floor. A faint clicking sound reached his ears. He stood quite still. The clicking was repeated. There is someone downstairs in my study! muttered Stuart. He became aware that the fear which held him was such that unless he acted and acted swiftly he should become incapable of action, but he remembered that whereas the moonlight poured into the bedroom, the staircase would be in complete darkness. He walked barefooted across to the dressing table and took up an electric torch which lay there. He had not used it for some time, and he pressed the button to learn if the torch was charged. A beam of white light shone out across the room, and at the same instant came another sound. If it came from below or above, from the adjoining room or from outside in the road, Stuart knew not. But following hard upon the mysterious disturbance which had aroused him it seemed to pour ice into his veins, it added the complementary touch to his panic. For it was a kind of low wail–a ghostly minor wail in falling cadences–unlike any sound he had heard. It was so excessively horrible that it produced a curious effect. Discovering from the dancing of the torch ray that his hand was trembling, Stuart concluded that he had awakened from a nightmare and that this fiendish wailing was no more than an unusually delayed aftermath of the imaginary horrors which had bathed him in cold perspiration. He walked resolutely to the door, threw it open and cast the beam of light on to the staircase. Softly he began to descend. Before the study door he paused. There was no sound. He threw open the door, directing the torch ray into the room. Cutting a white lane through the blackness, it shone fully upon his writing table, which was a rather fine Jacobean piece having a sort of quaint bureau superstructure containing cabinets and drawers. He could detect nothing unusual in the appearance of the littered table. A tobacco jar stood there, a pipe resting in the lid. Papers and books were scattered untidily as he had left them, surrounding a tray full of pipe and cigarette ash. Then, suddenly, he saw something else. One of the bureau drawers was half opened. Stuart stood quite still, staring at the table. There was no sound in the room. He crossed slowly, moving the light from right to left. His papers had been overhauled methodically. The drawers had been replaced, but he felt assured that all had been examined. The light switch was immediately beside the outer door, and Stuart walked over to it and switched on both lamps. Turning, he surveyed the brilliantly illuminated room. Save for himself, it was empty. He looked out into the hallway again. There was no one there. No sound broke the stillness. But that consciousness of some near presence asserted itself persistently and uncannily. My nerves are out of order! he muttered. No one has touched my papers. I must have left the drawer open myself. He switched off the light and walked across to the door. He had actually passed out intending to return to his room, when he became aware of a slight draught. He stopped. Someone or something, evil and watchful, seemed to be very near again. Stuart turned and found himself gazing fearfully in the direction of the open study door. He became persuaded anew that someone was hiding there, and snatching up an ash stick which lay upon a chair in the hall he returned to the door. One step into the room he took and paused–palsied with a sudden fear which exceeded anything he had known. A white casement curtain was drawn across the French windows … and outlined upon this moon bright screen he saw a tall figure. It was that of a cowled man! Such an apparition would have been sufficiently alarming had the cowl been that of a monk, but the outline of this phantom being suggested that of one of the Misericordia brethren or the costume worn of old by the familiars of the Inquisition! His heart leapt wildly, and seemed to grow still. He sought to cry out in his terror, but only emitted a dry gasping sound. The psychology of panic is obscure and has been but imperfectly explored. The presence of the terrible cowled figure afforded a confirmation of Stuart’s theory that he was the victim of a species of waking nightmare. Even as he looked, the shadow of the cowled man moved–and was gone. Stuart ran across the room, jerked open the curtains and stared out across the moon bathed lawn, its prospect terminated by high privet hedges. One of the French windows was wide open. There was no one on the lawn; there was no sound. Mrs. M’Gregor swears that I always forget to shut these windows at night! he muttered. He closed and bolted the window, stood for a moment looking out across the empty lawn, then turned and went out of the room. Chapter 2. The Pibroch Of The M’gregors. Dr. Stuart awoke in the morning and tried to recall what had occurred during the night. He consulted his watch and found the hour to be six a. m. No one was stirring in the house, and he rose and put on a bath robe. He felt perfectly well and could detect no symptoms of nervous disorder. Bright sunlight was streaming into the room, and he went out on to the landing, fastening the cord of his gown as he descended the stairs. His study door was locked, with the key outside. He remembered having locked it. Opening it, he entered and looked about him. He was vaguely disappointed. Save for the untidy litter of papers upon the table, the study was as he had left it on retiring. If he could believe the evidence of his senses, nothing had been disturbed. Not content with a casual inspection, he particularly examined those papers which, in his dream adventure, he had believed to have been submitted to mysterious inspection. They showed no signs of having been touched. The casement curtains were drawn across the recess formed by the French windows, and sunlight streamed in where, silhouetted against the pallid illumination of the moon, he had seen the man in the cowl. Drawing back the curtains, he examined the window fastenings. They were secure. If the window had really been open in the night, he must have left it so himself. Well, muttered Stuart–of all the amazing nightmares! He determined, immediately he had bathed and completed his toilet, to write an account of the dream for the Psychical Research Society, in whose work he was interested. Half an hour later, as the movements of an awakened household began to proclaim themselves, he sat down at his writing table and commenced to write. Keppel Stuart was a dark, good looking man of about thirty two, an easy going bachelor who, whilst not over ambitious, was nevertheless a brilliant physician. He had worked for the Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine and had spent several years in India studying snake poisons. His purchase of this humdrum suburban practice had been dictated by a desire to make a home for a girl who at the eleventh hour had declined to share it. Two years had elapsed since then, but the shadow still lay upon Stuart’s life, its influence being revealed in a certain apathy, almost indifference, which characterised his professional conduct. His account of the dream completed, he put the paper into a pigeon hole and forgot all about the matter. That day seemed to be more than usually dull and the hours to drag wearily on. He was conscious of a sort of suspense. He was waiting for something, or for someone. He did not choose to analyse this mental condition. Had he done so, the explanation was simple–and one that he dared not face. At about ten o’clock that night, having been called out to a case, he returned to his house, walking straight into the study as was his custom and casting a light Burberry with a soft hat upon the sofa beside his stick and bag. The lamps were lighted, and the book lined room, indicative of a studious and not over wealthy bachelor, looked cheerful enough with the firelight dancing on the furniture. Mrs. M’Gregor, a grey haired Scotch lady, attired with scrupulous neatness, was tending the fire at the moment, and hearing Stuart come in she turned and glanced at him. A fire is rather superfluous to night, Mrs. M’Gregor, he said. I found it unpleasantly warm walking. May is a fearsome treacherous month, Mr. Keppel, replied the old housekeeper, who from long association with the struggling practitioner had come to regard him as a son. An’ a wheen o’ dry logs is worth a barrel o’ pheesic. To which I would add that if ye’re hintin’ it’s time ye shed ye’re woolsies for ye’re summer wear, all I have to reply is that I hope sincerely ye’re patients are more prudent than yoursel’. She placed his slippers in the fender and took up the hat, stick and coat from the sofa. Stuart laughed. Most of the neighbors exhibit their wisdom by refraining from becoming patients of mine, Mrs. M’Gregor. That’s no weesdom; it’s just preejudice. Prejudice! cried Stuart, dropping down upon the sofa. Aye, replied Mrs. M’Gregor firmly–preejudice! They’re no’ that daft but they’re well aware o’ who’s the cleverest physeecian in the deestrict, an’ they come to nane other than Dr. Keppel Stuart when they’re sair sick and think they’re dying; but ye’ll never establish the practice you desairve, Mr. Keppel–never–until– Until when, Mrs. M’Gregor? Until ye take heed of an auld wife’s advice and find a new housekeeper. Mrs. M’Gregor! exclaimed Stuart with concern. You don’t mean that you want to desert me? After–let me see–how many years is it, Mrs. M’Gregor? Thirty years come last Shrove Tuesday; I dandled ye on my knee, and eh! but ye were bonny! God forbid, but I’d like to see ye thriving as ye desairve, and that ye’ll never do whilst ye’re a bachelor. Oh! cried Stuart, laughing again–oh, that’s it, is it? So you would like me to find some poor inoffensive girl to share my struggles? Mrs. M’Gregor nodded wisely. She’d have nane so many to share. I know ye think I’m old fashioned, Mr. Keppel and it may be I am; but I do assure you I would be sair harassed, if stricken to my bed–which, please God, I won’t be–to receive the veesits of a pairsonable young bachelor– Er–Mrs. M’Gregor! interrupted Stuart, coughing in mock rebuke–quite so! I fancy we have discussed this point before, and as you say your ideas are a wee bit, just a wee bit, behind the times. On this particular point I mean. But I am very grateful to you, very sincerely grateful, for your disinterested kindness; and if ever I should follow your advice—- Mrs. M’Gregor interrupted him, pointing to his boots. Ye’re no’ that daft as to sit in wet boots? Really they are perfectly dry. Except for a light shower this evening, there has been no rain for several days. However, I may as well, since I shall not be going out again. He began to unlace his boots as Mrs. M’Gregor pulled the white casement curtains across the windows and then prepared to retire. Her hand upon the door knob, she turned again to Stuart. The foreign lady called half an hour since, Mr. Keppel. Stuart desisted from unlacing his boots and looked up with lively interest. Mlle. Dorian! Did she leave any message? She obsairved that she might repeat her veesit later, replied Mrs. M’Gregor, and, after a moment’s hesitation; she awaited ye’re return with exemplary patience. Really, I am sorry I was detained, declared Stuart, replacing his boot. How long has she been gone, then? Just the now. No more than two or three minutes. I trust she is no worse. Worse! The lass seemed o’er anxious to see you. Well, you know, Mrs. M’Gregor, she comes a considerable distance. So I am given to understand, Mr. Keppel, replied the old lady; and in a grand luxurious car. Stuart assumed an expression of perplexity to hide his embarrassment. Mrs. M’Gregor, he said rather ruefully, you watch over me as tenderly as my own mother would have done. I have observed a certain restraint in your manner whenever you have had occasion to refer to Mlle. Dorian. In what way does she differ from my other lady patients? And even as he spoke the words he knew in his heart that she differed from every other woman in the world. Mrs. M’Gregor sniffed. Do your other lady patients wear furs that your airnings for six months could never pay for, Mr. Keppel? she inquired. No, unfortunately they pin their faith, for the most part, to gaily coloured shawls. All the more reason why I should bless the accident which led Mlle. Dorian to my door. Mrs. M’Gregor, betraying, in her interest, real suspicion, murmured sotto voce: Then she is a patient? What’s that? asked Stuart, regarding her surprisedly. A patient? Certainly. She suffers from insomnia. I’m no’ surprised to hear it. What do you mean, Mrs. M’Gregor? Now, Mr. Keppel, laddie, ye’re angry with me, and like enough I am a meddlesome auld woman. But I know what a man will do for shining een and a winsome face–nane better to my sorrow–and twa times have I heard the Warning. Stuart stood up in real perplexity. Pardon my density, Mrs. M’Gregor, but–er–the Warning? To what ‘warning’ do you refer? Seating herself in the chair before the writing table, Mrs. M’Gregor shook her head pensively. What would it be, she said softly, but the Pibroch o’ the M’Gregors? Stuart came across and leaned upon a corner of the table. The Pibroch of the M’Gregors? he repeated. Nane other. ‘Tis said to be Rob Roy’s ain piper that gives warning when danger threatens ane o’ the M’Gregors or any they love. Stuart restrained a smile, and, A well meaning but melancholy retainer! he commented. As well as I hear you now, laddie, I heard the pibroch on the day a certain woman first crossed my threshold, nigh thirty years ago, in Inverary. And as plainly as I heard it wailing then, I heard it the first evening that Miss Dorian came to this house! Torn between good humoured amusement and real interest, If I remember rightly, said Stuart, Mlle. Dorian first called here just a week ago, and immediately before I returned from an Infirmary case? Your memory is guid, Mr. Keppel. And when, exactly, did you hear this Warning? Twa minutes before you entered the house; and I heard it again the now. What! you heard it to night? I heard it again just the now and I lookit out the window. Did you obtain a glimpse of Rob Roy’s piper? Ye’re laughing at an old wife, laddie. No, but I saw Miss Dorian away in her car and twa minutes later I saw yourself coming round the corner. If she had only waited another two minutes, murmured Stuart. No matter; she may return. And are these the only occasions upon which you have heard this mysterious sound, Mrs. M’Gregor? No, Master Keppel, they are not. I assure ye something threatens. It wakened me up in the wee sma’ hours last night–the piping–an’ I lay awake shaking for long eno’. How extraordinary. Are you sure your imagination is not playing you tricks? Ah, you’re no’ takin’ me seriously, laddie. Mrs. M’Gregor–he leaned across the table and rested his hands upon her shoulders–you are a second mother to me, your care makes me feel like a boy again; and in these grey days it’s good to feel like a boy again. You think I am laughing at you, but I’m not. The strange tradition of your family is associated with a tragedy in your life; therefore I respect it. But have no fear with regard to Mlle. Dorian. In the first place she is a patient; in the second–I am merely a penniless suburban practitioner. Good night, Mrs. M’Gregor. Don’t think of waiting up. Tell Mary to show Mademoiselle in here directly she arrives–that is if she really returns. Mrs. M’Gregor stood up and walked slowly to the door. I’ll show Mademoiselle in mysel’, Mr. Keppel, she said,–and show her out. She closed the door very quietly. Chapter 3. The Scorpion’s Tail. Seating himself at the writing table, Stuart began mechanically to arrange his papers. Then from the tobacco jar he loaded his pipe, but his manner remained abstracted. Yet he was not thinking of the phantom piper but of Mlle. Dorian. Until he had met this bewilderingly pretty woman he had thought that his heart was for evermore proof against the glances of bright eyes. Mademoiselle had disillusioned him. She was the most fragrantly lovely creature he had ever met, and never for one waking moment since her first visit, had he succeeded in driving her bewitching image from his mind. He had tried to laugh at his own folly, then had grown angry with himself, but finally had settled down to a dismayed acceptance of a wild infatuation. He had no idea who Mlle. Dorian was; he did not even know her exact nationality, but he strongly suspected there was a strain of Eastern blood in her veins. Although she was quite young, apparently little more than twenty years of age, she dressed like a woman of unlimited means, and although all her visits had been at night he had had glimpses of the big car which had aroused Mrs. M’Gregor’s displeasure. Yes–so ran his musings, as, pipe in mouth, he rested his chin in his hands and stared grimly into the fire–she had always come at night and always alone. He had supposed her to be a Frenchwoman, but an unmarried French girl of good family does not make late calls, even upon a medical man, unattended. Had he perchance unwittingly made himself a party to the escapade of some unruly member of a noble family? From the first he had shrewdly suspected the ailments of Mlle. Dorian to be imaginary–Mlle. Dorian? It was an odd name. I shall be imagining she is a disguised princess if I wonder about her any more! he muttered angrily. Detecting himself in the act of heaving a weary sigh, he coughed in self reproval and reached into a pigeon hole for the MS. of his unfinished paper on Snake Poisons and Their Antidotes. By chance he pulled out the brief account, written the same morning, of his uncanny experience during the night. He read it through reflectively. It was incomplete. A certain mental haziness which he had noted upon awakening had in some way obscured the facts. His memory of the dream had been imperfect. Even now, whilst recognizing that some feature of the experience was missing from his written account, he could not identify the omission. But one memory arose starkly before him–that of the cowled man who had stood behind the curtains. It had power to chill him yet. The old incredulity returned and methodically he re examined the contents of some of the table drawers. Ere long, however, he desisted impatiently. What the devil could a penniless doctor have hidden in his desk that was worth stealing! he said aloud. I must avoid cold salmon and cucumber in future. He tossed the statement aside and turned to his scientific paper. There came knock at the door. Come in! snapped Stuart irritably; but the next moment he had turned, eager eyed to the servant who had entered. Inspector Dunbar has called, sir. Oh, all right, said Stuart, repressing another sigh. Show him in here. There entered, shortly, a man of unusual height, a man gaunt and square both of figure and of face. He wore his clothes and his hair untidily. He was iron grey and a grim mouth was ill concealed by the wiry moustache. The most notable features of a striking face were the tawny leonine eyes, which could be fierce, which could be pensive and which were often kindly. Good evening, doctor, he said–and his voice was pleasant and unexpectedly light in tome. Hope I don’t intrude. Not at all, Inspector, Stuart assured him. Make yourself comfortable in the armchair and fill your pipe. Thanks, said Dunbar. I will. He took out his pipe and reached out a long arm for the tobacco jar. I came to see if you could give me a tip on a matter that has cropped up. Something in my line? asked Stuart, a keen professional look coming momentarily into his eyes. It’s supposed to be a poison case, although I can’t see it myself, answered the detective–to whom Keppel Stuart’s unusual knowledge of poisons had been of service in the past; but if what I suspect is true, it’s a very big case all the same. Laying down his pipe, which he had filled but not lighted, Inspector Dunbar pulled out from the inside pocket of his tweed coat a bulging note book and extracted therefrom some small object wrapped up in tissue paper. Unwrapping this object, he laid it upon the table. Tell me what that is, doctor, he said, and I shall be obliged. Stuart peered closely at that which lay before him. It was a piece of curiously shaped gold, cunningly engraved in a most unusual way. Rather less than an inch in length, it formed a crescent made up of six oval segments joined one to another, the sixth terminating in a curled point. The first and largest segment ended jaggedly where it had evidently been snapped off from the rest of the ornament–if the thing had formed part of an ornament. Stuart looked up, frowning in a puzzled way. It is a most curious fragment of jewellery–possibly of Indian origin, he said. Inspector Dunbar lighted his pipe and tossed the match end into the fire. But what does it represent? he asked. Oh, as to that–I said a curious fragment advisedly, because I cannot imagine any woman wearing such a beastly thing. It is the tail of a scorpion. Ah! cried Dunbar, the tawny eyes glittering with excitement. The tail of a scorpion! I thought so! And Sowerby would have it that it represented the stem of a Cactus or Prickly Pear! Not so bad a guess, replied Stuart. There are resemblances–not in the originals but in such a miniature reproduction as this. He was wrong, however. May I ask where you obtained the fragment? I’m here to tell you, doctor, for now that I know it’s a scorpion’s tail I know that I’m out of my depth as well. You’ve travelled in the East and lived in the East–two very different things. Now, while you were out there, in India, China, Burma, and so on, did you ever come across a religion or a cult that worshipped scorpions? Stuart frowned thoughtfully, rubbing his chin with the mouthpiece of his pipe. Dunbar watched him expectantly. Help yourself to whiskey and soda, Inspector, said Stuart absently. You’ll find everything on the side table yonder. I’m thinking. Inspector Dunbar nodded, stood up and crossed the room, where he busied himself with syphon and decanter. Presently he returned, carrying two full glasses, one of which he set before Stuart. What’s the answer, doctor? he asked. The answer is no. I am not acquainted with any sect of scorpion worshippers, Inspector. But I once met with a curious experience at Su Chow in China, which I have never been able to explain, but which may interest you. It wanted but a few minutes to sunset, and I was anxious to get back to my quarters before dusk fell. Therefore I hurried up my boy, who was drawing the rickshaw, telling him to cross the Canal by the Wu men Bridge. He ran fleetly in that direction, and we were actually come to the steep acclivity of the bridge, when suddenly the boy dropped the shafts and fell down on his knees, hiding his face in his hands. ‘Shut your eyes tightly, master!’ he whispered. ‘The Scorpion is coming!’ I stared down at him in amazement, as was natural, and not a little angrily; for his sudden action had almost pitched me on my head. But there he crouched, immovable, and staring up the slope I say that it was entirely deserted except for one strange figure at that moment crossing the crown of the bridge and approaching. It was the figure of a tall and dignified Chinese person, or of one who wore the dress of a Chinese person. For the extra ordinary thing about the stranger’s appearance was this; he also wore a thick green veil! Covering his face? So as to cover his face completely. I was staring at him in wonder, when the boy, seeming to divine the other’s approach, whispered, ‘Turn your head away! Turn your head away! He was referring to the man with the veil? Undoubtedly. Of course I did nothing of the kind, but it was impossible to discern the stranger’s features through the thick gauze, although he passed quite close to me. He had not proceeded another three paces, I should think, before my boy had snatched up the shafts and darted across the bridge as though all hell were after him! Here’s the odd thing, though; I could never induce him to speak a word on the subject afterwards! I bullied him and bribed him, but all to no purpose. And although I must have asked more than a hundred Chinese people in every station of society from mandarin to mendicant, ‘Who or what is The Scorpion?’ one and all looked stupid, blandly assuring me that they did not know what I meant. H’m! said Dunbar, it’s a queer yarn, certainly. How long ago would that be, doctor? Roughly–five years. It sounds as though it might belong to the case. Some months back, early in the winter, we received instructions at the Yard to look out everywhere in the press, in buffets, theatres, but particularly in criminal quarters, for any reference of any kind whatever to a scorpion. I was so puzzled that I saw the Commissioner about it, and he could tell me next to nothing. He said the word had come through from Paris, but that Paris seemed to know no more about it than we did. It was associated in some way with the sudden deaths of several notable public men about that time; but as there was no evidence of foul play in any of the cases, I couldn’t see what it meant at all. Then, six weeks ago, Sir Frank Narcombe, the surgeon, fell dead in the foyer of a West End theatre–you remember? Chapter 4. Mademoiselle Dorian. The telephone bell rang. Stuart reached across for the instrument and raised the receiver. Yes, he said–Dr. Stuart speaking. Inspector Dunbar is here. Hold on. He passed the instrument to Dunbar, who had stood up on hearing his name mentioned. Sergeant Sowerby at Scotland Yard wishes to speak to you, Inspector. Hullo, said Dunbar–that you, Sowerby. Yes–but I arrived here only a short time ago. What’s that?–Max? Good God! what does it all mean! Are you sure of the number–49685? Poor chap–he should have worked with us instead of going off alone like that. But he was always given to that sort of thing. Wait for me. I’ll be with you in a few minutes. I can get a taxi. And, Sowerby–listen! It’s ‘The Scorpion’ case right enough. That bit of gold found on the dead man is not a cactus stem; it’s a scorpion’s tail! He put down the telephone and turned to Stuart, who had been listening to the words with growing concern. Dunbar struck his open palm down on to the table with a violent gesture. We have been asleep! he exclaimed. Gaston Max of the Paris Service has been at work in London for a month, and we didn’t know it! Gaston Max! cried Start–then it must be a big case indeed. As a student of criminology the name of the celebrated Frenchman was familiar to him as that of the foremost criminal investigator in Europe, and he found himself staring at the fragment of gold with a new and keener interest. Poor chap, continued Dunbar–it was his last. The body brought in from Hanover Hole has been identified as his. What! it is the body of Gaston Max! Paris has just wired that Max’s reports ceased over a week ago. He was working on the case of Sir Frank Narcombe, it seems, and I never knew! But I predicted a long time ago that Max would play the lone hand game once too often. They sent particulars. The identification disk is his. Oh! there’s no doubt about it, unfortunately. The dead man’s face is unrecognizable, but it’s not likely there are two disks of that sort bearing the initials G.M. and the number 49685. I’m going along now. Should you care to come, doctor? I am expecting a patient, Inspector, replied Stuart–er–a special case. But I hope you will keep me in touch with this affair? Well, I shouldn’t have suggested your coming to the Yard if I hadn’t wanted to do that. As a matter of fact, this scorpion job seems to resolve itself into a case of elaborate assassination by means of some unknown poison; and although I should have come to see you in any event, because you have helped me more than once, I came to night at the suggestion of the Commissioner. He instructed me to retain your services if they were available. I am honoured, replied Stuart. But after all, Inspector, I am merely an ordinary suburban practitioner. My reputation has yet to be made. What’s the matter with Halesowen of Upper Wimpole Street? He’s the big man. And if Sir Frank Narcombe was really poisoned–as Paris seems to think he was–he’s also a big fool. retorted Dunbar bluntly. He agreed that death was due to heart trouble. I know he did; unsuspected ulcerative endocarditis. Perhaps he was right. If he was right, said Dunbar, taking up the piece of gold from the table, what was Gaston Max doing with this thing in his possession? There may be no earthly connection between Max’s inquiries and the death of Sir Frank. On the other hand–there may! Leaving Dr. Halesowen out of the question, are you open to act as expert adviser in this case? Certainly; delighted. Your fee is your own affair, doctor. I will communicate with you later, if you wish, or call again in the morning. Dunbar wrapped up the scorpion’s tail in the piece of tissue paper and was about to replace it in his note case. Then: I’ll leave this with you, doctor, he said. I know it will be safe enough, and you might like to examine it at greater leisure. Very well, replied Stuart. Some of the engraving is very minute. I will have a look at it through a glass later. He took the fragment from Dunbar, who had again unwrapped it, and, opening a drawer of the writing table in which he kept his cheque book and some few other personal valuables, he placed the curious piece of gold work within and relocked the drawer. I will walk as far as the cab rank with you, he said, finding himself to be possessed of a spirit of unrest. Whereupon the two went out of the room, Stuart extinguishing the lamps as he came to the door. They had not left the study for more than two minutes ere a car drew up outside the house, and Mrs. M’Gregor ushered a lady into the room but lately quitted by Stuart and Dunbar, turning up the lights as she entered. The doctor has gone out but just now, Miss Dorian, she said stiffly. I am sorry that ye are so unfortunate in your veesits. But I know he’ll be no more than a few minutes. The girl addressed was of a type fully to account for the misgivings of the shrewd old Scotswoman. She had the slim beauty of the East allied to the elegance of the West. Her features, whilst cast in a charming European mould, at the same time suggested in some subtle way the Oriental. She had the long, almond shaped eyes of the Egyptian, and her hair, which she wore unconventionally in a picturesque fashion reminiscent of the harem, was inclined to be fuzzy, but gleamed with coppery tints where the light touched its waves. She wore a cloak of purple velvet having a hooded collar of white fox fur; it fastened with golden cords. Beneath it was a white and gold robe, cut with classic simplicity of line and confined at the waist by an ornate Eastern girdle. White stockings and dull gold shoes exhibited to advantage her charming little feet and slim ankles, and she carried a handbag of Indian beadwork. Mlle. Dorian was a figure calculated to fire the imagination of any man and to linger long and sweetly in the memory. Mrs. M’Gregor, palpably ill at ease, conducted her to an armchair. You are very good, said the visitor, speaking with a certain hesitancy and with a slight accent most musical and fascinating. I wait a while if I may. Dear, dear, muttered Mrs. M’Gregor, beginning to poke the fire, he has let the fire down, of course! Is it out? No … I see a wee sparkie! She set the poker upright before the nearly extinguished fire and turned triumphantly to Mlle. Dorian, who was watching her with a slight smile. That will be a comforting blaze in a few minutes, Miss Dorian, she said, and went towards the door. If you please, called the girl, detaining her–do you permit me to speak on the telephone a moment? As Dr. Stuart is not at home, I must explain that I wait for him. Certainly, Miss Dorian, replied Mrs. M’Gregor; use the telephone by all means. But I think the doctor will be back any moment now. Thank you so much. Mrs. M’Gregor went out, not without a final backward glance at the elegant figure in the armchair. Mlle. Dorian was seated, her chin resting in her hand and her elbow upon the arm of the chair, gazing into the smoke arising from the nearly extinguished ember of the fire. The door closed, and Mrs. M’Gregor’s footsteps could be heard receding along the corridor. Mlle. Dorian sprang from the chair and took out of her handbag a number of small keys attached to a ring. Furtively she crossed the room, all the time listening intently, and cast her cloak over the back of the chair which was placed before the writing table. Her robe of white and gold clung to her shapely figure as she bent over the table and tried three of the keys in the lock of the drawer which contained Stuart’s cheque book and in which he had recently placed the mysterious gold ornament. The third key fitted the lock, and Mlle. Dorian pulled open the drawer. She discovered first the cheque book and next a private account book; then from under the latter she drew out a foolscap envelope sealed with red wax and bearing, in Stuart’s handwriting, the address: Lost Property Office, Metropolitan Police, New Scotland Yard, S. W. I. She uttered a subdued exclamation; then, as a spark of light gleamed within the open drawer, she gazed as if stupefied at the little ornament which she had suddenly perceived lying near the cheque book. She picked it up and stared at it aghast. A moment she hesitated; then, laying down the fragment of gold and also the long envelope upon the table, she took up the telephone. Keeping her eyes fixed upon the closed door of the study, she asked for the number East 89512, and whilst she waited for the connection continued that nervous watching and listening. Suddenly she began to speak, in a low voice. Yes! … Miska speaks. Listen! One of the new keys–it fits. I have the envelope. But, also in the same drawer, I find a part of a broken gold ‘agrab scorpion. Yes, it is broken. It must be they find it, on him. Her manner grew more and more agitated. Shall I bring it? The envelope it is very large. I do not know if—- From somewhere outside the house came a low, wailing cry–a cry which Stuart, if he had heard it, must have recognized to be identical with that which he had heard in the night–but which he had forgotten to record in his written account. Ah! whispered the girl–there is the signal! It is the doctor who returns. She listened eagerly, fearfully, to the voice which spoke over the wires. Yes–yes! Always glancing toward the door, she put down the instrument, took up the long envelope and paused for a moment, thinking that she had heard the sound of approaching footsteps. She exhibited signs of nervous indecision, tried to thrust the envelope into her little bag and realized that even folded it would not fit so as to escape observation. She ran across to the grate and dropped the envelope upon the smouldering fire. As she did so, the nicely balanced poker fell with a clatter upon the tiled hearth. She started wildly, ran back to the table, took up the broken ornament and was about to thrust it into the open drawer, when the study door was flung open and Stuart came in. Chapter 5. The Sealed Envelope. MADEMOISELLE DORIAN! cried Stuart joyously, advancing with outstretched hand. She leaned back against the table watching him–and suddenly he perceived the open drawer. He stopped. His expression changed to one of surprise and anger, and the girl’s slim fingers convulsively clutched the table edge as she confronted him. Her exquisite colour fled and left her pallid, dark eyed and dismayed. So, he said bitterly–I returned none too soon, Mlle.–Dorian Oh! she whispered, and shrank from him as he approached nearer. Your object in selecting an obscure practitioner for your medical adviser becomes painfully evident to me. Diagnosis of your case would have been much more easy if I had associated your symptoms with the presence in my table drawer of–he hesitated–of something which you have taken out. Give me whatever you have stolen and compose yourself to await the arrival of the police. He was cruel in his disillusionment. Here lay the explanation of his romance; here was his disguised princess–a common thief! She stared at him wildly. I take nothing! she cried. Oh, let me go! Please, please let me go! Pleading is useless. What have you stolen? Nothing–see. She cast the little gold ornament on the table. I look at this, but I do not mean to steal it. She raised her beautiful eyes to his face again, and he found himself wavering. That she had made his acquaintance in order to steal the fragment of the golden scorpion was impossible, for he had not possessed it at the time of her first visit. He was hopelessly mystified and utterly miserable. How did you open the drawer? he asked sternly. She took up the bunch of keys which lay upon the table and naively exhibited that which fitted the lock of the drawer. Her hands were shaking. Where did you obtain this key; and why? She watched him intently, her lips trembling and her eyes wells of sorrow into which he could not gaze unmoved. If I tell you–will you let me go? I shall make no promises, for I can believe nothing that you may tell me. You gained my confidence by a lie–and now, by another lie, you seem to think that you can induce me to overlook a deliberate attempt at burglary–common burglary. He clenched his hands. Heavens! I could never have believed it of you! She flinched as though from a blow and regarded him pitifully as he stood, head averted. Oh, please listen to me, she whispered. At first I tell you a lie, yes. And now? Now–I tell you the truth. That you are a petty thief? Ah! you are cruel–you have no pity! You judge me as you judge–one of your Englishwomen. Perhaps I cannot help what I do. In the East a woman is a chattel and has no will of her own. A chattel! cried Stuart scornfully. Your resemblance to the ‘chattels’ of the East is a remote one. There is Eastern blood in your veins, no doubt, but you are educated, you are a linguist, you know the world. Right and wrong are recognizable to the lowest savage. And if they recognize, but are helpless? Stuart made a gesture of impatience. You are simply seeking to enlist my sympathy, he said bitterly. But you have said nothing which inclines me to listen to you any longer. Apart from the shock of finding you to be–what you are, I am utterly mystified as to your object. I am a poor man. The entire contents of my house would fetch only a few hundred pounds if sold to morrow. Yet you risk your liberty to rifle my bureau. For the last time–what have you taken from that drawer? She leaned back against the table, toying with the broken piece of gold and glancing down at it as she did so. Her long lashes cast shadows below her eyes, and a hint of colour was returning to her cheeks. Stuart studied her attentively–even delightedly, for all her shortcomings, and knew in his heart that he could never give her in charge of the police. More and more the wonder of it all grew upon him, and now he suddenly found himself thinking of the unexplained incident of the previous night. You do not answer, he said. I will ask you another question: have you attempted to open that drawer prior to this evening? Mlle. Dorian looked up rapidly, and her cheeks, which had been pale, now flushed rosily. I try twice before, she confessed, and cannot open it. Ah! And–has someone else tried also? Instantly her colour fled again, and she stared at him wide eyed, fearful. Someone else? she whispered. Yes–someone else. A man … wearing a sort of cowl—- Oh? she cried and threw out her hands in entreaty. Do not ask me of him! I dare not answer–I dare not! You have answered, said Stuart, in a voice unlike his own; for a horrified amazement was creeping upon him and supplanting the contemptuous anger which the discovery of this beautiful girl engaged in pilfering his poor belongings had at first aroused. The mystery of her operations was explained–explained by a deeper and a darker mystery. The horror of the night had been no dream but an almost incredible reality. He now saw before him an agent of the man in the cowl; he perceived that he was in some way entangled in an affair vastly more complex and sinister than a case of petty larceny. Has the golden scorpion anything to do with the matter? he demanded abruptly. And in the eyes of his beautiful captive he read the answer. She flinched again as she had done when he had taunted her with being a thief; but he pressed his advantage remorselessly. So you were concerned in the death of Sir Frank Narcombe! he said. I was not! she cried at him fiercely, and her widely opened eyes were magnificent. Sir Frank Narcombe is—- She faltered–and ceased speaking, biting her lip which had become tremulous again. Sir Frank Narcombe is? prompted Stuart, feeling himself to stand upon the brink of a revelation. I know nothing of him–this Sir Frank Narcombe. Stuart laughed unmirthfully. Am I, by any chance, in danger of sharing the fate of that distinguished surgeon? he asked. His question produced an unforeseen effect. Mlle. Dorian suddenly rested her jewelled hands upon his shoulders, and he found himself looking hungrily into those wonderful Eastern eyes. If I swear that I speak the truth, will you believe me? she whispered, and her fingers closed convulsively upon his shoulders. He was shaken. Her near presence was intoxicating. Perhaps, he said unsteadily. Listen, then. Now you are in danger, yes. Before, you were not, but now you must be very careful. Oh! indeed, indeed, I tell you true! I tell you for your own sake. Do with me what you please. I do not care. It does not matter. You ask me why I come here. I tell you that also. I come for what is in the long envelope–look, I cannot hide it. It is on the fire! Stuart turned and glanced toward the grate. A faint wisp of brown smoke was arising from a long white envelope which lay there. Had the fire been actually burning, it must long ago have been destroyed. More than ever mystified, for the significance of the envelope was not evident to him, he ran to the grate and plucked the smouldering paper from the embers. As he did so, the girl, with one quick glance in his direction, snatched her cloak, keys and bag and ran from the room. Stuart heard the door close, and racing back to the table he placed the slightly charred envelope there beside the fragment of gold and leapt to the door. Expletive! he said. His escaped prisoner had turned the key on the outside. He was locked in his own study! Momentarily nonplussed, he stood looking at the closed door. The sound of a restarted motor from outside the house spurred him to action. He switched off the lamps, crossed the darkened room and drew back the curtain, throwing open the French windows. Brilliant moonlight bathed the little lawn with its bordering of high privet hedges. Stuart ran out as the sound of the receding car reached his ears. By the time that he had reached the front of the house the street was vacant from end to end. He walked up the steps to the front door, which he unfastened with his latch key. As he entered the hall, Mrs. M’Gregor appeared from her room. I did no’ hear ye go out with Miss Dorian, she said. That’s quite possible, Mrs. M’Gregor, but she has gone, you see. Now tell me, Mr. Keppel, did ye or did ye no’ hear the wail o’ the pibroch the night? No–I am afraid I cannot say that I did, Mrs. M’Gregor, replied Stuart patiently. I feel sure you must be very tired and you can justifiably turn in now. I am expecting no other visitor. Good night. Palpably dissatisfied and ill at ease, Mrs. M’Gregor turned away. Good night, Mr. Keppel, she said. Stuart, no longer able to control his impatience, hurried to the study door, unlocked it and entered. Turning on the light, he crossed and hastily drew the curtains over the window recess, but without troubling to close the window which he had opened. Then he returned to the writing table and took up the sealed envelope whose presence in his bureau was clearly responsible for the singular visitation of the cowled man and for the coming of the lovely Mlle. Dorian. The pibroch of the M’Gregors: He remembered something–something which, unaccountably, he hitherto had failed to recall: that fearful wailing in the night–which had heralded the coming of the cowled man!–or had it been a signal of some kind? He stared at the envelope blankly, then laid it down and stood looking for some time at the golden scorpion’s tail. Finally, his hands resting upon the table, he found that almost unconsciously he had been listening–listening to the dim night sounds of London and to the vague stirrings within the house. Now, you are in danger. Before, you were not…. Could he believe her? If in naught else, in this at least surely she had been sincere? Stuart started–then laughed grimly. A clock on the mantel piece had chimed the half hour. Chapter 6. The Assistant Commissioner. Detective Inspector Dunbar arrived at New Scotland Yard in a veritable fever of excitement. Jumping out of the cab he ran into the building and without troubling the man in charge of the lift went straight on upstairs to his room. He found it to be in darkness and switched on the green shaded lamp which was suspended above the table. Its light revealed a bare apartment having distempered walls severely decorated by an etching of a former and unbeautiful Commissioner. The blinds were drawn. A plain, heavy deal table bearing a blotting pad, a pewter ink pot, several pens and a telephone, together with three uncomfortable chairs, alone broke the expanse of highly polished floor. Dunbar glanced at the table and then stood undecided in the middle of the bare room, tapping his small, widely separated teeth with a pencil which he had absently drawn from his waistcoat pocket. He rang the bell. A constable came in almost immediately and stood waiting just inside the door. When did Sergeant Sowerby leave? asked Dunbar. About three hours ago, sir. What! cried Dunbar. Three hours ago! But I have been here myself within that time–in the Commissioner’s office. Sergeant Sowerby left before then. I saw him go. But, my good fellow, he has been back again. He spoke to me on the telephone less than a quarter of an hour ago. Not from here, sir. But I say it was from here! shouted Dunbar fiercely; and I told him to wait for me. Very good, sir. Shall I make inquiries? Yes. Wait a minute. Is the Commissioner here? Yes, sir, I believe so. At least I have not seen him go. Find Sergeant Sowerby and tell him to wait here for me, snapped Dunbar. He walked out into the bare corridor and along to the room of the Assistant Commissioner. Knocking upon the door, he opened it immediately, and entered an apartment which afforded a striking contrast to his own. For whereas the room of Inspector Dunbar was practically unfurnished, that of his superior was so filled with tables, cupboards, desks, bureaux, files, telephones, bookshelves and stacks of documents that one only discovered the Assistant Commissioner sunk deep in a padded armchair and a cloud of tobacco smoke by dint of close scrutiny. The Assistant Commissioner was small, sallow and satanic. His black moustache was very black and his eyes were of so dark a brown as to appear black also. When he smiled he revealed a row of very large white teeth, and his smile was correctly Mephistophelean. He smoked a hundred and twenty Egyptian cigarettes per diem, and the first and second fingers of either hand were coffee coloured. Good evening, Inspector, he said courteously. You come at an opportune moment. He lighted a fresh cigarette. I was detained here unusually late to night or this news would not have reached us till the morning. He laid his finger upon a yellow form. There is an unpleasant development in ‘The Scorpion’ case. So I gather, sir. That is what brought me back to the Yard. The Assistant Commissioner glanced up sharply. What brought you back to the Yard? he asked. The news about Max. The assistant Commissioner leaned back in his chair. Might I ask, Inspector, he said, what news you have learned and how you have learned it? Dunbar stared uncomprehendingly. Sowerby ‘phoned me about half an hour ago, sir. Did he do so without your instructions? Most decidedly. What was his message? He told me, replied Dunbar, in ever growing amazement, that the body brought in by the River Police last night had been identified as that of Gaston Max. The Assistant Commissioner handed a pencilled slip to Dunbar. It read as follows:– Gaston Max in London. Scorpion, Narcombe. No report since 30th ult. Fear trouble. Identity disk G. M. 49685. But, sir, said Dunbar–this is exactly what Sowerby told me! Quite so. That is the really extraordinary feature of the affair. Because, you see, Inspector, I only finished decoding this message at the very moment that you knocked at my door! But—- There is no room for a ‘but,’ Inspector. This confidential message from Paris reached me ten minutes ago. You know as well as I know that there is no possibility of leakage. No one has entered my room in the interval, yet you tell me that Sergeant Sowerby communicated this information to you, by telephone, half an hour ago. Dunbar was tapping his teeth with the pencil. His amazement was too great for words. Had the message been a false one, continued the Commissioner, the matter would have been resolved into a meaningless hoax, but the message having been what it was, we find ourselves face to face with no ordinary problem. Remember, Inspector, that voices on the telephone are deceptive. Sergeant Sowerby has marked vocal mannerisms—- Which would be fairly easy to imitate? Yes, sir–that’s so. But it brings us no nearer to the real problems; viz., first, the sender of the message; and, second, his purpose. There was a dull purring sound and the Assistant Commissioner raised the telephone. Yes. Who is it that wishes to speak to him? Dr. Keppel Stuart? Connect with my office. He turned again to Dunbar. Dr. Stuart has a matter of the utmost urgency to communicate, Inspector. It was at the house of Dr. Stuart, I take it, that you received the unexplained message? It was–yes. Did you submit to Dr. Stuart the broken gold ornament? Yes. It’s a scorpion’s tail. Ah! The Assistant Commissioner smiled satanically and lighted a fresh cigarette. And is Dr. Stuart agreeable to placing his unusual knowledge at our disposal for the purposes of this case? He is, sir. The purring sound was repeated. You are through to Dr. Stuart, said the Assistant Commissioner. Hullo cried Dunbar, taking up the receiver–is that Dr. Stuart? Dunbar speaking. He stood silent for a while, listening to the voice over the wires. Then: You want me to come around now, doctor? Very well. I’ll be with you in less than half an hour. He put down the instrument. Something extraordinary seems to have taken place at Dr. Stuart’s house a few minutes after I left, sir, he said. I’m going back there, now, for particulars. It sounds as though the ‘phone message might have been intended to get me away. He stared down at the pencilled slip which the Assistant Commissioner had handed him, but stared vacantly, and: Do you mind if I call someone up, sir? he asked. It should be done at once. Call by all means, Inspector. Dunbar again took up the telephone. Battersea 0996, he said, and stood waiting. Then: Is that Battersea 0996? he asked. Is Dr. Stuart there? He is speaking? Oh, this is Inspector Dunbar. You called me up here at the Yard a few moments ago, did you not? Correct, doctor; that’s all I wanted to know. I am coming now. Good, said the Assistant Commissioner, nodding his approval. You will have to check ‘phone messages in that way until you have run your mimic to earth, Inspector. I don’t believe for a moment that it was Sergeant Sowerby who rang you up at Dr. Stuart’s. Neither do I, said Dunbar grimly. But I begin to have a glimmer of a notion who it was. I’ll be saying good night, sir. Dr. Stuart seems to have something very important to tell me. As a mere matter of form he waited for the report of the constable who had gone in quest of Sowerby, but it merely confirmed the fact that Sowerby had left Scotland Yard over three hours earlier. Dunbar summoned a taxicab and proceeded to the house of Dr. Stuart. Chapter 7. Contents Of The Sealed Envelope. Stuart personally admitted Dunbar, and once more the Inspector found himself in the armchair in the study. The fire was almost out and the room seemed to be chilly. Stuart was labouring under the influence of suppressed excitement and was pacing restlessly up and down the floor. Inspector, he began, I find it difficult to tell you the facts which have recently come to my knowledge bearing upon this most mysterious ‘Scorpion’ case. I clearly perceive, now, that without being aware of the fact I have nevertheless been concerned in the case for at least a week. Dunbar stared surprisedly, but offered no comment. A fortnight ago, Stuart continued, I found myself in the neighbourhood of the West India Docks. I had been spending the evening with a very old friend, chief officer of a liner in dock. I had intended to leave the ship at about ten o’clock and to walk to the railway station, but, as it fell out, the party did not break up until after midnight. Declining the offer of a berth on board, I came ashore determined to make my way home by tram and afoot. I should probably have done so and have been spared–much; but rain began to fall suddenly and I found myself, foolishly unprovided with a top coat, in those grey East End streets without hope of getting a lift. It was just as I was crossing Limehouse Causeway that I observed, to my astonishment, the head lamps of a cab or car shining out from a dark and forbidding thoroughfare which led down to the river. The sight was so utterly unexpected that I paused, looking through the rainy mist in the direction of the stationary vehicle. I was still unable to make out if it were a cab or a car, and accordingly I walked along to where it stood and found that it was a taxicab and apparently for hire. ‘Are you disengaged?’ I said to the man. ‘Well, sir, I suppose I am,’ was his curious reply. ‘Where do you want to go?’ I gave him this address and he drove me home. On arriving, so grateful did I feel that I took pity upon the man, for it had settled down into a brute of a night, and asked him to come in and take a glass of grog. He was only too glad to do so. He turned out to be quite an intelligent sort of fellow, and we chatted together for ten minutes or so. I had forgotten all about him when, I believe on the following night, he reappeared in the character of a patient. He had a badly damaged skull, and I gathered that he had had an accident with his cab and had been pitched out into the road. When I had fixed him up, he asked me to do him a small favour. From inside his tunic he pulled out a long stiff envelope, bearing no address but the number 30 in big red letters. It was secured at both ends with black wax bearing the imprint of a curious and complicated seal. ‘A gentleman left this behind in the cab today, sir,’ said the man–‘perhaps the one who was with me when I had the spill, and I’ve got no means of tracing him; but he may be able to trace me if he happened to notice my number, or he may advertise. It evidently contains something valuable.’ ‘Then why not take it to Scotland Yard?’ I asked. ‘Isn’t that the proper course?’ ‘It is,’ he admitted; ‘but here’s the point: if the owner reclaims it from Scotland Yard he’s less likely to dub up handsome than if he gets it direct from me!’ I laughed at that, for the soundness of the argument was beyond dispute. ‘But what on earth do you want to leave it with me for?’ I asked. ‘Self protection,’ was the reply. ‘They can’t say I meant to pinch it! Whereas, directly there’s any inquiry I can come and collect it and get the reward; and your word will back me up if any questions are asked; that’s if you don’t mind, sir.’ I told him I didn’t mind in the least, and accordingly I sealed the envelope in a yet larger one which I addressed to the Lost Property Office and put into a private drawer of my bureau. ‘You will have no objection,’ I said, ‘to this being posted if it isn’t reclaimed within a reasonable time?’ He said that would be all right and departed–since which moment I have not set eyes upon him. I now come to the sequel, or what I have just recognized to be the sequel. Stuart’s agitation grew more marked and it was only by dint of a palpable effort that he forced himself to resume. On the evening of the following day a lady called professionally. She was young, pretty, and dressed with extraordinary elegance. My housekeeper admitted her, as I was out at the time but momentarily expected. She awaited my return here, in this room. She came again two days later. The name she gave was an odd one: Mademoiselle Dorian. There is her card,–Stuart opened a drawer and laid a visiting card before Dunbar–no initials and no address. She travelled in a large and handsome car. That is to say, according to my housekeeper’s account it is a large and handsome car. I personally, have had but an imperfect glimpse of it. It does not await her in front of the house, for some reason, but just around the corner in the side turning. Beyond wondering why Mademoiselle Dorian had selected me as her medical advisor I had detected nothing suspicious in her behaviour up to the time of which I am about to speak. Last night there was a singular development, and to night matters came to a head. Thereupon Stuart related as briefly as possible the mysterious episode of the cowled man, and finally gave an account of the last visit of Mlle. Dorian. Inspector Dunbar did not interrupt him, but listened attentively to the singular story. And there, concluded Stuart, on the blotting pad, lies the sealed envelope! Dunbar took it up eagerly. A small hole had been burned in one end of the envelope and much of the surrounding paper was charred. The wax with which Stuart had sealed it had lain uppermost, and although it had been partly melted, the mark of his signet ring was still discernible upon it. Dunbar stood staring at it. In the circumstances, Inspector, I think you would be justified in opening both envelopes, said Stuart. I am inclined to agree. But let me just be clear on one or two points. He took out the bulging note book and also a fountain pen with which he prepared to make entries. About this cabman, now. You didn’t by any chance note the number of his cab? I did not. What build of man was he? Over medium height and muscular. Somewhat inclined to flesh and past his youth, but active all the same. Dark or fair? Dark and streaked with grey. I noted this particularly in dressing his skull. He wore his hair cropped close to the scalp. He had a short beard and moustache and heavily marked eyebrows. He seemed to be very short sighted and kept his eyes so screwed up that it was impossible to detect their colour, by night at any rate. What sort of wound had he on his skull? A short ugly gash. He had caught his head on the footboard in falling. I may add that on the occasion of his professional visit his breath smelled strongly of spirits, and I rather suspected that his accident might have been traceable to his condition. But he wasn’t actually drunk? By no means. He was perfectly sober, but he had recently been drinking–possibly because his fall had shaken him, of course. His hands? Small and very muscular. Quite steady. Also very dirty. What part of the country should you say he hailed from? London. He had a marked cockney accent. What make of cab was it? I couldn’t say. An old cab? Yes. The fittings were dilapidated, I remember, and the cab had a very musty smell. Ah, said Dunbar, making several notes. And now–the lady: about what would be her age? Difficult to say, Inspector. She had Eastern blood and may have been much younger than she appeared to be. Judged from a European standpoint and from her appearance and manner of dress, she might be about twenty three or twenty four. Complexion? Wonderful. Fresh as a flower. Eyes? Dark. They looked black at night. Hair? Brown and ‘fuzzy’ with copper tints. Tall? No; slight but beautifully shaped. Now–from her accent what should you judge her nationality to be? Stuart paced up and down the room, his head lowered in reflection, then: She pronounced both English and French words with an intonation which suggested familiarity with Arabic. Arabic? That still leaves a fairly wide field. It does, Inspector, but I had no means of learning more. She had certainly lived for a long time somewhere in the Near East. Her jewellery? Some of it was European and some of it Oriental, but not characteristic of any particular country of the Orient. Did she use perfume? Yes, but it was scarcely discernible. Jasmine–probably the Eastern preparation. Her ailment was imaginary? I fear so. H’m–and now you say that Mrs. M’Gregor saw the car? Yes, but she has retired. Her evidence will do to morrow. We come to the man in the hood. Can you give me any kind of a description of him? He appeared to be tall, but a shadow is deceptive, and his extraordinary costume would produce that effect, too. I can tell you absolutely nothing further about him. Remember, I thought I was dreaming. I could not credit my senses. Inspector Dunbar glanced over the notes which he had made, then returning the note book and pen to his pocket, he took up the long smoke discoloured envelope and with a paper knife which lay upon the table slit one end open. Inserting two fingers, he drew out the second envelope which the first enclosed. It was an ordinary commercial envelope only notable by reason of the number, 30, appearing in large red figures upon it and because it was sealed with black wax bearing a weird looking device: Stuart bent over him intently as he slit this envelope in turn. Again, he inserted two fingers–and brought forth the sole contents… a plain piece of cardboard, roughly rectangular and obviously cut in haste from the lid of a common cardboard box! Chapter 8. The Assistant Commissioner’s Theory. On the following morning Inspector Dunbar, having questioned Mrs. M’Gregor respecting the car in which Mlle. Dorian had visited the house and having elicited no other evidence than that it was a fine luxurious concern, the Inspector and Dr. Stuart prepared to set out upon gruesome business. Mrs. M’Gregor was very favourably impressed with the Inspector. A grand, pairsonable body, she confided to Stuart. He’d look bonny in the kilt. To an East End mortuary the cab bore them, and they were led by a constable in attendance to a stone paved, ill lighted apartment in which a swathed form lay upon a long deal table. The spectacle presented, when the covering was removed, was one to have shocked less hardened nerves than those of Stuart and Dunbar; but the duties of a police officer, like those of a medical man, not infrequently necessitate such inspections. The two bent over the tragic flotsam of the Thames unmoved and critical. H’m, said Stuart–he’s about the build, certainly. Hair iron grey and close cropped and he seems to have worn a beard. Now, let us see. He bent, making a close inspection of the skull; then turned and shook his head. No, Inspector, he said definitely. This is not the cabman. There is no wound corresponding to the one which I dressed. Right, answered Dunbar, covering up the ghastly face. That’s settled. You were wrong, Inspector. It was not Gaston Max who left the envelope with me. No, mused Dunbar, so it seems. Your theory that Max, jealously working alone, had left particulars of his inquiries, and clues, in my hands, knowing that they would reach Scotland Yard in the event of his death, surely collapsed when the envelope proved to contain nothing but a bit of cardboard? Yes–I suppose it did. But it sounded so much like Max’s round about methods. Anyway I wanted to make sure that the dead man from Hanover Hole and your mysterious cabman were not one and the same. Stuart entertained a lively suspicion that Inspector Dunbar was keeping something up his sleeve, but with this very proper reticence he had no quarrel, and followed by the constable, who relocked the mortuary behind them, they came out into the yard where the cab waited which was to take them to Scotland Yard. Dunbar, standing with one foot upon the step of the cab, turned to the constable. Has anyone else viewed the body? he asked. No sir. No one is to be allowed to do so–you understand?–no one, unless he has written permission from the Commissioner. Very good, sir. Half an hour later they arrived at New Scotland Yard and went up to Dunbar’s room. A thick set, florid man of genial appearance, having a dark moustache, a breezy manner and a head of hair resembling a very hard worked blacking brush, awaited them. This was Detective Sargeant Sowerby with whom Stuart was already acquainted. Good morning, Sergeant Sowerby, he said. Good morning, sir. I hear that someone was pulling your leg last night. What do you mean exactly, Sowerby? inquired Dunbar, fixing his fierce eyes upon his subordinate. Sergeant Sowerby exhibited confusion. I mean nothing offensive, Inspector. I was referring to the joker who gave so good an imitation of my voice that even you were deceived. Ah, replied Dunbar–I see. Yes–he did it well. He spoke just like you. I could hardly make out a word he said. With this Caledonian shaft and a side glance at Stuart, Inspector Dunbar sat down at the table. Here’s Dr. Stuart’s description of the missing cabman, he continued, taking out his note book. Dr. Stuart has viewed the body and it is not the man. You had better take a proper copy of this. Then the cabman wasn’t Max? cried Sowerby eagerly. I thought not. I believe you told me so before, said Dunbar sourly. I also seem to recall that you thought a scorpion’s tail was a Prickly Pear. However–here, on the page numbered twenty six, is a description of the woman known as Mlle. Dorian. It should be a fairly easy matter to trace the car through the usual channels, and she ought to be easy to find, too. He glanced at his watch. Stuart was standing by the lofty window looking out across the Embankment. Ten o’clock, said Dunbar. The Commissioner will be expecting us. I am ready, responded Stuart. Leaving Sergeant Sowerby seated at the table studying the note book, Stuart and Dunbar proceeded to the smoke laden room of the Assistant Commissioner. The great man, suavely satanic, greeted Stuart with that polished courtesy for which he was notable. You have been of inestimable assistance to us in the past, Dr. Stuart, he said, and I feel happy to know that we are to enjoy the aid of your special knowledge in the present case. Will you smoke one of my cigarettes? They are some which a friend is kind enough to supply to me direct from Cairo, and are really quite good. Thanks, replied Stuart. May I ask in what direction my services are likely to prove available? The Commissioner lighted a fresh cigarette. Then from a heap of correspondence he selected a long report typed upon blue foolscap. I have here, he said, confirmation of the telegraphic report received last night. The name of M. Gaston Max will no doubt be familiar to you? Stuart nodded. Well, continued the Commissioner, it appears that he has been engaged in England for the past month endeavouring to trace the connection which he claims to exist between the sudden deaths of various notable people, recently–a list is appended–and some person or organisation represented by, or associated with, a scorpion. His personal theory not being available–poor fellow, you have heard of his tragic death–I have this morning consulted such particulars as I could obtain respecting these cases. If they were really cases of assassination, some obscure poison was the only mode of death that could possibly have been employed. Do you follow me? Perfectly. Now, the death of Gaston Max under circumstances not yet explained, would seem to indicate that his theory was a sound one. In other words, I am disposed to believe that he himself represents the most recent outrage of what we will call ‘The Scorpion.’ Even at the time that the body of the man found by the River Police had not been identified, the presence upon his person of a fragment of gold strongly resembling the tail of a scorpion prompted me to instruct Inspector Dunbar to consult you. I had determined upon a certain course. The identification of the dead man with Gaston Max merely strengthens my determination and enhances the likelihood of my idea being a sound one. He flicked the ash from his cigarette and resumed: Without mentioning names, the experts consulted in the other cases which–according to the late Gaston Max–were victims of ‘The Scorpion,’ do not seem to have justified their titles. I am arranging that you shall be present at the autopsy upon the body of Gaston Max. And now, permit me to ask you a question: are you acquainted with any poison which would produce the symptoms noted in the case of Sir Frank Narcombe, for instance? Stuart shook his head slowly. All that I know of the case, he said, is that he was taken suddenly ill in the foyer of a West End theatre, immediately removed to his house in Half Moon Street, and died shortly afterward. Can you give me copies of the specialists’ reports and other particulars? I may then be able to form an opinion. I will get them for you, replied the Commissioner, the exact nature of whose theory was by no means evident to Stuart. He opened a drawer. I have here, he continued, the piece of cardboard and the envelope left with you by the missing cab man. Do you think there is any possibility of invisible writing? None, said Stuart confidently. I have tested in three or four places as you will see by the spots, but my experiments will in no way interfere with those which no doubt your own people will want to make. I have also submitted both surfaces to a microscopic examination. I am prepared to state definitely that there is no writing upon the cardboard, and except for the number, 30, none upon the envelope. It is only reasonable to suppose, continued the Commissioner, that the telephone message which led Inspector Dunbar to leave your house last night was originated by that unseen intelligence against which we find ourselves pitted. In the first place, no one in London, myself and, presumably, ‘The Scorpion’ excepted, knew at that time that M. Gaston Max was in England or that M. Gaston Max was dead. I say, presumably ‘The Scorpion’ because it is fair to assume that the person whom Max pursued was responsible for his death. Of course–the Commissioner reached for the box of cigarettes–were it not for the telephone message, we should be unjustified in assuming that Mlle. Dorian and this–he laid his finger upon the piece of cardboard–had any connection with the case of M. Max. But the message was so obviously designed to facilitate the purloining of the sealed envelope and so obviously emanated from one already aware of the murder of M. Max, that the sender is identified at once with– ‘The Scorpion.’ The Assistant Commissioner complacently lighted a fresh cigarette. Finally, he said, the mode of death in the case of M. Max may not have been the same as in the other cases. Therefore, Dr. Stuart–he paused impressively–if you fail to detect anything suspicious at the post mortem examination I propose to apply to the Home Secretary for power to exhume the body of the late Sir Frank Narcombe! Deep in reflection, Stuart walked alone along the Embankment. The full facts contained in the report from Paris the Commissioner had not divulged, but Stuart concluded that this sudden activity was directly due, not to the death of M. Max, but to the fact that he Max had left behind him some more or less tangible clue. Stuart fully recognized that the Commissioner had accorded him an opportunity to establish his reputation–or to wreck it. Yet, upon closer consideration, it became apparent that it was to Fate and not to the Commissioner that he was indebted. Strictly speaking, his association with the matter dated from the night of his meeting with the mysterious cabman in West India Dock road. Or had the curtain first been lifted upon this occult drama that evening, five years ago, as the setting sun reddened the waters of the Imperial Canal and a veiled figure passed him on the Wu Men Bridge? Shut your eyes tightly, master–the Scorpion is coming! He seemed to hear the boy’s words now, as he passed along the Embankment; he seemed to see again the tall figure. And suddenly he stopped, stood still and stared with unseeing eyes across the muddy waters of the Thames. He was thinking of the cowled man who had stood behind the curtains in his study–of that figure so wildly bizarre that even now he could scarcely believe that he had ever actually seen it. He walked on. Automatically his reflections led him to Mlle. Dorian, and he remembered that even as he paced along there beside the river the wonderful mechanism of New Scotland Yard was in motion, its many tentacles seeking–seeking tirelessly–for the girl, whose dark eyes haunted his sleeping and waking hours. He was responsible, and if she were arrested he would be called upon to identify her. He condemned himself bitterly. After all, what crime had she committed? She had tried to purloin a letter–which did not belong to Stuart in the first place. And she had failed. Now–the police were looking for her. His reflections took a new form. What of Gaston Max, foremost criminologist in Europe, who now lay dead and mutilated in an East End mortuary? The telephone message which had summoned Dunbar away had been too opportune to be regarded as a mere coincidence. Mlle. Dorian was, therefore, an accomplice of a murderer. Stuart sighed. He would have given much–more than he was prepared to admit to himself–to have known her to be guiltless. The identity of the missing cabman now engaged his mind. It was quite possible, of course, that the man had actually found the envelope in his cab and was in no other way concerned in the matter. But how had Mlle. Dorian, or the person instructing her, traced the envelope to his study? And why, if they could establish a claim to it, had they preferred to attempt to steal it? Finally, why all this disturbance about a blank piece of cardboard? A mental picture of the envelope arose before him, the number, 30, written upon it and the two black seals securing the lapels. He paused again in his walk. His reflections had led him to a second definite point and he fumbled in his waistcoat pocket for a time, seeking a certain brass coin about the size of a halfpenny, having a square hole in the middle and peculiar characters engraved around the square, one on each of the four sides. He failed to find the coin in his pocket, however, but he walked briskly up a side street until he came to the entrance to a tube station. Entering a public telephone call box, he asked for the number, City 400. Being put through and having deposited the necessary fee in the box: Is that the Commissioner’s Office, New Scotland Yard? he asked. Yes! My name is Dr. Keppel Stuart. If Inspector Dunbar is there, would you kindly allow me to speak to him. There was a short interval, then: Hullo! came–is that Dr. Stuart? Yes. That you, Inspector? I have just remembered something which I should have observed in the first place if I had been really wide awake. The envelope–you know the one I mean?–the one bearing the number, 30, has been sealed with a Chinese coin, known as cash. I have just recognized the fact and thought it wise to let you know at once. Are you sure? asked Dunbar. Certain. If you care to call at my place later to day I can show you some cash. Bring the envelope with you and you will see that the coins correspond to the impression in the wax. The inscriptions vary in different provinces, but the form of all cash is the same. Very good. Thanks for letting me know at once. It seems to establish a link with China, don’t you think? It does, but it merely adds to the mystery. Coming out of the call box, Stuart proceeded home, but made one or two professional visits before he actually returned to the house. He now remembered having left his particular cash piece which he usually carried in his dispensary, which satisfactorily accounted for his failure to find the coin in his waistcoat pocket. He had broken the cork of a flask, and in the absence of another of correct size had manufactured a temporary stopper with a small cork to the top of which he had fixed the Chinese coin with a drawing pin. His purpose served he had left the extemporised stopper lying somewhere in the dispensary. Stuart’s dispensary was merely a curtained recess at one end of the waiting room and shortly after entering the house he had occasion to visit it. Lying upon a shelf among flasks and bottles was the Chinese coin with the cork still attached. He took it up in order to study the inscription. Then: Have I cultivated somnambulism! he muttered. Fragments of black sealing wax adhered to the coin! Incredulous and half fearful he peered at it closely. He remembered that the impression upon the wax sealing the mysterious envelope had had a circular depression in the centre. It had been made by the head of the drawing pin! He found himself staring at the shelf immediately above that upon which the coin had lain. A stick of black sealing wax used for sealing medicine was thrust in beside a bundle of long envelopes in which he was accustomed to post his Infirmary reports! One hand raised to his head, Stuart stood endeavouring to marshal his ideas into some sane order. Then, knowing what he should find, he raised the green baize curtain hanging from the lower shelf, which concealed a sort of cupboard containing miscellaneous stores and not a little rubbish, including a number of empty cardboard boxes. A rectangular strip had been roughly cut from the lid of the topmost box! The mysterious envelope and its contents, the wax and the seal–all had come from his own dispensary! Chapter 9. The Chinese Coin. Deep in reflection, Stuart walked alone along the Embankment. The full facts contained in the report form Paris the Commissioner had not divulged, but Stuart concluded that this sudden activity was directly due, not to the death of M. Max, but to the fact that he Max had left behind him some more or less tangible clue. Stuart fully recognized that the Commissioner had accorded him an opportunity to establish his reputation–or to wreck it. Yet, upon closer consideration, it became apparent that it was to Fate and not to the Commissioner that he was indebted. Strictly speaking, his association with the matter dated from the night of his meeting with the mysterious cabman in West India Dock Road. Or had the curtain first been lifted upon this occult drama that evening, five years ago, as the setting sun reddened the waters of the Imperial Canal and a veiled figure passed him on the Wu Men Bridge? Shut your eyes tightly, master–the Scorpion is coming! He seemed to hear the boy’s words now, as he passed along the Embankment; he seemed to see again the tall figure. And suddenly he stopped, stood still and stared with unseeing eyes across the muddy waters of the Thames. He was thinking of the cowled man who had stood behind the curtains in his study–of that figure so wildly bizarre that even now he could scarcely believe that he had ever actually seen it. He walked on. Automatically his reflections led him to Mlle. Dorian, and he remembered that even as he paced along there beside the river the wonderful mechanism of New Scotland Yard was in motion, its many tentacles seeking–seeking tirelessly–for the girl, whose dark eyes haunted his sleeping and waking hours. He was responsible, and if she were arrested he would be called upon to identify her. He condemned himself bitterly. After all, what crime had she committed? She had tried to purloin a letter–which did not belong to Stuart in the first place. And she had failed. Now–the police were looking for her. His reflections took a new form. What of Gaston Max, foremost criminologist in Europe, who now lay dead and mutilated in an East End mortuary? The telephone message which had summoned Dunbar away had been too opportune to be regarded as a mere coincidence. Mlle. Dorian was, therefore, an accomplice of a murderer. Stuart sighed. He would have given much–more than he was prepared to admit to himself–to have known her to be guiltless. The identity of the missing cabman now engaged his mind. It was quite possible, of course, that the man had actually found the envelope in his cab and was in no other way concerned in the matter. But how had Mlle. Dorian, or the person instructing her, traced the envelope to his study? And why, if they could establish a claim to it, had they preferred to attempt to steal it? Finally, why all this disturbance about a blank pieced of cardboard? A mental picture of the envelope arose before him, the number, 30, written upon it and the two black seals securing the lapels. He paused again in his walk. His reflections had led him to a second definite point and he fumbled in his waistcoat pocket for a time, seeking a certain brass coin about the size of a halfpenny, having a square hole in the middle and peculiar characters engraved around the square, one on each of the four sides. He failed to find the coin in his pocket, however, but he walked briskly up a side street until he came to the entrance to a tube station. Entering a public telephone call box, he asked for the number, City 400. Being put through and having deposited the necessary fee in the box: Is that the Commissioner’s Office, New Scotland Yard? he asked. Yes! My name is Dr. Keppel Stuart. If Inspector Dunbar is there, would you kindly allow me to speak to him. There was a short interval, then: Hullo! came–is that Dr. Stuart? Yes. That you, Inspector? I have just remembered something which I should have observed in the first place if I had been really wide awake. The envelope–you know the one I mean?–the one bearing the number, 30, has been sealed with a Chinese coin, known as cash. I have just recognized the fact and thought it wise to let you know at once. Are you sure? asked Dunbar. Certain. If you care to call at my place later to day I can show you some cash. Bring the envelope with you and you will see that the coins correspond to the impression in the wax. The inscriptions vary in different provinces, but the form of all cash is the same. Very good. Thanks for letting me know at once. It seems to establish a link with China, don’t you think? It does, but it merely adds to the mystery. Coming out of the call box, Stuart proceeded home, but made one or two professional visits before he actually returned to the house. He now remembered having left this particular cash piece which he usually carried in his dispensary, which satisfactorily accounted fro his failure to find the coin in his waistcoat pocket. He had broken the cork of a flask, and in the absence of another of correct size had manufactured a temporary stopper with a small cork to the top of which he had fixed the Chinese coin with a drawing pin. His purpose served he had left the extemporized stopper somewhere in the dispensary. Stuart’s dispensary was merely a curtained recess at one end of the waiting room and shortly after entering the house he had occasion to visit it. Lying upon a shelf among flasks and bottles was the Chinese coin with the cork still attached. He took it up in order to study the inscription. Then: Have I cultivated somnambulism! he muttered. Fragments of black sealing wax adhered to the coin! Incredulous and half fearful he peered at it closely. He remembered that the impression upon the wax sealing the mysterious envelope had had a circular depression in the centre. It had been made by the head of the drawing pin! He found himself at the shelf immediately above that upon which the coin had lain. A stick of black sealing wax used for sealing medicine was thrust in beside a bundle of long envelopes in which he was accustomed to post his Infirmary reports! One hand raised to his head, Stuart stood endeavouring to marshal his ideas into some sane order. Then, knowing what he should find, he raised the green baize curtain hanging from the lower shelf, which concealed a sort of cupboard containing miscellaneous stores and not a little rubbish, including a number of empty cardboard boxes. A rectangular strip had been roughly cut from the lid of the topmost box! The mysterious envelope and its contents, the wax and the seal–all had come from his own dispensary! Chapter 10. Close Your Shutters At Night. Inspector Dunbar stood in the little dispensary tapping his teeth with the end of a fountain pen. The last time he visited you, doctor–the time when he gave you the envelope–did the cabman wait here in the waiting room? He did–yes. He came after my ordinary consulting hours and I was at supper, I remember, as I am compelled to dine early. He would be in here alone? Yes. No one else was in the room. Would he have had time to find the box, cut out the piece of cardboard from the lid, put it in the envelope and seal it? Ample time. But what could be his object? And why mark the envelope 30? It was in your consulting room that he asked you to take charge of the envelope? Yes. Might I take a peep at the consulting room? Certainly, Inspector. From the waiting room they went up a short flight of stairs into the small apartment in which Stuart saw his patients. Dunbar looked slowly about him, standing in the middle of the room, then crossed and stared out of the window into the narrow lane below. Where were you when he gave you the envelope? he snapped suddenly. At the table, replied Stuart with surprise. Was the table lamp alight? Yes. I always light it when seeing patients. Did you take the letter into the study to seal it in the other envelope? I did, and he came along and witnessed me do it. Ah, said Dunbar, and scribbled busily in his note book. We are badly tied at Scotland Yard, doctor, and this case looks like being another for which somebody else will reap the credit. I am going to make a request that will surprise you. He tore a leaf out of the book and folded it carefully. I am going to ask you to seal up something and lock it away! But I don’t think you’ll be troubled by cowled burglars or beautiful women because of it. On this piece of paper I have written–a–he ticked off the points on his fingers: what I believe to be the name of the man who cut out the cardboard and sealed it in an envelope; b: the name of the cabman; and, c: the name of the man who rang me up here last night and gave me information which had only just reached the Commissioner. I’ll ask you to lock it away until it’s wanted, doctor. Certainly, if you wish it, replied Stuart. Come into the study and you shall see me do as you direct. I may add that the object to be served is not apparent to me. Entering the study, he took an envelope, enclosed the piece of paper, sealed the lapel and locked the envelope in the same drawer of the bureau which once had contained that marked 30. Mlle. Dorian has a duplicate key to this drawer. he said. Are you prepared to take the chance? Quite, replied Dunbar, smiling; although my information is worth more than that which she risked so much to steal. It’s most astounding. At every step the darkness increases. Why should anyone have asked me to lock up a blank piece of cardboard? Why, indeed, murmured Dunbar. Well, I may as well get back. I am expecting a report from Sowerby. Look after yourself, sir. I’m inclined to think your pretty patient was talking square when she told you there might be danger. Stuart met the glance of the tawny eyes. What d’you mean, Inspector? Why should I be in danger? Because, replied Inspector Dunbar, if ‘The Scorpion’ is a poisoner, as the chief seems to think, there’s really only one man in England he has to fear, and that man is Dr. Keppel Stuart. When the Inspector had taken his departure Stuart stood for a long time staring out of the study window at the little lawn with its bordering of high neatly trimmed privet above which at intervals arose the mop crowns of dwarf acacias. A spell of warm weather seemed at last to have begun, and clouds of gnats floated over the grass, their minute wings glittering in the sunshine. Despite the nearness of teeming streets, this was a backwater of London’s stream. He sighed and returned to some work which the visit of the Scotland Yard man had interrupted. Later in the afternoon he had occasion to visit the institution to which he had recently been appointed as medical officer, and in contemplation of the squalor through which his steps led him he sought forgetfulness of the Scorpion problem–and of the dark eyes of Mlle. Dorian. He was not entirely successful, and returning by a different route he lost himself in memories which were sweetly mournful. A taxicab passed him, moving slowly very close to the pavement. He scarcely noted it until it had proceeded some distance ahead of him. Then its slow progress so near to the pavement at last attracted his attention, and he stared vacantly towards the closed vehicle. Mlle. Dorian was leaning out of the window and looking back at him! Stuart’s heart leapt high. For an instant he paused, then began to walk rapidly after the retreating vehicle. Perceiving that she had attracted his attention, the girl extended a white gloved hand from the window and dropped a note upon the edge of the pavement. Immediately she withdrew into the vehicle–which moved away at accelerated speed, swung around the next corner and was gone. Stuart ran forward and picked up the note. Without pausing to read it, he pressed on to the corner. The cab was already two hundred yards away, and he recognized pursuit to be out of the question. The streets were almost deserted at the moment, and no one apparently had witnessed the episode. He unfolded the sheet of plain note paper, faintly perfumed with jasmine, and read the following, written in an uneven feminine hand: Close your shutters at night. Do not think too bad of me. Chapter 11. The Blue Ray. Dusk found Stuart in a singular frame of mind. He was torn between duty–or what he conceived to be his duty–to the community, and … something else. A messenger from New Scotland Yard had brought him a bundle of documents relating to the case of Sir Frank Narcombe, and a smaller packet touching upon the sudden end of Henrik Ericksen, the Norwegian electrician, and the equally unexpected death of the Grand Duke Ivan. There were medical certificates, proceedings of coroners, reports of detectives, evidence of specialists and statements of friends, relatives and servants of the deceased. A proper examination of all the documents represented many hours of close study. Stuart was flattered by the opinion held of his ability by the Assistant Commissioner, but dubious of his chance of detecting any flaw in the evidence which had escaped the scrutiny of so many highly trained observers. He paced the study restlessly. Although more than six hours had elapsed, he had not communicated to Scotland Yard the fact of his having seen Mlle. Dorian that afternoon. A hundred times he had read the message, although he knew it by heart, knew the form of every letter, the odd crossing of the t’s and the splashy dotting of the i’s. If only he could have taken counsel with someone–with someone not bound to act upon such information–it would have relieved his mental stress. His ideas were so chaotic that he felt himself to be incapable of approaching the task presented by the pile of papers lying upon his table. The night was pleasantly warm and the sky cloudless. Often enough he found himself glancing toward the opened French windows, and once he had peered closely across into the belt of shadow below the hedge, thinking that he had detected something which moved there. Stepping to the window, the slinking shape had emerged into the moonlight–and had proclaimed itself to be that of a black cat! Yet he had been sorely tempted to act upon the advice so strangely offered. He refrained from doing so, however, reflecting that to spend his evenings with closed and barred shutters now that a spell of hot weather seemed to be imminent would be insufferable. Up and down the room he paced tirelessly, always confronted by the eternal problem. Forcing himself at last to begin work if only as a sedative, he filled and lighted his pipe, turned off the centre lamp and lighted the reading lamp upon his table. He sat down to consider the papers bearing upon the death of Eriksen. For half an hour he read on steadily and made a number of pencil notes. Then he desisted and sat staring straight before him. What possible motive could there be in assassinating these people? The case of the Grand Duke might be susceptible of explanation, but those of Henrik Ericksen and Sir Frank Narcombe were not. Furthermore he could perceive no links connecting the three, and no reason why they should have engaged the attention of a common enemy. Such crimes would seem to be purposeless. Assuming that The Scorpion was an individual, that individual apparently was a dangerous homicidal maniac. But, throughout the documents, he could discover no clue pointing to the existence of such an entity. The Scorpion might be an invention of the fertile brain of M. Gaston Max; for it had become more and more evident, as he had read, that the attempt to trace these deaths to an identical source had originated at the Service de Surete, and it was from Paris that the name The Scorpion had come. The fate of Max was significant, of course. The chances of his death proving to have been due to accident were almost negligible and the fact that a fragment of a golden scorpion had actually been found upon his body was certainly curious. Close your shutters at night…. How the words haunted him and how hotly he despised himself for a growing apprehension which refused to be ignored. It was more mental than physical, this dread which grew with the approach of midnight, and it resembled that which had robbed him of individuality and all but stricken him inert when he had seen upon the moon bright screen of the curtains the shadow of a cowled man. Dark forces seemed to be stirring, and some unseen menace crept near to him out of the darkness. The house was of early Victorian fashion and massive folding shutters were provided to close the French windows. He never used them, as a matter of fact, but now he tested the fastenings which kept them in place against the inner wall and even moved them in order to learn if they were still serviceable. Of all the mysteries which baffled him, that of the piece of cardboard in the envelope sealed with a Chinese coin was the most irritating. It seemed like the purposeless trick of a child, yet it had led to the presence of the cowled man–and to the presence of Mlle. Dorian. Why? He sat down at his table again. Expletive the whole business! he said. It is sending me crazy. Selecting from the heap of documents a large sheet of note paper bearing a blue diagram of a human bust, marked with figures and marginal notes, he began to read the report to which it was appended–that of Dr. Halesowen. It stated that the late Sir Frank Narcombe had a horizontal heart, slightly misplaced and dilatated, with other details which really threw no light whatever upon the cause of his death. I have a horizontal heart, growled Stuart–and considering my consumption of tobacco it is certainly dilatated. But I don’t expect to drop dead in a theatre nevertheless. He read on, striving to escape from that shadowy apprehension, but as he read he was listening to the night sounds of London, to the whirring of distant motors, the whistling of engines upon the railway and dim hooting of sirens from the Thames. A slight breeze had arisen and it rustled in the feathery foliage of the acacias and made a whispering sound as it stirred the leaves of the privet hedge. The drone of an approaching car reached his ears. Pencil in hand, he sat listening. The sound grew louder, then ceased. Either the car had passed or had stopped somewhere near the house. Came a rap on the door. Yes, called Stuart and stood up, conscious of excitement. Mrs. M’Gregor came in. There is nothing further you’ll be wanting to night? she asked. No, said Stuart, strangely disappointed, but smiling at the old lady cheerfully. I shall turn in very shortly. A keen east wind has arisen, she continued, severely eyeing the opened windows, and even for a medical man you are strangely imprudent. Shall I shut the windows? No, don’t trouble, Mrs. M’Gregor. The room gets very stuffy with tobacco smoke, and really it is quite a warm night. I shall close them before I retire, of course. Ah well, sighed Mrs. M’Gregor, preparing to depart. Good night, Mr. Keppel. Good night, Mrs. M’Gregor. She retired, and Stuart sat staring out into the darkness. He was not prone to superstition, but it seemed like tempting providence to remain there with the windows open any longer. Yet paradoxically, he lacked the moral courage to close them–to admit to himself that he was afraid! The telephone bell rang, and he started back in his chair as though to avoid a blow. By doing so he avoided destruction. At the very instant that the bell rang out sharply in the silence–so exact is the time table of Kismet–a needle like ray of blue light shot across the lawn from beyond and above the hedge and–but for that nervous start–must have struck fully upon the back of Stuart’s skull. Instead, it shone past his head, which it missed only by inches, and he experienced a sensation as though some one had buffeted him upon the cheek furiously. He pitched out of his chair and on to the carpet. The first object which the ray touched was the telephone; and next, beyond it, a medical dictionary; beyond that again, the grate, in which a fire was laid. My God! groaned Stuart–what is it! An intense crackling sound deafened him, and the air of the room seemed to have become hot as that of an oven. There came a series of dull reports–an uncanny wailing … and the needle ray vanished. A monstrous shadow, moon cast, which had lain across the carpet of the lawn–the shadow of a cowled man–vanished also. Clutching the side of his head, which throbbed and tingled as though from the blow of an open hand, Stuart struggled to his feet. There was smoke in the room, a smell of burning and of fusing metal. He glared at the table madly. The mouthpiece of the telephone had vanished! My God! he groaned again, and clutched at the back of the chair. His dictionary was smouldering slowly. It had a neat round hole some three inches in diameter, bored completely through, cover to cover! The fire in the grate was flaring up the chimney! He heard the purr of a motor in the lane beside the house. The room was laden with suffocating fumes. Stuart stood clutching the chair and striving to retain composure–sanity. The car moved out of the lane. Someone was running towards the back gate of the house … was scrambling over the hedge … was racing across the lawn! A man burst into the study. He was a man of somewhat heavy build, clean shaven and inclined to pallor. The hirsute blue tinge about his lips and jaw lent added vigour to a flexible but masterful mouth. His dark hair was tinged with grey, his dark eyes were brilliant with excitement. He was very smartly dressed and wore light tan gloves. He reeled suddenly, clutching at a chair for support. Quick! quick! he cried–the telephone! … Ah! Just inside the window he stood, swaying and breathing rapidly, his gaze upon the instrument. Mon Dieu! he cried–what has happened, then! Stuart stared at the new comer dazedly. Hell has been in my room! he replied. That’s all! Ah! said the stranger–again he eludes me! The telephone was the only chance. Pas d’blague! we are finished! He dropped into a chair, removed his light grey hat and began to dry his moist brow with a fine silk handkerchief. Stuart stared at him like a man who is stupefied. The room was still laden with strange fumes. Blimey! remarked the new comer, and his Whitechapel was as perfect as his Montmatre. He was looking at the decapitated telephone. This is a knock out! Might I ask, said Stuart, endeavouring to collect his scattered senses, where you came from? From up a tree! was the astonishing reply. It was the only way to get over! Up a tree! Exactly. Yes, I was foolish. I am too heavy. But what could I do! We must begin all over again. Stuart began to doubt his sanity. This was no ordinary man. Might I ask, he said, who you are and what you are doing in my house? Ah! The stranger laughed merrily. You wonder about me–I can see it. Permit me to present myself–Gaston Max, at your service! Gaston Max! Stuart glared at the speaker incredulously. Gaston Max! Why, I conduct a post mortem examination upon Gaston Max tomorrow, in order to learn if he was poisoned! Do not trouble, doctor. That poor fellow is not Gaston Max and he was not poisoned. You may accept my word for it. I had the misfortune to strangle him. PART II STATEMENT OF GASTON MAX THE DANCER OF MONTMARTRE. Chapter 12. Zara El Khala. The following statement which I, Gaston Max, am drawing up in duplicate for the guidance of whoever may inherit the task of tracing The Scorpion–a task which I have begun–will be lodged–one copy at the Service de Surete in Paris, and the other copy with the Commissioner of Police, New Scotland Yard. As I apprehend that I may be assassinated at any time, I propose to put upon record all that I have learned concerning the series of murders which I believe to be traceable to a certain person. In the event of my death, my French colleagues will open the sealed packet containing this statement and the English Assistant Commissioner of the Special Branch responsible for international affairs will receive instructions to open that which I shall have lodged at Scotland Yard. This matter properly commenced, then, with the visit to Paris, incognito, of the Grand Duke Ivan, that famous soldier of whom so much was expected, and because I had made myself responsible for his safety during the time that he remained in the French capital, I also incognito be it understood struck up a friendship with one Casimir, the Grand Duke’s valet. Nothing is sacred to a valet, and from Casimir I counted upon learning the real reason which had led this nobleman to visit Paris at so troublous a time. Knowing the Grand Duke to be a man of gallantry, I anticipated finding a woman in the case–and I was not wrong. Yes, there was a woman, and nom d’nom!she was beautiful. Now in Paris we have many beautiful women, and in times of international strife it is true that we have had to shoot some of them. For my own part I say with joy that I have never been instrumental in bringing a woman to such an end. Perhaps I am sentimental; it is a French weakness; but on those few occasions when I have found a guilty woman in my power–and she has been pretty– morbleu!–she has escaped! It may be that I have seen to it that she was kept out of further mischief, but nevertheless she has never met a firing party because of me. Very well. From the good fellow Casimir I learned that a certain dancer appearing at one of our Montmartre theatres had written to the Grand Duke craving the honour of his autograph–and enclosing her photograph. Pf! it was enough. One week later the autograph arrived–attached to an invitation to dine with the Grand Duke at his hotel in Paris. Yes–he had come to Paris. I have said that he was susceptible and I have said that she was beautiful. I address myself to men of the world, and I shall not be in error if I assume that they will say, A wealthy fool and a designing woman. It is an old story. Let us see. The confidences of Casimir interested me in more ways than one. In the first place I had particular reasons for suspecting anyone who sought to obtain access to the Grand Duke. These were diplomatic. And in the second place I had suspicions of Zara el Khala. These were personal. Yes–so she called herself–Zara el Khala, which in Arabic is Flower of the Desert. She professed to be an Egyptian, and certainly she had the long, almond shaped eyes of the East, but her white skin betrayed her, and I knew that whilst she might possess Eastern blood, she was more nearly allied to Europe than to Africa. It is my business to note unusual matters, you understand, and I noticed that this beautiful and accomplished woman of whom all Paris was beginning to speak rapturously remained for many weeks at a small Montmartre theatre. Her performance, which was unusually decorous for the type of establishment at which she appeared, had not apparently led to an engagement elsewhere. This aroused the suspicions to which I have referred. In the character of a vaudeville agent I called at the Montmartre theatre and was informed by the management that Zara el Khala received no visitors, professional or otherwise. A small but expensive car awaited her at the stage door. My suspicions increased. I went away, but returned on the following night, otherwise attired, and from a hiding place which I had selected on the previous evening I watched the dancer depart. She came out so enveloped in furs and veils as to be unrecognizable, and a Hindu wearing a chauffeur’s uniform opened the door of the car for her, and then, having arranged the rugs to her satisfaction, mounted to the wheel and drove away. I traced the car. It had been hired for the purpose of taking Zara el Khala from her hotel–to the theatre and home nightly. I sent a man to call upon her at the hotel–in order to obtain press material, ostensibly. She declined to see him. I became really interested. I sent her a choice bouquet, having the card of a nobleman attached to it, together with a message of respectful admiration. It was returned. I prevailed upon one of the most handsome and gallant cavalry officers in Paris to endeavour to make her acquaintance. He was rebuffed. Eh bien! I knew then that Mlle. Zara of the Desert was unusual. You will at once perceive that when I heard from the worthy Casimir how this unapproachable lady had actually written to the Grand Duke Ivan and had gone so far as to send him her photograph, I became excited. It appeared to me that I found myself upon the brink of an important discovery. I set six of my first class men at work: three being detailed to watch the hotel of the Grand Duke Ivan and three to watch Zara el Khala. Two more were employed in watching the Hindu servant and one in watching my good friend Casimir. Thus, nine clever men and myself were immediately engaged upon the case. Why do I speak of a case when thus far nothing of apparent importance had occurred? I will explain. Although the Grand Duke travelled incognito, his Government knew of the journey and wished to learn with what object it had been undertaken. At the time that I made the acquaintance of Casimir the Grand Duke had been in Paris for three days, and he was–according to my informant–like a raging lion. The charming dancer had vouchsafed no reply to his invitation and he had met with the same reception, on presenting himself in person, which had been accorded to myself and to those others who had sought to obtain an interview with Zara el Khala! My state of mystification grew more and more profound. I studied the reports of my nine assistants. It appeared that the girl had been in Paris for a period of two months. She occupied a suite of rooms in which all her meals were served. Except the Hindu who drove the hired car, she had no servant. She never appeared in the public part of the hotel unless veiled, and then merely in order to pass out to the car or in from it on returning. She drove out every day. She had been followed, of course, but her proceedings were unexceptionable. Leaving the car at a point in the Bois De Boulogne, she would take a short walk, if the day was fine enough, never proceeding out of sight of the Hindu, who followed with the automobile, and would then drive back to her hotel. She never received visits and never met any one during these daily excursions. I turned to the report dealing with the Hindu. He had hired a room high up under the roof of an apartment house where foreign waiters and others had their abodes. He bought and cooked his own food, which apparently consisted solely of rice, lentils and fruit. He went every morning to the garage and attended to the car, called for his mistress, and having returned remained until evening in his own apartment. At night, after returning from the theatre, he sometimes went out, and my agent had failed to keep track of him on every occasion that he had attempted pursuit. I detached the man who was watching Casimir and whose excellent reports revealed the fact that Casimir was an honest fellow–as valets go–and instructed him to assist in tracing the movements of the Hindu. Two nights later they tracked him to a riverside cafe kept by a gigantic quadroon from Dominique and patronized by that type which forms a link between the lowest commercial and the criminal classes: itinerant vendors of Eastern rugs, street performers and Turkish cigarette makers. At last I began to have hopes. The Grand Duke at this time was speaking of leaving Paris, but as he had found temporary consolation in the smiles of a lady engaged at the Folies I did not anticipate that he would depart for several days at any rate. Also he was the kind of man who is stimulated by obstacles. The Hindu remained for an hour in the cafe, smoking and drinking some kind of syrup, and one of my fellows watched him. Presently the proprietor called him into a little room behind the counter and closed the door. The Hindu and the quadroon remained there for a few minutes, then the Hindu came out and left the cafe, returning to his abode. There was a telephone in this inner room, and my agent was of opinion that the Indian had entered either to make or to receive a call. I caused the line to be tapped. On the following night the Hindu came back to the cafe, followed by one of my men. I posted myself at a selected point and listened for any message that might pass over the line to or from the cafe. At about the same hour as before–according to the report–someone called up the establishment, asking for Miguel. This was the quadroon, and I heard his thick voice replying. The other voice–which had first spoken–was curiously sibilant but very distinct. Yet it did not sound like the voice of a Frenchman or of any European. This was the conversation: Miguel. Miguel speaks. Scorpion. A message for Chunda Lal. Very good. Almost holding my breath, so intense was my excitement, I waited whilst Miguel went to bring the Hindu. Suddenly a new voice spoke–that of the Hindu. Chunda Lal speaks, it said. I clenched by teeth; I knew that I must not miss a syllable. Scorpion replied … in voluble Hindustani–a language of which I know less than a dozen words! Chapter 13. Concerning The Grand Duke. Although I had met with an unforeseen check, I had nevertheless learned three things. I had learned that Miguel the quadroon was possibly in league with the Hindu; that the Hindu was called Chunda Lal; and that Chunda Lal received messages, probably instructions, from a third party who announced his presence by the word Scorpion. One of my fellows, of course, had been in the cafe all the evening, and from him I obtained confirmation of the fact that it had been the Hindu who had been summoned to the telephone and whom I had heard speaking. Instant upon the man at the cafe replacing the telephone and disconnecting, I called up the exchange. They had been warned and were in readiness. From what subscriber did that call come? I demanded. Alas! another check awaited me. It had originated in a public call office, and Scorpion was untraceable by this means! Despair is not permitted by the traditions of the Service de Surete. Therefore I returned to my flat and recorded the facts of the matter thus far established. I perceived that I had to deal, not with a designing woman, but with some shadowy being of whom she was an instrument. The anomaly of her life was in a measure explained. She sojourned in Paris for a purpose–a mysterious purpose which was concerned I could not doubt it with the Grand Duke Ivan. This was not an amorous but a political intrigue. I communicated, at a late hour, with the senior of the three men watching the Grand Duke. The Grand Duke that evening had sent a handsome piece of jewellery purchased in Rue de la Paix to the dancer. It had been returned. In the morning I met with the good Casimir at his favorite cafe. He had just discovered that Zara el Khala drove daily to the Bois de Boulogne, alone, and that afternoon the Grand Duke had determined to accost her during her solitary walk. I prepared myself for this event. Arrayed in a workman’s blouse and having a modest luncheon and a small bottle of wine in a basket, I concealed myself in that part of the Bois which was the favourite recreation ground of the dancer, and awaited her appearance. The Grand Duke appeared first upon the scene, accompanied by Casimir. The latter pointed out to him a path through the trees along which Zara el Khala habitually strolled and showed him the point at which she usually rejoined the Hindu who followed along the road with the car. They retired. I seated myself beneath a tree from whence I could watch the path and the road and began to partake of the repast which I had brought with me. At about three o’clock the dancer’s car appeared, and the girl, veiled as usual, stepped out, and having exchanged a few words with the Indian, began to walk slowly towards me, sometimes pausing to watch a bird in the boughs above her and sometimes to examine some wild plant growing beside the way. I ate cheese from the point of a clasp knife and drank wine out of the bottle. Suddenly she saw me. She had cast her veil aside in order to enjoy the cool and fragrant air, and as she stopped and regarded me doubtfully where I sat, I saw her beautiful face, undefiled, now, by make up and unspoiled by the presence of garish Eastern ornaments. Nom d’un nom! but she was truly a lovely woman! My heart went out in sympathy to the poor Grand Duke. Had I received such a mark of favour from her as he had received, and had I then been scorned as now she scorned him, I should have been desperate indeed. Coming around a bend in the path, then, she stood only a few paces away, looking at me. I touched the peak of my cap. Good day, mademoiselle, I said. The weather is very beautiful. Good day, she replied. I continued to eat cheese, and reassured she walked on past me. Twenty yards beyond, the Grand Duke was waiting. As I laid down my knife upon the paper which had been wrapped around the bread and cheese, and raised the bottle to my lips, the enamoured nobleman stepped out from the trees and bowed low before Zara el Khala. She started back from him–a movement of inimitable grace, like that of a startled gazelle. And even before I had time to get upon my feet she had raised a little silver whistle to her lips and blown a short shrill note. The Grand Duke, endeavouring to seize her hand, was pouring out voluble expressions of adoration in execrable French, and Zara el Khala was retreating step by step. She had quickly thrown the veil about her again. I heard the pad of swiftly running feet. If I was to intervene before the arrival of the Hindu, I must act rapidly. I raced along the path and thrust myself between the Grand Duke and the girl. Mademoiselle, I said, is this gentleman annoying you? How dare you, low pig! cried the Grand Duke, and with a sweep of his powerful arm he hurled me aside. Thank you, replied Zara el Khala with great composure. But my servant is here. As I turned, Chunda Lal hurled himself upon the Grand Duke from behind. I had never seen an expression in a man’s eyes like that in the eyes of the Hindu at this moment. They blazed like the eyes of a tiger, and his teeth were bared in a savage grin which I cannot hope to describe. His lean body seemed to shoot through the air, and he descended upon his burly adversary as a jungle beast falls upon its prey. Those long brown fingers clasping his neck, the Grand Duke fell forward upon his face. Chunda Lal! said the dancer. Kneeling, his right knee thrust between the shoulder blades of the prostrate man, the Hindu looked up–and I read murder in those glaring eyes. That he was an accomplished wrestler–or perhaps a strangler–I divined from the helplessness of the Grand Duke, who lay inert, robbed of every power except that of his tongue. He was swearing savagely. Chunda Lal! said Zara el Khala again. The Hindu shifted his grip from the neck to the arms of the Grand Duke. He pinioned him as is done in jiu jitsu and forced him to stand upright. It was a curious spectacle–the impotency of this burly nobleman in the hands of his slight adversary. As they swayed to their feet, I thought I saw the glint of metal in the right hand of the Indian, but I could not be sure, for my attention was diverted. At this moment Casimir appeared upon the scene, looking very frightened. Suddenly releasing his hold altogether, the Hindu glaring into the empurpled face of the Grand Duke, shot out one arm and pointed with a quivering finger along the path. Go! he said. The Grand Duke clenched his fists, looked from face to face as if calculating his chances, then shrugged his shoulders, very deliberately wiped his neck and wrists, where the Indian had held him, with a large silk handkerchief and threw the handkerchief on the ground. I saw a speck of blood upon the silk. Without another glance he walked away, Casimir following sheepishly. It is needless, perhaps, to add that Casimir had not recognized me. I turned to the dancer, touching the peak of my cap. Can I be of any assistance to mademoiselle? I asked. Thank you–no, she replied. She placed five francs in my hand and set off rapidly through the trees in the direction of the road, her bloodthirsty but faithful attendant at her heels! I stood scratching my head and looking after her. That afternoon I posted a man acquainted with Hindustani to tap any message which might be sent to or from the cafe used by Chunda Lal. I learned that the Grand Duke had taken a stage box at the Montmartre theatre at which the dancer was appearing, and I decided that I would be present also. A great surprise was in store for me. Zara el Khala had at this time established a reputation which extended beyond those circles from which the regular patrons of this establishment were exclusively drawn and which had begun to penetrate to all parts of Paris. You will remember that it was the extraordinary circumstance of her remaining at this obscure place of entertainment so long which had first interested me in the lady. I had learned that she had rejected a number of professional offers, and, as I have already stated, I had assured myself of this unusual attitude by presenting the card of a well known Paris agency–and being refused admittance. Now, as I leaned upon the rail at the back of the auditorium and the time for the dancer’s appearance grew near, I could not fail to observe that there was a sprinkling of evening dress in the stalls and that the two boxes already occupied boasted the presence of parties of well known men of fashion. Then the Grand Duke entered as a troupe of acrobats finished their performance. Zara el Khala was next upon the programme. I glanced at the Grand Duke and thought that he looked pale and unwell. The tableau curtain fell and the manager appeared behind the footlights. He, also, seemed to be much perturbed. Ladies and gentlemen, he said, I greatly regret to announce that Mlle. Zara el Kahla is indisposed and unable to appear. We have succeeded in obtaining the services—- Of whom he had succeeded in obtaining the services I never heard, for the rougher section of the audience rose at him like a menacing wave! They had come to see the Egyptian dancer and they would have their money back! It was a swindle; they would smash the theatre! If one had doubted the great and growing popularity of Zara el Kahla, this demonstration must have proved convincing. Over the heads of the excited audience, I saw the Grand Duke rise as if to retire. The other box parties were also standing up and talking angrily. Why was it not announced outside the theatre? someone shouted. We did not know until twenty minutes ago! cried the manager in accents of despair. I hurried from the theatre and took a taxicab to the hotel of the dancer. Running into the hall, I thrust a card in the hand of a concierge who stood there. Announce to Mlle. Zara el Khala that I must see her at once, I said. The man smiled and returned the card to me. Mlle. Zara el Khala left Paris at seven o’clock, monsieur! What! I cried–left Paris! But certainly. Her baskets were taken to the Gare du Nord an hour earlier by her servant and she went off by the seven fifty rapid for Calais. The theatre people were here asking for her an hour ago. I hurried to my office to obtain the latest reports of my men, I had lost touch with them, you understand, during the latter part of the afternoon and evening. I found there the utmost confusion. They had been seeking me all over Paris to inform me that Zara el Khala had left. Two men had followed her and had telephoned from Calais for instructions. She had crossed by the night mail for Dover. It was already too late to instruct the English police. For a few hours I had relaxed my usual vigilance–and this was the result. What could I do? Zara el Khala had committed no crime, but her sudden flight–for it looked like flight you will agree–was highly suspicious. And as I sat there in my office filled with all sorts of misgivings, in ran one of the men engaged in watching the Grand Duke. The Grand Duke had been seized with illness as he left his box in the Montmartre theatre and had died before his car could reach the hotel! Chapter 14. A Strange Question. A conviction burst upon my mind that a frightful crime had been committed. By whom and for what purpose I knew not. I hastened to the hotel of the Grand Duke. Tremendous excitement prevailed there, of course. There is no more certain way for a great personage to court publicity than to travel incognito. Everywhere that M. de Stahler had appeared all Paris had cried, There goes the Grand Duke Ivan! And now as I entered the hotel, press, police and public were demanding: Is it true that the Grand Duke is dead? Just emerging from the lift I saw Casimir. In propria persona–as M. Max–he failed to recognize me. My good man, I said–are you a member of the suite of the late Grand Duke? I am, or was, the valet of M. de Stahler, monsieur, he replied. I showed him my card. To me ‘M. de Stahler’ is the Grand Duke Ivan. What other servants had he with him? I asked, although I knew very well. None, monsieur. Where and when was he taken ill? At the Theatre Coquerico. Montmartre, at about a quarter past ten o’clock to night. Who was with him? No one, monsieur. His Highness was alone in a box. I had instructions to call with the car at eleven o’clock. Well? The theatre management telephoned at a quarter past ten to say that His Highness had been taken ill and that a physician had been sent for. I went in the car at once and found him lying in one of the dressing rooms to which he had been carried. A medical man was in attendance. The Grand Duke was unconscious. We moved him to the car—- We? The doctor, the theatre manager, and myself. The Grand Duke was then alive, the physician declared, although he seemed to me to be already dead. But just before we reached the hotel, the physician, who was watching His Highness anxiously, cried, ‘Ah,mon Dieu! It is finished. What a catastrophe!’ He was dead? He was dead, monsieur. Who has seen him? They have telephoned for half the doctors in Paris, monsieur, but it is too late. He was affected, the good Casimir. Tears welled up in his eyes. I mounted in the lift to the apartment in which the Grand Duke lay. Three doctors were there, one of them being he of whom Casimir had spoken. Consternation was written on every face. It was his heart, I was assured by the doctor who had been summoned to the theatre. We shall find that he suffered from heart trouble. They were all agreed upon the point. He must have sustained a great emotional shock, said another. You are convinced that there was no foul play, gentlemen? I asked. They were quite unanimous on the point. Did the Grand Duke make any statement at the time of the seizure which would confirm the theory of a heart attack? No. He had fallen down unconscious outside the door of his box, and from this unconsciousness he had never recovered. Depositions of witnesses, medical evidence and other documents are available for the guidance of whoever may care to see them, but, as is well known, the death of the Grand Duke was ascribed to natural causes and it seemed as though my trouble would after all prove to be in vain. Let us see what happened. Leaving the hotel, on the night of the Grand Duke’s death, I joined the man who was watching the cafe telephone. There had been a message during the course of the evening, but it had been for a Greek cigarette maker and it referred to the theft of several bales of Turkish tobacco–useful information, of minor kind, but of little interest to me. I knew that it would be useless to question the man Miguel, although I strongly suspected him of being a member of The Scorpion’s organization. Any patron of the establishment enjoyed the privilege of receiving private telephone calls at the cafe on payment of a small fee. A man of less experience in obscure criminology might now have assumed that he had been misled by a series of striking coincidences. Remember, there was not a shadow of doubt in the minds of the medical experts that the Grand Duke had died from syncope. His own professional advisor had sent written testimony to show that there was hereditary heart trouble, although not of a character calculated to lead to a fatal termination except under extraordinary circumstances. His own Government, which had every reason to suspect that the Grand Duke’s assassination might be attempted, was satisfied. Eh bien! I was not. I cross examined the manager of the Theatre Coquerico. He admitted that Mlle. Zara el Khala had been a mystery throughout her engagement. Neither he nor anyone else connected with the house had ever entered her dressing room or held any conversation with her, whatever, except the stage manager and the musical director. These had spoken to her about her music and about lighting and other stage effects. She spoke perfect French. Such a state of affairs was almost incredible, but was explained by the fact that the dancer, at a most modest salary, had doubled the takings of the theatre in a few days and had attracted capacity business throughout the remainder of her engagement. She had written from Marseilles, enclosing press notices and other usual matter and had been booked direct for one week. She had remained for two months, and might have remained for ever, the poor manager assured me, at five times the salary! A curious fact now came to light. In all her photographs Zara el Khala appeared veiled, in the Eastern manner; that is to say, she wore a white silk yashmak which concealed all her face except her magnificent eyes! On the stage the veil was discarded; in the photographs it was always present. And the famous picture which she had sent to the Grand Duke? He had destroyed it, in a fit of passion, on returning from the Bois de Boulogne after his encounter with Chunda Lal! It is Fate after all–Kismet–and not the wit of man which leads to the apprehension of really great criminals–a tireless Fate which dogs their footsteps, a remorseless Fate from which they fly in vain. Long after the funeral of the Grand Duke, and at a time when I had almost forgotten Zara el Khala, I found myself one evening at the opera with a distinguished French scientist and he chanced to refer to the premature death which had occurred a few months earlier of Henrik Ericksen, the Norwegian. A very great loss to the century, M. Max, he said. Ericksen was as eminent in electrical science as the Grand Duke Ivan was eminent in the science of war. Both were stricken down in the prime of life–and under almost identical circumstances. That is true, I said thoughtfully. It would almost seem, he continued, as if Nature had determined to foil any further attempts to rifle her secrets and Heaven to check mankind in the making of future wars. Only three months after the Grand Duke’s death, the American admiral, Mackney, died at sea–you will remember? Now, following Ericksen, Van Rembold, undoubtedly the greatest mining engineer of the century and the only man who has ever produced radium in workable quantities, is seized with illness at a friend’s house and expires even before medical aid can be summoned. It is very strange.’ It is uncanny. Were you personally acquainted with the late Van Rembold? I asked. I knew him intimately–a man of unusual charm, M. Max; and I have particular reason to remember his death, for I actually met him and spoke to him less than an hour before he died. We only exchanged a few words–we met on the street; but I shall never forget the subject of our chat. How is that? I asked. Well, I presume Van Rembold’s question was prompted by his knowledge of the fact that I had studied such subjects at one time; but he asked me if I knew of any race or sect in Africa or Asia who worshipped scorpions. Scorpions! I cried. Ah, mon Dieu! monsieur say it again– scorpions? But yes, certainly. Does it surprise you? Did it not surprise you? Undoubtedly. I could not imagine what had occurred to account for his asking so strange a question. I replied that I knew of no such sect, and Van Rembold immediately changed the subject, nor did he revert to it. So that I never learned why he had made that singular inquiry. You can imagine that this conversation afforded me much food for reflection. Whilst I could think of no reason why anyone should plot to assassinate Grand Dukes, admirals and mining engineers, the circumstances of the several cases were undoubtedly similar in a number of respects. But it was the remarkable question asked by Van Rembold which particularly aroused my interest. Of course it might prove to be nothing more than a coincidence, but when one comes to consider how rarely the word scorpion is used, outside those in which these insects abound, it appears to be something more. Van Rembold, then, had had some occasion to feel curious about the scorpions; the name Scorpion was associated with the Hindu follower of Zara el Khala; and she was who had brought the Grand Duke to Paris, where he had died. Oh! it was a very fragile thread, but by following such a thread as this we are sometimes led to the heart of a labyrinth. Beyond wondering if some sinister chain bound together this series of apparently natural deaths I might have made no move in the matter, but something occurred which spurred me to action. Sir Frank Narcombe, the great English surgeon, collapsed in the foyer of a London theatre and died shortly afterwards. Here again I perceived a case of a notable man succumbing unexpectedly in a public place–a case parallel to that of the Grand Duke, of Ericksen, of Van Rembold! it seemed as though some strange epidemic had attacked men of science–yes! they were all men of science, even including the Grand Duke, who was said to be the most scientific soldier in Europe, and the admiral, who had perfected the science of submarine warfare. The Scorpion! … that name haunted me persistently. So much so that at last I determined to find out for myself if Sir Frank Narcombe had ever spoken about a scorpion or if there was any evidence to show that he had been interested in the subject. I could not fail to remember, too, that Zara el Khala had last been reported as crossing to England. Chapter 15. The Fight In The Cafe. New Scotland Yard had been advised that any reference to a scorpion, in whatever form it occurred, should be noted and followed up, but nothing had resulted and as a matter of fact I was not surprised in the least. All that I had learned–and this was little enough–I had learned more or less by accident. But I came to the conclusion that a visit to London might be advisable. I had caused a watch to be kept upon the man Miguel, whose establishment seemed to be a recognized resort of shady characters. I had no absolute proof, remember, that he knew anything of the private affairs of the Hindu, and no further reference to a scorpion had been made by anyone using the cafe telephone. Nevertheless I determined to give him a courtesy call before leaving for London … and to this determination I cannot doubt that once again I was led by providence. Attired in a manner calculated to enable me to pass unnoticed among the patrons of the establishment, I entered the place and ordered cognac. Miguel having placed it before me, I lighted a cigarette and surveyed my surroundings. Eight or nine men were in the cafe, and two women. Four of the men were playing cards at a corner table, and the others were distributed about the place, drinking and smoking. The women, who were flashily dressed but who belonged to that order of society which breeds the Apache, were deep in conversation with a handsome Algerian. I recognized only one face in the cafe–that of a dangerous character, Jean Sach, who had narrowly escaped the electric chair in the United States and who was well known to the Bureau. He was smiling at one of the two women–the woman to whom the Algerian seemed to be more particularly addressing himself. Another there was in the cafe who interested me as a student of physiognomy–a dark, bearded man, one of the card players. His face was disfigured by a purple scar extending from his brow to the left corner of his mouth, which it had drawn up into a permanent snarl, so that he resembled an enraged and dangerous wild animal. Mentally I classified this person as Le Balafre. I had just made up my mind to depart when the man Sach arose, crossed the cafe and seated himself insolently between the Algerian and the woman to whom the latter was talking. Turning his back upon the brown man, he addressed some remark to the woman, at the same time leering in her face. Women of this class are difficult, you understand? Sach received from the lady a violent blow upon the face which rolled him on the floor! As he fell, the Algerian sprang up and drew a knife. Sach rolled away from him and also reached for the knife which he carried in a hip pocket. Before he could draw it, Miguel, the quadroon proprietor, threw himself upon him and tried to pitch him into the street. But Sach, although a small man, was both agile and ferocious. He twisted out of the grasp of the huge quadroon and turned, raising the knife. As he did so, the Algerian deftly kicked it from his grasp and left Sach to face Miguel unarmed. Screaming with rage, he sprang at Miguel’s throat, and the two fell writhing upon the floor. There could only be one end to such a struggle, of course, as the Algerian recognized by replacing his knife in his pocket and resuming his seat. Miguel obtained a firm hold upon Sacah and raised him bodily above his head, as one has seen a professional weight lifter raise a heavy dumb bell. Thus he carried him, kicking and foaming at the mouth with passion, to the open door. From the step he threw him into the middle of the street. At this moment I observed something glittering upon the floor close to the chair occupied by the Algerian. Standing up–for I had determined to depart–I crossed in that direction, stooped and picked up this object which glittered. As my fingers touched it, so did my heart give a great leap. The object was a golden scorpion! Forgetful of my dangerous surroundings I stood looking at the golden ornament in my hand … when suddenly and violently it was snatched from me! The Algerian, his brown face convulsed with rage, confronted me. Where did you find that charm? he cried. It belongs to me. Very well, I replied–you have it. He glared at me with a ferocity which the incident scarcely seemed to merit and exchanged a significant glance with someone who had approached and who now stood behind me. Turning, I met a second black gaze–that of the quadroon who having restored order had returned from the cafe door and now stood regarding me. Did you find it on the floor? asked Miguel suspiciously. I did. He turned to the Algerian. It fell when you kicked the knife from the hand of that pig, he said. You should be more careful. Again they exchanged significant glances, but the Algerian resumed his seat and Miguel went behind the counter. I left the cafe conscious of the fact that black looks pursued me. The night was very dark, and as I came out on to the pavement someone touched me on the arm. I turned in a flash. Walk on, friend, said the voice of Jean Sach. What was it that you picked up from the floor? A golden scorpion, I answered quickly. Ah! he whispered–I thought so! It is enough. They shall pay for what they have done to me–those two. Hurry, friend, as I do. Before I could say another word or strive to detain him, he turned and ran off along a narrow courtway which at this point branched from the street. I stood for a moment, nonplussed, staring after him. By good fortune I had learned more in ten minutes than by the exercise of all my ingenuity and the resources of the Service I could have learned in ten months! Par al barbe du prophete the Kismet which dogs the footsteps of malefactors assisted me! Recollecting the advice of Jean Sach, I set off at a brisk pace along the street, which was dark and deserted and which passed through a district marked red on the Paris crimes map. Arriving at the corner, above which projected a lamp, I paused and glanced back into the darkness. I could see no one, but I thought I could detect the sound of stealthy footsteps following me. The suspicion was enough. I quickened my pace, anxious to reach the crowded boulevard upon which this second street opened. I reached it unmolested, but intending to throw any pursuer off the track, I dodged and doubled repeatedly on the way to my flat and arrived there about midnight, convinced that I had eluded pursuit–if indeed I had been pursued. All my arrangements were made for leaving Paris, and now I telephoned to the assistant on duty in my office, instructing him to take certain steps in regard to the proprietor of the cafe and the Algerian and to find the hiding place of the man Jean Sach. I counted it more than ever important that I should go to London at once. In this belief I was confirmed at the very moment that I boarded the Channel steamer at Boulogne: for as I stepped upon the deck I found myself face to face with a man who was leaning upon the rail and apparently watching the passengers coming on board. He was a man of heavy build, dark and bearded, and his face was strangely familiar. Turning, as I lighted a cigarette, I glanced back at him in order to obtain a view of his profile. I knew him instantly–for now the scar was visible. It was Le Balafre who had been playing cards in Miguel’s cafe on the previous night! I have sometimes been criticised, especially by my English confreres, for my faith in disguise. I have been told that no disguise is impenetrable to the trained eye. I reply that there are many disguises but few trained eyes! To my faith in disguise I owed the knowledge that a golden scorpion was the token of some sort of gang, society, or criminal group, and to this same faith which an English inspector of police once assured me to be a misplaced one I owed, on boarding the steamer, my escape from detection by this big bearded fellow who was possibly looking out for me! Yet, I began to wonder if after all I had escaped the shadowy pursuer whose presence I had suspected in the dark street outside the cafe or if he had tracked me and learned my real identity. In any event, the roles were about to be reversed! Le Balafre at Folkestone took a seat in a third class carriage of the London train. I took one in the next compartment. Arrived at Charing Cross, he stood for a time in the booking hall, glanced at his watch, and then took up the handbag which he carried and walked out into the station yard. I walked out also. Le Balafre accosted a cabman; and as he did so I passed close behind him and overheard a part of the conversation. … Bow Road Station East! It’s too far. What? I glanced back. The bearded man was holding up a note–a pound note apparently. I saw the cabman nod. Without an instant’s delay I rushed up to another cabman who had just discharged a passenger. To Bow Road Station East! I said to the man. Double fare if you are quick! It would be a close race. But I counted on the aid of that Fate which dogs the steps of wrong doers! My cab was off first and the driver had every reason for hurrying. From the moment that we turned out into the Strand until we arrived at our destination I saw no more of Le Balafre. My extensive baggage I must hope to recover later. At Bow Road Station I discovered a telephone box in a dark corner which commanded a view of the street. I entered this box and waited. It was important that I should remain invisible. Unless my bearded friend had been unusually fortunate he could not well have arrived before me. As it chanced I had nearly six minutes to wait. Then, not ten yards away, I saw Le Balafre arrive and dismiss the cabman outside the station. There was nothing furtive in his manner; he was evidently satisfied that no one pursued him; and he stood in the station entrance almost outside my box and lighted a cigar! Placing his bag upon the floor, he lingered, looking to left and right, when suddenly a big closed car painted dull yellow drew up beside the pavement. It was driven by a brown faced chauffeur whose nationality I found difficulty in placing, for he wore large goggles. But before I could determine upon my plan of action, Le Balafre crossed the pavement and entered the car–and the car glided smoothly away, going East. A passing lorry obstructed my view and I even failed to obtain a glimpse of the number on the plate. But I had seen something which had repaid me for my trouble. As the man of the scar had walked up to the car, had exhibited to the brown skinned chauffeur some object which he held in the palm of his hand … an object which glittered like gold! II. LE BALAFRE Chapter 16. I Become Charles Malet. Behold me established in rooms in Battersea and living retired during the day while I permitted my beard to grow. I had recognized that my mystery of The Scorpion was the biggest case which had ever engaged the attention of the Service de Surete, and I was prepared, if necessary, to devote my whole time for twelve months to its solution. I had placed myself in touch with Paris, and had had certain papers and licenses forwarded to me. A daily bulletin reached me, and one of these bulletins was sensational. The body of Jean Sach had been recovered from the Seine. The man had been stabbed to the heart. Surveillance of Miguel and his associates continued unceasingly, but I had directed that no raids or arrests were to be made without direct orders from me. I was now possessed of a French motor license and also that of a Paris taxi driver, together with all the other documents necessary to establish the identity of one Charles Malet. Everything was in order. I presented myself–now handsomely bearded–at New Scotland Yard and applied for a license. The knowledge of London and other tests I passed successfully and emerged a fully fledged cabman! Already I had opened negotiations for the purchase of a dilapidated but seviceable cab which belonged to a small proprietor who had obtained a car of more up to date pattern to replace this obsolete one. I completed these negotiations by paying down a certain sum and arranged to garage my cab in the disused stable of a house near my rooms in Battersea. Thus I now found myself in a position to appear anywhere at any time without exciting suspicion, enabled swiftly to proceed from point to point and to pursue anyone either walking or driving whom it might please me to pursue. It was a modus operandi which had served me well in Paris and which had led to one of my biggest successes the capture of the French desperado known as Mr. Q. in New York. I had obtained, via Paris, particulars of the recent death of Sir Frank Narcombe, and the circumstances attendant upon his end were so similar to those which had characterized the fate of the Grand Duke, of Van Rembold and the others, that I could not for a moment believe them to be due to mere coincidence. Acting upon my advice Paris advised Scotland Yard to press for a post mortem examination of the body, but the influence of Sir Frank’s family was exercised to prevent this being carried out–and exercised successfully. Meanwhile, I hovered around the houses, flats, clubs and offices of everyone who had been associated with the late surgeon, noting to what addresses they directed me to drive and who lived at those address. In this way I obtained evidence sufficient to secure three judicial separations, but not a single clue leading to The Scorpion! No matter. At every available opportunity I haunted the East End streets, hoping for a glimpse of the big car and the brown skinned chauffeur or of my scarred man from Paris. I frequented all sorts of public bars and eating houses used by foreign and Asiatics. By day and by night I roamed about the dismal thoroughfares of that depressing district, usually with my flag down to imply that I was engaged. Such diligence never goes long unrewarded. One evening, having discharged a passenger, a mercantile officer, at the East India Docks, as I was drifting, watchfully, back through Limehouse, I saw a large car pull up just ahead of me in the dark. A man got out and the car was driven off. Two courses presented themselves. I was not sure that this was the car for which I sought, but it strangely resembled it. Should I follow the car or the man? A rapid decision was called for. I followed the man. That I had not been mistaken in the identity of the car shortly appeared. The man took out a cigar and standing on the corner opposite the Town Hall, lighted it. I was close to him at the time, and by the light of the match, which he sheltered with his hands, I saw the scarred and bearded face! Triomphe! it was he! Having lighted his cigar, he crossed the road and entered the saloon of a neighbourhood public house. Locking my cab I, also, entered that saloon. I ordered a glass of bitter beer and glanced around at the object of my interest. He had obtained a glass of brandy and was contorting his hideous face as he sipped the beverage. I laughed. Have they tried to poison you, mister! I said. Ah,pardieu! poison–yes! he replied. You want to have it out of a bottle, I continued confidentially– Martell’s Three Stars. He stared at me uncomprehendingly. I don’t know, he said haltingly. I have very little English. Oh, that’s it! I cried, speaking French with a barbarous accent. You only speak French? Yes, yes, he replied eagerly. It is so difficult to make oneself understood. This spirit is not cognac, it is some kind of petrol! Finishing my bitter, I ordered two glasses of good brandy and placed one before Le Balafre. Try that, I said, continuing to speak in French, You will find it is better. He sipped from his glass and agreed that I was right. We chatted together for ten minutes and had another drink, after which my dangerous looking acquaintance wished me good night and went out. The car had come from the West, and I strongly suspected that my man either lived in the neighbourhood or had come there to keep an appointment. Leaving my cab outside the public house, I followed him on foot, down Three Colt Street to Ropemaker Street, where he turned into a narrow alley leading to the riverside. It was straight and deserted, and I dared not follow further until he had reached the corner. I heard his footsteps pass right to the end. Then the sound died away. I ran to the corner. The back of a wharf building–a high blank wall–faced a row of ramshackle tenements, some of them built of wood; but not a soul was in sight. I reluctantly returned to the spot at which I had left the cab–and found a constable there who wanted to know what I meant by leaving a vehicle in the street unattended. I managed to enlist his sympathy by telling him that I had been in pursuit of a fare who had swindled me with a bad half crown. The ruse succeeded. Which street did he go down, mate? asked the constable. I described the street and described the scarred man. The constable shook his head. Sounds like one o’ them foreign sailormen, he said. But I don’t know what he can have gone down there for. It’s nearly all Chinese, that part. His words came as a revelation; they changed the whole complexion of the case. It dawned upon me even as he spoke the word Chinese that the golden scorpion which I had seen in the Paris cafe was of Chinese workmanship! I started my engine and drove slowly to that street in which I had lost the track of Le Balafre. I turned the cab so that I should be ready to drive off at a moment’s notice, and sat there wondering what my next move should be. How long I had been there I cannot say, when suddenly it began to rain in torrents. What I might have done or what I had hoped to do is of no importance; for as I sat there staring out at the dismal rain swept street, a man came along, saw the head lamps of the cab and stopped, peering in my direction. Evidently perceiving that I drove a cab and not a private car, he came towards me. Are you disengaged? he asked. Whether it was that I sympathized with him–he had no topcoat or umbrella–or whether I was guided by Fate I know not, but as he spoke I determined to give up my dreary vigil for that night. Pardieu! but certainly it was Fate again! Well, I suppose I am, sir, I said, and asked him where he wanted to go. He gave an address not five hundred yards from my own rooms! I thought this so curious that I hesitated no longer. Jump in, I said; and still seeking in my mind for a link between the scorpion case and China, I drove off, and in less than half an hour, for the streets were nearly empty, arrived at my destination. The passenger, whose name was Dr. Keppel Stuart, very kindly suggested a glass of hot grog, and I did not refuse his proferred hospitality. When I came out of his house again, the rain had almost ceased, and just as I stooped to crank the car I thought I saw a shadowy figure moving near the end of a lane which led to the tradesmen’s entrance of Dr. Stuart’s house. A sudden suspicion laid hold upon me–a horrible doubt. Having driven some twenty yards along the road, I leaned from my seat and looked back. A big man wearing a black waterproof overall was standing looking after me! Remembering how cleverly I had been trailed from Miguel’s cafe to my flat, in Paris for I no longer doubted that someone had followed me on that occasion, I now perceived that I might again be the object of the same expert’s attention. Stopping my engine half way along the next road, I jumped out and ran back, hiding in the bushes which grew beside the gate of a large empty house. I had only a few seconds to wait. A big closed car, running almost silently, passed before me … and Le Balafre was leaning out of the window! At last I saw my chance of finding the headquarters of The Scorpion. Alas! The man of the scar was as swift to recognize that possibility as I. A moment after he had passed my stationary cab, and found it to be deserted, his big car was off like the wind, and even before I could step out from the bushes the roar of the powerful engine was growing dim in the distance! I was detected. I had to deal with dangerously clever people. Chapter 17. Baiting The Trap. The following morning I spent at home, in my modest rooms, reviewing my position and endeavouring to adjust my plans in accordance with the latest development. The Scorpion had scored a point. What had aroused the suspicions of Le Balafre, I knew not; but I was inclined to think that he had been looking from some window or peep hole in the narrow street with the wooden houses when I had, injudiciously, followed him there. On the other hand, the leakage might be in Paris–or in my correspondence system. The man of the scar might have been looking for me as I was looking for him. That he was looking for someone on the cross channel boat I had not doubted. He was aware, then that Charles Malet, cabman, was watching him. But was he aware that Charles Malet was Gaston Max? And did he know where I lived? Also–did he perchance think that my meeting with Dr. Stuart in Limehouse had been prearranged? Clearly he had seen Dr. Stuart enter my cab, for he had pursued us to Battersea. This course of reflection presently led me to a plan. It was a dangerous plan, but I doubted if I should ever find myself in greater danger than I was already. Nom d’un nom! I had not forgotten the poor Jean Sach! That night, well knowing that I carried my life in my hands, I drove again to Limehouse Town Hall, and again leaving my cab outside went into the bar where I had previously met Le Balafre. If I had doubted that my movements were watched I must now have had such doubts dispelled; for two minutes later the man with the scar came in and greeted me affably! I had learned something else. He did not know that I had recognized him as the person who had tracked me to Dr. Stuart’s house! He invited me to drink with him, and I did so. As we raised our glasses I made a move. Looking all about me suspiciously: Am I right in supposing that you have business in this part of London? I asked. Yes, he replied My affairs bring me here sometimes. You are well acquainted with the neighbourhood? Fairly well. But actually of course I am a stranger to London. I tapped him confidentially upon the breast. Take my advice, as a friend, I said, and visit these parts as rarely as possible. Why do you say that? It is dangerous. From the friendly manner in which you entered into conversation with me, I perceived that you were of a genial and unsuspicious nature. Very well. I warn you. Last night I was followed from a certain street not far from here to the house of a medical man who is a specialist in certain kinds of criminology, you understand. He stared at me very hard, his teeth bared by that fearful snarl. You are a strange cabman. Perhaps I am. No matter. Take my advice. I have things written here–I tapped the breast of my tunic–which will astonish all the world shortly. I tell you, my friend, my fortune is made. I finished my drink and ordered another for myself and one for my acquaintance. He was watching me doubtfully. Taking up my replenished glass, I emptied it at a draught and ordered a third. I leaned over towards the scarred man, resting my hand heavily upon his shoulder. Five thousand pounds, I whispered thickly, has been offered for the information which I have here in my pocket. It is not yet complete, you understand, and because they may murder me before I obtain the rest of the facts, do you know what I am going to do with this? Again I tapped my tunic pocket. Le Balafre frowned perplexedly. I don’t even know what you are talking about, my friend, he replied. I know what I am talking about, I assured him, speaking more and more huskily. Listen, then: I am going to take all my notes to my friend, the doctor, and leave them with him, sealed–sealed, you follow me? If I do not come back for them, In a week, shall we say?–he sends them to the police. I do not profit, you think? No.morbleu! but there are some who hang! Emptying my third glass, I ordered a fourth and one for my companion. He checked me. No more for me, thank you, he said. I have–business to attend to. I will wish you good night. Good night! I cried boisterously–good night, friend! take heed of my good advice! As he went out, the barman brought me my fourth glass of cognac, staring at me doubtfully. Our conversation had been conducted in French, but the tone of my voice had attracted attention. Had about enough, ain’t you, mate? he said. Your ugly pal jibbed! Quite enough! I replied, in English now of course. But I’ve had a stroke of luck to night and I feel happy. Have one with me. This is a final. On going out into the street I looked cautiously about me, for I did not expect to reach the house of Dr. Stuart unmolested. I credited Le Balafre with sufficient acumen to distrust the genuineness of my intoxication, even if he was unaware of my real identity. I never make the mistake of underestimating an opponent’s wit, and whilst acting on the assumption that the scarred man knew me to be forcing his hand, I recognized that whether he believed me to be drunk or sober, Gaston Max or another, his line of conduct must be the same. He must take it for granted that I actually designed to lodge my notes with Dr. Stuart and endeavour to prevent me doing so. I could detect no evidence of surveillance whatever and cranking the engine I mounted and drove off. More than once, as I passed along Commercial Road, I stopped and looked back. But so far as I could make out no one was following me. The greater part of my route lay along populous thoroughfares, and of this I was not sorry; but I did not relish the prospect of Thames Street, along which presently my course led me. Leaving the city behind me, I turned into that thoroughfare, which at night is almost quite deserted, and there I pulled up. Pardieu! I was disappointed! It seemed as though my scheme had miscarried. It could not understand why I had been permitted to go unmolested, and I intended to walk back to the corner for a final survey before continuing my journey. This survey was never made. As I stopped the cab and prepared to descend, a faint–a very faint– sound almost in my ear, set me keenly on the alert. Just in the nick of time I ducked … as the blade of a long knife flashed past my head, ripping its way through my cloth cap! Yes! That movement had saved my life, for otherwise the knife must have entered my shoulder–and pierced to my heart! Someone was hidden in the cab! He had quietly opened one of the front windows and had awaited a suitable opportunity to stab me. Now, recognizing failure, he leapt out on the near side as I lurched and stumbled from my seat, and ran off like the wind. I never so much as glimpsed him. Mon Dieu! I muttered, raising my hand to my head, from which blood was trickling down my face, the plan succeeds! I bound a handkerchief as tightly as possible around the wound in my scalp and put my cap on to keep the bandage in place. The wound was only a superficial one, and except for the bleeding I suffered no inconvenience from it. But I had now a legitimate reason for visiting Dr. Stuart, and as I drove on towards Battersea I was modifying my original plan in accordance with the unforeseen conditions. It was long past Dr. Stuart’s hours of consultation when I arrived at his house, and the servant showed me into a waiting room, informing me that the doctor would join me in a few minutes. Directly she had gone out I took from the pocket of my tunic the sealed envelope which I had intended to lodge with the doctor. Pah! it was stained with blood which had trickled down from the wound in my scalp! Actually, you will say, there was no reason why I should place a letter in the hand of Dr. Stuart; my purpose would equally well be served by pretending that I had done so. Ah, but I knew that I had to deal with clever people–with artists in crime–and it behooved me to be an artist also. I had good reason to know that their system of espionage was efficient; and the slipshod way is ever the wrong way. The unpleasantly sticky letter I returned to my pocket, looking around me for some means of making up any kind of packet which could do duty as a substitute. Beyond a curtain draped over a recess at one end of the waiting room I saw a row of boxes, a box of lint and other medical paraphernalia. It was the doctor’s dispensary. Perhaps I might find there an envelope. I crossed the room and looked. Immediately around the corner, on a level with my eyes, was a packet of foolscap envelopes and a stick of black sealing wax! Bien! all that I now required was a stout sheet of paper to enclose in one of those envelopes. But not a scrap of paper could I find, except the blood stained letter in my pocket– towards which I had formed a strong antipathy. I had not even a newspaper in my possession. I thought of folding three or four envelopes, but there were only six in all, and the absence of so many might be noted. Drawing aside a baize curtain which hung from the bottom shelf, I discovered a number of old card board boxes. It was sufficient. With a pair of surgical scissors I cut a piece from the lid of one and thrust it into an envelope, gumming down the lapel. At a little gas jet intended for the purpose I closed both ends with wax and– singular coincidence!–finding a Chinese coin fastened to a cork lying on the shelf, my sense of humour prompted me to use it as a seal! Finally, to add to the verisimilitude of the affair I borrowed a pen which rested in a bottle of red ink and wrote upon the envelope the number: 30, that day being the thirtieth day of the month. It was well that the artist within me had dictated this careful elaboration, as became evident a few minutes later when the doctor appeared at the head of a short flight of stairs and requested me to step up to his consulting room. It was a small room, so that the window, over which a linen blind was drawn, occupied nearly the whole of one wall. As Dr. Stuart, having examined the cut on my scalp, descended to the dispensary for lint, the habits of a lifetime asserted themselves. I quickly switched off the light and peeped out of the window around the edge of the blind, which I drew slightly aside. In the shadow of the wall upon the opposite side of the narrow lane a man was standing! I turned on the light again. The watcher should not be disappointed! My skull being dressed, I broached the subject of the letter, which I said I had found in my cab after the accident which had caused the injury. Someone left this behind to day, sir, I said; perhaps the gentleman who was with me when I had the accident; and I’ve got no means of tracing him. He may be able to trace me, though, or he may advertise. It evidently contains something valuable. I wonder if you would do me a small favour? Would you mind taking charge of it for a week or so, until it is claimed? He asked me why I did not take it to Scotland Yard. Because, said I, if the owner claims it from Scotland Yard he is less likely to be generous than if he gets it direct from me! But what is the point, asked Dr. Stuart, in leaving it here? I explained that if I kept the letter I might be suspected of an intention of stealing it, whereas directly there was any inquiry, he could certify that I had left it in his charge. He seemed to be satisfied and asked me to come into his study for a moment. The man in the lane was probably satisfied, too. I had stood three paces from the table lamp all the time, waving the letter about as I talked, and casting a bold shadow on the linen blind! The first thing that struck me as I entered the doctor’s study was that the French windows, which opened on a sheltered lawn, were open. I acted accordingly. You see, said Dr. Stuart, I am enclosing your letter in this big envelope which I am sealing. Yes, sir, I replied, standing at some distance from him, so that he had to speak loudly. And would you mind addressing it to the Lost Property Office. Not at all, said he, and did as I suggested. If not reclaimed within a reasonable time, it will be sent to Scotland Yard. I edged nearer to the open window. If it is not reclaimed, I said loudly, it goes to Scotland Yard–yes. Meanwhile, concluded the doctor, I am locking it in this private drawer in my bureau. It is locked in your bureau. Very good. Chapter 18. Disappearance Of Charles Malet. Knowing, and I knew it well, that people of The Scorpion were watching, I do not pretend that I felt at my ease as I drove around to the empty house in which I garaged my cab. My inquiry had entered upon another stage, and Charles Malet was about to disappear from the case. I was well aware that if he failed in his vigilance for a single moment he might well disappear from the world! The path which led to the stables was overgrown with weeds and flanked by ragged bushes; weeds and grass sprouted between the stones paving the little yard, also, although they were withered to a great extent by the petrol recently spilled there. Having run the cab into the yard, I alighted and looked around the deserted grounds, mysterious in the moonlight. Company would have been welcome, but excepting a constable who had stopped and chatted with me on one or two evenings I always had the stables to myself at night. I determined to run the cab into the stable and lock it up without delay, for it was palpably dangerous in the circumstances to remain longer than necessary in that lonely spot. Hurriedly I began to put out the lamps. I unlocked the stable doors and stood looking all about me again. I was dreading the ordeal of driving the cab those last ten yards into the garage, for whilst I had my back to the wilderness of bushes it would be an easy matter for anyone in hiding there to come up behind me. Nevertheless, it had to be done. Seating myself at the wheel I drove into the narrow building, stopped the engine and peered cautiously around toward the bright square formed by the open doors. Nothing was to be seen. No shadow moved. A magazine pistol held in my hand, I crept, step by step, along the wall until I stood just within the opening. There I stopped. I could hear a sound of quick breathing! There was someone waiting outside! Dropping quietly down upon the pavement, I slowly protruded my head around the angle of the brick wall at a point not four inches above the ground. I knew that whoever waited would have his eyes fixed upon the doorway at the level of a man’s head. Close to the wall, a pistol in his left hand and an upraised stand bag in his right, stood Le Balafre! His eyes gleamed savagely in the light of the moon and his teeth were bared in that fearful animal snarl. But he had not seen me. Inch by inch I thrust my pistol forward, the barrel raised sharply. I could not be sure of my aim, of course, nor had I time to judge it carefully. I fired. The bullet was meant for his right wrist, but it struck him in the fleshy part of his arm. Uttering a ferocious cry he leapt back, dropped his pistol–and perceiving me as I sprang to my feet, lashed at my head with the sand bag. I raised my left arm to guard my skull and sustained the full force of the blow upon it. I staggered back against the wall, and my own pistol was knocked from my grasp. My left arm was temporarily useless and the man of the scar was deprived of the use of his right. Pardieu! I had the better chance! He hurled himself upon me. Instantly he recovered the advantage, for he grasped me by the throat with his left hand–and, nom d’un nom! what a grip he had! Flat against the wall he held me, and began, his teeth bared in that fearful grin, to crush the life from me. To such an attack there was only one counter. I kicked him savagely– and that death grip relaxed. I writhed, twisted–and was free! As I regained my freedom I struck up at him, and by great good fortune caught him upon the point of the jaw. He staggered. I struck him over the heart, and as he fell I pounced upon him, exulting, for he had sought my life and I knew no pity. Yet I had not thought so strong a man would choke so easily, and for some moments I stood looking down at him, believing that he sought to trick me. But it was not so. His affair was finished. I listened. The situation in which I found myself was full of difficulty. An owl screeched somewhere in the trees, but nothing else stirred. The sound of the shot had not attracted attention, apparently. I stooped and examined the garments of the man who lay at my feet. He carried a travel coupon to Paris bearing that day’s date, together with some other papers, but, although I searched all his pockets, I could find nothing of real interest, until in an inside pocket of his coat I felt some hard, irregularly shaped object. I withdrew it, and in the moonlight it lay glittering in my palm … a golden scorpion! It had apparently been broken in the struggle. The tail was missing, nor could I find it: but I must confess that I did not prolong the search. Some chance effect produced by the shadow of the moonlight, and the presence of that recently purchased ticket, gave me the idea upon which without delay I proceeded to act. Satisfying myself that there was no mark upon any of his garments by which the man could be identified, I unlocked from my wrist an identification disk which I habitually wore there, and locked it upon the wrist of the man with the scar! Clearly, I argued, he had been detailed to dispatch me and then to leave at once for France. I would make it appear that he had succeeded. Behold me, ten minutes later, driving slowly along a part of the Thames Embankment which I chanced to remember, a gruesome passenger riding behind me in the cab. I was reflecting as I kept a sharp look out for a spot which I had noted one day during my travels, how easily one could commit murder in London, when a constable ran out and intercepted me! Mon Deiu! how my heart leapt! I’ll trouble you for your name and number, my lad, he said. What for? I asked, and remembering a rare fragment of idiom: What’s up with you? I added. Your lamp’s out! he cried, that’s what’s up with me! Oh, said I, climbing from my seat–very well. I’m sorry. I didn’t know. But here is my license. I handed him the little booklet and began to light my lamps, cursing myself for a dreadful artist because I had forgotten to do so. All right, he replied, and handed it back to me. But how the devil you’ve managed to get all your lamps out, I can’t imagine! This is my first job since dusk, I explained hurrying around to the tail light. And he don’t say much! remarked the constable. I replaced my matches in my pocket and returned to the front of the cab, making a gesture as of one raising a glass to his lips and jerking my thumb across my shoulder in the direction of my unseen fare. Oh, that’s it! said the constable, and moved off. Never in my whole career have I been so glad to see the back of any man! I drove on slowly. The point for which I was making was only some three hundred yards further along, but I had noted that the constable had walked off in the opposite direction. Therefore, arriving at my destination–a vacant wharf open to the road–I pulled up and listened. Only the wash of the tide upon the piles of the wharf was audible, for the night was now far advanced. I opened the door of the cab and dragged out Le Balafre. Right and left I peered, truly like a stage villain, and then hauled my unpleasant burden along the irregularly paved path and on to the little wharf. Out in mid stream a Thames Police patrol was passing, and I stood for a moment until the creak of the oars grew dim. Then: there was a dull splash far below … and silence again. Gaston Max had been consigned to a watery grave! Returning again to the garage, I wondered very much who he had been, this one, Le Balafre. Could it be that he was The Scorpion? I could not tell, but I had hopes very shortly of finding out. I had settled up my affairs with my landlady and had removed from my apartments all papers and other effects. In the garage I had placed a good suit of clothes and other necessities, and by telephone I had secured a room at a West End hotel. The cab returned to the stable, I locked the door, and by the light of one of the lamps, shaved off my beard and moustache. My uniform and cap I hung up on the hook where I usually left them after working hours, and changed into the suit which I had placed there in readiness. I next destroyed all evidences of identity and left the place in a neat condition. I extinguished the lamp, went out and locked the door behind me, and carrying a travelling grip and a cane I set off for my new hotel. Charles Malet had disappeared! Chapter 19. I Meet An Old Acquaintance. On the corner opposite Dr. Stuart’s establishment stood a house which was to be let or sold. From the estate agent whose name appeared upon the notice board I obtained the keys–and had a duplicate made of that which opened the front door. It was a simple matter, and the locksmith returned both keys to me within an hour. I informed the agent that the house would not suit me. Nevertheless, having bolted the door, in order that prospective purchasers might not surprise me, I camped out in an upper room all day, watching from behind the screen of trees all who came to the house of Dr. Stuart. Dusk found me still at my post, armed with a pair of good binoculars. Every patient who presented himself I scrutinized carefully, and finding as the darkness grew that it became increasingly difficult to discern the features of visitors, I descended to the front garden and resumed my watch from the lower branches of a tree which stood some twenty feet from the roadway. At selected intervals I crept from my post and surveyed the lane upon which the window of the consulting room opened and also the path leading to the tradesmen’s entrance, from which one might look across the lawn and in at the open study windows. It was during one of these tours of inspection and whilst I was actually peering through a gap in the hedge, that I heard the telephone bell. Dr. Stuart was in the study and I heard him speaking. I gathered that his services were required immediately at some institution in the neighbourhood. I saw him take his hat, stick and bag from the sofa and go out of the room. Then I returned to the front garden of my vacant house. No one appeared for some time. A policeman walked slowly up the road, and flashed his lantern in at the gate of the house I had commandeered. His footsteps died away. Then, faintly, I heard the hum of a powerful motor. I held my breath. The approaching car turned into the road at a point above me to the right, came nearer … and stopped before Dr. Stuart’s door. I focussed my binoculars upon the chauffeur. It was the brown skinned man! Nom d’un nom! a woman was descending form the car. She was enveloped in furs and I could not see her face. She walked up the steps to the door and was admitted. The chauffeur backed the car into the lane beside the house. My heart beating rapidly with excitement, I crept out by the further gate of the drive, crossed the road at a point fifty yards above the house and walking very quietly came back to the tradesmen’s entrance. Into its enveloping darkness I glided and on until I could peep across the lawn. The elegant visitor, as I hoped, had been shown, not into the ordinary waiting room but into the doctor’s study. She was seated with her back to the window, talking to a grey haired old lady–probably the doctor’s housekeeper. Impatiently I waited for this old lady to depart, and the moment that she did so, the visitor stood up, turned and … it was Zara el Khala! It was only with difficulty that I restrained the cry of triumph which arose to my lips. On the instant that the study door closed, Zara el Khala began to try a number of keys which she took from her handbag upon the various drawers of the bureau! So! I said–they are uncertain of the drawer! Suddenly she desisted, looking nervously at the open windows; then, crossing the room, she drew the curtains. I crept out into the road again and by the same roundabout route came back to the empty house. Feeling my way in the darkness of the shrubbery, I found the motor bicycle which I had hidden there and I wheeled it down to the further gate of the drive and waited. I could see the doctor’s door, and I saw him returning along the road. As he appeared, from somewhere—I could not determine from where–came a strange and uncanny wailing sound, a sound that chilled me like an evil omen. Even as it died away, and before Dr. Stuart had reached his door I knew what it portended–that horrible wail. Some one hidden I knew not where, had warned Zara el Khala that the doctor returned! But stay! Perhaps that some one was the dark skinned chauffeur! How I congratulated myself upon the precautions which I had taken to escape observation. Evidently the watcher had placed himself somewhere where he could command a view of the front door and the road. Five minutes later the girl came out, the old housekeeper accompanying her to the door. The car emerged from the lane, Zara el Khala entered it and was driven away. I could see no one seated beside the chauffeur. I started my Indian and leapt in pursuit. As I had anticipated, the route was Eastward, and I found myself traversing familiar ground. From the south west to the east of London whirled the big car of mystery–and I was ever close behind it. Sometimes, in the crowded streets, I lost sight of my quarry for a time, but always I caught up again, and at last I found myself whirling along Commercial Road and not fifty yards behind the car. Just by the canal bridge a drunken sailor lurched out in front of my wheel, and only by twisting perilously right into a turning called, I believe, Salmon Lane, did I avoid running him down. Sacre nom! how I cursed him! The lane was too narrow for me to turn and I was compelled to dismount and to wheel my Indian back to the highroad. The yellow car had vanished, of course, but I took it for granted that it had followed the main road. At a dangerous speed, pursued by execrations from the sailor and all his friends, I set off east once more turning to the right down West India Dock Road. Arriving at the dock, and seeing nothing ahead of me but desolation and ships’ masts, I knew that that inebriated pig had spoiled everything! I could have sat down upon the dirty pavement and wept, so mortified was I! For if Zara el Khala had secured the envelope I had missed my only chance. However, pardieu! I have said that despair is not permitted by the Bureau. I rode home to my hotel, deep in reflection. Whether the girl had the envelope or not, at least she had escaped detection by the doctor; therefore if she had failed she would try again. I could sleep in peace until the morrow. Of the following day, which I spent as I had spent the preceding one, I have nothing to record. At about the same time in the evening the yellow car again rolled into view, and on this occasion I devoted all my attention to the dark skinned chauffeur, upon whom I directed my glasses. As the girl alighted and spoke to him for a moment, he raised the goggles which habitually he wore and I saw his face. A theory which I had formed on the previous night proved correct. The chauffeur was the Hindu, Chunda Lal! As Zara el Khala walked up the steps he backed the car into the narrow lane and I watched him constantly. Yet, watch as closely as I might, I could not see where he concealed himself in order to command a view of the road. On this occasion, as I know, Dr. Stuart was at home. Nevertheless, the girl stayed for close upon half an hour, and I began to wonder if some new move had been planned. Suddenly the door opened and she came out. I crept through the bushes to my bicycle and wheeled it on to the drive. I saw the car start; but Madame Fortune being in playful mood, my own engine refused to start at all, and when ten minutes later I at last aroused a spark of life in the torpid machine I knew that pursuit would be futile. Since this record is intended for the guidance of those who take up the quest of The Scorpion either in co operation with myself or, in the event of my failure, alone, it would be profitless for me to record my disasters. Very well, I had one success. One night I pursued the yellow car from Dr. Stuart’s house to the end of Limehouse Causeway without once losing sight of it. A string of lorries from the docks, drawn by a traction engine, checked me at the corner for a time, although the yellow car passed. But I raced furiously on and by great good luck overtook it near the Dock Station. From thence onward pursuing a strangely tortuous route, I kept it in sight to Canning Town, when it turned into a public garage. I followed–to purchase petrol. Chunda Lal was talking to the man in charge; he had not yet left his seat. But the car was empty! At first I was stupid with astonishment. Par la barbe du prophete! I was astounded. Then I saw that I had really made a great discovery. The street into which I had injudiciously followed Le Balafre lay between Limehouse Causeway and Ropemaker Street, and it was at no great distance from this point that I had lost sight of the yellow car. In that street, which according to my friend the policeman was nearly all Chinese, Zara el Khala had descended; in that street was The Scorpion’s lair! Chapter 20. Conclusion Of Statement. I come now to the conclusion of this statement and to the strange occurrence which led to my proclaiming myself. The fear of imminent assassination which first had prompted me to record what I knew of The Scorpion had left me since I had ceased to be Charles Malet. And that the disappearance of Le Balafre had been accepted by his unknown chief as evidence of his success in removing me, I did not doubt. Therefore I breathed more freely … and more freely still when my body was recovered! Yes, my body was recovered from Hanover Hole; I read of it–a very short paragraph, but it is the short paragraphs that matter–in my morning paper. I knew then that I should very shortly be dead indeed– officially dead. I had counted on this happening before, you understand, for I more than ever suspected that The Scorpion knew me to be in England and I feared that he would lie low as the English say. However, since a fortunate thing happens better late than never, I say in this paragraph two things: 1 that the enemy would cease to count upon Gaston Max; 2 that the Scotland Yard Commissioner would be authorised to open Part First of this Statement which had been lodged at his office two days after I landed in England–the portion dealing with my inquiries in Paris and with my tracking of Le Balafre to Bow Road Station and observing that he showed a golden scorpion to the chauffeur of the yellow car. This would happen because Paris would wire that the identification disk found on the dead man was that of Gaston Max. Why would Paris do so? Because my reports had been discounted since I had ceased to be Charles Malet and Paris would be seeking evidence of my whereabouts. My reports had discontinued because I had learned that I had to do with a criminal organization of whose ramifications I knew nothing. Therefore I took no more chances. I died. I return to the night when Inspector Dunbar, the grim Dunbar of Scotland Yard, came to Dr. Stuart’s house. His appearance there puzzled me. I could not fail to recognize him, for as dusk had fully come I had descended from my top window and was posted among the bushes of the empty house from whence I commanded a perfect view of the doctor’s door. The night was unusually chilly–there had been some rain–and when I crept around to the lane bordering the lawn, hoping to see or hear something of what was taking place in the study, I found that the windows were closed and the blinds drawn. Luck seemed to have turned against me; for that night, at dusk, when I had gone to a local garage where I kept my motor bicycle, I had discovered the back tire to be perfectly flat and had been forced to contain my soul in patience whilst the man repaired a serious puncture. The result was of course that for more than half an hour I had not had Dr. Stuart’s house under observation. And a hundred and one things can happen in half an hour. Had Dr. Stuart sent for the Inspector? If so, I feared that the envelope was missing, or at any rate that he had detected Zara el Khala in the act of stealing it and had determined to place the matter in the hands of the police. It was a maddening reflection. Again–I shrewdly suspected that I was not the only watcher of Dr. Stuart’s house. The frequency with which the big yellow car drew up at the door a few moments after the doctor had gone out could not be due to accident. Yet I had been unable to detect the presence of this other watcher, nor had I any idea of the spot where the car remained hidden–if my theory was a correct one. Nevertheless I did not expect to see it come along whilst the Inspector remained at the house– always supposing that Zara el Khala had not yet succeeded. I wheeled out the Indian and rode to a certain tobacconist’s shop at which I had sometimes purchased cigarettes. He had a telephone in a room at the rear which customers were allowed to use on payment of a fee, and a public call box would not serve my purpose, since the operator usually announces to a subscriber the fact that a call emanated from such an office. The shop was closed, but I rang the bell at the side door and obtained permission to use the telephone upon pleading urgency. I had assiduously cultivated a natural gift for mimicry, having found it of inestimable service in the practice of my profession. It served me now. I had worked in the past with Inspector Dunbar and his subordinate Sergeant Sowerby, and I determined to trust to my memory of the latter’s mode of speech. I rang up Dr. Stuart and asked for the Inspector, saying Sergeant Sowerby spoke from Scotland Yard. Hullo! he cried, is that you, Sowerby? Yes, I replied in Sowerby’s voice. I thought I should find you there. About the body of Max.. Eh! said Dunbar–what’s that? Max? I knew immediately that Paris had not yet wired, therefore I told him that Paris had done so, and that the disk numbered 49685 was that of Gaston Max. He was inexpressibly shocked, deploring the rashness of Max in working alone. Come to Scotland Yard, I said, anxious to get him away from the house. He said he would be with me in a few minutes, and I was racking my brains for some means of learning what business had taken him to Dr. Stuart when he gave me the desired information spontaneously. Sowerby, listen, said he: It’s ‘The Scorpion’ case right enough! That bit of gold found on the dead man is not a cactus stem; it’s a scorpion’s tail! So! they had found what I had failed to find! It must have been attached, I concluded, to some inner part of Le Balafre’s clothing. There had been no mention of Zara el Khala; therefore, as I rode back to my post I permitted myself to assume that she would come again, since presumably she had thus far failed. I was right. Morbleu! quick as I was the car was there before me! But I had not overlooked this possibility and I had dismounted at a good distance from the house and had left the Indian in someone’s front garden. As I had turned out of the main road I had seen Dr. Stuart and Inspector Dunbar approaching a rank upon which two or three cabs usually stood. I watched la Bell Zara enter the house, a beautiful woman most elegantly attired, and then, even before Chunda Lal had backed the car into the lane I was off … to the spot at which I had abandoned my motor bicycle. In little more than half an hour I had traversed London, and was standing in the shadow of that high, blank wall to which I have referred as facing a row of wooden houses in a certain street adjoining Limehouse Causeway. You perceive my plan? I was practically sure of the street; all I had to learn was which house sheltered The Scorpion! I had already suspected that this night was to be for me an unlucky night. Nom d’un p’tit bon homme! it was so. Until an hour before dawn I crouched under that wall and saw no living thing except a very old Chinese person who came out of one of the houses and walked slowly away. The other houses appeared to be empty. No vehicle of any kind passed that way all night. Turning over in my mind the details of this most perplexing case, it became evident to me that the advantages of working alone were now outweighed by the disadvantages. The affair had reached a stage at which ordinary police methods should be put into operation. I had collected some of the threads; the next thing was for Scotland Yard to weave these together whilst I sought for more. I determined to remain dead. It would afford me greater freedom of action. The disappearance of Le Balafre which must by this time have been noted by his associates, might possibly lead to a suspicion that the dead man was not Gaston Max; but providing no member of The Scorpion group obtained access to the body I failed to see how this suspicion could be confirmed. I reviewed my position. The sealed letter had achieved its purpose in part. Although I had failed to locate the house from which these people operated, I could draw a circle on the map within which I knew it to be; and I had learned that Zara el Khala and the Hindu were in London. What it all meant–to what end The Scorpion was working I did not know. But having learned so much, be sure I did not despair of learning more. It was now imperative that I should find out exactly what had occurred at Dr. Stuart’s house. Accordingly I determined to call upon the Inspector at Scotland Yard. I presented myself towards evening of the day following my vigil in Limehouse, sending up the card of a Bureau confrere, for I did not intend to let it be generally known that I was alive. Presently I was shown up to that bare and shining room which I remembered having visited in the past. I stood just within the doorway, smiling. Inspector Dunbar rose, as the constable went out, and stood looking across at me. I had counted on striking him dumb with astonishment. He was Scottishly unmoved. Well, he said, coming forward with outstretched hand, I’m glad to see you. I knew you would have come to us sooner or later! I felt that my eyes sparkled. There was no resentment within my heart. I rejoiced. Look, he continued, taking a slip of paper from his note book. This is a copy of a note I left with Dr. Stuart some time ago. Read it. I did so, and this is what I read: A: the name of the man who cut out the lid of the cardboard box and sealed it in the envelope–Gaston Max! B: the name of the missing cabman–Gaston Max! C: the name of the man who rang me up at Dr. Stuart’s and told me that Gaston Max was dead–Gaston Max! I returned the slip to Inspector Dunbar. I bowed. It is a pleasure and a privilege to work with you, Inspector, I said …. This statement is nearly concluded. The whole of the evening I spent in the room of the Assistant Commissioner discussing the matters herein set forth and comparing notes with Inspector Dunbar. One important thing I learned: that I had abandoned my nightly watches too early. For one morning just before dawn someone who was not Zara had paid a visit to the house of Dr. Stuart! I determined to call upon the doctor. As it chanced I was delayed and did not actually arrive until so late an hour that I had almost decided not to present myself … when a big yellow car flashed past the taxicab in which I was driving! Nom d’un nom! I could not mistake it! This was within a few hundred yards of the house of Dr. Stuart, you understand, and I instantly dismissed my cabman and proceeded to advance cautiously on foot. I could no longer hear the engine of the car which had passed ahead of me, but then I knew that it could run almost noiselessly. As I crept along in that friendly shadow cast by a high hedge which had served me so well before, I saw the yellow car. It was standing on the opposite side of the road. I reached the tradesman’s entrance. From my left, in the direction of the back lawn of the house, came a sudden singular crackling noise and I discerned a flash of blue flame resembling faint summer lightning. A series of muffled explosions followed … and in the darkness I tripped over something which lay along the ground at my feet–a length of cable it seemed to be. Stumbling, I uttered a slight exclamation … and instantly received a blow on the head that knocked me flat upon the ground! Everything was swimming around me, but I realized that someone–Chunda Lal probably–had been hiding in the very passage which I had entered! I heard again that uncanny wailing, close beside me. Vaguely I discerned an incredible figure–like that of a tall cowled monk, towering over me. I struggled to retain consciousness–there was a rush of feet … the throb of a motor. It stimulated me–that sound! I must get to the telephone and cause the yellow car to be intercepted. I staggered to my feet and groped my way along the hedge to where I had observed a tree by means of which one might climb over. I was dizzy as a drunken man; but I half climbed and half fell on to the lawn. The windows were open. I rushed into the study of Dr. Stuart. Pah! it was full of fumes. I looked around me. Mon Dieu! I staggered. For I knew that in this fume laden room a thing more horrible and more strange than any within my experience had taken place that night. Part III At THE HOUSE OF AH FANG FU Chapter 21. The Brain Thieves. The Assistant Commissioner lighted a cigarette. It would appear, then, he said, that whilst some minor difficulties have been smoothed away, we remain face to face with the major problem: who is ‘The Scorpion’ and to what end are his activities directed? Gaston Max shrugged his shoulders and smiled at Dr. Stuart. Let us see, he suggested, what we really know about this ‘Scorpion’. Let us make a brief survey of our position in the matter. Let us take first what we have learned of him–if it is a ‘him’ with whom we have to deal–from the strange experiences of Dr. Stuart. Without attaching too much importance to that episode five years ago on the Wu Men Bridge; perhaps he is not. We will talk about this one again presently. We come to the arrival on the scene of Zara el Khala, also called Mlle. Dorian. She comes because of what I have told to the scarred man from Paris, she comes to obtain that dangerous information which is to be sent to Scotland Yard, she comes, in a word, from ‘The Scorpion.’ We have two links binding the poor one ‘Le Balafre’ to ‘The Scorpion’: 1 his intimacy with Miguel and those others with whom ‘Scorpion’ communicated by telephone; 2 his possession of the golden ornament which lies there upon the table and which I took from his pocket. What can we gather from the statement made to Dr. Stuart by Mlle. Dorian? Let us study this point for a moment. In the first place we can only accept her words with a certain skepticism. Her story may be nothing but a fabrication. However, it is interesting because she claims to be the unwilling servant of a dreaded master. She lays stress upon the fact that she is an Oriental and does not enjoy the same freedom as a European woman. This is possible, up to a point. On the other hand she seems to enjoy not only freedom but every luxury. Therefore it may equally well be a lie. Some slight colour is lent to her story by the extraordinary mode of life which she followed in Paris. In the midst of Bohemianism she remained secluded as an odalisque in some harem garden of Stambul, whether by her own will or by will of another we do not know. One little point her existence seems to strengthen: that we are dealing with Easterns; for Zara el Khala is partly of Eastern blood and her follower Chunda Lal is a Hindu. Eh bien. Consider the cowled man whose shadow Dr. Stuart has seen on two occasions: once behind the curtain of his window and once cast by the moonlight across the lawn of his house. The man himself he has never seen. Now this hooded man cannot have been ‘Le Balafre’, for ‘Le Balafre’ was already dead at the time of his first appearance. He may be ‘The Scorpion’! Max paused impressively, looking around at those in the Commissioner’s room. For a moment I return to the man of the Wu Men Bridge. The man of the Wu Men Bridge was veiled and this one is hooded! The man of the Wu Men Bridge was known as ‘The Scorpion,’ and this one also is associated with a scorpion. We will return yet again to this point in a moment. Is there something else which we may learn from the experiences of Dr. Stuart? Yes! We learn that ‘The Scorpion’ suddenly decides that Dr. Stuart is dangerous, either because of his special knowledge which would be interesting or because the ‘Scorpion’ believes that he has become acquainted with the contents of the sealed envelope– which is not so interesting although equally dangerous for Dr. Stuart. ‘The Scorpion’ acts. He pays a second visit, again accompanied by Chunda Lal, who seems to be a kind of watch dog who not only guards the person of Zara el Kahla but who also howls when danger threatens the cowled man! And what is the weapon which the cowled man who may be ‘The Scorpion’ uses to remove Dr. Stuart? It is a frightful weapon, my friends; it is a novel and deadly weapon. It is a weapon of which science knows nothing–a blue ray of the colour produced by a Mercury Vapour Lamp, according to Dr. Stuart who has seen it, and producing an odour like that of a blast furnace according to myself, who smelled it! Or this odour might have been caused by the fusing of the telephone; for the blue ray destroys such fragile things as telephones as easily as it destroys wood and paper! There is even a large round hole burned through the clay at the back of the study grate and through the brick wall behind it! Very well. ‘The Scorpion’ is a scientist and he is also the greatest menace to the world which the world has ever been called upon to deal with. You agree with me? Inspector Dunbar heaved a great sigh, Stuart silently accepted a cigarette from the Assistant Commissioner’s box and the Assistant Commissioner spoke, slowly. I entirely agree with you, M. Max. Respecting this ray, as well as some one or two other minutiae, I have made a short note which we will discuss when you have completed your admirably lucid survey of the case. These are the things, then, which we learn from the terrible experiences of Dr. Stuart. Placing these experiences side by side with my own in Paris and in London–which we have already discussed in detail–we find that we have to deal with an organisation–the object of which is unknown–comprising among its members both Europeans ‘Le Balafre’ was a Frenchman, I believe, cross breeds such as Miguel and Zara el Khala Stuart winced, one Algerian and a Hindu. It is then an organisation having ramifications throughout Europe, the East and, mon Dieu! where not? To continue. This little image–he took up from the Commissioner’s table the golden scorpion, and the broken fragment of tail–is now definitely recognized by Dr. Stuart–who is familiar with the work of Oriental goldsmiths–to be of Chinese craftsmanship! It may possibly be Tibetan, interrupted Stuart; but it comes to the same thing. Very well, continued Max. It is Chinese. We hope, very shortly, to identify a house situated somewhere within this red ink circle–he placed his finger on a map of London which lay open on the table–and which I know to be used as a meeting place by members of this mysterious group. That circle, my friends, surrounds what is now known as ‘Chinatown’! For the third time I return to the man of the Wu Men Bridge; for the man of the Wu Men Bridge was, apparently, a Chinese person! Do I make myself clear? Remarkably so, declared the Assistant Commissioner, taking a fresh cigarette. Pray continue, M. Max. I will do so. One of my most important investigations, in which I had the honour and the pleasure to be associated with Inspector Dunbar, led to the discovery of a dangerous group controlled by a certain ‘Mr. King’—- Ah! cried Dunbar, his tawny eyes sparkling with excitement, I was waiting for that! I knew you would be waiting for it, Inspector. Your powers of deductive reasoning more and more are earning my respect. You recall that singular case? The elaborate network extending from London to Buenos Ayres, from Peking to Petrograd? Ah! a wonderful system. It was an opium syndicate, you understand,–turning again to the Assistant Commissioner. I recall the case, replied the Commissioner, although I did not hold my present appointment at the time. I believe there were unsatisfactory features? There were, agreed Max. We never solved the mystery of the identity of ‘Mr. King,’ and although we succeeded in destroying the enterprise I have since thought that we acted with undue precipitation. Yes, said Dunbar rapidly; but there was that poor girl to be rescued, you will remember? We couldn’t waste time. I agree entirely, Inspector. Our hands were forced. Yet, I repeat, I have since thought that we acted with undue precipitation. I will tell you why. Do you recall the loss–not explained to this day–of the plans of the Haley torpedo? Perfectly, replied the Commissioner; and Dunbar also nodded affirmatively. Very well. A similar national loss was sustained about the same time by my own Government. I am not at liberty to divulge its exact nature, as in the latter case the loss never became known to the public. But the only member of the French Chamber who had seen this document to which I refer was a certain ‘M. Blank,’ shall we say? I believe also that I am correct in stating that the late Sir Brian Malpas was a member of the British Cabinet at the time that the Haley plans were lost? That is correct, said the Assistant Commissioner, but surely the honour of the late Sir Brian was above suspicion? Quite, agreed Max; so also was that of ‘M. Blank.’ But my point is this: Both ‘M. Blank’ and the late Sir Brian were clients of the opium syndicate! Dunbar nodded again eagerly. Hard work I had to hush it up, he said. It would have finished his political career. The Assistant Commissioner looked politely puzzled. It was generally supposed that Sir Brian Malpas was addicted to drugs, he remarked; and I am not surprised to learn that he patronised this syndicate to which you refer. But—- he paused, smiling satanically. Ah! he added–I see! I see! You perceive the drift of my argument? cried Max. You grasp what I mean when I say that we were too hasty? This syndicate existed for a more terrible purpose than the promulgating of a Chinese vice; it had in its clutches men entrusted with national secrets, men of genius but slaves of a horrible drug. Under the influence of that drug, my friends, how many of those secrets may they not have divulged? His words were received in hushed silence. What became of those stolen plans? he continued, speaking now in a very low voice. In the stress of recent years has the Haley torpedo made its appearance so that we might learn to which Government the plans had been taken? No! the same mystery surrounds the fate of the information filched from the drugged brain of ‘M. Blank.’ In a word– he raised a finger dramatically–someone is hoarding up those instruments of destruction! Who is it that collects such things and for what purpose does he collect them? Following another tense moment of silence: Let us have your own theory, M. Max, said the Assistant Commissioner. Gaston Max shrugged his shoulders. It is not worthy of the name of a theory, he replied, the surmise which I have made. But recently I found myself considering the fact that ‘The Scorpion’ might just conceivably be a Chinese person. Now, ‘Mr. King,’ we believe was a Chinese person, and ‘Mr. King,’ as I am now convinced, operated not for a personal but for a deeper, political purpose. He stole the brains of genius and accumulated that genius. Is it not possible that these contrary operations may be part of a common plan? Chapter 22. The Red Circle. You are not by any chance, suggested Stuart, smiling slightly, hinting at that defunct bogey, the ‘Yellow Peril’? Ah! cried Max, but certainly I am not! Do not misunderstand me. This group with which we are dealing is shown to be not of a national but of an international character. The same applied to the organisation of ‘Mr. King.’ But a Chinese person directed the one, and I begin to suspect that a Chinese person directs the other. No, I speak of no ridiculous ‘Yellow Peril,’ my friends. John Chinese person, as I have known him, is the whitest man breathing; but can you not imagine–he dropped his voice again in that impressive way which was yet so truly Gallic–can you not imagine a kind of Oriental society which like a great, a formidable serpent, lies hidden somewhere below that deceptive jungle of the East? These are troubled times. It is a wise state to day that knows its own leaders. Can you not imagine a dreadful sudden menace, not of men and guns but of brains and capital? You mean, said Dunbar slowly, that ‘The Scorpion’ may be getting people out of the way who might interfere with this rising or invasion or whatever it is? Just as ‘Mr. King’ accumulated material for it, interjected the Assistant Commissioner. It is a bold conception, M. Max, and it raises the case out of the ordinary category and invests it with enormous international importance. All were silent for a time, Stuart, Dunbar and the Commissioner watching the famous Frenchman as he sat there, arrayed in the latest fashion of Saville Row, yet Gallic to his finger tips and in every gesture. It was almost impossible at times to credit the fact that a Parisian was speaking, for the English of Gaston Max was flawless except that he spoke with a faint American accent. Then, suddenly, a gesture, an expletive, would betray the Frenchman. But such betrayals never escaped him when, in one of his inimitable disguises, he penetrated to the purlieu of Whitechapel, to the dens of Limehouse. Then he was the perfect Hooligan, as, mingling with the dangerous thieves of Paris, he was the perfect Apache. It was an innate gift of mimicry which had made him the greatest investigator of his day. He could have studied Chinese social life for six months and thereupon have become a mandarin whom his own servants would never have suspected to be a foreign barbarian. It was pure genius, as opposed to the brilliant efficiency of Dunbar. But in the heart of the latter, as he studied Gaston Max and realized the gulf that separated them, there was nothing but generous admiration of a master; yet Dunbar was no novice, for by a process of fine deductive reasoning he had come to the conclusion, as has appeared, that Gaston Max had been masquerading as a cabman and that the sealed letter left with Dr. Stuart had been left as a lure. By one of those tricks of fate which sometimes perfect the plans of men but more often destroy them, the body of Le Balafre had been so disfigured during the time that it had been buffeted about in the Thames that it was utterly unrecognizable and indescribable. But even the disk had not deceived Dunbar. He had seen in it another ruse of his brilliant confrere, and his orders to the keeper of the mortuary to admit no one without a written permit had been dictated by the conviction that Max wished the body to be mistaken for his own. In Inspector Dunbar, Gaston Max immediately had recognized an able colleague as Mrs. M’Gregor had recognized a grand figure of a man. The Assistant Commissioner broke the silence. There have been other cases, he said reflectively, now that one considers the matter, which seemed to point to the existence of such a group or society as you indicate, M. Max, notably one with which, if I remember rightly, Inspector–turning his dark eyes towards Dunbar–Inspector Weymouth, late of this Branch, was associated? Quite right, sir. It was his big case, and it got him a fine billet as Superintendent in Cairo if you remember? Yes, mused the Assistant Commissioner–he transferred to Egypt–a very good appointment, as you say. That, again, was before my term of office, but there were a number of very ghastly crimes connected with the case and it was more or less definitely established, I believe, that some extensive secret society did actually exist throughout the East, governed, I fancy, by a Chinese person. And from China, added Dunbar. Yes, yes, from China as you say, Inspector. He turned to Gaston Max. Can it really be, M. Max, that we have to deal with an upcrop of some deeply seated evil which resides in the Far East? Are all these cases, not the work of individual criminal but manifestations of a more sinister, a darker force? Gaston Max met his glance and Max’s mouth grew very grim. I honestly believe so. he answered. I have believed it for nearly two years–ever since the Grand Duke died. And now, you said, I remember, that you had made a note the nature of which you would communicate. Yes, replied the Assistant Commissioner–a small point, but one which may be worthy of attention. This ray, Dr. Stuart, which played such havoc in your study–do you know of anything approaching to it in more recent scientific devices? Well, said Stuart, it my be no more than a development of one of several systems, notably of that of the late Henrik Ericksen upon which he was at work at the time of his death. Exactly. The Assistant Commissioner smiled in his most Mephistophelean manner. Of the late Henrik Ericksen, as you say. He said no more for a moment and sat smoking and looking from face to face. Then: That is the subject of my note, gentlemen, he added. The other minutiae are of no immediate importance. Non d’un p’tit bonhomme! whispered Gaston Max. I see! You think that Ericksen had completed his experiments before he died, but that he never lived to give them to the world? The Assistant Commissioner waved one hand in the air so that he discoloration of the first and second fingers was very noticeable. It is for you to ascertain these points, M. Max, he said–I only suggest. But I begin to share your belief that a series of daring and unusual assassinations has been taking place under the eyes of the police authorities of Europe. It can only be poison–an unknown poison, perhaps. We shall be empowered to exhume the body of the late Sir Frank Narcombe in a few days’ time, I hope. His case puzzles me hopelessly. What obstacle did a surgeon offer to this hypothetical Eastern movement? On the other hand, what can have been filched from him before his death? The death of an inventor, a statesman, a soldier, can be variously explained by your ‘Yellow’ hypothesis, M. Max, but what of the death of a surgeon? Gaston Max shrugged, and his mobile mouth softened in a quaint smile. We have learned a little, he said, and guessed a lot. Let us hope to guess more–and learn everything! May I suggest, added Dunbar, that we hear Sowerby’s report, sir? Certainly, agreed the Assistant Commissioner–call Sergeant Sowerby. A moment later Sergeant Sowerby entered, his face very red and his hair bristling more persistently than usual. Anything to report, Sowerby? asked Dunbar. Yes, Inspector, replied Sowerby, in his Police Court manner;–he faced the Assistant Commissioner, with your permission, sir. He took out a note book which appeared to be the twin of Dunbar’s and consulted it, assuming an expression of profound reflection. In the first place, sir, he began, never raising his eyes from the page, I have traced the cab sold on the hire purchase system to a certain Charles Mallett… Ha, ha! laughed Max breezily–he calls me a hammer! It is not Mallett, Sergeant Sowerby–you have got too many l’s in that name; it is Malet and is called like one from the Malay States! Oh, commented Sowerby, glancing up–indeed. Very good, sir. The owner claims the balance of purchase money! Every one laughed at that, even the satanic Assistant Commissioner. Pay your debts, M. Max, he said. You will bring the Service de Surete into bad repute! Carry on, Sergeant. This cab, continued Sowerby, when Dunbar interrupted him. Cut out the part about the cab, Sowerby, he said. We’ve found that out from M. Max. Have you anything to report about the yellow car? Yes, replied Sowerby, unperturbed, and turning over to the next page. It was hired form Messrs. Wickers’ garage, at Canning Town, by the week. The lady who hired it was a Miss Dorian, a French lady. She gave no reference, except that of the Savoy Hotel, where she was stopping. She paid a big deposit and had her own chauffeur, a colored man of some kind. Is it still in use by her? snapped Dunbar eagerly. No, Inspector. She claimed her deposit this morning and said she was leaving London. The cheque? cried Dunbar. Was cashed half an hour later. At what bank? London County Birmingham, Canning Town. Her own account at a Strand bank was closed yesterday. The details all concern milliners, jewellers, hotels and so forth. There’s nothing there. I’ve been to the Savoy, of course. Yes! A lady named Dorian has had rooms there for six weeks, has dined there on several occasions, but was more often away than in the hotel. Visitors? Never had any. She used to dine alone, then? Always. In the public dining room? No. In her own room. Morbleu! muttered Max. It is she beyond doubt. I recognize her sociable habits! Has she left now? asked Dunbar. She left a week ago. Sowerby closed his note book and returned it to his pocket. Is that all you have to report, Sergeant? asked the Assistant Commissioner. That’s all, sir. Very good. Sergeant Sowerby retired. Now, sir, said Dunbar, I’ve got Inspector Kelly here. He looks after the Chinese quarter. Shall I call him? Yes, Inspector. Presently there entered a burly Irishman, bluff and good humoured, a very typical example of the intelligent superior police officer, looking keenly around him. Ah, Inspector, the Assistant Commissioner greeted him–we want your assistance in a little matter concerning the Chinese residential quarter. You know this district? Certainly, sir. I know it very well. On this map–the Assistant Commissioner laid a discoloured forefinger upon the map of London–you will perceive that we have drawn a circle. Inspector Kelly bent over the table. Yes, sir. Within that circle, which is no larger in circumference that a shilling as you observe, lies a house used by a certain group of people. It has been suggested to me that these people may be Chinese or associates of Chinese. Well, sir, said Inspector Kelly, smiling broadly, considering the patch inside the circle I think it more than likely! Seventy five or it may be eighty per cent of the rooms and cellars and attics in those three streets are occupied by Chinese. For your guidance, Inspector, we believe these people to be a dangerous gang of international criminals. Do you know of any particular house, or houses, likely to be used as a meeting place by such a gang? Inspector Kelly scratched his close cropped head. A woman was murdered just there, sir, he said, taking up a pen from the table and touching a point near the corner of Three Colt Street, about a twelve month ago. We traced the man–a Chinese sailor–to a house lying just about here. Again he touched the map. It’s a sort of little junk shop with a ramshackle house attached, all cellars and rabbit hutches, as you might say, overhanging a disused cutting which is filled at high tide. Opium is to be had there and card playing goes on, and I won’t swear that you couldn’t get liquor. But it’s well conducted as such dives go. Why is it not closed? inquired the Assistant Commissioner, seizing an opportunity to air his departmental ignorance. Well, sir, replied Inspector Kelly, his eyes twinkling–if we shut up all these places we should never know where to look for some of our regular customers! As I mentioned, we found the wanted Chinese person, three parts drunk, in one of the rooms. It’s a sort of lodging house, then? Exactly. There’s a moderately big room just behind the shop, principally used by opium smokers, and a whole nest of smaller rooms above and below. Mind you, sir, I don’t say this is the place you’re looking for, but it’s the most likely inside your circle. Who is the proprietor? A retired Chinese sailor called Ah Fang Fu, but better known as ‘Pidgin.’ His establishment is called locally ‘The Pidgin House.’ Ah. The Commissioner lighted a cigarette. And you know of no other house which might be selected for such a purpose as I have mentioned? I can’t say I do, sir. I know pretty well all the business affairs of that neighbourhood, and none of the houses inside your circle have changed hands during the past twelve months. Between ourselves, sir, nearly all the property in the district belongs to Ah Fang Fu, and anything that goes on in Chinatown he knows about! Ah, I see. Then in any event he is the man we want to watch? Well, sir, you ought to keep an eye on his visitors, I should say. I am obliged to you, Inspector, said the courteous Assistant Commissioner, for your very exact information. If necessary I shall communicate with you again. Good day. Good day, sir, replied the Inspector. Good day, gentlemen. He went out. Gaston Max, who had diplomatically remained in the background throughout this interview, now spoke. Pardieu! but I have been thinking, he said. Although ‘The Scorpion,’ as I hope, believes that that troublesome Charles Malet is dead, he may also wonder if Scotland Yard has secured from Dr. Stuart’s fire any fragments of the information sealed in the envelope! What does it mean, this releasing of the yellow car, closing of the bank account and departure from the Savoy? It means flight! cried Dunbar, jumping violently to his feet. By gad, sir! he turned to the Assistant Commissioner–the birds may have flown already! The Assistant Commissioner leaned back in his chair. I have sufficient confidence in M. Max, he said, to believe that, having taken the responsibility of permitting this dangerous group to learn that they were under surveillance, he has good reason to suppose that they have not slipped through our fingers. Gaston Max bowed. It is true, he replied, and from his pocket he took a slip of flimsy paper. This code message reached me as I was about to leave my hotel. The quadroon, Miguel, left Paris last night and arrived in London this morning—- He was followed? cried Dunbar. But certainly. He was followed to Limehouse, and he was definitely seen to enter the establishment described to us by Inspector Kelly! Gad! said Dunbar–then someone is still there? Someone, as you say, is still there, replied Max. But everything points to the imminent departure of this someone. Will you see to it, Inspector, that not a rat–pardieu not a little mouse–is allowed to slip out of our red circle to day. For to night we shall pay a friendly visit to the house of Ah Fang Fu, and I should wish all the company to be present. Chapter 23. Miska’s Story. Stuart returned to his house in a troubled frame of mind. He had refrained so long from betraying the circumstances of his last meeting with Mlle. Dorian to the police authorities that this meeting now constituted a sort of guilty secret, a link binding him to the beautiful accomplice of The Scorpion–to the dark eyed servant of the uncanny cowled thing which had sought his life by strange means. He hugged this secret to his breast, and the pain of it afforded him a kind of savage joy. In his study he found a Post Office workman engaged in fitting a new telephone. As Stuart entered the man turned. Good afternoon, sir, he said, taking up the destroyed instrument from the litter of flux, pincers and screw drivers lying upon the table. If it’s not a rude question, how on earth did this happen? Stuart laughed uneasily. It got mixed up with an experiment which I was conducting, he replied evasively. The man inspected the headless trunk of the instrument. It seems to be fused, as though the top of it had been in a blast furnace, he continued. Experiments of that sort are a bit dangerous outside a proper laboratory, I should think. They are, agreed Stuart. But I have no facilities here, you see, and I was–er–compelled to attempt the experiment. I don’t intend to repeat it. That’s lucky, murmured the man, dropping the instrument into a carpet bag. If you do, it will cost you a tidy penny for telephones! Walking out towards the dispensary, Stuart met Mrs. M’Gregor. A Post Office messenger brought this letter for you, Mr. Keppel, just the now, she said, handing Stuart a sealed envelope. He took the envelope from her hand, and turned quickly away. He felt that he had changed colour. For it was addressed in the handwriting of … Mlle. Dorian! Thank you, Mrs. M’Gregor, he said and turned into the dining room. Mrs. M’Gregor proceeded about her household duties, and as her footsteps receded, Stuart feverishly tore open the envelope. That elusive scent of jasmine crept to his nostrils. In the envelope was a sheet of thick note paper having the top cut off evidently in order to remove the printed address, upon which the following singular message was written: Before I go away there is something I want to say to you. You do not trust me. It is not wonderful that you do not. But I swear that I only want to save you from a great danger. If you will promise not to tell the police anything of it, I will meet you at six o’clock by the Book Stall at Victoria Station–on the Brighton side. If you agree you will wear something white in your button hole. If not you cannot find me there. Nobody ever sees me again. There was no signature, but no signature was necessary. Stuart laid the letter on the table, and began to pace up and down the room. His heart was beating ridiculously. His self contempt was profound. But he could not mistake his sentiments. His duty was plain enough. But he had failed in it once, and even as he strode up and down the room, already he knew that he must fail again. He knew that, rightly or wrongly, he was incapable of placing this note in the hands of the police … and he knew that he should be at Victoria Station at six o’clock. He would never have believed himself capable of becoming accessory to a series of crimes–for this was what his conduct amounted to; he had thought that sentiment no longer held any meaning for him. Yet the only excuse which he could find wherewith to solace himself was that this girl had endeavoured to save him from assassination. Weighed against the undoubted fact that she was a member of a dangerous criminal group what was it worth? If the supposition of Gaston Max was correct, The Scorpion had at least six successful murders to his credit, in addition to the attempt upon his Stuart’s life and that of Le Balafre, upon the life of Gaston Max. It was an accomplice of this nameless horror called The Scorpion with whom at six o’clock he had a tryst, whom he was protecting from justice, by the suppression of whose messages to himself he was adding difficulties to the already difficult task of the authorities! Up and down he paced, restlessly, every now and again glancing at a clock upon the mantelpiece. His behavior he told himself was contemptible. Yet, at a quarter to six, he went out–and seeing a little cluster of daisies growing amongst the grass bordering the path, he plucked one and set it in his button hole! A few minutes before the hour he entered the station and glanced sharply around at the many groups scattered about in the neighbourhood of the bookstall. There was no sign of Mlle. Dorian. He walked around the booking office without seeing her and glanced into the waiting room. Then, looking up at the station clock, he saw that the hour had come, and as he stood there staring upward he felt a timid touch upon his shoulder. He turned–and she was standing by his side! She was Parisian from head to foot, simply but perfectly gowned. A veil hung from her hat and half concealed her face, but could not hide her wonderful eyes nor disguise the delightful curves of her red lips. Stuart automatically raised his hat, and even as he did so wondered what she should have said and done had she suddenly found Gaston Max standing at his elbow! He laughed shortly. You are angry with me, said Mlle. Dorian, and Stuart thought that her quaint accent was adorable. Or are you angry with yourself for seeing me? I am angry with myself, he replied, for being so weak. Is it so weak, she said, rather tremulously, not to judge a woman by what she seems to be and not to condemn her before you hear what she has to say? If that is weak, I am glad; I think it is how a man should be. Her voice and her eyes completed the spell, and Stuart resigned himself without another struggle to this insane infatuation. We cannot very well talk here, he said. Suppose we go into the hotel and have late tea, Mlle. Dorian. Yes. Very well. But please do not call me that. It is not my name. Stuart was on the point of saying, Zara el Khala then, but checked himself in the nick of time. He might hold communication with the enemy, but at least he would give away no information. I am called Miska, she added. Will you please call me Miska? Of course, if you wish, said Stuart, looking down at her as she walked by his side and wondering what he would do when he had to stand up in Court, look at Miska in the felon’s dock and speak words which would help to condemn her–perhaps to death, at least to penal servitude! He shuddered. Have I said something that displeases you? she asked, resting a white gloved hand on his arm. I am sorry. No, no, he assured her. But I was thinking–I cannot help thinking … How wicked I am? she whispered. How lovely you are! he said hotly, and how maddening it is to remember that you are an accomplice of criminals! Oh, she said, and removed her hand, but not before he had felt how it trembled. They were about to enter the tea room when she added: Please don’t say that until I have told you why I do what I do. Obeying a sudden impulse, he took her hand and drew it close under his arm. No, he said; I won’t. I was a brute, Miska. Miska means ‘musk’, surely? Yes. She glanced up at him timidly. Do you think it a pretty name? Very, he said, laughing. Underlying the Western veneer was the fascinating naivete of the Eastern woman, and Miska had all the suave grace, too, which belongs to the women of the Orient, so that many admiring glances followed her charming figure as she crossed the room to a vacant table. Now, said Stuart, when he had given an order to the waiter, what do you want to tell me? Whatever it may be, I am all anxiety to hear it. I promise that I will only act upon anything you may tell me in the event of my life, or that of another, being palpably endangered by my silence. Very well. I want to tell you, replied Miska, why I stay with Fo Hi. Who is Fo Hi? I do not know! What! said Stuart. I am afraid I don’t understand you. If I speak in French will you be able to follow what I say? Certainly. Are you more at ease with French? Yes, replied Miska, beginning to speak in the latter language. My mother was French, you see, and although I can speak in English fairly well I cannot yet think in English. Do you understand? Perfectly. So perhaps you will now explain to whom you refer when you speak of Fo Hi. Miska glanced apprehensively around her, bending further forward over the table. Let me tell you from the beginning, she said in a low voice, and then you will understand. It must not take me long. You see me as I am to day because of a dreadful misfortune that befell me when I was fifteen years old. My father was Wali of Aleppo, and my mother, his third wife, was a Frenchwoman, a member of a theatrical company which had come to Cairo, where he had first seen her. She must have loved him, for she gave up the world, embraced Islam and entered his harem in the great house on the outskirts of Aleppo. Perhaps it was because he, too, was half French, that they were mutually attracted. My father’s mother was a Frenchwoman also, you understand. Until I was fifteen years of age, I never left the harem, but my mother taught me French and also a little English; and she prevailed upon my father not to give me in marriage so early as is usual in the East. She taught me to understand the ways of European women, and we used to have Paris journals and many books come to us regularly. Then an awful pestilence visited Aleppo. People were dying in the mosques and in the streets, and my father decided to send my mother and myself and some others of the harem to his brother’s house in Damaskus. Perhaps you will think that such things do not happen in these days, and particularly to members of the household of a chief magistrate, but I can only tell you what is true. On the second night of our journey a band of Arabs swept down upon the caravan, overpowered the guards, killing them all, and carried of everything of value which we had. Me, also, they carried off–me and one other, a little Syrian girl, my cousin. Oh! she shuddered violently–even now I can sometimes hear the shrieks of my mother … and I can hear, also, the way they suddenly ceased, those cries … Stuart looked up with a start to find a Swiss waiter placing tea upon the table. He felt like rubbing his eyes. He had been dragged rudely back from the Syrian desert to the prosaic realities of a London hotel. Perhaps, continued Miska, you will think that we were ill treated, but it was not so. No one molested us. We were given every comfort which desert life can provide, servant to wait upon us and plenty of good food. After several weeks’ journeying we came to a large city, having many minarets and domes glimmering in the moonlight; for we entered at night. Indeed, we always travelled at night. At the time I had no idea of the name of this city but I learned afterwards that it was Mecca. As we proceeded through the streets, the Assyrian girl and I peeped out through the little windows of the shibriyeh–which is a kind of tent on the back of a camel–in which we travelled, hoping to see some familiar face or someone to whom we could appeal. But there seemed to be scarcely anyone visible in the streets, although lights shone out from many windows, and the few men we saw seemed to be anxious to avoid us. In fact, several ran down side turnings as the camels approached. We stopped before the gate of a large house which was presently opened, and the camels entered the courtyard. We descended, and I saw that a number of small apartments surrounded the courtyard in the manner of a caravanserai. Then, suddenly, I saw something else, and I knew why we had been treated with such consideration on the journey; I knew into what hand I had fallen–I knew that I was in the house of a slave dealer! Good heavens! muttered Stuart–this is almost incredible. I knew you would doubt what I had to tell you, declared Miska plaintively; but I solemnly swear what I tell you is the truth. Yes, I was in the house of a slave dealer, and on the very next day, because I was proficient in languages, in music and in dancing, and also because–according to their Eastern ideas–I was pretty, the dealer, Mohammed Abd el Bali … offered me for sale. She stopped, lowering her eyes and flushing hotly, then continued with hesitancy. In a small room which I can never forget I was offered the only indignity which I had been called upon to suffer since my abduction. I was exhibited to prospective purchasers. As she spoke the words, Miska’s eyes flashed passionately and her hand, which lay on the table, trembled. Stuart silently reached across and rested his own upon it. There were all kinds of girls, Miska continued, black and brown and white, in the adjoining rooms, and some of them were singing and some dancing, whilst others wept. Four different visitors inspected me critically, two of them being agents for royal harems and the other two–how shall I say it?–wealthy connoisseurs. But the price asked by Mohammed Abd el Bali was beyond the purses of all except one of the agents. He had indeed settled the bargain, when the singing and dancing and shouting–every sound it seemed–ceased about me … and into the little room in which I crouched amongst perfumed cushions at the feet of the two men, walked Fo Hi. Chapter 24. Miska’s Story Concluded. Of course, I did not know that this was his name at the time; I only knew that a tall Chinese person had entered the room–and that his face was entirely covered by a green veil. Stuart started, but did not interrupt Miska’s story. This veil gave him in some way a frightfully malign and repellent appearance. As he stood in the doorway looking down I seemed to feel his gaze passing over me like a flame, although of course I could not see his eyes. For a moment he stood there looking at me; and much as his presence had affected me, its affect upon the slave dealer and my purchaser was extraordinary. They seemed to be stricken dumb. Suddenly the Chinese person spoke, in perfect Arabic. ‘Her price?’ he said. Mohammed Abd el Bali, standing trembling before him, replied: ‘Miska is already sold, lord, but—- ‘Her price?’ repeated the Chinese person, in the same hard metallic voice and without the slightest change of intonation. The harem agent who had bought me now said, his voice shaking so that the words were barely audible: ‘I give her up, Mohammed–I give her up. Who am I to dispute with the Mandarin Fo Hi;’ and performing an abject obeisance he backed out of the room. At the same moment, Mohammed, whose knees were trembling so that they seemed no longer capable of supporting him, addressed the Chinese person. ‘Accept the maiden as an unworthy gift,’ he began– ‘Her price?’ repeated Fo Hi. Mohammed, whose teeth had begun to chatter, asked him twice as much as he had agreed to accept from the other, Fo Hi clapped his hands, and a fierce eyed Hindu entered the room. Fo Hi addressed him in a language which I did not understand, although I have since learned that it was Hindustani, and the Indian from a purse which he carried counted out the amount demanded by the dealer and placed the money upon a little inlaid table which stood in the room. Fo Hi gave him some brief order, turned and walked out of the room. I did not see him again for four years–that is until my nineteenth birthday. I know that you are wondering about many things and I will try to make some of them clear to you. You are wondering, no doubt, how such a trade as I have described is carried on in the East to day almost under the eyes of European Governments. Now I shall surprise you. When I was taken from the house of the slave dealer, in charge of Chunda Lal–for this was the name of the Hindu–do you know where I was carried to? I will tell you: to Cairo! Cairo! cried Stuart–then, perceiving that he had attracted attention by speaking so loudly, he lowered his voice. Do you mean to tell me that you were taken as a slave to Cairo? Miska smiled–and her smile was the taunting smile of the East, which is at once a caress and an invitation. You think, no doubt, that there are no slaves in Cairo! she said. So do most people, and so did I–once. I learned better. There are palaces in Cairo, I assure you, in which there are many slaves. I myself lived in such a palace for four years, and I was not the only slave there. What do British residents and French residents know of the inner domestic life of their Oriental neighbours? Are they ever admitted to the harem? And the slaves–are they ever admitted outside the walls of the palace? Sometimes, yes, but never alone! By slow stages, following the ancient caravan routes, and accompanied by an extensive retinue of servants in charge of Chunda Lal, we came to Cairo; and one night, approaching the city from the north east and entering by the Bab en Nasr, I was taken to the old palace which was to be my prison for four years. How I passed those four years has no bearing upon the matters which I have to tell you, but I lived the useless, luxurious life of some Arabian princess, my lightest wish anticipated and gratified; nothing was denied me, except freedom. Then, one day–it was actually my nineteenth birthday–Chunda Lal presented himself and told me that I was to have an interview with Fo Hi. Hearing these words, I nearly swooned, for a hundred times during the years of my strange luxurious captivity I had awakened trembling in the night, thinking that the figure of the awful veiled Chinese person had entered the room. You must understand that having spent my childhood in a harem, the mode of life which I was compelled to follow in Cairo was not so insufferable as it must have been for a European woman. Neither was my captivity made unduly irksome. I often drove through the European quarters, always accompanied by Chunda Lal, and closely veiled, and I regularly went shopping in the bazaars–but never alone. The death of my mother–and later that of my father, of which Chunda Lal had told me–were griefs that time had dulled. But the horror of Fo Hi was one which lived with me, day and night. To a wing of the palace kept closely locked, and which I had never seen opened, I was conducted by Chunda Lal. There, in a room of a kind with which was part library and part mandarah, part museum and part laboratory, I found the veiled man seated at a great littered table. As I stood trembling before him he raised a long yellow hand and waved to Chunda Lal to depart. When he obeyed and I heard the door close I could scarcely repress a shriek of terror. For what seemed an interminable time he sat watching me. I dared not look at him, but again I felt his gaze passing over me like a flame. Then he began to speak, in French, which he spoke without a trace of accent. He told me briefly that my life of idleness had ended and that a new life of activity in many parts of the world was about to commence. His manner was quite unemotional, neither harsh nor kindly, his metallic voice conveyed no more than the bare meaning of the words which he uttered. When, finally, he ceased speaking, he struck a gong which hung from a corner of the huge table, and Chunda Lal entered. Fo Hi addressed a brief order to him in Hindustani–and a few moments later a second Chinese person walked slowly into the room. Miska paused, as if to collect her ideas, but continued almost immediately. He wore a plain yellow robe and had a little black cap on his head. His face, his wonderful evil face I can never forget, and his eyes–I fear you will think I exaggerate–but his eyes were green as emeralds! He fixed them upon me. ‘This,’ said Fo Hi, ‘is Miska.’ The other Chinese person continued to regard me with those dreadful eyes; then: ‘You have chosen well.’ he said, turned and slowly went out again. I thank God that I have never seen him since, for his dreadful face haunted my dreams for long afterwards. But I have learned of him, and I know that next to Fo Hi he is the most dangerous being in the known world. He has invented horrible things–poisons and instruments, which I cannot describe because I have never seen them; but I have seen … some of their effects. She paused, overcome with the horror of her memories. What is the name of this other man? asked Stuart eagerly. Miska glanced at him rapidly. Oh, do not ask me questions, please! she pleaded. I will tell you all I can, all I dare; what I do not tell you I cannot tell you–and this is one of the things I dare not tell. He is a Chinese scientist and, I have heard, the greatest genius in the whole world, but I can say no more–yet. Is he still alive–this man? I do not know that. If he is alive, he is in China–at some secret palace in the province of Ho Nan, which is the headquarters of what is called the ‘Sublime Order.’ I have never been there, but there are Europeans there, as well as Orientals. What! in the company of these fiends! It is useless to ask me–oh! indeed, I would tell you if I could, but I cannot! Let me go on from the time when I saw Fo Hi in Cairo. He told me that I was a member of an organization dating back to remote antiquity which was destined to rule all the races of mankind–the Celestial age he called their coming triumph. Something which they had lacked in order to achieve success had been supplied by the dreadful man who had entered the room and expressed his approval of me. For many years they had been at work in Europe, secretly, as well as in the East. I understood that they had acquired a quantity of valuable information of some kind by means of a system of opium houses situated in the principal capitals of the world and directed by Fo Hi and a number of Chinese assistants. Fo Hi had remained in China most of the time, but had paid occasional visits to Europe. The other man–the monster with the black skull cap–had been responsible for the conduct of the European enterprises. Throughout this interview, interrupted Stuart, forgetful of the fact that Miska had warned him of the futility of asking questions, and during others which you must have had with Fo Hi, did you never obtain a glimpse of his face? Never! No one has ever seen his face! I know that his eyes are a brilliant and unnatural yellow colour, but otherwise I should not know him if I saw him unveiled, to morrow. Except, she added, by a sense of loathing which his presence inspires in me. But I must hurry. If you interrupt me, I shall not have time. From that day in Cairo–oh! how can I tell you! I began the life of an adventuress! I do not deny it. I came here to confess it to you. I went to New York, to London, to Paris, to Petrograd; I went all over the world. I had beautiful dresses, jewels, admiration–all that women live for! And in the midst of it all mine was the life of the cloister; no nun could be more secluded! I see the question in your eyes–why did I do it? Why did I lure men into the clutches of Fo Hi? For this is what I did; and when I have failed, I have been punished. Stuart shrank from her. You confess, he said hoarsely, that you knowing lured men to death? Ah, no! she whispered, looking about her fearfully–never! never! I swear it–never! Then–he stared at her blankly–I do not understand you! I dare not make it clearer–now: I dare not–dare not! But believe me! Oh, please, please, she pleaded, her soft voice dropping to a whisper–believe me! If you know what I risked to tell you so much, you would be more merciful. A horror which cannot be described–again she shuddered–will fall upon me if he ever suspects! You think me young and full of life, with all the world before me. You do not know. I am, literally, already dead! Oh! I have followed a strange career. I have danced in a Paris theatre and I have sold flowers in Rome; I have had my box at the Opera and I have filled opium pipes in a den at San Francisco! But never, never have I lured a man to his death. And through it all, from first to last, no man has so much as kissed my finger tips! At a word, at a sign, I have been compelled to go from Monte Carlo to Buenos Ayres; at another sign from there to Tokio! Chunda Lal has guarded me as only the women of the East are guarded. Yet, in his fierce way, he has always tried to befriend me, he has always been faithful. But ah! I shrink from him many times, in horror, because I know what he is! But I may not tell you. Look! Chunda Lal has never been out of sound of this whistle–she drew a little silver whistle from her dress–for a moment since that day when he came into the house of the slave dealer in Mecca, except—- And now, suddenly, a wave of glorious colour flooded her beautiful face and swiftly she lowered her eyes, replacing the little whistle. Stuart’s rebellious heart leapt madly, for whatever he might think of her almost incredible story, that sweet blush was no subterfuge, no product of acting. You almost drive me mad, he said in low voice, resembling the tones of repressed savagery. You tell me so much, but withhold so much that I am more bewildered than ever. I can understand your helplessness in an Eastern household, but why should you obey the behests of this veiled monster in London, in New York, in Paris? She did not raise her eyes. I dare not tell you. But I dare not disobey him. Who is he! No one knows, because no one has ever seen his face! Ah! you are laughing! But I swear before heaven I speak the truth! Indoors he wears a Chinese dress and a green veil. In passing from place to place, which he always does at night, he is attired in a kind of cowl which only exposes his eyes—- But how can such a fantastic being travel? By road, on land, and in a steam yacht, at sea. Why should you doubt my honesty? She suddenly raises her glance to Stuart’s face and he saw that she had grown pale. I have risked what I cannot tell you, and more than once–for you! I tried to call you on the telephone on the night that he set out from the house near Hampton Court to kill you, but I could get no reply, and—- Stop! said Stuart, almost too exited to note at the time that she had betrayed a secret. It was you who rang up that night? Yes. Why did you not answer? Never mind. Your call saved my life. I shall not forget. He looked into her eyes. But can you not tell me what it all means? What or whom is ‘The Scorpion’? She flinched. The Scorpion is–a passport. See. From a little pocket in the coat of her costume she drew out a golden scorpion! I have one. She replaced it hurriedly. I dare not, dare not tell you more. But this much I had to tell you, because … I shall never see you again! What! A French detective, a very clever man, learned a lot about ‘The Scorpion’ and he followed one of the members to England. This man killed him. Oh, I know I belong to a horrible organization! she cried bitterly. But I tell you I am helpless and I have never aided in such a thing. You should know that! But all he found out he left with you–and I do not know if I succeeded in destroying it. I do not ask you. I do not care. But I leave England to night. Good bye. She suddenly stood up. Stuart rose also. He was about to speak when Miska’s expression changed. A look of terror crept over her face, and hastily lowering her veil she walked rapidly away from the table and out of the room! Many curious glances followed the elegant figure to the door. Then those glances were directed upon Stuart. Flushing with embarrassment, he quickly settled the bill and hurried out of the hotel. Gaining the street, he looked eagerly right and left. But Miska had disappeared! Chapter 25. The Heart Of Chunda Lal. Dusk had drawn a grey mantle over the East End streets when Miska, discharging the cab in which she had come from Victoria, hurried furtively along a narrow alley tending Thamesward. Unconsciously she crossed a certain line–a line invisible except upon a map of London which lay upon the table of the Assistant Commissioner in New Scotland Yard–the line forming the red circle of M. Gaston Max. And, crossing this line, she became the focus upon which four pairs of watchful eyes were directed. Arriving at the door of a mean house some little distance removed from that of Ah Fang Fu, Miska entered, for the door was open, and disappeared from the view of the four detectives who were watching the street. Her heart was beating rapidly. For she had thought, as she had stood up to leave the restaurant, that the fierce eyes of Chunda Lal had looked in through the glass panel of one of the doors. This gloomy house seemed to swallow her up, and the men who watched wondered more and more what had become of the elegant figure, grotesque in such a setting, which had vanished into the narrow doorway–and which did not reappear. Even Inspector Kelly, who knew so much about Chinatown, did not know that the cellars of the three houses left and right of Ah Fang Fu’s were connected by a series of doors planned and masked with Chinese cunning. Half an hour after Miska had disappeared into the little house near the corner, the hidden door in the damp cellar below The Pidgin House opened and a bent old woman, a ragged, grey haired and dirty figure, walked slowly up the rickety wooden stair and entered a bare room behind and below the shop and to the immediate left of the den of the opium smoker. This room, which was windowless, was lighted by a tin paraffin lamp hung upon a nail in the dirty plaster wall. The floor presented a litter of straw, paper and broken packing cases. Two steps led up to a second door, a square heavy door of great strength. The old woman, by means of a key which she carried, was about to open this door when it was opened from the other side. Lowering his head as he came through, Chunda Lal descended. He wore European clothes and a white turban. Save for his ardent eyes and the handsome fanatical face of the man, he might have passed for a lascar. He turned and half closed the door. The woman shrank from him, but extending a lean brown hand he gripped her arm. His eyes glittered feverishly. So! he said, we are all leaving England? Five of the Chinese sail with the P. and O. boat to night. Ali Khan goes to morrow, and Rama Dass, with Miguel, and the Andaman. I meet them at Singapore. But you? The woman raised her finger to her lips, glancing fearfully towards the open door. But the Hindu, drawing her nearer, repeated with subdued fierceness: I ask it again–but you? I do not know, muttered the woman, keeping her head lowered and moving in the direction of the steps. But Chunda Lal intercepted her. Stop! he said–not yet are you going. There is something I have to speak to you. Ssh! she whispered, half turning and pointing up toward the door. Those! said the Hindu contemptuously–the poor slaves of the black smoke! Ah! they are floating in their dream paradise; they have no ears to hear, no eyes to see! He grasped her wrist again. They contest for shadow smiles and dream kisses, but Chunda Lal have eyes to see and ears to hear. He dream, too but of lips more sweet than honey, of a voice like the Song of the Daood! Inshalla! Suddenly he clutched the grey hair of the bent old woman and with one angry jerk snatched it from her head–for it was a cunning wig. Disordered, hair gleaming like bronze waves in the dim lamplight was revealed and the great dark eyes of Miska looked out from the artificially haggard face–eyes wide open and fearful. Bend not that beautiful body so, whispered Chunda Lal, that is straight and supple as the willow branch. O, Miska–his voice trembled emotionally and he that had been but a moment since so fierce stood abashed before her–for you I become as the meanest and the lowest; for you I die! Miska started back from him as a muffled outcry sounded in the room beyond the half open door. Chunda Las started also, but almost immediately smiled–and his smile was tender as a woman’s. It is the voice of the black smoke that speaks, Miska. We are alone. Those are dead men speaking from their tombs. Ah Fang Fu is in the shop, whispered Miska. And there he remain. But what of … him! Miska pointed toward the eastern wall of the room in which they stood. Chunda Lal clenched his hands convulsively and turned his eyes in the same direction. It is of him, he replied in a voice of suppressed vehemence, it is of him I would speak. He bent close to Miska’s ear. In the creek, below the house, is lying the motor boat. I go to day to bring it down for him. He goes to night to the other house up the river. To morrow I am gone. Only you remaining. Yes, yes. He also leaves England to morrow. And you? I go with him, she whispered. Chunda Lal glanced apprehensively toward the door. Then: Do not go with him! he said, and sought to draw Miska into his arms. O, light of my eyes, do not go with him! Miska repulsed him, but not harshly. No, no, it is no good, Chunda Lal. I cannot hear you. You think–the Hindu’s voice was hoarse with emotion–that he will trace you–and kill you? Trace me! exclaimed Miska with sudden scorn. Is it necessary for him to trace me? Am I not already dead except for him! Would I be his servant, his lure, his slave for one little hour, for one short minute, if my life was my own! Beads of perspiration gleamed upon the brown forehead of the Hindu, and his eyes turned from the door to the eastern wall and back again to Miska. He was torn by conflicting desires, but suddenly came resolution. Listen, then. His voice was barely audible. If I tell you that your life is your own–if I reveal to you a secret which I learned in the house of Abdul Rozan in Cairo—- Miska watched him with eyes in which a new, a wild expression was dawning. If I tell you that life and not death awaits you, will you come away to night, and we sail for India to morrow! Ah! I have money! Perhaps I am rich as well as–someone; perhaps I can buy you the robes of a princess–he drew her swiftly to him–and cover those white arms with jewels. Miska shrank from him. All this means nothing, she said. How can the secret of Abdul Rozan help me to live! And you–you will be dead before I die!–yes! One little hour after he finds out that I go! Listen again, hissed Chunda Lal intensely. Promise me, and I will open for you a gate of life. For you, Miska, I will do it, and we shall be free. He will never find out. He shall not be living to find out! No, no, Chunda Lal, she moaned. You have been my only friend, and I have tried to forget … I will forswear Kali forever, he said fervently, and shed no blood for all my life! I will live for you alone and be your slave. It is no good. I cannot, Chunda Lal, I cannot. Miska! he pleaded tenderly. No, no, she repeated, her voice quivering–I cannot … Oh! do not ask it; I cannot! She picked up the hideous wig, moving towards the door. Chunda Lal watched her, clenching his hands; and his eyes, which had been so tender, grew fierce. Ah! he cried–and it may be I know a reason! She stopped, glancing back at him. It may be, he continued, and his repressed violence was terrible, it may be that I, whose heart is never sleeping, have seen and heard! One night–he crept towards her–one night when I cry the warning that the Doctor Sahib returns to his house, you do not come! He goes in at the house and you remain. But at last you come, and I see in your eyes—- Oh! breathed Miska, watching him fearfully. Do I not see it in your eyes now! Never before have I thought so until you go to that house, never before have you escaped from my care as here in London. Twice again I have doubted, and because there was other work to do I have been helpless to find out. To night–he stood before her, glaring madly into her face–I think so again–that you have gone to him…. Oh, Chunda Lal! cried Miska piteously and extended her hands towards him. No, no–do not say it! So! he whispered–I understand! You risk so much for him–for me you risk nothing! If he–the Doctor Sahib–say to you: ‘Come with me, Miska—-‘ No, no! Can I never have one friend in all the world! I hear you call, Chunda Lal, but I am burning the envelope and–Doctor Stuart– finds me. I am trapped. You know it is so. I know you say so. And because he–Fo Hi–is not sure and because of the piece of the scorpion which you find there, we go to that house– he and I–and we fail in what we go for. Chunda Lal’s hand dropped limply to his sides. Ah! I cannot understand, Miska. If we are not sure then, are we sure now? It may be–he bent towards her–we are trapped! Oh, what do you mean? We do not know how much they read of what he had written. Why do we wait? He has some plan, Chunda Lal, replied Miska wearily. Does he ever fail? Her words rekindled the Hindu’s ardour; his eyes lighted up anew. I tell you his plan, he whispered tensely. Oh! you shall hear me! He watch you grow from a little lovely child, as he watch his death spiders and his grey scorpions grow! He tend you and care for you and make you perfect, and he plan for you as he plan for this other creatures. Then, he see what I see, that you are not only his servant but also a woman and that you have a woman’s heart. He learn–who think he knows all–that he, too, is not yet a spirit but only a man, and have a man’s heart, a man’s blood, a man’s longings! It is because of the Doctor Sahib that he learn it—- He grasped Miska again, but she struggled to elude him. Oh, let me go! she pleaded. It is madness you speak! It is madness, yes–for you! Always I have watched, always I have waited; and I also have seen you bloom like a rose in the desert. To night I am here–watching … and he knows it! Tomorrow I am gone! Do you stay, for–him? Oh, she whispered fearfully, it cannot be. You say true when you say I have been your only friend, Miska. To morrow he plan that you have no friend. He released her, and slowly, from the sleeve of his coat, slipped into view the curved blade of a native knife. Ali Khan Bhai Salam! he muttered–by which formula he proclaimed himself a Thug! Rolling his eyes in the direction of the eastern wall, he concealed the knife. Chunda Lal! Miska spoke wildly. I am frightened! Please let me go, and tomorrow—- To morrow! Chunda Lal raised his eyes, which were alight with the awful light of fanaticism. For me there may be no tomorrow! Jey Bhowani! Yah Allah! Oh, he may hear you! whispered Miska pitifully. Please go now. I shall know that you are near me, if—- And then? I will ask your aid. Her voice was very low. And if it is written that I succeed? Miska averted her head. Oh, Chunda Lal … I cannot. She hid her face in her hands. Chunda Lal stood watching her for a moment in silence, then he turned toward the cellar door, and then again to Miska. Suddenly he dropped upon one knee before her, took her hand and kissed it, gently. I am your slave, he said, his voice shaken with emotion. For myself I ask nothing–only your pity. He rose, opened the door by which Miska had entered the room and went down into the cellars. She watched him silently, half fearfully, yet her eyes were filled with compassionate tears. Then, readjusting the hideous grey wig, she went up the steps and passed through the doorway into the den of the opium smokers. Chapter 26. The Man With The Scar. Stuart read through a paper, consisting of six closely written pages, then he pinned the sheets together, folded them and placed them in one of those long envelopes associated in his memory with the opening phase of The Scorpion mystery. Smiling grimly, he descended to his dispensary and returned with the Chinese coin attached to the cork. With this he sealed the envelope. He had volunteered that night for onerous service, and his offer had been accepted. Gaston Max’s knowledge of Eastern languages was slight, whilst Stuart’s was sound and extensive, and the Frenchman had cordially welcomed the doctor’s proposal that he should accompany him to the house of Ah Fang Fu. Reviewing the facts gleaned from Miska during the earlier part of the evening, Stuart perceived that, apart from the additional light which they shed upon her own relations with the group, they could be of slight assistance to the immediate success of the inquiry–unless the raid failed. Therefore he had determined upon the course which now he was adopting. As he completed the sealing of the envelope and laid it down upon the table, he heard a cab drawn up in front of the house, and presently Mrs. M’Gregor knocked and entered the study. Inspector Dunbar to see you, Mr. Keppel, she said–and he has with him an awful looking body, all cuts and bandages. A patient, no doubt. Stuart stood up, wondering what this could mean. Will you please show them up, Mrs. M’Gregor, he replied. A few moments later Dunbar entered, accompanied by a bearded man whose head was bandaged so as to partly cover one eye and who had an evil looking scar running from his cheekbone, apparently–or at any rate from the edge of the bandage–to the corner of his mouth, so that the lip was drawn up in a fierce and permanent snarl. At this person Stuart stared blankly, until Dunbar began to laugh. It’s a wonderful make up, isn’t it? he said. I used to say that disguises were out of date, but M. Max has taught me I was wrong. Max! cried Stuart. At your service, replied the apparition, but for this evening only I am ‘Le Belafre. ‘ Yes, pardieu! I am a real dead man! The airy indifference which he proclaimed himself to represent one whose awful body had but that day been removed from a mortuary, and one whom in his own words he had had the misfortune to strangle, was rather ghastly and at the same time admirable. For Le Balafre had deliberately tried to murder him, and false sentiment should form no part of the complement of a criminal investigator. It is a daring idea, said Stuart, and relies for its success upon the chance that ‘The Scorpion’ remains ignorant of the fate of his agent and continues to believe that the body found off Hanover Hole was yours. The admirable precautions of my clever colleague, replied Max, laying his hand upon Dunbar’s shoulder, in closing the mortuary and publishing particulars of the identification disk, made it perfectly safe. ‘Le Balafre’ has been in hiding. He emerges! Stuart had secret reasons for knowing that Max’s logic was not at fault, and this brought him to the matter of the sealed paper. He took up the envelope. I have here, he said slowly, a statement. Examine the seal. He held it out, and Max and Dunbar looked at it. The latter laughed shortly. Oh, it is a real statement, continued Stuart, the nature of which I am not at liberty to divulge. But as to night we take risks, I propose to leave it in your charge, Inspector. He handed the envelope to Dunbar, whose face was blank with astonishment. In the event of failure to night, added Stuart, or catastrophe, I authorise you to read this statement–and act upon it. If, however, I escape safely, I ask you to return it to me, unread. Eh bien, said Max, and fixed that eye the whole of which was visible upon Stuart. Perhaps I understand, and certainly–he removed his hand from Dunbar’s shoulder and rested it upon that of Stuart– but certainly, my friend, I sympathise! Stuart started guiltily, but Max immediately turned aside and began to speak about their plans. In a bag which Inspector Dunbar has thoughtfully left in the cab, he said—- Dunbar hastily retired and Max laughed. In that bag, he continued, is a suit of clothes such as habitues of ‘The Pidgin House’ rejoice to wear. I, who have studied disguise almost as deeply as the great Willy Clarkson, will transform you into a perfect ruffian. It is important, you understand, that someone should be inside the house of Ah Fang Fu, as otherwise by means of some secret exit the man we seek may escape. I believe that he contemplates departing at any moment, and I believe that the visit of Miguel means that what I may term the masters of the minor lodges are coming to London for parting instructions–or, of course Miguel may have come about the disappearance of ‘Le Balafre.’ Suppose you meet Miguel! My dear friend, I must trust to the Kismet who pursues evil doers! The only reason which has led me to adopt this daring disguise is a simple one. Although I believe ‘The Pidgin House’ to be open to ordinary opium smokers, it may not be open on ‘lodge nights.’ Do you follow me? Very well. I have the golden scorpion–which I suppose to be a sort of passport. Stuart wondered more and more at the reasoning powers of this remarkable man, which could lead him to such an accurate conclusion. The existence of such a passport, continued Max, would seem to point to the fact that all the members of this organisation are not known personally to one another. At the same time those invited or expected at present may be known to Ah Fang Fu or to whoever acts as concierge. You see? Expected or otherwise, I assume that ‘Le Balafre’ would be admitted–and at night I shall pass very well for ‘Le Balafre’–somewhat damaged as a result of my encounter with the late Charles Malet, but still recognisable! And I? You will be ‘franked’ in. The word of ‘Le Balafre’ should be sufficient for that! Of course I may be conducted immediately into the presence of the Chief–‘The Scorpion’–and he may prove to be none other than Miguel, for instance–or my Algerian acquaintance– or may even be a ‘she’–the fascinating Zara el Khala! We do not know. But I think–oh, decidedly I think–that the cowled one is a male creature, and his habits and habitat suggests to me that he is a Chinese person. And in that event how shall you act? At once! I shall hold him, if I can, or shoot him if I cannot hold him! Both of us will blow police whistles with which we shall be provided and Inspectors Dunbar and Kelly will raid the premises. But I am hoping for an interval. I do not like these inartistic scrimmages! The fact that these people foregather at an opium house suggests to me that a certain procedure may be followed which I observed during the course of the celebrated ‘Mr. Q’ case in New York. ‘Mr. Q.’ also had an audience chamber adjoining and opium den, and his visitors went there ostensibly to smoke opium. The opium den was a sort of anteroom. Weymouth’s big Chinese case had similar features, said Inspector Dunbar, who re entered at that moment carrying a leathern grip. If you are kept waiting and you keep your ears open, doctor, that’s when your knowledge of the lingo will come in useful. We might rope in the whole gang and find we hadn’t a scrap of evidence against them, for except the attempt on yourself, Dr. Stuart, there’s nothing so far that I can see to connect ‘The Scorpion’ with Sir Frank Newcombe! It is such a bungle that I fear! cried Max. Ah! how this looped up lip annoys me! He adjusted the bandage carefully. We’ve got the place comfortably surrounded, continued Dunbar, and whoever may be inside is booked! A lady, answering to the description of Mlle. Dorian, went in this evening, so Sowerby reports. Stuart felt that he was changing colour, and he stooped hastily to inspect the contents of the bag which Dunbar had opened. Eh bien! said Gaston Max. We shall not go empty handed, then. And now to transfigure you, my friend! Chapter 27. In The Opium Den. Interrupting a spell of warm, fine weather the night had set in wet and stormy. The squalid streets through which Stuart and Gaston Max made their way looked more than normally deserted and uninviting. The wind moaned and the rain accompanied with a dreary tattoo. Sometimes a siren wailed out upon the river. We are nearly there, said Max. Pardieu! they are well concealed, those fellows. I have not seen so much as an eyebrow. It would be encouraging to get a glimpse of some one! replied Stuart. Ah, but bad–inartistic. It is the next door, I think … yes. I hope they have no special way of knocking. Upon the door of a dark and apparently deserted shop he rapped. Both had anticipated an interval of waiting, and both were astonished when the door opened almost at once, revealing a blackly cavernous interior. Go off! Too late! Shuttee shop! chattered a voice out of the darkness. Max thrust his way resolutely in, followed by Stuart. Shut the door, Ah Fang Fu! he said curtly, speaking with a laboured French accent. Scorpion! The door was closed by the invisible Chinese person, there was a sound of soft movements and a hurricane lantern suddenly made its appearance. Its light revealed the interior of a nondescript untidy little shop and revealed the presence of an old and very wrinkled Chinese person who held the lantern. He wore a blue smock and a bowler hat and his face possessed the absolute impassivity of an image. As he leaned over the counter, scrutinising his visitors, Max thrust forward the golden scorpion held in the palm of his hand. Hoi, hoi chattered the Chinese person. Fo Hi fellers, eh? You hab got plenty much late. Other fellers Fo Hi pidgin plenty much sooner. You one time catchee allee same bhobbery, b’long number one joss pidgin man! Being covertly nudged by Max: Cut the palaver, Pidgin, growled Stuart. Allee lightee, chattered Ah Fang Fu, for evidently this was he. You play one piecee pipee till Fo Hi got. Raising the lantern, he led the way through a door at the back of the shop. Descending four wooden steps, Stuart and Max found themselves in the opium den. Full up. No loom, said the Chinese person. It was a low ceilinged apartment, the beams of the roof sloping slightly upward from west to east. The centre part of the wall at the back was covered with matting hung from the rough cornice supporting the beams. To the right of the matting was the door communicating with the shop, and to the left were bunks. Other bunks lined the southerly wall, except where, set in the thickness of the bare brick and plaster, a second strong door was partly hidden by a pile of empty packing cases and an untidy litter of straw and matting. Along the northern wall were more bunks, and an open wooden stair, with a handrail, ascended to a small landing or platform before a third door high up in the wall. A few mats were strewn about the floor. The place was dimly lighted by a red shaded lamp swung from the centre of the ceiling and near the foot of the stairs another lamp of the common tin variety stood upon a box near which was a broken cane chair. Opium pipes, tins, and a pack of cards were on this box. All the bunks appeared to be occupied. Most of the occupants were lying motionless, but one or two were noisily sucking at the opium pipes. These had not yet attained to the opium smokers Nirvana. So much did Gaston Max, a trained observer, gather in one swift glance. Then Ah Fang Fu, leaving the lantern in the shop, descended the four steps and crossing the room began to arrange two mats with round head cushions near to the empty packing cases. Stuart and Max remained by the door. You see, whispered Max, he has taken you on trust! And he did not appear to recognise me. It is as I thought. The place is ‘open to the public’ as usual, and Ah Fang Fu does a roaring trade, one would judge. For the benefit of patrons not affiliated to the order we have to pretend to smoke. Yes, replied Stuart with repressed excitement–until someone called Fo Hi is at home, or visible; the word ‘got’ may mean either of those things. Fo Hi, whispered Max, is ‘The Scorpion!’ I believe you are right, said Stuart–who had good reason to know it. My God! what a foul den! The reek is suffocating. Look at that yellow lifeless face yonder, and see that other fellow whose hand hangs limply down upon the floor. Those bunks might be occupied by corpses for all the evidence of life that some of them show. Morbleu! do not raise your voice; for some of them are occupied by ‘Scorpions.’ You noted the words of Ah Fang? Ssh! The old Chinese person returned with his curious shuffling walk, raising his hand to beckon to them. Number one piece bunk, lo! he chattered. Good enough, growled Stuart. The two crossed and reclined upon the uncleanly mats. Make special loom, explained Ah Fang Fu. Velly special chop! He passed from bunk to bunk, and presently came to a comatose Chinese person from whose limp hand, which hung down upon the floor, the pipe had dropped. This pipe Ah Fang Fu took from the smoker’s fingers and returning to the box upon which the tin lamp was standing began calmly to load it. Good heavens! muttered Stuart–he is short of pipes! Pah! how the place reeks! Ah Fang Fu busied himself with a tin of opium, the pipe which he had taken from the sleeper, and another pipe–apparently the last of his stock–which lay near the lamp. Igniting the two, he crossed and handed them to Stuart and Max. Velly soon lo! he said and made a curious sign, touching his brow, his lips and his breast in a manner resembling that of a Moslem. Max repeated the gesture and then lay back upon his elbow, raising the mouthpiece of the little pipe to his lips–but carefully avoiding contact. Ah Fang Fu shuffled back to the broken cane chair, from which he had evidently arisen to admit his late visitors. Inarticulate sounds proceeded from the bunks, breaking the sinister silence which now descended upon the den. Ah Fang Fu began to play Patience, constantly muttering to himself. The occasional wash of tidal water became audible, and once there came a scampering and squealing of rats from beneath the floor. Do you notice the sound of lapping water whispered Stuart. The place is evidently built upon a foundation of piles and the cellars must actually be submerged at high tide. Pardieu! it is a death trap. What is this! A loud knocking sounded upon the street door. Ah Fang Fu rose and shuffled up the steps into the shop. He could be heard unbarring the outer door. Then: Too late! shuttee shop, shuttee shop! sounded. I don’t want nothin’ out of your blasted shop, Pidgin! roared a loud and thick voice. I’m old Bill Bean, I am, and I want a pipe, I do! Hullo, Bill! replied the invisible ‘Pidgin.’ Allee samee dlunk again! A red bearded ship’s fireman, wearing sea boots, a rough blue suit similar to that which Stuart wore, a muffler and a peaked cap, lurched into view at the head of the steps. Blimey! he roared, over his shoulder. Drunk! Me drunk! An’ all the pubs in these parts sell barley water coloured brown! Blimey! Chuck it, Pidgin! Ah Fang Fu reappeared behind him. Catchee dlunk ev’ly time for comee here, he chattered. ‘Taint ‘umanly possible, declared the new arrival, staggering down the steps, fer a ‘ealthy sailorman to git drunk on coloured water just ’cause the publican calls it beer! I ain’t drunk; I’m only miserable. Gimmee a pipe, Pidgin. Ah Fang Fu barred the door and ascended. Comee here, he muttered, my placee, all full up and no other placee b’long open. Bill Bean slapped him boisterously on the back. Cut the palaver, Pidgin, and gimme a pipe. Piecee pipe, Pidgin! He lurched across the floor, nearly falling over Stuart’s legs, took up a mat and a cushion, lurched into the further corner and cast himself down. Ain’t I one o’ yer oldest customers, Pidgin? he inquired. One o’ yer oldest, I am. Blight side twelve time, muttered the Chinese person. Getchee me in tlouble, Bill. Number one police chop. Not the first time it wouldn’t be! retorted the fireman. Not the first time as you’ve been in trouble, Pidgin. An’ unless they ‘ung yer–which it ain’t ‘umanly possible to ‘ang a Person–it wouldn’t be the last–an’ not by a expletive long way … an’ not by a expletive long way! Ah Fang Fu, shrugging resignedly, shuffled from bunk to bunk in quest of a disused pipe, found one, and returning to the extemporised table, began to load it, muttering to himself. Don’t like to ‘ear about your wicked past, do you? continued Bill. Wicked old yellow faced ‘eathen! Remember the ‘dive’ in ‘Frisco, Pidgin? Wot a rough ‘ouse! Remember when I come in–full up I was: me back teeth well under water–an’ you tried to Shanghai me? You cutee palaber. All expletive lie, muttered the Chinese person. Ho! a lie is it? roared the other. Wot about me wakin’ up all of a tremble aboard o’ the old Nancy Lee–aboard of a blasted wind jammer! Me–a fireman! Wot about it? Wasn’t that Shanghaiin’? Blighter! An’ not a ‘oat’ in me pocket–not a ‘bean’! Broke to the wide an’ aboard of a old wind jammer wot was a coffin ship–a coffin ship she was; an’ ‘er old man was the devil’s father in law. Ho! lies! I don’t think! You cutee palaber! chattered Ah Fang Fu, busy with the pipe. You likee too much chin chin. You make nice piece bhobbery. Not a ‘bean’, continued Bill reminiscently–not a ‘oat.’ He sat up violently. Even me pipe an’ baccy was gone! he shouted. You’d even pinched me pipe an’ baccy! You’d pinch the whiskers off a blind man, you would, Pidgin! ‘And over the dope. Thank Gawd somebody’s still the right stuff! Suddenly, from a bunk on the left of Gaston Max came a faint cry. Ah! He has bitten me! ‘Ullo! said Bill–wotcher bin given’ ‘im, Pidgin? Chandu or hydrerphobia? Ah Fang Fu crossed and handed him the pipe. One piecee pipee. No more hab. Bill grasped the pipe eagerly and raised it to his lips. Ah Fang Fu returned unmoved to his Patience and silence reclaimed the den, only broken by the inarticulate murmuring and the lapping of the tide. A genuine customer! whispered Max. Ah! came again, more faintly–he … has … bitten … me. Blimey! said Bill in a drowsy voice–‘eave the chair at ‘im, Pidgin. Stuart was about to speak when Gaston Max furtively grasped his arm. Ssh! he whispered. Do not move, but look … at the top of the stair! Stuart turned his eyes. On the platform at the head of the stairs a Hindu was standing! Chunda Lal! whispered Max. Prepare for–anything! Chunda Lal descended slowly. Ah Fang Fu continued to play Patience. The Hindu stood behind him and began to speak in a voice of subdued fervour and with soft Hindu modulations. Why do you allow them, strangers, coming here to night! Ah Fang Fu continued complacently to arrange the cards. S’pose hab gotchee pidgin allee samee Chunda Lal hab got? Fo Hi no catchee buy bled and cheese for Ah Fang Fu. He–nodding casually in the direction of Bill Bean–plitty soon all blissful. Be very careful, Ah Fang Fu, said Chunda Lal tensely. He lowered his voice. Do you forget so soon what happen last week? No sabby. Some one comes here–we do not know how close he comes; perhaps he comes in–and he is of the police. Ah Fang Fu shuffled uneasily in his chair. No police chop for Pidgin! he muttered. Same feller tumble in liver? He is killed–yes; but suppose they find the writing he has made! Suppose he has written that it is here people meet together? Makee chit tell my name? Muchee hard luck! Number one police chop. You say Fo Hi not buying you bread and cheese. Perhaps it is Fo Hi that save you from hanging! Ah Fang Fu hugged himself. Yak pozee! Very good he muttered. Chunda Lal raised his finger. Be very careful, Ah Fang Fu! Allee time velly careful. But admit no more of them to come in, these strangers. Tchee, tchee! Velly ploper. Sometime big feller come in if Pidgin palaber or not. Pidgin never lude to big feller. Your life may depend on it, said Chunda Lal impressively. How many are here? Ah Fang Fu turned at last from his cards, pointing in three directions, and, finally, at Gaston Max. Four? said the Hindu–how can it be? He peered from bunk to bunk, muttering something–a name apparently– after scrutinizing each. When his gaze rested upon Max he started, stared hard, and meeting the gaze of the one visible eye, made the strange sign. Max repeated it; and Chunda Lal turned again to the Chinese person. Because of that drunken pig, he said, pointing at Bill Bean–we must wait. See to it that he is the last. He walked slowly up the stairs, opened the door at the top and disappeared. Chapter 28. The Green Eyed Joss. Sinister silence reclaimed the house of Ah Fang Fu. And Ah Fang Fu resumed his solitary game. He recognised ‘Le Belafre’ whispered Max–and was surprised to see him! So there are three of the gang here! Did you particularly observe in which bunks they lay, doctor. Ssh! A voice from a bunk had commenced to sing monotonously. Peyala peah, it sang, weird above the murmured accompaniment of the other dreaming smokers and the wash wash of the tide–To myn na peah Phir Kysee ko kyah … He is speaking from an opium trance, said Stuart softly. A native song: ‘If a cup of wine is drunk, and I have drunk it, what of that?’ Mon Dieu! it is uncanny! whispered Max. Brr! do you hear those rats? I am wondering in what order we shall be admitted to the ‘Scorpion’s’ presence, or if we shall see him together. He may come in here. All the better. Gimme ‘nother pipe, Pidgin, drawled a very drowsy voice from Bill Bean’s corner. Ah Fang Fu left his eternal arranging and rearranging of the cards and crossed the room. He took the opium pipe from the fireman’s limp fingers and returning to the box, refilled and lighted it. Max and Stuart watched him in silence until he had handed the second pipe to the man and returned to his chair. We must be very careful, said Stuart. We do not know which are real smokers and which are not. Again there was a weird interruption. A Chinese person lying in one of the bunks began to chant in a monotonous far away voice: Chong liou chouay Om mani padme hum. The Buddhist formula, whispered Stuart. He is a real smoker. Heavens! the reek is choking me! The chant was repeated, the words dying away into a long murmur. Ah Fang Fu continued to shuffle the cards. And presently Bill Bean’s second pipe dropped from his fingers. His husky voice spoke almost inaudibly. I’m … old … Bill … Bean … I … A deep noted siren hooted dimly. A steamer making for dock, whispered Max. Brr! it is a nightmare, this! I think in a minute something will happen. Ssh! Ah Fang Fu glanced slowly around. Then he stood up, raised the lamp from the table and made a tour of the bunks, shining the light in upon the faces of the occupants. Max watched him closely, hoping to learn in which bunks the members of ‘The Scorpion’s’ group lay. But he was disappointed. Ah Fang Fu examined all the bunks and even shone the light down upon Stuart and Max. He muttered to himself constantly, but seemed to address no one. Replacing the lamp on the box, he whistled softly; and:—- Look! breathed Max. The stair again! Stuart cautiously turned his eyes toward the open stair. On the platform above stood a bent old hag whose witch eyes were searching the place keenly! With a curiously lithe step, for all her age, she descended, and standing behind Ah Fang Fu tapped him on the shoulder and pointed to the outer door. He stood up and shuffled across, went up the four steps and unbarred the door. Tchee, tchee, he chattered. Pidgin make a look out. He went out and closed the door. Something happens! whispered Max. A gong sounded. Ah! The old woman approached the matting curtain hung over a portion of the wall, raised it slightly in the centre–where it opened–and disappeared beyond. You see! said Stuart excitedly. Yes! it is the audience chamber of ‘The Scorpion’! The ancient hag came out again, crossed to a bunk and touched its occupant, a Chinese person, with her hand. He immediately shot up and followed her. The two disappeared beyond the curtain. What shall we do, said Stuart, if you are summoned? I shall throw open those curtains the moment I reach them, and present my pistol at the head of whoever is on the other side. You–ssh! The old woman reappeared, looked slowly around and then held the curtains slightly apart to allow of the Chinese person’s coming out. He saluted her by touching his head, lips and breast with his right hand, then passed up to the door communicating with the shop, which he opened, and went out. His voice came, muffled: Fo Hi! Fo Hi, returned the high voice of Ah Fang Fu. The outer door was opened and shut. The old woman went up and barred the inner door, then returned and stood by the matting curtain. The sound of the water below alone broke the silence. It was the hour of high tide. There goes the first fish into Dunbar’s net! whispered Max. The gong sounded again. Thereupon the old woman crossed to another bunk and conducted a brown skinned Eastern into the hidden room. Immediately they had disappeared: As I pull the curtains aside, continued Max rapidly, blow the whistle and run across and unbar the door…. So engrossed was he in giving these directions, and so engrossed was Stuart in listening to them, that neither detected a faint creak which proceeded from almost immediately behind them. This sound was occasioned by the slow and cautious opening of that sunken, heavy door near to which they lay–the door which communicated with the labyrinth of cellars. Inch by inch from the opening protruded the head of Ah Fang Fu! If the Chinese person offers any resistance, Max went on, speaking very rapidly–morbleu! you have the means to deal with him! In a word, admit the police. Sh! what is that! A moaning voice from one of the bunks came. Cheal kegur men, mas ka dheer! A native adage, whispered Stuart. He is dreaming. ‘There is always meat in a kite’s nest.’ Eh bien! very true–and I think the kite is at home! The head of Ah Fang Fu vanished. A moment later the curtains opened again slightly and the old woman came out, ushering the brown man. He saluted her and unbarred the door, going out. Fo Hi, came dimly. There was no definite answer–only the sound of a muttered colloquy; and suddenly the brown man returned and spoke to the old woman in a voice so low that his words were inaudible to the two attentive listeners in the distant corner. Ah! whispered Max–what now? Shall we rush the curtain! said Stuart. No! Max grasped his arm–wait! wait! See! he is going out. He has perhaps forgotten something. A second fish in the net. The Oriental went up the steps into the shop. The old woman closed and barred the door, then opened the matting curtain and disappeared within. I was right, said Max. But for once in his career he was wrong. She was out again almost immediately and bending over a bunk close to the left of the masked opening. The occupant concealed in its shadow did not rise and follow her, however. She seemed to be speaking to him. Stuart and Max watched intently. The head of Ah Fang Fu reappeared in the doorway behind them. Now is our time! whispered Max tensely. As I rush for the curtains, you run to the shop door and get it unbolted, whistling for Dunbar—- Ah Fang Fu, fully opening the door behind them, crept out stealthily. Have your pistol ready, continued Max, and first put the whistle between your teeth—- Ah Fang Fu silently placed his bowler hat upon the floor, shook down his long pigtail, and moving with catlike tread, stooping, drew nearer. Now, doctor! cried Max. Both sprang to their feet. Max leapt clear of the matting and other litter and dashed for the curtain. He reached it, seized it and tore bodily from its fastenings. Behind him the long flat note of a police whistle sounded–and ended abruptly. Ah! Nom d’un nom! cried Max. A cunningly devised door–looking like a section of solid brick and plaster wall–was closing slowly–heavily. Through the opening which yet remained he caught a glimpse of a small room, draped with Chinese dragon tapestry and having upon a raised, carpeted dais a number of cushions forming a diwan and an inlaid table bearing a silver snuff vase. A cowled figure was seated upon the dais. The door closed completely. Within a niche in its centre sat a yellow leering idol, green eyed and complacent. Wild, gurgling cries brought Max sharply about. An answering whistle sounded from the street outside … a second … a third. Ah Fang Fu, stooping ever lower, at the instant that Stuart had sprung to his feet had seized his ankle from behind, pitching him on to his face. It was then that the note of the whistle had ceased. Now, the Chinese person had his long pigtail about Stuart’s neck, at which Stuart, prone with the other kneeling upon his body, plucked vainly. Max raised his pistol … and from the bunk almost at his elbow leapt Miguel the quadroon, a sand bag raised. It descended upon the Frenchman’s skull … and he crumbled up limply and collapsed upon the floor. There came a crash of broken glass from the shop. Uttering a piercing cry, the old woman staggered from the door near which she had been standing as if stricken helpless, during the lightning moments in which these things had happened–and advanced in the direction of Ah Fang Fu. Ah, God! You kill him! You kill him? she moaned. Through the window, Sowerby! This way! came Dunbar’s voice. Max! Max! The sustained note of a whistle, a confusion of voices and a sound of heavy steps proclaimed the entrance of the police into the shop and the summoning of reinforcements. Ah Fang Fu rose. Stuart had ceased to struggle. The Chinese person replaced his hat and looked up at the woman, whose eyes glared madly into his own. Tche’, tche’e, he said sibilantly–Tchon dzee ti Fan Fu. Yes, yes. It is the will of the Master. Down with the door! roared Dunbar. The woman threw herself, with a wild sob, upon the motionless body of Stuart. Ensued a series of splintering crashes, and finally the head of an axe appeared through the panels of the door. Ah Fang Fu tried to drag the woman away, but she clung to Stuart desperately and was immovable. Thereupon the huge quadroon, running across the room, swept them both up into his giant embrace, man and woman together, and bore them down by the sunken doorway into the cellars below! The shop door fell inwards, crashing down the four steps, and Dunbar sprang into the place, revolver in hand, followed by Inspector Kelly and four men of the River Police, one of whom carried a hurricane lantern. Ah Fang Fu had just descended after Miguel and closed the heavy door. Try this way, boys! cried Kelly, and rushed up the stair. The four men followed him. The lantern was left on the floor. Dunbar stared about him. Sowerby and several other men entered. Suddenly Dunbar saw Gaston Max lying on the floor. My God! he cried–they have killed him! He ran across, knelt and examined Max, pressing his ear against his breast. Inspector Kelly reaching the top of the stairs and finding the door locked, hurled his great bulk against it and burst it open. Follow me, boys! he cried. Take care! Bring the lantern, somebody. The fourth man grasped the lantern and all followed the Inspector up the stair and out through the doorway. His voice came dimly: Mind the beam! Pass the light forward…. Sowerby was struggling with the door by which Miguel and Ah Fang Fu unseen had made their escape and Dunbar, having rested Max’s head upon a pillow, was glaring all about him, his square jaw set grimly and his eyes fierce with anger. A voice droned from a bunk: Cheal kegur men ms ka dheer! The police were moving from bunk to bunk, scrutinising the occupants. The uproar had penetrated to them even in their drugged slumbers. There were stirrings and mutterings and movements of yellow hands. But where is ‘The Scorpion’? He turned and stared at the wall from which the matting had been torn. And out of the little niche in the cunningly masked door the green eyed joss leered at him complacently. PART IV THE LAIR OF THE SCORPION Chapter 29. The Sublime Order. Stuart awoke to a discovery so strange that for some time he found himself unable to accept its reality. He passed his hands over his face and eyes and looked about him dazedly. He experienced great pain in his throat, and he could feel that his neck was swollen. He stared down at his ankles, which also were throbbing agonisingly–to learn that they were confined in gyves attached by a short chain to a ring in the floor! He was lying upon a deep diwan, which was covered with leopard skins and which occupied one corner of the most extraordinary room he had ever seen or ever could have imagined. He sat up, but was immediately overcome with faintness which he conquered with difficulty. The apartment, then, was one of extraordinary Oriental elegance, having two entrances closed with lacquer sliding doors. Chinese lamps swung from the ceiling, illuminated it warmly, and a great number of large and bright silk cushions were strewn about the floor. There were tapestries in black and gold, rich carpets and couches, several handsome cabinets and a number of tall cases of Oriental workmanship containing large and strangely bound books, scientific paraphernalia, curios and ornaments. At the further end of the room was a deep tiled hearth in which stood a kind of chemical furnace which hissed constantly. Upon ornate small tables and pedestals were vases and cases–one of the latter containing a number or orchids, in flower. Preserved lizards, snakes, and other creatures were in a row of jars upon a shelf, together with small skeletons of animals in frames. There was also a perfect human skeleton. Near the centre of the room was a canopied chair, of grotesque Chinese design, upon a dais, a big bronze bell hanging from it; and near to the diwan upon which Stuart was lying stood a large, very finely carved table upon which were some open faded volumes and a litter of scientific implements. Near the table stood a very large bowl of what looked like platinum, upon a tripod, and several volumes lay scattered near it upon the carpet. From a silver incense burner arose a pencilling of blue smoke. One of the lacquer doors slid noiselessly open and a man entered, Stuart inhaled sibilantly and clenched his fists. The new comer wore a cowled garment of some dark blue material which enveloped him from head to feet. It possessed oval eye holes, and through these apertures gleamed two eyes which looked scarcely like the eyes of a human being. They were of that brilliant yellow color sometimes seen in the eyes of tigers, and their most marked and awful peculiarity was their unblinking regard. They seemed always to be open to their fullest extent, and Stuart realized with anger that it was impossible to sustain for long the piercing gaze of Fo Hi … for he knew that he was in the presence of The Scorpion! Walking with a slow and curious dignity, the cowled figure came across to the table, first closing the lacquer door. Stuart’s hands convulsively clutched the covering of the diwan as the sinister figure approached. The intolerable gaze of those weird eyes had awakened a horror, a loathing horror, within him, such as he never remembered to have experienced in regard to any human being. It was the sort of horror which the proximity of a poisonous serpent occasions–or the nearness of a scorpion…. Fo Hi seated himself at the table. Absolute silence reigned in the big room, except for the hissing of the furnace. No sound penetrated from the outer world. Having no means of judging how long he had been insensible, Stuart found himself wondering if the raid on the den of Ah Fang Fu had taken place hours before, days earlier, or weeks ago. Taking up a test tube from a rack on the table, Fo Hi held it near a lamp and examined the contents–a few drops of colourless fluid. These he poured into a curious long necked yellow bottle. He began to speak, but without looking at Stuart. His diction was characteristic, resembling his carriage in that it was slow and distinctive. He seemed deliberately to choose each word and to give to it all its value, syllable by syllable. His English was perfect to the verge of the pedantic; and his voice was metallic and harsh, touching at time, when his words were vested with some subtle or hidden significance, guttural depths which betrayed the Chinese person. He possessed uncanny dignity as of tremendous intellect and conscious power. I regret that you were so rash as to take part in last night’s abortive raid, Dr. Stuart, he said. Stuart started. So he had been unconscious for many hours! Because of your professional acquirements at one time I had contemplated removing you, continued the unemotional voice. But I rejoice to think that I failed. It would have been an error of judgement. I have useful work for such men. You shall assist in the extensive laboratories of my distinguished predecessor. Never! snapped Stuart. The man’s callousness was so purposeful and deliberate that it awed. He seemed like one who stands above all ordinary human frailties and emotions. Your prejudice is natural, rejoined Fo Hi calmly. You are ignorant of our sublime motives, but you shall nevertheless assist us to establish that intellectual control which is destined to be the new World Force. No doubt you are conscious of a mental hiatus extending from the moment when you found the pigtail of the worthy Ah Fang Fu about your throat until that when you recovered consciousness in this room. It has covered a period roughly of twenty four hours, Dr. Stuart. I don’t believe it, muttered Stuart–and found his own voice to seem as unreal as everything else in the nightmare apartment. If I had not revived earlier, I should never have revived at all. He raised his hand to his swollen throat, touching it gingerly. Your unconsciousness was prolonged, explained Fo Hi, consulting an open book written in Chinese characters, by an injection which I found it necessary to make. Otherwise, as you remark, it would have been prolonged indefinitely. Your clever but rash companion was less happy. What! cried Stuart–he is dead? You fiend! You damned yellow fiend! Emotion shook him and he sat clutching the leopard skins and glaring madly at the cowled figure. Fortunately, resumed Fo Hi, my people–with one exception– succeeded in making their escape. I may add that the needless scuffling attendant upon arresting this unfortunate follower of mine, immediately outside the door of the house, led to the discovery of your own presence. Nevertheless, the others departed safely. My own departure is imminent; it has been because of certain domestic details and by the necessity of awaiting nightfall. You see, I am frank with you. Because the grave is silent! The grave, and … China. There is no other alternative in your case. Are you sure that there is no other in your own? asked Stuart huskily. An alternative to my returning to China? Can you suggest one? The scaffold! cried Stuart furiously, for you and the scum who follow you! Fo Hi lighted a Bunsen burner. I trust not, he rejoined placidly. With two exceptions, all my people are out of England. Stuart’s heart began to throb painfully. With two exceptions! Did Miska still remain? He conquered his anger and tried to speak calmly, recognising how he lay utterly in the power of this uncanny being and how closely his happiness was involved even if he escaped with life. And you? he said. In these matters, Dr. Stuart, replied Fo Hi, I have always modelled my behavior upon that of the brilliant scientist who preceded me as European representative of our movement. Your beautiful Thames is my highway as it was his highway. No one of my immediate neighbours has ever seen me or my once extensive following enter this house. He selected an empty test tube. No one shall see me leave. The unreality of it all threatened to swamp Stuart’s mind again, but he forced himself to speak calmly. Your own escape is just possible, if some vessel awaits you; but do you imagine for a moment that you can carry me to China and elude pursuit? Fo Hi, again consulting the huge book with its yellow faded characters, answered him absently. Do you recall the death of the Grand Duke Ivan? he said. Does your memory retain the name of Van Rembold and has your Scotland Yard yet satisfied itself that Sir Frank Narcombe died from ‘natural causes’? Then, there was Ericksen, the most brilliant European electrical expert of the century, who died quite suddenly last year. I honor you, Dr. Stuart, by inviting you to join a company so distinguished. You are raving! What have these men in common with me? Stuart found himself holding his breath as he awaited a reply–for he knew that he was on the verge of learning that which poor Gaston Max had given his life to learn. A moment Fo Hi hesitated–and in that moment his captive recognised, and shuddered to recognise, that he won this secret too late. Then: The Grand Duke is a tactician who, had he remained in Europe, might well have readjusted the frontiers of his country. Van Rembold, as a mining engineer, stands alone, as does Henrik Ericksen in the electrical world. As for Sir Frank Narcombe, he is beyond doubt the most brilliant surgeon of today, and I, a judge of men, count you his peer in the realm of pure therapeutics. Whilst your studies in snake poisons which were narrowly watched for us in India give you an unique place in toxicology. These great men will be some of your companions in China. In China! In China, Dr. Stuart, where I hope you will join them. You misapprehend the purpose of my mission. It is not destructive, although neither I nor my enlightened predecessor have ever scrupled to remove any obstacle from the path of that world change which no human power can check or hinder; it is primarily constructive. No state or group of states can hope to resist the progress of a movement guided and upheld by a monopoly of the world’s genius. The Sublime Order, of which I am an unworthy member, stands for such a movement. Rest assured it will be crushed. Van Rembold is preparing radium in quantities hitherto unknown from the vast pitchblend deposits of Ho Nan–which industry we control. He visited China arrayed in his shroud, and he travelled in a handsome Egyptian sarcophagus purchased at Sotherby’s on behalf of a Chinese collector. Fo Hi stood up and crossed to the hissing furnace. He busied himself with some obscure experiment which proceeded there, and: Your own state room will be less romantic, Dr. Stuart, he said, speaking without turning his head; possibly a packing case. In brief, that intellectual giant who achieved to much for the Sublime Order–my immediate predecessor in office–devised a means of inducing artificial catalepsy—- My God! muttered Stuart, as the incredible, the appalling truth burst upon his mind. My own rather hazardous delay, continued Fo Hi, is occasioned in some measure by my anxiety to complete the present experiment. Its product will be your passport to China. Carrying a tiny crucible, he returned to the table. Stuart felt that his self possession was deserting him. Madness threatened … If he was not already mad. He forced himself to speak. You taunt me because I am helpless. I do not believe that those men have been spirited into China. Even if it were so, they would die, as I would die, rather than prostitute their talents to such mad infamy. Fo Hi carefully poured the contents of the crucible into a flat platinum pan. In China, Dr. Stuart, he said, we know how to make men work! I myself am the deviser of a variant of the unduly notorious kite device and the scarcely less celebrated ‘Six Gates of Wisdom.’ I term it The Feast of a Thousand Ants. It is performed with the aid of African driver ant, a pair of surgical scissors and a pot of honey. I have observed you studying with interest the human skeleton yonder. It is that of one of my followers–a Nubian mute–who met with an untimely end quite recently. You are wondering, no doubt, how I obtained the frame in so short a time? My African driver ants, Dr. Stuart, of which I have three large cases in a cellar below this room, performed the task for me in exactly sixty nine minutes. Stuart strained frenziedly at his gyves. My God! he groaned. All I have heard of you was the merest flattery. You are either a fiend or a madman! When you are enlisted as a member of the Sublime Order, said Fo Hi softly, and you awaken in China, Dr. Stuart–you will work. We have no unwilling recruits. Stop your accursed talk. I have heard enough. But the metallic voice continued smoothly: I appreciate the difficulty which you must experience in grasping the true significance of this movement. You have seen mighty nations, armed with every known resource of science, at a deadlock on the battlefield. You naturally fail to perceive how a group of Oriental philosophers can achieve what the might of Europe failed to achieve. You will remember, in favour of my claims, that we command the service of the world’s genius, and have a financial backing which could settle the national loans of the world! In other words, exhumation of a large percentage of the great men who have died in recent years would be impossible. Their tombs are empty. I have heard enough. Drug me, kill me; but spare me your confidences. In the crowded foyer of a hotel, continued Fo Hi imperturbably, of a theatre, of a concert room; in the privacy of their home, of their office; wherever opportunity offered, I caused them to be touched with the point of a hypodermic needle such as this. He held up a small hypodermic syringe. It contained a minute quantity of the serum which I am now preparing–the serum whose discovery was the crowning achievement of a great scientist’s career I refer, Dr. Stuart, to my brilliant predecessor. They were buried alive; but no surgeon in Europe or America would have hesitated to certify them dead. Aided by a group of six Hindu fanatics, trained as Lughais grave diggers, it was easy to gain access to their resting places. One had the misfortune to be cremated by his family–a great loss to my Council. But the others are now in China, at our headquarters. They are labouring day and night to bring this war scarred world under the sceptre of an Eastern Emperor. Faugh! cried Stuart. The whole of that war scarred world will stand armed before you! We realise that, doctor; therefore we are prepared for it. We spoke of the Norwegian Henrick Ericksen. This is his most recent contribution to our armament. Fo Hi rested on long yellow hand upon a kind of model searchlight. I nearly committed the clumsy indiscretion of removing you with this little instrument, he said. You recall the episode? Ericksen’s Disintegrating Ray, Dr. Stuart. The model, here, possesses a limited range, of course, but the actual instrument has a compass of seven and a half miles. It can readily be carried by a heavy plane! One such plane in a flight from Suez to Port Said, could destroy all the shipping in the Canal and explode every grain of ammunition on either shore! Since I must leave England to night, the model must be destroyed, and unfortunately a good collection of bacilli has already suffered the same fate. Placidly, slowly, and unmoved from his habit of unruffled dignity, Fo Hi placed the model in a deep mortar, whilst Stuart watched him speechless and aghast. He poured the contents of a large pan into the mortar, whereupon a loud hissing sound broke the awesome silence of the room and a cloud of fumes arose. Not a trace, doctor! said the cowled man. A little preparation of my own. It destroys the hardest known substance–with the solitary exception of a certain clay–in the same way that nitric acid would destroy tissue paper. You see I might have aspired to become famous among safe breakers. You have preferred to become infamous among murderers! snapped Stuart. To murder, Dr. Stuart, I have never stooped. I am a specialist in selective warfare. When you visit the laboratory of our chief chemist in Kiangsu you will be shown the whole of the armory of the Sublime Order. I regret that the activities of your zealous and painfully inquisitive friend, M. Gaston Max, have forced me to depart from England before I had completed my work here. I pray you may never depart, murmured Stuart. Fo Hi having added some bright green fluid to that in the flat pan, had now poured the whole into a large test tube, and was holding it in the flame of the burner. At the moment that it reached the boiling point it became colourless. He carefully placed the whole of the liquid in a retort to which he attached a condensor. He stood up. Crossing to a glass case which rested upon a table near the diwan he struck it lightly with his hand. The case contained sand and fragments of rock, but as Fo Hi struck it, out from beneath the pieces of rock darted black active creatures. The common black scorpion of Southern India, he said softly. Its venom is the basis of the priceless formula, F. Katalepsis, upon which the structure of our Sublime Order rests, Dr. Stuart; hence the adoption of a scorpion as our device. He took up a long slender flask. This virus prepared from a glandular secretion of the Chinese swamp adder is also beyond price. Again the case upon the pedestal yonder contains five perfect bulbs, three already in flower, as you observe, of an orchid discovered by our chief chemist in certain forests of Burma. It only occurs at extremely rare intervals–eighty years or more–and under highly special conditions. If the other two bulbs flower, I shall be enabled to obtain from the blooms a minimum quantity of an essential oil for which the nations of the earth, if they knew its properties, would gladly empty their treasuries. This case must at all costs accompany me. Yet because you are still in England, said Stuart huskily, I venture to hope that your devil dreams may end on the scaffold. That can never be, Dr. Stuart, returned Fo Hi placidly. The scaffold is not for such as I. Moreover, it is a crude and barbaric institution which I deplore. Do you see that somewhat peculiarly constructed chair, yonder? It is an adaptation, by a brilliant young chemist of Canton, of Ericksen’s Disintegrating Ray. A bell hangs beside it. If you were seated in that chair and I desire to dismiss you, it would merely be necessary fro me to strike the bell once with the hammer. Before the vibration of the note had become inaudible you would be seeking your ancestors among the shades. It is the throne of the gods. Such a death is poetic. He returned to the table and, observing meticulous care, emptied the few drops of colourless liquid from the condenser into a test tube. Holding the tube near a lamp, he examined the contents, then poured the liquid into the curious yellow bottle. A faint vapour arose from it. You would scarcely suppose, he said, that yonder window opens upon an ivy grown balcony commanding an excellent view of that picturesque Tudor survival, Hampton Court? I apprehend, however, that the researches of your late friend, M. Gaston Max, may ere long lead Scotland Yard to my doors, although there has been nothing in the outward seeming of this house, in the circumstances of my tenancy, or in my behaviour since I have–secretly–resided here, to excite local suspicion. Scotland Yard men may surround the house now! said Stuart viciously. One of the two followers I have retained here with me, watches at the gate, replied Fo Hi. An intruder seeking to enter by any other route, through the hedge, over the wall, or from the river, would cause electric bells to ring loudly in this room, the note of the bell signifying the point of entry. Finally, in the event of such a surprise, I have an exit whereby one emerges at a secret spot on the river bank. A motor boat, suitably concealed, awaits me there. He placed a thermometer in the neck of the yellow bottle and the bottle in a rack. He directed the intolerable gaze of his awful eyes upon the man who sat, teeth tightly clenched, watching him from the diwan. Ten minutes of life–in England–yet remain to you, Dr. Stuart. In ten minutes this fluid will have cooled to a temperature of 99 degrees, when I shall be enabled safely make an injection. You will be reborn in Kiangsu. Fo Hi walked slowly to the door whereby he had entered, opened it and went out. The door closed. Chapter 30. The Living Death. The little furnace hissed continuously. A wisp of smoke floated up from the incense burner. Stuart sat with his hands locked between his knees, and his gaze set upon the yellow flask. Even now he found it difficult to credit the verity of his case. He found it almost impossible to believe that such a being as Fo Hi existed, that such deeds had been done, were being done, in England, as those of which he had heard from the sinister cowled man. Save for the hissing of the furnace and the clanking of the chain as he strove with all his strength to win freedom, that wonderful evil room was silent as the King’s Chamber at the heart of the Great Pyramid. His gaze reverted to the yellow flask. Oh, my God! he groaned. Terror claimed him–the terror which he had with difficulty been fending off throughout that nightmare interview with Fo Hi. Madness threatened him, and he was seized by an almost incontrollable desire to shout execrations–prayers–he knew not what. He clenched his teeth grimly and tried to think, to plan. He had two chances: The statement left with Inspector Dunbar, in which he had mentioned the existence of a house near Hampton Court, and … Miska. That she was one of the two exceptions mentioned by Fo Hi he felt assured. But was she in this house, and did she know of his presence there? Even so, had she access to that room of mysteries–of horrors? And who was the other who remained? Almost certainly it was the fanatical Hindu, Chunda Lal, of whom she had spoken with such palpable terror and who watched her unceasingly, untiringly. He would prevent her intervening even if she had power to intervene. His great hope, then, was in Dunbar … for Gaston Max was dead. At the coming of that thought, the foul doing to death of the fearless Frenchman, he gnashed his teeth savagely and strained at the gyves until the pain in his ankles brought out beads of perspiration upon his forehead. He dropped his head into his hands and frenziedly clutched at his hair with twitching fingers. The faint sound occasioned by the opening of one of the sliding doors brought him sharply upright. Miska entered! She looked so bewilderingly beautiful that terror and sorrow fled, leaving Stuart filled only with passionate admiration. She wore an Eastern dress of gauzy shimmering silk and high heeled gilt Turkish slippers upon her stockingless feet. About her left ankle was a gold bangle, and there was barbaric jewellery upon her arms. She was a figure unreal as all those in that house of dreams, but a figure so lovely that Stuart forgot the yellow flask … forgot that less than ten minutes of life remained to him. Miska! he whispered–Miska! She exhibited intense but repressed excitement and fear. Creeping to the second door–that by which Fo Hi had gone out–she pressed her ear to the lacquered panel and listened intently. Then, coming swiftly to the table, she took up a bunch of keys, approached Stuart and, kneeling, unlocked the gyves. The scent of jasmine stole to his nostrils. God bless you! he said with stifled ardour. She rose quickly to her feet, standing before him with head downcast. Stuart rose with difficulty. His legs were cramped and aching. He grasped Miska’s hand and endeavoured to induce her to look up. One swift glance she gave him and looked away again. You must go–this instant, she said. I show you the way. There is not a moment to lose…. Miska! She glanced at him again. You must come with me! Ah! she whispered–that is impossible! Have I not told you so? You have told me, but I cannot understand. Here, in England, you are free. Why should you remain with that cowled monster? Shall I tell you? she asked, and he could feel how she trembled. If I tell you, will you promise to believe me–and to go? Not without you! Ah! no, no! If I tell you that my only chance of life–such a little, little chance–is to stay, will you go? Stuart secured her other hand and drew her toward him, half resisting. Tell me, he said softly. I will believe you–and if it can spare you one moment of pain or sorrow, I will go as you ask me. Listen, she whispered, glancing fearfully back toward the closed door–Fo Hi has something that make people to die; and only he can bring them to life again. Do you believe this? She looked up at him rapidly, her wonderful eyes wide and fearful. He nodded. Ah! you know! Very well. On that day in Cairo, which I am taken before him–you remember, I tell you?–he … oh! She shuddered wildly and hid her beautiful face against Stuart’s breast. He threw his arms about her. Tell me, he said. With the needle, he … inject … Miska! Stuart felt the blood rushing to his heart and knew that he had paled. There is something else, she went on, almost inaudibly, with which he gives life again to those he had made dead with the needle. It is a light green liquid tasting like bitter apples; and once each week for six months it must be drunk or else … the living death comes. Sometimes I have not seen Fo Hi for six months at a time, but a tiny flask, one draught, of the green liquid, always comes to me wherever I am, every week … and twice each year I see him–Fo Hi … and he … Her voice quivered and ceased. Moving back, she slipped a soft shoulder free of it s flimsy covering. Stuart looked–and suppressed a groan. Her arm was dotted with the tiny marks made by a hypodermic syringe! You see! she whispered tremulously. If I go, I die, and I am buried alive … or else I live until my body … Oh, God! moaned Stuart–the fiend! the merciless, cunning fiend! Is there nothing … Yes, yes! said Miska, looking up. If I can get enough of the green fluid and escape. But he tell me once–it was in America–that he only prepares one tiny draught at a time! Listen! I must stay, and if he can be captured he must be forced to make this antidote … Ah! go! go! Her words ended in a sob, and Stuart held her to him convulsively, his heart filled with such helpless, fierce misery and bitterness as he had never known. Go, please go! she whispered. It is my only chance–there is no other. There is not a moment to wait. Listen to me! You will go by that door by which I come in. There is a better way, through a tunnel he has made to the river bank; but I cannot open the door. Only he has the key. At the end of the passage some one is waiting—- Chunda Lal! Miska glanced up rapidly and then dropped her eyes again. Yes–poor Chunda Lal. He is my only friend. Give him this. She removed an amulet upon a gold chain from about her neck and thrust it into Stuart’s hand. It seems to you silly, but Chunda Lal is of the East; and he has promised. Oh! be quick! I am afraid. I tell you something. Fo Hi does not know, but the police Inspector and many men search the river bank for the house! I see them from a window—- What! cried Stuart–Dunbar is here! Ssh! ssh! Miska clutched him wildly. He is not far away. You will go and bring him here. No! for me do not fear. I put the keys back and he will think you have opened the lock by some trick—- Miska! Oh, no more! She slipped from his arms, crossed and reopened the lacquered door, revealing a corridor dimly lighted. Stuart followed and looked along the corridor. Right to the end, she whispered, and down the steps. You know– touching the amulet which Stuart carried–how to deal with–Chunda Lal. But still he hesitated; until she seized his hand and urged him. Thereupon he swept her wildly into his arms. Miska! how can I leave you! It is maddening! You must! you must! He looked into her eyes, stooped and kissed her upon the lips. Then, with no other word, he tore himself away and walked quickly along the corridor. Miska watched him until he was out of sight, then re entered the great room and closed the door. She turned, and: Oh, God of mercy, she whispered. Just within the second doorway stood Fo Hi watching her. Chapter 31. The Fifth Secret Of Rache Churan. Stricken silent with fear, Miska staggered back against the lacquered door, dropping the keys which she held in her hand. Fo Hi had removed the cowled garment and was now arrayed in a rich mandarin robe. Through the grotesque green veil which obscured his features the brilliant eyes shone catlike. So, he said softly, you speed the parting guest. And did I not hear the sound of a chaste salute? Miska watched him, wild eyed. And he knows, continued the metallic voice, ‘how to deal with Chunda Lal’? But it may be that Chunda Lal will know how to deal with him! I had suspected that Dr. Keppel Stuart entertained an unprofessional interest in his charming patient. Your failure to force the bureau drawer in his study excited my suspicion–unjustly, I admit; for did not I fail also when I paid the doctor a personal visit? True, I was disturbed. But this suspicion later returned. It was in order that some lingering doubt might be removed that I afforded you the opportunity of interviewing my guest. But whatever surprise his ingenuity, aided by your woman’s wit, has planned for Chunda Lal, I dare to believe that Chunda Lal, being forewarned, will meet successfully. He is expecting an attempt, by Dr. Stuart, to leave this house. He has my orders to detain him. At that, anger conquered terror in the heart of Miska, and: You mean he has your orders to kill him! she cried desperately. Fo Hi closed the door. On the contrary, he has my orders to take every possible care of him. Those blind, tempestuous passions which merely make a woman more desirable find no place in the trained mind of the scientist. That Dr. Stuart covets my choicest possession in no way detracts from his value to my Council. Miska had never moved from the doorway by which Stuart had gone out; and now, having listened covertly and heard no outcry, her faith in Chunda Lal was restored. Her wonderful eyes narrowed momentarily, and she spoke with the guile, which seems so naive, of the Oriental woman. I care nothing for him–this Dr. Stuart. But he had done you no wrong—- Beyond seeking my death–none. I have already said–the eyes of Fo Hi gleamed through the hideous veil–that I bear him no ill will. But you plan to carry him to China–like those others. I assign him a part in the New Renaissance–yes. In the Deluge that shall engulf the world, his place is in the Ark. I honor him. Perhaps he rather remain a–nobody–than be so honored. In his present state of imperfect understanding it is quite possible, said Fo Hi smoothly. But if he refuses to achieve greatness he must have greatness thrust upon him. Van Rembold, I seem to recall, hesitated for some time to direct his genius to the problem of producing radium in workable quantities from the pitchblend deposits of Ho Nan. But the split rod had not been applied to the soles of his feet more than five times ere he reviewed his prejudices and found them to be surmountable. Miska, knowing well the moods of the monstrous being whose unveiled face she had never seen, was not deceived by the suavity of his manner. Nevertheless, she fought down her terror, knowing how much might depend upon her retaining her presence of mind. How much of her interview with Stuart he had overheard she did not know, nor how much he had witnessed. But, she said, moving away from him, he does not matter–this one. Forgive me if I think to let him go; but I am afraid—- Fo Hi crossed slowly, intercepting her. Ah! said Miska, her eyes opening widely–you are going to punish me again! For why? Because I am a woman and cannot always be cruel? From its place on the wall Fo Hi took a whip. At that: Ah! no, no! she cried. You drive me mad! I am only in part of the East and I cannot bear it–I cannot bear it! You teach me to be like the women of England, who are free, and you treat me like the women of China, who are slaves. Once, it did not matter. I thought it was a part of a woman’s life to be treated so. But now I cannot bear it! She stamped her foot fiercely upon the floor. I tell you I cannot bear it! Whip in hand, Fo Hi stood watching her. You release that man–for whom you ‘care nothing’–in order that he may bring my enemies about me, in order that he may hand me over to the barbarous law of England. Now, you ‘cannot bear’ so light a rebuke as the whip. Here, I perceive, is some deep psychological change. Such protests do not belong to the women of my country; they are never heard in the zenana, and would provoke derision in the harems of Stambul. You have trained me to know that life in a harem is not life, but only the existence of an animal. I have trained you–yes. What fate was before you when I intervened in that Mecca slave market? You who are ‘only in part of the East.’ Do you forget so soon how you cowered there amongst the others, Arabs, Circassians, Georgians, Nubians, striving to veil your beauty from those ravenous eyes? From what did I rescue you? And for what? cried Miska bitterly. To use me as a lure–and beat me if I failed. Fo Hi stood watching her, and slowly, as he watched, terror grew upon her and she retreated before him, step by step. He made no attempt to follow her, but continued to watch. Then, raising the whip he broke it across his knee and dropped the pieces on the floor. At that she extended her hands towards him pitifully. Oh! what are you going to do to me! she said. Let me go! let me go! I can no more be of use to you. Give me back my life and let me go– et me go and hide away from them all–from all … the world…. Her words died away and ceased upon a suppressed hysterical sob. For, in silence, Fo Hi stood watching her, unmoved. Oh! she moaned, and sank cowering upon a diwan– why do you watch me so! Because, came the metallic voice, softly–you are beautiful with a beauty given but rarely to the daughters of men. The Sublime Order has acquired many pretty women–for they are potent weapons–but none so fair as you. Miska, I would make life sweet for you. Ah! you do not mean that! she whispered fearfully. Have I not clothed you in the raiment of a princess! continued Fo Hi. To night, at my urgent request, you wear the charming national costume in which I delight to see you. But is there a woman of Paris, of London, of New York, who has such robes, such jewels, such apartments as you possess? Perhaps the peculiar duties which I have required you to perform, the hideous disguises, which you have sometimes been called upon to adopt, have disgusted you. Her heart beating wildly, for she did not know this mood but divined it to portend some unique horror, Miska crouched, head averted. To night the hour has come to break the whip. To night the master in me dies. My cloak of wise authority has fallen from me and I offer myself in bondage to you, my slave! This is some trap you set for me! she whispered. But Fo Hi, paying no heed to her words, continued in the same rapt voice: Truly have you observed that the Chinese wife is but a slave to her lord. I have said that the relation of master and slave is ended between us. I offer you a companionship that signifies absolute freedom and perfect understanding. Half of all I have–and the world lies in my grasp–is yours. I offer a throne set upon the Seven Mountains of the Universe. Look into my eyes and read the truth. But lower and lower she cowered upon the diwan. No, no! I am afraid! Fo Hi approached her closely and abject terror now had robbed her of strength. Her limbs seemed to have become numbed, her tongue clave to the roof of her mouth. Fear me no more, Miska, said Fo Hi. I will you nothing but joy. The man who has learned the Fifth Secret of Rache Churan–who has learned how to control his will–holds a power absolute and beyond perfectability. You know, who have dwelt beneath my roof, that there is no escape from my will. His calm was terrible, and his glance, through the green veil, was like a ray of scorching heat. His voice sank lower and lower. There is one frailty, Miska, that even the Adept cannot conquer. It is inherent in every man. Miska, I would not force you to grasp the joy I offer; I would have you accept it willingly. No! do not turn from me! No woman in all the world has ever heard me plead, as I plead to you. Never before have I sued for favours. Do not turn from me, Miska. Slightly, the metallic voice vibrated, and the ruffling of that giant calm was a thing horrible to witness. Fo Hi extended his long yellow hands, advancing step by step until he stood over the cowering girl. Irresistibly her glance was drawn to those blazing eyes which the veil could not hide, and as she met that unblinking gaze her own eyes dilated and grew fixed as those of a sleep walker. A moment Fo Hi stood so. Then passion swept him from his feet and he seized her fiercely. Your eyes drive me mad! he hissed. Your lips taunt me, and I know all earthly greatness to be a mirage, its conquests visions, and its fairness dust. I would rather be a captive in your white arms than the emperor of heaven! Your sweetness intoxicates me, Miska. A fever burns me up! Helpless, enmeshed in the toils of that mighty will, Miska raised her head; and gradually her expression changed. Fear was smoothed away from her lovely face as by some magic brush. She grew placid; and finally she smiled–the luresome, caressing smile of the East. Nearer and nearer drew the green veil. Then, uttering a sudden fierce exclamation, Fo Hi thrust her from him. That smile is not for me, the man! he cried gutterally. Ah! I could curse the power that I coveted and set above all earthly joys! I who boasted that he could control his will–I read in your eyes that I am willing you to love me! I seek a gift and can obtain but a tribute! Miska, with a sobbing moan, sank upon the diwan. Fo Hi stood motionless, looking straight before him. His terrible calm was restored. It is the bitter truth, he said–that to win the world I have bartered the birthright of men; the art of winning a woman’s heart. There is much in our Chinese wisdom. I erred in breaking the whip. I erred in doubting my own prescience, which told me that the smiles I could not woo were given freely to another … and perhaps the kisses. At least I can set these poor frail human doubts at rest. He crossed and struck a gong which hung midway between the two doors. Chapter 32. The Guile Of The East. Her beautiful face a mask of anguish, Miska cowered upon the diwan, watching the closed doors. Fo Hi stood in the centre of the great room with his back to the entrance. Silently one of the lacquered panels slid open and Chunda Lal entered. He saluted the figure of the veiled Chinese person but never once glanced in the direction of the diwan from which Miska wildly was watching him. Without turning his head, Fo Hi, who seemed to detect the presence of the silent Hindu by means of some fifth sense, pointed to a bundle of long rods stacked in a corner of the room. His brown face expressionless as that of a bronze statue, Chunda Lal crossed and took the rods from their place. Tum samajhte ho? Do you understand? said Fo Hi. Chunda Lal inclined his head. Main tumhari bat manunga Your orders shall be obeyed, he replied. Ah, God! no! whispered Miska–what are you going to do? Your Hindustani was ever poor, Miska, said Fo Hi. He turned to Chunda Lal. Until you hear the gong, he said in English. Miska leapt to her feet, as Chunda Lal, never once glancing at her, went out bearing the rods, and closed the door behind him. Fo Hi turned and confronted her. Ta’ala hina come hither, Miska! he said softly. Shall I speak to you in the soft Arab tongue? Come to me, lovely Miska. Let me feel how that sorrowful heart will leap like a captive gazelle. But Miska shrank back from him, pale to the lips. Very well. His metallic voice sank to a hiss. I employ no force. You shall yield to me your heart as a love offering. Of such motives as jealousy and revenge you know me incapable. What I do, I do with a purpose. That compassion of yours shall be a lever to cast you into my arms. Your hatred you shall conquer. Oh, have you no mercy? Is there nothing human in your heart? Did I say I hate you! Your eyes are eloquent, Miska. I cherish two memories of those beautiful eyes. One is of their fear and loathing–of me; the other is of their sweet softness when they watched the departure of my guest. Listen! Do you hear nothing? In an attitude of alert and fearful attention Miska stood listening. Fo Hi watched her through the veil with those remorseless blazing eyes. I will open the door, he said smoothly, that we may more fully enjoy the protests of one for whom you ‘care nothing’–of one whose lips have pressed–your hand. He opened the door by which Chunda Lal had gone out and turned again to Miska. Her eyes looked unnaturally dark by contrast with the pallor of her face. Chunda Lal had betrayed her. She no longer doubted it. For he had not dared to meet her glance. His fear of Fo Hi had overcome his love for her … and Stuart had been treacherously seized somewhere in the corridors and rendered helpless by the awful art of the thug. There is a brief interval, hissed the evil voice. Chunda Lal is securing him to the frame and baring the soles of his feet for the caresses of the rod. Suddenly, from somewhere outside the room, came the sound of dull, regular blows … then, a smothered moan! Miska sprang forward and threw herself upon her knees before Fo Hi, clutching at his robe frantically. Ah! merciful God! he is there! Spare him! spare him! No more–no more! He is there? repeated Fo Hi suavely. Assuredly he is there, Miska. I know not by what trick he hoped to ‘deal with’ Chunda Lal. But, as I informed you, Chunda Lal was forewarned. The sound of blows continued, followed by that of another, louder groan. Stop him! Stop him! shrieked Miska. You ‘care nothing’ for this man. Why do you tremble? Oh! she wailed piteously. I cannot bear it … oh, I cannot bear it! Do what you like with me, but spare him. Ah! you have no mercy. Fo Hi handed her the hammer for striking the gong. It is you who have no mercy, he replied. I have asked but one gift. The sound of the gong will end Dr. Stuart’s discomfort … and will mean that you voluntarily accept my offer. What! you hesitate? A stifled scream rang out sharply. Ah, yes! yes! Miska ran and struck the gong, then staggered back to the diwan and fell upon it, hiding her face in her hands. The sounds of torture ceased. Fo Hi closed the door and stood looking at her where she lay. I permit you some moments of reflection, he said, in order that you may compose yourself to receive the addresses which I shall presently have the honour, and joy, of making to you. Yes–this door is unlocked. He threw the keys on the table. I respect your promise … and Chunda Lal guards the outer exits. He opened the further door, by which he had entered, and went out. Miska, through the fingers of her shielding hands, watched him go. When he had disappeared she sprang up, clenching her teeth, and her face was contorted with anguish. She began to move aimlessly about the room, glancing at the many strange objects on the big table and fearfully at the canopied chair beside which hung the bronze bell. Finally: Oh, Chunda Lal! Chunda Lal! she moaned, and threw herself face downward on the diwan, sobbing wildly. So she lay, her whole body quivering with the frenzy of her emotions, and as she lay there, inch by inch, cautiously, the nearer door began to open. Chunda Lal looked in. Finding the room to be occupied only by Miska, he crossed rapidly to the diwan, bending over her with infinite pity and tenderness. Miska! he whispered softly. As though an adder had touched her, Miska sprang to her feet–and back from the Hindu. Her eyes flashed fiercely. Ah! you! you! she cried at him, with a repressed savagery that spoke of the Oriental blood in her veins. Do not speak to me–look at me! Do not come near me! I hate you! God! how I hate you! Miska! Miska! he said beseechingly–you pierce my heart! you kill me! Can you not understand—- Go! go! She drew back from him, clenching and unclenching her jewelled fingers and glaring madly into his eyes. Look, Miska! He took the gold chain and amulet from his bosom. Your token! Can you not understand! Yah Allah! how little you trust me– and I would die for one glance of your eyes! He–Stuart Sahib–has gone, gone long since! Ah! Chunda Lal! Miska swayed dizzily and extended her hands towards him. Chunda Lal glanced fearfully about him. Did I not, he whispered, with an intense ardour in his soft voice,– did I not lay my life, my service, all I have, at your feet? Did I not vow to serve you in the name of Bhowani! He is long since gone to bring his friends–who are searching from house to house along the river. At any moment they may be here! Miska dropped weakly upon her knees before him and clasped his hand. Chunda Lal, my friend! Oh, forgive me! Her voice broke. Forgive … Chunda Lal raised her gently. Not upon your knees to me, Miska. It was a little thing to do–for you. Did I not tell you that he had cast his eyes upon you? Mine was the voice you heard to cry out. Ah! you do not know; it is to gain time that I seem to serve him! Only this, Miska–he revealed the blade of a concealed knife–stand between Fo Hi and–you! Had I not read it in his eyes! He raised his glance upward frantically. Jey Bhowani! give me strength, give me courage! For if I fail … He glared at her passionately, clutching his bosom; then, pressing the necklet to his lips, he concealed it again, and bent, whispering urgently: Listen again–I reveal it to you without price or hope of reward, for I know there is no love in your heart to give, Miska; I know that it takes you out of my sight for always. But I tell you what I learn in the house of Abdul Rozan. Your life is your own, Miska! With the needle–yet closer he bent to her ear and even softer he spoke–he pricks your white skin–no more! The vial he sends contains a harmless cordial! Chunda Lal! Miska swayed again dizzily, clutching at the Hindu for support. Quick! fly! he said, leading her to the door. I will see he does not pursue! No, no! you shall shed no blood for me! Not even his. You come also! And if he escape, and know that I was false to him, he will call me back, and I shall be dragged to those yellow eyes, though I am a thousand miles away! Inshalla! those eyes! No–I must strike swift, or he robs me of my strength. For a long moment Miska hesitated. Then, I also remain, Chunda Lal, my friend! We will wait–and watch and listen for the bells–here–that tell they are in the grounds of the house. Ah, Miska! the glance of the Hindu grew fearful–you are clever–but he is the Evil One! I fear for you. Fly now. There is yet time … A faint sound attracted Miska’s attention. Placing a quivering finger to her lips, she gently thrust Chunda Lal out into the corridor. He returns! she whispered: If I call–come to me, my friend. But we have not long to wait! She closed the door. Chapter 33. What Happened To Stuart. Stuart had gained the end of the corridor, unmolested. There he found a short flight of steps, which he descended and came to a second corridor forming a right angle with the first. A lamp was hung at the foot of the steps, and by its light he discerned a shadowy figure standing at the further end of this second passage. A moment he hesitated, peering eagerly along the corridor. The man who waited was Chunda Lal. Stuart approached him and silently placed in his hand the gold amulet. Chunda Lal took it as one touching something holy, and raising it he kissed it with reverence. His dark eyes were sorrowful. Long and ardently he pressed the little trinket to his lips, then concealed it under the white robe which he wore and turned to Stuart. His eyes were sorrowful no more, but fierce as the eyes of a tiger. Follow! he said. He unlocked a door and stepped out into a neglected garden, Stuart close at his heels. The sky was cloudy, and the moon obscured. Never glancing back, Chunda Lal led the way along a path skirting a high wall upon which climbing fruit trees were growing until they came to a second door and this also the Hindu unlocked. He stood aside. To the end of this lane, he said, in his soft queerly modulated voice, and along the turning to the left to the river bank. Follow the bank towards the palace and you will meet them. I owe you my life, said Stuart. Go! you owe me nothing, returned the Hindu fiercely. Stuart turned and walked rapidly along the lane. Once he glanced back. Chunda Lal was looking after him … and he detected something that gleamed in his hand, gleamed not like gold but like the blade of a knife! Turning the corner, Stuart began to run. For he was unarmed and still weak, and there had been that in the fierce black eyes of the Hindu when he had scorned Stuart’s thanks which had bred suspicion and distrust. From the position of the moon, Stuart judged the hour to be something after midnight. No living thing stirred about him. The lane in which now he found himself was skirted on one side by a hedge beyond which was open country and on the other by a continuation of the high wall which evidently enclosed the grounds of the house that he had just quitted. A cool breeze fanned his face, and he knew that he was approaching the Thames. Ten more paces and he came to the bank. In his weak condition the short run had exhausted him. His bruised throat was throbbing painfully, and he experienced some difficulty in breathing. He leaned up against the moss grown wall, looking back into the darkness of the lane. No one was in sight. There was no sound save the gently lapping of the water upon the bank. He would have liked to bathe his throat and to quench his feverish thirst, but a mingled hope and despair spurred him and he set off along the narrow path towards where dimly above some trees he could discern in the distance a group of red roofed buildings. Having proceeded for a considerable distance, he stood still, listening for any sound that might guide him to the search party–or warn him that he was followed. But he could hear nothing. Onward he pressed, not daring to think of what the future held for him, not daring to dwell upon the memory, the maddening sweetness, of that parting kiss. His eyes grew misty, he stumbled as he walked, and became oblivious of his surrounding. His awakening was a rude one. Suddenly a man, concealed behind a bush, sprang out upon him and bore him irresistibly to the ground! Not a word! rapped his assailant, or I’ll knock you out! Stuart glared into the red face lowered so threateningly over his own, and: Sergeant Sowerby! he gasped. The grip upon his shoulders relaxed. Expletive! cried Sowerby–if it isn’t Dr. Stuart? What is that! cried another voice from the shelter of the bush. Pardieu! say it again! … Dr. Stuart! And Gaston Max sprang out! Max! murmured Stuart, staggering to his feet–Max! Nom d’un nom! Two dead men meet! exclaimed Gaston Max. But indeed–he grasped Stuart by both hands and his voice shook with emotion–I thank God that I see you! Stuart was dazed. Words failed him, and he swayed dizzily. I thought you were murdered, said Max, still grasping his hand, and I perceive that you had made the same mistake about me! Do you know what saved me, my friend, from the consequences of that frightful blow? It was the bandage of ‘Le Balafre’! You must possess a skull like a black person’s! said Stuart feebly. I believe I have a skull like a baboon! returned Max, laughing with joyous excitement. And you, doctor, you must possess a steel wind pipe; for flesh and blood could never have survived the pressure of that horrible pigtail. You will rejoice to learn that Miguel was arrested on the Dover boat train this morning and Ah Fang Fu at Tilbury Dock some four hours ago. So we are both avenged! But we waste time! He unscrewed a flask and handed it to Stuart. A terrible experience has befallen you, he said. But tell me–do you know where it is–the lair of ‘The Scorpion’? I do! replied Stuart, having taken a welcome draught from the flask. Where is Dunbar? We must carefully surround the place or he will elude us. Ah! as he eluded us at ‘The Pidgin House’! cried Max. Do you know what happened? They had a motorboat in the very cellar of that warren. At high tide they could creep out into the cutting, drawing their craft along from pile to pile, and reach the open river at a point fifty yards above the house! In the damnable darkness they escaped. But we have two of them. It was all my fault, said Sowerby guiltily. I missed my spring when I went for the Chinese person who came out first, and he gave one yell. The old fox in the shop heard it and the fat was in the fire. You didn’t miss your spring at me! retort Stuart ruefully. No, agreed Sowerby. I didn’t mean to miss a second time! What’s all this row, came a gruff voice. Ah! Inspector Dunbar! said Max. Dunbar walked up the path, followed by a number of men. At first he did not observe Stuart, and: You’ll be waking all the neighborhood, he said. It’s the next big house, Sowerby, the one we thought, surrounded by the brick wall. There’s no doubt, I think … Why! He had seen Stuart, and he sprang forward with outstretched hand. Thank God! he cried, disregarding his own counsel about creating a disturbance. This is fine! Eh, man! but I’m glad to see you! And I am glad to be here! Stuart assured him. They shook hands warmly. You have read my statement, of course? asked Stuart. I have, replied the Inspector, and gave him a swift glance of the tawny eyes. And considering that you’ve nearly been strangled, I’ll forgive you! But I wish we’d known about this house—- Ah! Inspector, interrupted Gaston Max, but you have never seen Zara el Khala! I have seen her–and I forgive him, also! Stuart continued rapidly: We have little time to waste. There are only three people in the house, so far as I am aware: Miska–known to you, M. Max, as Zara el Khala–the Hindu, Chunda Lal, and–Fo Hi—- Ah! cried Max–‘The Scorpion.’ Chunda Lal, for some obscure personal reason, not entirely unconnected with Miska, enabled me to make my escape in order that I might lead you to the house. Therefore we may look upon Chunda Lal, as well as Miska, in the light of an accomplice—- Eh, bien! a spy in the camp! This is where we see how fatal to the success of any enterprise, criminal or otherwise, is the presence of a pretty woman! Proceed, my friend! There are three entrances to the apartment in which Fo Hi apparently spends the greater part of his time. Two of these I know, although I am unaware where one of them leads to. But the third, of which he alone holds the key, communicates with a tunnel leading to the river bank, where a motorboat is concealed. Ah, that motor boat! cried Max. He travels at night, you understand—- Always, I am told. Yes, always. Therefore, once he is out on the river, he is moderately secure between the first lock and the Nore! When a police patrol is near he can shut off his engine and lie under the bank. Last night he crept away from us in that fashion. Tonight is not so dark, and the River Police are watching all the way down. Furthermore, replied Stuart, Chunda Lal, who acts as engineer, has it in his power to prevent Fo Hi’s escape by that route! But we must count upon the possibility of his attempting to leave by water. Therefore, in disposing your forces, place a certain number of men along the bank and below the house. Is there a River Police boat near? Not nearer than Putney Bridge, answered Dunbar. We shall have to try and block that exit. There’s no time to waste, continued Stuart excitedly–and I have a very particular request to make: that you will take Fo Hi alive. But of course, said Gaston Max, if it is humanly possible. Stuart repressed a groan; for even so he had little hope of inducing the awful veiled man to give back life to the woman who would have been instrumental in bringing him to the scaffold … and no compromise was possible! If you will muster your men, Inspector, he said, I will lead you to the spot. Once we have affected an entrance we must proceed with dispatch. He has alarm bells connected with every possible point of entry. Lead on, my friend, cried Gaston Max. I perceive that time is precious. Chapter 34. Jey Bhowani! As the door closed upon Chunda Lal, Miska stepped back from it and stood, unconsciously, in a curiously rigid and statuesque attitude, her arms pressed to her sides and her hands directed outward. It was the physical expression of an intense mental effort to gain control of herself. Her heart was leaping wildly in her breast–for the future that had held only horror and a living tomb, now opened out sweetly before her. She had only to ply her native wiles for a few precious moments … and someone would have her in his arms, to hold her safe from harm! If the will of the awful Chinese person threatened to swamp her individuality, then–there was Chunda Lal! But because of his helpless, unselfish love, she hesitated even at the price of remaining alone again with Fo Hi, to demand any further sacrifice of the Hindu. Furthermore–he might fail! The lacquer door slid noiselessly open and Fo Hi entered. He paused, watching her. Ah, he said, in that low pitched voice which was so terrifying–a gaziyeh of Ancient Egypt! How beautiful you are, Miska! You transport me to the court of golden Pharaoh. Miska! daughter of the moon magic of Isis–Zara el Khala! At any hour my enemies may be clamoring at my doors. But this hour is mine! He moved at his customary slow gait to the table, took up the keys … and locked both doors! Miska, perceiving in this her chance of aid from Chunda Lal utterly destroyed, sank slowly upon the diwan, her pale face expressing the utmost consternation. Suppose the police did not come! Fo Hi dropped the keys on the table again and approached her. She stood up, retreating before him. He inhaled sibilantly and paused. So your ‘acceptance’ was only a trick, he said. Your loathing of my presence is as strong as ever. Well! At the word, as a volcano leaps into life, the hidden fires which burned within this terrible man leapt up consumingly–if the gift of the flower is withheld, at least I will grasp the Dead Sea Fruit! He leapt toward Miska–and she fled shrieking before him. Running around a couch which stood near the centre of the room, she sprang to the door and beat upon it madly. Chunda Lal! she cried–Chunda Lal! Fo Hi was close upon her, and she turned striving to elude him. Oh, merciful God! Chunda Lal! The name burst from her lips in a long frenzied scream. Fo Hi had seized her! Grasping her shoulders, he twisted her about so that he could look into her eyes. A low, shuddering cry, died away, and her gaze became set, hypnotically, upon Fo Hi. He raised one hand, fingers outstretched before her. She swayed slightly. Forget! he said in a deep, guttural voice of command–forget. I will it. We stand in an empty world, you and I; you, Miska, and I, Fo Hi, your master. My master, she whispered mechanically. Your lover. My lover. You give me your life, to do with as I will. As you will. Fo Hi momentarily raised the blazing eyes. Oh, empty shell of a vanished joy! he cried. Then, frenziedly grasping Miska by her arms, he glared into her impassive face. Your heart leaps wildly in your breast! he whispered tenderly. Look into my eyes…. Miska sighed and opened her eyes yet more widely. She shuddered and a slow smile appeared upon her lips. The lacquer screen making the window was pushed open and Chunda Lal leapt in over the edge. As Fo Hi drew the yielding, hypnotised girl towards him, Chunda Lal, a gleaming kukri held aloft, ran with a silent panther step across the floor. He reached Fo Hi, drew himself upright; the glittering blade quivered … and Fo Hi divined his presence. Uttering a short, guttural exclamation, he thrust Miska aside. She staggered dazedly and fell prone upon the floor. The quivering blade did not descend. Fo Hi drew himself rigidly upright, extending his hands, palms downward, before him. He was exerting a superhuman effort. The breath whistled through his nostrils. Chunda Lal, knife upraised, endeavored to strike; but his arm seemed to have become incapable of movement and to be held, helpless, aloft. Staring at the rigid figure before him, he began to pant like a man engaged in a wrestle for life. Fo Hi stretched his right arm outward, and with a gesture of hand and fingers beckoned to Chunda Lal to come before him. And now, Miska, awakening as from a fevered dream, looked wildly about her, and then, serpentine, began to creep to the table upon which the keys were lying. Always watching the awful group of two, she rose slowly, snatched the keys and leapt across to the open window…. Chunda Lal, swollen veins standing out cord like on his brow, his gaze set hypnotically upon the moving hand, dropped his knife and began to move in obedience to the will of Fo Hi. As he came finally face to face with the terrible Adept of Rache Churan, Miska disappeared into the shadow of the balcony. Fo Hi by an imperious gesture commanded Chunda Lal to kneel and bow his head. The Hindu, gasping, obeyed. Thereupon Fo Hi momentarily relaxed his giant concentration and almost staggered as he glared down at the kneeling man. But never was that dreadful gaze removed from Chunda Lal. And now the veiled man drew himself rigidly upright again and stepped backward until the fallen kukri lay at his feet. He spoke, Chunda Lal! The Hindu rose, gazing before him with unseeing eyes. His forehead was wet with perspiration. Fo Hi pointed to the knife. Chunda Lal, without removing his sightless gaze from the veiled face, stooped, groped until he found the knife and rose with it in his hand. Back stepped Fo Hi, and back, until he could touch the big table. He moved a brass switch–and a trap opened in the floor behind Chunda Lal. Fo Hi raised his right hand, having the fingers tightly closed as if grasping the hilt of a knife. With his left hand he pointed to the trap. Again he spoke. Tum samauhe ho? Mechanically Chunda La replied: Ah, Sahib, tumhara huken jaldi: kiya’ jaega’ Yes, I hear and obey. As Fo Hi raised his clenched right hand, so did Chunda Lal raise the kukri. Fo Hi extended his left hand rigidly towards the Hindu and seemed to force him, step by step, back towards the open trap. Almost at the brink, Chunda Lal paused, swayed, and began to utter short, agonised cries. Froth appeared upon his lips. Raising his right hand yet further aloft, Fo Hi swiftly brought it down, performing the gesture of stabbing himself to the heart. His ghastly reserve deserted him. Jey Bhowana! he screamed–Yah Allah! Chunda Lal, uttering a loud groan, stabbed himself and fell backward into the opening. Ensued a monstrous crash of broken glass. As he fell, Fo Hi leapt to the brink of the trap, glaring down madly into the cellar below. His yellow fingers opened and closed spasmodically. Lie there, he shrieked–my ‘faithful’ servant! The ants shall pick your bones! He grasped the upstanding door of the trap and closed it. It descended with a reverberating boom. Fo Hi raised his clenched fists and stepped to the door. Finding it locked, he stood looking toward the open screen before the window. Miska! he whispered despairingly. He crossed to the window and was about to look out, when a high pitched electric bell began to ring in the room. Instantly Fo Hi closed the screen and turned, looking in the direction from whence the sound of ringing proceeded. As he did so, a second bell, in another key, began to ring–a third–a fourth. Momentarily the veiled man exhibited evidence of indecision. Then, from beneath his robe he took a small key. Approaching an ornate cabinet set against the wall to the left of one of the lacquer doors, he inserted the key in a hidden lock, and slid the entire cabinet partly aside revealing an opening. Fo Hi bent, peering down into the darkness of the passage below. A muffled report came, a flash out of the blackness of the river tunnel, and a bullet passed through the end of the cabinet upon which his hand was resting, smashing an ivory statuette and shattering the glass. Hurriedly he slid the cabinet into place again and stood with his back to it, arms outstretched. Miska! he said–and a note of yet deeper despair had crept into the harsh voice. Awhile he stood thus; then he drew himself up with dignity. The bells had ceased. Methodically Fo Hi began to take certain books from the shelves and to cast them into the great metal bowl which stood upon the tripod. Into the bowl he poured the contents of a large glass jar. Flames and clouds of smoke arose. He paused, listening. Confused voices were audible, seemingly from all around him, together with a sound of vague movements. Fo Hi took up vials and jars and dashed them to pieces upon the tiled hearth in which the furnace rested. Test tubes, flasks and retorts he shattered, and finally, raising the large glass case of orchids he dashed it down amid the debris of the other nameless and priceless monstrosities unknown to Western science. Chapter 35. The Way Of A Scorpion. A black cloud swept past the face of the moon and cold illumination flooded the narrow lane and patched with light the drive leading up to the front of the isolated mansion. Wrought iron gates closed both entrances and a high wall, surmounted by broken glass and barbed wire, entirely surrounded the grounds. This one also is locked, said Gaston Max, trying the gate and then peering through the bars in the direction of the gloomy house. All the visible windows were shuttered. No ray of light showed anywhere. The house must have been pronounced deserted by anyone contemplating it. Upon which side do you suppose the big room to be? asked Max. It is difficult to judge, replied Stuart. But I am disposed to believe that it is in the front of the house and on the first floor, for I traversed a long corridor, descended several stairs, turned to the right and emerged in a part of the garden bordering the lane in which Inspector Kelly is posted. I was thinking of the window and the balcony which ‘The Scorpion’ informed you commanded a view of Hampton Court. Hampton Court, he turned half left, lies about yonder. Therefore you are probably right, doctor; the room as you say should be in front of the house. Since we do not know how to disconnect the alarms, once we have entered the grounds it is important that we should gain access to the house immediately. Ah! morbleu! the moon disappears again! Darkness crept over the countryside. There is an iron balcony jutting out amongst the ivy just above and to the right of the porch! cried Stuart, who had also been peering up the moon patched drive. I would wager that that is the room! Ah! replied Max, I believe you are right. This, then is how we shall proceed: Inspector Kelly, with the aid of two men, can get over the wall near that garden door by which you came out. If they cannot force it from inside, you also must get over and lead the way to the entrance you know of. Sowerby and two more men will remain to watch the lane. The river front is well guarded. We will post a man here at this gate and one at the other. Dunbar and I will climb this one and rush straight for that balcony which we must hope to reach by climbing up the ivy. Ah! here comes Inspector Dunbar … and someone is with him! Dunbar appeared at the double around the corner of the lane which led riverward, and beside him ran a girl who presented a bizarre figure beside the gaunt Scotsman and a figure wildly out of place in that English riverside setting. It was Miska, arrayed in her flimsy harem dress! Miska! cried Stuart, and sprang towards her, sweeping her hungrily into his arms–forgetful of, indifferent to, the presence of Max and Dunbar. Ah! sighed the Frenchman–yes, she is beautiful! Trembling wildly, Miska clung to Stuart and began to speak, her English more broken than ever, because of her emotion. Listen–quick! she panted. Oh! do not hold me so tight. I have the house keys–look!–she held up a bunch of keys–but not the keys of the gates. Two men have gone to the end of the tunnel where the boat is hid beside the river. Someone–he better climb this gate and by the ivy he can reach the room in which Fo Hi is! I come down so. You do not see me because the moon goes out and I run to the side door. It is open. You come with me! She clung to Stuart, looking up into his eyes. Yes, yes, Miska! Oh! Chunda Lal–she choked down a sob. Be quick! be quick! He will kill him! he will kill him! Off you go, doctor! cried Max. Come along, Dunbar! He began to climb the ironwork of the gate. This way! said Miska, dragging Stuart by the arm. Oh! I am wild with fear and sorrow and joy! With joy, dear little Miska! whispered Stuart, as he followed her. They passed around the bend into the narrower lane which led toward the river and upon which the garden door opened. Stuart detained her. If the fate of the whole world had hung in the balance–as indeed, perhaps it did–he could not have acted otherwise. He raised her bewitching face and kissed her ardently. She trembled and clung to him rapturously. I live! she whispered. Oh! I am mad with happiness! It is Chunda Lal that gives me life–for he tells me the truth. It is not with the living death that he touches me; it is a trick, it is all a trick to bind me to him! Oh, Chunda Lal! Hurry! he is going to kill him! But supreme above all the other truths in the world, the joyous truth that Miska was to live set Stuart’s heart on fire. Thank God! he said fervently–oh, thank God! Miska! At the garden door a group of men awaited them. Sergeant Sowerby and two assistants remaining to watch the entrance and the lane, Miska led Stuart and the burly Inspector Kelly along that path beside the wall which Stuart so well remembered. Hurry! she whispered urgently. We must try to reach him before … You fear for Chunda Lal? said Stuart. Oh, yes! He has a terrible power–Fo Hi–which he never employs with me, until to night. Ah! it is only Chunda Lal, who saved me! But Chunda Lal he can command with his Will. From it, once he has made anyone a slave to it, there is no escape. I have seen one in the city of Quebec, in Canada, forget all else and begin to act in obedience to the will of Fo Hi who is thousands of miles away! My God! murmured Stuart, what a horrible monster! They had reached the open door beyond which showed the dimly lighted passage. Miska hesitated. Oh! I am afraid! she whispered. She thrust the keys into the hand of Inspector Kelly, pointing to one of them, and: That is the key! she said. Have your pistol ready. Do not touch anything in the room and do not go in if I tell you not to. Come! They pressed along the passage, came to the stair and were about to ascend, when there ensued a dull reverberating boom, and Miska shrank back into Stuart’s arms with a stifled shriek. Oh! Chunda Lal! she moaned–Chunda Lal! It is the trap! The trap! said Inspector Kelly. The cellar trap. He has thrown him down … to the ants! Inspector Kelly uttered a short laugh; but Stuart repressed a shudder. He was never likely to forget the skeleton of the Nubian mute which had been stripped by the ants in sixty nine minutes! We are too late! whispered Miska. Oh! listen! listen! Bells began to ring somewhere above them. Max and Dunbar are in! said Kelly. Come on, sir! Follow closely, boys! He ran up the stairs and along the corridor to the door at the end. A muffled shot sounded from somewhere in the depths of the house. That’s Harvey! said one of the men who followed–Our man must have tried to escape by the tunnel to the river bank! Inspector Kelly placed the key in the lock of the door. It was at this moment that Gaston Max, climbing up to the front balcony by means of the natural ladder afforded by the ancient ivy, grasped the iron railing and drew himself up to the level of the room. By this same stairway Chunda Lal had ascended to death and Miska had climbed down to life. Mind the ironwork doesn’t give way, sir! called Dunbar from below. It is strong, replied Max. Join me here, my friend. Max, taking a magazine pistol from his pocket, stepped warily over the ledge into the mysterious half light behind the great screen. As he did so, one of the lacquer doors was unlocked from the outside, and across the extraordinary, smoke laden room he saw Inspector Kelly enter. He saw something else. Seated in a strangely shaped canopied chair was a figure wearing a rich mandarin robe, but having its face covered with a green veil. Mon Deiu! at last! he cried, and leapt into the room. ‘The Scorpion’! Even as he leapt, and as the Scotland Yard men closed in upon the chair also, all of them armed and all half fearful, a thing happened which struck awe to every heart–for it seemed to be supernatural. Raising a metal hammer which he held in his hand, Fo Hi struck the bronze bell hung beside the chair. It emitted a deep, loud note…. There came a flash of blinding light, and intense crackling sound, the crash of broken glass, and a dense cloud of pungent fumes rose in the heated air. Dunbar had just climbed in behind Gaston Max. Bother were all but hurled from their feet by the force of the explosion. Then: Oh, my God! cried Dunbar, staggering, half blinded, look–look! A deathly silence claimed them all. Just within the doorway Stuart appeared, having his arm about the shoulders of Miska. The Throne of the Gods was empty! A thin coating of grey dust was settling upon it and upon the dais which supported it. They had witnessed a scientific miracle … the complete and instantaneous disintegration of a human body. Gaston Max was the first to recover speech. We are defeated, he said. ‘The Scorpion,’ surrounded, destroys himself. It is the way of a scorpion. Thank you for joining us on this journey through ‘The Golden Scorpion.’ We hope you enjoyed the mystery and the twists along the way. If you liked this story, don’t forget to subscribe to Classic Detective Mysteries for more thrilling tales. Share your thoughts in the comments, and let us know what you think about the detective’s cunning and the story’s resolution. Until next time, keep the mysteries alive. .

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0.0 Welcome to Classic Detective Mysteries. Today, we present ‘The Golden
5.84 Scorpion’ by Arthur Henry Sarsfield Ward, a thrilling tale of intrigue
10.92 and adventure. Join us as we follow a brilliant detective, caught in a web of secrets, danger, and an enigmatic villain. In this gripping
20.28 story, nothing is as it seems, and every clue brings us closer to uncovering the truth. Prepare yourself for a mystery that will keep
29.28 you guessing until the very end. Chapter 1. The Shadow Of A Cowl.
35.136 Keppel Stuart, M.D., F. R. S., awoke with a start and discovered himself to be bathed in cold perspiration. The moonlight shone in at
44.256 his window, but did not touch the bed, therefore his awakening could not be due to this cause. He lay for some time listening for any
52.336 unfamiliar noise which might account for the sudden disturbance of his usually sound slumbers. In the house below nothing stirred. His
61.496 windows were widely open and he could detect that vague drumming which is characteristic of midnight London; sometimes, too, the
69.216 clashing of buffers upon some siding of the Brighton railway where shunting was in progress and occasional siren notes from the Thames.
78.616 Otherwise–nothing. He glanced at the luminous disk of his watch. The hour was half past
84.856 two. Dawn was not far off. The night seemed to have become almost intolerably hot, and to this heat Stuart felt disposed to ascribe
94.096 both his awakening and also a feeling of uncomfortable tension of which he now became aware. He continued to listen, and, listening
103.056 and hearing nothing, recognized with anger that he was frightened. A sense of some presence oppressed him. Someone or something evil
111.216 was near him–perhaps in the room, veiled by the shadows. This uncanny sensation grew more and more marked.
118.656 Stuart sat up in bed, slowly and cautiously, looking all about him. He remembered to have awakened once thus in India–and to have found
126.736 a great cobra coiled at his feet. His inspection revealed the presence of nothing unfamiliar, and he stepped out on to the floor.
134.256 A faint clicking sound reached his ears. He stood quite still. The clicking was repeated.
140.136 There is someone downstairs in my study! muttered Stuart. He became aware that the fear which held him was such that unless he
147.848 acted and acted swiftly he should become incapable of action, but he remembered that whereas the moonlight poured into the bedroom, the
156.408 staircase would be in complete darkness. He walked barefooted across to the dressing table and took up an electric torch which lay there.
165.288 He had not used it for some time, and he pressed the button to learn if the torch was charged. A beam of white light shone out across the
173.488 room, and at the same instant came another sound. If it came from below or above, from the adjoining room or from outside
182.088 in the road, Stuart knew not. But following hard upon the mysterious
187.528 disturbance which had aroused him it seemed to pour ice into his veins, it added the complementary touch to his panic. For it was a kind of low
196.008 wail–a ghostly minor wail in falling cadences–unlike any sound he had
202.008 heard. It was so excessively horrible that it produced a curious effect. Discovering from the dancing of the torch ray that his hand was
210.288 trembling, Stuart concluded that he had awakened from a nightmare and that this fiendish wailing was no more than an unusually delayed
219.248 aftermath of the imaginary horrors which had bathed him in cold perspiration. He walked resolutely to the door, threw it open and cast the beam of
227.968 light on to the staircase. Softly he began to descend. Before the study door he paused. There was no sound. He threw open the door,
237.488 directing the torch ray into the room. Cutting a white lane through the blackness, it shone fully upon his
243.888 writing table, which was a rather fine Jacobean piece having a sort of quaint bureau superstructure containing cabinets and drawers. He
252.248 could detect nothing unusual in the appearance of the littered table. A tobacco jar stood there, a pipe resting in the lid.
259.68 Papers and books were scattered untidily as he had left them, surrounding a tray
264.96 full of pipe and cigarette ash. Then, suddenly, he saw something else.
270.36 One of the bureau drawers was half opened. Stuart stood quite still, staring at the table. There was no sound in
277.12 the room. He crossed slowly, moving the light from right to left. His papers had been overhauled methodically. The drawers had been
285.12 replaced, but he felt assured that all had been examined. The light switch was immediately beside the outer door, and Stuart walked
292.48 over to it and switched on both lamps. Turning, he surveyed the brilliantly illuminated room. Save for himself, it was empty. He
301.24 looked out into the hallway again. There was no one there. No sound broke the stillness. But that consciousness of some near presence
309.04 asserted itself persistently and uncannily. My nerves are out of order! he muttered. No one has touched my
315.72 papers. I must have left the drawer open myself. He switched off the light and walked across to the door. He had
323.32 actually passed out intending to return to his room, when he became aware of a slight draught. He stopped.
330.28 Someone or something, evil and watchful, seemed to be very near again. Stuart turned and found himself gazing fearfully in the direction of
338.92 the open study door. He became persuaded anew that someone was hiding there, and snatching up an ash stick which lay upon a chair in the
347.68 hall he returned to the door. One step into the room he took and paused–palsied with a sudden fear which exceeded anything he had
356.16 known. A white casement curtain was drawn across the French windows … and outlined upon this moon bright screen he saw a tall figure.
364.8 It was that of a cowled man! Such an apparition would have been sufficiently alarming had the cowl
371.2 been that of a monk, but the outline of this phantom being suggested that of one of the Misericordia brethren or the costume worn of old
379.32 by the familiars of the Inquisition! His heart leapt wildly, and seemed to grow still. He sought to cry out
386.48 in his terror, but only emitted a dry gasping sound. The psychology of panic is obscure and has been but imperfectly
394.4 explored. The presence of the terrible cowled figure afforded a confirmation of Stuart’s theory that he was the victim of a species
403.0 of waking nightmare. Even as he looked, the shadow of the cowled man moved–and was gone.
410.16 Stuart ran across the room, jerked open the curtains and stared out across the moon bathed lawn, its prospect terminated by high privet
418.44 hedges. One of the French windows was wide open. There was no one on the lawn; there was no sound.
425.64 Mrs. M’Gregor swears that I always forget to shut these windows at night! he muttered.
431.84 He closed and bolted the window, stood for a moment looking out across the empty lawn, then turned and went out of the room.
439.28 Chapter 2. The Pibroch Of The M’gregors. Dr. Stuart awoke in the morning and tried to recall what had occurred
447.56 during the night. He consulted his watch and found the hour to be six a. m. No one was stirring in the house, and he rose and put on a
456.36 bath robe. He felt perfectly well and could detect no symptoms of nervous disorder. Bright sunlight was streaming into the room, and
465.64 he went out on to the landing, fastening the cord of his gown as he descended the stairs.
471.2 His study door was locked, with the key outside. He remembered having locked it. Opening it, he entered and looked about him. He was
479.68 vaguely disappointed. Save for the untidy litter of papers upon the table, the study was as he had left it on retiring. If he could
488.912 believe the evidence of his senses, nothing had been disturbed. Not content with a casual inspection, he particularly examined those
497.352 papers which, in his dream adventure, he had believed to have been submitted to mysterious inspection. They showed no signs of having
506.032 been touched. The casement curtains were drawn across the recess formed by the French windows, and sunlight streamed in where,
513.712 silhouetted against the pallid illumination of the moon, he had seen the man in the cowl. Drawing back the curtains, he examined the window
521.672 fastenings. They were secure. If the window had really been open in the night, he must have left it so himself.
528.792 Well, muttered Stuart–of all the amazing nightmares! He determined, immediately he had bathed and completed his toilet, to
536.632 write an account of the dream for the Psychical Research Society, in whose work he was interested. Half an hour later, as the movements of
544.632 an awakened household began to proclaim themselves, he sat down at his writing table and commenced to write.
550.792 Keppel Stuart was a dark, good looking man of about thirty two, an
556.312 easy going bachelor who, whilst not over ambitious, was nevertheless a brilliant physician. He had worked for the Liverpool School of
564.272 Tropical Medicine and had spent several years in India studying snake poisons. His purchase of this humdrum suburban practice had been
573.832 dictated by a desire to make a home for a girl who at the eleventh hour had declined to share it. Two years had elapsed since then, but
583.472 the shadow still lay upon Stuart’s life, its influence being revealed in a certain apathy, almost indifference, which characterised his
593.272 professional conduct. His account of the dream completed, he put the paper into a
598.88 pigeon hole and forgot all about the matter. That day seemed to be more than usually dull and the hours to drag wearily on. He was
606.96 conscious of a sort of suspense. He was waiting for something, or for someone. He did not choose to analyse this mental condition. Had he
615.88 done so, the explanation was simple–and one that he dared not face.
621.36 At about ten o’clock that night, having been called out to a case, he returned to his house, walking straight into the study as was his
629.72 custom and casting a light Burberry with a soft hat upon the sofa beside his stick and bag. The lamps were lighted, and the book lined
638.0 room, indicative of a studious and not over wealthy bachelor, looked cheerful enough with the firelight dancing on the furniture.
646.4 Mrs. M’Gregor, a grey haired Scotch lady, attired with scrupulous neatness, was tending the fire at the moment, and hearing Stuart come
655.24 in she turned and glanced at him. A fire is rather superfluous to night, Mrs. M’Gregor, he said. I
662.56 found it unpleasantly warm walking. May is a fearsome treacherous month, Mr. Keppel, replied the old
669.6 housekeeper, who from long association with the struggling practitioner had come to regard him as a son. An’ a wheen o’ dry
678.16 logs is worth a barrel o’ pheesic. To which I would add that if ye’re hintin’ it’s time ye shed ye’re woolsies for ye’re summer wear, all I
686.64 have to reply is that I hope sincerely ye’re patients are more prudent than yoursel’.
691.96 She placed his slippers in the fender and took up the hat, stick and coat from the sofa. Stuart laughed.
698.32 Most of the neighbors exhibit their wisdom by refraining from becoming patients of mine, Mrs. M’Gregor.
704.52 That’s no weesdom; it’s just preejudice. Prejudice! cried Stuart, dropping down upon the sofa.
711.08 Aye, replied Mrs. M’Gregor firmly–preejudice! They’re no’ that
716.272 daft but they’re well aware o’ who’s the cleverest physeecian in the deestrict, an’ they come to nane other than Dr. Keppel Stuart when
723.552 they’re sair sick and think they’re dying; but ye’ll never establish the practice you desairve, Mr. Keppel–never–until–
731.312 Until when, Mrs. M’Gregor? Until ye take heed of an auld wife’s advice and find a new
737.232 housekeeper. Mrs. M’Gregor! exclaimed Stuart with concern. You don’t mean that
743.232 you want to desert me? After–let me see–how many years is it, Mrs. M’Gregor?
748.912 Thirty years come last Shrove Tuesday; I dandled ye on my knee, and eh! but ye were bonny! God forbid, but I’d like to see ye thriving as
757.432 ye desairve, and that ye’ll never do whilst ye’re a bachelor. Oh! cried Stuart, laughing again–oh, that’s it, is it? So you
766.832 would like me to find some poor inoffensive girl to share my struggles? Mrs. M’Gregor nodded wisely. She’d have nane so many to share. I
776.192 know ye think I’m old fashioned, Mr. Keppel and it may be I am; but I do assure you I would be sair harassed, if stricken to my bed–which,
784.232 please God, I won’t be–to receive the veesits of a pairsonable young bachelor– Er–Mrs. M’Gregor! interrupted Stuart, coughing in mock
792.392 rebuke–quite so! I fancy we have discussed this point before, and as you say your ideas are a wee bit, just a wee bit, behind the times.
801.272 On this particular point I mean. But I am very grateful to you, very sincerely grateful, for your disinterested kindness; and if ever I
809.712 should follow your advice—- Mrs. M’Gregor interrupted him, pointing to his boots. Ye’re no’ that
815.592 daft as to sit in wet boots? Really they are perfectly dry. Except for a light shower this
821.872 evening, there has been no rain for several days. However, I may as well, since I shall not be going out again.
828.912 He began to unlace his boots as Mrs. M’Gregor pulled the white casement curtains across the windows and then prepared to retire. Her
837.4 hand upon the door knob, she turned again to Stuart. The foreign lady called half an hour since, Mr. Keppel.
844.68 Stuart desisted from unlacing his boots and looked up with lively interest. Mlle. Dorian! Did she leave any message?
852.84 She obsairved that she might repeat her veesit later, replied Mrs. M’Gregor, and, after a moment’s hesitation; she awaited ye’re
860.36 return with exemplary patience. Really, I am sorry I was detained, declared Stuart, replacing his
866.84 boot. How long has she been gone, then? Just the now. No more than two or three minutes. I trust she is no
873.2 worse. Worse! The lass seemed o’er anxious to see you. Well, you know, Mrs. M’Gregor, she comes a considerable distance.
882.24 So I am given to understand, Mr. Keppel, replied the old lady; and in a grand luxurious car.
888.84 Stuart assumed an expression of perplexity to hide his embarrassment. Mrs. M’Gregor, he said rather ruefully, you watch over me as
897.24 tenderly as my own mother would have done. I have observed a certain restraint in your manner whenever you have had occasion to refer to
904.68 Mlle. Dorian. In what way does she differ from my other lady patients? And even as he spoke the words he knew in his heart that
912.28 she differed from every other woman in the world. Mrs. M’Gregor sniffed. Do your other lady patients wear furs that
919.84 your airnings for six months could never pay for, Mr. Keppel? she inquired. No, unfortunately they pin their faith, for the most part, to gaily
928.92 coloured shawls. All the more reason why I should bless the accident which led Mlle. Dorian to my door.
936.44 Mrs. M’Gregor, betraying, in her interest, real suspicion, murmured sotto voce: Then she is a patient?
944.2 What’s that? asked Stuart, regarding her surprisedly. A patient? Certainly. She suffers from insomnia.
951.504 I’m no’ surprised to hear it. What do you mean, Mrs. M’Gregor? Now, Mr. Keppel, laddie, ye’re angry with me, and like enough I am
959.504 a meddlesome auld woman. But I know what a man will do for shining een and a winsome face–nane better to my sorrow–and twa times have
968.464 I heard the Warning. Stuart stood up in real perplexity. Pardon my density, Mrs.
974.664 M’Gregor, but–er–the Warning? To what ‘warning’ do you refer? Seating herself in the chair before the writing table, Mrs. M’Gregor
982.464 shook her head pensively. What would it be, she said softly, but the Pibroch o’ the M’Gregors?
988.904 Stuart came across and leaned upon a corner of the table. The Pibroch of the M’Gregors? he repeated.
995.704 Nane other. ‘Tis said to be Rob Roy’s ain piper that gives warning when danger threatens ane o’ the M’Gregors or any they love.
1004.624 Stuart restrained a smile, and, A well meaning but melancholy retainer! he commented.
1010.784 As well as I hear you now, laddie, I heard the pibroch on the day a certain woman first crossed my threshold, nigh thirty years ago, in
1019.424 Inverary. And as plainly as I heard it wailing then, I heard it the first evening that Miss Dorian came to this house!
1026.784 Torn between good humoured amusement and real interest, If I remember rightly, said Stuart, Mlle. Dorian first called here just a week ago,
1036.304 and immediately before I returned from an Infirmary case? Your memory is guid, Mr. Keppel.
1042.624 And when, exactly, did you hear this Warning? Twa minutes before you entered the house; and I heard it again the
1048.744 now. What! you heard it to night? I heard it again just the now and I lookit out the window.
1055.504 Did you obtain a glimpse of Rob Roy’s piper? Ye’re laughing at an old wife, laddie. No, but I saw Miss Dorian away
1064.064 in her car and twa minutes later I saw yourself coming round the corner. If she had only waited another two minutes, murmured Stuart.
1072.176 No matter; she may return. And are these the only occasions upon which
1077.216 you have heard this mysterious sound, Mrs. M’Gregor? No, Master Keppel, they are not. I assure ye something threatens. It
1085.016 wakened me up in the wee sma’ hours last night–the piping–an’ I lay awake shaking for long eno’.
1091.736 How extraordinary. Are you sure your imagination is not playing you tricks? Ah, you’re no’ takin’ me seriously, laddie.
1099.216 Mrs. M’Gregor–he leaned across the table and rested his hands upon her shoulders–you are a second mother to me, your care makes me feel
1108.056 like a boy again; and in these grey days it’s good to feel like a boy again. You think I am laughing at you, but I’m not. The strange
1116.616 tradition of your family is associated with a tragedy in your life; therefore I respect it. But have no fear with regard to Mlle. Dorian.
1125.856 In the first place she is a patient; in the second–I am merely a penniless suburban practitioner. Good night, Mrs. M’Gregor. Don’t
1134.576 think of waiting up. Tell Mary to show Mademoiselle in here directly she arrives–that is if she really returns.
1142.416 Mrs. M’Gregor stood up and walked slowly to the door. I’ll show Mademoiselle in mysel’, Mr. Keppel, she said,–and show her out.
1149.976 She closed the door very quietly. Chapter 3. The Scorpion’s Tail. Seating himself at the writing table, Stuart began mechanically to
1159.176 arrange his papers. Then from the tobacco jar he loaded his pipe,
1164.216 but his manner remained abstracted. Yet he was not thinking of the phantom piper but of Mlle. Dorian.
1171.856 Until he had met this bewilderingly pretty woman he had thought that his heart was for evermore proof against the glances of bright eyes.
1180.056 Mademoiselle had disillusioned him. She was the most fragrantly lovely creature he had ever met, and never for one waking moment since her
1189.304 first visit, had he succeeded in driving her bewitching image from his mind. He had tried to laugh at his own folly, then had grown angry
1198.064 with himself, but finally had settled down to a dismayed acceptance of a wild infatuation.
1204.704 He had no idea who Mlle. Dorian was; he did not even know her exact nationality, but he strongly suspected there was a strain of Eastern
1213.984 blood in her veins. Although she was quite young, apparently little more than twenty years of age, she dressed like a woman of unlimited
1222.384 means, and although all her visits had been at night he had had glimpses of the big car which had aroused Mrs. M’Gregor’s displeasure.
1230.744 Yes–so ran his musings, as, pipe in mouth, he rested his chin in his
1236.184 hands and stared grimly into the fire–she had always come at night and always alone. He had supposed her to be a Frenchwoman, but an
1244.464 unmarried French girl of good family does not make late calls, even upon a medical man, unattended. Had he perchance unwittingly made
1252.824 himself a party to the escapade of some unruly member of a noble family? From the first he had shrewdly suspected the ailments of Mlle.
1261.344 Dorian to be imaginary–Mlle. Dorian? It was an odd name.
1266.664 I shall be imagining she is a disguised princess if I wonder about her any more! he muttered angrily.
1272.984 Detecting himself in the act of heaving a weary sigh, he coughed in self reproval and reached into a pigeon hole for the MS. of his
1280.584 unfinished paper on Snake Poisons and Their Antidotes. By chance he pulled out the brief account, written the same morning, of his uncanny
1288.904 experience during the night. He read it through reflectively. It was incomplete. A certain mental haziness which he had noted upon
1298.104 awakening had in some way obscured the facts. His memory of the dream had been imperfect. Even now, whilst recognizing that some feature of
1307.24 the experience was missing from his written account, he could not identify the omission. But one memory arose starkly before him–that
1315.56 of the cowled man who had stood behind the curtains. It had power to chill him yet. The old incredulity returned and methodically he
1324.36 re examined the contents of some of the table drawers. Ere long, however, he desisted impatiently.
1330.68 What the devil could a penniless doctor have hidden in his desk that was worth stealing! he said aloud. I must avoid cold salmon and
1338.84 cucumber in future. He tossed the statement aside and turned to his scientific paper.
1344.76 There came knock at the door. Come in! snapped Stuart irritably; but the next moment he had turned,
1351.16 eager eyed to the servant who had entered. Inspector Dunbar has called, sir.
1356.96 Oh, all right, said Stuart, repressing another sigh. Show him in here. There entered, shortly, a man of unusual height, a man gaunt and
1366.44 square both of figure and of face. He wore his clothes and his hair untidily. He was iron grey and a grim mouth was ill concealed by the
1375.64 wiry moustache. The most notable features of a striking face were the tawny leonine eyes, which could be fierce, which could be pensive and
1384.52 which were often kindly. Good evening, doctor, he said–and his voice was pleasant and
1390.0 unexpectedly light in tome. Hope I don’t intrude. Not at all, Inspector, Stuart assured him.
1397.48 Make yourself comfortable in the armchair and fill your pipe. Thanks, said Dunbar. I will. He took out his pipe and reached out
1406.12 a long arm for the tobacco jar. I came to see if you could give me a tip on a matter that has cropped up.
1412.48 Something in my line? asked Stuart, a keen professional look coming momentarily into his eyes.
1419.192 It’s supposed to be a poison case, although I can’t see it myself,
1424.272 answered the detective–to whom Keppel Stuart’s unusual knowledge of poisons had been of service in the past; but if what I suspect is
1432.832 true, it’s a very big case all the same. Laying down his pipe, which he had filled but not lighted, Inspector
1440.832 Dunbar pulled out from the inside pocket of his tweed coat a bulging note book and extracted therefrom some small object wrapped up in
1449.112 tissue paper. Unwrapping this object, he laid it upon the table. Tell me what that is, doctor, he said, and I shall be obliged.
1459.072 Stuart peered closely at that which lay before him. It was a piece of curiously shaped gold, cunningly engraved in a most unusual way.
1468.032 Rather less than an inch in length, it formed a crescent made up of six oval segments joined one to another, the sixth terminating in a
1476.832 curled point. The first and largest segment ended jaggedly where it had evidently been snapped off from the rest of the ornament–if the
1485.192 thing had formed part of an ornament. Stuart looked up, frowning in a puzzled way.
1490.792 It is a most curious fragment of jewellery–possibly of Indian origin, he said.
1496.192 Inspector Dunbar lighted his pipe and tossed the match end into the fire. But what does it represent? he asked.
1502.832 Oh, as to that–I said a curious fragment advisedly, because I cannot imagine any woman wearing such a beastly thing. It is the tail
1511.672 of a scorpion. Ah! cried Dunbar, the tawny eyes glittering with excitement. The
1516.752 tail of a scorpion! I thought so! And Sowerby would have it that it represented the stem of a Cactus or Prickly Pear!
1524.072 Not so bad a guess, replied Stuart. There are resemblances–not in the originals but in such a miniature reproduction as this. He was
1532.152 wrong, however. May I ask where you obtained the fragment? I’m here to tell you, doctor, for now that I know it’s a scorpion’s
1540.08 tail I know that I’m out of my depth as well. You’ve travelled in the East and lived in the East–two very different things. Now, while
1548.92 you were out there, in India, China, Burma, and so on, did you ever come across a religion or a cult that worshipped scorpions?
1557.28 Stuart frowned thoughtfully, rubbing his chin with the mouthpiece of his pipe. Dunbar watched him expectantly.
1563.92 Help yourself to whiskey and soda, Inspector, said Stuart absently. You’ll find everything on the side table yonder. I’m thinking.
1572.08 Inspector Dunbar nodded, stood up and crossed the room, where he busied himself with syphon and decanter. Presently he returned,
1580.64 carrying two full glasses, one of which he set before Stuart. What’s the answer, doctor? he asked.
1587.88 The answer is no. I am not acquainted with any sect of scorpion worshippers, Inspector. But I once met with a curious
1596.56 experience at Su Chow in China, which I have never been able to explain, but which may interest you. It wanted but a few minutes to
1605.44 sunset, and I was anxious to get back to my quarters before dusk fell. Therefore I hurried up my boy, who was drawing the rickshaw, telling
1614.4 him to cross the Canal by the Wu men Bridge. He ran fleetly in that direction, and we were actually come to the steep acclivity of the
1622.72 bridge, when suddenly the boy dropped the shafts and fell down on his knees, hiding his face in his hands.
1630.12 ‘Shut your eyes tightly, master!’ he whispered. ‘The Scorpion is coming!’ I stared down at him in amazement, as was natural, and not a little
1638.32 angrily; for his sudden action had almost pitched me on my head. But there he crouched, immovable, and staring up the slope I say that it
1647.536 was entirely deserted except for one strange figure at that moment crossing the crown of the bridge and approaching. It was the figure
1656.456 of a tall and dignified Chinese person, or of one who wore the dress of a Chinese person. For the extra ordinary thing about the stranger’s appearance
1665.136 was this; he also wore a thick green veil! Covering his face?
1670.496 So as to cover his face completely. I was staring at him in wonder, when the boy, seeming to divine the other’s approach, whispered,
1678.776 ‘Turn your head away! Turn your head away! He was referring to the man with the veil?
1684.576 Undoubtedly. Of course I did nothing of the kind, but it was impossible to discern the stranger’s features through the thick gauze,
1692.816 although he passed quite close to me. He had not proceeded another three paces, I should think, before my boy had snatched up the shafts
1701.456 and darted across the bridge as though all hell were after him! Here’s the odd thing, though; I could never induce him to speak a word on the
1708.936 subject afterwards! I bullied him and bribed him, but all to no purpose. And although I must have asked more than a hundred Chinese people
1717.576 in every station of society from mandarin to mendicant, ‘Who or what is The Scorpion?’ one and all looked stupid, blandly assuring me
1726.896 that they did not know what I meant. H’m! said Dunbar, it’s a queer yarn, certainly. How long ago would
1733.616 that be, doctor? Roughly–five years. It sounds as though it might belong to the case. Some months back,
1740.896 early in the winter, we received instructions at the Yard to look out everywhere in the press, in buffets, theatres, but particularly in
1749.536 criminal quarters, for any reference of any kind whatever to a scorpion. I was so puzzled that I saw the Commissioner about it,
1757.536 and he could tell me next to nothing. He said the word had come through from Paris, but that Paris seemed to know no more about it
1764.832 than we did. It was associated in some way with the sudden deaths of several notable public men about that time; but as there was no
1773.032 evidence of foul play in any of the cases, I couldn’t see what it meant at all. Then, six weeks ago, Sir Frank Narcombe, the surgeon,
1782.032 fell dead in the foyer of a West End theatre–you remember? Chapter 4.
1787.912 Mademoiselle Dorian. The telephone bell rang. Stuart reached across for the instrument and raised the receiver.
1795.272 Yes, he said–Dr. Stuart speaking. Inspector Dunbar is here. Hold
1801.592 on. He passed the instrument to Dunbar, who had stood up on hearing his name mentioned. Sergeant Sowerby at Scotland Yard wishes to speak
1809.072 to you, Inspector. Hullo, said Dunbar–that you, Sowerby. Yes–but I arrived here
1815.872 only a short time ago. What’s that?–Max? Good God! what does it all mean! Are you sure of the number–49685? Poor chap–he should have
1827.312 worked with us instead of going off alone like that. But he was always given to that sort of thing. Wait for me. I’ll be with you in
1834.952 a few minutes. I can get a taxi. And, Sowerby–listen! It’s ‘The Scorpion’ case right enough. That bit of gold found on the dead man
1843.472 is not a cactus stem; it’s a scorpion’s tail! He put down the telephone and turned to Stuart, who had been listening
1850.272 to the words with growing concern. Dunbar struck his open palm down on to the table with a violent gesture.
1857.992 We have been asleep! he exclaimed. Gaston Max of the Paris Service has been at work in London for a month, and we didn’t know it!
1866.272 Gaston Max! cried Start–then it must be a big case indeed. As a student of criminology the name of the celebrated Frenchman was
1876.264 familiar to him as that of the foremost criminal investigator in Europe, and he found himself staring at the fragment of gold with a new
1884.664 and keener interest. Poor chap, continued Dunbar–it was his last. The body brought in
1891.344 from Hanover Hole has been identified as his. What! it is the body of Gaston Max!
1897.704 Paris has just wired that Max’s reports ceased over a week ago. He
1902.744 was working on the case of Sir Frank Narcombe, it seems, and I never knew! But I predicted a long time ago that Max would play the
1910.904 lone hand game once too often. They sent particulars. The identification disk is his. Oh! there’s no doubt about it,
1920.584 unfortunately. The dead man’s face is unrecognizable, but it’s not likely there are two disks of that sort bearing the initials G.M. and
1929.744 the number 49685. I’m going along now. Should you care to come,
1935.944 doctor? I am expecting a patient, Inspector, replied Stuart–er–a special
1941.904 case. But I hope you will keep me in touch with this affair?
1947.184 Well, I shouldn’t have suggested your coming to the Yard if I hadn’t wanted to do that. As a matter of fact, this scorpion job seems to
1956.944 resolve itself into a case of elaborate assassination by means of some unknown poison; and although I should have come to see you in
1965.664 any event, because you have helped me more than once, I came to night
1971.184 at the suggestion of the Commissioner. He instructed me to retain your services if they were available.
1978.184 I am honoured, replied Stuart. But after all, Inspector, I am merely an ordinary suburban practitioner. My reputation has yet to
1987.024 be made. What’s the matter with Halesowen of Upper Wimpole Street? He’s the big man.
1993.024 And if Sir Frank Narcombe was really poisoned–as Paris seems to think he was–he’s also a big fool. retorted Dunbar bluntly.
2001.144 He agreed that death was due to heart trouble. I know he did; unsuspected ulcerative endocarditis. Perhaps he was
2009.184 right. If he was right, said Dunbar, taking up the piece of gold from the table, what was Gaston Max doing with this thing in his possession?
2018.184 There may be no earthly connection between Max’s inquiries and the death of Sir Frank.
2023.264 On the other hand–there may! Leaving Dr. Halesowen out of the question, are you open to act as expert adviser in this case?
2031.624 Certainly; delighted. Your fee is your own affair, doctor. I will communicate with you later, if you wish, or call again in the morning.
2039.024 Dunbar wrapped up the scorpion’s tail in the piece of tissue paper and was about to replace it in his note case. Then:
2047.344 I’ll leave this with you, doctor, he said. I know it will be safe enough, and you might like to examine it at greater leisure.
2055.864 Very well, replied Stuart. Some of the engraving is very minute. I will have a look at it through a glass later.
2063.904 He took the fragment from Dunbar, who had again unwrapped it, and, opening a drawer of the writing table in which he kept his cheque book
2071.304 and some few other personal valuables, he placed the curious piece of gold work within and relocked the drawer.
2078.784 I will walk as far as the cab rank with you, he said, finding himself to be possessed of a spirit of unrest. Whereupon the two went
2086.984 out of the room, Stuart extinguishing the lamps as he came to the door. They had not left the study for more than two minutes ere a car drew
2095.144 up outside the house, and Mrs. M’Gregor ushered a lady into the room but lately quitted by Stuart and Dunbar, turning up the lights as she
2103.104 entered. The doctor has gone out but just now, Miss Dorian, she said stiffly.
2108.864 I am sorry that ye are so unfortunate in your veesits. But I know he’ll be no more than a few minutes.
2115.168 The girl addressed was of a type fully to account for the misgivings of the shrewd old Scotswoman. She had the slim beauty of the East
2124.128 allied to the elegance of the West. Her features, whilst cast in a charming European mould, at the same time suggested in some subtle
2133.328 way the Oriental. She had the long, almond shaped eyes of the Egyptian, and her hair, which she wore unconventionally in a picturesque
2142.168 fashion reminiscent of the harem, was inclined to be fuzzy, but gleamed with coppery tints where the light touched its waves.
2150.008 She wore a cloak of purple velvet having a hooded collar of white fox fur; it fastened with golden cords. Beneath it was a white and gold
2159.048 robe, cut with classic simplicity of line and confined at the waist by an ornate Eastern girdle. White stockings and dull gold shoes
2168.848 exhibited to advantage her charming little feet and slim ankles, and she carried a handbag of Indian beadwork. Mlle. Dorian was a figure
2179.328 calculated to fire the imagination of any man and to linger long and sweetly in the memory.
2185.048 Mrs. M’Gregor, palpably ill at ease, conducted her to an armchair.
2190.288 You are very good, said the visitor, speaking with a certain hesitancy and with a slight accent most musical and fascinating.
2198.448 I wait a while if I may. Dear, dear, muttered Mrs. M’Gregor, beginning to poke the fire, he
2204.408 has let the fire down, of course! Is it out? No … I see a wee sparkie!
2210.408 She set the poker upright before the nearly extinguished fire and turned triumphantly to Mlle. Dorian, who was watching her with a
2218.288 slight smile. That will be a comforting blaze in a few minutes, Miss Dorian, she
2223.528 said, and went towards the door. If you please, called the girl, detaining her–do you permit me to
2230.008 speak on the telephone a moment? As Dr. Stuart is not at home, I must explain that I wait for him.
2236.408 Certainly, Miss Dorian, replied Mrs. M’Gregor; use the telephone by all means. But I think the doctor will be back any moment now.
2245.856 Thank you so much. Mrs. M’Gregor went out, not without a final backward glance at the
2251.496 elegant figure in the armchair. Mlle. Dorian was seated, her chin
2256.656 resting in her hand and her elbow upon the arm of the chair, gazing into the smoke arising from the nearly extinguished ember of the fire.
2265.736 The door closed, and Mrs. M’Gregor’s footsteps could be heard receding along the corridor.
2272.136 Mlle. Dorian sprang from the chair and took out of her handbag a number of small keys attached to a ring. Furtively she crossed the
2280.696 room, all the time listening intently, and cast her cloak over the back of the chair which was placed before the writing table. Her robe
2288.776 of white and gold clung to her shapely figure as she bent over the table and tried three of the keys in the lock of the drawer which
2296.336 contained Stuart’s cheque book and in which he had recently placed the mysterious gold ornament. The third key fitted the lock, and Mlle.
2304.856 Dorian pulled open the drawer. She discovered first the cheque book and next a private account book; then from under the latter she drew
2312.736 out a foolscap envelope sealed with red wax and bearing, in Stuart’s handwriting, the address:
2319.096 Lost Property Office, Metropolitan Police, New Scotland Yard, S. W. I.
2326.776 She uttered a subdued exclamation; then, as a spark of light gleamed within the open drawer, she gazed as if stupefied at the little
2335.016 ornament which she had suddenly perceived lying near the cheque book. She picked it up and stared at it aghast. A moment she hesitated;
2343.216 then, laying down the fragment of gold and also the long envelope upon the table, she took up the telephone.
2350.44 Keeping her eyes fixed upon the closed door of the study, she asked for the number East 89512, and
2359.16 whilst she waited for the connection continued that nervous watching and listening. Suddenly she began to speak, in a low voice.
2367.8 Yes! … Miska speaks. Listen! One of the new keys–it fits. I have
2373.52 the envelope. But, also in the same drawer, I find a part of a broken gold ‘agrab scorpion. Yes, it is broken. It must be they find it,
2383.44 on him. Her manner grew more and more agitated. Shall I bring it? The envelope it is very large. I do not know if—-
2391.52 From somewhere outside the house came a low, wailing cry–a cry which Stuart, if he had heard it, must have recognized to be identical with
2399.72 that which he had heard in the night–but which he had forgotten to record in his written account.
2405.72 Ah! whispered the girl–there is the signal! It is the doctor who returns. She listened eagerly, fearfully, to the voice which spoke
2414.96 over the wires. Yes–yes! Always glancing toward the door, she put down the instrument, took
2423.16 up the long envelope and paused for a moment, thinking that she had heard the sound of approaching footsteps. She exhibited signs of
2431.16 nervous indecision, tried to thrust the envelope into her little bag and realized that even folded it would not fit so as to escape
2438.68 observation. She ran across to the grate and dropped the envelope upon the smouldering fire. As she did so, the nicely balanced poker
2446.88 fell with a clatter upon the tiled hearth. She started wildly, ran back to the table, took up the broken ornament
2454.72 and was about to thrust it into the open drawer, when the study door was flung open and Stuart came in.
2460.72 Chapter 5. The Sealed Envelope. MADEMOISELLE DORIAN! cried Stuart joyously, advancing with
2467.68 outstretched hand. She leaned back against the table watching him–and suddenly he perceived the open drawer.
2474.496 He stopped. His expression changed to one of surprise and anger, and the girl’s slim fingers
2481.896 convulsively clutched the table edge as she confronted him. Her exquisite colour fled and left her pallid, dark eyed and dismayed.
2491.136 So, he said bitterly–I returned none too soon, Mlle.–Dorian
2496.296 Oh! she whispered, and shrank from him as he approached nearer. Your object in selecting an obscure practitioner for your medical
2504.776 adviser becomes painfully evident to me. Diagnosis of your case would have been much more easy if I had associated your symptoms with the
2512.936 presence in my table drawer of–he hesitated–of something which you have taken out. Give me whatever you have stolen and compose
2520.896 yourself to await the arrival of the police. He was cruel in his disillusionment. Here lay the explanation of his
2528.016 romance; here was his disguised princess–a common thief! She stared
2533.696 at him wildly. I take nothing! she cried. Oh, let me go! Please, please let me go!
2539.776 Pleading is useless. What have you stolen? Nothing–see. She cast the little gold ornament on the table. I
2547.456 look at this, but I do not mean to steal it. She raised her beautiful eyes to his face again, and he found himself
2553.896 wavering. That she had made his acquaintance in order to steal the fragment of the golden scorpion was impossible, for he had not
2561.456 possessed it at the time of her first visit. He was hopelessly mystified and utterly miserable.
2567.816 How did you open the drawer? he asked sternly. She took up the bunch of keys which lay upon the table and naively
2575.656 exhibited that which fitted the lock of the drawer. Her hands were shaking. Where did you obtain this key; and why?
2583.616 She watched him intently, her lips trembling and her eyes wells of sorrow into which he could not gaze unmoved.
2590.584 If I tell you–will you let me go? I shall make no promises, for I can believe nothing that you may
2597.584 tell me. You gained my confidence by a lie–and now, by another lie,
2602.824 you seem to think that you can induce me to overlook a deliberate attempt at burglary–common burglary. He clenched his hands.
2611.064 Heavens! I could never have believed it of you! She flinched as though from a blow and regarded him pitifully as he
2618.664 stood, head averted. Oh, please listen to me, she whispered. At first I tell you a lie,
2625.704 yes. And now? Now–I tell you the truth. That you are a petty thief?
2632.584 Ah! you are cruel–you have no pity! You judge me as you judge–one
2637.704 of your Englishwomen. Perhaps I cannot help what I do. In the East a woman is a chattel and has no will of her own.
2645.064 A chattel! cried Stuart scornfully. Your resemblance to the ‘chattels’ of the East is a remote one. There is Eastern blood in
2653.104 your veins, no doubt, but you are educated, you are a linguist, you know the world. Right and wrong are recognizable to the lowest savage.
2661.224 And if they recognize, but are helpless? Stuart made a gesture of impatience.
2666.584 You are simply seeking to enlist my sympathy, he said bitterly. But you have said nothing which inclines me to listen to you any
2673.944 longer. Apart from the shock of finding you to be–what you are, I am utterly mystified as to your object. I am a poor man. The entire
2683.464 contents of my house would fetch only a few hundred pounds if sold to morrow. Yet you risk your liberty to rifle my bureau. For the last
2692.224 time–what have you taken from that drawer? She leaned back against the table, toying with the broken piece of
2699.184 gold and glancing down at it as she did so. Her long lashes cast shadows below her eyes, and a hint of colour was returning to her
2707.664 cheeks. Stuart studied her attentively–even delightedly, for all
2713.032 her shortcomings, and knew in his heart that he could never give her in charge of the police. More and more the wonder of it all grew upon
2720.592 him, and now he suddenly found himself thinking of the unexplained incident of the previous night.
2727.072 You do not answer, he said. I will ask you another question: have you attempted to open that drawer prior to this evening?
2735.112 Mlle. Dorian looked up rapidly, and her cheeks, which had been pale, now flushed rosily.
2741.272 I try twice before, she confessed, and cannot open it. Ah! And–has someone else tried also?
2748.832 Instantly her colour fled again, and she stared at him wide eyed, fearful.
2754.072 Someone else? she whispered. Yes–someone else. A man … wearing a sort of cowl—-
2761.592 Oh? she cried and threw out her hands in entreaty. Do not ask me of
2766.672 him! I dare not answer–I dare not! You have answered, said Stuart, in a voice unlike his own; for a
2774.152 horrified amazement was creeping upon him and supplanting the contemptuous anger which the discovery of this beautiful girl engaged
2782.712 in pilfering his poor belongings had at first aroused. The mystery of her operations was explained–explained by a deeper
2790.912 and a darker mystery. The horror of the night had been no dream but an almost incredible reality. He now saw before him an agent of the
2800.032 man in the cowl; he perceived that he was in some way entangled in an affair vastly more complex and sinister than a case of petty larceny.
2810.032 Has the golden scorpion anything to do with the matter? he demanded abruptly.
2815.512 And in the eyes of his beautiful captive he read the answer. She flinched again as she had done when he had taunted her with being a
2822.392 thief; but he pressed his advantage remorselessly. So you were concerned in the death of Sir Frank Narcombe! he said.
2830.488 I was not! she cried at him fiercely, and her widely opened eyes
2835.848 were magnificent. Sir Frank Narcombe is—- She faltered–and ceased speaking, biting her lip which had become
2843.608 tremulous again. Sir Frank Narcombe is? prompted Stuart, feeling himself to stand
2850.128 upon the brink of a revelation. I know nothing of him–this Sir Frank Narcombe. Stuart laughed unmirthfully.
2857.248 Am I, by any chance, in danger of sharing the fate of that distinguished surgeon? he asked.
2862.528 His question produced an unforeseen effect. Mlle. Dorian suddenly rested her jewelled hands upon his shoulders, and he found himself
2870.288 looking hungrily into those wonderful Eastern eyes. If I swear that I speak the truth, will you believe me? she
2877.288 whispered, and her fingers closed convulsively upon his shoulders. He was shaken. Her near presence was intoxicating. Perhaps, he said
2886.048 unsteadily. Listen, then. Now you are in danger, yes. Before, you were not, but
2891.328 now you must be very careful. Oh! indeed, indeed, I tell you true! I
2896.688 tell you for your own sake. Do with me what you please. I do not care. It does not matter. You ask me why I come here. I tell you that also.
2906.928 I come for what is in the long envelope–look, I cannot hide it. It is on the fire!
2913.288 Stuart turned and glanced toward the grate. A faint wisp of brown smoke was arising from a long white envelope which lay there. Had the
2921.808 fire been actually burning, it must long ago have been destroyed. More than ever mystified, for the significance of the envelope was
2930.168 not evident to him, he ran to the grate and plucked the smouldering paper from the embers.
2936.088 As he did so, the girl, with one quick glance in his direction, snatched her cloak, keys and bag and ran from the room.
2944.368 Stuart heard the door close, and racing back to the table he placed the slightly
2950.288 charred envelope there beside the fragment of gold and leapt to the door. Expletive! he said.
2956.768 His escaped prisoner had turned the key on the outside. He was locked in his own study!
2962.288 Momentarily nonplussed, he stood looking at the closed door. The sound of a restarted motor from outside the house spurred him to action. He
2970.768 switched off the lamps, crossed the darkened room and drew back the curtain, throwing open the French windows. Brilliant moonlight bathed
2978.928 the little lawn with its bordering of high privet hedges. Stuart ran out as the sound of the receding car reached his ears. By the time
2987.568 that he had reached the front of the house the street was vacant from end to end. He walked up the steps to the front door, which he
2994.968 unfastened with his latch key. As he entered the hall, Mrs. M’Gregor appeared from her room.
3000.968 I did no’ hear ye go out with Miss Dorian, she said. That’s quite possible, Mrs. M’Gregor, but she has gone, you see.
3007.448 Now tell me, Mr. Keppel, did ye or did ye no’ hear the wail o’ the pibroch the night?
3012.808 No–I am afraid I cannot say that I did, Mrs. M’Gregor, replied Stuart patiently. I feel sure you must be very tired and you can
3021.248 justifiably turn in now. I am expecting no other visitor. Good night. Palpably dissatisfied and ill at ease, Mrs. M’Gregor turned away.
3030.928 Good night, Mr. Keppel, she said. Stuart, no longer able to control his impatience, hurried to the study
3037.448 door, unlocked it and entered. Turning on the light, he crossed and hastily drew the curtains over the window recess, but without
3044.968 troubling to close the window which he had opened. Then he returned to the writing table and took up the sealed envelope whose presence
3052.792 in his bureau was clearly responsible for the singular visitation of the cowled man and for the coming of the lovely Mlle. Dorian.
3060.712 The pibroch of the M’Gregors: He remembered something–something which, unaccountably, he hitherto had failed to recall: that fearful
3068.512 wailing in the night–which had heralded the coming of the cowled man!–or had it been a signal of some kind?
3075.712 He stared at the envelope blankly, then laid it down and stood looking for some time at the golden scorpion’s tail. Finally, his hands
3083.752 resting upon the table, he found that almost unconsciously he had been listening–listening to the dim night sounds of London and to
3092.032 the vague stirrings within the house. Now, you are in danger. Before, you were not….
3098.032 Could he believe her? If in naught else, in this at least surely she had been sincere? Stuart started–then laughed grimly.
3106.432 A clock on the mantel piece had chimed the half hour. Chapter 6. The Assistant Commissioner.
3112.792 Detective Inspector Dunbar arrived at New Scotland Yard in a veritable fever of excitement. Jumping out of the cab he ran into the building
3121.752 and without troubling the man in charge of the lift went straight on upstairs to his room. He found it to be in darkness and switched on
3129.352 the green shaded lamp which was suspended above the table. Its light revealed a bare apartment having distempered walls severely decorated
3138.232 by an etching of a former and unbeautiful Commissioner. The blinds were drawn. A plain, heavy deal table bearing a blotting pad, a
3146.752 pewter ink pot, several pens and a telephone, together with three uncomfortable chairs, alone broke the expanse of highly polished
3154.872 floor. Dunbar glanced at the table and then stood undecided in the middle of the bare room, tapping his small, widely separated teeth
3163.848 with a pencil which he had absently drawn from his waistcoat pocket. He rang the bell.
3170.328 A constable came in almost immediately and stood waiting just inside the door.
3175.448 When did Sergeant Sowerby leave? asked Dunbar. About three hours ago, sir.
3180.928 What! cried Dunbar. Three hours ago! But I have been here myself
3186.128 within that time–in the Commissioner’s office. Sergeant Sowerby left before then. I saw him go.
3192.488 But, my good fellow, he has been back again. He spoke to me on the telephone less than a quarter of an hour ago.
3198.808 Not from here, sir. But I say it was from here! shouted Dunbar fiercely; and I told
3204.488 him to wait for me. Very good, sir. Shall I make inquiries? Yes. Wait a minute. Is the Commissioner here?
3214.408 Yes, sir, I believe so. At least I have not seen him go. Find Sergeant Sowerby and tell him to wait here for me, snapped
3221.888 Dunbar. He walked out into the bare corridor and along to the room of the Assistant Commissioner. Knocking upon the door, he opened it
3230.648 immediately, and entered an apartment which afforded a striking contrast to his own. For whereas the room of Inspector Dunbar was
3238.568 practically unfurnished, that of his superior was so filled with tables, cupboards, desks, bureaux, files, telephones, bookshelves
3247.328 and stacks of documents that one only discovered the Assistant Commissioner sunk deep in a padded armchair and a cloud of tobacco
3255.208 smoke by dint of close scrutiny. The Assistant Commissioner was small, sallow and satanic. His black moustache was very black and his eyes
3264.608 were of so dark a brown as to appear black also. When he smiled he revealed a row of very large white teeth, and his smile was correctly
3274.368 Mephistophelean. He smoked a hundred and twenty Egyptian cigarettes
3279.504 per diem, and the first and second fingers of either hand were coffee coloured. Good evening, Inspector, he said courteously. You come at an
3288.344 opportune moment. He lighted a fresh cigarette. I was detained here unusually late to night or this news would not have reached us till
3296.264 the morning. He laid his finger upon a yellow form. There is an unpleasant development in ‘The Scorpion’ case.
3302.664 So I gather, sir. That is what brought me back to the Yard. The Assistant Commissioner glanced up sharply.
3309.264 What brought you back to the Yard? he asked. The news about Max. The assistant Commissioner leaned back in his chair. Might I ask,
3316.864 Inspector, he said, what news you have learned and how you have learned it? Dunbar stared uncomprehendingly.
3324.224 Sowerby ‘phoned me about half an hour ago, sir. Did he do so without your instructions?
3329.824 Most decidedly. What was his message? He told me, replied Dunbar, in ever growing amazement, that the
3337.384 body brought in by the River Police last night had been identified as that of Gaston Max.
3342.944 The Assistant Commissioner handed a pencilled slip to Dunbar. It read as follows:–
3348.424 Gaston Max in London. Scorpion, Narcombe. No report since 30th ult.
3354.464 Fear trouble. Identity disk G. M. 49685.
3361.144 But, sir, said Dunbar–this is exactly what Sowerby told me! Quite so. That is the really extraordinary feature of the affair.
3370.664 Because, you see, Inspector, I only finished decoding this message at the very moment that you knocked at my door!
3376.864 But—- There is no room for a ‘but,’ Inspector. This confidential message
3382.744 from Paris reached me ten minutes ago. You know as well as I know that there is no possibility of leakage. No one has entered my room in the
3390.664 interval, yet you tell me that Sergeant Sowerby communicated this information to you, by telephone, half an hour ago.
3397.92 Dunbar was tapping his teeth with the pencil. His amazement was too great for words.
3404.16 Had the message been a false one, continued the Commissioner, the matter would have been resolved into a meaningless hoax, but the
3411.32 message having been what it was, we find ourselves face to face with no ordinary problem. Remember, Inspector, that voices on the telephone
3420.08 are deceptive. Sergeant Sowerby has marked vocal mannerisms—- Which would be fairly easy to imitate? Yes, sir–that’s so.
3430.4 But it brings us no nearer to the real problems; viz., first, the sender of the message; and, second, his purpose.
3438.4 There was a dull purring sound and the Assistant Commissioner raised the telephone. Yes. Who is it that wishes to speak to him? Dr. Keppel Stuart?
3447.44 Connect with my office. He turned again to Dunbar. Dr. Stuart has a matter of the utmost urgency to communicate,
3455.08 Inspector. It was at the house of Dr. Stuart, I take it, that you received the unexplained message?
3461.28 It was–yes. Did you submit to Dr. Stuart the broken gold ornament?
3466.76 Yes. It’s a scorpion’s tail. Ah! The Assistant Commissioner smiled satanically and lighted a
3473.4 fresh cigarette. And is Dr. Stuart agreeable to placing his unusual knowledge at our disposal for the purposes of this case?
3481.12 He is, sir. The purring sound was repeated. You are through to Dr. Stuart, said the Assistant Commissioner.
3488.16 Hullo cried Dunbar, taking up the receiver–is that Dr. Stuart? Dunbar speaking.
3494.68 He stood silent for a while, listening to the voice over the wires. Then: You want me to come around now, doctor? Very well. I’ll be
3503.44 with you in less than half an hour. He put down the instrument. Something extraordinary seems to have taken place at Dr. Stuart’s
3511.0 house a few minutes after I left, sir, he said. I’m going back there, now, for particulars.
3517.416 It sounds as though the ‘phone message might have been intended to get me away. He stared down at the
3523.656 pencilled slip which the Assistant Commissioner had handed him, but stared vacantly, and: Do you mind if I call someone up, sir? he
3531.616 asked. It should be done at once. Call by all means, Inspector.
3537.056 Dunbar again took up the telephone. Battersea 0996, he said, and stood waiting. Then:
3545.776 Is that Battersea 0996? he asked. Is Dr. Stuart there? He is
3551.256 speaking? Oh, this is Inspector Dunbar. You called me up here at the Yard a few moments ago, did you not? Correct, doctor; that’s all I
3559.816 wanted to know. I am coming now. Good, said the Assistant Commissioner, nodding his approval. You
3566.096 will have to check ‘phone messages in that way until you have run your mimic to earth, Inspector. I don’t believe for a moment that it was
3573.016 Sergeant Sowerby who rang you up at Dr. Stuart’s. Neither do I, said Dunbar grimly. But I begin to have a glimmer of
3580.656 a notion who it was. I’ll be saying good night, sir. Dr. Stuart seems to have something very important to tell me.
3588.016 As a mere matter of form he waited for the report of the constable who had gone in quest of Sowerby, but it merely confirmed the fact that
3596.296 Sowerby had left Scotland Yard over three hours earlier. Dunbar summoned a taxicab and proceeded to the house of Dr. Stuart.
3604.016 Chapter 7. Contents Of The Sealed Envelope. Stuart personally admitted Dunbar, and once more the Inspector found
3612.456 himself in the armchair in the study. The fire was almost out and the room seemed to be chilly. Stuart was labouring under the influence of
3621.656 suppressed excitement and was pacing restlessly up and down the floor. Inspector, he began, I find it difficult to tell you the facts which
3630.096 have recently come to my knowledge bearing upon this most mysterious ‘Scorpion’ case.
3635.928 I clearly perceive, now, that without being aware of the fact I have nevertheless been concerned in the case for at least
3643.408 a week. Dunbar stared surprisedly, but offered no comment. A fortnight ago, Stuart continued, I found myself in the
3651.848 neighbourhood of the West India Docks. I had been spending the evening with a very old friend, chief officer of a liner in dock. I had
3659.728 intended to leave the ship at about ten o’clock and to walk to the railway station, but, as it fell out, the party did not break up until
3667.408 after midnight. Declining the offer of a berth on board, I came ashore
3672.488 determined to make my way home by tram and afoot. I should probably have done so and have been spared–much; but rain began to fall
3681.008 suddenly and I found myself, foolishly unprovided with a top coat, in those grey East End streets without hope of getting a lift.
3689.648 It was just as I was crossing Limehouse Causeway that I observed, to my astonishment, the head lamps of a cab or car shining out from a dark
3699.168 and forbidding thoroughfare which led down to the river. The sight was so utterly unexpected that I paused, looking through the rainy mist in
3707.928 the direction of the stationary vehicle. I was still unable to make out if it were a cab or a car, and accordingly I walked along to where
3716.128 it stood and found that it was a taxicab and apparently for hire. ‘Are you disengaged?’ I said to the man.
3723.728 ‘Well, sir, I suppose I am,’ was his curious reply. ‘Where do you want to go?’ I gave him this address and he drove me home. On arriving, so
3732.528 grateful did I feel that I took pity upon the man, for it had settled down into a brute of a night, and asked him to come in and take a
3739.968 glass of grog. He was only too glad to do so. He turned out to be quite an intelligent sort of fellow, and we chatted together for ten
3747.888 minutes or so. I had forgotten all about him when, I believe on the following night,
3754.024 he reappeared in the character of a patient. He had a badly damaged skull, and I gathered that he had had an accident with his cab and had
3762.944 been pitched out into the road. When I had fixed him up, he asked me to do him a small favour. From
3770.024 inside his tunic he pulled out a long stiff envelope, bearing no address but the number 30 in big red letters. It was secured at both
3779.144 ends with black wax bearing the imprint of a curious and complicated seal.
3785.224 ‘A gentleman left this behind in the cab today, sir,’ said the man–‘perhaps the one who was with me when I had the spill, and I’ve
3792.264 got no means of tracing him; but he may be able to trace me if he happened to notice my number, or he may advertise. It evidently
3800.344 contains something valuable.’ ‘Then why not take it to Scotland Yard?’ I asked. ‘Isn’t that the
3806.224 proper course?’ ‘It is,’ he admitted; ‘but here’s the point: if the owner reclaims it
3811.744 from Scotland Yard he’s less likely to dub up handsome than if he gets it direct from me!’
3817.544 I laughed at that, for the soundness of the argument was beyond dispute. ‘But what on earth do you want to leave it with me for?’
3825.024 I asked. ‘Self protection,’ was the reply. ‘They can’t say I meant to pinch
3830.784 it! Whereas, directly there’s any inquiry I can come and collect it and get the reward; and your word will back me up if any questions are
3839.064 asked; that’s if you don’t mind, sir.’ I told him I didn’t mind in the least, and accordingly I sealed the
3845.024 envelope in a yet larger one which I addressed to the Lost Property Office and put into a private drawer of my bureau. ‘You will have no
3852.424 objection,’ I said, ‘to this being posted if it isn’t reclaimed within a reasonable time?’
3857.664 He said that would be all right and departed–since which moment I have not set eyes upon him.
3863.64 I now come to the sequel, or what I have just recognized to be the sequel.
3869.32 Stuart’s agitation grew more marked and it was only by dint of a palpable effort that he forced himself to resume.
3876.84 On the evening of the following day a lady called professionally. She was young, pretty, and dressed with extraordinary elegance. My
3885.48 housekeeper admitted her, as I was out at the time but momentarily expected. She awaited my return here, in this room. She came again
3894.96 two days later. The name she gave was an odd one: Mademoiselle Dorian.
3900.36 There is her card,–Stuart opened a drawer and laid a visiting card before Dunbar–no initials and no address. She travelled in a large
3908.92 and handsome car. That is to say, according to my housekeeper’s account it is a large and handsome car. I personally, have had but an
3917.64 imperfect glimpse of it. It does not await her in front of the house, for some reason, but just around the corner in the side turning.
3925.48 Beyond wondering why Mademoiselle Dorian had selected me as her medical advisor I had detected nothing suspicious in her behaviour up
3933.64 to the time of which I am about to speak. Last night there was a singular development, and to night matters
3939.68 came to a head. Thereupon Stuart related as briefly as possible the mysterious episode
3945.6 of the cowled man, and finally gave an account of the last visit of Mlle. Dorian. Inspector Dunbar did not interrupt him, but listened
3954.96 attentively to the singular story. And there, concluded Stuart, on the blotting pad, lies the sealed
3962.48 envelope! Dunbar took it up eagerly. A small hole had been burned in one end of
3968.8 the envelope and much of the surrounding paper was charred. The wax with which Stuart had sealed it had lain uppermost, and although it
3976.88 had been partly melted, the mark of his signet ring was still discernible upon it. Dunbar stood staring at it.
3984.648 In the circumstances, Inspector, I think you would be justified in opening both envelopes, said Stuart.
3992.688 I am inclined to agree. But let me just be clear on one or two points. He took out the bulging note book and also a fountain pen
4001.888 with which he prepared to make entries. About this cabman, now. You didn’t by any chance note the number of his cab?
4009.688 I did not. What build of man was he? Over medium height and muscular. Somewhat inclined to flesh and past
4017.168 his youth, but active all the same. Dark or fair? Dark and streaked with grey. I noted this particularly in dressing
4025.568 his skull. He wore his hair cropped close to the scalp. He had a short beard and moustache and heavily marked eyebrows. He seemed to be very
4034.048 short sighted and kept his eyes so screwed up that it was impossible to detect their colour, by night at any rate.
4041.488 What sort of wound had he on his skull? A short ugly gash. He had caught his head on the footboard in falling.
4049.408 I may add that on the occasion of his professional visit his breath smelled strongly of spirits, and I rather suspected that his accident
4057.448 might have been traceable to his condition. But he wasn’t actually drunk? By no means. He was perfectly sober, but he had recently been
4065.888 drinking–possibly because his fall had shaken him, of course. His hands? Small and very muscular. Quite steady. Also very dirty.
4074.528 What part of the country should you say he hailed from? London. He had a marked cockney accent.
4080.688 What make of cab was it? I couldn’t say. An old cab? Yes. The fittings were dilapidated, I remember, and the cab had a
4088.928 very musty smell. Ah, said Dunbar, making several notes. And now–the lady: about
4095.648 what would be her age? Difficult to say, Inspector. She had Eastern blood and may have been
4101.568 much younger than she appeared to be. Judged from a European standpoint
4107.224 and from her appearance and manner of dress, she might be about twenty three or twenty four.
4113.704 Complexion? Wonderful. Fresh as a flower. Eyes? Dark. They looked black at night.
4121.664 Hair? Brown and ‘fuzzy’ with copper tints. Tall? No; slight but beautifully shaped.
4128.864 Now–from her accent what should you judge her nationality to be?
4133.944 Stuart paced up and down the room, his head lowered in reflection, then: She pronounced both English and French words with an intonation which
4142.624 suggested familiarity with Arabic. Arabic? That still leaves a fairly wide field.
4149.024 It does, Inspector, but I had no means of learning more. She had certainly lived for a long time somewhere in the Near East.
4156.824 Her jewellery? Some of it was European and some of it Oriental, but not characteristic of any particular country of the Orient.
4165.064 Did she use perfume? Yes, but it was scarcely discernible. Jasmine–probably the Eastern
4171.584 preparation. Her ailment was imaginary? I fear so. H’m–and now you say that Mrs. M’Gregor saw the car?
4180.144 Yes, but she has retired. Her evidence will do to morrow. We come to the man in the hood. Can
4186.424 you give me any kind of a description of him? He appeared to be tall, but a shadow is deceptive, and his
4192.904 extraordinary costume would produce that effect, too. I can tell you absolutely nothing further about him. Remember, I thought I was
4201.384 dreaming. I could not credit my senses. Inspector Dunbar glanced over the notes which he had made, then
4209.024 returning the note book and pen to his pocket, he took up the long smoke discoloured envelope and with a paper knife which lay upon the
4216.384 table slit one end open. Inserting two fingers, he drew out the second
4221.504 envelope which the first enclosed. It was an ordinary commercial envelope only notable by reason of the number, 30, appearing in large
4231.816 red figures upon it and because it was sealed with black wax bearing a weird looking device:
4238.376 Stuart bent over him intently as he slit this envelope in turn. Again, he inserted two fingers–and brought forth the sole contents… a
4248.016 plain piece of cardboard, roughly rectangular and obviously cut in haste from the lid of a common cardboard box!
4255.016 Chapter 8. The Assistant Commissioner’s Theory. On the following morning Inspector Dunbar, having questioned Mrs.
4262.056 M’Gregor respecting the car in which Mlle. Dorian had visited the house and having elicited no other evidence than that it was a fine
4269.776 luxurious concern, the Inspector and Dr. Stuart prepared to set out upon gruesome business. Mrs. M’Gregor was very favourably impressed
4278.896 with the Inspector. A grand, pairsonable body, she confided to Stuart. He’d look bonny in the kilt.
4285.736 To an East End mortuary the cab bore them, and they were led by a constable in attendance to a stone paved, ill lighted apartment in
4293.936 which a swathed form lay upon a long deal table. The spectacle presented, when the covering was removed, was one to have shocked
4302.016 less hardened nerves than those of Stuart and Dunbar; but the duties of a police officer, like those of a medical man, not infrequently
4310.216 necessitate such inspections. The two bent over the tragic flotsam of the Thames unmoved and critical.
4317.496 H’m, said Stuart–he’s about the build, certainly. Hair iron grey and close cropped and he seems to have worn a beard. Now, let us see.
4325.536 He bent, making a close inspection of the skull; then turned and shook his head.
4330.616 No, Inspector, he said definitely. This is not the cabman. There is
4335.936 no wound corresponding to the one which I dressed. Right, answered Dunbar, covering up the ghastly face. That’s
4344.536 settled. You were wrong, Inspector. It was not Gaston Max who left the envelope with me.
4350.616 No, mused Dunbar, so it seems. Your theory that Max, jealously working alone, had left particulars
4357.816 of his inquiries, and clues, in my hands, knowing that they would reach Scotland Yard in the event of his death, surely collapsed when
4365.576 the envelope proved to contain nothing but a bit of cardboard? Yes–I suppose it did. But it sounded so much like Max’s round about
4373.536 methods. Anyway I wanted to make sure that the dead man from Hanover Hole and your mysterious cabman were not one and the same.
4381.336 Stuart entertained a lively suspicion that Inspector Dunbar was keeping something up his sleeve, but with this very proper reticence he had no
4389.656 quarrel, and followed by the constable, who relocked the mortuary behind them, they came out into the yard where the cab waited which
4397.496 was to take them to Scotland Yard. Dunbar, standing with one foot upon the step of the cab, turned to the constable.
4404.376 Has anyone else viewed the body? he asked. No sir. No one is to be allowed to do so–you understand?–no one, unless
4412.176 he has written permission from the Commissioner. Very good, sir. Half an hour later they arrived at New Scotland Yard and went up to
4419.336 Dunbar’s room. A thick set, florid man of genial appearance, having a
4424.656 dark moustache, a breezy manner and a head of hair resembling a very hard worked blacking brush, awaited them. This was Detective Sargeant
4434.336 Sowerby with whom Stuart was already acquainted. Good morning, Sergeant Sowerby, he said.
4440.576 Good morning, sir. I hear that someone was pulling your leg last night. What do you mean exactly, Sowerby? inquired Dunbar, fixing his
4449.336 fierce eyes upon his subordinate. Sergeant Sowerby exhibited confusion.
4455.496 I mean nothing offensive, Inspector. I was referring to the joker who gave so good an imitation of my voice that even
4463.792 you were deceived. Ah, replied Dunbar–I see. Yes–he did it well. He spoke just like
4471.192 you. I could hardly make out a word he said. With this Caledonian shaft and a side glance at Stuart, Inspector
4478.752 Dunbar sat down at the table. Here’s Dr. Stuart’s description of the missing cabman, he continued,
4485.232 taking out his note book. Dr. Stuart has viewed the body and it is not the man. You had better take a proper copy of this.
4493.232 Then the cabman wasn’t Max? cried Sowerby eagerly. I thought not. I believe you told me so before, said Dunbar sourly. I also seem to
4502.952 recall that you thought a scorpion’s tail was a Prickly Pear. However–here, on the page numbered twenty six, is a description of
4511.272 the woman known as Mlle. Dorian. It should be a fairly easy matter to trace the car through the usual channels, and she ought to be easy to
4519.632 find, too. He glanced at his watch. Stuart was standing by the lofty window
4525.352 looking out across the Embankment. Ten o’clock, said Dunbar. The Commissioner will be expecting us.
4532.152 I am ready, responded Stuart. Leaving Sergeant Sowerby seated at the table studying the note book,
4538.432 Stuart and Dunbar proceeded to the smoke laden room of the Assistant Commissioner. The great man, suavely satanic, greeted Stuart with
4546.712 that polished courtesy for which he was notable. You have been of inestimable assistance to us in the past, Dr.
4553.472 Stuart, he said, and I feel happy to know that we are to enjoy the aid of your special knowledge in the present case. Will you smoke one
4561.392 of my cigarettes? They are some which a friend is kind enough to supply to me direct from Cairo, and are really quite good.
4568.912 Thanks, replied Stuart. May I ask in what direction my services are likely to prove available?
4575.032 The Commissioner lighted a fresh cigarette. Then from a heap of correspondence he selected a long report typed upon blue foolscap.
4583.944 I have here, he said, confirmation of the telegraphic report received last night. The name of M. Gaston Max will no doubt be
4592.184 familiar to you? Stuart nodded. Well, continued the Commissioner, it appears that he has been
4598.304 engaged in England for the past month endeavouring to trace the connection which he claims to exist between the sudden deaths of
4605.384 various notable people, recently–a list is appended–and some person
4611.144 or organisation represented by, or associated with, a scorpion. His
4617.144 personal theory not being available–poor fellow, you have heard of his tragic death–I have this morning consulted such particulars as
4625.784 I could obtain respecting these cases. If they were really cases of assassination, some obscure poison was the only mode of death that
4634.024 could possibly have been employed. Do you follow me? Perfectly.
4639.104 Now, the death of Gaston Max under circumstances not yet explained, would seem to indicate that his theory was a sound one. In other
4647.704 words, I am disposed to believe that he himself represents the most recent outrage of what we will call ‘The Scorpion.’ Even at the time
4656.864 that the body of the man found by the River Police had not been identified, the presence upon his person of a fragment of gold
4663.784 strongly resembling the tail of a scorpion prompted me to instruct Inspector Dunbar to consult you. I had determined upon a certain
4672.464 course. The identification of the dead man with Gaston Max merely strengthens my determination and enhances the likelihood of my idea
4681.784 being a sound one. He flicked the ash from his cigarette and resumed: Without mentioning names, the experts consulted in the other cases
4690.424 which–according to the late Gaston Max–were victims of ‘The Scorpion,’ do not seem to have justified their titles.
4697.448 I am arranging that you shall be present at the autopsy upon the body of Gaston Max.
4703.168 And now, permit me to ask you a question: are you acquainted with any poison which would produce the symptoms noted in the case of Sir Frank
4711.288 Narcombe, for instance? Stuart shook his head slowly. All that I know of the case, he said, is that he was taken suddenly
4719.208 ill in the foyer of a West End theatre, immediately removed to his house in Half Moon Street, and died shortly afterward. Can you give me
4728.168 copies of the specialists’ reports and other particulars? I may then be able to form an opinion.
4734.368 I will get them for you, replied the Commissioner, the exact nature of whose theory was by no means evident to Stuart. He opened a drawer.
4742.928 I have here, he continued, the piece of cardboard and the envelope left with you by the missing cab man. Do you think there is any
4749.768 possibility of invisible writing? None, said Stuart confidently. I have tested in three or four
4756.408 places as you will see by the spots, but my experiments will in no way interfere with those which no doubt your own people will want to make.
4765.368 I have also submitted both surfaces to a microscopic examination. I am
4770.448 prepared to state definitely that there is no writing upon the cardboard, and except for the number, 30, none upon the envelope.
4778.848 It is only reasonable to suppose, continued the Commissioner, that the telephone message which led Inspector Dunbar to leave your house
4786.328 last night was originated by that unseen intelligence against which we
4791.368 find ourselves pitted. In the first place, no one in London, myself and, presumably, ‘The Scorpion’ excepted, knew at that time that M.
4800.128 Gaston Max was in England or that M. Gaston Max was dead. I say,
4805.368 presumably ‘The Scorpion’ because it is fair to assume that the person whom Max pursued was responsible for his death.
4812.576 Of course–the Commissioner reached for the box of cigarettes–were it not for the telephone message, we should be unjustified in assuming
4820.856 that Mlle. Dorian and this–he laid his finger upon the piece of cardboard–had any connection with the case of M. Max. But the
4829.016 message was so obviously designed to facilitate the purloining of the sealed envelope and so obviously emanated from one already aware of
4837.616 the murder of M. Max, that the sender is identified at once with– ‘The Scorpion.’
4843.016 The Assistant Commissioner complacently lighted a fresh cigarette. Finally, he said, the mode of death in the case of M. Max may not
4851.696 have been the same as in the other cases. Therefore, Dr. Stuart–he paused impressively–if you fail to detect anything suspicious at the
4859.936 post mortem examination I propose to apply to the Home Secretary for power to exhume the body of the late Sir Frank Narcombe!
4867.216 Deep in reflection, Stuart walked alone along the Embankment. The full facts contained in the report from Paris the Commissioner had not
4874.696 divulged, but Stuart concluded that this sudden activity was directly due, not to the death of M. Max, but to the fact that he Max had
4883.736 left behind him some more or less tangible clue. Stuart fully recognized that the Commissioner had accorded him an opportunity to
4891.816 establish his reputation–or to wreck it. Yet, upon closer consideration, it became apparent that it was to
4899.096 Fate and not to the Commissioner that he was indebted. Strictly speaking, his association with the matter dated from the night of
4906.256 his meeting with the mysterious cabman in West India Dock road. Or had
4911.424 the curtain first been lifted upon this occult drama that evening, five years ago, as the setting sun reddened the waters of the Imperial
4920.104 Canal and a veiled figure passed him on the Wu Men Bridge? Shut your eyes tightly, master–the Scorpion is coming!
4928.784 He seemed to hear the boy’s words now, as he passed along the Embankment; he seemed to see again the tall figure. And suddenly he
4936.784 stopped, stood still and stared with unseeing eyes across the muddy waters of the Thames. He was thinking of the cowled man who had stood
4945.504 behind the curtains in his study–of that figure so wildly bizarre that even now he could scarcely believe that he had ever actually seen
4953.544 it. He walked on. Automatically his reflections led him to Mlle. Dorian, and he
4959.704 remembered that even as he paced along there beside the river the wonderful mechanism of New Scotland Yard was in motion, its many
4967.664 tentacles seeking–seeking tirelessly–for the girl, whose dark eyes
4973.424 haunted his sleeping and waking hours. He was responsible, and if she were arrested he would be called upon to identify her. He
4982.184 condemned himself bitterly. After all, what crime had she committed? She had tried to purloin a
4988.384 letter–which did not belong to Stuart in the first place. And she had failed. Now–the police were looking for her. His reflections took a
4997.504 new form. What of Gaston Max, foremost criminologist in Europe, who now lay dead
5002.824 and mutilated in an East End mortuary? The telephone message which had summoned Dunbar away had been too opportune to be regarded as a mere
5011.384 coincidence. Mlle. Dorian was, therefore, an accomplice of a murderer.
5017.064 Stuart sighed. He would have given much–more than he was prepared to admit to himself–to have known her to be guiltless.
5024.664 The identity of the missing cabman now engaged his mind. It was quite
5029.856 possible, of course, that the man had actually found the envelope in his cab and was in no other way concerned in the matter. But how had
5039.296 Mlle. Dorian, or the person instructing her, traced the envelope to his study? And why, if they could establish a claim to it, had they
5048.056 preferred to attempt to steal it? Finally, why all this disturbance
5053.736 about a blank piece of cardboard? A mental picture of the envelope arose before him, the number, 30,
5062.056 written upon it and the two black seals securing the lapels. He paused
5067.536 again in his walk. His reflections had led him to a second definite point and he fumbled in his waistcoat pocket for a time, seeking a
5075.936 certain brass coin about the size of a halfpenny, having a square hole
5081.296 in the middle and peculiar characters engraved around the square, one on each of the four sides.
5087.976 He failed to find the coin in his pocket, however, but he walked briskly up a side street until he came to the entrance to a tube
5094.896 station. Entering a public telephone call box, he asked for the number, City 400. Being put through and having deposited the necessary
5103.576 fee in the box: Is that the Commissioner’s Office, New Scotland Yard? he asked. Yes! My name is Dr. Keppel Stuart. If Inspector Dunbar is there,
5113.216 would you kindly allow me to speak to him. There was a short interval, then: Hullo! came–is that Dr. Stuart?
5120.496 Yes. That you, Inspector? I have just remembered something which I should have observed in the first place if I had been really wide awake.
5128.536 The envelope–you know the one I mean?–the one bearing the number, 30, has been sealed with a Chinese coin, known as cash. I have just
5136.936 recognized the fact and thought it wise to let you know at once. Are you sure? asked Dunbar.
5143.136 Certain. If you care to call at my place later to day I can show you some cash.
5148.624 Bring the envelope with you and you will see that the coins correspond to the impression in the wax. The inscriptions vary
5157.544 in different provinces, but the form of all cash is the same. Very good. Thanks for letting me know at once. It seems to establish
5166.064 a link with China, don’t you think? It does, but it merely adds to the mystery. Coming out of the call box, Stuart proceeded home, but made one or
5175.064 two professional visits before he actually returned to the house. He now remembered having left his particular cash piece which he
5182.264 usually carried in his dispensary, which satisfactorily accounted for his failure to find the coin in his waistcoat pocket. He had
5190.464 broken the cork of a flask, and in the absence of another of correct size had manufactured a temporary stopper with a small cork to the top
5198.784 of which he had fixed the Chinese coin with a drawing pin. His purpose served he had left the extemporised stopper lying somewhere in the
5206.624 dispensary. Stuart’s dispensary was merely a curtained recess at one end of the
5211.904 waiting room and shortly after entering the house he had occasion to visit it. Lying upon a shelf among flasks and bottles was the Chinese
5221.504 coin with the cork still attached. He took it up in order to study the inscription. Then:
5227.984 Have I cultivated somnambulism! he muttered. Fragments of black sealing wax adhered to the coin!
5235.424 Incredulous and half fearful he peered at it closely. He remembered that the impression upon the wax sealing the mysterious envelope had
5243.504 had a circular depression in the centre. It had been made by the head of the drawing pin!
5248.864 He found himself staring at the shelf immediately above that upon which the coin had lain.
5255.184 A stick of black sealing wax used for sealing medicine was thrust in beside a bundle of long envelopes in which he
5264.104 was accustomed to post his Infirmary reports! One hand raised to his head, Stuart stood endeavouring to marshal his
5271.504 ideas into some sane order. Then, knowing what he should find, he raised the green baize curtain hanging from the lower shelf, which
5280.384 concealed a sort of cupboard containing miscellaneous stores and not a little rubbish, including a number of empty cardboard boxes.
5289.784 A rectangular strip had been roughly cut from the lid of the topmost box! The mysterious envelope and its contents, the wax and the seal–all
5298.144 had come from his own dispensary! Chapter 9. The Chinese Coin.
5305.024 Deep in reflection, Stuart walked alone along the Embankment. The full facts contained in the report form Paris the Commissioner had not
5313.464 divulged, but Stuart concluded that this sudden activity was directly due, not to the death of M. Max, but to the fact that he Max had
5321.944 left behind him some more or less tangible clue. Stuart fully recognized that the Commissioner had accorded him an opportunity to
5329.744 establish his reputation–or to wreck it. Yet, upon closer consideration, it became apparent that it was to Fate
5337.344 and not to the Commissioner that he was indebted. Strictly speaking, his association with the matter dated from the night of his meeting
5344.624 with the mysterious cabman in West India Dock Road. Or had the curtain first been lifted upon this occult drama that evening, five
5353.384 years ago, as the setting sun reddened the waters of the Imperial Canal and a veiled figure passed him on the Wu Men Bridge?
5361.944 Shut your eyes tightly, master–the Scorpion is coming! He seemed to hear the boy’s words now, as he passed along the
5370.584 Embankment; he seemed to see again the tall figure. And suddenly he stopped, stood still and stared with unseeing eyes across the muddy
5379.688 waters of the Thames. He was thinking of the cowled man who had stood behind the curtains in his study–of that figure so wildly bizarre
5389.088 that even now he could scarcely believe that he had ever actually seen it. He walked on.
5394.448 Automatically his reflections led him to Mlle. Dorian, and he remembered that even as he paced along there beside the river the
5401.728 wonderful mechanism of New Scotland Yard was in motion, its many tentacles seeking–seeking tirelessly–for the girl, whose dark eyes
5411.568 haunted his sleeping and waking hours. He was responsible, and if she were arrested he would be called upon to identify her. He
5419.368 condemned himself bitterly. After all, what crime had she committed? She had tried to purloin a
5425.568 letter–which did not belong to Stuart in the first place. And she had failed. Now–the police were looking for her. His reflections took a
5435.088 new form. What of Gaston Max, foremost criminologist in Europe, who now lay dead
5440.808 and mutilated in an East End mortuary? The telephone message which had summoned Dunbar away had been too opportune to be regarded as a mere
5449.168 coincidence. Mlle. Dorian was, therefore, an accomplice of a murderer. Stuart sighed. He would have given much–more than he was prepared to
5457.968 admit to himself–to have known her to be guiltless. The identity of the missing cabman now engaged his mind. It was quite
5466.408 possible, of course, that the man had actually found the envelope in his cab and was in no other way concerned in the matter. But how had
5475.168 Mlle. Dorian, or the person instructing her, traced the envelope to his study? And why, if they could establish a claim to it, had they
5485.448 preferred to attempt to steal it? Finally, why all this disturbance
5491.528 about a blank pieced of cardboard? A mental picture of the envelope arose before him, the number, 30,
5499.088 written upon it and the two black seals securing the lapels. He paused
5504.808 again in his walk. His reflections had led him to a second definite point and he fumbled in his waistcoat pocket for a time, seeking a
5512.448 certain brass coin about the size of a halfpenny, having a square hole in the middle and peculiar characters engraved around the
5519.768 square, one on each of the four sides. He failed to find the coin in his pocket, however, but he walked
5526.528 briskly up a side street until he came to the entrance to a tube station. Entering a public telephone call box, he asked for the
5533.928 number, City 400. Being put through and having deposited the necessary
5539.008 fee in the box: Is that the Commissioner’s Office, New Scotland Yard? he asked.
5544.528 Yes! My name is Dr. Keppel Stuart. If Inspector Dunbar is there,
5549.768 would you kindly allow me to speak to him. There was a short interval, then: Hullo! came–is that Dr. Stuart?
5556.728 Yes. That you, Inspector? I have just remembered something which I should have observed in the first place if I had been really wide awake.
5564.648 The envelope–you know the one I mean?–the one bearing the number, 30, has been sealed with a Chinese coin, known as cash. I have just
5573.528 recognized the fact and thought it wise to let you know at once. Are you sure? asked Dunbar.
5579.648 Certain. If you care to call at my place later to day I can show you some cash. Bring the envelope with you and you will see that the
5587.128 coins correspond to the impression in the wax. The inscriptions vary in different provinces, but the form of all cash is the same.
5594.928 Very good. Thanks for letting me know at once. It seems to establish a link with China, don’t you think?
5602.248 It does, but it merely adds to the mystery. Coming out of the call box, Stuart proceeded home, but made one or two
5609.488 professional visits before he actually returned to the house. He now remembered having left this particular cash piece which he usually
5617.168 carried in his dispensary, which satisfactorily accounted fro his failure to find the coin in his waistcoat pocket. He had broken the
5625.768 cork of a flask, and in the absence of another of correct size had manufactured a temporary stopper with a small cork to the top of which
5634.568 he had fixed the Chinese coin with a drawing pin. His purpose served he had left the extemporized stopper somewhere in the dispensary.
5642.768 Stuart’s dispensary was merely a curtained recess at one end of the waiting room and shortly after entering the house he had occasion to
5650.368 visit it. Lying upon a shelf among flasks and bottles was the Chinese
5655.688 coin with the cork still attached. He took it up in order to study the inscription. Then:
5662.048 Have I cultivated somnambulism! he muttered. Fragments of black sealing wax adhered to the coin!
5669.088 Incredulous and half fearful he peered at it closely. He remembered that the impression upon the wax sealing the mysterious envelope had
5677.128 had a circular depression in the centre. It had been made by the head of the drawing pin!
5683.448 He found himself at the shelf immediately above that upon which the coin had lain. A stick of black sealing wax used for sealing medicine
5692.208 was thrust in beside a bundle of long envelopes in which he was accustomed to post his Infirmary reports!
5699.208 One hand raised to his head, Stuart stood endeavouring to marshal his ideas into some sane order.
5705.52 Then, knowing what he should find, he raised the green baize curtain hanging from the lower shelf, which
5712.72 concealed a sort of cupboard containing miscellaneous stores and not a little rubbish, including a number of empty cardboard boxes.
5721.08 A rectangular strip had been roughly cut from the lid of the topmost box! The mysterious envelope and its contents, the wax and the seal–all
5730.12 had come from his own dispensary! Chapter 10. Close Your Shutters At Night.
5735.56 Inspector Dunbar stood in the little dispensary tapping his teeth with the end of a fountain pen.
5741.2 The last time he visited you, doctor–the time when he gave you the envelope–did the cabman wait here in the waiting room?
5748.92 He did–yes. He came after my ordinary consulting hours and I was at
5754.12 supper, I remember, as I am compelled to dine early. He would be in here alone?
5760.44 Yes. No one else was in the room. Would he have had time to find the box, cut out the piece of
5766.28 cardboard from the lid, put it in the envelope and seal it? Ample time. But what could be his object? And why mark the envelope
5775.28 30? It was in your consulting room that he asked you to take charge of the envelope?
5780.64 Yes. Might I take a peep at the consulting room? Certainly, Inspector.
5786.32 From the waiting room they went up a short flight of stairs into the small apartment in which Stuart saw his patients. Dunbar looked slowly
5794.56 about him, standing in the middle of the room, then crossed and stared out of the window into the narrow lane below.
5801.56 Where were you when he gave you the envelope? he snapped suddenly. At the table, replied Stuart with surprise.
5808.44 Was the table lamp alight? Yes. I always light it when seeing patients. Did you take the letter into the study to seal it in the other
5816.8 envelope? I did, and he came along and witnessed me do it. Ah, said Dunbar, and scribbled busily in his note book.
5824.152 We are badly tied at Scotland Yard, doctor, and this case looks like being
5829.672 another for which somebody else will reap the credit. I am going to make a request that will surprise you.
5835.872 He tore a leaf out of the book and folded it carefully. I am going to ask you to seal up something and lock it away! But I
5843.312 don’t think you’ll be troubled by cowled burglars or beautiful women because of it. On this piece of paper I have written–a–he ticked
5852.192 off the points on his fingers: what I believe to be the name of the man who cut out the cardboard and sealed it in an envelope; b: the
5860.352 name of the cabman; and, c: the name of the man who rang me up here last night and gave me information which had only just reached the
5869.112 Commissioner. I’ll ask you to lock it away until it’s wanted, doctor. Certainly, if you wish it, replied Stuart. Come into the study and
5877.312 you shall see me do as you direct. I may add that the object to be served is not apparent to me.
5883.312 Entering the study, he took an envelope, enclosed the piece of paper, sealed the lapel and locked the envelope in the same drawer of the
5890.952 bureau which once had contained that marked 30. Mlle. Dorian has a duplicate key to this drawer. he said. Are you
5899.352 prepared to take the chance? Quite, replied Dunbar, smiling; although my information is worth
5905.672 more than that which she risked so much to steal. It’s most astounding. At every step the darkness increases. Why
5913.512 should anyone have asked me to lock up a blank piece of cardboard? Why, indeed, murmured Dunbar. Well, I may as well get back. I am
5921.312 expecting a report from Sowerby. Look after yourself, sir. I’m inclined to think your pretty patient was talking square when she told
5929.752 you there might be danger. Stuart met the glance of the tawny eyes. What d’you mean, Inspector? Why should I be in danger?
5938.568 Because, replied Inspector Dunbar, if ‘The Scorpion’ is a poisoner, as the chief seems to think, there’s really only one man in England he
5947.728 has to fear, and that man is Dr. Keppel Stuart. When the Inspector had taken his departure Stuart stood for a long
5955.088 time staring out of the study window at the little lawn with its bordering of high neatly trimmed privet above which at intervals
5963.968 arose the mop crowns of dwarf acacias. A spell of warm weather seemed
5969.608 at last to have begun, and clouds of gnats floated over the grass, their minute wings glittering in the sunshine. Despite the nearness of
5979.048 teeming streets, this was a backwater of London’s stream. He sighed and returned to some work which the visit of the Scotland
5987.488 Yard man had interrupted. Later in the afternoon he had occasion to visit the institution to
5994.048 which he had recently been appointed as medical officer, and in contemplation of the squalor through which his steps led him he sought
6002.648 forgetfulness of the Scorpion problem–and of the dark eyes of Mlle.
6007.688 Dorian. He was not entirely successful, and returning by a different
6013.208 route he lost himself in memories which were sweetly mournful. A taxicab passed him, moving slowly very close to the pavement. He
6022.208 scarcely noted it until it had proceeded some distance ahead of him. Then its slow progress so near to the pavement at last attracted his
6030.368 attention, and he stared vacantly towards the closed vehicle. Mlle. Dorian was leaning out of the window and looking back at him!
6038.488 Stuart’s heart leapt high. For an instant he paused, then began to walk rapidly after the retreating vehicle. Perceiving that she had
6046.608 attracted his attention, the girl extended a white gloved hand from the window and dropped a note upon the edge of the pavement.
6053.688 Immediately she withdrew into the vehicle–which moved away at accelerated speed, swung around the next corner and was gone.
6062.728 Stuart ran forward and picked up the note. Without pausing to read it, he pressed on to the corner. The cab was already two hundred yards
6070.328 away, and he recognized pursuit to be out of the question. The streets were almost deserted at the moment, and no one apparently had
6077.528 witnessed the episode. He unfolded the sheet of plain note paper, faintly perfumed with jasmine, and read the following, written in an
6085.808 uneven feminine hand: Close your shutters at night. Do not think too bad of me.
6091.408 Chapter 11. The Blue Ray. Dusk found Stuart in a singular frame of mind. He was torn between
6098.168 duty–or what he conceived to be his duty–to the community, and … something else. A messenger from New Scotland Yard had brought him a
6106.208 bundle of documents relating to the case of Sir Frank Narcombe, and a smaller packet touching upon the sudden end of Henrik Ericksen, the
6113.888 Norwegian electrician, and the equally unexpected death of the Grand Duke Ivan. There were medical certificates, proceedings of coroners,
6123.048 reports of detectives, evidence of specialists and statements of friends, relatives and servants of the deceased. A proper examination
6132.168 of all the documents represented many hours of close study. Stuart was flattered by the opinion held of his ability by the
6139.768 Assistant Commissioner, but dubious of his chance of detecting any flaw in the evidence which had escaped the scrutiny of so many highly
6148.248 trained observers. He paced the study restlessly. Although more than six hours had
6153.448 elapsed, he had not communicated to Scotland Yard the fact of his having seen Mlle. Dorian that afternoon.
6160.392 A hundred times he had read the message, although he knew it by heart, knew the form of every
6166.912 letter, the odd crossing of the t’s and the splashy dotting of the i’s.
6172.032 If only he could have taken counsel with someone–with someone not bound to act upon such information–it would have relieved his mental
6180.432 stress. His ideas were so chaotic that he felt himself to be incapable of approaching the task presented by the pile of papers lying upon his
6189.712 table. The night was pleasantly warm and the sky cloudless. Often enough he
6194.992 found himself glancing toward the opened French windows, and once he had peered closely across into the belt of shadow below the hedge,
6203.112 thinking that he had detected something which moved there. Stepping to the window, the slinking shape had emerged into the moonlight–and
6210.472 had proclaimed itself to be that of a black cat! Yet he had been sorely tempted to act upon the advice so strangely
6216.872 offered. He refrained from doing so, however, reflecting that to spend his evenings with closed and barred shutters now that a spell of hot
6225.632 weather seemed to be imminent would be insufferable. Up and down the room he paced tirelessly, always confronted by the eternal problem.
6234.832 Forcing himself at last to begin work if only as a sedative, he filled
6239.912 and lighted his pipe, turned off the centre lamp and lighted the reading lamp upon his table. He sat down to consider the papers
6247.512 bearing upon the death of Eriksen. For half an hour he read on steadily and made a number of pencil notes. Then he desisted and sat
6255.232 staring straight before him. What possible motive could there be in assassinating these people? The
6261.272 case of the Grand Duke might be susceptible of explanation, but those of Henrik Ericksen and Sir Frank Narcombe were not.
6268.464 Furthermore he could perceive no links connecting the three, and no reason why they
6273.784 should have engaged the attention of a common enemy. Such crimes would seem to be purposeless. Assuming that The Scorpion was an individual,
6283.544 that individual apparently was a dangerous homicidal maniac. But, throughout the documents, he could discover no clue pointing to
6291.584 the existence of such an entity. The Scorpion might be an invention of the fertile brain of M. Gaston Max; for it had become more and more
6301.544 evident, as he had read, that the attempt to trace these deaths to an identical source had originated at the Service de Surete, and it was
6309.584 from Paris that the name The Scorpion had come. The fate of Max was significant, of course. The chances of his death proving to have been
6317.224 due to accident were almost negligible and the fact that a fragment of a golden scorpion had actually been found upon his body was certainly
6325.224 curious. Close your shutters at night…. How the words haunted him and how hotly he despised himself for a
6332.504 growing apprehension which refused to be ignored. It was more mental than physical, this dread which grew with the approach of midnight,
6341.504 and it resembled that which had robbed him of individuality and all but stricken him inert when he had seen upon the moon bright screen of
6349.224 the curtains the shadow of a cowled man. Dark forces seemed to be stirring, and some unseen menace crept near
6356.624 to him out of the darkness. The house was of early Victorian fashion and massive folding shutters
6362.664 were provided to close the French windows. He never used them, as a matter of fact, but now he tested the fastenings which kept them in
6370.144 place against the inner wall and even moved them in order to learn if they were still serviceable.
6375.768 Of all the mysteries which baffled him, that of the piece of cardboard in the envelope sealed with a Chinese coin was the most
6384.568 irritating. It seemed like the purposeless trick of a child, yet it had led to the presence of the cowled man–and to the presence of
6393.408 Mlle. Dorian. Why? He sat down at his table again.
6398.568 Expletive the whole business! he said. It is sending me crazy. Selecting from the heap of documents a large sheet of note paper
6407.568 bearing a blue diagram of a human bust, marked with figures and marginal notes, he began to read the report to which it was
6415.568 appended–that of Dr. Halesowen. It stated that the late Sir Frank Narcombe had a horizontal heart, slightly misplaced and dilatated,
6425.048 with other details which really threw no light whatever upon the cause of his death. I have a horizontal heart, growled Stuart–and considering my
6433.928 consumption of tobacco it is certainly dilatated. But I don’t expect to drop dead in a theatre nevertheless.
6441.288 He read on, striving to escape from that shadowy apprehension, but as he read he was listening to the night sounds of London, to the
6449.488 whirring of distant motors, the whistling of engines upon the railway and dim hooting of sirens from the Thames. A slight breeze had arisen
6459.088 and it rustled in the feathery foliage of the acacias and made a whispering sound as it stirred the leaves of the privet hedge.
6467.088 The drone of an approaching car reached his ears. Pencil in hand, he sat listening. The sound grew louder, then ceased. Either the car
6475.968 had passed or had stopped somewhere near the house. Came a rap on the door. Yes, called Stuart and stood up, conscious of excitement.
6484.168 Mrs. M’Gregor came in. There is nothing further you’ll be wanting to night? she asked.
6490.208 No, said Stuart, strangely disappointed, but smiling at the old lady cheerfully. I shall turn in very shortly.
6497.808 A keen east wind has arisen, she continued, severely eyeing the
6503.168 opened windows, and even for a medical man you are strangely imprudent. Shall I shut the windows?
6509.128 No, don’t trouble, Mrs. M’Gregor. The room gets very stuffy with tobacco smoke, and really it is quite a warm night. I shall close
6517.488 them before I retire, of course. Ah well, sighed Mrs. M’Gregor, preparing to depart. Good night,
6524.808 Mr. Keppel. Good night, Mrs. M’Gregor. She retired, and Stuart sat staring out into the darkness. He was
6533.288 not prone to superstition, but it seemed like tempting providence to remain there with the windows open any longer. Yet paradoxically, he
6542.208 lacked the moral courage to close them–to admit to himself that he was afraid! The telephone bell rang, and he started back in his chair as though
6550.608 to avoid a blow. By doing so he avoided destruction. At the very instant that the bell rang out sharply in the silence–so
6559.008 exact is the time table of Kismet–a needle like ray of blue light shot across the lawn from beyond and above the hedge and–but for
6567.608 that nervous start–must have struck fully upon the back of Stuart’s skull. Instead, it shone past his head, which it missed only by
6576.928 inches, and he experienced a sensation as though some one had buffeted him upon the cheek furiously. He pitched out of his chair
6585.728 and on to the carpet. The first object which the ray touched was the telephone; and next,
6591.248 beyond it, a medical dictionary; beyond that again, the grate, in which a fire was laid.
6597.808 My God! groaned Stuart–what is it! An intense crackling sound deafened him, and the air of the room
6606.008 seemed to have become hot as that of an oven. There came a series of dull reports–an uncanny wailing … and the needle ray vanished.
6615.688 A monstrous shadow, moon cast, which had lain across the carpet of the lawn–the shadow of a cowled man–vanished also.
6623.4 Clutching the side of his head, which throbbed and tingled as though from the blow of an open hand, Stuart struggled to his feet. There
6631.32 was smoke in the room, a smell of burning and of fusing metal. He glared at the table madly.
6637.68 The mouthpiece of the telephone had vanished! My God! he groaned again, and clutched at the back of the chair.
6645.92 His dictionary was smouldering slowly. It had a neat round hole some three inches in diameter, bored completely through, cover to cover!
6654.88 The fire in the grate was flaring up the chimney! He heard the purr of a motor in the lane beside the house. The room
6661.64 was laden with suffocating fumes. Stuart stood clutching the chair and striving to retain composure–sanity. The car moved out of the lane.
6671.64 Someone was running towards the back gate of the house … was scrambling over the hedge … was racing across the lawn!
6678.88 A man burst into the study. He was a man of somewhat heavy build, clean shaven and inclined to pallor. The hirsute blue tinge about his
6688.76 lips and jaw lent added vigour to a flexible but masterful mouth. His
6693.88 dark hair was tinged with grey, his dark eyes were brilliant with excitement. He was very smartly dressed and wore light tan gloves. He
6703.52 reeled suddenly, clutching at a chair for support. Quick! quick! he cried–the telephone! … Ah!
6710.32 Just inside the window he stood, swaying and breathing rapidly, his gaze upon the instrument.
6716.64 Mon Dieu! he cried–what has happened, then! Stuart stared at the new comer dazedly.
6723.04 Hell has been in my room! he replied. That’s all! Ah! said the stranger–again he eludes me! The telephone was the
6731.0 only chance. Pas d’blague! we are finished! He dropped into a chair, removed his light grey hat and began to dry
6738.48 his moist brow with a fine silk handkerchief. Stuart stared at him like a man who is stupefied.
6745.392 The room was still laden with strange fumes. Blimey! remarked the new comer, and his Whitechapel was as perfect
6753.192 as his Montmatre. He was looking at the decapitated telephone. This is a knock out!
6758.752 Might I ask, said Stuart, endeavouring to collect his scattered senses, where you came from?
6764.792 From up a tree! was the astonishing reply. It was the only way to get over!
6769.952 Up a tree! Exactly. Yes, I was foolish. I am too heavy. But what could I do!
6776.672 We must begin all over again. Stuart began to doubt his sanity. This was no ordinary man.
6782.912 Might I ask, he said, who you are and what you are doing in my house? Ah! The stranger laughed merrily. You wonder about me–I can see
6793.152 it. Permit me to present myself–Gaston Max, at your service! Gaston Max! Stuart glared at the speaker incredulously. Gaston Max!
6803.672 Why, I conduct a post mortem examination upon Gaston Max tomorrow, in order to learn if he was poisoned!
6810.872 Do not trouble, doctor. That poor fellow is not Gaston Max and he was not poisoned. You may accept my word for it. I had the misfortune
6819.312 to strangle him. PART II STATEMENT OF GASTON MAX
6824.512 THE DANCER OF MONTMARTRE. Chapter 12. Zara El Khala. The following statement which I, Gaston Max, am drawing up in
6834.232 duplicate for the guidance of whoever may inherit the task of tracing The Scorpion–a task which I have begun–will be lodged–one copy at
6843.152 the Service de Surete in Paris, and the other copy with the Commissioner of Police, New Scotland Yard. As I apprehend that I may be
6851.352 assassinated at any time, I propose to put upon record all that I have
6856.512 learned concerning the series of murders which I believe to be traceable to a certain person.
6862.512 In the event of my death, my French colleagues will open the sealed packet containing this statement and
6869.712 the English Assistant Commissioner of the Special Branch responsible for international affairs will receive instructions to open that which
6878.672 I shall have lodged at Scotland Yard. This matter properly commenced, then, with the visit to Paris,
6885.192 incognito, of the Grand Duke Ivan, that famous soldier of whom so much
6890.272 was expected, and because I had made myself responsible for his safety during the time that he remained in the French capital, I also
6899.032 incognito be it understood struck up a friendship with one Casimir,
6904.112 the Grand Duke’s valet. Nothing is sacred to a valet, and from Casimir
6909.352 I counted upon learning the real reason which had led this nobleman to visit Paris at so troublous a time. Knowing the Grand Duke to be a man
6918.232 of gallantry, I anticipated finding a woman in the case–and I was not wrong.
6923.952 Yes, there was a woman, and nom d’nom!she was beautiful.
6929.112 Now in Paris we have many beautiful women, and in times of international strife it is true that we have had to shoot some of
6935.872 them. For my own part I say with joy that I have never been instrumental in bringing a woman to such an end. Perhaps I am
6942.952 sentimental; it is a French weakness; but on those few occasions when I have found a guilty woman in my power–and she has been pretty–
6952.112 morbleu!–she has escaped! It may be that I have seen to it that she was kept out of further mischief, but nevertheless she has never met a
6960.232 firing party because of me. Very well. From the good fellow Casimir I learned that a certain dancer appearing
6969.112 at one of our Montmartre theatres had written to the Grand Duke craving the honour of his autograph–and enclosing her photograph.
6976.592 Pf! it was enough. One week later the autograph arrived–attached to an
6985.528 invitation to dine with the Grand Duke at his hotel in Paris. Yes–he
6991.008 had come to Paris. I have said that he was susceptible and I have said that she was beautiful. I address myself to men of the world, and I
6998.888 shall not be in error if I assume that they will say, A wealthy fool and a designing woman. It is an old story. Let us see.
7007.168 The confidences of Casimir interested me in more ways than one. In the first place I had particular reasons for suspecting anyone who sought
7015.328 to obtain access to the Grand Duke. These were diplomatic. And in the
7020.368 second place I had suspicions of Zara el Khala. These were personal.
7025.888 Yes–so she called herself–Zara el Khala, which in Arabic is Flower of the Desert. She professed to be an Egyptian, and certainly
7034.688 she had the long, almond shaped eyes of the East, but her white skin betrayed her, and I knew that whilst she might possess Eastern blood,
7043.128 she was more nearly allied to Europe than to Africa. It is my business to note unusual matters, you understand, and I noticed that this
7051.888 beautiful and accomplished woman of whom all Paris was beginning to speak rapturously remained for many weeks at a small Montmartre
7060.248 theatre. Her performance, which was unusually decorous for the type of establishment at which she appeared, had not apparently led to an
7068.608 engagement elsewhere. This aroused the suspicions to which I have referred. In the character
7074.528 of a vaudeville agent I called at the Montmartre theatre and was informed by the management that Zara el Khala received no visitors,
7082.648 professional or otherwise. A small but expensive car awaited her at the stage door. My suspicions increased. I went away, but returned on
7092.008 the following night, otherwise attired, and from a hiding place which I had selected on the previous evening I watched the dancer depart.
7099.752 She came out so enveloped in furs and veils as to be unrecognizable,
7105.112 and a Hindu wearing a chauffeur’s uniform opened the door of the car for her, and then, having arranged the rugs to her satisfaction,
7113.112 mounted to the wheel and drove away. I traced the car. It had been hired for the purpose of taking Zara
7119.912 el Khala from her hotel–to the theatre and home nightly. I sent a
7125.072 man to call upon her at the hotel–in order to obtain press material, ostensibly. She declined to see him. I became really interested. I
7134.752 sent her a choice bouquet, having the card of a nobleman attached to it, together with a message of respectful admiration. It was returned.
7143.992 I prevailed upon one of the most handsome and gallant cavalry officers in Paris to endeavour to make her acquaintance. He was rebuffed.
7152.592 Eh bien! I knew then that Mlle. Zara of the Desert was unusual. You will at once perceive that when I heard from the worthy Casimir
7160.512 how this unapproachable lady had actually written to the Grand Duke Ivan and had gone so far as to send him her photograph, I became
7168.872 excited. It appeared to me that I found myself upon the brink of an important discovery. I set six of my first class men at work: three
7178.232 being detailed to watch the hotel of the Grand Duke Ivan and three to watch Zara el Khala. Two more were employed in watching the Hindu
7186.832 servant and one in watching my good friend Casimir. Thus, nine clever
7191.952 men and myself were immediately engaged upon the case. Why do I speak of a case when thus far nothing of apparent
7198.952 importance had occurred? I will explain. Although the Grand Duke travelled incognito, his Government knew of the journey and wished to
7206.912 learn with what object it had been undertaken. At the time that I made the acquaintance of Casimir the Grand Duke
7213.696 had been in Paris for three days, and he was–according to my informant–like a raging lion. The charming dancer had vouchsafed
7222.816 no reply to his invitation and he had met with the same reception, on presenting himself in person, which had been accorded to myself and to
7232.056 those others who had sought to obtain an interview with Zara el Khala! My state of mystification grew more and more profound. I studied the
7240.296 reports of my nine assistants. It appeared that the girl had been in Paris for a period of two months.
7246.616 She occupied a suite of rooms in which all her meals were served. Except the Hindu who drove the hired car, she had no servant. She
7255.216 never appeared in the public part of the hotel unless veiled, and then merely in order to pass out to the car or in from it on returning. She
7264.416 drove out every day. She had been followed, of course, but her proceedings were unexceptionable. Leaving the car at a point in the
7272.296 Bois De Boulogne, she would take a short walk, if the day was fine enough, never proceeding out of sight of the Hindu, who followed with
7279.776 the automobile, and would then drive back to her hotel. She never received visits and never met any one during these daily excursions.
7288.616 I turned to the report dealing with the Hindu. He had hired a room high up under the roof of an apartment house where
7294.696 foreign waiters and others had their abodes. He bought and cooked his own food, which apparently consisted solely of rice, lentils and fruit.
7304.656 He went every morning to the garage and attended to the car, called for his mistress, and having returned remained until evening in his
7312.736 own apartment. At night, after returning from the theatre, he sometimes went out, and my agent had failed to keep track of him on
7320.896 every occasion that he had attempted pursuit. I detached the man who was watching Casimir and whose excellent reports revealed the fact
7329.544 that Casimir was an honest fellow–as valets go–and instructed him to assist in tracing the movements of the Hindu.
7337.224 Two nights later they tracked him to a riverside cafe kept by a gigantic quadroon from Dominique and patronized by that type which
7346.024 forms a link between the lowest commercial and the criminal classes: itinerant vendors of Eastern rugs, street performers and Turkish
7354.024 cigarette makers. At last I began to have hopes. The Grand Duke at this time was
7359.544 speaking of leaving Paris, but as he had found temporary consolation in the smiles of a lady engaged at the Folies I did not anticipate
7368.064 that he would depart for several days at any rate. Also he was the kind of man who is stimulated by obstacles.
7375.424 The Hindu remained for an hour in the cafe, smoking and drinking some kind of syrup, and one of my fellows watched him. Presently the
7383.704 proprietor called him into a little room behind the counter and closed the door. The Hindu and the quadroon remained there for a few minutes,
7392.304 then the Hindu came out and left the cafe, returning to his abode. There was a telephone in this inner room, and my agent was of opinion
7401.024 that the Indian had entered either to make or to receive a call. I caused the line to be tapped.
7406.984 On the following night the Hindu came back to the cafe, followed by one of my men. I posted myself at a selected point and listened for
7415.704 any message that might pass over the line to or from the cafe. At about the same hour as before–according to the report–someone called
7424.384 up the establishment, asking for Miguel. This was the quadroon, and I heard his thick voice replying. The other voice–which had first
7432.904 spoken–was curiously sibilant but very distinct. Yet it did not sound
7438.224 like the voice of a Frenchman or of any European. This was the conversation:
7443.944 Miguel. Miguel speaks. Scorpion. A message for Chunda Lal.
7449.864 Very good. Almost holding my breath, so intense was my excitement, I waited
7455.624 whilst Miguel went to bring the Hindu. Suddenly a new voice spoke–that of the Hindu.
7461.504 Chunda Lal speaks, it said. I clenched by teeth; I knew that I must not miss a syllable.
7468.624 Scorpion replied … in voluble Hindustani–a language of which I know less than a dozen words!
7474.864 Chapter 13. Concerning The Grand Duke. Although I had met with an unforeseen check, I had nevertheless learned
7483.104 three things. I had learned that Miguel the quadroon was possibly in league with the Hindu; that the Hindu was called Chunda Lal; and that
7491.424 Chunda Lal received messages, probably instructions, from a third party who announced his presence by the word Scorpion.
7499.824 One of my fellows, of course, had been in the cafe all the evening, and from him I obtained confirmation of the fact that it had been the
7506.784 Hindu who had been summoned to the telephone and whom I had heard speaking. Instant upon the man at the cafe replacing the telephone
7515.504 and disconnecting, I called up the exchange. They had been warned and were in readiness.
7521.144 From what subscriber did that call come? I demanded. Alas! another check awaited me. It had originated in a public call
7530.064 office, and Scorpion was untraceable by this means! Despair is not permitted by the traditions of the Service de Surete.
7537.624 Therefore I returned to my flat and recorded the facts of the matter thus far established. I perceived that I had to deal, not with a
7546.544 designing woman, but with some shadowy being of whom she was an instrument. The anomaly of her life was in a measure explained. She
7555.544 sojourned in Paris for a purpose–a mysterious purpose which was concerned I could not doubt it with the Grand Duke Ivan.
7564.512 This was not an amorous but a political intrigue. I communicated, at a late hour, with the senior of the three men
7572.112 watching the Grand Duke. The Grand Duke that evening had sent a handsome piece of jewellery purchased in Rue de la Paix to the dancer.
7580.072 It had been returned. In the morning I met with the good Casimir at his favorite cafe. He
7585.992 had just discovered that Zara el Khala drove daily to the Bois de Boulogne, alone, and that afternoon the Grand Duke had determined to
7594.192 accost her during her solitary walk. I prepared myself for this event. Arrayed in a workman’s blouse and having a modest luncheon and a small
7603.352 bottle of wine in a basket, I concealed myself in that part of the Bois which was the favourite recreation ground of the dancer, and
7611.192 awaited her appearance. The Grand Duke appeared first upon the scene, accompanied by Casimir.
7618.952 The latter pointed out to him a path through the trees along which Zara el Khala habitually strolled and showed him the point at which
7627.192 she usually rejoined the Hindu who followed along the road with the car. They retired. I seated myself beneath a tree from whence I could
7636.232 watch the path and the road and began to partake of the repast which I had brought with me.
7642.432 At about three o’clock the dancer’s car appeared, and the girl, veiled as usual, stepped out, and having exchanged a few words with
7649.912 the Indian, began to walk slowly towards me, sometimes pausing to watch a bird in the boughs above her and sometimes to examine some
7657.792 wild plant growing beside the way. I ate cheese from the point of a clasp knife and drank wine out of the bottle.
7665.072 Suddenly she saw me. She had cast her veil aside in order to enjoy the cool and fragrant
7671.68 air, and as she stopped and regarded me doubtfully where I sat, I saw
7676.84 her beautiful face, undefiled, now, by make up and unspoiled by the presence of garish Eastern ornaments. Nom d’un nom! but she was truly
7687.08 a lovely woman! My heart went out in sympathy to the poor Grand Duke.
7692.24 Had I received such a mark of favour from her as he had received, and had I then been scorned as now she scorned him, I should have been
7700.64 desperate indeed. Coming around a bend in the path, then, she stood only a few paces
7706.68 away, looking at me. I touched the peak of my cap. Good day, mademoiselle, I said. The weather is very beautiful.
7715.72 Good day, she replied. I continued to eat cheese, and reassured she walked on past me. Twenty
7722.92 yards beyond, the Grand Duke was waiting. As I laid down my knife upon
7728.04 the paper which had been wrapped around the bread and cheese, and raised the bottle to my lips, the enamoured nobleman stepped out from
7735.16 the trees and bowed low before Zara el Khala. She started back from him–a movement of inimitable grace, like that
7743.2 of a startled gazelle. And even before I had time to get upon my feet she had raised a little silver whistle to her lips and blown a short
7751.72 shrill note. The Grand Duke, endeavouring to seize her hand, was pouring out
7757.28 voluble expressions of adoration in execrable French, and Zara
7762.4 el Khala was retreating step by step. She had quickly thrown the veil about her again. I heard the pad of swiftly running feet. If I was to
7771.4 intervene before the arrival of the Hindu, I must act rapidly. I raced along the path and thrust myself between the Grand Duke and the girl.
7779.24 Mademoiselle, I said, is this gentleman annoying you? How dare you, low pig! cried the Grand Duke, and with a sweep of his
7787.36 powerful arm he hurled me aside. Thank you, replied Zara el Khala with great composure. But my
7794.832 servant is here. As I turned, Chunda Lal hurled himself upon the Grand Duke from behind.
7801.632 I had never seen an expression in a man’s eyes like that in the eyes of the Hindu at this moment. They blazed like the eyes of a tiger, and
7810.272 his teeth were bared in a savage grin which I cannot hope to describe. His lean body seemed to shoot through the air, and he descended upon
7819.312 his burly adversary as a jungle beast falls upon its prey. Those long
7825.072 brown fingers clasping his neck, the Grand Duke fell forward upon his face.
7830.512 Chunda Lal! said the dancer. Kneeling, his right knee thrust between the shoulder blades of the
7837.072 prostrate man, the Hindu looked up–and I read murder in those glaring eyes. That he was an accomplished wrestler–or perhaps a strangler–I
7847.072 divined from the helplessness of the Grand Duke, who lay inert, robbed of every power except that of his tongue. He was swearing savagely.
7855.992 Chunda Lal! said Zara el Khala again. The Hindu shifted his grip from the neck to the arms of the Grand
7864.032 Duke. He pinioned him as is done in jiu jitsu and forced him to stand upright. It was a curious spectacle–the impotency of this burly
7873.312 nobleman in the hands of his slight adversary. As they swayed to their feet, I thought I saw the glint of metal in the right hand of the
7881.232 Indian, but I could not be sure, for my attention was diverted. At this moment Casimir appeared upon the scene, looking very frightened.
7890.672 Suddenly releasing his hold altogether, the Hindu glaring into the empurpled face of the Grand Duke, shot out one arm and pointed with a
7899.672 quivering finger along the path. Go! he said. The Grand Duke clenched his fists, looked from face to face as if
7907.944 calculating his chances, then shrugged his shoulders, very deliberately wiped his neck and wrists, where the Indian had held him,
7916.104 with a large silk handkerchief and threw the handkerchief on the ground. I saw a speck of blood upon the silk. Without another glance
7924.984 he walked away, Casimir following sheepishly. It is needless, perhaps, to add that Casimir had not recognized me.
7933.104 I turned to the dancer, touching the peak of my cap. Can I be of any assistance to mademoiselle? I asked.
7941.464 Thank you–no, she replied. She placed five francs in my hand and set off rapidly through the
7949.024 trees in the direction of the road, her bloodthirsty but faithful attendant at her heels!
7955.384 I stood scratching my head and looking after her. That afternoon I posted a man acquainted with Hindustani to tap any
7962.504 message which might be sent to or from the cafe used by Chunda Lal. I learned that the Grand Duke had taken a stage box at the Montmartre
7970.744 theatre at which the dancer was appearing, and I decided that I would be present also.
7976.464 A great surprise was in store for me. Zara el Khala had at this time established a reputation which
7983.104 extended beyond those circles from which the regular patrons of this establishment were exclusively drawn and which had begun to penetrate
7991.984 to all parts of Paris. You will remember that it was the extraordinary circumstance of her remaining at this obscure place of entertainment
8000.864 so long which had first interested me in the lady. I had learned that she had rejected a number of professional offers, and, as I have
8009.904 already stated, I had assured myself of this unusual attitude by
8014.944 presenting the card of a well known Paris agency–and being refused admittance.
8020.44 Now, as I leaned upon the rail at the back of the auditorium and the time for the dancer’s appearance grew near, I could not fail to
8028.6 observe that there was a sprinkling of evening dress in the stalls and that the two boxes already occupied boasted the presence of parties
8036.84 of well known men of fashion. Then the Grand Duke entered as a troupe of acrobats finished their performance. Zara el Khala was next upon
8045.96 the programme. I glanced at the Grand Duke and thought that he looked pale and unwell.
8051.28 The tableau curtain fell and the manager appeared behind the footlights. He, also, seemed to be much perturbed.
8058.32 Ladies and gentlemen, he said, I greatly regret to announce that Mlle. Zara el Kahla is indisposed and unable to appear. We have
8065.8 succeeded in obtaining the services—- Of whom he had succeeded in obtaining the services I never heard, for
8072.44 the rougher section of the audience rose at him like a menacing wave! They had come to see the Egyptian dancer and they would have their
8080.32 money back! It was a swindle; they would smash the theatre! If one had doubted the great and growing popularity of Zara el Kahla,
8089.24 this demonstration must have proved convincing. Over the heads of the excited audience, I saw the Grand Duke rise as if to retire. The other
8098.8 box parties were also standing up and talking angrily. Why was it not announced outside the theatre? someone shouted.
8106.88 We did not know until twenty minutes ago! cried the manager in accents of despair.
8112.64 I hurried from the theatre and took a taxicab to the hotel of the dancer. Running into the hall, I thrust a card in the hand of a
8119.88 concierge who stood there. Announce to Mlle. Zara el Khala that I must see her at once, I said.
8127.16 The man smiled and returned the card to me. Mlle. Zara el Khala left Paris at seven o’clock, monsieur!
8134.56 What! I cried–left Paris! But certainly. Her baskets were taken to the Gare du Nord an hour
8142.16 earlier by her servant and she went off by the seven fifty rapid for Calais. The theatre people were here asking for her an hour ago.
8151.16 I hurried to my office to obtain the latest reports of my men, I had lost touch with them, you understand, during the latter part of the
8158.0 afternoon and evening. I found there the utmost confusion. They had been seeking me all over Paris to inform me that Zara el Khala had
8166.52 left. Two men had followed her and had telephoned from Calais for instructions. She had crossed by the night mail for Dover. It was
8174.64 already too late to instruct the English police. For a few hours I had relaxed my usual vigilance–and this was the
8182.12 result. What could I do? Zara el Khala had committed no crime, but her sudden flight–for it looked like flight you will agree–was
8190.44 highly suspicious. And as I sat there in my office filled with all sorts of misgivings, in ran one of the men engaged in watching the
8199.24 Grand Duke. The Grand Duke had been seized with illness as he left his box in the
8204.76 Montmartre theatre and had died before his car could reach the hotel! Chapter 14.
8211.6 A Strange Question. A conviction burst upon my mind that a frightful crime had been
8217.24 committed. By whom and for what purpose I knew not. I hastened to the hotel of the Grand Duke. Tremendous excitement prevailed there, of
8225.76 course. There is no more certain way for a great personage to court publicity than to travel incognito. Everywhere that M. de Stahler
8234.12 had appeared all Paris had cried, There goes the Grand Duke Ivan! And now as I entered the hotel, press, police and public were
8242.24 demanding: Is it true that the Grand Duke is dead? Just emerging from the lift I saw Casimir. In propria persona–as M. Max–he
8251.88 failed to recognize me. My good man, I said–are you a member of the suite of the late
8258.16 Grand Duke? I am, or was, the valet of M. de Stahler, monsieur, he replied.
8264.04 I showed him my card. To me ‘M. de Stahler’ is the Grand Duke Ivan. What other servants had
8269.481 he with him? I asked, although I knew very well. None, monsieur. Where and when was he taken ill?
8275.281 At the Theatre Coquerico. Montmartre, at about a quarter past ten o’clock to night.
8280.321 Who was with him? No one, monsieur. His Highness was alone in a box. I had instructions
8287.2 to call with the car at eleven o’clock. Well? The theatre management telephoned at a quarter past ten to say that
8294.24 His Highness had been taken ill and that a physician had been sent for. I went in the car at once and found him lying in one of the
8301.76 dressing rooms to which he had been carried. A medical man was in attendance. The Grand Duke was unconscious. We moved him to the car—-
8310.16 We? The doctor, the theatre manager, and myself. The Grand Duke was then
8315.2 alive, the physician declared, although he seemed to me to be already dead. But just before we reached the hotel, the physician, who was
8324.24 watching His Highness anxiously, cried, ‘Ah,mon Dieu! It is finished. What a catastrophe!’
8329.88 He was dead? He was dead, monsieur. Who has seen him? They have telephoned for half the doctors in Paris, monsieur, but it
8337.08 is too late. He was affected, the good Casimir. Tears welled up in his eyes. I
8343.76 mounted in the lift to the apartment in which the Grand Duke lay. Three doctors were there, one of them being he of whom Casimir had
8351.72 spoken. Consternation was written on every face. It was his heart, I was assured by the doctor who had been summoned
8358.96 to the theatre. We shall find that he suffered from heart trouble. They were all agreed upon the point.
8365.52 He must have sustained a great emotional shock, said another. You are convinced that there was no foul play, gentlemen? I asked.
8374.777 They were quite unanimous on the point. Did the Grand Duke make any statement at the time of the seizure
8380.976 which would confirm the theory of a heart attack? No. He had fallen down unconscious outside the door of his box, and
8388.256 from this unconsciousness he had never recovered. Depositions of witnesses, medical evidence and other documents are available for
8396.776 the guidance of whoever may care to see them, but, as is well known,
8401.976 the death of the Grand Duke was ascribed to natural causes and it seemed as though my trouble would after all prove to be in vain.
8410.816 Let us see what happened. Leaving the hotel, on the night of the Grand Duke’s death, I joined
8416.976 the man who was watching the cafe telephone. There had been a message during the course of the evening, but it had
8423.016 been for a Greek cigarette maker and it referred to the theft of several bales of Turkish tobacco–useful information, of minor kind,
8431.776 but of little interest to me. I knew that it would be useless to question the man Miguel, although I strongly suspected him of being
8439.936 a member of The Scorpion’s organization. Any patron of the establishment enjoyed the privilege of receiving private telephone
8447.496 calls at the cafe on payment of a small fee. A man of less experience in obscure criminology might now have assumed
8455.576 that he had been misled by a series of striking coincidences. Remember,
8460.656 there was not a shadow of doubt in the minds of the medical experts that the Grand Duke had died from syncope. His own professional
8468.256 advisor had sent written testimony to show that there was hereditary heart trouble, although not of a character calculated to lead to a
8475.976 fatal termination except under extraordinary circumstances. His own Government, which had every reason to suspect that the Grand Duke’s
8484.608 assassination might be attempted, was satisfied. Eh bien! I was not.
8490.328 I cross examined the manager of the Theatre Coquerico. He admitted that Mlle. Zara el Khala had been a mystery throughout her engagement.
8498.448 Neither he nor anyone else connected with the house had ever entered her dressing room or held any conversation with her, whatever, except
8506.368 the stage manager and the musical director. These had spoken to her about her music and about lighting and other stage effects. She spoke
8514.848 perfect French. Such a state of affairs was almost incredible, but was explained by
8520.728 the fact that the dancer, at a most modest salary, had doubled the takings of the theatre in a few days and had attracted capacity
8529.328 business throughout the remainder of her engagement. She had written from Marseilles, enclosing press notices and other usual matter and
8537.528 had been booked direct for one week. She had remained for two months, and might have remained for ever, the poor manager assured me, at five
8545.528 times the salary! A curious fact now came to light. In all her photographs Zara
8551.128 el Khala appeared veiled, in the Eastern manner; that is to say, she wore a white silk yashmak which concealed all her face except her
8558.888 magnificent eyes! On the stage the veil was discarded; in the photographs it was always present.
8566.448 And the famous picture which she had sent to the Grand Duke? He had destroyed it, in a fit of passion, on returning from the Bois de
8574.648 Boulogne after his encounter with Chunda Lal! It is Fate after all–Kismet–and not the wit of man which leads to
8583.568 the apprehension of really great criminals–a tireless Fate which dogs their footsteps, a remorseless Fate from which they fly in vain.
8591.88 Long after the funeral of the Grand Duke, and at a time when I had almost forgotten Zara el Khala, I found myself one evening at the
8601.12 opera with a distinguished French scientist and he chanced to refer to the premature death which had occurred a few months earlier of
8608.32 Henrik Ericksen, the Norwegian. A very great loss to the century, M. Max, he said. Ericksen was as
8615.44 eminent in electrical science as the Grand Duke Ivan was eminent in the science of war. Both were stricken down in the prime of life–and
8623.28 under almost identical circumstances. That is true, I said thoughtfully.
8628.4 It would almost seem, he continued, as if Nature had determined to foil any further attempts to rifle her secrets and Heaven to check
8636.52 mankind in the making of future wars. Only three months after the Grand Duke’s death, the American admiral, Mackney, died at sea–you
8645.6 will remember? Now, following Ericksen, Van Rembold, undoubtedly the
8650.72 greatest mining engineer of the century and the only man who has ever produced radium in workable quantities, is seized with illness
8659.0 at a friend’s house and expires even before medical aid can be summoned. It is very strange.’
8665.28 It is uncanny. Were you personally acquainted with the late Van Rembold? I asked.
8671.76 I knew him intimately–a man of unusual charm, M. Max; and I have particular reason to remember his death, for I actually met him and
8680.56 spoke to him less than an hour before he died. We only exchanged a few words–we met on the street; but I shall never forget the subject
8689.4 of our chat. How is that? I asked. Well, I presume Van Rembold’s question was prompted by his knowledge
8697.0 of the fact that I had studied such subjects at one time; but he asked me if I knew of any race or sect in Africa or Asia who
8704.48 worshipped scorpions. Scorpions! I cried. Ah, mon Dieu! monsieur say it again–
8712.12 scorpions? But yes, certainly. Does it surprise you? Did it not surprise you?
8718.952 Undoubtedly. I could not imagine what had occurred to account for his asking so strange a question. I replied that I knew of no such
8727.432 sect, and Van Rembold immediately changed the subject, nor did he revert to it. So that I never learned why he had made that singular
8736.392 inquiry. You can imagine that this conversation afforded me much food for reflection. Whilst I could think of no reason why anyone should plot
8745.152 to assassinate Grand Dukes, admirals and mining engineers, the circumstances of the several cases were undoubtedly similar in a
8753.512 number of respects. But it was the remarkable question asked by Van
8758.632 Rembold which particularly aroused my interest. Of course it might prove to be nothing more than a coincidence, but
8765.152 when one comes to consider how rarely the word scorpion is used, outside those in which these insects abound, it appears to be
8773.352 something more. Van Rembold, then, had had some occasion to feel curious about the scorpions; the name Scorpion was associated
8782.072 with the Hindu follower of Zara el Khala; and she was who had brought the Grand Duke to Paris, where he had died.
8789.632 Oh! it was a very fragile thread, but by following such a thread as
8794.832 this we are sometimes led to the heart of a labyrinth. Beyond wondering if some sinister chain bound together this series of
8802.432 apparently natural deaths I might have made no move in the matter, but something occurred which spurred me to action. Sir Frank Narcombe, the
8811.592 great English surgeon, collapsed in the foyer of a London theatre and died shortly afterwards.
8817.696 Here again I perceived a case of a notable man succumbing unexpectedly in a public place–a case parallel to that
8825.056 of the Grand Duke, of Ericksen, of Van Rembold! it seemed as though some strange epidemic had attacked men of science–yes! they were all
8834.736 men of science, even including the Grand Duke, who was said to be the most scientific soldier in Europe, and the admiral, who had perfected
8843.456 the science of submarine warfare. The Scorpion! … that name haunted me persistently. So much so that
8850.936 at last I determined to find out for myself if Sir Frank Narcombe had ever spoken about a scorpion or if there was any evidence to show that
8858.856 he had been interested in the subject. I could not fail to remember, too, that Zara el Khala had last been
8865.936 reported as crossing to England. Chapter 15. The Fight In The Cafe.
8871.656 New Scotland Yard had been advised that any reference to a scorpion, in whatever form it occurred, should be noted and followed up, but
8879.856 nothing had resulted and as a matter of fact I was not surprised in the least. All that I had learned–and this was little enough–I had
8888.096 learned more or less by accident. But I came to the conclusion that a visit to London might be advisable.
8894.576 I had caused a watch to be kept upon the man Miguel, whose establishment seemed to be a recognized resort of shady characters.
8902.576 I had no absolute proof, remember, that he knew anything of the private affairs of the Hindu, and no further reference to a scorpion
8910.216 had been made by anyone using the cafe telephone. Nevertheless I determined to give him a courtesy call before leaving for London …
8918.096 and to this determination I cannot doubt that once again I was led by providence.
8923.416 Attired in a manner calculated to enable me to pass unnoticed among the patrons of the establishment, I entered the place and ordered
8931.696 cognac. Miguel having placed it before me, I lighted a cigarette and
8936.808 surveyed my surroundings. Eight or nine men were in the cafe, and two women. Four of the men
8944.008 were playing cards at a corner table, and the others were distributed about the place, drinking and smoking. The women, who were flashily
8952.528 dressed but who belonged to that order of society which breeds the Apache, were deep in conversation with a handsome Algerian. I
8960.688 recognized only one face in the cafe–that of a dangerous character, Jean Sach, who had narrowly escaped the electric chair in the United
8968.768 States and who was well known to the Bureau. He was smiling at one of the two women–the woman to whom the Algerian seemed to be more
8976.488 particularly addressing himself. Another there was in the cafe who interested me as a student of
8982.288 physiognomy–a dark, bearded man, one of the card players. His face was disfigured by a purple scar extending from his brow to the left
8991.288 corner of his mouth, which it had drawn up into a permanent snarl, so that he resembled an enraged and dangerous wild animal. Mentally
8999.928 I classified this person as Le Balafre. I had just made up my mind to depart when the man Sach arose, crossed
9007.568 the cafe and seated himself insolently between the Algerian and the woman to whom the latter was talking. Turning his back upon the brown
9015.768 man, he addressed some remark to the woman, at the same time leering in her face.
9021.168 Women of this class are difficult, you understand? Sach received from the lady a violent blow upon the face which rolled him on the floor!
9029.208 As he fell, the Algerian sprang up and drew a knife. Sach rolled away from him and also reached for the knife which he carried in a
9036.568 hip pocket. Before he could draw it, Miguel, the quadroon proprietor, threw himself upon him and tried to pitch him into the street.
9044.28 But Sach, although a small man, was both agile and ferocious. He twisted out of
9051.96 the grasp of the huge quadroon and turned, raising the knife. As he
9057.16 did so, the Algerian deftly kicked it from his grasp and left Sach to face Miguel unarmed. Screaming with rage, he sprang at Miguel’s throat,
9067.28 and the two fell writhing upon the floor. There could only be one end to such a struggle, of course, as the
9073.48 Algerian recognized by replacing his knife in his pocket and resuming his seat. Miguel obtained a firm hold upon Sacah and raised him bodily
9082.52 above his head, as one has seen a professional weight lifter raise a heavy dumb bell. Thus he carried him, kicking and foaming at the mouth
9091.28 with passion, to the open door. From the step he threw him into the middle of the street.
9096.72 At this moment I observed something glittering upon the floor close to the chair occupied by the Algerian. Standing up–for I had determined
9105.04 to depart–I crossed in that direction, stooped and picked up this object which glittered. As my fingers touched it, so did my heart give
9113.76 a great leap. The object was a golden scorpion! Forgetful of my dangerous surroundings I stood looking at the golden
9122.2 ornament in my hand … when suddenly and violently it was snatched from me! The Algerian, his brown face convulsed with rage,
9131.24 confronted me. Where did you find that charm? he cried. It belongs to me.
9138.08 Very well, I replied–you have it. He glared at me with a ferocity which the incident scarcely seemed to
9144.16 merit and exchanged a significant glance with someone who had approached and who now stood behind me. Turning, I met a second black
9152.56 gaze–that of the quadroon who having restored order had returned from the cafe door and now stood regarding me. Did you find it on the
9161.8 floor? asked Miguel suspiciously. I did. He turned to the Algerian.
9167.592 It fell when you kicked the knife from the hand of that pig, he said. You should be more careful.
9175.792 Again they exchanged significant glances, but the Algerian resumed his seat and Miguel went behind the counter. I left the cafe
9184.392 conscious of the fact that black looks pursued me. The night was very dark, and as I came out on to the pavement someone
9192.072 touched me on the arm. I turned in a flash. Walk on, friend, said the voice of Jean Sach. What was it that you
9199.832 picked up from the floor? A golden scorpion, I answered quickly. Ah! he whispered–I thought so! It is enough. They shall pay for
9210.152 what they have done to me–those two. Hurry, friend, as I do. Before I could say another word or strive to detain him, he turned
9218.472 and ran off along a narrow courtway which at this point branched from the street. I stood for a moment, nonplussed, staring after him. By good fortune
9227.032 I had learned more in ten minutes than by the exercise of all my ingenuity and the resources of the Service I could have learned in
9233.712 ten months! Par al barbe du prophete the Kismet which dogs the footsteps of malefactors assisted me!
9241.392 Recollecting the advice of Jean Sach, I set off at a brisk pace along the street, which was dark and deserted and which passed through a
9250.072 district marked red on the Paris crimes map. Arriving at the corner, above which projected a lamp, I paused and glanced back into the
9258.712 darkness. I could see no one, but I thought I could detect the sound of stealthy footsteps following me.
9265.592 The suspicion was enough. I quickened my pace, anxious to reach the crowded boulevard upon which this second street opened. I reached it
9274.072 unmolested, but intending to throw any pursuer off the track, I dodged
9279.272 and doubled repeatedly on the way to my flat and arrived there about midnight, convinced that I had eluded pursuit–if indeed I had been
9288.592 pursued. All my arrangements were made for leaving Paris, and now I telephoned
9294.296 to the assistant on duty in my office, instructing him to take certain steps in regard to the proprietor of the cafe and the Algerian and to
9303.136 find the hiding place of the man Jean Sach. I counted it more than ever important that I should go to London at once.
9310.456 In this belief I was confirmed at the very moment that I boarded the Channel steamer at Boulogne: for as I stepped upon the deck I found
9317.736 myself face to face with a man who was leaning upon the rail and apparently watching the passengers coming on board. He was a man of
9325.776 heavy build, dark and bearded, and his face was strangely familiar. Turning, as I lighted a cigarette, I glanced back at him in order to
9335.536 obtain a view of his profile. I knew him instantly–for now the scar
9340.656 was visible. It was Le Balafre who had been playing cards in Miguel’s cafe on the previous night!
9347.176 I have sometimes been criticised, especially by my English confreres, for my faith in disguise. I have been told that no disguise is
9356.376 impenetrable to the trained eye. I reply that there are many disguises but few trained eyes! To my faith in disguise I owed the knowledge
9364.616 that a golden scorpion was the token of some sort of gang, society, or criminal group, and to this same faith which an English inspector of
9373.736 police once assured me to be a misplaced one I owed, on boarding the steamer, my escape from detection by this big bearded fellow who was
9382.576 possibly looking out for me! Yet, I began to wonder if after all I had escaped the shadowy pursuer
9389.976 whose presence I had suspected in the dark street outside the cafe or if he had tracked me and learned my real identity. In any event, the
9399.136 roles were about to be reversed! Le Balafre at Folkestone took a seat in a third class carriage of the London train. I took one in the next
9408.216 compartment. Arrived at Charing Cross, he stood for a time in the booking hall,
9414.032 glanced at his watch, and then took up the handbag which he carried and walked out into the station yard. I walked out also.
9422.832 Le Balafre accosted a cabman; and as he did so I passed close behind him and overheard a part of the conversation.
9430.312 … Bow Road Station East! It’s too far. What? I glanced back. The bearded man was holding up a note–a pound note
9438.512 apparently. I saw the cabman nod. Without an instant’s delay I rushed
9443.552 up to another cabman who had just discharged a passenger. To Bow Road Station East! I said to the man. Double fare if you
9451.272 are quick! It would be a close race. But I counted on the aid of that Fate which
9456.432 dogs the steps of wrong doers! My cab was off first and the driver had
9462.232 every reason for hurrying. From the moment that we turned out into the Strand until we arrived at our destination I saw no more of
9470.552 Le Balafre. My extensive baggage I must hope to recover later. At Bow Road Station I discovered a telephone box in a dark corner
9479.152 which commanded a view of the street. I entered this box and waited. It was important that I should remain invisible. Unless my bearded
9487.872 friend had been unusually fortunate he could not well have arrived before me. As it chanced I had nearly six minutes to wait. Then, not ten yards
9497.032 away, I saw Le Balafre arrive and dismiss the cabman outside the station.
9502.512 There was nothing furtive in his manner; he was evidently satisfied that no one pursued him; and he stood in the station entrance almost
9510.592 outside my box and lighted a cigar! Placing his bag upon the floor, he lingered, looking to left and right,
9518.072 when suddenly a big closed car painted dull yellow drew up beside the pavement. It was driven by a brown faced chauffeur whose nationality
9528.592 I found difficulty in placing, for he wore large goggles. But before
9533.904 I could determine upon my plan of action, Le Balafre crossed the pavement and entered the car–and the car glided smoothly away, going
9542.264 East. A passing lorry obstructed my view and I even failed to obtain a glimpse of the number on the plate.
9548.704 But I had seen something which had repaid me for my trouble. As the man of the scar had walked up to the car, had exhibited to the
9556.424 brown skinned chauffeur some object which he held in the palm of his hand … an object which glittered like gold!
9563.184 II. LE BALAFRE Chapter 16. I Become Charles Malet.
9568.544 Behold me established in rooms in Battersea and living retired during the day while I permitted my beard to grow. I had recognized that my
9576.904 mystery of The Scorpion was the biggest case which had ever engaged the attention of the Service de Surete, and I was prepared, if
9584.144 necessary, to devote my whole time for twelve months to its solution. I had placed myself in touch with Paris, and had had certain papers
9592.704 and licenses forwarded to me. A daily bulletin reached me, and one of these bulletins was sensational.
9599.584 The body of Jean Sach had been recovered from the Seine. The man had been stabbed to the heart. Surveillance of Miguel and his associates
9607.424 continued unceasingly, but I had directed that no raids or arrests were to be made without direct orders from me.
9615.384 I was now possessed of a French motor license and also that of a Paris taxi driver, together with all the other documents necessary to
9624.744 establish the identity of one Charles Malet. Everything was in order. I presented myself–now handsomely bearded–at New Scotland Yard and
9634.504 applied for a license. The knowledge of London and other tests I passed successfully and emerged a fully fledged cabman!
9643.088 Already I had opened negotiations for the purchase of a dilapidated but seviceable cab which belonged to a small proprietor who had
9651.408 obtained a car of more up to date pattern to replace this obsolete one. I completed these negotiations by paying down a certain sum and
9660.648 arranged to garage my cab in the disused stable of a house near my rooms in Battersea.
9667.208 Thus I now found myself in a position to appear anywhere at any time
9672.528 without exciting suspicion, enabled swiftly to proceed from point to
9677.888 point and to pursue anyone either walking or driving whom it might please me to pursue. It was a modus operandi which had served me well
9687.088 in Paris and which had led to one of my biggest successes the capture of the French desperado known as Mr. Q. in New York.
9695.888 I had obtained, via Paris, particulars of the recent death of Sir Frank Narcombe, and the circumstances attendant upon his end were so
9704.128 similar to those which had characterized the fate of the Grand Duke, of Van Rembold and the others, that I could not for a moment believe
9712.168 them to be due to mere coincidence. Acting upon my advice Paris advised Scotland Yard to press for a post mortem examination of the
9721.128 body, but the influence of Sir Frank’s family was exercised to prevent this being carried out–and exercised successfully.
9729.728 Meanwhile, I hovered around the houses, flats, clubs and offices of everyone who had been associated with the late surgeon, noting to what
9737.248 addresses they directed me to drive and who lived at those address. In this way I obtained evidence sufficient to secure three judicial
9746.128 separations, but not a single clue leading to The Scorpion! No matter.
9751.704 At every available opportunity I haunted the East End streets, hoping
9757.824 for a glimpse of the big car and the brown skinned chauffeur or of my scarred man from Paris. I frequented all sorts of public bars and
9767.504 eating houses used by foreign and Asiatics. By day and by night I roamed about the dismal thoroughfares of that depressing district,
9776.544 usually with my flag down to imply that I was engaged. Such diligence never goes long unrewarded. One evening, having
9786.184 discharged a passenger, a mercantile officer, at the East India Docks, as I was drifting, watchfully, back through Limehouse, I saw a large
9795.304 car pull up just ahead of me in the dark. A man got out and the car was driven off.
9801.024 Two courses presented themselves. I was not sure that this was the
9806.184 car for which I sought, but it strangely resembled it. Should I follow the car or the man? A rapid decision was called for. I followed the man.
9816.344 That I had not been mistaken in the identity of the car shortly appeared. The man took out a cigar and standing on the corner opposite
9824.064 the Town Hall, lighted it. I was close to him at the time, and by the light of the match, which he sheltered with his hands, I saw the
9832.384 scarred and bearded face! Triomphe! it was he! Having lighted his cigar, he crossed the road and entered the saloon
9839.904 of a neighbourhood public house. Locking my cab I, also, entered that saloon. I ordered a glass of bitter beer and glanced around at the
9848.544 object of my interest. He had obtained a glass of brandy and was contorting his hideous face as he sipped the beverage. I laughed.
9857.144 Have they tried to poison you, mister! I said. Ah,pardieu! poison–yes! he replied.
9864.024 You want to have it out of a bottle, I continued confidentially– Martell’s Three Stars.
9869.464 He stared at me uncomprehendingly. I don’t know, he said haltingly. I have very little English.
9876.096 Oh, that’s it! I cried, speaking French with a barbarous accent.
9881.856 You only speak French? Yes, yes, he replied eagerly. It is so difficult to make oneself
9888.816 understood. This spirit is not cognac, it is some kind of petrol! Finishing my bitter, I ordered two glasses of good brandy and placed
9897.736 one before Le Balafre. Try that, I said, continuing to speak in French, You will find it
9902.976 is better. He sipped from his glass and agreed that I was right. We chatted together for ten minutes and had another drink, after which my
9910.496 dangerous looking acquaintance wished me good night and went out. The car had come from the West, and I strongly suspected that my man either
9918.536 lived in the neighbourhood or had come there to keep an appointment. Leaving my cab outside the public house, I followed him on foot, down
9927.376 Three Colt Street to Ropemaker Street, where he turned into a narrow alley leading to the riverside. It was straight and deserted, and I
9936.016 dared not follow further until he had reached the corner. I heard his footsteps pass right to the end. Then the sound died away. I ran to
9944.936 the corner. The back of a wharf building–a high blank wall–faced a row of ramshackle tenements, some of them built of wood; but not a
9954.136 soul was in sight. I reluctantly returned to the spot at which I had left the cab–and
9960.176 found a constable there who wanted to know what I meant by leaving a vehicle in the street unattended. I managed to enlist his sympathy by
9968.696 telling him that I had been in pursuit of a fare who had swindled me with a bad half crown. The ruse succeeded.
9976.176 Which street did he go down, mate? asked the constable. I described the street and described the scarred man. The constable
9984.736 shook his head. Sounds like one o’ them foreign sailormen, he said. But I don’t
9990.376 know what he can have gone down there for. It’s nearly all Chinese, that part. His words came as a revelation; they changed the whole complexion of
9999.448 the case. It dawned upon me even as he spoke the word Chinese that the golden scorpion which I had seen in the Paris cafe was of Chinese
10008.608 workmanship! I started my engine and drove slowly to that street in
10014.368 which I had lost the track of Le Balafre. I turned the cab so that I should be ready to drive off at a moment’s notice, and sat there
10022.488 wondering what my next move should be. How long I had been there I cannot say, when suddenly it began to rain in torrents.
10031.448 What I might have done or what I had hoped to do is of no importance;
10037.008 for as I sat there staring out at the dismal rain swept street, a man
10042.088 came along, saw the head lamps of the cab and stopped, peering in my direction. Evidently perceiving that I drove a cab and not a private
10051.728 car, he came towards me. Are you disengaged? he asked.
10057.048 Whether it was that I sympathized with him–he had no topcoat or umbrella–or whether I was guided by Fate I know not, but as he spoke
10065.808 I determined to give up my dreary vigil for that night. Pardieu! but
10071.528 certainly it was Fate again! Well, I suppose I am, sir, I said, and asked him where he wanted
10077.208 to go. He gave an address not five hundred yards from my own rooms! I thought
10082.528 this so curious that I hesitated no longer. Jump in, I said; and still seeking in my mind for a link between the
10089.808 scorpion case and China, I drove off, and in less than half an hour, for the streets were nearly empty, arrived at my destination.
10098.168 The passenger, whose name was Dr. Keppel Stuart, very kindly suggested a glass of hot grog, and I did not refuse his proferred hospitality.
10107.328 When I came out of his house again, the rain had almost ceased, and just as I stooped to crank the car I thought I saw a shadowy figure
10115.208 moving near the end of a lane which led to the tradesmen’s entrance of Dr. Stuart’s house. A sudden suspicion laid hold upon me–a horrible
10124.36 doubt. Having driven some twenty yards along the road, I leaned from my seat and looked back. A big man wearing a black waterproof overall was
10133.4 standing looking after me! Remembering how cleverly I had been trailed from Miguel’s cafe to my
10138.92 flat, in Paris for I no longer doubted that someone had followed me on that occasion, I now perceived that I might again be the object of
10146.88 the same expert’s attention. Stopping my engine half way along the next road, I jumped out and ran back, hiding in the bushes which grew
10156.04 beside the gate of a large empty house. I had only a few seconds to wait.
10161.52 A big closed car, running almost silently, passed before me … and Le Balafre was leaning out of the window!
10168.92 At last I saw my chance of finding the headquarters of The Scorpion. Alas! The man of the scar was as swift to recognize that possibility
10176.96 as I. A moment after he had passed my stationary cab, and found it to be deserted, his big car was off like the wind, and even before I
10185.12 could step out from the bushes the roar of the powerful engine was growing dim in the distance!
10190.44 I was detected. I had to deal with dangerously clever people. Chapter 17.
10196.36 Baiting The Trap. The following morning I spent at home, in my modest rooms, reviewing
10201.96 my position and endeavouring to adjust my plans in accordance with the latest development. The Scorpion had scored a point. What had aroused
10211.08 the suspicions of Le Balafre, I knew not; but I was inclined to think that he had been looking from some window or peep hole in the narrow
10219.16 street with the wooden houses when I had, injudiciously, followed him there. On the other hand, the leakage might be in Paris–or in my
10227.52 correspondence system. The man of the scar might have been looking for me as I was looking for him.
10233.936 That he was looking for someone on the cross channel boat I had not doubted.
10239.216 He was aware, then that Charles Malet, cabman, was watching him. But was he aware that Charles Malet was Gaston Max? And did he know where
10248.256 I lived? Also–did he perchance think that my meeting with Dr. Stuart in Limehouse had been prearranged? Clearly he had seen Dr. Stuart
10257.496 enter my cab, for he had pursued us to Battersea. This course of reflection presently led me to a plan. It was a
10265.496 dangerous plan, but I doubted if I should ever find myself in greater danger than I was already. Nom d’un nom! I had not forgotten the
10273.936 poor Jean Sach! That night, well knowing that I carried my life in my hands, I drove
10279.816 again to Limehouse Town Hall, and again leaving my cab outside went into the bar where I had previously met Le Balafre. If I had doubted
10289.136 that my movements were watched I must now have had such doubts dispelled; for two minutes later the man with the scar came in and
10296.336 greeted me affably! I had learned something else. He did not know that I had recognized
10301.696 him as the person who had tracked me to Dr. Stuart’s house! He invited me to drink with him, and I did so. As we raised our
10309.336 glasses I made a move. Looking all about me suspiciously: Am I right in supposing that you have business in this part of
10316.656 London? I asked. Yes, he replied My affairs bring me here sometimes.
10322.256 You are well acquainted with the neighbourhood? Fairly well. But actually of course I am a stranger to London.
10328.296 I tapped him confidentially upon the breast. Take my advice, as a friend, I said, and visit these parts as
10335.136 rarely as possible. Why do you say that? It is dangerous. From the friendly manner in which you entered into
10341.336 conversation with me, I perceived that you were of a genial and unsuspicious nature. Very well. I warn you.
10348.632 Last night I was followed from a certain street not far from here to the house of a medical man
10355.112 who is a specialist in certain kinds of criminology, you understand. He stared at me very hard, his teeth bared by that fearful snarl. You
10365.032 are a strange cabman. Perhaps I am. No matter. Take my advice. I have things written
10371.592 here–I tapped the breast of my tunic–which will astonish all the world shortly. I tell you, my friend, my fortune is made.
10381.072 I finished my drink and ordered another for myself and one for my acquaintance. He was watching me doubtfully. Taking up my replenished
10388.632 glass, I emptied it at a draught and ordered a third. I leaned over towards the scarred man, resting my hand heavily upon his shoulder.
10397.392 Five thousand pounds, I whispered thickly, has been offered for the information which I have here in my pocket. It is not yet complete,
10404.912 you understand, and because they may murder me before I obtain the rest of the facts, do you know what I am going to do with this?
10412.472 Again I tapped my tunic pocket. Le Balafre frowned perplexedly.
10417.832 I don’t even know what you are talking about, my friend, he replied. I know what I am talking about, I assured him, speaking more and
10425.152 more huskily. Listen, then: I am going to take all my notes to my friend, the doctor, and leave them with him, sealed–sealed, you
10433.112 follow me? If I do not come back for them, In a week, shall we say?–he sends them to the police. I do not profit, you think? No.morbleu!
10440.272 but there are some who hang! Emptying my third glass, I ordered a fourth and one for my companion.
10445.912 He checked me. No more for me, thank you, he said. I have–business to attend to. I will wish you good night.
10452.312 Good night! I cried boisterously–good night, friend! take heed of my good advice!
10459.312 As he went out, the barman brought me my fourth glass of cognac, staring at me doubtfully. Our conversation had been conducted in French, but
10467.944 the tone of my voice had attracted attention. Had about enough, ain’t you, mate? he said. Your ugly pal jibbed!
10474.944 Quite enough! I replied, in English now of course. But I’ve had a stroke of luck to night and I feel happy. Have one with me. This is a
10483.824 final. On going out into the street I looked cautiously about me, for I did not expect to reach the house of Dr. Stuart unmolested. I credited
10493.384 Le Balafre with sufficient acumen to distrust the genuineness of my intoxication, even if he was unaware of my real identity. I never
10502.624 make the mistake of underestimating an opponent’s wit, and whilst acting on the assumption that the scarred man knew me to be forcing
10510.064 his hand, I recognized that whether he believed me to be drunk or sober, Gaston Max or another, his line of conduct must be the same.
10520.464 He must take it for granted that I actually designed to lodge my notes with Dr. Stuart and endeavour to prevent me doing so.
10528.984 I could detect no evidence of surveillance whatever and cranking the engine I mounted and drove off. More than once, as I passed along
10538.184 Commercial Road, I stopped and looked back. But so far as I could make out no one was following me. The greater part of my route lay
10546.704 along populous thoroughfares, and of this I was not sorry; but I did not relish the prospect of Thames Street, along which presently my
10555.504 course led me. Leaving the city behind me, I turned into that thoroughfare, which at
10561.664 night is almost quite deserted, and there I pulled up. Pardieu! I was disappointed! It seemed as though my scheme had miscarried. It
10570.504 could not understand why I had been permitted to go unmolested, and I intended to walk back to the corner for a final survey before
10578.304 continuing my journey. This survey was never made. As I stopped the cab and prepared to descend, a faint–a very faint–
10587.584 sound almost in my ear, set me keenly on the alert. Just in the nick
10592.864 of time I ducked … as the blade of a long knife flashed past my head, ripping its way through my cloth cap!
10599.784 Yes! That movement had saved my life, for otherwise the knife must have entered my shoulder–and pierced to my heart!
10608.104 Someone was hidden in the cab! He had quietly opened one of the front windows and had awaited a
10613.624 suitable opportunity to stab me. Now, recognizing failure, he leapt out on the near side as I lurched and stumbled from my seat, and ran
10622.864 off like the wind. I never so much as glimpsed him. Mon Dieu! I muttered, raising my hand to my head, from which blood
10631.064 was trickling down my face, the plan succeeds! I bound a handkerchief as tightly as possible around the wound in my
10638.224 scalp and put my cap on to keep the bandage in place. The wound was
10643.504 only a superficial one, and except for the bleeding I suffered no inconvenience from it. But I had now a legitimate reason for visiting
10652.584 Dr. Stuart, and as I drove on towards Battersea I was modifying my
10657.824 original plan in accordance with the unforeseen conditions. It was long past Dr. Stuart’s hours of consultation when I arrived at
10666.144 his house, and the servant showed me into a waiting room, informing me that the doctor would join me in a few minutes. Directly she had gone
10674.984 out I took from the pocket of my tunic the sealed envelope which I had intended to lodge with the doctor. Pah! it was stained with blood
10683.024 which had trickled down from the wound in my scalp! Actually, you will say, there was no reason why I should place a
10689.304 letter in the hand of Dr. Stuart; my purpose would equally well be served by pretending that I had done so.
10695.888 Ah, but I knew that I had to deal with clever people–with artists in crime–and it behooved me
10702.848 to be an artist also. I had good reason to know that their system of espionage was efficient; and the slipshod way is ever the wrong way.
10711.368 The unpleasantly sticky letter I returned to my pocket, looking around me for some means of making up any kind of packet which could do duty
10718.848 as a substitute. Beyond a curtain draped over a recess at one end of the waiting room I saw a row of boxes, a box of lint and other medical
10727.928 paraphernalia. It was the doctor’s dispensary. Perhaps I might find there an envelope.
10734.368 I crossed the room and looked. Immediately around the corner, on a level with my eyes, was a packet of foolscap envelopes and a stick of
10742.208 black sealing wax! Bien! all that I now required was a stout sheet of paper to enclose in one of those envelopes. But not a scrap of
10750.808 paper could I find, except the blood stained letter in my pocket– towards which I had formed a strong antipathy. I had not even a
10758.408 newspaper in my possession. I thought of folding three or four envelopes, but there were only six in all, and the absence of so
10766.288 many might be noted. Drawing aside a baize curtain which hung from the bottom shelf, I
10771.928 discovered a number of old card board boxes. It was sufficient. With a pair of surgical scissors I cut a piece from the lid of one and
10780.048 thrust it into an envelope, gumming down the lapel. At a little gas jet intended for the purpose I closed both ends with wax and–
10788.728 singular coincidence!–finding a Chinese coin fastened to a cork lying on the shelf, my sense of humour prompted me to use it as a
10797.448 seal! Finally, to add to the verisimilitude of the affair I borrowed
10802.648 a pen which rested in a bottle of red ink and wrote upon the envelope the number: 30, that day being the thirtieth day of the
10810.128 month. It was well that the artist within me had dictated this careful elaboration, as became evident a few minutes later when the doctor
10819.336 appeared at the head of a short flight of stairs and requested me to step up to his consulting room. It was a small room, so that the
10827.496 window, over which a linen blind was drawn, occupied nearly the whole of one wall. As Dr. Stuart, having examined the cut on my scalp,
10836.936 descended to the dispensary for lint, the habits of a lifetime asserted themselves.
10842.896 I quickly switched off the light and peeped out of the window around the edge of the blind, which I drew slightly aside. In the shadow of
10850.616 the wall upon the opposite side of the narrow lane a man was standing!
10856.176 I turned on the light again. The watcher should not be disappointed! My skull being dressed, I broached the subject of the letter, which I
10864.856 said I had found in my cab after the accident which had caused the injury. Someone left this behind to day, sir, I said; perhaps the gentleman
10874.456 who was with me when I had the accident; and I’ve got no means of tracing him. He may be able to trace me, though, or he may advertise.
10883.416 It evidently contains something valuable. I wonder if you would do me a small favour? Would you mind taking charge of it for a week or so,
10891.776 until it is claimed? He asked me why I did not take it to Scotland Yard. Because, said I, if the owner claims it from Scotland Yard he is
10901.136 less likely to be generous than if he gets it direct from me! But what is the point, asked Dr. Stuart, in leaving it here?
10909.496 I explained that if I kept the letter I might be suspected of an intention of stealing it, whereas directly there was any inquiry, he
10918.576 could certify that I had left it in his charge. He seemed to be satisfied and asked me to come into his study for a moment. The man
10927.176 in the lane was probably satisfied, too. I had stood three paces from
10932.272 the table lamp all the time, waving the letter about as I talked, and casting a bold shadow on the linen blind!
10939.832 The first thing that struck me as I entered the doctor’s study was that the French windows, which opened on a sheltered lawn, were open.
10948.192 I acted accordingly. You see, said Dr. Stuart, I am enclosing your letter in this big
10953.752 envelope which I am sealing. Yes, sir, I replied, standing at some distance from him, so that he
10960.352 had to speak loudly. And would you mind addressing it to the Lost Property Office. Not at all, said he, and did as I suggested. If not reclaimed
10969.632 within a reasonable time, it will be sent to Scotland Yard. I edged nearer to the open window.
10976.512 If it is not reclaimed, I said loudly, it goes to Scotland Yard–yes.
10981.912 Meanwhile, concluded the doctor, I am locking it in this private drawer in my bureau.
10988.152 It is locked in your bureau. Very good. Chapter 18.
10993.352 Disappearance Of Charles Malet. Knowing, and I knew it well, that people of The Scorpion were
10998.992 watching, I do not pretend that I felt at my ease as I drove around to the empty house in which I garaged my cab. My inquiry had entered upon
11008.152 another stage, and Charles Malet was about to disappear from the case. I was well aware that if he failed in his vigilance for a single moment
11017.152 he might well disappear from the world! The path which led to the stables was overgrown with weeds and flanked
11023.952 by ragged bushes; weeds and grass sprouted between the stones paving the little yard, also, although they were withered to a great extent
11032.592 by the petrol recently spilled there. Having run the cab into the yard, I alighted and looked around the deserted grounds, mysterious in the
11041.232 moonlight. Company would have been welcome, but excepting a constable who had stopped and chatted with me on one or two evenings I always
11050.104 had the stables to myself at night. I determined to run the cab into the stable and lock it up without
11056.944 delay, for it was palpably dangerous in the circumstances to remain longer than necessary in that lonely spot. Hurriedly I began to put
11065.704 out the lamps. I unlocked the stable doors and stood looking all about me again. I was dreading the ordeal of driving the cab those last ten
11074.904 yards into the garage, for whilst I had my back to the wilderness of bushes it would be an easy matter for anyone in hiding there to come
11082.464 up behind me. Nevertheless, it had to be done. Seating myself at the wheel I drove
11087.944 into the narrow building, stopped the engine and peered cautiously around toward the bright square formed by the open doors. Nothing was
11095.664 to be seen. No shadow moved. A magazine pistol held in my hand, I crept, step by step, along the
11103.184 wall until I stood just within the opening. There I stopped. I could hear a sound of quick breathing! There was someone waiting
11111.224 outside! Dropping quietly down upon the pavement, I slowly protruded my head
11116.424 around the angle of the brick wall at a point not four inches above the ground. I knew that whoever waited would have his eyes fixed upon
11125.584 the doorway at the level of a man’s head. Close to the wall, a pistol in his left hand and an upraised
11131.584 stand bag in his right, stood Le Balafre! His eyes gleamed savagely in the light of the moon and his teeth were bared in that fearful
11139.984 animal snarl. But he had not seen me. Inch by inch I thrust my pistol forward, the barrel raised sharply. I
11148.584 could not be sure of my aim, of course, nor had I time to judge it carefully.
11153.664 I fired. The bullet was meant for his right wrist, but it struck him in the
11158.784 fleshy part of his arm. Uttering a ferocious cry he leapt back,
11163.912 dropped his pistol–and perceiving me as I sprang to my feet, lashed at my head with the sand bag. I raised my left arm to guard my skull
11173.192 and sustained the full force of the blow upon it. I staggered back against the wall, and my own pistol was knocked from
11180.232 my grasp. My left arm was temporarily useless and the man of the scar was deprived of the use of his right. Pardieu! I had the better
11188.432 chance! He hurled himself upon me. Instantly he recovered the advantage, for he grasped me by the throat
11195.672 with his left hand–and, nom d’un nom! what a grip he had! Flat against the wall he held me, and began, his teeth bared in that
11204.232 fearful grin, to crush the life from me. To such an attack there was only one counter. I kicked him savagely–
11212.752 and that death grip relaxed. I writhed, twisted–and was free! As I
11218.592 regained my freedom I struck up at him, and by great good fortune caught him upon the point of the jaw. He staggered. I struck him over
11226.552 the heart, and as he fell I pounced upon him, exulting, for he had sought my life and I knew no pity.
11233.272 Yet I had not thought so strong a man would choke so easily, and for some moments I stood looking down at him, believing that he sought to
11240.872 trick me. But it was not so. His affair was finished. I listened. The situation in which I found myself was full of
11249.072 difficulty. An owl screeched somewhere in the trees, but nothing else stirred. The sound of the shot had not attracted attention, apparently.
11258.232 I stooped and examined the garments of the man who lay at my feet. He carried a travel coupon to Paris bearing that day’s date, together
11266.632 with some other papers, but, although I searched all his pockets, I could find nothing of real interest, until in an inside pocket of his
11275.112 coat I felt some hard, irregularly shaped object. I withdrew it, and
11280.736 in the moonlight it lay glittering in my palm … a golden scorpion!
11286.016 It had apparently been broken in the struggle. The tail was missing, nor could I find it: but I must confess that I did not prolong the
11293.576 search. Some chance effect produced by the shadow of the moonlight, and the presence of that recently purchased ticket, gave me the idea upon
11302.776 which without delay I proceeded to act. Satisfying myself that there was no mark upon any of his garments by which the man could be
11310.256 identified, I unlocked from my wrist an identification disk which I habitually wore there, and locked it upon the wrist of the man with
11318.896 the scar! Clearly, I argued, he had been detailed to dispatch me and then to
11324.616 leave at once for France. I would make it appear that he had succeeded.
11329.976 Behold me, ten minutes later, driving slowly along a part of the Thames Embankment which I chanced to remember, a gruesome passenger
11338.936 riding behind me in the cab. I was reflecting as I kept a sharp look out
11344.256 for a spot which I had noted one day during my travels, how easily one
11349.296 could commit murder in London, when a constable ran out and intercepted me!
11354.736 Mon Deiu! how my heart leapt! I’ll trouble you for your name and number, my lad, he said.
11361.536 What for? I asked, and remembering a rare fragment of idiom: What’s up with you? I added.
11367.616 Your lamp’s out! he cried, that’s what’s up with me! Oh, said I, climbing from my seat–very well. I’m sorry. I didn’t
11374.576 know. But here is my license. I handed him the little booklet and began to light my lamps, cursing
11380.936 myself for a dreadful artist because I had forgotten to do so. All right, he replied, and handed it back to me. But how the devil
11388.656 you’ve managed to get all your lamps out, I can’t imagine! This is my first job since dusk, I explained hurrying around to the
11396.296 tail light. And he don’t say much! remarked the constable.
11402.496 I replaced my matches in my pocket and returned to the front of the cab, making a gesture as of one raising a glass to his lips and
11410.576 jerking my thumb across my shoulder in the direction of my unseen fare.
11415.656 Oh, that’s it! said the constable, and moved off. Never in my whole career have I been so glad to see the back of any
11422.416 man! I drove on slowly. The point for which I was making was only some
11427.456 three hundred yards further along, but I had noted that the constable had walked off in the opposite direction. Therefore, arriving at my
11435.336 destination–a vacant wharf open to the road–I pulled up and listened.
11440.376 Only the wash of the tide upon the piles of the wharf was audible, for the night was now far advanced.
11446.536 I opened the door of the cab and dragged out Le Balafre. Right and left I peered, truly like a stage villain, and then hauled my
11454.776 unpleasant burden along the irregularly paved path and on to the little wharf. Out in mid stream a Thames Police patrol was passing,
11463.936 and I stood for a moment until the creak of the oars grew dim. Then: there was a dull splash far below … and silence again.
11472.016 Gaston Max had been consigned to a watery grave! Returning again to the garage, I wondered very much who he had been,
11479.576 this one, Le Balafre. Could it be that he was The Scorpion? I could not tell, but I had hopes very shortly of finding out. I had
11487.856 settled up my affairs with my landlady and had removed from my apartments all papers and other effects. In the garage I had placed
11495.376 a good suit of clothes and other necessities, and by telephone I had secured a room at a West End hotel.
11502.056 The cab returned to the stable, I locked the door, and by the light of one of the lamps, shaved off my beard and moustache.
11509.488 My uniform and cap I hung up on the hook where I usually left them after working
11514.608 hours, and changed into the suit which I had placed there in readiness. I next destroyed all evidences of identity and left the place in a
11523.368 neat condition. I extinguished the lamp, went out and locked the door behind me, and carrying a travelling grip and a cane I set off for my
11531.088 new hotel. Charles Malet had disappeared! Chapter 19. I Meet An Old Acquaintance.
11537.728 On the corner opposite Dr. Stuart’s establishment stood a house which was to be let or sold. From the estate agent whose name appeared
11545.768 upon the notice board I obtained the keys–and had a duplicate made of that which opened the front door. It was a simple matter, and the
11554.168 locksmith returned both keys to me within an hour. I informed the agent that the house would not suit me.
11560.888 Nevertheless, having bolted the door, in order that prospective purchasers might not surprise me, I camped out in an upper room all
11568.888 day, watching from behind the screen of trees all who came to the house of Dr. Stuart. Dusk found me still at my post, armed with a pair of
11577.648 good binoculars. Every patient who presented himself I scrutinized carefully, and finding as the darkness grew that it became increasingly
11586.208 difficult to discern the features of visitors, I descended to the front garden and resumed my watch from the lower branches of a tree which
11595.768 stood some twenty feet from the roadway. At selected intervals I crept from my post and surveyed the lane upon
11602.488 which the window of the consulting room opened and also the path leading to the tradesmen’s entrance, from which one might look across
11610.368 the lawn and in at the open study windows. It was during one of these tours of inspection and whilst I was actually peering through a gap in
11618.848 the hedge, that I heard the telephone bell. Dr. Stuart was in the
11624.088 study and I heard him speaking. I gathered that his services were required immediately at some
11629.728 institution in the neighbourhood. I saw him take his hat, stick and bag from the sofa and go out of the room. Then I returned to the front
11638.048 garden of my vacant house. No one appeared for some time. A policeman walked slowly up the road,
11644.408 and flashed his lantern in at the gate of the house I had commandeered. His footsteps died away. Then, faintly, I heard the hum of a powerful
11653.328 motor. I held my breath. The approaching car turned into the road at
11658.888 a point above me to the right, came nearer … and stopped before Dr. Stuart’s door.
11665.408 I focussed my binoculars upon the chauffeur. It was the brown skinned man! Nom d’un nom! a woman was descending
11673.168 form the car. She was enveloped in furs and I could not see her face. She walked up the steps to the door and was admitted.
11681.488 The chauffeur backed the car into the lane beside the house. My heart beating rapidly with excitement, I crept out by the further
11688.848 gate of the drive, crossed the road at a point fifty yards above the house and walking very quietly came back to the tradesmen’s entrance.
11697.448 Into its enveloping darkness I glided and on until I could peep across the lawn.
11703.048 The elegant visitor, as I hoped, had been shown, not into the ordinary waiting room but into the doctor’s study. She was seated with her back
11711.328 to the window, talking to a grey haired old lady–probably the doctor’s housekeeper. Impatiently I waited for this old lady to depart,
11720.608 and the moment that she did so, the visitor stood up, turned and … it was Zara el Khala!
11727.848 It was only with difficulty that I restrained the cry of triumph which arose to my lips.
11733.408 On the instant that the study door closed, Zara el Khala began to try a number of keys which she took from her handbag
11742.128 upon the various drawers of the bureau! So! I said–they are uncertain of the drawer!
11749.208 Suddenly she desisted, looking nervously at the open windows; then, crossing the room, she drew the curtains. I crept out into the road
11758.088 again and by the same roundabout route came back to the empty house. Feeling my way in the darkness of the shrubbery, I found the motor
11765.648 bicycle which I had hidden there and I wheeled it down to the further gate of the drive and waited.
11771.008 I could see the doctor’s door, and I saw him returning along the road. As he appeared, from somewhere—I could not determine from where–came
11779.448 a strange and uncanny wailing sound, a sound that chilled me like an evil omen.
11785.288 Even as it died away, and before Dr. Stuart had reached his door I knew what it portended–that horrible wail. Some one hidden I knew not
11794.088 where, had warned Zara el Khala that the doctor returned! But stay! Perhaps that some one was the dark skinned chauffeur!
11802.168 How I congratulated myself upon the precautions which I had taken to escape observation. Evidently the watcher had placed himself somewhere
11810.168 where he could command a view of the front door and the road. Five minutes later the girl came out, the old housekeeper accompanying
11817.888 her to the door. The car emerged from the lane, Zara el Khala entered it and was driven away. I could see no one seated beside the
11826.048 chauffeur. I started my Indian and leapt in pursuit. As I had anticipated, the route was Eastward, and I found myself
11833.648 traversing familiar ground. From the south west to the east of London whirled the big car of mystery–and I was ever close behind it.
11842.104 Sometimes, in the crowded streets, I lost sight of my quarry for a time, but always I caught up again, and at last I found myself whirling
11851.664 along Commercial Road and not fifty yards behind the car. Just by the canal bridge a drunken sailor lurched out in front of my
11859.184 wheel, and only by twisting perilously right into a turning called, I believe, Salmon Lane, did I avoid running him down.
11867.904 Sacre nom! how I cursed him! The lane was too narrow for me to turn
11872.944 and I was compelled to dismount and to wheel my Indian back to the highroad. The yellow car had vanished, of course, but I took it for
11880.224 granted that it had followed the main road. At a dangerous speed, pursued by execrations from the sailor and all his friends, I set off
11889.584 east once more turning to the right down West India Dock Road. Arriving at the dock, and seeing nothing ahead of me but desolation
11897.544 and ships’ masts, I knew that that inebriated pig had spoiled everything! I could have sat down upon the dirty pavement and wept,
11905.224 so mortified was I! For if Zara el Khala had secured the envelope I had missed my only chance.
11911.824 However, pardieu! I have said that despair is not permitted by the Bureau. I rode home to my hotel, deep in reflection. Whether the girl
11920.744 had the envelope or not, at least she had escaped detection by the doctor; therefore if she had failed she would try again. I could sleep
11928.464 in peace until the morrow. Of the following day, which I spent as I had spent the preceding one,
11934.784 I have nothing to record. At about the same time in the evening the yellow car again rolled into view, and on this occasion I devoted all
11942.864 my attention to the dark skinned chauffeur, upon whom I directed my glasses.
11948.224 As the girl alighted and spoke to him for a moment, he raised the goggles which habitually he wore and I saw his face.
11955.984 A theory which I had formed on the previous night proved correct. The chauffeur was the
11961.384 Hindu, Chunda Lal! As Zara el Khala walked up the steps he backed
11967.224 the car into the narrow lane and I watched him constantly. Yet, watch as closely as I might, I could not see where he concealed himself in
11975.584 order to command a view of the road. On this occasion, as I know, Dr. Stuart was at home. Nevertheless, the
11983.344 girl stayed for close upon half an hour, and I began to wonder if some new move had been planned. Suddenly the door opened and she came out.
11992.424 I crept through the bushes to my bicycle and wheeled it on to the drive. I saw the car start; but Madame Fortune being in playful mood,
12001.064 my own engine refused to start at all, and when ten minutes later I at last aroused a spark of life in the torpid machine I knew that
12009.544 pursuit would be futile. Since this record is intended for the guidance of those who take up
12014.744 the quest of The Scorpion either in co operation with myself or,
12020.704 in the event of my failure, alone, it would be profitless for me to
12026.104 record my disasters. Very well, I had one success. One night I pursued
12033.264 the yellow car from Dr. Stuart’s house to the end of Limehouse Causeway without once losing sight of it.
12040.424 A string of lorries from the docks, drawn by a traction engine, checked me at the corner for a time, although the yellow car passed. But I
12049.584 raced furiously on and by great good luck overtook it near the Dock Station. From thence onward pursuing a strangely tortuous route, I
12059.104 kept it in sight to Canning Town, when it turned into a public garage. I followed–to purchase petrol.
12066.624 Chunda Lal was talking to the man in charge; he had not yet left his
12072.744 seat. But the car was empty! At first I was stupid with astonishment. Par la barbe du prophete! I
12080.424 was astounded. Then I saw that I had really made a great discovery. The street into which I had injudiciously followed Le Balafre lay
12089.2 between Limehouse Causeway and Ropemaker Street, and it was at no great distance from this point that I had lost sight of the yellow car. In
12097.72 that street, which according to my friend the policeman was nearly all Chinese, Zara el Khala had descended; in that street was The
12106.48 Scorpion’s lair! Chapter 20. Conclusion Of Statement.
12112.0 I come now to the conclusion of this statement and to the strange occurrence which led to my proclaiming myself. The fear of imminent
12120.88 assassination which first had prompted me to record what I knew of The Scorpion had left me since I had ceased to be Charles Malet. And
12129.2 that the disappearance of Le Balafre had been accepted by his unknown chief as evidence of his success in removing me, I did not
12138.16 doubt. Therefore I breathed more freely … and more freely still when
12143.36 my body was recovered! Yes, my body was recovered from Hanover Hole; I read of it–a very
12149.16 short paragraph, but it is the short paragraphs that matter–in my morning paper. I knew then that I should very shortly be dead indeed–
12158.76 officially dead. I had counted on this happening before, you understand, for I more than ever suspected that The Scorpion knew me
12166.4 to be in England and I feared that he would lie low as the English say. However, since a fortunate thing happens better late than never,
12174.6 I say in this paragraph two things: 1 that the enemy would cease to count upon Gaston Max; 2 that the Scotland Yard Commissioner would
12183.68 be authorised to open Part First of this Statement which had been lodged at his office two days after I landed in England–the portion
12192.24 dealing with my inquiries in Paris and with my tracking of Le Balafre to Bow Road Station and observing that he showed a golden
12200.28 scorpion to the chauffeur of the yellow car. This would happen because Paris would wire that the identification
12207.504 disk found on the dead man was that of Gaston Max. Why would Paris do
12212.544 so? Because my reports had been discounted since I had ceased to be Charles Malet and Paris would be seeking evidence of my whereabouts.
12221.224 My reports had discontinued because I had learned that I had to do with a criminal organization of whose ramifications I knew nothing.
12228.984 Therefore I took no more chances. I died. I return to the night when Inspector Dunbar, the grim Dunbar of
12237.064 Scotland Yard, came to Dr. Stuart’s house. His appearance there puzzled me. I could not fail to recognize him, for as dusk had fully
12245.664 come I had descended from my top window and was posted among the bushes of the empty house from whence I commanded a perfect view of
12253.584 the doctor’s door. The night was unusually chilly–there had been some rain–and when I crept around to the lane bordering the lawn, hoping
12262.264 to see or hear something of what was taking place in the study, I found that the windows were closed and the blinds drawn.
12269.504 Luck seemed to have turned against me; for that night, at dusk, when I had gone to a local garage where I kept my motor bicycle, I had
12276.704 discovered the back tire to be perfectly flat and had been forced to contain my soul in patience whilst the man repaired a serious puncture.
12285.584 The result was of course that for more than half an hour I had not had Dr. Stuart’s house under observation. And a hundred and one things
12293.944 can happen in half an hour. Had Dr. Stuart sent for the Inspector? If so, I feared that the
12300.744 envelope was missing, or at any rate that he had detected Zara el Khala in the act of stealing it and had determined to place the
12308.664 matter in the hands of the police. It was a maddening reflection. Again–I shrewdly suspected that I was not the only watcher of Dr.
12317.704 Stuart’s house. The frequency with which the big yellow car drew up at the door a few moments after the doctor had gone out could not be
12326.256 due to accident. Yet I had been unable to detect the presence of this other watcher, nor had I any idea of the spot where the car remained
12334.376 hidden–if my theory was a correct one. Nevertheless I did not expect to see it come along whilst the Inspector remained at the house–
12342.296 always supposing that Zara el Khala had not yet succeeded. I wheeled out the Indian and rode to a certain tobacconist’s shop at
12350.576 which I had sometimes purchased cigarettes. He had a telephone in a room at the rear which customers were allowed
12356.416 to use on payment of a fee, and a public call box would not serve my purpose, since the operator usually announces to a subscriber the fact
12365.376 that a call emanated from such an office. The shop was closed, but I rang the bell at the side door and obtained permission to use the
12373.216 telephone upon pleading urgency. I had assiduously cultivated a natural gift for mimicry, having found it of inestimable service in the
12381.536 practice of my profession. It served me now. I had worked in the past with Inspector Dunbar and his subordinate Sergeant Sowerby, and I
12390.856 determined to trust to my memory of the latter’s mode of speech. I rang up Dr. Stuart and asked for the Inspector, saying Sergeant
12399.136 Sowerby spoke from Scotland Yard. Hullo! he cried, is that you, Sowerby?
12404.936 Yes, I replied in Sowerby’s voice. I thought I should find you there. About the body of Max..
12411.416 Eh! said Dunbar–what’s that? Max? I knew immediately that Paris had not yet wired, therefore I told him
12419.976 that Paris had done so, and that the disk numbered 49685 was that of
12427.176 Gaston Max. He was inexpressibly shocked, deploring the rashness of
12432.736 Max in working alone. Come to Scotland Yard, I said, anxious to get him away from the house.
12439.632 He said he would be with me in a few minutes, and I was racking my brains for some means of learning what business had taken him to Dr.
12447.992 Stuart when he gave me the desired information spontaneously. Sowerby, listen, said he: It’s ‘The Scorpion’ case right enough!
12457.112 That bit of gold found on the dead man is not a cactus stem; it’s a scorpion’s tail!
12462.752 So! they had found what I had failed to find! It must have been attached, I concluded, to some inner part of Le Balafre’s clothing.
12470.912 There had been no mention of Zara el Khala; therefore, as I rode back to my post I permitted myself to assume that she would come
12478.512 again, since presumably she had thus far failed. I was right.
12483.952 Morbleu! quick as I was the car was there before me! But I had not
12489.192 overlooked this possibility and I had dismounted at a good distance from the house and had left the Indian in someone’s front garden.
12496.352 As I had turned out of the main road I had seen Dr. Stuart and Inspector Dunbar approaching a rank upon which two or three cabs
12503.832 usually stood. I watched la Bell Zara enter the house, a beautiful woman most
12509.752 elegantly attired, and then, even before Chunda Lal had backed the car into the lane I was off … to the spot at which I had abandoned
12517.992 my motor bicycle. In little more than half an hour I had traversed London, and was standing in the shadow of that high, blank wall to
12526.472 which I have referred as facing a row of wooden houses in a certain street adjoining Limehouse Causeway.
12533.712 You perceive my plan? I was practically sure of the street; all I had to learn was which house sheltered The Scorpion!
12541.112 I had already suspected that this night was to be for me an unlucky night. Nom d’un p’tit bon homme! it was so.
12548.064 Until an hour before dawn I crouched under that wall and saw no living thing except a very old
12555.544 Chinese person who came out of one of the houses and walked slowly away.
12560.784 The other houses appeared to be empty. No vehicle of any kind passed that way all night. Turning over in my mind the details of this most perplexing case, it
12570.584 became evident to me that the advantages of working alone were now outweighed by the disadvantages. The affair had reached a stage at
12579.784 which ordinary police methods should be put into operation. I had collected some of the threads; the next thing was for Scotland Yard
12587.184 to weave these together whilst I sought for more. I determined to remain dead. It would afford me greater freedom of
12595.584 action. The disappearance of Le Balafre which must by this time have been noted by his associates, might possibly lead to a suspicion that the
12605.344 dead man was not Gaston Max; but providing no member of The Scorpion
12610.704 group obtained access to the body I failed to see how this suspicion could be confirmed. I reviewed my position.
12617.864 The sealed letter had achieved its purpose in part. Although I had failed to locate the house from which these people operated, I could draw
12625.344 a circle on the map within which I knew it to be; and I had learned that Zara el Khala and the Hindu were in London. What it all meant–to what
12634.224 end The Scorpion was working I did not know. But having learned so much, be sure I did not despair of learning more.
12641.944 It was now imperative that I should find out exactly what had occurred at Dr. Stuart’s house. Accordingly I determined to call upon the
12650.104 Inspector at Scotland Yard. I presented myself towards evening of the day following my vigil in Limehouse, sending up the card of a Bureau
12659.184 confrere, for I did not intend to let it be generally known that I was alive.
12664.2 Presently I was shown up to that bare and shining room which I remembered having visited in the past. I stood just within the doorway,
12672.8 smiling. Inspector Dunbar rose, as the constable went out, and stood
12677.92 looking across at me. I had counted on striking him dumb with astonishment. He was Scottishly
12684.64 unmoved. Well, he said, coming forward with outstretched hand, I’m glad to
12689.84 see you. I knew you would have come to us sooner or later! I felt that my eyes sparkled. There was no resentment within my heart.
12698.08 I rejoiced. Look, he continued, taking a slip of paper from his note book. This
12703.84 is a copy of a note I left with Dr. Stuart some time ago. Read it. I did so, and this is what I read:
12711.04 A: the name of the man who cut out the lid of the cardboard box and sealed it in the envelope–Gaston Max!
12718.88 B: the name of the missing cabman–Gaston Max! C: the name of the man who rang me up at Dr. Stuart’s and told me
12727.6 that Gaston Max was dead–Gaston Max! I returned the slip to Inspector Dunbar. I bowed.
12736.12 It is a pleasure and a privilege to work with you, Inspector, I said …. This statement is nearly concluded. The whole of the evening I spent
12744.2 in the room of the Assistant Commissioner discussing the matters herein set forth and comparing notes with Inspector Dunbar. One
12751.92 important thing I learned: that I had abandoned my nightly watches too early. For one morning just before dawn someone who was not
12759.72 Zara had paid a visit to the house of Dr. Stuart! I determined to call upon the doctor.
12766.12 As it chanced I was delayed and did not actually arrive until so late an hour that I had almost decided not to present myself … when a big
12773.76 yellow car flashed past the taxicab in which I was driving! Nom d’un nom! I could not mistake it! This was within a few hundred
12782.4 yards of the house of Dr. Stuart, you understand, and I instantly
12787.968 dismissed my cabman and proceeded to advance cautiously on foot. I could no longer hear the engine of the car which had passed ahead of
12796.008 me, but then I knew that it could run almost noiselessly. As I crept along in that friendly shadow cast by a high hedge which had served
12804.888 me so well before, I saw the yellow car. It was standing on the opposite side of the road. I reached the tradesman’s entrance.
12814.408 From my left, in the direction of the back lawn of the house, came a sudden singular crackling noise and I discerned a flash of blue flame
12822.928 resembling faint summer lightning. A series of muffled explosions followed … and in the darkness I tripped over something which lay
12831.608 along the ground at my feet–a length of cable it seemed to be. Stumbling, I uttered a slight exclamation … and instantly received
12840.488 a blow on the head that knocked me flat upon the ground! Everything was swimming around me, but I realized that someone–Chunda Lal
12848.728 probably–had been hiding in the very passage which I had entered! I heard again that uncanny wailing, close beside me.
12856.928 Vaguely I discerned an incredible figure–like that of a tall cowled monk, towering over me. I struggled to retain consciousness–there was
12866.008 a rush of feet … the throb of a motor. It stimulated me–that sound!
12871.408 I must get to the telephone and cause the yellow car to be intercepted. I staggered to my feet and groped my way along the hedge to where I
12879.008 had observed a tree by means of which one might climb over. I was dizzy as a drunken man; but I half climbed and half fell on to the
12886.728 lawn. The windows were open. I rushed into the study of Dr. Stuart. Pah! it was full of fumes. I looked around me. Mon Dieu! I staggered.
12897.672 For I knew that in this fume laden room a thing more horrible and more strange than any within my experience had taken place that night.
12906.512 Part III At THE HOUSE OF AH FANG FU Chapter 21.
12912.352 The Brain Thieves. The Assistant Commissioner lighted a cigarette. It would appear, then, he said, that whilst some minor difficulties have been smoothed
12921.352 away, we remain face to face with the major problem: who is ‘The Scorpion’ and to what end are his activities directed?
12930.832 Gaston Max shrugged his shoulders and smiled at Dr. Stuart. Let us see, he suggested, what we really know about this ‘Scorpion’.
12938.712 Let us make a brief survey of our position in the matter. Let us take first what we have learned of him–if it is a ‘him’ with whom we have
12946.712 to deal–from the strange experiences of Dr. Stuart. Without attaching
12951.872 too much importance to that episode five years ago on the Wu Men Bridge; perhaps he is not. We will talk about this one again presently.
12962.232 We come to the arrival on the scene of Zara el Khala, also called Mlle. Dorian. She comes because of what I have told to the scarred
12971.312 man from Paris, she comes to obtain that dangerous information which is to be sent to Scotland Yard, she comes, in a word, from ‘The
12981.072 Scorpion.’ We have two links binding the poor one ‘Le Balafre’ to ‘The Scorpion’: 1 his intimacy with Miguel and those others with
12988.672 whom ‘Scorpion’ communicated by telephone; 2 his possession of the golden ornament which lies there upon the table and which I took
12997.392 from his pocket. What can we gather from the statement made to Dr. Stuart by Mlle. Dorian? Let us study this point for a moment.
13006.352 In the first place we can only accept her words with a certain skepticism. Her story may be nothing but a fabrication. However, it is
13015.712 interesting because she claims to be the unwilling servant of a dreaded master. She lays stress upon the fact that she is an Oriental
13024.976 and does not enjoy the same freedom as a European woman. This is
13030.016 possible, up to a point. On the other hand she seems to enjoy not only freedom but every luxury. Therefore it may equally well be a lie.
13040.296 Some slight colour is lent to her story by the extraordinary mode of life which she followed in Paris. In the midst of Bohemianism she
13048.896 remained secluded as an odalisque in some harem garden of Stambul,
13054.176 whether by her own will or by will of another we do not know. One little point her existence seems to strengthen: that we are dealing
13063.336 with Easterns; for Zara el Khala is partly of Eastern blood and her follower Chunda Lal is a Hindu. Eh bien.
13071.336 Consider the cowled man whose shadow Dr. Stuart has seen on two
13076.496 occasions: once behind the curtain of his window and once cast by the moonlight across the lawn of his house. The man himself he has never
13085.256 seen. Now this hooded man cannot have been ‘Le Balafre’, for ‘Le Balafre’ was already dead at the time of his first appearance.
13093.976 He may be ‘The Scorpion’! Max paused impressively, looking around at those in the Commissioner’s
13100.136 room. For a moment I return to the man of the Wu Men Bridge. The man of the Wu Men Bridge was veiled and this one is hooded! The man of the
13108.256 Wu Men Bridge was known as ‘The Scorpion,’ and this one also is associated with a scorpion. We will return yet again to this point
13116.256 in a moment. Is there something else which we may learn from the experiences of Dr. Stuart? Yes! We learn that ‘The Scorpion’ suddenly decides that
13125.376 Dr. Stuart is dangerous, either because of his special knowledge which would be interesting or because the ‘Scorpion’ believes that
13134.176 he has become acquainted with the contents of the sealed envelope– which is not so interesting although equally dangerous for Dr. Stuart.
13142.696 ‘The Scorpion’ acts. He pays a second visit, again accompanied by
13147.888 Chunda Lal, who seems to be a kind of watch dog who not only guards the person of Zara el Kahla but who also howls when danger threatens
13157.368 the cowled man! And what is the weapon which the cowled man who may be ‘The Scorpion’ uses to remove Dr. Stuart? It is a frightful weapon, my
13167.208 friends; it is a novel and deadly weapon. It is a weapon of which science knows nothing–a blue ray of the colour produced by a Mercury
13176.048 Vapour Lamp, according to Dr. Stuart who has seen it, and producing an odour like that of a blast furnace according to myself, who smelled
13185.328 it! Or this odour might have been caused by the fusing of the telephone; for the blue ray destroys such fragile things as telephones as easily
13194.808 as it destroys wood and paper! There is even a large round hole burned through the clay at the back of the study grate and through the brick
13202.608 wall behind it! Very well. ‘The Scorpion’ is a scientist and he is also
13208.528 the greatest menace to the world which the world has ever been called upon to deal with. You agree with me?
13214.448 Inspector Dunbar heaved a great sigh, Stuart silently accepted a cigarette from the Assistant Commissioner’s box and the Assistant
13222.048 Commissioner spoke, slowly. I entirely agree with you, M. Max. Respecting this ray, as well as
13228.328 some one or two other minutiae, I have made a short note which we will discuss when you have completed your admirably lucid survey of
13236.328 the case. These are the things, then, which we learn from the terrible experiences of Dr. Stuart.
13242.696 Placing these experiences side by side with my own in Paris and in London–which we have already discussed in
13250.656 detail–we find that we have to deal with an organisation–the object of which is unknown–comprising among its members both Europeans
13259.376 ‘Le Balafre’ was a Frenchman, I believe, cross breeds such as Miguel and Zara el Khala Stuart winced, one Algerian and a Hindu. It is
13268.896 then an organisation having ramifications throughout Europe, the East and, mon Dieu! where not? To continue. This little image–he took
13277.976 up from the Commissioner’s table the golden scorpion, and the broken fragment of tail–is now definitely recognized by Dr. Stuart–who is
13286.616 familiar with the work of Oriental goldsmiths–to be of Chinese craftsmanship! It may possibly be Tibetan, interrupted Stuart; but it comes to the
13295.056 same thing. Very well, continued Max. It is Chinese. We hope, very shortly, to
13301.416 identify a house situated somewhere within this red ink circle–he placed his finger on a map of London which lay open on the table–and
13309.496 which I know to be used as a meeting place by members of this mysterious group. That circle, my friends, surrounds what is now known
13317.816 as ‘Chinatown’! For the third time I return to the man of the Wu Men Bridge; for the man of the Wu Men Bridge was, apparently, a
13325.896 Chinese person! Do I make myself clear? Remarkably so, declared the Assistant Commissioner, taking a fresh
13332.536 cigarette. Pray continue, M. Max. I will do so. One of my most important investigations, in which I had
13339.856 the honour and the pleasure to be associated with Inspector Dunbar, led to the discovery of a dangerous group controlled by a certain
13348.416 ‘Mr. King’—- Ah! cried Dunbar, his tawny eyes sparkling with excitement, I was
13355.256 waiting for that! I knew you would be waiting for it, Inspector. Your powers of
13360.496 deductive reasoning more and more are earning my respect. You recall that singular case? The elaborate network extending from London to
13369.488 Buenos Ayres, from Peking to Petrograd? Ah! a wonderful system. It was
13375.648 an opium syndicate, you understand,–turning again to the Assistant Commissioner. I recall the case, replied the Commissioner, although I did not
13383.728 hold my present appointment at the time. I believe there were unsatisfactory features?
13389.968 There were, agreed Max. We never solved the mystery of the identity of ‘Mr. King,’ and although we succeeded in destroying the enterprise
13398.408 I have since thought that we acted with undue precipitation. Yes, said Dunbar rapidly; but there was that poor girl to be
13406.128 rescued, you will remember? We couldn’t waste time. I agree entirely, Inspector. Our hands were forced. Yet, I repeat, I
13414.528 have since thought that we acted with undue precipitation. I will tell you why. Do you recall the loss–not explained to this day–of the
13423.488 plans of the Haley torpedo? Perfectly, replied the Commissioner; and Dunbar also nodded
13429.968 affirmatively. Very well. A similar national loss was sustained about the same time
13435.408 by my own Government. I am not at liberty to divulge its exact nature, as in the latter case the loss never became known to the public. But
13443.728 the only member of the French Chamber who had seen this document to which I refer was a certain ‘M. Blank,’ shall we say? I believe also
13451.728 that I am correct in stating that the late Sir Brian Malpas was a member of the British Cabinet at the time that the Haley plans were
13458.288 lost? That is correct, said the Assistant Commissioner, but surely the honour of the late Sir Brian was above suspicion?
13465.568 Quite, agreed Max; so also was that of ‘M. Blank.’ But my point is
13471.928 this: Both ‘M. Blank’ and the late Sir Brian were clients of the opium syndicate!
13476.968 Dunbar nodded again eagerly. Hard work I had to hush it up, he said.
13482.624 It would have finished his political career. The Assistant Commissioner looked politely puzzled.
13489.384 It was generally supposed that Sir Brian Malpas was addicted to drugs, he remarked; and I am not surprised to learn that he
13496.624 patronised this syndicate to which you refer. But—- he paused, smiling satanically. Ah! he added–I see! I see!
13508.384 You perceive the drift of my argument? cried Max. You grasp what I
13514.144 mean when I say that we were too hasty? This syndicate existed for a more terrible purpose than the promulgating of a Chinese vice; it had
13522.304 in its clutches men entrusted with national secrets, men of genius but slaves of a horrible drug. Under the influence of that drug, my
13530.704 friends, how many of those secrets may they not have divulged? His words were received in hushed silence.
13537.664 What became of those stolen plans? he continued, speaking now in a very low voice. In the stress of recent years has the Haley torpedo
13546.184 made its appearance so that we might learn to which Government the plans had been taken? No! the same mystery surrounds the fate of the
13553.744 information filched from the drugged brain of ‘M. Blank.’ In a word– he raised a finger dramatically–someone is hoarding up those
13561.744 instruments of destruction! Who is it that collects such things and for what purpose does he collect them?
13567.784 Following another tense moment of silence: Let us have your own theory, M. Max, said the Assistant Commissioner.
13574.584 Gaston Max shrugged his shoulders. It is not worthy of the name of a theory, he replied, the surmise
13580.784 which I have made. But recently I found myself considering the fact that ‘The Scorpion’ might just conceivably be a Chinese person. Now, ‘Mr.
13590.424 King,’ we believe was a Chinese person, and ‘Mr. King,’ as I am now
13596.184 convinced, operated not for a personal but for a deeper, political purpose.
13601.808 He stole the brains of genius and accumulated that genius.
13607.888 Is it not possible that these contrary operations may be part of a common plan? Chapter 22.
13615.448 The Red Circle. You are not by any chance, suggested Stuart, smiling slightly,
13621.168 hinting at that defunct bogey, the ‘Yellow Peril’? Ah! cried Max, but certainly I am not! Do not misunderstand me.
13629.368 This group with which we are dealing is shown to be not of a national but of an international character. The same applied to the organisation
13637.328 of ‘Mr. King.’ But a Chinese person directed the one, and I begin to suspect
13642.968 that a Chinese person directs the other. No, I speak of no ridiculous
13648.088 ‘Yellow Peril,’ my friends. John Chinese person, as I have known him, is the
13653.488 whitest man breathing; but can you not imagine–he dropped his voice again in that impressive way which was yet so truly Gallic–can you
13662.728 not imagine a kind of Oriental society which like a great, a formidable serpent, lies hidden somewhere below that deceptive jungle
13671.688 of the East? These are troubled times. It is a wise state to day that
13676.768 knows its own leaders. Can you not imagine a dreadful sudden menace, not of men and guns but of brains and capital?
13684.928 You mean, said Dunbar slowly, that ‘The Scorpion’ may be getting people out of the way who might interfere with this rising or invasion
13692.888 or whatever it is? Just as ‘Mr. King’ accumulated material for it, interjected the
13698.368 Assistant Commissioner. It is a bold conception, M. Max, and it
13703.408 raises the case out of the ordinary category and invests it with enormous international importance.
13709.848 All were silent for a time, Stuart, Dunbar and the Commissioner watching the famous Frenchman as he sat there, arrayed in the latest
13717.488 fashion of Saville Row, yet Gallic to his finger tips and in every gesture.
13722.864 It was almost impossible at times to credit the fact that a Parisian was speaking, for the English of Gaston Max was flawless
13730.984 except that he spoke with a faint American accent. Then, suddenly, a
13736.064 gesture, an expletive, would betray the Frenchman. But such betrayals never escaped him when, in one of his inimitable
13744.464 disguises, he penetrated to the purlieu of Whitechapel, to the dens of Limehouse. Then he was the perfect Hooligan, as, mingling with the
13754.304 dangerous thieves of Paris, he was the perfect Apache. It was an
13759.344 innate gift of mimicry which had made him the greatest investigator of his day. He could have studied Chinese social life for six months
13768.144 and thereupon have become a mandarin whom his own servants would never have suspected to be a foreign barbarian. It was pure genius, as
13776.024 opposed to the brilliant efficiency of Dunbar. But in the heart of the latter, as he studied Gaston Max and realized
13782.944 the gulf that separated them, there was nothing but generous admiration of a master; yet Dunbar was no novice, for by a process of
13791.184 fine deductive reasoning he had come to the conclusion, as has appeared, that Gaston Max had been masquerading as a cabman and that
13800.024 the sealed letter left with Dr. Stuart had been left as a lure. By one
13805.184 of those tricks of fate which sometimes perfect the plans of men but more often destroy them, the body of Le Balafre had been so
13814.104 disfigured during the time that it had been buffeted about in the Thames that it was utterly unrecognizable and indescribable. But even
13823.184 the disk had not deceived Dunbar. He had seen in it another ruse of his brilliant confrere, and his orders to the keeper of the mortuary
13831.664 to admit no one without a written permit had been dictated by the conviction that Max wished the body to be mistaken for his own.
13840.056 In Inspector Dunbar, Gaston Max immediately had recognized an able
13845.416 colleague as Mrs. M’Gregor had recognized a grand figure of a man. The Assistant Commissioner broke the silence.
13853.016 There have been other cases, he said reflectively, now that one considers the matter, which seemed to point to the existence of such
13860.256 a group or society as you indicate, M. Max, notably one with which, if I remember rightly, Inspector–turning his dark eyes towards
13868.696 Dunbar–Inspector Weymouth, late of this Branch, was associated? Quite right, sir. It was his big case, and it got him a fine billet
13877.936 as Superintendent in Cairo if you remember? Yes, mused the Assistant Commissioner–he transferred to Egypt–a
13885.256 very good appointment, as you say. That, again, was before my term of office, but there were a number of very ghastly crimes connected with
13893.056 the case and it was more or less definitely established, I believe, that some extensive secret society did actually exist throughout the
13900.576 East, governed, I fancy, by a Chinese person. And from China, added Dunbar.
13906.656 Yes, yes, from China as you say, Inspector. He turned to Gaston Max. Can it really be, M. Max, that we have to deal with an upcrop of some
13916.096 deeply seated evil which resides in the Far East? Are all these cases, not the work of individual criminal but manifestations of a more
13924.096 sinister, a darker force? Gaston Max met his glance and Max’s mouth grew very grim.
13931.256 I honestly believe so. he answered. I have believed it for nearly two years–ever since the Grand Duke died. And now, you said, I
13940.696 remember, that you had made a note the nature of which you would communicate. Yes, replied the Assistant Commissioner–a small point, but one
13949.536 which may be worthy of attention. This ray, Dr. Stuart, which played
13954.744 such havoc in your study–do you know of anything approaching to it in more recent scientific devices?
13961.824 Well, said Stuart, it my be no more than a development of one of several systems, notably of that of the late Henrik Ericksen upon
13971.104 which he was at work at the time of his death. Exactly. The Assistant Commissioner smiled in his most
13978.464 Mephistophelean manner. Of the late Henrik Ericksen, as you say.
13984.504 He said no more for a moment and sat smoking and looking from face to face. Then:
13989.864 That is the subject of my note, gentlemen, he added. The other minutiae are of no immediate importance.
13997.104 Non d’un p’tit bonhomme! whispered Gaston Max. I see! You think
14002.344 that Ericksen had completed his experiments before he died, but that he never lived to give them to the world?
14008.824 The Assistant Commissioner waved one hand in the air so that he discoloration of the first and second fingers was very noticeable.
14016.744 It is for you to ascertain these points, M. Max, he said–I only suggest. But I begin to share your belief that a series of daring and
14025.984 unusual assassinations has been taking place under the eyes of the police authorities of Europe. It can only be poison–an unknown poison,
14035.544 perhaps. We shall be empowered to exhume the body of the late Sir Frank Narcombe in a few days’ time, I hope. His case puzzles me
14044.704 hopelessly. What obstacle did a surgeon offer to this hypothetical Eastern movement? On the other hand, what can have been filched from
14052.824 him before his death? The death of an inventor, a statesman, a soldier, can be variously explained by your ‘Yellow’ hypothesis, M. Max, but
14063.424 what of the death of a surgeon? Gaston Max shrugged, and his mobile mouth softened in a quaint smile.
14071.024 We have learned a little, he said, and guessed a lot. Let us hope to guess more–and learn everything!
14079.184 May I suggest, added Dunbar, that we hear Sowerby’s report, sir?
14084.504 Certainly, agreed the Assistant Commissioner–call Sergeant Sowerby. A moment later Sergeant Sowerby entered, his face very red and his
14094.064 hair bristling more persistently than usual. Anything to report, Sowerby? asked Dunbar.
14100.384 Yes, Inspector, replied Sowerby, in his Police Court manner;–he faced the Assistant Commissioner, with your permission, sir.
14109.504 He took out a note book which appeared to be the twin of Dunbar’s and consulted it, assuming an expression of profound reflection.
14118.304 In the first place, sir, he began, never raising his eyes from the page, I have traced the cab sold on the hire purchase system to a
14125.944 certain Charles Mallett… Ha, ha! laughed Max breezily–he calls me a hammer! It is not
14132.744 Mallett, Sergeant Sowerby–you have got too many l’s in that name; it is Malet and is called like one from the Malay States!
14141.384 Oh, commented Sowerby, glancing up–indeed. Very good, sir. The
14146.464 owner claims the balance of purchase money! Every one laughed at that, even the satanic Assistant Commissioner.
14153.544 Pay your debts, M. Max, he said. You will bring the Service de Surete into bad repute! Carry on, Sergeant.
14160.064 This cab, continued Sowerby, when Dunbar interrupted him. Cut out the part about the cab, Sowerby, he said. We’ve found that
14168.104 out from M. Max. Have you anything to report about the yellow car? Yes, replied Sowerby, unperturbed, and turning over to the next
14175.464 page. It was hired form Messrs. Wickers’ garage, at Canning Town, by
14180.584 the week. The lady who hired it was a Miss Dorian, a French lady. She gave no reference, except that of the Savoy Hotel, where she was
14189.464 stopping. She paid a big deposit and had her own chauffeur, a colored man of some kind.
14195.984 Is it still in use by her? snapped Dunbar eagerly. No, Inspector. She claimed her deposit this morning and said she was
14203.968 leaving London. The cheque? cried Dunbar. Was cashed half an hour later.
14209.488 At what bank? London County Birmingham, Canning Town. Her own account at a Strand
14215.168 bank was closed yesterday. The details all concern milliners, jewellers, hotels and so forth. There’s nothing there. I’ve been to
14223.448 the Savoy, of course. Yes! A lady named Dorian has had rooms there for six weeks, has dined there
14230.048 on several occasions, but was more often away than in the hotel. Visitors? Never had any.
14235.968 She used to dine alone, then? Always. In the public dining room? No. In her own room.
14243.728 Morbleu! muttered Max. It is she beyond doubt. I recognize her
14248.768 sociable habits! Has she left now? asked Dunbar. She left a week ago.
14254.328 Sowerby closed his note book and returned it to his pocket. Is that all you have to report, Sergeant? asked the Assistant
14262.648 Commissioner. That’s all, sir. Very good. Sergeant Sowerby retired.
14268.208 Now, sir, said Dunbar, I’ve got Inspector Kelly here. He looks after the Chinese quarter. Shall I call him?
14275.088 Yes, Inspector. Presently there entered a burly Irishman, bluff and good humoured, a
14280.848 very typical example of the intelligent superior police officer, looking keenly around him.
14287.408 Ah, Inspector, the Assistant Commissioner greeted him–we want your assistance in a little matter concerning the Chinese residential
14294.528 quarter. You know this district? Certainly, sir. I know it very well. On this map–the Assistant Commissioner laid a discoloured
14302.168 forefinger upon the map of London–you will perceive that we have drawn a circle.
14307.408 Inspector Kelly bent over the table. Yes, sir. Within that circle, which is no larger in circumference that a
14314.248 shilling as you observe, lies a house used by a certain group of people. It has been suggested to me that these people may be Chinese
14323.448 or associates of Chinese. Well, sir, said Inspector Kelly, smiling broadly, considering the
14329.408 patch inside the circle I think it more than likely! Seventy five or it may be eighty per cent of the rooms and cellars and attics in
14337.368 those three streets are occupied by Chinese. For your guidance, Inspector, we believe these people to be a
14344.248 dangerous gang of international criminals. Do you know of any particular house, or houses, likely to be used as a meeting place by
14352.568 such a gang? Inspector Kelly scratched his close cropped head. A woman was murdered just there, sir, he said, taking up a pen from
14361.928 the table and touching a point near the corner of Three Colt Street, about a twelve month ago. We traced the man–a Chinese sailor–to a
14369.848 house lying just about here. Again he touched the map. It’s a sort of little junk shop with a ramshackle house attached, all cellars and
14378.808 rabbit hutches, as you might say, overhanging a disused cutting which is filled at high tide. Opium is to be had there and card playing
14387.608 goes on, and I won’t swear that you couldn’t get liquor. But it’s well conducted as such dives go.
14394.608 Why is it not closed? inquired the Assistant Commissioner, seizing an opportunity to air his departmental ignorance.
14402.368 Well, sir, replied Inspector Kelly, his eyes twinkling–if we shut
14407.448 up all these places we should never know where to look for some of our regular customers! As I mentioned, we found the wanted Chinese person,
14415.528 three parts drunk, in one of the rooms. It’s a sort of lodging house, then?
14420.648 Exactly. There’s a moderately big room just behind the shop, principally used by opium smokers, and a whole nest of smaller rooms
14429.928 above and below. Mind you, sir, I don’t say this is the place you’re looking for, but it’s the most likely inside your circle.
14436.96 Who is the proprietor? A retired Chinese sailor called Ah Fang Fu, but better known as
14443.2 ‘Pidgin.’ His establishment is called locally ‘The Pidgin House.’ Ah. The Commissioner lighted a cigarette. And you know of no other
14451.4 house which might be selected for such a purpose as I have mentioned? I can’t say I do, sir. I know pretty well all the business affairs of
14458.64 that neighbourhood, and none of the houses inside your circle have changed hands during the past twelve months. Between ourselves, sir,
14466.64 nearly all the property in the district belongs to Ah Fang Fu, and anything that goes on in Chinatown he knows about!
14474.0 Ah, I see. Then in any event he is the man we want to watch?
14479.44 Well, sir, you ought to keep an eye on his visitors, I should say. I am obliged to you, Inspector, said the courteous Assistant
14486.68 Commissioner, for your very exact information. If necessary I shall communicate with you again. Good day.
14494.44 Good day, sir, replied the Inspector. Good day, gentlemen. He went out. Gaston Max, who had diplomatically remained in the background
14502.36 throughout this interview, now spoke. Pardieu! but I have been thinking, he said. Although ‘The
14508.48 Scorpion,’ as I hope, believes that that troublesome Charles Malet is dead, he may also wonder if Scotland Yard has secured from Dr.
14516.72 Stuart’s fire any fragments of the information sealed in the envelope! What does it mean, this releasing of the yellow car, closing of the
14525.56 bank account and departure from the Savoy? It means flight! cried Dunbar, jumping violently to his feet. By
14532.96 gad, sir! he turned to the Assistant Commissioner–the birds may have flown already!
14538.44 The Assistant Commissioner leaned back in his chair. I have sufficient confidence in M.
14544.504 Max, he said, to believe that, having taken the responsibility of permitting this dangerous group to
14551.864 learn that they were under surveillance, he has good reason to suppose that they have not slipped through our fingers.
14558.864 Gaston Max bowed. It is true, he replied, and from his pocket he took a slip of flimsy
14564.784 paper. This code message reached me as I was about to leave my hotel.
14570.384 The quadroon, Miguel, left Paris last night and arrived in London this morning—-
14575.544 He was followed? cried Dunbar. But certainly. He was followed to Limehouse, and he was definitely
14582.464 seen to enter the establishment described to us by Inspector Kelly! Gad! said Dunbar–then someone is still there?
14590.984 Someone, as you say, is still there, replied Max. But everything points to the imminent departure of this someone. Will you see to it,
14599.264 Inspector, that not a rat–pardieu not a little mouse–is allowed to slip out of our red circle to day. For to night we shall pay a
14607.424 friendly visit to the house of Ah Fang Fu, and I should wish all the company to be present.
14612.784 Chapter 23. Miska’s Story. Stuart returned to his house in a troubled frame of mind. He had
14620.224 refrained so long from betraying the circumstances of his last meeting with Mlle. Dorian to the police authorities that this meeting now
14628.384 constituted a sort of guilty secret, a link binding him to the beautiful accomplice of The Scorpion–to the dark eyed servant of
14636.704 the uncanny cowled thing which had sought his life by strange means. He hugged this secret to his breast, and the pain of it afforded him a
14645.464 kind of savage joy. In his study he found a Post Office workman engaged in fitting a new
14652.144 telephone. As Stuart entered the man turned. Good afternoon, sir, he said, taking up the destroyed instrument
14660.664 from the litter of flux, pincers and screw drivers lying upon the table. If it’s not a rude question, how on earth did this happen?
14670.032 Stuart laughed uneasily. It got mixed up with an experiment which I was conducting, he
14675.312 replied evasively. The man inspected the headless trunk of the instrument. It seems to be fused, as though the top of it had been in a blast
14683.272 furnace, he continued. Experiments of that sort are a bit dangerous outside a proper laboratory, I should think.
14690.232 They are, agreed Stuart. But I have no facilities here, you see, and I was–er–compelled to attempt the experiment. I don’t intend to
14699.552 repeat it. That’s lucky, murmured the man, dropping the instrument into a carpet bag. If you do, it will cost you a tidy penny for telephones!
14709.632 Walking out towards the dispensary, Stuart met Mrs. M’Gregor. A Post Office messenger brought this letter for you, Mr. Keppel, just
14717.872 the now, she said, handing Stuart a sealed envelope. He took the envelope from her hand, and turned quickly away. He felt
14725.352 that he had changed colour. For it was addressed in the handwriting of … Mlle. Dorian!
14731.312 Thank you, Mrs. M’Gregor, he said and turned into the dining room.
14736.632 Mrs. M’Gregor proceeded about her household duties, and as her footsteps receded, Stuart feverishly tore open the envelope. That
14745.592 elusive scent of jasmine crept to his nostrils. In the envelope was a sheet of thick note paper having the top cut off evidently in order
14754.152 to remove the printed address, upon which the following singular message was written: Before I go away there is something I want to say to you. You do not
14763.432 trust me. It is not wonderful that you do not. But I swear that I only want to save you from a great danger. If you will promise not
14771.832 to tell the police anything of it, I will meet you at six o’clock by the Book Stall at Victoria Station–on the Brighton side. If you agree
14781.392 you will wear something white in your button hole. If not you cannot
14786.432 find me there. Nobody ever sees me again. There was no signature, but no signature was necessary.
14793.992 Stuart laid the letter on the table, and began to pace up and down the room. His heart was beating ridiculously. His self contempt was
14802.552 profound. But he could not mistake his sentiments. His duty was plain enough. But he had failed in it once, and even as
14810.792 he strode up and down the room, already he knew that he must fail again. He knew that, rightly or wrongly, he was incapable of placing
14819.912 this note in the hands of the police … and he knew that he should be at Victoria Station at six o’clock.
14826.192 He would never have believed himself capable of becoming accessory to a series of crimes–for this was what his conduct amounted to; he had
14834.592 thought that sentiment no longer held any meaning for him. Yet the only excuse which he could find wherewith to solace himself was that
14842.512 this girl had endeavoured to save him from assassination. Weighed against the undoubted fact that she was a member of a dangerous
14850.032 criminal group what was it worth? If the supposition of Gaston Max
14855.552 was correct, The Scorpion had at least six successful murders to his credit, in addition to the attempt upon his Stuart’s life and
14863.512 that of Le Balafre, upon the life of Gaston Max. It was an accomplice of this nameless horror called The Scorpion
14871.352 with whom at six o’clock he had a tryst, whom he was protecting from justice, by the suppression of whose messages to himself he was adding
14879.832 difficulties to the already difficult task of the authorities! Up and down he paced, restlessly, every now and again glancing at a
14888.552 clock upon the mantelpiece. His behavior he told himself was contemptible.
14893.632 Yet, at a quarter to six, he went out–and seeing a little cluster of daisies growing amongst the grass bordering the path, he plucked
14903.032 one and set it in his button hole! A few minutes before the hour he entered the station and glanced
14909.072 sharply around at the many groups scattered about in the neighbourhood of the bookstall. There was no sign of Mlle. Dorian. He walked
14917.032 around the booking office without seeing her and glanced into the waiting room. Then, looking up at the station clock, he saw that the
14924.632 hour had come, and as he stood there staring upward he felt a timid touch upon his shoulder.
14930.152 He turned–and she was standing by his side! She was Parisian from head to foot, simply but perfectly gowned. A
14937.712 veil hung from her hat and half concealed her face, but could not hide her wonderful eyes nor disguise the delightful curves of her red
14946.072 lips. Stuart automatically raised his hat, and even as he did so wondered what she should have said and done had she suddenly found
14953.912 Gaston Max standing at his elbow! He laughed shortly. You are angry with me, said Mlle. Dorian, and Stuart thought that
14961.872 her quaint accent was adorable. Or are you angry with yourself for seeing me?
14967.232 I am angry with myself, he replied, for being so weak. Is it so weak, she said, rather tremulously, not to judge a woman
14976.072 by what she seems to be and not to condemn her before you hear what she has to say? If that is weak, I am glad; I think it is how a man
14984.952 should be. Her voice and her eyes completed the spell, and Stuart resigned
14990.032 himself without another struggle to this insane infatuation. We cannot very well talk here, he said. Suppose we go into the
14998.192 hotel and have late tea, Mlle. Dorian. Yes. Very well. But please do not call me that. It is not my name.
15005.952 Stuart was on the point of saying, Zara el Khala then, but checked himself in the nick of time.
15011.856 He might hold communication with the enemy, but at least he would give away no information.
15018.656 I am called Miska, she added. Will you please call me Miska? Of course, if you wish, said Stuart, looking down at her as she
15026.776 walked by his side and wondering what he would do when he had to stand up in Court, look at Miska in the felon’s dock and speak words which
15034.376 would help to condemn her–perhaps to death, at least to penal servitude! He shuddered.
15040.296 Have I said something that displeases you? she asked, resting a white gloved hand on his arm. I am sorry.
15047.256 No, no, he assured her. But I was thinking–I cannot help thinking … How wicked I am? she whispered.
15054.296 How lovely you are! he said hotly, and how maddening it is to
15059.416 remember that you are an accomplice of criminals! Oh, she said, and removed her hand, but not before he had felt how
15067.176 it trembled. They were about to enter the tea room when she added: Please don’t say that until I have told you why I do what I do.
15076.536 Obeying a sudden impulse, he took her hand and drew it close under his arm.
15081.656 No, he said; I won’t. I was a brute, Miska. Miska means ‘musk’,
15086.976 surely? Yes. She glanced up at him timidly. Do you think it a pretty name?
15092.296 Very, he said, laughing. Underlying the Western veneer was the fascinating naivete of the
15097.736 Eastern woman, and Miska had all the suave grace, too, which belongs to the women of the Orient, so that many admiring glances followed
15106.096 her charming figure as she crossed the room to a vacant table. Now, said Stuart, when he had given an order to the waiter, what
15113.896 do you want to tell me? Whatever it may be, I am all anxiety to hear it. I promise that I will only act upon anything you may tell me in
15122.536 the event of my life, or that of another, being palpably endangered by my silence.
15128.616 Very well. I want to tell you, replied Miska, why I stay with Fo Hi.
15133.824 Who is Fo Hi? I do not know! What! said Stuart. I am afraid I don’t understand you.
15140.944 If I speak in French will you be able to follow what I say? Certainly. Are you more at ease with French?
15148.384 Yes, replied Miska, beginning to speak in the latter language. My mother was French, you see, and although I can speak in English
15155.104 fairly well I cannot yet think in English. Do you understand? Perfectly. So perhaps you will now explain to whom you refer when
15163.664 you speak of Fo Hi. Miska glanced apprehensively around her, bending further forward over
15169.464 the table. Let me tell you from the beginning, she said in a low voice, and then you will understand. It must not take me long. You see me as I
15178.784 am to day because of a dreadful misfortune that befell me when I was fifteen years old.
15184.544 My father was Wali of Aleppo, and my mother, his third wife, was a Frenchwoman, a member of a theatrical company which had come to Cairo,
15193.384 where he had first seen her. She must have loved him, for she gave up the world, embraced Islam and entered his harem in the great house
15201.544 on the outskirts of Aleppo. Perhaps it was because he, too, was half French, that they were mutually attracted. My father’s mother was a
15209.424 Frenchwoman also, you understand. Until I was fifteen years of age, I never left the harem, but my
15216.024 mother taught me French and also a little English; and she prevailed upon my father not to give me in marriage so early as is usual in the
15223.904 East. She taught me to understand the ways of European women, and we used to have Paris journals and many books come to us regularly. Then
15232.504 an awful pestilence visited Aleppo. People were dying in the mosques and in the streets, and my father decided to send my mother and myself
15241.504 and some others of the harem to his brother’s house in Damaskus. Perhaps you will think that such things do not happen in these days,
15250.056 and particularly to members of the household of a chief magistrate, but I can only tell you what is true. On the second night of our
15257.896 journey a band of Arabs swept down upon the caravan, overpowered the guards, killing them all, and carried of everything of value which we
15266.216 had. Me, also, they carried off–me and one other, a little Syrian girl, my cousin. Oh! she shuddered violently–even now I can
15276.576 sometimes hear the shrieks of my mother … and I can hear, also, the way they suddenly ceased, those cries …
15283.416 Stuart looked up with a start to find a Swiss waiter placing tea upon the table. He felt like rubbing his eyes. He had been dragged rudely
15291.576 back from the Syrian desert to the prosaic realities of a London hotel. Perhaps, continued Miska, you will think that we were ill treated,
15300.096 but it was not so. No one molested us. We were given every comfort which desert life can provide, servant to wait upon us and plenty of
15308.936 good food. After several weeks’ journeying we came to a large city, having many minarets and domes glimmering in the moonlight; for we
15317.816 entered at night. Indeed, we always travelled at night. At the time I had no idea of the name of this city but I learned afterwards that it
15326.096 was Mecca. As we proceeded through the streets, the Assyrian girl and I peeped
15331.416 out through the little windows of the shibriyeh–which is a kind of tent on the back of a camel–in which we travelled, hoping to see some
15339.296 familiar face or someone to whom we could appeal. But there seemed to be scarcely anyone visible in the streets, although lights shone out
15347.736 from many windows, and the few men we saw seemed to be anxious to avoid us. In fact, several ran down side turnings as the camels
15357.176 approached. We stopped before the gate of a large house which was presently opened, and the camels entered the courtyard. We descended, and I saw
15366.864 that a number of small apartments surrounded the courtyard in the manner of a caravanserai. Then, suddenly, I saw something else, and
15375.584 I knew why we had been treated with such consideration on the journey; I knew into what hand I had fallen–I knew that I was in the house of
15383.944 a slave dealer! Good heavens! muttered Stuart–this is almost incredible.
15389.464 I knew you would doubt what I had to tell you, declared Miska plaintively; but I solemnly swear what I tell you is the truth. Yes,
15397.984 I was in the house of a slave dealer, and on the very next day, because I was proficient in languages, in music and in dancing, and
15406.224 also because–according to their Eastern ideas–I was pretty, the dealer, Mohammed Abd el Bali … offered me for sale.
15415.344 She stopped, lowering her eyes and flushing hotly, then continued with hesitancy.
15421.264 In a small room which I can never forget I was offered the only indignity which I had been called upon to suffer since my abduction.
15429.664 I was exhibited to prospective purchasers. As she spoke the words, Miska’s eyes flashed passionately and her
15437.984 hand, which lay on the table, trembled. Stuart silently reached across and rested his own upon it.
15445.344 There were all kinds of girls, Miska continued, black and brown and
15450.384 white, in the adjoining rooms, and some of them were singing and some dancing, whilst others wept. Four different visitors inspected me
15459.304 critically, two of them being agents for royal harems and the other two–how shall I say it?–wealthy connoisseurs. But the price asked by
15468.864 Mohammed Abd el Bali was beyond the purses of all except one of the agents. He had indeed settled the bargain, when the singing and
15477.264 dancing and shouting–every sound it seemed–ceased about me … and
15482.984 into the little room in which I crouched amongst perfumed cushions at the feet of the two men, walked Fo Hi.
15490.584 Chapter 24. Miska’s Story Concluded. Of course, I did not know that this was his name at the time; I only
15498.584 knew that a tall Chinese person had entered the room–and that his face was entirely covered by a green veil.
15506.144 Stuart started, but did not interrupt Miska’s story. This veil gave him in some way a frightfully malign and repellent
15513.384 appearance. As he stood in the doorway looking down I seemed to feel his gaze passing over me like a flame, although of course I could not
15521.984 see his eyes. For a moment he stood there looking at me; and much as his presence had affected me, its affect upon the slave dealer and my
15530.704 purchaser was extraordinary. They seemed to be stricken dumb. Suddenly the Chinese person spoke, in perfect Arabic. ‘Her price?’ he said.
15540.424 Mohammed Abd el Bali, standing trembling before him, replied: ‘Miska is already sold, lord, but—-
15546.744 ‘Her price?’ repeated the Chinese person, in the same hard metallic voice and without the slightest change of intonation.
15553.824 The harem agent who had bought me now said, his voice shaking so that the words were barely audible:
15560.024 ‘I give her up, Mohammed–I give her up. Who am I to dispute with the Mandarin Fo Hi;’ and performing an abject obeisance he backed out of
15567.744 the room. At the same moment, Mohammed, whose knees were trembling so that they seemed no longer capable of supporting him, addressed the Chinese person.
15577.864 ‘Accept the maiden as an unworthy gift,’ he began– ‘Her price?’ repeated Fo Hi.
15584.224 Mohammed, whose teeth had begun to chatter, asked him twice as much as he had agreed to accept from the other, Fo Hi clapped his hands,
15592.304 and a fierce eyed Hindu entered the room. Fo Hi addressed him in a language which I did not understand,
15600.464 although I have since learned that it was Hindustani, and the Indian from a purse which he carried counted out the amount demanded by the
15608.024 dealer and placed the money upon a little inlaid table which stood in the room. Fo Hi gave him some brief order, turned and walked out of
15616.704 the room. I did not see him again for four years–that is until my nineteenth birthday.
15622.864 I know that you are wondering about many things and I will try to make some of them clear to you. You are wondering, no doubt, how such
15630.784 a trade as I have described is carried on in the East to day almost under the eyes of European Governments. Now I shall surprise you. When
15640.424 I was taken from the house of the slave dealer, in charge of Chunda Lal–for this was the name of the Hindu–do you know where I was
15648.984 carried to? I will tell you: to Cairo! Cairo! cried Stuart–then, perceiving that he had attracted
15656.384 attention by speaking so loudly, he lowered his voice. Do you mean to tell me that you were taken as a slave to Cairo?
15664.944 Miska smiled–and her smile was the taunting smile of the East, which is at once a caress and an invitation.
15672.704 You think, no doubt, that there are no slaves in Cairo! she said. So do most people, and so did I–once. I learned better. There are
15682.424 palaces in Cairo, I assure you, in which there are many slaves. I myself lived in such a palace for four years, and I was not the only
15691.424 slave there. What do British residents and French residents know of
15696.744 the inner domestic life of their Oriental neighbours? Are they ever admitted to the harem? And the slaves–are they ever admitted
15705.264 outside the walls of the palace? Sometimes, yes, but never alone!
15710.504 By slow stages, following the ancient caravan routes, and accompanied by an extensive retinue of servants in charge of Chunda Lal, we came
15719.504 to Cairo; and one night, approaching the city from the north east and entering by the Bab en Nasr, I was taken to the old palace which was
15729.344 to be my prison for four years. How I passed those four years has no bearing upon the matters which I have to tell you, but I lived the
15737.664 useless, luxurious life of some Arabian princess, my lightest wish
15742.824 anticipated and gratified; nothing was denied me, except freedom.
15747.984 Then, one day–it was actually my nineteenth birthday–Chunda Lal presented himself and told me that I was to have an interview with
15755.944 Fo Hi. Hearing these words, I nearly swooned, for a hundred times during the years of my strange luxurious captivity I had awakened
15764.664 trembling in the night, thinking that the figure of the awful veiled Chinese person had entered the room.
15770.944 You must understand that having spent my childhood in a harem, the mode of life which I was compelled to follow in Cairo was not so
15778.504 insufferable as it must have been for a European woman. Neither was my captivity made unduly irksome. I often drove through the European
15787.504 quarters, always accompanied by Chunda Lal, and closely veiled, and I regularly went shopping in the bazaars–but never alone. The death
15797.224 of my mother–and later that of my father, of which Chunda Lal had told me–were griefs that time had dulled. But the horror of Fo Hi was
15806.144 one which lived with me, day and night. To a wing of the palace kept closely locked, and which I had never
15812.72 seen opened, I was conducted by Chunda Lal. There, in a room of a
15818.04 kind with which was part library and part mandarah, part museum and part laboratory, I found the veiled man seated at a great
15825.48 littered table. As I stood trembling before him he raised a long yellow hand and waved to Chunda Lal to depart. When he obeyed and I
15834.8 heard the door close I could scarcely repress a shriek of terror. For what seemed an interminable time he sat watching me. I dared not
15843.6 look at him, but again I felt his gaze passing over me like a flame. Then he began to speak, in French, which he spoke without a trace of
15853.0 accent. He told me briefly that my life of idleness had ended and that a new
15858.2 life of activity in many parts of the world was about to commence. His manner was quite unemotional, neither harsh nor kindly, his
15866.64 metallic voice conveyed no more than the bare meaning of the words which he uttered. When, finally, he ceased speaking, he struck a gong
15875.6 which hung from a corner of the huge table, and Chunda Lal entered.
15880.72 Fo Hi addressed a brief order to him in Hindustani–and a few moments later a second Chinese person walked slowly into the room.
15889.12 Miska paused, as if to collect her ideas, but continued almost immediately.
15894.36 He wore a plain yellow robe and had a little black cap on his head. His face, his wonderful evil face I can never forget, and his eyes–I
15903.88 fear you will think I exaggerate–but his eyes were green as emeralds!
15909.16 He fixed them upon me. ‘This,’ said Fo Hi, ‘is Miska.’ The other Chinese person continued to regard me with those dreadful eyes;
15917.72 then: ‘You have chosen well.’ he said, turned and slowly went out again.
15922.84 I thank God that I have never seen him since, for his dreadful face haunted my dreams for long afterwards.
15928.416 But I have learned of him, and I know that next to Fo Hi he is the most dangerous being in the known
15934.176 world. He has invented horrible things–poisons and instruments, which
15939.536 I cannot describe because I have never seen them; but I have seen … some of their effects.
15945.856 She paused, overcome with the horror of her memories. What is the name of this other man? asked Stuart eagerly. Miska
15954.256 glanced at him rapidly. Oh, do not ask me questions, please! she pleaded. I will tell you
15959.696 all I can, all I dare; what I do not tell you I cannot tell you–and this is one of the things I dare not tell. He is a Chinese scientist
15967.816 and, I have heard, the greatest genius in the whole world, but I can say no more–yet.
15973.256 Is he still alive–this man? I do not know that. If he is alive, he is in China–at some secret
15980.016 palace in the province of Ho Nan, which is the headquarters of what is called the ‘Sublime Order.’ I have never been there, but there are
15988.016 Europeans there, as well as Orientals. What! in the company of these fiends!
15993.096 It is useless to ask me–oh! indeed, I would tell you if I could, but I cannot! Let me go on from the time when I saw Fo Hi in Cairo. He
16001.616 told me that I was a member of an organization dating back to remote antiquity which was destined to rule all the races of mankind–the
16010.056 Celestial age he called their coming triumph. Something which they had lacked in order to achieve success had been supplied by the dreadful
16017.936 man who had entered the room and expressed his approval of me. For many years they had been at work in Europe, secretly, as well as
16025.856 in the East. I understood that they had acquired a quantity of valuable information of some kind by means of a system of opium houses
16033.936 situated in the principal capitals of the world and directed by Fo Hi
16039.056 and a number of Chinese assistants. Fo Hi had remained in China most
16044.144 of the time, but had paid occasional visits to Europe. The other man–the monster with the black skull cap–had been responsible for
16052.744 the conduct of the European enterprises. Throughout this interview, interrupted Stuart, forgetful of the fact
16059.704 that Miska had warned him of the futility of asking questions, and during others which you must have had with Fo Hi, did you never obtain
16068.584 a glimpse of his face? Never! No one has ever seen his face! I know that his eyes are a
16075.264 brilliant and unnatural yellow colour, but otherwise I should not know him if I saw him unveiled, to morrow. Except, she added, by a
16083.944 sense of loathing which his presence inspires in me. But I must hurry. If you interrupt me, I shall not have time.
16091.584 From that day in Cairo–oh! how can I tell you! I began the life of an adventuress! I do not deny it. I came here to confess it to you. I
16101.504 went to New York, to London, to Paris, to Petrograd; I went all over the world. I had beautiful dresses, jewels, admiration–all that women
16111.264 live for! And in the midst of it all mine was the life of the cloister; no nun could be more secluded!
16118.064 I see the question in your eyes–why did I do it? Why did I lure men into the clutches of Fo Hi? For this is what I did; and when I have
16127.224 failed, I have been punished. Stuart shrank from her. You confess, he said hoarsely, that you knowing lured men to
16135.704 death? Ah, no! she whispered, looking about her fearfully–never! never!
16141.704 I swear it–never! Then–he stared at her blankly–I do not understand you!
16148.304 I dare not make it clearer–now: I dare not–dare not! But believe me! Oh, please, please, she pleaded, her soft voice dropping to a
16157.544 whisper–believe me! If you know what I risked to tell you so much, you would be more merciful.
16163.928 A horror which cannot be described–again she shuddered–will fall upon me if he ever suspects! You think me
16171.768 young and full of life, with all the world before me. You do not know. I am, literally, already dead! Oh! I have followed a strange career.
16181.528 I have danced in a Paris theatre and I have sold flowers in Rome; I have had my box at the Opera and I have filled opium pipes in a den at
16190.408 San Francisco! But never, never have I lured a man to his death. And
16196.568 through it all, from first to last, no man has so much as kissed my finger tips!
16202.928 At a word, at a sign, I have been compelled to go from Monte Carlo to Buenos Ayres; at another sign from there to Tokio! Chunda Lal has
16212.248 guarded me as only the women of the East are guarded. Yet, in his fierce way, he has always tried to befriend me, he has always been
16220.648 faithful. But ah! I shrink from him many times, in horror, because I know what he is! But I may not tell you. Look! Chunda Lal has never
16230.408 been out of sound of this whistle–she drew a little silver whistle from her dress–for a moment since that day when he came into the
16237.528 house of the slave dealer in Mecca, except—- And now, suddenly, a wave of glorious colour flooded her beautiful
16244.568 face and swiftly she lowered her eyes, replacing the little whistle. Stuart’s rebellious heart leapt madly, for whatever he might think
16252.688 of her almost incredible story, that sweet blush was no subterfuge,
16257.808 no product of acting. You almost drive me mad, he said in low voice, resembling the tones
16264.448 of repressed savagery. You tell me so much, but withhold so much that I am more bewildered than ever. I can understand your
16272.408 helplessness in an Eastern household, but why should you obey the behests of this veiled monster in London, in New York, in Paris?
16280.568 She did not raise her eyes. I dare not tell you. But I dare not disobey him.
16286.208 Who is he! No one knows, because no one has ever seen his face! Ah! you are
16292.328 laughing! But I swear before heaven I speak the truth! Indoors he
16297.648 wears a Chinese dress and a green veil. In passing from place to place, which he always does at night, he is attired in a kind of cowl which
16306.528 only exposes his eyes—- But how can such a fantastic being travel? By road, on land, and in a steam yacht, at sea. Why should you
16316.728 doubt my honesty? She suddenly raises her glance to Stuart’s face and
16322.408 he saw that she had grown pale. I have risked what I cannot tell you, and more than once–for you! I tried to call you on the telephone on
16331.488 the night that he set out from the house near Hampton Court to kill you, but I could get no reply, and—-
16338.768 Stop! said Stuart, almost too exited to note at the time that she had betrayed a secret. It was you who rang up that night?
16347.648 Yes. Why did you not answer? Never mind. Your call saved my life. I shall not forget. He looked
16355.088 into her eyes. But can you not tell me what it all means? What or whom is ‘The Scorpion’?
16361.568 She flinched. The Scorpion is–a passport. See. From a little pocket in the coat
16366.888 of her costume she drew out a golden scorpion! I have one. She replaced it hurriedly. I dare not, dare not tell you more. But this
16376.368 much I had to tell you, because … I shall never see you again! What!
16381.888 A French detective, a very clever man, learned a lot about ‘The Scorpion’ and he followed one of the members to England. This man
16389.568 killed him. Oh, I know I belong to a horrible organization! she cried bitterly. But I tell you I am helpless and I have never
16396.488 aided in such a thing. You should know that! But all he found out he left with you–and I do not know if I succeeded in destroying it. I do
16404.447 not ask you. I do not care. But I leave England to night. Good bye.
16409.688 She suddenly stood up. Stuart rose also. He was about to speak when
16415.039 Miska’s expression changed. A look of terror crept over her face, and
16420.439 hastily lowering her veil she walked rapidly away from the table and out of the room!
16426.039 Many curious glances followed the elegant figure to the door. Then those glances were directed upon Stuart.
16433.0 Flushing with embarrassment, he quickly settled the bill and hurried out of the hotel. Gaining the street, he looked eagerly right and left.
16441.359 But Miska had disappeared! Chapter 25. The Heart Of Chunda Lal.
16447.721 Dusk had drawn a grey mantle over the East End streets when Miska, discharging the cab in which she had come from Victoria, hurried
16455.641 furtively along a narrow alley tending Thamesward. Unconsciously she crossed a certain line–a line invisible except upon a map of London
16465.16 which lay upon the table of the Assistant Commissioner in New Scotland Yard–the line forming the red circle of M. Gaston Max. And,
16473.359 crossing this line, she became the focus upon which four pairs of watchful eyes were directed.
16479.4 Arriving at the door of a mean house some little distance removed from that of Ah Fang Fu, Miska entered, for the door was open, and
16488.439 disappeared from the view of the four detectives who were watching the street. Her heart was beating rapidly. For she had thought, as she
16496.76 had stood up to leave the restaurant, that the fierce eyes of Chunda Lal had looked in through the glass panel of one of the doors.
16504.24 This gloomy house seemed to swallow her up, and the men who watched wondered more and more what had become of the elegant figure,
16512.199 grotesque in such a setting, which had vanished into the narrow doorway–and which did not reappear. Even Inspector Kelly, who knew
16520.24 so much about Chinatown, did not know that the cellars of the three houses left and right of Ah Fang Fu’s were connected by a series of
16528.721 doors planned and masked with Chinese cunning. Half an hour after Miska had disappeared into the little house near
16535.977 the corner, the hidden door in the damp cellar below The Pidgin House opened and a bent old woman, a ragged, grey haired and dirty
16544.736 figure, walked slowly up the rickety wooden stair and entered a bare room behind and below the shop and to the immediate left of the den
16553.656 of the opium smoker. This room, which was windowless, was lighted by a tin paraffin lamp hung upon a nail in the dirty plaster wall. The
16562.977 floor presented a litter of straw, paper and broken packing cases. Two steps led up to a second door, a square heavy door of great
16572.176 strength. The old woman, by means of a key which she carried, was about to open this door when it was opened from the other side.
16580.936 Lowering his head as he came through, Chunda Lal descended. He wore European clothes and a white turban. Save for his ardent eyes and
16590.416 the handsome fanatical face of the man, he might have passed for a lascar. He turned and half closed the door. The woman shrank from
16599.137 him, but extending a lean brown hand he gripped her arm. His eyes glittered feverishly.
16605.016 So! he said, we are all leaving England? Five of the Chinese sail
16610.695 with the P. and O. boat to night. Ali Khan goes to morrow, and Rama
16615.736 Dass, with Miguel, and the Andaman. I meet them at Singapore. But you?
16622.016 The woman raised her finger to her lips, glancing fearfully towards the open door. But the Hindu, drawing her nearer, repeated with subdued
16630.535 fierceness: I ask it again–but you? I do not know, muttered the woman, keeping her head lowered and
16639.057 moving in the direction of the steps. But Chunda Lal intercepted her. Stop! he said–not yet are you going. There is something I have to
16648.416 speak to you. Ssh! she whispered, half turning and pointing up toward the door.
16654.08 Those! said the Hindu contemptuously–the poor slaves of the black
16659.119 smoke! Ah! they are floating in their dream paradise; they have no ears to hear, no eyes to see! He grasped her wrist again. They
16668.279 contest for shadow smiles and dream kisses, but Chunda Lal have eyes to see and ears to hear. He dream, too but of lips more sweet than
16677.68 honey, of a voice like the Song of the Daood! Inshalla! Suddenly he clutched the grey hair of the bent old woman and with one
16686.359 angry jerk snatched it from her head–for it was a cunning wig. Disordered, hair gleaming like bronze waves in the dim lamplight was
16695.48 revealed and the great dark eyes of Miska looked out from the artificially haggard face–eyes wide open and fearful.
16703.721 Bend not that beautiful body so, whispered Chunda Lal, that is straight and supple as the willow branch. O, Miska–his voice
16713.08 trembled emotionally and he that had been but a moment since so fierce stood abashed before her–for you I become as the meanest and the
16721.32 lowest; for you I die! Miska started back from him as a muffled outcry sounded in the room
16727.84 beyond the half open door. Chunda Las started also, but almost immediately smiled–and his smile was tender as a woman’s.
16736.0 It is the voice of the black smoke that speaks, Miska. We are alone. Those are dead men speaking from their tombs.
16743.76 Ah Fang Fu is in the shop, whispered Miska. And there he remain. But what of … him!
16750.359 Miska pointed toward the eastern wall of the room in which they stood. Chunda Lal clenched his hands convulsively and turned his eyes in the
16757.961 same direction. It is of him, he replied in a voice of suppressed vehemence, it
16763.721 is of him I would speak. He bent close to Miska’s ear. In the creek, below the house, is lying the motor boat. I go to day to bring
16772.92 it down for him. He goes to night to the other house up the river. To morrow I am gone.
16778.184 Only you remaining. Yes, yes. He also leaves England to morrow. And you?
16784.184 I go with him, she whispered. Chunda Lal glanced apprehensively toward the door. Then:
16791.064 Do not go with him! he said, and sought to draw Miska into his arms. O, light of my eyes, do not go with him!
16798.504 Miska repulsed him, but not harshly. No, no, it is no good, Chunda Lal. I cannot hear you.
16805.584 You think–the Hindu’s voice was hoarse with emotion–that he will trace you–and kill you?
16811.224 Trace me! exclaimed Miska with sudden scorn. Is it necessary for him to trace me? Am I not already dead except for him! Would I be
16820.144 his servant, his lure, his slave for one little hour, for one short minute, if my life was my own!
16827.064 Beads of perspiration gleamed upon the brown forehead of the Hindu, and his eyes turned from the door to the eastern wall and back again
16834.664 to Miska. He was torn by conflicting desires, but suddenly came resolution.
16840.704 Listen, then. His voice was barely audible. If I tell you that your life is your own–if I reveal to you a secret which I learned in the
16849.104 house of Abdul Rozan in Cairo—- Miska watched him with eyes in which a new, a wild expression was
16855.424 dawning. If I tell you that life and not death awaits you, will you come away to night, and we sail for India to morrow! Ah! I have money! Perhaps I
16865.224 am rich as well as–someone; perhaps I can buy you the robes of a princess–he drew her swiftly to him–and cover those white arms
16873.024 with jewels. Miska shrank from him. All this means nothing, she said. How can the secret of Abdul
16878.984 Rozan help me to live! And you–you will be dead before I die!–yes!
16884.904 One little hour after he finds out that I go! Listen again, hissed Chunda Lal intensely. Promise me, and I will
16893.504 open for you a gate of life. For you, Miska, I will do it, and we shall be free. He will never find out.
16899.96 He shall not be living to find out! No, no, Chunda Lal, she moaned. You have been my only friend, and
16908.84 I have tried to forget … I will forswear Kali forever, he said fervently, and shed no blood
16915.28 for all my life! I will live for you alone and be your slave. It is no good. I cannot, Chunda Lal, I cannot.
16923.44 Miska! he pleaded tenderly. No, no, she repeated, her voice quivering–I cannot … Oh! do not
16929.96 ask it; I cannot! She picked up the hideous wig, moving towards the door. Chunda Lal
16935.56 watched her, clenching his hands; and his eyes, which had been so tender, grew fierce.
16941.68 Ah! he cried–and it may be I know a reason! She stopped, glancing back at him.
16948.84 It may be, he continued, and his repressed violence was terrible, it may be that I, whose heart is never sleeping, have seen and heard!
16957.84 One night–he crept towards her–one night when I cry the warning that the Doctor Sahib returns to his house, you do not come! He goes
16967.56 in at the house and you remain. But at last you come, and I see in your eyes—-
16972.76 Oh! breathed Miska, watching him fearfully. Do I not see it in your eyes now! Never before have I thought so
16979.92 until you go to that house, never before have you escaped from my care as here in London. Twice again I have doubted, and because there was
16988.68 other work to do I have been helpless to find out. To night–he stood before her, glaring madly into her face–I think so again–that
16998.44 you have gone to him…. Oh, Chunda Lal! cried Miska piteously and extended her hands towards
17005.72 him. No, no–do not say it! So! he whispered–I understand! You risk so much for him–for me
17013.68 you risk nothing! If he–the Doctor Sahib–say to you: ‘Come with me, Miska—-‘ No, no! Can I never have one friend in all the world! I hear you
17022.92 call, Chunda Lal, but I am burning the envelope and–Doctor Stuart– finds me. I am trapped. You know it is so.
17031.0 I know you say so. And because he–Fo Hi–is not sure and because of
17037.68 the piece of the scorpion which you find there, we go to that house– he and I–and we fail in what we go for. Chunda Lal’s hand dropped
17047.28 limply to his sides. Ah! I cannot understand, Miska. If we are not
17052.68 sure then, are we sure now? It may be–he bent towards her–we are trapped!
17058.28 Oh, what do you mean? We do not know how much they read of what he had written. Why do we
17063.84 wait? He has some plan, Chunda Lal, replied Miska wearily. Does he
17069.96 ever fail? Her words rekindled the Hindu’s ardour; his eyes lighted up anew.
17076.04 I tell you his plan, he whispered tensely. Oh! you shall hear me! He watch you grow from a little lovely child, as he watch his
17084.96 death spiders and his grey scorpions grow! He tend you and care for you and make you perfect, and he plan for you as he plan for this
17093.36 other creatures. Then, he see what I see, that you are not only his
17098.44 servant but also a woman and that you have a woman’s heart. He learn–who think he knows all–that he, too, is not yet a spirit
17107.68 but only a man, and have a man’s heart, a man’s blood, a man’s longings! It is because of the Doctor Sahib that he learn it—-
17115.68 He grasped Miska again, but she struggled to elude him. Oh, let me
17120.84 go! she pleaded. It is madness you speak! It is madness, yes–for you! Always I have watched, always I have
17129.56 waited; and I also have seen you bloom like a rose in the desert. To night I am here–watching … and he knows it! Tomorrow I am
17137.88 gone! Do you stay, for–him? Oh, she whispered fearfully, it cannot be.
17143.64 You say true when you say I have been your only friend, Miska. To morrow he plan that you have no friend.
17150.16 He released her, and slowly, from the sleeve of his coat, slipped into view the curved blade of a native knife.
17156.952 Ali Khan Bhai Salam! he muttered–by which formula he proclaimed himself a Thug!
17163.352 Rolling his eyes in the direction of the eastern wall, he concealed the knife. Chunda Lal! Miska spoke wildly. I am frightened! Please let me go,
17173.072 and tomorrow—- To morrow! Chunda Lal raised his eyes, which were alight with the
17178.392 awful light of fanaticism. For me there may be no tomorrow! Jey Bhowani! Yah Allah!
17185.632 Oh, he may hear you! whispered Miska pitifully. Please go now. I shall know that you are near me, if—-
17192.112 And then? I will ask your aid. Her voice was very low. And if it is written that I succeed?
17200.232 Miska averted her head. Oh, Chunda Lal … I cannot. She hid her face in her hands.
17207.032 Chunda Lal stood watching her for a moment in silence, then he turned toward the cellar door, and then again to Miska. Suddenly he dropped
17215.992 upon one knee before her, took her hand and kissed it, gently. I am your slave, he said, his voice shaken with emotion. For myself
17224.712 I ask nothing–only your pity. He rose, opened the door by which Miska had entered the room and went
17232.192 down into the cellars. She watched him silently, half fearfully, yet
17237.352 her eyes were filled with compassionate tears. Then, readjusting the hideous grey wig, she went up the steps and passed through the doorway
17246.312 into the den of the opium smokers. Chapter 26. The Man With The Scar.
17252.232 Stuart read through a paper, consisting of six closely written pages, then he pinned the sheets together, folded them and placed them in one
17260.432 of those long envelopes associated in his memory with the opening phase of The Scorpion mystery. Smiling grimly, he descended to his
17269.992 dispensary and returned with the Chinese coin attached to the cork. With this he sealed the envelope.
17276.712 He had volunteered that night for onerous service, and his offer had been accepted.
17281.968 Gaston Max’s knowledge of Eastern languages was slight, whilst Stuart’s was sound and extensive, and the Frenchman had
17290.808 cordially welcomed the doctor’s proposal that he should accompany him to the house of Ah Fang Fu. Reviewing the facts gleaned from Miska
17299.968 during the earlier part of the evening, Stuart perceived that, apart from the additional light which they shed upon her own relations with
17307.888 the group, they could be of slight assistance to the immediate success of the inquiry–unless the raid failed. Therefore he had determined
17317.208 upon the course which now he was adopting. As he completed the sealing of the envelope and laid it down upon the
17323.448 table, he heard a cab drawn up in front of the house, and presently Mrs. M’Gregor knocked and entered the study.
17331.168 Inspector Dunbar to see you, Mr. Keppel, she said–and he has with him an awful looking body, all cuts and bandages. A patient, no doubt.
17340.848 Stuart stood up, wondering what this could mean. Will you please show them up, Mrs. M’Gregor, he replied.
17347.288 A few moments later Dunbar entered, accompanied by a bearded man whose head was bandaged so as to partly cover one eye and who had an
17355.128 evil looking scar running from his cheekbone, apparently–or at any rate from the edge of the bandage–to the corner of his mouth, so that
17363.928 the lip was drawn up in a fierce and permanent snarl. At this person Stuart stared blankly, until Dunbar began to laugh.
17372.168 It’s a wonderful make up, isn’t it? he said. I used to say that disguises were out of date, but M. Max has taught me I was wrong.
17380.848 Max! cried Stuart. At your service, replied the apparition, but for this evening only
17387.768 I am ‘Le Belafre. ‘ Yes, pardieu! I am a real dead man!
17393.032 The airy indifference which he proclaimed himself to represent one whose awful body had but that day been removed from a mortuary, and
17401.952 one whom in his own words he had had the misfortune to strangle, was rather ghastly and at the same time admirable. For Le Balafre
17411.152 had deliberately tried to murder him, and false sentiment should form no part of the complement of a criminal investigator.
17418.912 It is a daring idea, said Stuart, and relies for its success upon the chance that ‘The Scorpion’ remains ignorant of the fate of his
17427.592 agent and continues to believe that the body found off Hanover Hole was yours.
17433.152 The admirable precautions of my clever colleague, replied Max, laying his hand upon Dunbar’s shoulder, in closing the mortuary and
17441.792 publishing particulars of the identification disk, made it perfectly safe. ‘Le Balafre’ has been in hiding. He emerges!
17450.472 Stuart had secret reasons for knowing that Max’s logic was not at fault, and this brought him to the matter of the sealed paper. He
17458.352 took up the envelope. I have here, he said slowly, a statement. Examine the seal.
17464.672 He held it out, and Max and Dunbar looked at it. The latter laughed shortly.
17469.832 Oh, it is a real statement, continued Stuart, the nature of which I am not at liberty to divulge. But as to night we take risks, I
17478.312 propose to leave it in your charge, Inspector. He handed the envelope to Dunbar, whose face was blank with
17485.312 astonishment. In the event of failure to night, added Stuart, or catastrophe, I
17491.312 authorise you to read this statement–and act upon it. If, however, I escape safely, I ask you to return it to me, unread.
17500.232 Eh bien, said Max, and fixed that eye the whole of which was visible upon Stuart.
17505.672 Perhaps I understand, and certainly–he removed his hand from Dunbar’s shoulder and rested it upon that of Stuart–
17514.472 but certainly, my friend, I sympathise! Stuart started guiltily, but Max immediately turned aside and began
17522.072 to speak about their plans. In a bag which Inspector Dunbar has thoughtfully left in the cab,
17528.152 he said—- Dunbar hastily retired and Max laughed. In that bag, he continued, is a suit of clothes such as habitues of
17536.552 ‘The Pidgin House’ rejoice to wear. I, who have studied disguise almost as deeply as the great Willy Clarkson, will transform you into
17545.392 a perfect ruffian. It is important, you understand, that someone should be inside the house of Ah Fang Fu, as otherwise by means of
17554.392 some secret exit the man we seek may escape. I believe that he contemplates departing at any moment, and I believe that the visit of
17564.192 Miguel means that what I may term the masters of the minor lodges are coming to London for parting instructions–or, of course Miguel may
17572.632 have come about the disappearance of ‘Le Balafre.’ Suppose you meet Miguel! My dear friend, I must trust to the Kismet who pursues evil doers!
17581.032 The only reason which has led me to adopt this daring disguise is a simple one. Although I believe ‘The Pidgin House’ to be open to
17588.552 ordinary opium smokers, it may not be open on ‘lodge nights.’ Do you follow me? Very well. I have the golden scorpion–which I suppose to
17597.552 be a sort of passport. Stuart wondered more and more at the reasoning powers of this
17602.712 remarkable man, which could lead him to such an accurate conclusion. The existence of such a passport, continued Max, would seem to
17610.912 point to the fact that all the members of this organisation are not known personally to one another. At the same time those invited or
17619.832 expected at present may be known to Ah Fang Fu or to whoever acts
17625.072 as concierge. You see? Expected or otherwise, I assume that ‘Le
17630.224 Balafre’ would be admitted–and at night I shall pass very well for ‘Le Balafre’–somewhat damaged as a result of my encounter with the
17639.184 late Charles Malet, but still recognisable! And I? You will be ‘franked’ in. The word of ‘Le Balafre’ should be
17646.544 sufficient for that! Of course I may be conducted immediately into the presence of the Chief–‘The Scorpion’–and he may prove to be
17653.664 none other than Miguel, for instance–or my Algerian acquaintance– or may even be a ‘she’–the fascinating Zara el Khala! We do not
17662.184 know. But I think–oh, decidedly I think–that the cowled one is a male creature, and his habits and habitat suggests to me that he is a
17671.024 Chinese person. And in that event how shall you act? At once! I shall hold him, if I can, or shoot him if I cannot hold
17679.784 him! Both of us will blow police whistles with which we shall be provided and Inspectors Dunbar and Kelly will raid the premises. But I
17688.304 am hoping for an interval. I do not like these inartistic scrimmages! The fact that these people foregather at an opium house suggests to me
17696.784 that a certain procedure may be followed which I observed during the course of the celebrated ‘Mr. Q’ case in New York. ‘Mr. Q.’ also had
17706.584 an audience chamber adjoining and opium den, and his visitors went there ostensibly to smoke opium. The opium den was a sort of anteroom.
17716.304 Weymouth’s big Chinese case had similar features, said Inspector Dunbar, who re entered at that moment carrying a leathern grip. If
17724.024 you are kept waiting and you keep your ears open, doctor, that’s when your knowledge of the lingo will come in useful. We might rope in the
17731.464 whole gang and find we hadn’t a scrap of evidence against them, for except the attempt on yourself, Dr.
17737.416 Stuart, there’s nothing so far that I can see to connect ‘The Scorpion’ with Sir Frank Newcombe!
17743.576 It is such a bungle that I fear! cried Max. Ah! how this looped up lip annoys me! He adjusted the bandage carefully.
17752.136 We’ve got the place comfortably surrounded, continued Dunbar, and whoever may be inside is booked! A lady, answering to the description
17761.296 of Mlle. Dorian, went in this evening, so Sowerby reports.
17766.736 Stuart felt that he was changing colour, and he stooped hastily to inspect the contents of the bag which Dunbar had opened.
17774.336 Eh bien! said Gaston Max. We shall not go empty handed, then. And now to transfigure you, my friend!
17781.136 Chapter 27. In The Opium Den. Interrupting a spell of warm, fine weather the night had set in wet
17787.856 and stormy. The squalid streets through which Stuart and Gaston Max made their way looked more than normally deserted and uninviting. The
17796.216 wind moaned and the rain accompanied with a dreary tattoo. Sometimes a siren wailed out upon the river.
17802.776 We are nearly there, said Max. Pardieu! they are well concealed, those fellows. I have not seen so much as an eyebrow.
17810.536 It would be encouraging to get a glimpse of some one! replied Stuart. Ah, but bad–inartistic. It is the next door, I think … yes. I hope
17820.536 they have no special way of knocking. Upon the door of a dark and apparently deserted shop he rapped.
17826.896 Both had anticipated an interval of waiting, and both were astonished when the door opened almost at once, revealing a blackly cavernous
17834.296 interior. Go off! Too late! Shuttee shop! chattered a voice out of the darkness.
17840.656 Max thrust his way resolutely in, followed by Stuart. Shut the door, Ah Fang Fu! he said curtly, speaking with a laboured French accent.
17849.496 Scorpion! The door was closed by the invisible Chinese person, there was a sound of
17855.496 soft movements and a hurricane lantern suddenly made its appearance. Its light revealed the interior of a nondescript untidy little shop
17864.176 and revealed the presence of an old and very wrinkled Chinese person who held the lantern. He wore a blue smock and a bowler hat and his face
17873.576 possessed the absolute impassivity of an image. As he leaned over the counter, scrutinising his visitors, Max thrust forward the golden
17882.656 scorpion held in the palm of his hand. Hoi, hoi chattered the Chinese person. Fo Hi fellers, eh? You hab got
17891.576 plenty much late. Other fellers Fo Hi pidgin plenty much sooner. You
17896.616 one time catchee allee same bhobbery, b’long number one joss pidgin man!
17901.976 Being covertly nudged by Max: Cut the palaver, Pidgin, growled Stuart.
17907.496 Allee lightee, chattered Ah Fang Fu, for evidently this was he. You play one piecee pipee till Fo Hi got. Raising the lantern, he led
17916.616 the way through a door at the back of the shop. Descending four wooden steps, Stuart and Max found themselves in the opium den.
17924.176 Full up. No loom, said the Chinese person. It was a low ceilinged apartment, the beams of the roof sloping
17931.416 slightly upward from west to east. The centre part of the wall at the back was covered with matting hung from the rough cornice supporting
17938.896 the beams. To the right of the matting was the door communicating with the shop, and to the left were bunks. Other bunks lined the southerly
17947.096 wall, except where, set in the thickness of the bare brick and plaster, a second strong door was partly hidden by a pile of empty
17955.376 packing cases and an untidy litter of straw and matting. Along the northern wall were more bunks, and an open wooden stair,
17963.936 with a handrail, ascended to a small landing or platform before a third door high up in the wall.
17969.784 A few mats were strewn about the floor. The place was dimly lighted by a red shaded lamp swung from
17977.384 the centre of the ceiling and near the foot of the stairs another lamp of the common tin variety stood upon a box near which was a broken
17985.984 cane chair. Opium pipes, tins, and a pack of cards were on this box.
17992.824 All the bunks appeared to be occupied. Most of the occupants were lying motionless, but one or two were noisily sucking at the
18000.704 opium pipes. These had not yet attained to the opium smokers Nirvana.
18006.104 So much did Gaston Max, a trained observer, gather in one swift glance.
18011.544 Then Ah Fang Fu, leaving the lantern in the shop, descended the four steps and crossing the room began to arrange two mats with round
18019.744 head cushions near to the empty packing cases. Stuart and Max remained by the door.
18025.424 You see, whispered Max, he has taken you on trust! And he did not appear to recognise me. It is as I thought. The place is ‘open to the
18034.584 public’ as usual, and Ah Fang Fu does a roaring trade, one would judge. For the benefit of patrons not affiliated to the order we have
18043.184 to pretend to smoke. Yes, replied Stuart with repressed excitement–until someone called
18049.784 Fo Hi is at home, or visible; the word ‘got’ may mean either of those
18056.144 things. Fo Hi, whispered Max, is ‘The Scorpion!’ I believe you are right, said Stuart–who had good reason to know it.
18064.144 My God! what a foul den! The reek is suffocating. Look at that yellow lifeless face yonder, and see that other fellow whose hand hangs
18072.264 limply down upon the floor. Those bunks might be occupied by corpses for all the evidence of life that some of them show.
18079.784 Morbleu! do not raise your voice; for some of them are occupied by ‘Scorpions.’ You noted the words of Ah Fang? Ssh!
18088.624 The old Chinese person returned with his curious shuffling walk, raising his hand to beckon to them.
18094.8 Number one piece bunk, lo! he chattered. Good enough, growled Stuart.
18100.8 The two crossed and reclined upon the uncleanly mats. Make special loom, explained Ah Fang Fu. Velly special chop!
18109.56 He passed from bunk to bunk, and presently came to a comatose Chinese person from whose limp hand, which hung down upon the floor, the pipe had
18118.24 dropped. This pipe Ah Fang Fu took from the smoker’s fingers and returning to the box upon which the tin lamp was standing began calmly
18127.04 to load it. Good heavens! muttered Stuart–he is short of pipes! Pah! how the
18134.88 place reeks! Ah Fang Fu busied himself with a tin of opium, the pipe which he had
18140.6 taken from the sleeper, and another pipe–apparently the last of his stock–which lay near the lamp. Igniting the two, he crossed and
18149.12 handed them to Stuart and Max. Velly soon lo! he said and made a curious sign, touching his brow,
18155.92 his lips and his breast in a manner resembling that of a Moslem.
18161.72 Max repeated the gesture and then lay back upon his elbow, raising the mouthpiece of the little pipe to his lips–but carefully avoiding
18170.68 contact. Ah Fang Fu shuffled back to the broken cane chair, from which he had
18176.28 evidently arisen to admit his late visitors. Inarticulate sounds proceeded from the bunks, breaking the sinister
18183.72 silence which now descended upon the den. Ah Fang Fu began to play
18188.88 Patience, constantly muttering to himself. The occasional wash of
18193.92 tidal water became audible, and once there came a scampering and squealing of rats from beneath the floor.
18201.44 Do you notice the sound of lapping water whispered Stuart. The place is evidently built upon a foundation of piles and the cellars
18209.04 must actually be submerged at high tide. Pardieu! it is a death trap. What is this!
18215.56 A loud knocking sounded upon the street door. Ah Fang Fu rose and shuffled up the steps into the shop.
18222.504 He could be heard unbarring the outer door. Then: Too late! shuttee shop, shuttee shop! sounded.
18230.184 I don’t want nothin’ out of your blasted shop, Pidgin! roared a loud and thick voice. I’m old Bill Bean, I am, and I want a pipe, I do!
18238.944 Hullo, Bill! replied the invisible ‘Pidgin.’ Allee samee dlunk again! A red bearded ship’s fireman, wearing sea boots, a rough blue suit
18247.824 similar to that which Stuart wore, a muffler and a peaked cap, lurched
18252.864 into view at the head of the steps. Blimey! he roared, over his shoulder. Drunk! Me drunk! An’ all
18259.064 the pubs in these parts sell barley water coloured brown! Blimey! Chuck it, Pidgin!
18264.824 Ah Fang Fu reappeared behind him. Catchee dlunk ev’ly time for comee here, he chattered.
18270.344 ‘Taint ‘umanly possible, declared the new arrival, staggering down the steps, fer a ‘ealthy sailorman to git drunk on coloured water
18278.984 just ’cause the publican calls it beer! I ain’t drunk; I’m only miserable. Gimmee a pipe, Pidgin.
18285.584 Ah Fang Fu barred the door and ascended. Comee here, he muttered, my placee, all full up and no other placee
18291.784 b’long open. Bill Bean slapped him boisterously on the back. Cut the palaver, Pidgin, and gimme a pipe. Piecee pipe, Pidgin!
18300.424 He lurched across the floor, nearly falling over Stuart’s legs, took up a mat and a cushion, lurched into the further corner and cast
18307.784 himself down. Ain’t I one o’ yer oldest customers, Pidgin? he inquired. One o’
18313.424 yer oldest, I am. Blight side twelve time, muttered the Chinese person. Getchee me in tlouble, Bill. Number one police chop.
18321.304 Not the first time it wouldn’t be! retorted the fireman. Not the first time as you’ve been in trouble, Pidgin. An’ unless they ‘ung
18328.664 yer–which it ain’t ‘umanly possible to ‘ang a Person–it wouldn’t be the last–an’ not by a expletive long way …
18336.432 an’ not by a expletive long way! Ah Fang Fu, shrugging resignedly, shuffled from bunk to bunk in quest
18344.272 of a disused pipe, found one, and returning to the extemporised table, began to load it, muttering to himself.
18352.152 Don’t like to ‘ear about your wicked past, do you? continued Bill. Wicked old yellow faced ‘eathen! Remember the ‘dive’ in ‘Frisco,
18360.672 Pidgin? Wot a rough ‘ouse! Remember when I come in–full up I was: me back teeth well under water–an’ you tried to Shanghai me?
18369.072 You cutee palaber. All expletive lie, muttered the Chinese person.
18374.152 Ho! a lie is it? roared the other. Wot about me wakin’ up all of a tremble aboard o’ the old Nancy Lee–aboard of a blasted
18381.912 wind jammer! Me–a fireman! Wot about it? Wasn’t that Shanghaiin’?
18387.752 Blighter! An’ not a ‘oat’ in me pocket–not a ‘bean’! Broke to the wide an’ aboard of a old wind jammer wot was a coffin ship–a
18396.712 coffin ship she was; an’ ‘er old man was the devil’s father in law. Ho! lies! I don’t think!
18403.392 You cutee palaber! chattered Ah Fang Fu, busy with the pipe. You likee too much chin chin. You make nice piece bhobbery.
18412.592 Not a ‘bean’, continued Bill reminiscently–not a ‘oat.’ He sat up violently. Even me pipe an’ baccy was gone! he shouted. You’d even
18422.032 pinched me pipe an’ baccy! You’d pinch the whiskers off a blind man, you would, Pidgin! ‘And over the dope. Thank Gawd somebody’s still
18429.592 the right stuff! Suddenly, from a bunk on the left of Gaston Max came a faint cry.
18434.712 Ah! He has bitten me! ‘Ullo! said Bill–wotcher bin given’ ‘im, Pidgin? Chandu or
18442.232 hydrerphobia? Ah Fang Fu crossed and handed him the pipe. One piecee pipee. No more hab.
18448.912 Bill grasped the pipe eagerly and raised it to his lips. Ah Fang Fu returned unmoved to his Patience and silence reclaimed the den, only
18457.792 broken by the inarticulate murmuring and the lapping of the tide. A genuine customer! whispered Max.
18465.024 Ah! came again, more faintly–he … has … bitten … me. Blimey! said Bill in a drowsy voice–‘eave the chair at ‘im,
18473.664 Pidgin. Stuart was about to speak when Gaston Max furtively grasped his arm.
18479.424 Ssh! he whispered. Do not move, but look … at the top of the stair!
18484.744 Stuart turned his eyes. On the platform at the head of the stairs a Hindu was standing!
18489.824 Chunda Lal! whispered Max. Prepare for–anything! Chunda Lal descended slowly. Ah Fang Fu continued to play Patience.
18499.744 The Hindu stood behind him and began to speak in a voice of subdued fervour and with soft Hindu modulations.
18506.944 Why do you allow them, strangers, coming here to night! Ah Fang Fu continued complacently to arrange the cards.
18513.544 S’pose hab gotchee pidgin allee samee Chunda Lal hab got? Fo Hi no catchee buy bled and cheese for Ah Fang Fu. He–nodding casually in
18523.104 the direction of Bill Bean–plitty soon all blissful. Be very careful, Ah Fang Fu, said Chunda Lal tensely. He lowered
18531.464 his voice. Do you forget so soon what happen last week? No sabby.
18536.904 Some one comes here–we do not know how close he comes; perhaps he comes in–and he is of the police.
18544.304 Ah Fang Fu shuffled uneasily in his chair. No police chop for Pidgin! he muttered. Same feller tumble in
18551.264 liver? He is killed–yes; but suppose they find the writing he has made! Suppose he has written that it is here people meet together?
18559.664 Makee chit tell my name? Muchee hard luck! Number one police chop. You say Fo Hi not buying you bread and cheese. Perhaps it is Fo Hi
18568.464 that save you from hanging! Ah Fang Fu hugged himself. Yak pozee! Very good he muttered.
18574.744 Chunda Lal raised his finger. Be very careful, Ah Fang Fu! Allee time velly careful.
18581.344 But admit no more of them to come in, these strangers. Tchee, tchee! Velly ploper. Sometime big feller come in if Pidgin
18589.312 palaber or not. Pidgin never lude to big feller. Your life may depend on it, said Chunda Lal impressively. How many
18598.112 are here? Ah Fang Fu turned at last from his cards, pointing in three directions, and, finally, at Gaston Max.
18605.992 Four? said the Hindu–how can it be? He peered from bunk to bunk, muttering something–a name apparently–
18613.632 after scrutinizing each. When his gaze rested upon Max he started, stared hard, and meeting the gaze of the one visible eye, made the
18622.632 strange sign. Max repeated it; and Chunda Lal turned again to the Chinese person. Because
18629.552 of that drunken pig, he said, pointing at Bill Bean–we must wait. See to it that he is the last.
18635.432 He walked slowly up the stairs, opened the door at the top and disappeared. Chapter 28.
18641.832 The Green Eyed Joss. Sinister silence reclaimed the house of Ah Fang Fu. And Ah Fang Fu
18648.912 resumed his solitary game. He recognised ‘Le Belafre’ whispered Max–and was surprised to
18655.152 see him! So there are three of the gang here! Did you particularly observe in which bunks they lay, doctor. Ssh!
18663.592 A voice from a bunk had commenced to sing monotonously. Peyala peah, it sang, weird above the murmured accompaniment of
18670.952 the other dreaming smokers and the wash wash of the tide–To myn na peah Phir Kysee ko kyah …
18677.712 He is speaking from an opium trance, said Stuart softly. A native song: ‘If a cup of wine is drunk, and I have drunk it, what of that?’
18686.312 Mon Dieu! it is uncanny! whispered Max. Brr! do you hear those
18691.392 rats? I am wondering in what order we shall be admitted to the ‘Scorpion’s’ presence, or if we shall see him together.
18698.712 He may come in here. All the better. Gimme ‘nother pipe, Pidgin, drawled a very drowsy voice from Bill
18705.152 Bean’s corner. Ah Fang Fu left his eternal arranging and rearranging of the cards and
18710.232 crossed the room. He took the opium pipe from the fireman’s limp fingers and returning to the box, refilled and lighted it. Max and
18719.28 Stuart watched him in silence until he had handed the second pipe to the man and returned to his chair.
18726.32 We must be very careful, said Stuart. We do not know which are real smokers and which are not.
18733.36 Again there was a weird interruption. A Chinese person lying in one of the bunks began to chant in a monotonous far away voice:
18742.08 Chong liou chouay Om mani padme hum. The Buddhist formula, whispered Stuart. He is a real smoker.
18748.76 Heavens! the reek is choking me! The chant was repeated, the words dying away into a long murmur.
18756.0 Ah Fang Fu continued to shuffle the cards. And presently Bill Bean’s second pipe dropped from his fingers. His husky voice spoke almost
18764.12 inaudibly. I’m … old … Bill … Bean … I … A deep noted siren hooted dimly.
18771.6 A steamer making for dock, whispered Max. Brr! it is a nightmare, this! I think in a minute something will happen. Ssh!
18780.36 Ah Fang Fu glanced slowly around. Then he stood up, raised the lamp from the table and made a tour of the bunks, shining the light in upon
18788.84 the faces of the occupants. Max watched him closely, hoping to learn in which bunks the members of ‘The Scorpion’s’ group lay. But he was
18797.36 disappointed. Ah Fang Fu examined all the bunks and even shone the light down upon Stuart and Max. He muttered to himself constantly, but
18806.32 seemed to address no one. Replacing the lamp on the box, he whistled softly; and:—-
18812.32 Look! breathed Max. The stair again! Stuart cautiously turned his eyes toward the open stair.
18819.52 On the platform above stood a bent old hag whose witch eyes were searching the place keenly! With a curiously lithe step, for all her
18828.0 age, she descended, and standing behind Ah Fang Fu tapped him on the shoulder and pointed to the outer door.
18834.216 He stood up and shuffled across, went up the four steps and unbarred the door.
18839.336 Tchee, tchee, he chattered. Pidgin make a look out. He went out and closed the door.
18845.736 Something happens! whispered Max. A gong sounded. Ah!
18851.616 The old woman approached the matting curtain hung over a portion of the wall, raised it slightly in the centre–where it opened–and
18859.336 disappeared beyond. You see! said Stuart excitedly.
18864.416 Yes! it is the audience chamber of ‘The Scorpion’! The ancient hag came out again, crossed to a bunk and touched its
18873.256 occupant, a Chinese person, with her hand. He immediately shot up and followed her. The two disappeared beyond the curtain.
18881.256 What shall we do, said Stuart, if you are summoned? I shall throw open those curtains the moment I reach them, and
18887.856 present my pistol at the head of whoever is on the other side. You–ssh!
18893.696 The old woman reappeared, looked slowly around and then held the curtains slightly apart to allow of the Chinese person’s coming out. He
18902.576 saluted her by touching his head, lips and breast with his right hand,
18907.736 then passed up to the door communicating with the shop, which he opened, and went out.
18913.296 His voice came, muffled: Fo Hi! Fo Hi, returned the high voice of Ah Fang Fu.
18920.536 The outer door was opened and shut. The old woman went up and barred the inner door, then returned and stood by the matting curtain. The
18929.536 sound of the water below alone broke the silence. It was the hour of high tide. There goes the first fish into Dunbar’s net! whispered Max.
18939.696 The gong sounded again. Thereupon the old woman crossed to another bunk and conducted a
18945.376 brown skinned Eastern into the hidden room. Immediately they had disappeared: As I pull the curtains aside, continued Max rapidly, blow the
18954.856 whistle and run across and unbar the door…. So engrossed was he in giving these directions, and so engrossed was
18962.096 Stuart in listening to them, that neither detected a faint creak which proceeded from almost immediately behind them. This sound was
18969.976 occasioned by the slow and cautious opening of that sunken, heavy door near to which they lay–the door which communicated with the labyrinth
18978.776 of cellars. Inch by inch from the opening protruded the head of Ah Fang Fu!
18984.856 If the Chinese person offers any resistance, Max went on, speaking very rapidly–morbleu! you have the means to deal with him! In a word,
18994.456 admit the police. Sh! what is that! A moaning voice from one of the bunks came.
19000.176 Cheal kegur men, mas ka dheer! A native adage, whispered Stuart. He is dreaming. ‘There is always
19006.376 meat in a kite’s nest.’ Eh bien! very true–and I think the kite is at home!
19011.536 The head of Ah Fang Fu vanished. A moment later the curtains opened again slightly and the old woman came out, ushering the brown man. He
19019.696 saluted her and unbarred the door, going out. Fo Hi, came dimly.
19025.656 There was no definite answer–only the sound of a muttered colloquy;
19030.856 and suddenly the brown man returned and spoke to the old woman in a voice so low that his words were inaudible to the two attentive
19039.056 listeners in the distant corner. Ah! whispered Max–what now?
19044.816 Shall we rush the curtain! said Stuart. No! Max grasped his arm–wait! wait! See! he is going out. He has
19054.016 perhaps forgotten something. A second fish in the net. The Oriental went up the steps into the shop. The old woman closed
19062.336 and barred the door, then opened the matting curtain and disappeared within.
19067.376 I was right, said Max. But for once in his career he was wrong.
19072.616 She was out again almost immediately and bending over a bunk close to the left of the masked opening. The occupant concealed in its shadow
19081.136 did not rise and follow her, however. She seemed to be speaking to him. Stuart and Max watched intently.
19088.2 The head of Ah Fang Fu reappeared in the doorway behind them. Now is our time! whispered Max tensely. As I rush for the curtains,
19096.24 you run to the shop door and get it unbolted, whistling for Dunbar—- Ah Fang Fu, fully opening the door behind them, crept out stealthily.
19104.56 Have your pistol ready, continued Max, and first put the whistle between your teeth—- Ah Fang Fu silently placed his bowler hat upon the floor, shook down
19113.88 his long pigtail, and moving with catlike tread, stooping, drew nearer. Now, doctor! cried Max.
19120.32 Both sprang to their feet. Max leapt clear of the matting and other litter and dashed for the curtain. He reached it, seized it and tore
19128.24 bodily from its fastenings. Behind him the long flat note of a police whistle sounded–and ended abruptly.
19135.68 Ah! Nom d’un nom! cried Max. A cunningly devised door–looking like a section of solid brick and
19142.32 plaster wall–was closing slowly–heavily. Through the opening which yet remained he caught a glimpse of a small room, draped with Chinese
19151.16 dragon tapestry and having upon a raised, carpeted dais a number of cushions forming a diwan and an inlaid table bearing a silver snuff
19160.08 vase. A cowled figure was seated upon the dais. The door closed
19165.24 completely. Within a niche in its centre sat a yellow leering idol, green eyed and complacent.
19172.76 Wild, gurgling cries brought Max sharply about. An answering whistle sounded from the street outside … a second …
19181.04 a third. Ah Fang Fu, stooping ever lower, at the instant that Stuart had sprung
19186.72 to his feet had seized his ankle from behind, pitching him on to his face. It was then that the note of the whistle had ceased. Now, the
19196.04 Chinese person had his long pigtail about Stuart’s neck, at which Stuart, prone with the other kneeling upon his body, plucked vainly.
19205.544 Max raised his pistol … and from the bunk almost at his elbow leapt Miguel the quadroon, a sand bag raised. It descended upon the
19215.104 Frenchman’s skull … and he crumbled up limply and collapsed upon the floor. There came a crash of broken glass from the shop.
19223.424 Uttering a piercing cry, the old woman staggered from the door near which she had been standing as if stricken helpless, during the
19230.264 lightning moments in which these things had happened–and advanced in the direction of Ah Fang Fu.
19236.624 Ah, God! You kill him! You kill him? she moaned. Through the window, Sowerby! This way! came Dunbar’s voice. Max!
19246.344 Max! The sustained note of a whistle, a confusion of voices and a sound of
19251.584 heavy steps proclaimed the entrance of the police into the shop and the summoning of reinforcements.
19257.624 Ah Fang Fu rose. Stuart had ceased to struggle. The Chinese person replaced
19262.664 his hat and looked up at the woman, whose eyes glared madly into his own. Tche’, tche’e, he said sibilantly–Tchon dzee ti Fan Fu.
19271.064 Yes, yes. It is the will of the Master. Down with the door! roared Dunbar.
19276.504 The woman threw herself, with a wild sob, upon the motionless body of Stuart.
19281.584 Ensued a series of splintering crashes, and finally the head of an axe appeared through the panels of the door. Ah Fang Fu tried to
19290.424 drag the woman away, but she clung to Stuart desperately and was immovable. Thereupon the huge quadroon, running across the room,
19298.424 swept them both up into his giant embrace, man and woman together, and bore them down by the sunken doorway into the cellars below!
19306.744 The shop door fell inwards, crashing down the four steps, and Dunbar sprang into the place, revolver in hand, followed by Inspector Kelly
19315.464 and four men of the River Police, one of whom carried a hurricane lantern. Ah Fang Fu had just descended after Miguel and closed the
19323.944 heavy door. Try this way, boys! cried Kelly, and rushed up the stair. The four
19330.176 men followed him. The lantern was left on the floor. Dunbar stared about him. Sowerby and several other men entered. Suddenly Dunbar saw
19339.816 Gaston Max lying on the floor. My God! he cried–they have killed him!
19345.816 He ran across, knelt and examined Max, pressing his ear against his breast.
19350.856 Inspector Kelly reaching the top of the stairs and finding the door locked, hurled his great bulk against it and burst it open.
19359.176 Follow me, boys! he cried. Take care! Bring the lantern, somebody.
19364.656 The fourth man grasped the lantern and all followed the Inspector up the stair and out through the doorway. His voice came dimly:
19373.296 Mind the beam! Pass the light forward…. Sowerby was struggling with the door by which Miguel and Ah Fang Fu
19380.176 unseen had made their escape and Dunbar, having rested Max’s head upon a pillow, was glaring all about him, his square jaw set grimly and his
19390.576 eyes fierce with anger. A voice droned from a bunk: Cheal kegur men ms ka dheer!
19397.456 The police were moving from bunk to bunk, scrutinising the occupants. The uproar had penetrated to them even in their drugged slumbers.
19406.256 There were stirrings and mutterings and movements of yellow hands. But where is ‘The Scorpion’?
19412.136 He turned and stared at the wall from which the matting had been torn. And out of the little niche in the cunningly masked door the
19419.656 green eyed joss leered at him complacently. PART IV THE LAIR OF THE SCORPION
19425.656 Chapter 29. The Sublime Order. Stuart awoke to a discovery so strange that for some time he found
19434.336 himself unable to accept its reality. He passed his hands over his face and eyes and looked about him dazedly. He experienced great
19443.056 pain in his throat, and he could feel that his neck was swollen. He stared down at his ankles, which also were throbbing agonisingly–to
19452.664 learn that they were confined in gyves attached by a short chain to a ring in the floor!
19458.024 He was lying upon a deep diwan, which was covered with leopard skins and which occupied one corner of the most extraordinary room he had
19465.744 ever seen or ever could have imagined. He sat up, but was immediately
19470.864 overcome with faintness which he conquered with difficulty. The apartment, then, was one of extraordinary Oriental elegance,
19478.024 having two entrances closed with lacquer sliding doors. Chinese lamps
19483.104 swung from the ceiling, illuminated it warmly, and a great number of large and bright silk cushions were strewn about the floor. There
19492.184 were tapestries in black and gold, rich carpets and couches, several handsome cabinets and a number of tall cases of Oriental workmanship
19501.424 containing large and strangely bound books, scientific paraphernalia, curios and ornaments.
19507.904 At the further end of the room was a deep tiled hearth in which stood a kind of chemical furnace which hissed constantly. Upon ornate small
19516.464 tables and pedestals were vases and cases–one of the latter containing a number or orchids, in flower.
19523.104 Preserved lizards, snakes, and other creatures were in a row of jars
19528.304 upon a shelf, together with small skeletons of animals in frames. There was also a perfect human skeleton. Near the centre of the room
19537.624 was a canopied chair, of grotesque Chinese design, upon a dais, a big
19542.784 bronze bell hanging from it; and near to the diwan upon which Stuart was lying stood a large, very finely carved table upon which were some
19552.024 open faded volumes and a litter of scientific implements. Near the table stood a very large bowl of what looked like platinum, upon a
19560.984 tripod, and several volumes lay scattered near it upon the carpet. From a silver incense burner arose a pencilling of blue smoke.
19569.632 One of the lacquer doors slid noiselessly open and a man entered, Stuart inhaled sibilantly and clenched his fists.
19576.952 The new comer wore a cowled garment of some dark blue material which enveloped him from head to feet. It possessed oval eye holes, and
19585.552 through these apertures gleamed two eyes which looked scarcely like the eyes of a human being. They were of that brilliant yellow color
19593.272 sometimes seen in the eyes of tigers, and their most marked and awful peculiarity was their unblinking regard. They seemed always to be open
19602.672 to their fullest extent, and Stuart realized with anger that it was impossible to sustain for long the piercing gaze of Fo Hi … for he
19611.352 knew that he was in the presence of The Scorpion! Walking with a slow and curious dignity, the cowled figure came across
19618.592 to the table, first closing the lacquer door. Stuart’s hands convulsively clutched the covering of the diwan as the sinister
19626.072 figure approached. The intolerable gaze of those weird eyes had awakened a horror, a loathing horror, within him, such as he never
19635.512 remembered to have experienced in regard to any human being. It was the sort of horror which the proximity of a poisonous serpent
19643.472 occasions–or the nearness of a scorpion…. Fo Hi seated himself at the table.
19650.072 Absolute silence reigned in the big room, except for the hissing of the furnace. No sound penetrated from the outer world. Having no means
19659.352 of judging how long he had been insensible, Stuart found himself wondering if the raid on the den of Ah Fang Fu had taken place hours
19667.472 before, days earlier, or weeks ago. Taking up a test tube from a rack on the table, Fo Hi held it near a
19674.992 lamp and examined the contents–a few drops of colourless fluid. These he poured into a curious long necked yellow bottle.
19682.568 He began to speak, but without looking at Stuart. His diction was characteristic, resembling his carriage in that it was
19690.368 slow and distinctive. He seemed deliberately to choose each word and
19695.488 to give to it all its value, syllable by syllable. His English was perfect to the verge of the pedantic; and his voice was metallic and
19704.288 harsh, touching at time, when his words were vested with some subtle or hidden significance, guttural depths which betrayed the Chinese person.
19714.368 He possessed uncanny dignity as of tremendous intellect and conscious power.
19719.608 I regret that you were so rash as to take part in last night’s abortive raid, Dr. Stuart, he said.
19725.448 Stuart started. So he had been unconscious for many hours!
19730.688 Because of your professional acquirements at one time I had contemplated removing you, continued the unemotional voice. But I
19738.848 rejoice to think that I failed. It would have been an error of judgement. I have useful work for such men. You shall assist in the
19747.408 extensive laboratories of my distinguished predecessor. Never! snapped Stuart.
19753.128 The man’s callousness was so purposeful and deliberate that it awed. He seemed like one who stands above all ordinary human frailties and
19761.568 emotions. Your prejudice is natural, rejoined Fo Hi calmly. You are ignorant
19769.408 of our sublime motives, but you shall nevertheless assist us to establish that intellectual control which is destined to be the new
19777.568 World Force. No doubt you are conscious of a mental hiatus extending
19782.768 from the moment when you found the pigtail of the worthy Ah Fang Fu about your throat until that when you recovered consciousness in this
19790.448 room. It has covered a period roughly of twenty four hours, Dr. Stuart.
19795.808 I don’t believe it, muttered Stuart–and found his own voice to seem as unreal as everything else in the nightmare apartment.
19802.736 If I had not revived earlier, I should never have revived at all.
19807.856 He raised his hand to his swollen throat, touching it gingerly. Your unconsciousness was prolonged, explained Fo Hi, consulting an
19816.456 open book written in Chinese characters, by an injection which I found it necessary to make. Otherwise, as you remark, it would have
19823.896 been prolonged indefinitely. Your clever but rash companion was less happy.
19829.336 What! cried Stuart–he is dead? You fiend! You damned yellow
19834.536 fiend! Emotion shook him and he sat clutching the leopard skins and
19841.216 glaring madly at the cowled figure. Fortunately, resumed Fo Hi, my people–with one exception–
19849.376 succeeded in making their escape. I may add that the needless scuffling attendant upon arresting this unfortunate follower of mine,
19857.856 immediately outside the door of the house, led to the discovery of your own presence. Nevertheless, the others departed safely. My own
19867.296 departure is imminent; it has been because of certain domestic details and by the necessity of awaiting nightfall. You see, I am frank with
19876.256 you. Because the grave is silent! The grave, and … China. There is no other alternative in your
19881.816 case. Are you sure that there is no other in your own? asked Stuart huskily.
19887.496 An alternative to my returning to China? Can you suggest one? The scaffold! cried Stuart furiously, for you and the scum who
19895.616 follow you! Fo Hi lighted a Bunsen burner. I trust not, he rejoined placidly. With two exceptions, all my
19904.136 people are out of England. Stuart’s heart began to throb painfully. With two exceptions! Did
19910.896 Miska still remain? He conquered his anger and tried to speak calmly, recognising how he lay utterly in the power of this uncanny being and
19919.536 how closely his happiness was involved even if he escaped with life. And you? he said.
19925.776 In these matters, Dr. Stuart, replied Fo Hi, I have always
19931.624 modelled my behavior upon that of the brilliant scientist who preceded me as European representative of our movement. Your
19939.024 beautiful Thames is my highway as it was his highway. No one of my immediate neighbours has ever seen me or my once extensive following
19947.784 enter this house. He selected an empty test tube. No one shall see me leave.
19953.344 The unreality of it all threatened to swamp Stuart’s mind again, but he forced himself to speak calmly.
19959.344 Your own escape is just possible, if some vessel awaits you; but do you imagine for a moment that you can carry me to China and elude
19967.624 pursuit? Fo Hi, again consulting the huge book with its yellow faded characters,
19973.624 answered him absently. Do you recall the death of the Grand Duke Ivan? he said. Does your
19979.384 memory retain the name of Van Rembold and has your Scotland Yard yet satisfied itself that Sir Frank Narcombe died from ‘natural causes’?
19987.984 Then, there was Ericksen, the most brilliant European electrical expert of the century, who died quite suddenly last year. I honor
19996.304 you, Dr. Stuart, by inviting you to join a company so distinguished. You are raving! What have these men in common with me?
20004.344 Stuart found himself holding his breath as he awaited a reply–for he knew that he was on the verge of learning that which poor Gaston Max
20012.144 had given his life to learn. A moment Fo Hi hesitated–and in that moment his captive recognised, and shuddered to recognise, that he
20020.944 won this secret too late. Then: The Grand Duke is a tactician who, had he remained in Europe, might
20028.344 well have readjusted the frontiers of his country. Van Rembold, as a mining engineer, stands alone, as does Henrik Ericksen in the
20037.104 electrical world. As for Sir Frank Narcombe, he is beyond doubt the
20042.32 most brilliant surgeon of today, and I, a judge of men, count you his
20047.56 peer in the realm of pure therapeutics. Whilst your studies in snake poisons which were narrowly watched for us in India give you
20054.8 an unique place in toxicology. These great men will be some of your companions in China.
20061.32 In China! In China, Dr. Stuart, where I hope you will join them. You
20066.36 misapprehend the purpose of my mission. It is not destructive, although neither I nor my enlightened predecessor have ever scrupled
20074.4 to remove any obstacle from the path of that world change which no human power can check or hinder; it is primarily constructive. No
20083.96 state or group of states can hope to resist the progress of a movement guided and upheld by a monopoly of the world’s genius. The Sublime
20092.56 Order, of which I am an unworthy member, stands for such a movement. Rest assured it will be crushed.
20099.44 Van Rembold is preparing radium in quantities hitherto unknown from the vast pitchblend deposits of Ho Nan–which industry we control. He
20109.0 visited China arrayed in his shroud, and he travelled in a handsome Egyptian sarcophagus purchased at Sotherby’s on behalf of a Chinese
20117.68 collector. Fo Hi stood up and crossed to the hissing furnace. He busied himself
20123.36 with some obscure experiment which proceeded there, and: Your own state room will be less romantic, Dr. Stuart, he said,
20130.64 speaking without turning his head; possibly a packing case. In brief, that intellectual giant who achieved to much for the Sublime Order–my
20139.4 immediate predecessor in office–devised a means of inducing artificial catalepsy—-
20145.32 My God! muttered Stuart, as the incredible, the appalling truth burst upon his mind.
20150.48 My own rather hazardous delay, continued Fo Hi, is occasioned in
20155.56 some measure by my anxiety to complete the present experiment. Its product will be your passport to China.
20163.488 Carrying a tiny crucible, he returned to the table. Stuart felt that his self possession was deserting him. Madness
20172.248 threatened … If he was not already mad. He forced himself to speak.
20177.648 You taunt me because I am helpless. I do not believe that those men have been spirited into China. Even if it were so, they would die, as
20187.248 I would die, rather than prostitute their talents to such mad infamy.
20192.448 Fo Hi carefully poured the contents of the crucible into a flat platinum pan. In China, Dr. Stuart, he said, we know how to make men work! I
20202.328 myself am the deviser of a variant of the unduly notorious kite device and the scarcely less celebrated ‘Six Gates of Wisdom.’ I term
20211.408 it The Feast of a Thousand Ants. It is performed with the aid of African driver ant, a pair of surgical scissors and a pot of honey.
20218.928 I have observed you studying with interest the human skeleton yonder. It is that of one of my followers–a Nubian mute–who met with an
20227.048 untimely end quite recently. You are wondering, no doubt, how I obtained the frame in so short a time? My African driver ants, Dr.
20235.648 Stuart, of which I have three large cases in a cellar below this room, performed the task for me in exactly sixty nine minutes.
20243.888 Stuart strained frenziedly at his gyves. My God! he groaned. All I have heard of you was the merest
20250.928 flattery. You are either a fiend or a madman! When you are enlisted as a member of the Sublime Order, said Fo Hi
20258.408 softly, and you awaken in China, Dr. Stuart–you will work. We have
20263.648 no unwilling recruits. Stop your accursed talk. I have heard enough.
20270.048 But the metallic voice continued smoothly: I appreciate the difficulty which you must experience in grasping the
20277.208 true significance of this movement. You have seen mighty nations, armed with every known resource of science, at a deadlock on the
20284.888 battlefield. You naturally fail to perceive how a group of Oriental philosophers can achieve what the might of Europe failed to achieve.
20293.528 You will remember, in favour of my claims, that we command the service of the world’s genius, and have a financial backing which
20301.168 could settle the national loans of the world! In other words, exhumation of a large percentage of the great men who have died in
20309.168 recent years would be impossible. Their tombs are empty. I have heard enough. Drug me, kill me; but spare me your confidences.
20319.248 In the crowded foyer of a hotel, continued Fo Hi imperturbably, of a theatre, of a concert room; in the privacy of their home, of their
20328.248 office; wherever opportunity offered, I caused them to be touched with the point of a hypodermic needle such as this. He held up a
20336.448 small hypodermic syringe. It contained a minute quantity of the serum which I am now
20342.088 preparing–the serum whose discovery was the crowning achievement of a great scientist’s career I refer, Dr. Stuart, to my brilliant
20351.488 predecessor. They were buried alive; but no surgeon in Europe or America would have hesitated to certify them dead. Aided by a group
20360.688 of six Hindu fanatics, trained as Lughais grave diggers, it was easy to gain access to their resting places. One had the misfortune to
20370.168 be cremated by his family–a great loss to my Council. But the others are now in China, at our headquarters. They are labouring day and
20378.808 night to bring this war scarred world under the sceptre of an Eastern Emperor. Faugh! cried Stuart. The whole of that war scarred world will stand
20387.288 armed before you! We realise that, doctor; therefore we are prepared for it. We spoke
20392.488 of the Norwegian Henrick Ericksen. This is his most recent contribution to our armament.
20397.504 Fo Hi rested on long yellow hand upon a kind of model searchlight.
20402.624 I nearly committed the clumsy indiscretion of removing you with this little instrument, he said. You recall the episode? Ericksen’s
20410.504 Disintegrating Ray, Dr. Stuart. The model, here, possesses a limited
20415.904 range, of course, but the actual instrument has a compass of seven and a half miles. It can readily be carried by a heavy plane! One such
20425.784 plane in a flight from Suez to Port Said, could destroy all the shipping in the Canal and explode every grain of ammunition on either
20434.064 shore! Since I must leave England to night, the model must be destroyed, and unfortunately a good collection of bacilli has already
20443.144 suffered the same fate. Placidly, slowly, and unmoved from his habit of unruffled dignity,
20450.344 Fo Hi placed the model in a deep mortar, whilst Stuart watched him speechless and aghast. He poured the contents of a large pan into the
20459.264 mortar, whereupon a loud hissing sound broke the awesome silence of the room and a cloud of fumes arose.
20466.824 Not a trace, doctor! said the cowled man. A little preparation of
20472.104 my own. It destroys the hardest known substance–with the solitary exception of a certain clay–in the same way that nitric acid would
20481.104 destroy tissue paper. You see I might have aspired to become famous among safe breakers.
20487.784 You have preferred to become infamous among murderers! snapped Stuart. To murder, Dr. Stuart, I have never stooped. I am a specialist in
20496.784 selective warfare. When you visit the laboratory of our chief chemist in Kiangsu you will be shown the whole of the armory of the Sublime
20505.344 Order. I regret that the activities of your zealous and painfully inquisitive friend, M. Gaston Max, have forced me to depart from
20514.424 England before I had completed my work here. I pray you may never depart, murmured Stuart.
20521.584 Fo Hi having added some bright green fluid to that in the flat pan,
20527.064 had now poured the whole into a large test tube, and was holding it in the flame of the burner. At the moment that it reached the boiling
20534.424 point it became colourless. He carefully placed the whole of the liquid in a retort to which he attached a condensor. He stood up.
20542.064 Crossing to a glass case which rested upon a table near the diwan he struck it lightly with his hand. The case contained sand and
20550.424 fragments of rock, but as Fo Hi struck it, out from beneath the pieces of rock darted black active creatures.
20557.744 The common black scorpion of Southern India, he said softly. Its venom is the basis of the priceless formula, F. Katalepsis, upon
20566.064 which the structure of our Sublime Order rests, Dr. Stuart; hence the adoption of a scorpion as our device.
20573.864 He took up a long slender flask. This virus prepared from a glandular secretion of the Chinese
20580.224 swamp adder is also beyond price. Again the case upon the pedestal yonder contains five perfect bulbs, three already in flower, as you
20590.064 observe, of an orchid discovered by our chief chemist in certain forests of Burma. It only occurs at extremely rare intervals–eighty
20599.224 years or more–and under highly special conditions. If the other two bulbs flower, I shall be enabled to obtain from the blooms a minimum
20608.304 quantity of an essential oil for which the nations of the earth, if they knew its properties, would gladly empty their treasuries. This
20617.344 case must at all costs accompany me. Yet because you are still in England, said Stuart huskily, I
20624.304 venture to hope that your devil dreams may end on the scaffold. That can never be, Dr. Stuart, returned Fo Hi placidly. The
20632.864 scaffold is not for such as I. Moreover, it is a crude and barbaric institution which I deplore.
20639.328 Do you see that somewhat peculiarly constructed chair, yonder? It is an adaptation, by a brilliant young
20647.408 chemist of Canton, of Ericksen’s Disintegrating Ray. A bell hangs
20652.608 beside it. If you were seated in that chair and I desire to dismiss you, it would merely be necessary fro me to strike the bell once with
20661.048 the hammer. Before the vibration of the note had become inaudible you would be seeking your ancestors among the shades. It is the throne of
20669.608 the gods. Such a death is poetic. He returned to the table and, observing meticulous care, emptied the
20677.808 few drops of colourless liquid from the condenser into a test tube. Holding the tube near a lamp, he examined the contents, then poured
20686.608 the liquid into the curious yellow bottle. A faint vapour arose from it.
20691.648 You would scarcely suppose, he said, that yonder window opens upon an ivy grown balcony commanding an excellent view of that picturesque
20700.008 Tudor survival, Hampton Court? I apprehend, however, that the researches
20705.128 of your late friend, M. Gaston Max, may ere long lead Scotland Yard to my doors, although there has been nothing in the outward seeming of
20713.568 this house, in the circumstances of my tenancy, or in my behaviour since I have–secretly–resided here, to excite local suspicion.
20723.608 Scotland Yard men may surround the house now! said Stuart viciously. One of the two followers I have retained here with me, watches at
20731.448 the gate, replied Fo Hi. An intruder seeking to enter by any other route, through the hedge, over the wall, or from the river, would
20739.848 cause electric bells to ring loudly in this room, the note of the bell signifying the point of entry. Finally, in the event of such a
20749.048 surprise, I have an exit whereby one emerges at a secret spot on the river bank. A motor boat, suitably concealed, awaits me there.
20757.792 He placed a thermometer in the neck of the yellow bottle and the bottle in a rack. He directed the intolerable gaze of his awful eyes
20766.032 upon the man who sat, teeth tightly clenched, watching him from the diwan.
20771.472 Ten minutes of life–in England–yet remain to you, Dr. Stuart. In
20776.592 ten minutes this fluid will have cooled to a temperature of 99 degrees, when I shall be enabled safely make an injection. You will be reborn
20785.792 in Kiangsu. Fo Hi walked slowly to the door whereby he had entered, opened it and
20791.752 went out. The door closed. Chapter 30. The Living Death.
20796.992 The little furnace hissed continuously. A wisp of smoke floated up from the incense burner.
20803.272 Stuart sat with his hands locked between his knees, and his gaze set upon the yellow flask.
20809.512 Even now he found it difficult to credit the verity of his case. He found it almost impossible to believe that such a being as Fo Hi
20817.352 existed, that such deeds had been done, were being done, in England,
20822.952 as those of which he had heard from the sinister cowled man. Save for the hissing of the furnace and the clanking of the chain as he strove
20832.032 with all his strength to win freedom, that wonderful evil room was silent as the King’s Chamber at the heart of the Great Pyramid.
20841.072 His gaze reverted to the yellow flask. Oh, my God! he groaned. Terror claimed him–the terror which he had with difficulty been
20849.352 fending off throughout that nightmare interview with Fo Hi. Madness threatened him, and he was seized by an almost incontrollable desire
20857.992 to shout execrations–prayers–he knew not what. He clenched his teeth
20863.472 grimly and tried to think, to plan. He had two chances: The statement left with Inspector Dunbar, in which he had mentioned
20872.232 the existence of a house near Hampton Court, and … Miska. That she was one of the two exceptions mentioned by Fo Hi he felt
20880.752 assured. But was she in this house, and did she know of his presence
20885.824 there? Even so, had she access to that room of mysteries–of horrors?
20892.184 And who was the other who remained? Almost certainly it was the fanatical Hindu, Chunda Lal, of whom she had spoken with such palpable
20901.104 terror and who watched her unceasingly, untiringly. He would prevent her intervening even if she had power to intervene.
20909.184 His great hope, then, was in Dunbar … for Gaston Max was dead. At the coming of that thought, the foul doing to death of the fearless
20917.304 Frenchman, he gnashed his teeth savagely and strained at the gyves until the pain in his ankles brought out beads of perspiration upon
20925.264 his forehead. He dropped his head into his hands and frenziedly clutched at his
20930.464 hair with twitching fingers. The faint sound occasioned by the opening of one of the sliding doors
20936.464 brought him sharply upright. Miska entered! She looked so bewilderingly beautiful that terror and sorrow fled,
20943.944 leaving Stuart filled only with passionate admiration. She wore an Eastern dress of gauzy shimmering silk and high heeled gilt Turkish
20953.584 slippers upon her stockingless feet. About her left ankle was a gold bangle, and there was barbaric jewellery upon her arms. She was a
20962.784 figure unreal as all those in that house of dreams, but a figure so lovely that Stuart forgot the yellow flask … forgot that less than
20971.424 ten minutes of life remained to him. Miska! he whispered–Miska!
20977.304 She exhibited intense but repressed excitement and fear. Creeping to the second door–that by which Fo Hi had gone out–she pressed her
20985.544 ear to the lacquered panel and listened intently. Then, coming swiftly to the table, she took up a bunch of keys, approached Stuart and,
20994.464 kneeling, unlocked the gyves. The scent of jasmine stole to his nostrils.
21000.384 God bless you! he said with stifled ardour. She rose quickly to her feet, standing before him with head downcast.
21008.776 Stuart rose with difficulty. His legs were cramped and aching. He grasped Miska’s hand and endeavoured to induce her to look up. One
21017.056 swift glance she gave him and looked away again. You must go–this instant, she said. I show you the way. There is
21024.296 not a moment to lose…. Miska! She glanced at him again. You must come with me!
21029.936 Ah! she whispered–that is impossible! Have I not told you so? You have told me, but I cannot understand. Here, in England, you are
21038.776 free. Why should you remain with that cowled monster? Shall I tell you? she asked, and he could feel how she trembled. If
21047.096 I tell you, will you promise to believe me–and to go? Not without you! Ah! no, no! If I tell you that my only chance of life–such a
21056.496 little, little chance–is to stay, will you go? Stuart secured her other hand and drew her toward him, half resisting.
21064.376 Tell me, he said softly. I will believe you–and if it can spare you one moment of pain or sorrow, I will go as you ask me.
21072.936 Listen, she whispered, glancing fearfully back toward the closed door–Fo Hi has something that make people to die; and only he can
21081.536 bring them to life again. Do you believe this? She looked up at him rapidly, her wonderful eyes wide and fearful. He
21089.376 nodded. Ah! you know! Very well. On that day in Cairo, which I am taken
21095.216 before him–you remember, I tell you?–he … oh! She shuddered wildly and hid her beautiful face against Stuart’s
21102.976 breast. He threw his arms about her. Tell me, he said. With the needle, he … inject …
21108.896 Miska! Stuart felt the blood rushing to his heart and knew that he had paled.
21114.416 There is something else, she went on, almost inaudibly, with which he gives life again to those he had made dead with the needle.
21122.568 It is a light green liquid tasting like bitter apples; and once each week
21127.928 for six months it must be drunk or else … the living death comes. Sometimes I have not seen Fo Hi for six months at a time, but a tiny
21137.008 flask, one draught, of the green liquid, always comes to me wherever I am, every week … and twice each year I see him–Fo Hi … and
21147.008 he … Her voice quivered and ceased. Moving back, she slipped a soft shoulder free of it s flimsy covering.
21153.928 Stuart looked–and suppressed a groan. Her arm was dotted with the tiny marks made by a hypodermic syringe!
21161.808 You see! she whispered tremulously. If I go, I die, and I am buried alive … or else I live until my body …
21170.248 Oh, God! moaned Stuart–the fiend! the merciless, cunning fiend!
21176.248 Is there nothing … Yes, yes! said Miska, looking up. If I can get enough of the green
21181.688 fluid and escape. But he tell me once–it was in America–that he
21186.728 only prepares one tiny draught at a time! Listen! I must stay, and if
21191.808 he can be captured he must be forced to make this antidote … Ah! go! go!
21197.568 Her words ended in a sob, and Stuart held her to him convulsively, his heart filled with such helpless, fierce misery and bitterness as
21205.368 he had never known. Go, please go! she whispered. It is my only chance–there is no
21211.208 other. There is not a moment to wait. Listen to me! You will go by that door by which I come in. There is a better way, through a tunnel
21219.488 he has made to the river bank; but I cannot open the door. Only he has the key. At the end of the passage some one is waiting—-
21227.448 Chunda Lal! Miska glanced up rapidly and then dropped her eyes again.
21233.448 Yes–poor Chunda Lal. He is my only friend. Give him this.
21238.568 She removed an amulet upon a gold chain from about her neck and thrust it into Stuart’s hand.
21244.048 It seems to you silly, but Chunda Lal is of the East; and he has promised. Oh! be quick! I am afraid. I tell you something. Fo Hi
21253.384 does not know, but the police Inspector and many men search the river bank for the house! I see them from a window—-
21260.584 What! cried Stuart–Dunbar is here! Ssh! ssh! Miska clutched him wildly. He is not far away. You
21267.784 will go and bring him here. No! for me do not fear. I put the keys back and he will think you have opened the lock by some trick—-
21274.784 Miska! Oh, no more! She slipped from his arms, crossed and reopened the lacquered door,
21280.744 revealing a corridor dimly lighted. Stuart followed and looked along the corridor.
21286.384 Right to the end, she whispered, and down the steps. You know– touching the amulet which Stuart carried–how to deal with–Chunda Lal.
21295.384 But still he hesitated; until she seized his hand and urged him. Thereupon he swept her wildly into his arms.
21302.384 Miska! how can I leave you! It is maddening! You must! you must!
21307.664 He looked into her eyes, stooped and kissed her upon the lips. Then, with no other word, he tore himself away and walked quickly along the
21315.064 corridor. Miska watched him until he was out of sight, then re entered the great room and closed the door. She turned, and:
21322.864 Oh, God of mercy, she whispered. Just within the second doorway stood Fo Hi watching her.
21328.144 Chapter 31. The Fifth Secret Of Rache Churan. Stricken silent with fear, Miska staggered back against the lacquered
21336.344 door, dropping the keys which she held in her hand. Fo Hi had removed
21341.464 the cowled garment and was now arrayed in a rich mandarin robe. Through the grotesque green veil which obscured his features the
21350.024 brilliant eyes shone catlike. So, he said softly, you speed the parting guest. And did I not
21357.984 hear the sound of a chaste salute? Miska watched him, wild eyed.
21363.288 And he knows, continued the metallic voice, ‘how to deal with Chunda Lal’? But it may be that Chunda Lal will know how to deal with
21372.248 him! I had suspected that Dr. Keppel Stuart entertained an unprofessional interest in his charming patient. Your failure to
21380.448 force the bureau drawer in his study excited my suspicion–unjustly, I admit; for did not I fail also when I paid the doctor a personal
21388.728 visit? True, I was disturbed. But this suspicion later returned. It was in order that some lingering doubt might be removed that I
21396.648 afforded you the opportunity of interviewing my guest. But whatever surprise his ingenuity, aided by your woman’s wit, has planned for
21404.368 Chunda Lal, I dare to believe that Chunda Lal, being forewarned, will meet successfully. He is expecting an attempt, by Dr. Stuart, to leave
21412.888 this house. He has my orders to detain him. At that, anger conquered terror in the heart of Miska, and:
21419.528 You mean he has your orders to kill him! she cried desperately. Fo Hi closed the door.
21426.048 On the contrary, he has my orders to take every possible care of him. Those blind, tempestuous passions which merely make a woman more
21434.008 desirable find no place in the trained mind of the scientist. That Dr. Stuart covets my choicest possession in no way detracts from his
21442.968 value to my Council. Miska had never moved from the doorway by which Stuart had gone out;
21448.968 and now, having listened covertly and heard no outcry, her faith in Chunda Lal was restored. Her wonderful eyes narrowed momentarily, and
21458.048 she spoke with the guile, which seems so naive, of the Oriental woman. I care nothing for him–this Dr. Stuart. But he had done you no
21466.688 wrong—- Beyond seeking my death–none. I have already said–the eyes of
21472.048 Fo Hi gleamed through the hideous veil–that I bear him no ill will.
21477.128 But you plan to carry him to China–like those others. I assign him a part in the New Renaissance–yes. In the Deluge that
21485.488 shall engulf the world, his place is in the Ark. I honor him. Perhaps he rather remain a–nobody–than be so honored.
21493.888 In his present state of imperfect understanding it is quite possible, said Fo Hi smoothly. But if he refuses to achieve
21501.888 greatness he must have greatness thrust upon him. Van Rembold, I seem
21506.928 to recall, hesitated for some time to direct his genius to the problem of producing radium in workable quantities from the pitchblend
21515.208 deposits of Ho Nan. But the split rod had not been applied to the soles of his feet more than five times ere he reviewed his prejudices
21523.808 and found them to be surmountable. Miska, knowing well the moods of the monstrous being whose unveiled
21530.088 face she had never seen, was not deceived by the suavity of his manner. Nevertheless, she fought down her terror, knowing how much
21537.888 might depend upon her retaining her presence of mind. How much of her interview with Stuart he had overheard she did not know, nor how much
21546.168 he had witnessed. But, she said, moving away from him, he does not matter–this one.
21552.688 Forgive me if I think to let him go; but I am afraid—- Fo Hi crossed slowly, intercepting her.
21558.648 Ah! said Miska, her eyes opening widely–you are going to punish me again! For why? Because I am a woman and cannot always be cruel?
21567.928 From its place on the wall Fo Hi took a whip. At that: Ah! no, no! she cried. You drive me mad! I am only in part of the
21576.808 East and I cannot bear it–I cannot bear it! You teach me to be like the women of England, who are free, and you treat me like the women of
21585.208 China, who are slaves. Once, it did not matter. I thought it was a part of a woman’s life to be treated so. But now I cannot bear it!
21594.808 She stamped her foot fiercely upon the floor. I tell you I cannot bear it!
21600.512 Whip in hand, Fo Hi stood watching her. You release that man–for whom you ‘care nothing’–in order that he
21607.112 may bring my enemies about me, in order that he may hand me over to the barbarous law of England. Now, you ‘cannot bear’ so light a
21614.872 rebuke as the whip. Here, I perceive, is some deep psychological change. Such protests do not belong to the women of my country; they
21624.632 are never heard in the zenana, and would provoke derision in the harems of Stambul.
21629.712 You have trained me to know that life in a harem is not life, but only the existence of an animal.
21635.552 I have trained you–yes. What fate was before you when I intervened
21640.592 in that Mecca slave market? You who are ‘only in part of the East.’ Do you forget so soon how you cowered there amongst the others, Arabs,
21648.912 Circassians, Georgians, Nubians, striving to veil your beauty from those ravenous eyes? From what did I rescue you?
21657.192 And for what? cried Miska bitterly. To use me as a lure–and beat me if I failed.
21663.992 Fo Hi stood watching her, and slowly, as he watched, terror grew upon her and she retreated before him, step by step. He made no attempt to
21672.752 follow her, but continued to watch. Then, raising the whip he broke it across his knee and dropped the pieces on the floor.
21680.112 At that she extended her hands towards him pitifully. Oh! what are you going to do to me! she said. Let me go! let me go!
21688.112 I can no more be of use to you. Give me back my life and let me go– et me go and hide away from them all–from all … the world….
21696.232 Her words died away and ceased upon a suppressed hysterical sob. For,
21701.432 in silence, Fo Hi stood watching her, unmoved. Oh! she moaned, and sank cowering upon a diwan– why do you watch
21708.752 me so! Because, came the metallic voice, softly–you are beautiful with a
21713.912 beauty given but rarely to the daughters of men. The Sublime Order has acquired many pretty women–for they are potent weapons–but none
21723.68 so fair as you. Miska, I would make life sweet for you.
21728.92 Ah! you do not mean that! she whispered fearfully. Have I not clothed you in the raiment of a princess! continued
21736.28 Fo Hi. To night, at my urgent request, you wear the charming national costume in which I delight to see you. But is there a woman of Paris,
21745.64 of London, of New York, who has such robes, such jewels, such apartments as you possess? Perhaps the peculiar duties which I have
21754.36 required you to perform, the hideous disguises, which you have sometimes been called upon to adopt, have disgusted you.
21762.6 Her heart beating wildly, for she did not know this mood but divined it to portend some unique horror, Miska crouched, head averted.
21771.32 To night the hour has come to break the whip. To night the master in me dies. My cloak of wise authority has fallen from me and I offer
21779.52 myself in bondage to you, my slave! This is some trap you set for me! she whispered.
21785.44 But Fo Hi, paying no heed to her words, continued in the same rapt voice:
21790.56 Truly have you observed that the Chinese wife is but a slave to her lord. I have said that the relation of master and slave is ended
21798.92 between us. I offer you a companionship that signifies absolute freedom and perfect understanding. Half of all I have–and the world
21807.68 lies in my grasp–is yours. I offer a throne set upon the Seven
21812.84 Mountains of the Universe. Look into my eyes and read the truth. But lower and lower she cowered upon the diwan.
21820.76 No, no! I am afraid! Fo Hi approached her closely and abject terror now had robbed her of
21828.88 strength. Her limbs seemed to have become numbed, her tongue clave to
21834.04 the roof of her mouth. Fear me no more, Miska, said Fo Hi. I will you nothing but joy.
21841.152 The man who has learned the Fifth Secret of Rache Churan–who has learned how to control his will–holds a power absolute and beyond
21850.072 perfectability. You know, who have dwelt beneath my roof, that there is no escape from my will. His calm was terrible, and his glance,
21858.952 through the green veil, was like a ray of scorching heat. His voice sank lower and lower.
21865.152 There is one frailty, Miska, that even the Adept cannot conquer. It is inherent in every man. Miska, I would not force you to grasp the
21873.232 joy I offer; I would have you accept it willingly. No! do not turn from me! No woman in all the world has ever heard me plead, as I
21881.512 plead to you. Never before have I sued for favours. Do not turn from me, Miska.
21887.192 Slightly, the metallic voice vibrated, and the ruffling of that giant calm was a thing horrible to witness. Fo Hi extended his long yellow
21895.712 hands, advancing step by step until he stood over the cowering girl. Irresistibly her glance was drawn to those blazing eyes which the veil
21904.832 could not hide, and as she met that unblinking gaze her own eyes dilated and grew fixed as those of a sleep walker. A moment Fo Hi
21914.472 stood so. Then passion swept him from his feet and he seized her fiercely. Your eyes drive me mad! he hissed. Your lips taunt me, and I know
21923.952 all earthly greatness to be a mirage, its conquests visions, and its fairness dust. I would rather be a captive in your white arms than
21932.632 the emperor of heaven! Your sweetness intoxicates me, Miska. A fever
21938.472 burns me up! Helpless, enmeshed in the toils of that mighty will, Miska raised her
21944.272 head; and gradually her expression changed. Fear was smoothed away
21950.232 from her lovely face as by some magic brush. She grew placid; and finally she smiled–the luresome, caressing smile of the East. Nearer
21960.992 and nearer drew the green veil. Then, uttering a sudden fierce exclamation, Fo Hi thrust her from him.
21969.072 That smile is not for me, the man! he cried gutterally. Ah! I could curse the power that I coveted and set above all earthly joys!
21978.432 I who boasted that he could control his will–I read in your eyes that I am willing you to love me! I seek a gift and can obtain but a
21986.632 tribute! Miska, with a sobbing moan, sank upon the diwan. Fo Hi stood
21991.792 motionless, looking straight before him. His terrible calm was restored. It is the bitter truth, he said–that to win the world I have
21999.872 bartered the birthright of men; the art of winning a woman’s heart. There is much in our Chinese wisdom. I erred in breaking the whip.
22008.632 I erred in doubting my own prescience, which told me that the smiles I could not woo were given freely to another … and perhaps the
22016.392 kisses. At least I can set these poor frail human doubts at rest.
22021.592 He crossed and struck a gong which hung midway between the two doors. Chapter 32.
22027.392 The Guile Of The East. Her beautiful face a mask of anguish, Miska cowered upon the diwan,
22034.232 watching the closed doors. Fo Hi stood in the centre of the great room with his back to the entrance. Silently one of the lacquered
22042.392 panels slid open and Chunda Lal entered. He saluted the figure of the veiled Chinese person but never once glanced in the direction of the
22051.072 diwan from which Miska wildly was watching him. Without turning his head, Fo Hi, who seemed to detect the presence
22058.392 of the silent Hindu by means of some fifth sense, pointed to a bundle of long rods stacked in a corner of the room.
22065.912 His brown face expressionless as that of a bronze statue, Chunda Lal crossed and took the rods from their place.
22072.992 Tum samajhte ho? Do you understand? said Fo Hi. Chunda Lal
22079.352 inclined his head. Main tumhari bat manunga Your orders shall be obeyed, he
22084.712 replied. Ah, God! no! whispered Miska–what are you going to do?
22090.432 Your Hindustani was ever poor, Miska, said Fo Hi. He turned to Chunda Lal.
22096.472 Until you hear the gong, he said in English. Miska leapt to her feet, as Chunda Lal, never once glancing at her,
22104.232 went out bearing the rods, and closed the door behind him. Fo Hi turned and confronted her.
22110.032 Ta’ala hina come hither, Miska! he said softly. Shall I speak
22115.152 to you in the soft Arab tongue? Come to me, lovely Miska. Let me feel how that sorrowful heart will leap like a captive gazelle.
22123.672 But Miska shrank back from him, pale to the lips. Very well. His metallic voice sank to a hiss. I employ no force.
22132.712 You shall yield to me your heart as a love offering. Of such motives as jealousy and revenge you know me incapable. What I do, I do with a
22141.072 purpose. That compassion of yours shall be a lever to cast you into my arms. Your hatred you shall conquer.
22147.712 Oh, have you no mercy? Is there nothing human in your heart? Did I say I hate you!
22152.952 Your eyes are eloquent, Miska. I cherish two memories of those beautiful eyes. One is of their fear and loathing–of me; the other
22161.352 is of their sweet softness when they watched the departure of my guest. Listen! Do you hear nothing?
22167.992 In an attitude of alert and fearful attention Miska stood listening. Fo Hi watched her through the veil with those remorseless blazing eyes.
22176.512 I will open the door, he said smoothly, that we may more fully enjoy the protests of one for whom you ‘care nothing’–of one whose
22184.152 lips have pressed–your hand. He opened the door by which Chunda Lal had gone out and turned again
22190.152 to Miska. Her eyes looked unnaturally dark by contrast with the pallor of her face.
22195.552 Chunda Lal had betrayed her. She no longer doubted it. For he had not dared to meet her glance. His fear of Fo Hi had overcome his love for
22205.152 her … and Stuart had been treacherously seized somewhere in the corridors and rendered helpless by the awful art of the thug.
22213.728 There is a brief interval, hissed the evil voice. Chunda Lal is securing him to the frame and baring the soles of his feet for the
22221.968 caresses of the rod. Suddenly, from somewhere outside the room, came the sound of dull,
22228.328 regular blows … then, a smothered moan! Miska sprang forward and threw herself upon her knees before Fo Hi,
22236.728 clutching at his robe frantically. Ah! merciful God! he is there! Spare him! spare him! No more–no
22245.728 more! He is there? repeated Fo Hi suavely. Assuredly he is there, Miska.
22258.048 I know not by what trick he hoped to ‘deal with’ Chunda Lal. But, as I informed you, Chunda Lal was forewarned.
22266.048 The sound of blows continued, followed by that of another, louder groan.
22271.648 Stop him! Stop him! shrieked Miska. You ‘care nothing’ for this man. Why do you tremble?
22278.288 Oh! she wailed piteously. I cannot bear it … oh, I cannot bear it! Do what you like with me, but spare him. Ah! you have no mercy.
22287.648 Fo Hi handed her the hammer for striking the gong. It is you who have no mercy, he replied. I have asked but one
22294.248 gift. The sound of the gong will end Dr. Stuart’s discomfort … and will mean that you voluntarily accept my offer. What! you hesitate?
22303.648 A stifled scream rang out sharply. Ah, yes! yes! Miska ran and struck the gong, then staggered back to the diwan and
22312.328 fell upon it, hiding her face in her hands. The sounds of torture ceased.
22317.968 Fo Hi closed the door and stood looking at her where she lay. I permit you some moments of reflection, he said, in order that you
22326.008 may compose yourself to receive the addresses which I shall presently have the honour, and joy, of making to you. Yes–this door is
22334.768 unlocked. He threw the keys on the table. I respect your promise … and Chunda Lal guards the outer exits.
22343.36 He opened the further door, by which he had entered, and went out. Miska, through the fingers of her shielding hands, watched him go.
22351.96 When he had disappeared she sprang up, clenching her teeth, and her face was contorted with anguish. She began to move aimlessly about the
22360.68 room, glancing at the many strange objects on the big table and fearfully at the canopied chair beside which hung the bronze bell.
22368.8 Finally: Oh, Chunda Lal! Chunda Lal! she moaned, and threw herself face
22374.72 downward on the diwan, sobbing wildly. So she lay, her whole body quivering with the frenzy of her emotions,
22383.32 and as she lay there, inch by inch, cautiously, the nearer door began to open. Chunda Lal looked in.
22390.16 Finding the room to be occupied only by Miska, he crossed rapidly to the diwan, bending over her with infinite pity and tenderness.
22398.24 Miska! he whispered softly. As though an adder had touched her, Miska sprang to her feet–and
22404.68 back from the Hindu. Her eyes flashed fiercely. Ah! you! you! she cried at him, with a repressed savagery that
22413.08 spoke of the Oriental blood in her veins. Do not speak to me–look at me! Do not come near me! I hate you! God! how I hate you!
22421.8 Miska! Miska! he said beseechingly–you pierce my heart! you kill
22427.2 me! Can you not understand—- Go! go! She drew back from him, clenching and unclenching her jewelled fingers
22435.08 and glaring madly into his eyes. Look, Miska! He took the gold chain and amulet from his bosom. Your
22442.04 token! Can you not understand! Yah Allah! how little you trust me– and I would die for one glance of your eyes!
22449.4 He–Stuart Sahib–has gone, gone long since! Ah! Chunda Lal!
22455.64 Miska swayed dizzily and extended her hands towards him. Chunda Lal glanced fearfully about him.
22462.224 Did I not, he whispered, with an intense ardour in his soft voice,–
22467.704 did I not lay my life, my service, all I have, at your feet? Did I not vow to serve you in the name of Bhowani! He is long since gone to
22476.144 bring his friends–who are searching from house to house along the river. At any moment they may be here!
22482.744 Miska dropped weakly upon her knees before him and clasped his hand. Chunda Lal, my friend! Oh, forgive me! Her voice broke. Forgive …
22493.464 Chunda Lal raised her gently. Not upon your knees to me, Miska. It was a little thing to do–for
22500.104 you. Did I not tell you that he had cast his eyes upon you? Mine was
22505.184 the voice you heard to cry out. Ah! you do not know; it is to gain time that I seem to serve him! Only this, Miska–he revealed the
22514.584 blade of a concealed knife–stand between Fo Hi and–you! Had I not
22520.824 read it in his eyes! He raised his glance upward frantically. Jey Bhowani! give me strength, give me courage! For if I fail …
22530.984 He glared at her passionately, clutching his bosom; then, pressing the
22536.024 necklet to his lips, he concealed it again, and bent, whispering urgently:
22541.904 Listen again–I reveal it to you without price or hope of reward, for
22547.224 I know there is no love in your heart to give, Miska; I know that it takes you out of my sight for always. But I tell you what I learn in
22555.024 the house of Abdul Rozan. Your life is your own, Miska! With the needle–yet closer he bent to her ear and even softer he spoke–he
22563.984 pricks your white skin–no more! The vial he sends contains a harmless cordial!
22569.184 Chunda Lal! Miska swayed again dizzily, clutching at the Hindu for support.
22575.144 Quick! fly! he said, leading her to the door. I will see he does
22580.224 not pursue! No, no! you shall shed no blood for me! Not even his.
22585.656 You come also! And if he escape, and know that I was false to him, he will call me
22591.736 back, and I shall be dragged to those yellow eyes, though I am a thousand miles away! Inshalla! those eyes! No–I must strike swift,
22602.016 or he robs me of my strength. For a long moment Miska hesitated.
22607.496 Then, I also remain, Chunda Lal, my friend! We will wait–and watch
22613.376 and listen for the bells–here–that tell they are in the grounds of the house. Ah, Miska! the glance of the Hindu grew fearful–you are
22621.896 clever–but he is the Evil One! I fear for you. Fly now. There is
22627.096 yet time … A faint sound attracted Miska’s attention. Placing a quivering finger
22632.736 to her lips, she gently thrust Chunda Lal out into the corridor. He returns! she whispered: If I call–come to me, my friend. But we
22642.296 have not long to wait! She closed the door. Chapter 33. What Happened To Stuart.
22648.496 Stuart had gained the end of the corridor, unmolested. There he found a short flight of steps, which he descended and came to a second
22656.336 corridor forming a right angle with the first. A lamp was hung at the foot of the steps, and by its light he discerned a shadowy figure
22664.576 standing at the further end of this second passage. A moment he hesitated, peering eagerly along the corridor. The man
22671.976 who waited was Chunda Lal. Stuart approached him and silently placed in his hand the gold amulet.
22678.416 Chunda Lal took it as one touching something holy, and raising it he kissed it with reverence. His dark eyes were sorrowful. Long and
22687.816 ardently he pressed the little trinket to his lips, then concealed it under the white robe which he wore and turned to Stuart. His eyes were
22695.896 sorrowful no more, but fierce as the eyes of a tiger. Follow! he said. He unlocked a door and stepped out into a neglected garden, Stuart
22705.056 close at his heels. The sky was cloudy, and the moon obscured. Never
22710.912 glancing back, Chunda Lal led the way along a path skirting a high wall upon which climbing fruit trees were growing until they came to a
22719.712 second door and this also the Hindu unlocked. He stood aside.
22725.832 To the end of this lane, he said, in his soft queerly modulated voice, and along the turning to the left to the river bank. Follow
22735.072 the bank towards the palace and you will meet them. I owe you my life, said Stuart.
22740.712 Go! you owe me nothing, returned the Hindu fiercely. Stuart turned and walked rapidly along the lane. Once he glanced back.
22748.992 Chunda Lal was looking after him … and he detected something that gleamed in his hand, gleamed not like gold but like the blade of a
22757.272 knife! Turning the corner, Stuart began to run. For he was unarmed and still
22762.512 weak, and there had been that in the fierce black eyes of the Hindu when he had scorned Stuart’s thanks which had bred suspicion and
22770.632 distrust. From the position of the moon, Stuart judged the hour to be something after midnight. No living thing stirred about him. The lane in which
22780.032 now he found himself was skirted on one side by a hedge beyond which was open country and on the other by a continuation of the high wall
22788.712 which evidently enclosed the grounds of the house that he had just quitted. A cool breeze fanned his face, and he knew that he was
22796.712 approaching the Thames. Ten more paces and he came to the bank. In his weak condition the short run had exhausted him. His bruised
22805.712 throat was throbbing painfully, and he experienced some difficulty in breathing. He leaned up against the moss grown wall, looking back into
22814.992 the darkness of the lane. No one was in sight. There was no sound save the gently lapping of the
22821.472 water upon the bank. He would have liked to bathe his throat and to quench his feverish
22827.112 thirst, but a mingled hope and despair spurred him and he set off along the narrow path towards where dimly above some trees he could
22835.632 discern in the distance a group of red roofed buildings. Having proceeded for a considerable distance, he stood still, listening for
22844.552 any sound that might guide him to the search party–or warn him that he was followed. But he could hear nothing.
22852.472 Onward he pressed, not daring to think of what the future held for him, not daring to dwell upon the memory, the maddening sweetness, of
22861.352 that parting kiss. His eyes grew misty, he stumbled as he walked, and
22866.952 became oblivious of his surrounding. His awakening was a rude one.
22872.552 Suddenly a man, concealed behind a bush, sprang out upon him and bore him irresistibly to the ground!
22878.832 Not a word! rapped his assailant, or I’ll knock you out! Stuart glared into the red face lowered so threateningly over his own,
22886.752 and: Sergeant Sowerby! he gasped. The grip upon his shoulders relaxed.
22892.072 Expletive! cried Sowerby–if it isn’t Dr. Stuart? What is that! cried another voice from the shelter of the bush.
22899.392 Pardieu! say it again! … Dr. Stuart! And Gaston Max sprang out!
22905.472 Max! murmured Stuart, staggering to his feet–Max! Nom d’un nom! Two dead men meet! exclaimed Gaston Max. But
22914.432 indeed–he grasped Stuart by both hands and his voice shook with emotion–I thank God that I see you!
22922.392 Stuart was dazed. Words failed him, and he swayed dizzily.
22928.152 I thought you were murdered, said Max, still grasping his hand, and I perceive that you had made the same mistake about me! Do you
22936.512 know what saved me, my friend, from the consequences of that frightful blow? It was the bandage of ‘Le Balafre’!
22944.592 You must possess a skull like a black person’s! said Stuart feebly. I believe I have a skull like a baboon! returned Max, laughing with
22954.544 joyous excitement. And you, doctor, you must possess a steel wind pipe; for flesh and blood could never have survived the pressure
22962.624 of that horrible pigtail. You will rejoice to learn that Miguel was arrested on the Dover boat train this morning and Ah Fang Fu at
22970.664 Tilbury Dock some four hours ago. So we are both avenged! But we waste time!
22977.064 He unscrewed a flask and handed it to Stuart. A terrible experience has befallen you, he said. But tell me–do
22984.904 you know where it is–the lair of ‘The Scorpion’? I do! replied Stuart, having taken a welcome draught from the flask.
22993.224 Where is Dunbar? We must carefully surround the place or he will elude us. Ah! as he eluded us at ‘The Pidgin House’! cried Max. Do you know
23001.584 what happened? They had a motorboat in the very cellar of that warren. At high tide they could creep out into the cutting, drawing their
23008.624 craft along from pile to pile, and reach the open river at a point fifty yards above the house! In the damnable darkness they escaped.
23017.664 But we have two of them. It was all my fault, said Sowerby guiltily. I missed my spring when
23024.584 I went for the Chinese person who came out first, and he gave one yell. The old fox in the shop heard it and the fat was in the fire.
23033.384 You didn’t miss your spring at me! retort Stuart ruefully. No, agreed Sowerby. I didn’t mean to miss a second time!
23041.864 What’s all this row, came a gruff voice. Ah! Inspector Dunbar! said Max.
23048.064 Dunbar walked up the path, followed by a number of men. At first he did not observe Stuart, and:
23054.744 You’ll be waking all the neighborhood, he said. It’s the next big house, Sowerby, the one we thought, surrounded by the brick wall.
23062.824 There’s no doubt, I think … Why! He had seen Stuart, and he sprang forward with outstretched hand.
23069.4 Thank God! he cried, disregarding his own counsel about creating a disturbance. This is fine! Eh, man! but I’m glad to see you!
23079.64 And I am glad to be here! Stuart assured him. They shook hands warmly. You have read my statement, of course? asked Stuart.
23087.72 I have, replied the Inspector, and gave him a swift glance of the tawny eyes. And considering that you’ve nearly been strangled, I’ll
23095.72 forgive you! But I wish we’d known about this house—- Ah! Inspector, interrupted Gaston Max, but you have never seen
23104.48 Zara el Khala! I have seen her–and I forgive him, also! Stuart continued rapidly:
23111.08 We have little time to waste. There are only three people in the house, so far as I am aware: Miska–known to you, M. Max, as Zara
23119.8 el Khala–the Hindu, Chunda Lal, and–Fo Hi—- Ah! cried Max–‘The Scorpion.’ Chunda Lal, for some obscure personal
23129.32 reason, not entirely unconnected with Miska, enabled me to make my escape in order that I might lead you to the house. Therefore we may
23137.4 look upon Chunda Lal, as well as Miska, in the light of an accomplice—- Eh, bien! a spy in the camp! This is where we see how fatal to the
23147.28 success of any enterprise, criminal or otherwise, is the presence of a pretty woman! Proceed, my friend!
23153.84 There are three entrances to the apartment in which Fo Hi apparently spends the greater part of his time. Two of these I know, although I
23161.72 am unaware where one of them leads to. But the third, of which he alone holds the key, communicates with a tunnel leading to the river
23169.52 bank, where a motorboat is concealed. Ah, that motor boat! cried Max. He travels at night, you
23176.68 understand—- Always, I am told. Yes, always. Therefore, once he is out on the river, he is moderately
23184.24 secure between the first lock and the Nore! When a police patrol is near he can shut off his engine and lie under the bank.
23192.016 Last night he crept away from us in that fashion. Tonight is not so dark, and the
23197.496 River Police are watching all the way down. Furthermore, replied Stuart, Chunda Lal, who acts as engineer, has
23204.576 it in his power to prevent Fo Hi’s escape by that route! But we must count upon the possibility of his attempting to leave by water.
23212.536 Therefore, in disposing your forces, place a certain number of men along the bank and below the house. Is there a River Police boat near?
23220.896 Not nearer than Putney Bridge, answered Dunbar. We shall have to try and block that exit.
23226.416 There’s no time to waste, continued Stuart excitedly–and I have a very particular request to make: that you will take Fo Hi alive.
23234.776 But of course, said Gaston Max, if it is humanly possible. Stuart repressed a groan; for even so he had little hope of inducing
23243.656 the awful veiled man to give back life to the woman who would have been instrumental in bringing him to the scaffold … and no
23250.656 compromise was possible! If you will muster your men, Inspector, he said, I will lead you
23256.376 to the spot. Once we have affected an entrance we must proceed with dispatch. He has alarm bells connected with every possible point of
23264.616 entry. Lead on, my friend, cried Gaston Max. I perceive that time is precious.
23270.216 Chapter 34. Jey Bhowani! As the door closed upon Chunda Lal, Miska stepped back from it and
23277.576 stood, unconsciously, in a curiously rigid and statuesque attitude,
23282.656 her arms pressed to her sides and her hands directed outward. It was the physical expression of an intense mental effort to gain control
23291.016 of herself. Her heart was leaping wildly in her breast–for the future that had held only horror and a living tomb, now opened out
23299.296 sweetly before her. She had only to ply her native wiles for a few precious moments …
23304.96 and someone would have her in his arms, to hold her safe from harm! If the will of the awful Chinese person threatened
23312.72 to swamp her individuality, then–there was Chunda Lal!
23317.88 But because of his helpless, unselfish love, she hesitated even at the price of remaining alone again with Fo Hi, to demand any further
23326.84 sacrifice of the Hindu. Furthermore–he might fail! The lacquer door slid noiselessly open and Fo Hi entered. He paused,
23336.72 watching her. Ah, he said, in that low pitched voice which was so terrifying–a
23342.24 gaziyeh of Ancient Egypt! How beautiful you are, Miska! You transport me to the court of golden Pharaoh. Miska! daughter of the
23351.6 moon magic of Isis–Zara el Khala! At any hour my enemies may be
23356.88 clamoring at my doors. But this hour is mine! He moved at his customary slow gait to the table, took up the keys …
23365.52 and locked both doors! Miska, perceiving in this her chance of aid from Chunda Lal utterly
23371.28 destroyed, sank slowly upon the diwan, her pale face expressing the
23376.32 utmost consternation. Suppose the police did not come! Fo Hi dropped the keys on the table again and approached her. She
23384.76 stood up, retreating before him. He inhaled sibilantly and paused. So your ‘acceptance’ was only a trick, he said. Your loathing of
23393.52 my presence is as strong as ever. Well! At the word, as a volcano leaps into life, the hidden fires which burned within this terrible
23402.08 man leapt up consumingly–if the gift of the flower is withheld, at least I will grasp the Dead Sea Fruit!
23409.72 He leapt toward Miska–and she fled shrieking before him. Running around a couch which stood near the centre of the room, she sprang to
23417.64 the door and beat upon it madly. Chunda Lal! she cried–Chunda Lal! Fo Hi was close upon her, and she turned striving to elude him.
23427.08 Oh, merciful God! Chunda Lal! The name burst from her lips in a long frenzied scream.
23433.216 Fo Hi had seized her! Grasping her shoulders, he twisted her about so that he could look
23439.256 into her eyes. A low, shuddering cry, died away, and her gaze became
23444.936 set, hypnotically, upon Fo Hi. He raised one hand, fingers
23450.296 outstretched before her. She swayed slightly. Forget! he said in a deep, guttural voice of command–forget. I
23458.696 will it. We stand in an empty world, you and I; you, Miska, and I, Fo Hi, your master.
23465.136 My master, she whispered mechanically. Your lover. My lover.
23470.296 You give me your life, to do with as I will. As you will.
23475.976 Fo Hi momentarily raised the blazing eyes. Oh, empty shell of a vanished joy! he cried.
23483.216 Then, frenziedly grasping Miska by her arms, he glared into her impassive face.
23489.056 Your heart leaps wildly in your breast! he whispered tenderly. Look into my eyes….
23495.176 Miska sighed and opened her eyes yet more widely. She shuddered and a slow smile appeared upon her lips.
23502.096 The lacquer screen making the window was pushed open and Chunda Lal leapt in over the edge. As Fo Hi drew the yielding, hypnotised girl
23510.776 towards him, Chunda Lal, a gleaming kukri held aloft, ran with a silent panther step across the floor.
23518.416 He reached Fo Hi, drew himself upright; the glittering blade quivered … and Fo Hi divined his presence.
23525.936 Uttering a short, guttural exclamation, he thrust Miska aside. She staggered dazedly and fell prone upon the floor. The quivering blade
23534.736 did not descend. Fo Hi drew himself rigidly upright, extending his hands, palms
23540.456 downward, before him. He was exerting a superhuman effort. The breath whistled through his nostrils. Chunda Lal, knife upraised, endeavored
23549.296 to strike; but his arm seemed to have become incapable of movement and to be held, helpless, aloft.
23556.536 Staring at the rigid figure before him, he began to pant like a man engaged in a wrestle for life.
23563.032 Fo Hi stretched his right arm outward, and with a gesture of hand and fingers beckoned to Chunda Lal to come before him.
23571.592 And now, Miska, awakening as from a fevered dream, looked wildly about
23576.992 her, and then, serpentine, began to creep to the table upon which the keys were lying. Always watching the awful group of two, she rose
23585.912 slowly, snatched the keys and leapt across to the open window…. Chunda Lal, swollen veins standing out cord like on his brow, his
23594.792 gaze set hypnotically upon the moving hand, dropped his knife and began to move in obedience to the will of Fo Hi.
23602.672 As he came finally face to face with the terrible Adept of Rache Churan, Miska disappeared into the shadow of the balcony. Fo Hi by
23611.472 an imperious gesture commanded Chunda Lal to kneel and bow his head. The Hindu, gasping, obeyed.
23618.952 Thereupon Fo Hi momentarily relaxed his giant concentration and almost staggered as he glared down at the kneeling man. But never was that
23627.792 dreadful gaze removed from Chunda Lal. And now the veiled man drew himself rigidly upright again and stepped backward until the fallen
23635.232 kukri lay at his feet. He spoke, Chunda Lal! The Hindu rose, gazing before him with unseeing eyes. His forehead
23643.352 was wet with perspiration. Fo Hi pointed to the knife. Chunda Lal, without removing his sightless gaze from the veiled
23650.712 face, stooped, groped until he found the knife and rose with it in his hand.
23655.872 Back stepped Fo Hi, and back, until he could touch the big table. He moved a brass switch–and a trap opened in the floor behind Chunda
23664.472 Lal. Fo Hi raised his right hand, having the fingers tightly closed
23669.792 as if grasping the hilt of a knife. With his left hand he pointed to the trap. Again he spoke.
23675.272 Tum samauhe ho? Mechanically Chunda La replied: Ah, Sahib, tumhara huken jaldi: kiya’ jaega’ Yes, I hear and
23685.352 obey. As Fo Hi raised his clenched right hand, so did Chunda Lal raise the
23690.944 kukri. Fo Hi extended his left hand rigidly towards the Hindu and seemed to force him, step by step, back towards the open trap. Almost
23701.064 at the brink, Chunda Lal paused, swayed, and began to utter short, agonised cries. Froth appeared upon his lips.
23710.344 Raising his right hand yet further aloft, Fo Hi swiftly brought it down, performing the gesture of stabbing himself to the heart. His
23719.304 ghastly reserve deserted him. Jey Bhowana! he screamed–Yah Allah!
23724.544 Chunda Lal, uttering a loud groan, stabbed himself and fell backward into the opening. Ensued a monstrous crash of broken glass.
23733.664 As he fell, Fo Hi leapt to the brink of the trap, glaring down madly into the cellar below. His yellow fingers opened and closed
23741.864 spasmodically. Lie there, he shrieked–my ‘faithful’ servant! The ants shall pick
23747.144 your bones! He grasped the upstanding door of the trap and closed it. It descended with a reverberating boom. Fo Hi raised his clenched fists
23757.104 and stepped to the door. Finding it locked, he stood looking toward the open screen before the window.
23763.344 Miska! he whispered despairingly. He crossed to the window and was about to look out, when a
23769.184 high pitched electric bell began to ring in the room. Instantly Fo Hi closed the screen and turned, looking in the direction
23776.264 from whence the sound of ringing proceeded. As he did so, a second bell, in another key, began to ring–a third–a fourth.
23785.704 Momentarily the veiled man exhibited evidence of indecision. Then, from beneath his robe he took a small key. Approaching an ornate
23794.664 cabinet set against the wall to the left of one of the lacquer doors, he inserted the key in a hidden lock, and slid the entire cabinet
23802.704 partly aside revealing an opening. Fo Hi bent, peering down into the darkness of the passage below.
23809.464 A muffled report came, a flash out of the blackness of the river tunnel,
23814.664 and a bullet passed through the end of the cabinet upon which his hand was resting, smashing an ivory statuette and shattering the glass.
23823.424 Hurriedly he slid the cabinet into place again and stood with his back to it, arms outstretched.
23829.624 Miska! he said–and a note of yet deeper despair had crept into the harsh voice.
23835.744 Awhile he stood thus; then he drew himself up with dignity. The bells
23841.104 had ceased. Methodically Fo Hi began to take certain books from the shelves and to
23846.664 cast them into the great metal bowl which stood upon the tripod. Into the bowl he poured the contents of a large glass jar. Flames and
23855.784 clouds of smoke arose. He paused, listening. Confused voices were audible, seemingly from all around him, together
23864.144 with a sound of vague movements. Fo Hi took up vials and jars and dashed them to pieces upon the tiled
23871.664 hearth in which the furnace rested. Test tubes, flasks and retorts he
23876.864 shattered, and finally, raising the large glass case of orchids he dashed it down amid the debris of the other nameless and priceless
23885.384 monstrosities unknown to Western science. Chapter 35.
23891.504 The Way Of A Scorpion. A black cloud swept past the face of the moon and cold illumination
23898.544 flooded the narrow lane and patched with light the drive leading up to the front of the isolated mansion. Wrought iron gates closed both
23907.224 entrances and a high wall, surmounted by broken glass and barbed wire, entirely surrounded the grounds.
23915.264 This one also is locked, said Gaston Max, trying the gate and then peering through the bars in the direction of the gloomy house.
23923.824 All the visible windows were shuttered. No ray of light showed anywhere. The house must have been pronounced deserted by anyone
23931.864 contemplating it. Upon which side do you suppose the big room to be? asked Max.
23938.464 It is difficult to judge, replied Stuart. But I am disposed to
23943.544 believe that it is in the front of the house and on the first floor, for I traversed a long corridor, descended several stairs, turned to
23951.944 the right and emerged in a part of the garden bordering the lane in which Inspector Kelly is posted.
23958.464 I was thinking of the window and the balcony which ‘The Scorpion’ informed you commanded a view of Hampton Court. Hampton Court, he
23965.744 turned half left, lies about yonder. Therefore you are probably right, doctor; the room as you say should be in front of the house.
23973.024 Since we do not know how to disconnect the alarms, once we have entered the grounds it is important that we should gain access to the
23979.944 house immediately. Ah! morbleu! the moon disappears again!
23985.104 Darkness crept over the countryside. There is an iron balcony jutting out amongst the ivy just above and
23991.904 to the right of the porch! cried Stuart, who had also been peering up the moon patched drive. I would wager that that is the room!
24000.744 Ah! replied Max, I believe you are right. This, then is how we shall proceed: Inspector Kelly, with the aid of two men, can get over
24008.664 the wall near that garden door by which you came out. If they cannot force it from inside, you also must get over and lead the way to the
24016.504 entrance you know of. Sowerby and two more men will remain to watch the lane. The river front is well guarded. We will post a man here
24024.824 at this gate and one at the other. Dunbar and I will climb this one and rush straight for that balcony which we must hope to reach by
24031.624 climbing up the ivy. Ah! here comes Inspector Dunbar … and
24036.736 someone is with him! Dunbar appeared at the double around the corner of the lane which led riverward, and beside him ran a girl who presented a bizarre
24046.016 figure beside the gaunt Scotsman and a figure wildly out of place in that English riverside setting.
24053.176 It was Miska, arrayed in her flimsy harem dress! Miska! cried Stuart, and sprang towards her, sweeping her hungrily
24063.176 into his arms–forgetful of, indifferent to, the presence of Max and
24068.536 Dunbar. Ah! sighed the Frenchman–yes, she is beautiful!
24074.256 Trembling wildly, Miska clung to Stuart and began to speak, her English more broken than ever, because of her emotion.
24082.456 Listen–quick! she panted. Oh! do not hold me so tight. I have the house keys–look!–she held up a bunch of keys–but not the keys of
24091.576 the gates. Two men have gone to the end of the tunnel where the boat is hid beside the river. Someone–he better climb this gate and by the
24099.536 ivy he can reach the room in which Fo Hi is! I come down so. You do
24104.696 not see me because the moon goes out and I run to the side door. It is open. You come with me!
24111.416 She clung to Stuart, looking up into his eyes. Yes, yes, Miska! Oh! Chunda Lal–she choked down a sob. Be quick! be quick! He
24119.616 will kill him! he will kill him! Off you go, doctor! cried Max. Come along, Dunbar!
24125.136 He began to climb the ironwork of the gate. This way! said Miska, dragging Stuart by the arm. Oh! I am wild
24132.416 with fear and sorrow and joy! With joy, dear little Miska! whispered Stuart, as he followed her.
24138.376 They passed around the bend into the narrower lane which led toward the river and upon which the garden door opened. Stuart detained her.
24146.216 If the fate of the whole world had hung in the balance–as indeed, perhaps it did–he could not have acted otherwise. He raised her
24153.816 bewitching face and kissed her ardently. She trembled and clung to him rapturously.
24159.816 I live! she whispered. Oh! I am mad with happiness! It is Chunda
24165.536 Lal that gives me life–for he tells me the truth. It is not with the living death that he touches me; it is a trick, it is all a trick
24174.296 to bind me to him! Oh, Chunda Lal! Hurry! he is going to kill him!
24179.696 But supreme above all the other truths in the world, the joyous truth that Miska was to live set Stuart’s heart on fire.
24186.976 Thank God! he said fervently–oh, thank God! Miska! At the garden door a group of men awaited them. Sergeant Sowerby and
24196.656 two assistants remaining to watch the entrance and the lane, Miska led Stuart and the burly Inspector Kelly along that path beside the
24204.056 wall which Stuart so well remembered. Hurry! she whispered urgently. We must try to reach him before …
24210.936 You fear for Chunda Lal? said Stuart. Oh, yes! He has a terrible power–Fo Hi–which he never employs with
24218.856 me, until to night. Ah! it is only Chunda Lal, who saved me! But Chunda Lal he can command with his Will. From it, once he has made
24226.936 anyone a slave to it, there is no escape. I have seen one in the city of Quebec, in Canada, forget all else and begin to act in obedience
24236.416 to the will of Fo Hi who is thousands of miles away! My God! murmured Stuart, what a horrible monster!
24243.936 They had reached the open door beyond which showed the dimly lighted passage. Miska hesitated.
24249.696 Oh! I am afraid! she whispered. She thrust the keys into the hand of Inspector Kelly, pointing to one
24256.656 of them, and: That is the key! she said. Have your pistol ready. Do not touch
24262.136 anything in the room and do not go in if I tell you not to. Come! They pressed along the passage, came to the stair and were about to
24270.776 ascend, when there ensued a dull reverberating boom, and Miska shrank back into Stuart’s arms with a stifled shriek.
24278.712 Oh! Chunda Lal! she moaned–Chunda Lal! It is the trap!
24285.072 The trap! said Inspector Kelly. The cellar trap. He has thrown him down … to the ants!
24291.472 Inspector Kelly uttered a short laugh; but Stuart repressed a shudder. He was never likely to forget the skeleton of the Nubian mute which
24299.592 had been stripped by the ants in sixty nine minutes! We are too late! whispered Miska. Oh! listen! listen!
24308.152 Bells began to ring somewhere above them. Max and Dunbar are in! said Kelly. Come on, sir! Follow closely,
24315.912 boys! He ran up the stairs and along the corridor to the door at the end. A muffled shot sounded from somewhere in the depths of the house.
24325.152 That’s Harvey! said one of the men who followed–Our man must have tried to escape by the tunnel to the river bank!
24332.152 Inspector Kelly placed the key in the lock of the door. It was at this moment that Gaston Max, climbing up to the front
24339.072 balcony by means of the natural ladder afforded by the ancient ivy, grasped the iron railing and drew himself up to the level of the
24346.712 room. By this same stairway Chunda Lal had ascended to death and Miska had climbed down to life.
24353.752 Mind the ironwork doesn’t give way, sir! called Dunbar from below. It is strong, replied Max. Join me here, my friend.
24362.312 Max, taking a magazine pistol from his pocket, stepped warily over the ledge into the mysterious half light behind the great screen. As
24370.272 he did so, one of the lacquer doors was unlocked from the outside, and across the extraordinary, smoke laden room he saw Inspector Kelly
24378.552 enter. He saw something else. Seated in a strangely shaped canopied chair was a figure wearing a
24385.632 rich mandarin robe, but having its face covered with a green veil.
24390.672 Mon Deiu! at last! he cried, and leapt into the room. ‘The
24395.84 Scorpion’! Even as he leapt, and as the Scotland Yard men closed in upon the
24401.12 chair also, all of them armed and all half fearful, a thing happened which struck awe to every heart–for it seemed to be supernatural.
24410.16 Raising a metal hammer which he held in his hand, Fo Hi struck the bronze bell hung beside the chair. It emitted a deep, loud note….
24418.36 There came a flash of blinding light, and intense crackling sound, the crash of broken glass, and a dense cloud of pungent fumes rose
24427.72 in the heated air. Dunbar had just climbed in behind Gaston Max. Bother were all but
24433.72 hurled from their feet by the force of the explosion. Then: Oh, my God! cried Dunbar, staggering, half blinded, look–look!
24442.2 A deathly silence claimed them all. Just within the doorway Stuart appeared, having his arm about the shoulders of Miska.
24448.92 The Throne of the Gods was empty! A thin coating of grey dust was settling upon it and upon the dais which supported it.
24456.8 They had witnessed a scientific miracle … the complete and instantaneous disintegration of a human body. Gaston Max was the
24464.68 first to recover speech. We are defeated, he said. ‘The Scorpion,’ surrounded, destroys
24470.36 himself. It is the way of a scorpion. Thank you for joining us on this journey through ‘The Golden
24477.08 Scorpion.’ We hope you enjoyed the mystery and the twists along the way. If you liked this story, don’t forget to subscribe to Classic
24485.84 Detective Mysteries for more thrilling tales. Share your thoughts in the comments, and let us know what you think about the detective’s
24493.84 cunning and the story’s resolution. Until next time, keep the mysteries alive.
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