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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“Where is he?” asked Nayland Smith harshly. “How was it done?”
Weymouth sat down and lighted a cigar which I offered him.
“I thought you would like to hear what led up to it—so far as we know—
before seeing him?”
Smith nodded.
“Well,” continued the Inspector, “the man you arranged to send
down from the Yard got here all right and took up a post in the
road outside, where he could command a good view of the gates.
He saw and heard nothing, until going on for half-past ten,
when a young lady turned up and went in.”
“A young lady?”
“Miss Edmonds, Sir Lionel’s shorthand typist. She had found,
after getting home, that her bag, with her purse in,
was missing, and she came back to see if she had left it here.
She gave the alarm. My man heard the row from the road and came in.
Then he ran out and rang us up. I immediately wired for you.”
“He heard the row, you say. What row?”
“Miss Edmonds went into violent hysterics!”
Smith was pacing the room now in tense excitement.
“Describe what he saw when he came in.”
“He saw a negro footman—there isn’t an Englishman in the house—
trying to pacify the girl out in the hall yonder, and a Malay
and another colored man beating their foreheads and howling.
There was no sense to be got out of any of them, so he started
to investigate for himself. He had taken the bearings of the place
earlier in the evening, and from the light in a window on the ground
floor had located the study; so he set out to look for the door.
When he found it, it was locked from the inside.”
“Well?”
“He went out and round to the window. There’s no blind, and from
the shrubbery you can see into the lumber-room known as the study.
He looked in, as apparently Miss Edmonds had done before him.
What he saw accounted for her hysterics.”
Both Smith and I were hanging upon his words.
“All amongst the rubbish on the floor a big Egyptian mummy case was
lying on its side, and face downwards, with his arms thrown across it,
lay Sir Lionel Barton.”
“My God! Yes. Go on.”
“There was only a shaded reading-lamp alight, and it stood on a chair,
shining right down on him; it made a patch of light on the floor,
you understand.” The Inspector indicated its extent with his bands.
“Well, as the man smashed the glass and got the window open,
and was just climbing in, he saw something else, so he says.”
He paused.
“What did he see?” demanded Smith shortly.
“A sort of GREEN MIST, sir. He says it seemed to be alive.
It moved over the floor, about a foot from the ground, going away
from him and towards a curtain at the other end of the study.”
Nayland Smith fixed his eyes upon the speaker.
“Where did he first see this green mist?”
“He says, Mr. Smith, that he thinks it came from the mummy case.”
“Yes; go on.”
“It is to his credit that he climbed into the room after
seeing a thing like that. He did. He turned the body over,
and Sir Lionel looked horrible. He was quite dead.
Then Croxted—that’s the man’s name—went over to this curtain.
There was a glass door—shut. He opened it, and it gave on
a conservatory—a place stacked from the tiled floor to the glass
roof with more rubbish. It was dark inside, but enough light
came from the study—it’s really a drawing-room, by the way—
as he’d turned all the lamps on, to give him another glimpse
of this green, crawling mist. There are three steps to go down.
On the steps lay a dead Chinaman.”
“A dead Chinaman!”
“A dead CHINAMAN.”
“Doctor seen them?” rapped Smith.
“Yes; a local man. He was out of his depth, I could see.
Contradicted himself three times. But there’s no need for
another opinion—until we get the coroner’s.”
“And Croxted?”
“Croxted was taken ill, Mr. Smith, and had to be sent home in a cab.”
“What ails him?”
Detective-Inspector Weymouth raised his eyebrows and carefully
knocked the ash from his cigar.
“He held out until I came, gave me the story, and then fainted right away.
He said that something in the conservatory seemed to get him by the throat.”
“Did he mean that literally?”
“I couldn’t say. We had to send the girl home, too, of course.”
Nayland Smith was pulling thoughtfully at the lobe of his left ear.
“Got any theory?” he jerked.
Weymouth shrugged his shoulders.
“Not one that includes the green mist,” he said.
“Shall we go in now?”
We crossed the Assyrian hall, where the members of that strange
household were gathered in a panic-stricken group. They numbered four.
Two of them were negroes, and two Easterns of some kind. I missed
the Chinaman, Kwee, of whom Smith had spoken, and the Italian secretary;
and from the way in which my friend peered about the shadows
of the hall I divined that he, too, wondered at their absence.
We entered Sir Lionel’s study—an apartment which I despair of describing.
Nayland Smith’s words, “an earthquake at Sotheby’s auction-rooms,”
leaped to my mind at once; for the place was simply stacked
with curious litter—loot of Africa, Mexico and Persia.
In a clearing by the hearth a gas stove stood upon a packing-case,
and about it lay a number of utensils for camp cookery.
The odor of rotting vegetation, mingled with the insistent
perfume of the strange night-blooming flowers, was borne
in through the open window.
In the center of the floor, beside an overturned sarcophagus,
lay a figure in a neutral-colored dressing-gown, face downwards,
and arms thrust forward and over the side of the ancient
Egyptian mummy case.
My friend advanced and knelt beside the dead man.
“Good God!”
Smith sprang upright and turned with an extraordinary expression
to Inspector Weymouth.
“You do not know Sir Lionel Barton by sight?” he rapped.
“No,” began Weymouth, “but—”
“This is not Sir Lionel. This is Strozza, the secretary.”
“What!” shouted Weymouth.
“Where is the other—the Chinaman—quick!” cried Smith.
“I have had him left where he was found—on the conservatory steps,”
said the Inspector.
Smith ran across the room to where, beyond the open door,
a glimpse might be obtained of stacked-up curiosities.
Holding back the curtain to allow more light to penetrate,
he bent forward over a crumpled-up figure which lay upon
the steps below.
“It is!” he cried aloud. “It is Sir Lionel’s servant, Kwee.”
Weymouth and I looked at one another across the body of the Italian;
then our eyes turned together to where my friend, grim-faced, stood
over the dead Chinaman. A breeze whispered through the leaves;
a great wave of exotic perfume swept from the open window towards
the curtained doorway.
It was a breath of the East—that stretched out a yellow hand to the West.
It was symbolic of the subtle, intangible power manifested in Dr. Fu-Manchu,
as Nayland Smith—lean, agile, bronzed with the suns of Burma, was symbolic
of the clean British efficiency which sought to combat the insidious enemy.
“One thing is evident,” said Smith: “no one in the house, Strozza excepted,
knew that Sir Lionel was absent.”
“How do you arrive at that?” asked Weymouth.
“The servants, in the hall, are bewailing him as dead.
If they had seen him go out they would know that it must
be someone else who lies here.”
“What about the Chinaman?”
“Since there is no other means of entrance to the conservatory save
through the study, Kwee must have hidden himself there at some time
when his master was absent from the room.”
“Croxted found the communicating door closed. What killed the Chinaman?”
“Both Miss Edmonds and Croxted found the study door locked from the inside.
What killed Strozza?” retorted Smith.
“You will have noted,” continued the Inspector, “that the secretary is
wearing Sir Lionel’s dressing-gown. It was seeing him in that, as she looked
in at the window, which led Miss Edmonds to mistake him for her employer—
and consequently to put us on the wrong scent.”
“He wore it in order that anybody looking in at the window would
be sure to make that mistake,” rapped Smith.
“Why?” I asked.
“Because he came here for a felonious purpose. See.” Smith stooped
and took up several tools from the litter on the floor.
“There lies the lid. He came to open the sarcophagus.
It contained the mummy of some notable person who flourished
under Meneptah II; and Sir Lionel told me that a number of valuable
ornaments and jewels probably were secreted amongst the wrappings.
He proposed to open the thing and to submit the entire contents
to examination tonight. He evidently changed his mind—
fortunately for himself.”
I ran my fingers through my hair in perplexity.
“Then what has become of the mummy?”
Nayland Smith laughed dryly.
“It has vanished in the form of a green vapor apparently,” he said.
“Look at Strozza’s face.”
He turned the body over, and, used as I was to such spectacles,
the contorted features of the Italian filled me with horror, so—
suggestive were they of a death more than ordinarily violent. I pulled aside
the dressing-gown and searched the body for marks, but failed to find any.
Nayland Smith crossed the room, and, assisted by the detective,
carried Kwee, the Chinaman, into the study and laid him fully in the light.
His puckered yellow face presented a sight even more awful than the other,
and his blue lips were drawn back, exposing both upper and lower teeth.
There were no marks of violence, but his limbs, like Strozza’s, had been
tortured during his mortal struggles into unnatural postures.
The breeze was growing higher, and pungent odor-waves from
the damp shrubbery, bearing, too, the oppressive sweetness of
the creeping, plant, swept constantly through the open window.
Inspector Weymouth carefully relighted his cigar.
“I’m with you this far, Mr. Smith,” he said. “Strozza, knowing Sir
Lionel to be absent, locked himself in here to rifle the mummy case,
for Croxted, entering by way of the window, found the key on the inside.
Strozza didn’t know that the Chinaman was hidden in the conservatory—”
“And Kwee did not dare to show himself, because he too was there
for some mysterious reason of his own,” interrupted Smith.
“Having got the lid off, something,—somebody—”
“Suppose we say the mummy?”
Weymouth laughed uneasily.
“Well, sir, something that vanished from a locked room without
opening the door or the window killed Strozza.”
“And something which, having killed Strozza, next killed the Chinaman,
apparently without troubling to open the door behind which he lay concealed,”
Smith continued. “For once in a way, Inspector, Dr. Fu-Manchu has employed
an ally which even his giant will was incapable entirely to subjugate.
What blind force—what terrific agent of death—had he confined
in that sarcophagus!”
“You think this is the work of Fu-Manchu?” I said.
“If you are correct, his power indeed is more than human.”
Something in my voice, I suppose, brought Smith right about.
He surveyed me curiously.
“Can you doubt it? The presence of a concealed Chinaman surely
is sufficient. Kwee, I feel assured, was one of the murder group,
though probably he had only recently entered that mysterious service.
He is unarmed, or I should feel disposed
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