 Chapter 1. A Summons in the Night It all seemed so real that I could hardly imagine that it had ever occurred before, and yet each episode came, not as a fresh step in the logic of things, but as something expected. It is in such a wise that memory plays its pranks for good or ill, for pleasure or pain, for wheel or woe. It is thus that life is bittersweet, and that which has been done becomes eternal. Again the light skiff, seizing to shoot through the lazy water as when the oars flashed and dripped, glided out of the fierce July sunlight into the cool shade of the great drooping willow branches. I, standing up in the swaying boat, she, sitting still and with deft fingers guarding herself from stray twigs or the freedom of the resilience of moving bows. Again the water looked golden-brown under the canopy of translucent green, and the grassy bank was of emerald hue. Again we sat in the cool shade, with the myriad noises of nature both without and within our bower merging into that drowsy hum in whose sufficing environment the great world with its disturbing trouble and its more disturbing joys can be effectually forgotten. Again in that blissful solitude the young girl lost the convention of her prim narrow upbringing and told me in a natural, dreamy way of the loneliness of her new life. With an undertone of sadness she made me feel how in that spacious home each one of the household was isolated by the personal magnificence of her father and herself. That there confidence had no altar and sympathy no shrine, and that there even her father's face was as distant as the old country life seemed now. Once more the wisdom of my manhood and the experience of my years laid themselves at the girl's feet. It was seemingly their own doing, for the individual I had no say in the matter but only just obeyed imperative orders. And once again the flying seconds multiplied themselves endlessly. For it is in the arcana of dreams that existence merge and renew themselves, change and yet keep the same like the soul of a musician in a fugue. And so memory swooned again and again in sleep. It seems that there is never to be any perfect rest. Even in Eden the snake rears its head among the laden bows of the tree of knowledge. The silence of the dreamless night is broken by the roar of the avalanche, the hissing of sudden floods, the clanging of the engine-bell marking its sweep through a sleeping American town, the clanking of distant paddles over the sea. Whatever it is it is breaking the charm of my Eden. The canopy of greenery above us, starred with diamond points of light, seems to quiver in the ceaseless bead of paddles and the restless bells seems as though it would never cease. All at once the gates of sleep were thrown wide open and my waking ears took in the cause of the disturbing sounds. Waking existence is prosaic enough there was somebody knocking and ringing at someone's street door. I was pretty well accustomed in my germine street chambers to passing sounds. Usually I did not concern myself, sleeping or waking, with the doings, however noisy, of my neighbors. But this noise was too continuous, too insistent, too imperative to be ignored. There was some active intelligence behind that ceaseless sound and some stress or need behind the intelligence. I was not altogether selfish and at the thought of someone's need I was, without premeditation, out of bed. Instinctively I looked at my watch. It was just three o'clock. There was a faint edging of gray round the green blind which darkened my room. It was evident that the knocking and ringing were at the door of our own house, and it was evident, too, that there was no one awake to answer the call. I slipped on my dressing gown and slippers and went down to the hall door. When I opened it there stood a dapper groom with one hand pressed unflinchingly on the electric bell, whilst with the other he raised a ceaseless clanger with the knocker. The instant he saw me the noise ceased. One hand went up instinctively to the brim of his hat and the other produced a letter from his pocket. A neat broam was opposite the door. The horses were breathing heavily as though they had come fast. A policeman, with his night lantern still alighted as belt, stood by, attracted to the spot by the noise. Big pardon, sir. I'm sorry for disturbing you, but my orders was imperative. I was not to lose a moment, but to knock and ring till someone came. May I ask you, sir, if Mr. Malcolm Ross lives here? I am Mr. Malcolm Ross. Then this letter is for you, sir, and the broam is for you, too, sir. I took, with a strange curiosity, the letter which he handed to me. As a barrister I had had, of course, odd experiences now and then, including sudden demands upon my time, but never anything like this. I stepped back into the hall, closing the door, too, but leaving at a jar. Then I switched on the electric light. The letter was directed in a strange hand, a woman's. It began once without, dear sir, or any such address. You said you would like to help me if I needed it, and I believe you meant what you said. The time has come sooner than I expected. I am in dreadful trouble and do not know where to turn or to whom to apply. An attempt has, I fear, been made to murder my father, though, thank God, he still lives. But he is quite unconscious. The doctors and police have been sent for, but there is no one here whom I can depend on. Come at once, if you are able to, and forgive me if you can. I suppose I shall realize later what I have done in asking such a favour, but at present I cannot think. Come! Come at once! Margaret Trelawney. Pain and exultation struggled in my mind as I read, but the mastering thought was that she was in trouble and had called on me. Me. My dreaming of her then was not altogether without a cause. I called out to the groom. Wait! I shall be with you in a minute. Then I flew upstairs. A very few minutes suffice to wash and dress, and we were soon driving through the streets as fast as the horses could go. It was market-morning, and when we got out on Piccadilly there was an endless stream of carts coming from the west, but for the rest of the roadway was clear, and we went quickly. I had told the groom to come into the broam with me so that he could tell me what had happened as we went along. He sat awkwardly with his hat on his knees as he spoke. Miss Trelawney, sir, sent a man to tell us to get out of carriage at once, and when we was ready she come herself and gave me the letter and told Morgan, the coachman, sir, to fly. She said as I was to lose not a second, but to keep knocking till someone come. Yes, I know. I know. You told me. What I want to know is why she sent for me. What happened in the house? I don't quite know myself, sir, except that Master was found in his room senseless with the sheets all bloody and a wound on his head. He couldn't be waked know-how. To his Miss Trelawney herself has found him. How did she suppose to find him at such an hour? It was late in the night, I suppose. I don't know, sir. I didn't hear nothing at all of the details. As he could tell me no more, I stopped the carriage for a moment to let him get out on the box. Then I turned the matter over in my mind as I sat alone. There were many things which I could have asked the servant, and for a few moments after he had gone I was angry with myself for not having used my opportunity. On second thought, however, I was glad the temptation was gone. I felt that it would be more delicate to learn what I wanted to know of Miss Trelawney's surroundings from herself, rather than from her servants. We bold swiftly along Nightsbridge, the small noise of our well appointed vehicle sounding hollily in the morning air. We turned up the Kensington Palace Road and presently stopped opposite a great house on the left-hand side, nearer, so far as I could judge, the nodding hill than the Kensington End of the Avenue. It was a truly fine house, not only with regard to size, but to architecture. Even in the dim gray light of the morning, which tends to diminish the size of things, it looked big. Miss Trelawney met me in the hall. She was not in any way shy. She seemed to rule all around her with a sort of high-bred dominance, all the more remarkable as she was greatly agitated and as pale as snow. In the great hall were several servants, the men standing together near the hall door, and the women clinging together in the further corners and doorways. A police superintendent had been talking to Miss Trelawney. Two men in uniform and one plainclothesman stood near him. As she took my hand impulsively, there was a look of relief in her eyes and she gave a gentle sigh of relief. Her salutation was simple. I knew you would come. The clasp of the hand can mean a great deal, even when it is not intended to mean anything especially. Miss Trelawney's hand somehow became lost in my own. It was not that it was a small hand, it was fine and flexible, with long delicate fingers, a rare and beautiful hand. It was the unconscious self-surrender. And though at the moment I could not dwell on the cause of the thrill which swept me, it came back to me later. She turned and said to the police superintendent, This is Mr. Malcolm Ross. The police officer saluted as he answered, I know Mr. Malcolm Ross, Miss. Perhaps he will remember I had the honour of working with him in the Brixton Coining case. I had not at first glance noticed who it was, my whole attention having been taken with Miss Trelawney. Of course, Superintendent Dolan, I remember very well, I said as we shook hands. I could not but note that the acquaintance seemed a relief to Miss Trelawney. There was a certain vague uneasiness in her manner which took my attention. Instinctively I felt that it would be less embarrassing for her to speak with me alone. So I said to the superintendent, Perhaps it will be better if Miss Trelawney will see me alone for a few minutes. You, of course, have already heard all she knows, and I shall understand better how things are if I may ask some questions. I will then talk the matter over with you if I may. I shall be glad to be of what service I can, sir, he answered heartily. Following Miss Trelawney I moved over to a dainty room which opened from the hall and looked out on the garden at the back of the house. When we had entered and I had closed the door she said, I will thank you later for your goodness in coming to me in my trouble, but at present you can best help me when you know the facts. Go on, I said, tell me all you know and spare no detail, however trivial it may at the present time seem to be. She went on at once. I was awakened by some sound, I do not know what. I only know that it came through my sleep, for all at once I found myself awake with my heart beating wildly, listening anxiously for some sound from my father's room. My room is next father's, and I can often hear him moving about before I fall asleep. He works late at night, sometimes very late indeed, so that when I wake early, as I do occasionally, or in the gray of the dawn, I hear him still moving. I tried once to remonstrate with him about staying up so late, as it cannot be good for him, but I never ventured to repeat the experiment. You know how stern and cold he can be, at least you may remember what I told you about him, and when he is polite in this mood he is dreadful. When he is angry I can bear it much better, but when he is slow and deliberate, and the sight of his mouth lifts up to show the sharp teeth, I think I feel, well, I don't know how. Last night I got up softly and stole to the door, for I really feared to disturb him. There was not any noise of moving, and no kind of cry at all, but there was a queer kind of dragging sound, and a slow, heavy breathing. Oh, it was dreadful waiting there in the dark, in the silence, and fearing, fearing I did not know what. At last I took my courage, ah, de me, and turning the handle as softly as I could I opened the door a tiny bit. It was quite dark within, I could just see the outline of the windows. But in the darkness the sound of breathing, becoming more distinct, was appalling. As I listened this continued, but there was no other sound. I pushed the door open all at once. I was afraid to open it slowly, I felt as if there might be some dreadful thing behind it ready to pounce out on me. Then I switched on the electric light and stepped into the room. I looked first at the bed. The sheets were all crumpled up so that I knew Father had been in bed, but there was a great dark red patch in the center of the bed, and spreading to the edge of it that made my heart stand still. As I was gazing at it the sound of the breathing came across the room, and my eyes followed to it. There was Father on his right side, with the other arm under him, just as if his dead body had been thrown there all in a heap. The track of blood went across the room up to the bed, and there was a pool all around him which looked terribly red and glittering as I bent over to examine him. The place where he lay was right in front of the big safe. He was in his pajamas. The left sleeve was torn, showing his bare arm, and stretched out toward the safe. It looked, oh, so terrible, patched all with blood, and with the flesh torn or cut all around a gold-chain bangle on his wrist. I did not know he wore such a thing, and it seemed to give me a new shock of surprise. She paused a moment, and as I wished to relieve her by a moment's divergence of thought, I said, oh, that need not surprise you, you will see the most unlikely men wearing bangles. I have seen a judge condemn a man to death, and the wrist of the hand he held up had a gold bangle. She did not seem to heed much of the words or the idea. The pause, however, relieved her somewhat, and she went on in a steadier voice. I did not lose a moment in summoning aid, for I feared he might bleed to death. I rang the bell, and then went out and called for help as loudly as I could. In what must have been a very short time, though it seemed an incredibly long one to me, some of the servants came running up, and then others, till the room seemed full of staring eyes, and dishelled hair, and nightclothes of all sorts. We lifted father on a sofa, and the housekeeper, Mrs. Grant, who seemed to ever wits about her more than any of us, began to look where the flow of blood came from. In a few seconds it became apparent that it came from the arm which was bare. There was a deep wound, not clean cut as with a knife, but like a jagged rent or tear, close to the wrist which seemed to have cut into the vein. Mrs. Grant tied a handkerchief round the cut, and screwed it up tight with a silver paper cutter, and the flow of blood seemed to be checked at once. By this time I had come to my senses, or such of them as remained, and I sent off one man for the doctor, and another for the police. When they had gone I felt that except for the servants I was all alone in the house, and that I knew nothing of my father or anything else, and a great longing came to me to have someone with me who could help me. Then I thought of you and your kind offer in the boat under the willow tree, and without waiting to think I told the men to get a carriage ready at once, and I scribbled a note and sent it on to you. She paused. I did not like to say just then anything of how I felt. I looked at her, I think she understood, for her eyes were raised to mine for a moment, and then fell, leaving her cheeks as red as peony roses. With a manifest effort she went on with her story. The doctor was with us in an incredibly short time. The groom had met him letting himself into his house with his latch key, and he came here running. He made a proper tourniquet for poor father's arm, and then went home to get some appliances. I daresay he will be back almost immediately. Then a policeman came and sent a message to the station, and very soon the superintendent was here. Then you came. There was a long pause, and I ventured to take her hand for an instant. Without a word more we opened the door and joined the superintendent in the hall. He hurried up to us, saying as he came, I have been examining everything myself and have sent off a message to Scotland Yard. You see, Mr. Ross, there seemed so much that was odd about the case that I thought we had better have the best man of the Criminal Investigation Department that we could get. So I sent a note asking to have Sergeant Daw send it once. You remember him, sir, in that American poisoning case at Hoxton? Oh, yes, I said. I remember him well, in that and other cases, for I have benefited several times by his skill and acumen. He has a mind that works as truly as any that I know. When I have been for the defense and believed my man was innocent, I was glad to have him against us. That is high praise, sir, said the superintendent, gratified. I am glad you are proof of my choice that I did well in sending for him. I answered heartily. Could not be better. I do not doubt that between you we shall get at the facts and what lies behind them. We ascended to Mr. Trelani's room where we found everything exactly as his daughter had described. There came a ring at the house bell, and a minute later a man was shown into the room. A young man with aquiline features, keen gray eyes, and a forehead that stood out square and broad as that of a thinker. In his hand he had a black bag which he at once opened. Mr. Trelani introduced us. Dr. Winchester, Mr. Ross, Superintendent Dolan. We bowed mutually, and he, without a moment's delay, began his work. We all waited and eagerly watched him as he proceeded to dress the wound. As he went on he turned now and again to call the superintendent's attention to some point about the wound, the latter proceeding to enter the fact at once in his notebook. See, several parallel cuts or scratches beginning on the left side of the wrist and in some places endangering the radial artery. These small wounds here, deep and jagged, seem as if made with a blunt instrument. This in particular would seem as if made with some kind of sharp wedge. The flesh round it seems torn as if with lateral pressure. Turning to Mr. Trelani he said presently, Do you think we might remove this bangle? It is not absolutely necessary, as it will fall lower on the wrist where it can hang loosely, but it might add to the patient's comfort later on. The poor girl flushed deeply as she answered in a low voice. I do not know. I have only recently come to live with my father, and I know so little of his life or his ideas that I fear I can hardly judge in such a matter. The doctor, after a keen glance at her, said in a very kindly way, Forgive me, I did not know, but in any case you need not be distressed. It is not required at present to move it. Were it so, I should do so at once on my own responsibility. If it be necessary later on, we can easily remove it with a file. Your father doubtless has some object in keeping it as it is. See, this is a tiny key attached to it. As he was speaking he stopped and bent lower, taking from my hand the candle which I held and lowering it till its light fell on the bangle. Then, motioning me to hold the candle in the same position, he took from his pocket a magnifying glass which he adjusted. When he had made a careful examination he stood up and handed the magnifying glass to Dolan, saying as he did so, You had better examine it yourself. That is no ordinary bangle. The gold is wrought over triple steel links. See where it is worn away. It is manifestly not meant to be removed lightly, and it would need more than an ordinary file to do it. The superintendent bent his great body, but not getting close enough that way, knelt down by the sofa as the doctor had done. He examined the bangle minutely, turning it slowly around so that no particle of it escaped observation. Then he stood up and handed the magnifying glass to me. When you have examined it yourself, he said, Let the lady look at it if she will, and he commenced to write at length in his notebook. I made a simple alteration in his suggestion. I held out the glass toward Mr. Olani, saying, Had you not better examine it first? She drew back, slightly raising her hand in disclaimer as she said impulsively, Oh no! Father would doubtless have shown it to me had he wished me to see it. I would not like to without his consent. Then she added, doubtless fearing lest her delicacy of view should give offence to the rest of us. Of course it is right that you should see it. You have to examine and consider everything, and indeed, indeed I am grateful to you. She turned away. I could see that she was crying quietly. It was evident to me that even in the midst of her trouble and anxiety there was a chagrin that she knew so little of her father, and that her ignorance had to be shown at such a time and among so many strangers. That they were all men did not make the shame more easy to bear, though there was a certain relief in it. Trying to interpret her feelings I could not but think that she must have been glad that no woman's eyes, of understanding greater than man's, were upon her in that hour. When I stood up for my examination, which verified to me that of the doctor, the latter resumed his place beside the couch and went on with his ministrations. Superintendent Dolan said to me in a whisper, I think we are fortunate in our doctor. I nodded, and was about to add something in praise of his acumen, when there came a low tapping at the door. End of Chapter 1 Recording by Roger Maline Chapter 2 Of The Jewel of Seven Stars This LibriVox recording is in the public domain. Recording by Roger Maline The Jewel of Seven Stars by Bram Stoker Chapter 2 Strange Instructions Superintendent Dolan went quietly to the door, by a sort of natural understanding he had taken possession of affairs in the room. The rest of us waited. He opened the door a little way, and then with a gesture of manifest relief threw it wide and a young man stepped in. A young man, clean shaven, tall and slight, with an eagle face and bright, quick eyes that seemed to take in everything around him at a glance. As he came in the superintendent held out his hand. The two men shook hands warmly. I came at once, sir, the moment I got your message. I am glad I still have your confidence. That you'll always have, said the superintendent heartily. I have not forgotten our old bow-street days, and I never shall. Then, without a word of preliminary, he began to tell everything he knew up to the moment of the newcomer's entry. Sergeant Daw asked a few questions, a very few, when it was necessary for his understanding of circumstances or the relative positions of persons, but as a rule, Dolan, who knew his work thoroughly, forestalled every query and explained all necessary matters as he went on. Sergeant Daw threw occasionally swift glances around him, now at one of us, now at the room or some part of it, now at the wounded man lying senseless on the sofa. When the superintendent had finished, the sergeant turned to me and said, Perhaps you remember me, sir, I was with you in that Hoxton case. I remember you very well, I said, as I held out my hand. The superintendent spoke again. You understand, Sergeant Daw, that you are put in full charge of this case. Under you, I hope, sir, he interrupted. The other shook his head and smiled, as he said. It seems to me that this is a case that will take all a man's time and his brains. I have other work to do, but I shall be more than interested, and if I can help in any possible way, I shall be glad to do so. All right, sir, said the other, accepting his responsibility with a sort of modified salute, straight away he began his investigation. First he came over to the doctor, and, having learned his name and address, asked him to write a full report which he could use, and which he could refer to headquarters, if necessary. Dr. Winchester bowed gravely, as he promised. Then the sergeant approached me and said, Satovochi, I like the look of your doctor, I think we can work together. Turning to Miss Trelawney, he asked, Please let me know what you can of your father, his ways of life, his history, in fact of anything of whatsoever kind which interests him, or in which he may be concerned. I was about to interrupt to tell him what she had already said of her ignorance in all matters of her father and his ways, but her warning hand was raised to me pointedly, and she spoke herself. Alas, I know little or nothing. Superintendent Dolan and Mr. Ross know already, all I can say. Well, ma'am, we must be content to do what we can, said the officer genially. I'll begin by making a minute examination. You say that you were outside the door when you heard the noise? I was in my room when I heard the queer sound. Indeed, it must have been the early part of whatever it was which woke me. I came out of my room at once. Father's door was shut, and I could see the whole landing and the upper slopes of the staircase. No one could have left by the door unknown to me, if that is what you mean. That is just what I do mean, Miss. If everyone who knows anything will tell me as well as that, we shall soon get to the bottom of this. He then went over to the bed, looked at it carefully, and asked, Has the bed been touched? Not to my knowledge, said Mrs. Trelawney, but I shall ask Mrs. Grant, the housekeeper, she added as she rang the bell. Mrs. Grant answered it in person. Come in, said Mrs. Trelawney. These gentlemen want to know, Mrs. Grant, if the bed has been touched. Nor by me, ma'am. Then, said Mrs. Trelawney, turning to Sergeant Daw, it cannot have been touched by anyone. Either Mrs. Grant or I myself was here all the time, and I do not think any of the servants who came when I gave the alarm were near the bed at all. You see, Father lay here just under the great safe, and everyone crowded round him. We sent them all away in a very short time. Daw, with a motion of his hand, asked us all to stay at the other side of the room, whilst with a magnifying glass he examined the bed, taking care as he moved each fold of the bedclothes to replace it in exact position. Then he examined with his magnifying glass the floor beside it, taking a special pains where the blood had trickled over the side of the bed, which was of heavy red wood handsomely carved. Inch by inch, down on his knees, carefully avoiding any touch with the stains on the floor, he followed the blood marks over to the spot, close under the great safe, where the body had lain. All around and about this spot he went for a radius of some yards, but seemingly did not meet with anything to arrest special attention. Then he examined the front of the safe, round the lock, and along the bottom and top of the double doors, more especially at the places of their touching in front. Next he went to the windows, which were fastened down with the hasps. Were the shutters closed, he asked Mr. Lani in a casual way, as though he expected the negative answer, which came. All this time Dr. Winchester was attending to his patient, now dressing the wounds in the wrist or making minute examination all over the head and throat and over the heart. More than once he put his nose to the mouth of the senseless man and sniffed. Each time he did so he finished up by unconsciously looking round the room as though in search of something. Then we heard the deep strong voice of the detective. So far as I can see the object was to bring that key to the lock of the safe. There seems to be some secret in the mechanism that I am unable to guess at, though I served a year in chubs before I joined the police. It is a combination lock of seven letters, but there seems to be a way of locking even the combination. It is one of chat woods. I shall call it their place and find out something about it. Then turning to the doctor, as though his own work were for the present done, he said, Have you anything you can tell me at once, doctor, which will not interfere with your full report? If there is any doubt I can wait, but the sooner I know something definite, the better. Dr. Winchester answered at once, For my own part I see no reason in waiting. I shall make a full report, of course. But in the meantime I shall tell you all I know, which is after all not very much, and all I think, which is less definite. There is no wound on the head which could account for the state of stupor in which the patient continues. I must therefore take it that either he has been drugged or is under some hypnotic influence. So far as I can judge he has not been drugged, at least by means of any drug of whose qualities I am aware. Of course there is ordinarily in this room so much of a mummy smell that it is difficult to be certain about anything having a delicate aroma. I dare say that you have noticed the peculiar Egyptians' scents, bitumen, nard, aromatic gums and spices and so forth. It is quite possible that somewhere in this room amongst the curios and hidden by stronger scents is some substance or liquid which may have the effect we see. It is possible that the patient has taken some drug and that he may in some sleeping face have injured himself. I do not think this is likely, and circumstances other than noise which I have myself been investigating may prove that this surmise is not correct. But in the meantime it is possible, and must, till it be disproved, be kept within our purview. Here Sergeant Daw interrupted. That may be, but if so we should be able to find the instrument with which the wrist was injured. There would be marks of blood somewhere. Exactly so, said the doctor, fixing his glasses as though preparing for an argument. But if it be that the patient has used some strange drug, it may be one that does not take effect at once. As we are as yet ignorant of its potentialities, if indeed the whole surmise is correct at all, we must be prepared at all points. Here Miss Trollani joined in the conversation. That would be quite right, so far as the action of the drug was concerned. But according to the second part of your surmise, the wound may have been self-inflicted, and this after the drug had taken effect. True, said the detective, and the doctor simultaneously. She went on. As, however, doctor, your guest does not exhaust the possibilities, we must bear in mind that some other variant of the same root idea may be correct. I take it, therefore, that our first search, to be made on this assumption, must be for the weapon with which the injury was done to my father's wrist. Perhaps he put the weapon in the safe before he became quite unconscious, said I, giving voice foolishly to a half-formed thought. That could not be, said the doctor quickly. At least I think it could hardly be, he added cautiously with a brief bow to me. You see, the left hand is covered with blood, but there is no blood mark whatever on the safe. Quite right, I said, and there was a long pause. The first to break the silence was the doctor. We shall want a nurse here as soon as possible, and I know the very one to suit. I shall go at once to get her, if I can. I must ask that till I return some of you will remain constantly with the patient. It may be necessary to remove him to another room later on, but in the meantime he is best left here. Miss Trelawney, may I take it that either you or Mrs. Grant will remain here? Not merely in the room, but close to the patient, and watchful of him, till I return? She bowed in reply, and took a seat beside the sofa. The doctor gave her some directions as to what she should do in case her father should become conscious before his return. The next to move was Superintendent Dolan, who came close to Sergeant Daw as he said, I had better return now to the station, unless, of course, you should wish me to remain for a while. He answered, Is Johnny Wright still in your division? Yes. Would you like him to be with you? The other nodded reply. Then I will send him on to you as soon as can be arranged. He shall then stay with you as long as you wish. I will tell him that he is to take his instructions entirely from you. The sergeant accompanied him to the door, saying as he went, Thank you, sir. You are always thoughtful for men who are working with you. It is a pleasure to me to be with you again. I shall go back to Scotland Yard and report to my Chief. Then I shall call at Chatwoods, and I shall return here as soon as possible. I suppose I may take it, Miss, that I may put up here for a day or two, if required. It may be some help, or possibly some comfort to you, if I am about, until we unravel this mystery. I shall be very grateful to you. He looked keenly at her for a few seconds before he spoke again. Before I go, have I permission to look about your father's table and desk? There might be something which would give us a clue, or a lead at all events. Her answer was so unequivocal as almost to surprise him. You have the fullest possible permission to do anything which may help us in this dreadful trouble, to discover what it is that is wrong with my father, or which may shield him in the future. He began at once a systematic search of the dressing table, and after that of the writing table in the room. In one of the drawers he found a letter sealed. This he brought it once across the room and handed to Miss Trelawney. A letter directed to me and in my father's hand, she said as she eagerly opened it. I watched her face as she began to read, but seeing at once that Sergeant Daw kept his keen eyes on her face, unflinchingly watching every flitting expression, I kept my eyes henceforth fixed on his. When Miss Trelawney had read her letter through, I had in my mind a conviction, which, however, I kept locked in my own heart. Amongst the suspicions in the mind of the detective was one rather perhaps potential than definite of Miss Trelawney herself. For several minutes Miss Trelawney held the letter in her hand with her eyes downcast, thinking. Then she read it carefully again. This time the varying expressions were intensified. And I thought I could easily follow them. When she had finished the second reading she paused again. Then, though with some reluctance, she handed the letter to the detective. He read it eagerly but with unchanging face. Read it a second time and then handed it back with a bow. She paused a little again and then handed it to me. As she did so she raised her eyes to mine for a single moment appealingly. A swift blush spread over her pale cheeks and forehead. With mingled feelings I took it, but all said I was glad. She did not show any perturbation in giving the letter to the detective. She might not have shown any to anyone else. But to me I feared to follow the thought further. But read on, conscious that the eyes of both Miss Trelawney and the detective were fixed on me. My dear daughter, I want you to take this letter as an instruction, absolute and imperative, and admitting of no deviation whatsoever, in case anything untoward or unexpected by you or by others should happen to me. If I should be suddenly and mysteriously stricken down, either by sickness, accident or attack, you must follow these directions implicitly. If I am not already in my bedroom when you are made cognizant of my state, I am to be brought there as quickly as possible. Even should I be dead, my body is to be brought there. Thenceforth, until I am either conscious and able to give instructions on my own account or buried, I am never to be left alone, not for a single instant. From nightfall to sunrise at least two persons must remain in the room. It will be well that a trained nurse be in the room from time to time and will note any symptoms, either permanent or changing, which may strike her. My solicitors, Marvin and Jukes, of 27B Lincoln's Inn, have full instructions in case of my death, and Mr. Marvin has himself undertaken to see personally my wishes carried out. I should advise you, my dear daughter, seeing that you have no relative to apply to, to get some friend whom you can trust, to either remain within the house where instant communication can be made or to come nightly to aid in the watching or to be within call. Such friend may be either male or female, but whichever it may be, there should be added one other watcher or attendant at hand of the opposite sex. Understand that it is of the very essence of my wish that there should be, awake and exercising themselves to my purposes, both masculine and feminine intelligences. Once more, my dear Margaret, let me impress on you the need for observation and just reasoning to conclusions, howsoever strange. If I am taken ill or injured, this will be no ordinary occasion, and I wish to warn you so that your guarding may be complete. Nothing in my room, I speak of the curios, must be removed or displaced in any way or for any cause, whatever. I have a special reason and a special purpose in the placing of each, so that any moving of them would thwart my plans. Should you want money or counsel in anything, Mr. Marvin will carry out your wishes, to the which he has my full instructions. Abel Trelawney I read the letter a second time before speaking, for I feared to betray myself. The choice of a friend might be a momentous occasion for me. I had already ground for hope that she had asked me to help her in the first throw of her trouble, but love makes its own doubtings, and I feared. My thoughts seemed a whirl with lightning rapidity, and in a few seconds a whole process of reasoning became formulated. I must not volunteer to be the friend that the father advised his daughter to have to aid her in her vigil, and yet that one glance had a lesson which I must not ignore. Also did not she, when she wanted help, send to me, to me a stranger, except for one meeting at a dance, and one brief afternoon of companionship on the river? Would it not humiliate her to make her ask me twice? Humiliate her. No. That pain I could at all event save her. It is not humiliation to refuse. So, as I handed her back the letter, I said, I know you will forgive me, Mr. Trelawney, if I presume too much, but if you'll permit me to aid in the watching, I shall be proud. Though the occasion is a sad one, I shall be so far happy to be allowed the privilege. Despite her manifest and painful effort at self-control, the red tide swept her face and neck. Even her eyes seemed suffused, and in stern contrast with her pale cheeks when the tide had rolled back. She answered in a low voice, I shall be very grateful for your help. Then, in an afterthought, she added, But you must not let me be selfish in my need. I know you have many duties to engage you, and though I shall value your help highly, most highly, it would not be fair to monopolize your time. As to that, I answered at once, my time is yours. I can for to-day easily arrange my work so that I can come here in the afternoon and stay till morning. After that, if the occasion still demands it, I can so arrange my work that I shall have more time still at my disposal. She was much moved. I could see the tears gather in her eyes, and she turned away her head. The detective spoke, I am glad you will be here, Mr. Ross. I shall be in the house myself, as Mr. Trelawney will allow me, if my people in Scotland Yard will permit. That letter seems to put a different complexion on everything, though the mystery remains greater than ever. If you can wait here an hour or two, I shall go to headquarters, and then to the safe-makers. After that, I shall return, and you can go away easier in your mind, for I shall be here. When he had gone, we too, Mr. Trelawney and I, remained in silence. At last she raised her eyes and looked at me for a moment. After that I would not have exchanged places with a king. For a while she busied herself round the extemporized bedside of her father. Then, asking me to be sure not to take my eyes off him till she returned, she hurried out. In a few minutes she came back with Mrs. Grant and two maids and a couple of men, who bore the entire frame and furniture of a light iron bed. This they proceeded to put together and to make. When the work was completed and the servants had withdrawn, she said to me, It will be well to be all ready when the doctor returns. He will surely want to have father put to bed, and a proper bed will be better for him than the sofa. She then got a chair close beside her father and sat down watching him. I went about the room, taking accurate note of all I saw. And truly there were enough things in the room to evoke the curiosity of any man, even though the attendant circumstances were less strange. The whole place, accepting those articles of furniture necessary to a well furnished bedroom, was filled with magnificent curios, chiefly Egyptian. As the room was of immense size there was opportunity for the placing of a large number of them, even if, as with these, they were of huge proportions. Whilst I was still investigating the room there came the sound of wheels on the gravel outside the house. There was a ring at the hall door, and a few minutes later, after a preliminary tap at the door and an answering, come in, Dr. Winchester entered, followed by a young woman in the dark dress of a nurse. I have been fortunate, he said, as he came in. I found her at once and free. Miss Trelawney, this is Nurse Kennedy. End of Chapter 2 RECORDING BY RODGER MALINE I was struck by the way the two young women looked at each other. I suppose I have been so much in the habit of weighing up in my own mind the personality of witnesses and of forming judgment by their unconscious action and mode of bearing themselves, that the habit extends to my life outside as well as within the courthouse. At this moment of my life anything that interested Miss Trelawney interested me, and as she had been struck up by the newcomer I instinctively weighed her up also. By comparison of the two, I seemed somehow to gain a new knowledge of Miss Trelawney. Certainly the two women made a good contrast. Miss Trelawney was a fine figure, dark, straight-featured. She had marvellous eyes, great, wide-open, and as black and soft as velvet, with a mysterious depth. To look in them was like gazing at a black mirror, such as Dr. D. used in his wizard rites. I heard an old gentleman at the picnic, a great Oriental traveller, described the effect of her eyes as looking at night at the great distant lamps of a mosque through the open door. The eyebrows were typical, finely arched and rich in long, curling hair. They seemed like the proper architectural environment of the deep, splendid eyes. Her hair was black also, but was as fine as silk. Generally black hair is a type of animal strength and seems as if some strong expression of the forces of a strong nature, but in this case there could be no such thought. There were refinement and high breeding, and though there was no suggestion of weakness, any sense of power there was was rather spiritual than animal. The whole harmony of her being seemed complete. Carriage, figure, hair, eyes, the mobile, full mouth whose scarlet lips and white teeth seemed to light up the lower part of the face, as the eyes did the upper. The wide sweep of the jaw from chin to ear, the long, fine fingers, the hand which seemed to move from the wrist as though it had a sentience of its own. All these perfections went to make up a personality that dominated either by its grace, its sweetness, its beauty, or its charm. Nurse Kennedy, on the other hand, was rather under than over a woman's average height. She was firm and thick-set, with full limbs and broad, strong, capable hands. Her colour was in the general effect that of an autumn leaf. The yellow-brown hair was thick and long, and the golden-brown eyes sparkled from the freckled sunburnt skin. Her rosy cheeks gave a general idea of rich brown. The red lips and white teeth did not alter the colour scheme but only emphasised it. She had a snub nose. There was no possible doubt about it. But like such noses in general, it showed a nature generous, untiring, and full of good nature. Her broad white forehead, which even the freckles had spared, was full of forceful thought and reason. Dr. Winchester had on their journey from the hospital, coached her in the necessary particulars, and without a word she took charge of the patient and set to work. Having examined the new-made bed and shaken the pillows, she spoke to the doctor, who gave instructions. Presently we, all four, stepping together, lifted the unconscious man from the sofa. Early in the afternoon, when Sergeant Dahl had returned, I called at my rooms in Jermaine Street and sent out such clothes, books, and papers as I should be likely to want within a few days. Then I went on to keep my legal engagements. The court sat late that day, as an important case was ending. It was striking six as I drove in at the gate of the Kensington Palace Road. I found myself installed in a large room close to the sick chamber. That night we were not yet regularly organized for watching, so that the early part of the evening showed an unevenly balanced guard. Nurse Kennedy, who had been on duty all day, was lying down as she had arranged to come on again by twelve o'clock. Dr. Winchester, who was dining in the house, remained in the room until dinner was announced, and went back at once when it was over. During dinner Mrs. Grant remained in the room, and with her, Sergeant Dahl, who wished to complete a minute examination which he had undertaken of everything in the room and near it. At nine o'clock Miss Trelawney and I went in to relieve the doctor. She had lain down for a few hours in the afternoon so as to be refreshed for her work at night. She told me that she had determined that for this night at least she would sit up and watch. I did not try to dissuade her, for I knew that her mind was made up. Then and there I made up my mind that I would watch with her, unless, of course, I should see that she really did not wish it. I said nothing of my intentions for the present. We came in on tiptoe so silently that the doctor, who was bending over the bed, did not hear us, and seemed a little startled when suddenly looking up he saw our eyes upon him. I felt that the mystery of the whole thing was getting on his nerves, as it had already got on the nerves of some others of us. He was, I fancied, a little annoyed with himself for having been so startled, and at once began to talk in a hurried manner, as though to get over our idea of his embarrassment. I am really and absolutely at my wit's end to find any fit cause for this stupor. I have made again as accurate an examination as I know how, and I am satisfied that there is no injury to the brain, that is, no external injury. Indeed, all his vital organs seem unimpaired. I have given him, as you know, food several times, and it has manifestly done him good. His breathing is strong and regular, and his pulse is slower and stronger than it was this morning. I cannot find evidence of any known drug, and his unconsciousness does not resemble any of the many cases of hypnotic sleep which I saw in the Charcot hospital in Paris. And as to these wounds, he laid his finger gently on the bandaged wrist which lay outside the coverlet as he spoke, I do not know what to make of them. They might have been made by a carding machine, but that supposition is untenable. It is within the bounds of possibility that they might have been made by a wild animal, if it had taken care to sharpen its claws. That, too, is, I take it, impossible. By the way, have you any strange pets here in the house? Anything of an exceptional kind, such as a tiger-cat or anything out of the common? Mistralani smiled a sad smile which made my heart ache as she made answer. Oh, no! Father does not like animals about the house, unless they are dead and mummied. This was said with a touch of bitterness, or jealousy, I could hardly tell which. Even my poor kitten was only allowed in the house on sufferance, and though he is the dearest and best conducted cat in the world, he is now on a sort of parole and is not allowed into this room. As she was speaking, a faint rattling of the door handle was heard. Instantly Mistralani's face brightened. She sprang up and went over to the door, saying as she went, There he is! That is my Silvio! He stands on his hind legs and rattles the door handle when he wants to come into her room. She opened the door, speaking to the cat as though he were a baby. Did him want his morpher? Come, then, but he must stay with her. She lifted the cat and came back with him in her arms. He was certainly a magnificent animal. A chinchilla gray Persian with long, silky hair, a really lordly animal with the haughty bearing despite his gentleness, and with great paws which spread out as he placed them on the ground. Whilst she was fondling him, he suddenly gave a wriggle like an eel and slipped out of her arms. He ran across the room and stood opposite a low table on which stood the mummy of an animal, and began to mew and snarl. Mistralani was after him in an instant and lifted him in her arms, kicking and struggling and wriggling to get away, but not biting or scratching, for evidently he loved his beautiful mistress. He ceased to make a noise the moment he was in her arms. In a whisper she admonished him. Oh, you naughty Silvio! You have broken your parole that mother gave for you. Now say good night to the gentleman and come away to mother's room. As she was speaking she held out the cat's paw to me to shake. As I did so I could not but admire its size and beauty. Why, said I, his paw seems like a little boxing glove full of claws. She smiled. So it ought to. Don't you notice that my Silvio has seven toes? See? She opened the paw, and surely enough there were seven separate claws, each of them sheathed in a delicate, fine, shell-like case. As I gently stroked the foot the claws emerged and one of them, accidentally, there was no anger now in the cat was purring, stuck into my hand. Instinctively I said, as I drew back, why his claws are like razors. Dr. Winchester had come close to us and was bending over, looking at the cat's claws. As I spoke he said in a quick, sharp way, hey, I could hear the quick intake of his breath. Whilst I was stroking the now quiescent cat, the doctor went to the table and tore off a piece of blotting paper from the writing-pad and came back. He laid the paper on his palm and, with a simple pardon me to Miss Trelawney, placed the cat's paw on it and pressed it down with his other hand. The haughty cat seemed to resent somewhat the familiarity and tried to draw its foot away. This was plainly what the doctor wanted, for in the act the cat opened the sheaves of its claws and made several wreaths in the soft paper. Then Miss Trelawney took her pet away. She returned in a couple of minutes. As she came in she said, It is most odd about that mummy. When Silvio came into the room first, indeed I took him in as a kitten to show to Father, he went on just the same way. He jumped up on the table and tried to scratch and bite the mummy. That was what made Father so angry and brought the decree of banishment on poor Silvio. Only his parole, given through me, kept him in the house. Whilst she had been gone, Dr. Winchester had taken the bandage from her father's wrist. The wound was now quite clear as the separate cuts showed out in fierce red lines. The doctor folded the blotting paper across the line of punctures made by the cat's claws and held it down close to the wound. As he did so he looked up triumphantly and beckoned us over to him. The cuts in the paper corresponded with the wounds in the wrist. No explanation was needed, as he said. It would have been better if Master Silvio had not broken his parole. We were all silent for a little while. Suddenly Miss Trelani said, But Silvio was not in here last night. Are you sure? Could you prove that if necessary? She hesitated before replying. I am certain of it, but I fear it would be difficult to prove. Silvio sleeps in a basket in my room. I certainly put him to bed last night. I remember distinctly laying his little blanket over him and tucking him in. This morning I took him out of the basket myself. I certainly never noticed him in there, though, of course, that would not mean much, for I was too concerned about poor father and too much occupied with him to notice even Silvio. The doctor shook his head, as he said with a certain sadness. Well, at any rate it is no use trying to prove anything now. Any cat in the world would have cleaned blood marks, did any exist, from his paws in a hundredth part of the time that has elapsed. Again we were all silent, and again the silence was broken by Miss Trelani. But now that I think of it it could not have been poor Silvio that injured father. My door was shut when I first heard the sound, and father's was shut when I listened at it. When I went in the injury had been done, so that it must have been before Silvio could possibly have got in. This reasoning commended itself, especially to me, as a barrister, for it was proof to satisfy a jury. It gave me a distinct pleasure to have Silvio acquitted of the crime, possibly because he was Miss Trelani's cat and was loved by her. Happy cat! Silvio's mistress was manifestly pleased, as I said. Verdict! Not guilty! Dr. Winchester, after a pause, observed. My apologies to Master Silvio on this occasion, but I am still puzzled to know why he is so keen against that mummy. Is he the same toward the other mummies in the house? There are, I suppose, a lot of them. I saw three in the hall as I came in. There are lots of them, she answered. I sometimes don't know whether I am in a private house or the British Museum. But Silvio never concerns himself about any of them, except that particular one. I suppose it must be because it is of an animal, not a man or a woman. Perhaps it is of a cat, said the doctor, as he started up and went across the room to look at the mummy more closely. Yes, he went on. It is the mummy of a cat, and a very fine one, too. If it hadn't been a special favorite of some very special person, it would never have received so much honor. See? A painted case and obsidian eyes, just like a human mummy. It is an extraordinary thing, that knowledge of kind to kind. Here is a dead cat, that is all. It is perhaps four or five thousand years old, and another cat, of another breed, in what is practically another world, is ready to fly at it, just as it would if it were not dead. I should like to experiment a bit about that cat, if you don't mind, Mr. Lani. She hesitated before replying. Of course, do anything you may think necessary or wise, but I hope it will not be anything to hurt or worry my poor Silvio. The doctor smiled, as he answered. Oh, Silvio would be all right. It is the other one that my sympathies would be reserved for. How do you mean? Master Silvio will do the attacking. The other one will do the suffering. Suffering? There was a note of pain in her voice. The doctor smiled more broadly. Oh, please make your mind easy as to that. The other won't suffer as we understand it, except perhaps in his structure and outfit. What on earth do you mean? Simply this, my dear young lady, that the antagonist will be a mummy cat like this one. There are, I take it, plenty of them to be had in Museum Street. I shall get one and place it here instead of that one. You won't think that a temporary exchange will violate your father's instructions, I hope? We shall then find out, to begin with, whether Silvio objects to all mummy cats or only to this one in particular. I don't know, she said doubtfully. Father's instructions seem very uncompromising. Then, after a pause, she went on. But, of course, under the circumstances, anything that is to be ultimately for his good must be done. I suppose there can't be anything very particular about the mummy of a cat. Dr. Winchester said nothing. He sat rigid, with so grave a look on his face that his extra gravity passed on to me, and in its enlightening perturbation I began to realize more than I had yet done the strangeness of the case in which I was now so deeply concerned. When once this thought had begun there was no end to it. Indeed it grew, and blossomed, and reproduced itself in a thousand different ways. The Rome and all in it gave grounds for strange thoughts. There were so many ancient relics that, unconsciously, one was taken back to strange lands and strange times. There were so many mummies, or mummy objects, round which there seemed to cling forever the penetrating odors of bitumen and spices and gums, gnarred and Circassius balmy smells, that one was unable to forget the past. Of course there was but little light in the room, and that carefully shaded so that there was no glare anywhere. None of that direct light which can manifest itself as a power or an entity and so make for companionship. The room was a large one, and lofty in proportion to its size. In its vastness was place for a multitude of things not often found in a bed-chamber. In far corners of the room were shadows of uncanny shape. More than once as I thought the multitudinous presence of the dead and the past took such hold on me that I caught myself looking round fearfully as though some strange personality or influence was present. Even the manifest presence of Dr. Winchester and Ms. Trelawney could not altogether comfort or satisfy me at such moments. It was with a distinct sense of relief that I saw a new personality in the room in the shape of Nurse Kennedy. There was no doubt that that business-like, self-reliant, capable young woman added an element of security to such wild imaginings as my own. She had a quality of common sense that seemed to pervade everything around her as though it were some kind of emanation. Up to that moment I had been building fancies around the sick man, so that finally all about him, including myself, had become involved in them or enmeshed or saturated or—but now that she had come he relapsed into his proper perspective as a patient. The room was a sick room, and the shadows lost their fearsome quality. The only thing which it could not altogether abrogate was the strange Egyptian smell. You may put a mummy in a glass case and hermetically seal it so that no corroding air can get within, but all the same it will exhale its odor. One might think that four or five thousand years would exhaust the old factory qualities of anything, but experience teaches us that these smells remain and that their secrets are unknown to us. Today they are as much mysteries as they were when the embalmers put the body in the bath of Natron. All at once I sat up. I had become lost in an absorbing reverie. The Egyptian smell had seemed to get on my nerves, on my memory, on my very will. At that moment I had a thought which was like an inspiration. If I was influenced in such a manner by the smell, might it not be that the sick man, who lived half his life or more in the atmosphere, had gradually and by slow but sure process taken into his system something which had permeated him to such degree that it had a new power derived from quantity or strength or I was becoming lost again in a reverie. This would not do. I must take such precaution that I could remain awake or free from such entrancing thought. I had had but half a night's sleep last night, and this night I must remain awake. Without stating my intention, for I feared that I might add to the trouble and uneasiness of Mrilani, I went downstairs and out of the house. I soon found a chemist's shop and came away with a respirator. When I got back it was ten o'clock, the doctor was going for the night. The nurse came with him to the door of the sick room, taking her last instructions. Mrilani sat still beside the bed. Sergeant Daw, who had entered as the doctor went out, was some little distance off. When Nurse Kennedy joined us, we arranged that she should sit up till two o'clock when Mrilani would relieve her. Thus, in accordance with Mr. Trilani's instructions, there would always be a man and a woman in the room, and each one of us would overlap, so that at no time would a new set of watchers come on duty without someone to tell of what, if anything, had occurred. I lay down on a sofa in my own room, having arranged that one of the servants should call me a little before twelve. In a few moments I was asleep. When I was waked it took me several seconds to get back my thoughts so as to recognize my own identity and surroundings. The short sleep had, however, done me good, and I could look on things around me in a more practical light than I had been able to do earlier in the evening. I bathed my face and thus refreshed went into the sick room. I moved very softly. The nurse was sitting by the bed, quiet and alert. The detective sat in an armchair across the room in deep shadow. He did not move when I crossed until I got close to him when he said in a dull whisper, It is all right. I have not been asleep. An unnecessary thing to say, I thought, it always is unless it be untrue in spirit. When I told him that his watch was over, that he might go to bed till I should call him at six o'clock, he seemed relieved and went with alacrity. At the door he turned and coming back to me said in a whisper, I sleep lightly and I shall have my pistols with me. I won't feel so heavy-handed when I get out of this mummy-smell. He too, then, had shared my experience of drowsiness. I asked the nurse if she wanted anything. I noticed that she had a vinaigrette in her lab. Doubtless she too had felt some of the influence which had so affected me. She said that she had all she required, but that if she should want anything she would at once let me know. I wished to keep her away from noticing my respirator, so I went to the chair in the shadow where her back was toward me. Here I quietly put it on and made myself comfortable. For what seemed a long time I sat and thought and thought. It was a wild medley of thoughts as might have been expected from the experiences of the previous day and night. Again I found myself thinking of the Egyptian smell and I remember that I felt a delicious satisfaction that I did not experience it, as I had done. The respirator was doing its work. It must have been that the passing of this disturbing thought made for repose of mind, which is the corollary of bodily rest, for though I really cannot remember being asleep or waking from it, I saw a vision. I dreamed a dream. I scarcely know which. I was still in the room seated in the chair. I had on my respirator and knew that I breathed freely. The nurse sat in her chair with her back toward me. She sat quite still. The sick man lay as still as the dead. It was rather like the picture of a scene than the reality. All were still and silent, and the stillness and silence were continuous. Outside in the distance I could hear the sounds of a city, the occasional roll of wheels, the shout of a reveler, the faraway echo of whistles and the rumbling of trains. The light was very, very low. The reflection of it under the green-shaded lamp was a dim relief to the darkness rather than light. The green silk fringe of the lamp had merely the color of an emerald scene in the moonlight. The room, for all its darkness, was full of shadows. It seemed in my whirling thoughts as though all the real things had become shadows, shadows which moved, for they passed the dim outline of the high windows. Shadows which had sentience. I even thought there was a sound, a faint sound as of the mew of a cat, the rustle of drapery and a metallic clink as of metal faintly touching metal. I sat as one entranced. At last I felt as in nightmare that this was sleep and that in the passing of its portals all my will had gone. All at once my senses were full awake. A shriek rang in my ears. The room was filled suddenly with a blaze of light. There was the sound of pistol shots, one, two, and a haze of white smoke in the room. When my waking eyes regained their power I could have shrieked with horror myself at what I saw before me. END OF CHAPTER 3 RECORDING BY RODGER MALEAN CHAPTER IV. THE SIGHT WHICH MET MY EYES HAD THE HORROR OF A DREAM within a dream, with the certainty of reality added. The room was as I had seen it last, except that the shadowy look had gone in the glare of the many lights, and every article in it stood stark and solidly real. By the empty bed sat Nurse Kennedy, as my eyes had last seen her, sitting bolt upright in the armchair beside the bed. She had placed a pillow behind her so that her back might be erect, but her neck was fixed as that of one in a cataleptic trance. She was, to all intents and purposes, turned into stone. There was no special expression on her face, no fear, no horror, nothing such as might be expected of one in such a condition. Her open eyes showed neither wonder nor interest. She was simply a negative existence, warm, breathing, placid, but absolutely unconscious of the world around her. The bed clothes were disarranged as though the patient had been drawn from under them without throwing them back. The corner of the upper sheet hung upon the floor, close by it lay one of the bandages with which the doctor had dressed the wounded wrist. Another and another lay further along the floor, as though forming a clue to where the sick man now lay. This was almost exactly where he had been found on the previous night, under the great safe. Again the left arm lay toward the safe. But there had been a new outrage, an attempt had been made to sever the arm close to the bangle which held the tiny key. A heavy, cookery knife, one of the leaf-shaped knives which the gherkas and others of the hill-tribes of India use with such effect, had been taken from its place on the wall, and with it the attempt had been made. It was manifest that just at the moment of striking the blow had been arrested, for only the point of the knife and not the edge of the blade had struck the flesh. As it was, the outer side of the arm had been cut to the bone and the blood was pouring out. In addition, the former wound in front of the arm had been cut or torn about terribly. One of the cuts seemed to jet out blood as if with each pulsation of the heart. By the side of her father, knelt Miss Trelawney, her white night-dress stained with the blood in which she knelt. In the middle of the room Sergeant Daw, in his shirt and trousers and stocking feet, was putting fresh cartridges into his revolver in a dazed, mechanical kind of way. His eyes were red and heavy, and he seemed only half awake, and less than half conscious of what was going on around him. Several servants, bearing lights of various kinds, were clustered round the doorway. As I rose from my chair and came forward, Miss Trelawney raised her eyes toward me. When she saw me, she shrieked and started to her feet, pointing towards me. Never shall I forget the strange picture she made, with her white drapery all smeared with blood, which, as she rose from the pool, ran in streaks toward her bare feet. I believe that I had only been asleep, that whatever influence had worked on Mr. Trelawney and Nurse Kennedy, and in less degree on Sergeant Daw, had not touched me. The respirator had been of some service, though it had not kept off the tragedy whose dire evidences were before me. I can understand now, I could understand even then, the fright added to that which had gone before, which my appearance must have evoked. I had still on the respirator, which covered mouth and nose. My hair had been tossed in my sleep. Coming suddenly forward, thus enwrapped and disheveled in that horrified crowd, I must have had, in the strange mixture of lights, an extraordinary and terrifying appearance. It was well that I recognized all this in time to avert another catastrophe, for the half-dazed, mechanically acting detective, put in the cartridges, and had raised his revolver to shoot at me, when I succeeded in wrenching off the respirator and shouting to him to hold his hand. In this also he acted mechanically. The red, half-awake eyes had not in them even then the intention of conscious action. The danger, however, was averted. The relief of the situation, strangely enough, came in a simple fashion. Mrs. Grant, seeing that her young mistress had on only her night-dress, had gone to fetch a dressing-gown which she now threw over her. This simple act brought us all back to the region of fact. With a long breath one and all seemed to devote themselves to the most pressing matter before us, that of staunching the flow of blood from the arm of the wounded man. Even as the thought of action came I rejoiced, for the bleeding was very proof that Mr. Trelawney still lived. Last night's lesson was not thrown away. More than one of those present knew now what to do in such an emergency, and within a few seconds willing hands were at work on a tourniquet. A man was at once dispatched for the doctor, and several of the servants disappeared to make themselves respectable. We lifted Mr. Trelawney on to the sofa where he had lain yesterday, and having done what we could for him turned our attention to the nurse. In all the turmoil she had not stirred she sat there as before, erect and rigid, breathing softly and naturally and with a placid smile. As it was manifestly of no use to attempt anything with her till the doctor had come we began to think of the general situation. Mrs. Grant had by this time taken her mistress away and changed her clothes, for she was back presently in a dressing-gown and slippers, and with the traces of blood removed from her hands. She was now much calmer, though she trembled sadly, and her face was ghastly white. When she had looked at her father's wrist, eye holding the tourniquet, she turned her eyes round the room, resting them now and again on each one of us present in turn, but seeming to find no comfort. It was so apparent to me that she did not know where to begin or whom to trust that, to reassure her, I said, I am all right now. I was only asleep. Her voice had a gulp in it, as she said in a low voice. Asleep! You! And my father in danger? I thought you were on the watch! I felt the sting of justice in the reproach, but I really wanted to help her, so I answered. Only asleep! It is bad enough, I know, but there is something more than an only round us here. Had it not been that I took a definite precaution I might have been like the nurse there. She turned her eyes swiftly on the weird figure, sitting grimly upright like a painted statue, and then her face softened. With the action of habitual courtesy she said, Forgive me, I did not mean to be rude, but I am in such distress and fear that I hardly know what I am saying. Oh, it is dreadful! I fear for fresh trouble and horror and mystery every moment. This cut me to the very heart, and out of the heart's fullness I spoke. Don't give me a thought, I don't deserve it. I was on guard, and yet I slept. All that I can say is that I didn't mean to, and I tried to avoid it, but it was over me before I knew it. Anyhow, it is done now, and can't be undone. Probably some day we may understand it all, but now let us try to get at some idea of what has happened. Tell me what you remember. The effort to recollect seemed a stimulator. She became calmer as she spoke. I was asleep, and woke suddenly with the same horrible feeling on me that Father was in great and immediate danger. I jumped up and ran, just as I was, into his room. It was nearly pitch dark, but as I opened the door there was light enough to see Father's nightdress as he lay on the floor under the safe, just as on that first awful night. Then I think I must have gone mad for a moment. She stopped and shuddered. My eyes lit on Sergeant Da, still fiddling in an aimless way with the revolver. Mindful of my work with the tourniquet, I said calmly, Now tell us, Sergeant Da, what did you fire at? The policeman seemed to pull himself together with the habit of obedience. Looking around at the servants remaining in the room, he said with that air of importance which, I take it, is the regulation attitude of an official of the law before strangers. Don't you think, sir, that we can allow the servants to go away? We can then better go into the matter. I nodded approval. The servants took the hint and withdrew, though unwillingly the last one closing the door behind him. Then the detective went on. I think I had better tell you my impressions, sir, rather than recount my actions. That is, so far as I can remember them. There was a mortified deference now in his manner which probably arose from his consciousness of the awkward position in which he found himself. I went to sleep half-dressed, as I am now, with a revolver under my pillow. It was the last thing I remember thinking of. I do not know how long I slept. I had turned off the electric light, and it was quite dark. I thought I heard a scream, but I can't be sure, for I felt thick-headed, as a man does when he is called too soon after an extra-long stretch of work. Not that such was the case this time. Anyhow, my thoughts flew to the pistol. I took it out and ran on to the landing. Then I heard a sort of scream, or rather a call for help, and ran into this room. The room was dark, for the lamp beside the nurse was out, and the only light was that from the landing, coming through the open door. Miss Filani was kneeling on the floor beside her father, and was screaming. I thought I saw something move between me and the window, so, without thinking and being half-dazed and only half-awake, I shot at it. It moved a little more to the right, between the windows, and I shot again. Then you came up out of the big chair with all that muffling on your face. It seemed to me, being as I say half-dazed and half-awake, I know, sir, you will take this into account, as if it had been you being in the same direction as the thing I had fired at. And so I was about to fire again when you pulled off the wrap. Here I asked him. I was cross-examining now and felt at home. You say you thought I was the thing you fired at? What thing? The man scratched his head, but made no reply. Come, sir, I said. What thing? What was it like? The answer came in a low voice. I don't know, sir. I thought there was something. But what it was, or what it was like, I haven't the faintest notion. I suppose it was because I had been thinking of the pistol before I went to sleep, and because when I came in here I was half-dazed and only half-awake, which I hope you will, in future, sir, always remember. He clung to that formula of excuses, though it were his sheet anchor. I did not want to antagonize the man. On the contrary, I wanted to have him with us. Besides, I had on me at that time myself the shadow of my own default. So I said as kindly as I knew how. Quite right, Sergeant, your impulse was correct, though, of course, in the half-somnolent condition in which you were, and perhaps partly affected by the same influence, whatever it may be, which made me sleep, and which has put the nurse in that cataleptic trance, it could not be expected that you would pause to weigh matters. But now, whilst the matter is fresh, let me see exactly where you stood and where I sat. We shall be able to trace the course of your bullets. The prospect of action and the exercise of his habitual skill seemed to brace him at once. He seemed a different man, as he said about his work. I asked Mrs. Grant to hold the tourniquet and went and stood where he had stood, and looked where in the darkness he had pointed. I could not but notice the mechanical exactness of his mind, as when he showed me where he had stood, or drew, as a matter of course, the revolver from his pistol-pocket, and pointed with it. The chair from which I had risen still stood in its place. Then I asked him to point with his hand only, as I wished to move in the track of his shot. Just behind my chair and a little back of it stood a high-bule cabinet. The glass door was shattered. I asked, was this the direction of your first shot or your second? The answer came promptly. The second, the first, was over there. He turned a little to the left, more toward the wall where the great safe stood, and pointed. I followed the direction of his hand and came to the low table whereon rested, amongst other curios, the mummy of the cat which had raised Silvio's ire. I got a candle and easily found the mark of the bullet. It had broken a little glass vase and a taza of black basalt, exquisitely engraved with hieroglyphics, the graven lines being filled with some faint green cement and the whole thing being polished to an equal surface. The bullet, flattened against the wall, lay on the table. I then went to the broken cabinet. It was evidently a receptacle for valuable curios. For in it were some great scarabs of gold, agate, green jasper, amethyst, lapis lazuli, opal, granite, and blue-green china. None of these things happily were touched. The bullet had gone through the back of the cabinet, but no other damage, save the shattering of the glass, had been done. I could not but notice the strange arrangement of the curios on the shelf of the cabinet. All the scarabs, rings, amulets, etc., were arranged in an uneven oval round an exquisitely carved golden miniature figure of a hawk-headed god crowned with a disc and plumes. I did not wait to look further at present, for my attention was demanded by more pressing things, but I determined to make a more minute examination when I should have time. It was evident that some of the strange Egyptian smell clung to these old curios. Through the broken glass came an added whiff of spice and gum and bitumen, almost stronger than those I had already noticed as coming from others in the room. All this had really taken but a few minutes. I was surprised when my eye met through the chinks between the dark window blinds and the window cases, the brighter light of the coming dawn. When I went back to the sofa and took the tourniquet for Mrs. Grant, she went over and pulled up the blinds. It would be hard to imagine anything more ghastly than the appearance of the room with the faint gray light of early morning coming in upon it. As the windows faced north, any light that came was a fixed gray light without any of the rosy possibility of dawn which comes in the eastern quarter of heaven. The electric lights seemed dull and yet glaring, and every shadow was of a hard intensity. There was nothing of morning freshness, nothing of the softness of night. All was hard and cold and inexpressibly dreary. The face of the senseless man on the sofa seemed of a ghastly yellow, and the nurse's face had taken a suggestion of green from the shade of the lamp near her. Only Miss Trelani's face looked white, and it was of a pallor which made my heart ache. It looked as if nothing on God's earth could ever again bring back to it the color of life and happiness. It was a relief to us all when Dr. Winchester came in breathless with running. He only asked one question. Can anyone tell me anything of how this wound was gotten? On seeing the head shake which went round us under his glance, he said no more, but applied himself to his surgical work. For an instant he looked up at the nurse sitting so still, but then bent himself to his task, a grave frown contracting his brows. It was not till the arteries were tied and the wounds completely dressed that he spoke again, except, of course, when he had asked for anything to be handed to him or to be done for him. When Mr. Trelani's wounds had been thoroughly cared for, he said to Miss Trelani, What about Nurse Kennedy? She answered at once, I really do not know. I found her when I came into the room at half past two o'clock, sitting exactly as she does now. We have not moved her or changed her position. She has not waken since. Even Sergeant Dawes' pistol shots did not disturb her. Pistol shots! Have you then discovered any cause for this new outrage? The rest were silent, so I answered. We have discovered nothing. I was in the room watching with the nurse. Earlier in the evening I fancied that the mummy smells were making me drowsy, so I went out and got a respirator. I had it on when I came on duty, but it did not keep me from going to sleep. I awoke to see the room full of people, that is, Miss Trelani and Sergeant Dawes being only half-awake and still stupefied by the same scent or influence which had affected us, fancied that he saw something moving through the shadowy darkness of the room and fired twice. When I rose out of my chair, with my face swathed in the respirator, he took me for the cause of the trouble. Naturally enough he was about to fire again when I was fortunately in time to manifest my identity. Mr. Trelani was lying beside the safe, just as he was found last night, and was bleeding profusely from the new wound in his wrist. We lifted him on the sofa and made a tourniquet. That is, literally and absolutely, all that any of us know is yet. We have not touched the knife, which you see lies closed by the pool of blood. Look, I said, going over and lifting it. The point is red with the blood which has dried. Dr. Winchester stood quite still a few minutes before speaking. Then the doings of this night are quite as mysterious as those of last night. Quite, I answered. He said nothing in reply, but turning to Mr. Trelani, he said, We had better take Nurse Kennedy into another room. I suppose there is nothing to prevent it. Nothing. Please, Mrs. Grant, see that Nurse Kennedy's room is ready, and ask two of the men to come and carry her in. Mrs. Grant went out immediately and in a few minutes came back saying, The room is quite ready, and the men are here. By her direction two footmen came into the room, and lifting up the rigid body of Nurse Kennedy under the supervision of the doctor, carried her out of the room. Mr. Trelani remained with me in the sick chamber, and Mrs. Grant went with the doctor into the nurse's room. When we were alone, Mr. Trelani came over to me, and taking both my hands and hers, said, I hope you won't remember what I said. I did not mean it, and I was distraught. I did not make reply, but I held her hands and kissed them. There are different ways of kissing a lady's hands. This way was intended as homage and respect. And it was accepted as such in the high-bred, dignified way which marked Mr. Trelani's bearing and every movement. I went over to the sofa and looked down at the senseless man. The dawn had come much nearer in the last few minutes, and there was something of the clearness of day in the light. As I looked at the stern cold set face, now as white as a marble monument in the pale gray light, I could not but feel that there was some deep mystery beyond all that had happened within the last twenty-six hours. Those beatling brows screened some massive purpose, that high broad forehead held some finished train of reasoning which the broad chin and massive jaw would help to carry into effect. As I looked and wandered, there began to steal over me again that phase of wandering thought which had last night heralded the approach of sleep. I resisted it, and held myself sternly to the present. This was easier to do when Mr. Trelani came close to me, and leaning her forehead against my shoulder began to cry silently. Then all the manhood in me woke and to present purpose. It was of little use trying to speak words were inadequate to thought. But we understood each other. She did not draw away when I put arm protectingly over her shoulder as I used to do with my little sister, long ago, when in her childish trouble she would come to her big brother to be comforted. That very act or attitude of protection made me more resolute in my purpose, and seemed to clear my brain of idle, dreamy wandering in thought. With an instinct of greater protection, however, I took away my arm as I heard the doctor's footstep outside the door. When Dr. Winchester came in, he looked intently at the patient before speaking. His brows were set, and his mouth was a thin, hard line. Presently, he said, There is much in common between the sleep of your father and nurse Kennedy. Whatever influence has brought it about has probably worked the same way in both cases. In Kennedy's case the coma is less marked. I cannot but feel, however, that with her we may be able to do more and more quickly than with this patient, as our hands are not tied. I have placed her in a draft, and already she shows some signs, though very faint ones, of ordinary unconsciousness. The rigidity of her limbs is less, and her skin seems more sensitive, or, perhaps I should say less sensitive, to pain. How is it, then, I asked, that Mr. Trelawney is still in this state of insensibility, and yet, so far as we know, his body has not had such rigidity at all? That I cannot answer. The problem is one which we may solve in a few hours, or it may need a few days. But it will be a useful lesson and diagnosis to us all, and perhaps to many and many others after us. Who knows? he added, with a genuine fire of an enthusiast. As the morning wore on he flitted perpetually between the two rooms, watching anxiously over both patients. He made Mrs. Grant remain with the nurse, but either Mr. Trelawney or I, generally both of us, remained with the wounded man. We each managed, however, to get bathed and dressed. The doctor and Mrs. Grant remained with Mr. Trelawney whilst we had breakfast. Sergeant Da went off to report at Scotland Yard the progress of the night, and then to the local station to arrange for the coming of his comrade, Wright, as fixed with Superintendent Dolan. When he returned I could not but think that he had been hauled over the coals for shooting in a sick room, or perhaps for shooting at all, without certain and proper cause. His remark to me enlightened me in the matter. A good character is worth something, sir, in spite of what some of them say. See, I've still got leave to carry my revolver. That day was a long and long journey, and it was a long and anxious one. Toward nightfall Nurse Kennedy so far improved that the rigidity of her limbs entirely disappeared. She still breathed quietly and regularly, but the fixed expression of her face, though it was a calm enough expression, gave place to fallen eyelids and the negative look of sleep. Dr. Winchester had, towards evening, brought two more nurses, one of whom was to remain with Nurse Kennedy and the other to share in the watching with Miss Trelawney, who had insisted on remaining up herself. She had, in order to prepare for the duty, slept for several hours in the afternoon. We had all taken counsel together and had arranged thus for the watching in Mr. Trelawney's room. Mrs. Grant was to remain beside the patient till twelve when Miss Trelawney would relieve her. The new nurse was to sit in Miss Trelawney's room and to visit the sick chamber each quarter of an hour. The doctor would remain till twelve when I was to relieve him. One or other of the detectives was to remain with inhale of the room all night and to pay periodical visits to see that all was well. Thus the watchers would be watched, and the possibility of such events as last night, when the watchers were both overcome, would be avoided. When the sun set, a strange and grave anxiety fell on all of us, and in our separate ways we prepared for the vigil. Dr. Winchester had evidently been thinking of my respirator, for he told me he would go out and get one. Indeed he took to the idea so kindly that I persuaded Mr. Trelawney also to have one which he could put on when her time for watching came. And so the night drew on.