The Insidious Dr. Fu Manchu by Sax Rohmer (ebook reader below 3000 .TXT) đź“•
"Good man!" he cried, wringing my hand in his impetuous way. "We start now."
"What, to-night?
"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."
"Sir Crichton Davey--of the India--"
"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."
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
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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.
“Well,” said Nayland Smith, joining me at the window, “we had dared
to hope him dead, but we know now that he lives!”
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.
“You think I acted rightly in sending for you, Mr. Smith?”
Nayland Smith smoked furiously.
“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.”
“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.”
“What did he do with the case in his hands?”
“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.”
“But someone used the emergency cord, and stopped the train.”
“Greba has no recollection of having done so.”
“Hm! Of course, no yellow-faced man was on the train.
When did you awake?”
“I was aroused by the guard, but only when he had repeatedly shaken me.”
“Upon reaching Great Yarmouth you immediately called up Scotland Yard?
You acted very wisely, sir. How long were you in China?”
Mr. Eltham’s start of surprise was almost comical.
“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.”
“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.”
The clergyman blushed again like a girl, and slightly inclined his head,
with its scanty fair hair.
“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.”
He left us.
“Who is our host?” I asked, as the door closed.
Smith smiled.
“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.”
“Good heavens, Smith!” I said; for I could not reconcile the diffident
personality of the clergyman with the memories which those words awakened.
“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.”
“J. D. Eltham—” I began.
“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 at Nan-Yang against two hundred Boxers.
That’s who the 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!”
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.
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.
These little pools of calm dotted along the torrential course of
the circumstances which were bearing my friend and me onward to unknown
issues form pleasant, sunny spots in my dark recollections.
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.
“Redmoat,” said the Rev. J. D. Eltham, “has latterly become the theater
of strange doings.”
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.
“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.
“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.
“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.
“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.”
He paused, and smiled around upon us boyishly.
“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.”
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.”
Mr. Eltham coughed nervously.
“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.
“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.”
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.
“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.”
The clergyman’s face clouded.
“That, certainly, was alarming,” he confessed.
“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.”
“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.”
“How long has that other dog taken to howling?” inquired Smith.
“Only since Rex’s death,” said Denby quickly.
“It is my mastiff,” explained the clergyman, “and he is confined in the yard.
He is never allowed on this side of the house.”
Nayland Smith wandered aimlessly about the library.
“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?”
Mr. Eltham hesitated for a long time.
“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!”
Smith jumped round upon him as though moved by a spring.
“Then
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