The William Hope Hodgson Megapack

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by William Hope Hodgson


  “For some minutes further I watched it, lifting it out once or twice to make a more exact scrutiny, but could not imagine what the markings might represent, until suddenly it occurred to me that in one of two places they certainly had shapes suggestive of a cross hilted dagger. Yet, the shapes were sufficiently indefinite to make me careful not to let myself be overimpressed by the uncomfortable resemblance, though I must confess, the very thought was sufficient to set some odd thrills adrift in me.

  “I carried development a little further, then put the negative into the hypo, and commenced work upon the other plate. This came up nicely, and very soon I had a really decent negative that appeared similar in every respect (except for the difference of lighting) to the negative I had taken during the previous day. I fixed the plate, then having washed both it and the ‘unexposed’ one for a few minutes under the tap, I put them into methylated spirits for fifteen minutes, after which I carried them into the photographer’s kitchen and dried them in the oven.

  “Whilst the two plates were drying the photographer and I made an enlargement from the negative I had taken by daylight. Then we did the same with the two that I had just developed, washing them as quickly as possible, for I was not troubling about the permanency of the prints, and drying them with spirits.

  “When this was done I took them to the window and made a thorough examination, commencing with the one that appeared to show shadowy daggers in several places. Yet, though it was now enlarged, I was still unable to feel convinced that the marks truly represented anything abnormal; and because of this, I put it on one side, determined not to let my imagination play too large a part in constructing weapons out of the indefinite outlines.

  “I took up the two other enlargements, both of the chancel, as you will remember, and commenced to compare them. For some minutes I examined them without being able to distinguish any difference in the scene they portrayed, and then abruptly, I saw something in which they varied. In the second enlargement—the one made from the flashlight negative—the dagger was not in its sheath. Yet, I had felt sure it was there but a few minutes before I took the photograph.

  “After this discovery I began to compare the two enlargements in a very different manner from my previous scrutiny. I borrowed a pair of calipers from the photographer and with these I carried out a most methodical and exact comparison of the details shown in the two photographs.

  “Suddenly I came upon something that set me all tingling with excitement. I threw the calipers down, paid the photographer, and walked out through the shop into the street. The three enlargements I took with me, making them into a roll as I went. At the corner of the street I had the luck to get a cab and was soon back at the castle.

  “I hurried up to my room and put the photographs away; then I went down to see whether I could find Sir Alfred Jarnock; but Mr. George Jarnock, who met me, told me that his father was too unwell to rise and would prefer that no one entered the Chapel unless he were about.

  “Young Jarnock made a half apologetic excuse for his father; remarking that Sir Alfred Jarnock was perhaps inclined to be a little over careful; but that, considering what had happened, we must agree that the need for his carefulness had been justified. He added, also, that even before the horrible attack on the butler his father had been just as particular, always keeping the key and never allowing the door to be unlocked except when the place was in use for Divine Service, and for an hour each forenoon when the cleaners were in.

  “To all this I nodded understandingly; but when, presently, the young man left me I took my duplicate key and made for the door of the Chapel. I went in and locked it behind me, after which I carried out some intensely interesting and rather weird experiments. These proved successful to such an extent that I came out of the place in a perfect fever of excitement. I inquired for Mr. George Jarnock and was told that he was in the morning room.

  “‘Come along,’ I said, when I had found him. ‘Please give me a lift. I’ve something exceedingly strange to show you.’

  “He was palpably very much puzzled, but came quickly. As we strode along he asked me a score of questions, to all of which I just shook my head, asking him to wait a little.

  “I led the way to the Armory. Here I suggested that he should take one side of a dummy, dressed in half plate armor, whilst I took the other. He nodded, though obviously vastly bewildered, and together we carried the thing to the Chapel door. When he saw me take out my key and open the way for us he appeared even more astonished, but held himself in, evidently waiting for me to explain. We entered the Chapel and I locked the door behind us, after which we carted the armored dummy up the aisle to the gate of the chancel rail where we put it down upon its round, wooden stand.

  “‘Stand back!’ I shouted suddenly as young Jarnock made a movement to open the gate. ‘My God, man! you mustn’t do that!’

  “Do what?” he asked, half-startled and half-irritated by my words and manner.

  “One minute,” I said. “Just stand to the side a moment, and watch.”

  He stepped to the left whilst I took the dummy in my arms and turned it to face the altar, so that it stood close to the gate. Then, standing well away on the right side, I pressed the back of the thing so that it leant forward a little upon the gate, which flew open. In the same instant, the dummy was struck a tremendous blow that hurled it into the aisle, the armor rattling and clanging upon the polished marble floor.

  “Good God!” shouted young Jarnock, and ran back from the chancel rail, his face very white.

  “Come and look at the thing,” I said, and led the way to where the dummy lay, its armored upper limbs all splayed adrift in queer contortions. I stooped over it and pointed. There, driven right through the thick steel breastplate, was the ‘waeful dagger.’

  “Good God!” said young Jarnock again. “Good God! It’s the dagger! The thing’s been stabbed, same as Bellett!”

  “Yes,” I replied, and saw him glance swiftly toward the entrance of the Chapel. But I will do him the justice to say that he never budged an inch.

  “Come and see how it was done,” I said, and led the way back to the chancel rail. From the wall to the left of the altar I took down a long, curiously ornamented, iron instrument, not unlike a short spear. The sharp end of this I inserted in a hole in the left-hand gatepost of the chancel gateway. I lifted hard, and a section of the post, from the floor upward, bent inward toward the altar, as though hinged at the bottom. Down it went, leaving the remaining part of the post standing. As I bent the movable portion lower there came a quick click and a section of the floor slid to one side, showing a long, shallow cavity, sufficient to enclose the post. I put my weight to the lever and hove the post down into the niche. Immediately there was a sharp clang, as some catch snicked in, and held it against the powerful operating spring.

  I went over now to the dummy, and after a few minute’s work managed to wrench the dagger loose out of the armor. I brought the old weapon and placed its hilt in a hole near the top of the post where it fitted loosely, the point upward. After that I went again to the lever and gave another strong heave, and the post descended about a foot, to the bottom of the cavity, catching there with another clang. I withdrew the lever and the narrow strip of floor slid back, covering post and dagger, and looking no different from the surrounding surface.

  Then I shut the chancel gate, and we both stood well to one side. I took the spear-like lever, and gave the gate a little push, so that it opened. Instantly there was a loud thud, and something sang through the air, striking the bottom wall of the Chapel. It was the dagger. I showed Jarnock then that the other half of the post had sprung back into place, making the whole post as thick as the one upon the right-hand side of the gate.

  “There!” I said, turning to the young man and tapping the divided post. “There’s the ‘invisible’ thing that used the dagger, but who the deuce is the person who sets the trap?” I looked at him keenly as I spoke.

  “My father is the only
one who has a key,” he said. “So it’s practically impossible for anyone to get in and meddle.”

  I looked at him again, but it was obvious that he had not yet reached out to any conclusion.

  “See here, Mr. Jarnock,” I said, perhaps rather curter than I should have done, considering what I had to say. “Are you quite sure that Sir Alfred is quite balanced—mentally?”

  “He looked at me, half frightenedly and flushing a little. I realized then how badly I put it.

  “‘I—I don’t know,’ he replied, after a slight pause and was then silent, except for one or two incoherent half remarks.

  “‘Tell the truth,’ I said. ‘Haven’t you suspected something, now and again? You needn’t be afraid to tell me.’

  “‘Well,’ he answered slowly, ‘I’ll admit I’ve thought Father a little—a little strange, perhaps, at times. But I’ve always tried to think I was mistaken. I’ve always hoped no one else would see it. You see, I’m very fond of the old guvnor.’

  “I nodded.

  “‘Quite right, too,’ I said. ‘There’s not the least need to make any kind of scandal about this. We must do something, though, but in a quiet way. No fuss, you know. I should go and have a chat with your father, and tell him we’ve found out about this thing.’ I touched the divided post.

  “Young Jarnock seemed very grateful for my advice and after shaking my hand pretty hard, took my key, and let himself out of the Chapel. He came back in about an hour, looking rather upset. He told me that my conclusions were perfectly correct. It was Sir Alfred Jarnock who had set the trap, both on the night that the butler was nearly killed, and on the past night. Indeed, it seemed that the old gentleman had set it every night for many years. He had learnt of its existence from an old manuscript book in the Castle library. It had been planned and used in an earlier age as a protection for the gold vessels of the ritual, which were, it seemed, kept in a hidden recess at the back of the altar.

  “This recess Sir Alfred Jarnock had utilized, secretly, to store his wife’s jewelry. She had died some twelve years back, and the young man told me that his father had never seemed quite himself since.

  “I mentioned to young Jarnock how puzzled I was that the trap had been set before the service, on the night that the butler was struck; for, if I understood him aright, his father had been in the habit of setting the trap late every night and unsetting it each morning before anyone entered the Chapel. He replied that his father, in a fit of temporary forgetfulness (natural enough in his neurotic condition), must have set it too early and hence what had so nearly proved a tragedy.

  “That is about all there is to tell. The old man is not (so far as I could learn), really insane in the popularly accepted sense of the word. He is extremely neurotic and has developed into a hypochondriac, the whole condition probably brought about by the shock and sorrow resultant on the death of his wife, leading to years of sad broodings and to overmuch of his own company and thoughts. Indeed, young Jarnock told me that his father would sometimes pray for hours together, alone in the Chapel.” Carnacki made an end of speaking and leant forward for a spill.

  “But you’ve never told us just how you discovered the secret of the divided post and all that,” I said, speaking for the four of us.

  “Oh, that!” replied Carnacki, puffing vigorously at his pipe. “I found—on comparing the—photos, that the one—taken in the—daytime, showed a thicker left-hand gatepost, than the one taken at night by the flashlight. That put me on to the track. I saw at once that there might be some mechanical dodge at the back of the whole queer business and nothing at all of an abnormal nature. I examined the post and the rest was simple enough, you know.

  “By the way,” he continued, rising and going to the mantelpiece, “you may be interested to have a look at the so-called ‘waeful dagger.’ Young Jarnock was kind enough to present it to me, as a little memento of my adventure.”

  He handed it ’round to us and whilst we examined it, stood silent before the fire, puffing meditatively at his pipe.

  “Jarnock and I made the trap so that it won’t work,” he remarked after a few moments. “I’ve got the dagger, as you see, and old Bellett’s getting about again, so that the whole business can be hushed up, decently. All the same I fancy the Chapel will never lose its reputation as a dangerous place. Should be pretty safe now to keep valuables in.”

  “There’s two things you haven’t explained yet,” I said. “What do you think caused the two clangey sounds when you were in the Chapel in the dark? And do you believe the soft tready sounds were real, or only a fancy, with your being so worked up and tense?”

  “Don’t know for certain about the clangs,” replied Carnacki.

  “I’ve puzzled quite a bit about them. I can only think that the spring which worked the post must have ‘given’ a trifle, slipped you know, in the catch. If it did, under such a tension, it would make a bit of a ringing noise. And a little sound goes a long way in the middle of the night when you’re thinking of ‘ghostesses.’ You can understand that—eh?”

  “Yes,” I agreed. “And the other sounds?”

  “Well, the same thing—I mean the extraordinary quietness—may help to explain these a bit. They may have been some usual enough sound that would never have been noticed under ordinary conditions, or they may have been only fancy. It is just impossible to say. They were disgustingly real to me. As for the slithery noise, I am pretty sure that one of the tripod legs of my camera must have slipped a few inches: if it did so, it may easily have jolted the lens cap off the baseboard, which would account for that queer little tap which I heard directly after.”

  “How do you account for the dagger being in its place above the altar when you first examined it that night?” I asked. “How could it be there, when at that very moment it was set in the trap?”

  “That was my mistake,” replied Carnacki. “The dagger could not possibly have been in its sheath at the time, though I thought it was. You see, the curious cross-hilted sheath gave the appearance of the complete weapon, as you can understand. The hilt of the dagger protrudes very little above the continued portion of the sheath—a most inconvenient arrangement for drawing quickly!” He nodded sagely at the lot of us and yawned, then glanced at the clock.

  “Out you go!” he said, in friendly fashion, using the recognized formula. “I want a sleep.”

  We rose, shook him by the hand, and went out presently into the night and the quiet of the Embankment, and so to our homes.

  THE GHOST PIRATES

  “Strange as the glimmer of the ghastly light

  That shines from some vast crest of wave at night.”

  DEDICATION

  TO MARY WHALLEY

  OPENING QUOTATION

  “Olden memories that shine against death’s night—

  Quiet stars of sweet enchantments, that are seen

  In Life’s lost distances…”

  —The World of Dreams

  SEA CHAUNTY

  Chaunty Man: Man the capstan, bullies!

  Men: Ha!-o-o! Ha!-o-o!

  Chaunty Man: Capstan-bars, you tarry souls!

  Men: Ha!-o-o! Ha!-o-o!

  Chaunty Man: Take a turn!

  Men: Ha!-o-o!

  Chaunty Man: Stand by to fleet!

  Men: Ha!-o-o!

  Chaunty Man: Stand by to surge!

  Men: Ha!-o-o!

  Chaunty Man: Ha!—o-o-o-o!

  Men: TRAMP!

  And away we go!

  Chaunty Man: Hark to the tramp of the bearded shellbacks!

  Men: Hush!

  O hear ’em tramp!

  Chaunty Man: Tramping, stamping — treading, vamping,

  While the cable comes in ramping.

  Men: Hark!

  O hear ’em stamp!

  Chaunty Man: Surge when it rides!

  Surge when it rides!

  Round-o-o-o handsome as it slacks!

  Men: Ha!-o-o-o-o! hear ’em ramp!

  Ha!-o-o-o-o! hear ’
em stamp!

  Ha!-o-o-o-o-o-o!

  Ha!-o-o-o-o-o-o!

  Chorus: They’re shouting now; oh! hear ’em

  A-bellow as they stamp:—

  Ha!-o-o-o! Ha!-o-o-o!

  Ha!-o-o-o!

  A-shouting as they tramp!

  Chaunty Man: O hark to the haunting chorus of the capstan and the bars!

  Chaunty-o-o-o and rattle crash—

  Bash against the stars!

  Men: Ha-a!-o-o-o!

  Tramp and go!

  Ha-a!-o-o-o!

  Ha-a!-o-o-o!

  Chaunty Man: Hear the pawls a-ranting: with the bearded men a-chaunting;

  While the brazen dome above ’em

  Bellows back the ‘bars.’

  Men: Hear and hark!

  O hear ’em!

  Ha-a!-o-o!

  Ha-a!-o-o!

  Chaunty Man: Hurling songs towards the heavens—!

  Men: Ha-a!-o-o!

  Ha-a!-o-o!

  Chaunty Man: Hush! O hear ’em!

  Hark! O hear ’em!

  Hurling oaths among their spars!

  Men: Hark! O hear ’em!

  Hush! O hear ’em!

  Chaunty Man: Tramping round between the bars!

  Chorus: They’re shouting now; oh! hear ’em

  A-bellow as they stamp:—

  Ha-a!-o-o-o! Ha-a!-o-o-o!

  Ha-a!-o-o-o!

  A-shouting as they tramp!

  Chaunty Man: O do you hear the capstan-chaunty!

  Thunder round the pawls!

  Men: Click a-clack, a-clatter

  Surge!

  And scatter bawls!

  Chaunty Man: Click-a-clack, my bonny boys, while it comes in handsome!

  Men: Ha-a!-o-o!

  Hear ’em clack!

  Chaunty Man: Ha-a!-o-o! Click-a-clack!

  Men: Hush! O hear ’em pant!

  Hark! O hear ’em rant!

  Chaunty Man: Click, a-clitter, clicker-clack.

  Men: Ha-a!-o-o!

  Tramp and go!

 

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