Works of Sax Rohmer

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by Sax Rohmer


  Frobisher’s uneasiness grew. He stood up.

  “You think I shouldn’t have had Craig out here, with that work?”

  “I think,” said Smith, “that whilst it would be fairly easy to protect the Huston laboratory, now that we know what we’re up against, this house surrounded by sixty acres, largely woodland, is a colt of a different color. By tonight, there will be inflammable material here. Do you realize that if Fu-Manchu — or the Kremlin — first sets up a full-scale Craig plant, Fu-Manchu — or the Kremlin — will be master of the world?”

  “You’re sure, dead sure, that they’re both out to get it?” Frobisher’s voice was more than usually hoarse.

  “I have said so. One of the two has a flying start. I want to see your radar alarm system and I want to inspect your armory. I’m returning to New York. Two inquiries should have given results. One leading to the hideout of Dr. Fu-Manchu, the other to the identity of the Soviet agent.”

  Camille and Stella Frobisher came in from the garden. “You know,” Stella was saying, “I believe we have discovered something.”

  “All we seem to have discovered,” Camille replied, “is that there are strange gaps in your memory, and strange gaps in mine. The trouble in your case seems to have begun after you consulted Professor Hoffmeyer about your nerves.”

  “Yes, dear, it did. You see, I had been so worried about Mike. I thought he was working too hard. In his way, dear, he’s rather a treasure. Dr. Pardoe, who is a neighbor of ours, suggested, almost playfully, that I consult the professor.”

  “And your nerves improved?”

  “Enormously. I began to sleep again. But these queer lapses came on. I told him. He reassured me. I’m not at all certain, dear, that we have discovered anything after all. Your lapses began before you had ever seen him.”

  “Yes.” Camille was thinking hard. “The trouble doesn’t seem to be with the professor’s treatment, after all. Quite apart from which, I have no idea if I ever consulted him at all.”

  “No, dear — I quite understand.” Stella squeezed her hand, sympathetically. “You have no idea how completely I understand.”

  They were crossing the library, together, when there came a sudden, tremendous storm of barking. It swept in upon the peace of Falling Waters, a hurricane of sound.

  “Whatever is it?” Camille whispered.

  As if in answer to her question, Sam entered through open French windows. He had removed his topcoat, his cerise scarf, and his slate-grey hat. He wore the sort of checked suit for which otherwise innocent men have been lynched. He grinned happily at Camille.

  “Morning, lady.”

  “Good morning, Sam. I didn’t expect to see you.”

  “Pleasant surprise, eh? Same with me.” The barking continued; became a tornado. “There’s a guy outside says he’s brought some dogs.”

  “Oh!” Stella’s face lighted up. “Now we shall be safe! How splendid. Have they sent all the dogs?”

  “Sounds to me like they sent all they had.”

  “And a kennelman?”

  Stella hadn’t the slightest idea who Sam was, but she accepted his striking presence without hesitation.

  “Sure. He’s a busy guy, too.”

  “I must go and see them at once!” She put her arm around Camille. “Do come with me, dear!”

  Camille smiled at Sam.

  “I should love to.”

  “The guy is down there by the barbed-wire entanglements.” Sam stood in the window, pointing. “You can’t miss him. He’s right beside a truckload of maybe a couple hundred dogs.”

  Camille and Stella hurried out, Stella almost dancing with excitement.

  Their voices — particularly Stella’s — were still audible even above the barrage of barking, when Nayland Smith and Michael Frobisher came into the library.

  “You have a fair assortment of sporting guns and an automatic or two,” Smith was saying. “But you’re low on ammunition.”

  “Do you expect a siege?”

  “Not exactly. But I expect developments.”

  Nayland Smith crossed to the glazed cabinet and stood before it, pulling at the lobe of his ear. Then he tilted his head sideways, listening.

  “Dogs,” he rapped. “Why all the dogs?”

  Frobisher met his glance almost apologetically.

  “It’s Mrs. F.’s idea. I do try to keep all this bother from her, but she seems to have got onto it. She ordered a damned pack of these German police dogs from some place. There’s a collection of kennels down there like a Kaffir village. She’s had men at work for a week fixing barbed wire. Falling Waters is a prison camp!”

  “Not a bad idea. I have known dogs to succeed where men and machines failed. But, tell me” — he pointed to the cabinet— “how does this thing work?”

  “Well — it’s simple enough in principle. How it works I don’t know. Ground plan of the property. Anyone moving around, when it’s connected up, marks his trail on the scoreboard.”

  “I see.”

  “I’m having Craig overhaul it, when he has time. If you’ll step into my study again for just a minute, I’ll get the chart on the layout, which will make the thing more clear.”

  Nayland Smith glanced at his wrist-watch.

  “I can give you just ten minutes, Mr. Frobisher.”

  They returned to Frobisher’s study.

  Sunshine poured into the empty library. A beautiful Italian casket, silver studded with semi-precious stones, glowed as though lighted by inner fires, or become transparent. The pure lines of the Discus Thrower were sharply emphasized. Barking receded as the pack was removed to the “Kaffir village” erected at Mrs. Frobisher’s command.

  Then Michael Frobisher came back. Crossing to the desk, he sat down and unlocked a drawer. He took out a chart in a folder, a chart which indicated points of contact surrounding the house as well as free zones. He pressed a bell button and waited, glancing about him.

  Stein came in and Frobisher turned.

  “Take this to Sir Denis in the study. Tell him I’ll be right along in two minutes.”

  Stein nodded and went out with the folder.

  Frobisher dialed a number, and presently:

  “Yes — Frobisher,” he said nervously. “Sir Denis Nayland Smith is here… They’re onto us… Looks like all that money has been poured down the sewers… Huston Electric doesn’t have a chance…”

  He became silent, listening intently to someone on the other end of the line. His eyes kept darting right and left, furtively. Then:

  “Got ’em all here, back of the drawer in this desk,” he said, evidently in reply to a question. “That’s none too easy… Yes, I’ll have it in my hands by tonight, but… All right, give me the times.”

  Frobisher pulled an envelope from a rack and picked up a pencil.

  “It mayn’t be possible,” he said, writing rapidly. “Remember that… Nayland Smith is only one danger—” He broke off. “Have to hang up. Call you later.”

  Stein, standing in the arched opening, was urgently pointing in the direction of the study. Frobisher nodded irritably and passed him on his way to rejoin Nayland Smith.

  And, as Stein in turn retired, Sam stepped out from behind that Spanish screen which formed so artistic a background for the big walnut desk.

  Without waste of time, he opened the drawer which Frobisher had just closed.

  Chewing industriously, he studied the scribbled lines. Apparently they conveyed little or nothing to his mind for he was about to replace the envelope, and no doubt to explore further, when a dull, heavy voice spoke right behind him. “Put up your hands. I have been watching you.”

  Stein had re-entered quite silently, and now had Sam covered by an automatic!

  Sam dropped the envelope, and slowly raised his hands. “Listen! — happen to have a postage stamp? That’s what I was looking for.”

  Stein’s reply was to step closer and run his hands expertly over Sam’s person. Having relieved him of a heavy revolver
and a flashlamp he raised his voice to a hoarse shout:

  “Mr. Frobisher! Dr. Craig!”

  “Listen. Wait a minute—”

  There came the sound of a door thrown open. Michael Frobisher and Nayland Smith ran in. Frobisher’s florid coloring changed a half tone.

  “What’s this, Stein? What goes on?”

  “This man searches your desk, Mr. Frobisher. I catch him doing it.”

  As he spoke, he glanced significantly down at the envelope which Sam had dropped. Nayland Smith saw a look of consternation cross Frobisher’s face, as he stooped, snatched it up, and slipped it into his pocket. But there was plenty of thunder in his voice when he spoke.

  “I thought so! I thought so right along!”

  “Suppose,” rapped Smith, “we get the facts.”

  “The facts are plain! This man” — he pointed a quivering finger at Sam— “was going through my private papers! You took that gun off him?”

  “Yes, sir.”

  “What’s he doing armed in my house?” Frobisher roared. “Part of the mystery is solved, anyway—”

  A rataplan of footsteps on the stair heralded Morris Craig, in shirt-sleeves, and carrying his reading glasses. He came bounding down.

  “Did I hear someone bawling my number?” He pulled up, considered the group, then stared from face to face. “What the devil’s all this?”

  Michael Frobisher turned now empurpled features in his direction.

  “It’s what I suspected, Craig. I told you I didn’t like the looks of him. There stands the man who broke into the Huston office last night! There stands the man who broke into this house last week. Caught redhanded!”

  Sam had dropped his hands, and now, ignoring Stein, he faced his accuser.

  “Listen! Wait a minute! I needed a postage stamp. Any harm needing a postage stamp? I just pull a drawer open, just kind of casual, and look in the first thing I see there—”

  Craig brushed his forelock back and stared very hard.

  “But, I say, Sam — seriously — can you explain this?”

  “Sure. I am explaining it!”

  Nayland Smith had become silent, but now:

  “Does the envelope happen to contain stamps, Mr. Frobisher?” he jerked.

  “No, sir.” Michael Frobisher glared at him. “It doesn’t. That inquiry is beside the point. As I understand you represent law and order in this house, I’m sorry — but will you arrange for the arrest of that man.”

  His accusing finger was directed again at Sam.

  “I mean to say,” Craig broke in, “I may have missed something. But this certainly seems to me—”

  “It’s just plain silly,” said Sam. “People getting so het up.”

  Came another rush, of lighter footsteps. Camille and Mrs. Frobisher ran in. They halted, thunderstruck by what they saw.

  “Whatever is going on?” Stella demanded.

  “Sam!” Camille whispered — and crossing to his side, laid her hand on his shoulder. “What has happened?”

  Sam stopped chewing, and patted the encouraging hand. His upraised spectacles were eloquent.

  “Thanks for the inquiry,” he said. “I’m in trouble.”

  “You are!” Frobisher assured him. “Sir Denis! This is either a common thief or a foreign spy. In either case, I want him jailed.”

  Nayland Smith, glancing from Sam to Frobisher, snapped his fingers irritably.

  “It is absurd,” said Camille in a quiet voice.

  “Listen!” Sam patted her hand again and turned to Smith. “I’m sorry. I took chances. The pot’s on the boil, and I thought maybe Mr. Frobisher, even right now, might be thinking more about Huston Electric than about bigger things. I guess I was wrong. But acted for the best.”

  Michael Frobisher made a choking sound, like that of a faulty radiator.

  “You see, Mr. Frobisher,” said Nayland Smith, “whatever their faults, your police department is very thorough. James Sampson, an operative of the F.B.I., whom you know as Sam, was placed in the Huston research laboratory by his chief, Raymond Harkness, a long time before I was called in. I regret that this has occurred. But he is working entirely in your interests…”

  CHAPTER EIGHTEEN

  Luncheon at Falling Waters was not an unqualified success. Both, in the physical and psychical sense, a shadow overhung the feast.

  Promise of the morning had not been fulfilled. Young spring shrank away before returning winter; clouds drew a dull curtain over the happy landscape, blotting out gay skies. And with the arrival of Professor Hoffmeyer, a spiritual chill touched at least two of the company.

  Camille experienced terror when the stooped figure appeared. His old-fashioned morning coat, his tinted glasses and black gloves, the ebony stick, rang a loud note of alarm within. But the moment he spoke, her terror left her.

  “So this,” said the professor in his guttural German-English, “is the little patient who comes to see me not — ha?”

  Camille felt helpless. She could think of nothing to say, for she didn’t know if she had ever seen him before.

  “Never mind. Some other time. I shall send you no account.”

  Michael Frobisher hated the man on sight. His nerves had remained badly on edge since the incident with Sam. He gave the professor a grip of his powerful fingers calculated to hurt.

  “Ach! Not so hard! Not so hard! These” — Hoffmeyer raised gloved hands— “and these” — touching the dark glasses— “and this” — tapping his ebony stick on the floor— “are proofs that in war men become beasts. I ask you to remember that nails were torn from fingers, and eyes exposed to white heat, in some of those Nazi concentration camps. These things, Mr. Frobisher, could be again… While we may, let us be gentle.”

  Dr. Pardoe treated the professor in a detached way, avoiding technical topics, and rather conveying that he doubted his ability. But not so Mrs. Pardoe. She unbent to the celebrated consultant in a highly gracious manner. A tall, square woman, who always wore black, the sad and sandy Pardoe was not her first love. There had been two former husbands. Nobody knew why. There was something ominous about the angular frame. She resembled a draped gallows…

  Professor Hoffmeyer addressed much of his conversation to Craig; and Mrs. Pardoe hung on his every word.

  “You are that Morris Craig,” he said, during luncheon, “who reads a paper on the direction of neutrons, at Oxford, two years ago — ha?”

  “The same, Professor. Amazing memory. I am that identical egg in the old shell. Rather stupid paper. Learned better since.”

  “Modesty is a poor cloak for a man of genius to wear. Discard it, Dr. Craig. It would make me very happy to believe that your work shall be for the good of humanity. This world of ours is spinning — spinning on, to disaster. We are a ship which nears the rocks, with fools at the prow and fanatics at the helm.”

  “But is there no way to prevent such a disaster?” Mrs. Pardoe asked, in a voice which seemed to come from a condemned cell.

  “But most certainly. There could be a committee of men of high intelligence. To serve this committee would be a group of the first scientific brains in the world — such as that of Dr. Craig.” For some reason, Camille shuddered at those words. “These would have power to enforce their decisions. If some political maniac threatens to use violence, he will be warned. If he neglects this warning—”

  Professor Hoffmeyer helped himself to more fried oysters offered by Stein.

  “You believe, then, there’ll be another war?” grumbled Frobisher.

  “How, otherwise, shall enslavement to Communism be avoided — ha?”

  “Unless I misunderstood you,” Dr. Pardoe interjected sandily, “your concept of good government approaches very closely to that of an intelligent Communist.”

  “An intelligent Communist is an impossibility. We have only to separate the rogues from the fools. Yes, Mr. Frobisher, there is danger of another war — from the same quarter as before. Those subhumans of the German General Staff who es
caped justice. Those fellows with the traditions of the stockyard and the mentalities of adding machines. Those ghouls in uniform smell blood again. The Kremlin is feeding them meat.”

  “You mean,” Camille asked softly, “that the Soviet government is employing German ex-officers to prepare another war?”

  The secret agent within was stirring. She wondered why this man knew.

  “But of course. You are of France, and France has a long memory. Very well. Let France remember. If it shall come another war, those ignorant buffoons will destroy all, including themselves. This would not matter much if selected communities could be immunized. For almost complete destruction of human life on the planet is now a scientific possibility. It is also desirable. But indiscriminate slaughter — no. The new race must start better equipped than Noah.”

  When, luncheon over, the professor refused coffee and prepared to take his leave, there was no one present upon whom, in one way or another, he had failed to impress his singular personality. Stella Frobisher flutteringly begged a brief consultation before he left, and was granted one. Mrs. Pardoe made an appointment for the following Friday.

  “There is nothing the matter with you,” Professor Hoffmeyer told her, “which your husband cannot cure. But come if you so want. You all eat too much. See to it that you permit not here prohibitions, rationings, coupons. Communism knows no boxing laws. Communism strikes at the stomach first. To this you could never stand up.”

  A car, in charge of a saturnine chauffeur who had declined to lunch in the kitchen, declined a drink, and spent his leisure wandering about the property, awaited him. As the professor was driven away, drops of rain began to patter on the terrace.

  * * * *

  Night crept unnoticed upon Falling Waters.

  Rain descended steadily, and a slight, easterly wind stole, eerie, through the trees. Stella did not merely ask, she extended an invitation to Dr. and Mrs. Pardoe to remain to dinner. But Mrs. Pardoe, already enveloped in a cloak like a velvet pall, reminded her husband that a patient was expected at eight-thirty. Stella saw them off.

  “Oh, I’m so nervous. It’s getting so dark. I shan’t feel really safe until everything is bolted and barred…”

 

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