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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Come along, Petrie; we must be at Tilbury within the hour.
There is just a bare chance.”
IT was with my mind in a condition of unique perplexity that I hurried
with Nayland Smith into the cab which waited and dashed off through
the streets in which the busy life of London just stirred into being.
I suppose I need not say that I could penetrate no farther into this,
Fu-Manchu’s latest plot, than the drugging of Norris West with hashish?
Of his having been so drugged with Indian hemp—that is,
converted temporarily into a maniac—would have been evident to any
medical man who had heard his statement and noted the distressing
after-effects which conclusively pointed to Indian hemp poisoning.
Knowing something of the Chinese doctor’s powers, I could understand that
he might have extracted from West the secret of the combination by sheer
force of will whilst the American was under the influence of the drug.
But I could not understand how Fu-Manchu had gained access to locked
chambers on the third story of a building.
“Smith,” I said, “those bird tracks on the window-sill—
they furnish the key to a mystery which is puzzling me.”
“They do,” said Smith, glancing impatiently at his watch.
“Consult your memories of Dr. Fu-Manchu’s habits—especially your
memories of his pets.”
I reviewed in my mind the creatures gruesome and terrible which
surrounded the Chinaman—the scorpions, the bacteria, the noxious
things which were the weapons wherewith he visited death upon
whomsoever opposed the establishment of a potential Yellow Empire.
But no one of them could account for the imprints upon the dust
of West’s window-sill.
“You puzzle me, Smith,” I confessed. “There is much in this extraordinary
case that puzzles me. I can think of nothing to account for the marks.”
“Have you thought of Fu-Manchu’s marmoset?” asked Smith.
“The monkey!” I cried.
“They were the footprints of a small ape,” my friend continued.
“For a moment I was deceived as you were, and believed them
to be the tracks of a large bird; but I have seen the footprints
of apes before now, and a marmoset, though an American variety,
I believe, is not unlike some of the apes of Burma.”
“I am still in the dark,” I said.
“It is pure hypothesis,” continued Smith, “but here is the theory—
in lieu of a better one it covers the facts. The marmoset—
and it is contrary from the character of Fu-Manchu to keep any
creature for mere amusement—is trained to perform certain duties.
“You observed the waterspout running up beside the window; you observed
the iron bar intended to prevent a window-cleaner from falling out?
For an ape the climb from the court below to the sill above was
a simple one. He carried a cord, probably attached to his body.
He climbed on to the sill, over the bar, and climbed down again.
By means of this cord a rope was pulled up over the bar,
by means of the rope one of those ladders of silk and bamboo.
One of the Doctor’s servants ascended—probably to
ascertain if the hashish had acted successfully.
That was the yellow dream-face which West saw bending over him.
Then followed the Doctor, and to his giant will the drugged brain
of West was a pliant instrument which he bent to his own ends.
The court would be deserted at that hour of the night, and,
in any event, directly after the ascent the ladder probably
was pulled up, only to be lowered again when West had revealed
the secret of his own safe and Fu-Manchu had secured the plans.
The reclosing of the safe and the removing of the hashish tabloids,
leaving no clew beyond the delirious ravings of a drug slave—
for so anyone unacquainted with the East must have construed
West’s story—is particularly characteristic. His own tabloids
were returned, of course. The sparing of his life alone is
a refinement of art which points to a past master.”
“Karamaneh was the decoy again?” I said shortly.
“Certainly. Hers was the task to ascertain West’s habits and to
substitute the tabloids. She it was who waited in the luxurious car—
infinitely less likely to attract attention at that hour in
that place than a modest taxi—and received the stolen plans.
She did her work well.
“Poor Karamaneh; she had no alternative! I said I would have given a hundred
pounds for a sight of the messenger’s face—the man to whom she handed them.
I would give a thousand now!”
“ANDAMAN—SECOND,” I said. “What did she mean?”
“Then it has not dawned upon you?” cried Smith excitedly, as the cab
turned into the station. “The ANDAMAN, of the Oriental Navigation
Company’s line, leaves Tilbury with the next tide for China ports.
Our man is a second-class passenger. I am wiring to delay her departure,
and the special should get us to the docks inside of forty minutes.”
Very vividly I can reconstruct in my mind that dash to the docks
through the early autumn morning. My friend being invested
with extraordinary powers from the highest authorities,
by Inspector Weymouth’s instructions the line had been cleared
all the way.
Something of the tremendous importance of Nayland Smith’s mission came home
to me as we hurried on to the platform, escorted by the stationmaster,
and the five of us—for Weymouth had two other C.I.D. men with him—
took our seats in the special.
Off we went on top speed, roaring through stations,
where a glimpse might be had of wondering officials upon
the platforms, for a special train was a novelty on the line.
All ordinary traffic arrangements were held up until we had
passed through, and we reached Tilbury in time which I doubt
not constituted a record.
There at the docks was the great liner, delayed in her passage
to the Far East by the will of my royally empowered companion.
It was novel, and infinitely exciting.
“Mr. Commissioner Nayland Smith?” said the captain interrogatively,
when we were shown into his room, and looked from one to another and back
to the telegraph form which he held in his hand.
“The same, Captain,” said my friend briskly. “I shall not detain
you a moment. I am instructing the authorities at all ports
east of Suez to apprehend one of your second-class passengers,
should he leave the ship. He is in possession of plans
which practically belong to the British Government!”
“Why not arrest him now?” asked the seaman bluntly.
“Because I don’t know him. All second-class passengers’
baggage will be searched as they land. I am hoping something from that,
if all else fails. But I want you privately to instruct your stewards
to watch any passenger of Oriental nationality, and to cooperate
with the two Scotland Yard men who are joining you for the voyage.
I look to you to recover these plans, Captain.”
“I will do my best,” the captain assured him.
Then, from amid the heterogeneous group on the dockside, we were watching
the liner depart, and Nayland Smith’s expression was a very singular one.
Inspector Weymouth stood with us, a badly puzzled man. Then occurred
the extraordinary incident which to this day remains inexplicable, for,
clearly heard by all three of us, a guttural voice said:
“Another victory for China, Mr. Nayland Smith!”
I turned as though I had been stung. Smith turned also.
My eyes passed from face to face of the group about us.
None was familiar. No one apparently had moved away.
But the voice was the voice of DOCTOR FU-MANCHU.
As I write of it, now, I can appreciate the difference
between that happening, as it appealed to us, and as it must
appeal to you who merely read of it. It is beyond my powers
to convey the sense of the uncanny which the episode created.
Yet, even as I think of it, I feel again, though in lesser degree,
the chill which seemed to creep through my veins that day.
From my brief history of the wonderful and evil man who once walked,
by the way unsuspected, in the midst of the people of England—
near whom you, personally, may at some time unwittingly, have been—
I am aware that much must be omitted. I have no space for lengthy
examinations of the many points but ill illuminated with which it is dotted.
This incident at the docks is but one such point.
Another is the singular vision which appeared to me whilst I lay in
the cellar of the house near Windsor. It has since struck me that it
possessed peculiarities akin to those of a hashish hallucination.
Can it be that we were drugged on that occasion with Indian hemp? Cannabis
indica is a treacherous narcotic, as every medical man knows full well;
but Fu-Manchu’s knowledge of the drug was far in advance of our slow science.
West’s experience proved so much.
I may have neglected opportunities—later, you shall judge if I did so—
opportunities to glean for the West some of the strange knowledge of
the secret East. Perhaps, at a future time, I may rectify my errors.
Perhaps that wisdom—the wisdom stored up by Fu-Manchu—is lost forever.
There is, however, at least a bare possibility of its survival, in part;
and I do not wholly despair of one day publishing a scientific sequel
to this record of our dealings with the Chinese doctor.
TIME wore on and seemingly brought us no nearer, or very little nearer,
to our goal. So carefully had my friend Nayland Smith excluded
the matter from the press that, whilst public interest was much engaged
with some of the events in the skein of mystery which he had come from
Burma to unravel, outside the Secret Service and the special department
of Scotland Yard few people recognized that the several murders,
robberies and disappearances formed each a link in a chain; fewer still
were aware that a baneful presence was in our midst, that a past
master of the evil arts lay concealed somewhere in the metropolis;
searched for by the keenest wits which the authorities could direct
to the task, but eluding all-triumphant, contemptuous.
One link in that chain Smith himself for long failed to recognize.
Yet it was a big and important link.
“Petrie,” he said to me one morning, “listen to this:
“`…In sight of Shanghai—a clear, dark night. On board the deck of a junk
passing close to seaward of the Andaman a blue flare started up.
A minute later there was a cry of “Man overboard!”
“`Mr. Lewin, the chief officer, who was in charge, stopped the engines.
A boat was put out. But no one was recovered. There are sharks
in these waters. A fairly heavy sea was running.
“`Inquiry showed the missing man to be a James Edwards,
second class, booked to Shanghai. I think the name was assumed.
The man was some sort of Oriental, and we had had him
under close observation… .’”
“That’s the end of their report,” exclaimed Smith.
He referred to the two C.I.D. men who had joined the Andaman
at the moment of her departure from Tilbury.
He carefully lighted his pipe.
“IS it a victory for China, Petrie?” he said softly.
“Until the great war reveals her secret resources—and I pray that the day
be not in my time—we shall never know,” I replied.
Smith began striding up and down the room,
“Whose name,” he jerked abruptly, “stands now at the head
of our danger list?”
He referred to a list which we had compiled of the notable men intervening
between the evil genius who
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