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 The Insidious Dr. Fu Manchu 

 Sax Rohmer 

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<book>

<frontmatter>
<titlepage>
<title> The Insidious Dr. Fu Manchu </title>

<author> Sax Rohmer </author>

<!-- October, 1994  [Etext #173] -->
</titlepage>
</frontmatter>








<bookbody>

<chapter>

<title>CHAPTER I</title>



<para>

"A GENTLEMAN to see you, Doctor."

</para><para>

From across the common a clock sounded the half-hour.

</para><para>

"Ten-thirty!" I said.  "A late visitor.  Show him up, if you please."

</para><para>

I pushed my writing aside and tilted the lamp-shade, as footsteps

sounded on the landing.  The next moment I had jumped to my feet,

for a tall, lean man, with his square-cut, clean-shaven face

sun-baked to the hue of coffee, entered and extended both hands,

with a cry:

</para><para>

"Good old Petrie!  Didn't expect me, I'll swear!"

</para><para>

It was Nayland Smith--whom I had thought to be in Burma!

</para><para>

"Smith," I said, and gripped his hands hard, "this is a delightful surprise!

Whatever--however--"

</para><para>

"Excuse me, Petrie!" he broke in.  "Don't put it down to the sun!"

And he put out the lamp, plunging the room into darkness.

</para><para>

I was too surprised to speak.

</para><para>

"No doubt you will think me mad," he continued, and, dimly,

I could see him at the window, peering out into the road,

"but before you are many hours older you will know that I

have good reason to be cautious.  Ah, nothing suspicious!

Perhaps I am first this time."  And, stepping back to the

writing-table he relighted the lamp.

</para><para>

"Mysterious enough for you?" he laughed, and glanced at my unfinished MS.

"A story, eh?  From which I gather that the district is beastly healthy--

what, Petrie?  Well, I can put some material in your way that, if sheer

uncanny mystery is a marketable commodity, ought to make you independent

of influenza and broken legs and shattered nerves and all the rest."

</para><para>

I surveyed him doubtfully, but there was nothing in his appearance

to justify me in supposing him to suffer from delusions.  His eyes

were too bright, certainly, and a hardness now had crept over his face.

I got out the whisky and siphon, saying:

</para><para>

"You have taken your leave early?"

</para><para>

"I am not on leave," he replied, and slowly filled his pipe.

"I am on duty."

</para><para>

"On duty!" I exclaimed.  "What, are you moved to London or something?"

</para><para>

"I have got a roving commission, Petrie, and it doesn't rest

with me where I am to-day nor where I shall be to-morrow."

</para><para>

There was something ominous in the words, and, putting down my glass,

its contents untasted, I faced round and looked him squarely in the eyes.

"Out with it!" I said.  "What is it all about?"

</para><para>

Smith suddenly stood up and stripped off his coat.

Rolling back his left shirt-sleeve he revealed a wicked-looking

wound in the fleshy part of the forearm.  It was quite healed,

but curiously striated for an inch or so around.

</para><para>

"Ever seen one like it?" he asked.

</para><para>

"Not exactly," I confessed.  "It appears to have been deeply cauterized."

</para><para>

"Right!  Very deeply!" he rapped.  "A barb steeped in the venom

of a hamadryad went in there!"

</para><para>

A shudder I could not repress ran coldly through me at mention

of that most deadly of all the reptiles of the East.

</para><para>

"There's only one treatment," he continued, rolling his sleeve down again,

"and that's with a sharp knife, a match, and a broken cartridge.

I lay on my back, raving, for three days afterwards, in a forest that stank

with malaria, but I should have been lying there now if I had hesitated.

Here's the point.  It was not an accident!"

</para><para>

"What do you mean?"

</para><para>

"I mean that it was a deliberate attempt on my life, and I am hard upon

the tracks of the man who extracted that venom--patiently, drop by drop--

from the poison-glands of the snake, who prepared that arrow, and who caused

it to be shot at me."

</para><para>

"What fiend is this?"

</para><para>

"A fiend who, unless my calculations are at fault is now in London,

and who regularly wars with pleasant weapons of that kind.  Petrie, I have

traveled from Burma not in the interests of the British Government merely,

but in the interests of the entire white race, and I honestly believe--

though I pray I may be wrong--that its survival depends largely upon

the success of my mission."

</para><para>

To say that I was perplexed conveys no idea of the mental chaos

created by these extraordinary statements, for into my humdrum

suburban life Nayland Smith had brought fantasy of the wildest.

I did not know what to think, what to believe.

</para><para>

"I am wasting precious time!" he rapped decisively, and, draining his glass,

he stood up.  "I came straight to you, because you are the only man I dare

to trust.  Except the big chief at headquarters, you are the only person

in England, I hope, who knows that Nayland Smith has quitted Burma.

I must have someone with me, Petrie, all the time--it's imperative!

Can you put me up here, and spare a few days to the strangest business,

I promise you, that ever was recorded in fact or fiction?"

</para><para>

I agreed readily enough, for, unfortunately, my professional

duties were not onerous.

</para><para>

"Good man!" he cried, wringing my hand in his impetuous way.

"We start now."

</para><para>

"What, to-night?

</para><para>

"To-night!  I had thought of turning in, I must admit.  I have not dared

to sleep for forty-eight hours, except in fifteen-minute stretches.

But there is one move that must be made to-night and immediately.

I must warn Sir Crichton Davey."

</para><para>

"Sir Crichton Davey--of the India--"

</para><para>

"Petrie, he is a doomed man!  Unless he follows my instructions

without question, without hesitation--before Heaven, nothing can

save him!  I do not know when the blow will fall, how it will fall,

nor from whence, but I know that my, first duty is to warn him.

Let us walk down to the corner of the common and get a taxi."

</para><para>

How strangely does the adventurous intrude upon the humdrum;

for, when it intrudes at all, more often than not its intrusion

is sudden and unlooked for.  To-day, we may seek for romance

and fail to find it:  unsought, it lies in wait for us at most

prosaic corners of life's highway.

</para><para>

The drive that night, though it divided the drably commonplace

from the wildly bizarre--though it was the bridge between the

ordinary and the outre--has left no impression upon my mind.

Into the heart of a weird mystery the cab bore me; and in reviewing

my memories of those days I wonder that the busy thoroughfares

through which we passed did not display before my eyes signs

and portents--warnings.

</para><para>

It was not so.  I recall nothing of the route and little of import

that passed between us (we both were strangely silent, I think)

until we were come to our journey's end.  Then:

</para><para>

"What's this?" muttered my friend hoarsely.

</para><para>

Constables were moving on a little crowd of curious idlers who pressed

about the steps of Sir Crichton Davey's house and sought to peer in at

the open door.  Without waiting for the cab to draw up to the curb,

Nayland Smith recklessly leaped out and I followed close at his heels.

</para><para>

"What has happened?" he demanded breathlessly of a constable.

</para><para>

The latter glanced at him doubtfully, but something in his voice

and bearing commanded respect.

</para><para>

"Sir Crichton Davey has been killed, sir."

</para><para>

Smith lurched back as though he had received a physical blow, and clutched

my shoulder convulsively.  Beneath the heavy tan his face had blanched,

and his eyes were set in a stare of horror.

</para><para>

"My God!" he whispered.  "I am too late!"

</para><para>

With clenched fists he turned and, pressing through the group

of loungers, bounded up the steps.  In the hall a man who unmistakably

was a Scotland Yard official stood talking to a footman.

Other members of the household were moving about, more or

less aimlessly, and the chilly hand of King Fear had touched

one and all, for, as they came and went, they glanced ever over

their shoulders, as if each shadow cloaked a menace, and listened,

as it seemed, for some sound which they dreaded to hear.

Smith strode up to the detective and showed him a card,

upon glancing at which the Scotland Yard man said something

in a low voice, and, nodding, touched his hat to Smith

in a respectful manner.

</para><para>

A few brief questions and answers, and, in gloomy silence,

we followed the detective up the heavily carpeted stair,

along a corridor lined with pictures and busts, and into a

large library.  A group of people were in this room, and one,

in whom I recognized Chalmers Cleeve, of Harley Street,

was bending over a motionless form stretched upon a couch.

Another door communicated with a small study, and through

the opening I could see a man on all fours examining the carpet.

The uncomfortable sense of hush, the group about the physician,

the bizarre figure crawling, beetle-like, across the inner room,

and the grim hub, around which all this ominous activity turned,

made up a scene that etched itself indelibly on my mind.

</para><para>

As we entered Dr. Cleeve straightened himself, frowning thoughtfully.

</para><para>

"Frankly, I do not care to venture any opinion at present regarding

the immediate cause of death," he said.  "Sir Crichton was addicted

to cocaine, but there are indications which are not in accordance

with cocaine-poisoning. I fear that only a post-mortem can

establish the facts--if," he added, "we ever arrive at them.

A most mysterious case!"

</para><para>

Smith stepping forward and engaging the famous pathologist in conversation,

I seized the opportunity to examine Sir Crichton's body.

</para><para>

The dead man was in evening dress, but wore an old

smoking-jacket. He Lad been of spare but hardy build,

with thin, aquiline features, which now were oddly puffy,

as were his clenched hands.  I pushed back his sleeve,

and saw the marks of the hypodermic syringe upon his left arm.

Quite mechanically I turned my attention to the right arm.

It was unscarred, but on the back of the hand was a faint

red mark, not unlike the imprint of painted lips.

I examined it closely, and even tried to rub it off, but it

evidently was caused by some morbid process of local inflammation,

if it were not a birthmark.

</para><para>

Turning to a pale young man whom I had understood to be Sir

Crichton's private secretary, I drew his attention to this mark,

and inquired if it were constitutional.  "It is not, sir,"

answered Dr. Cleeve, overhearing my question.  "I have already

made that inquiry.  Does it suggest anything to your mind?

I must confess that it affords me no assistance."

</para><para>

"Nothing," I replied.  "It is most curious."

</para><para>

"Excuse me, Mr. Burboyne," said Smith, now turning to the secretary,

"but Inspector Weymouth will tell you that I act with authority.

I understand that Sir Crichton was--seized with, illness in his study?"

</para><para>

"Yes--at half-past ten.  I was working here in the library, and he inside,

as was our custom."

</para><para>

"The communicating door was kept closed?"

</para><para>

"Yes, always.  It was open for a minute or less about

ten-twenty-five, when a message came for Sir Crichton.

I took it in to him, and he then seemed in his usual health."

</para><para>

"What was the message?"

</para><para>

"I could not say.  it was brought by a district messenger, and he placed

it beside him on the table.  It is there now, no doubt."

</para><para>

"And at half-past ten?"

</para><para>

"Sir Crichton suddenly burst open the door and threw himself,

with a scream, into the library.  I ran to him but he waved

me back.  His eyes were glaring horribly.  I had just

reached his side when he fell, writhing, upon the floor.

He seemed past speech, but as I raised him and laid him upon

the couch, he gasped something that sounded like `The red hand!'

Before I could get to bell or telephone he was dead!"

</para><para>

Mr. Burboyne's voice shook as he spoke the words, and Smith seemed

to find this evidence confusing.

</para><para>

"You do not think he referred to the mark on his own hand?"

</para><para>

"I think not.  From the direction of his last glance, I feel

sure he referred to something in the study."

</para><para>

"What did you do?  Having summoned the servants, I ran into the study.

But there was absolutely nothing unusual to be seen.  The windows were closed

and fastened.  He worked with closed windows in the hottest weather.

There is no other door, for the study occupies the end of a narrow wing,

so that no one could possibly have gained access to it, whilst I was

in the library, unseen by me.  Had someone concealed himself in the study

earlier in the evening--and I am convinced that it offers no hiding-place--

he could only have come out again by passing through here."

</para><para>

Nayland Smith tugged at the lobe of his left ear, as was his

habit when meditating.

</para><para>

"You had been at work here in this way for some time?"

</para><para>

"Yes.  Sir Crichton was preparing an important book."

</para><para>

"Had anything unusual occurred prior to this evening?"

</para><para>

"Yes," said Mr. Burboyne, with evident perplexity; "though I attached

no importance to it at the time.  Three nights ago Sir Crichton

came out to me, and appeared very nervous; but at times his nerves--

you know?  Well, on this occasion he asked me to search the study.

He had an idea that something was concealed there."

</para><para>

"Some THING or someone?"

</para><para>

"`Something' was the word he used.  I searched, but fruitlessly,

and he seemed quite satisfied, and returned to his work."

</para><para>

"Thank you, Mr. Burboyne.  My friend and I would like a few minutes'

private investigation in the study."

</para>

</chapter>





<chapter>

<title>CHAPTER II</title>



<para>

SIR CRICHTON DAVEY'S study was a small one, and a glance sufficed to

show that, as the secretary had said, it offered no hiding-place. It was

heavily carpeted, and over-full of Burmese and Chinese ornaments and curios,

and upon the mantelpiece stood several framed photographs which showed

this to be the sanctum of a wealthy bachelor who was no misogynist.

A map of the Indian Empire occupied the larger part of one wall.

The grate was empty, for the weather was extremely warm, and a

green-shaded lamp on the littered writing-table afforded the only light.

The air was stale, for both windows were closed and fastened.

</para><para>

Smith immediately pounced upon a large, square envelope that lay beside

the blotting-pad. Sir Crichton had not even troubled to open it,

but my friend did so.  It contained a blank sheet of paper!

</para><para>

"Smell!" he directed, handing the letter to me.  I raised it to my nostrils.

It was scented with some pungent perfume.

</para><para>

"What is it?"  I asked.

</para><para>

"It is a rather rare essential oil," was the reply,

"which I have met with before, though never in Europe.

I begin to understand, Petrie."

</para><para>

He tilted the lamp-shade and made a close examination of the scraps

of paper, matches, and other debris that lay in the grate and on the hearth.

I took up a copper vase from the mantelpiece, and was examining it curiously,

when he turned, a strange expression upon his face.

</para><para>

"Put that back, old man," he said quietly.

</para><para>

Much surprised, I did as he directed.

</para><para>

"Don't touch anything in the room.  It may he dangerous."

</para><para>

Something in the tone of his voice chilled me, and I hastily

replaced the vase, and stood by the door of the study,

watching him search, methodically, every inch of the room--

behind the books, in all the ornaments, in table drawers,

in cupboards, on shelves.

</para><para>

"That will do," he said at last.  "There is nothing here and I

have no time to search farther."

</para><para>

We returned to the library.

</para><para>

"Inspector Weymouth," said my friend, "I have a particular

reason for asking that Sir Crichton's body be removed from

this room at once and the library locked.  Let no one be

admitted on any pretense whatever until you hear from me."

It spoke volumes for the mysterious credentials borne by my

friend that the man from Scotland Yard accepted his orders

without demur, and, after a brief chat with Mr. Burboyne,

Smith passed briskly downstairs.  In the hall a man who looked

like a groom out of livery was waiting.

</para><para>

"Are you Wills?" asked Smith.

</para><para>

"Yes, sir."

</para><para>

"It was you who heard a cry of some kind at the rear of the house

about the time of Sir Crichton's death?"

</para><para>

"Yes, sir.  I was locking the garage door, and, happening to look up

at the window of Sir Crichton's study, I saw him jump out of his chair.

Where he used to sit at his writing, sir, you could see his shadow

on the blind.  Next minute I heard a call out in the lane."

</para><para>

"What kind of call?"

</para><para>

The man, whom the uncanny happening clearly had frightened,

seemed puzzled for a suitable description.

</para><para>

"A sort of wail, sir," he said at last.  "I never heard anything

like it before, and don't want to again."

</para><para>

"Like this?" inquired Smith, and he uttered a low, wailing cry,

impossible to describe.  Wills perceptibly shuddered; and, indeed,

it was an eerie sound.

</para><para>

"The same, sir, I think," he said, "but much louder."

</para><para>

"That will do," said Smith, and I thought I detected a note of triumph

in his voice.  "But stay!  Take us through to the back of the house."

</para><para>

The man bowed and led the way, so that shortly we found ourselves

in a small, paved courtyard.  It was a perfect summer's night,

and the deep blue vault above was jeweled with myriads of starry points.

How impossible it seemed to reconcile that vast, eternal calm

with the hideous passions and fiendish agencies which that night

had loosed a soul upon the infinite.

</para><para>

"Up yonder are the study windows, sir.  Over that wall on your left

is the back lane from which the cry came, and beyond is Regent's Park."

</para><para>

"Are the study windows visible from there?"

</para><para>

"Oh, yes, sir."

</para><para>

"Who occupies the adjoining house?"

</para><para>

"Major-General Platt-Houston, sir; but the family is out of town."

</para><para>

"Those iron stairs are a means of communication between the domestic

offices and the servants' quarters, I take it?"

</para><para>

"Yes, sir."  "Then send someone to make my business known to

the Major-General's housekeeper; I want to examine those stairs."

</para><para>

Singular though my friend's proceedings appeared to me, I had ceased

to wonder at anything.  Since Nayland Smith's arrival at my rooms I

seemed to have been moving through the fitful phases of a nightmare.

My friend's account of how he came by the wound in his arm;

the scene on our arrival at the house of Sir Crichton Davey;

the secretary's story of the dying man's cry, "The red hand!";

the hidden perils of the study; the wall in the lane--

all were fitter incidents of delirium than of sane reality.

So, when a white-faced butler made us known to a nervous old lady

who proved to be the housekeeper of the next-door residence,

I was not surprised at Smith's saying:

</para><para>

"Lounge up and down outside, Petrie.  Everyone has cleared off now.

It is getting late.  Keep your eyes open and be on your guard.

I thought I had the start, but he is here before me, and, what is worse,

he probably knows by now that I am here, too."

</para><para>

With which he entered the house and left me out in the square,

with leisure to think, to try to understand.

</para><para>

The crowd which usually haunts the scene of a sensational crime

had been cleared away, and it had been circulated that Sir Crichton

had died from natural causes.  The intense heat having driven most

of the residents out of town, practically I had the square to myself,

and I gave myself up to a brief consideration of the mystery in which I

so suddenly had found myself involved.

</para><para>

By what agency had Sir Crichton met his death?

Did Nayland Smith know?  I rather suspected that he did.

What was the hidden significance of the perfumed envelope?

Who was that mysterious personage whom Smith so evidently dreaded,

who had attempted his life, who, presumably, had murdered

Sir Crichton?  Sir Crichton Davey, during the time that he had held

office in India, and during his long term of service at home,

had earned the good will of all, British and native alike.

Who was his secret enemy?

</para><para>

Something touched me lightly on the shoulder.

</para><para>

I turned, with my heart fluttering like a child's. This night's

work had imposed a severe strain even upon my callous nerves.

</para><para>

A girl wrapped in a hooded opera-cloak stood at my elbow,

and, as she glanced up at me, I thought that I never had seen

a face so seductively lovely nor of so unusual a type.

With the skin of a perfect blonde, she had eyes and lashes

as black as a Creole's, which, together with her full red lips,

told me that this beautiful stranger, whose touch had so startled me,

was not a child of our northern shores.

</para><para>

"Forgive me," she said, speaking with an odd, pretty accent,

and laying a slim hand, with jeweled fingers, confidingly upon

my arm, "if I startled you.  But--is it true that Sir Crichton

Davey has been--murdered?"

</para><para>

I looked into her big, questioning eyes, a harsh suspicion laboring

in my mind, but could read nothing in their mysterious depths--

only I wondered anew at my questioner's beauty.  The grotesque

idea momentarily possessed me that, were the bloom of her red

lips due to art and not to nature, their kiss would leave--

though not indelibly--just such a mark as I had seen upon the dead

man's hand.  But I dismissed the fantastic notion as bred

of the night's horrors, and worthy only of a mediaeval legend.

No doubt she was some friend or acquaintance of Sir Crichton

who lived close by.

</para><para>

"I cannot say that he has been murdered," I replied, acting upon the latter

supposition, and seeking to tell her what she asked as gently as possible.

"But he is--Dead?"

</para><para>

I nodded.

</para><para>

She closed her eyes and uttered a low, moaning sound, swaying dizzily.

Thinking she was about to swoon, I threw my arm round her shoulder

to support her, but she smiled sadly, and pushed me gently away.

</para><para>

"I am quite well, thank you," she said.

</para><para>

"You are certain?  Let me walk with you until you feel quite

sure of yourself."

</para><para>

She shook her head, flashed a rapid glance at me with her beautiful eyes,

and looked away in a sort of sorrowful embarrassment, for which I was entirely

at a loss to account.  Suddenly she resumed:

</para><para>

"I cannot let my name be mentioned in this dreadful matter, but--I think

I have some information--for the police.  Will you give this to--

whomever you think proper?"

</para><para>

She handed me a sealed envelope, again met my eyes

with one of her dazzling glances, and hurried away.

She had gone no more than ten or twelve yards, and I still was

standing bewildered, watching her graceful, retreating figure,

when she turned abruptly and came back.

</para><para>

Without looking directly at me, but alternately glancing towards a distant

corner of the square and towards the house of Major-General Platt-Houston,

she made the following extraordinary request:

</para><para>

"If you would do me a very great service, for which I always would

be grateful,"--she glanced at me with passionate intentness--"when you

have given my message to the proper person, leave him and do not go

near him any more to-night!"

</para><para>

Before I could find words to reply she gathered up her cloak and ran.

Before I could determine whether or not to follow her (for her words

had aroused anew all my worst suspicions) she had disappeared!

I heard the whir of a restarted motor at no great distance, and,

in the instant that Nayland Smith came running down the steps,

I knew that I had nodded at my post.

</para><para>

"Smith!"  I cried as he joined me, "tell me what we must do!"

And rapidly I acquainted him with the incident.

</para><para>

My friend looked very grave; then a grim smile crept round his lips.

</para><para>

"She was a big card to play," he said; "but he did not know that I

held one to beat it."

</para><para>

"What!  You know this girl!  Who is she?"

</para><para>

"She is one of the finest weapons in the enemy's armory, Petrie.

But a woman is a two-edged sword, and treacherous.

To our great good fortune, she has formed a sudden predilection,

characteristically Oriental, for yourself.  Oh, you may scoff, but it

is evident.  She was employed to get this letter placed in my hands.

Give it to me."

</para><para>

I did so.

</para><para>

"She has succeeded.  Smell."

</para><para>

He held the envelope under my nose, and, with a sudden sense of nausea,

I recognized the strange perfume.

</para><para>

"You know what this presaged in Sir Crichton's case?

Can you doubt any longer?  She did not want you to share

my fate, Petrie."

</para><para>

"Smith," I said unsteadily, "I have followed your lead blindly

in this horrible business and have not pressed for an explanation,

but I must insist before I go one step farther upon knowing

what it all means."

</para><para>

"Just a few steps farther," he rejoined; "as far as a cab.

We are hardly safe here.  Oh, you need not fear shots or knives.

The man whose servants are watching us now scorns to employ

such clumsy, tell-tale weapons."

</para><para>

Only three cabs were on the rank, and, as we entered the first,

something hissed past my ear.  missed both Smith and me

by a miracle, and, passing over the roof of the taxi,

presumably fell in the enclosed garden occupying the center

of the square.

</para><para>

"What was that?" I cried.

</para><para>

"Get in--quickly!"  Smith rapped back.  "It was attempt number one!

More than that I cannot say.  Don't let the man hear.

He has noticed nothing.  Pull up the window on your side,

Petrie, and look out behind.  Good!  We've started."

</para><para>

The cab moved off with a metallic jerk, and I turned and looked

back through the little window in the rear.

</para><para>

"Someone has got into another cab.  It is following ours, I think."

</para><para>

Nayland Smith lay back and laughed unmirthfully.

</para><para>

"Petrie," he said, "if I escape alive from this business I shall

know that I bear a charmed life."

</para><para>

I made no reply, as he pulled out the dilapidated pouch and filled his pipe.

</para><para>

"You have asked me to explain matters," he continued, "and I

will do so to the best of my ability.  You no doubt wonder why

a servant of the British Government, lately stationed in Burma,

suddenly appears in London, in the character of a detective.

I am here, Petrie--and I bear credentials from the very

highest sources--because, quite by accident, I came upon a clew.

Following it up, in the ordinary course of routine, I obtained

evidence of the existence and malignant activity of a certain man.

At the present stage of the case I should not be justified

in terming him the emissary of an Eastern Power, but I may say

that representations are shortly to be made to that Power's

ambassador in London."

</para><para>

He paused and glanced back towards the pursuing cab.

</para><para>

"There is little to fear until we arrive home," he said calmly.

"Afterwards there is much.  To continue:  This man, whether a fanatic

or a duly appointed agent, is, unquestionably, the most malign

and formidable personality existing in the known world today.

He is a linguist who speaks with almost equal facility in any

of the civilized languages, and in most of the barbaric.

He is an adept in all the arts and sciences which a great

university could teach him.  He also is an adept in certain obscure

arts and sciences which no university of to-day can teach.

He has the brains of any three men of genius.  Petrie, he is

a mental giant."

</para><para>

"You amaze me!" I said.

</para><para>

"As to his mission among men.  Why did M. Jules Furneaux fall

dead in a Paris opera house?  Because of heart failure?

No!  Because his last speech had shown that he held the key

to the secret of Tongking.  What became of the Grand

Duke Stanislaus?  Elopement?  Suicide?  Nothing of the kind.

He alone was fully alive to Russia's growing peril.

He alone knew the truth about Mongolia.  Why was Sir Crichton

Davey murdered?  Because, had the work he was engaged upon ever

seen the light it would have shown him to be the only living

Englishman who understood the importance of the Tibetan frontiers.

I say to you solemnly, Petrie, that these are but a few.

Is there a man who would arouse the West to a sense of

the awakening of the East, who would teach the deaf to hear,

the blind to see, that the millions only await their leader?

He will die.  And this is only one phase of the devilish campaign.

The others I can merely surmise."

</para><para>

"But, Smith, this is almost incredible!  What perverted genius

controls this awful secret movement?"

</para><para>

"Imagine a person, tall, lean and feline, high-shouldered, with a

brow like Shakespeare and a face like Satan, a close-shaven skull,

and long, magnetic eyes of the true cat-green. Invest him with all

the cruel cunning of an entire Eastern race, accumulated in one

giant intellect, with all the resources of science past and present,

with all the resources, if you will, of a wealthy government--

which, however, already has denied all knowledge of his existence.

Imagine that awful being, and you have a mental picture of Dr. Fu-Manchu,

the yellow peril incarnate in one man."

</para>

</chapter>







<chapter>

<title>CHAPTER III</title>



<para>

I SANK into an arm-chair in my rooms and gulped down a strong

peg of brandy.

</para><para>

"We have been followed here," I said.  "Why did you make no attempt

to throw the pursuers off the track, to have them intercepted?"

</para><para>

Smith laughed.

</para><para>

"Useless, in the first place.  Wherever we went, HE

would find us.  And of what use to arrest his creatures?

We could prove nothing against them.  Further, it is evident

that an attempt is to be made upon my life to-night--

and by the same means that proved so successful in the case

of poor Sir Crichton."

</para><para>

His square jaw grew truculently prominent, and he leapt stormily to his feet,

shaking his clenched fists towards the window.

</para><para>

"The villain!" he cried.  "The fiendishly clever villain!

I suspected that Sir Crichton was next, and I was right.

But I came too late, Petrie!  That hits me hard, old man.

To think that I knew and yet failed to save him!"

</para><para>

He resumed his seat, smoking hard.

</para><para>

"Fu-Manchu has made the blunder common to all men of unusual genius,"

he said.  "He has underrated his adversary.  He has not given

me credit for perceiving the meaning of the scented messages.

He has thrown away one powerful weapon--to get such a message

into my hands--and he thinks that once safe within doors,

I shall sleep, unsuspecting, and die as Sir Crichton died.

But without the indiscretion of your charming friend, I should

have known what to expect when I receive her `information'--

which by the way, consists of a blank sheet of paper."

</para><para>

"Smith," I broke in, "who is she?"

</para><para>

"She is either Fu-Manchu's daughter, his wife, or his slave.

I am inclined to believe the last, for she has no will but

his will, except"--with a quizzical glance--"in a certain instance."

</para><para>

"How can you jest with some awful thing--Heaven knows what--

hanging over your head?  What is the meaning of these perfumed envelopes?

How did Sir Crichton die?"

</para><para>

"He died of the Zayat Kiss.  Ask me what that is and I reply

'I do not know.'  The zayats are the Burmese caravanserais,

or rest-houses. Along a certain route--upon which I set eyes,

for the first and only time, upon Dr. Fu-Manchu--travelers who use

them sometimes die as Sir Crichton died, with nothing to show

the cause of death but a little mark upon the neck, face, or limb,

which has earned, in those parts, the title of the `Zayat Kiss.'

The rest-houses along that route are shunned now.

I have my theory and I hope to prove it to-night, if I live.

It will be one more broken weapon in his fiendish armory,

and it is thus, and thus only, that I can hope to crush him.

This was my principal reason for not enlightening Dr. Cleeve.

Even walls have ears where Fu-Manchu is concerned, so I feigned

ignorance of the meaning of the mark, knowing that he would be

almost certain to employ the same methods upon some other victim.

I wanted an opportunity to study the Zayat Kiss in operation,

and I shall have one."

</para><para>

"But the scented envelopes?"

</para><para>

"In the swampy forests of the district I have referred to a rare

species of orchid, almost green, and with a peculiar scent,

is sometimes met with.  I recognized the heavy perfume at once.

I take it that the thing which kills the traveler is attracted

by this orchid.  You will notice that the perfume clings to whatever

it touches.  I doubt if it can be washed off in the ordinary way.

After at least one unsuccessful attempt to kill Sir Crichton--

you recall that he thought there was something concealed in his study

on a previous occasion?--Fu-Manchu hit upon the perfumed envelopes.

He may have a supply of these green orchids in his possession--

possibly to feed the creature."

</para><para>

"What creature?  How could any kind of creature have got into Sir

Crichton's room tonight?"

</para><para>

"You no doubt observed that I examined the grate of the study.

I found a fair quantity of fallen soot.  I at once assumed, since it

appeared to be the only means of entrance, that something has been

dropped down; and I took it for granted that the thing, whatever it was,

must still be concealed either in the study or in the library.

But when I had obtained the evidence of the groom, Wills, I perceived

that the cry from the lane or from the park was a signal.

I noted that the movements of anyone seated at the study table

were visible, in shadow, on the blind, and that the study occupied

the corner of a two-storied wing and, therefore, had a short chimney.

What did the signal mean?  That Sir Crichton had leaped up from

his chair, and either had received the Zayat Kiss or had seen the thing

which someone on the roof had lowered down the straight chimney.

It was the signal to withdraw that deadly thing.  By means of

the iron stairway at the rear of Major-General Platt-Houston's, I

quite easily, gained access to the roof above Sir Crichton's study--

and I found this."

</para><para>

Out from his pocket Nayland Smith drew a tangled piece of silk,

mixed up with which were a brass ring and a number of unusually

large-sized split-shot, nipped on in the manner usual on a fishing-line.

</para><para>

"My theory proven," he resumed.  "Not anticipating a search on the roof,

they had been careless.  This was to weight the line and to prevent

the creature clinging to the walls of the chimney.  Directly it had dropped

in the grate, however, by means of this ring I assume that the weighted

line was withdrawn, and the thing was only held by one slender thread,

which sufficed, though, to draw it back again when it had done its work.

lt might have got tangled, of course, but they reckoned on its making

straight up the carved leg of the writing-table for the prepared envelope.

From there to the hand of Sir Crichton--which, from having touched

the envelope, would also be scented with the perfume--was a certain move."

</para><para>

"My God!  How horrible!" I exclaimed, and glanced apprehensively into

the dusky shadows of the room.  "What is your theory respecting this creature--

what shape, what color--?"

</para><para>

"It is something that moves rapidly and silently.  I will

venture no more at present, but I think it works in the dark.

The study was dark, remember, save for the bright patch beneath

the reading-lamp. I have observed that the rear of this

house is ivy-covered right up to and above your bedroom.

Let us make ostentatious preparations to retire, and I think

we may rely upon Fu-Manchu's servants to attempt my removal,

at any rate--if not yours."

</para><para>

"But, my dear fellow, it is a climb of thirty-five feet at the very least."

</para><para>

"You remember the cry in the back lane?  It suggested something to me,

and I tested my idea--successfully.  It was the cry of a dacoit.

Oh, dacoity, though quiescent, is by no means extinct.  Fu-Manchu has

dacoits in his train, and probably it is one who operates the Zayat Kiss,

since it was a dacoit who watched the window of the study this evening.

To such a man an ivy-covered wall is a grand staircase."

</para><para>

The horrible events that followed are punctuated, in my mind,

by the striking of a distant clock.  It is singular how

trivialities thus assert themselves in moments of high tension.

I will proceed, then, by these punctuations, to the coming

of the horror that it was written we should encounter.

</para><para>

The clock across the common struck two.

</para><para>

Having removed all traces of the scent of the orchid from our hands with

a solution of ammonia Smith and I had followed the programme laid down.

It was an easy matter to reach the rear of the house, by simply climbing

a fence, and we did not doubt that seeing the light go out in the front,

our unseen watcher would proceed to the back.

</para><para>

The room was a large one, and we had made up my camp-bed at one end,

stuffing odds and ends under the clothes to lend the appearance of a sleeper,

which device we also had adopted in the case of the larger bed.

The perfumed envelope lay upon a little coffee table in the center

of the floor, and Smith, with an electric pocket lamp, a revolver,

and a brassey beside him, sat on cushions in the shadow of the wardrobe.

I occupied a post between the windows.

</para><para>

No unusual sound, so far, had disturbed the stillness of the night.

Save for the muffled throb of the rare all-night cars passing

the front of the house, our vigil had been a silent one.

The full moon bad painted about the floor weird shadows of

the clustering ivy, spreading the design gradually from the door,

across the room, past the little table where the envelope lay,

and finally to the foot of the bed.

</para><para>

The distant clock struck a quarter-past two.

</para><para>

A slight breeze stirred the ivy, and a new shadow added itself

to the extreme edge of the moon's design.

</para><para>

Something rose, inch by inch, above the sill of the westerly window.

I could see only its shadow, but a sharp, sibilant breath from Smith

told me that he, from his post, could see the cause of the shadow.

</para><para>

Every nerve in my body seemed to be strung tensely.

I was icy cold, expectant, and prepared for whatever horror

was upon us.

</para><para>

The shadow became stationary.  The dacoit was studying the interior

of the room.

</para><para>

Then it suddenly lengthened, and, craning my head to the left,

I saw a lithe, black-clad form, surmounted by a Yellow face,

sketchy in the moonlight, pressed against the window-panes!

</para><para>

One thin, brown hand appeared over the edge of the lowered sash,

which it grasped--and then another.  The man made absolutely

no sound whatever.  The second hand disappeared--and reappeared.

It held a small, square box.  There was a very faint CLICK.

</para><para>

The dacoit swung himself below the window with the agility

of an ape, as, with a dull, muffled thud, SOMETHING dropped

upon the carpet!

</para><para>

"Stand still, for your life!" came Smith's voice, high-pitched.

</para><para>

A beam of white leaped out across the room and played full upon

the coffee-table in the center.

</para><para>

Prepared as I was for something horrible, I know that I paled at sight

of the thing that was running round the edge of the envelope.

</para><para>

It was an insect, full six inches long, and of a vivid, venomous, red color!

It had something of the appearance of a great ant, with its long, quivering

antennae and its febrile, horrible vitality; but it was proportionately

longer of body and smaller of head, and had numberless rapidly moving legs.

In short, it was a giant centipede, apparently of the scolopendra group,

but of a form quite new to me.

</para><para>

These things I realized in one breathless instant; in the next--

Smith had dashed the thing's poisonous life out with one straight,

true blow of the golf club!

</para><para>

I leaped to the window and threw it widely open, feeling a silk

thread brush my hand as I did so.  A black shape was dropping,

with incredible agility from branch to branch of the ivy,

and, without once offering a mark for a revolver-shot, it

merged into the shadows beneath the trees of the garden.

As I turned and switched on the light Nayland Smith dropped

limply into a chair, leaning his head upon his hands.

Even that grim courage had been tried sorely.

</para><para>

"Never mind the dacoit, Petrie," he said.  "Nemesis will know where

to find him.  We know now what causes the mark of the Zayat Kiss.

Therefore science is richer for our first brush with the enemy,

and the enemy is poorer--unless he has any more unclassified centipedes.

I understand now something that has been puzzling me since I heard of it--

Sir Crichton's stifled cry.  When we remember that he was almost past speech,

it is reasonable to suppose that his cry was not `The red hand!'

but `The red ANT!  Petrie, to think that I failed, by less than an hour,

to save him from such an end!"

</para>

</chapter>







<chapter>

<title>CHAPTER IV</title>



<para>

"THE body of a lascar, dressed in the manner usual on the P. &amp; O. boats,

was recovered from the Thames off Tilbury by the river police at six

A.M. this morning.  It is supposed that the man met with an accident

in leaving his ship."

</para><para>

Nayland Smith passed me the evening paper and pointed to the above paragraph.

</para><para>

"For `lascar' read `dacoit,'" he said.  "Our visitor, who came by way

of the ivy, fortunately for us, failed to follow his instructions.

Also, he lost the centipede and left a clew behind him.

Dr. Fu-Manchu does not overlook such lapses."

</para><para>

It was a sidelight upon the character of the awful being with whom we

had to deal.  My very soul recoiled from bare consideration of the fate

that would be ours if ever we fell into his hands.

</para><para>

The telephone bell rang.  I went out and found that Inspector

Weymouth of New Scotland Yard had called us up.

</para><para>

"Will Mr. Nayland Smith please come to the Wapping River Police

Station at once," was the message.

</para><para>

Peaceful interludes were few enough throughout that wild pursuit.

</para><para>

"It is certainly something important," said my friend; "and, if

Fu-Manchu is at the bottom of it--as we must presume him to be--

probably something ghastly."

</para><para>

A brief survey of the time-tables showed us that there were no trains

to serve our haste.  We accordingly chartered a cab and proceeded east.

</para><para>

Smith, throughout the journey, talked entertainingly about his work in Burma.

Of intent, I think, he avoided any reference to the circumstances which first

had brought him in contact with the sinister genius of the Yellow Movement.

His talk was rather of the sunshine of the East than of its shadows.

</para><para>

But the drive concluded--and all too soon.  In a silence which neither

of us seemed disposed to break, we entered the police depot, and followed

an officer who received us into the room where Weymouth waited.

</para><para>

The inspector greeted us briefly, nodding toward the table.

</para><para>

"Poor Cadby, the most promising lad at the Yard," he said;

and his usually gruff voice had softened strangely.

</para><para>

Smith struck his right fist into the palm of his left hand and swore

under his breath, striding up and down the neat little room.

No one spoke for a moment, and in the silence I could hear the whispering

of the Thames outside--of the Thames which had so many strange secrets

to tell, and now was burdened with another.

</para><para>

The body lay prone upon the deal table--this latest of the river's dead--

dressed in rough sailor garb, and, to all outward seeming, a seaman of

nondescript nationality--such as is no stranger in Wapping and Shadwell.

His dark, curly hair clung clammily about the brown forehead;

his skin was stained, they told me.  He wore a gold ring in one ear,

and three fingers of the left hand were missing.

</para><para>

"It was almost the same with Mason."  The river police inspector

was speaking.  "A week ago, on a Wednesday, he went off in his own

time on some funny business down St. George's way--and Thursday

night the ten-o'clock boat got the grapnel on him off Hanover Hole.

His first two fingers on the right hand were clean gone, and his left

hand was mutilated frightfully."

</para><para>

He paused and glanced at Smith.

</para><para>

"That lascar, too," he continued, "that you came down to see, sir;

you remember his hands?"

</para><para>

Smith nodded.

</para><para>

"He was not a lascar," he said shortly.  "He was a dacoit."

</para><para>

Silence fell again.

</para><para>

I turned to the array of objects lying on the table--those which

had been found in Cadby's clothing.  None of them were noteworthy,

except that which had been found thrust into the loose neck of his shirt.

This last it was which had led the police to send for Nayland Smith,

for it constituted the first clew which had come to light pointing

to the authors of these mysterious tragedies.

</para><para>

It was a Chinese pigtail.  That alone was sufficiently remarkable;

but it was rendered more so by the fact that the plaited queue

was a false one being attached to a most ingenious bald wig.

</para><para>

"You're sure it wasn't part of a Chinese make-up?" questioned Weymouth,

his eye on the strange relic.  "Cadby was clever at disguise."

</para><para>

Smith snatched the wig from my hands with a certain irritation,

and tried to fit it on the dead detective.

</para><para>

"Too small by inches!" he jerked.  "And look how it's padded in the crown.

This thing was made for a most abnormal head."

</para><para>

He threw it down, and fell to pacing the room again.

</para><para>

"Where did you find him--exactly?" he asked.

</para><para>

"Limehouse Reach--under Commercial Dock Pier--exactly an hour ago."

</para><para>

"And you last saw him at eight o'clock last night?"--to Weymouth.

</para><para>

"Eight to a quarter past."

</para><para>

"You think he has been dead nearly twenty-four hours, Petrie?"

</para><para>

"Roughly, twenty-four hours," I replied.

</para><para>

"Then, we know that he was on the track of the Fu-Manchu group,

that he followed up some clew which led him to the neighborhood

of old Ratcliff Highway, and that he died the same night.

You are sure that is where he was going?"

</para><para>

"Yes," said Weymouth; "He was jealous of giving anything away,

poor chap; it meant a big lift for him if he pulled the case off.

But he gave me to understand that he expected to spend last night

in that district.  He left the Yard about eight, as I've said,

to go to his rooms, and dress for the job."

</para><para>

"Did he keep any record of his cases?"

</para><para>

"Of course!  He was most particular.  Cadby was a man

with ambitions, sir!  You'll want to see his book.

Wait while I get his address; it's somewhere in Brixton."

</para><para>

He went to the telephone, and Inspector Ryman covered up the dead man's face.

</para><para>

Nayland Smith was palpably excited.

</para><para>

"He almost succeeded where we have failed, Petrie," he said.

"There is no doubt in my mind that he was hot on the track

of Fu-Manchu!  Poor Mason had probably blundered on the scent,

too, and he met with a similar fate.  Without other evidence,

the fact that they both died in the same way as the dacoit would

be conclusive, for we know that Fu-Manchu killed the dacoit!"

</para><para>

"What is the meaning of the mutilated hands, Smith?"

</para><para>

"God knows!  Cadby's death was from drowning, you say?"

</para><para>

"There are no other marks of violence."

</para><para>

"But he was a very strong swimmer, Doctor," interrupted Inspector Ryman.

"Why, he pulled off the quarter-mile championship at the Crystal Palace

last year!  Cadby wasn't a man easy to drown.  And as for Mason,

he was an R.N.R., and like a fish in the water!"

</para><para>

Smith shrugged his shoulders helplessly.

</para><para>

"Let us hope that one day we shall know how they died,"

he said simply.

</para><para>

Weymouth returned from the telephone.

</para><para>

"The address is No.--Cold Harbor Lane," he reported.

"I shall not be able to come along, but you can't

miss it; it's close by the Brixton Police Station.

There's no family, fortunately; he was quite alone in the world.

His case-book isn't in the American desk, which you'll find in

his sitting-room; it's in the cupboard in the corner--top shelf.

Here are his keys, all intact.  I think this is the cupboard key."

</para><para>

Smith nodded.

</para><para>

"Come on, Petrie," he said.  "We haven't a second to waste."

</para><para>

Our cab was waiting, and in a few seconds we were speeding along Wapping

High Street.  We had gone no more than a few hundred yards, I think,

when Smith suddenly slapped his open hand down on his knee.

</para><para>

"That pigtail!" he cried.  "I have left it behind!

We must have it, Petrie!  Stop!  Stop!"

</para><para>

The cab was pulled up, and Smith alighted.

</para><para>

"Don't wait for me," he directed hurriedly.  "Here, take Weymouth's card.

Remember where he said the book was?  It's all we want.  Come straight

on to Scotland Yard and meet me there."

</para><para>

"But Smith," I protested, "a few minutes can make no difference!"

</para><para>

"Can't it!" he snapped.  "Do you suppose Fu-Manchu is going to leave

evidence like that lying about?  It's a thousand to one he has it already,

but there is just a bare chance."

</para><para>

It was a new aspect of the situation and one that afforded

no room for comment; and so lost in thought did I become

that the cab was outside the house for which I was bound ere

I realized that we had quitted the purlieus of Wapping.

Yet I had had leisure to review the whole troop of events which had

crowded my life since the return of Nayland Smith from Burma.

Mentally, I had looked again upon the dead Sir Crichton Davey,

and with Smith had waited in the dark for the dreadful thing

that had killed him.  Now, with those remorseless memories

jostling in my mind, I was entering the house of Fu-Manchu's

last victim, and the shadow of that giant evil seemed to be

upon it like a palpable cloud.

</para><para>

Cadby's old landlady greeted me with a queer mixture of fear

and embarrassment in her manner.

</para><para>

"I am Dr. Petrie," I said, "and I regret that I bring bad news

respecting Mr. Cadby."

</para><para>

"Oh, sir!" she cried.  "Don't tell me that anything has happened to him!"

And divining something of the mission on which I was come,

for such sad duty often falls to the lot of the medical man:

"Oh, the poor, brave lad!"

</para><para>

Indeed, I respected the dead man's memory more than ever from that hour,

since the sorrow of the worthy old soul was quite pathetic, and spoke

eloquently for the unhappy cause of it.

</para><para>

"There was a terrible wailing at the back of the house last night,

Doctor, and I heard it again to-night, a second before you knocked.

Poor lad!  It was the same when his mother died."

</para><para>

At the moment I paid little attention to her words, for such

beliefs are common, unfortunately; but when she was sufficiently

composed I went on to explain what I thought necessary.

And now the old lady's embarrassment took precedence of her sorrow,

and presently the truth came out:

</para><para>

"There's a--young lady--in his rooms, sir."

</para><para>

I started.  This might mean little or might mean much.

</para><para>

"She came and waited for him last night, Doctor--from ten until half-past--

and this morning again.  She came the third time about an hour ago,

and has been upstairs since."

</para><para>

"Do you know her, Mrs. Dolan?"

</para><para>

Mrs. Dolan grew embarrassed again.

</para><para>

"Well, Doctor," she said, wiping her eyes the while, "I DO.

And God knows he was a good lad, and I like a mother to him;

but she is not the girl I should have liked a son of mine

to take up with."

</para><para>

At any other time, this would have been amusing; now, it might be serious.

Mrs. Dolan's account of the wailing became suddenly significant, for perhaps

it meant that one of Fu-Manchu's dacoit followers was watching the house,

to give warning of any stranger's approach!  Warning to whom?  It was unlikely

that I should forget the dark eyes of another of Fu-Manchu's servants.

Was that lure of men even now in the house, completing her evil work?

</para><para>

"I should never have allowed her in his rooms--" began Mrs. Dolan again.

Then there was an interruption.

</para><para>

A soft rustling retched my ears--intimately feminine.

The girl was stealing down!

</para><para>

I leaped out into the hall, and she turned and fled blindly before me--

back up the stairs!  Taking three steps at a time, I followed her,

bounded into the room above almost at her heels, and stood with my back

to the door.

</para><para>

She cowered against the desk by the window, a slim figure in a

clinging silk gown, which alone explained Mrs. Dolan's distrust.

The gaslight was turned very low, and her hat shadowed her face,

but could not hide its startling, beauty, could not mar the brilliancy

of the skin, nor dim the wonderful eyes of this modern Delilah.

For it was she!

</para><para>

"So I came in time" I said grimly, and turned the key in the lock.

</para><para>

"Oh!" she panted at that, and stood facing me, leaning back

with her jewel-laden hands clutching the desk edge.

</para><para>

"Give me whatever you have removed from here," I said sternly,

"and then prepare to accompany me."

</para><para>

She took a step forward, her eyes wide with fear, her lips parted.

</para><para>

"I have taken nothing," she said.  her breast was heaving tumultuously.

"Oh, let me go!  Please, let me go!"  And impulsively she threw

herself forward, pressing clasped hands against my shoulder and looking

up into my face with passionate, pleading eyes.

</para><para>

It is with some shame that I confess how her charm enveloped me like a

magic cloud.  Unfamiliar with the complex Oriental temperament, I had

laughed at Nayland Smith when he had spoken of this girl's infatuation.

"Love in the East," he had said, "is like the conjurer's mango-tree;

it is born, grows and flowers at the touch of a hand."

Now, in those pleading eyes I read confirmation of his words.

Her clothes or her hair exhaled a faint perfume.  Like all

Fu-Manchu's servants, she was perfectly chosen for her peculiar duties.

Her beauty was wholly intoxicating.

</para><para>

But I thrust her away.

</para><para>

"You have no claim to mercy," I said.  "Do not count upon any.

What have you taken from here?"

</para><para>

She grasped the lapels of my coat.

</para><para>

"I will tell you all I can--all I dare," she panted eagerly, fearfully.

"I should know how to deal with your friend, but with you I am lost!

If you could only understand you would not be so cruel."  Her slight accent

added charm to the musical voice.  "I am not free, as your English women are.

What I do I must do, for it is the will of my master, and I am only

a slave.  Ah, you are not a man if you can give me to the police.

You have no heart if you can forget that I tried to save you once."

</para><para>

I had feared that plea, for, in her own Oriental fashion, she certainly

had tried to save me from a deadly peril once--at the expense of my friend.

But I had feared the plea, for I did not know how to meet it.

How could I give her up, perhaps to stand her trial for murder?

And now I fell silent, and she saw why I was silent.

</para><para>

"I may deserve no mercy; I may be even as bad as you think;

but what have YOU to do with the police?

It is not your work to hound a woman to death.  Could you

ever look another woman in the eyes--one that you loved,

and know that she trusted you--if you had done such a thing?

Ah, I have no friend in all the world, or I should not be here.

Do not be my enemy, my judge, and make me worse than I am;

be my friend, and save me--from HIM." The tremulous

lips were close to mine, her breath fanned my cheek.

"Have mercy on me."

</para><para>

At that moment I honestly would have given half of my worldly

possessions to have been spared the decision which I knew I must

come to.  After all, what proof had I that she was a willing

accomplice of Dr. Fu-Manchu?  Furthermore, she was an Oriental,

and her code must necessarily be different from mine.

Irreconcilable as the thing may be with Western ideas, Nayland Smith

had really told me that he believed the girl to be a slave.

Then there remained that other reason why I loathed the idea

of becoming her captor.  It was almost tantamount to betrayal!

Must I soil my hands with such work?

</para><para>

Thus--I suppose--her seductive beauty argued against my sense of right.

The jeweled fingers grasped my shoulders nervously, and her slim body

quivered against mine as she watched me, with all her soul in her eyes,

in an abandonment of pleading despair.  Then I remembered the fate

of the man in whose room we stood.

</para><para>

"You lured Cadby to his death," I said, and shook her off.

</para><para>

"No, no!" she cried wildly, clutching at me.  "No, I swear by the holy name

I did not!  I did not!  I watched him, spied upon him--yes!  But, listen:

it was because he would not be warned that he met his death.

I could not save him!  Ah, I am not so bad as that.  I will tell you.

I have taken his notebook and torn out the, last pages and burnt them.

Look!  in the grate.  The book was too big to steal away.

I came twice and could not find it.  There, will you let me go?"

</para><para>

"If you will tell me where and how to seize Dr. Fu-Manchu--yes."

</para><para>

Her hands dropped and she took a backward step.

A new terror was to be read in her face.

</para><para>

"I dare not!  I dare not!"

</para><para>

"Then you would--if you dared?"

</para><para>

She was watching me intently.

</para><para>

"Not if YOU would go to find him," she said.

</para><para>

And, with all that I thought her to be, the stern servant

of justice that I would have had myself, I felt the hot

blood leap to my cheek at all which the words implied.

She grasped my arm.

</para><para>

Could you hide me from him if I came to you, and told you all I know?

</para><para>

"The authorities--"

</para><para>

"Ah!"  Her expression changed.  "They can put me on the rack if they choose,

but never one word would I speak--never one little word."

</para><para>

She threw up her head scornfully.  Then the proud glance softened again.

</para><para>

"But I will speak for you."

</para><para>

Closer she came, and closer, until she could whisper in my ear.

</para><para>

"Hide me from your police, from HIM, from everybody,

and I will no longer be his slave."

</para><para>

My heart was beating with painful rapidity.  I had not counted on this

warring with a woman; moreover, it was harder than I could have dreamt of.

For some time I had been aware that by the charm of her personality

and the art of her pleading she bad brought me down from my judgment seat--

had made it all but impossible for me to give her up to justice.

Now, I was disarmed--but in a quandary.  What should I do?

What COULD I do?  I turned away from her and walked to the hearth,

in which some paper ash lay and yet emitted a faint smell.

</para><para>

Not more than ten seconds elapsed, I am confident, from the time

that I stepped across the room until I glanced back.

But she had gone!

</para><para>

As I leapt to the door the key turned gently from the outside.

</para><para>

"Ma 'alesh!" came her soft whisper; "but I am afraid to

trust you--yet.  Be comforted, for there is one near who would

have killed you had I wished it.  Remember, I will come to you

whenever you will take me and hide me."

</para><para>

Light footsteps pattered down the stairs.  I heard a stifled

cry from Mrs. Dolan as the mysterious visitor ran past her.

The front door opened and closed.

</para>

</chapter>







<chapter>

<title>CHAPTER V</title>



<para>

"Shen-Yan's is a dope-shop in one of the burrows off the old Ratcliff Highway,"

said Inspector Weymouth.

</para><para>

"`Singapore Charlie's,' they call it.  It's a center for some of

the Chinese societies, I believe, but all sorts of opium-smokers

use it.  There have never been any complaints that I know of.

I don't understand this."

</para><para>

We stood in his room at New Scotland Yard, bending over a sheet

of foolscap upon which were arranged some burned fragments

from poor Cadby's grate, for so hurriedly had the girl done

her work that combustion had not been complete.

</para><para>

"What do we make of this?" said Smith.  "`. . .Hunchback. . .lascar

went up. . .unlike others. . .not return. . .till Shen-Yan'

(there is no doubt about the name, I think) `turned me out. . .

booming sound. . .lascar in. . .mortuary I could ident. . .

not for days, or suspici. . .Tuesday night in a different make

. . .snatch. . .pigtail. . .'"

</para><para>

"The pigtail again!" rapped Weymouth.

</para><para>

"She evidently burned the torn-out pages all together,"

continued Smith.  "They lay flat, and this was in the middle.

I see the band of retributive justice in that, Inspector.  Now we

have a reference to a hunchback, and what follows amounts to this:

A lascar (amongst several other persons) went up somewhere--

presumably upstairs--at Shen-Yan's, and did not come down again.

Cadby, who was there disguised, noted a booming sound.

Later, he identified the lascar in some mortuary.

We have no means of fixing the date of this visit to Shen-Yan's,

but I feel inclined to put down the `lascar' as the dacoit

who was murdered by Fu-Manchu!  It is sheer supposition, however.

But that Cadby meant to pay another visit to the place in a

different `make-up' or disguise, is evident, and that the Tuesday

night proposed was last night is a reasonable deduction.

The reference to a pigtail is principally interesting because

of what was found on Cadby's body."

</para><para>

Inspector Weymouth nodded affirmatively, and Smith glanced at his watch.

</para><para>

"Exactly ten-twenty-three," he said.  "I will trouble you, Inspector,

for the freedom of your fancy wardrobe.  There is time to spend an hour

in the company of Shen-Yan's opium friends."

</para><para>

Weymouth raised his eyebrows.

</para><para>

"It might be risky.  What about an official visit?"

</para><para>

Nayland Smith laughed.

</para><para>

"Worse than useless!  By your own showing, the place is open to inspection.

No; guile against guile!  We are dealing with a Chinaman, with the incarnate

essence of Eastern subtlety, with the most stupendous genius that the modern

Orient has produced."

</para><para>

"I don't believe in disguises," said Weymouth, with a certain truculence.

"It's mostly played out, that game, and generally leads to failure.

Still, if you're determined, sir, there's an end of it.  Foster will make

your face up.  What disguise do you propose to adopt?"

</para><para>

"A sort of Dago seaman, I think; something like poor Cadby.

I can rely on my knowledge of the brutes, if I am sure

of my disguise."

</para><para>

"You are forgetting me, Smith," I said.

</para><para>

He turned to me quickly.

</para><para>

"Petrie," he replied, "it is MY business, unfortunately, but it

is no sort of hobby."

</para><para>

"You mean that you can no longer rely upon me?"

I said angrily.

</para><para>

Smith grasped my hand, and met my rather frigid stare with a look

of real concern on his gaunt, bronzed face.

</para><para>

"My dear old chap," he answered, "that was really unkind.

You know that I meant something totally different."

</para><para>

"It's all right, Smith;" I said, immediately ashamed of my choler, and wrung

his hand heartily.  "I can pretend to smoke opium as well as another.

I shall be going, too, Inspector."

</para><para>

As a result of this little passage of words, some twenty minutes

later two dangerous-looking seafaring ruffians entered a waiting cab,

accompanied by Inspector Weymouth, and were driven off into

the wilderness of London's night.  In this theatrical business

there was, to my mind, something ridiculous--almost childish--

and I could have laughed heartily had it not been that grim

tragedy lurked so near to farce.

</para><para>

The mere recollection that somewhere at our journey's end Fu-Manchu

awaited us was sufficient to sober my reflections--Fu-Manchu, who,

with all the powers represented by Nayland Smith pitted against him,

pursued his dark schemes triumphantly, and lurked in hiding within

this very area which was so sedulously patrolled--Fu-Manchu, whom

I had never seen, but whose name stood for horrors indefinable!

Perhaps I was destined to meet the terrible Chinese doctor to-night.

</para><para>

I ceased to pursue a train of thought which promised to lead to morbid depths,

and directed my attention to what Smith was saying.

</para><para>

"We will drop down from Wapping and reconnoiter, as you say the place

is close to the riverside.  Then you can put us ashore somewhere below.

Ryman can keep the launch close to the back of the premises, and your fellows

will be hanging about near the front, near enough to hear the whistle."

</para><para>

"Yes," assented Weymouth; "I've arranged for that.

If you are suspected, you shall give the alarm?"

</para><para>

"I don't know," said Smith thoughtfully.  "Even in that event

I might wait awhile."

</para><para>

"Don't wait too long," advised the Inspector.  "We shouldn't be

much wiser if your next appearance was on the end of a grapnel,

somewhere down Greenwich Reach, with half your fingers missing."

</para><para>

The cab pulled up outside the river police depot, and Smith and I

entered without delay, four shabby-looking fellows who had been

seated in the office springing up to salute the Inspector,

who followed us in.

</para><para>

"Guthrie and Lisle," he said briskly, "get along and find a dark corner

which commands the door of Singapore Charlie's off the old Highway.

You look the dirtiest of the troupe, Guthrie; you might drop asleep

on the pavement, and Lisle can argue with you about getting home.

Don't move till you hear the whistle inside or have my orders,

and note everybody that goes in and comes out.  You other two belong

to this division?"

</para><para>

The C.I.D. men having departed, the remaining pair saluted again.

</para><para>

"Well, you're on special duty to-night. You've been prompt,

but don't stick your chests out so much.  Do you know of a back

way to Shen-Yan's?"

</para><para>

The men looked at one another, and both shook their heads.

</para><para>

"There's an empty shop nearly opposite, sir," replied one of them.

"I know a broken window at the back where we could climb in.

Then we could get through to the front and watch from there."

</para><para>

"Good!" cried the Inspector.  "See you are not spotted, though; and if you

hear the whistle, don't mind doing a bit of damage, but be inside Shen-Yan's

like lightning.  Otherwise, wait for orders."

</para><para>

Inspector Ryman came in, glancing at the clock.

</para><para>

"Launch is waiting," he said.

</para><para>

"Right," replied Smith thoughtfully.  "I am half afraid, though, that the

recent alarms may have scared our quarry--your man, Mason, and then Cadby.

Against which we have that, so far as he is likely to know, there has

been no clew pointing to this opium den.  Remember, he thinks Cadby's

notes are destroyed."

</para><para>

"The whole business is an utter mystery to me," confessed Ryman.

"I'm told that there's some dangerous Chinese devil hiding

somewhere in London, and that you expect to find him at

Shen-Yan's. Supposing he uses that place, which is possible,

how do you know he's there to-night?"

</para><para>

"I don't," said Smith; "but it is the first clew we have had

pointing to one of his haunts, and time means precious lives

where Dr. Fu-Manchu is concerned."

</para><para>

"Who is he, sir, exactly, this Dr. Fu-Manchu?"

</para><para>

"I have only the vaguest idea, Inspector; but he is no ordinary criminal.

He is the greatest genius which the powers of evil have put on earth

for centuries.  He has the backing of a political group whose wealth is

enormous, and his mission in Europe is to PAVE THE WAY!  Do you follow me?

He is the advance-agent of a movement so epoch-making that not one Britisher,

and not one American, in fifty thousand has ever dreamed of it."

</para><para>

Ryman stared, but made no reply, and we went out,

passing down to the breakwater and boarding the waiting launch.

With her crew of three, the party numbered seven that swung

out into the Pool, and, clearing the pier, drew in again

and hugged the murky shore.

</para><para>

The night had been clear enough hitherto, but now came scudding rainbanks

to curtain the crescent moon, and anon to unveil her again and show

the muddy swirls about us.  The view was not extensive from the launch.

Sometimes a deepening of the near shadows would tell of a moored barge,

or lights high above our heads mark the deck of a large vessel.

In the floods of moonlight gaunt shapes towered above; in the ensuing

darkness only the oily glitter of the tide occupied the foreground

of the night-piece.

</para><para>

The Surrey shore was a broken wall of blackness, patched with

lights about which moved hazy suggestions of human activity.

The bank we were following offered a prospect even more gloomy--

a dense, dark mass, amid which, sometimes, mysterious half-tones

told of a dock gate, or sudden high lights leapt flaring

to the eye.

</para><para>

Then, out of the mystery ahead, a green light grew and crept down upon us.

A giant shape loomed up, and frowned crushingly upon the little craft.

A blaze of light, the jangle of a bell, and it was past.  We were dancing

in the wash of one of the Scotch steamers, and the murk had fallen again.

</para><para>

Discords of remote activity rose above the more intimate

throbbing of our screw, and we seemed a pigmy company

floating past the workshops of Brobdingnagian toilers.

The chill of the near water communicated itself to me, and I

felt the protection of my shabby garments inadequate against it.

</para><para>

Far over on the Surrey shore a blue light--vaporous, mysterious--

flicked translucent tongues against the night's curtain.

It was a weird, elusive flame, leaping, wavering, magically changing

from blue to a yellowed violet, rising, falling.

</para><para>

"Only a gasworks," came Smith's voice, and I knew that he, too, had been

watching those elfin fires.  "But it always reminds me of a Mexican

&lt;i teocalli,&gt; and the altar of sacrifice."

</para><para>

The simile was apt, but gruesome.  I thought of Dr. Fu-Manchu

and the severed fingers, and could not repress a shudder.

</para><para>

"On your left, past the wooden pier!  Not where the lamp is--

beyond that; next to the dark, square building--Shen-Yan's."

</para><para>

It was Inspector Ryman speaking.

</para><para>

"Drop us somewhere handy, then," replied Smith, "and lie close in,

with your ears wide open.  We may have to run for it, so don't

go far away."

</para><para>

From the tone of his voice I knew that the night mystery of the Thames

had claimed at least one other victim.

</para><para>

"Dead slow," came Ryman's order.  "We'll put in to the Stone Stairs."

</para>

</chapter>







<chapter>

<title>CHAPTER VI</title>



<para>

A SEEMINGLY drunken voice was droning from a neighboring alleyway as Smith

lurched in hulking fashion to the door of a little shop above which,

crudely painted, were the words:

</para><para>

</para><para>

"SHEN-YAN, Barber."

</para><para>

</para><para>

I shuffled along behind him, and had time to note the box of studs,

German shaving tackle and rolls of twist which lay untidily in the window

ere Smith kicked the door open, clattered down three wooden steps,

and pulled himself up with a jerk, seizing my arm for support.

</para><para>

We stood in a bare and very dirty room, which could only

claim kinship with a civilized shaving-saloon by virtue of

the grimy towel thrown across the back of the solitary chair.

A Yiddish theatrical bill of some kind, illustrated, adorned one

of the walls, and another bill, in what may have been Chinese,

completed the decorations.  From behind a curtain heavily brocaded

with filth a little Chinaman appeared, dressed in a loose smock,

black trousers and thick-soled slippers, and, advancing,

shook his head vigorously.

</para><para>

"No shavee--no shavee," he chattered, simian fashion,

squinting from one to the other of us with his twinkling eyes.

"Too late!  Shuttee shop!"

</para><para>

"Don't you come none of it wi' me!" roared Smith, in a voice of amazing

gruffness, and shook an artificially dirtied fist under the Chinaman's nose.

"Get inside and gimme an' my mate a couple o' pipes.  Smokee pipe,

you yellow scum--savvy?"

</para><para>

My friend bent forward and glared into the other's eyes with a vindictiveness

that amazed me, unfamiliar as I was with this form of gentle persuasion.

</para><para>

"Kop 'old o' that," he said, and thrust a coin into the Chinaman's

yellow paw.  "Keep me waitin' an' I'll pull the dam' shop down, Charlie.

You can lay to it."

</para><para>

"No hab got pipee--" began the other.

</para><para>

Smith raised his fist, and Yan capitulated.

</para><para>

"Allee lightee," he said.  "Full up--no loom.  You come see."

</para><para>

He dived behind the dirty curtain, Smith and I following, and ran up

a dark stair.  The next moment I found myself in an atmosphere which

was literally poisonous.  It was all but unbreathable, being loaded

with opium fumes.  Never before had I experienced anything like it.

Every breath was an effort.  A tin oil-lamp on a box in the middle

of the floor dimly illuminated the horrible place, about the walls

of which ten or twelve bunks were ranged and all of them occupied.

Most of the occupants were lying motionless, but one or two were

squatting in their bunks noisily sucking at the little metal pipes.

These had not yet attained to the opium-smoker's Nirvana.

</para><para>

"No loom--samee tella you," said Shen-Yan, complacently testing

Smith's shilling with his yellow, decayed teeth.

</para><para>

Smith walked to a corner and dropped cross-legged, on the floor,

pulling me down with him.

</para><para>

"Two pipe quick," he said.  "Plenty room.  Two piecee pipe--

or plenty heap trouble."

</para><para>

A dreary voice from one of the bunks came:

</para><para>

"Give 'im a pipe, Charlie, curse yer!  an' stop 'is palaver."

</para><para>

Yan performed a curious little shrug, rather of the back than of

the shoulders, and shuffled to the box which bore the smoky lamp.

Holding a needle in the flame, he dipped it, when red-hot, into an old

cocoa tin, and withdrew it with a bead of opium adhering to the end.

Slowly roasting this over the lamp, he dropped it into the bowl

of the metal pipe which he held ready, where it burned with a

spirituous blue flame.

</para><para>

"Pass it over," said Smith huskily, and rose on his knees with the assumed

eagerness of a slave to the drug.

</para><para>

Yan handed him the pipe, which he promptly put to his lips,

and prepared another for me.

</para><para>

"Whatever you do, don't inhale any," came Smith's whispered injunction.

</para><para>

It was with a sense of nausea greater even than that occasioned by the

disgusting atmosphere of the den that I took the pipe and pretended to smoke.

Taking my cue from my friend, I allowed my head gradually to sink lower

and lower, until, within a few minutes, I sprawled sideways on the floor,

Smith lying close beside me.

</para><para>

"The ship's sinkin'," droned a voice from one of the bunks.

"Look at the rats."

</para><para>

Yan had noiselessly withdrawn, and I experienced a curious sense

of isolation from my fellows--from the whole of the Western world.

My throat was parched with the fumes, my head ached.

The vicious atmosphere seemed contaminating.  I was as one dropped--

</para><para>

Somewhere East of Suez, where the best is like the worst,

And there ain't no Ten Commandments and a man can raise a thirst.

</para><para>

Smith began to whisper softly.

</para><para>

"We have carried it through successfully so far," he said.

"I don't know if you have observed it, but there is a stair

just behind you, half concealed by a ragged curtain.

We are near that, and well in the dark.  I have seen nothing

suspicious so far--or nothing much.  But if there was anything

going forward it would no doubt be delayed until we new arrivals

were well doped.  S-SH!>"

</para><para>

He pressed my arm to emphasize the warning.  Through my half-closed eyes

I perceived a shadowy form near the curtain to which he had referred.

I lay like a log, but my muscles were tensed nervously.

</para><para>

The shadow materialized as the figure moved forward into the room

with a curiously lithe movement.

</para><para>

The smoky lamp in the middle of the place afforded

scant illumination, serving only to indicate sprawling shapes--

here an extended hand, brown or yellow, there a sketchy,

corpse-like face; whilst from all about rose obscene sighings

and murmurings in far-away voices--an uncanny, animal chorus.

It was like a glimpse of the Inferno seen by some Chinese Dante.

But so close to us stood the newcomer that I was able to make out a

ghastly parchment face, with small, oblique eyes, and a misshapen head

crowned with a coiled pigtail, surmounting a slight, hunched body.

There was something unnatural, inhuman, about that masklike face,

and something repulsive in the bent shape and the long,

yellow hands clasped one upon the other.

</para><para>

Fu-Manchu, from Smith's account, in no way resembled this crouching

apparition with the death's-head countenance and lithe movements;

but an instinct of some kind told me that we were on the right scent--

that this was one of the doctor's servants.  How I came to that conclusion,

I cannot explain; but with no doubt in my mind that this was a member

of the formidable murder group, I saw the yellow man creep nearer,

nearer, silently, bent and peering.

</para><para>

He was watching us.

</para><para>

Of another circumstance I became aware, and a disquieting circumstance.

There were fewer murmurings and sighings from the surrounding bunks.

The presence of the crouching figure had created a sudden semi-silence

in the den, which could only mean that some of the supposed opium-smokers

had merely feigned coma and the approach of coma.

</para><para>

Nayland Smith lay like a dead man, and trusting to the darkness,

I, too, lay prone and still, but watched the evil face bending

lower and lower, until it came within a few inches of my own.

I completely closed my eyes.

</para><para>

Delicate fingers touched my right eyelid.  Divining what was coming,

I rolled my eyes up, as the lid was adroitly lifted and lowered again.

The man moved away.

</para><para>

I had saved the situation!  And noting anew the hush about me--

a hush in which I fancied many pairs of ears listened--I was glad.

For just a moment I realized fully how, with the place watched back

and front, we yet were cut off, were in the hands of Far Easterns,

to some extent in the power of members of that most inscrutably

mysterious race, the Chinese.

</para><para>

"Good," whispered Smith at my side.  "I don't think I could have done it.

He took me on trust after that.  My God!  what an awful face.

Petrie, it's the hunchback of Cadby's notes.  Ah, I thought so.

Do you see that?"

</para><para>

I turned my eyes round as far as was possible.  A man had scrambled down

from one of the bunks and was following the bent figure across the room.

</para><para>

They passed around us quietly, the little yellow man leading, with his

curious, lithe gait, and the other, an impassive Chinaman, following.

The curtain was raised, and I heard footsteps receding on the stairs.

</para><para>

"Don't stir," whispered Smith.

</para><para>

An intense excitement was clearly upon him, and he communicated it to me.

Who was the occupant of the room above?

</para><para>

Footsteps on the stair, and the Chinaman reappeared, recrossed the floor,

and went out.  The little, bent man went over to another bunk, this time

leading up the stair one who looked like a lascar.

</para><para>

"Did you see his right hand?" whispered Smith.  "A dacoit!

They come here to report and to take orders.  Petrie, Dr. Fu-Manchu

is up there."

</para><para>

"What shall we do?"--softly.

</para><para>

"Wait.  Then we must try to rush the stairs.  It would be futile

to bring in the police first.  He is sure to have some other exit.

I will give the word while the little yellow devil is down here.

You are nearer and will have to go first, but if the hunchback follows,

I can then deal with him."

</para><para>

Our whispered colloquy was interrupted by the return of the dacoit,

who recrossed the room as the Chinaman had done, and immediately

took his departure.  A third man, whom Smith identified as a Malay,

ascended the mysterious stairs, descended, and went out; and a fourth,

whose nationality it was impossible to determine, followed.

Then, as the softly moving usher crossed to a bunk on the right

of the outer door--

</para><para>

"Up you go, Petrie," cried Smith, for further delay was dangerous

and further dissimulation useless.

</para><para>

I leaped to my feet.  Snatching my revolver from the pocket

of the rough jacket I wore, I bounded to the stair and went

blundering up in complete darkness.  A chorus of brutish cries

clamored from behind, with a muffled scream rising above them all.

But Nayland Smith was close behind as I raced along a covered gangway,

in a purer air, and at my heels when I crashed open a door at

the end and almost fell into the room beyond.

</para><para>

What I saw were merely a dirty table, with some odds and ends upon

it of which I was too excited to take note, an oil-lamp swung

by a brass chain above, and a man sitting behind the table.

But from the moment that my gaze rested upon the one who sat there,

I think if the place had been an Aladdin's palace I should have

had no eyes for any of its wonders.

</para><para>

He wore a plain yellow robe, of a hue almost identical with that

of his smooth, hairless countenance.  His hands were large,

long and bony, and he held them knuckles upward, and rested his

pointed chin upon their thinness.  He had a great, high brow,

crowned with sparse, neutral-colored hair.

</para><para>

Of his face, as it looked out at me over the dirty table,

I despair of writing convincingly.  It was that of an archangel

of evil, and it was wholly dominated by the most uncanny

eyes that ever reflected a human soul, for they were narrow

and long, very slightly oblique, and of a brilliant green.

But their unique horror lay in a certain filminess

(it made me think of the membrana nictitans in a bird)

which, obscuring them as I threw wide the door, seemed to lift

as I actually passed the threshold, revealing the eyes in all

their brilliant iridescence.

</para><para>

I know that I stopped dead, one foot within the room, for the

malignant force of the man was something surpassing my experience.

He was surprised by this sudden intrusion--yes, but no trace of fear

showed upon that wonderful face, only a sort of pitying contempt.

And, as I paused, he rose slowly to his feet, never removing his

gaze from mine.

</para><para>

"IT'S FU-MANCHU!" cried Smith over my shoulder, in a voice

that was almost a scream.  "IT'S FU-MANCHU!  Cover him!

Shoot him dead if--"

</para><para>

The conclusion of that sentence I never heard.

</para><para>

Dr. Fu-Manchu reached down beside the table, and the floor slipped

from under me.

</para><para>

One last glimpse I had of the fixed green eyes, and with a scream I was

unable to repress I dropped, dropped, dropped, and plunged into icy water,

which closed over my head.

</para><para>

Vaguely I had seen a spurt of flame, had heard another cry following

my own, a booming sound (the trap), the flat note of a police whistle.

But when I rose to the surface impenetrable darkness enveloped me;

I was spitting filthy, oily liquid from my mouth, and fighting down

the black terror that had me by the throat--terror of the darkness

about me, of the unknown depths beneath me, of the pit into which I

was cast amid stifling stenches and the lapping of tidal water.

</para><para>

"Smith!" I cried. . . ."Help!  Help!"

</para><para>

My voice seemed to beat back upon me, yet I was about

to cry out again, when, mustering all my presence of mind

and all my failing courage, I recognized that I had better

employment of my energies, and began to swim straight ahead,

desperately determined to face all the horrors of this place--

to die hard if die I must.

</para><para>

A drop of liquid fire fell through the darkness and hissed

into the water beside me!

</para><para>

I felt that, despite my resolution, I was going mad.

</para><para>

Another fiery drop--and another!

</para><para>

I touched a rotting wooden post and slimy timbers.

I had reached one bound of my watery prison.  More fire fell

from above, and the scream of hysteria quivered, unuttered,

in my throat.

</para><para>

Keeping myself afloat with increasing difficulty in my heavy garments,

I threw my head back and raised my eyes.

</para><para>

No more drops fell, and no more drops would fall; but it

was merely a question of time for the floor to collapse.

For it was beginning to emit a dull, red glow.

</para><para>

The room above me was in flames!

</para><para>

It was drops of burning oil from the lamp, finding passage through

the cracks in the crazy flooring, which had fallen about me--

for the death trap had reclosed, I suppose, mechanically.

</para><para>

My saturated garments were dragging me down, and now I could hear

the flames hungrily eating into the ancient rottenness overhead.

Shortly that cauldron would be loosed upon my head.  The glow of the

flames grew brighter. . .and showed me the half-rotten piles upholding

the building, showed me the tidal mark upon the slime-coated walls--

showed me that there was no escape!

</para><para>

By some subterranean duct the foul place was fed from the Thames.

By that duct, with the outgoing tide, my body would pass,

in the wake of Mason, Cadby, and many another victim!

</para><para>

Rusty iron rungs were affixed to one of the walls communicating with a trap--

but the bottom three were missing!

</para><para>

Brighter and brighter grew the awesome light the light of what

should be my funeral pyre--reddening the oily water and adding

a new dread to the whispering, clammy horror of the pit.

But something it showed me. . .a projecting beam a few feet

above the water. . .and directly below the iron ladder!

</para><para>

"Merciful Heaven!" I breathed.  "Have I the strength?"

</para><para>

A desire for laughter claimed me with sudden, all but irresistible force.

I knew what it portended and fought it down--grimly, sternly.

</para><para>

My garments weighed upon me like a suit of mail; with my chest

aching dully, my veins throbbing to bursting, I forced tired

muscles to work, and, every stroke an agony, approached the beam.

Nearer I swam. . .nearer.  Its shadow fell black upon

the water, which now had all the seeming of a pool of blood.

Confused sounds--a remote uproar--came to my ears.

I was nearly spent. . .I was in the shadow of the beam!

If I could throw up one arm. . .

</para><para>

A shrill scream sounded far above me!

</para><para>

"Petrie!  Petrie!"  (That voice must be Smith's!)  "Don't touch the beam!

For God's sake DON'T TOUCH THE BEAM!  Keep afloat another few seconds

and I can get to you!"

</para><para>

Another few seconds!  Was that possible?

</para><para>

I managed to turn, to raise my throbbing head; and I saw the strangest

sight which that night yet had offered.

</para><para>

Nayland Smith stood upon the lowest iron rung. . .supported by the hideous,

crook-backed Chinaman, who stood upon the rung above!

</para><para>

"I can't reach him!"

</para><para>

It was as Smith hissed the words despairingly that I looked up--

and saw the Chinaman snatch at his coiled pigtail and pull it off!

With it came the wig to which it was attached; and the ghastly yellow mask,

deprived of its fastenings, fell from position!  "Here!  Here!  Be quick!

Oh!  be quick!  You can lower this to him!  Be quick!  Be quick!"

</para><para>

A cloud of hair came falling about the slim shoulders

as the speaker bent to pass this strange lifeline to Smith;

and I think it was my wonder at knowing her for the girl whom

that day I had surprised in Cadby's rooms which saved my life.

</para><para>

For I not only kept afloat, but kept my gaze upturned to that beautiful,

flushed face, and my eyes fixed upon hers--which were wild with fear

. . .for me!

</para><para>

Smith, by some contortion, got the false queue into my grasp,

and I, with the strength of desperation, by that means seized

hold upon the lowest rung.  With my friend's arm round me I

realized that exhaustion was even nearer than I had supposed.

My last distinct memory is of the bursting of the floor above

and the big burning joist hissing into the pool beneath us.

Its fiery passage, striated with light, disclosed two

sword blades, riveted, edges up along the top of the beam

which I had striven to reach.

</para><para>

"The severed fingers--" I said; and swooned.

</para><para>

How Smith got me through the trap I do not know--nor how we made our way

through the smoke and flames of the narrow passage it opened upon.

My next recollection is of sitting up, with my friend's arm supporting

me and Inspector Ryman holding a glass to my lips.

</para><para>

A bright glare dazzled my eyes.  A crowd surged about us,

and a clangor and shouting drew momentarily nearer.

</para><para>

"It's the engines coming," explained Smith, seeing my bewilderment.

"Shen-Yan's is in flames.  It was your shot, as you fell through the trap,

broke the oil-lamp."

</para><para>

"Is everybody out?"

</para><para>

"So far as we know."

</para><para>

"Fu-Manchu?"

</para><para>

Smith shrugged his shoulders.

</para><para>

"No one has seen him.  There was some door at the back--"

</para><para>

"Do you think he may--"

</para><para>

"No," he said tensely.  "Not until I see him lying dead before me

shall I believe it."

</para><para>

Then memory resumed its sway.  I struggled to my feet.

</para><para>

"Smith, where is she?" I cried.  "Where is she?"

</para><para>

"I don't know," be answered.

</para><para>

"She's given us the slip, Doctor," said Inspector Weymouth,

as a fire-engine came swinging round the corner of the narrow lane.

"So has Mr. Singapore Charlie--and, I'm afraid, somebody else.

We've got six or eight all-sorts, some awake and some asleep,

but I suppose we shall have to let 'em go again.

Mr. Smith tells me that the girl was disguised as a Chinaman.

I expect that's why she managed to slip away."

</para><para>

I recalled how I had been dragged from the pit by the false queue,

how the strange discovery which had brought death to poor Cadby

had brought life to me, and I seemed to remember, too, that Smith

had dropped it as he threw his arm about me on the ladder.

Her mask the girl might have retained, but her wig, I felt certain,

had been dropped into the water.

</para><para>

It was later that night, when the brigade still were playing,

upon the blackened shell of what had been Shen-Yan's opium-shop,

and Smith and I were speeding away in a cab from the scene of God

knows how many crimes, that I had an idea.

</para><para>

"Smith," I said, "did you bring the pigtail with you that was

found on Cadby?"

</para><para>

"Yes.  I had hoped to meet the owner."

</para><para>

"Have you got it now?"

</para><para>

"No. I met the owner."

</para><para>

I thrust my hands deep into the pockets of the big pea-jacket

lent to me by Inspector Ryman, leaning back in my corner.

</para><para>

"We shall never really excel at this business," continued Nayland Smith.

"We are far too sentimental.  I knew what it meant to us, Petrie, what it

meant to the world, but I hadn't the heart.  I owed her your life--

I had to square the account."

</para>

</chapter>







<chapter>

<title>CHAPTER VII</title>



<para>

NIGHT fell on Redmoat.  I glanced from the window at

the nocturne in silver and green which lay beneath me.

To the west of the shrubbery, with its broken canopy of elms

and beyond the copper beech which marked the center of its mazes,

a gap offered a glimpse of the Waverney where it swept into a broad.

Faint bird-calls floated over the water.  These, with the whisper

of leaves, alone claimed the ear.

</para><para>

Ideal rural peace, and the music of an English summer evening;

but to my eyes, every shadow holding fantastic terrors;

to my ears, every sound a signal of dread.  For the deathful

hand of Fu-Manchu was stretched over Redmoat, at any hour

to loose strange, Oriental horrors upon its inmates.

</para><para>

"Well," said Nayland Smith, joining me at the window, "we had dared

to hope him dead, but we know now that he lives!"

</para><para>

The Rev. J. D. Eltham coughed nervously, and I turned, leaning my elbow

upon the table, and studied the play of expression upon the refined,

sensitive face of the clergyman.

</para><para>

"You think I acted rightly in sending for you, Mr. Smith?"

</para><para>

Nayland Smith smoked furiously.

</para><para>

"Mr. Eltham," he replied, "you see in me a man groping in the dark.

I am to-day no nearer to the conclusion of my mission than

upon the day when I left Mandalay.  You offer me a clew;

I am here.  Your affair, I believe, stands thus:

A series of attempted burglaries, or something of the kind,

has alarmed your household.  Yesterday, returning from London

with your daughter, you were both drugged in some way and,

occupying a compartment to yourselves, you both slept.

Your daughter awoke, and saw someone else in the carriage--

a yellow-faced man who held a case of instruments in his hands."

</para><para>

"Yes; I was, of course, unable to enter into particulars over the telephone.

The man was standing by one of the windows.  Directly he observed that my

daughter was awake, he stepped towards her."

</para><para>

"What did he do with the case in his hands?"

</para><para>

"She did not notice--or did not mention having noticed.

In fact, as was natural, she was so frightened that she recalls

nothing more, beyond the fact that she strove to arouse me,

without succeeding, felt hands grasp her shoulders--and swooned."

</para><para>

"But someone used the emergency cord, and stopped the train."

</para><para>

"Greba has no recollection of having done so."

</para><para>

"Hm!  Of course, no yellow-faced man was on the train.

When did you awake?"

</para><para>

"I was aroused by the guard, but only when he had repeatedly shaken me."

</para><para>

"Upon reaching Great Yarmouth you immediately called up Scotland Yard?

You acted very wisely, sir.  How long were you in China?"

</para><para>

Mr. Eltham's start of surprise was almost comical.

</para><para>

"It is perhaps not strange that you should be aware of my residence in China,

Mr. Smith," he said; "but my not having mentioned it may seem so.

The fact is"--his sensitive face flushed in palpable embarrassment--

"I left China under what I may term an episcopal cloud.

I have lived in retirement ever since.  Unwittingly--I solemnly

declare to you, Mr. Smith, unwittingly--I stirred up certain

deep-seated prejudices in my endeavors to do my duty--my duty.

I think you asked me how long I was in China?  I was there from 1896

until 1900--four years."

</para><para>

"I recall the circumstances, Mr. Eltham," said Smith, with an odd

note in his voice.  "I have been endeavoring to think where I

had come across the name, and a moment ago I remembered.

I am happy to have met you, sir."

</para><para>

The clergyman blushed again like a girl, and slightly inclined his head,

with its scanty fair hair.

</para><para>

"Has Redmoat, as its name implies, a moat round it?  I was unable to see

in the dusk."  "It remains.  Redmoat--a corruption of Round Moat--

was formerly a priory, disestablished by the eighth Henry in 1536."

His pedantic manner was quaint at times.  "But the moat is no

longer flooded.  In fact, we grow cabbages in part of it.

If you refer to the strategic strength of the place"--he smiled,

but his manner was embarrassed again--"it is considerable.

I have barbed wire fencing, and--other arrangements.

You see, it is a lonely spot," he added apologetically.

"And now, if you will excuse me, we will resume these gruesome

inquiries after the more pleasant affairs of dinner."

</para><para>

He left us.

</para><para>

"Who is our host?" I asked, as the door closed.

</para><para>

Smith smiled.

</para><para>

"You are wondering what caused the `episcopal cloud?'" he suggested.

"Well, the deep-seated prejudices which our reverend friend stirred up

culminated in the Boxer Risings."

</para><para>

"Good heavens, Smith!" I said; for I could not reconcile the diffident

personality of the clergyman with the memories which those words awakened.

</para><para>

"He evidently should be on our danger list," my friend continued quickly;

"but he has so completely effaced himself of recent years that I think it

probable that someone else has only just recalled his existence to mind.

The Rev. J. D. Eltham, my dear Petrie, though he may be a poor hand

at saving souls, at any rate, has saved a score of Christian women

from death--and worse."

</para><para>

"J. D. Eltham--" I began.

</para><para>

"Is `Parson Dan'!" rapped Smith, "the `Fighting Missionary,'

the man who with a garrison of a dozen cripples and a German

doctor held the hospital a Nan-Yang against two hundred Boxers.

That's who th Rev. J. D. Eltham is!  But what is he up to,

now, I have yet to find out.  He is keeping something back--

something which has made him an object of interest to Young China!"

</para><para>

During dinner the matters responsible for our presence there did not

hold priority in the conversation.  In fact, this, for the most part,

consisted in light talk of books and theaters.

</para><para>

Greba Eltham, the clergyman's daughter, was a charming young hostess,

and she, with Vernon Denby, Mr. Eltham's nephew, completed the party.

No doubt the girl's presence, in part, at any rate, led us to refrain

from the subject uppermost in our minds.

</para><para>

These little pools of calm dotted along the torrential course of

the circumstances which were bearing my friend and I onward to unknown

issues form pleasant, sunny spots in my dark recollections.

</para><para>

So I shall always remember, with pleasure, that dinner-party

at Redmoat, in the old-world dining-room; it was so very peaceful,

so almost grotesquely calm.  For I, within my very bones, felt it

to be the calm before the storm.  When, later, we men passed

to the library, we seemed to leave that atmosphere behind us.

</para><para>

"Redmoat," said the Rev. J. D. Eltham, "has latterly become the theater

of strange doings."

</para><para>

He stood on the hearth-rug. A shaded lamp upon the big table

and candles in ancient sconces upon the mantelpiece afforded

dim illumination.  Mr. Eltham's nephew, Vernon Denby,

lolled smoking on the window-seat, and I sat near to him.

Nayland Smith paced restlessly up and down the room.

</para><para>

"Some mouths ago, almost a year," continued the clergyman,

"a burglarious attempt was made upon the house.  There was an arrest,

and the man confessed that he had been tempted by my collection."

He waved his hand vaguely towards the several cabinets about

the shadowed room.

</para><para>

"It was shortly afterwards that I allowed my hobby for--

playing at forts to run away with me."  He smiled an apology.

"I virtually fortified Redmoat--against trespassers of any kind, I mean.

You have seen that the house stands upon a kind of large mound.

This is artificial, being the buried ruins of a Roman outwork;

a portion of the ancient castrum." Again he waved indicatively,

this time toward the window.

</para><para>

"When it was a priory it was completely isolated and defended

by its environing moat.  Today it is completely surrounded by

barbed-wire fencing.  Below this fence, on the east, is a narrow stream,

a tributary of the Waverney; on the north and west, the high road,

but nearly twenty feet below, the banks being perpendicular.

On the south is the remaining part of the moat--now my kitchen garden;

but from there up to the level of the house is nearly twenty feet again,

and the barbed wire must also be counted with.

</para><para>

"The entrance, as you know, is by the way of a kind of cutting.

There is a gate at the foot of the steps (they are some of the original

steps of the priory, Dr. Petrie), and another gate at the head."

</para><para>

He paused, and smiled around upon us boyishly.

</para><para>

"My secret defenses remain to be mentioned," he resumed;

and, opening a cupboard, he pointed to a row of batteries,

with a number of electric bells upon the wall behind.

"The more vulnerable spots are connected at night with these bells,"

he said triumphantly.  "Any attempt to scale the barbed wire

or to force either gate would set two or more of these ringing.

A stray cow raised one false alarm," he added, "and a careless

rook threw us into a perfect panic on another occasion."

</para><para>

He was so boyish--so nervously brisk and acutely sensitive--

that it was difficult to see in him the hero of the Nan-Yang hospital.

I could only suppose that he had treated the Boxers' raid in the same spirit

wherein he met would-be trespassers within the precincts of Redmoat.

It had been an escapade, of which he was afterwards ashamed, as, faintly,

he was ashamed of his "fortifications."  "But," rapped Smith, "it was not

the visit of the burglar which prompted these elaborate precautions."

</para><para>

Mr. Eltham coughed nervously.

</para><para>

"I am aware," he said, "that having invoked official aid, I must be

perfectly frank with you, Mr. Smith.  It was the burglar who was responsible

for my continuing the wire fence all round the grounds, but the electrical

contrivance followed, later, as a result of several disturbed nights.

My servants grew uneasy about someone who came, they said, after dusk.

No one could describe this nocturnal visitor, but certainly we found traces.

I must admit that.

</para><para>

"Then--I received what I may term a warning.  My position is a peculiar one--

a peculiar one.  My daughter, too, saw this prowling, person,

over by the Roman castrum, and described him as a yellow man.

It was the incident in the train following closely upon this other, which led

me to speak to the police, little as I desired to--er--court publicity."

</para><para>

Nayland Smith walked to a window, and looked out across

the sloping lawn to where the shadows of the shrubbery lay.

A dog was howling dismally somewhere.

</para><para>

"Your defenses are not impregnable, after all, then?" he jerked.

"On our way up this evening Mr. Denby was telling us about the death

of his collie a few nights ago."

</para><para>

The clergyman's face clouded.

</para><para>

"That, certainly, was alarming," he confessed.

</para><para>

"I had been in London for a few days, and during my absence Vernon

came down, bringing the dog with him.  On the night of his arrival

it ran, barking, into the shrubbery yonder, and did not come out.

He went to look for it with a lantern, and found it lying among

the bushes, quite dead.  The poor creature had been dreadfully

beaten about the head."

</para><para>

"The gates were locked," Denby interrupted, "and no one could

have got out of the grounds without a ladder and someone

to assist him.  But there was so sign of a living thing about.

Edwards and I searched every corner."

</para><para>

"How long has that other dog taken to howling?" inquired Smith.

</para><para>

"Only since Rex's death," said Denby quickly.

</para><para>

"It is my mastiff," explained the clergyman, "and he is confined in the yard.

He is never allowed on this side of the house."

</para><para>

Nayland Smith wandered aimlessly about the library.

</para><para>

"I am sorry to have to press you, Mr. Eltham," he said,

"but what was the nature of the warning to which you referred,

and from whom did it come?"

</para><para>

Mr. Eltham hesitated for a long time.

</para><para>

"I have been so unfortunate," he said at last, "in my previous efforts,

that I feel assured of your hostile criticism when I tell you that I am

contemplating an immediate return to Ho-Nan!"

</para><para>

Smith jumped round upon him as though moved by a spring.

</para><para>

"Then you are going back to Nan-Yang?" he cried.

"Now I understand!  Why have you not told me before?

That is the key for which I have vainly been seeking.

Your troubles date from the time of your decision to return?"

</para><para>

"Yes, I must admit it," confessed the clergyman diffidently.

</para><para>

"And your warning came from China?"

</para><para>

"It did."

</para><para>

"From a Chinaman?"

</para><para>

"From the Mandarin, Yen-Sun-Yat."

</para><para>

"Yen-Sun-Yat!  My good sir!  He warned you to abandon your visit?

And you reject his advice?  Listen to me."  Smith was intensely

excited now, his eyes bright, his lean figure curiously strung up, alert.

"The Mandarin Yen-Sun-Yat is one of the seven!"

</para><para>

"I do not follow you, Mr. Smith."

</para><para>

"No, sir.  China to-day is not the China of '98.  It is a huge secret machine,

and Ho-Nan one of its most important wheels!  But if, as I understand,

this official is a friend of yours, believe me, he has saved your life!

You would be a dead man now if it were not for your friend in China!

My dear sir, you must accept his counsel."

</para><para>

Then, for the first time since I had made his acquaintance, "Parson Dan"

showed through the surface of the Rev. J. D. Eltham.

</para><para>

"No, sir!" replied the clergyman--and the change in his voice was startling.

"I am called to Nan-Yang. Only One may deter my going."

</para><para>

The admixture of deep spiritual reverence with intense truculence

in his voice was dissimilar from anything I ever had heard.

</para><para>

"Then only One can protect you," cried Smith, "for, by Heaven,

no MAN will be able to do so!  Your presence in Ho-Nan

can do no possible good at present.  It must do harm.

Your experience in 1900 should be fresh in your memory."

</para><para>

"Hard words, Mr. Smith."

</para><para>

"The class of missionary work which you favor, sir, is injurious

to international peace.  At the present moment, Ho-Nan is

a barrel of gunpowder; you would be the lighted match.

I do not willingly stand between any man and what he chooses

to consider his duty, but I insist that you abandon your visit

to the interior of China!"

</para><para>

"You insist, Mr. Smith?"  "As your guest, I regret the necessity

for reminding you that I hold authority to enforce it."

</para><para>

Denby fidgeted uneasily.  The tone of the conversation was growing harsh

and the atmosphere of the library portentous with brewing, storms.

</para><para>

There was a short, silent interval.

</para><para>

"This is what I had feared and expected," said the clergyman.

"This was my reason for not seeking official protection."

</para><para>

"The phantom Yellow Peril," said Nayland Smith, "to-day materializes

under the very eyes of the Western world."

</para><para>

"The `Yellow Peril'!"

</para><para>

"You scoff, sir, and so do others.  We take the proffered right

hand of friendship nor inquire if the hidden left holds a knife!

The peace of the world is at stake, Mr. Eltham.  Unknowingly, you tamper

with tremendous issues."

</para><para>

Mr. Eltham drew a deep breath, thrusting both hands in his pockets.

</para><para>

"You are painfully frank, Mr. Smith," he said; "but I like you for it.

I will reconsider my position and talk this matter over again

with you to-morrow."

</para><para>

Thus, then, the storm blew over.  Yet I had never

experienced such an overwhelming sense of imminent peril--

of a sinister presence--as oppressed me at that moment.

The very atmosphere of Redmoat was impregnated with

Eastern devilry; it loaded the air like some evil perfume.

And then, through the silence, cut a throbbing scream--

the scream of a woman in direst fear.

</para><para>

"My God, it's Greba!" whispered Mr. Eltham.

</para>

</chapter>







<chapter>

<title>CHAPTER VIII</title>



<para>

IN what order we dashed down to the drawing-room I cannot recall.

But none was before me when I leaped over the threshold and saw Miss

Eltham prone by the French windows.

</para><para>

These were closed and bolted, and she lay with hands

outstretched in the alcove which they formed.  I bent over her.

Nayland Smith was at my elbow.

</para><para>

"Get my bag" I said.  "She has swooned.  It is nothing serious."

</para><para>

Her father, pale and wide-eyed, hovered about me, muttering incoherently;

but I managed to reassure him; and his gratitude when, I having administered

a simple restorative, the girl sighed shudderingly and opened her eyes,

was quite pathetic.

</para><para>

I would permit no questioning at that time, and on her father's

arm she retired to her own rooms.

</para><para>

It was some fifteen minutes later that her message was brought to me.

I followed the maid to a quaint little octagonal apartment, and Greba

Eltham stood before me, the candlelight caressing the soft curves

of her face and gleaming in the meshes of her rich brown hair.

</para><para>

When she had answered my first question she hesitated in pretty confusion.

</para><para>

"We are anxious to know what alarmed you, Miss Eltham."

</para><para>

She bit her lip and glanced with apprehension towards the window.

</para><para>

"I am almost afraid to tell father," she began rapidly.

"He will think me imaginative, but you have been so kind.

It was two green eyes!  Oh!  Dr. Petrie, they looked up at me

from the steps leading to the lawn.  And they shone like the eyes

of a cat."

</para><para>

The words thrilled me strangely.

</para><para>

"Are you sure it was not a cat, Miss Eltham?"

</para><para>

"The eyes were too large, Dr. Petrie.  There was

something dreadful, most dreadful, in their appearance.

I feel foolish and silly for having fainted, twice in two days!

But the suspense is telling upon me, I suppose.

Father thinks"--she was becoming charmingly confidential,

as a woman often will with a tactful physician--"that

shut up here we are safe from--whatever threatens us."

I noted, with concern, a repetition of the nervous shudder.

"But since our return someone else has been in Redmoat!"

</para><para>

"Whatever do you mean, Miss Eltham?"

</para><para>

"Oh!  I don't quite know what I do mean, Dr. Petrie.

What does it ALL mean?  Vernon has been explaining to me

that some awful Chinaman is seeking the life of Mr. Nayland Smith.

But if the same man wants to kill my father, why has

he not done so?"

</para><para>

"I am afraid you puzzle me."

</para><para>

"Of course, I must do so.  But--the man in the train.

He could have killed us both quite easily!  And--last night

someone was in father's room."

</para><para>

"In his room!"

</para><para>

"I could not sleep, and I heard something moving.

My room is the next one.  I knocked on the wall and woke father.

There was nothing; so I said it was the howling of the dog

that had frightened me."

</para><para>

"How, could anyone get into his