Works of Sax Rohmer

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by Sax Rohmer


  “What, you were there?”

  “Yes. That was where I first met Madame de Stämer. She used to be very wealthy, you see, and she established this hospital in France at her own expense, and I was one of her assistants for a time. She lost both her husband and her fortune in the war, and as if that were not bad enough, lost the use of her limbs, too.”

  “Poor woman,” I said. “I had no idea her life had been so tragic. She has wonderful courage.”

  “Courage!” exclaimed the girl, “if you knew all that I know about her.”

  Her face grew sweetly animated as she bent toward me excitedly and confidentially.

  “Really, she is simply wonderful. I learned to respect her in those days as I have never respected any other woman in the world; and when, after all her splendid work, she, so vital and active, was stricken down like that, I felt that I simply could not leave her, especially as she asked me to stay.”

  “So you went with her to Nice?”

  “Yes. Then the Colonel took this house, and we came here, but—”

  She hesitated, and glanced at me curiously.

  “Perhaps you are not quite happy?”

  “No,” she said, “I am not. You see it was different in France. I knew so many people. But here at Cray’s Folly it is so lonely, and Madame is—”

  Again she hesitated.

  “Yes?”

  “Well,” she laughed in an embarrassed fashion, “I am afraid of her at times.”

  “In what way?”

  “Oh, in a silly, womanish sort of way. Of course she is a wonderful manager; she rules the house with a rod of iron. But really I haven’t anything to do here, and I feel frightfully out of place sometimes. Then the Colonel — Oh, but what am I talking about?”

  “Won’t you tell me what it is that the Colonel fears?”

  “You know that he fears something, then?”

  “Of course. That is why Paul Harley is here.”

  A change came over the girl’s face; a look almost of dread.

  “I wish I knew what it all meant.”

  “You are aware, then, that there is something wrong?”

  “Naturally I am. Sometimes I have been so frightened that I have made up my mind to leave the very next day.”

  “You mean that you have been frightened at night?” I asked with curiosity.

  “Dreadfully frightened.”

  “Won’t you tell me in what way?”

  She looked up at me swiftly, then turned her head aside, and bit her lip.

  “No, not now,” she replied. “I can’t very well.”

  “Then at least tell me why you stayed?”

  “Well,” she smiled rather pathetically, “for one thing, I haven’t anywhere else to go.”

  “Have you no friends in England?”

  She shook her head.

  “No. There was only poor daddy, and he died over two years ago. That was when I went to Nice.”

  “Poor little girl,” I said; and the words were spoken before I realized their undue familiarity.

  An apology was on the tip of my tongue, but Miss Beverley did not seem to have noticed the indiscretion. Indeed my sympathy was sincere, and I think she had appreciated the fact.

  She looked up again with a bright smile.

  “Why are we talking about such depressing things on this simply heavenly day?” she exclaimed.

  “Goodness knows,” said I. “Will you show me round these lovely gardens?”

  “Delighted, sir!” replied the girl, rising and sweeping me a mocking curtsey.

  Thereupon we set out, and at every step I found a new delight in some wayward curl, in a gesture, in the sweet voice of my companion. Her merry laugh was music, but in wistful mood I think she was even more alluring.

  The menace, if menace there were, which overhung Cray’s Folly, ceased to exist — for me, at least, and I blessed the lucky chance which had led to my presence there.

  We were presently rejoined by Colonel Menendez and Paul Harley, and I gathered that my surmise that it had been their voices which I had heard proceeding from the top of the tower to have been only partly accurate.

  “I know you will excuse me, Mr. Harley,” said the Colonel, “for detailing the duty to Pedro, but my wind is not good enough for the stairs.”

  He used idiomatic English at times with that facility which some foreigners acquire, but always smiled in a self-satisfied way when he had employed a slang term.

  “I quite understand, Colonel,” replied Harley. “The view from the top was very fine.”

  “And now, gentlemen,” continued the Colonel, “if Miss Beverley will excuse us, we will retire to the library and discuss business.”

  “As you wish,” said Harley; “but I have an idea that it is your custom to rest in the afternoon.”

  Colonel Menendez shrugged his shoulders. “It used to be,” he admitted, “but I have too much to think about in these days.”

  “I can see that you have much to tell me,” admitted Harley; “and therefore I am entirely at your service.”

  Val Beverley smiled and walked away swinging her book, at the same time treating me to a glance which puzzled me considerably. I wondered if I had mistaken its significance, for it had seemed to imply that she had accepted me as an ally. Certainly it served to awaken me to the fact that I had discovered a keen personal interest in the mystery which hung over this queerly assorted household.

  I glanced at my friend as the Colonel led the way into the house. I saw him staring upward with a peculiar expression upon his face, and following the direction of his glance I could see an awning spread over one of the gray-stone balconies. Beneath it, reclining in a long cane chair, lay Madame de Stämer. I think she was asleep; at any rate, she gave no sign, but lay there motionless, as Harley and I walked in through the open French window followed by Colonel Menendez.

  Odd and unimportant details sometimes linger long in the memory. And I remember noticing that a needle of sunlight, piercing a crack in the gaily-striped awning rested upon a ring which Madame wore, so that the diamonds glittered like sparks of white-hot fire.

  CHAPTER VI. THE BARRIER

  Colonel Menendez conducted us to a long, lofty library in which might be detected the same note of un-English luxury manifested in the other appointments of the house. The room, in common with every other which I had visited in Cray’s Folly, was carried out in oak: doors, window frames, mantelpiece, and ceiling representing fine examples of this massive woodwork. Indeed, if the eccentricity of the designer of Cray’s Folly were not sufficiently demonstrated by the peculiar plan of the building, its construction wholly of granite and oak must have remarked him a man of unusual if substantial ideas.

  There were four long windows opening on to a veranda which commanded a view of part of the rose garden and of three terraced lawns descending to a lake upon which I perceived a number of swans. Beyond, in the valley, lay verdant pastures, where cattle grazed. A lark hung carolling blithely far above, and the sky was almost cloudless. I could hear a steam reaper at work somewhere in the distance. This, with the more intimate rattle of a lawn-mower wielded by a gardener who was not visible from where I stood, alone disturbed the serene silence, except that presently I detected the droning of many bees among the roses. Sunlight flooded the prospect; but the veranda lay in shadow, and that long, oaken room was refreshingly cool and laden with the heavy perfume of the flowers.

  From the windows, then, one beheld a typical English summer-scape, but the library itself struck an altogether more exotic note. There were many glazed bookcases of a garish design in ebony and gilt, and these were laden with a vast collection of works in almost every European language, reflecting perhaps the cosmopolitan character of the colonel’s household. There was strange Spanish furniture upholstered in perforated leather and again displaying much gilt. There were suits of black armour and a great number of Moorish ornaments. The pictures were fine but sombre, and all of the Spanish school.

 
One Velasquez in particular I noted with surprise, reflecting that, assuming it to be an authentic work of the master, my entire worldly possessions could not have enabled me to buy it. It was the portrait of a typical Spanish cavalier and beyond doubt a Menendez. In fact, the resemblance between the haughty Spanish grandee, who seemed about to step out of the canvas and pick a quarrel with the spectator, and Colonel Don Juan himself was almost startling. Evidently, our host had imported most of his belongings from Cuba.

  “Gentlemen,” he said, as we entered, “make yourselves quite at home, I beg. All my poor establishment contains is for your entertainment and service.”

  He drew up two long, low lounge chairs, the arms provided with receptacles to contain cooling drinks; and the mere sight of these chairs mentally translated me to the Spanish Main, where I pictured them set upon the veranda of that hacienda which had formerly been our host’s residence.

  Harley and I became seated and Colonel Menendez disposed himself upon a leather-covered couch, nodding apologetically as he did so.

  “My health requires that I should recline for a certain number of hours every day,” he explained. “So you will please forgive me.”

  “My dear Colonel Menendez,” said Harley, “I feel sure that you are interrupting your siesta in order to discuss the unpleasant business which finds us in such pleasant surroundings. Allow me once again to suggest that we postpone this matter until, shall we say, after dinner?”

  “No, no! No, no,” protested the Colonel, waving his hand deprecatingly. “Here is Pedro with coffee and some curaçao of a kind which I can really recommend, although you may be unfamiliar with it.”

  I was certainly unfamiliar with the liqueur which he insisted we must taste, and which was contained in a sort of square, opaque bottle unknown, I think, to English wine merchants. Beyond doubt it was potent stuff; and some cigars which the Spaniard produced on this occasion and which were enclosed in little glass cylinders resembling test-tubes and elaborately sealed, I recognized to be priceless. They convinced me, if conviction had not visited me already, that Colonel Don Juan Sarmiento Menendez belonged to that old school of West Indian planters by whom the tradition of the Golden Americas had been for long preserved in the Spanish Main.

  We discussed indifferent matters for a while, sipping this wonderful curaçao of our host’s. The effect created by the Colonel’s story faded entirely, and when, the latter being unable to conceal his drowsiness, Harley stood up, I took the hint with gratitude; for at that moment I did not feel in the mood to discuss serious business or indeed business of any kind.

  “Gentlemen,” said the Colonel, also rising, in spite of our protests, “I will observe your wishes. My guests’ wishes are mine. We will meet the ladies for tea on the terrace.”

  Harley and I walked out into the garden together, our courteous host standing in the open window, and bowing in that exaggerated fashion which in another might have been ridiculous but which was possible in Colonel Menendez, because of the peculiar grace of deportment which was his.

  As we descended the steps I turned and glanced back, I know not why. But the impression which I derived of the Colonel’s face as he stood there in the shadow of the veranda was one I can never forget.

  His expression had changed utterly, or so it seemed to me. He no longer resembled Velasquez’ haughty cavalier; gone, too, was the debonnaire bearing, I turned my head aside swiftly, hoping that he had not detected my backward glance.

  I felt that I had violated hospitality. I felt that I had seen what I should not have seen. And the result was to bring about that which no story of West Indian magic could ever have wrought in my mind.

  A dreadful, cold premonition claimed me, a premonition that this was a doomed man.

  The look which I had detected upon his face was an indefinable, an indescribable look; but I had seen it in the eyes of one who had been bitten by a poisonous reptile and who knew his hours to be numbered. It was uncanny, unnerving; and whereas at first the atmosphere of Colonel Menendez’s home had seemed to be laden with prosperous security, now that sense of ease and restfulness was gone — and gone for ever.

  “Harley,” I said, speaking almost at random, “this promises to be the strangest case you have ever handled.”

  “Promises?” Paul Harley laughed shortly. “It is the strangest case, Knox. It is a case of wheels within wheels, of mystery crowning mystery. Have you studied our host?”

  “Closely.”

  “And what conclusion have you formed?”

  “None at the moment; but I think one is slowly crystalizing.”

  “Hm,” muttered Harley, as we paced slowly on amid the rose trees. “Of one thing I am satisfied.”

  “What is that?”

  “That Colonel Menendez is not afraid of Bat Wing, whoever or whatever Bat Wing may be.”

  “Not afraid?”

  “Certainly he is not afraid, Knox. He has possibly been afraid in the past, but now he is resigned.”

  “Resigned to what?”

  “Resigned to death!”

  “Good God, Harley, you are right!” I cried. “You are right! I saw it in his eyes as we left the library.”

  Harley stopped and turned to me sharply.

  “You saw this in the Colonel’s eyes?” he challenged.

  “I did.”

  “Which corroborates my theory,” he said, softly; “for I had seen it elsewhere.”

  “Where do you mean, Harley?”

  “In the face of Madame de Stämer.”

  “What?”

  “Knox” — Harley rested his hand upon my arm and looked about him cautiously— “she knows.”

  “But knows what?”

  “That is the question which we are here to answer, but I am as sure as it is humanly possible to be sure of anything that whatever Colonel Menendez may tell us to-night, one point at least he will withhold.”

  “What do you expect him to withhold?”

  “The meaning of the sign of the Bat Wing.”

  “Then you think he knows its meaning?”

  “He has told us that it is the death-token of Voodoo.”

  I stared at Harley in perplexity.

  “Then you believe his explanation to be false?”

  “Not necessarily, Knox. It may be what he claims for it. But he is keeping something back. He speaks all the time from behind a barrier which he, himself, has deliberately erected against me.”

  “I cannot understand why he should do so,” I declared, as he looked at me steadily. “Within the last few moments I have become definitely convinced that his appeal to you was no idle one. Therefore, why should he not offer you every aid in his power?”

  “Why, indeed?” muttered Harley.

  “The same thing,” I continued, “applies to Madame de Stämer. If ever I have seen love-light in a woman’s eyes I have seen it in hers, to-day, whenever her glance has rested upon Colonel Menendez. Harley, I believe she literally worships the ground he walks upon.”

  “She does, she does!” cried my companion, and emphasized the words with beats of his clenched fist. “It is utterly, damnably mystifying. But I tell you, she knows, Knox, she knows!”

  “You mean she knows that he is a doomed man?”

  Harley nodded rapidly.

  “They both know,” he replied; “but there is something which they dare not divulge.”

  He glanced at me swiftly, and his bronzed face wore a peculiar expression.

  “Have you had an opportunity of any private conversation with Miss Val Beverley?” he enquired.

  “Yes,” I said. “Surely you remember that you found me chatting with her when you returned from your inspection of the tower.”

  “I remember perfectly well, but I thought you might have just met. Now it appears to me, Knox, that you have quickly established yourself in the good books of a very charming girl. My only reason for visiting the tower was to afford you just this opportunity! Don’t frown. Beyond reminding you of the fact tha
t she has been on intimate terms with Madame de Stämer for some years, I will not intrude in any way upon your private plans in that direction.”

  I stared at him, and I suppose my expression was an angry one.

  “Surely you don’t misunderstand me?” he said. “A cultured English girl of that type cannot possibly have lived with these people without learning something of the matters which are puzzling us so badly. Am I asking too much?”

  “I see what you mean,” I said, slowly. “No, I suppose you are right, Harley.”

  “Good,” he muttered. “I will leave that side of the enquiry in your very capable hands, Knox.”

  He paused, and began to stare about him.

  “From this point,” said he, “we have an unobstructed view of the tower.”

  We turned and stood looking up at the unsightly gray structure, with its geometrical rows of windows and the minaret-like gallery at the top.

  “Of course” — I broke a silence of some moments duration— “the entire scheme of Cray’s Folly is peculiar, but the rooms, except for a uniformity which is monotonous, and an unimaginative scheme of decoration which makes them all seem alike, are airy and well lighted, eminently sane and substantial. The tower, however, is quite inexcusable, unless the idea was to enable the occupant to look over the tops of the trees in all directions.”

  “Yes,” agreed Harley, “it is an ugly landmark. But yonder up the slope I can see the corner of what seems to be a very picturesque house of some kind.”

  “I caught a glimpse of it earlier to-day,” I replied. “Yes, from this point a little more of it is visible. Apparently quite an old place.”

  I paused, staring up the hillside, but Harley, hands locked behind him and chin lowered reflectively, was pacing on. I joined him, and we proceeded for some little distance in silence, passing a gardener who touched his cap respectfully and to whom I thought at first my companion was about to address some remark. Harley passed on, however, still occupied, it seemed, with his reflections, and coming to a gravel path which, bordering one side of the lawns, led down from terrace to terrace into the valley, turned, and began to descend.

 

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