The Hand of Dr. Fu Manchu

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The Hand of Dr. Fu Manchu Page 21

by Sax Rohmer


  Mrs. Oram, the white-haired housekeeper, placed her arm in motherly fashion about the girl’s slim waist.

  “She wants to stay in my room until the trouble is all over,” she said in her refined, sweet voice.

  “You are very good, Mrs. Oram,” I replied. “Take care of her.”

  One long, reassuring glance I gave Kâramaneh, then turned and followed Smith and Sir Lionel up the winding oak stair. Kennedy came close behind me, carrying one of the acetylene headlamps of the car. And—

  “Just listen to the lioness, sir!” he whispered. “It’s not the gathering storm that’s making her so restless. Jungle beasts grow quiet, as a rule, when there’s thunder about.”

  The snarling of the great creature was plainly audible, distant though we were from her cage.

  “Through your room, Barton!” snapped Nayland Smith, when we gained the top corridor.

  He was his old, masterful self once more, and his voice was vibrant with that suppressed excitement which I knew well. Into the disorderly sleeping apartment of the baronet we hurried, and Smith made for the recess near the bed which concealed a door in the paneling.

  “Cautiously here!” cried Smith. “Follow immediately behind me, Kennedy, and throw the beam ahead. Hold the lamp well to the left.”

  In we filed, into that ancient passage which had figured in many a black deed but had never served the ends of a more evil plotter than the awful Chinaman who so recently had rediscovered it.

  Down we marched, and down, but not to the base of the tower, as I had anticipated. At a point which I judged to be about level with the first floor of the house, Smith—who had been audibly counting the steps—paused, and began to examine the seemingly unbroken masonry of the wall.

  “We have to remember,” he muttered, “that this passage may be blocked up or otherwise impassable, and that Fu-Manchu may know of another entrance. Furthermore, since the plan is lost, I have to rely upon my memory for the exact position of the door.”

  He was feeling about in the crevices between the stone blocks of which the wall was constructed.

  “Twenty-one steps,” he muttered; “I feel certain.”

  Suddenly it seemed that his quest had proved successful.

  “Ah!” he cried—“the ring!”

  I saw that he had drawn out a large iron ring from some crevice in which it had been concealed.

  “Stand back, Kennedy!” he warned.

  Kennedy moved on to a lower step—as Smith, bringing all his weight to bear upon the ring, turned the huge stone slab upon its hidden pivot, so that it fell back upon the stair with a reverberating boom.

  We all pressed forward to peer into the black cavity. Kennedy moving the light, a square well was revealed, not more than three feet across. Footholes were cut at intervals down the further side.

  “H’m!” said Smith—“I was hardly prepared for this. The method of descent that occurs to me is to lean back against one side and trust one’s weight entirely to the footholes on the other. A shaft appeared in the plan, I remember, but I had formed no theory respecting the means provided for descending it. Tilt the lamp forward, Kennedy. Good! I can see the floor of the passage below; only about fifteen feet or so down.”

  He stretched his foot across, placed it in the niche and began to descend.

  “Kennedy next!” came his muffled voice, “with the lamp. Its light will enable you others to see the way.”

  Down went Kennedy without hesitation, the lamp swung from his right arm.

  “I will bring up the rear,” said Sir Lionel Barton.

  Whereupon I descended. I had climbed down about halfway when, from below, came a loud cry, a sound of scuffling, and a savage exclamation from Smith. Then—

  “We’re right, Petrie! This passage was recently used by Fu-Manchu!”

  I gained the bottom of the well, and found myself standing in the entrance to an arched passage. Kennedy was directing the light of the lamp down upon the floor.

  “You see, the door was guarded,” said Nayland Smith.

  “What!”

  “Puff adder!” he snapped, and indicated a small snake whose head was crushed beneath his heel.

  Sir Lionel now joined us; and, a silent quartette, we stood staring from the dead reptile into the damp and evil-smelling tunnel. A distant muttering and rumbling rolled, echoing awesomely along it.

  “For Heaven’s sake what was that, sir?” whispered Kennedy.

  “It was the thunder,” answered Nayland Smith. “The storm is breaking over the hills. Steady with the lamp, my man.”

  We had proceeded for some three hundred yards, and, according to my calculation, were clear of the orchard of Graywater Park and close to the fringe of trees beyond; I was taking note of the curious old brickwork of the passage, when—

  “Look out, sir!” cried Kennedy—and the light began dancing madly. “Just under your feet! Now it’s up the wall!—mind your hand, Dr. Petrie!”

  The lamp was turned, and, since it shone fully into my face, temporarily blinded me.

  “On the roof over your head, Barton!”—this from Nayland Smith. “What can we kill it with?”

  Now my sight was restored to me, and looking back along the passage, I saw, clinging to an irregularity in the moldy wall, the most gigantic scorpion I had ever set eyes upon! It was fully as large as my open hand.

  Kennedy and Nayland Smith were stealthily retracing their steps, the former keeping the light directed upon the hideous insect, which now began running about with that horrible, febrile activity characteristic of the species. Suddenly came a sharp, staccato report.... Sir Lionel had scored a hit with his Browning pistol.

  In waves of sound, the report went booming along the passage. The lamp, as I have said, was turned in order to shine back upon us, rendering the tunnel ahead a mere black mouth—a veritable inferno, held by inhuman guards. Into that black cavern I stared, gloomily fascinated by the onward rolling sound storm; into that blackness I looked ... to feel my scalp tingle horrifically, to know the crowning horror of the horrible journey.

  The blackness was spangled with watching, diamond eyes!—with tiny insect eyes that moved; upon the floor, upon the walls, upon the ceiling! A choking cry rose to my lips.

  “Smith! Barton! for God’s sake, look! The place is alive with scorpions!”

  Around we all came, panic plucking at our hearts, around swept the beam of the big lamp; and there, retreating before the light, went a veritable army of venomous creatures! I counted no fewer than three of the giant red centipedes whose poisonous touch, called “the zayat kiss,” is certain death; several species of scorpion were represented; and some kind of bloated, unwieldy spider, so gross of body that its short, hairy legs could scarce support it, crawled, hideous, almost at my feet.

  What other monstrosities of the insect kingdom were included in that obscene host I know not; my skin tingled from head to feet; I experienced a sensation as if a million venomous things already clung to me—unclean things bred in the malarial jungles of Burma, in the corpse-tainted mud of China’s rivers, in the fever spots of that darkest East from which Fu-Manchu recruited his shadow army.

  I was perilously near to losing my nerve when the crisp, incisive tones of Nayland Smith’s voice came to stimulate me like a cold douche.

  “This wanton sacrifice of horrors speaks eloquently of a forlorn hope! Sweep the walls with light, Kennedy; all those filthy things are nocturnal and they will retreat before us as we advance.”

  His words proved true. Occasioning a sort of rustling sound—a faint sibilance indescribably loathsome—the creatures gray and black and red darted off along the passage. One by one, as we proceeded, they crept into holes and crevices of the ancient walls, sometimes singly, sometimes in pairs—the pairs locked together in deadly embrace.

  “They cannot live long in this cold atmosphere,” cried Smith. “Many of them will kill one another—and we can safely leave the rest to the British climate. But see that none of them drop
s upon you in passing.”

  Thus we pursued our nightmare march, on through that valley of horror. Colder grew the atmosphere and colder. Again the thunder boomed out above us, seeming to shake the roof of the tunnel fiercely, as with Titan hands. A sound of falling water, audible for some time, now grew so loud that conversation became difficult. All the insects had disappeared.

  “We are approaching the River Starn!” roared Sir Lionel. “Note the dip of the passage and the wet walls!”

  “Note the type of brickwork!” shouted Smith.

  Largely as a sedative to the feverish excitement which consumed me, I forced myself to study the construction of the tunnel; and I became aware of an astonishing circumstance. Partly the walls were natural, a narrow cavern traversing the bed of rock which upcropped on this portion of the estate, but partly, if my scanty knowledge of archaeology did not betray me, they were Phoenician!

  “This stretch of passage,” came another roar from Sir Lionel, “dates back to Roman days or even earlier! By God! It’s almost incredible!”

  And now Smith and Kennedy, who lid, were up to their knees in a running tide. An icy shower-bath drenched us from above; ahead was a solid wall of falling water. Again, and louder, nearer, boomed and rattled the thunder; its mighty voice was almost lost in the roar of that subterranean cataract. Nayland Smith, using his hands as a megaphone, cried;—

  “Failing the evidence that others have passed this way, I should not dare to risk it! But the river is less than forty feet wide at the point below Monkswell; a dozen paces should see us through the worst!”

  I attempted no reply. I will frankly admit that the prospect appalled me. But, bracing himself up as one does preparatory to a high dive, Smith, nodding to Kennedy to proceed, plunged into the cataract ahead....

  CHAPTER FORTY

  THE BLACK CHAPEL

  Of how we achieved that twelve or fifteen yards below the rocky bed of the stream the Powers that lent us strength and fortitude alone hold record. Gasping for breath, drenched, almost reconciled to the end which I thought was come—I found myself standing at the foot of a steep flight of stairs roughly hewn in the living rock.

  Beside me, the extinguished lamp still grasped in his hand, leant Kennedy, panting wildly and clutching at the uneven wall. Sir Lionel Barton had sunk exhausted upon the bottom step, and Nayland Smith was standing near him, looking up the stairs. From an arched doorway at their head light streamed forth!

  Immediately behind me, in the dark place where the waters roared, opened a fissure in the rock, and into it poured the miniature cataract; I understood now the phenomenon of minor whirlpools for which the little river above was famous. Such were my impressions of that brief breathing-space; then—

  “Have your pistols ready!” cried Smith. “Leave the lamp, Kennedy. It can serve us no further.”

  Mustering all the reserve that remained to us, we went, pell-mell, a wild, bedraggled company, up that ancient stair and poured into the room above....

  One glance showed us that this was indeed the chapel of Asmodeus, the shrine of Satan where the Black Mass had been sung in the Middle Ages. The stone altar remained, together with certain Latin inscriptions cut in the wall. Fu-Manchu’s last home in England had been within a temple of his only Master.

  Save for nondescript litter, evidencing a hasty departure of the occupants, and a ship’s lantern burning upon the altar, the chapel was unfurnished. Nothing menaced us, but the thunder hollowly crashed far above. To cover his retreat, Fu-Manchu had relied upon the noxious host in the passage and upon the wall of water. Silent, motionless, we four stood looking down at that which lay upon the floor of the unholy place.

  In a pool of blood was stretched the Eurasian girl, Zarmi. Her picturesque finery was reft into tatters and her bare throat and arms were covered with weals and bruises occasioned by ruthless, clutching fingers. Of her face, which had been notable for a sort of devilish beauty, I cannot write; it was the awful face of one who had did from strangulation.

  Beside her, with a Malay krîs in his heart—a little, jeweled weapon that I had often seen in Zarmi’s hand—sprawled the obese Greek, Samarkan, a member of the Si-Fan group and sometime manager of a great London hotel!

  It was ghastly, it was infinitely horrible, that tragedy of which the story can never be known, never be written; that fiendish fight to the death in the black chapel of Asmodeus.

  “We are too late!” said Nayland Smith. “The stair behind the altar!”

  He snatched up the lantern. Directly behind the stone altar was a narrow, pointed doorway. From the depths with which it communicated proceeded vague, awesome sounds, as of waves breaking in some vast cavern....

  We were more than halfway down the stair when, above the muffled roaring of the thunder, I distinctly heard the voice of Dr. Fu-Manchu!

  “My God!” shouted Smith, “perhaps they are trapped! The cave is only navigable at low tide and in calm weather!”

  We literally fell down the remaining steps ... and were almost precipitated into the water!

  The light of the lantern showed a lofty cavern tapering away to a point at its remote end, pear-fashion. The throbbing of an engine and churning of a screw became audible. There was a faint smell of petrol.

  “Shoot! shoot!”—the frenzied voice was that of Sir Lionel—“Look! they can just get through! ...”

  Crack! Crack! Crack!

  Nayland Smith’s Browning spat death across the cave. Then followed the report of Barton’s pistol; then those of mine and Kennedy’s.

  A small motorboat was creeping cautiously out under a low, natural archway which evidently gave access to the sea! Since the tide was incoming, a few minutes more of delay had rendered the passage of the cavern impossible....

  The boat disappeared.

  “We are not beaten!” snapped Nayland Smith. “The Chanak-Kampo will be seized in the Channel!”

  “There were formerly steps, in the side of the well from which this place takes its name,” declared Nayland Smith dully. “This was the means of access to the secret chapel employed by the devil-worshipers.”

  “The top of the well (alleged to be the deepest in England),” said Sir Lionel, “is among a tangle of weeds close by the ruined tower.”

  Smith, ascending three stone steps, swung the lantern out over the yawning pit below; then he stared long and fixedly upwards.

  Both thunder and rain had ceased; but even in those gloomy depths we could hear the coming of the tempest which followed upon that memorable storm.

  “The steps are here,” reported Smith; “but without the aid of a rope from above, I doubt if they are climbable.”

  “It’s that or the way we came, sir!” said Kennedy. “I was five years at sea in wind-jammers. Let me swarm up and go for a rope to the Park.”

  “Can you do it?” demanded Smith. “Come and look!”

  Kennedy craned from the opening, staring upward and downward; then—

  “I can do it, sir,” he said quietly.

  Removing his boots and socks, he swung himself out from the opening into the well and was gone.

  The story of Fu-Manchu, and of the organization called the Si-Fan which he employed as a means to further his own vast projects, is almost told.

  Kennedy accomplished the perilous climb to the lip of the well, and sped barefooted to Graywater Park for ropes. By means of these we all escaped from the strange chapel of the devil-worshipers. Of how we arranged for the removal of the bodies which lay in the place I need not write. My record advances twenty-four hours.

  The great storm which burst over England in the never-to-be-forgotten spring when Fu-Manchu fled our shores has become historical. There were no fewer than twenty shipwrecks during the day and night that it raged.

  Imprisoned by the elements in Graywater Park, we listened to the wind howling with the voice of a million demons around the ancient manor, to the creatures of Sir Lionel’s collection swelling the unholy discord. Then came the news that ther
e was a big steamer on the Pinion Rocks—that the lifeboat could not reach her.

  As though it were but yesterday I can see us, Sir Lionel Barton, Nayland Smith and I, hurrying down into the little cove which sheltered the fishing-village; fighting our way against the power of the tempest....

  Thrice we saw the rockets split the inky curtain of the storm; thrice saw the gallant lifeboat crew essay to put their frail craft out to sea ... thrice the mighty rollers hurled them contemptuously back....

  Dawn—a gray, eerie dawn—was creeping ghostly over the iron-bound shore, when the fragments of wreckage began to drift in. Such are the currents upon those coasts that bodies are rarely recovered from wrecks on the cruel Pinion Rocks.

  In the dim light I bent over a battered and torn mass of timber—that once had been the bow of a boat; and in letters of black and gold I read: “S. Y. Chanak-Kampo.”

  ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  Sax Rohmer was born Arthur Henry Ward in 1883, in Birmingham, England, adding “Sarsfield” to his name in 1901. He was four years old when Sherlock Holmes appeared in print, five when the Jack the Ripper murders began, and sixteen when H.G. Wells’ Martians invaded.

  Initially pursuing a career as a civil servant, he turned to writing as a journalist, poet, comedy sketch writer, and songwriter in British music halls. At age 20 he submitted the short story “The Mysterious Mummy” to Pearson’s magazine and “The Leopard-Couch” to Chamber’s Journal. Both were published under the byline “A. Sarsfield Ward.”

  Ward’s Bohemian associates Cumper, Bailey, and Dodgson gave him the nickname “Digger,” which he used as his byline on several serialized stories. Then, in 1908, the song “Bang Went the Chance of a Lifetime” appeared under the byline “Sax Rohmer.” Becoming immersed in theosophy, alchemy, and mysticism, Ward decided the name was appropriate to his writing, so when “The Zayat Kiss” first appeared in The Story-Teller magazine in October, 1912, it was credited to Sax Rohmer.

 

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