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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is a dangerous homicidal maniac!”
Nayland Smith’s tanned face was very drawn, but he shook his head grimly.
“Dangerous, yes, I agree,” he muttered; “his existence is a danger
to the entire white race which, now, we are powerless to avert.”
Dr. Fu-Manchu recovered himself, took up the lantern and,
turning abruptly, walked to the door, with his awkward, yet feline gait.
At the threshold be looked back.
“You would have warned Mr. Graham Guthrie?” he said, in a soft voice.
“Tonight, at half-past twelve, Mr. Graham Guthrie dies!”
Smith sat silent and motionless, his eyes fixed upon the speaker.
“You were in Rangoon in 1908?” continued Dr. Fu-Manchu—
“you remember the Call?”
From somewhere above us—I could not determine the exact direction—
came a low, wailing cry, an uncanny thing of falling cadences, which, in that
dismal vault, with the sinister yellow-robed figure at the door, seemed to
pour ice into my veins. Its effect upon Smith was truly extraordinary.
His face showed grayly in the faint light, and I heard him draw a hissing
breath through clenched teeth.
“It calls for you!” said Fu-Manchu. “At half-past twelve it calls
for Graham Guthrie!”
The door closed and darkness mantled us again.
“Smith,” I said, “what was that?” The horrors about us were playing
havoc with my nerves.
“It was the Call of Siva!” replied Smith hoarsely.
“What is it? Who uttered it? What does it mean?”
“I don’t know what it is, Petrie, nor who utters it.
But it means death!”
THERE may be some who could have lain, chained to that noisome cell,
and felt no fear—no dread of what the blackness might hold.
I confess that I am not one of these. I knew that Nayland
Smith and I stood in the path of the most stupendous genius
who in the world’s history had devoted his intellect to crime.
I knew that the enormous wealth of the political group backing
Dr. Fu-Manchu rendered him a menace to Europe and to America
greater than that of the plague. He was a scientist trained
at a great university—an explorer of nature’s secrets, who had
gone farther into the unknown, I suppose, than any living man.
His mission was to remove all obstacles—human obstacles—
from the path of that secret movement which was progressing
in the Far East. Smith and I were two such obstacles;
and of all the horrible devices at his command, I wondered,
and my tortured brain refused to leave the subject, by which
of them were we doomed to be dispatched?
Even at that very moment some venomous centipede might
be wriggling towards me over the slime of the stones,
some poisonous spider be preparing to drop from the roof!
Fu-Manchu might have released a serpent in the cellar,
or the air be alive with microbes of a loathsome disease!
“Smith,” I said, scarcely recognizing my own voice, “I can’t bear
this suspense. He intends to kill us, that is certain, but—”
“Don’t worry,” came the reply; “he intends to learn our plans first.”
“You mean—?”
“You heard him speak of his files and of his wire jacket?”
“Oh, my God!” I groaned; “can this be England?”
Smith laughed dryly, and I heard him fumbling with the steel
collar about his neck.
“I have one great hope,” he said, “since you share
my captivity, but we must neglect no minor chance.
Try with your pocket-knife if you can force the lock.
I am trying to break this one.”
Truth to tell, the idea had not entered my half-dazed mind, but I
immediately acted upon my friend’s suggestion, setting to work with
the small blade of my knife. I was so engaged, and, having snapped
one blade, was about to open another, when a sound arrested me.
It came from beneath my feet.
“Smith,” I whispered, “listen!”
The scraping and clicking which told of Smith’s efforts ceased.
Motionless, we sat in that humid darkness and listened.
Something was moving beneath the stones of the cellar.
I held my breath; every nerve in my body was strung up.
A line of light showed a few feet from where we lay.
It widened—became an oblong. A trap was lifted,
and within a yard of me, there rose a dimly seen head.
Horror I had expected—and death, or worse. Instead, I saw
a lovely face, crowned with a disordered mass of curling hair;
I saw a white arm upholding the stone slab, a shapely arm
clasped about the elbow by a broad gold bangle.
The girl climbed into the cellar and placed the lantern on the stone floor.
In the dim light she was unreal—a figure from an opium vision, with her
clinging silk draperies and garish jewelry, with her feet encased in little
red slippers. In short, this was the houri of my vision, materialized.
It was difficult to believe that we were in modern, up-to-date England;
easy to dream that we were the captives of a caliph, in a dungeon
in old Bagdad.
“My prayers are answered,” said Smith softly. “She has come
to save YOU.”
“S-sh!” warned the girl, and her wonderful eyes opened widely, fearfully.
“A sound and he will kill us all.”
She bent over me; a key jarred in the lock which had broken my penknife—
and the collar was off. As I rose to my feet the girl turned and
released Smith. She raised the lantern above the trap, and signed
to us to descend the wooden steps which its light revealed.
“Your knife,” she whispered to me. “Leave it on the floor.
He will think you forced the locks. Down! Quickly!”
Nayland Smith, stepping gingerly, disappeared into the darkness.
I rapidly followed. Last of all came our mysterious friend, a gold band about
one of her ankles gleaming in the rays of the lantern which she carried.
We stood in a low-arched passage.
“Tie your handkerchiefs over your eyes and do exactly as I
tell you,” she ordered.
Neither of us hesitated to obey her. Blindfolded, I allowed
her to lead me, and Smith rested his hand upon my shoulder.
In that order we proceeded, and came to stone steps,
which we ascended.
“Keep to the wall on the left,” came a whisper.
“There is danger on the right.”
With my free hand I felt for and found the wall, and we pressed forward.
The atmosphere of the place through which we were passing was steamy,
and loaded with an odor like that of exotic plant life. But a faint animal
scent crept to my nostrils, too, and there was a subdued stir about me,
infinitely suggestive—mysterious.
Now my feet sank in a soft carpet, and a curtain brushed my shoulder.
A gong sounded. We stopped.
The din of distant drumming came to my ears.
“Where in Heaven’s name are we?” hissed Smith in my ear;
“that is a tom-tom!”
“S-sh! S-sh!”
The little hand grasping mine quivered nervously. We were near a door
or a window, for a breath of perfume was wafted through the air;
and it reminded me of my other meetings with the beautiful woman
who was now leading us from the house of Fu-Manchu; who, with her
own lips, had told me that she was his slave. Through the horrible
phantasmagoria she flitted—a seductive vision, her piquant loveliness
standing out richly in its black setting of murder and devilry.
Not once, but a thousand times, I had tried to reason out the nature
of the tie which bound her to the sinister Doctor.
Silence fell.
“Quick! This way!”
Down a thickly carpeted stair we went. Our guide opened a door, and led us
along a passage. Another door was opened; and we were in the open air.
But the girl never tarried, pulling me along a graveled path, with a fresh
breeze blowing in my face, and along until, unmistakably, I stood upon
the river bank. Now, planking creaked to our tread; and looking downward
beneath the handkerchief, I saw the gleam of water beneath my feet.
“Be careful!” I was warned, and found myself stepping into
a narrow boat—a punt.
Nayland Smith followed, and the girl pushed the punt off and poled
out into the stream.
“Don’t speak!” she directed.
My brain was fevered; I scarce knew if I dreamed and was waking,
or if the reality ended with my imprisonment in the clammy cellar
and this silent escape, blindfolded, upon the river with a girl for our
guide who might have stepped out of the pages of “The Arabian Nights”
were fantasy—the mockery of sleep.
Indeed, I began seriously to doubt if this stream whereon we floated,
whose waters plashed and tinkled about us, were the Thames, the Tigris,
or the Styx.
The punt touched a bank.
“You will hear a clock strike in a few minutes,”
said the girl, with her soft, charming accent, “but I rely
upon your honor not to remove the handkerchiefs until then.
You owe me this.”
“We do!” said Smith fervently.
I heard him scrambling to the bank, and a moment later a soft hand
was placed in mine, and I, too, was guided on to terra firma.
Arrived on the bank, I still held the girl’s hand, drawing her towards me.
“You must not go back,” I whispered. “We will take care of you.
You must not return to that place.”
“Let me go!” she said. “When, once, I asked you to take me from him,
you spoke of police protection; that was your answer, police protection!
You would let them lock me up—imprison me—and make me betray him!
For what? For what?” She wrenched herself free. “How little
you understand me. Never mind. Perhaps one day you will know!
Until the clock strikes!”
She was gone. I heard the creak of the punt, the drip of the water
from the pole. Fainter it grew, and fainter.
“What is her secret?” muttered Smith, beside me.
“Why does she cling to that monster?”
The distant sound died away entirely. A clock began to strike;
it struck the half-hour. In an instant my handkerchief was off,
and so was Smith’s. We stood upon a towing-path. Away to the left
the moon shone upon the towers and battlements of an ancient fortress.
It was Windsor Castle.
“Half-past ten,” cried Smith. “Two hours to save Graham Guthrie!”
We had exactly fourteen minutes in which to catch the last
train to Waterloo; and we caught it. But I sank into a corner
of the compartment in a state bordering upon collapse.
Neither of us, I think, could have managed another twenty yards.
With a lesser stake than a human life at issue, I doubt if we
should have attempted that dash to Windsor station.
“Due at Waterloo at eleven-fifty-one,” panted Smith.
“That gives us thirty-nine minutes to get to the other side
of the river and reach his hotel.”
“Where in Heaven’s name is that house situated?
Did we come up or down stream?”
“I couldn’t determine. But at any rate, it stands close to the riverside.
It should be merely a question of time to identify it. I shall set
Scotland Yard to work immediately; but I am hoping for nothing.
Our escape will warn him.”
I said no more for a time, sitting wiping the perspiration
from my forehead and watching my friend load his cracked briar
with the broadcut Latakia mixture.
“Smith,” I said at last, “what was that horrible wailing we heard,
and what did Fu-Manchu mean when he referred
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