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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 2126 ***
+
+
+
+
+The Quest of the Sacred Slipper
+
+by Sax Rohmer
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+ CHAPTER I. THE PHANTOM SCIMITAR.
+ CHAPTER II. THE GIRL WITH THE VIOLET EYES
+ CHAPTER III. "HASSAN OF ALEPPO"
+ CHAPTER IV. THE OBLONG BOX
+ CHAPTER V. THE OCCUPANT OF THE BOX
+ CHAPTER VI. THE RING OF THE PROPHET
+ CHAPTER VII. FIRST ATTEMPT ON THE SAFE
+ CHAPTER VIII. THE VIOLET EYES AGAIN
+ CHAPTER IX. SECOND ATTEMPT ON THE SAFE
+ CHAPTER X. AT THE BRITISH ANTIQUARIAN MUSEUM
+ CHAPTER XI. THE HOLE IN THE BLIND
+ CHAPTER XII. THE HASHISHIN WATCH
+ CHAPTER XIII. THE WHITE BEAM
+ CHAPTER XIV. A SCREAM IN THE NIGHT
+ CHAPTER XV. A SHRIVELLED HAND
+ CHAPTER XVI. THE DWARF
+ CHAPTER XVII. THE WOMAN WITH THE BASKET
+ CHAPTER XVIII. WHAT CAME THROUGH THE WINDOW
+ CHAPTER XIX. A RAPPING AT MIDNIGHT
+ CHAPTER XX. THE GOLDEN PAVILION
+ CHAPTER XXI. THE BLACK TUBE
+ CHAPTER XXII. THE LIGHT OF EL-MEDINEH
+ CHAPTER XXIII. THE THREE MESSAGES
+ CHAPTER XXIV. I KEEP THE APPOINTMENT
+ CHAPTER XXV. THE WATCHER IN BANK CHAMBERS
+ CHAPTER XXVI. THE STRONG-ROOM
+ CHAPTER XXVII. THE SLIPPER
+ CHAPTER XXVIII. CARNETA
+ CHAPTER XXIX. WE MEET MR. ISAACS
+ CHAPTER XXX. AT THE GATE HOUSE
+ CHAPTER XXXI. THE POOL OF DEATH
+ CHAPTER XXXII. SIX PATCHES
+ CHAPTER XXXIII. HOW WE WERE REENFORCED
+ CHAPTER XXXIV. MY LAST MEETING WITH HASSAN OF ALEPPO
+
+
+
+
+THE QUEST OF THE SACRED SLIPPER
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+THE PHANTOM SCIMITAR
+
+
+I was not the only passenger aboard the S.S. Mandalay who perceived the
+disturbance and wondered what it might portend and from whence proceed.
+A goodly number of passengers were joining the ship at Port Said. I was
+lounging against the rail, pipe in mouth, lazily wondering, with a
+large vagueness.
+
+What a heterogeneous rabble it was!—a brightly coloured rabble, but the
+colours all were dirty, like the town and the canal. Only the sky was
+clean; the sky and the hard, merciless sunlight which spared nothing of
+the uncleanness, and defied one even to think of the term dear to
+tourists, “picturesque.” I was in that kind of mood. All the natives
+appeared to be pockmarked; all the Europeans greasy with perspiration.
+
+But what was the stir about?
+
+I turned to the dark, bespectacled young man who leaned upon the rail
+beside me. From the first I had taken to Mr. Ahmad Ahmadeen.
+
+“There is some kind of undercurrent of excitement among the natives,” I
+said, “a sort of subdued Greek chorus is audible. What’s it all about?”
+
+Mr. Ahmadeen smiled. After a gaunt fashion, he was a handsome man and
+had a pleasant smile.
+
+“Probably,” he replied, “some local celebrity is joining the ship.”
+
+I stared at him curiously.
+
+“Any idea who he is?” (The soul of the copyhunter is a restless soul.)
+
+A group of men dressed in semi-European fashion—that is, in European
+fashion save for their turbans, which were green—passed close to us
+along the deck.
+
+Ahmadeen appeared not to have heard the question.
+
+The disturbance, which could only be defined as a subdued uproar, but
+could be traced to no particular individual or group, grew momentarily
+louder—and died away. It was only when it had completely ceased that
+one realized how pronounced it had been—how altogether peculiar,
+secret; like that incomprehensible murmuring in a bazaar when, unknown
+to the insular visitor, a reputed saint is present.
+
+Then it happened; the inexplicable incident which, though I knew it
+not, heralded the coming of strange things, and the dawn of a new
+power; which should set up its secret standards in England, which
+should flood Europe and the civilized world with wonder.
+
+A shrill scream marked the overture—a scream of fear and of pain, which
+dropped to a groan, and moaned out into the silence of which it was the
+cause.
+
+“My God! what’s that?”
+
+I started forward. There was a general crowding rush, and a darkly
+tanned and bearded man came on board, carrying a brown leather case.
+Behind him surged those who bore the victim.
+
+“It’s one of the lascars!”
+
+“No—an Egyptian!”
+
+“It was a porter—?”
+
+“What is it—?”
+
+“Someone been stabbed!”
+
+“Where’s the doctor?”
+
+“Stand away there, if you please!”
+
+That was a ship’s officer; and the voice of authority served to quell
+the disturbance. Through a lane walled with craning heads they bore the
+insensible man. Ahmadeen was at my elbow.
+
+“A Copt,” he said softly. “Poor devil!” I turned to him. There was a
+queer expression on his lean, clean-shaven, bronze face.
+
+“Good God!” I said. “His hand has been cut off!”
+
+That was the fact of the matter. And no one knew who was responsible
+for the atrocity. And no one knew what had become of the severed hand!
+I wasted not a moment in linking up the story. The pressman within me
+acted automatically.
+
+“The gentleman just come aboard, sir,” said a steward, “is Professor
+Deeping. The poor beggar who was assaulted was carrying some of the
+Professor’s baggage.” The whole incident struck me as most odd. There
+was an idea lurking in my mind that something else—something more—lay
+behind all this. With impatience I awaited the time when the injured
+man, having received medical attention, was conveyed ashore, and
+Professor Deeping reappeared. To the celebrated traveller and Oriental
+scholar I introduced myself.
+
+He was singularly reticent.
+
+“I was unable to see what took place, Mr. Cavanagh,” he said. “The poor
+fellow was behind me, for I had stepped from the boat ahead of him. I
+had just taken a bag from his hand, but he was carrying another,
+heavier one. It is a clean cut, like that of a scimitar. I have seen
+very similar wounds in the cases of men who have suffered the old
+Moslem penalty for theft.”
+
+Nothing further had come to light when the Mandalay left, but I found
+new matter for curiosity in the behaviour of the Moslem party who had
+come on board at Port Said.
+
+In conversation with Mr. Bell, the chief officer, I learned that the
+supposed leader of the party was one, Mr. Azraeel. “Obviously,” said
+Bell, “not his real name or not all it. I don’t suppose they’ll show
+themselves on deck; they’ve got their own servants with them, and seem
+to be people of consequence.”
+
+This conversation was interrupted, but I found my unseen fellow
+voyagers peculiarly interesting and pursued inquiries in other
+directions. I saw members of the distinguished travellers’ retinue
+going about their duties, but never obtained a glimpse of Mr. Azraeel
+nor of any of his green-turbaned companions.
+
+“Who is Mr. Azraeel?” I asked Ahmadeen.
+
+“I cannot say,” replied the Egyptian, and abruptly changed the subject.
+
+Some curious aroma of mystery floated about the ship. Ahmadeen conveyed
+to me the idea that he was concealing something. Then, one night, Mr.
+Bell invited me to step forward with him.
+
+“Listen,” he said.
+
+From somewhere in the fo’c’sle proceeded low chanting.
+
+“Hear it?”
+
+“Yes. What the devil is it?”
+
+“It’s the lascars,” said Bell. “They have been behaving in a most
+unusual manner ever since the mysterious Mr. Azraeel joined us. I may
+be wrong in associating the two things, but I shan’t be sorry to see
+the last of our mysterious passengers.”
+
+The next happening on board the Mandalay which I have to record was the
+attempt to break open the door of Professor Deeping’s stateroom. Except
+when he was actually within, the Professor left his room door
+religiously locked.
+
+He made light of the affair, but later took me aside and told me a
+curious story of an apparition which had appeared to him.
+
+“It was a crescent of light,” he said, “and it glittered through the
+darkness there to the left as I lay in my berth.”
+
+“A reflection from something on the deck?”
+
+Deeping smiled, uneasily.
+
+“Possibly,” he replied; “but it was very sharply defined. Like the
+blade of a scimitar,” he added.
+
+I stared at him, my curiosity keenly aroused. “Does any explanation
+suggest itself to you?” I said.
+
+“Well,” he confessed, “I have a theory, I will admit; but it is rather
+going back to the Middle Ages. You see, I have lived in the East a lot;
+perhaps I have assimilated some of their superstitions.”
+
+He was oddly reticent, as ever. I felt convinced that he was keeping
+something back. I could not stifle the impression that the clue to
+these mysteries lay somewhere around the invisible Mohammedan party.
+
+“Do you know,” said Bell to me, one morning, “this trip’s giving me the
+creeps. I believe the damned ship’s haunted! Three bells in the middle
+watch last night, I’ll swear I saw some black animal crawling along the
+deck, in the direction of the forward companion-way.”
+
+“Cat?” I suggested.
+
+“Nothing like it,” said Mr. Bell. “Mr. Cavanagh, it was some uncanny
+thing! I’m afraid I can’t explain quite what I mean, but it was
+something I wanted to shoot!”
+
+“Where did it go?”
+
+The chief officer shrugged his shoulders. “Just vanished,” he said. “I
+hope I don’t see it again.”
+
+At Tilbury the Mohammedan party went ashore in a body. Among them were
+veiled women. They contrived so to surround a central figure that I
+entirely failed to get a glimpse of the mysterious Mr. Azraeel.
+Ahmadeen was standing close by the companion-way, and I had a momentary
+impression that one of the women slipped something into his hand.
+Certainly, he started; and his dusky face seemed to pale.
+
+Then a deck steward came out of Deeping’s stateroom, carrying the brown
+bag which the Professor had brought aboard at Port Said. Deeping’s
+voice came:
+
+“Hi, my man! Let me take that bag!”
+
+The bag changed hands. Five minutes later, as I was preparing to go
+ashore, arose a horrid scream above the berthing clamour. Those
+passengers yet aboard made in the direction from which the scream had
+proceeded.
+
+A steward—the one to whom Professor Deeping had spoken—lay writhing at
+the foot of the stairs leading to the saloon-deck. His right hand had
+been severed above the wrist!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+THE GIRL WITH THE VIOLET EYES
+
+
+During the next day or two my mind constantly reverted to the incidents
+of the voyage home. I was perfectly convinced that the curtain had been
+partially raised upon some fantasy in which Professor Deeping figured.
+
+But I had seen no more of Deeping nor had I heard from him, when
+abruptly I found myself plunged again into the very vortex of his
+troubled affairs. I was half way through a long article, I remember,
+upon the mystery of the outrage at the docks. The poor steward whose
+hand had been severed lay in a precarious condition, but the police had
+utterly failed to trace the culprit.
+
+I had laid down my pen to relight my pipe (the hour was about ten at
+night) when a faint sound from the direction of the outside door
+attracted my attention. Something had been thrust through the
+letter-box.
+
+“A circular,” I thought, when the bell rang loudly, imperatively.
+
+I went to the door. A square envelope lay upon the mat—a curious
+envelope, pale amethyst in colour. Picking it up, I found it to bear my
+name—written simply—
+
+“Mr. Cavanagh.”
+
+Tearing it open I glanced at the contents. I threw open the door. No
+one was visible upon the landing, but when I leaned over the banister a
+white-clad figure was crossing the hall, below.
+
+Without hesitation, hatless, I raced down the stairs. As I crossed the
+dimly lighted hall and came out into the peaceful twilight of the
+court, my elusive visitor glided under the archway opposite.
+
+Just where the dark and narrow passage opened on to Fleet Street I
+overtook her—a girl closely veiled and wrapped in a long coat of white
+ermine.
+
+“Madam,” I said.
+
+She turned affrightedly.
+
+“Please do not detain me!” Her accent was puzzling, but pleasing. She
+glanced apprehensively about her.
+
+You have seen the moon through a mist?—and known it for what it was in
+spite of its veiling? So, now, through the cloudy folds of the veil, I
+saw the stranger’s eyes, and knew them for the most beautiful eyes I
+had ever seen, had ever dreamt of.
+
+“But you must explain the meaning of your note!”
+
+“I cannot! I cannot! Please do not ask me!”
+
+She was breathless from her flight and seemed to be trembling. From
+behind the cloud her eyes shone brilliantly, mysteriously.
+
+I was sorely puzzled. The whole incident was bizarre—indeed, it had in
+it something of the uncanny. Yet I could not detain the girl against
+her will. That she went in apprehension of something, of someone, was
+evident.
+
+Past the head of the passage surged the noisy realities of Fleet
+Street. There were men there in quest of news; men who would have given
+much for such a story as this in which I was becoming entangled. Yet a
+story more tantalizingly incomplete could not well be imagined.
+
+I knew that I stood upon the margin of an arena wherein strange
+adversaries warred to a strange end. But a mist was over all. Here,
+beside me, was one who could disperse the mist—and would not. Her one
+anxiety seemed to be to escape.
+
+Suddenly she raised her veil; and I looked fully into the only really
+violet eyes I had ever beheld. Mentally, I started. For the face framed
+in the snowy fur was the most bewitchingly lovely imaginable. One
+rebellious lock of wonderful hair swept across the white brow. It was
+brown hair, with an incomprehensible sheen in the high lights that
+suggested the heart of a blood-red rose.
+
+“Oh,” she cried, “promise me that you will never breathe a word to any
+one about my visit!”
+
+“I promise willingly,” I said; “but can you give me no hint?”
+
+“Honestly, truly, I cannot, dare not, say more! Only promise that you
+will do as I ask!”
+
+Since I could perceive no alternative—
+
+“I will do so,” I replied.
+
+“Thank you—oh, thank you!” she said; and dropping her veil again she
+walked rapidly away from me, whispering, “I rely upon you. Do not fail
+me. Good-bye!”
+
+Her conspicuous white figure joined the hurrying throngs upon the
+pavement beyond. My curiosity brooked no restraint. I hurried to the
+end of the courtway. She was crossing the road. From the shadows where
+he had lurked, a man came forward to meet her. A vehicle obstructed the
+view ere I could confirm my impression; and when it had passed, neither
+my lovely visitor nor her companion were anywhere in sight.
+
+But, unless some accident of light and shade had deceived me, the man
+who had waited was Ahmad Ahmadeen!
+
+It seemed that some astral sluice-gate was raised; a dreadful sense of
+foreboding for the first time flooded my mind. Whilst the girl had
+stood before me it had been different—the mysterious charm of her
+personality had swamped all else. But now, the messenger gone, it was
+the purport of her message which assumed supreme significance.
+
+Written in odd, square handwriting upon the pale amethyst paper, this
+was the message—
+
+Prevail upon Professor Deeping to place what he has in the brown case
+in the porch of his house to-night. If he fails to do so, no power on
+earth can save him from the Scimitar of Hassan.
+
+A FRIEND.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+“HASSAN OF ALEPPO”
+
+
+Professor Deeping’s number was in the telephone directory, therefore,
+on returning to my room, where there still lingered the faint perfume
+of my late visitor’s presence, I asked for his number. He proved to be
+at home.
+
+“Strange you should ring me up, Cavanagh,” he said; “for I was about to
+ring you up.”
+
+“First,” I replied, “listen to the contents of an anonymous letter
+which I have received.”
+
+(I remembered, and only just in time, my promise to the veiled
+messenger.)
+
+“To me,” I added, having read him the note, “it seems to mean nothing.
+I take it that you understand better than I do.”
+
+“I understand very well, Cavanagh!” he replied. “You will recall my
+story of the scimitar which flashed before me in the darkness of my
+stateroom on the Mandalay? Well, I have seen it again! I am not an
+imaginative man: I had always believed myself to possess the scientific
+mind; but I can no longer doubt that I am the object of a pursuit which
+commenced in Mecca! The happenings on the steamer prepared me for this,
+in a degree. When the man lost his hand at Port Said I doubted. I had
+supposed the days of such things past. The attempt to break into my
+stateroom even left me still uncertain. But the outrage upon the
+steward at the docks removed all further doubt. I perceived that the
+contents of a certain brown leather case were the objective of the
+crimes.”
+
+I listened in growing wonder.
+
+“It was not necessary in order to further the plan of stealing the bag
+that the hands were severed,” resumed the Professor. “In fact, as was
+rendered evident by the case of the steward, this was a penalty visited
+upon any one who touched it! You are thinking of my own immunity?”
+
+“I am!”
+
+“This is attributable to two things. Those who sought to recover what I
+had in the case feared that my death en route might result in its being
+lost to them for ever. They awaited a suitable opportunity. They had
+designed to take it at Port Said certainly, I think; but the bag was
+too large to be readily concealed, and, after the outrage, might have
+led to the discovery of the culprit. In the second place, they are
+uncertain of my faith. I have long passed for a true Believer in the
+East! As a Moslem I visited Mecca—”
+
+“You visited Mecca!”
+
+“I had just returned from the hadj when I joined the Mandalay at Port
+Said! My death, however, has been determined upon, whether I be Moslem
+or Christian!”
+
+“Why?”
+
+“Because,” came the Professor’s harsh voice over the telephone, “of the
+contents of the brown leather case! I will not divulge to you now the
+nature of these contents; to know might endanger you. But the case is
+locked in my safe here, and the key, together with a full statement of
+the true facts of the matter, is hidden behind the first edition copy
+of my book ‘Assyrian Mythology,’ in the smaller bookcase—”
+
+“Why do you tell me all this?” I interrupted.
+
+He laughed harshly.
+
+“The identity of my pursuer has just dawned upon me,” he said. “I know
+that my life is in real danger. I would give up what is demanded of me,
+but I believe its possession to be my strongest safeguard.”
+
+Mystery upon mystery! I seemed to be getting no nearer to the heart of
+this maze. What in heaven’s name did it all mean? Suddenly an idea
+struck me.
+
+“Is our late fellow passenger, Mr. Ahmadeen, connected with the
+matter?” I asked.
+
+“In no way,” replied Deeping earnestly. “Mr. Ahmadeen is, I believe, a
+person of some consequence in the Moslem world; but I have nothing to
+fear from him.”
+
+“What steps have you taken to protect yourself?”
+
+Again the short laugh reached my ears.
+
+“I’m afraid long residence in the East has rendered me something of a
+fatalist, Cavanagh! Beyond keeping my door locked, I have taken no
+steps whatever. I fear I am quite accessible!”
+
+A while longer we talked; and with every word the conviction was more
+strongly borne in upon me that some uncanny menace threatened the
+peace, perhaps the life, of Professor Deeping.
+
+I had hung up the receiver scarce a moment when, acting upon a sudden
+determination, I called up New Scotland Yard, and asked for
+Detective-Inspector Bristol, whom I knew well. A few words were
+sufficient keenly to arouse his curiosity, and he announced his
+intention of calling upon me immediately. He was in charge of the case
+of the severed hand.
+
+I made no attempt to resume work in the interval preceding his arrival.
+I had not long to wait, however, ere Bristol was ringing my bell; and I
+hurried to the door, only too glad to confide in one so well equipped
+to analyze my doubts and fears. For Bristol is no ordinary policeman,
+but a trained observer, who, when I first made his acquaintance,
+completely upset my ideas upon the mental limitations of the official
+detective force.
+
+In appearance Bristol suggests an Anglo-Indian officer, and at the time
+of which I write he had recently returned from Jamaica and his face was
+as bronzed as a sailor’s. One would never take Bristol for a detective.
+As he seated himself in the armchair, without preamble I plunged into
+my story. He listened gravely.
+
+“What sort of house is Professor Deeping’s?” he asked suddenly.
+
+“I have no idea,” I replied, “beyond the fact that it is somewhere in
+Dulwich.”
+
+“May I use your telephone?”
+
+“Certainly.”
+
+Very quickly Bristol got into communication with the superintendent of
+P Division. A brief delay, and the man came to the telephone whose beat
+included the road wherein Professor Deeping’s house was situated.
+
+“Why!” said Bristol, hanging up the receiver after making a number of
+inquiries, “it’s a sort of rambling cottage in extensive grounds.
+There’s only one servant, a manservant, and he sleeps in a detached
+lodge. If the Professor is really in danger of attack he could not well
+have chosen a more likely residence for the purpose!”
+
+“What shall you do? What do you make of it all?”
+
+“As I see the case,” he said slowly, “it stands something like this:
+Professor Deeping has...”
+
+The telephone bell began to ring.
+
+I took up the receiver.
+
+“Hullo! Hullo.”
+
+“Cavanagh!—is that Cavanagh?”
+
+“Yes! yes! who is that?”
+
+“Deeping! I have rung up the police, and they are sending some one. But
+I wish...”
+
+His voice trailed off. The sound of a confused and singular uproar came
+to me.
+
+“Hullo!” I cried. “Hullo!”
+
+A shriek—a deathful, horrifying cry—and a distant babbling alone
+answered me. There was a crash. Clearly, Deeping had dropped the
+receiver. I suppose my face blanched.
+
+“What is it?” asked Bristol anxiously.
+
+“God knows what it is!” I said. “Deeping has met with some mishap—”
+
+When, over the wires—
+
+“Hassan of Aleppo!” came a dying whisper. “Hassan ... of Aleppo...”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+THE OBLONG BOX
+
+
+“You had better wait for us,” said Bristol to the taxi-man.
+
+“Very good, sir. But I shan’t be able to take you further back than the
+Brixton Garage. You can get another cab there, though.”
+
+A clock chimed out—an old-world chime in keeping with the loneliness,
+the curiously remote loneliness, of the locality. Less than five miles
+from St. Paul’s are spots whereto, with the persistence of Damascus
+attar, clings the aroma of former days. This iron gateway fronting the
+old chapel was such a spot.
+
+Just within stood a plain-clothes man, who saluted my companion
+respectfully.
+
+“Professor Deeping,” I began.
+
+The man, with a simple gesture, conveyed the dreadful news.
+
+“Dead! dead!” I cried incredulously.
+
+He glanced at Bristol.
+
+“The most mysterious case I have ever had anything to do with, sir,” he
+said.
+
+The power of speech seemed to desert me. It was unthinkable that
+Deeping, with whom I had been speaking less than an hour ago, should
+now be no more; that some malign agency should thus murderously have
+thrust him into the great borderland.
+
+In that kind of silence which seems to be peopled with whispering
+spirits we strode forward along the elm avenue. It was very dark where
+the moon failed to penetrate. The house, low and rambling, came into
+view, its facade bathed in silver light. Two of the visible windows
+were illuminated. A sort of loggia ran along one side.
+
+On our left, as we made for this, lay a black ocean of shrubbery. It
+intruded, raggedly, upon the weed-grown path, for neglect was the
+keynote of the place.
+
+We entered the cottage, crossed the tiny lobby, and came to the study.
+A man, evidently Deeping’s servant, was sitting in a chair by the door,
+his head sunken in his hands. He looked up, haggard-faced.
+
+“My God! my God!” he groaned. “He was locked in, gentlemen! He was
+locked in; and yet something murdered him!”
+
+“What do you mean?” said Bristol. “Where were you?”
+
+“I was away on an errand, sir. When I returned, the police were
+knocking the door down. He was locked in!”
+
+We passed him, entering the study.
+
+It was a museum-like room, lighted by a lamp on the littered table. At
+first glance it looked as though some wild thing had run amok there.
+The disorder was indescribable.
+
+“Touched nothing, of course?” asked Bristol sharply of the officer on
+duty.
+
+“Nothing, sir. It’s just as we found it when we forced the door.”
+
+“Why did you force the door?”
+
+“He rung us up at the station and said that something or somebody had
+got into the house. It was evident the poor gentleman’s nerve had
+broken down, sir. He said he was locked in his study. When we arrived
+it was all in darkness—but we thought we heard sounds in here.”
+
+“What sort of sounds?”
+
+“Something crawling about!”
+
+Bristol turned.
+
+“Key is in the lock on the inside of the door,” he said. “Is that where
+you found it?”
+
+“Yes, sir!”
+
+He looked across to where the brass knob of a safe gleamed dully.
+
+“Safe locked?”
+
+“Yes, sir.”
+
+Professor Deeping lay half under the table, a spectacle so ghastly that
+I shall not attempt to describe it.
+
+“Merciful heavens!” whispered Bristol. “He’s nearly decapitated!”
+
+I clutched dizzily at the mantelpiece. It was all so utterly,
+incredibly horrible. How had Deeping met his death? The windows both
+were latched and the door had been locked from within!
+
+“You searched for the murderer, of course?” asked Bristol.
+
+“You can see, sir,” replied the officer, “that there isn’t a spot in
+the room where a man could hide! And there was nobody in here when we
+forced the door!”
+
+“Why!” cried my companion suddenly. “The Professor has a chisel in his
+hand!”
+
+“Yes. I think he must have been trying to prise open that box yonder
+when he was attacked.”
+
+Bristol and I looked, together, at an oblong box which lay upon the
+floor near the murdered man. It was a kind of small packing case,
+addressed to Professor Deeping, and evidently had not been opened.
+
+“When did this arrive?” asked Bristol. Lester, the Professor’s man, who
+had entered the room, replied shakily—
+
+“It came by carrier, sir, just before I went out.”
+
+“Was he expecting it?”
+
+“I don’t think so.”
+
+Inspector Bristol and the officer dragged the box fully into the light.
+It was some three feet long by one foot square, and solidly
+constructed.
+
+“It is perfectly evident,” remarked Bristol, “that the murderer stayed
+to search for—”
+
+“The key of the safe!”
+
+“Exactly. If the men really heard sounds here, it would appear that the
+assassin was still searching at that time.”
+
+“I assure you,” the officer interrupted, “that there was no living
+thing in the room when we entered.”
+
+Bristol and I looked at one another in horrified wonder.
+
+“It’s incomprehensible!” he said.
+
+“See if the key is in the place mentioned by the Professor, Mr.
+Cavanagh, whilst I break the box.”
+
+I went to a great, open bookcase, which the frantic searcher seemed to
+have overlooked. Removing the bulky “Assyrian Mythology,” there, behind
+the volume, lay an envelope, containing a key, and a short letter. Not
+caring to approach more closely to the table and to that which lay
+beneath it, I was peering at the small writing, in the semi-gloom by
+the bookcase, when Bristol cried—
+
+“This box is unopenable by ordinary means! I shall have to smash it!”
+
+At his words, I joined him where he knelt on the floor. Mysteriously,
+the chest had defied all his efforts.
+
+“There’s a pick-axe in the garden,” volunteered Lester. “Shall I bring
+it?”
+
+“Yes.”
+
+The man ran off.
+
+“I see the key is safe,” said Bristol. “Possibly the letter may throw
+some light upon all this.”
+
+“Let us hope so,” I replied. “You might read it.”
+
+He took the letter from my hand, stepped up to the table, and by the
+light of the lamp read as follows—
+
+
+My Dear Cavanagh,—
+
+It has now become apparent to me that my life is in imminent danger.
+You know of the inexplicable outrages which marked my homeward journey,
+and if this letter come to your hand it will be because these have
+culminated in my death.
+
+The idea of a pursuing scimitar is not new to me. This phenomenon,
+which I have now witnessed three times, is fairly easy of explanation,
+but its significance is singular. It is said to be one of the devices
+whereby the Hashishin warn those whom they have marked down for
+destruction, and is called, in the East, “The Scimitar of Hassan.”
+
+The Hashishin were the members of a Moslem secret society, founded in
+1090 by one Hassan of Khorassan. There is a persistent tradition in
+parts of the Orient that this sect still flourishes in Assyria, under
+the rule of a certain Hassan of Aleppo, the Sheikh-al-jebal, or supreme
+lord of the Hashishin. My careful inquiries, however, at the time that
+I was preparing matter for my “Assyrian Mythology,” failed to discover
+any trace of such a person or such a group.
+
+I accordingly assumed Hassan to be a myth—a first cousin to the ginn. I
+was wrong. He exists. And by my supremely rash act I have incurred his
+vengeance, for Hassan of Aleppo is the self-appointed guardian of the
+traditions and relics of Mohammed. And I have Stolen one of the holy
+slippers of the Prophet!
+
+He, with some of his servants, has followed me from Mecca to England.
+My precautions have enabled me to retain the relic, but you have seen
+what fate befell all those others who even touched the receptacle
+containing it.
+
+If I fall a victim to the Hashishin, I am uncertain how you, as my
+confidant, will fare. Therefore I have locked the slipper in my safe
+and to you entrust the key. I append particulars of the lock
+combination; but I warn you—do not open the safe. If their wrath be
+visited upon you, your possession of the key may prove a safeguard.
+
+Take the copy of “Assyrian Mythology.” You will find in it all that I
+learned respecting the Hashishin. If I am doomed to be assassinated, it
+may aid you; if not in avenging me, in saving others from my fate. I
+fear I shall never see you again. A cloud of horror settles upon me
+like a pall. Do not touch the slipper, nor the case containing it.
+
+
+EDWARD DEEPING.
+
+
+“It is almost incredible!” I said hoarsely.
+
+Bristol returned the letter to me without a word, and turning to
+Lester, who had reentered carrying a heavy pick-axe, he attacked the
+oblong box with savage energy.
+
+Through the house of death the sound of the blows echoed and rang with
+a sort of sacrilegious mockery. The box fell to pieces.
+
+“My God! look, sir!”
+
+Lester was the trembling speaker.
+
+The box, I have said, was but three feet long by one foot square, and
+had clearly defied poor Deeping’s efforts to open it. But a
+crescent-shaped knife, wet with blood, lay within!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+THE OCCUPANT OF THE BOX
+
+
+Dimly to my ears came the ceaseless murmur of London. The night now was
+far advanced, and not a sound disturbed the silence of the court below
+my windows.
+
+Professor Deeping’s “Assyrian Mythology” lay open before me, beside it
+my notebook. A coal dropped from the fire, and I half started up out of
+my chair. My nerves were all awry, and I had more than my horrible
+memories of the murdered man to thank for it. Let me explain what I
+mean.
+
+When, after assisting, or endeavouring to assist, Bristol at his
+elaborate inquiries, I had at last returned to my chambers, I had
+become the victim of a singular delusion—though one common enough in
+the case of persons whose nerves are overwrought. I had thought myself
+followed.
+
+During the latter part of my journey I found myself constantly looking
+from the little window at the rear of the cab. I had an impression that
+some vehicle was tracking us. Then, when I discharged the man and
+walked up the narrow passage to the court, it was fear of a skulking
+form that dodged from shadow to shadow which obsessed me.
+
+Finally, as I entered the hall and mounted the darkened stair, from the
+first landing I glanced down into the black well beneath. Blazing
+yellow eyes, I thought, looked up at me!
+
+I will confess that I leapt up the remaining flight of stairs to my
+door, and, safely within, found myself trembling as if with a palsy.
+
+When I sat down to write (for sleep was an impossible proposition) I
+placed my revolver upon the table beside me. I cannot say why. It
+afforded me some sense of protection, I suppose. My conclusions, thus
+far, amounted to the following—
+
+The apparition of the phantom scimitar was due to the presence of
+someone who, by means of the moonlight, or of artificial light, cast a
+reflection of such a weapon as that found in the oblong chest upon the
+wall of a darkened apartment—as, Deeping’s stateroom on the Mandalay,
+his study, etc.
+
+A group of highly efficient assassins, evidently Moslem fanatics, who
+might or might not be of the ancient order of the Hashishin, had
+pursued the stolen slipper to England. They had severed any hand, other
+than that of a Believer, which had touched the case containing it. (The
+Coptic porter was a Christian.)
+
+Uncertain, possibly, of Deeping’s faith, or fearful of endangering the
+success of their efforts by an outrage upon him en route, they had
+refrained from this until his arrival at his house. He had been warned
+of his impending end by Ahmad Ahmadeen.
+
+Who was Ahmadeen? And who was his beautiful associate? I found myself
+unable, at present, to answer either of those questions. In order to
+gain access to Professor Deeping, who so carefully secluded himself, a
+box had been sent to him by ordinary carrier. (As I sat at my table,
+Scotland Yard was busy endeavouring to trace the sender.) Respecting
+this box we had made an extraordinary discovery.
+
+It was of the kind used by Eastern conjurors for what is generally
+known as “the Box Trick.” That is to say, it could only be opened
+(short of smashing it) from the inside! You will remember what we found
+within it? Consider this with the new fact, above, and to what
+conclusion do you come?
+
+Something (it is not possible to speak of someone in connection with so
+small a box) had been concealed inside, and had killed Professor
+Deeping whilst he was actually engaged in endeavouring to force it
+open. This inconceivable creature had then searched the study for the
+slipper—or for the key of the safe. Interrupted and trapped by the
+arrival of the police, the creature had returned to the box, re-closed
+it, and had actually been there when the study was searched!
+
+For a creature so small as the murderous thing in the box to slip out
+during the confusion, and at some time prior to Bristol’s arrival, was
+no difficult matter. The inspector and I were certain that these were
+the facts.
+
+But what was this creature?
+
+I turned to the chapter in “Assyrian Mythology”—“The Tradition of the
+Hashishin.”
+
+The legends which the late Professor Deeping had collected relative to
+this sect of religious murderers were truly extraordinary. Of the
+cult’s extinction at the time of writing he was clearly certain, but he
+referred to the popular belief, or Moslem legend, that, since Hassan of
+Khorassan, there had always been a Sheikh-al-jebal, and that a dreadful
+being known as Hassan of Aleppo was the present holder of the title.
+
+He referred to the fact that De Sacy has shown the word Assassin to be
+derived from Hashishin, and quoted El-Idrisi to the same end. The
+Hashishin performed their murderous feats under the influence of
+hashish, or Indian hemp; and during the state of ecstasy so induced,
+according to Deeping, they acquired powers almost superhuman. I read
+how they could scale sheer precipices, pass fearlessly along narrow
+ledges which would scarce afford foothold for a rat, cast themselves
+from great heights unscathed, and track one marked for death in such a
+manner as to remain unseen not only by the victim but by others about
+him. At this point of my studies I started, in a sudden nervous panic,
+and laid my hand upon my revolver.
+
+I thought of the eyes which had seemed to look up from the black well
+of the staircase—I thought of the horrible end of this man whose book
+lay upon the table ... and I thought I heard a faint sound outside my
+study door!
+
+The key of Deeping’s safe, and his letter to me, lay close by my hand.
+I slipped them into a drawer and locked it. With every nerve, it
+seemed, strung up almost to snapping point, I mechanically pursued my
+reading.
+
+“At the time of the Crusades,” wrote Deeping, “there was a story
+current of this awful Order which I propose to recount. It is one of
+the most persistent dealing with the Hashishin, and is related to-day
+of the apparently mythical Hassan of Aleppo. I am disposed to believe
+that at one time it had a solid foundation, for a similar practice was
+common in Ancient Egypt and is mentioned by Georg Ebers.”
+
+My door began very slowly to open!
+
+Merciful God! What was coming into the room!
+
+So very slowly, so gently, nay, all but imperceptibly, did it move,
+that had my nerves been less keenly attuned I doubt not I should have
+remained unaware of the happening. Frozen with horror, I sat and
+watched. Yet my mental condition was a singular one.
+
+My direct gaze never quitted the door, but in some strange fashion I
+saw the words of the next paragraph upon the page before me!
+
+“As making peculiarly efficient assassins, when under the influence of
+the drug, and as being capable of concealing themselves where a normal
+man could not fail to be detected—”
+
+(At this moment I remembered that my bathroom window was open, and that
+the waste-pipe passed down the exterior wall.)
+
+“—the Sheikh-al-jebal took young boys of a certain desert tribe, and
+for eight hours of every day, until their puberty, confined them in a
+wooden frame—”
+
+What looked like a reed was slowly inserted through the opening between
+door and doorpost! It was brought gradually around ... until it pointed
+directly toward me!
+
+I seemed to put forth a mighty mental effort, shaking off the icy hand
+of fear which held me inactive in my chair. A saving instinct warned
+me—and I ducked my head.
+
+Something whirred past me and struck the wall behind.
+
+Revolver in hand, I leapt across the room, dashed the door open, and
+fired blindly—again—and again—and again—down the passage.
+
+And in the brief gleams I saw it!
+
+I cannot call it man, but I saw the thing which, I doubt not, had
+killed poor Deeping with the crescent-knife and had propelled a
+poison-dart at me.
+
+It was a tiny dwarf! Neither within nor without a freak exhibition had
+I seen so small a human being! A kind of supernatural dread gripped me
+by the throat at sight of it. As it turned with animal activity and
+bounded into my bathroom, I caught a three-quarter view of the
+creature’s swollen, incredible head—which was nearly as large as that
+of a normal man!
+
+Never while my mind serves me can I forget that yellow, grinning face
+and those canine fangs—the tigerish, blazing eyes—set in the great,
+misshapen head upon the tiny, agile body.
+
+Wildly, I fired again. I hurled myself forward and dashed into the
+room.
+
+Like nothing so much as a cat, the gleaming body (the dwarf was but
+scantily clothed) streaked through the open window!
+
+Certain death, I thought, must be his lot upon the stones of the court
+far below. I ran and looked down, shaking in every limb, my mind filled
+with a loathing terror unlike anything I had ever known.
+
+Brilliant moonlight flooded the pavement beneath; for twenty yards to
+left and right every stone was visible.
+
+The court was empty!
+
+Human, homely London moved and wrought intimately about me; but there,
+at sight of the empty court below, a great loneliness swept down like a
+mantle—a clammy mantle of the fabric of dread. I stood remote from my
+fellows, in an evil world peopled with the creatures of Hassan of
+Aleppo.
+
+Moved by some instinct, as that of a frightened child, I dropped to my
+knees and buried my face in trembling hands.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+THE RING OF THE PROPHET
+
+
+“There is no doubt,” said Mr. Rawson, “that great personal danger
+attaches to any contact with this relic. It is the first time I have
+been concerned with anything of the kind.”
+
+Mr. Bristol, of Scotland Yard, standing stiffly military by the window,
+looked across at the gray-haired solicitor. We were all silent for a
+few moments.
+
+“My late client’s wishes,” continued Mr. Rawson, “are explicit. His
+last instructions, evidently written but a short time prior to his
+death, advise me that the holy slipper of the Prophet is contained in
+the locked safe at his house in Dulwich. He was clearly of opinion that
+you, Mr. Cavanagh, would incur risk—great risk—from your possession of
+the key. Since attempts have been made upon you, murderous attempts,
+the late Professor Deeping, my unfortunate client, evidently was not in
+error.”
+
+“Mysterious outrages,” said Bristol, “have marked the progress of the
+stolen slipper from Mecca almost to London.”
+
+“I understand,” interrupted the solicitor, “that a fanatic known as
+Hassan of Aleppo seeks to restore the relic to its former
+resting-place.”
+
+“That is so.”
+
+“Exactly; and it accounts for the Professor’s wish that the safe should
+not be touched by any one but a Believer—and for his instructions that
+its removal to the Antiquarian Museum and the placing of the slipper
+within that institution be undertaken by a Moslem or Moslems.”
+
+Bristol frowned.
+
+“Any one who has touched the receptacle containing the thing,” he said,
+“has either been mutilated or murdered. I want to apprehend the authors
+of those outrages, but I fail to see why the slipper should be put on
+exhibition. Other crimes are sure to follow.”
+
+“I can only pursue my instructions,” said Mr. Rawson dryly. “They are,
+that the work be done in such a manner as to expose all concerned to a
+minimum of risk from these mysterious people; that if possible a Moslem
+be employed for the purpose; and that Mr. Cavanagh, here, shall always
+hold the key or keys to the case in the museum containing the slipper.
+Will you undertake to look for some—Eastern workmen, Mr. Bristol? In
+the course of your inquiries you may possibly come across such a
+person.”
+
+“I can try,” replied Bristol. “Meanwhile, I take it, the safe must
+remain at Dulwich?”
+
+“Certainly. It should be guarded.”
+
+“We are guarding it and shall guard it,” Bristol assured him. “I only
+hope we catch someone trying to get at it!”
+
+Shortly afterward Bristol and I left the office, and, his duties taking
+him to Scotland Yard, I returned to my chambers to survey the position
+in which I now found myself. Indeed, it was a strange one enough,
+showing how great things have small beginnings; for, as a result of a
+steamer acquaintance I found myself involved in a dark business worthy
+of the Middle Ages. That Professor Deeping should have stolen one of
+the holy slippers of Mohammed was no affair of mine, and that an awful
+being known as Hassan of Aleppo should have pursued it did not properly
+enter into my concerns; yet now, with a group of Eastern fanatics at
+large in England, I was become, in a sense, the custodian of the relic.
+Moreover, I perceived that I had been chosen that I might safeguard
+myself. What I knew of the matter might imperil me, but whilst I held
+the key to the reliquary, and held it fast, I might hope to remain
+immune though I must expect to be subjected to attempts. It would be my
+affair to come to terms.
+
+Contemplating these things I sat, in a world of dark dreams,
+unconscious of the comings and goings in the court below, unconscious
+of the hum which told of busy Fleet Street so near to me. The weather,
+as is its uncomfortable habit in England, had suddenly grown tropically
+hot, plunging London into the vapours of an African spring, and the sun
+was streaming through my open window fully upon the table.
+
+I mopped my clammy forehead, glancing with distaste at the pile of work
+which lay before me. Then my eyes turned to an open quarto book. It was
+the late Professor Deeping’s “Assyrian Mythology,” and embodied the
+result of his researches into the history of the Hashishin, the
+religious murderers of whose existence he had been so skeptical. To the
+Chief of the Order, the terrible Sheikh Hassan of Aleppo, he referred
+as a “fabled being”; yet it was at the hands of this “fabled being”
+that he had met his end! How incredible it all seemed. But I knew full
+well how worthy of credence it was.
+
+Then upon my gloomy musings a sound intruded—the ringing of my door
+bell. I rose from my chair with a weary sigh, went to the door, and
+opened it. An aged Oriental stood without. He was tall and straight,
+had a snow-white beard and clear-cut, handsome features. He wore
+well-cut European garments and a green turban. As I stood staring he
+saluted me gravely.
+
+“Mr. Cavanagh?” he asked, speaking in faultless English.
+
+“I am he.”
+
+“I learn that the services of a Moslem workman are required.”
+
+“Quite correct, sir; but you should apply at the offices of Messrs.
+Rawson & Rawson, Chancery Lane.”
+
+The old man bowed, smiling.
+
+“Many thanks; I understood so much. But, my position being a peculiar
+one, I wished to speak with you—as a friend of the late Professor.”
+
+I hesitated. The old man looked harmless enough, but there was an air
+of mystery about the matter which put me on my guard.
+
+“You will pardon me,” I said, “but the work is scarcely of a kind—”
+
+He raised his thin hand.
+
+“I am not undertaking it myself. I wished to explain to you the
+conditions under which I could arrange to furnish suitable porters.”
+
+His patient explanation disposed me to believe that he was merely some
+kind of small contractor, and in any event I had nothing to fear from
+this frail old man.
+
+“Step in, sir,” I said, repenting of my brusquerie—and stood aside for
+him.
+
+He entered, with that Oriental meekness in which there is something
+majestic. I placed a chair for him in the study, and reseated myself at
+the table. The old man, who from the first had kept his eyes lowered
+deferentially, turned to me with a gentle gesture, as if to apologize
+for opening the conversation.
+
+“From the papers, Mr. Cavanagh,” he began, “I have learned of the
+circumstances attending the death of Professor Deeping. Your papers”—he
+smiled, and I thought I had never seen a smile of such sweetness—“your
+papers know all! Now I understand why a Moslem is required, and I
+understand what is required of him. But remembering that the object of
+his labours would be to place a holy relic on exhibition for the
+amusement of unbelievers, can you reasonably expect to obtain the
+services of one?”
+
+His point of view was fair enough.
+
+“Perhaps not,” I replied. “For my own part I should wish to see the
+slipper back in Mecca, or wherever it came from. But Professor
+Deeping—”
+
+“Professor Deeping was a thorn in the flesh of the Faithful!”
+
+My visitor’s voice was gravely reproachful.
+
+“Nevertheless his wishes must be considered,” I said, “and the methods
+adopted by those who seek to recover the relic are such as to alienate
+all sympathy.”
+
+“You speak of the Hashishin?” asked the old man. “Mr. Cavanagh, in your
+own faith you have had those who spilled the blood of infidels as
+freely!”
+
+“My good sir, the existence of such an organization cannot be tolerated
+today! This survival of the dark ages must be stamped out. However just
+a cause may be, secret murder is not permissible, as you, a man of
+culture, a Believer, and”—I glanced at his unusual turban—“a descendant
+of the Prophet, must admit.”
+
+“I can admit nothing against the Guardian of the Tradition, Mr.
+Cavanagh! The Prophet taught that we should smite the Infidel. I ask
+you—have you the courage of your convictions?”
+
+“Perhaps; I trust so.”
+
+“Then assist me to rid England of what you have called a survival of
+the dark ages. I will furnish porters to remove and carry the safe, if
+you will deliver to me the key!”
+
+I sprang to my feet.
+
+“That is madness!” I cried. “In the first place I should be
+compromising with my conscience, and in the second place I should be
+defenceless against those who might—”
+
+“I have with me a written promise from one highly placed—one to whose
+will Hassan of Aleppo bows!”
+
+My mind greatly disturbed, I watched the venerable speaker. I had
+determined now that he was some religious leader of Islam in England,
+who had been deputed to approach me; and, let me add, I was sorely
+tempted to accede to his proposal, for nothing would be gained by any
+one if the slipper remained for ever at the museum, whereas by
+conniving at its recovery by those who, after all, were its rightful
+owners I should be ridding England of a weird and undesirable visitant.
+
+I think I should have agreed, when I remembered that the Hashishin had
+murdered Professor Deeping and had mutilated others wholly innocent of
+offence. I looked across at the old man. He had drawn himself up to his
+great height, and for the first time fully raising the lids, had fixed
+upon me the piercing gaze of a pair of eagle eyes. I started, for the
+aspect of this majestic figure was entirely different from that of the
+old stranger who had stood suppliant before me a moment ago.
+
+“It is impossible,” I said. “I can come to no terms with those who
+shield murderers.”
+
+He regarded me fixedly, but did not move.
+
+“Es-selam ’aleykum!” I added (“Peace be on you!”) closing the interview
+in the Eastern manner.
+
+The old man lowered his eyes, and saluted me with graceful gravity.
+
+“Wa-’aleykum!” he said (“And on you!”). I conducted him to the door and
+closed it upon his exit. In his last salute I had noticed the flashing
+of a ring which he wore upon his left hand, and he was gone scarce ten
+seconds ere my heart began to beat furiously. I snatched up “Assyrian
+Mythology” and with trembling fingers turned to a certain page.
+
+There I read—
+
+Each Sheikh of the Assassins is said to be invested with the “Ring of
+the Prophet.” It bears a green stone, shaped in the form of a scimitar
+or crescent.
+
+My dreadful suspicion was confirmed. I knew who my visitor had been.
+
+“God in heaven!” I whispered. “It was Hassan of Aleppo!”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+FIRST ATTEMPT ON THE SAFE
+
+
+On the following morning I was awakened by the arrival of Bristol. I
+hastened to admit him.
+
+“Your visitor of yesterday,” he began, “has wasted no time!”
+
+“What has happened?”
+
+He tugged irritably at his moustache. “I don’t know!” he replied. “Of
+course it was no surprise to find that there isn’t a Mohammedan who’ll
+lay his little finger on Professor Deeping’s safe! There’s no doubt in
+my mind that every lascar at the docks knows Hassan of Aleppo to be in
+England. Some other arrangement will have to be arrived at, if the
+thing is ever to be taken to the Antiquarian Museum. Meanwhile we stand
+to lose it. Last night—”
+
+He accepted a cigarette, and lighted it carefully.
+
+“Last night,” he resumed, “a member of P Division was on point duty
+outside the late Professor’s house, and two C.I.D. men were actually in
+the room where the safe is. Result—someone has put in at least an
+hour’s work on the lock, but it proved too tough a job!”
+
+I stared at him amazedly.
+
+“Someone has been at the lock!” I cried. “But that is impossible, with
+two men in the room—unless—”
+
+“They were both knocked on the head!”
+
+“Both! But by whom! My God! They are not—”
+
+“Oh, no! It was done artistically. They both came round about four
+o’clock this morning.”
+
+“And who attacked them?”
+
+“They had no idea. Neither of them saw a thing!”
+
+My amazement grew by leaps and bounds. “But, Bristol, one of them must
+have seen the other succumb!”
+
+“Both did! Their statements tally exactly!”
+
+“I quite fail to follow you.”
+
+“That’s not surprising. Listen: When I got on the scene about five
+o’clock, Marden and West, the two C.I.D. men, had quite recovered their
+senses, though they were badly shaken, and one had a cracked skull. The
+constable was conscious again, too.”
+
+“What! Was he attacked?”
+
+“In exactly the same way! I’ll give you Marden’s story, as he gave it
+to me a few minutes after the surgeon had done with him. He said that
+they were sitting in the study, smoking, and with both windows wide
+open. It was a fearfully hot night.”
+
+“Did they have lights?”
+
+“No. West sat in an armchair near the writing-table; Marden sat by the
+window next to the door. I had arranged that every hour one of them
+should go out to the gate and take the constable’s report. It was just
+after Marden had been out at one o’clock that it happened.
+
+“They were sitting as I tell you when Marden thought he heard a curious
+sort of noise from the gate. West appeared to have heard nothing; but I
+have no doubt that it was the sound of the constable’s fall. West’s
+pipe had gone out, and he struck a match to relight it. As he did so,
+Marden saw him drop the match, clench both fists, and with eyes glaring
+in the moonlight and his teeth coming together with a snap, drop from
+his chair.
+
+“Marden says that he was half up from his seat when something struck
+him on the back of the head with fearful force. He remembered nothing
+more until he awoke, with the dawn creeping into the room, and heard
+West groaning somewhere beside him. They both had badly damaged skulls
+with great bruises behind the ear. It is instructive to note that their
+wounds corresponded almost to a fraction of an inch. They had been
+stunned by someone who thoroughly understood his business, and with
+some heavy, blunt weapon. A few minutes later came the man to relieve
+the constable; and the constable was found to have been treated in
+exactly the same way!”
+
+“But if Marden’s account is true—”
+
+“West, as he lost consciousness, saw Marden go in exactly the same
+way.”
+
+“Marden was seated by the open window, but I cannot conjecture how any
+one can have got at West, who sat by the table!”
+
+“The case of Marden is little less than remarkable; he was some
+distance from the window. No one could possibly have reached him from
+outside.”
+
+“And the constable?”
+
+“The constable can give us no clue. He was suddenly struck down, as the
+others were. I examined the safe, of course, but didn’t touch it,
+according to instructions. Someone had been at work on the lock, but it
+had defied their efforts. I’m fully expecting though that they’ll be
+back to-night, with different tools!”
+
+“The place is watched during the day, of course?”
+
+“Of course. But it’s unlikely that anything will be attempted in
+daylight. Tonight I am going down myself.”
+
+“Could you arrange that I join you?”
+
+“I could, but you can see the danger for yourself?”
+
+“It is extraordinarily mysterious.”
+
+“Mr. Cavanagh, it’s uncanny!” said Bristol. “I can understand that one
+of these Hashishin could easily have got up behind the man on duty out
+in the open. I know, and so do you, that they’re past masters of that
+kind of thing; but unless they possess the power to render themselves
+invisible, it’s not evident how they can have got behind West whilst he
+sat at the table, with Marden actually watching him!”
+
+“We must lay a trap for them to-night.”
+
+“Rely upon me to do so. My only fear is that they may anticipate it and
+change their tactics. Hassan of Aleppo apparently knows as much of our
+plans as we do ourselves.”
+
+Inspector Bristol, though a man of considerable culture, clearly was
+infected with a species of supernatural dread.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+THE VIOLET EYES AGAIN
+
+
+At four o’clock in the afternoon I had heard nothing further from
+Bristol, but I did not doubt that he would advise me of his
+arrangements in good time. I sought by hard work to forget for a time
+the extraordinary business of the stolen slipper; but it persistently
+intruded upon my mind. Particularly, my thoughts turned to the night of
+Professor Deeping’s murder, and to the bewitchingly pretty woman who
+had warned me of the impending tragedy. She had bound me to secrecy—a
+secrecy which had proved irksome, for it had since appeared to me that
+she must have been an accomplice of Hassan of Aleppo. At the time I had
+been at a loss to define her peculiar accent, now it seemed evidently
+enough to have been Oriental.
+
+I threw down my pen in despair, for work was impossible, went
+downstairs, and walked out under the arch into Fleet Street. Quite
+mechanically I turned to the left, and, still engaged with idle
+conjectures, strolled along westward.
+
+Passing the entrance to one of the big hotels, I was abruptly recalled
+to the realities—by a woman’s voice.
+
+“Wait for me here,” came musically to my ears.
+
+I stopped, and turned. A woman who had just quitted a taxi-cab was
+entering the hotel. The day was hot and thunderously oppressive, and
+this woman with the musical voice wore a delicate costume of flimsiest
+white. A few steps upward she paused and glanced back. I had a view of
+a Greek profile, and for one magnetic instant looked into eyes of the
+deepest and most wonderful violet.
+
+Then, shaking off inaction, I ran up the steps and overtook the lady in
+white as a porter swung open the door to admit her. We entered
+together.
+
+“Madame,” I said in a low tone, “I must detain you for a moment. There
+is something I have to ask.”
+
+She turned, exhibiting the most perfect composure, lowered her lashes
+and raised them again, the gaze of the violet eyes sweeping me from
+head to foot with a sort of frigid scorn.
+
+“I fear you have made a mistake, sir. We have never met before!”
+
+Her voice betrayed no trace of any foreign accent!
+
+“But,” I began—and paused.
+
+I felt myself flush; for this encounter in the foyer of an hotel, with
+many curious onlookers, was like to prove embarrassing if my beautiful
+acquaintance persisted in her attitude. I fully realized what
+construction would be put upon my presence there, and foresaw that
+forcible and ignominious ejection must be my lot if I failed to
+establish my right to address her.
+
+She turned away, and crossed in the direction of the staircase. A
+sunbeam sought out a lock of hair that strayed across her brow, and
+kissed it to a sudden glow like that which lurks in the heart of a
+blush rose.
+
+That wonderful sheen, which I had never met with elsewhere in nature,
+but which no artifice could lend, served to remove my last frail doubt
+which had survived the evidence of the violet eyes. I had been deceived
+by no strange resemblance; this was indeed the woman who had been the
+harbinger of Professor Deeping’s death. In three strides I was beside
+her again. Curious glances were set upon me, and I saw a servant
+evidently contemplating approach; but I ignored all save my own fixed
+purpose.
+
+“You must listen to what I have to say!” I whispered. “If you decline,
+I shall have no alternative but to call in the detective who holds a
+warrant for your arrest!”
+
+She stood quite still, watching me coolly. “I suppose you would wish to
+avoid a scene?” I added.
+
+“You have already made me the object of much undesirable attention,”
+she replied scornfully. “I do not need your assurance that you would
+disgrace me utterly! You are talking nonsense, as you must be
+aware—unless you are insane. But if your object be to force your
+acquaintance upon me, your methods are novel, and, under the
+circumstances, effective. Come, sir, you may talk to me—for three
+minutes!”
+
+The musical voice had lost nothing of its imperiousness, but for one
+instant the lips parted, affording a fleeting glimpse of pearl beyond
+the coral.
+
+Her sudden change of front was bewildering. Now, she entered the lift
+and I followed her. As we ascended side by side I found it impossible
+to believe that this dainty white figure was that of an associate of
+the Hashishin, that of a creature of the terrible Hassan of Aleppo. Yet
+that she was the same girl who, a few days after my return from the
+East, had shown herself conversant with the plans of the murderous
+fanatics was beyond doubt. Her accent on that occasion clearly had been
+assumed, with what object I could not imagine. Then, as we quitted the
+lift and entered a cosy lounge, my companion seated herself upon a
+Chesterfield, signing to me to sit beside her.
+
+As I did so she lay back smiling, and regarding me from beneath her
+black lashes. Thus, half veiled, her great violet eyes were most
+wonderful.
+
+“Now, sir,” she said softly, “explain yourself.”
+
+“Then you persist in pretending that we have not met before?”
+
+“There is no occasion for pretence,” she replied lightly; and I found
+myself comparing her voice with her figure, her figure with her face,
+and vainly endeavouring to compute her age. Frankly, she was
+bewildering—this lovely girl who seemed so wholly a woman of the world.
+
+“This fencing is useless.”
+
+“It is quite useless! Come, I know New York, London, and I know Paris,
+Vienna, Budapest. Therefore I know mankind! You thought I was pretty, I
+suppose? I may be; others have thought so. And you thought you would
+like to make my acquaintance without troubling about the usual
+formalities? You adopted a singularly brutal method of achieving your
+object, but I love such insolence in a man. Therefore I forgave you.
+What have you to say to me?”
+
+I perceive that I had to deal with a bold adventuress, with a
+consummate actress, who, finding herself in a dangerous situation, had
+adopted this daring line of defence, and now by her personal charm
+sought to lure me from my purpose.
+
+But with the scimitar of Hassan of Aleppo stretched over me, with the
+dangers of the night before me, I was in no mood for a veiled duel of
+words, for an interchange of glances in thrust and parry, however
+delightful such warfare might have been with so pretty an adversary.
+
+For a long time I looked sternly into her eyes; but their violet
+mystery defied, whilst her red-lipped smile taunted me.
+
+“Unfortunately,” I said, with slow emphasis, “you are protected by my
+promise, made on the occasion of our previous meeting. But murder has
+been done, so that honour scarcely demands that I respect my promise
+further—”
+
+She raised her eyebrows slightly.
+
+“Surely that depends upon the quality of the honour!” she said.
+
+“I believe you to be a member of a murderous organization, and unless
+you can convince me that I am wrong, I shall act accordingly.”
+
+At that she leaned toward me, laying her hand on my arm.
+
+“Please do not be so cruel,” she whispered, “as to drag me into a
+matter with which truly I have no concern. Believe me, you are utterly
+mistaken. Wait one moment, and I will prove it.”
+
+She rose, and before I could make move to detain her, quitted the room;
+but the door scarcely had closed ere I was afoot. The corridor beyond
+was empty. I ran on. The lift had just descended. A dark man whom I
+recognized stood near the closed gate.
+
+“Quick!” I said, “I am Cavanagh of the Report! Did you see a lady enter
+the lift?”
+
+“I did, Mr. Cavanagh,” answered the hotel detective; for this was he.
+
+In such a giant inn as this I knew full well that one could come and go
+almost with impunity, though one had no right to the hospitality of the
+establishment; and it was with a premonition respecting what his answer
+would be, that I asked the man—
+
+“Is she staying here?”
+
+“She is not. I have never seen her before!”
+
+The girl with the violet eyes had escaped, taking all her secrets with
+her!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+SECOND ATTEMPT ON THE SAFE
+
+
+“You see,” said Bristol, “the Hashishin must know that the safe won’t
+remain here unopened much longer. They will therefore probably make
+another attempt to-night.”
+
+“It seems likely,” I replied; and was silent. Outside the open windows
+whispered the shrubbery, as a soft breeze stole through the bushes.
+Beyond, the moon made play in the dim avenue. From the old chapel hard
+by the sweet-toned bell proclaimed midnight. Our vigil was begun. In
+this room it was that Professor Deeping had met death at the hands of
+the murderous Easterns; here it was that Marden and West had
+mysteriously been struck down the night before.
+
+To-night was every whit as hot, and Bristol and I had the windows
+widely opened. My companion was seated where the detective, Marden, had
+sat, in a chair near the westerly window, and I lay back in the
+armchair that had been occupied by West.
+
+I may repeat here that the house of the late Professor Deeping was more
+properly a cottage, surrounded by a fairly large piece of ground, for
+the most part run wild. The room used as a study was on the ground
+floor, and had windows on the west and on the south. Those on the west
+(French windows) opened on a loggia; those on the south opened right
+into the dense tangle of a neglected shrubbery. The place possessed an
+oppressive atmosphere of loneliness, for which in some measure its
+history may have been responsible.
+
+The silence, seemingly intensified by each whisper that sped through
+the elms and crept about the shrubbery, grew to such a stillness that I
+told myself I had experienced nothing like it since crossing with a
+caravan I had slept in the desert. Yet noisy, whirling London was
+within gunshot of us; and this, though hard enough to believe, was a
+reflection oddly comforting. Only one train of thought was possible,
+and this I pursued at random.
+
+By what means were Marden and West struck down? In thus exposing
+ourselves, in order that we might trap the author or authors of the
+outrage, did we act wisely?
+
+“Bristol,” I said suddenly, “it was someone who came through the open
+window.”
+
+“No one,” he replied, “came through the windows. West saw absolutely
+nothing. But if any one comes that way to-night, we have him!”
+
+“West may have seen nothing; but how else could any one enter?”
+
+Bristol offered no reply; and I plunged again into a maze of
+speculation.
+
+Powerful mantraps were set in such a way that any one or anything,
+ignorant of their positions, coming up to the windows must unavoidably
+be snared. These had been placed in position with much secrecy after
+dusk, and the man on duty at the gate stood with his back to the wall.
+No one could approach him except from the front. My thoughts took a new
+turn.
+
+Was the girl with the violet eyes an ally of the Hashishin? Thus far,
+although she so palpably had tricked me, I had found myself unable to
+speak of her to Bristol; for the idea had entered my mind that she
+might have learned of the plan to murder Deeping without directly being
+implicated. Now came yet another explanation. The publicity given to
+that sensational case might have interested some third party in the
+fate of the stolen slipper! Could it be that others, in no way
+connected with the dreadful Hassan of Aleppo, were in quest of the
+slipper?
+
+Scotland Yard had taken care to ensure that the general public be kept
+in ignorance of the existence of such an organization as the Hashishin,
+but I must assume that this hypothetical third party were well aware
+that they had Hassan, as well as the authorities, to count with.
+Granting the existence of such a party, my beautiful acquaintance might
+be classified as one of its members. I spoke again.
+
+“Bristol,” I said, “has it occurred to you that there may be others, as
+well as Hassan of Aleppo, seeking to gain possession of the sacred
+slipper?”
+
+“It has not,” he replied. “In the strictest sense of the expression,
+they would be out for trouble! What gave you the idea?”
+
+“I hardly know,” I returned evasively, for even now I was loath to
+betray the mysterious girl with the wonderful eyes.
+
+The chapel bell sounding the half-hour, Bristol rose with a sigh that
+might have been one of relief, and went out to take the report of the
+man on duty at the gate. As his footsteps died away along the elm
+avenue, it came to me how, in the darkness about, menace lurked; and I
+felt myself succumbing to the greatest dread experienced by man—the
+dread of the unknown.
+
+All that I knew of the weird group of fanatics—survivals of a dim and
+evil past—who must now be watching this cottage as bloodlustful
+devotees watch a shrine violated, burst upon my mind. I peopled the
+still blackness with lurking assassins, armed with the murderous
+knowledge of by-gone centuries, armed with invisible weapons which
+struck down from afar, supernaturally.
+
+I glanced toward the corner of the room where the safe stood, reliquary
+of a worthless thing for which much blood had been spilled.
+
+Then sounded footsteps along the avenue, and my fear whispered that
+they were not those of Bristol but of one who had murdered him, and who
+came guilefully, to murder me!
+
+I snatched the revolver from my pocket and crossed the darkened room.
+Just to the right of one of the French windows I stood looking out
+across the loggia to the end of the avenue. The night was a bright one,
+and the room was flooded with a reflected mystic light, but outside the
+moon paved the avenue with pearl, and through the trees I saw a figure
+approaching.
+
+Was it Bristol? It had his build, it had his gait; but my fears
+remained. Then the figure crossed the patch of shrubbery and stepped on
+to the loggia.
+
+“Mr. Cavanagh!”
+
+I laughed dryly at my own cowardice, but my heart was still beating
+abnormally.
+
+“Here I am, Bristol, in a ghastly funk!”
+
+“I don’t wonder! They may be on us any time now. All’s well at the
+gate, but Morris says he heard, or thought he heard something at the
+side of the chapel opposite, a while ago.”
+
+“Wind in the bushes?”
+
+“It may have been; but he says there was no breeze at the time.”
+
+We resumed our seats.
+
+“Bristol,” I said, “now that the danger grows imminent, doesn’t it seem
+to you foolhardy for us thus to expose ourselves?”
+
+“Perhaps it is,” he agreed; “but how otherwise are we likely to learn
+what happened to Marden and West?”
+
+“The enemy may adopt different measures to-night.”
+
+“I think not. Our dispositions are the same, and I credit them with
+cunning enough to know it. At the same time I credit ourselves with
+having kept the existence of the steel traps completely secret. They
+will assume (so I’ve reasoned) that we intend to rely entirely upon our
+superior vigilance, therefore they will try the same game as last
+night.”
+
+Silence fell.
+
+The moon rays, creeping around from the right of the avenue, crossing
+the shrubbery and encroaching upon the low wall of the loggia, now
+flooded its floor. Against the silvern light, Bristol appeared to me in
+black silhouette. The breeze, too, seemed now to blow from a slightly
+different direction. It came through the windows on my right, beyond
+which lay the unkempt bushes which extended on that side to the wall of
+the grounds.
+
+So we sat, until the moonlight poured fully in upon Bristol’s back. So
+we sat when the clock chimed the hour of one.
+
+Bristol arose and once more went out to the gate. He had arranged to
+visit Morris’s post every half-hour. Again I experienced the nervous
+dread that he would be attacked in the avenue; but again he returned
+unscathed.
+
+“All’s well,” he said.
+
+But from his tones I knew that he had not forgotten that it was at this
+hour Marden and West had suffered mysterious attack.
+
+Neither of us, I think, was disposed to talk. We both were unwilling to
+break the silence, wherein, with all our ears, we listened for the
+slightest disturbance.
+
+And now my attention turned anew to the course of the slowly creeping
+moon rays. In my mind an idea was struggling for definition. There was
+something significant in the lunar lighting of the room. Why, I asked
+myself, had the attack been made at one o’clock? Did the time signify
+anything? If so, what? I looked toward Bristol.
+
+His figure, the chair upon which he sat, were sharply outlined by the
+cold light. The wall behind me, and to my left, was illuminated
+brilliantly; but no light fell directly upon me.
+
+The idea was taking shape. From the loggia and the avenue Bristol, I
+reasoned, must be clearly visible. From the shrubbery on the south,
+through the other windows could I be seen? Yes, silhouetted against the
+moonlight!
+
+A faint sound, quite indescribable, came to my ears from somewhere
+outside-beyond.
+
+“My God!” whispered Bristol. “Did you hear it?”
+
+“Yes! What?”
+
+“It must have been Morris!—”
+
+Bristol was half standing, one hand upon the arm of the chair, the
+other concealed, but grasping his revolver as I well knew. I, too, had
+my revolver in my hand, and as I twisted in my seat, preparatory to
+rising, in sheer nervousness I dropped the weapon upon the carpet.
+
+With an exclamation of dismay, I stooped quickly to recover it.
+
+As I did so something whistled past my ear, so closely as almost to
+touch it—and struck with a dull thud upon the wall beyond!
+
+“Bristol!” I whispered.
+
+But as I raised my eyes to him he seemed to crumple up, and fell
+loosely forward into the patch of moonlight spread upon the floor! “God
+in heaven!” I said aloud.
+
+In a cold sweat of fear I crouched there, for it had become evident to
+me that, as I bent, I was entirely in shadow.
+
+There was a rustling in the bushes on the left; but before I could turn
+in that direction, my attention was claimed elsewhere. Over into the
+loggia leapt an almost naked brown figure!
+
+It was that of a small but strongly built man, who carried a short,
+exceedingly thick bamboo rod in his hand. My fear was too great to
+admit of my accurately observing anything at that time, but I noticed
+that some kind of leather thong or loop was attached to the end of the
+squat cane.
+
+The panic fear of the supernatural was strongly upon me, and I was
+unable to realize that this Eastern apparition was a creature of flesh
+and blood. With my nerves strung up to snapping point, I crouched
+watching him. He entered the room, bending over the body of Bristol.
+
+A hot breath fanned my cheek!
+
+At that my overwrought nerves betrayed me. I uttered a stifled cry,
+looking upward ... and into a pair of gleaming eyes which looked down
+into mine!
+
+A second brown man (who must have entered by one of the windows
+overlooking the shrubbery) was bending over me!
+
+Scarce knowing what I did, I raised my revolver and blazed straight
+into the dimly-seen face. Down upon me silently dropped a naked body,
+and something warm came flowing over my hand. But, knowing my foes to
+be of flesh and blood, feeling myself at handgrips now with a palpable
+enemy, I threw off the body, leapt up and fired, though blindly, at the
+flying shape that flashed across the loggia—and was lost in the shadow
+pools under the elms.
+
+Upon the din of my shooting fell silence like a cloak. A moment I
+listened, tense, still; then I turned to the table and lighted the
+lamp.
+
+In its light I saw Bristol lying like a dead man. Close beside him was
+a big and heavy lump of clay. It had been shaped as a ball, but now it
+was flattened out curiously. Bending over my unfortunate companion and
+learning that, though unconscious, he lived, I learnt, too, how the
+Hashishin contrived to strike men insensible without approaching them;
+I learnt that the one whom I had shot, who lay in his blood almost on
+the spot where Professor Deeping once had lain, was an expert slinger.
+
+The contrivance which he carried, as did the other who had escaped, was
+a sling, of the ancient Persian type. In place of stones, heavy lumps
+of clay were used, which operated much the same as a sand-bag, whilst
+enabling the operator to work from a considerable distance.
+
+Hidden, over by the ancient chapel it might be, one of this evil twain
+had struck down Morris, the constable; from the shelter of the trees,
+from many yards away, they had shot their singular missiles through the
+open windows at Bristol and myself. Bristol had succumbed, and now,
+with a redness showing through his close-cut hair immediately behind
+the right ear, lay wholly unconscious at my feet.
+
+It had been a divine accident which had caused me to drop my revolver,
+and, stooping to recover it, unknowingly to frustrate the design of the
+second slinger upon myself. The light of the lamp fell upon the face of
+the dead Hashishin. He lay forward upon his hands, crouching almost,
+but with his face, his dreadful, featureless face, twisted up at me
+from under his left shoulder.
+
+God knows he deserved his end; but that mutilated face is often
+grinning, bloodily, in my dreams.
+
+And then as I stood, between that horrid exultation which is born of
+killing and the panic which threatened me out of the darkness, I saw
+something advancing ... slowly ... slowly ... from the elmen shades
+toward the loggia.
+
+It was a shape—it was a shadow. Silent it came—on—and on. Where the
+dusk lay deepest it paused, undefined; for I could give it no name of
+man or spirit. But a horror seemed to proceed from it as light from a
+lamp.
+
+I groped about the table near to me, never taking my eyes from that
+sinister form outside. As my fingers closed upon the telephone, distant
+voices and the sound of running footsteps (of those who had heard the
+shots) came welcome to my ears.
+
+The form stirred, seeming to raise phantom arms in execration, and a
+stray moonbeam pierced the darkness shrouding it. For a fleeting
+instant something flashed venomously.
+
+The sounds grew nearer. I could tell that the newcomers had found
+Morris lying at the gate. Yet still I stood, frozen with uncanny fear,
+and watching—watching the spot to which that stray beam had pierced;
+the spot where I had seen the moon gleam upon the ring of the Prophet!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+AT THE BRITISH ANTIQUARIAN MUSEUM
+
+
+A little group of interested spectators stood at the head of the square
+glass case in the centre of the lofty apartment in the British
+Antiquarian Museum known as the Burton Room (by reason of the fact that
+a fine painting of Sir Richard Burton faces you as you enter). A few
+other people looked on curiously from the lower end of the case. It
+contained but one exhibit—a dirty and dilapidated markoob—or slipper of
+morocco leather that had once been red.
+
+“Our latest acquisition, gentlemen,” said Mr. Mostyn, the curator,
+speaking in a low tone to the distinguished Oriental scholars around
+him. “It has been left to the Institution by the late Professor
+Deeping. He describes it in a document furnished by his solicitor as
+one of the slippers worn by the Prophet Mohammed, but gives us no
+further particulars. I myself cannot quite place the relic.”
+
+“Nor I,” interrupted one of the group. “It is not mentioned by any of
+the Arabian historians to my knowledge—that is, if it comes from Mecca,
+as I understand it does.”
+
+“I cannot possibly assert that it comes from Mecca, Dr. Nicholson,”
+Mostyn replied. “The Professor may have taken it from
+Al-Madinah—perhaps from the mysterious inner passage of the baldaquin
+where the treasures of the place lie. But I can assure you that what
+little we do know of its history is sufficiently unsavoury.”
+
+I fancied that the curator’s tired cultured voice faltered as he spoke;
+and now, without apparent reason, he moved a step to the right and
+glanced oddly along the room. I followed the direction of his glance,
+and saw a tall man in conventional morning dress, irreproachable in
+every detail, whose head was instantly bent upon his catalogue. But
+before his eyes fell I knew that their long almond shape, as well as
+the peculiar burnt pallor of his countenance, were undoubtedly those of
+an Oriental.
+
+“There have been mysterious outrages committed, I believe, upon many of
+those who have come in contact with the slipper?” asked one of the
+savants.
+
+“Exactly. Professor Deeping was undoubtedly among the victims. His
+instructions were explicit that the relic should be brought here by a
+Moslem, but for a long time we failed to discover any Moslem who would
+undertake the task; and, as you are aware, while the slipper remained
+at the Professor’s house attempts were made to steal it.”
+
+He ceased uneasily, and glanced at the tall Eastern figure. It had
+edged a little nearer; the head was still bowed and the fine yellow
+waxen fingers of the hand from which he had removed his glove fumbled
+with the catalogue’s leaves. It may well have been that in those days I
+read menace in every eye, yet I felt assured that the yellow visitor
+was eavesdropping—was malignantly attentive to the conversation.
+
+The curator spoke lower than ever now; no one beyond the circle could
+possibly hear him as he proceeded—
+
+“We discovered an Alexandrian Greek who, for personal reasons, not
+unconnected with matrimony, had turned Moslem! He carried the slipper
+here, strongly escorted, and placed it where you now see it. No other
+hand has touched it.” (The speaker’s voice was raised ever so
+slightly.) “You will note that there is a rail around the case, to
+prevent visitors from touching even the glass.”
+
+“Ah,” said Dr. Nicholson quizzically, “And has anything untoward
+happened to our Graeco-Moslem friend?”
+
+“Perhaps Inspector Bristol can tell,” replied the curator.
+
+The straight, military figure of the well-known Scotland Yard man was
+conspicuous among the group of distinguished—and mostly
+round-shouldered—scholars.
+
+“Sorry, gentlemen,” he said, smiling, “but Mr. Acepulos has vanished
+from his tobacco shop in Soho. I am not apprehensive that he had been
+kidnapped or anything of that kind. I think rather that the date of his
+disappearance tallies with that on which he cashed his cheque for
+service rendered! His present wife is getting most unbeautifully fat,
+too.”
+
+“What precautions,” someone asked, “are being taken to guard the
+slipper?”
+
+“Well,” Mostyn answered, “though we have only the bare word of the late
+Professor Deeping that the slipper was actually worn by Mohammed, it
+has certainly an enormous value according to Moslem ideas. There can be
+no doubt that a group of fanatics known as Hashishin are in London
+engaged in an extraordinary endeavour to recover it.”
+
+Mostyn’s voice sank to an impressive whisper. My gaze sought again the
+tall Eastern visitor and was held fascinated by the baffled straining
+in those velvet eyes. But the lids fell as I looked; and the effect was
+that of a fire suddenly extinguished. I determined to draw Bristol’s
+attention to the man.
+
+“Accordingly,” Mostyn continued, “we have placed it in this room, from
+which I fancy it would puzzle the most accomplished thief to remove
+it.”
+
+The party, myself included, stared about the place, as he went on to
+explain—
+
+“We have four large windows here; as you see. The Burton Room occupies
+the end of a wing; there is only one door; it communicates with the
+next room, which in turn opens into the main building by another door
+on the landing. We are on the first floor; these two east windows
+afford a view of the lawn before the main entrance; those two west ones
+face Orpington Square; all are heavily barred as you see. During the
+day there is a man always on duty in these two rooms. At night that
+communicating door is locked. Short of erecting a ladder in full view
+either of the Square or of Great Orchard Street, filing through four
+iron bars and breaking the window and the case, I fail to see how
+anybody can get at the slipper here.”
+
+“If a duplicate key to the safe—” another voice struck in; I knew it
+afterward for that of Professor Rhys-Jenkyns.
+
+“Impossible to procure one, Professor,” cried Mostyn, his eyes
+sparkling with an almost boyish interest. “Mr. Cavanagh here holds the
+keys of the case, under the will of the late Professor Deeping. They
+are of foreign workmanship and more than a little complicated.”
+
+The eyes of the savants were turned now in my direction.
+
+“I suppose you have them in a place of safety?” said Dr. Nicholson.
+
+“They are at my bankers,” I replied.
+
+“Then I venture to predict,” said the celebrated Orientalist, “that the
+slipper of the Prophet will rest here undisturbed.”
+
+He linked his arm into that of a brother scholar and the little group
+straggled away, Mostyn accompanying them to the main entrance.
+
+But I saw Inspector Bristol scratching his chin; he looked very much as
+if he doubted the accuracy of the doctor’s prediction. He had already
+had some experience of the implacable devotion of the Moslem group to
+this treasure of the Faithful.
+
+“The real danger begins,” I suggested to him, “when the general public
+is admitted—after to-day, is it not?”
+
+“Yes. All to-day’s people are specially invited, or are using special
+invitation cards,” he replied. “The people who received them often give
+their tickets away to those who will be likely really to appreciate the
+opportunity.”
+
+I looked around for the tall Oriental. He seemed to have vanished, and
+for some reason I hesitated to speak of him to Bristol; for my gaze
+fell upon an excessively thin, keen-faced man whose curiously wide-open
+eyes met mine smilingly, whose gray suit spoke Stein-Bloch, whose felt
+was a Boss raw-edge unmistakably of a kind that only Philadelphia can
+produce. At the height of the season such visitors are not rare, but
+this one had an odd personality, and moreover his keen gaze was raking
+the place from ceiling to floor.
+
+Where had I met him before? To the best of my recollection I had never
+set eyes upon the man prior to that moment; and since he was so
+palpably an American I had no reason for assuming him to be associated
+with the Hashishin. But I remembered—indeed, I could never forget—how,
+in the recent past, I had met with an apparent associate of the Moslems
+as evidently European as this curiously alert visitor was American.
+Moreover ... there was something tauntingly familiar, yet elusive,
+about that gaunt face.
+
+Was it not upon the eve of the death of Professor Deeping that the girl
+with the violet eyes had first intruded her fascinating personality
+into my tangled affairs? Patently, she had then been seeking the holy
+slipper, and by craft had endeavoured to bend me to her will. Then had
+I not encountered her again, meeting the glance of her unforgettable
+violet eyes outside a Strand hotel? The encounter had presaged a
+further attempt upon the slipper! Certainly she acted on behalf of
+someone interested in it; and since neither Bristol nor I could
+conceive of any one seeking to possess the bloodstained thing except
+the mysterious leader of the Hashishin—Hassan of Aleppo—as a creature
+of that awful fanatic being I had written her down.
+
+Why, then, if the mysterious Eastern employed a European girl, should
+he not also employ an American man? It might well be that the relic, in
+entering the doors of the impregnable Antiquarian Museum, had passed
+where the diabolical arts of the Hashishin had no power to reach
+it—where the beauty of Western women and the craft of Eastern man were
+equally useless weapons. Perhaps Hassan’s campaign was entering upon a
+new phase.
+
+Was it a shirking of plain duty on my part that wish—that ever-present
+hope—that the murderous company of fanatics who had pursued the stolen
+slipper from its ancient resting-place to London, should succeed in
+recovering it? I leave you to judge.
+
+The crescent of Islam fades to-day and grows pale, but there are yet
+fierce Believers, a lust for the blood of the infidel. In such as these
+a faith dies the death of an adder, and is more venomous in its
+death-throes than in the full pulse of life. The ghastly indiscretion
+of Professor Deeping, in rifling a Moslem Sacristy, had led to the
+mutilation of many who, unwittingly, had touched the looted relic, had
+brought about his own end, had established a league of fantastic
+assassins in the heart of the metropolis.
+
+Only once had I seen the venerable Hassan of Aleppo—a stately, gentle
+old man; but I knew that the velvet eyes could blaze into a passionate
+fury that seemed to scorch whom it fell upon. I knew that the saintly
+Hassan was Sheikh of the Hashishin. And familiarity with that dreadful
+organization had by no means bred contempt. I was the holder of the
+key, and my fear of the fanatics grew like a magic mango, darkened the
+sunlight of each day, and filled the night with indefinable dread.
+
+You, who have not read poor Deeping’s “Assyrian Mythology”, cannot
+picture a creature with a huge, distorted head, and a tiny, dwarfed
+body—a thing inhuman, yet human—a man stunted and malformed by the
+cruel arts of brother men—a thing obnoxious to life, with but one
+passion, the passion to kill. You cannot conceive of the years of agony
+spent by that creature strapped to a wooden frame—in order to prevent
+his growth! You cannot conceive of his fierce hatred of all humanity,
+inflamed to madness by the Eastern drug, hashish, and directed against
+the enemies of Islam—the holders of the slipper—by the wonderful power
+of Hassan of Aleppo.
+
+But I had not only read of such beings, I had encountered one!
+
+And he was but one of the many instruments of the Hashishin. Perhaps
+the girl with the violet eyes was another. What else to be dreaded
+Hassan might hold in store for us I could not conjecture.
+
+Do you wonder that I feared? Do you wonder that I hoped (I confess it),
+hoped that the slipper might be recovered without further bloodshed?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+THE HOLE IN THE BLIND
+
+
+I stepped over to the door, where a constable stood on duty.
+
+“You observed a tall Eastern gentleman in the room a while ago,
+officer?”
+
+“I did, sir.”
+
+“How long is he gone?”
+
+The man started and began to peer about anxiously.
+
+“That’s a funny thing, sir,” he said. “I was keeping my eyes specially
+upon him. I noticed him hovering around while Mr. Mostyn was speaking;
+but although I could have sworn he hadn’t passed out, he’s gone!”
+
+“You didn’t notice his departure, then?”
+
+“I’m sorry to say I didn’t, sir.”
+
+The man clearly was perplexed, but I found small matter for wonder in
+the episode. I had more than suspected the stranger to be a spy of
+Hassan’s, and members of that strange company were elusive as
+will-o’-the-wisps.
+
+Bristol, at the far end of the room, was signalling to me. I walked
+back and joined him.
+
+“Come over here,” he said, in a low voice, “and pretend to examine
+these things.”
+
+He glanced significantly to his left. Following the glance, my eyes
+fell upon the lean American; he was peering into the receptacle which
+held the holy slipper.
+
+Bristol led me across the room, and we both faced the wall and bent
+over a glass case. Some yellow newspaper cuttings describing its
+contents hung above it, and these we pretended to read.
+
+“Did you notice that man I glanced at?”
+
+“Yes.”
+
+“Well, that’s Earl Dexter, the first crook in America! Ssh! Only goes
+in on very big things. We had word at the Yard he was in town; but we
+can’t touch him—we can only keep our eyes on him. He usually travels
+openly and in his own name, but this time he seems to have slipped over
+quietly. He always dresses the same and has just given me ‘good day!’
+They call him The Stetson Man. We heard this morning that he had booked
+two first-class sailings in the Oceanic, leaving for New York three
+weeks hence. Now, Mr. Cavanagh, what is his game?”
+
+“It has occurred to me before, Bristol,” I replied, “and you may
+remember that I mentioned the idea to you, that there might be a third
+party interested in the slipper. Why shouldn’t Earl Dexter be that
+third party?”
+
+“Because he isn’t a fool,” rapped Bristol shortly. “Earl Dexter isn’t a
+man to gather up trouble for himself. More likely if his visit has
+anything really to do with the slipper he’s retained by Hassan and
+Company. Museum-breaking may be a bit out of the line of Hashishin!”
+
+This latter suggestion dovetailed with my own ideas, and oddly enough
+there was something positively wholesome in the notion of the
+straightforward crookedness of a mere swell cracksman.
+
+Then happened a singular thing, and one that effectually concluded our
+whispered colloquy. From the top end of the room, beyond the case
+containing the slipper, one of the yellow blinds came down with a run.
+
+Bristol turned in a flash. It was not a remarkable accident, and might
+portend no more than a loose cord; but when, having walked rapidly up
+the room, we stood before the lowered blind, it appeared that this was
+no accident at all.
+
+Some four feet from the bottom of the blind (or five feet from the
+floor) a piece of linen a foot square had been neatly slashed out!
+
+I glanced around the room. Several fashionably dressed visitors were
+looking idly in our direction, but I could fasten upon no one of them
+as a likely perpetrator.
+
+Bristol stared at me in perplexity.
+
+“Who on earth did it,” he muttered, “and what the blazes for?”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+THE HASHISHIN WATCH
+
+
+“The American gentleman has just gone out, sir,” said the sergeant at
+the door.
+
+I nodded grimly and raced down the steps. Despite my half-formed desire
+that the slipper should be recovered by those to whom properly it
+belonged, I experienced at times a curious interest in its welfare. I
+cannot explain this. Across the hall in front of me I saw Earl Dexter
+passing out of the Museum. I followed him through into Kingsway and
+thence to Fleet Street. He sauntered easily along, a nonchalant gray
+figure. I had begun to think that he was bound for his hotel and that I
+was wasting my time when he turned sharply into quiet Salisbury Square;
+it was almost deserted.
+
+My heart leapt into my mouth with a presentiment of what was coming as
+I saw an elegant and beautifully dressed woman sauntering along in
+front of us on the far side.
+
+Was it that I detected something familiar in her carriage, in the poise
+of her head—something that reminded me of former unforgettable
+encounters; encounters which without exception had presaged attempts
+upon the slipper of the Prophet? Or was it that I recollected how
+Dexter had booked two passages to America? I cannot say, but I felt my
+heart leap; I knew beyond any possibility of doubt that this meeting in
+Salisbury Square marked the opening of a new chapter in the history of
+the slipper.
+
+Dexter slipped his arm within that of the girl in front of him and they
+paced slowly forward in earnest conversation. I suppose my action was
+very amateurish and very poor detective work; but regardless of
+discovery I crossed the road and passed close by the pair.
+
+I am certain that Dexter was speaking as I came up, but, well out of
+earshot, his voice was suddenly arrested. His companion turned and
+looked at me.
+
+I was prepared for it, yet was thrilled electrically by the flashing
+glance of the violet eyes—for it was she—the beautiful harbinger of
+calamities!
+
+My brain was in a whirl; complication piled itself upon complication;
+yet in the heart of all this bewilderment I thought I could detect the
+key of the labyrinth, but at the time my ideas were in disorder, for
+the violet eyes were not lowered but fixed upon me in cold scorn.
+
+I knew myself helpless, and bending my head with conscious
+embarrassment I passed on hurriedly.
+
+I had work to do in plenty, but I could not apply my mind to it; and
+now, although the obvious and sensible thing was to go about my
+business, I wandered on aimlessly, my brain employed with a hundred
+idle conjectures and the query, “Where have I seen The Stetson Man?”
+seeming to beat, like a tattoo, in my brain. There was something
+magnetic about the accursed slipper, for without knowing by what route
+I had arrived there, I found myself in Great Orchard Street and close
+under the walls of the British Antiquarian Museum. Then I was
+effectually aroused from my reverie.
+
+Two men, both tall, stood in the shadow of a doorway on the Opposite
+side of the street, staring intently up at the Museum windows. It was a
+tropically hot afternoon and they stood in deepest shadow. No one else
+was in Orchard Street—that odd little backwater—at the time, and they
+stood gazing upward intently and gave me not even a passing glance.
+
+But I knew one for the Oriental visitor of the morning, and despite
+broad noonday and the hum of busy London about me, my blood seemed to
+turn to water. I stood rooted to the spot, held there by a most
+surprising horror.
+
+For the gray-bearded figure of the other watcher was one I could never
+forget; its benignity was associated with the most horrible hours of my
+life, with deeds so dreadful that recollection to this day sometimes
+breaks my sleep, arousing me in the still watches, bathed in a cold
+sweat of fear.
+
+It was Hassan of Aleppo!
+
+If he saw me, if either of them saw me, I cannot say. What I should
+have done, what I might have done it is useless to speak of here—for I
+did nothing. Inert, thralled by the presence of that eerie, dreadful
+being, I watched them leave the shadow of the doorway and pace slowly
+on with their dignified Eastern gait.
+
+Then, knowing how I had failed in my plain duty to my fellow-men—how,
+finding a serpent in my path, I had hesitated to crush it, had weakly
+succumbed to its uncanny fascination—I made my way round to the door of
+the Museum.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+THE WHITE BEAM
+
+
+That night the deviltry began. Mr. Mostyn found himself wholly unable
+to sleep. Many relics have curious histories, and the experienced
+archaeologist becomes callous to that uncanniness which seems to attach
+to some gruesome curios. But the slipper of the Prophet was different.
+No mere ghostly menace threatened its holders; an avenging scimitar
+followed those who came in contact with it; gruesome tragedies,
+mutilations, murders, had marked its progress throughout.
+
+The night was still—as still as a London night can be; for there is
+always a vague murmuring in the metropolis as though the sleeping city
+breathed gently and sometimes stirred in its sleep.
+
+Then, distinct amid these usual nocturnal noises, rose another,
+unaccountable sound, a muffled crash followed by a musical tinkling.
+
+Mostyn sprang up in bed, drew on a dressing-gown, and took from the
+small safe at his bed-head the Museum keys and a loaded revolver. A
+somewhat dishevelled figure, pale and wild-eyed, he made his way
+through the private door and into the ghostly precincts of the Museum.
+He did not hesitate, but ascended the stairs and unlocked the door of
+the Assyrian gallery.
+
+Along its ghostly aisles he passed, and before the door which gave
+admittance to the Burton Room paused, fumbling a moment for the key.
+
+Inside the room something was moving!
+
+Mostyn was keenly alarmed; he knew that he must enter at once or never.
+He inserted the key in the lock, swung open the heavy door, stepped
+through and closed it behind him. He was a man of tremendous moral
+courage, for now,—alone in the apartment which harboured the uncanny
+relic, alone in the discharge of his duty, he stood with his back to
+the door trembling slightly, but with the idea of retreat finding no
+place in his mind.
+
+One side of the room lay in blackest darkness; through the furthermost
+window of the other a faint yellowed luminance (the moonlight through
+the blind) spread upon the polished parquet flooring. But that which
+held the curator spell-bound—that which momentarily quickened into life
+the latent superstition, common to all mankind, was a beam of cold
+light which poured its effulgence fully upon the case containing the
+Prophet’s slipper! Where the other exhibits lay either in utter
+darkness or semi-darkness this one it seemed was supernaturally picked
+out by this lunar searchlight!
+
+It was ghostly-unnerving; but, the first dread of it passed, Mostyn
+recalled how during the day a hole inexplicably had been cut in that
+blind; he recalled that it had not been mended, but that the damaged
+blind had merely been rolled up again.
+
+And as a dawning perception of the truth came to him, as falteringly he
+advanced a step toward the mystic beam, he saw that one side of the
+case had been shattered—he saw the broken glass upon the floor; and in
+the dense shadow behind and under the beam of light, vaguely he saw a
+dull red object.
+
+It moved—it seemed to live! It moved away from the case and in the
+direction of the eastern windows.
+
+“My God!” whispered Mostyn; “it’s the Prophet’s slipper!”
+
+And wildly, blindly, he fired down the room. Later he knew that he had
+fired in panic, for nothing human was or could be in the place; yet his
+shot was not without effect. In the instant of its flash, something
+struck sharply against the dimly seen blind of one of the east windows;
+he heard the crash of broken glass.
+
+He leapt to the switch and flooded the room with light. A fear of what
+it might hold possessed him, and he turned instantly.
+
+Hard by the fragments of broken glass upon the floor and midway between
+the case and the first easterly window lay the slipper. A bell was
+ringing somewhere. His shot probably had aroused the attention of the
+policeman. Someone was clamouring upon the door of the Museum, too.
+Mostyn raced forward and raised the blind—that toward which the slipper
+had seemed to move.
+
+The lower pane of the window was smashed. Blood was trickling down upon
+the floor from the jagged edges of the glass.
+
+“Hullo there! Open the door! Open the door!”
+
+Bells were going all over the place now; sounds of running footsteps
+came from below; but Mostyn stood staring at the broken window and at
+the solid iron bars which protected it without, which were intact,
+substantial—which showed him that nothing human could possibly have
+entered.
+
+Yet the case was shattered, the holy slipper lay close beside him upon
+the floor, and from the broken window-pane blood was
+falling—drip-drip-drip...
+
+That was the story as I heard it half an hour later. For Inspector
+Bristol, apprised of the happening, was promptly on the scene; and
+knowing how keen was my interest in the matter, he rang me up
+immediately. I arrived soon after Bristol and found a perplexed group
+surrounding the uncanny slipper of the Prophet. No one had dared to
+touch it; the dread vengeance of Hassan of Aleppo would visit any
+unbeliever who ventured to lay hand upon the holy, bloody thing. Well
+we knew it, and as though it had been a venomous scorpion we, a company
+of up-to-date, prosaic men of affairs, stood around that dilapidated
+markoob, and kept a respectful distance.
+
+Mostyn, an odd figure in pyjamas and dressing-gown, turned his pale,
+intellectual face to me as I entered.
+
+“It will have to be put back ... secretly,” he said.
+
+His voice was very unsteady. Bristol nodded grimly and glanced at the
+two constables, who, with a plain-clothes man unknown to me, made up
+that midnight company.
+
+“I’ll do it, sir,” said one of the constables suddenly.
+
+“One moment”—Mostyn raised his hand!
+
+In the ensuing silence I could hear the heavy breathing of those around
+me. We were all looking at the slipper, I think.
+
+“Do you understand, fully,” the curator continued, “the risk you run?”
+
+“I think so, sir,” answered the constable; “but I’m prepared to chance
+it.”
+
+“The hands,” resumed Mostyn slowly, “of those who hitherto have
+ventured to touch it have been”—he hesitated—“cut off.”
+
+“Your career in the Force would be finished if it happened to you, my
+lad,” said Bristol shortly.
+
+“I suppose they’d look after me,” said the man, with grim humour.
+
+“They would if you met with—an accident, in the discharge of your
+duty,” replied the inspector; “but I haven’t ordered you to do it, and
+I’m not going to.”
+
+“All right, sir,” said the man, with a sort of studied truculence,
+“I’ll take my chance.”
+
+I tried to stop him; Mostyn, too, stepped forward, and Bristol swore
+frankly. But it was all of no avail.
+
+A sort of chill seemed to claim my very soul when I saw the constable
+stoop, unconcernedly pick up the slipper, and replace it in the broken
+case.
+
+It was out of a silence cathedral-like, awesome, that he spoke.
+
+“All you want is a new pane of glass, sir,” he said—“and the thing’s
+done.”
+
+I anticipate in mentioning it here; but since Constable Hughes has no
+further place in these records I may perhaps be excused for dismissing
+him at this point.
+
+He was picked up outside the section house on the following evening
+with his right hand severed just above the wrist.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+A SCREAM IN THE NIGHT
+
+
+The day that followed was one of the hottest which we experienced
+during the heat wave. It was a day crowded with happenings. The Burton
+Room was closed to the public, whilst a glazier worked upon the broken
+east window and a new blind was fitted to the west. Behind the workmen,
+guarded by a watchful commissionaire, yawned the shattered case
+containing the slipper.
+
+I wondered if the visitors to the other rooms of the Museum realized,
+as I realized, that despite the blazing sunlight of tropical London,
+the shadow of Hassan of Aleppo lay starkly on that haunted building?
+
+At about eleven o’clock, as I hurried along the Strand, I almost
+collided with the girl of the violet eyes! She turned and ran like the
+wind down Arundel Street, whilst I stood at the corner staring after
+her in blank amazement, as did other passers-by; for a man cannot with
+dignity race headlong after a pretty woman down a public thoroughfare!
+
+My mystification grew hourly deeper; and Bristol wallowed in
+perplexities.
+
+“It’s the most horrible and confusing case,” he said to me when I
+joined him at the Museum, “that the Yard has ever had to handle. It
+bristles with outrages and murders. God knows where it will all end.
+I’ve had London scoured for a clue to the whereabouts of Hassan and
+Company and drawn absolutely blank! Then there’s Earl Dexter. Where
+does he come in? For once in a way he’s living in hiding. I can’t find
+his headquarters. I’ve been thinking—”
+
+He drew me aside into the small gallery which runs parallel with the
+Assyrian Room.
+
+“Dexter has booked two passages in the Oceanic. Who is his companion?”
+
+I wondered, I had wondered more than once, if his companion were my
+beautiful violet-eyed acquaintance. A scruple—perhaps an absurd
+scruple—hitherto had kept me silent respecting her, but now I
+determined to take Bristol fully into my confidence. A conviction was
+growing upon me that she and Earl Dexter together represented that
+third party whose existence we had long suspected. Whether they
+operated separately or on behalf of the Moslems (of which arrangement I
+could not conceive) remained to be seen. I was about to voice my doubts
+and suspicions when Bristol went on hurriedly—
+
+“I have thoroughly examined the Burton Room, and considering that the
+windows are thirty feet from the ground, that there is no sign of a
+ladder having stood upon the lawn, and that the iron bars are quite
+intact, it doesn’t look humanly possible for any one to have been in
+the room last night prior to Mostyn’s arrival!”
+
+“One of the dwarfs—”
+
+“Not even one of the dwarfs,” said Bristol, “could have passed between
+those iron bars!”
+
+“But there was blood on the window!”
+
+“I know there was, and human blood. It’s been examined!”
+
+He stared at me fixedly. The thing was unspeakably uncanny.
+
+“To-night,” he went on, “I am remaining in here”—nodding toward the
+Assyrian Room—“and I have so arranged it that no mortal being can
+possibly know I am here. Mostyn is staying, and you can stay, too, if
+you care to. Owing to Professor Deeping’s will you are badly involved
+in the beastly business, and I have no doubt you are keen to see it
+through.”
+
+“I am,” I admitted, “and the end I look for and hope for is the
+recovery of the slipper by its murderous owners!”
+
+“I am with you,” said Bristol. “It’s just a point of honour; but I
+should be glad to make them a present of it. We’re ostentatiously
+placing a constable on duty in the hallway to-night—largely as a blind.
+It will appear that we’re taking no other additional precautions.”
+
+He hurried off to make arrangements for my joining him in his watch,
+and thus again I lost my opportunity of confiding in him regarding the
+mysterious girl.
+
+I half anticipated, though I cannot imagine why, that Earl Dexter would
+put in an appearance, during the day. He did not do so, however, for
+Bristol had put a constable on the door who was well acquainted with
+the appearance of The Stetson Man. The inspector, in the course of his
+investigations, had come upon what might have been a clue, but what was
+at best a confusing one. Close by the wall of the curator’s house and
+lying on the gravel path he had found a part of a gold cuff link. It
+was of American manufacture.
+
+Upon such slender evidence we could not justly assume that it pointed
+to the presence of Dexter on the night of the attempted robbery, but it
+served to complicate a matter already sufficiently involved.
+
+In pursuance of Bristol’s plan, I concealed myself that evening just
+before the closing of the Museum doors, in a recess behind a heavy
+piece of Babylonian sculpture. Bristol was similarly concealed in
+another part of the room, and Mostyn joined us later.
+
+The Museum was closed; and so far as evidence went the authorities had
+relied again upon the bolts and bars hitherto considered impregnable,
+and upon the constable in the hall. The broken window was mended, the
+cut blind replaced, and within, in its shattered case, reposed the
+slipper of the Prophet.
+
+All the blinds being lowered, the Assyrian Room was a place of gloom,
+yellowed on the western side by the moonlight through the blind. The
+door communicating with the Burton Room was closed but not fastened.
+
+“They operated last night,” Bristol whispered to me, “at the exact time
+when the moonlight shone through the hole in the westerly blind on to
+the case. If they come to-night, and I am quite expecting them, they
+will have to dispense with that assistance; but they know by experience
+where to reach the case.”
+
+“Despite our precautions,” I said, “they will almost certainly know
+that a watch is being kept.”
+
+“They may or they may not,” replied Bristol. “Either way I’m disposed
+to think there will be another attempt. Their mysterious method is so
+rapid that they can afford to take chances.”
+
+This was not my first night vigil since I had become in a sense the
+custodian of the relic, but it was quite the most dreary. Amid the
+tomb-like objects about us we seemed two puny mortals toying with
+stupendous things. We could not smoke and must converse only in
+whispers; and so the night wore on until I began to think that our
+watch would be dully uneventful.
+
+“Our big chance,” whispered Mostyn, “is in the fact that any day may
+change the conditions. They can’t afford to wait.”
+
+He ceased abruptly, grasping my arm. From somewhere, somewhere outside
+the building, we all three had heard a soft whistle. A moment of tense
+listening followed.
+
+“If only we could have had the place surrounded,” whispered
+Bristol—“but it was impossible, of course.”
+
+A faint grating noise echoed through the lofty Burton Room. Bristol
+slipped past me in the semi-gloom, and gently opened the communicating
+door a few inches.
+
+A-tiptoe, I joined him, and craning across his shoulder saw a strange
+and wonderful thing.
+
+The newly glazed east window again was shattered with a booming crash!
+The yellow blind was thrust aside. A long something reached out toward
+the broken case. There was a sort of fumbling sound, and paralyzed with
+the wonder of it—for the window, remember, was thirty feet from the
+ground—I stood frozen to my post.
+
+Not so Bristol. As the weird tentacle (or more exactly it reminded me
+of a gigantic crab’s claw) touched the case, the Inspector leapt
+forward. A white beam from his electric torch cut through to the broken
+cabinet.
+
+The thing was withdrawn ... and with it went the slipper of the
+Prophet.
+
+“Raise the blinds!” cried Bristol. “Mr. Cavanagh! Mr. Mostyn! We must
+not let them give us the slip!”
+
+I got up the blind of the nearer window as Bristol raised the other.
+Not a living thing was in sight from either!
+
+Mostyn was beside me, his hand resting on my shoulder. I noted how he
+trembled. Bristol turned and looked back at us. The light from his
+pocket torch flashed upon the curator’s face; and I have never seen
+such an expression of horrified amazement as that which it wore.
+Faintly, I could hear the constable racing up the steps from the hall.
+
+Ideas of the supernatural came to us all, I know; when, with a
+scuffling sound not unlike that of a rat in a ceiling, something moved
+above us!
+
+“Damn my thick head!” roared Bristol, furiously. “He’s on the roof!
+It’s flat as a floor and there’s enough ivy alongside the water-spout
+on your house adjoining, Mr. Mostyn, to afford foothold to an invading
+army!”
+
+He plunged off toward the open door, and I heard him racing down the
+Assyrian Room.
+
+“He had a short rope ladder fixed from the gutter!” he cried back at
+us. “Graham! Graham!” (the constable on duty in the hall)—“Get the
+front door open! Get...” His voice died away as he leapt down the
+stairs.
+
+From the direction of Orpington Square came a horrid, choking scream.
+It rose hideously; it fell, rose again—and died.
+
+The thief escaped. We saw the traces upon the ivy where he had hastened
+down. Bristol ascended by the same route, and found where the
+ladder-hooks had twice been attached to the gutterway. Constable
+Graham, who was first actually to leave the building, declared that he
+heard the whirr of a re-started motor lower down Great Orchard Street.
+
+Bristol’s theory, later to be dreadfully substantiated, was that the
+thief had broken the glass and reached into the case with an
+arrangement similar to that employed for pruning trees, having a clutch
+at the end, worked with a cord.
+
+“Hassan has been too clever for us!” said the inspector. “But—what in
+God’s name did that awful screaming mean?”
+
+I had a theory, but I did not advance it then.
+
+It was not until nearly dawn that my theory, and Bristol’s, regarding
+the clutch arrangement, both were confirmed. For close under the
+railings which abut on Orpington Square, in a pool of blood we found
+just such an instrument as Bristol had described.
+
+And still clutching it was a pallid and ghastly shrunken hand that had
+been severed from above the wrist!
+
+“Merciful God!” whispered the inspector—“look at the opal ring on the
+finger! Look at the bandage where he cut himself on the broken
+window-glass that first night, when Mr. Mostyn disturbed him. It wasn’t
+the Hashishin who stole the thing.... It’s Earl Dexter’s hand!”
+
+No one spoke for a moment. Then—
+
+“Which of them has—” began Mostyn huskily.
+
+“The slipper of the Prophet?” interrupted Bristol. “I wonder if we
+shall ever know?”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+A SHRIVELLED HAND
+
+
+Around a large square table in a room at New Scotland Yard stood a
+group of men, all of whom looked more or less continuously at something
+that lay upon the polished deal. One of the party, none other than the
+Commissioner himself, had just finished speaking, and in silence now we
+stood about the gruesome object which had furnished him with the text
+of his very terse address.
+
+I knew myself privileged in being admitted to such a conference at the
+C.I.D. headquarters and owed my admission partly to Inspector Bristol,
+and partly to the fact that under the will of the late Professor
+Deeping I was concerned in the uncanny business we were met to discuss.
+
+Novelty has a charm for every one; and to find oneself immersed in a
+maelstrom of Eastern devilry, with a group of scientific murderers in
+pursuit of a holy Moslem relic, and unexpectedly to be made a trustee
+of that dangerous curiosity, makes a certain appeal to the adventurous.
+But to read of such things and to participate in them are widely
+different matters. The slipper of the Prophet and the dreadful crimes
+connected with it, the mutilations, murders, the uncanny mysteries
+which made up its history, were filling my world with horror.
+
+Now, in silence we stood around that table at New Scotland Yard and
+watched, as though we expected it to move, the ghastly “clue” which lay
+there. It was a shrivelled human hand, and about the thumb and
+forefinger there still dryly hung a fragment of lint which had bandaged
+a jagged wound. On one of the shrunken fingers was a ring set with a
+large opal.
+
+Inspector Bristol broke the oppressive silence.
+
+“You see, sir,” he said, addressing the Commissioner, “this marks a new
+complication in the case. Up to this week although, unfortunately, we
+had made next to no progress, the thing was straightforward enough. A
+band of Eastern murderers, working along lines quite novel to Europe,
+were concealed somewhere in London. We knew that much. They murdered
+Professor Deeping, but failed to recover the slipper. They mutilated
+everyone who touched it mysteriously. The best men in the department,
+working night and day, failed to effect a single arrest. In spite of
+the mysterious activity of Hassan of Aleppo the slipper was safely
+lodged in the British Antiquarian Museum.”
+
+The Commissioner nodded thoughtfully.
+
+“There is no doubt,” continued Bristol, “that the Hashishin were
+watching the Museum. Mr. Cavanagh, here”—he nodded in my direction—“saw
+Hassan himself lurking in the neighbourhood. We took every precaution,
+observed the greatest secrecy; but in spite of it all a constable who
+touched the accursed thing lost his right hand. Then the slipper was
+taken.”
+
+He stopped, and all eyes again were turned to the table.
+
+“The Yard,” resumed Bristol slowly, “had information that Earl Dexter,
+the cleverest crook in America, was in England. He was seen in the
+Museum, and the night following the slipper was stolen. Then outside
+the place I found—that!”
+
+He pointed to the severed hand. No one spoke for a moment. Then—
+
+“The new problem,” said the Commissioner, “is this: who took the
+slipper, Dexter or Hassan of Aleppo?”
+
+“That’s it, sir,” agreed Bristol. “Dexter had two passages booked in
+the Oceanic: but he didn’t sail with her, and—that’s his hand!”
+
+“You say he has not been traced?” asked the Commissioner.
+
+“No doctor known to the Medical Association,” replied Bristol, “is
+attending him! He’s not in any of the hospitals. He has completely
+vanished. The conclusion is obvious!”
+
+“The evident deduction,” I said, “is that Dexter stole the slipper from
+the Museum—God knows with what purpose—and that Hassan of Aleppo
+recovered it from him.”
+
+“You think we shall next hear of Earl Dexter from the river police?”
+suggested Bristol.
+
+“Personally,” replied the Commissioner, “I agree with Mr. Cavanagh. I
+think Dexter is dead, and it is very probable that Hassan and Company
+are already homeward bound with the slipper of the Prophet.”
+
+With all my heart I hoped that he might be right, but an intuition was
+with me crying that he was wrong, that many bloody deeds would be, ere
+the sacred slipper should return to the East.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+THE DWARF
+
+
+The manner in which we next heard of the whereabouts of the Prophet’s
+slipper was utterly unforeseen, wildly dramatic. That the Hashishin
+were aware that I, though its legal trustee, no longer had charge of
+the relic nor knowledge of its resting-place, was sufficiently evident
+from the immunity which I enjoyed at this time from that ceaseless
+haunting by members of the uncanny organization ruled by Hassan. I had
+begun to feel more secure in my chambers, and no longer worked with a
+loaded revolver upon the table beside me. But the slightest unusual
+noise in the night still sufficed to arouse me and set me listening
+intently, to chill me with dread of what it might portend. In short, my
+nerves were by no means recovered from the ceaseless strain of the
+events connected with and arising out of the death of my poor friend,
+Professor Deeping.
+
+One evening as I sat at work in my chambers, with the throb of busy
+Fleet Street and its thousand familiar sounds floating in to me through
+the open windows, my phone bell rang.
+
+Even as I turned to take up the receiver a foreboding possessed me that
+my trusteeship was no longer to be a sinecure. It was Bristol who had
+rung me up, and upon very strange business.
+
+“A development at last!” he said; “but at present I don’t know what to
+make of it. Can you come down now?”
+
+“Where are you speaking from?”
+
+“From the Waterloo Road—a delightful neighbourhood. I shall be glad if
+you can meet me at the entrance to Wyatt’s Buildings in half an hour.”
+
+“What is it? Have you found Dexter?”
+
+“No, unfortunately. But it’s murder!”
+
+I knew as I hung up the receiver that my brief period of peace was
+ended; that the lists of assassination were reopened. I hurried out
+through the court into Fleet Street, thinking of the key of the now
+empty case at the Museum which reposed at my bankers, thinking of the
+devils who pursued the slipper, thinking of the hundred and one things,
+strange and terrible, which went to make up the history of that
+gruesome relic.
+
+Wyatt’s Buildings, Waterloo Road, are a gloomy and forbidding block of
+dwellings which seem to frown sullenly upon the high road, from which
+they are divided by a dark and dirty courtyard. Passing an iron
+gateway, you enter, by way of an arch, into this sinister place of
+uncleanness. Male residents in their shirt sleeves lounge against the
+several entrances. Bedraggled women nurse dirty infants and sit in
+groups upon the stone steps, rendering them almost impassable. But
+to-night a thing had happened in Wyatt’s Buildings which had awakened
+in the inhabitants, hardened to sordid crime, a sort of torpid
+interest.
+
+Faces peered from most of the windows which commanded a view of the
+courtyard, looking like pallid blotches against the darkness; but a
+number of police confined the loungers within their several doorways,
+so that the yard itself was comparatively clear.
+
+I had had some difficulty in forcing a way through the crowd which
+thronged the entrance, but finally I found myself standing beside
+Inspector Bristol and looking down upon that which had brought us both
+to Wyatt’s Buildings.
+
+There was no moon that night, and only the light of the lamp in the
+archway, with some faint glimmers from the stairways surrounding the
+court, reached the dirty paving. Bristol directed the light of a
+pocket-lamp upon the hunched-up figure which lay in the dust, and I saw
+it to be that of a dwarfish creature, yellow skinned and wearing only a
+dark loin cloth. He had a malformed and disproportionate head, a head
+that had been too large even for a big man. I knew after first glance
+that this was one of the horrible dwarfs employed by the Hashishin in
+their murderous business. It might even be the one who had killed
+Deeping; but this was impossible to determine by reason of the fact
+that the hideous, swollen head, together with the features, was
+completely crushed. I shall not describe the creature’s appearance in
+further detail.
+
+Having given me an opportunity to examine the dead dwarf, Bristol
+returned the electric lamp to his pocket and stood looking at me in the
+semi-gloom. A constable stood on duty quite near to us, and others
+guarded the archway and the doors to the dwellings. The murmur of
+subdued voices echoed hollowly in the wells of the staircases, and a
+constant excited murmur proceeded from the crowd at the entrance. No
+pressmen had yet been admitted, though numbers of them were at the
+gates.
+
+“It happened less than an hour ago,” said Bristol. “The place was much
+as you see it now, and from what I can gather there came the sound of a
+shot and several people saw the dwarf fall through the air and drop
+where he lies!”
+
+The light was insufficient to show the expression upon the speaker’s
+face, but his voice told of a great wonder.
+
+“It is a bit like an Indian conjuring trick,” I said, looking up to the
+sky above us; “who fired the shot?”
+
+“So far,” replied Bristol, “I have failed to find out; but there’s a
+bullet in the thing’s head. He was dead before he reached the
+pavement.”
+
+“Did no one see the flash of the pistol?”
+
+“No one that I have got hold of yet. Of course this kind of evidence is
+very unreliable; these people regularly go out of their way to mislead
+the police.”
+
+“You think the body may have been carried here from somewhere else?”
+
+“Oh, no; this is where it fell, right enough. You can see where his
+head struck the stones.”
+
+“He has not been moved at all?”
+
+“No; I shall not move him until I’ve worked out where in heaven’s name
+he can have fallen from! You and I have seen some mysterious things
+happen, Mr. Cavanagh, since the slipper of the Prophet came to England
+and brought these people”—he nodded toward the thing at our feet—“in
+its train; but this is the most inexplicable incident to date. I don’t
+know what to make of it at all. Quite apart from the question of where
+the dwarf fell from, who shot at him and why?”
+
+“Have you no theory?” I asked. “The incident to my mind points directly
+to one thing. We know that this uncanny creature belonged to the
+organization of Hassan of Aleppo. We know that Hassan implacably
+pursues one object—the slipper. In pursuit of the slipper, then, the
+dwarf came here. Bristol!”—I laid my hand upon his arm, glancing about
+me with a very real apprehension—“the slipper must be somewhere near!”
+
+Bristol turned to the constable standing hard by.
+
+“Remain here,” he ordered. Then to me: “I should like you to come up on
+to the roof. From there we can survey the ground and perhaps arrive at
+some explanation of how the dwarf came to fall upon that spot.”
+
+Passing the constable on duty at one of the doorways and making our way
+through the group of loiterers there, we ascended amid conflicting
+odours to the topmost floor. A ladder was fixed against the wall
+communicating with a trap in the ceiling. Several individuals in their
+shirt sleeves and all smoking clay pipes had followed us up. Bristol
+turned upon them.
+
+“Get downstairs,” he said—“all the lot of you, and stop there!”
+
+With muttered imprecations our audience dispersed, slowly returning by
+the way they had come. Bristol mounted the ladder and opened the trap.
+Through the square opening showed a velvet patch spangled with starry
+points. As he passed up on to the roof and I followed him, the
+comparative cleanness of the air was most refreshing after the varied
+fumes of the staircase.
+
+Side by side we leaned upon the parapet looking down into the dirty
+courtyard which was the theatre of this weird mystery; looking down
+upon the stage, sordidly Western, where a mystic Eastern tragedy had
+been enacted.
+
+I could see the constable standing beside the crushed thing upon the
+stones.
+
+“Now,” said Bristol, with a sort of awe in his voice, “where did he
+fall from?”
+
+And at his words, looking down at the spot where the dwarf lay, and
+noting that he could not possibly have fallen there from any of the
+buildings surrounding the courtyard, an eerie sensation crept over me;
+for I was convinced that the happening was susceptible of no natural
+explanation.
+
+I had heard—who has not heard?—of the Indian rope trick, where a fakir
+throws a rope into the air which remains magically suspended whilst a
+boy climbs upward and upward until he disappears into space. I had
+never credited accounts of the performance; but now I began seriously
+to wonder if the arts of Hassan of Aleppo were not as great or greater
+than the arts of fakir. But the crowning mystery to my mind was that of
+the Hashishin’s death. It would seem that as he had hung suspended in
+space he had been shot!
+
+“You say that someone heard the sound of the shot?” I asked suddenly.
+
+“Several people,” replied Bristol; “but no one knows, or no one will
+say, from what direction it came. I shall go on with the inquiry, of
+course, and cross-examine every soul in Wyatt’s Buildings. Meanwhile,
+I’m open to confess that I am beaten.”
+
+In the velvet sky countless points blazed tropically. The hum of the
+traffic in Waterloo Road reached us only in a muffled way. Sordidness
+lay beneath us, but up there under the heavens we seemed removed from
+it as any Babylonian astronomer communing with the stars.
+
+When, some ten minutes later, I passed out into the noise of Waterloo
+Road, I left behind me an unsolved mystery and took with me a great
+dread; for I knew that the quest of the sacred slipper was not ended, I
+knew that another tragedy was added to its history—and I feared to
+surmise what the future might hold for all of us.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+THE WOMAN WITH THE BASKET
+
+
+Deep in thought respecting the inexplicable nature of this latest
+mystery, I turned in the direction of the bridge, and leaving behind me
+an ever-swelling throng at the gate of Wyatt’s Buildings, proceeded
+westward.
+
+The death of the dwarf had lifted the case into the realms of the
+marvellous, and I noted nothing of the bustle about me, for mentally I
+was still surveying that hunched-up body which had fallen out of empty
+space.
+
+Then in upon my preoccupation burst a woman’s scream!
+
+I aroused myself from reverie, looking about to right and left.
+Evidently I had been walking slowly, for I was less than a hundred
+yards from Wyatt’s Buildings, and hard by the entrance to an uninviting
+alley from which I thought the scream had proceeded.
+
+And as I hesitated, for I had no desire to become involved in a drunken
+brawl, again came the shrill scream: “Help! help!”
+
+I cannot say if I was the only passer-by who heard the cry; certainly I
+was the only one who responded to it. I ran down the narrow street,
+which was practically deserted, and heard windows thrown up as I passed
+for the cries for help continued.
+
+Just beyond a patch of light cast by a street lamp a scene was being
+enacted strange enough at any time and in any place, but doubly
+singular at that hour of the night, or early morning, in a lane off the
+Waterloo Road.
+
+An old woman, from whose hand a basket of provisions had fallen, was
+struggling in the grasp of a tall Oriental! He was evidently trying to
+stifle her screams and at the same time to pinion her arms behind her!
+
+I perceived that there was more in this scene than met the eye.
+Oriental footpads are rarities in the purlieus of Waterloo Road. So
+much was evident; and since I carried a short, sharp argument in my
+pocket, I hastened to advance it.
+
+At the sight of the gleaming revolver barrel the man, who was dressed
+in dark clothes and wore a turban, turned and ran swiftly off. I had
+scarce a glimpse of his pallid brown face ere he was gone, nor did the
+thought of pursuit enter my mind. I turned to the old woman, who was
+dressed in shabby black and who was rearranging her thick veil in an
+oddly composed manner, considering the nature of the adventure that had
+befallen her.
+
+She picked up her basket, and turned away. Needless to say I was rather
+shocked at her callous ingratitude, for she offered no word of thanks,
+did not even glance in my direction, but made off hurriedly toward
+Waterloo Road.
+
+I had been on the point of inquiring if she had sustained any injury,
+but I checked the words and stood looking after her in blank
+wonderment. Then my ideas were diverted into a new channel. I
+perceived, as she passed under an adjacent lamp, that her basket
+contained provisions such as a woman of her appearance would scarcely
+be expected to purchase. I noted a bottle of wine, a chicken, and a
+large melon.
+
+The nationality of the assailant from the first had marked the affair
+for no ordinary one, and now a hazy notion of what lay behind all this
+began to come to me.
+
+Keeping well in the shadows on the opposite side of the way, I followed
+the woman with the basket. The lane was quite deserted; for, the
+disturbance over, those few residents who had raised their windows had
+promptly lowered them again. She came out into Waterloo Road, crossed
+over, and stood waiting by a stopping-place for electric cars. I saw
+her arranging a cloth over her basket in such a way as effectually to
+conceal the contents. A strong mental excitement possessed me. The
+detective fever claims us all at one time or another, I think, and I
+had good reason for pursuing any inquiry that promised to lead to the
+elucidation of the slipper mystery. A theory, covering all the facts of
+the assault incident, now presented itself, and I stood back in the
+shadow, watchful; in a degree, exultant.
+
+A Greenwich-bound car was hailed by the woman with the basket. I could
+not be mistaken, I felt sure, in my belief that she cast furtive
+glances about her as she mounted the steps. But, having seen her
+actually aboard, my attention became elsewhere engaged.
+
+All now depended upon securing a cab before the tram car had passed
+from view!
+
+I counted it an act of Providence that a disengaged taxi appeared at
+that moment, evidently bound for Waterloo Station. I ran out into the
+road with cane upraised.
+
+As the man drew up—
+
+“Quick!” I cried. “You see that Greenwich car—nearly at the Ophthalmic
+Hospital? Follow it. Don’t get too near. I will give you further
+instructions through the tube.” I leapt in. We were off!
+
+The rocking car ahead was rounding the bend now toward St. George’s
+Circus. As it passed the clock and entered South London Road it
+stopped. I raised the tube.
+
+“Pass it slowly!”
+
+We skirted the clock tower, and bore around to the right. Then I drew
+well back in the corner of the cab.
+
+The woman with the basket was descending! “Pull up a few yards beyond!”
+I directed. As the car re-started, and passed us, the taxi became
+stationary. I peered out of the little window at the back.
+
+The woman was returning in the direction of Waterloo Road!
+
+“Drive slowly back along Waterloo Road,” was my next order. “Pretend
+you are looking for a fare; I will keep out of sight.”
+
+The man nodded. It was unlikely that any one would notice the fact that
+the cab was engaged.
+
+I was borne back again upon my course. The woman kept to the right,
+and, once we were entered into the straight road which leads to the
+bridge, I again raised the speaking-tube.
+
+“Pull up,” I said. “On the right-hand side is an old woman carrying a
+basket, fifty yards ahead. Do you see her? Keep well behind, but don’t
+lose sight of her.”
+
+The man drew up again and sat watching the figure with the basket until
+it was almost lost from sight. Then slowly we resumed our way. I would
+have continued the pursuit afoot now, but I feared that my quarry might
+again enter a vehicle. She did not do so, however, but coming abreast
+of the turning in which the mysterious assault had taken place, she
+crossed the road and disappeared from view.
+
+I leapt out of the cab, thrust half a crown into the man’s hand, and
+ran on to the corner. The night was now far advanced, and I knew that
+the chances of detection were thereby increased. But the woman seemed
+to have abandoned her fears, and I saw her just ahead of me walking
+resolutely past the lamp beyond which a short time earlier she had met
+with a dangerous adventure.
+
+Since the opposite side of the street was comparatively in darkness, I
+slipped across, and in a state of high nervous tension pursued this
+strange work of espionage. I was convinced that I had forestalled
+Bristol and that I was hot upon the track of those who could explain
+the mystery of the dead dwarf.
+
+The woman entered the gate of the block of dwellings even more
+forbidding in appearance than those which that night had staged a
+dreadful drama.
+
+As the figure with the basket was lost from view I crept on, and in
+turn entered the evil-smelling hallway. I stepped cautiously, and
+standing beneath a gaslight protected by a wire frame, I congratulated
+myself upon having reached that point of vantage as silently as any
+Sioux stalker.
+
+Footsteps were receding up the stone stairs. Craning my neck, I peered
+up the well of the staircase. I could not see the woman, but from the
+sound of her tread it was possible to count the landings which she
+passed. When she had reached the fourth, and I heard her step upon yet
+another flight, I knew that she must be bound for the topmost floor;
+and observing every precaution, almost holding my breath in a nervous
+endeavour to make not the slightest sound, rapidly I mounted the
+stairs.
+
+I was come to the third landing in this secret fashion when quite
+distinctly I heard the grating of a key in a lock!
+
+Since four doors opened upon each of the landings, at all costs, I
+thought, I must learn by which door she entered.
+
+Throwing caution to the winds I raced up the remaining flights ... and
+there at the top the woman confronted me, with blazing eyes!—with eyes
+that thrilled every nerve; for they were violet eyes, the only truly
+violet eyes I have ever seen! They were the eyes of the woman who like
+a charming, mocking will-o’-the-wisp had danced through this tragic
+scene from the time that poor Professor Deeping had brought the
+Prophet’s slipper to London up to this present hour!
+
+There at the head of those stone steps in that common dwelling-house I
+knew her—and in the violet eyes it was written that she knew, and
+feared, me!
+
+“What do you want? Why are you following me?”
+
+She made no endeavour to disguise her voice. Almost, I think, she spoke
+the words involuntarily.
+
+I stood beside her. Quickly as she had turned from the door at my
+ascent, I had noted that it was that numbered forty-eight which she had
+been about to open.
+
+“You waste words,” I said grimly. “Who lives there?”
+
+I nodded in the direction of the doorway. The violet eyes watched me
+with an expression in their depths which I find myself wholly unable to
+describe. Fear predominated, but there was anger, too, and with it a
+sort of entreaty which almost made me regret that I had taken this task
+upon myself. From beneath the shabby black hat escaped an errant lock
+of wavy hair wholly inconsistent with the assumed appearance of the
+woman. The flickering gaslight on the landing sought out in that
+wonderful hair shades which seemed to glow with the soft light seen in
+the heart of a rose. The thick veil was raised now and all attempts at
+deception abandoned. At bay she faced me, this secret woman whom I knew
+to hold the key to some of the darkest places which we sought to
+explore.
+
+“I live there,” she said slowly. “What do you want with me?”
+
+“I want to know,” I replied, “for whom are those provisions in your
+basket?”
+
+She watched me fixedly.
+
+“And I want to know,” I continued, “something that only you can tell
+me. We have met before, madam, but you have always eluded me. This time
+you shall not do so. There’s much I have to ask of you, but
+particularly I want to know who killed the Hashishin who lies dead at
+no great distance from here!”
+
+“How can I tell you that? Of what are you speaking?”
+
+Her voice was low and musical; that of a cultured woman. She evidently
+recognized the futility of further subterfuge in this respect.
+
+“You know quite well of what I am speaking! You know that you can tell
+me if any one can! The fact that you go disguised alone condemns you!
+Why should I remind you of our previous meetings—of the links which
+bind you to the history of the Prophet’s slipper?” She shuddered and
+closed her eyes. “Your present attitude is a sufficient admission!”
+
+She stood silent before me, with something pitiful in her pose—a
+wonderfully pretty woman, whose disarranged hair and dilapidated hat
+could not mar her beauty; whose clumsy, ill-fitting garments could not
+conceal her lithe grace.
+
+Our altercation had not thus far served to arouse any of the
+inhabitants and on that stuffy landing, beneath the flickering
+gaslight, we stood alone, a group of two which epitomized strange
+things.
+
+Then, with that quietly dramatic note which marks real life entrances
+and differentiates them from the loudly acclaimed episodes of the
+stage, a third actor took up his cue.
+
+“Both hands, Mr. Cavanagh!” directed an American voice.
+
+Nerves atwitch, I started around in its direction.
+
+From behind the slightly opened door of No. 48 protruded a steel
+barrel, pointed accurately at my head!
+
+I hesitated, glancing from the woman toward the open door.
+
+“Do it quick!” continued the voice incisively. “You are up against a
+desperate man, Mr. Cavanagh. Raise your hands. Carneta, relieve Mr.
+Cavanagh of his gun!”
+
+Instantly the girl, with deft fingers, had obtained possession of my
+revolver.
+
+“Step inside,” said the crisp, strident voice. Knowing myself helpless
+and quite convinced that I was indeed in the clutches of desperate
+people, I entered the doorway, the door being held open from within.
+She whom I had heard called Carneta followed. The door was reclosed;
+and I found myself in a perfectly bare and dim passageway. From behind
+me came the order—
+
+“Go right ahead!”
+
+Into a practically unfurnished room, lighted by one gas jet, I walked.
+Some coarse matting hung before the two windows and a fairly large grip
+stood on the floor against one wall. A gas-ring was in the hearth,
+together with a few cheap cooking utensils.
+
+
+I turned and faced the door. First entered Carneta, carrying the
+basket; then came a man with a revolver in his left hand and his right
+arm strapped across his chest and swathed in bandages. One glance
+revealed the fact that his right hand had been severed—revealed the
+fact, though I knew it already, that my captor was Earl Dexter.
+
+He looked even leaner than when I had last seen him. I had no doubt
+that his ghastly wound had occasioned a tremendous loss of blood. His
+gaunt face was positively emaciated, but the steely gray eyes had lost
+nothing of their brightness. There was a good deal about Mr. Earl
+Dexter, the cracksman, that any man must have admired.
+
+“Shut the door, Carneta,” he said quietly. His companion closed the
+door and Dexter sat down on the grip, regarding me with his oddly
+humorous smile.
+
+“You’re a visitor I did not expect, Mr. Cavanagh,” he said. “I expected
+someone worse. You’ve interfered a bit with my plans but I don’t know
+that I can’t rearrange things satisfactorily. I don’t think I’ll stop
+for supper, though—” He glanced at the girl, who stood silent by the
+door.
+
+“Just pack up the provisions,” he directed, nodding toward the
+basket—“in the next room.”
+
+She departed without a word.
+
+“That’s a noticeable dust coat you’re wearing, Mr. Cavanagh,” said the
+American; “it gives me a great notion. I’m afraid I’ll have to borrow
+it.”
+
+He glanced, smiling, at the revolver in his left hand and back again to
+me. There was nothing of the bully about him, nothing melodramatic; but
+I took off the coat without demur and threw it across to him.
+
+“It will hide this stump,” he said grimly; “and any of the Hashishin
+gentlemen who may be on the look-out—though I rather fancy the road is
+clear at the moment—will mistake me for you. See the idea? Carneta will
+be in a cab and I’ll be in after her and away before they’ve got time
+to so much as whistle.”
+
+Very awkwardly he got into the coat.
+
+“She’s a clever girl, Carneta,” he said. “She’s doctored me all along
+since those devils cut my hand off.”
+
+As he finished speaking Carneta returned.
+
+She had discarded her rags and wore a large travelling coat and a
+fashionable hat.
+
+“Ready?” asked Dexter. “We’ll make a rush for it. We meant to go
+to-night anyway. It’s getting too hot here!” He turned to me.
+
+“Sorry to say,” he drawled, “I’ll have to tie you up and gag you.
+Apologize; but it can’t be helped.”
+
+Carneta nodded and went out of the room again, to return almost
+immediately with a line that looked as though it might have been
+employed for drying washing.
+
+“Hands behind you,” rapped Dexter, toying with the revolver—“and think
+yourself lucky you’ve got two!”
+
+There was no mistaking the manner of man with whom I had to deal, and I
+obeyed; but my mind was busy with a hundred projects. Very neatly the
+girl bound my wrists, and in response to a slight nod from Dexter threw
+the end of the line up over a beam in the sloping ceiling, for the room
+was right under the roof, and drew it up in such a way that, my wrists
+being raised behind me, I became utterly helpless. It was an ingenious
+device indicating considerable experience.
+
+“Just tie his handkerchief around his mouth,” directed Dexter: “that
+will keep him quiet long enough for our purpose. I hope you will be
+released soon, Mr. Cavanagh,” he added. “Greatly regret the necessity.”
+
+Carneta bound the handkerchief over my mouth.
+
+Dexter extinguished the gas.
+
+“Mr. Cavanagh,” he said, “I’ve gone through hell and I’ve lost the most
+useful four fingers and a thumb in the United States to get hold of the
+Prophet’s slipper. Any one can have it that’s open to pay for it—but
+I’ve got to retire on the deal, so I’ll drive a hard bargain!
+Good-night!”
+
+There was a sound of retreating footsteps, and I heard the entrance
+door close quietly.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+WHAT CAME THROUGH THE WINDOW
+
+
+I had not been in my unnatural position for many minutes before I began
+to suffer agonies, agonies not only physical but mental; for standing
+there like some prisoner of the Inquisition, it came to me how this
+dismantled apartment must be the focus of the dreadful forces of Hassan
+of Aleppo!
+
+That Earl Dexter had the slipper of the Prophet I no longer doubted,
+and that he had sustained, in this dwelling beneath the roof, an
+uncanny siege during the days which had passed since the theft from the
+Antiquarian Museum, was equally certain. Helpless, gagged, I pictured
+those hideous creatures, evil products of the secret East, who might,
+nay, who must surround that place! I thought of the horrible little
+yellow man who lay dead in Wyatt’s Buildings; and it became evident to
+me that the house in which I was now imprisoned must overlook the back
+of those unsavoury tenements. The windows, sack-covered now, no doubt
+commanded a view of the roofs of the buildings. One of the mysteries
+that had puzzled us was solved. It was Earl Dexter who had shot the
+yellow dwarf as he was bound for this very room! But how humanly the
+Hashishin had proposed to gain his goal, how he had travelled through
+empty space—for from empty space the shot had brought him down—I could
+not imagine.
+
+I knew something of the almost supernatural attributes of these people.
+From Professor Deeping’s book I knew of the incredible feats which they
+could perform when under the influence of the drug hashish. From
+personal experience also I knew that they had powers wholly abnormal.
+
+The pain in my arms and back momentarily increased. An awesome silence
+ruled. I tortured myself with pictures of murderous yellow men
+possessed of the power claimed by the Mahatmas, of levitation. Mentally
+I could see a distorted half-animal creature carrying a great gleaming
+knife and floating supernaturally toward me through the night!
+
+A soft pattering sound became perceptible on the sloping roof above!
+
+I think I have never known such intense and numbing fear as that which
+now descended upon me. Perhaps I may be forgiven it. A more dreadful
+situation it would be hard to devise. Knowing that I was on the fifth
+story of a house, bound, helpless, I knew, too, that a second mystic
+guardian of the slipper was come to accomplish the task in which the
+first had failed!
+
+I began to pray fervently.
+
+Neither of the windows were closed; and now through the intense
+darkness I heard one of them being raised up—up—up...
+
+The sacking was pulled aside inch by inch.
+
+Silhouetted against the faintly luminous background I saw a hunched,
+unnatural figure. The real was more dreadful even than the
+imaginary—for some stray beam of light touched into cold radiance a
+huge curved knife which the visitant held between his teeth!
+
+My fear became a madness, and I twisted my body violently in a wild
+endeavour to free myself. A dreadful pain shot through my left
+shoulder, and the whole nightmare scene—the thing with the knife at the
+window—the low-ceiled room-began to fade away from me. I seemed to be
+falling into deep water.
+
+A splintering crash and the sound of shouting formed my last
+recollections ere unconsciousness came.
+
+I found myself lying in an armchair with Bristol forcing brandy between
+my lips. My left arm hung limply at my side and the pain in my
+dislocated shoulder was excruciating.
+
+“Thank God you are all right, Mr. Cavanagh!” said the inspector. “I got
+the surprise of my life when we smashed the door in and found you tied
+up here!”
+
+“You came none too soon,” I said feebly. “God knows how Providence
+directed you here.”
+
+“Providence it was,” replied Bristol. “From the roof of Wyatt’s
+Buildings—you know the spot?—I saw the second yellow devil coming. By
+God! They meant to have it to-night! They don’t value their lives a
+brass farthing against that damned slipper!”
+
+“But how—”
+
+“Along the telegraph-wires, Mr. Cavanagh! They cross Wyatt’s Buildings
+and cross this house. It was a moonless night or we should have seen it
+at once! I watched him, saw him drop to this roof—and brought the men
+around to the front.”
+
+“Did he, that awful thing, escape?”
+
+“He dropped full forty feet into a tree—from the tree to the ground,
+and went off like a cat!”
+
+“Earl Dexter has escaped us,” I said, “and he has the slipper!”
+
+“God help him!” replied Bristol. “For by now he has that hell-pack at
+his heels! What a case! Heavens above, it will drive me mad!”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+A RAPPING AT MIDNIGHT
+
+
+Inspector Bristol finished his whisky at a gulp and stood up, a tall,
+massive figure, stretching himself and yawning.
+
+“The detective of fiction would be hard at work on this case, now,” he
+said, smiling, “but I don’t even pretend to be. I am at a standstill
+and I don’t care who knows it.”
+
+“You have absolutely no clue to the whereabouts of Earl Dexter?”
+
+“Not the slightest, Mr. Cavanagh. You hear a lot about the machinery of
+the law, but as a matter of fact, looking for a clever man hidden in
+London is a good deal like looking for a needle in a haystack. Then, he
+may have been bluffing when he told you he had the Prophet’s slipper.
+He’s already had his hand cut off through interfering with the beastly
+thing, and I really can’t believe he would take further chances by
+keeping it in his possession. Nevertheless, I should like to find him.”
+
+He leaned back against the mantelpiece, scratching his head
+perplexedly. In this perplexity he had my sympathy. No such pursuit, I
+venture to say, had ever before been required of Scotland Yard as this
+of the slipper of the Prophet. An organization founded in 1090, which
+has made a science of assassination, which through the centuries has
+perfected the malign arts, which, lingering on in a dark spot in Syria,
+has suddenly migrated and established itself in London, is a
+proposition almost unthinkable.
+
+It was hard to believe that even the daring American cracksman should
+have ventured to touch that blood-stained relic of the Prophet, that he
+should have snatched it away from beneath the very eyes of the fanatics
+who fiercely guarded it. What he hoped to gain by his possession of the
+slipper was not evident, but the fact remained that if he could be
+believed, he had it, and provided Scotland Yard’s information was
+accurate, he still lurked in hiding somewhere in London.
+
+Meanwhile, no clue offered to his hiding-place, and despite the
+ceaseless vigilance of the men acting under Bristol’s orders, no trace
+could be found of Hassan of Aleppo nor of his fiendish associates.
+
+“My theory is,” said Bristol, lighting a cigarette, “that even Dexter’s
+cleverness has failed to save him. He’s probably a dead man by now,
+which accounts for our failing to find him; and Hassan of Aleppo has
+recovered the slipper and returned to the East, taking his gruesome
+company with him—God knows how! But that accounts for our failing to
+find him.”
+
+I stood up rather wearily. Although poor Deeping had appointed me legal
+guardian of the relic, and although I could render but a poor account
+of my stewardship, let me confess that I was anxious to take that
+comforting theory to my bosom. I would have given much to have known
+beyond any possibility of doubt that the accursed slipper and its
+blood-lustful guardian were far away from England. Had I known so much,
+life would again have had something to offer me besides ceaseless fear,
+endless watchings. I could have slept again, perhaps; without awaking,
+clammy, peering into every shadow, listening, nerves atwitch to each
+slightest sound disturbing the night; without groping beneath the
+pillow for my revolver.
+
+“Then you think,” I said, “that the English phase of the slipper’s
+history is closed? You think that Dexter, minus his right hand, has
+eluded British law—that Hassan and Company have evaded retribution?”
+
+“I do!” said Bristol grimly, “and although that means the biggest
+failure in my professional career, I am glad—damned glad!”
+
+Shortly afterward he took his departure; and I leaned from the window,
+watching him pass along the court below and out under the arch into
+Fleet Street. He was a man whose opinions I valued, and in all
+sincerity I prayed now that he might be right; that the surcease of
+horror which we had recently experienced after the ghastly tragedies
+which had clustered thick about the haunted slipper, might mean what he
+surmised it to mean.
+
+The heat to-night was very oppressive. A sort of steaming mist seemed
+to rise from the court, and no cooling breeze entered my opened
+windows. The clamour of the traffic in Fleet Street came to me but
+remotely. Big Ben began to strike midnight. So far as I could see,
+residents on the other stairs were all abed and a velvet shadow carpet
+lay unbroken across three parts of the court. The sky was tropically
+perfect, cloudless, and jewelled lavishly. Indeed, we were in the midst
+of an Indian summer; it seemed that the uncanny visitants had brought,
+together with an atmosphere of black Eastern deviltry, something, too,
+of the Eastern climate.
+
+The last stroke of the Cathedral bell died away. Other more distant
+bells still were sounding dimly, but save for the ceaseless hum of the
+traffic, no unusual sound now disturbed the archaic peace of the court.
+
+I returned to my table, for during the time that had passed I had badly
+neglected my work and now must often labour far into the night. I was
+just reseated when there came a very soft rapping at the outer door!
+
+No doubt my mood was in part responsible, but I found myself thinking
+of Poe’s weird poem, “The Raven”; and like the character therein I
+found myself hesitating.
+
+I stole quietly into the passage. It was in darkness. How odd it is
+that in moments of doubt instinctively one shuns the dark and seeks the
+light. I pressed the switch lighting the hall lamp, and stood looking
+at the closed door.
+
+Why should this late visitor have rapped in so uncanny a fashion in
+preference to ringing the bell?
+
+I stepped back to my table and slipped a revolver into my pocket.
+
+The muffled rapping was repeated. As I stood in the study doorway I saw
+the flap of the letter-box slowly raised!
+
+Instantly I extinguished both lights. You may brand me as childishly
+timid, but incidents were fresh in my memory which justified all my
+fears.
+
+A faintly luminous slit in the door showed me that the flap was now
+fully raised. It was the dim light on the stairway shining through.
+Then quite silently the flap was lowered. Came the soft rapping again.
+
+“Who’s there?” I cried.
+
+No one answered.
+
+Wondering if I were unduly alarming myself, yet, I confess, strung up
+tensely in anticipation that this was some device of the phantom enemy,
+I stood in doubt.
+
+The silence remained unbroken for thirty seconds or more. Then yet
+again it was disturbed by that ghostly, muffled rapping.
+
+I advanced a step nearer to the door.
+
+“Who’s there?” I cried loudly. “What do you want?”
+
+The flap of the letter box began to move, and I formed a sudden
+determination. Making no sound in my heelless Turkish slippers I crept
+close up to the door and dropped upon my knees.
+
+Thereupon the flap became fully lifted, but from where I crouched
+beneath it I was unable to see who or what was looking in; yet I
+hesitated no longer. I suddenly raised myself and thrust the revolver
+barrel through the opening!
+
+“Who are you?” I cried. “Answer or I fire!”—and along the barrel I
+peered out on to the landing.
+
+Still no one answered. But something impalpable—a powder—a vapour—to
+this hour I do not know what—enveloped me with its nauseating fumes;
+was puffed fully into my face! My eyes, my mouth, my nostrils became
+choked up, it seemed, with a deadly stifling perfume.
+
+Wildly, feeling that everything about me was slipping away, that I was
+sinking into a void, for ought I knew that of dissolution, I pulled the
+trigger once, twice, thrice...
+
+“My God!”—the words choked in my throat and I reeled back into the
+passage—“it’s not loaded!”
+
+I threw up my arms to save myself, lurched, and fell forward into what
+seemed a bottomless pit.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+THE GOLDEN PAVILION
+
+
+When I opened my eyes it was to a conviction that I dreamed. I lay upon
+a cushioned divan in a small apartment which I find myself at a loss
+adequately to describe.
+
+It was a yellow room, then, its four walls being hung with yellow silk,
+its floor being entirely covered by a yellow Persian carpet. One lamp,
+burning in a frame of some lemon coloured wood and having its openings
+filled with green glass, flooded the place with a ghastly illumination.
+The lamp hung by gold chains from the ceiling, which was yellow.
+Several low tables of the same lemon-hued wood as the lamp-frame stood
+around; they were inlaid in fanciful designs with gleaming green
+stones. Turn my eyes where I would, clutch my aching head as I might,
+this dream chamber would not disperse, but remained palpable before
+me—yellow and green and gold.
+
+There was a niche behind the divan upon which I lay framed about with
+yellow wood. In it stood a golden bowl and a tall pot of yellow
+porcelain; I lay amid yellow cushions having golden tassels. Some of
+them were figured with vivid green devices.
+
+To contemplate my surroundings assuredly must be to court madness. No
+door was visible, no window; nothing but silk and luxury, yellow and
+green and gold.
+
+To crown all, the air was heavy with a perfume wholly unmistakable by
+one acquainted with Egypt’s ruling vice. It was the reek of smouldering
+hashish—a stench that seemed to take me by the throat, a vapour
+damnable and unclean. I saw that a little censer, golden in colour and
+inset with emeralds, stood upon the furthermost corner of the yellow
+carpet. From it rose a faint streak of vapour; and I followed the
+course of the sickly scented smoke upward through the still air until
+in oily spirals it lost itself near to the yellow ceiling. As a sick
+man will study the veriest trifle I studied that wisp of smoke,
+pencilled grayly against the silken draperies, the carven tables,
+against the almost terrifying persistency of the yellow and green and
+gold.
+
+I strove to rise, but was overcome by vertigo and sank back again upon
+the yellow cushions. I closed my eyes, which throbbed and burned, and
+rested my head upon my hands. I ceased to conjecture if I dreamed or
+was awake. I knew that I felt weak and ill, that my head throbbed
+agonizingly, that my eyes smarted so as to render it almost impossible
+to keep them open, that a ceaseless humming was in my ears.
+
+For some time I lay endeavouring to regain command of myself, to
+prepare to face again that scene which had something horrifying in its
+yellowness, touched with the green and gold.
+
+And when finally I reopened my eyes, I sat up with a suppressed cry.
+For a tall figure in a yellow robe from beneath which peeped yellow
+slippers, a figure crowned with a green turban, stood in the centre of
+the apartment!
+
+It was that of a majestic old man, white bearded, with aquiline nose,
+and the fierce eagle eyes of a fanatic set upon me sternly,
+reprovingly.
+
+With folded arms he stood watching me, and I drew a sharp breath and
+rose slowly to my feet.
+
+There amid the yellow and green and gold, amid the abominable reek of
+burning hashish I stood and faced Hassan of Aleppo!
+
+No words came to me; I was confounded.
+
+Hassan spoke in that gentle voice which I had heard only once before.
+
+“Mr. Cavanagh,” he said, “I have brought you here that I might warn
+you. Your police are seeking me night and day, and I am fully alive to
+my danger whilst I stay in your midst. But for close upon a thousand
+years the Sheikh-al-jebal, Lord of the Hashishin, has guarded the
+traditions and the relics of the Prophet, Salla-’llahu ’ale yhi
+wasellem! I, Hassan of Aleppo, am Sheikh of the Order to-day, and my
+sacred duty has brought me here.”
+
+The piercing gaze never left my face. I was not yet by any means my own
+man and still I made no reply.
+
+“You have been wise,” continued Hassan, “in that you have never touched
+the sacred slipper. Had you lain hands upon it, no secrecy could have
+availed you. The eye of the Hashishin sees all. There is a shaft of
+light which the true Believer perceives at night as he travels toward
+El-Medineh. It is the light which uprises, a spiritual fire, from the
+tomb of the Prophet (Salla-’llahu ’aleyhi wasellem!). The relics also
+are radiant, though in a lesser degree.”
+
+He took a step toward me, spreading out his lean brown hands, palms
+downward.
+
+“A shaft of light,” he said impressively, “shines upward now from
+London. It is the light of the holy slipper.” He gazed intently at the
+yellow drapery at the left of the divan, but as though he were looking
+not at the wall but through it. His features worked convulsively; he
+was a man inspired. “I see it now!” he almost whispered—“that white
+light by which the guardians of the relic may always know its resting
+place!”
+
+I managed to force words to my lips.
+
+“If you know where the slipper is,” I said, more for the sake of
+talking than for anything else, “why do you not recover it?”
+
+Hassan turned his eyes upon me again.
+
+“Because the infidel dog,” he cried loudly, “who has soiled it with his
+unclean touch, defies us—mocks us! He has suffered the loss of the
+offending hand, but the evil ginn protect him; he is inspired by
+efreets! But God is great and Mohammed is His only Prophet! We shall
+triumph; but it is written, oh, daring infidel, that you again shall
+become the guardian of the slipper!”
+
+He spoke like some prophet of old and I stared at him fascinated. I was
+loth to believe his words.
+
+“When again,” he continued, “the slipper shall be in the receptacle of
+which you hold the key, that key must be given to me!”
+
+I thought I saw the drift of his words now; I thought I perceived with
+what object I had been trapped and borne to this mysterious abode for
+whose whereabouts the police vainly were seeking. By the exercise of
+the gift of divination it would seem that Hassan of Aleppo had forecast
+the future history of the accursed slipper or believed that he had done
+so. According to his own words I was doomed once more to become trustee
+of the relic. The key of the case at the Antiquarian Museum, to which
+he had prophesied the slipper’s return, would be the price of my life!
+But—
+
+“In order that these things may be fulfilled,” he continued, “I must
+permit you to return to your house. So it is written, so it shall be.
+Your life is in my hands; beware when it is demanded of you that you
+hesitate not in yielding up the key!”
+
+He raised his hands before him, making a sort of obeisance, I doubt not
+in the direction of Mecca, drew aside one of the yellow hangings behind
+him and disappeared, leaving me alone again in that nightmare apartment
+of yellow and green and gold. A moment I stood watching the swaying
+curtain. Utter silence reigned, and a sort of panic seized me
+infinitely greater than that occasioned by the presence of the weird
+Sheikh. I felt that I must escape from the place or that I should
+become raving mad.
+
+I leapt forward to the curtain which Hassan had raised and jerked it
+aside; it had concealed a door. In this door and about level with my
+eyes was a kind of little barred window through which shone a dim green
+light. I bent forward, peering into the place beyond, but was unable to
+perceive anything save a vague greenness.
+
+And as I peered, half believing that the whole episode was a dreadful,
+fevered dream, the abominable fumes of hashish grew, or seemed to grow,
+quite suddenly insupportable. Through the square opening, from the
+green void beyond, a cloud of oily vapour, pungent, stifling,
+resembling that of burning Indian hemp, poured out and enveloped me!
+
+With a gasping cry I fell back, fighting for breath, for a breath of
+clean air unpolluted with hashish. But every inhalation drew down into
+my lungs the fumes that I sought to escape from. I experienced a
+deathly sickness; I seemed to be sinking into a sea of hashish, amid
+bubbles of yellow and green and gold, and I knew no more until,
+struggling again to my feet, surrounded by utter darkness—I struck my
+head on the corner of my writing-table ... for I lay in my own study!
+
+My revolver, unloaded, was upon the table beside me. The night was very
+still. I think it must have been near to dawn.
+
+“My God!” I whispered, “did I dream it all? Did I dream it all?”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+THE BLACK TUBE
+
+
+“There’s no doubt in my mind,” said Inspector Bristol, “that your
+experience was real enough.”
+
+The sun was shining into my room now, but could not wholly disperse the
+cloud of horror which lay upon it. That I had been drugged was
+sufficiently evident from my present condition, and that I had been
+taken away from my chambers Inspector Bristol had satisfactorily proved
+by an examination of the soles of my slippers.
+
+“It was a clever trick,” he said. “God knows what it was they puffed
+into your face through the letter box, but the devilish arts of ten
+centuries, we must remember, are at the command of Hassan of Aleppo!
+The repetition of the trick at the mysterious place you were taken to
+is particularly interesting. I should say you won’t be in a hurry to
+peer through letter boxes and so forth in the future?”
+
+I shook my aching head.
+
+“That accursed yellow room,” I replied, “stank with the fumes of
+hashish. It may have been some preparation of hashish that was used to
+drug me.”
+
+Bristol stood looking thoughtfully from the window.
+
+“It was a nightmare business, Mr. Cavanagh,” he said; “but it doesn’t
+advance our inquiry a little bit. The prophecy of the old man with the
+white beard—whom you assure me to be none other than Hassan of
+Aleppo—is something we cannot very well act upon. He clearly believes
+it himself; for he has released you after having captured you,
+evidently in order that you may be at liberty to take up your duty as
+trustee of the slipper again. If the slipper really comes back to the
+Museum the fact will show Hassan to be something little short of a
+magician. I shan’t envy you then, Mr. Cavanagh, considering that you
+hold the keys of the case!”
+
+“No,” I replied wearily. “Poor Professor Deeping thought that he acted
+in my interests and that my possession of the keys would constitute a
+safeguard. He was wrong. It has plunged me into the very vortex of this
+ghastly affair.”
+
+“It is maddening,” said Bristol, “to know that Hassan and Company are
+snugly located somewhere under our very noses, and that all Scotland
+Yard can find no trace of them. Then to think that Hassan of Aleppo,
+apparently by means of some mystical light, has knowledge of the
+whereabouts of the slipper and consequently of the whereabouts of Earl
+Dexter (another badly wanted man) is extremely discouraging! I feel
+like an amateur; I’m ashamed of myself!”
+
+Bristol departed in a condition of irritable uncertainty.
+
+My head in my hands, I sat for long after his departure, with the
+phantom characters of the ghoulish drama dancing through my brain. The
+distorted yellow dwarfs seemed to gibe apish before me. Severed hands
+clenched and unclenched themselves in my face, and gleaming knives
+flashed across the mental picture. Predominant over all was the stately
+figure of Hassan of Aleppo, that benignant, remorseless being, that
+terrible guardian of the holy relic who directed the murderous
+operations. Earl Dexter, The Stetson Man, with his tightly bandaged
+arm, his gaunt, clean-shaven face and daredevil smile, figured, too, in
+my feverish daydream; nor was that other character missing, the girl
+with the violet eyes whose beautiful presence I had come to dread; for
+like a sybil announcing destruction her appearances in the drama had
+almost invariably presaged fresh tragedies. I recalled my previous
+meetings with this woman of mystery. I recalled my many surmises
+regarding her real identity and association with the case. I wondered
+why in the not very distant past I had promised to keep silent
+respecting her; I wondered why up to that present moment, knowing
+beyond doubt that her activities were inimical to my interests, were
+criminal, I had observed that foolish pledge.
+
+And now my door-bell was ringing—as intuitively I had anticipated. So
+certain was I of the identity of my visitor that as I walked along the
+passage I was endeavouring to make up my mind how I should act, how I
+should receive her.
+
+I opened the door; and there, wearing European garments but a green
+turban ... stood Hassan of Aleppo!
+
+When I say that amazement robbed me of the power to speak, to move,
+almost to think, I doubt not you will credit me. Indeed, I felt that
+modern London was crumbling about me and that I was become involved in
+the fantastic mazes of one of those Oriental intrigues such as figure
+in the Romance of Abu Zeyd, or with which most European readers have
+been rendered familiar by the glowing pages of “The Thousand and One
+Nights.”
+
+“Effendim,” said my visitor, “do not hesitate to act as I direct!”
+
+In his gloved hand he carried what appeared to be an ebony cane. He
+raised and pointed it directly at me. I perceived that it was, in fact,
+a hollow tube.
+
+“Death is in my hand,” he continued; “enter slowly and I will follow
+you.”
+
+Still the sense of unreality held me thralled and my brain refused me
+service. Like an hypnotic subject I walked back to my study, followed
+by my terrible visitor, who reclosed the door behind him.
+
+He sat facing me across my littered table with the mysterious tube held
+loosely in his grasp.
+
+How infinitely more terrifying are perils unknown than those known and
+appreciated! Had a European armed with a pistol attempted a similar act
+of coercion, I cannot doubt that I should have put up some sort of
+fight; had he sat before me now as Hassan of Aleppo sat, with a
+comprehensible weapon thus laid upon his knees, I should have taken my
+chance, should have attacked him with the lamp, with a chair, with
+anything that came to my hand.
+
+But before this awful, mysterious being who was turning my life into
+channels unsuspected, before that black tube with its unknown
+potentialities, I sat in a kind of passive panic which I cannot attempt
+to describe, which I had never experienced before and have never known
+since.
+
+“There is one about to visit you,” he said, “whom you know, whom I
+think you expect. For it is written that she shall come and such events
+cast a shadow before them. I, too, shall be present at your meeting!”
+
+His eagle eyes opened widely; they burned with fanaticism.
+
+“Already she is here!” he resumed suddenly, and bent as one listening.
+“She comes under the archway; she crossed the courtyard—and is upon the
+stair! Admit her, effendim; I shall be close behind you!”
+
+The door-bell rang.
+
+With the consciousness that the black tube was directed toward the back
+of my head, I went and opened the door. My mind was at work again, and
+busy with plans to terminate this impossible situation.
+
+On the landing stood a girl wearing a simple white frock which fitted
+her graceful figure perfectly. A white straw hat, of the New York
+tourist type, with a long veil draped from the back suited her delicate
+beauty very well. The red mouth drooped a little at the corners, but
+the big violet eyes, like lamps of the soul, seemed afire with mystic
+light.
+
+“Mr. Cavanagh,” she said, very calmly and deliberately, “there is only
+one way now to end all this trouble. I come from the man who can return
+the slipper to where it belongs; but he wants his price!”
+
+Her quiet speech served completely to restore my mental balance, and I
+noted with admiration that her words were so chosen as to commit her in
+no way. She knew quite well that thus far she might appear in the
+matter with impunity, and she clearly was determined to say nothing
+that could imperil her.
+
+“Will you please come in?” I said quietly—and stood aside to admit her.
+
+Exhibiting wonderful composure, she entered—and there, in the badly
+lighted hallway came face to face with my other visitor!
+
+It was a situation so dramatic as to seem unreal.
+
+Away from that tall figure retreated the girl with the violet eyes—and
+away—until she stood with her back to the wall. Even in the gloom I
+could see that her composure was deserting her; her beautiful face was
+pallid.
+
+“Oh, God!” she whispered, all but inaudible—“You!”
+
+Hassan, grasping the black rod in his hand, signed to her to enter the
+study. She stood quite near to me, with her eyes fixed upon him. I bent
+closer to her.
+
+“My revolver—in left-hand table drawer,” I breathed in her ear. “Get
+it. He is watching me!”
+
+I could not tell if my words had been understood, for, never taking her
+gaze from the Sheikh of the Assassins, she sidled into the study. I
+followed her; and Hassan came last of all. Just within the doorway he
+stood, confronting us.
+
+“You have come,” he said, addressing the girl and speaking in perfect
+English but with a marked accent, “to open your impudent negotiations
+through Mr. Cavanagh for the return of the thrice holy relic to the
+Museum! Your companion, the man, who is inspired by the Evil One, has
+even dared to demand ransom for the slipper from me!”
+
+Hassan was majestic in his wrath; but his eyes were black with venomous
+hatred.
+
+“He has suffered the penalty which the Koran lays down; he has lost his
+right hand. But the lord of all evil protects him, else ere this he had
+lost his life! Move no closer to that table!”
+
+I started. Either Hassan of Aleppo was omniscient or he had overheard
+my whispered words!
+
+“Easily I could slay you where you stand!” he continued. “But to do so
+would profit me nothing. This meeting has been revealed to me. Last
+night I witnessed it as I slept. Also it has been revealed to me by
+Erroohanee, in the mirror of ink, that the slipper of the Prophet,
+Salla-’llahu ’ale yhi wasellem! Shall indeed return to that place
+accursed, that infidel eyes may look upon it! It is the will of Allah,
+whose name be exalted, that I hold my hand, but it is also His will
+that I be here, at whatever danger to my worthless body.”
+
+He turned his blazing eyes upon me.
+
+“To-morrow, ere noon,” he said, “the slipper will again be in the
+Museum from which the man of evil stole it. So it is written; obscure
+are the ways. We met last night, you and I, but at that time much was
+dark to me that now is light. The holy ’Alee spoke to me in a vision,
+saying: ‘There are two keys to the case in which it will be locked.
+Secure one, leaving the other with him who holds it! Let him swear to
+be secret. This shall be the price of his life!’”
+
+The black tube was pointed directly at my forehead.
+
+“Effendim,” concluded the speaker, “place in my hand the key of the
+case in the Antiquarian Museum!”
+
+Hands convulsively clenched, the girl was looking from me to Hassan. My
+throat felt parched, but I forced speech to my lips.
+
+“Your omniscience fails you,” I said. “Both keys are at my bank!”
+
+Blacker grew the fierce eyes—and blacker. I gave myself up for lost; I
+awaited death—death by some awful, unique means—with what courage I
+could muster.
+
+From the court below came the sound of voices, the voices of passers-by
+who so little suspected what was happening near to them that had
+someone told them they certainly had refused to credit it. The noise of
+busy Fleet Street came drumming under the archway, too.
+
+Then, above all, another sound became audible. To this day I find
+myself unable to define it; but it resembled the note of a silver bell.
+
+Clearly it was a signal; for, hearing it, Hassan dropped the tube and
+glanced toward the open window.
+
+In that instant I sprang upon him!
+
+That I had to deal with a fanatic, a dangerous madman, I knew; that it
+was his life or mine, I was fully convinced. I struck out then and
+caught him fairly over the heart. He reeled back, and I made a wild
+clutch for the damnable tube, horrid, unreasoning fear of which thus
+far had held me inert.
+
+I heard the girl scream affrightedly, and I knew, and felt my heart
+chill to know, that the tube had been wrenched from my hand! Hassan of
+Aleppo, old man that he appeared, had the strength of a tiger. He
+recovered himself and hurled me from him so that I came to the floor
+crashingly half under my writing-table!
+
+Something he cried back at me, furiously—and like an enraged animal,
+his teeth gleaming out from his beard, he darted from the room. The
+front door banged loudly.
+
+Shaken and quivering, I got upon my feet. On the threshold, in a state
+of pitiable hesitancy, stood the pale, beautiful accomplice of Earl
+Dexter. One quick glance she flashed at me, then turned and ran!
+
+Again the door slammed. I ran to the window, looking out into the
+court. The girl came hurrying down the steps, and with never a backward
+glance ran on and was lost to view in one of the passages opening
+riverward.
+
+Out under the arch, statelily passed a tall figure—and Inspector
+Bristol was entering! I saw the detective glance aside as the two all
+but met. He stood still, and looked back!
+
+“Bristol!” I cried, and waved my arms frantically.
+
+“Stop him! Stop him! It’s Hassan of Aleppo!”
+
+Bristol was not the only one to hear my wild cry—not the only one to
+dash back under the arch and out into Fleet Street.
+
+But Hassan of Aleppo was gone!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII
+THE LIGHT OF EL-MEDINEH
+
+
+Bristol and I walked slowly in the direction of the entrance of the
+British Antiquarian Museum. It was the day following upon the
+sensational scene in my chambers.
+
+“There’s very little doubt,” said Bristol, “that Earl Dexter has the
+slipper and that Hassan of Aleppo knows where Dexter is in hiding. I
+don’t know which of the two is more elusive. Hassan apparently melted
+into thin air yesterday; and although The Stetson Man has never within
+my experience employed disguises, no one has set eyes upon him since
+the night that he vanished from his lodgings off the Waterloo Road.
+It’s always possible for a man to baffle the police by remaining
+closely within doors, but during all the time that has elapsed Dexter
+must have taken a little exercise occasionally, and the missing hand
+should have betrayed him.”
+
+“The wonder to me is,” I replied, “that he has escaped death at the
+hands of the Hashishin. He is a supremely daring man, for I should
+think that he must be carrying the slipper of the Prophet about with
+him!”
+
+“I would rather he did it than I!” commented Bristol. “For sheer
+audacity commend me to The Stetson Man! His idea no doubt was to use
+you as intermediary in his negotiations with the Museum authorities,
+but that plan failing, he has written them direct, thoughtfully
+omitting his address, of course!”
+
+We were, in fact, at that moment bound for the Museum to inspect this
+latest piece of evidence.
+
+“The crowning example of the man’s audacity and cleverness,” added my
+companion, “is his having actually approached Hassan of Aleppo with a
+similar proposition! How did he get in touch with him? All Scotland
+Yard has failed to find any trace of that weird character!”
+
+“Birds of a feather—” I suggested.
+
+“But they are not birds of a feather!” cried Bristol. “On your own
+showing, Hassan of Aleppo is simply waiting his opportunity to balance
+Dexter’s account forever! I always knew Dexter was a clever man; I
+begin to think he’s the most daring genius alive!”
+
+We mounted the steps of the Museum. In the hallway Mostyn, the curator,
+awaited us. Having greeted Bristol and myself he led the way to his
+private office, and from a pigeon-hole in his desk took out a letter
+typewritten upon a sheet of quarto paper.
+
+Bristol spread it out upon the blotting pad and we bent over it
+curiously.
+
+SIR—
+
+
+I believe I can supply information concerning the whereabouts of the
+missing slipper of Mohammed. As any inquiry of this nature must be
+extremely perilous to the inquirer and as the relic is a priceless one,
+my fee would be 10,000 pounds. The fanatics who seek to restore the
+slipper to the East must not know of any negotiations, therefore I omit
+my address, but will communicate further if you care to insert
+instructions in the agony column of Times.
+
+Faithfully,
+EARL DEXTER
+
+
+Bristol laughed grimly.
+
+“It’s a daring game,” he said; “a piece of barefaced impudence quite
+characteristic.
+
+“He’s posing as a sort of private detective now, and is prepared for a
+trifling consideration to return the slipper which he stole himself! He
+must know, though, that we have his severed hand at the Yard to be used
+in evidence against him.”
+
+“Is the Burton Room open to the public again?” I asked Mostyn.
+
+“It is open, yes,” he replied, “and a quite unusual number of visitors
+come daily to gaze at the empty case which once held the slipper of the
+Prophet.”
+
+“Has the case been mended?”
+
+“Yes; it is quite intact again; only the exhibit is missing.”
+
+We ascended the stairs, passed along the Assyrian Room, which seemed to
+be unusually crowded, and entered the lofty apartment known as the
+Burton Room. The sunblinds were drawn, and a sort of dim, religious
+light prevailed therein. A group of visitors stood around an empty case
+at the farther end of the apartment.
+
+“You see,” said Mostyn, pointing, “that empty case has a greater
+attraction than all the other full ones!”
+
+But I scarcely heeded his words, for I was intently watching the
+movements of one of the group about the empty case. I have said that
+the room was but dimly illuminated, and this fact, together no doubt
+with some effect of reflected light, enhanced by my imagination,
+perhaps produced the phenomenon which was occasioning me so much
+amazement.
+
+Remember that my mind was filled with memories of weird things, that I
+often found myself thinking of that mystic light which Hassan of Aleppo
+had called the light of El-Medineh—that light whereby, undeterred by
+distance, he claimed to be able to trace the whereabouts of any of the
+relics of the Prophet.
+
+Bristol and Mostyn walked on then; but I stood just within the doorway,
+intently, breathlessly watching an old man wearing an out-of-date
+Inverness coat and a soft felt hat. He had a gray beard and moustache,
+and long, untidy hair, walked with a stoop, and in short was no unusual
+type of Visitor to that institution.
+
+But it seemed to me, and the closer I watched him the more convinced I
+became, that this was no optical illusion, that a faint luminosity, a
+sort of elfin light, played eerily about his head!
+
+As Bristol and Mostyn approached the case the old man began to walk
+toward me and in the direction of the door. The idea flashed through my
+mind that it might be Hassan of Aleppo himself, Hassan who had
+predicted that the stolen slipper should that day be returned to the
+Museum!
+
+Then he came abreast of me, passed me, and I felt that my surmise had
+been wrong. I saw Bristol, from farther up the room, turn and look
+back. Something attracted his trained eye, I suppose, which was not
+perceptible to me. But he suddenly came striding along. Obviously he
+was pursuing the old man, who was just about to leave the apartment.
+Seeing that the latter had reached the doorway, Bristol began to run.
+
+The old man turned; and amid a chorus of exclamations from the
+astonished spectators, Bristol sprang upon him!
+
+How it all came about I cannot say, cannot hope to describe; but there
+was a short, sharp scuffle, the crack of a well-directed blow ... and
+Bristol was rolling on his back, the old man, hatless, was racing up
+the Assyrian Room, and everyone in the place seemed to be shouting at
+once!
+
+Bristol, with blood streaming from his face, staggered to his feet,
+clutching at me for support.
+
+“After him, Mr. Cavanagh!” he cried hoarsely. “It’s your turn to-day!
+After him! That’s Earl Dexter!”
+
+Mostyn waited for no more, but went running quickly through the
+Assyrian Room. I may mention here that at the head of the stairs he
+found the caped Inverness which had served to conceal Dexter’s
+mutilated arm, and later, behind a piece of statuary, a wig and a very
+ingenious false beard and moustache were discovered. But of The Stetson
+Man there was no trace. His brief start had enabled him to make good
+his escape.
+
+As Mostyn went off, and a group of visitors flocked in our direction,
+Bristol, who had been badly shaken by the blow, turned to them.
+
+“You will please all leave the Burton Room immediately,” he said.
+
+Looks of surprise greeted his words; but with his handkerchief raised
+to his face, he peremptorily repeated them. The official note in his
+voice was readily to be detected; and the wonder-stricken group
+departed with many a backward glance.
+
+As the last left the Burton Room, Bristol pointed, with a rather shaky
+finger, at the soft felt hat which lay at his feet. It had formed part
+of Dexter’s disguise. Close beside it lay another object which had
+evidently fallen from the hat—a dull red thing lying on the polished
+parquet flooring.
+
+“For God’s sake don’t go near it!” whispered Bristol. “The room must be
+closed for the present. And now I’m off after that man. Step clear of
+it.”
+
+His words were unnecessary; I shunned it as a leprous thing.
+
+It was the slipper of the Prophet!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII
+THE THREE MESSAGES
+
+
+I stood in the foyer of the Astoria Hotel. About me was the pulsing
+stir of transatlantic life, for the tourist season was now at its
+height, and I counted myself fortunate in that I had been able to
+secure a room at this establishment, always so popular with American
+visitors. Chatting groups surrounded me and I became acquainted with
+numberless projects for visiting the Tower of London, the National
+Gallery, the British Museum, Windsor Castle, Kew Gardens, and the other
+sights dear to the heart of our visiting cousins. Loaded lifts ascended
+and descended. Bradshaws were in great evidence everywhere; all was
+hustle and glad animation.
+
+The tall military-looking man who stood beside me glanced about him
+with a rather grim smile.
+
+“You ought to be safe enough here, Mr. Cavanagh!” he said.
+
+“I ought to be safe enough in my own chambers,” I replied wearily. “How
+many of these pleasure-seeking folk would believe that a man can be as
+greatly in peril of his life in Fleet Street as in the most uncivilized
+spot upon the world map? Do you think if I told that prosperous New
+Yorker who is buying a cigar yonder, for instance, that I had been
+driven from my chambers by a band of Eastern assassins founded some
+time in the eleventh century, he would believe it?”
+
+“I am certain he wouldn’t!” replied Bristol. “I should not have
+credited it myself before I was put in charge of this damnable case.”
+
+My position at that hour was in truth an incredible one. The sacred
+slipper of Mohammed lay once more in the glass case at the Antiquarian
+Museum from which Earl Dexter had stolen it. Now, with apish yellow
+faces haunting my dreams, with ghostly menaces dogging me day and
+night, I was outcast from my own rooms and compelled, in self-defence,
+to live amid the bustle of the Astoria. So wholly nonplussed were the
+police authorities that they could afford me no protection. They knew
+that a group of scientific murderers lay hidden in or near to London;
+they knew that Earl Dexter, the foremost crook of his day, was also in
+the metropolis—and they could make no move, were helpless; indeed, as
+Bristol had confessed, were hopeless!
+
+Bristol, on the previous day, had unearthed the Greek cigar merchant,
+Acepulos, who had replaced the slipper in its case (for a monetary
+consideration). He had performed a similar service when the
+bloodstained thing had first been put upon exhibition at the Museum,
+and for a considerable period had disappeared. We had feared that his
+religious pretensions had not saved him from the avenging scimitar of
+Hassan; but quite recently he had returned again to his Soho shop, and
+in time thus to earn a second cheque.
+
+As Bristol and I stood glancing about the foyer of the hotel, a
+plain-clothes officer whom I knew by sight came in and approached my
+companion. I could not divine the fact, of course, but I was about to
+hear news of the money-loving and greatly daring Graeco-Moslem.
+
+The detective whispered something to Bristol, and the latter started,
+and paled. He turned to me.
+
+“They haven’t overlooked him this time, Mr. Cavanagh,” he said.
+“Acepulos has been found dead in his room, nearly decapitated!”
+
+I shuddered involuntarily. Even there, amid the chatter and laughter of
+those light-hearted tourists, the shadow of Hassan of Aleppo was
+falling upon me.
+
+Bristol started immediately for Soho and I parted from him in the
+Strand, he proceeding west and I eastward, for I had occasion that
+morning to call at my bank. It was the time of the year when London is
+full of foreigners, and as I proceeded in the direction of Fleet Street
+I encountered more than one Oriental. To my excited imagination they
+all seemed to glance at me furtively, with menacing eyes, but in any
+event I knew that I had little to fear whilst I contrived to keep to
+the crowded thoroughfares. Solitude I dreaded and with good reason.
+
+Then at the door of the bank I found fresh matter for reflection. The
+assistant manager, Mr. Colby, was escorting a lady to the door. As I
+stood aside, he walked with her to a handsome car which waited, and
+handed her in with marks of great deference. She was heavily veiled and
+I had no more than a glimpse of her, but she appeared to be of middle
+age and had gray hair and a very stately manner.
+
+I told myself that I was unduly suspicious, suspicious of everyone and
+of everything; yet as I entered the bank I found myself wondering where
+I had seen that dignified, grayhaired figure before. I even thought of
+asking the manager the name of his distinguished customer, but did not
+do so, for in the circumstances such an inquiry must have appeared
+impertinent.
+
+My business transacted, I came out again by the side entrance which
+opens on the little courtyard, for this branch of the London County and
+Provincial Bank occupies a corner site.
+
+A ragged urchin who was apparently waiting for me handed me a note. I
+looked at him inquiringly.
+
+“For me?” I said.
+
+“Yes, sir. A dark gentleman pointed you out as you was goin’ into the
+bank.”
+
+The note was written upon a half sheet of paper and, doubting if it was
+really intended for me, I unfolded it and read the following—
+
+Mr. Cavanagh, take the keys of the case containing the holy slipper to
+your hotel this evening without fail.
+HASSAN.
+
+
+“Who gave you this, boy?” I asked sharply.
+
+“A foreign gentleman, sir, very dark—like an Indian.”
+
+“Where is he?”
+
+“He went off in a cab, sir, after he give me the note.”
+
+I handed the boy sixpence and slowly pursued my way. An idea was
+forming in my mind to trap the enemy by seeming acquiescent. I wondered
+if my movements were being watched at that moment. Since it was more
+than probable, I returned to the bank, entered, and made some trivial
+inquiry of a cashier, and then came out again and walked on as far as
+the Report office.
+
+I had not been in the office more than five minutes before I received a
+telegram from Inspector Bristol. It had been handed in at Soho, and the
+message was an odd one.
+
+CAVANAGH, Report, London.
+Plot afoot to steal keys. Get them from bank and join me 11 o’clock at
+Astoria. Have planned trap.
+
+BRISTOL.
+
+
+This was very mysterious in view of the note so recently received by
+me, but I concluded that Bristol had hit upon a similar plan to that
+which was forming in my own mind. It seemed unnecessarily hazardous,
+though, actually to withdraw the keys from their place of safety.
+
+Pondering deeply upon the perplexities of this maddening case, I
+shortly afterward found myself again at the bank. With the manager I
+descended to the strong-room, and the safe was unlocked which contained
+the much-sought-for keys of the case at the Antiquarian Museum.
+
+“There are the keys, quite safe!—and by the way, this is my second
+visit here this morning, Mr. Cavanagh,” said the manager, with whom I
+was upon rather intimate terms. “A foreign lady who has recently become
+a customer of the bank deposited some valuable jewels here this
+morning—less than an hour ago, in fact.”
+
+“Indeed,” I said, and my mind was working rapidly. “The lady who came
+in the large blue car, a gray-haired lady?”
+
+“Yes,” was the reply, “did you notice her, then?”
+
+I nodded and said no more, for in truth I had no more to say. I had
+good reason to respect the uncanny powers of Hassan of Aleppo, but I
+doubted if even his omniscience could tell him (since I had actually
+gone down into the strong-room) whether when I emerged I had the keys,
+or whether my visit and seeming acceptance of his orders had been no
+more than a subterfuge!
+
+That the Hashishin had some means of communicating with me at the
+Astoria was evident from the contents of the note which I had received,
+and as I walked in the direction of the hotel my mind was filled with
+all sorts of misgivings. I was playing with fire! Had I done rightly or
+should I have acted otherwise? I sighed wearily. The dark future would
+resolve all my doubts.
+
+When I reached the Astoria, Bristol had not arrived. I lighted a
+cigarette and sat down in the lounge to await his coming. Presently a
+boy approached, handing me a message which had been taken down from the
+telephone by the clerk. It was as follows—
+
+Tell Mr. Cavanagh, who is waiting in the hotel, to take what I am
+expecting to his chambers, and say that I will join him there in twenty
+minutes.
+
+INSPECTOR BRISTOL.
+
+
+Again I doubted the wisdom of Bristol’s plan. Had I not fled to the
+Astoria to escape from the dangerous solitude of my rooms? That he was
+laying some trap for the Hashishin was sufficiently evident, and whilst
+I could not justly suspect him of making a pawn of me I was quite
+unable to find any other explanation of this latest move.
+
+I was torn between conflicting doubts. I glanced at my watch. Yes!
+There was just time for me to revisit the bank ere joining Bristol at
+my chambers! I hesitated. After all, in what possible way could it
+jeopardize his plans for me merely to pretend to bring the keys?
+
+“Hang it all!” I said, and jumped to my feet. “These maddening
+conjectures will turn my brain! I’ll let matters stand as they are, and
+risk the consequences!”
+
+I hesitated no longer, but passed out from the hotel and once more
+directed my steps in the direction of Fleet Street.
+
+As I passed in under the arch through which streamed many busy workers,
+I told myself that to dread entering my own chambers at high noon was
+utterly childish. Yet I did dread doing so! And as I mounted the stair
+and came to the landing, which was always more or less dark, I paused
+for quite a long time before putting the key in the lock.
+
+The affair of the accursed slipper was playing havoc with my nerves,
+and I laughed dryly to note that my hand was not quite steady as I
+turned the key, opened my door, and slipped into the dim hallway.
+
+As I closed it behind me, something, probably a slight noise, but
+possibly something more subtle—an instinct—made me turn rapidly.
+
+There facing me stood Hassan of Aleppo.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV
+I KEEP THE APPOINTMENT
+
+
+That moment was pungent with drama. In the intense hush of the next
+five seconds I could fancy that the world had slipped away from me and
+that I was become an unsubstantial thing of dreams. I was in no sense
+master of myself; the effect of the presence of this white-bearded
+fanatic was of a kind which I am entirely unable to describe. About
+Hassan of Aleppo was an aroma of evil, yet of majesty, which marked him
+strangely different from other men—from any other that I have ever
+known. In his venerable presence, remembering how he was Sheikh of the
+Assassins, and recalling his bloody history, I was always conscious of
+a weakness, physical and mental. He appalled me; and now, with my back
+to the door, I stood watching him and watching the ominous black tube
+which he held in his hand. It was a weapon unknown to Europe and
+therefore more fearful than the most up-to-date of death-dealing
+instruments.
+
+Hassan of Aleppo pointed it toward me.
+
+“The keys, effendim,” he said; “hand me the keys!”
+
+He advanced a step; his manner was imperious. The black tube was less
+than a foot removed from my face. That I had my revolver in my pocket
+could avail me nothing, for in my pocket it must remain, since I dared
+to make no move to reach it under cover of that unfamiliar, terrible
+weapon.
+
+The black eyes of Hassan glared insanely into mine.
+
+“You will have placed them in your pocketcase,” he said. “Take it out;
+hand it to me!”
+
+I obeyed, for what else could I do? Taking the case from my pocket, I
+placed it in his lean brown hand.
+
+An expression of wild exultation crossed his features; the eagle eyes
+seemed to be burning into my brain. A puff of hot vapour struck me in
+the face—something which was expelled from the mysterious black tube.
+And with memories crowding to my mind of similar experiences at the
+hands of the Hashishin, I fell back, clutching at my throat, fighting
+for my life against the deadly, vaporous thing that like a palpable
+cloud surrounded me. I tried to cry out, but the words died upon my
+tongue. Hassan of Aleppo seemed to grow huge before my eyes like some
+ginn of Eastern lore. Then a curtain of darkness descended. I
+experienced a violent blow upon the forehead (I suppose I had pitched
+forward), and for the time resigned my part in the drama of the sacred
+slipper.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV
+THE WATCHER IN BANK CHAMBERS
+
+
+At about five o’clock that afternoon Inspector Bristol, who had spent
+several hours in Soho upon the scene of the murder of the Greek, was
+walking along Fleet Street, bound for the offices of the Report. As he
+passed the court, on the corner of which stands a branch of the London
+County and Provincial Bank, his eye was attracted by a curious
+phenomenon.
+
+There are reflectors above the bank windows which face the court, and
+it appeared to Bristol that there was a hole in one of these, the
+furthermost from the corner. A tiny beam of light shone from the bank
+window on to the reflector, or from the reflector on to the window,
+which circumstance in itself was not curious. But above the reflector,
+at an acute angle, this mysterious beam was seemingly projected upward.
+Walking a little way up the court he saw that it shone through, and
+cast a disc of light upon the ceiling of an office on the first floor
+of Bank Chambers above.
+
+It is every detective’s business to be observant, and although many
+thousands of passersby must have cast their eyes in the same direction
+that day, there is small matter for wonder in the fact that Bristol
+alone took the trouble to inquire into the mystery—for his trained eye
+told him that there was a mystery here.
+
+Possibly he was in that passive frame of mind when the brain is
+particularly receptive of trivial impressions; for after a futile
+search of the Soho cigar store for anything resembling a clue, he was
+quite resigned to the idea of failure in the case of Hassan and
+Company. He walked down the court and into the entrance of Bank
+Chambers. An Inspection of the board upon the wall showed him that the
+first floor apparently was occupied by three firms, two of them legal,
+for this is the neighbourhood of the law courts, and the third a press
+agency. He stepped up to the first floor. Past the doors bearing the
+names of the solicitors and past that belonging to the press agent he
+proceeded to a fourth suite of offices. Here, pinned upon the door
+frame, appeared a card which bore the legend—
+
+THE CONGO FIBRE COMPANY
+
+Evidently the Congo Fibre Company had so recently taken possession of
+the offices that there had been no time to inscribe their title either
+upon the doors or upon the board in the hall.
+
+Inspector Bristol was much impressed, for into one of the rooms
+occupied by the Fibre Company shone that curious disc of light which
+first had drawn his attention to Bank Chambers. He rapped on the door,
+turned the handle, and entered. The sole furniture of the office in
+which he found himself apparently consisted of one desk and an office
+stool, which stool was occupied by an office boy. The windows opened on
+the court, and a door marked “Private” evidently communicated with an
+inner office whose windows likewise must open on the court. It was the
+ceiling of this inner office, unless the detective’s calculation erred,
+which he was anxious to inspect.
+
+“Yes, sir?” said the boy tentatively.
+
+Bristol produced a card which bore the uncompromising legend: John
+Henry Smith.
+
+“Take my card to Mr. Boulter, boy,” he said tersely. The boy stared.
+
+“Mr. Boulter, sir? There isn’t any one of that name here.”
+
+“Oh!” said Bristol, looking around him in apparent surprise: “how long
+is he gone?”
+
+“I don’t know, sir. I’ve only been here three weeks, and Mr. Knowlson
+only took the offices a month ago.”
+
+“Oh,” commented Bristol, “then take my card to Mr. Knowlson; he will
+probably be able to give me Mr. Boulter’s present address.”
+
+The boy hesitated. The detective had that authoritative manner which
+awes the youthful mind.
+
+“He’s out, sir,” he said, but without conviction.
+
+“Is he?” rapped Bristol. “Well, I’ll leave my card.”
+
+He turned and quitted the office, carefully closing the door behind
+him. Three seconds later he reopened it, and peering in, was in time to
+see the boy knock upon the private door. A little wicket, or movable
+panel, was let down, the card of John Henry Smith was passed through to
+someone unseen, and the wicket was reclosed!
+
+
+The boy turned and met the wrathful eye of the detective. Bristol
+reentered, closing the door behind him.
+
+“See here, young fellow,” said he, “I don’t stand for those tricks! Why
+didn’t you tell me Mr. Knowlson was in?”
+
+“I’m very sorry, sir!”—the boy quailed beneath his glance—“but he won’t
+see any one who hasn’t an appointment.”
+
+“Is there someone with him, then?”
+
+“No.”
+
+“Well, what’s he doing?”
+
+“I don’t know, sir; I’ve never been in to see!”
+
+“What! never been in that room?”
+
+“Never!” declared the boy solemnly. “And I don’t mind telling you,” he
+added, recovering something of his natural confidence, “that I am
+leaving on the 31st. This job ain’t any use to me!”
+
+“Too much work?” suggested Bristol.
+
+“No work at all!” returned the boy indignantly. “I’m just here for a
+blessed buffer, that’s what I’m here for, a buffer!”
+
+“What do you mean?”
+
+“I just have to sit here and see that nobody gets into that office.
+Lively, ain’t it? Where’s the prospects?”
+
+Bristol surveyed him thoughtfully.
+
+“Look here, my lad,” he said quietly; “is that door locked?”
+
+“Always,” replied the boy.
+
+“Does Mr. Knowlson come to that shutter when you knock?”
+
+“Yes.”
+
+“Then go and knock!”
+
+The boy obeyed with alacrity. He rapped loudly on the door, not
+noticing or not caring that the visitor was standing directly behind
+him. The shutter was lowered and a grizzled, bearded face showed for a
+moment through the opening.
+
+Bristol leant over the boy and pushed a card through into the hand of
+the man beyond. On this occasion it did not bear the legend “John Henry
+Smith,” but the following—
+
+CHIEF INSPECTOR BRISTOL
+C.I.D.
+NEW SCOTLAND YARD
+
+“Good afternoon, Mr. Knowlson,” said the detective dryly. “I want to
+come in!”
+
+There followed a moment of silence, from which Bristol divined that he
+had blundered upon some mystery, possibly upon a big case; then a key
+was turned in the lock and the door thrown open.
+
+“Come right in, Inspector,” invited a strident voice. “Carter, you can
+go home.”
+
+Bristol entered warily, but not warily enough. For as the door was
+banged upon his entrance he faced around only in time to find himself
+looking down the barrel of a Colt automatic.
+
+With his back to the door which contained the wicket, now reclosed,
+stood the man with the bearded face. The revolver was held in his left
+hand; his right arm terminated in a bandaged stump. But without that
+his steel-gray eyes would have betrayed him to the detective.
+
+“Good God!” whispered Bristol. “It’s Earl Dexter!”
+
+“It is!” replied the cracksman, “and you’ve looked in at a real
+inconvenient time! My visitors mostly seem to have that knack. I’ll
+have to ask you to stay, Inspector. Sit down in that chair yonder.”
+
+Bristol knew his man too well to think of opening any argument at that
+time. He sat down as directed, and ignoring the revolver which covered
+him all the time, began coolly to survey the room in which he found
+himself. In several respects it was an extraordinary apartment.
+
+The only bright patch in the room was the shining disc upon the
+ceiling; and the detective noted with interest that this marked the
+position of an arrangement of mirrors. A white-covered table, entirely
+bare, stood upon the floor immediately beneath this mysterious
+apparatus. With the exception of one or two ordinary items of furniture
+and a small hand lathe, the office otherwise was unfurnished. Bristol
+turned his eyes again upon the daring man who so audaciously had
+trapped him—the man who had stolen the slipper of the Prophet and
+suffered the loss of his hand by the scimitar of an Hashishin as a
+result. When he had least expected to find one, Fate had thrown a clue
+in Bristol’s way. He reflected grimly that it was like to prove of
+little use to him.
+
+“Now,” said Dexter, “you can do as you please, of course, but you know
+me pretty well and I advise you to sit quiet.”
+
+“I am sitting quiet!” was the reply.
+
+“I am sorry,” continued Dexter, with a quick glance at his maimed arm,
+“that I can’t tie you up, but I am expecting a friend any moment now.”
+
+He suddenly raised the wicket with a twitch of his elbow and, without
+removing his gaze from the watchful detective, cried sharply—
+
+“Carter!”
+
+But there was no reply.
+
+“Good; he’s gone!”
+
+Dexter sat down facing Bristol.
+
+“I have lost my hand in this game, Mr. Bristol,” he said genially, “and
+had some narrow squeaks of losing my head; but having gone so far and
+lost so much I’m going through, if I don’t meet a funeral! You see I’m
+up against two tough propositions.”
+
+Bristol nodded sympathetically.
+
+“The first,” continued Dexter, “is you and Cavanagh, and English law
+generally. My idea—if I can get hold of the slipper again—oh! you
+needn’t stare; I’m out for it!—is to get the Antiquarian Institution to
+ransom it. It’s a line of commercial speculation I have worked
+successfully before. There’s a dozen rich highbrows, cranks to a man,
+connected with it, and they are my likeliest buyers—sure. But to keep
+the tone of the market healthy there’s Hassan of Aleppo, rot him! He’s
+a dangerous customer to approach, but you’ll note I’ve been in
+negotiation with him already and am still, if not booming, not much
+below par!”
+
+“Quite so,” said Bristol. “But you’ve cut off a pretty hefty chew
+nevertheless. They used to call you The Stetson Man, you used to dress
+like a fashion plate and stop at the big hotels. Those days are past,
+Dexter, I’m sorry to note. You’re down to the skulking game now and
+you’re nearer an advert for Clarkson than Stein-Bloch!”
+
+“Yep,” said Dexter sadly, “I plead guilty, but I think here’s Carneta!”
+
+Bristol heard the door of the outer office open, and a moment later
+that upon which his gaze was set opened in turn, to admit a girl who
+was heavily veiled, and who started and stood still in the doorway, on
+perceiving the situation. Never for one unguarded moment did the
+American glance aside from his prisoner.
+
+“The Inspector’s dropped in, Carneta!” he drawled in his strident way.
+“You’re handy with a ball of twine; see if you can induce him to stay
+the night!”
+
+The girl, immediately recovering her composure, took off her hat in a
+businesslike way and began to look around her, evidently in search of a
+suitable length of rope with which to fasten up Bristol.
+
+“Might I suggest,” said the detective, “that if you are shortly
+quitting these offices a couple of the window-cords neatly joined would
+serve admirably?”
+
+“Thanks,” drawled Dexter, nodding to his companion, who went into the
+outer office, where she might be heard lowering the windows. She was
+gone but a few moments ere she returned again, carrying a length of
+knotted rope. Under cover of Dexter’s revolver, Bristol stoically
+submitted to having his wrists tied behind him. The end of the line was
+then thrown through the ventilator above the door which communicated
+with the outer office and Bristol was triced up in such a way that, his
+wrists being raised behind him to an uncomfortable degree, he was
+almost forced to stand upon tiptoe. The line was then secured.
+
+“Very workmanlike!” commented the victim. “You’ll find a large
+handkerchief in my inside breast pocket. It’s a clean one, and I can
+recommend it as a gag!”
+
+Very promptly it was employed for the purpose, and Inspector Bristol
+found himself helpless and constrained in a very painful position.
+Dexter laid down his revolver.
+
+“We will now give you a free show, Inspector,” he said, genially, “of
+our camera obscura!”
+
+He pulled down the blinds, which Bristol noted with interest to be
+black, but through an opening in one of them a mysterious ray of
+light—the same that he had noticed from Fleet Street—shone upon that
+point in the ceiling where the arrangement of mirrors was attached.
+Dexter made some alteration, apparently in the focus of the lens (for
+Bristol had divined that in some way a lens had been fixed in the
+reflector above the bank window below) and the disc of light became
+concentrated. The white-covered table was moved slightly, and in the
+darkness some further manipulation was performed.
+
+“Observe,” came the strident voice—“we now have upon the screen here a
+minute moving picture. This little device, which is not protected in
+any way, is of my own invention, and proved extremely useful in the
+Arkwright jewel case, which startled Chicago. It has proved useful now.
+I know almost as much concerning the arrangements below as the manager
+himself. In confidence, Inspector, this is my last bid for the slipper!
+I have plunged on it. Madame Sforza, the distinguished Italian lady who
+recently opened an account below, opened it for 500 pounds cash. She
+has drawn a portion, but a balance remains which I am resigned to lose.
+Her motor-car (hired), her references (forged), the case of jewels
+which she deposited this morning (duds!)—all represent a considerable
+outlay. It’s a nerve-racking line of operation, too. Any hour of the
+day may bring such a visitor as yourself, for example. In short, I am
+at the end of my tether.”
+
+Bristol, ignoring the increasing pain in his arms and wrists, turned
+his eyes upon the white-covered table and there saw a minute and
+clear-cut picture, such as one sees in a focussing screen, of the
+interior of the manager’s office of the London County and Provincial
+Bank!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI
+THE STRONG-ROOM
+
+
+I wonder how often a sense of humour has saved a man from desperation?
+Perhaps only the Easterns have thoroughly appreciated that divine gift.
+I have interpolated the adventure of Inspector Bristol in order that
+the sequence of my story be not broken; actually I did not learn it
+until later, but when, on the following day, the whole of the facts
+came into my possession, I laughed and was glad that I could laugh, for
+laughter has saved many a man from madness.
+
+Certainly the Fates were playing with us, for at a time very nearly
+corresponding with that when Bristol found himself bound and helpless
+in Bank Chambers I awoke to find myself tied hand and foot to my own
+bed! Nothing but the haziest recollections came to me at first, nothing
+but dim memories of the awful being who had lured me there; for I
+perceived now that all the messages proceeded, not from Bristol, but
+from Hassan of Aleppo! I had been a fool, and I was reaping the fruits
+of my folly. Could I have known that almost within pistol shot of me
+the Inspector was trussed up as helpless as I, then indeed my situation
+must have become unbearable, since upon him I relied for my speedy
+release.
+
+My ankles were firmly lashed to the rails at the foot of my bed; each
+of my wrists was tied back to a bedpost. I ached in every limb and my
+head burned feverishly, which latter symptom I ascribed to the powerful
+drug which had been expelled into my face by the uncanny weapon carried
+by Hassan of Aleppo. I reflected bitterly how, having transferred my
+quarters to the Astoria, I could not well hope for any visitor to my
+chambers; and even the event of such a visitor had been foreseen and
+provided against by the cunning lord of the Hashishin. A gag, of the
+type which Dumas has described in “Twenty Years After,” the poire
+d’angoisse, was wedged firmly into my mouth, so that only by preserving
+the utmost composure could I breathe. I was bathed in cold
+perspiration. So I lay listening to the familiar sounds without and
+reflecting that it was quite possible so to lie, undisturbed, and to
+die alone, my presence there wholly unsuspected!
+
+Once, toward dusk, my phone bell rang, and my state of mind became
+agonizing. It was maddening to think that someone, a friend, was
+virtually within reach of me, yet actually as far removed as if an
+ocean divided us! I tasted the hellish torments of Tantalus. I cursed
+fate, heaven, everything; I prayed; I sank into bottomless depths of
+despair and rose to dizzy pinnacles of hope, when a footstep sounded on
+the landing and a thousand wild possibilities, vague possibilities of
+rescue, poured into my mind.
+
+The visitor hesitated, apparently outside my door; and a change, as
+sudden as lightning out of a cloud, transformed my errant fancies. A
+gruesome conviction seized me, as irrational as the hope which it
+displayed, that this was one of the Hashishin—an apish yellow dwarf, a
+strangler, the awful Hassan himself!
+
+The footsteps receded down the stairs. And my thoughts reverted into
+the old channels of dull despair.
+
+I weighed the chances of Bristol’s seeking me there; and, eager as I
+was to give them substance, found them but airy—ultimately was forced
+to admit them to be nil.
+
+So I lay, whilst only a few hundred yards from me a singular scene was
+being enacted. Bristol, a prisoner as helpless as myself, watched the
+concluding business of the day being conducted in the bank beneath him;
+he watched the lift descend to the strongroom—the spying apparatus
+being slightly adjusted in some way; he saw the clerks hastening to
+finish their work in the outer office, and as he watched, absorbed by
+the novelty of the situation, he almost forgot the pain and discomfort
+which he suffered...
+
+“This little peep-show of ours has been real useful,” Dexter confided
+out of the darkness. “I got an impression of the key of the strongroom
+door a week ago, and Carneta got one of the keys of the safe only this
+morning, when she lodged her box of jewellery with the bank! I was at
+work on that key when you interrupted me, and as by means of this
+useful apparatus I have learnt the combination, you ought to see some
+fun in the next few hours!”
+
+Bristol repressed a groan, for the prospect of remaining in that
+position was thus brought keenly home to him.
+
+The bank staff left the premises one by one until only a solitary clerk
+worked on at a back desk. His task completed, he, too, took his
+departure and the bank messenger commenced his nightly duty of sweeping
+up the offices. It was then that excitement like an anaesthetic dulled
+the detective’s pain—indeed, he forgot his aching body and became
+merely a watchful intelligence.
+
+So intent had he become upon the picture before him that he had not
+noticed the fact that he was alone in the office of the Congo Fibre
+Company. Now he realized it from the absolute silence about him, and
+from another circumstance.
+
+The spying apparatus had been left focussed, and on to the screen
+beneath his eyes, bending low behind the desks and creeping,
+Indian-like, around, toward the head of the stair which communicated
+with the strongroom and the apartment used by the messenger, came the
+alert figure of Earl Dexter!
+
+It may be a surprise to some people to learn that at any time in the
+day the door of a bank, unguarded, should be left open, when only a
+solitary messenger is within the premises; yet for a few minutes at
+least each evening this happens at more than one City bank, where one
+of the duties of the resident messenger is to clean the outer steps.
+Dexter had taken advantage of the man’s absence below in quest of
+scrubbing material to enter the bank through the open door.
+
+Watching, breathless, and utterly forgetful of his own position,
+Bristol saw the messenger, all unconscious of danger, come up the
+stairs carrying a pail and broom. As his head reached the level of the
+railings The Stetson Man neatly sand-bagged him, rushed across to the
+outer door, and closed it!
+
+Given duplicate keys and the private information which Dexter so
+ingeniously had obtained, there are many London banks vulnerable to
+similar attack. Certainly, bullion is rarely kept in a branch
+storeroom, but the detective was well aware that the keys of the case
+containing the slipper were kept in this particular safe!
+
+He was convinced, and could entertain no shadowy doubt, that at last
+Dexter had triumphed. He wondered if it had ever hitherto fallen to the
+lot of a representative of the law thus to be made an accessory to a
+daring felony!
+
+But human endurance has well-defined limits. The fading light rendered
+the ingenious picture dim and more dim. The pain occasioned by his
+position became agonizing, and uttering a stifled groan he ceased to
+take an interest in the robbery of the London County and Provincial
+Bank.
+
+Fate is a comedian; and when later I learned how I had lain strapped to
+my bed, and, so near to me, Bristol had hung helpless as a butchered
+carcass in the office of the Congo Fibre Company, whilst, in our
+absence from the stage, the drama of the slipper marched feverish to
+its final curtain, I accorded Fate her well-earned applause. I laughed;
+not altogether mirthfully.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII
+THE SLIPPER
+
+
+Someone was breaking in at the door of my chambers!
+
+I aroused myself from a state of coma almost death-like and listened to
+the blows. The sun was streaming in at my windows.
+
+A splintering crash told of a panel broken. Then a moment later I heard
+the grating of the lock, and a rush of footsteps along the passage.
+
+“Try the study!” came a voice that sounded like Bristol’s, save that it
+was strangely weak and shaky.
+
+Almost simultaneously the Inspector himself threw open the bedroom
+door—and, very pale and haggard-eyed, stood there looking across at me.
+It was a scene unforgettable.
+
+“Mr. Cavanagh!” he said huskily—“Mr. Cavanagh! Thank God you’re alive!
+But”—he turned—“this way, Marden!” he cried, “Untie him quickly! I’ve
+got no strength in my arms!”
+
+Marden, a C.I.D. man, came running, and in a minute, or less, I was
+sitting up gulping brandy.
+
+“I’ve had the most awful experience of my life,” said Bristol. “You’ve
+fared badly enough, but I’ve been hanging by my wrists—you know
+Dexter’s trick!—for close upon sixteen hours! I wasn’t released until
+Carter, an office boy, came on the scene this morning!”
+
+Very feebly I nodded; I could not talk.
+
+“The strong-room of your bank was rifled under my very eyes last
+evening!” he continued, with something of his old vigour; “and five
+minutes after the Antiquarian Museum was opened to the public this
+morning quite an unusual number of visitors appeared.
+
+“I saw the bank manager the moment he arrived, and learned a piece of
+news that positively took my breath away! I was at the Museum seven
+minutes later and got another shock! There in the case was the red
+slipper!”
+
+“Then,” I whispered—“it hadn’t been stolen?”
+
+“Wrong! It had! This was a duplicate, as Mostyn, the curator, saw at a
+glance! Some of the early visitors—they were Easterns—had quite
+surrounded the case. They were watched, of course, but any number of
+Orientals come to see the thing; and, short of smashing the glass,
+which would immediately attract attention, the authorities were
+unprepared, of course, for any attempt. Anyway, they were tricked.
+Somebody opened the case. The real slipper of the Prophet is gone!”
+
+“They told you at the bank—”
+
+“That you had withdrawn the keys! If Dexter had known that!”
+
+“Hassan of Aleppo took them from me last night! At last the Hashishin
+have triumphed.”
+
+Bristol sank into the armchair.
+
+“Every port is watched,” he said. “But—”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII
+CARNETA
+
+
+“I am entirely at your mercy; you can do as you please with me. But
+before you do anything I should like you to listen to what I have to
+say.”
+
+Her beautiful face was pale and troubled. Violet eyes looked sadly into
+mine.
+
+“For nearly an hour I have been waiting for this chance—until I knew
+you were alone,” she continued. “If you are thinking of giving me up to
+the police, at least remember that I came here of my own free will. Of
+course, I know you are quite entitled to take advantage of that; but
+please let me say what I came to say!”
+
+She pleaded so hard, with that musical voice, with her evident
+helplessness, most of all with her wonderful eyes, that I quite
+abandoned any project I might have entertained to secure her arrest. I
+think she divined this masculine weakness, for she said, with greater
+confidence—
+
+“Your friend, Professor Deeping, was murdered by the man called Hassan
+of Aleppo. Are you content to remain idle while his murderer escapes?”
+
+God knows I was not. My idleness in the matter was none of my choosing.
+Since poor Deeping’s murder I had come to handgrips with the assassins
+more than once, but Hassan had proved too clever for me, too clever for
+Scotland Yard. The sacred slipper was once more in the hands of its
+fanatic guardian.
+
+One man there was who might have helped the search, Earl Dexter. But
+Earl Dexter was himself wanted by Scotland Yard!
+
+From the time of the bank affair up to the moment when this beautiful
+visitor had come to my chambers I had thought Dexter, as well as
+Hassan, to have fled secretly from England. But the moment that I saw
+Carneta at my door I divined that The Stetson Man must still be in
+London.
+
+She sat watching me and awaiting my answer.
+
+“I cannot avenge my friend unless I can find his murderer.”
+
+Eagerly she bent forward.
+
+“But if I can find him?”
+
+That made me think, and I hesitated before speaking again.
+
+“Say what you came to say,” I replied slowly. “You must know that I
+distrust you. Indeed, my plain duty is to detain you. But I will listen
+to anything you may care to tell me, particularly if it enables me to
+trap Hassan of Aleppo.”
+
+“Very well,” she said, and rested her elbows upon the table before her.
+“I have come to you in desperation. I can help you to find the man who
+murdered Professor Deeping, but in return I want you to help me!”
+
+I watched her closely. She was very plainly, almost poorly, dressed.
+Her face was pale and there were dark marks around her eyes. This but
+served to render their strange beauty more startling; yet I could see
+that my visitor was in real trouble. The situation was an odd one.
+
+“You are possibly about to ask me,” I suggested, “to assist Earl Dexter
+to escape the police?”
+
+She shook her head. Her voice trembled as she replied—
+
+“That would not have induced me to run the risk of coming here. I came
+because I wanted to find a man who was brave enough to help me. We have
+no friends in London, and so it became a question of terms. I can repay
+you by helping you to trace Hassan.”
+
+“What is it, then, that Dexter asks me to do?”
+
+“He asks nothing. I, Carneta, am asking!”
+
+“Then you are not come from him?”
+
+At my question, all her self-possession left her. She abruptly dropped
+her face into her hands and was shaken with sobs! It was more than I
+could bear, unmoved. I forgot the shady past, forgot that she was the
+associate of a daring felon, and could only realize that she was a
+weeping woman, who had appealed to my pity and who asked my aid.
+
+I stood up and stared out of the window, for I experienced a not
+unnatural embarrassment. Without looking at her I said—
+
+“Don’t be afraid to tell me your troubles. I don’t say I should go out
+of my way to be kind to Mr. Dexter, but I have no wish whatever to be
+instrumental in”—I hesitated—“in making you responsible for his
+misdeeds. If you can tell me where to find Hassan of Aleppo, I won’t
+even ask you where Dexter is—”
+
+“God help me! I don’t know where he is!”
+
+There was real, poignant anguish in her cry. I turned and confronted
+her. Her lashes were all wet with tears.
+
+“What! has he disappeared?”
+
+She nodded, fought with her emotion a moment, and went on unsteadily,
+
+“I want you to help me to find him for in finding him we shall find
+Hassan!”
+
+“How so?”
+
+Her gaze avoided me now.
+
+“Mr. Cavanagh, he has staked everything upon securing the slipper—and
+the Hashishin were too clever for him. His hand—those Eastern fiends
+cut off his hand! But he would not give in. He made another bid—and
+lost again. It left him almost penniless.”
+
+She spoke of Earl Dexter’s felonious plans as another woman might have
+spoken of her husband’s unwise investments! It was fantastic hearing
+that confession of The Stetson Man’s beautiful partner, and I counted
+the interview one of the strangest I had ever known.
+
+A sudden idea came to me. “When did Dexter first conceive the plan to
+steal the slipper?” I asked.
+
+“In Egypt!” answered Carneta. “Yes! You may as well know! He is
+thoroughly familiar with the East, and he learned of the robbery of
+Professor Deeping almost as soon as it became known to Hassan. I know
+what you are going to ask—”
+
+“Ahmad Ahmadeen!”
+
+“Yes! He travelled home as Ahmadeen—the only time he ever used a
+disguise. Oh! the thing is accursed!” she cried. “I begged him,
+implored him, to abandon his attempts upon it. Day and night we were
+watched by those ghastly yellow men! But it was all in vain. He knew,
+had known for a long time, where Hassan of Aleppo was in hiding!”
+
+And I reflected that the best men at New Scotland Yard had failed to
+pick up the slightest clue!
+
+“The Hashishin, of whom that dreadful man is leader, are rich, or have
+supporters who are rich. The plan was to make them pay for the
+slipper.”
+
+“My God! it was playing with fire!”
+
+She sat silent awhile. Emotion threatened to get the upper hand. Then—
+
+“Two days ago,” she almost whispered, “he set out—to ... get the
+slipper!”
+
+“To steal it?”
+
+“To steal it!”
+
+“From Hassan of Aleppo?”
+
+I could scarcely believe that any man, single-handed, could have had
+the hardihood to attempt such a thing.
+
+“From Hassan, yes!”
+
+I faced her, amazed, incredulous.
+
+“Dexter had suffered mutilation, he knew that the Hashishin sought his
+life for his previous attempts upon the relic of the Prophet, and yet
+he dared to venture again into the very lions’ den?”
+
+“He did, Mr. Cavanagh, two days ago. And—”
+
+“Yes?” I urged, as gently as I could, for she was shaking pitifully.
+
+“He never came back!”
+
+The words were spoken almost in a whisper. She clenched her hands and
+leapt from the chair, fighting down her grief and with such a stark
+horror in her beautiful eyes that from my very soul I longed to be able
+to help her.
+
+“Mr. Cavanagh” (she had courage, this bewildering accomplice of a
+cracksman), “I know the house he went to! I cannot hope to make you
+understand what I have suffered since then. A thousand times I have
+been on the point of going to the police, confessing all I knew, and
+leading them to that house! O God! if only he is alive, this shall be
+his last crooked deal—and mine! I dared not go to the police, for his
+sake! I waited, and watched, and hoped, through two such nights and
+days ... then I ventured. I should have gone mad if I had not come
+here. I knew you had good cause to hate, to detest me, but I remembered
+that you had a great grievance against Hassan. Not as great, O heaven!
+not as great as mine, but yet a great one. I remembered, too, that you
+were the kind of man—a woman can come to...”
+
+She sank back into the chair, and with her fingers twining and
+untwining, sat looking dully before her.
+
+“In brief,” I said, “what do you propose?”
+
+“I propose that we endeavour to obtain admittance to the house of
+Hassan of Aleppo—secretly, of course, and all I ask of you in return
+for revealing the secret of its situation is—”
+
+“That I let Dexter go free?”
+
+Almost inaudibly she whispered: “If he lives!”
+
+Surely no stranger proposition ever had been submitted to a law-abiding
+citizen. I was asked to connive in the escape of a notorious criminal,
+and at one and the same time to embark upon an expedition patently
+burglarious! As though this were not enough, I was invited to beard
+Hassan of Aleppo, the most dreadful being I had ever encountered East
+or West, in his mysterious stronghold!
+
+I wondered what my friend, Inspector Bristol, would have thought of the
+project; I wondered if I should ever live to see Hassan meet his just
+deserts as a result of this enterprise, which I was forced to admit a
+foolhardy one. But a man who has selected the career of a war
+correspondent from amongst those which Fleet Street offers, is the
+victim of a certain craving for fresh experiences; I suppose, has in
+his character something of an adventurous turn.
+
+For a while I stood staring from the window, then faced about and
+looked into the violet eyes of my visitor.
+
+“I agree, Carneta!” I said.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIX
+WE MEET MR. ISAACS
+
+
+Quitting the wayside station, and walking down a short lane, we came
+out upon Watling Street, white and dusty beneath the afternoon sun. We
+were less than an hour’s train journey from London but found ourselves
+amid the Kentish hop gardens, amid a rural peace unbroken. My companion
+carried a camera case slung across her shoulder, but its contents were
+less innocent than one might have supposed. In fact, it contained a
+neat set of those instruments of the burglar’s art with whose use she
+appeared to be quite familiar.
+
+“There is an inn,” she said, “about a mile ahead, where we can obtain
+some vital information. He last wrote to me from there.”
+
+Side by side we tramped along the dusty road. We both were silent,
+occupied with our own thoughts. Respecting the nature of my companion’s
+I could entertain little doubt, and my own turned upon the foolhardy
+nature of the undertaking upon which I was embarked. No other word
+passed between us then, until upon rounding a bend and passing a
+cluster of picturesque cottages, the yard of the Vinepole came into
+view.
+
+“Do they know you by sight here?” I asked abruptly.
+
+“No, of course not; we never made strategic mistakes of that kind. If
+we have tea here, no doubt we can learn all we require.”
+
+I entered the little parlour of the inn, and suggested that tea should
+be served in the pretty garden which opened out of it upon the right.
+
+The host, who himself laid the table, viewed the camera case
+critically.
+
+“We get a lot of photographers down here,” he remarked tentatively.
+
+“No doubt,” said my companion. “There is some very pretty scenery in
+the neighbourhood.”
+
+The landlord rested his hands upon the table.
+
+“There was a gentleman here on Wednesday last,” he said; “an old
+gentleman who had met with an accident, and was staying somewhere
+hereabouts for his health. But he’d got his camera with him, and it was
+wonderful the way he could use it, considering he hadn’t got the use of
+his right hand.”
+
+“He must have been a very keen photographer,” I said, glancing at the
+girl beside me.
+
+“He took three or four pictures of the Vinepole,” replied the landlord
+(which I doubted, since probably his camera was a dummy); “and he
+wanted to know if there were any other old houses in the neighbourhood.
+I told him he ought to take Cadham Hall, and he said he had heard that
+the Gate House, which is about a mile from here, was one of the oldest
+buildings about.”
+
+A girl appeared with a tea tray, and for a moment I almost feared that
+the landlord was about to retire; but he lingered, whilst the girl
+distributed the things about the table, and Carneta asked casually,
+“Would there be time for me to photograph the Gate House before dark?”
+
+“There might be time,” was the reply, “but that’s not the difficulty.
+Mr. Isaacs is the difficulty.”
+
+“Who is Mr. Isaacs?” I asked.
+
+“He’s the Jewish gentleman who bought the Gate House recently. Lots of
+money he’s got and a big motor car. He’s up and down to London almost
+every day in the week, but he won’t let anybody take photographs of the
+house. I know several who’ve asked.”
+
+“But I thought,” said Carneta, innocently, “you said the old gentleman
+who was here on Wednesday went to take some?”
+
+“He went, yes, miss; but I don’t know if he succeeded.”
+
+Carneta poured out some tea.
+
+“Now that you speak of it,” she said, “I too have heard that the Gate
+House is very picturesque. What objection can Mr. Isaacs have to
+photographers?”
+
+“Well, you see, miss, to get a picture of the house, you have to pass
+right through the grounds.”
+
+“I should walk right up to the house and ask permission. Is Mr. Isaacs
+at home, I wonder?”
+
+“I couldn’t say. He hasn’t passed this way to-day.”
+
+“We might meet him on the way,” said I. “What is he like?”
+
+“A Jewish gentleman sir, very dark, with a white beard. Wears gold
+glasses. Keeps himself very much to himself. I don’t know anything
+about his household; none of them ever come here.”
+
+Carneta inquired the direction of Cadham Hall and of the Gate House,
+and the landlord left us to ourselves. My companion exhibited signs of
+growing agitation, and it seemed to me that she had much ado to
+restrain herself from setting out without a moment’s delay for the Gate
+House, which, I readily perceived, was the place to which our strange
+venture was leading us.
+
+I found something very stimulating in the reflection that, rash though
+the expedition might be, and, viewed from whatever standpoint,
+undeniably perilous, it promised to bring me to that secret stronghold
+of deviltry where the sinister Hassan of Aleppo so successfully had
+concealed himself.
+
+The work of the modern journalist had many points of contact with that
+of the detective; and since the murder of Professor Deeping I had
+succumbed to the man-hunting fever more than once. I knew that Scotland
+Yard had failed to locate the hiding-place of the remarkable and evil
+man who, like an efreet of Oriental lore, obeyed the talisman of the
+stolen slipper, striking down whomsoever laid hand upon its sacredness.
+It was a novel sensation to know that, aided by this beautiful
+accomplice of a rogue, I had succeeded where the experts had failed!
+
+Misgivings I had and shall not deny. If our scheme succeeded it would
+mean that Deeping’s murderer should be brought to justice. If it
+failed-well, frankly, upon that possibility I did not dare to reflect!
+
+It must be needless for me to say that we two strangely met allies were
+ill at ease, sometimes to the point of embarrassment. We proceeded on
+our way in almost unbroken silence, and, save for a couple of farm
+hands, without meeting any wayfarer, up to the time that we reached the
+brow of the hill and had our first sight of the Gate House lying in a
+little valley beneath. It was a small Tudor mansion, very compact in
+plan and its roof glowed redly in the rays of the now setting sun.
+
+From the directions given by the host of the Vinepole it was impossible
+to mistake the way or to mistake the house. Amid well-wooded grounds it
+stood, a place quite isolated, but so typically English that, as I
+stood looking down upon it, I found myself unable to believe that any
+other than a substantial country gentleman could be its proprietor.
+
+I glanced at Carneta. Her violet eyes were burning feverishly, but her
+lips twitched in a bravely pitiful way.
+
+Clearly now my adventure lay before me; that red-roofed homestead
+seemed to have rendered it all substantial which hitherto had been
+shadowy; and I stood there studying the Gate House gravely, for it
+might yet swallow me up, as apparently it had swallowed Earl Dexter.
+
+There, amid that peaceful Kentish landscape, fantasy danced and horrors
+unknown lurked in waiting...
+
+The eminence upon which we were commanded an extensive prospect, and
+eastward showed a tower and flagstaff which marked the site of Cadham
+Hall. There were homeward-bound labourers to be seen in the lanes now,
+and where like a white ribbon the Watling Street lay across the verdant
+carpet moved an insect shape, speedily.
+
+It was a car, and I watched it with vague interest. At a point where a
+dense coppice spread down to the roadway and a lane crossed west to
+east, the car became invisible. Then I saw it again, nearer to us and
+nearer to the Gate House. Finally it disappeared among the trees.
+
+I turned to Carneta. She, too, had been watching. Now her gaze met
+mine.
+
+“Mr. Isaacs!” she said; and her voice was less musical than usual. “His
+chauffeur, who learned his business in Cairo, is probably the only one
+of his servants who remains in England.”
+
+“What!” I began—and said no more.
+
+Where the road upon which we stood wound down into the valley and lost
+itself amid the trees surrounding the Gate House, the car suddenly
+appeared again, and began to mount the slope toward us!
+
+“Heavens!” whispered Carneta. “He may have seen us—with glasses! Quick!
+Let us walk back until the hill-top conceals us; then we must hide
+somewhere!”
+
+I shared her excitement. Without a moment’s hesitation we both turned
+and retraced our steps. Twenty paces brought us to a spot where a stack
+of mangel wurzels stood at the roadside.
+
+“This will do!” I said.
+
+We ran around into the field, and crouched where we could peer out on
+the road without ourselves being seen. Nor had we taken up this
+position a moment too soon.
+
+Topping the slope came a light-weight electric, driven by a man who, in
+his spruce uniform, might have passed at a glance for a very dusky
+European. The car had a limousine back, and as the chauffeur slowed
+down, out from the open windows right and left peered the solitary
+occupant.
+
+He had the cast of countenance which is associated with the best type
+of Jew, with clear-cut aquiline features wholly destitute of grossness.
+His white beard was patriarchal and he wore gold-rimmed pince-nez and a
+glossy silk hat. Such figures may often be met with in the great
+money-markets of the world, and Mr. Isaacs would have passed for a
+successful financier in even more discerning communities than that of
+Cadham.
+
+But I scarcely breathed until the car was past; and, beside me, my
+companion, crouching to the ground, was trembling wildly. Fifty yards
+toward the village Mr. Isaacs evidently directed the man to return.
+
+The car was put about, and flashed past us at high speed down into the
+valley. When the sound of the humming motor had died to something no
+louder than the buzz of a sleepy wasp, I held out my hand to Carneta
+and she rose, pale, but with blazing eyes, and picked up her camera
+case.
+
+“If he had detected us, everything would have been lost!” she
+whispered.
+
+“Not everything!” I replied grimly—and showed her the revolver which I
+had held in my hand whilst those eagle eyes had been seeking us. “If he
+had made a sign to show that he had seen us, in fact, if he had once
+offered a safe mark by leaning from the car, I should have shot him
+dead without hesitation!”
+
+“We must not show ourselves again, but wait for dusk. He must have seen
+us, then, on the hilltop, but I hope without recognizing us. He has the
+sight and instincts of a vulture!”
+
+I nodded, slipping the revolver into my pocket, but I wondered if I
+should not have been better advised to have risked a shot at the moment
+that I had recognized “Mr. Isaacs” for Hassan of Aleppo.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXX
+AT THE GATE HOUSE
+
+
+From sunset to dusk I lurked about the neighbourhood of the Gate House
+with my beautiful accomplice—watching and waiting: a man bound upon
+stranger business, I dare swear, than any other in the county of Kent
+that night.
+
+Our endeavour now was to avoid observation by any one, and in this, I
+think, we succeeded. At the same time, Carneta, upon whose experience I
+relied implicitly, regarded it as most important that we should observe
+(from a safe distance) any one who entered or quitted the gates.
+
+But none entered, and none came out. When, finally, we made along the
+narrow footpath skirting the west of the grounds, the night was
+silent—most strangely still.
+
+The trees met overhead, but no rustle disturbed their leaves and of
+animal life no indication showed itself. There was no moon.
+
+A full appreciation of my mad folly came to me, and with it a sense of
+heavy depression. This stillness that ruled all about the house which
+sheltered the awful Sheikh of the Assassins was ominous, I thought. In
+short, my nerves were playing me tricks.
+
+“We have little to fear,” said my companion, speaking in a hushed and
+quivering voice. “The whole of the party left England some days ago.”
+
+“Are you sure?”
+
+“Certain! We learned that before Earl made his attempt. Hassan remains,
+for some reason; Hassan and one other—the one who drives the car.”
+
+“But the slipper?”
+
+“If Hassan remains, so does the slipper!” From the knapsack, which, as
+you will have divined, did not contain a camera, she took out an
+electric pocket lamp, and directed its beam upon the hedge above us.
+
+“There is a gap somewhere here!” she said. “See if you can find it. I
+dare not show the light too long.”
+
+Darkness followed. I clambered up the bank and sought for the opening
+of which Carneta had spoken.
+
+“The light here a moment,” I whispered. “I think I have it!”
+
+Out shone the white beam, and momentarily fell upon a black hole in the
+thickset hedge. The light disappeared, and as I extended my hand to
+Carneta she grasped it and climbed up beside me.
+
+“Put on your rubber shoes,” she directed. “Leave the others here.”
+
+There in the darkness I did as she directed, for I was provided with a
+pair of tennis shoes. Carneta already was suitably shod.
+
+“I will go first,” I said. “What is the ground like beyond?”
+
+“Just unkempt bushes and weeds.”
+
+Upon hands and knees I crawled through, saw dimly that there was a
+short descent, corresponding with the ascent from the lane, and turned,
+whispering to my fellow conspirator to follow.
+
+The grounds proved even more extensive than I had anticipated. We
+pressed on, dodging low-sweeping branches and keeping our arms up to
+guard our faces from outshoots of thorn bushes. Our progress
+necessarily was slow, but even so quite a long time seemed to have
+elapsed ere we came in sight of the house.
+
+This was my first expedition of the kind; and now that my goal was
+actually in sight I became conscious of a sort of exultation hard to
+describe. My companion, on the contrary, seemed to have become icily
+cool. When next she spoke, her voice had a businesslike ring, which
+revealed the fact that she was no amateur at this class of work.
+
+“Wait here,” she directed. “I am going to pass all around the house,
+and I will rejoin you.”
+
+I could see her but dimly, and she moved off as silent as an Indian
+deer-stalker, leaving me alone there crouching at the extreme edge of
+the thicket. I looked out over a small wilderness of unkempt
+flower-beds; so much it was just possible to perceive. The plants in
+many instances had spread on to the pathways and contested survival
+with the flourishing weeds. All was wild—deserted—eerie.
+
+A sense of dampness assailed me, and I raised my eyes to the low-lying
+building wherein no light showed, no sign of life was evident. The
+nearer wing presented a verandah apparently overgrown by some climbing
+plant, the nature of which it was impossible to determine in the
+darkness.
+
+The zest for the nocturnal operation which temporarily had thrilled me
+succumbed now to loneliness. With keen anxiety I awaited the return of
+my more experienced accomplice. The situation was grotesque, utterly
+bizarre; but even my sense of humour could not save me from the growing
+dread which this seemingly deserted place poured into my heart.
+
+When upon the right I heard a faint rustling I started, and grasped the
+revolver in my pocket.
+
+“Not a sound!” came in Carneta’s voice. “Keep just inside the bushes
+and come this way. There is something I want to show you.”
+
+The various profuse growths rendered concealment simple enough—if
+indeed any other concealment were necessary than that which the
+strangely black night afforded. Just within the evil-smelling thicket
+we made a half circuit of the building, and stopped.
+
+“Look!” whispered Carneta.
+
+The word was unnecessary, for I was staring fixedly in the direction of
+that which evidently had occasioned her uneasiness.
+
+It was a small square window, so low-set that I assumed it to be that
+of a cellar, and heavily cross-barred.
+
+From it, out upon a tangled patch of vegetation, shone a dull red
+light!
+
+“There’s no other light in the place,” my companion whispered. “For
+God’s sake, what can it be?”
+
+My mind supplied no explanation. The idea that it might be a dark room
+no doubt was suggested by the assumed role of Carneta; but I knew that
+idea to be absurd. The red light meant something else.
+
+Evidently the commencing of operations before all lights were out was
+irregular, for Carneta said slowly—
+
+“We must wait and watch the light. There was formerly a moat around the
+Gate House; that must be the window of a dungeon.”
+
+I little relished the prospect of waiting in that swamp-like spot, but
+since no alternative presented itself I accepted the inevitable. For
+close upon an hour we stood watching the red window. No sound of bird,
+beast, or man disturbed our vigil; in fact, it would appear that the
+very insects shunned the neighbourhood of Hassan of Aleppo. But the red
+light still shone out.
+
+“We must risk it!” said Carneta steadily. “There are French windows
+opening on to that verandah. Ten yards farther around the bushes come
+right up to the wall of the house. We’ll go that way and around by the
+other wing on to the verandah.”
+
+Any action was preferable to this nerve-sapping delay, and with a
+determination to shoot, and shoot to kill, any one who opposed our
+entrance, I passed through the bushes and, with Carneta, rounded the
+southern border of that silent house and slipped quietly on to the
+verandah.
+
+Kneeling, Carneta opened the knapsack. My eyes were growing accustomed
+to the darkness, and I was just able to see her deft hands at work upon
+the fastenings. She made no noise, and I watched her with an
+ever-growing wonder. A female burglar is a personage difficult to
+imagine. Certainly, no one ever could have suspected this girl with the
+violet eyes of being an expert crackswoman; but of her efficiency there
+could be no question. I think I had never witnessed a more amazing
+spectacle than that of this cultured girl manipulating the tools of the
+house breaker with her slim white fingers.
+
+Suddenly she turned and clutched my arm.
+
+“The windows are not fastened!” she whispered.
+
+A strange courage came to me—perhaps that of desperation. For, ignoring
+the ominous circumstance, I pushed open the nearest window and stepped
+into the room beyond! A hissing breath from Carneta acknowledged my
+performance, and she entered close behind me, silent in her
+rubber-soled shoes.
+
+For one thrilling moment we stood listening. Then came the white beam
+from the electric lamp to cut through the surrounding blackness.
+
+The room was totally unfurnished!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXI
+THE POOL OF DEATH
+
+
+Not a sound broke the stillness of the Gate House. It was the most
+eerily silent place in which I had ever found myself. Out into the
+corridor we went, noiselessly. It was stripped, uncarpeted.
+
+Three doors we passed, two upon the left and one upon the right. We
+tried them all. All were unfastened, and the rooms into which they
+opened bare and deserted. Then we came upon a short, descending stair,
+at its foot a massive oaken door.
+
+Carneta glided down, noiseless as a ghost, and to one of the blackened
+panels applied an ingenious little instrument which she carried in her
+knapsack. It was not unlike a stethoscope; and as I watched her
+listening, by means of this arrangement, for any sound beyond the oaken
+door, I reflected how almost every advance made by science places a new
+tool in the hand of the criminal.
+
+No word had been spoken since we had discovered this door; none had
+been necessary. For we both knew that the place beyond was that from
+which proceeded the mysterious red light.
+
+I directed the ray of the electric torch upon Carneta, as she stood
+there listening, and against that sombre oaken background her face and
+profile stood out with startling beauty. She seemed half perplexed and
+half fearful. Then she abruptly removed the apparatus, and, stooping to
+the knapsack, replaced it and took out a bunch of wire keys, signing to
+me to hand her the lamp.
+
+As I crept down the steps I saw her pause, glancing back over her
+shoulder toward the door. The expression upon her face induced me to
+direct the light in the same direction.
+
+Why neither of us had observed the fact before I cannot conjecture; but
+a key was in the lock!
+
+Perhaps the traffic of the night afforded no more dramatic moment than
+this. The house which we were come prepared burglariously to enter was
+thrown open, it would seem, to us, inviting our inspection!
+
+Looking back upon that moment, it seems almost incredible that the
+sight of a key in a lock should have so thrilled me. But at the time I
+perceived something sinister in this failure of the Lord of the
+Hashishin to close his doors to intruders. That Carneta shared my
+doubts and fears was to be read in her face; but her training had been
+peculiar, I learned, and such as establishes a surprising resoluteness
+of character.
+
+Quite noiselessly she turned the key, and holding a dainty pocket
+revolver in her hand, pushed the door open slowly!
+
+An odour, sickly sweet and vaguely familiar, was borne to my nostrils.
+Carneta became outlined in dim, reddish light. Bending forward
+slightly, she entered the room, and I, with muscles tensed nervously,
+advanced and stood beside her.
+
+I perceived that this was a cellar; indeed, I doubt not that in some
+past age it had served as a dungeon. From the stone roof hung the first
+evidence of Eastern occupation which the Gate House had yielded; in the
+form of an Oriental lantern, or fanoos, of rose-coloured waxed paper
+upon a copper frame. Its vague light revealed the interior of the
+hideous place upon whose threshold we stood.
+
+Straight before us, deep set in the stone wall, was the tiny square
+window, iron-barred without, and glazed with red glass, the light from
+which had so deeply mystified us. Within a niche in the wall, a little
+to the left of the window, rested an object which, at that moment,
+claimed our undivided attention the sight of which so wrought upon us
+that temporarily all else was forgotten.
+
+It was the red slipper of the Prophet!
+
+“My God!” whispered Carneta—“my God!”—and clutched at me, swaying
+dizzily.
+
+A few inches from our feet the floor became depressed, how deeply I
+could not determine, for it was filled with water, water filthy and
+slimy! The strange, nauseating odour had grown all but unsupportable;
+it seemingly proceeded from this fetid pool which, occupying the floor
+of the dungeon, offered a barrier, since its depth was unknown, of
+fully twelve feet between ourselves and the farther wall.
+
+There was a faint, dripping sound: a whispering, echoing drip-drip of
+falling water. I could not tell from whence it proceeded.
+
+Almost supporting my companion, whose courage seemed suddenly to have
+failed her, I stared fascinatedly at that blood-stained relic.
+Something then induced me to look behind; I suppose a warning instinct
+of that sort which is unexplainable. I only know that upholding Carneta
+with my left arm, and nervously grasping my revolver in my right, I
+turned and glanced over my shoulder.
+
+Very slowly, but with a constant, regular motion, the massive door was
+closing!
+
+I snatched away my arm; in my left hand I held the electric torch, and
+springing sharply about I directed the searching ray into the black gap
+of the stairway. A yellow face, a malignant Oriental face, came
+suddenly, fully, into view! Instantly I recognized it for that of the
+man who had driven Hassan’s car!
+
+Acting upon the determination with which I had entered the Gate House,
+I raised my revolver and fired straight between the evil eyes! To the
+fact that I dropped my left hand in the act of pulling the trigger with
+my right, and thus lost my mark, the servant of Hassan of Aleppo owed
+his escape. I missed him. He uttered a shrill cry of fear and went
+racing up the wooden stair. I followed him with the light and fired
+twice at the retreating figure. I heard him stumble and a second time
+cry out. But, though I doubt not he was hit, he recovered himself, for
+I heard his tread in the corridor above.
+
+Propping wide the door with my foot, I turned to Carneta. Her face was
+drawn and haggard; but her mouth set in a sort of grim determination.
+
+“Earl is dead!” she said, in a queer, toneless voice. “He died trying
+to get—that thing! I will get it, and destroy it!”
+
+Before I could detain her, even had I sought to do so, she stepped into
+the filthy water, struggled to recover her foothold, and sank above her
+waist into its sliminess. Without hesitation she began to advance
+toward the niche which contained the slipper. In the middle of the pool
+she stopped.
+
+What memory it was which supplied the clue to the identity of that
+nauseating smell, heaven alone knows; but as the girl stopped and drew
+herself up rigidly—then turned and leapt wildly back toward the door—I
+knew what occasioned that sickly odour!
+
+She screamed once, dreadfully—shrilly—a scream of agonizing fear that I
+can never forget. Then, roughly I grasped her, for the need was
+urgent—and dragged her out on to the floor beside me. With her wet
+garments clinging to her limbs, she fell prostrate on the stones.
+
+A yard from the brink the slimy water parted, and the yellow snout of a
+huge crocodile was raised above the surface! The saurian eyes, hungrily
+malevolent, rose next to view!
+
+The extremity of our danger found me suddenly cool. As the thing drew
+its slimy body up out of the pool I waited. The jaws were extended
+toward the prostrate body, were but inches removed from it, dripped
+their saliva upon the soddened skirt—when I bent forward, and at a
+range of some ten inches emptied the remaining three loaded chambers of
+my revolver into the creature’s left eye!
+
+Upchurned in bloody foam became the water of that dreadful place.... As
+one recalls the incidents of a fevered dream, I recall dragging Carneta
+away from the contorted body of the death-stricken reptile. A nightmare
+chaos of horrid, revolting sights and sounds forms my only recollection
+of quitting the dungeon of the slipper.
+
+I succeeded in carrying her up the stairs and out through the empty
+rooms on to the verandah; but there, from sheer exhaustion, I laid her
+down. I had no means of reviving her and I lacked the strength to carry
+her farther. Having recharged my revolver, I stood watching her where
+she lay, wanly beautiful in the dim light.
+
+There was no doubt in my mind respecting the fate of Earl Dexter, nor
+could I doubt that the slipper in the dungeon below was a duplicate of
+the real one. It was a death-trap into which he had lured Dexter and
+which he had left baited for whomsoever might trace the cracksman to
+the Gate House. Why Hassan should have remained behind, unless from
+fanatic lust of killing, I could not imagine.
+
+When at last the fresher night air had its effect, and Carneta opened
+her eyes, I led her to the gates, nor did she offer the slightest
+resistance, but looked dully before her, muttering over and over again,
+“Earl, Earl!”
+
+The gates were open; we passed out on to the open road. No man pursued
+us, and the night was gravely still.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXII
+SIX GRAY PATCHES
+
+
+When the invitation came from my old friend Hilton to spend a week
+“roughing it” with him in Warwickshire I accepted with alacrity. If
+ever a man needed a holiday I was that man. Nervous breakdown
+threatened me at any moment; the ghastly experience at the Gate House
+together with Carneta’s grief-stricken face when I had parted from her
+were obsessing memories which I sought in vain to shake off.
+
+A brief wire had contained the welcome invitation, and up to the time
+when I had received it I had been unaware that Hilton was back in
+England. Moreover, beyond the fact that his house, “Uplands,” was near
+H—, for which I was instructed to change at New Street Station,
+Birmingham, I had little idea of its location. But he added “Wire train
+and will meet at H—”; so that I had no uneasiness on that score.
+
+I had contemplated catching the 2:45 from Euston, but by the time I had
+got my work into something like order, I decided that the 6:55 would be
+more suitable and decided to dine on the train.
+
+Altogether, there was something of a rush and hustle attendant upon
+getting away, and when at last I found myself in the cab, bound for
+Euston, I sat back with a long-drawn sigh. The quest of the Prophet’s
+slipper was ended; in all probability that blood-stained relic was
+already Eastward bound. Hassan of Aleppo, its awful guardian, had
+triumphed and had escaped retribution. Earl Dexter was dead. I could
+not doubt that; for the memory of his beautiful accomplice, Carneta, as
+I last had seen her, broken-hearted, with her great violet eyes dulled
+in tearless agony—have I not said that it lived with me?
+
+Even as the picture of her lovely, pale face presented itself to my
+mind, the cab was held up by a temporary block in the traffic—and my
+imagination played me a strange trick.
+
+Another taxi ran close alongside, almost at the moment that the press
+of vehicles moved on again. Certainly, I had no more than a passing
+glimpse of the occupants; but I could have sworn that violet eyes
+looked suddenly into mine, and with equal conviction I could have sworn
+to the gaunt face of the man who sat beside the violet-eyed girl for
+that of Earl Dexter!
+
+The travellers, however, were immediately lost to sight in the rear,
+and I was left to conjecture whether this had been a not uncommon form
+of optical delusion or whether I had seen a ghost.
+
+At any rate, as I passed in between the big pillars, “The gateway of
+the North,” I scrutinized, and closely, the numerous hurrying figures
+about me. None of them, by any stretch of the imagination, could have
+been set down for that of Dexter, The Stetson Man. No doubt, I
+concluded, I had been tricked by a chance resemblance.
+
+Having dispatched my telegram, I boarded the 6:55. I thought I should
+have the compartment to myself, and so deep in reverie was I that the
+train was actually clear of the platforms ere I learned that I had a
+companion. He must have joined me at the moment that the train started.
+Certainly, I had not seen him enter. But, suddenly looking up, I met
+the eyes of this man who occupied the corner seat facing me.
+
+This person was olive-skinned, clean-shaven, fine featured, and
+perfectly groomed. His age might have been anything from twenty-five to
+forty-five, but his hair and brows were jet black. His eyes, too, were
+nearer to real black than any human eyes I had ever seen
+before—excepting the awful eyes of Hassan of Aleppo. Hassan of Aleppo!
+It was, to that hour, a mystery how his group of trained assassins—the
+Hashishin—had quitted England. Since none of them were known to the
+police, it was no insoluble mystery, I admit; but nevertheless it was
+singular that the careful watching of the ports had yielded no result.
+Could it be that some of them had not yet left the country? Could it
+be—
+
+I looked intently into the black eyes. They were caressing, smiling
+eyes, and looked boldly into mine. I picked up a magazine, pretending
+to read. But I supported it with my left hand; my right was in my coat
+pocket—and it rested upon my Smith and Wesson!
+
+So much had the slipper of Mohammed done for me: I went in hourly dread
+of murderous attack!
+
+My travelling companion watched me; of that I was certain. I could feel
+his gaze. But he made no move and no word passed between us. This was
+the situation when the train slowed into Northampton. At Northampton,
+to my indescribable relief (frankly, I was as nervous in those days as
+a woman), the Oriental traveller stepped out on to the platform.
+
+Having reclosed the door, he turned and leaned in through the open
+window.
+
+“Evidently you are not concerned, Mr. Cavanagh,” he said. “Be warned.
+Do not interfere with those that are!”
+
+The night swallowed him up.
+
+My fears had been justified; the man was one of the Hashishin—a spy of
+Hassan of Aleppo! What did it mean?
+
+I craned from the window, searching the platform right and left. But
+there was no sign of him.
+
+When the train left Northampton I found myself alone, and I should only
+weary you were I to attempt to recount the troubled conjectures that
+bore me company to Birmingham.
+
+The train reached New Street at nine, with the result that having
+gulped a badly needed brandy and soda in the buffet, I grabbed my bag,
+raced across—and just missed the connection! More than an hour later I
+found myself standing at ten minutes to eleven upon the H— platform,
+watching the red taillight of the “local” disappear into the night.
+Then I realized to the full that with four miles of lonely England
+before me there hung above my head a mysterious threat—a vague menace.
+The solitary official, who but waited my departure to lock up the
+station, was the last representative of civilization I could hope to
+encounter until the gates of “Uplands” should be opened to me!
+
+What was the matter with which I was warned not to interfere? Might I
+not, by my mere presence in that place, unwittingly be interfering now?
+
+With the station-master’s directions humming like a refrain in my ears,
+I passed through the sleeping village and out on to the road. The moon
+was exceptionally bright and unobscured, although a dense bank of cloud
+crept slowly from the west, and before me the path stretched as an
+unbroken thread of silvery white twining a sinuous way up the
+bracken-covered slope, to where, sharply defined against the moonlight
+sky, a coppice in grotesque silhouette marked the summit.
+
+The month had been dry and tropically hot, and my footsteps rang
+crisply upon the hard ground. There is nothing more deceptive than a
+straight road up a hill; and half an hour’s steady tramping but saw me
+approaching the trees.
+
+I had so far resolutely endeavoured to keep my mind away from the idea
+of surveillance. Now, as I paused to light my pipe—a never-failing
+friend in loneliness—I perceived something move in the shadows of a
+neighbouring bush.
+
+This object was not unlike a bladder, and the very incongruity of its
+appearance served to revive all my apprehensions. Taking up my grip, as
+though I had noticed nothing of an alarming nature, I pursued my way up
+the slope, leaving a trail of tobacco smoke in my wake; and having my
+revolver secreted up my right coat-sleeve.
+
+Successfully resisting a temptation to glance behind, I entered the
+cover of the coppice, and, now invisible to any one who might be
+dogging me, stood and looked back upon the moon-bright road.
+
+There was no living thing in sight, the road was empty as far as the
+eye could see. The coppice now remained to be negotiated, and then, if
+the station-master’s directions were not at fault, “Uplands” should be
+visible beyond. Taking, therefore, what I had designed to be a final
+glance back down the hillside, I was preparing to resume my way when I
+saw something—something that arrested me.
+
+It was a long way behind—so far that, had the moon been less bright, I
+could never have discerned it. What it was I could not even conjecture;
+but it had the appearance of a vague gray patch, moving—not along the
+road, but through the undergrowth—in my direction.
+
+For a second my eye rested upon it. Then I saw a second patch—a third—a
+fourth!
+
+Six!
+
+There were six gray patches creeping up the slope toward me!
+
+The sight was unnerving. What were these things that approached,
+silently, stealthily—like snakes in the grass?
+
+A fear, unlike anything I had known before the quest of the Prophet’s
+slipper had brought fantastic horror into my life, came upon me.
+Revolver in hand I ran—ran for my life toward the gap in the trees that
+marked the coppice end. And as I went something hummed through the
+darkness beside my head, some projectile, some venomous thing that
+missed its mark by a bare inch!
+
+Painfully conversant with the uncanny weapons employed by the
+Hashishin, I knew now, beyond any possibility of doubt, that death was
+behind me.
+
+A pattering like naked feet sounded on the road, and, without pausing
+in my headlong career, I sent a random shot into the blackness.
+
+The crack of the Smith and Wesson reassured me. I pulled up short,
+turned, and looked back toward the trees.
+
+Nothing—no one!
+
+Breathing heavily, I crammed my extinguished briar into my
+pocket—re-charged the empty chamber of the revolver—and started to run
+again toward a light that showed over the treetops to my left.
+
+That, if the man’s directions were right, was “Uplands”—if his
+directions were wrong—then...
+
+A shrill whistle—minor, eerie, in rising cadence—sounded on the dead
+silence with piercing clearness! Six whistles—seemingly from all around
+me—replied!
+
+Some object came humming through the air, and I ducked wildly.
+
+On and on I ran—flying from an unknown, but, as a warning instinct told
+me, deadly peril—ran as a man runs pursued by devils.
+
+The road bent sharply to the left then forked. Overhanging trees
+concealed the house, and the light, though high up under the eaves, was
+no longer visible. Trusting to Providence to guide me, I plunged down
+the lane that turned to the left, and, almost exhausted, saw the gates
+before me—saw the sweep of the drive, and the moonlight, gleaming on
+the windows!
+
+None of the windows were illuminated.
+
+Straight up to the iron gates I raced.
+
+They were locked!
+
+Without a moment’s hesitation I hurled my grip over the top and
+clambered up the bars! As I got astride, from the blackness of the lane
+came the ominous hum, and my hat went spinning away across the
+lawn!—the black cloud veiled the moon and complete darkness fell.
+
+Then I dropped and ran for the house—shouting, though all but
+winded—“Hilton! Hilton! Open the door!”
+
+Sinking exhausted on the steps, I looked toward the gates—but they
+showed only dimly in the dense shadows of the trees.
+
+Bzzz! Buzz!
+
+I dropped flat in the portico as something struck the metal knob of the
+door and rebounded over me. A shower of gravel told of another
+misdirected projectile.
+
+Crack! Crack! Crack! The revolver spoke its short reply into the
+mysterious darkness; but the night gave up no sound to tell of a shot
+gone home.
+
+“Hilton! Hilton!” I cried, banging on the panels with the butt of the
+weapon. “Open the door! Open the door!”
+
+And now I heard the coming footsteps along the hall within; heavy bolts
+were withdrawn—the door swung open—and Hilton, pale-faced, appeared.
+His hand shot out, grabbed my coat collar; and weak, exhausted, I found
+myself snatched into safety, and the door rebolted.
+
+“Thank God!” I whispered. “Thank God! Hilton, look to all your bolts
+and fastenings. Hell is outside!”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIII
+HOW WE WERE REINFORCED
+
+
+Hilton, I learned, was living the simple life at “Uplands.” The place
+was not yet decorated and was only partly furnished. But with his man,
+Soar, he had been in solitary occupation for a week.
+
+“Feel better now?” he asked anxiously.
+
+I reached for my tumbler and blew a cloud of smoke into the air. I
+could hear Soar’s footsteps as he made the round of bolts and bars,
+testing each anxiously.
+
+“Thanks, Hilton,” I said. “I’m quite all right. You are naturally
+wondering what the devil it all means? Well, then, I wired you from
+Euston that I was coming by the 6:55.”
+
+“H— Post Office shuts at 7. I shall get your wire in the morning!”
+
+“That explains your failing to meet me. Now for my explanation!”
+
+“Surrounding this house at the present moment,” I continued, “are
+members of an Eastern organization—the Hashishin, founded in Khorassan
+in the eleventh century and flourishing to-day!”
+
+“Do you mean it, Cavanagh?”
+
+“I do! One Hassan of Aleppo is the present Sheikh of the order, and he
+has come to England, bringing a fiendish company in his train, in
+pursuit of the sacred slipper of Mohammed, which was stolen by the late
+Professor Deeping—-”
+
+“Surely I have read something about this?”
+
+“Probably. Deeping was murdered by Hassan! The slipper was placed in
+the Antiquarian Museum—”
+
+“From which it was stolen again!”
+
+“Correct—by Earl Dexter, America’s foremost crook! But the real facts
+have never got into print. I am the only pressman who knows them, and I
+have good reason for keeping my knowledge to myself! Dexter is dead (I
+believe I saw his ghost to-day). But although, to the best of my
+knowledge, the accursed slipper is in the hands of Hassan and Company,
+I have been watched since I left Euston, and on my way to ‘Uplands’ my
+life was attempted!”
+
+“For God’s sake, why?”
+
+“I cannot surmise, Hilton. Deeping, for certain reasons that are
+irrelevant at the moment, left the keys of the case at the Museum in my
+perpetual keeping—but the case was rifled a second time—”
+
+“I read of it!”
+
+“And the keys were stolen from me. I am utterly at a loss to understand
+why the Hashishin—for it is members of that awful organization who,
+without a doubt, surround this house at the present moment—should seek
+my life. Hilton, I have brought trouble with me!”
+
+“It’s almost incredible!” said Hilton, staring at me. “Why do these
+people pursue you?”
+
+Ere I had time to reply Soar entered, arrayed, as was Hilton, in his
+night attire. Soar was an ex-dragoon and a model man.
+
+“Everything fast, sir,” he reported; “but from the window of the
+bedroom over here—the room I got ready for Mr. Cavanagh—I thought I saw
+someone in the orchard.”
+
+“Eh?” jerked Hilton—“in the orchard? Come on up, Cavanagh!”
+
+We all ran upstairs. The moonlight was streaming into the room.
+
+“Keep back!” I warned.
+
+Well within the shadow, I crept up to the window and looked out. The
+night was hot and still. No breeze stirred the leaves, but the edge of
+the frowning thunder cloud which I had noted before spread a heavy
+carpet of ebony black upon the ground. Beyond, I could dimly discern
+the hills. The others stood behind me, constrained by the fear of this
+mysterious danger which I had brought to “Uplands.”
+
+There was someone moving among the trees!
+
+Closer came the figure, and closer, until suddenly a shaft of moonlight
+found passage and spilled a momentary pool of light amid the shadows, I
+could see the watcher very clearly. A moment he stood there,
+motionless, and looking up at the window; then as he glided again into
+the shade of the trees the darkness became complete. But I watched,
+crouching there nervously, for long after he was gone.
+
+“For God’s sake, who is it?” whispered Hilton, with a sort of awe in
+his voice.
+
+“It’s Hassan of Aleppo!” I replied.
+
+Virtually, the house, with the capital of the Midlands so near upon the
+one hand, the feverish activity of the Black Country reddening the
+night upon the other, was invested by fanatic Easterns!
+
+We descended again to the extemporized study. Soar entered with us and
+Hilton invited him to sit down.
+
+“We must stick together to-night!” he said. “Now, Cavanagh, let us see
+if we can find any explanation of this amazing business. I can
+understand that at one period of the slipper’s history you were an
+object of interest to those who sought to recover it; but if, as you
+say, the Hashishin have the slipper now, what do they want with you? If
+you have never touched it, they cannot be prompted by desire for
+vengeance.”
+
+“I have never touched it,” I replied grimly; “nor even any receptacle
+containing it.”
+
+As I ceased speaking came a distant muffled rumbling.
+
+“That’s the thunder,” said Hilton. “There’s a tremendous storm
+brewing.”
+
+He poured out three glasses of whisky, and was about to speak when Soar
+held up a warning finger.
+
+“Listen!” he said.
+
+At his words, with tropical suddenness down came the rain.
+
+Hilton, his pipe in his hand, stood listening intently.
+
+“What?” he asked.
+
+“I don’t know, sir; the sound of the rain has drowned it.”
+
+Indeed, the rain was descending in a perfect deluge, its continuous
+roar drowning all other sounds; but as we three listened tensely we
+detected a noise which hitherto had seemed like the overflowing of some
+spout.
+
+But louder and clearer it grew, until at last I knew it for what it
+was.
+
+“It’s a motor-car!” I cried.
+
+“And coming here!” added Soar. “Listen! it’s in the lane!”
+
+“It certainly isn’t a taxicab,” declared Hilton. “None of the men will
+come beyond the village.”
+
+“That’s the gate!” said Soar, in an awed voice, and stood up, looking
+at Hilton.
+
+“Come on,” said the latter abruptly, making for the door.
+
+“Be careful, Hilton!” I cried; “it may be a trick!”
+
+Soar unbolted the front door, threw it open, and looked out. In the
+darkness of the storm it was almost impossible to see anything in the
+lane outside. But at that moment a great sheet of lightning split the
+gloom, and we saw a taxicab standing close up to the gateway!
+
+“Help! Open the gate!” came a high-pitched voice; “open the gate!”
+
+Out into the rain we ran and down the gravel path. Soar had the gate
+open in a twinkling, and a woman carrying a brown leather grip, but who
+was so closely veiled that I had no glimpse of her features, leapt
+through on to the drive.
+
+“Lend a hand, two of you!” cried a vaguely familiar voice—“this way!”
+
+Hilton and Soar stepped out into the road. The driver of the cab was
+lying forward across the wheel, apparently insensible, but as Hilton
+seized his arm he moved and spoke feebly.
+
+“For God’s sake be quick, sir!” he said. “They’re after us! They’re on
+the other side of the lane, there!”
+
+With that he dropped limply into Hilton’s arms!
+
+He was dragged in on to the drive—and something whizzed over our heads
+and went sputtering into the gravel away up toward the house. The last
+to enter was the man who had come in the cab. As he barred the gate
+behind him he suddenly reached out through the bars and I saw a pistol
+in his hand.
+
+Once—twice—thrice—he fired into the blackness of the lane.
+
+“Take that, you swine!” he shouted. “Take that!”
+
+As quickly as we could, bearing the insensible man, we hurried back to
+the door. On the step the woman was waiting for us, with her veil
+raised. A blinding flash of lightning came as we mounted the step—and I
+looked into the violet eyes of Carneta! I turned and stared at the man
+behind me.
+
+It was Earl Dexter.
+
+Three of the mysterious missiles fell amongst us, but miraculously no
+one was struck. Amid the mighty booming of the thunder we reentered the
+houses and got the door barred. In the hall we laid down the
+unconscious man and stood, a strangely met company, peering at one
+another in the dim lamplight.
+
+“We’ve got to bury the hatchet, Mr. Cavanagh!” said Dexter. “It’s a
+case of the common enemy. I’ve brought you your bag!” and he pointed to
+the brown grip upon the floor.
+
+“My bag!” I cried. “My bag is upstairs in my room.”
+
+“Wrong, sir!” snapped The Stetson Man. “They are like as two peas in a
+pod, I’ll grant you, but the bag you snatched off the platform at New
+Street was mine! That’s what I’m after; I ought to be on the way to
+Liverpool. That’s what Hassan’s after!”
+
+“The bag!”
+
+“You don’t need to ask what’s in the bag?” suggested Dexter.
+
+“What is in the bag?” ask Hilton hoarsely.
+
+“The slipper of the Prophet, sir!” was the reply.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIV
+MY LAST MEETING WITH HASSAN OF ALEPPO
+
+
+I felt dazed, as a man must feel who has just heard the death sentence
+pronounced upon him. Hilton seemed to have become incapable of speech
+or action; and in silence we stood watching Carneta tending the
+unconscious man. She forced brandy from a flask between his teeth,
+kneeling there beside him with her face very pale and dark rings around
+her eyes. Presently she looked up.
+
+“Will you please get me a bowl of water and a sponge?” she said
+quietly.
+
+Soar departed without a word, and no one spoke until he returned,
+bringing the sponge and the water, when the girl set to work in a
+businesslike way to cleanse a wound which showed upon the man’s head.
+
+“She’s a good nurse is Carneta,” said Dexter coolly. “She was the only
+doctor I had through this”—indicating his maimed wrist. “If you will
+fetch my bag down, there’s some lint in it.”
+
+I hesitated.
+
+“You needn’t worry,” said Dexter; “as well be hung for a sheep as a
+lamb. You’ve handled the bag, and I’m not asking you to do any more.”
+
+I went up to my room and lifted the grip from the chair upon which I
+had put it. Even now I found it difficult to perceive any difference
+between this and mine. Both were of identical appearance and both new.
+In fact, I had bought mine only that morning, my old one being past
+use, and being in a hurry, I had not left it to be initialled.
+
+As I picked up the bag the lightning flashed again, and from the window
+I could see the orchard as clearly as by sunlight. At the farther end
+near the wall someone was standing watching the house.
+
+I went downstairs carrying the fatal bag, and rejoined the group in the
+hall.
+
+“He will have to be got to bed,” said Carneta, referring to the wounded
+man; “he will probably remain unconscious for a long time.”
+
+Accordingly, we took the patient into one of the few furnished
+bedrooms, and having put him to bed left him in care of the beautiful
+nurse. When we four men met again downstairs, amazement had rendered
+the whole scene unreal to me. Soar stood just within the open door, not
+knowing whether to go or to remain; but Hilton motioned to him to stay.
+Earl Dexter bit off the end of a cigar and stood with his left elbow
+resting on the mantelpiece.
+
+His gaunt face looked gaunter than ever, but the daredevil gray eyes
+still nursed that humorous light in their depths.
+
+“Mr. Cavanagh,” he said, “we’re brothers! And if you’ll consider a
+minute, you’ll see that I’m not lying when I say I’m on the straight,
+now and for always!”
+
+I made no reply: I could think of none.
+
+“I’m a crook,” he resumed, “or I was up to a while ago. There’s a
+warrant out for me—the first that ever bore my name. I’ve sailed near
+the wind often enough, but it was desperation that got me into hot
+water about that!”
+
+He jerked his cigar in the direction of his grip, which lay now on the
+rug at his feet.
+
+“I lost a useful right hand,” he went on—“and I lost every cent I had.
+It was a dead rotten speculation—for I lost my good name! I mean it!
+Believe me, I’ve handled some shady propositions in the past, but I did
+it right in the sunlight! Up to the time I went out for that damned
+slipper I could have had lunch with any detective from Broadway to the
+Strand! I didn’t need any false whiskers and the Ritz was good enough
+for The Stetson Man. What now? I’m ‘wanted!’ Enough said.”
+
+He tossed the cigar—he had smoked scarce an inch of it—into the empty
+grate.
+
+“I’m an Aunt Sally for any man to shy at,” he resumed bitterly. “My
+place henceforth is in the dark. Right! I’ve finished; the book’s
+closed. From the time I quit England—if I can quit—I’m on the straight!
+I’ve promised Carneta, and I mean to keep my word. See here—”
+
+Dexter turned to me.
+
+“You’ll want to know how I escaped from the cursed death-trap at
+Hassan’s house in Kent? I’ll tell you. I was never in it! I was hiding
+and waiting my chance. You know what was left to guard the slipper
+while the Sheikh—rot him—was away looking after arrangements for
+getting his mob out of the country?”
+
+I nodded.
+
+“You fell into the trap—you and Carneta. By God! I didn’t know till it
+was all over! But two minutes later I was inside that place—and three
+minutes later I was away with the slipper! Oh, it wasn’t a duplicate;
+it was the goods! What then? Carneta had had a sickening of the
+business and she just invited me to say Yes or No. I said Yes; and I’m
+a straight man onward.”
+
+“Then what were you doing on the train with the slipper?” asked Hilton
+sharply.
+
+“I was going to Liverpool, sir!” snapped The Stetson Man, turning on
+him. “I was going to try to get aboard the Mauretania and then make
+terms for my life! What happened? I slipped out at Birmingham for a
+drink—grip in hand! I put it down beside me, and Mr. Cavanagh here, all
+in a hustle, must have rushed in behind me, snatched a whisky and
+snatched my grip and started for H—!”
+
+A vivid flash of lightning flickered about the room. Then came the
+deafening boom of the thunder, right over the house it seemed.
+
+“I knew from the weight of the grip it wasn’t mine,” said Dexter, “and
+I was the most surprised guy in Great Britain and Ireland when I found
+whose it was! I opened it, of course! And right on top was a waistcoat
+and right in the first pocket was a telegram. Here it is!”
+
+He passed it to me. It was that which I had received from Hilton. I had
+packed the suit which I had been wearing that morning and must
+previously have thrust the telegram into the waistcoat pocket.
+
+“Providence!” Dexter assured me. “Because I got on the station in time
+to see Hassan of Aleppo join the train for H—! I was too late, though.
+But I chartered a taxi out on Corporation Street and invited the man to
+race the local! He couldn’t do it, but we got here in time for the
+fireworks! Mr. Cavanagh, there are anything from six to ten Hashishin
+watching this house!”
+
+“I know it!”
+
+“They’re bareheaded; and in the dark their shaven skulls look like
+nothing human. They’re armed with those damned tubes, too. I’d give a
+thousand dollars—if I had it!—to know their mechanism. Well, gentlemen,
+deeds speak. What am I here for, when I might be on the way to
+Liverpool, and safety?”
+
+“You’re here to try to make up for the past a bit!” said a soft,
+musical voice. “Mr. Cavanagh’s life is in danger.”
+
+Carneta entered the room.
+
+The light played in that wonderful hair of hers; and pale though she
+was, I thought I had never seen a more beautiful woman.
+
+“Tell them,” she said quietly, “what must be done.”
+
+Soar glanced at me out of the corner of his eyes and shifted uneasily.
+Hilton stared as if fascinated.
+
+“Now,” rapped Dexter, in his strident voice, “putting aside all
+questions of justice and right (we’re not policemen), what do we
+want—you and I, Mr. Cavanagh?”
+
+“I can’t think clearly about anything,” I said dully. “Explain
+yourself.”
+
+“Very well. Inspector Bristol, C.I.D., would want me and Hassan
+arrested. I don’t want that! What I want is peace; I want to be able to
+sleep in comfort; I want to know I’m not likely to be murdered on the
+next corner! Same with you?”
+
+“Yes—yes.”
+
+“How can we manage it? One way would be to kill Hassan of Aleppo; but
+he wants a lot of killing—I’ve tried! Moreover, directly we’d done it,
+another Sheikh-al-jebal would be nominated and he’d carry on the bloody
+work. We’d be worse off than ever. Right! we’ve got to connive at
+letting the blood-stained fanatic escape, and we’ve got to give up the
+slipper!”
+
+“I’ll do that with all my heart!”
+
+“Sure! But you and I have both got little scores up against Hassan,
+which it’s not in human nature to forget. But I’ve got it worked out
+that there’s only one way. It may nearly choke us to have to do it,
+I’ll allow. I’m working on the Moslem character. Mr. Hilton, make up a
+fire in the grate here!”
+
+Hilton stared, not comprehending.
+
+“Do as he asks,” I said. “Personally, I am resigned to mutilation,
+since I have touched the bag containing the slipper, but if Dexter has
+a plan—”
+
+“Excuse me, sir,” Soar interrupted. “I believe there’s some coal in the
+coal-box, but I shall have to break up a packing-case for firewood—or
+go out into the yard!”
+
+“Let it be the packing-case,” replied Hilton hastily.
+
+Accordingly a fire was kindled, whilst we all stood about the room in a
+sort of fearful uncertainty; and before long a big blaze was roaring up
+the chimney. Dexter turned to me.
+
+“Mr. Cavanagh,” said he, “I want you to go right upstairs, open a
+first-floor window—I would suggest that of your bedroom—and invite
+Hassan of Aleppo to come and discuss terms!”
+
+Silence followed his words; we were all amazed. Then—
+
+“Why do you ask me to do this?” I inquired.
+
+“Because,” replied Dexter, “I happen to know that Hassan has some queer
+kind of respect for you—I don’t know why.”
+
+“Which is probably the reason why he tried to kill me to-night!”
+
+“That’s beside the question, Mr. Cavanagh. He will believe you—which is
+the important point.”
+
+“Very well. I have no idea what you have in mind but I am prepared to
+adopt any plan since I have none of my own. What shall I say?”
+
+“Say that we are prepared to return the slipper—on conditions.”
+
+“He will probably try to shoot me as I stand at the window.”
+
+Dexter shrugged his shoulders.
+
+“Got to risk it,” he drawled.
+
+“And what are the conditions?”
+
+“He must come right in here and discuss them! Guarantee him safe
+conduct and I don’t think he’ll hesitate. Anyway, if he does, just tell
+him that the slipper will be destroyed immediately!”
+
+Without a word I turned on my heel and ascended the stairs.
+
+I entered my room, crossed to the window, and threw it widely open.
+Hovering over the distant hills I could see the ominous thunder cloud,
+but the storm seemed to have passed from “Uplands,” and only a distant
+muttering with the faint dripping of water from the pipes broke the
+silence of the night. A great darkness reigned, however, and I was
+entirely unable to see if any one was in the orchard.
+
+Like some mueddin of fantastic fable I stood there.
+
+“Hassan!” I cried—“Hassan of Aleppo!”
+
+The name rang out strangely upon the stillness—the name which for me
+had a dreadful significance; but the whole episode seemed unreal, the
+voice that had cried unlike my voice.
+
+Instantly as any magician summoning an efreet I was answered.
+
+Out from the trees strode a tall figure, a figure I could not mistake.
+It was that of Hassan of Aleppo!
+
+“I hear, effendim, and obey,” he said. “I am ready. Open the door!”
+
+“We are prepared to discuss terms. You may come and go safely”—still my
+voice sounded unfamiliar in my ears.
+
+“I know, effendim; it is so written. Open the door.”
+
+I closed the window and mechanically descended the stairs.
+
+“Mind it isn’t a trap!” cried Hilton, who, with the others, had
+overheard every word of this strange interview. “They may try to rush
+the door directly we open it.”
+
+“I’ll stand the chest behind it,” said Soar; “between the door and the
+wall, so that only one can enter at a time.”
+
+This was done, and the door opened.
+
+Alone, majestic, entered Hassan of Aleppo.
+
+He was dressed in European clothes but wore the green turban of a
+Sherif. With his snowy beard and coal-black eyes he seemed like a
+vision of the Prophet, of the Prophet in whose name he had committed
+such ghastly atrocities.
+
+Deigning no glance to Soar nor to Hilton, he paced into the room,
+passing me and ignoring Carneta, where Earl Dexter awaited him. I shall
+never forget the scene as Hassan entered, to stand looking with blazing
+eyes at The Stetson Man, who sat beside the fire with the slipper of
+Mohammed in his hand!
+
+“Hassan,” said Dexter quietly, “Mr. Cavanagh has had to promise you
+safe conduct, or as sure as God made me, I’d put a bullet in you!”
+
+The Sheikh of the Hashishin glared fixedly at him.
+
+“Companion of the evil one,” he said, “it is not written that I shall
+die by your hand—or by the hand of any here. But it has been revealed
+to me that to-night the gates of Paradise may be closed in my face.”
+
+“I shouldn’t be at all surprised,” drawled Dexter. “But it’s up to you.
+You’ve got to swear by Mohammed—”
+
+“Salla-’llahu ’aleyhi wasellem!”
+
+“That you won’t lay a hand upon any living soul, or allow any of your
+followers to do so, who has touched the slipper or had anything to do
+with it, but that you will go in peace.”
+
+“You are doomed to die!”
+
+“You don’t agree, then?”
+
+“Those who have offended must suffer the penalty!”
+
+“Right!” said Dexter—and prepared to toss the slipper into the heart of
+the fire!
+
+“Stop! Infidel! Stop!”
+
+There was real agony in Hassan’s voice. To my inexpressible surprise he
+dropped upon his knee, extending his lean brown hands toward the
+slipper.
+
+Dexter hesitated. “You agree, then?”
+
+Hassan raised his eyes to the ceiling.
+
+“I agree,” he said. “Dark are the ways. It is the will of God...”
+
+Dimly the booming of the thunder came echoing back to us from the
+hills. Above its roll sounded a barbaric chanting to which the drums of
+angry heaven formed a fitting accompaniment.
+
+I heard Soar shooting the bolts again upon the going of our strange
+visitor.
+
+Faint and more faint grew the chanting, until it merged into the remote
+muttering of the storm—and was lost. The quest of the sacred slipper
+was ended.
+
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 2126 ***
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+<div>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 2126 ***</div>
+
+<h1>The Quest of the Sacred Slipper</h1>
+
+<h2 class="no-break">by Sax Rohmer</h2>
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2>CONTENTS</h2>
+
+<table summary="" style="">
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap01">CHAPTER I. THE PHANTOM SCIMITAR.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap02">CHAPTER II. THE GIRL WITH THE VIOLET EYES</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap03">CHAPTER III. "HASSAN OF ALEPPO"</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap04">CHAPTER IV. THE OBLONG BOX</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap05">CHAPTER V. THE OCCUPANT OF THE BOX</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap06">CHAPTER VI. THE RING OF THE PROPHET</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap07">CHAPTER VII. FIRST ATTEMPT ON THE SAFE</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap08">CHAPTER VIII. THE VIOLET EYES AGAIN</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap09">CHAPTER IX. SECOND ATTEMPT ON THE SAFE</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap10">CHAPTER X. AT THE BRITISH ANTIQUARIAN MUSEUM</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap11">CHAPTER XI. THE HOLE IN THE BLIND</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap12">CHAPTER XII. THE HASHISHIN WATCH</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap13">CHAPTER XIII. THE WHITE BEAM</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap14">CHAPTER XIV. A SCREAM IN THE NIGHT</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap15">CHAPTER XV. A SHRIVELLED HAND</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap16">CHAPTER XVI. THE DWARF</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap17">CHAPTER XVII. THE WOMAN WITH THE BASKET</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap18">CHAPTER XVIII. WHAT CAME THROUGH THE WINDOW</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap19">CHAPTER XIX. A RAPPING AT MIDNIGHT</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap20">CHAPTER XX. THE GOLDEN PAVILION</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap21">CHAPTER XXI. THE BLACK TUBE</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap22">CHAPTER XXII. THE LIGHT OF EL-MEDINEH</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap23">CHAPTER XXIII. THE THREE MESSAGES</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap24">CHAPTER XXIV. I KEEP THE APPOINTMENT</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap25">CHAPTER XXV. THE WATCHER IN BANK CHAMBERS</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap26">CHAPTER XXVI. THE STRONG-ROOM</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap27">CHAPTER XXVII. THE SLIPPER</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap28">CHAPTER XXVIII. CARNETA</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap29">CHAPTER XXIX. WE MEET MR. ISAACS</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap30">CHAPTER XXX. AT THE GATE HOUSE</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap31">CHAPTER XXXI. THE POOL OF DEATH</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap32">CHAPTER XXXII. SIX PATCHES</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap33">CHAPTER XXXIII. HOW WE WERE REENFORCED</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap34">CHAPTER XXXIV. MY LAST MEETING WITH HASSAN OF ALEPPO</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2>THE QUEST OF THE SACRED SLIPPER</h2>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap01"></a>
+CHAPTER I<br/>
+THE PHANTOM SCIMITAR</h2>
+
+<p>
+I was not the only passenger aboard the S.S. Mandalay who perceived the
+disturbance and wondered what it might portend and from whence proceed. A
+goodly number of passengers were joining the ship at Port Said. I was lounging
+against the rail, pipe in mouth, lazily wondering, with a large vagueness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+What a heterogeneous rabble it was!&mdash;a brightly coloured rabble, but the
+colours all were dirty, like the town and the canal. Only the sky was clean;
+the sky and the hard, merciless sunlight which spared nothing of the
+uncleanness, and defied one even to think of the term dear to tourists,
+“picturesque.” I was in that kind of mood. All the natives appeared to be
+pockmarked; all the Europeans greasy with perspiration.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But what was the stir about?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I turned to the dark, bespectacled young man who leaned upon the rail beside
+me. From the first I had taken to Mr. Ahmad Ahmadeen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“There is some kind of undercurrent of excitement among the natives,” I said,
+“a sort of subdued Greek chorus is audible. What’s it all about?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mr. Ahmadeen smiled. After a gaunt fashion, he was a handsome man and had a
+pleasant smile.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Probably,” he replied, “some local celebrity is joining the ship.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I stared at him curiously.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Any idea who he is?” (The soul of the copyhunter is a restless soul.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A group of men dressed in semi-European fashion&mdash;that is, in European
+fashion save for their turbans, which were green&mdash;passed close to us along
+the deck.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ahmadeen appeared not to have heard the question.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The disturbance, which could only be defined as a subdued uproar, but could be
+traced to no particular individual or group, grew momentarily louder&mdash;and
+died away. It was only when it had completely ceased that one realized how
+pronounced it had been&mdash;how altogether peculiar, secret; like that
+incomprehensible murmuring in a bazaar when, unknown to the insular visitor, a
+reputed saint is present.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then it happened; the inexplicable incident which, though I knew it not,
+heralded the coming of strange things, and the dawn of a new power; which
+should set up its secret standards in England, which should flood Europe and
+the civilized world with wonder.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A shrill scream marked the overture&mdash;a scream of fear and of pain, which
+dropped to a groan, and moaned out into the silence of which it was the cause.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“My God! what’s that?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I started forward. There was a general crowding rush, and a darkly tanned and
+bearded man came on board, carrying a brown leather case. Behind him surged
+those who bore the victim.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It’s one of the lascars!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“No&mdash;an Egyptian!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It was a porter&mdash;?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What is it&mdash;?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Someone been stabbed!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Where’s the doctor?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Stand away there, if you please!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That was a ship’s officer; and the voice of authority served to quell the
+disturbance. Through a lane walled with craning heads they bore the insensible
+man. Ahmadeen was at my elbow.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“A Copt,” he said softly. “Poor devil!” I turned to him. There was a queer
+expression on his lean, clean-shaven, bronze face.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Good God!” I said. “His hand has been cut off!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That was the fact of the matter. And no one knew who was responsible for the
+atrocity. And no one knew what had become of the severed hand! I wasted not a
+moment in linking up the story. The pressman within me acted automatically.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The gentleman just come aboard, sir,” said a steward, “is Professor Deeping.
+The poor beggar who was assaulted was carrying some of the Professor’s
+baggage.” The whole incident struck me as most odd. There was an idea lurking
+in my mind that something else&mdash;something more&mdash;lay behind all this.
+With impatience I awaited the time when the injured man, having received
+medical attention, was conveyed ashore, and Professor Deeping reappeared. To
+the celebrated traveller and Oriental scholar I introduced myself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was singularly reticent.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I was unable to see what took place, Mr. Cavanagh,” he said. “The poor fellow
+was behind me, for I had stepped from the boat ahead of him. I had just taken a
+bag from his hand, but he was carrying another, heavier one. It is a clean cut,
+like that of a scimitar. I have seen very similar wounds in the cases of men
+who have suffered the old Moslem penalty for theft.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nothing further had come to light when the Mandalay left, but I found new
+matter for curiosity in the behaviour of the Moslem party who had come on board
+at Port Said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In conversation with Mr. Bell, the chief officer, I learned that the supposed
+leader of the party was one, Mr. Azraeel. “Obviously,” said Bell, “not his real
+name or not all it. I don’t suppose they’ll show themselves on deck; they’ve
+got their own servants with them, and seem to be people of consequence.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This conversation was interrupted, but I found my unseen fellow voyagers
+peculiarly interesting and pursued inquiries in other directions. I saw members
+of the distinguished travellers’ retinue going about their duties, but never
+obtained a glimpse of Mr. Azraeel nor of any of his green-turbaned companions.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Who is Mr. Azraeel?” I asked Ahmadeen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I cannot say,” replied the Egyptian, and abruptly changed the subject.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Some curious aroma of mystery floated about the ship. Ahmadeen conveyed to me
+the idea that he was concealing something. Then, one night, Mr. Bell invited me
+to step forward with him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Listen,” he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+From somewhere in the fo’c’sle proceeded low chanting.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Hear it?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes. What the devil is it?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It’s the lascars,” said Bell. “They have been behaving in a most unusual
+manner ever since the mysterious Mr. Azraeel joined us. I may be wrong in
+associating the two things, but I shan’t be sorry to see the last of our
+mysterious passengers.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The next happening on board the Mandalay which I have to record was the attempt
+to break open the door of Professor Deeping’s stateroom. Except when he was
+actually within, the Professor left his room door religiously locked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He made light of the affair, but later took me aside and told me a curious
+story of an apparition which had appeared to him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It was a crescent of light,” he said, “and it glittered through the darkness
+there to the left as I lay in my berth.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“A reflection from something on the deck?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Deeping smiled, uneasily.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Possibly,” he replied; “but it was very sharply defined. Like the blade of a
+scimitar,” he added.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I stared at him, my curiosity keenly aroused. “Does any explanation suggest
+itself to you?” I said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Well,” he confessed, “I have a theory, I will admit; but it is rather going
+back to the Middle Ages. You see, I have lived in the East a lot; perhaps I
+have assimilated some of their superstitions.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was oddly reticent, as ever. I felt convinced that he was keeping something
+back. I could not stifle the impression that the clue to these mysteries lay
+somewhere around the invisible Mohammedan party.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Do you know,” said Bell to me, one morning, “this trip’s giving me the creeps.
+I believe the damned ship’s haunted! Three bells in the middle watch last
+night, I’ll swear I saw some black animal crawling along the deck, in the
+direction of the forward companion-way.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Cat?” I suggested.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Nothing like it,” said Mr. Bell. “Mr. Cavanagh, it was some uncanny thing! I’m
+afraid I can’t explain quite what I mean, but it was something I wanted to
+shoot!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Where did it go?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The chief officer shrugged his shoulders. “Just vanished,” he said. “I hope I
+don’t see it again.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At Tilbury the Mohammedan party went ashore in a body. Among them were veiled
+women. They contrived so to surround a central figure that I entirely failed to
+get a glimpse of the mysterious Mr. Azraeel. Ahmadeen was standing close by the
+companion-way, and I had a momentary impression that one of the women slipped
+something into his hand. Certainly, he started; and his dusky face seemed to
+pale.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then a deck steward came out of Deeping’s stateroom, carrying the brown bag
+which the Professor had brought aboard at Port Said. Deeping’s voice came:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Hi, my man! Let me take that bag!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The bag changed hands. Five minutes later, as I was preparing to go ashore,
+arose a horrid scream above the berthing clamour. Those passengers yet aboard
+made in the direction from which the scream had proceeded.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A steward&mdash;the one to whom Professor Deeping had spoken&mdash;lay writhing
+at the foot of the stairs leading to the saloon-deck. His right hand had been
+severed above the wrist!
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap02"></a>
+CHAPTER II<br/>
+THE GIRL WITH THE VIOLET EYES</h2>
+
+<p>
+During the next day or two my mind constantly reverted to the incidents of the
+voyage home. I was perfectly convinced that the curtain had been partially
+raised upon some fantasy in which Professor Deeping figured.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But I had seen no more of Deeping nor had I heard from him, when abruptly I
+found myself plunged again into the very vortex of his troubled affairs. I was
+half way through a long article, I remember, upon the mystery of the outrage at
+the docks. The poor steward whose hand had been severed lay in a precarious
+condition, but the police had utterly failed to trace the culprit.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I had laid down my pen to relight my pipe (the hour was about ten at night)
+when a faint sound from the direction of the outside door attracted my
+attention. Something had been thrust through the letter-box.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“A circular,” I thought, when the bell rang loudly, imperatively.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I went to the door. A square envelope lay upon the mat&mdash;a curious
+envelope, pale amethyst in colour. Picking it up, I found it to bear my
+name&mdash;written simply&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Mr. Cavanagh.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Tearing it open I glanced at the contents. I threw open the door. No one was
+visible upon the landing, but when I leaned over the banister a white-clad
+figure was crossing the hall, below.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Without hesitation, hatless, I raced down the stairs. As I crossed the dimly
+lighted hall and came out into the peaceful twilight of the court, my elusive
+visitor glided under the archway opposite.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Just where the dark and narrow passage opened on to Fleet Street I overtook
+her&mdash;a girl closely veiled and wrapped in a long coat of white ermine.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Madam,” I said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She turned affrightedly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Please do not detain me!” Her accent was puzzling, but pleasing. She glanced
+apprehensively about her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+You have seen the moon through a mist?&mdash;and known it for what it was in
+spite of its veiling? So, now, through the cloudy folds of the veil, I saw the
+stranger’s eyes, and knew them for the most beautiful eyes I had ever seen, had
+ever dreamt of.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“But you must explain the meaning of your note!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I cannot! I cannot! Please do not ask me!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She was breathless from her flight and seemed to be trembling. From behind the
+cloud her eyes shone brilliantly, mysteriously.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I was sorely puzzled. The whole incident was bizarre&mdash;indeed, it had in it
+something of the uncanny. Yet I could not detain the girl against her will.
+That she went in apprehension of something, of someone, was evident.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Past the head of the passage surged the noisy realities of Fleet Street. There
+were men there in quest of news; men who would have given much for such a story
+as this in which I was becoming entangled. Yet a story more tantalizingly
+incomplete could not well be imagined.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I knew that I stood upon the margin of an arena wherein strange adversaries
+warred to a strange end. But a mist was over all. Here, beside me, was one who
+could disperse the mist&mdash;and would not. Her one anxiety seemed to be to
+escape.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Suddenly she raised her veil; and I looked fully into the only really violet
+eyes I had ever beheld. Mentally, I started. For the face framed in the snowy
+fur was the most bewitchingly lovely imaginable. One rebellious lock of
+wonderful hair swept across the white brow. It was brown hair, with an
+incomprehensible sheen in the high lights that suggested the heart of a
+blood-red rose.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Oh,” she cried, “promise me that you will never breathe a word to any one
+about my visit!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I promise willingly,” I said; “but can you give me no hint?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Honestly, truly, I cannot, dare not, say more! Only promise that you will do
+as I ask!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Since I could perceive no alternative&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I will do so,” I replied.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Thank you&mdash;oh, thank you!” she said; and dropping her veil again she
+walked rapidly away from me, whispering, “I rely upon you. Do not fail me.
+Good-bye!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Her conspicuous white figure joined the hurrying throngs upon the pavement
+beyond. My curiosity brooked no restraint. I hurried to the end of the
+courtway. She was crossing the road. From the shadows where he had lurked, a
+man came forward to meet her. A vehicle obstructed the view ere I could confirm
+my impression; and when it had passed, neither my lovely visitor nor her
+companion were anywhere in sight.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But, unless some accident of light and shade had deceived me, the man who had
+waited was Ahmad Ahmadeen!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It seemed that some astral sluice-gate was raised; a dreadful sense of
+foreboding for the first time flooded my mind. Whilst the girl had stood before
+me it had been different&mdash;the mysterious charm of her personality had
+swamped all else. But now, the messenger gone, it was the purport of her
+message which assumed supreme significance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Written in odd, square handwriting upon the pale amethyst paper, this was the
+message&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p class="letter">
+Prevail upon Professor Deeping to place what he has in the brown case in the
+porch of his house to-night. If he fails to do so, no power on earth can save
+him from the Scimitar of Hassan.<br/>
+<br/>
+A FRIEND.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap03"></a>
+CHAPTER III<br/>
+“HASSAN OF ALEPPO”</h2>
+
+<p>
+Professor Deeping’s number was in the telephone directory, therefore, on
+returning to my room, where there still lingered the faint perfume of my late
+visitor’s presence, I asked for his number. He proved to be at home.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Strange you should ring me up, Cavanagh,” he said; “for I was about to ring
+you up.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“First,” I replied, “listen to the contents of an anonymous letter which I have
+received.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+(I remembered, and only just in time, my promise to the veiled messenger.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“To me,” I added, having read him the note, “it seems to mean nothing. I take
+it that you understand better than I do.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I understand very well, Cavanagh!” he replied. “You will recall my story of
+the scimitar which flashed before me in the darkness of my stateroom on the
+Mandalay? Well, I have seen it again! I am not an imaginative man: I had always
+believed myself to possess the scientific mind; but I can no longer doubt that
+I am the object of a pursuit which commenced in Mecca! The happenings on the
+steamer prepared me for this, in a degree. When the man lost his hand at Port
+Said I doubted. I had supposed the days of such things past. The attempt to
+break into my stateroom even left me still uncertain. But the outrage upon the
+steward at the docks removed all further doubt. I perceived that the contents
+of a certain brown leather case were the objective of the crimes.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I listened in growing wonder.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It was not necessary in order to further the plan of stealing the bag that the
+hands were severed,” resumed the Professor. “In fact, as was rendered evident
+by the case of the steward, this was a penalty visited upon any one who touched
+it! You are thinking of my own immunity?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I am!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“This is attributable to two things. Those who sought to recover what I had in
+the case feared that my death en route might result in its being lost to them
+for ever. They awaited a suitable opportunity. They had designed to take it at
+Port Said certainly, I think; but the bag was too large to be readily
+concealed, and, after the outrage, might have led to the discovery of the
+culprit. In the second place, they are uncertain of my faith. I have long
+passed for a true Believer in the East! As a Moslem I visited Mecca&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You visited Mecca!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I had just returned from the hadj when I joined the Mandalay at Port Said! My
+death, however, has been determined upon, whether I be Moslem or Christian!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Why?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Because,” came the Professor’s harsh voice over the telephone, “of the
+contents of the brown leather case! I will not divulge to you now the nature of
+these contents; to know might endanger you. But the case is locked in my safe
+here, and the key, together with a full statement of the true facts of the
+matter, is hidden behind the first edition copy of my book ‘Assyrian
+Mythology,’ in the smaller bookcase&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Why do you tell me all this?” I interrupted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He laughed harshly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The identity of my pursuer has just dawned upon me,” he said. “I know that my
+life is in real danger. I would give up what is demanded of me, but I believe
+its possession to be my strongest safeguard.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mystery upon mystery! I seemed to be getting no nearer to the heart of this
+maze. What in heaven’s name did it all mean? Suddenly an idea struck me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Is our late fellow passenger, Mr. Ahmadeen, connected with the matter?” I
+asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“In no way,” replied Deeping earnestly. “Mr. Ahmadeen is, I believe, a person
+of some consequence in the Moslem world; but I have nothing to fear from him.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What steps have you taken to protect yourself?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Again the short laugh reached my ears.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’m afraid long residence in the East has rendered me something of a fatalist,
+Cavanagh! Beyond keeping my door locked, I have taken no steps whatever. I fear
+I am quite accessible!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A while longer we talked; and with every word the conviction was more strongly
+borne in upon me that some uncanny menace threatened the peace, perhaps the
+life, of Professor Deeping.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I had hung up the receiver scarce a moment when, acting upon a sudden
+determination, I called up New Scotland Yard, and asked for Detective-Inspector
+Bristol, whom I knew well. A few words were sufficient keenly to arouse his
+curiosity, and he announced his intention of calling upon me immediately. He
+was in charge of the case of the severed hand.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I made no attempt to resume work in the interval preceding his arrival. I had
+not long to wait, however, ere Bristol was ringing my bell; and I hurried to
+the door, only too glad to confide in one so well equipped to analyze my doubts
+and fears. For Bristol is no ordinary policeman, but a trained observer, who,
+when I first made his acquaintance, completely upset my ideas upon the mental
+limitations of the official detective force.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In appearance Bristol suggests an Anglo-Indian officer, and at the time of
+which I write he had recently returned from Jamaica and his face was as bronzed
+as a sailor’s. One would never take Bristol for a detective. As he seated
+himself in the armchair, without preamble I plunged into my story. He listened
+gravely.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What sort of house is Professor Deeping’s?” he asked suddenly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I have no idea,” I replied, “beyond the fact that it is somewhere in Dulwich.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“May I use your telephone?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Certainly.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Very quickly Bristol got into communication with the superintendent of P
+Division. A brief delay, and the man came to the telephone whose beat included
+the road wherein Professor Deeping’s house was situated.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Why!” said Bristol, hanging up the receiver after making a number of
+inquiries, “it’s a sort of rambling cottage in extensive grounds. There’s only
+one servant, a manservant, and he sleeps in a detached lodge. If the Professor
+is really in danger of attack he could not well have chosen a more likely
+residence for the purpose!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What shall you do? What do you make of it all?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“As I see the case,” he said slowly, “it stands something like this: Professor
+Deeping has...”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The telephone bell began to ring.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I took up the receiver.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Hullo! Hullo.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Cavanagh!&mdash;is that Cavanagh?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes! yes! who is that?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Deeping! I have rung up the police, and they are sending some one. But I
+wish...”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His voice trailed off. The sound of a confused and singular uproar came to me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Hullo!” I cried. “Hullo!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A shriek&mdash;a deathful, horrifying cry&mdash;and a distant babbling alone
+answered me. There was a crash. Clearly, Deeping had dropped the receiver. I
+suppose my face blanched.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What is it?” asked Bristol anxiously.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“God knows what it is!” I said. “Deeping has met with some mishap&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When, over the wires&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Hassan of Aleppo!” came a dying whisper. “Hassan ... of Aleppo...”
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap04"></a>
+CHAPTER IV<br/>
+THE OBLONG BOX</h2>
+
+<p>
+“You had better wait for us,” said Bristol to the taxi-man.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Very good, sir. But I shan’t be able to take you further back than the Brixton
+Garage. You can get another cab there, though.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A clock chimed out&mdash;an old-world chime in keeping with the loneliness, the
+curiously remote loneliness, of the locality. Less than five miles from St.
+Paul’s are spots whereto, with the persistence of Damascus attar, clings the
+aroma of former days. This iron gateway fronting the old chapel was such a
+spot.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Just within stood a plain-clothes man, who saluted my companion respectfully.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Professor Deeping,” I began.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The man, with a simple gesture, conveyed the dreadful news.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Dead! dead!” I cried incredulously.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He glanced at Bristol.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The most mysterious case I have ever had anything to do with, sir,” he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The power of speech seemed to desert me. It was unthinkable that Deeping, with
+whom I had been speaking less than an hour ago, should now be no more; that
+some malign agency should thus murderously have thrust him into the great
+borderland.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In that kind of silence which seems to be peopled with whispering spirits we
+strode forward along the elm avenue. It was very dark where the moon failed to
+penetrate. The house, low and rambling, came into view, its facade bathed in
+silver light. Two of the visible windows were illuminated. A sort of loggia ran
+along one side.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On our left, as we made for this, lay a black ocean of shrubbery. It intruded,
+raggedly, upon the weed-grown path, for neglect was the keynote of the place.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We entered the cottage, crossed the tiny lobby, and came to the study. A man,
+evidently Deeping’s servant, was sitting in a chair by the door, his head
+sunken in his hands. He looked up, haggard-faced.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“My God! my God!” he groaned. “He was locked in, gentlemen! He was locked in;
+and yet something murdered him!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What do you mean?” said Bristol. “Where were you?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I was away on an errand, sir. When I returned, the police were knocking the
+door down. He was locked in!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We passed him, entering the study.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was a museum-like room, lighted by a lamp on the littered table. At first
+glance it looked as though some wild thing had run amok there. The disorder was
+indescribable.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Touched nothing, of course?” asked Bristol sharply of the officer on duty.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Nothing, sir. It’s just as we found it when we forced the door.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Why did you force the door?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“He rung us up at the station and said that something or somebody had got into
+the house. It was evident the poor gentleman’s nerve had broken down, sir. He
+said he was locked in his study. When we arrived it was all in
+darkness&mdash;but we thought we heard sounds in here.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What sort of sounds?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Something crawling about!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bristol turned.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Key is in the lock on the inside of the door,” he said. “Is that where you
+found it?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes, sir!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He looked across to where the brass knob of a safe gleamed dully.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Safe locked?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes, sir.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Professor Deeping lay half under the table, a spectacle so ghastly that I shall
+not attempt to describe it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Merciful heavens!” whispered Bristol. “He’s nearly decapitated!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I clutched dizzily at the mantelpiece. It was all so utterly, incredibly
+horrible. How had Deeping met his death? The windows both were latched and the
+door had been locked from within!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You searched for the murderer, of course?” asked Bristol.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You can see, sir,” replied the officer, “that there isn’t a spot in the room
+where a man could hide! And there was nobody in here when we forced the door!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Why!” cried my companion suddenly. “The Professor has a chisel in his hand!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes. I think he must have been trying to prise open that box yonder when he
+was attacked.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bristol and I looked, together, at an oblong box which lay upon the floor near
+the murdered man. It was a kind of small packing case, addressed to Professor
+Deeping, and evidently had not been opened.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“When did this arrive?” asked Bristol. Lester, the Professor’s man, who had
+entered the room, replied shakily&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It came by carrier, sir, just before I went out.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Was he expecting it?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I don’t think so.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Inspector Bristol and the officer dragged the box fully into the light. It was
+some three feet long by one foot square, and solidly constructed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It is perfectly evident,” remarked Bristol, “that the murderer stayed to
+search for&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The key of the safe!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Exactly. If the men really heard sounds here, it would appear that the
+assassin was still searching at that time.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I assure you,” the officer interrupted, “that there was no living thing in the
+room when we entered.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bristol and I looked at one another in horrified wonder.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It’s incomprehensible!” he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“See if the key is in the place mentioned by the Professor, Mr. Cavanagh,
+whilst I break the box.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I went to a great, open bookcase, which the frantic searcher seemed to have
+overlooked. Removing the bulky “Assyrian Mythology,” there, behind the volume,
+lay an envelope, containing a key, and a short letter. Not caring to approach
+more closely to the table and to that which lay beneath it, I was peering at
+the small writing, in the semi-gloom by the bookcase, when Bristol cried&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“This box is unopenable by ordinary means! I shall have to smash it!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At his words, I joined him where he knelt on the floor. Mysteriously, the chest
+had defied all his efforts.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“There’s a pick-axe in the garden,” volunteered Lester. “Shall I bring it?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The man ran off.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I see the key is safe,” said Bristol. “Possibly the letter may throw some
+light upon all this.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Let us hope so,” I replied. “You might read it.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He took the letter from my hand, stepped up to the table, and by the light of
+the lamp read as follows&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<div class="letter">
+
+<p>
+My Dear Cavanagh,&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It has now become apparent to me that my life is in imminent danger. You know
+of the inexplicable outrages which marked my homeward journey, and if this
+letter come to your hand it will be because these have culminated in my death.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The idea of a pursuing scimitar is not new to me. This phenomenon, which I have
+now witnessed three times, is fairly easy of explanation, but its significance
+is singular. It is said to be one of the devices whereby the Hashishin warn
+those whom they have marked down for destruction, and is called, in the East,
+“The Scimitar of Hassan.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Hashishin were the members of a Moslem secret society, founded in 1090 by
+one Hassan of Khorassan. There is a persistent tradition in parts of the Orient
+that this sect still flourishes in Assyria, under the rule of a certain Hassan
+of Aleppo, the Sheikh-al-jebal, or supreme lord of the Hashishin. My careful
+inquiries, however, at the time that I was preparing matter for my “Assyrian
+Mythology,” failed to discover any trace of such a person or such a group.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I accordingly assumed Hassan to be a myth&mdash;a first cousin to the ginn. I
+was wrong. He exists. And by my supremely rash act I have incurred his
+vengeance, for Hassan of Aleppo is the self-appointed guardian of the
+traditions and relics of Mohammed. And I have Stolen one of the holy slippers
+of the Prophet!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He, with some of his servants, has followed me from Mecca to England. My
+precautions have enabled me to retain the relic, but you have seen what fate
+befell all those others who even touched the receptacle containing it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+If I fall a victim to the Hashishin, I am uncertain how you, as my confidant,
+will fare. Therefore I have locked the slipper in my safe and to you entrust
+the key. I append particulars of the lock combination; but I warn you&mdash;do
+not open the safe. If their wrath be visited upon you, your possession of the
+key may prove a safeguard.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Take the copy of “Assyrian Mythology.” You will find in it all that I learned
+respecting the Hashishin. If I am doomed to be assassinated, it may aid you; if
+not in avenging me, in saving others from my fate. I fear I shall never see you
+again. A cloud of horror settles upon me like a pall. Do not touch the slipper,
+nor the case containing it.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class="right">
+EDWARD DEEPING.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It is almost incredible!” I said hoarsely.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bristol returned the letter to me without a word, and turning to Lester, who
+had reentered carrying a heavy pick-axe, he attacked the oblong box with savage
+energy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Through the house of death the sound of the blows echoed and rang with a sort
+of sacrilegious mockery. The box fell to pieces.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“My God! look, sir!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lester was the trembling speaker.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The box, I have said, was but three feet long by one foot square, and had
+clearly defied poor Deeping’s efforts to open it. But a crescent-shaped knife,
+wet with blood, lay within!
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap05"></a>
+CHAPTER V<br/>
+THE OCCUPANT OF THE BOX</h2>
+
+<p>
+Dimly to my ears came the ceaseless murmur of London. The night now was far
+advanced, and not a sound disturbed the silence of the court below my windows.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Professor Deeping’s “Assyrian Mythology” lay open before me, beside it my
+notebook. A coal dropped from the fire, and I half started up out of my chair.
+My nerves were all awry, and I had more than my horrible memories of the
+murdered man to thank for it. Let me explain what I mean.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When, after assisting, or endeavouring to assist, Bristol at his elaborate
+inquiries, I had at last returned to my chambers, I had become the victim of a
+singular delusion&mdash;though one common enough in the case of persons whose
+nerves are overwrought. I had thought myself followed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+During the latter part of my journey I found myself constantly looking from the
+little window at the rear of the cab. I had an impression that some vehicle was
+tracking us. Then, when I discharged the man and walked up the narrow passage
+to the court, it was fear of a skulking form that dodged from shadow to shadow
+which obsessed me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Finally, as I entered the hall and mounted the darkened stair, from the first
+landing I glanced down into the black well beneath. Blazing yellow eyes, I
+thought, looked up at me!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I will confess that I leapt up the remaining flight of stairs to my door, and,
+safely within, found myself trembling as if with a palsy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When I sat down to write (for sleep was an impossible proposition) I placed my
+revolver upon the table beside me. I cannot say why. It afforded me some sense
+of protection, I suppose. My conclusions, thus far, amounted to the
+following&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The apparition of the phantom scimitar was due to the presence of someone who,
+by means of the moonlight, or of artificial light, cast a reflection of such a
+weapon as that found in the oblong chest upon the wall of a darkened
+apartment&mdash;as, Deeping’s stateroom on the Mandalay, his study, etc.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A group of highly efficient assassins, evidently Moslem fanatics, who might or
+might not be of the ancient order of the Hashishin, had pursued the stolen
+slipper to England. They had severed any hand, other than that of a Believer,
+which had touched the case containing it. (The Coptic porter was a Christian.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Uncertain, possibly, of Deeping’s faith, or fearful of endangering the success
+of their efforts by an outrage upon him en route, they had refrained from this
+until his arrival at his house. He had been warned of his impending end by
+Ahmad Ahmadeen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Who was Ahmadeen? And who was his beautiful associate? I found myself unable,
+at present, to answer either of those questions. In order to gain access to
+Professor Deeping, who so carefully secluded himself, a box had been sent to
+him by ordinary carrier. (As I sat at my table, Scotland Yard was busy
+endeavouring to trace the sender.) Respecting this box we had made an
+extraordinary discovery.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was of the kind used by Eastern conjurors for what is generally known as
+“the Box Trick.” That is to say, it could only be opened (short of smashing it)
+from the inside! You will remember what we found within it? Consider this with
+the new fact, above, and to what conclusion do you come?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Something (it is not possible to speak of someone in connection with so small a
+box) had been concealed inside, and had killed Professor Deeping whilst he was
+actually engaged in endeavouring to force it open. This inconceivable creature
+had then searched the study for the slipper&mdash;or for the key of the safe.
+Interrupted and trapped by the arrival of the police, the creature had returned
+to the box, re-closed it, and had actually been there when the study was
+searched!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For a creature so small as the murderous thing in the box to slip out during
+the confusion, and at some time prior to Bristol’s arrival, was no difficult
+matter. The inspector and I were certain that these were the facts.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But what was this creature?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I turned to the chapter in “Assyrian Mythology”&mdash;“The Tradition of the
+Hashishin.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The legends which the late Professor Deeping had collected relative to this
+sect of religious murderers were truly extraordinary. Of the cult’s extinction
+at the time of writing he was clearly certain, but he referred to the popular
+belief, or Moslem legend, that, since Hassan of Khorassan, there had always
+been a Sheikh-al-jebal, and that a dreadful being known as Hassan of Aleppo was
+the present holder of the title.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He referred to the fact that De Sacy has shown the word Assassin to be derived
+from Hashishin, and quoted El-Idrisi to the same end. The Hashishin performed
+their murderous feats under the influence of hashish, or Indian hemp; and
+during the state of ecstasy so induced, according to Deeping, they acquired
+powers almost superhuman. I read how they could scale sheer precipices, pass
+fearlessly along narrow ledges which would scarce afford foothold for a rat,
+cast themselves from great heights unscathed, and track one marked for death in
+such a manner as to remain unseen not only by the victim but by others about
+him. At this point of my studies I started, in a sudden nervous panic, and laid
+my hand upon my revolver.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I thought of the eyes which had seemed to look up from the black well of the
+staircase&mdash;I thought of the horrible end of this man whose book lay upon
+the table ... and I thought I heard a faint sound outside my study door!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The key of Deeping’s safe, and his letter to me, lay close by my hand. I
+slipped them into a drawer and locked it. With every nerve, it seemed, strung
+up almost to snapping point, I mechanically pursued my reading.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“At the time of the Crusades,” wrote Deeping, “there was a story current of
+this awful Order which I propose to recount. It is one of the most persistent
+dealing with the Hashishin, and is related to-day of the apparently mythical
+Hassan of Aleppo. I am disposed to believe that at one time it had a solid
+foundation, for a similar practice was common in Ancient Egypt and is mentioned
+by Georg Ebers.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My door began very slowly to open!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Merciful God! What was coming into the room!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So very slowly, so gently, nay, all but imperceptibly, did it move, that had my
+nerves been less keenly attuned I doubt not I should have remained unaware of
+the happening. Frozen with horror, I sat and watched. Yet my mental condition
+was a singular one.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My direct gaze never quitted the door, but in some strange fashion I saw the
+words of the next paragraph upon the page before me!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“As making peculiarly efficient assassins, when under the influence of the
+drug, and as being capable of concealing themselves where a normal man could
+not fail to be detected&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+(At this moment I remembered that my bathroom window was open, and that the
+waste-pipe passed down the exterior wall.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“&mdash;the Sheikh-al-jebal took young boys of a certain desert tribe, and for
+eight hours of every day, until their puberty, confined them in a wooden
+frame&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+What looked like a reed was slowly inserted through the opening between door
+and doorpost! It was brought gradually around ... until it pointed directly
+toward me!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I seemed to put forth a mighty mental effort, shaking off the icy hand of fear
+which held me inactive in my chair. A saving instinct warned me&mdash;and I
+ducked my head.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Something whirred past me and struck the wall behind.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Revolver in hand, I leapt across the room, dashed the door open, and fired
+blindly&mdash;again&mdash;and again&mdash;and again&mdash;down the passage.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And in the brief gleams I saw it!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I cannot call it man, but I saw the thing which, I doubt not, had killed poor
+Deeping with the crescent-knife and had propelled a poison-dart at me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was a tiny dwarf! Neither within nor without a freak exhibition had I seen
+so small a human being! A kind of supernatural dread gripped me by the throat
+at sight of it. As it turned with animal activity and bounded into my bathroom,
+I caught a three-quarter view of the creature’s swollen, incredible
+head&mdash;which was nearly as large as that of a normal man!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Never while my mind serves me can I forget that yellow, grinning face and those
+canine fangs&mdash;the tigerish, blazing eyes&mdash;set in the great, misshapen
+head upon the tiny, agile body.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Wildly, I fired again. I hurled myself forward and dashed into the room.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Like nothing so much as a cat, the gleaming body (the dwarf was but scantily
+clothed) streaked through the open window!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Certain death, I thought, must be his lot upon the stones of the court far
+below. I ran and looked down, shaking in every limb, my mind filled with a
+loathing terror unlike anything I had ever known.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Brilliant moonlight flooded the pavement beneath; for twenty yards to left and
+right every stone was visible.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The court was empty!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Human, homely London moved and wrought intimately about me; but there, at sight
+of the empty court below, a great loneliness swept down like a mantle&mdash;a
+clammy mantle of the fabric of dread. I stood remote from my fellows, in an
+evil world peopled with the creatures of Hassan of Aleppo.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Moved by some instinct, as that of a frightened child, I dropped to my knees
+and buried my face in trembling hands.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap06"></a>
+CHAPTER VI<br/>
+THE RING OF THE PROPHET</h2>
+
+<p>
+“There is no doubt,” said Mr. Rawson, “that great personal danger attaches to
+any contact with this relic. It is the first time I have been concerned with
+anything of the kind.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mr. Bristol, of Scotland Yard, standing stiffly military by the window, looked
+across at the gray-haired solicitor. We were all silent for a few moments.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“My late client’s wishes,” continued Mr. Rawson, “are explicit. His last
+instructions, evidently written but a short time prior to his death, advise me
+that the holy slipper of the Prophet is contained in the locked safe at his
+house in Dulwich. He was clearly of opinion that you, Mr. Cavanagh, would incur
+risk&mdash;great risk&mdash;from your possession of the key. Since attempts
+have been made upon you, murderous attempts, the late Professor Deeping, my
+unfortunate client, evidently was not in error.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Mysterious outrages,” said Bristol, “have marked the progress of the stolen
+slipper from Mecca almost to London.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I understand,” interrupted the solicitor, “that a fanatic known as Hassan of
+Aleppo seeks to restore the relic to its former resting-place.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That is so.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Exactly; and it accounts for the Professor’s wish that the safe should not be
+touched by any one but a Believer&mdash;and for his instructions that its
+removal to the Antiquarian Museum and the placing of the slipper within that
+institution be undertaken by a Moslem or Moslems.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bristol frowned.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Any one who has touched the receptacle containing the thing,” he said, “has
+either been mutilated or murdered. I want to apprehend the authors of those
+outrages, but I fail to see why the slipper should be put on exhibition. Other
+crimes are sure to follow.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I can only pursue my instructions,” said Mr. Rawson dryly. “They are, that the
+work be done in such a manner as to expose all concerned to a minimum of risk
+from these mysterious people; that if possible a Moslem be employed for the
+purpose; and that Mr. Cavanagh, here, shall always hold the key or keys to the
+case in the museum containing the slipper. Will you undertake to look for
+some&mdash;Eastern workmen, Mr. Bristol? In the course of your inquiries you
+may possibly come across such a person.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I can try,” replied Bristol. “Meanwhile, I take it, the safe must remain at
+Dulwich?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Certainly. It should be guarded.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“We are guarding it and shall guard it,” Bristol assured him. “I only hope we
+catch someone trying to get at it!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Shortly afterward Bristol and I left the office, and, his duties taking him to
+Scotland Yard, I returned to my chambers to survey the position in which I now
+found myself. Indeed, it was a strange one enough, showing how great things
+have small beginnings; for, as a result of a steamer acquaintance I found
+myself involved in a dark business worthy of the Middle Ages. That Professor
+Deeping should have stolen one of the holy slippers of Mohammed was no affair
+of mine, and that an awful being known as Hassan of Aleppo should have pursued
+it did not properly enter into my concerns; yet now, with a group of Eastern
+fanatics at large in England, I was become, in a sense, the custodian of the
+relic. Moreover, I perceived that I had been chosen that I might safeguard
+myself. What I knew of the matter might imperil me, but whilst I held the key
+to the reliquary, and held it fast, I might hope to remain immune though I must
+expect to be subjected to attempts. It would be my affair to come to terms.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Contemplating these things I sat, in a world of dark dreams, unconscious of the
+comings and goings in the court below, unconscious of the hum which told of
+busy Fleet Street so near to me. The weather, as is its uncomfortable habit in
+England, had suddenly grown tropically hot, plunging London into the vapours of
+an African spring, and the sun was streaming through my open window fully upon
+the table.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I mopped my clammy forehead, glancing with distaste at the pile of work which
+lay before me. Then my eyes turned to an open quarto book. It was the late
+Professor Deeping’s “Assyrian Mythology,” and embodied the result of his
+researches into the history of the Hashishin, the religious murderers of whose
+existence he had been so skeptical. To the Chief of the Order, the terrible
+Sheikh Hassan of Aleppo, he referred as a “fabled being”; yet it was at the
+hands of this “fabled being” that he had met his end! How incredible it all
+seemed. But I knew full well how worthy of credence it was.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then upon my gloomy musings a sound intruded&mdash;the ringing of my door bell.
+I rose from my chair with a weary sigh, went to the door, and opened it. An
+aged Oriental stood without. He was tall and straight, had a snow-white beard
+and clear-cut, handsome features. He wore well-cut European garments and a
+green turban. As I stood staring he saluted me gravely.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Mr. Cavanagh?” he asked, speaking in faultless English.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I am he.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I learn that the services of a Moslem workman are required.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Quite correct, sir; but you should apply at the offices of Messrs. Rawson
+&amp; Rawson, Chancery Lane.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The old man bowed, smiling.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Many thanks; I understood so much. But, my position being a peculiar one, I
+wished to speak with you&mdash;as a friend of the late Professor.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I hesitated. The old man looked harmless enough, but there was an air of
+mystery about the matter which put me on my guard.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You will pardon me,” I said, “but the work is scarcely of a kind&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He raised his thin hand.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I am not undertaking it myself. I wished to explain to you the conditions
+under which I could arrange to furnish suitable porters.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His patient explanation disposed me to believe that he was merely some kind of
+small contractor, and in any event I had nothing to fear from this frail old
+man.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Step in, sir,” I said, repenting of my brusquerie&mdash;and stood aside for
+him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He entered, with that Oriental meekness in which there is something majestic. I
+placed a chair for him in the study, and reseated myself at the table. The old
+man, who from the first had kept his eyes lowered deferentially, turned to me
+with a gentle gesture, as if to apologize for opening the conversation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“From the papers, Mr. Cavanagh,” he began, “I have learned of the circumstances
+attending the death of Professor Deeping. Your papers”&mdash;he smiled, and I
+thought I had never seen a smile of such sweetness&mdash;“your papers know all!
+Now I understand why a Moslem is required, and I understand what is required of
+him. But remembering that the object of his labours would be to place a holy
+relic on exhibition for the amusement of unbelievers, can you reasonably expect
+to obtain the services of one?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His point of view was fair enough.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Perhaps not,” I replied. “For my own part I should wish to see the slipper
+back in Mecca, or wherever it came from. But Professor Deeping&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Professor Deeping was a thorn in the flesh of the Faithful!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My visitor’s voice was gravely reproachful.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Nevertheless his wishes must be considered,” I said, “and the methods adopted
+by those who seek to recover the relic are such as to alienate all sympathy.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You speak of the Hashishin?” asked the old man. “Mr. Cavanagh, in your own
+faith you have had those who spilled the blood of infidels as freely!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“My good sir, the existence of such an organization cannot be tolerated today!
+This survival of the dark ages must be stamped out. However just a cause may
+be, secret murder is not permissible, as you, a man of culture, a Believer,
+and”&mdash;I glanced at his unusual turban&mdash;“a descendant of the Prophet,
+must admit.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I can admit nothing against the Guardian of the Tradition, Mr. Cavanagh! The
+Prophet taught that we should smite the Infidel. I ask you&mdash;have you the
+courage of your convictions?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Perhaps; I trust so.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Then assist me to rid England of what you have called a survival of the dark
+ages. I will furnish porters to remove and carry the safe, if you will deliver
+to me the key!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I sprang to my feet.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That is madness!” I cried. “In the first place I should be compromising with
+my conscience, and in the second place I should be defenceless against those
+who might&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I have with me a written promise from one highly placed&mdash;one to whose
+will Hassan of Aleppo bows!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My mind greatly disturbed, I watched the venerable speaker. I had determined
+now that he was some religious leader of Islam in England, who had been deputed
+to approach me; and, let me add, I was sorely tempted to accede to his
+proposal, for nothing would be gained by any one if the slipper remained for
+ever at the museum, whereas by conniving at its recovery by those who, after
+all, were its rightful owners I should be ridding England of a weird and
+undesirable visitant.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I think I should have agreed, when I remembered that the Hashishin had murdered
+Professor Deeping and had mutilated others wholly innocent of offence. I looked
+across at the old man. He had drawn himself up to his great height, and for the
+first time fully raising the lids, had fixed upon me the piercing gaze of a
+pair of eagle eyes. I started, for the aspect of this majestic figure was
+entirely different from that of the old stranger who had stood suppliant before
+me a moment ago.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It is impossible,” I said. “I can come to no terms with those who shield
+murderers.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He regarded me fixedly, but did not move.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Es-selam ’aleykum!” I added (“Peace be on you!”) closing the interview in the
+Eastern manner.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The old man lowered his eyes, and saluted me with graceful gravity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Wa-’aleykum!” he said (“And on you!”). I conducted him to the door and closed
+it upon his exit. In his last salute I had noticed the flashing of a ring which
+he wore upon his left hand, and he was gone scarce ten seconds ere my heart
+began to beat furiously. I snatched up “Assyrian Mythology” and with trembling
+fingers turned to a certain page.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There I read&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Each Sheikh of the Assassins is said to be invested with the “Ring of the
+Prophet.” It bears a green stone, shaped in the form of a scimitar or crescent.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My dreadful suspicion was confirmed. I knew who my visitor had been.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“God in heaven!” I whispered. “It was Hassan of Aleppo!”
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap07"></a>
+CHAPTER VII<br/>
+FIRST ATTEMPT ON THE SAFE</h2>
+
+<p>
+On the following morning I was awakened by the arrival of Bristol. I hastened
+to admit him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Your visitor of yesterday,” he began, “has wasted no time!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What has happened?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He tugged irritably at his moustache. “I don’t know!” he replied. “Of course it
+was no surprise to find that there isn’t a Mohammedan who’ll lay his little
+finger on Professor Deeping’s safe! There’s no doubt in my mind that every
+lascar at the docks knows Hassan of Aleppo to be in England. Some other
+arrangement will have to be arrived at, if the thing is ever to be taken to the
+Antiquarian Museum. Meanwhile we stand to lose it. Last night&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He accepted a cigarette, and lighted it carefully.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Last night,” he resumed, “a member of P Division was on point duty outside the
+late Professor’s house, and two C.I.D. men were actually in the room where the
+safe is. Result&mdash;someone has put in at least an hour’s work on the lock,
+but it proved too tough a job!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I stared at him amazedly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Someone has been at the lock!” I cried. “But that is impossible, with two men
+in the room&mdash;unless&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“They were both knocked on the head!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Both! But by whom! My God! They are not&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Oh, no! It was done artistically. They both came round about four o’clock this
+morning.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“And who attacked them?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“They had no idea. Neither of them saw a thing!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My amazement grew by leaps and bounds. “But, Bristol, one of them must have
+seen the other succumb!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Both did! Their statements tally exactly!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I quite fail to follow you.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That’s not surprising. Listen: When I got on the scene about five o’clock,
+Marden and West, the two C.I.D. men, had quite recovered their senses, though
+they were badly shaken, and one had a cracked skull. The constable was
+conscious again, too.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What! Was he attacked?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“In exactly the same way! I’ll give you Marden’s story, as he gave it to me a
+few minutes after the surgeon had done with him. He said that they were sitting
+in the study, smoking, and with both windows wide open. It was a fearfully hot
+night.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Did they have lights?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“No. West sat in an armchair near the writing-table; Marden sat by the window
+next to the door. I had arranged that every hour one of them should go out to
+the gate and take the constable’s report. It was just after Marden had been out
+at one o’clock that it happened.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“They were sitting as I tell you when Marden thought he heard a curious sort of
+noise from the gate. West appeared to have heard nothing; but I have no doubt
+that it was the sound of the constable’s fall. West’s pipe had gone out, and he
+struck a match to relight it. As he did so, Marden saw him drop the match,
+clench both fists, and with eyes glaring in the moonlight and his teeth coming
+together with a snap, drop from his chair.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Marden says that he was half up from his seat when something struck him on the
+back of the head with fearful force. He remembered nothing more until he awoke,
+with the dawn creeping into the room, and heard West groaning somewhere beside
+him. They both had badly damaged skulls with great bruises behind the ear. It
+is instructive to note that their wounds corresponded almost to a fraction of
+an inch. They had been stunned by someone who thoroughly understood his
+business, and with some heavy, blunt weapon. A few minutes later came the man
+to relieve the constable; and the constable was found to have been treated in
+exactly the same way!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“But if Marden’s account is true&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“West, as he lost consciousness, saw Marden go in exactly the same way.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Marden was seated by the open window, but I cannot conjecture how any one can
+have got at West, who sat by the table!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The case of Marden is little less than remarkable; he was some distance from
+the window. No one could possibly have reached him from outside.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“And the constable?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The constable can give us no clue. He was suddenly struck down, as the others
+were. I examined the safe, of course, but didn’t touch it, according to
+instructions. Someone had been at work on the lock, but it had defied their
+efforts. I’m fully expecting though that they’ll be back to-night, with
+different tools!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The place is watched during the day, of course?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Of course. But it’s unlikely that anything will be attempted in daylight.
+Tonight I am going down myself.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Could you arrange that I join you?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I could, but you can see the danger for yourself?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It is extraordinarily mysterious.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Mr. Cavanagh, it’s uncanny!” said Bristol. “I can understand that one of these
+Hashishin could easily have got up behind the man on duty out in the open. I
+know, and so do you, that they’re past masters of that kind of thing; but
+unless they possess the power to render themselves invisible, it’s not evident
+how they can have got behind West whilst he sat at the table, with Marden
+actually watching him!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“We must lay a trap for them to-night.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Rely upon me to do so. My only fear is that they may anticipate it and change
+their tactics. Hassan of Aleppo apparently knows as much of our plans as we do
+ourselves.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Inspector Bristol, though a man of considerable culture, clearly was infected
+with a species of supernatural dread.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap08"></a>
+CHAPTER VIII<br/>
+THE VIOLET EYES AGAIN</h2>
+
+<p>
+At four o’clock in the afternoon I had heard nothing further from Bristol, but
+I did not doubt that he would advise me of his arrangements in good time. I
+sought by hard work to forget for a time the extraordinary business of the
+stolen slipper; but it persistently intruded upon my mind. Particularly, my
+thoughts turned to the night of Professor Deeping’s murder, and to the
+bewitchingly pretty woman who had warned me of the impending tragedy. She had
+bound me to secrecy&mdash;a secrecy which had proved irksome, for it had since
+appeared to me that she must have been an accomplice of Hassan of Aleppo. At
+the time I had been at a loss to define her peculiar accent, now it seemed
+evidently enough to have been Oriental.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I threw down my pen in despair, for work was impossible, went downstairs, and
+walked out under the arch into Fleet Street. Quite mechanically I turned to the
+left, and, still engaged with idle conjectures, strolled along westward.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Passing the entrance to one of the big hotels, I was abruptly recalled to the
+realities&mdash;by a woman’s voice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Wait for me here,” came musically to my ears.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I stopped, and turned. A woman who had just quitted a taxi-cab was entering the
+hotel. The day was hot and thunderously oppressive, and this woman with the
+musical voice wore a delicate costume of flimsiest white. A few steps upward
+she paused and glanced back. I had a view of a Greek profile, and for one
+magnetic instant looked into eyes of the deepest and most wonderful violet.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then, shaking off inaction, I ran up the steps and overtook the lady in white
+as a porter swung open the door to admit her. We entered together.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Madame,” I said in a low tone, “I must detain you for a moment. There is
+something I have to ask.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She turned, exhibiting the most perfect composure, lowered her lashes and
+raised them again, the gaze of the violet eyes sweeping me from head to foot
+with a sort of frigid scorn.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I fear you have made a mistake, sir. We have never met before!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Her voice betrayed no trace of any foreign accent!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“But,” I began&mdash;and paused.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I felt myself flush; for this encounter in the foyer of an hotel, with many
+curious onlookers, was like to prove embarrassing if my beautiful acquaintance
+persisted in her attitude. I fully realized what construction would be put upon
+my presence there, and foresaw that forcible and ignominious ejection must be
+my lot if I failed to establish my right to address her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She turned away, and crossed in the direction of the staircase. A sunbeam
+sought out a lock of hair that strayed across her brow, and kissed it to a
+sudden glow like that which lurks in the heart of a blush rose.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That wonderful sheen, which I had never met with elsewhere in nature, but which
+no artifice could lend, served to remove my last frail doubt which had survived
+the evidence of the violet eyes. I had been deceived by no strange resemblance;
+this was indeed the woman who had been the harbinger of Professor Deeping’s
+death. In three strides I was beside her again. Curious glances were set upon
+me, and I saw a servant evidently contemplating approach; but I ignored all
+save my own fixed purpose.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You must listen to what I have to say!” I whispered. “If you decline, I shall
+have no alternative but to call in the detective who holds a warrant for your
+arrest!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She stood quite still, watching me coolly. “I suppose you would wish to avoid a
+scene?” I added.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You have already made me the object of much undesirable attention,” she
+replied scornfully. “I do not need your assurance that you would disgrace me
+utterly! You are talking nonsense, as you must be aware&mdash;unless you are
+insane. But if your object be to force your acquaintance upon me, your methods
+are novel, and, under the circumstances, effective. Come, sir, you may talk to
+me&mdash;for three minutes!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The musical voice had lost nothing of its imperiousness, but for one instant
+the lips parted, affording a fleeting glimpse of pearl beyond the coral.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Her sudden change of front was bewildering. Now, she entered the lift and I
+followed her. As we ascended side by side I found it impossible to believe that
+this dainty white figure was that of an associate of the Hashishin, that of a
+creature of the terrible Hassan of Aleppo. Yet that she was the same girl who,
+a few days after my return from the East, had shown herself conversant with the
+plans of the murderous fanatics was beyond doubt. Her accent on that occasion
+clearly had been assumed, with what object I could not imagine. Then, as we
+quitted the lift and entered a cosy lounge, my companion seated herself upon a
+Chesterfield, signing to me to sit beside her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As I did so she lay back smiling, and regarding me from beneath her black
+lashes. Thus, half veiled, her great violet eyes were most wonderful.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Now, sir,” she said softly, “explain yourself.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Then you persist in pretending that we have not met before?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“There is no occasion for pretence,” she replied lightly; and I found myself
+comparing her voice with her figure, her figure with her face, and vainly
+endeavouring to compute her age. Frankly, she was bewildering&mdash;this lovely
+girl who seemed so wholly a woman of the world.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“This fencing is useless.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It is quite useless! Come, I know New York, London, and I know Paris, Vienna,
+Budapest. Therefore I know mankind! You thought I was pretty, I suppose? I may
+be; others have thought so. And you thought you would like to make my
+acquaintance without troubling about the usual formalities? You adopted a
+singularly brutal method of achieving your object, but I love such insolence in
+a man. Therefore I forgave you. What have you to say to me?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I perceive that I had to deal with a bold adventuress, with a consummate
+actress, who, finding herself in a dangerous situation, had adopted this daring
+line of defence, and now by her personal charm sought to lure me from my
+purpose.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But with the scimitar of Hassan of Aleppo stretched over me, with the dangers
+of the night before me, I was in no mood for a veiled duel of words, for an
+interchange of glances in thrust and parry, however delightful such warfare
+might have been with so pretty an adversary.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For a long time I looked sternly into her eyes; but their violet mystery
+defied, whilst her red-lipped smile taunted me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Unfortunately,” I said, with slow emphasis, “you are protected by my promise,
+made on the occasion of our previous meeting. But murder has been done, so that
+honour scarcely demands that I respect my promise further&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She raised her eyebrows slightly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Surely that depends upon the quality of the honour!” she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I believe you to be a member of a murderous organization, and unless you can
+convince me that I am wrong, I shall act accordingly.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At that she leaned toward me, laying her hand on my arm.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Please do not be so cruel,” she whispered, “as to drag me into a matter with
+which truly I have no concern. Believe me, you are utterly mistaken. Wait one
+moment, and I will prove it.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She rose, and before I could make move to detain her, quitted the room; but the
+door scarcely had closed ere I was afoot. The corridor beyond was empty. I ran
+on. The lift had just descended. A dark man whom I recognized stood near the
+closed gate.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Quick!” I said, “I am Cavanagh of the Report! Did you see a lady enter the
+lift?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I did, Mr. Cavanagh,” answered the hotel detective; for this was he.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In such a giant inn as this I knew full well that one could come and go almost
+with impunity, though one had no right to the hospitality of the establishment;
+and it was with a premonition respecting what his answer would be, that I asked
+the man&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Is she staying here?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“She is not. I have never seen her before!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The girl with the violet eyes had escaped, taking all her secrets with her!
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap09"></a>
+CHAPTER IX<br/>
+SECOND ATTEMPT ON THE SAFE</h2>
+
+<p>
+“You see,” said Bristol, “the Hashishin must know that the safe won’t remain
+here unopened much longer. They will therefore probably make another attempt
+to-night.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It seems likely,” I replied; and was silent. Outside the open windows
+whispered the shrubbery, as a soft breeze stole through the bushes. Beyond, the
+moon made play in the dim avenue. From the old chapel hard by the sweet-toned
+bell proclaimed midnight. Our vigil was begun. In this room it was that
+Professor Deeping had met death at the hands of the murderous Easterns; here it
+was that Marden and West had mysteriously been struck down the night before.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To-night was every whit as hot, and Bristol and I had the windows widely
+opened. My companion was seated where the detective, Marden, had sat, in a
+chair near the westerly window, and I lay back in the armchair that had been
+occupied by West.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I may repeat here that the house of the late Professor Deeping was more
+properly a cottage, surrounded by a fairly large piece of ground, for the most
+part run wild. The room used as a study was on the ground floor, and had
+windows on the west and on the south. Those on the west (French windows) opened
+on a loggia; those on the south opened right into the dense tangle of a
+neglected shrubbery. The place possessed an oppressive atmosphere of
+loneliness, for which in some measure its history may have been responsible.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The silence, seemingly intensified by each whisper that sped through the elms
+and crept about the shrubbery, grew to such a stillness that I told myself I
+had experienced nothing like it since crossing with a caravan I had slept in
+the desert. Yet noisy, whirling London was within gunshot of us; and this,
+though hard enough to believe, was a reflection oddly comforting. Only one
+train of thought was possible, and this I pursued at random.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+By what means were Marden and West struck down? In thus exposing ourselves, in
+order that we might trap the author or authors of the outrage, did we act
+wisely?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Bristol,” I said suddenly, “it was someone who came through the open window.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“No one,” he replied, “came through the windows. West saw absolutely nothing.
+But if any one comes that way to-night, we have him!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“West may have seen nothing; but how else could any one enter?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bristol offered no reply; and I plunged again into a maze of speculation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Powerful mantraps were set in such a way that any one or anything, ignorant of
+their positions, coming up to the windows must unavoidably be snared. These had
+been placed in position with much secrecy after dusk, and the man on duty at
+the gate stood with his back to the wall. No one could approach him except from
+the front. My thoughts took a new turn.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Was the girl with the violet eyes an ally of the Hashishin? Thus far, although
+she so palpably had tricked me, I had found myself unable to speak of her to
+Bristol; for the idea had entered my mind that she might have learned of the
+plan to murder Deeping without directly being implicated. Now came yet another
+explanation. The publicity given to that sensational case might have interested
+some third party in the fate of the stolen slipper! Could it be that others, in
+no way connected with the dreadful Hassan of Aleppo, were in quest of the
+slipper?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Scotland Yard had taken care to ensure that the general public be kept in
+ignorance of the existence of such an organization as the Hashishin, but I must
+assume that this hypothetical third party were well aware that they had Hassan,
+as well as the authorities, to count with. Granting the existence of such a
+party, my beautiful acquaintance might be classified as one of its members. I
+spoke again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Bristol,” I said, “has it occurred to you that there may be others, as well as
+Hassan of Aleppo, seeking to gain possession of the sacred slipper?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It has not,” he replied. “In the strictest sense of the expression, they would
+be out for trouble! What gave you the idea?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I hardly know,” I returned evasively, for even now I was loath to betray the
+mysterious girl with the wonderful eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The chapel bell sounding the half-hour, Bristol rose with a sigh that might
+have been one of relief, and went out to take the report of the man on duty at
+the gate. As his footsteps died away along the elm avenue, it came to me how,
+in the darkness about, menace lurked; and I felt myself succumbing to the
+greatest dread experienced by man&mdash;the dread of the unknown.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All that I knew of the weird group of fanatics&mdash;survivals of a dim and
+evil past&mdash;who must now be watching this cottage as bloodlustful devotees
+watch a shrine violated, burst upon my mind. I peopled the still blackness with
+lurking assassins, armed with the murderous knowledge of by-gone centuries,
+armed with invisible weapons which struck down from afar, supernaturally.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I glanced toward the corner of the room where the safe stood, reliquary of a
+worthless thing for which much blood had been spilled.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then sounded footsteps along the avenue, and my fear whispered that they were
+not those of Bristol but of one who had murdered him, and who came guilefully,
+to murder me!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I snatched the revolver from my pocket and crossed the darkened room. Just to
+the right of one of the French windows I stood looking out across the loggia to
+the end of the avenue. The night was a bright one, and the room was flooded
+with a reflected mystic light, but outside the moon paved the avenue with
+pearl, and through the trees I saw a figure approaching.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Was it Bristol? It had his build, it had his gait; but my fears remained. Then
+the figure crossed the patch of shrubbery and stepped on to the loggia.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Mr. Cavanagh!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I laughed dryly at my own cowardice, but my heart was still beating abnormally.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Here I am, Bristol, in a ghastly funk!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I don’t wonder! They may be on us any time now. All’s well at the gate, but
+Morris says he heard, or thought he heard something at the side of the chapel
+opposite, a while ago.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Wind in the bushes?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It may have been; but he says there was no breeze at the time.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We resumed our seats.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Bristol,” I said, “now that the danger grows imminent, doesn’t it seem to you
+foolhardy for us thus to expose ourselves?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Perhaps it is,” he agreed; “but how otherwise are we likely to learn what
+happened to Marden and West?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The enemy may adopt different measures to-night.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I think not. Our dispositions are the same, and I credit them with cunning
+enough to know it. At the same time I credit ourselves with having kept the
+existence of the steel traps completely secret. They will assume (so I’ve
+reasoned) that we intend to rely entirely upon our superior vigilance,
+therefore they will try the same game as last night.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Silence fell.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The moon rays, creeping around from the right of the avenue, crossing the
+shrubbery and encroaching upon the low wall of the loggia, now flooded its
+floor. Against the silvern light, Bristol appeared to me in black silhouette.
+The breeze, too, seemed now to blow from a slightly different direction. It
+came through the windows on my right, beyond which lay the unkempt bushes which
+extended on that side to the wall of the grounds.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So we sat, until the moonlight poured fully in upon Bristol’s back. So we sat
+when the clock chimed the hour of one.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bristol arose and once more went out to the gate. He had arranged to visit
+Morris’s post every half-hour. Again I experienced the nervous dread that he
+would be attacked in the avenue; but again he returned unscathed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“All’s well,” he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But from his tones I knew that he had not forgotten that it was at this hour
+Marden and West had suffered mysterious attack.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Neither of us, I think, was disposed to talk. We both were unwilling to break
+the silence, wherein, with all our ears, we listened for the slightest
+disturbance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And now my attention turned anew to the course of the slowly creeping moon
+rays. In my mind an idea was struggling for definition. There was something
+significant in the lunar lighting of the room. Why, I asked myself, had the
+attack been made at one o’clock? Did the time signify anything? If so, what? I
+looked toward Bristol.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His figure, the chair upon which he sat, were sharply outlined by the cold
+light. The wall behind me, and to my left, was illuminated brilliantly; but no
+light fell directly upon me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The idea was taking shape. From the loggia and the avenue Bristol, I reasoned,
+must be clearly visible. From the shrubbery on the south, through the other
+windows could I be seen? Yes, silhouetted against the moonlight!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A faint sound, quite indescribable, came to my ears from somewhere
+outside-beyond.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“My God!” whispered Bristol. “Did you hear it?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes! What?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It must have been Morris!&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bristol was half standing, one hand upon the arm of the chair, the other
+concealed, but grasping his revolver as I well knew. I, too, had my revolver in
+my hand, and as I twisted in my seat, preparatory to rising, in sheer
+nervousness I dropped the weapon upon the carpet.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With an exclamation of dismay, I stooped quickly to recover it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As I did so something whistled past my ear, so closely as almost to touch
+it&mdash;and struck with a dull thud upon the wall beyond!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Bristol!” I whispered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But as I raised my eyes to him he seemed to crumple up, and fell loosely
+forward into the patch of moonlight spread upon the floor! “God in heaven!” I
+said aloud.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In a cold sweat of fear I crouched there, for it had become evident to me that,
+as I bent, I was entirely in shadow.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was a rustling in the bushes on the left; but before I could turn in that
+direction, my attention was claimed elsewhere. Over into the loggia leapt an
+almost naked brown figure!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was that of a small but strongly built man, who carried a short, exceedingly
+thick bamboo rod in his hand. My fear was too great to admit of my accurately
+observing anything at that time, but I noticed that some kind of leather thong
+or loop was attached to the end of the squat cane.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The panic fear of the supernatural was strongly upon me, and I was unable to
+realize that this Eastern apparition was a creature of flesh and blood. With my
+nerves strung up to snapping point, I crouched watching him. He entered the
+room, bending over the body of Bristol.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A hot breath fanned my cheek!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At that my overwrought nerves betrayed me. I uttered a stifled cry, looking
+upward ... and into a pair of gleaming eyes which looked down into mine!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A second brown man (who must have entered by one of the windows overlooking the
+shrubbery) was bending over me!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Scarce knowing what I did, I raised my revolver and blazed straight into the
+dimly-seen face. Down upon me silently dropped a naked body, and something warm
+came flowing over my hand. But, knowing my foes to be of flesh and blood,
+feeling myself at handgrips now with a palpable enemy, I threw off the body,
+leapt up and fired, though blindly, at the flying shape that flashed across the
+loggia&mdash;and was lost in the shadow pools under the elms.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Upon the din of my shooting fell silence like a cloak. A moment I listened,
+tense, still; then I turned to the table and lighted the lamp.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In its light I saw Bristol lying like a dead man. Close beside him was a big
+and heavy lump of clay. It had been shaped as a ball, but now it was flattened
+out curiously. Bending over my unfortunate companion and learning that, though
+unconscious, he lived, I learnt, too, how the Hashishin contrived to strike men
+insensible without approaching them; I learnt that the one whom I had shot, who
+lay in his blood almost on the spot where Professor Deeping once had lain, was
+an expert slinger.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The contrivance which he carried, as did the other who had escaped, was a
+sling, of the ancient Persian type. In place of stones, heavy lumps of clay
+were used, which operated much the same as a sand-bag, whilst enabling the
+operator to work from a considerable distance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hidden, over by the ancient chapel it might be, one of this evil twain had
+struck down Morris, the constable; from the shelter of the trees, from many
+yards away, they had shot their singular missiles through the open windows at
+Bristol and myself. Bristol had succumbed, and now, with a redness showing
+through his close-cut hair immediately behind the right ear, lay wholly
+unconscious at my feet.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It had been a divine accident which had caused me to drop my revolver, and,
+stooping to recover it, unknowingly to frustrate the design of the second
+slinger upon myself. The light of the lamp fell upon the face of the dead
+Hashishin. He lay forward upon his hands, crouching almost, but with his face,
+his dreadful, featureless face, twisted up at me from under his left shoulder.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+God knows he deserved his end; but that mutilated face is often grinning,
+bloodily, in my dreams.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And then as I stood, between that horrid exultation which is born of killing
+and the panic which threatened me out of the darkness, I saw something
+advancing ... slowly ... slowly ... from the elmen shades toward the loggia.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was a shape&mdash;it was a shadow. Silent it came&mdash;on&mdash;and on.
+Where the dusk lay deepest it paused, undefined; for I could give it no name of
+man or spirit. But a horror seemed to proceed from it as light from a lamp.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I groped about the table near to me, never taking my eyes from that sinister
+form outside. As my fingers closed upon the telephone, distant voices and the
+sound of running footsteps (of those who had heard the shots) came welcome to
+my ears.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The form stirred, seeming to raise phantom arms in execration, and a stray
+moonbeam pierced the darkness shrouding it. For a fleeting instant something
+flashed venomously.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The sounds grew nearer. I could tell that the newcomers had found Morris lying
+at the gate. Yet still I stood, frozen with uncanny fear, and
+watching&mdash;watching the spot to which that stray beam had pierced; the spot
+where I had seen the moon gleam upon the ring of the Prophet!
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap10"></a>
+CHAPTER X<br/>
+AT THE BRITISH ANTIQUARIAN MUSEUM</h2>
+
+<p>
+A little group of interested spectators stood at the head of the square glass
+case in the centre of the lofty apartment in the British Antiquarian Museum
+known as the Burton Room (by reason of the fact that a fine painting of Sir
+Richard Burton faces you as you enter). A few other people looked on curiously
+from the lower end of the case. It contained but one exhibit&mdash;a dirty and
+dilapidated markoob&mdash;or slipper of morocco leather that had once been red.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Our latest acquisition, gentlemen,” said Mr. Mostyn, the curator, speaking in
+a low tone to the distinguished Oriental scholars around him. “It has been left
+to the Institution by the late Professor Deeping. He describes it in a document
+furnished by his solicitor as one of the slippers worn by the Prophet Mohammed,
+but gives us no further particulars. I myself cannot quite place the relic.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Nor I,” interrupted one of the group. “It is not mentioned by any of the
+Arabian historians to my knowledge&mdash;that is, if it comes from Mecca, as I
+understand it does.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I cannot possibly assert that it comes from Mecca, Dr. Nicholson,” Mostyn
+replied. “The Professor may have taken it from Al-Madinah&mdash;perhaps from
+the mysterious inner passage of the baldaquin where the treasures of the place
+lie. But I can assure you that what little we do know of its history is
+sufficiently unsavoury.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I fancied that the curator’s tired cultured voice faltered as he spoke; and
+now, without apparent reason, he moved a step to the right and glanced oddly
+along the room. I followed the direction of his glance, and saw a tall man in
+conventional morning dress, irreproachable in every detail, whose head was
+instantly bent upon his catalogue. But before his eyes fell I knew that their
+long almond shape, as well as the peculiar burnt pallor of his countenance,
+were undoubtedly those of an Oriental.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“There have been mysterious outrages committed, I believe, upon many of those
+who have come in contact with the slipper?” asked one of the savants.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Exactly. Professor Deeping was undoubtedly among the victims. His instructions
+were explicit that the relic should be brought here by a Moslem, but for a long
+time we failed to discover any Moslem who would undertake the task; and, as you
+are aware, while the slipper remained at the Professor’s house attempts were
+made to steal it.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He ceased uneasily, and glanced at the tall Eastern figure. It had edged a
+little nearer; the head was still bowed and the fine yellow waxen fingers of
+the hand from which he had removed his glove fumbled with the catalogue’s
+leaves. It may well have been that in those days I read menace in every eye,
+yet I felt assured that the yellow visitor was eavesdropping&mdash;was
+malignantly attentive to the conversation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The curator spoke lower than ever now; no one beyond the circle could possibly
+hear him as he proceeded&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“We discovered an Alexandrian Greek who, for personal reasons, not unconnected
+with matrimony, had turned Moslem! He carried the slipper here, strongly
+escorted, and placed it where you now see it. No other hand has touched it.”
+(The speaker’s voice was raised ever so slightly.) “You will note that there is
+a rail around the case, to prevent visitors from touching even the glass.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Ah,” said Dr. Nicholson quizzically, “And has anything untoward happened to
+our Graeco-Moslem friend?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Perhaps Inspector Bristol can tell,” replied the curator.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The straight, military figure of the well-known Scotland Yard man was
+conspicuous among the group of distinguished&mdash;and mostly
+round-shouldered&mdash;scholars.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Sorry, gentlemen,” he said, smiling, “but Mr. Acepulos has vanished from his
+tobacco shop in Soho. I am not apprehensive that he had been kidnapped or
+anything of that kind. I think rather that the date of his disappearance
+tallies with that on which he cashed his cheque for service rendered! His
+present wife is getting most unbeautifully fat, too.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What precautions,” someone asked, “are being taken to guard the slipper?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Well,” Mostyn answered, “though we have only the bare word of the late
+Professor Deeping that the slipper was actually worn by Mohammed, it has
+certainly an enormous value according to Moslem ideas. There can be no doubt
+that a group of fanatics known as Hashishin are in London engaged in an
+extraordinary endeavour to recover it.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mostyn’s voice sank to an impressive whisper. My gaze sought again the tall
+Eastern visitor and was held fascinated by the baffled straining in those
+velvet eyes. But the lids fell as I looked; and the effect was that of a fire
+suddenly extinguished. I determined to draw Bristol’s attention to the man.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Accordingly,” Mostyn continued, “we have placed it in this room, from which I
+fancy it would puzzle the most accomplished thief to remove it.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The party, myself included, stared about the place, as he went on to
+explain&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“We have four large windows here; as you see. The Burton Room occupies the end
+of a wing; there is only one door; it communicates with the next room, which in
+turn opens into the main building by another door on the landing. We are on the
+first floor; these two east windows afford a view of the lawn before the main
+entrance; those two west ones face Orpington Square; all are heavily barred as
+you see. During the day there is a man always on duty in these two rooms. At
+night that communicating door is locked. Short of erecting a ladder in full
+view either of the Square or of Great Orchard Street, filing through four iron
+bars and breaking the window and the case, I fail to see how anybody can get at
+the slipper here.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“If a duplicate key to the safe&mdash;” another voice struck in; I knew it
+afterward for that of Professor Rhys-Jenkyns.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Impossible to procure one, Professor,” cried Mostyn, his eyes sparkling with
+an almost boyish interest. “Mr. Cavanagh here holds the keys of the case, under
+the will of the late Professor Deeping. They are of foreign workmanship and
+more than a little complicated.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The eyes of the savants were turned now in my direction.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I suppose you have them in a place of safety?” said Dr. Nicholson.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“They are at my bankers,” I replied.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Then I venture to predict,” said the celebrated Orientalist, “that the slipper
+of the Prophet will rest here undisturbed.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He linked his arm into that of a brother scholar and the little group straggled
+away, Mostyn accompanying them to the main entrance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But I saw Inspector Bristol scratching his chin; he looked very much as if he
+doubted the accuracy of the doctor’s prediction. He had already had some
+experience of the implacable devotion of the Moslem group to this treasure of
+the Faithful.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The real danger begins,” I suggested to him, “when the general public is
+admitted&mdash;after to-day, is it not?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes. All to-day’s people are specially invited, or are using special
+invitation cards,” he replied. “The people who received them often give their
+tickets away to those who will be likely really to appreciate the opportunity.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I looked around for the tall Oriental. He seemed to have vanished, and for some
+reason I hesitated to speak of him to Bristol; for my gaze fell upon an
+excessively thin, keen-faced man whose curiously wide-open eyes met mine
+smilingly, whose gray suit spoke Stein-Bloch, whose felt was a Boss raw-edge
+unmistakably of a kind that only Philadelphia can produce. At the height of the
+season such visitors are not rare, but this one had an odd personality, and
+moreover his keen gaze was raking the place from ceiling to floor.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Where had I met him before? To the best of my recollection I had never set eyes
+upon the man prior to that moment; and since he was so palpably an American I
+had no reason for assuming him to be associated with the Hashishin. But I
+remembered&mdash;indeed, I could never forget&mdash;how, in the recent past, I
+had met with an apparent associate of the Moslems as evidently European as this
+curiously alert visitor was American. Moreover ... there was something
+tauntingly familiar, yet elusive, about that gaunt face.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Was it not upon the eve of the death of Professor Deeping that the girl with
+the violet eyes had first intruded her fascinating personality into my tangled
+affairs? Patently, she had then been seeking the holy slipper, and by craft had
+endeavoured to bend me to her will. Then had I not encountered her again,
+meeting the glance of her unforgettable violet eyes outside a Strand hotel? The
+encounter had presaged a further attempt upon the slipper! Certainly she acted
+on behalf of someone interested in it; and since neither Bristol nor I could
+conceive of any one seeking to possess the bloodstained thing except the
+mysterious leader of the Hashishin&mdash;Hassan of Aleppo&mdash;as a creature
+of that awful fanatic being I had written her down.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Why, then, if the mysterious Eastern employed a European girl, should he not
+also employ an American man? It might well be that the relic, in entering the
+doors of the impregnable Antiquarian Museum, had passed where the diabolical
+arts of the Hashishin had no power to reach it&mdash;where the beauty of
+Western women and the craft of Eastern man were equally useless weapons.
+Perhaps Hassan’s campaign was entering upon a new phase.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Was it a shirking of plain duty on my part that wish&mdash;that ever-present
+hope&mdash;that the murderous company of fanatics who had pursued the stolen
+slipper from its ancient resting-place to London, should succeed in recovering
+it? I leave you to judge.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The crescent of Islam fades to-day and grows pale, but there are yet fierce
+Believers, a lust for the blood of the infidel. In such as these a faith dies
+the death of an adder, and is more venomous in its death-throes than in the
+full pulse of life. The ghastly indiscretion of Professor Deeping, in rifling a
+Moslem Sacristy, had led to the mutilation of many who, unwittingly, had
+touched the looted relic, had brought about his own end, had established a
+league of fantastic assassins in the heart of the metropolis.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Only once had I seen the venerable Hassan of Aleppo&mdash;a stately, gentle old
+man; but I knew that the velvet eyes could blaze into a passionate fury that
+seemed to scorch whom it fell upon. I knew that the saintly Hassan was Sheikh
+of the Hashishin. And familiarity with that dreadful organization had by no
+means bred contempt. I was the holder of the key, and my fear of the fanatics
+grew like a magic mango, darkened the sunlight of each day, and filled the
+night with indefinable dread.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+You, who have not read poor Deeping’s “Assyrian Mythology”, cannot picture a
+creature with a huge, distorted head, and a tiny, dwarfed body&mdash;a thing
+inhuman, yet human&mdash;a man stunted and malformed by the cruel arts of
+brother men&mdash;a thing obnoxious to life, with but one passion, the passion
+to kill. You cannot conceive of the years of agony spent by that creature
+strapped to a wooden frame&mdash;in order to prevent his growth! You cannot
+conceive of his fierce hatred of all humanity, inflamed to madness by the
+Eastern drug, hashish, and directed against the enemies of Islam&mdash;the
+holders of the slipper&mdash;by the wonderful power of Hassan of Aleppo.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But I had not only read of such beings, I had encountered one!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And he was but one of the many instruments of the Hashishin. Perhaps the girl
+with the violet eyes was another. What else to be dreaded Hassan might hold in
+store for us I could not conjecture.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Do you wonder that I feared? Do you wonder that I hoped (I confess it), hoped
+that the slipper might be recovered without further bloodshed?
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap11"></a>
+CHAPTER XI<br/>
+THE HOLE IN THE BLIND</h2>
+
+<p>
+I stepped over to the door, where a constable stood on duty.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You observed a tall Eastern gentleman in the room a while ago, officer?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I did, sir.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“How long is he gone?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The man started and began to peer about anxiously.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That’s a funny thing, sir,” he said. “I was keeping my eyes specially upon
+him. I noticed him hovering around while Mr. Mostyn was speaking; but although
+I could have sworn he hadn’t passed out, he’s gone!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You didn’t notice his departure, then?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’m sorry to say I didn’t, sir.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The man clearly was perplexed, but I found small matter for wonder in the
+episode. I had more than suspected the stranger to be a spy of Hassan’s, and
+members of that strange company were elusive as will-o’-the-wisps.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bristol, at the far end of the room, was signalling to me. I walked back and
+joined him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Come over here,” he said, in a low voice, “and pretend to examine these
+things.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He glanced significantly to his left. Following the glance, my eyes fell upon
+the lean American; he was peering into the receptacle which held the holy
+slipper.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bristol led me across the room, and we both faced the wall and bent over a
+glass case. Some yellow newspaper cuttings describing its contents hung above
+it, and these we pretended to read.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Did you notice that man I glanced at?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Well, that’s Earl Dexter, the first crook in America! Ssh! Only goes in on
+very big things. We had word at the Yard he was in town; but we can’t touch
+him&mdash;we can only keep our eyes on him. He usually travels openly and in
+his own name, but this time he seems to have slipped over quietly. He always
+dresses the same and has just given me ‘good day!’ They call him The Stetson
+Man. We heard this morning that he had booked two first-class sailings in the
+Oceanic, leaving for New York three weeks hence. Now, Mr. Cavanagh, what is his
+game?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It has occurred to me before, Bristol,” I replied, “and you may remember that
+I mentioned the idea to you, that there might be a third party interested in
+the slipper. Why shouldn’t Earl Dexter be that third party?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Because he isn’t a fool,” rapped Bristol shortly. “Earl Dexter isn’t a man to
+gather up trouble for himself. More likely if his visit has anything really to
+do with the slipper he’s retained by Hassan and Company. Museum-breaking may be
+a bit out of the line of Hashishin!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This latter suggestion dovetailed with my own ideas, and oddly enough there was
+something positively wholesome in the notion of the straightforward crookedness
+of a mere swell cracksman.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then happened a singular thing, and one that effectually concluded our
+whispered colloquy. From the top end of the room, beyond the case containing
+the slipper, one of the yellow blinds came down with a run.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bristol turned in a flash. It was not a remarkable accident, and might portend
+no more than a loose cord; but when, having walked rapidly up the room, we
+stood before the lowered blind, it appeared that this was no accident at all.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Some four feet from the bottom of the blind (or five feet from the floor) a
+piece of linen a foot square had been neatly slashed out!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I glanced around the room. Several fashionably dressed visitors were looking
+idly in our direction, but I could fasten upon no one of them as a likely
+perpetrator.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bristol stared at me in perplexity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Who on earth did it,” he muttered, “and what the blazes for?”
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap12"></a>
+CHAPTER XII<br/>
+THE HASHISHIN WATCH</h2>
+
+<p>
+“The American gentleman has just gone out, sir,” said the sergeant at the door.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I nodded grimly and raced down the steps. Despite my half-formed desire that
+the slipper should be recovered by those to whom properly it belonged, I
+experienced at times a curious interest in its welfare. I cannot explain this.
+Across the hall in front of me I saw Earl Dexter passing out of the Museum. I
+followed him through into Kingsway and thence to Fleet Street. He sauntered
+easily along, a nonchalant gray figure. I had begun to think that he was bound
+for his hotel and that I was wasting my time when he turned sharply into quiet
+Salisbury Square; it was almost deserted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My heart leapt into my mouth with a presentiment of what was coming as I saw an
+elegant and beautifully dressed woman sauntering along in front of us on the
+far side.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Was it that I detected something familiar in her carriage, in the poise of her
+head&mdash;something that reminded me of former unforgettable encounters;
+encounters which without exception had presaged attempts upon the slipper of
+the Prophet? Or was it that I recollected how Dexter had booked two passages to
+America? I cannot say, but I felt my heart leap; I knew beyond any possibility
+of doubt that this meeting in Salisbury Square marked the opening of a new
+chapter in the history of the slipper.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Dexter slipped his arm within that of the girl in front of him and they paced
+slowly forward in earnest conversation. I suppose my action was very amateurish
+and very poor detective work; but regardless of discovery I crossed the road
+and passed close by the pair.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I am certain that Dexter was speaking as I came up, but, well out of earshot,
+his voice was suddenly arrested. His companion turned and looked at me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I was prepared for it, yet was thrilled electrically by the flashing glance of
+the violet eyes&mdash;for it was she&mdash;the beautiful harbinger of
+calamities!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My brain was in a whirl; complication piled itself upon complication; yet in
+the heart of all this bewilderment I thought I could detect the key of the
+labyrinth, but at the time my ideas were in disorder, for the violet eyes were
+not lowered but fixed upon me in cold scorn.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I knew myself helpless, and bending my head with conscious embarrassment I
+passed on hurriedly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I had work to do in plenty, but I could not apply my mind to it; and now,
+although the obvious and sensible thing was to go about my business, I wandered
+on aimlessly, my brain employed with a hundred idle conjectures and the query,
+“Where have I seen The Stetson Man?” seeming to beat, like a tattoo, in my
+brain. There was something magnetic about the accursed slipper, for without
+knowing by what route I had arrived there, I found myself in Great Orchard
+Street and close under the walls of the British Antiquarian Museum. Then I was
+effectually aroused from my reverie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Two men, both tall, stood in the shadow of a doorway on the Opposite side of
+the street, staring intently up at the Museum windows. It was a tropically hot
+afternoon and they stood in deepest shadow. No one else was in Orchard
+Street&mdash;that odd little backwater&mdash;at the time, and they stood gazing
+upward intently and gave me not even a passing glance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But I knew one for the Oriental visitor of the morning, and despite broad
+noonday and the hum of busy London about me, my blood seemed to turn to water.
+I stood rooted to the spot, held there by a most surprising horror.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For the gray-bearded figure of the other watcher was one I could never forget;
+its benignity was associated with the most horrible hours of my life, with
+deeds so dreadful that recollection to this day sometimes breaks my sleep,
+arousing me in the still watches, bathed in a cold sweat of fear.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was Hassan of Aleppo!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+If he saw me, if either of them saw me, I cannot say. What I should have done,
+what I might have done it is useless to speak of here&mdash;for I did nothing.
+Inert, thralled by the presence of that eerie, dreadful being, I watched them
+leave the shadow of the doorway and pace slowly on with their dignified Eastern
+gait.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then, knowing how I had failed in my plain duty to my fellow-men&mdash;how,
+finding a serpent in my path, I had hesitated to crush it, had weakly succumbed
+to its uncanny fascination&mdash;I made my way round to the door of the Museum.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap13"></a>
+CHAPTER XIII<br/>
+THE WHITE BEAM</h2>
+
+<p>
+That night the deviltry began. Mr. Mostyn found himself wholly unable to sleep.
+Many relics have curious histories, and the experienced archaeologist becomes
+callous to that uncanniness which seems to attach to some gruesome curios. But
+the slipper of the Prophet was different. No mere ghostly menace threatened its
+holders; an avenging scimitar followed those who came in contact with it;
+gruesome tragedies, mutilations, murders, had marked its progress throughout.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The night was still&mdash;as still as a London night can be; for there is
+always a vague murmuring in the metropolis as though the sleeping city breathed
+gently and sometimes stirred in its sleep.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then, distinct amid these usual nocturnal noises, rose another, unaccountable
+sound, a muffled crash followed by a musical tinkling.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mostyn sprang up in bed, drew on a dressing-gown, and took from the small safe
+at his bed-head the Museum keys and a loaded revolver. A somewhat dishevelled
+figure, pale and wild-eyed, he made his way through the private door and into
+the ghostly precincts of the Museum. He did not hesitate, but ascended the
+stairs and unlocked the door of the Assyrian gallery.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Along its ghostly aisles he passed, and before the door which gave admittance
+to the Burton Room paused, fumbling a moment for the key.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Inside the room something was moving!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mostyn was keenly alarmed; he knew that he must enter at once or never. He
+inserted the key in the lock, swung open the heavy door, stepped through and
+closed it behind him. He was a man of tremendous moral courage, for
+now,&mdash;alone in the apartment which harboured the uncanny relic, alone in
+the discharge of his duty, he stood with his back to the door trembling
+slightly, but with the idea of retreat finding no place in his mind.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One side of the room lay in blackest darkness; through the furthermost window
+of the other a faint yellowed luminance (the moonlight through the blind)
+spread upon the polished parquet flooring. But that which held the curator
+spell-bound&mdash;that which momentarily quickened into life the latent
+superstition, common to all mankind, was a beam of cold light which poured its
+effulgence fully upon the case containing the Prophet’s slipper! Where the
+other exhibits lay either in utter darkness or semi-darkness this one it seemed
+was supernaturally picked out by this lunar searchlight!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was ghostly-unnerving; but, the first dread of it passed, Mostyn recalled
+how during the day a hole inexplicably had been cut in that blind; he recalled
+that it had not been mended, but that the damaged blind had merely been rolled
+up again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And as a dawning perception of the truth came to him, as falteringly he
+advanced a step toward the mystic beam, he saw that one side of the case had
+been shattered&mdash;he saw the broken glass upon the floor; and in the dense
+shadow behind and under the beam of light, vaguely he saw a dull red object.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It moved&mdash;it seemed to live! It moved away from the case and in the
+direction of the eastern windows.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“My God!” whispered Mostyn; “it’s the Prophet’s slipper!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And wildly, blindly, he fired down the room. Later he knew that he had fired in
+panic, for nothing human was or could be in the place; yet his shot was not
+without effect. In the instant of its flash, something struck sharply against
+the dimly seen blind of one of the east windows; he heard the crash of broken
+glass.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He leapt to the switch and flooded the room with light. A fear of what it might
+hold possessed him, and he turned instantly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hard by the fragments of broken glass upon the floor and midway between the
+case and the first easterly window lay the slipper. A bell was ringing
+somewhere. His shot probably had aroused the attention of the policeman.
+Someone was clamouring upon the door of the Museum, too. Mostyn raced forward
+and raised the blind&mdash;that toward which the slipper had seemed to move.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The lower pane of the window was smashed. Blood was trickling down upon the
+floor from the jagged edges of the glass.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Hullo there! Open the door! Open the door!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bells were going all over the place now; sounds of running footsteps came from
+below; but Mostyn stood staring at the broken window and at the solid iron bars
+which protected it without, which were intact, substantial&mdash;which showed
+him that nothing human could possibly have entered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Yet the case was shattered, the holy slipper lay close beside him upon the
+floor, and from the broken window-pane blood was
+falling&mdash;drip-drip-drip...
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That was the story as I heard it half an hour later. For Inspector Bristol,
+apprised of the happening, was promptly on the scene; and knowing how keen was
+my interest in the matter, he rang me up immediately. I arrived soon after
+Bristol and found a perplexed group surrounding the uncanny slipper of the
+Prophet. No one had dared to touch it; the dread vengeance of Hassan of Aleppo
+would visit any unbeliever who ventured to lay hand upon the holy, bloody
+thing. Well we knew it, and as though it had been a venomous scorpion we, a
+company of up-to-date, prosaic men of affairs, stood around that dilapidated
+markoob, and kept a respectful distance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mostyn, an odd figure in pyjamas and dressing-gown, turned his pale,
+intellectual face to me as I entered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It will have to be put back ... secretly,” he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His voice was very unsteady. Bristol nodded grimly and glanced at the two
+constables, who, with a plain-clothes man unknown to me, made up that midnight
+company.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’ll do it, sir,” said one of the constables suddenly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“One moment”&mdash;Mostyn raised his hand!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the ensuing silence I could hear the heavy breathing of those around me. We
+were all looking at the slipper, I think.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Do you understand, fully,” the curator continued, “the risk you run?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I think so, sir,” answered the constable; “but I’m prepared to chance it.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The hands,” resumed Mostyn slowly, “of those who hitherto have ventured to
+touch it have been”&mdash;he hesitated&mdash;“cut off.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Your career in the Force would be finished if it happened to you, my lad,”
+said Bristol shortly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I suppose they’d look after me,” said the man, with grim humour.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“They would if you met with&mdash;an accident, in the discharge of your duty,”
+replied the inspector; “but I haven’t ordered you to do it, and I’m not going
+to.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“All right, sir,” said the man, with a sort of studied truculence, “I’ll take
+my chance.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I tried to stop him; Mostyn, too, stepped forward, and Bristol swore frankly.
+But it was all of no avail.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A sort of chill seemed to claim my very soul when I saw the constable stoop,
+unconcernedly pick up the slipper, and replace it in the broken case.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was out of a silence cathedral-like, awesome, that he spoke.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“All you want is a new pane of glass, sir,” he said&mdash;“and the thing’s
+done.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I anticipate in mentioning it here; but since Constable Hughes has no further
+place in these records I may perhaps be excused for dismissing him at this
+point.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was picked up outside the section house on the following evening with his
+right hand severed just above the wrist.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap14"></a>
+CHAPTER XIV<br/>
+A SCREAM IN THE NIGHT</h2>
+
+<p>
+The day that followed was one of the hottest which we experienced during the
+heat wave. It was a day crowded with happenings. The Burton Room was closed to
+the public, whilst a glazier worked upon the broken east window and a new blind
+was fitted to the west. Behind the workmen, guarded by a watchful
+commissionaire, yawned the shattered case containing the slipper.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I wondered if the visitors to the other rooms of the Museum realized, as I
+realized, that despite the blazing sunlight of tropical London, the shadow of
+Hassan of Aleppo lay starkly on that haunted building?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At about eleven o’clock, as I hurried along the Strand, I almost collided with
+the girl of the violet eyes! She turned and ran like the wind down Arundel
+Street, whilst I stood at the corner staring after her in blank amazement, as
+did other passers-by; for a man cannot with dignity race headlong after a
+pretty woman down a public thoroughfare!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My mystification grew hourly deeper; and Bristol wallowed in perplexities.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It’s the most horrible and confusing case,” he said to me when I joined him at
+the Museum, “that the Yard has ever had to handle. It bristles with outrages
+and murders. God knows where it will all end. I’ve had London scoured for a
+clue to the whereabouts of Hassan and Company and drawn absolutely blank! Then
+there’s Earl Dexter. Where does he come in? For once in a way he’s living in
+hiding. I can’t find his headquarters. I’ve been thinking&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He drew me aside into the small gallery which runs parallel with the Assyrian
+Room.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Dexter has booked two passages in the Oceanic. Who is his companion?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I wondered, I had wondered more than once, if his companion were my beautiful
+violet-eyed acquaintance. A scruple&mdash;perhaps an absurd
+scruple&mdash;hitherto had kept me silent respecting her, but now I determined
+to take Bristol fully into my confidence. A conviction was growing upon me that
+she and Earl Dexter together represented that third party whose existence we
+had long suspected. Whether they operated separately or on behalf of the
+Moslems (of which arrangement I could not conceive) remained to be seen. I was
+about to voice my doubts and suspicions when Bristol went on hurriedly&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I have thoroughly examined the Burton Room, and considering that the windows
+are thirty feet from the ground, that there is no sign of a ladder having stood
+upon the lawn, and that the iron bars are quite intact, it doesn’t look humanly
+possible for any one to have been in the room last night prior to Mostyn’s
+arrival!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“One of the dwarfs&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Not even one of the dwarfs,” said Bristol, “could have passed between those
+iron bars!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“But there was blood on the window!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I know there was, and human blood. It’s been examined!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He stared at me fixedly. The thing was unspeakably uncanny.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“To-night,” he went on, “I am remaining in here”&mdash;nodding toward the
+Assyrian Room&mdash;“and I have so arranged it that no mortal being can
+possibly know I am here. Mostyn is staying, and you can stay, too, if you care
+to. Owing to Professor Deeping’s will you are badly involved in the beastly
+business, and I have no doubt you are keen to see it through.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I am,” I admitted, “and the end I look for and hope for is the recovery of the
+slipper by its murderous owners!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I am with you,” said Bristol. “It’s just a point of honour; but I should be
+glad to make them a present of it. We’re ostentatiously placing a constable on
+duty in the hallway to-night&mdash;largely as a blind. It will appear that
+we’re taking no other additional precautions.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He hurried off to make arrangements for my joining him in his watch, and thus
+again I lost my opportunity of confiding in him regarding the mysterious girl.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I half anticipated, though I cannot imagine why, that Earl Dexter would put in
+an appearance, during the day. He did not do so, however, for Bristol had put a
+constable on the door who was well acquainted with the appearance of The
+Stetson Man. The inspector, in the course of his investigations, had come upon
+what might have been a clue, but what was at best a confusing one. Close by the
+wall of the curator’s house and lying on the gravel path he had found a part of
+a gold cuff link. It was of American manufacture.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Upon such slender evidence we could not justly assume that it pointed to the
+presence of Dexter on the night of the attempted robbery, but it served to
+complicate a matter already sufficiently involved.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In pursuance of Bristol’s plan, I concealed myself that evening just before the
+closing of the Museum doors, in a recess behind a heavy piece of Babylonian
+sculpture. Bristol was similarly concealed in another part of the room, and
+Mostyn joined us later.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Museum was closed; and so far as evidence went the authorities had relied
+again upon the bolts and bars hitherto considered impregnable, and upon the
+constable in the hall. The broken window was mended, the cut blind replaced,
+and within, in its shattered case, reposed the slipper of the Prophet.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All the blinds being lowered, the Assyrian Room was a place of gloom, yellowed
+on the western side by the moonlight through the blind. The door communicating
+with the Burton Room was closed but not fastened.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“They operated last night,” Bristol whispered to me, “at the exact time when
+the moonlight shone through the hole in the westerly blind on to the case. If
+they come to-night, and I am quite expecting them, they will have to dispense
+with that assistance; but they know by experience where to reach the case.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Despite our precautions,” I said, “they will almost certainly know that a
+watch is being kept.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“They may or they may not,” replied Bristol. “Either way I’m disposed to think
+there will be another attempt. Their mysterious method is so rapid that they
+can afford to take chances.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This was not my first night vigil since I had become in a sense the custodian
+of the relic, but it was quite the most dreary. Amid the tomb-like objects
+about us we seemed two puny mortals toying with stupendous things. We could not
+smoke and must converse only in whispers; and so the night wore on until I
+began to think that our watch would be dully uneventful.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Our big chance,” whispered Mostyn, “is in the fact that any day may change the
+conditions. They can’t afford to wait.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He ceased abruptly, grasping my arm. From somewhere, somewhere outside the
+building, we all three had heard a soft whistle. A moment of tense listening
+followed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“If only we could have had the place surrounded,” whispered Bristol&mdash;“but
+it was impossible, of course.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A faint grating noise echoed through the lofty Burton Room. Bristol slipped
+past me in the semi-gloom, and gently opened the communicating door a few
+inches.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A-tiptoe, I joined him, and craning across his shoulder saw a strange and
+wonderful thing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The newly glazed east window again was shattered with a booming crash! The
+yellow blind was thrust aside. A long something reached out toward the broken
+case. There was a sort of fumbling sound, and paralyzed with the wonder of
+it&mdash;for the window, remember, was thirty feet from the ground&mdash;I
+stood frozen to my post.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Not so Bristol. As the weird tentacle (or more exactly it reminded me of a
+gigantic crab’s claw) touched the case, the Inspector leapt forward. A white
+beam from his electric torch cut through to the broken cabinet.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The thing was withdrawn ... and with it went the slipper of the Prophet.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Raise the blinds!” cried Bristol. “Mr. Cavanagh! Mr. Mostyn! We must not let
+them give us the slip!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I got up the blind of the nearer window as Bristol raised the other. Not a
+living thing was in sight from either!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mostyn was beside me, his hand resting on my shoulder. I noted how he trembled.
+Bristol turned and looked back at us. The light from his pocket torch flashed
+upon the curator’s face; and I have never seen such an expression of horrified
+amazement as that which it wore. Faintly, I could hear the constable racing up
+the steps from the hall.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ideas of the supernatural came to us all, I know; when, with a scuffling sound
+not unlike that of a rat in a ceiling, something moved above us!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Damn my thick head!” roared Bristol, furiously. “He’s on the roof! It’s flat
+as a floor and there’s enough ivy alongside the water-spout on your house
+adjoining, Mr. Mostyn, to afford foothold to an invading army!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He plunged off toward the open door, and I heard him racing down the Assyrian
+Room.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“He had a short rope ladder fixed from the gutter!” he cried back at us.
+“Graham! Graham!” (the constable on duty in the hall)&mdash;“Get the front door
+open! Get...” His voice died away as he leapt down the stairs.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+From the direction of Orpington Square came a horrid, choking scream. It rose
+hideously; it fell, rose again&mdash;and died.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The thief escaped. We saw the traces upon the ivy where he had hastened down.
+Bristol ascended by the same route, and found where the ladder-hooks had twice
+been attached to the gutterway. Constable Graham, who was first actually to
+leave the building, declared that he heard the whirr of a re-started motor
+lower down Great Orchard Street.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bristol’s theory, later to be dreadfully substantiated, was that the thief had
+broken the glass and reached into the case with an arrangement similar to that
+employed for pruning trees, having a clutch at the end, worked with a cord.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Hassan has been too clever for us!” said the inspector. “But&mdash;what in
+God’s name did that awful screaming mean?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I had a theory, but I did not advance it then.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was not until nearly dawn that my theory, and Bristol’s, regarding the
+clutch arrangement, both were confirmed. For close under the railings which
+abut on Orpington Square, in a pool of blood we found just such an instrument
+as Bristol had described.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And still clutching it was a pallid and ghastly shrunken hand that had been
+severed from above the wrist!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Merciful God!” whispered the inspector&mdash;“look at the opal ring on the
+finger! Look at the bandage where he cut himself on the broken window-glass
+that first night, when Mr. Mostyn disturbed him. It wasn’t the Hashishin who
+stole the thing.... It’s Earl Dexter’s hand!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+No one spoke for a moment. Then&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Which of them has&mdash;” began Mostyn huskily.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The slipper of the Prophet?” interrupted Bristol. “I wonder if we shall ever
+know?”
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap15"></a>
+CHAPTER XV<br/>
+A SHRIVELLED HAND</h2>
+
+<p>
+Around a large square table in a room at New Scotland Yard stood a group of
+men, all of whom looked more or less continuously at something that lay upon
+the polished deal. One of the party, none other than the Commissioner himself,
+had just finished speaking, and in silence now we stood about the gruesome
+object which had furnished him with the text of his very terse address.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I knew myself privileged in being admitted to such a conference at the C.I.D.
+headquarters and owed my admission partly to Inspector Bristol, and partly to
+the fact that under the will of the late Professor Deeping I was concerned in
+the uncanny business we were met to discuss.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Novelty has a charm for every one; and to find oneself immersed in a maelstrom
+of Eastern devilry, with a group of scientific murderers in pursuit of a holy
+Moslem relic, and unexpectedly to be made a trustee of that dangerous
+curiosity, makes a certain appeal to the adventurous. But to read of such
+things and to participate in them are widely different matters. The slipper of
+the Prophet and the dreadful crimes connected with it, the mutilations,
+murders, the uncanny mysteries which made up its history, were filling my world
+with horror.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now, in silence we stood around that table at New Scotland Yard and watched, as
+though we expected it to move, the ghastly “clue” which lay there. It was a
+shrivelled human hand, and about the thumb and forefinger there still dryly
+hung a fragment of lint which had bandaged a jagged wound. On one of the
+shrunken fingers was a ring set with a large opal.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Inspector Bristol broke the oppressive silence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You see, sir,” he said, addressing the Commissioner, “this marks a new
+complication in the case. Up to this week although, unfortunately, we had made
+next to no progress, the thing was straightforward enough. A band of Eastern
+murderers, working along lines quite novel to Europe, were concealed somewhere
+in London. We knew that much. They murdered Professor Deeping, but failed to
+recover the slipper. They mutilated everyone who touched it mysteriously. The
+best men in the department, working night and day, failed to effect a single
+arrest. In spite of the mysterious activity of Hassan of Aleppo the slipper was
+safely lodged in the British Antiquarian Museum.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Commissioner nodded thoughtfully.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“There is no doubt,” continued Bristol, “that the Hashishin were watching the
+Museum. Mr. Cavanagh, here”&mdash;he nodded in my direction&mdash;“saw Hassan
+himself lurking in the neighbourhood. We took every precaution, observed the
+greatest secrecy; but in spite of it all a constable who touched the accursed
+thing lost his right hand. Then the slipper was taken.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He stopped, and all eyes again were turned to the table.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The Yard,” resumed Bristol slowly, “had information that Earl Dexter, the
+cleverest crook in America, was in England. He was seen in the Museum, and the
+night following the slipper was stolen. Then outside the place I
+found&mdash;that!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He pointed to the severed hand. No one spoke for a moment. Then&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The new problem,” said the Commissioner, “is this: who took the slipper,
+Dexter or Hassan of Aleppo?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That’s it, sir,” agreed Bristol. “Dexter had two passages booked in the
+Oceanic: but he didn’t sail with her, and&mdash;that’s his hand!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You say he has not been traced?” asked the Commissioner.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“No doctor known to the Medical Association,” replied Bristol, “is attending
+him! He’s not in any of the hospitals. He has completely vanished. The
+conclusion is obvious!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The evident deduction,” I said, “is that Dexter stole the slipper from the
+Museum&mdash;God knows with what purpose&mdash;and that Hassan of Aleppo
+recovered it from him.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You think we shall next hear of Earl Dexter from the river police?” suggested
+Bristol.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Personally,” replied the Commissioner, “I agree with Mr. Cavanagh. I think
+Dexter is dead, and it is very probable that Hassan and Company are already
+homeward bound with the slipper of the Prophet.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With all my heart I hoped that he might be right, but an intuition was with me
+crying that he was wrong, that many bloody deeds would be, ere the sacred
+slipper should return to the East.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap16"></a>
+CHAPTER XVI<br/>
+THE DWARF</h2>
+
+<p>
+The manner in which we next heard of the whereabouts of the Prophet’s slipper
+was utterly unforeseen, wildly dramatic. That the Hashishin were aware that I,
+though its legal trustee, no longer had charge of the relic nor knowledge of
+its resting-place, was sufficiently evident from the immunity which I enjoyed
+at this time from that ceaseless haunting by members of the uncanny
+organization ruled by Hassan. I had begun to feel more secure in my chambers,
+and no longer worked with a loaded revolver upon the table beside me. But the
+slightest unusual noise in the night still sufficed to arouse me and set me
+listening intently, to chill me with dread of what it might portend. In short,
+my nerves were by no means recovered from the ceaseless strain of the events
+connected with and arising out of the death of my poor friend, Professor
+Deeping.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One evening as I sat at work in my chambers, with the throb of busy Fleet
+Street and its thousand familiar sounds floating in to me through the open
+windows, my phone bell rang.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Even as I turned to take up the receiver a foreboding possessed me that my
+trusteeship was no longer to be a sinecure. It was Bristol who had rung me up,
+and upon very strange business.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“A development at last!” he said; “but at present I don’t know what to make of
+it. Can you come down now?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Where are you speaking from?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“From the Waterloo Road&mdash;a delightful neighbourhood. I shall be glad if
+you can meet me at the entrance to Wyatt’s Buildings in half an hour.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What is it? Have you found Dexter?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“No, unfortunately. But it’s murder!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I knew as I hung up the receiver that my brief period of peace was ended; that
+the lists of assassination were reopened. I hurried out through the court into
+Fleet Street, thinking of the key of the now empty case at the Museum which
+reposed at my bankers, thinking of the devils who pursued the slipper, thinking
+of the hundred and one things, strange and terrible, which went to make up the
+history of that gruesome relic.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Wyatt’s Buildings, Waterloo Road, are a gloomy and forbidding block of
+dwellings which seem to frown sullenly upon the high road, from which they are
+divided by a dark and dirty courtyard. Passing an iron gateway, you enter, by
+way of an arch, into this sinister place of uncleanness. Male residents in
+their shirt sleeves lounge against the several entrances. Bedraggled women
+nurse dirty infants and sit in groups upon the stone steps, rendering them
+almost impassable. But to-night a thing had happened in Wyatt’s Buildings which
+had awakened in the inhabitants, hardened to sordid crime, a sort of torpid
+interest.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Faces peered from most of the windows which commanded a view of the courtyard,
+looking like pallid blotches against the darkness; but a number of police
+confined the loungers within their several doorways, so that the yard itself
+was comparatively clear.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I had had some difficulty in forcing a way through the crowd which thronged the
+entrance, but finally I found myself standing beside Inspector Bristol and
+looking down upon that which had brought us both to Wyatt’s Buildings.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was no moon that night, and only the light of the lamp in the archway,
+with some faint glimmers from the stairways surrounding the court, reached the
+dirty paving. Bristol directed the light of a pocket-lamp upon the hunched-up
+figure which lay in the dust, and I saw it to be that of a dwarfish creature,
+yellow skinned and wearing only a dark loin cloth. He had a malformed and
+disproportionate head, a head that had been too large even for a big man. I
+knew after first glance that this was one of the horrible dwarfs employed by
+the Hashishin in their murderous business. It might even be the one who had
+killed Deeping; but this was impossible to determine by reason of the fact that
+the hideous, swollen head, together with the features, was completely crushed.
+I shall not describe the creature’s appearance in further detail.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Having given me an opportunity to examine the dead dwarf, Bristol returned the
+electric lamp to his pocket and stood looking at me in the semi-gloom. A
+constable stood on duty quite near to us, and others guarded the archway and
+the doors to the dwellings. The murmur of subdued voices echoed hollowly in the
+wells of the staircases, and a constant excited murmur proceeded from the crowd
+at the entrance. No pressmen had yet been admitted, though numbers of them were
+at the gates.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It happened less than an hour ago,” said Bristol. “The place was much as you
+see it now, and from what I can gather there came the sound of a shot and
+several people saw the dwarf fall through the air and drop where he lies!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The light was insufficient to show the expression upon the speaker’s face, but
+his voice told of a great wonder.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It is a bit like an Indian conjuring trick,” I said, looking up to the sky
+above us; “who fired the shot?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“So far,” replied Bristol, “I have failed to find out; but there’s a bullet in
+the thing’s head. He was dead before he reached the pavement.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Did no one see the flash of the pistol?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“No one that I have got hold of yet. Of course this kind of evidence is very
+unreliable; these people regularly go out of their way to mislead the police.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You think the body may have been carried here from somewhere else?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Oh, no; this is where it fell, right enough. You can see where his head struck
+the stones.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“He has not been moved at all?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“No; I shall not move him until I’ve worked out where in heaven’s name he can
+have fallen from! You and I have seen some mysterious things happen, Mr.
+Cavanagh, since the slipper of the Prophet came to England and brought these
+people”&mdash;he nodded toward the thing at our feet&mdash;“in its train; but
+this is the most inexplicable incident to date. I don’t know what to make of it
+at all. Quite apart from the question of where the dwarf fell from, who shot at
+him and why?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Have you no theory?” I asked. “The incident to my mind points directly to one
+thing. We know that this uncanny creature belonged to the organization of
+Hassan of Aleppo. We know that Hassan implacably pursues one object&mdash;the
+slipper. In pursuit of the slipper, then, the dwarf came here.
+Bristol!”&mdash;I laid my hand upon his arm, glancing about me with a very real
+apprehension&mdash;“the slipper must be somewhere near!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bristol turned to the constable standing hard by.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Remain here,” he ordered. Then to me: “I should like you to come up on to the
+roof. From there we can survey the ground and perhaps arrive at some
+explanation of how the dwarf came to fall upon that spot.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Passing the constable on duty at one of the doorways and making our way through
+the group of loiterers there, we ascended amid conflicting odours to the
+topmost floor. A ladder was fixed against the wall communicating with a trap in
+the ceiling. Several individuals in their shirt sleeves and all smoking clay
+pipes had followed us up. Bristol turned upon them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Get downstairs,” he said&mdash;“all the lot of you, and stop there!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With muttered imprecations our audience dispersed, slowly returning by the way
+they had come. Bristol mounted the ladder and opened the trap. Through the
+square opening showed a velvet patch spangled with starry points. As he passed
+up on to the roof and I followed him, the comparative cleanness of the air was
+most refreshing after the varied fumes of the staircase.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Side by side we leaned upon the parapet looking down into the dirty courtyard
+which was the theatre of this weird mystery; looking down upon the stage,
+sordidly Western, where a mystic Eastern tragedy had been enacted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I could see the constable standing beside the crushed thing upon the stones.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Now,” said Bristol, with a sort of awe in his voice, “where did he fall from?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And at his words, looking down at the spot where the dwarf lay, and noting that
+he could not possibly have fallen there from any of the buildings surrounding
+the courtyard, an eerie sensation crept over me; for I was convinced that the
+happening was susceptible of no natural explanation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I had heard&mdash;who has not heard?&mdash;of the Indian rope trick, where a
+fakir throws a rope into the air which remains magically suspended whilst a boy
+climbs upward and upward until he disappears into space. I had never credited
+accounts of the performance; but now I began seriously to wonder if the arts of
+Hassan of Aleppo were not as great or greater than the arts of fakir. But the
+crowning mystery to my mind was that of the Hashishin’s death. It would seem
+that as he had hung suspended in space he had been shot!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You say that someone heard the sound of the shot?” I asked suddenly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Several people,” replied Bristol; “but no one knows, or no one will say, from
+what direction it came. I shall go on with the inquiry, of course, and
+cross-examine every soul in Wyatt’s Buildings. Meanwhile, I’m open to confess
+that I am beaten.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the velvet sky countless points blazed tropically. The hum of the traffic in
+Waterloo Road reached us only in a muffled way. Sordidness lay beneath us, but
+up there under the heavens we seemed removed from it as any Babylonian
+astronomer communing with the stars.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When, some ten minutes later, I passed out into the noise of Waterloo Road, I
+left behind me an unsolved mystery and took with me a great dread; for I knew
+that the quest of the sacred slipper was not ended, I knew that another tragedy
+was added to its history&mdash;and I feared to surmise what the future might
+hold for all of us.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap17"></a>
+CHAPTER XVII<br/>
+THE WOMAN WITH THE BASKET</h2>
+
+<p>
+Deep in thought respecting the inexplicable nature of this latest mystery, I
+turned in the direction of the bridge, and leaving behind me an ever-swelling
+throng at the gate of Wyatt’s Buildings, proceeded westward.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The death of the dwarf had lifted the case into the realms of the marvellous,
+and I noted nothing of the bustle about me, for mentally I was still surveying
+that hunched-up body which had fallen out of empty space.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then in upon my preoccupation burst a woman’s scream!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I aroused myself from reverie, looking about to right and left. Evidently I had
+been walking slowly, for I was less than a hundred yards from Wyatt’s
+Buildings, and hard by the entrance to an uninviting alley from which I thought
+the scream had proceeded.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And as I hesitated, for I had no desire to become involved in a drunken brawl,
+again came the shrill scream: “Help! help!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I cannot say if I was the only passer-by who heard the cry; certainly I was the
+only one who responded to it. I ran down the narrow street, which was
+practically deserted, and heard windows thrown up as I passed for the cries for
+help continued.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Just beyond a patch of light cast by a street lamp a scene was being enacted
+strange enough at any time and in any place, but doubly singular at that hour
+of the night, or early morning, in a lane off the Waterloo Road.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+An old woman, from whose hand a basket of provisions had fallen, was struggling
+in the grasp of a tall Oriental! He was evidently trying to stifle her screams
+and at the same time to pinion her arms behind her!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I perceived that there was more in this scene than met the eye. Oriental
+footpads are rarities in the purlieus of Waterloo Road. So much was evident;
+and since I carried a short, sharp argument in my pocket, I hastened to advance
+it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At the sight of the gleaming revolver barrel the man, who was dressed in dark
+clothes and wore a turban, turned and ran swiftly off. I had scarce a glimpse
+of his pallid brown face ere he was gone, nor did the thought of pursuit enter
+my mind. I turned to the old woman, who was dressed in shabby black and who was
+rearranging her thick veil in an oddly composed manner, considering the nature
+of the adventure that had befallen her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She picked up her basket, and turned away. Needless to say I was rather shocked
+at her callous ingratitude, for she offered no word of thanks, did not even
+glance in my direction, but made off hurriedly toward Waterloo Road.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I had been on the point of inquiring if she had sustained any injury, but I
+checked the words and stood looking after her in blank wonderment. Then my
+ideas were diverted into a new channel. I perceived, as she passed under an
+adjacent lamp, that her basket contained provisions such as a woman of her
+appearance would scarcely be expected to purchase. I noted a bottle of wine, a
+chicken, and a large melon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The nationality of the assailant from the first had marked the affair for no
+ordinary one, and now a hazy notion of what lay behind all this began to come
+to me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Keeping well in the shadows on the opposite side of the way, I followed the
+woman with the basket. The lane was quite deserted; for, the disturbance over,
+those few residents who had raised their windows had promptly lowered them
+again. She came out into Waterloo Road, crossed over, and stood waiting by a
+stopping-place for electric cars. I saw her arranging a cloth over her basket
+in such a way as effectually to conceal the contents. A strong mental
+excitement possessed me. The detective fever claims us all at one time or
+another, I think, and I had good reason for pursuing any inquiry that promised
+to lead to the elucidation of the slipper mystery. A theory, covering all the
+facts of the assault incident, now presented itself, and I stood back in the
+shadow, watchful; in a degree, exultant.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A Greenwich-bound car was hailed by the woman with the basket. I could not be
+mistaken, I felt sure, in my belief that she cast furtive glances about her as
+she mounted the steps. But, having seen her actually aboard, my attention
+became elsewhere engaged.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All now depended upon securing a cab before the tram car had passed from view!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I counted it an act of Providence that a disengaged taxi appeared at that
+moment, evidently bound for Waterloo Station. I ran out into the road with cane
+upraised.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As the man drew up&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Quick!” I cried. “You see that Greenwich car&mdash;nearly at the Ophthalmic
+Hospital? Follow it. Don’t get too near. I will give you further instructions
+through the tube.” I leapt in. We were off!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The rocking car ahead was rounding the bend now toward St. George’s Circus. As
+it passed the clock and entered South London Road it stopped. I raised the
+tube.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Pass it slowly!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We skirted the clock tower, and bore around to the right. Then I drew well back
+in the corner of the cab.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The woman with the basket was descending! “Pull up a few yards beyond!” I
+directed. As the car re-started, and passed us, the taxi became stationary. I
+peered out of the little window at the back.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The woman was returning in the direction of Waterloo Road!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Drive slowly back along Waterloo Road,” was my next order. “Pretend you are
+looking for a fare; I will keep out of sight.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The man nodded. It was unlikely that any one would notice the fact that the cab
+was engaged.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I was borne back again upon my course. The woman kept to the right, and, once
+we were entered into the straight road which leads to the bridge, I again
+raised the speaking-tube.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Pull up,” I said. “On the right-hand side is an old woman carrying a basket,
+fifty yards ahead. Do you see her? Keep well behind, but don’t lose sight of
+her.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The man drew up again and sat watching the figure with the basket until it was
+almost lost from sight. Then slowly we resumed our way. I would have continued
+the pursuit afoot now, but I feared that my quarry might again enter a vehicle.
+She did not do so, however, but coming abreast of the turning in which the
+mysterious assault had taken place, she crossed the road and disappeared from
+view.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I leapt out of the cab, thrust half a crown into the man’s hand, and ran on to
+the corner. The night was now far advanced, and I knew that the chances of
+detection were thereby increased. But the woman seemed to have abandoned her
+fears, and I saw her just ahead of me walking resolutely past the lamp beyond
+which a short time earlier she had met with a dangerous adventure.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Since the opposite side of the street was comparatively in darkness, I slipped
+across, and in a state of high nervous tension pursued this strange work of
+espionage. I was convinced that I had forestalled Bristol and that I was hot
+upon the track of those who could explain the mystery of the dead dwarf.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The woman entered the gate of the block of dwellings even more forbidding in
+appearance than those which that night had staged a dreadful drama.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As the figure with the basket was lost from view I crept on, and in turn
+entered the evil-smelling hallway. I stepped cautiously, and standing beneath a
+gaslight protected by a wire frame, I congratulated myself upon having reached
+that point of vantage as silently as any Sioux stalker.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Footsteps were receding up the stone stairs. Craning my neck, I peered up the
+well of the staircase. I could not see the woman, but from the sound of her
+tread it was possible to count the landings which she passed. When she had
+reached the fourth, and I heard her step upon yet another flight, I knew that
+she must be bound for the topmost floor; and observing every precaution, almost
+holding my breath in a nervous endeavour to make not the slightest sound,
+rapidly I mounted the stairs.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I was come to the third landing in this secret fashion when quite distinctly I
+heard the grating of a key in a lock!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Since four doors opened upon each of the landings, at all costs, I thought, I
+must learn by which door she entered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Throwing caution to the winds I raced up the remaining flights ... and there at
+the top the woman confronted me, with blazing eyes!&mdash;with eyes that
+thrilled every nerve; for they were violet eyes, the only truly violet eyes I
+have ever seen! They were the eyes of the woman who like a charming, mocking
+will-o’-the-wisp had danced through this tragic scene from the time that poor
+Professor Deeping had brought the Prophet’s slipper to London up to this
+present hour!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There at the head of those stone steps in that common dwelling-house I knew
+her&mdash;and in the violet eyes it was written that she knew, and feared, me!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What do you want? Why are you following me?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She made no endeavour to disguise her voice. Almost, I think, she spoke the
+words involuntarily.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I stood beside her. Quickly as she had turned from the door at my ascent, I had
+noted that it was that numbered forty-eight which she had been about to open.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You waste words,” I said grimly. “Who lives there?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I nodded in the direction of the doorway. The violet eyes watched me with an
+expression in their depths which I find myself wholly unable to describe. Fear
+predominated, but there was anger, too, and with it a sort of entreaty which
+almost made me regret that I had taken this task upon myself. From beneath the
+shabby black hat escaped an errant lock of wavy hair wholly inconsistent with
+the assumed appearance of the woman. The flickering gaslight on the landing
+sought out in that wonderful hair shades which seemed to glow with the soft
+light seen in the heart of a rose. The thick veil was raised now and all
+attempts at deception abandoned. At bay she faced me, this secret woman whom I
+knew to hold the key to some of the darkest places which we sought to explore.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I live there,” she said slowly. “What do you want with me?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I want to know,” I replied, “for whom are those provisions in your basket?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She watched me fixedly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“And I want to know,” I continued, “something that only you can tell me. We
+have met before, madam, but you have always eluded me. This time you shall not
+do so. There’s much I have to ask of you, but particularly I want to know who
+killed the Hashishin who lies dead at no great distance from here!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“How can I tell you that? Of what are you speaking?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Her voice was low and musical; that of a cultured woman. She evidently
+recognized the futility of further subterfuge in this respect.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You know quite well of what I am speaking! You know that you can tell me if
+any one can! The fact that you go disguised alone condemns you! Why should I
+remind you of our previous meetings&mdash;of the links which bind you to the
+history of the Prophet’s slipper?” She shuddered and closed her eyes. “Your
+present attitude is a sufficient admission!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She stood silent before me, with something pitiful in her pose&mdash;a
+wonderfully pretty woman, whose disarranged hair and dilapidated hat could not
+mar her beauty; whose clumsy, ill-fitting garments could not conceal her lithe
+grace.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Our altercation had not thus far served to arouse any of the inhabitants and on
+that stuffy landing, beneath the flickering gaslight, we stood alone, a group
+of two which epitomized strange things.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then, with that quietly dramatic note which marks real life entrances and
+differentiates them from the loudly acclaimed episodes of the stage, a third
+actor took up his cue.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Both hands, Mr. Cavanagh!” directed an American voice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nerves atwitch, I started around in its direction.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+From behind the slightly opened door of No. 48 protruded a steel barrel,
+pointed accurately at my head!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I hesitated, glancing from the woman toward the open door.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Do it quick!” continued the voice incisively. “You are up against a desperate
+man, Mr. Cavanagh. Raise your hands. Carneta, relieve Mr. Cavanagh of his gun!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Instantly the girl, with deft fingers, had obtained possession of my revolver.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Step inside,” said the crisp, strident voice. Knowing myself helpless and
+quite convinced that I was indeed in the clutches of desperate people, I
+entered the doorway, the door being held open from within. She whom I had heard
+called Carneta followed. The door was reclosed; and I found myself in a
+perfectly bare and dim passageway. From behind me came the order&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Go right ahead!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Into a practically unfurnished room, lighted by one gas jet, I walked. Some
+coarse matting hung before the two windows and a fairly large grip stood on the
+floor against one wall. A gas-ring was in the hearth, together with a few cheap
+cooking utensils.
+</p>
+
+<br/>
+<p>
+I turned and faced the door. First entered Carneta, carrying the basket; then
+came a man with a revolver in his left hand and his right arm strapped across
+his chest and swathed in bandages. One glance revealed the fact that his right
+hand had been severed&mdash;revealed the fact, though I knew it already, that
+my captor was Earl Dexter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He looked even leaner than when I had last seen him. I had no doubt that his
+ghastly wound had occasioned a tremendous loss of blood. His gaunt face was
+positively emaciated, but the steely gray eyes had lost nothing of their
+brightness. There was a good deal about Mr. Earl Dexter, the cracksman, that
+any man must have admired.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Shut the door, Carneta,” he said quietly. His companion closed the door and
+Dexter sat down on the grip, regarding me with his oddly humorous smile.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You’re a visitor I did not expect, Mr. Cavanagh,” he said. “I expected someone
+worse. You’ve interfered a bit with my plans but I don’t know that I can’t
+rearrange things satisfactorily. I don’t think I’ll stop for supper,
+though&mdash;” He glanced at the girl, who stood silent by the door.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Just pack up the provisions,” he directed, nodding toward the basket&mdash;“in
+the next room.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She departed without a word.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That’s a noticeable dust coat you’re wearing, Mr. Cavanagh,” said the
+American; “it gives me a great notion. I’m afraid I’ll have to borrow it.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He glanced, smiling, at the revolver in his left hand and back again to me.
+There was nothing of the bully about him, nothing melodramatic; but I took off
+the coat without demur and threw it across to him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It will hide this stump,” he said grimly; “and any of the Hashishin gentlemen
+who may be on the look-out&mdash;though I rather fancy the road is clear at the
+moment&mdash;will mistake me for you. See the idea? Carneta will be in a cab
+and I’ll be in after her and away before they’ve got time to so much as
+whistle.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Very awkwardly he got into the coat.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“She’s a clever girl, Carneta,” he said. “She’s doctored me all along since
+those devils cut my hand off.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As he finished speaking Carneta returned.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She had discarded her rags and wore a large travelling coat and a fashionable
+hat.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Ready?” asked Dexter. “We’ll make a rush for it. We meant to go to-night
+anyway. It’s getting too hot here!” He turned to me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Sorry to say,” he drawled, “I’ll have to tie you up and gag you. Apologize;
+but it can’t be helped.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Carneta nodded and went out of the room again, to return almost immediately
+with a line that looked as though it might have been employed for drying
+washing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Hands behind you,” rapped Dexter, toying with the revolver&mdash;“and think
+yourself lucky you’ve got two!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was no mistaking the manner of man with whom I had to deal, and I obeyed;
+but my mind was busy with a hundred projects. Very neatly the girl bound my
+wrists, and in response to a slight nod from Dexter threw the end of the line
+up over a beam in the sloping ceiling, for the room was right under the roof,
+and drew it up in such a way that, my wrists being raised behind me, I became
+utterly helpless. It was an ingenious device indicating considerable
+experience.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Just tie his handkerchief around his mouth,” directed Dexter: “that will keep
+him quiet long enough for our purpose. I hope you will be released soon, Mr.
+Cavanagh,” he added. “Greatly regret the necessity.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Carneta bound the handkerchief over my mouth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Dexter extinguished the gas.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Mr. Cavanagh,” he said, “I’ve gone through hell and I’ve lost the most useful
+four fingers and a thumb in the United States to get hold of the Prophet’s
+slipper. Any one can have it that’s open to pay for it&mdash;but I’ve got to
+retire on the deal, so I’ll drive a hard bargain! Good-night!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was a sound of retreating footsteps, and I heard the entrance door close
+quietly.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap18"></a>
+CHAPTER XVIII<br/>
+WHAT CAME THROUGH THE WINDOW</h2>
+
+<p>
+I had not been in my unnatural position for many minutes before I began to
+suffer agonies, agonies not only physical but mental; for standing there like
+some prisoner of the Inquisition, it came to me how this dismantled apartment
+must be the focus of the dreadful forces of Hassan of Aleppo!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That Earl Dexter had the slipper of the Prophet I no longer doubted, and that
+he had sustained, in this dwelling beneath the roof, an uncanny siege during
+the days which had passed since the theft from the Antiquarian Museum, was
+equally certain. Helpless, gagged, I pictured those hideous creatures, evil
+products of the secret East, who might, nay, who must surround that place! I
+thought of the horrible little yellow man who lay dead in Wyatt’s Buildings;
+and it became evident to me that the house in which I was now imprisoned must
+overlook the back of those unsavoury tenements. The windows, sack-covered now,
+no doubt commanded a view of the roofs of the buildings. One of the mysteries
+that had puzzled us was solved. It was Earl Dexter who had shot the yellow
+dwarf as he was bound for this very room! But how humanly the Hashishin had
+proposed to gain his goal, how he had travelled through empty space&mdash;for
+from empty space the shot had brought him down&mdash;I could not imagine.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I knew something of the almost supernatural attributes of these people. From
+Professor Deeping’s book I knew of the incredible feats which they could
+perform when under the influence of the drug hashish. From personal experience
+also I knew that they had powers wholly abnormal.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The pain in my arms and back momentarily increased. An awesome silence ruled. I
+tortured myself with pictures of murderous yellow men possessed of the power
+claimed by the Mahatmas, of levitation. Mentally I could see a distorted
+half-animal creature carrying a great gleaming knife and floating
+supernaturally toward me through the night!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A soft pattering sound became perceptible on the sloping roof above!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I think I have never known such intense and numbing fear as that which now
+descended upon me. Perhaps I may be forgiven it. A more dreadful situation it
+would be hard to devise. Knowing that I was on the fifth story of a house,
+bound, helpless, I knew, too, that a second mystic guardian of the slipper was
+come to accomplish the task in which the first had failed!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I began to pray fervently.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Neither of the windows were closed; and now through the intense darkness I
+heard one of them being raised up&mdash;up&mdash;up...
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The sacking was pulled aside inch by inch.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Silhouetted against the faintly luminous background I saw a hunched, unnatural
+figure. The real was more dreadful even than the imaginary&mdash;for some stray
+beam of light touched into cold radiance a huge curved knife which the visitant
+held between his teeth!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My fear became a madness, and I twisted my body violently in a wild endeavour
+to free myself. A dreadful pain shot through my left shoulder, and the whole
+nightmare scene&mdash;the thing with the knife at the window&mdash;the
+low-ceiled room-began to fade away from me. I seemed to be falling into deep
+water.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A splintering crash and the sound of shouting formed my last recollections ere
+unconsciousness came.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I found myself lying in an armchair with Bristol forcing brandy between my
+lips. My left arm hung limply at my side and the pain in my dislocated shoulder
+was excruciating.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Thank God you are all right, Mr. Cavanagh!” said the inspector. “I got the
+surprise of my life when we smashed the door in and found you tied up here!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You came none too soon,” I said feebly. “God knows how Providence directed you
+here.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Providence it was,” replied Bristol. “From the roof of Wyatt’s
+Buildings&mdash;you know the spot?&mdash;I saw the second yellow devil coming.
+By God! They meant to have it to-night! They don’t value their lives a brass
+farthing against that damned slipper!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“But how&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Along the telegraph-wires, Mr. Cavanagh! They cross Wyatt’s Buildings and
+cross this house. It was a moonless night or we should have seen it at once! I
+watched him, saw him drop to this roof&mdash;and brought the men around to the
+front.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Did he, that awful thing, escape?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“He dropped full forty feet into a tree&mdash;from the tree to the ground, and
+went off like a cat!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Earl Dexter has escaped us,” I said, “and he has the slipper!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“God help him!” replied Bristol. “For by now he has that hell-pack at his
+heels! What a case! Heavens above, it will drive me mad!”
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap19"></a>
+CHAPTER XIX<br/>
+A RAPPING AT MIDNIGHT</h2>
+
+<p>
+Inspector Bristol finished his whisky at a gulp and stood up, a tall, massive
+figure, stretching himself and yawning.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The detective of fiction would be hard at work on this case, now,” he said,
+smiling, “but I don’t even pretend to be. I am at a standstill and I don’t care
+who knows it.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You have absolutely no clue to the whereabouts of Earl Dexter?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Not the slightest, Mr. Cavanagh. You hear a lot about the machinery of the
+law, but as a matter of fact, looking for a clever man hidden in London is a
+good deal like looking for a needle in a haystack. Then, he may have been
+bluffing when he told you he had the Prophet’s slipper. He’s already had his
+hand cut off through interfering with the beastly thing, and I really can’t
+believe he would take further chances by keeping it in his possession.
+Nevertheless, I should like to find him.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He leaned back against the mantelpiece, scratching his head perplexedly. In
+this perplexity he had my sympathy. No such pursuit, I venture to say, had ever
+before been required of Scotland Yard as this of the slipper of the Prophet. An
+organization founded in 1090, which has made a science of assassination, which
+through the centuries has perfected the malign arts, which, lingering on in a
+dark spot in Syria, has suddenly migrated and established itself in London, is
+a proposition almost unthinkable.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was hard to believe that even the daring American cracksman should have
+ventured to touch that blood-stained relic of the Prophet, that he should have
+snatched it away from beneath the very eyes of the fanatics who fiercely
+guarded it. What he hoped to gain by his possession of the slipper was not
+evident, but the fact remained that if he could be believed, he had it, and
+provided Scotland Yard’s information was accurate, he still lurked in hiding
+somewhere in London.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meanwhile, no clue offered to his hiding-place, and despite the ceaseless
+vigilance of the men acting under Bristol’s orders, no trace could be found of
+Hassan of Aleppo nor of his fiendish associates.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“My theory is,” said Bristol, lighting a cigarette, “that even Dexter’s
+cleverness has failed to save him. He’s probably a dead man by now, which
+accounts for our failing to find him; and Hassan of Aleppo has recovered the
+slipper and returned to the East, taking his gruesome company with
+him&mdash;God knows how! But that accounts for our failing to find him.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I stood up rather wearily. Although poor Deeping had appointed me legal
+guardian of the relic, and although I could render but a poor account of my
+stewardship, let me confess that I was anxious to take that comforting theory
+to my bosom. I would have given much to have known beyond any possibility of
+doubt that the accursed slipper and its blood-lustful guardian were far away
+from England. Had I known so much, life would again have had something to offer
+me besides ceaseless fear, endless watchings. I could have slept again,
+perhaps; without awaking, clammy, peering into every shadow, listening, nerves
+atwitch to each slightest sound disturbing the night; without groping beneath
+the pillow for my revolver.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Then you think,” I said, “that the English phase of the slipper’s history is
+closed? You think that Dexter, minus his right hand, has eluded British
+law&mdash;that Hassan and Company have evaded retribution?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I do!” said Bristol grimly, “and although that means the biggest failure in my
+professional career, I am glad&mdash;damned glad!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Shortly afterward he took his departure; and I leaned from the window, watching
+him pass along the court below and out under the arch into Fleet Street. He was
+a man whose opinions I valued, and in all sincerity I prayed now that he might
+be right; that the surcease of horror which we had recently experienced after
+the ghastly tragedies which had clustered thick about the haunted slipper,
+might mean what he surmised it to mean.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The heat to-night was very oppressive. A sort of steaming mist seemed to rise
+from the court, and no cooling breeze entered my opened windows. The clamour of
+the traffic in Fleet Street came to me but remotely. Big Ben began to strike
+midnight. So far as I could see, residents on the other stairs were all abed
+and a velvet shadow carpet lay unbroken across three parts of the court. The
+sky was tropically perfect, cloudless, and jewelled lavishly. Indeed, we were
+in the midst of an Indian summer; it seemed that the uncanny visitants had
+brought, together with an atmosphere of black Eastern deviltry, something, too,
+of the Eastern climate.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The last stroke of the Cathedral bell died away. Other more distant bells still
+were sounding dimly, but save for the ceaseless hum of the traffic, no unusual
+sound now disturbed the archaic peace of the court.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I returned to my table, for during the time that had passed I had badly
+neglected my work and now must often labour far into the night. I was just
+reseated when there came a very soft rapping at the outer door!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+No doubt my mood was in part responsible, but I found myself thinking of Poe’s
+weird poem, “The Raven”; and like the character therein I found myself
+hesitating.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I stole quietly into the passage. It was in darkness. How odd it is that in
+moments of doubt instinctively one shuns the dark and seeks the light. I
+pressed the switch lighting the hall lamp, and stood looking at the closed
+door.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Why should this late visitor have rapped in so uncanny a fashion in preference
+to ringing the bell?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I stepped back to my table and slipped a revolver into my pocket.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The muffled rapping was repeated. As I stood in the study doorway I saw the
+flap of the letter-box slowly raised!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Instantly I extinguished both lights. You may brand me as childishly timid, but
+incidents were fresh in my memory which justified all my fears.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A faintly luminous slit in the door showed me that the flap was now fully
+raised. It was the dim light on the stairway shining through. Then quite
+silently the flap was lowered. Came the soft rapping again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Who’s there?” I cried.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+No one answered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Wondering if I were unduly alarming myself, yet, I confess, strung up tensely
+in anticipation that this was some device of the phantom enemy, I stood in
+doubt.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The silence remained unbroken for thirty seconds or more. Then yet again it was
+disturbed by that ghostly, muffled rapping.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I advanced a step nearer to the door.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Who’s there?” I cried loudly. “What do you want?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The flap of the letter box began to move, and I formed a sudden determination.
+Making no sound in my heelless Turkish slippers I crept close up to the door
+and dropped upon my knees.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thereupon the flap became fully lifted, but from where I crouched beneath it I
+was unable to see who or what was looking in; yet I hesitated no longer. I
+suddenly raised myself and thrust the revolver barrel through the opening!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Who are you?” I cried. “Answer or I fire!”&mdash;and along the barrel I peered
+out on to the landing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Still no one answered. But something impalpable&mdash;a powder&mdash;a
+vapour&mdash;to this hour I do not know what&mdash;enveloped me with its
+nauseating fumes; was puffed fully into my face! My eyes, my mouth, my nostrils
+became choked up, it seemed, with a deadly stifling perfume.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Wildly, feeling that everything about me was slipping away, that I was sinking
+into a void, for ought I knew that of dissolution, I pulled the trigger once,
+twice, thrice...
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“My God!”&mdash;the words choked in my throat and I reeled back into the
+passage&mdash;“it’s not loaded!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I threw up my arms to save myself, lurched, and fell forward into what seemed a
+bottomless pit.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap20"></a>
+CHAPTER XX<br/>
+THE GOLDEN PAVILION</h2>
+
+<p>
+When I opened my eyes it was to a conviction that I dreamed. I lay upon a
+cushioned divan in a small apartment which I find myself at a loss adequately
+to describe.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was a yellow room, then, its four walls being hung with yellow silk, its
+floor being entirely covered by a yellow Persian carpet. One lamp, burning in a
+frame of some lemon coloured wood and having its openings filled with green
+glass, flooded the place with a ghastly illumination. The lamp hung by gold
+chains from the ceiling, which was yellow. Several low tables of the same
+lemon-hued wood as the lamp-frame stood around; they were inlaid in fanciful
+designs with gleaming green stones. Turn my eyes where I would, clutch my
+aching head as I might, this dream chamber would not disperse, but remained
+palpable before me&mdash;yellow and green and gold.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was a niche behind the divan upon which I lay framed about with yellow
+wood. In it stood a golden bowl and a tall pot of yellow porcelain; I lay amid
+yellow cushions having golden tassels. Some of them were figured with vivid
+green devices.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To contemplate my surroundings assuredly must be to court madness. No door was
+visible, no window; nothing but silk and luxury, yellow and green and gold.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To crown all, the air was heavy with a perfume wholly unmistakable by one
+acquainted with Egypt’s ruling vice. It was the reek of smouldering
+hashish&mdash;a stench that seemed to take me by the throat, a vapour damnable
+and unclean. I saw that a little censer, golden in colour and inset with
+emeralds, stood upon the furthermost corner of the yellow carpet. From it rose
+a faint streak of vapour; and I followed the course of the sickly scented smoke
+upward through the still air until in oily spirals it lost itself near to the
+yellow ceiling. As a sick man will study the veriest trifle I studied that wisp
+of smoke, pencilled grayly against the silken draperies, the carven tables,
+against the almost terrifying persistency of the yellow and green and gold.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I strove to rise, but was overcome by vertigo and sank back again upon the
+yellow cushions. I closed my eyes, which throbbed and burned, and rested my
+head upon my hands. I ceased to conjecture if I dreamed or was awake. I knew
+that I felt weak and ill, that my head throbbed agonizingly, that my eyes
+smarted so as to render it almost impossible to keep them open, that a
+ceaseless humming was in my ears.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For some time I lay endeavouring to regain command of myself, to prepare to
+face again that scene which had something horrifying in its yellowness, touched
+with the green and gold.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And when finally I reopened my eyes, I sat up with a suppressed cry. For a tall
+figure in a yellow robe from beneath which peeped yellow slippers, a figure
+crowned with a green turban, stood in the centre of the apartment!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was that of a majestic old man, white bearded, with aquiline nose, and the
+fierce eagle eyes of a fanatic set upon me sternly, reprovingly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With folded arms he stood watching me, and I drew a sharp breath and rose
+slowly to my feet.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There amid the yellow and green and gold, amid the abominable reek of burning
+hashish I stood and faced Hassan of Aleppo!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+No words came to me; I was confounded.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hassan spoke in that gentle voice which I had heard only once before.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Mr. Cavanagh,” he said, “I have brought you here that I might warn you. Your
+police are seeking me night and day, and I am fully alive to my danger whilst I
+stay in your midst. But for close upon a thousand years the Sheikh-al-jebal,
+Lord of the Hashishin, has guarded the traditions and the relics of the
+Prophet, Salla-’llahu ’ale yhi wasellem! I, Hassan of Aleppo, am Sheikh of the
+Order to-day, and my sacred duty has brought me here.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The piercing gaze never left my face. I was not yet by any means my own man and
+still I made no reply.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You have been wise,” continued Hassan, “in that you have never touched the
+sacred slipper. Had you lain hands upon it, no secrecy could have availed you.
+The eye of the Hashishin sees all. There is a shaft of light which the true
+Believer perceives at night as he travels toward El-Medineh. It is the light
+which uprises, a spiritual fire, from the tomb of the Prophet (Salla-’llahu
+’aleyhi wasellem!). The relics also are radiant, though in a lesser degree.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He took a step toward me, spreading out his lean brown hands, palms downward.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“A shaft of light,” he said impressively, “shines upward now from London. It is
+the light of the holy slipper.” He gazed intently at the yellow drapery at the
+left of the divan, but as though he were looking not at the wall but through
+it. His features worked convulsively; he was a man inspired. “I see it now!” he
+almost whispered&mdash;“that white light by which the guardians of the relic
+may always know its resting place!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I managed to force words to my lips.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“If you know where the slipper is,” I said, more for the sake of talking than
+for anything else, “why do you not recover it?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hassan turned his eyes upon me again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Because the infidel dog,” he cried loudly, “who has soiled it with his unclean
+touch, defies us&mdash;mocks us! He has suffered the loss of the offending
+hand, but the evil ginn protect him; he is inspired by efreets! But God is
+great and Mohammed is His only Prophet! We shall triumph; but it is written,
+oh, daring infidel, that you again shall become the guardian of the slipper!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He spoke like some prophet of old and I stared at him fascinated. I was loth to
+believe his words.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“When again,” he continued, “the slipper shall be in the receptacle of which
+you hold the key, that key must be given to me!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I thought I saw the drift of his words now; I thought I perceived with what
+object I had been trapped and borne to this mysterious abode for whose
+whereabouts the police vainly were seeking. By the exercise of the gift of
+divination it would seem that Hassan of Aleppo had forecast the future history
+of the accursed slipper or believed that he had done so. According to his own
+words I was doomed once more to become trustee of the relic. The key of the
+case at the Antiquarian Museum, to which he had prophesied the slipper’s
+return, would be the price of my life! But&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“In order that these things may be fulfilled,” he continued, “I must permit you
+to return to your house. So it is written, so it shall be. Your life is in my
+hands; beware when it is demanded of you that you hesitate not in yielding up
+the key!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He raised his hands before him, making a sort of obeisance, I doubt not in the
+direction of Mecca, drew aside one of the yellow hangings behind him and
+disappeared, leaving me alone again in that nightmare apartment of yellow and
+green and gold. A moment I stood watching the swaying curtain. Utter silence
+reigned, and a sort of panic seized me infinitely greater than that occasioned
+by the presence of the weird Sheikh. I felt that I must escape from the place
+or that I should become raving mad.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I leapt forward to the curtain which Hassan had raised and jerked it aside; it
+had concealed a door. In this door and about level with my eyes was a kind of
+little barred window through which shone a dim green light. I bent forward,
+peering into the place beyond, but was unable to perceive anything save a vague
+greenness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And as I peered, half believing that the whole episode was a dreadful, fevered
+dream, the abominable fumes of hashish grew, or seemed to grow, quite suddenly
+insupportable. Through the square opening, from the green void beyond, a cloud
+of oily vapour, pungent, stifling, resembling that of burning Indian hemp,
+poured out and enveloped me!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With a gasping cry I fell back, fighting for breath, for a breath of clean air
+unpolluted with hashish. But every inhalation drew down into my lungs the fumes
+that I sought to escape from. I experienced a deathly sickness; I seemed to be
+sinking into a sea of hashish, amid bubbles of yellow and green and gold, and I
+knew no more until, struggling again to my feet, surrounded by utter
+darkness&mdash;I struck my head on the corner of my writing-table ... for I lay
+in my own study!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My revolver, unloaded, was upon the table beside me. The night was very still.
+I think it must have been near to dawn.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“My God!” I whispered, “did I dream it all? Did I dream it all?”
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap21"></a>
+CHAPTER XXI<br/>
+THE BLACK TUBE</h2>
+
+<p>
+“There’s no doubt in my mind,” said Inspector Bristol, “that your experience
+was real enough.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The sun was shining into my room now, but could not wholly disperse the cloud
+of horror which lay upon it. That I had been drugged was sufficiently evident
+from my present condition, and that I had been taken away from my chambers
+Inspector Bristol had satisfactorily proved by an examination of the soles of
+my slippers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It was a clever trick,” he said. “God knows what it was they puffed into your
+face through the letter box, but the devilish arts of ten centuries, we must
+remember, are at the command of Hassan of Aleppo! The repetition of the trick
+at the mysterious place you were taken to is particularly interesting. I should
+say you won’t be in a hurry to peer through letter boxes and so forth in the
+future?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I shook my aching head.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That accursed yellow room,” I replied, “stank with the fumes of hashish. It
+may have been some preparation of hashish that was used to drug me.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bristol stood looking thoughtfully from the window.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It was a nightmare business, Mr. Cavanagh,” he said; “but it doesn’t advance
+our inquiry a little bit. The prophecy of the old man with the white
+beard&mdash;whom you assure me to be none other than Hassan of Aleppo&mdash;is
+something we cannot very well act upon. He clearly believes it himself; for he
+has released you after having captured you, evidently in order that you may be
+at liberty to take up your duty as trustee of the slipper again. If the slipper
+really comes back to the Museum the fact will show Hassan to be something
+little short of a magician. I shan’t envy you then, Mr. Cavanagh, considering
+that you hold the keys of the case!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“No,” I replied wearily. “Poor Professor Deeping thought that he acted in my
+interests and that my possession of the keys would constitute a safeguard. He
+was wrong. It has plunged me into the very vortex of this ghastly affair.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It is maddening,” said Bristol, “to know that Hassan and Company are snugly
+located somewhere under our very noses, and that all Scotland Yard can find no
+trace of them. Then to think that Hassan of Aleppo, apparently by means of some
+mystical light, has knowledge of the whereabouts of the slipper and
+consequently of the whereabouts of Earl Dexter (another badly wanted man) is
+extremely discouraging! I feel like an amateur; I’m ashamed of myself!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bristol departed in a condition of irritable uncertainty.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My head in my hands, I sat for long after his departure, with the phantom
+characters of the ghoulish drama dancing through my brain. The distorted yellow
+dwarfs seemed to gibe apish before me. Severed hands clenched and unclenched
+themselves in my face, and gleaming knives flashed across the mental picture.
+Predominant over all was the stately figure of Hassan of Aleppo, that
+benignant, remorseless being, that terrible guardian of the holy relic who
+directed the murderous operations. Earl Dexter, The Stetson Man, with his
+tightly bandaged arm, his gaunt, clean-shaven face and daredevil smile,
+figured, too, in my feverish daydream; nor was that other character missing,
+the girl with the violet eyes whose beautiful presence I had come to dread; for
+like a sybil announcing destruction her appearances in the drama had almost
+invariably presaged fresh tragedies. I recalled my previous meetings with this
+woman of mystery. I recalled my many surmises regarding her real identity and
+association with the case. I wondered why in the not very distant past I had
+promised to keep silent respecting her; I wondered why up to that present
+moment, knowing beyond doubt that her activities were inimical to my interests,
+were criminal, I had observed that foolish pledge.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And now my door-bell was ringing&mdash;as intuitively I had anticipated. So
+certain was I of the identity of my visitor that as I walked along the passage
+I was endeavouring to make up my mind how I should act, how I should receive
+her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I opened the door; and there, wearing European garments but a green turban ...
+stood Hassan of Aleppo!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When I say that amazement robbed me of the power to speak, to move, almost to
+think, I doubt not you will credit me. Indeed, I felt that modern London was
+crumbling about me and that I was become involved in the fantastic mazes of one
+of those Oriental intrigues such as figure in the Romance of Abu Zeyd, or with
+which most European readers have been rendered familiar by the glowing pages of
+“The Thousand and One Nights.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Effendim,” said my visitor, “do not hesitate to act as I direct!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In his gloved hand he carried what appeared to be an ebony cane. He raised and
+pointed it directly at me. I perceived that it was, in fact, a hollow tube.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Death is in my hand,” he continued; “enter slowly and I will follow you.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Still the sense of unreality held me thralled and my brain refused me service.
+Like an hypnotic subject I walked back to my study, followed by my terrible
+visitor, who reclosed the door behind him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He sat facing me across my littered table with the mysterious tube held loosely
+in his grasp.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+How infinitely more terrifying are perils unknown than those known and
+appreciated! Had a European armed with a pistol attempted a similar act of
+coercion, I cannot doubt that I should have put up some sort of fight; had he
+sat before me now as Hassan of Aleppo sat, with a comprehensible weapon thus
+laid upon his knees, I should have taken my chance, should have attacked him
+with the lamp, with a chair, with anything that came to my hand.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But before this awful, mysterious being who was turning my life into channels
+unsuspected, before that black tube with its unknown potentialities, I sat in a
+kind of passive panic which I cannot attempt to describe, which I had never
+experienced before and have never known since.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“There is one about to visit you,” he said, “whom you know, whom I think you
+expect. For it is written that she shall come and such events cast a shadow
+before them. I, too, shall be present at your meeting!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His eagle eyes opened widely; they burned with fanaticism.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Already she is here!” he resumed suddenly, and bent as one listening. “She
+comes under the archway; she crossed the courtyard&mdash;and is upon the stair!
+Admit her, effendim; I shall be close behind you!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The door-bell rang.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With the consciousness that the black tube was directed toward the back of my
+head, I went and opened the door. My mind was at work again, and busy with
+plans to terminate this impossible situation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On the landing stood a girl wearing a simple white frock which fitted her
+graceful figure perfectly. A white straw hat, of the New York tourist type,
+with a long veil draped from the back suited her delicate beauty very well. The
+red mouth drooped a little at the corners, but the big violet eyes, like lamps
+of the soul, seemed afire with mystic light.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Mr. Cavanagh,” she said, very calmly and deliberately, “there is only one way
+now to end all this trouble. I come from the man who can return the slipper to
+where it belongs; but he wants his price!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Her quiet speech served completely to restore my mental balance, and I noted
+with admiration that her words were so chosen as to commit her in no way. She
+knew quite well that thus far she might appear in the matter with impunity, and
+she clearly was determined to say nothing that could imperil her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Will you please come in?” I said quietly&mdash;and stood aside to admit her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Exhibiting wonderful composure, she entered&mdash;and there, in the badly
+lighted hallway came face to face with my other visitor!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was a situation so dramatic as to seem unreal.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Away from that tall figure retreated the girl with the violet eyes&mdash;and
+away&mdash;until she stood with her back to the wall. Even in the gloom I could
+see that her composure was deserting her; her beautiful face was pallid.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Oh, God!” she whispered, all but inaudible&mdash;“You!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hassan, grasping the black rod in his hand, signed to her to enter the study.
+She stood quite near to me, with her eyes fixed upon him. I bent closer to her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“My revolver&mdash;in left-hand table drawer,” I breathed in her ear. “Get it.
+He is watching me!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I could not tell if my words had been understood, for, never taking her gaze
+from the Sheikh of the Assassins, she sidled into the study. I followed her;
+and Hassan came last of all. Just within the doorway he stood, confronting us.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You have come,” he said, addressing the girl and speaking in perfect English
+but with a marked accent, “to open your impudent negotiations through Mr.
+Cavanagh for the return of the thrice holy relic to the Museum! Your companion,
+the man, who is inspired by the Evil One, has even dared to demand ransom for
+the slipper from me!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hassan was majestic in his wrath; but his eyes were black with venomous hatred.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“He has suffered the penalty which the Koran lays down; he has lost his right
+hand. But the lord of all evil protects him, else ere this he had lost his
+life! Move no closer to that table!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I started. Either Hassan of Aleppo was omniscient or he had overheard my
+whispered words!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Easily I could slay you where you stand!” he continued. “But to do so would
+profit me nothing. This meeting has been revealed to me. Last night I witnessed
+it as I slept. Also it has been revealed to me by Erroohanee, in the mirror of
+ink, that the slipper of the Prophet, Salla-’llahu ’ale yhi wasellem! Shall
+indeed return to that place accursed, that infidel eyes may look upon it! It is
+the will of Allah, whose name be exalted, that I hold my hand, but it is also
+His will that I be here, at whatever danger to my worthless body.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He turned his blazing eyes upon me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“To-morrow, ere noon,” he said, “the slipper will again be in the Museum from
+which the man of evil stole it. So it is written; obscure are the ways. We met
+last night, you and I, but at that time much was dark to me that now is light.
+The holy ’Alee spoke to me in a vision, saying: ‘There are two keys to the case
+in which it will be locked. Secure one, leaving the other with him who holds
+it! Let him swear to be secret. This shall be the price of his life!’”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The black tube was pointed directly at my forehead.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Effendim,” concluded the speaker, “place in my hand the key of the case in the
+Antiquarian Museum!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hands convulsively clenched, the girl was looking from me to Hassan. My throat
+felt parched, but I forced speech to my lips.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Your omniscience fails you,” I said. “Both keys are at my bank!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Blacker grew the fierce eyes&mdash;and blacker. I gave myself up for lost; I
+awaited death&mdash;death by some awful, unique means&mdash;with what courage I
+could muster.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+From the court below came the sound of voices, the voices of passers-by who so
+little suspected what was happening near to them that had someone told them
+they certainly had refused to credit it. The noise of busy Fleet Street came
+drumming under the archway, too.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then, above all, another sound became audible. To this day I find myself unable
+to define it; but it resembled the note of a silver bell.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Clearly it was a signal; for, hearing it, Hassan dropped the tube and glanced
+toward the open window.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In that instant I sprang upon him!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That I had to deal with a fanatic, a dangerous madman, I knew; that it was his
+life or mine, I was fully convinced. I struck out then and caught him fairly
+over the heart. He reeled back, and I made a wild clutch for the damnable tube,
+horrid, unreasoning fear of which thus far had held me inert.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I heard the girl scream affrightedly, and I knew, and felt my heart chill to
+know, that the tube had been wrenched from my hand! Hassan of Aleppo, old man
+that he appeared, had the strength of a tiger. He recovered himself and hurled
+me from him so that I came to the floor crashingly half under my writing-table!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Something he cried back at me, furiously&mdash;and like an enraged animal, his
+teeth gleaming out from his beard, he darted from the room. The front door
+banged loudly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Shaken and quivering, I got upon my feet. On the threshold, in a state of
+pitiable hesitancy, stood the pale, beautiful accomplice of Earl Dexter. One
+quick glance she flashed at me, then turned and ran!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Again the door slammed. I ran to the window, looking out into the court. The
+girl came hurrying down the steps, and with never a backward glance ran on and
+was lost to view in one of the passages opening riverward.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Out under the arch, statelily passed a tall figure&mdash;and Inspector Bristol
+was entering! I saw the detective glance aside as the two all but met. He stood
+still, and looked back!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Bristol!” I cried, and waved my arms frantically.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Stop him! Stop him! It’s Hassan of Aleppo!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bristol was not the only one to hear my wild cry&mdash;not the only one to dash
+back under the arch and out into Fleet Street.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Hassan of Aleppo was gone!
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap22"></a>
+CHAPTER XXII<br/>
+THE LIGHT OF EL-MEDINEH</h2>
+
+<p>
+Bristol and I walked slowly in the direction of the entrance of the British
+Antiquarian Museum. It was the day following upon the sensational scene in my
+chambers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“There’s very little doubt,” said Bristol, “that Earl Dexter has the slipper
+and that Hassan of Aleppo knows where Dexter is in hiding. I don’t know which
+of the two is more elusive. Hassan apparently melted into thin air yesterday;
+and although The Stetson Man has never within my experience employed disguises,
+no one has set eyes upon him since the night that he vanished from his lodgings
+off the Waterloo Road. It’s always possible for a man to baffle the police by
+remaining closely within doors, but during all the time that has elapsed Dexter
+must have taken a little exercise occasionally, and the missing hand should
+have betrayed him.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The wonder to me is,” I replied, “that he has escaped death at the hands of
+the Hashishin. He is a supremely daring man, for I should think that he must be
+carrying the slipper of the Prophet about with him!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I would rather he did it than I!” commented Bristol. “For sheer audacity
+commend me to The Stetson Man! His idea no doubt was to use you as intermediary
+in his negotiations with the Museum authorities, but that plan failing, he has
+written them direct, thoughtfully omitting his address, of course!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We were, in fact, at that moment bound for the Museum to inspect this latest
+piece of evidence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The crowning example of the man’s audacity and cleverness,” added my
+companion, “is his having actually approached Hassan of Aleppo with a similar
+proposition! How did he get in touch with him? All Scotland Yard has failed to
+find any trace of that weird character!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Birds of a feather&mdash;” I suggested.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“But they are not birds of a feather!” cried Bristol. “On your own showing,
+Hassan of Aleppo is simply waiting his opportunity to balance Dexter’s account
+forever! I always knew Dexter was a clever man; I begin to think he’s the most
+daring genius alive!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We mounted the steps of the Museum. In the hallway Mostyn, the curator, awaited
+us. Having greeted Bristol and myself he led the way to his private office, and
+from a pigeon-hole in his desk took out a letter typewritten upon a sheet of
+quarto paper.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bristol spread it out upon the blotting pad and we bent over it curiously.
+</p>
+
+<p class="letter">
+SIR&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p class="letter">
+I believe I can supply information concerning the whereabouts of the missing
+slipper of Mohammed. As any inquiry of this nature must be extremely perilous
+to the inquirer and as the relic is a priceless one, my fee would be 10,000
+pounds. The fanatics who seek to restore the slipper to the East must not know
+of any negotiations, therefore I omit my address, but will communicate further
+if you care to insert instructions in the agony column of Times.<br/>
+<br/>
+Faithfully,<br/>
+EARL DEXTER
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bristol laughed grimly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It’s a daring game,” he said; “a piece of barefaced impudence quite
+characteristic.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“He’s posing as a sort of private detective now, and is prepared for a trifling
+consideration to return the slipper which he stole himself! He must know,
+though, that we have his severed hand at the Yard to be used in evidence
+against him.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Is the Burton Room open to the public again?” I asked Mostyn.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It is open, yes,” he replied, “and a quite unusual number of visitors come
+daily to gaze at the empty case which once held the slipper of the Prophet.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Has the case been mended?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes; it is quite intact again; only the exhibit is missing.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We ascended the stairs, passed along the Assyrian Room, which seemed to be
+unusually crowded, and entered the lofty apartment known as the Burton Room.
+The sunblinds were drawn, and a sort of dim, religious light prevailed therein.
+A group of visitors stood around an empty case at the farther end of the
+apartment.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You see,” said Mostyn, pointing, “that empty case has a greater attraction
+than all the other full ones!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But I scarcely heeded his words, for I was intently watching the movements of
+one of the group about the empty case. I have said that the room was but dimly
+illuminated, and this fact, together no doubt with some effect of reflected
+light, enhanced by my imagination, perhaps produced the phenomenon which was
+occasioning me so much amazement.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Remember that my mind was filled with memories of weird things, that I often
+found myself thinking of that mystic light which Hassan of Aleppo had called
+the light of El-Medineh&mdash;that light whereby, undeterred by distance, he
+claimed to be able to trace the whereabouts of any of the relics of the
+Prophet.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bristol and Mostyn walked on then; but I stood just within the doorway,
+intently, breathlessly watching an old man wearing an out-of-date Inverness
+coat and a soft felt hat. He had a gray beard and moustache, and long, untidy
+hair, walked with a stoop, and in short was no unusual type of Visitor to that
+institution.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But it seemed to me, and the closer I watched him the more convinced I became,
+that this was no optical illusion, that a faint luminosity, a sort of elfin
+light, played eerily about his head!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As Bristol and Mostyn approached the case the old man began to walk toward me
+and in the direction of the door. The idea flashed through my mind that it
+might be Hassan of Aleppo himself, Hassan who had predicted that the stolen
+slipper should that day be returned to the Museum!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then he came abreast of me, passed me, and I felt that my surmise had been
+wrong. I saw Bristol, from farther up the room, turn and look back. Something
+attracted his trained eye, I suppose, which was not perceptible to me. But he
+suddenly came striding along. Obviously he was pursuing the old man, who was
+just about to leave the apartment. Seeing that the latter had reached the
+doorway, Bristol began to run.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The old man turned; and amid a chorus of exclamations from the astonished
+spectators, Bristol sprang upon him!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+How it all came about I cannot say, cannot hope to describe; but there was a
+short, sharp scuffle, the crack of a well-directed blow ... and Bristol was
+rolling on his back, the old man, hatless, was racing up the Assyrian Room, and
+everyone in the place seemed to be shouting at once!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bristol, with blood streaming from his face, staggered to his feet, clutching
+at me for support.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“After him, Mr. Cavanagh!” he cried hoarsely. “It’s your turn to-day! After
+him! That’s Earl Dexter!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mostyn waited for no more, but went running quickly through the Assyrian Room.
+I may mention here that at the head of the stairs he found the caped Inverness
+which had served to conceal Dexter’s mutilated arm, and later, behind a piece
+of statuary, a wig and a very ingenious false beard and moustache were
+discovered. But of The Stetson Man there was no trace. His brief start had
+enabled him to make good his escape.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As Mostyn went off, and a group of visitors flocked in our direction, Bristol,
+who had been badly shaken by the blow, turned to them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You will please all leave the Burton Room immediately,” he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Looks of surprise greeted his words; but with his handkerchief raised to his
+face, he peremptorily repeated them. The official note in his voice was readily
+to be detected; and the wonder-stricken group departed with many a backward
+glance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As the last left the Burton Room, Bristol pointed, with a rather shaky finger,
+at the soft felt hat which lay at his feet. It had formed part of Dexter’s
+disguise. Close beside it lay another object which had evidently fallen from
+the hat&mdash;a dull red thing lying on the polished parquet flooring.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“For God’s sake don’t go near it!” whispered Bristol. “The room must be closed
+for the present. And now I’m off after that man. Step clear of it.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His words were unnecessary; I shunned it as a leprous thing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was the slipper of the Prophet!
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap23"></a>
+CHAPTER XXIII<br/>
+THE THREE MESSAGES</h2>
+
+<p>
+I stood in the foyer of the Astoria Hotel. About me was the pulsing stir of
+transatlantic life, for the tourist season was now at its height, and I counted
+myself fortunate in that I had been able to secure a room at this
+establishment, always so popular with American visitors. Chatting groups
+surrounded me and I became acquainted with numberless projects for visiting the
+Tower of London, the National Gallery, the British Museum, Windsor Castle, Kew
+Gardens, and the other sights dear to the heart of our visiting cousins. Loaded
+lifts ascended and descended. Bradshaws were in great evidence everywhere; all
+was hustle and glad animation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The tall military-looking man who stood beside me glanced about him with a
+rather grim smile.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You ought to be safe enough here, Mr. Cavanagh!” he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I ought to be safe enough in my own chambers,” I replied wearily. “How many of
+these pleasure-seeking folk would believe that a man can be as greatly in peril
+of his life in Fleet Street as in the most uncivilized spot upon the world map?
+Do you think if I told that prosperous New Yorker who is buying a cigar yonder,
+for instance, that I had been driven from my chambers by a band of Eastern
+assassins founded some time in the eleventh century, he would believe it?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I am certain he wouldn’t!” replied Bristol. “I should not have credited it
+myself before I was put in charge of this damnable case.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My position at that hour was in truth an incredible one. The sacred slipper of
+Mohammed lay once more in the glass case at the Antiquarian Museum from which
+Earl Dexter had stolen it. Now, with apish yellow faces haunting my dreams,
+with ghostly menaces dogging me day and night, I was outcast from my own rooms
+and compelled, in self-defence, to live amid the bustle of the Astoria. So
+wholly nonplussed were the police authorities that they could afford me no
+protection. They knew that a group of scientific murderers lay hidden in or
+near to London; they knew that Earl Dexter, the foremost crook of his day, was
+also in the metropolis&mdash;and they could make no move, were helpless;
+indeed, as Bristol had confessed, were hopeless!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bristol, on the previous day, had unearthed the Greek cigar merchant, Acepulos,
+who had replaced the slipper in its case (for a monetary consideration). He had
+performed a similar service when the bloodstained thing had first been put upon
+exhibition at the Museum, and for a considerable period had disappeared. We had
+feared that his religious pretensions had not saved him from the avenging
+scimitar of Hassan; but quite recently he had returned again to his Soho shop,
+and in time thus to earn a second cheque.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As Bristol and I stood glancing about the foyer of the hotel, a plain-clothes
+officer whom I knew by sight came in and approached my companion. I could not
+divine the fact, of course, but I was about to hear news of the money-loving
+and greatly daring Graeco-Moslem.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The detective whispered something to Bristol, and the latter started, and
+paled. He turned to me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“They haven’t overlooked him this time, Mr. Cavanagh,” he said. “Acepulos has
+been found dead in his room, nearly decapitated!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I shuddered involuntarily. Even there, amid the chatter and laughter of those
+light-hearted tourists, the shadow of Hassan of Aleppo was falling upon me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bristol started immediately for Soho and I parted from him in the Strand, he
+proceeding west and I eastward, for I had occasion that morning to call at my
+bank. It was the time of the year when London is full of foreigners, and as I
+proceeded in the direction of Fleet Street I encountered more than one
+Oriental. To my excited imagination they all seemed to glance at me furtively,
+with menacing eyes, but in any event I knew that I had little to fear whilst I
+contrived to keep to the crowded thoroughfares. Solitude I dreaded and with
+good reason.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then at the door of the bank I found fresh matter for reflection. The assistant
+manager, Mr. Colby, was escorting a lady to the door. As I stood aside, he
+walked with her to a handsome car which waited, and handed her in with marks of
+great deference. She was heavily veiled and I had no more than a glimpse of
+her, but she appeared to be of middle age and had gray hair and a very stately
+manner.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I told myself that I was unduly suspicious, suspicious of everyone and of
+everything; yet as I entered the bank I found myself wondering where I had seen
+that dignified, grayhaired figure before. I even thought of asking the manager
+the name of his distinguished customer, but did not do so, for in the
+circumstances such an inquiry must have appeared impertinent.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My business transacted, I came out again by the side entrance which opens on
+the little courtyard, for this branch of the London County and Provincial Bank
+occupies a corner site.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A ragged urchin who was apparently waiting for me handed me a note. I looked at
+him inquiringly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“For me?” I said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes, sir. A dark gentleman pointed you out as you was goin’ into the bank.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The note was written upon a half sheet of paper and, doubting if it was really
+intended for me, I unfolded it and read the following&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p class="letter">
+Mr. Cavanagh, take the keys of the case containing the holy slipper to your
+hotel this evening without fail.<br/>
+HASSAN.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Who gave you this, boy?” I asked sharply.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“A foreign gentleman, sir, very dark&mdash;like an Indian.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Where is he?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“He went off in a cab, sir, after he give me the note.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I handed the boy sixpence and slowly pursued my way. An idea was forming in my
+mind to trap the enemy by seeming acquiescent. I wondered if my movements were
+being watched at that moment. Since it was more than probable, I returned to
+the bank, entered, and made some trivial inquiry of a cashier, and then came
+out again and walked on as far as the Report office.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I had not been in the office more than five minutes before I received a
+telegram from Inspector Bristol. It had been handed in at Soho, and the message
+was an odd one.
+</p>
+
+<p class="letter">
+CAVANAGH, Report, London.<br/>
+Plot afoot to steal keys. Get them from bank and join me 11 o’clock at Astoria.
+Have planned trap.<br/>
+<br/>
+BRISTOL.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This was very mysterious in view of the note so recently received by me, but I
+concluded that Bristol had hit upon a similar plan to that which was forming in
+my own mind. It seemed unnecessarily hazardous, though, actually to withdraw
+the keys from their place of safety.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Pondering deeply upon the perplexities of this maddening case, I shortly
+afterward found myself again at the bank. With the manager I descended to the
+strong-room, and the safe was unlocked which contained the much-sought-for keys
+of the case at the Antiquarian Museum.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“There are the keys, quite safe!&mdash;and by the way, this is my second visit
+here this morning, Mr. Cavanagh,” said the manager, with whom I was upon rather
+intimate terms. “A foreign lady who has recently become a customer of the bank
+deposited some valuable jewels here this morning&mdash;less than an hour ago,
+in fact.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Indeed,” I said, and my mind was working rapidly. “The lady who came in the
+large blue car, a gray-haired lady?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes,” was the reply, “did you notice her, then?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I nodded and said no more, for in truth I had no more to say. I had good reason
+to respect the uncanny powers of Hassan of Aleppo, but I doubted if even his
+omniscience could tell him (since I had actually gone down into the
+strong-room) whether when I emerged I had the keys, or whether my visit and
+seeming acceptance of his orders had been no more than a subterfuge!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That the Hashishin had some means of communicating with me at the Astoria was
+evident from the contents of the note which I had received, and as I walked in
+the direction of the hotel my mind was filled with all sorts of misgivings. I
+was playing with fire! Had I done rightly or should I have acted otherwise? I
+sighed wearily. The dark future would resolve all my doubts.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When I reached the Astoria, Bristol had not arrived. I lighted a cigarette and
+sat down in the lounge to await his coming. Presently a boy approached, handing
+me a message which had been taken down from the telephone by the clerk. It was
+as follows&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p class="letter">
+Tell Mr. Cavanagh, who is waiting in the hotel, to take what I am expecting to
+his chambers, and say that I will join him there in twenty minutes.<br/>
+<br/>
+INSPECTOR BRISTOL.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Again I doubted the wisdom of Bristol’s plan. Had I not fled to the Astoria to
+escape from the dangerous solitude of my rooms? That he was laying some trap
+for the Hashishin was sufficiently evident, and whilst I could not justly
+suspect him of making a pawn of me I was quite unable to find any other
+explanation of this latest move.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I was torn between conflicting doubts. I glanced at my watch. Yes! There was
+just time for me to revisit the bank ere joining Bristol at my chambers! I
+hesitated. After all, in what possible way could it jeopardize his plans for me
+merely to pretend to bring the keys?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Hang it all!” I said, and jumped to my feet. “These maddening conjectures will
+turn my brain! I’ll let matters stand as they are, and risk the consequences!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I hesitated no longer, but passed out from the hotel and once more directed my
+steps in the direction of Fleet Street.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As I passed in under the arch through which streamed many busy workers, I told
+myself that to dread entering my own chambers at high noon was utterly
+childish. Yet I did dread doing so! And as I mounted the stair and came to the
+landing, which was always more or less dark, I paused for quite a long time
+before putting the key in the lock.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The affair of the accursed slipper was playing havoc with my nerves, and I
+laughed dryly to note that my hand was not quite steady as I turned the key,
+opened my door, and slipped into the dim hallway.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As I closed it behind me, something, probably a slight noise, but possibly
+something more subtle&mdash;an instinct&mdash;made me turn rapidly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There facing me stood Hassan of Aleppo.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap24"></a>
+CHAPTER XXIV<br/>
+I KEEP THE APPOINTMENT</h2>
+
+<p>
+That moment was pungent with drama. In the intense hush of the next five
+seconds I could fancy that the world had slipped away from me and that I was
+become an unsubstantial thing of dreams. I was in no sense master of myself;
+the effect of the presence of this white-bearded fanatic was of a kind which I
+am entirely unable to describe. About Hassan of Aleppo was an aroma of evil,
+yet of majesty, which marked him strangely different from other men&mdash;from
+any other that I have ever known. In his venerable presence, remembering how he
+was Sheikh of the Assassins, and recalling his bloody history, I was always
+conscious of a weakness, physical and mental. He appalled me; and now, with my
+back to the door, I stood watching him and watching the ominous black tube
+which he held in his hand. It was a weapon unknown to Europe and therefore more
+fearful than the most up-to-date of death-dealing instruments.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hassan of Aleppo pointed it toward me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The keys, effendim,” he said; “hand me the keys!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He advanced a step; his manner was imperious. The black tube was less than a
+foot removed from my face. That I had my revolver in my pocket could avail me
+nothing, for in my pocket it must remain, since I dared to make no move to
+reach it under cover of that unfamiliar, terrible weapon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The black eyes of Hassan glared insanely into mine.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You will have placed them in your pocketcase,” he said. “Take it out; hand it
+to me!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I obeyed, for what else could I do? Taking the case from my pocket, I placed it
+in his lean brown hand.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+An expression of wild exultation crossed his features; the eagle eyes seemed to
+be burning into my brain. A puff of hot vapour struck me in the
+face&mdash;something which was expelled from the mysterious black tube. And
+with memories crowding to my mind of similar experiences at the hands of the
+Hashishin, I fell back, clutching at my throat, fighting for my life against
+the deadly, vaporous thing that like a palpable cloud surrounded me. I tried to
+cry out, but the words died upon my tongue. Hassan of Aleppo seemed to grow
+huge before my eyes like some ginn of Eastern lore. Then a curtain of darkness
+descended. I experienced a violent blow upon the forehead (I suppose I had
+pitched forward), and for the time resigned my part in the drama of the sacred
+slipper.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap25"></a>
+CHAPTER XXV<br/>
+THE WATCHER IN BANK CHAMBERS</h2>
+
+<p>
+At about five o’clock that afternoon Inspector Bristol, who had spent several
+hours in Soho upon the scene of the murder of the Greek, was walking along
+Fleet Street, bound for the offices of the Report. As he passed the court, on
+the corner of which stands a branch of the London County and Provincial Bank,
+his eye was attracted by a curious phenomenon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There are reflectors above the bank windows which face the court, and it
+appeared to Bristol that there was a hole in one of these, the furthermost from
+the corner. A tiny beam of light shone from the bank window on to the
+reflector, or from the reflector on to the window, which circumstance in itself
+was not curious. But above the reflector, at an acute angle, this mysterious
+beam was seemingly projected upward. Walking a little way up the court he saw
+that it shone through, and cast a disc of light upon the ceiling of an office
+on the first floor of Bank Chambers above.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is every detective’s business to be observant, and although many thousands
+of passersby must have cast their eyes in the same direction that day, there is
+small matter for wonder in the fact that Bristol alone took the trouble to
+inquire into the mystery&mdash;for his trained eye told him that there was a
+mystery here.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Possibly he was in that passive frame of mind when the brain is particularly
+receptive of trivial impressions; for after a futile search of the Soho cigar
+store for anything resembling a clue, he was quite resigned to the idea of
+failure in the case of Hassan and Company. He walked down the court and into
+the entrance of Bank Chambers. An Inspection of the board upon the wall showed
+him that the first floor apparently was occupied by three firms, two of them
+legal, for this is the neighbourhood of the law courts, and the third a press
+agency. He stepped up to the first floor. Past the doors bearing the names of
+the solicitors and past that belonging to the press agent he proceeded to a
+fourth suite of offices. Here, pinned upon the door frame, appeared a card
+which bore the legend&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<h4>THE CONGO FIBRE COMPANY</h4>
+
+<p>
+Evidently the Congo Fibre Company had so recently taken possession of the
+offices that there had been no time to inscribe their title either upon the
+doors or upon the board in the hall.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Inspector Bristol was much impressed, for into one of the rooms occupied by the
+Fibre Company shone that curious disc of light which first had drawn his
+attention to Bank Chambers. He rapped on the door, turned the handle, and
+entered. The sole furniture of the office in which he found himself apparently
+consisted of one desk and an office stool, which stool was occupied by an
+office boy. The windows opened on the court, and a door marked “Private”
+evidently communicated with an inner office whose windows likewise must open on
+the court. It was the ceiling of this inner office, unless the detective’s
+calculation erred, which he was anxious to inspect.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes, sir?” said the boy tentatively.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bristol produced a card which bore the uncompromising legend: John Henry Smith.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Take my card to Mr. Boulter, boy,” he said tersely. The boy stared.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Mr. Boulter, sir? There isn’t any one of that name here.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Oh!” said Bristol, looking around him in apparent surprise: “how long is he
+gone?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I don’t know, sir. I’ve only been here three weeks, and Mr. Knowlson only took
+the offices a month ago.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Oh,” commented Bristol, “then take my card to Mr. Knowlson; he will probably
+be able to give me Mr. Boulter’s present address.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The boy hesitated. The detective had that authoritative manner which awes the
+youthful mind.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“He’s out, sir,” he said, but without conviction.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Is he?” rapped Bristol. “Well, I’ll leave my card.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He turned and quitted the office, carefully closing the door behind him. Three
+seconds later he reopened it, and peering in, was in time to see the boy knock
+upon the private door. A little wicket, or movable panel, was let down, the
+card of John Henry Smith was passed through to someone unseen, and the wicket
+was reclosed!
+</p>
+
+<br/>
+<p>
+The boy turned and met the wrathful eye of the detective. Bristol reentered,
+closing the door behind him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“See here, young fellow,” said he, “I don’t stand for those tricks! Why didn’t
+you tell me Mr. Knowlson was in?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’m very sorry, sir!”&mdash;the boy quailed beneath his glance&mdash;“but he
+won’t see any one who hasn’t an appointment.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Is there someone with him, then?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“No.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Well, what’s he doing?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I don’t know, sir; I’ve never been in to see!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What! never been in that room?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Never!” declared the boy solemnly. “And I don’t mind telling you,” he added,
+recovering something of his natural confidence, “that I am leaving on the 31st.
+This job ain’t any use to me!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Too much work?” suggested Bristol.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“No work at all!” returned the boy indignantly. “I’m just here for a blessed
+buffer, that’s what I’m here for, a buffer!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What do you mean?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I just have to sit here and see that nobody gets into that office. Lively,
+ain’t it? Where’s the prospects?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bristol surveyed him thoughtfully.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Look here, my lad,” he said quietly; “is that door locked?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Always,” replied the boy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Does Mr. Knowlson come to that shutter when you knock?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Then go and knock!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The boy obeyed with alacrity. He rapped loudly on the door, not noticing or not
+caring that the visitor was standing directly behind him. The shutter was
+lowered and a grizzled, bearded face showed for a moment through the opening.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bristol leant over the boy and pushed a card through into the hand of the man
+beyond. On this occasion it did not bear the legend “John Henry Smith,” but the
+following&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<h4>CHIEF INSPECTOR BRISTOL<br/>
+C.I.D.<br/>
+NEW SCOTLAND YARD</h4>
+
+<p>
+“Good afternoon, Mr. Knowlson,” said the detective dryly. “I want to come in!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There followed a moment of silence, from which Bristol divined that he had
+blundered upon some mystery, possibly upon a big case; then a key was turned in
+the lock and the door thrown open.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Come right in, Inspector,” invited a strident voice. “Carter, you can go
+home.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bristol entered warily, but not warily enough. For as the door was banged upon
+his entrance he faced around only in time to find himself looking down the
+barrel of a Colt automatic.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With his back to the door which contained the wicket, now reclosed, stood the
+man with the bearded face. The revolver was held in his left hand; his right
+arm terminated in a bandaged stump. But without that his steel-gray eyes would
+have betrayed him to the detective.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Good God!” whispered Bristol. “It’s Earl Dexter!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It is!” replied the cracksman, “and you’ve looked in at a real inconvenient
+time! My visitors mostly seem to have that knack. I’ll have to ask you to stay,
+Inspector. Sit down in that chair yonder.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bristol knew his man too well to think of opening any argument at that time. He
+sat down as directed, and ignoring the revolver which covered him all the time,
+began coolly to survey the room in which he found himself. In several respects
+it was an extraordinary apartment.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The only bright patch in the room was the shining disc upon the ceiling; and
+the detective noted with interest that this marked the position of an
+arrangement of mirrors. A white-covered table, entirely bare, stood upon the
+floor immediately beneath this mysterious apparatus. With the exception of one
+or two ordinary items of furniture and a small hand lathe, the office otherwise
+was unfurnished. Bristol turned his eyes again upon the daring man who so
+audaciously had trapped him&mdash;the man who had stolen the slipper of the
+Prophet and suffered the loss of his hand by the scimitar of an Hashishin as a
+result. When he had least expected to find one, Fate had thrown a clue in
+Bristol’s way. He reflected grimly that it was like to prove of little use to
+him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Now,” said Dexter, “you can do as you please, of course, but you know me
+pretty well and I advise you to sit quiet.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I am sitting quiet!” was the reply.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I am sorry,” continued Dexter, with a quick glance at his maimed arm, “that I
+can’t tie you up, but I am expecting a friend any moment now.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He suddenly raised the wicket with a twitch of his elbow and, without removing
+his gaze from the watchful detective, cried sharply&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Carter!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But there was no reply.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Good; he’s gone!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Dexter sat down facing Bristol.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I have lost my hand in this game, Mr. Bristol,” he said genially, “and had
+some narrow squeaks of losing my head; but having gone so far and lost so much
+I’m going through, if I don’t meet a funeral! You see I’m up against two tough
+propositions.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bristol nodded sympathetically.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The first,” continued Dexter, “is you and Cavanagh, and English law generally.
+My idea&mdash;if I can get hold of the slipper again&mdash;oh! you needn’t
+stare; I’m out for it!&mdash;is to get the Antiquarian Institution to ransom
+it. It’s a line of commercial speculation I have worked successfully before.
+There’s a dozen rich highbrows, cranks to a man, connected with it, and they
+are my likeliest buyers&mdash;sure. But to keep the tone of the market healthy
+there’s Hassan of Aleppo, rot him! He’s a dangerous customer to approach, but
+you’ll note I’ve been in negotiation with him already and am still, if not
+booming, not much below par!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Quite so,” said Bristol. “But you’ve cut off a pretty hefty chew nevertheless.
+They used to call you The Stetson Man, you used to dress like a fashion plate
+and stop at the big hotels. Those days are past, Dexter, I’m sorry to note.
+You’re down to the skulking game now and you’re nearer an advert for Clarkson
+than Stein-Bloch!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yep,” said Dexter sadly, “I plead guilty, but I think here’s Carneta!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bristol heard the door of the outer office open, and a moment later that upon
+which his gaze was set opened in turn, to admit a girl who was heavily veiled,
+and who started and stood still in the doorway, on perceiving the situation.
+Never for one unguarded moment did the American glance aside from his prisoner.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The Inspector’s dropped in, Carneta!” he drawled in his strident way. “You’re
+handy with a ball of twine; see if you can induce him to stay the night!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The girl, immediately recovering her composure, took off her hat in a
+businesslike way and began to look around her, evidently in search of a
+suitable length of rope with which to fasten up Bristol.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Might I suggest,” said the detective, “that if you are shortly quitting these
+offices a couple of the window-cords neatly joined would serve admirably?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Thanks,” drawled Dexter, nodding to his companion, who went into the outer
+office, where she might be heard lowering the windows. She was gone but a few
+moments ere she returned again, carrying a length of knotted rope. Under cover
+of Dexter’s revolver, Bristol stoically submitted to having his wrists tied
+behind him. The end of the line was then thrown through the ventilator above
+the door which communicated with the outer office and Bristol was triced up in
+such a way that, his wrists being raised behind him to an uncomfortable degree,
+he was almost forced to stand upon tiptoe. The line was then secured.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Very workmanlike!” commented the victim. “You’ll find a large handkerchief in
+my inside breast pocket. It’s a clean one, and I can recommend it as a gag!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Very promptly it was employed for the purpose, and Inspector Bristol found
+himself helpless and constrained in a very painful position. Dexter laid down
+his revolver.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“We will now give you a free show, Inspector,” he said, genially, “of our
+camera obscura!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He pulled down the blinds, which Bristol noted with interest to be black, but
+through an opening in one of them a mysterious ray of light&mdash;the same that
+he had noticed from Fleet Street&mdash;shone upon that point in the ceiling
+where the arrangement of mirrors was attached. Dexter made some alteration,
+apparently in the focus of the lens (for Bristol had divined that in some way a
+lens had been fixed in the reflector above the bank window below) and the disc
+of light became concentrated. The white-covered table was moved slightly, and
+in the darkness some further manipulation was performed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Observe,” came the strident voice&mdash;“we now have upon the screen here a
+minute moving picture. This little device, which is not protected in any way,
+is of my own invention, and proved extremely useful in the Arkwright jewel
+case, which startled Chicago. It has proved useful now. I know almost as much
+concerning the arrangements below as the manager himself. In confidence,
+Inspector, this is my last bid for the slipper! I have plunged on it. Madame
+Sforza, the distinguished Italian lady who recently opened an account below,
+opened it for 500 pounds cash. She has drawn a portion, but a balance remains
+which I am resigned to lose. Her motor-car (hired), her references (forged),
+the case of jewels which she deposited this morning (duds!)&mdash;all represent
+a considerable outlay. It’s a nerve-racking line of operation, too. Any hour of
+the day may bring such a visitor as yourself, for example. In short, I am at
+the end of my tether.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bristol, ignoring the increasing pain in his arms and wrists, turned his eyes
+upon the white-covered table and there saw a minute and clear-cut picture, such
+as one sees in a focussing screen, of the interior of the manager’s office of
+the London County and Provincial Bank!
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap26"></a>
+CHAPTER XXVI<br/>
+THE STRONG-ROOM</h2>
+
+<p>
+I wonder how often a sense of humour has saved a man from desperation? Perhaps
+only the Easterns have thoroughly appreciated that divine gift. I have
+interpolated the adventure of Inspector Bristol in order that the sequence of
+my story be not broken; actually I did not learn it until later, but when, on
+the following day, the whole of the facts came into my possession, I laughed
+and was glad that I could laugh, for laughter has saved many a man from
+madness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Certainly the Fates were playing with us, for at a time very nearly
+corresponding with that when Bristol found himself bound and helpless in Bank
+Chambers I awoke to find myself tied hand and foot to my own bed! Nothing but
+the haziest recollections came to me at first, nothing but dim memories of the
+awful being who had lured me there; for I perceived now that all the messages
+proceeded, not from Bristol, but from Hassan of Aleppo! I had been a fool, and
+I was reaping the fruits of my folly. Could I have known that almost within
+pistol shot of me the Inspector was trussed up as helpless as I, then indeed my
+situation must have become unbearable, since upon him I relied for my speedy
+release.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My ankles were firmly lashed to the rails at the foot of my bed; each of my
+wrists was tied back to a bedpost. I ached in every limb and my head burned
+feverishly, which latter symptom I ascribed to the powerful drug which had been
+expelled into my face by the uncanny weapon carried by Hassan of Aleppo. I
+reflected bitterly how, having transferred my quarters to the Astoria, I could
+not well hope for any visitor to my chambers; and even the event of such a
+visitor had been foreseen and provided against by the cunning lord of the
+Hashishin. A gag, of the type which Dumas has described in “Twenty Years
+After,” the poire d’angoisse, was wedged firmly into my mouth, so that only by
+preserving the utmost composure could I breathe. I was bathed in cold
+perspiration. So I lay listening to the familiar sounds without and reflecting
+that it was quite possible so to lie, undisturbed, and to die alone, my
+presence there wholly unsuspected!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Once, toward dusk, my phone bell rang, and my state of mind became agonizing.
+It was maddening to think that someone, a friend, was virtually within reach of
+me, yet actually as far removed as if an ocean divided us! I tasted the hellish
+torments of Tantalus. I cursed fate, heaven, everything; I prayed; I sank into
+bottomless depths of despair and rose to dizzy pinnacles of hope, when a
+footstep sounded on the landing and a thousand wild possibilities, vague
+possibilities of rescue, poured into my mind.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The visitor hesitated, apparently outside my door; and a change, as sudden as
+lightning out of a cloud, transformed my errant fancies. A gruesome conviction
+seized me, as irrational as the hope which it displayed, that this was one of
+the Hashishin&mdash;an apish yellow dwarf, a strangler, the awful Hassan
+himself!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The footsteps receded down the stairs. And my thoughts reverted into the old
+channels of dull despair.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I weighed the chances of Bristol’s seeking me there; and, eager as I was to
+give them substance, found them but airy&mdash;ultimately was forced to admit
+them to be nil.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So I lay, whilst only a few hundred yards from me a singular scene was being
+enacted. Bristol, a prisoner as helpless as myself, watched the concluding
+business of the day being conducted in the bank beneath him; he watched the
+lift descend to the strongroom&mdash;the spying apparatus being slightly
+adjusted in some way; he saw the clerks hastening to finish their work in the
+outer office, and as he watched, absorbed by the novelty of the situation, he
+almost forgot the pain and discomfort which he suffered...
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“This little peep-show of ours has been real useful,” Dexter confided out of
+the darkness. “I got an impression of the key of the strongroom door a week
+ago, and Carneta got one of the keys of the safe only this morning, when she
+lodged her box of jewellery with the bank! I was at work on that key when you
+interrupted me, and as by means of this useful apparatus I have learnt the
+combination, you ought to see some fun in the next few hours!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bristol repressed a groan, for the prospect of remaining in that position was
+thus brought keenly home to him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The bank staff left the premises one by one until only a solitary clerk worked
+on at a back desk. His task completed, he, too, took his departure and the bank
+messenger commenced his nightly duty of sweeping up the offices. It was then
+that excitement like an anaesthetic dulled the detective’s pain&mdash;indeed,
+he forgot his aching body and became merely a watchful intelligence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So intent had he become upon the picture before him that he had not noticed the
+fact that he was alone in the office of the Congo Fibre Company. Now he
+realized it from the absolute silence about him, and from another circumstance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The spying apparatus had been left focussed, and on to the screen beneath his
+eyes, bending low behind the desks and creeping, Indian-like, around, toward
+the head of the stair which communicated with the strongroom and the apartment
+used by the messenger, came the alert figure of Earl Dexter!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It may be a surprise to some people to learn that at any time in the day the
+door of a bank, unguarded, should be left open, when only a solitary messenger
+is within the premises; yet for a few minutes at least each evening this
+happens at more than one City bank, where one of the duties of the resident
+messenger is to clean the outer steps. Dexter had taken advantage of the man’s
+absence below in quest of scrubbing material to enter the bank through the open
+door.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Watching, breathless, and utterly forgetful of his own position, Bristol saw
+the messenger, all unconscious of danger, come up the stairs carrying a pail
+and broom. As his head reached the level of the railings The Stetson Man neatly
+sand-bagged him, rushed across to the outer door, and closed it!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Given duplicate keys and the private information which Dexter so ingeniously
+had obtained, there are many London banks vulnerable to similar attack.
+Certainly, bullion is rarely kept in a branch storeroom, but the detective was
+well aware that the keys of the case containing the slipper were kept in this
+particular safe!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was convinced, and could entertain no shadowy doubt, that at last Dexter had
+triumphed. He wondered if it had ever hitherto fallen to the lot of a
+representative of the law thus to be made an accessory to a daring felony!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But human endurance has well-defined limits. The fading light rendered the
+ingenious picture dim and more dim. The pain occasioned by his position became
+agonizing, and uttering a stifled groan he ceased to take an interest in the
+robbery of the London County and Provincial Bank.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Fate is a comedian; and when later I learned how I had lain strapped to my bed,
+and, so near to me, Bristol had hung helpless as a butchered carcass in the
+office of the Congo Fibre Company, whilst, in our absence from the stage, the
+drama of the slipper marched feverish to its final curtain, I accorded Fate her
+well-earned applause. I laughed; not altogether mirthfully.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap27"></a>
+CHAPTER XXVII<br/>
+THE SLIPPER</h2>
+
+<p>
+Someone was breaking in at the door of my chambers!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I aroused myself from a state of coma almost death-like and listened to the
+blows. The sun was streaming in at my windows.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A splintering crash told of a panel broken. Then a moment later I heard the
+grating of the lock, and a rush of footsteps along the passage.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Try the study!” came a voice that sounded like Bristol’s, save that it was
+strangely weak and shaky.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Almost simultaneously the Inspector himself threw open the bedroom
+door&mdash;and, very pale and haggard-eyed, stood there looking across at me.
+It was a scene unforgettable.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Mr. Cavanagh!” he said huskily&mdash;“Mr. Cavanagh! Thank God you’re alive!
+But”&mdash;he turned&mdash;“this way, Marden!” he cried, “Untie him quickly!
+I’ve got no strength in my arms!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Marden, a C.I.D. man, came running, and in a minute, or less, I was sitting up
+gulping brandy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’ve had the most awful experience of my life,” said Bristol. “You’ve fared
+badly enough, but I’ve been hanging by my wrists&mdash;you know Dexter’s
+trick!&mdash;for close upon sixteen hours! I wasn’t released until Carter, an
+office boy, came on the scene this morning!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Very feebly I nodded; I could not talk.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The strong-room of your bank was rifled under my very eyes last evening!” he
+continued, with something of his old vigour; “and five minutes after the
+Antiquarian Museum was opened to the public this morning quite an unusual
+number of visitors appeared.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I saw the bank manager the moment he arrived, and learned a piece of news that
+positively took my breath away! I was at the Museum seven minutes later and got
+another shock! There in the case was the red slipper!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Then,” I whispered&mdash;“it hadn’t been stolen?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Wrong! It had! This was a duplicate, as Mostyn, the curator, saw at a glance!
+Some of the early visitors&mdash;they were Easterns&mdash;had quite surrounded
+the case. They were watched, of course, but any number of Orientals come to see
+the thing; and, short of smashing the glass, which would immediately attract
+attention, the authorities were unprepared, of course, for any attempt. Anyway,
+they were tricked. Somebody opened the case. The real slipper of the Prophet is
+gone!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“They told you at the bank&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That you had withdrawn the keys! If Dexter had known that!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Hassan of Aleppo took them from me last night! At last the Hashishin have
+triumphed.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bristol sank into the armchair.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Every port is watched,” he said. “But&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap28"></a>
+CHAPTER XXVIII<br/>
+CARNETA</h2>
+
+<p>
+“I am entirely at your mercy; you can do as you please with me. But before you
+do anything I should like you to listen to what I have to say.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Her beautiful face was pale and troubled. Violet eyes looked sadly into mine.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“For nearly an hour I have been waiting for this chance&mdash;until I knew you
+were alone,” she continued. “If you are thinking of giving me up to the police,
+at least remember that I came here of my own free will. Of course, I know you
+are quite entitled to take advantage of that; but please let me say what I came
+to say!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She pleaded so hard, with that musical voice, with her evident helplessness,
+most of all with her wonderful eyes, that I quite abandoned any project I might
+have entertained to secure her arrest. I think she divined this masculine
+weakness, for she said, with greater confidence&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Your friend, Professor Deeping, was murdered by the man called Hassan of
+Aleppo. Are you content to remain idle while his murderer escapes?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+God knows I was not. My idleness in the matter was none of my choosing. Since
+poor Deeping’s murder I had come to handgrips with the assassins more than
+once, but Hassan had proved too clever for me, too clever for Scotland Yard.
+The sacred slipper was once more in the hands of its fanatic guardian.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One man there was who might have helped the search, Earl Dexter. But Earl
+Dexter was himself wanted by Scotland Yard!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+From the time of the bank affair up to the moment when this beautiful visitor
+had come to my chambers I had thought Dexter, as well as Hassan, to have fled
+secretly from England. But the moment that I saw Carneta at my door I divined
+that The Stetson Man must still be in London.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She sat watching me and awaiting my answer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I cannot avenge my friend unless I can find his murderer.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Eagerly she bent forward.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“But if I can find him?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That made me think, and I hesitated before speaking again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Say what you came to say,” I replied slowly. “You must know that I distrust
+you. Indeed, my plain duty is to detain you. But I will listen to anything you
+may care to tell me, particularly if it enables me to trap Hassan of Aleppo.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Very well,” she said, and rested her elbows upon the table before her. “I have
+come to you in desperation. I can help you to find the man who murdered
+Professor Deeping, but in return I want you to help me!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I watched her closely. She was very plainly, almost poorly, dressed. Her face
+was pale and there were dark marks around her eyes. This but served to render
+their strange beauty more startling; yet I could see that my visitor was in
+real trouble. The situation was an odd one.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You are possibly about to ask me,” I suggested, “to assist Earl Dexter to
+escape the police?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She shook her head. Her voice trembled as she replied&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That would not have induced me to run the risk of coming here. I came because
+I wanted to find a man who was brave enough to help me. We have no friends in
+London, and so it became a question of terms. I can repay you by helping you to
+trace Hassan.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What is it, then, that Dexter asks me to do?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“He asks nothing. I, Carneta, am asking!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Then you are not come from him?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At my question, all her self-possession left her. She abruptly dropped her face
+into her hands and was shaken with sobs! It was more than I could bear,
+unmoved. I forgot the shady past, forgot that she was the associate of a daring
+felon, and could only realize that she was a weeping woman, who had appealed to
+my pity and who asked my aid.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I stood up and stared out of the window, for I experienced a not unnatural
+embarrassment. Without looking at her I said&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Don’t be afraid to tell me your troubles. I don’t say I should go out of my
+way to be kind to Mr. Dexter, but I have no wish whatever to be instrumental
+in”&mdash;I hesitated&mdash;“in making you responsible for his misdeeds. If you
+can tell me where to find Hassan of Aleppo, I won’t even ask you where Dexter
+is&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“God help me! I don’t know where he is!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was real, poignant anguish in her cry. I turned and confronted her. Her
+lashes were all wet with tears.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What! has he disappeared?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She nodded, fought with her emotion a moment, and went on unsteadily,
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I want you to help me to find him for in finding him we shall find Hassan!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“How so?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Her gaze avoided me now.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Mr. Cavanagh, he has staked everything upon securing the slipper&mdash;and the
+Hashishin were too clever for him. His hand&mdash;those Eastern fiends cut off
+his hand! But he would not give in. He made another bid&mdash;and lost again.
+It left him almost penniless.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She spoke of Earl Dexter’s felonious plans as another woman might have spoken
+of her husband’s unwise investments! It was fantastic hearing that confession
+of The Stetson Man’s beautiful partner, and I counted the interview one of the
+strangest I had ever known.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A sudden idea came to me. “When did Dexter first conceive the plan to steal the
+slipper?” I asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“In Egypt!” answered Carneta. “Yes! You may as well know! He is thoroughly
+familiar with the East, and he learned of the robbery of Professor Deeping
+almost as soon as it became known to Hassan. I know what you are going to
+ask&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Ahmad Ahmadeen!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes! He travelled home as Ahmadeen&mdash;the only time he ever used a
+disguise. Oh! the thing is accursed!” she cried. “I begged him, implored him,
+to abandon his attempts upon it. Day and night we were watched by those ghastly
+yellow men! But it was all in vain. He knew, had known for a long time, where
+Hassan of Aleppo was in hiding!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And I reflected that the best men at New Scotland Yard had failed to pick up
+the slightest clue!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The Hashishin, of whom that dreadful man is leader, are rich, or have
+supporters who are rich. The plan was to make them pay for the slipper.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“My God! it was playing with fire!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She sat silent awhile. Emotion threatened to get the upper hand. Then&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Two days ago,” she almost whispered, “he set out&mdash;to ... get the
+slipper!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“To steal it?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“To steal it!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“From Hassan of Aleppo?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I could scarcely believe that any man, single-handed, could have had the
+hardihood to attempt such a thing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“From Hassan, yes!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I faced her, amazed, incredulous.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Dexter had suffered mutilation, he knew that the Hashishin sought his life for
+his previous attempts upon the relic of the Prophet, and yet he dared to
+venture again into the very lions’ den?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“He did, Mr. Cavanagh, two days ago. And&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes?” I urged, as gently as I could, for she was shaking pitifully.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“He never came back!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The words were spoken almost in a whisper. She clenched her hands and leapt
+from the chair, fighting down her grief and with such a stark horror in her
+beautiful eyes that from my very soul I longed to be able to help her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Mr. Cavanagh” (she had courage, this bewildering accomplice of a cracksman),
+“I know the house he went to! I cannot hope to make you understand what I have
+suffered since then. A thousand times I have been on the point of going to the
+police, confessing all I knew, and leading them to that house! O God! if only
+he is alive, this shall be his last crooked deal&mdash;and mine! I dared not go
+to the police, for his sake! I waited, and watched, and hoped, through two such
+nights and days ... then I ventured. I should have gone mad if I had not come
+here. I knew you had good cause to hate, to detest me, but I remembered that
+you had a great grievance against Hassan. Not as great, O heaven! not as great
+as mine, but yet a great one. I remembered, too, that you were the kind of
+man&mdash;a woman can come to...”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She sank back into the chair, and with her fingers twining and untwining, sat
+looking dully before her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“In brief,” I said, “what do you propose?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I propose that we endeavour to obtain admittance to the house of Hassan of
+Aleppo&mdash;secretly, of course, and all I ask of you in return for revealing
+the secret of its situation is&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That I let Dexter go free?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Almost inaudibly she whispered: “If he lives!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Surely no stranger proposition ever had been submitted to a law-abiding
+citizen. I was asked to connive in the escape of a notorious criminal, and at
+one and the same time to embark upon an expedition patently burglarious! As
+though this were not enough, I was invited to beard Hassan of Aleppo, the most
+dreadful being I had ever encountered East or West, in his mysterious
+stronghold!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I wondered what my friend, Inspector Bristol, would have thought of the
+project; I wondered if I should ever live to see Hassan meet his just deserts
+as a result of this enterprise, which I was forced to admit a foolhardy one.
+But a man who has selected the career of a war correspondent from amongst those
+which Fleet Street offers, is the victim of a certain craving for fresh
+experiences; I suppose, has in his character something of an adventurous turn.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For a while I stood staring from the window, then faced about and looked into
+the violet eyes of my visitor.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I agree, Carneta!” I said.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap29"></a>
+CHAPTER XXIX<br/>
+WE MEET MR. ISAACS</h2>
+
+<p>
+Quitting the wayside station, and walking down a short lane, we came out upon
+Watling Street, white and dusty beneath the afternoon sun. We were less than an
+hour’s train journey from London but found ourselves amid the Kentish hop
+gardens, amid a rural peace unbroken. My companion carried a camera case slung
+across her shoulder, but its contents were less innocent than one might have
+supposed. In fact, it contained a neat set of those instruments of the
+burglar’s art with whose use she appeared to be quite familiar.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“There is an inn,” she said, “about a mile ahead, where we can obtain some
+vital information. He last wrote to me from there.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Side by side we tramped along the dusty road. We both were silent, occupied
+with our own thoughts. Respecting the nature of my companion’s I could
+entertain little doubt, and my own turned upon the foolhardy nature of the
+undertaking upon which I was embarked. No other word passed between us then,
+until upon rounding a bend and passing a cluster of picturesque cottages, the
+yard of the Vinepole came into view.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Do they know you by sight here?” I asked abruptly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“No, of course not; we never made strategic mistakes of that kind. If we have
+tea here, no doubt we can learn all we require.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I entered the little parlour of the inn, and suggested that tea should be
+served in the pretty garden which opened out of it upon the right.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The host, who himself laid the table, viewed the camera case critically.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“We get a lot of photographers down here,” he remarked tentatively.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“No doubt,” said my companion. “There is some very pretty scenery in the
+neighbourhood.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The landlord rested his hands upon the table.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“There was a gentleman here on Wednesday last,” he said; “an old gentleman who
+had met with an accident, and was staying somewhere hereabouts for his health.
+But he’d got his camera with him, and it was wonderful the way he could use it,
+considering he hadn’t got the use of his right hand.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“He must have been a very keen photographer,” I said, glancing at the girl
+beside me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“He took three or four pictures of the Vinepole,” replied the landlord (which I
+doubted, since probably his camera was a dummy); “and he wanted to know if
+there were any other old houses in the neighbourhood. I told him he ought to
+take Cadham Hall, and he said he had heard that the Gate House, which is about
+a mile from here, was one of the oldest buildings about.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A girl appeared with a tea tray, and for a moment I almost feared that the
+landlord was about to retire; but he lingered, whilst the girl distributed the
+things about the table, and Carneta asked casually, “Would there be time for me
+to photograph the Gate House before dark?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“There might be time,” was the reply, “but that’s not the difficulty. Mr.
+Isaacs is the difficulty.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Who is Mr. Isaacs?” I asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“He’s the Jewish gentleman who bought the Gate House recently. Lots of money
+he’s got and a big motor car. He’s up and down to London almost every day in
+the week, but he won’t let anybody take photographs of the house. I know
+several who’ve asked.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“But I thought,” said Carneta, innocently, “you said the old gentleman who was
+here on Wednesday went to take some?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“He went, yes, miss; but I don’t know if he succeeded.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Carneta poured out some tea.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Now that you speak of it,” she said, “I too have heard that the Gate House is
+very picturesque. What objection can Mr. Isaacs have to photographers?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Well, you see, miss, to get a picture of the house, you have to pass right
+through the grounds.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I should walk right up to the house and ask permission. Is Mr. Isaacs at home,
+I wonder?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I couldn’t say. He hasn’t passed this way to-day.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“We might meet him on the way,” said I. “What is he like?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“A Jewish gentleman sir, very dark, with a white beard. Wears gold glasses.
+Keeps himself very much to himself. I don’t know anything about his household;
+none of them ever come here.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Carneta inquired the direction of Cadham Hall and of the Gate House, and the
+landlord left us to ourselves. My companion exhibited signs of growing
+agitation, and it seemed to me that she had much ado to restrain herself from
+setting out without a moment’s delay for the Gate House, which, I readily
+perceived, was the place to which our strange venture was leading us.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I found something very stimulating in the reflection that, rash though the
+expedition might be, and, viewed from whatever standpoint, undeniably perilous,
+it promised to bring me to that secret stronghold of deviltry where the
+sinister Hassan of Aleppo so successfully had concealed himself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The work of the modern journalist had many points of contact with that of the
+detective; and since the murder of Professor Deeping I had succumbed to the
+man-hunting fever more than once. I knew that Scotland Yard had failed to
+locate the hiding-place of the remarkable and evil man who, like an efreet of
+Oriental lore, obeyed the talisman of the stolen slipper, striking down
+whomsoever laid hand upon its sacredness. It was a novel sensation to know
+that, aided by this beautiful accomplice of a rogue, I had succeeded where the
+experts had failed!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Misgivings I had and shall not deny. If our scheme succeeded it would mean that
+Deeping’s murderer should be brought to justice. If it failed-well, frankly,
+upon that possibility I did not dare to reflect!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It must be needless for me to say that we two strangely met allies were ill at
+ease, sometimes to the point of embarrassment. We proceeded on our way in
+almost unbroken silence, and, save for a couple of farm hands, without meeting
+any wayfarer, up to the time that we reached the brow of the hill and had our
+first sight of the Gate House lying in a little valley beneath. It was a small
+Tudor mansion, very compact in plan and its roof glowed redly in the rays of
+the now setting sun.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+From the directions given by the host of the Vinepole it was impossible to
+mistake the way or to mistake the house. Amid well-wooded grounds it stood, a
+place quite isolated, but so typically English that, as I stood looking down
+upon it, I found myself unable to believe that any other than a substantial
+country gentleman could be its proprietor.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I glanced at Carneta. Her violet eyes were burning feverishly, but her lips
+twitched in a bravely pitiful way.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Clearly now my adventure lay before me; that red-roofed homestead seemed to
+have rendered it all substantial which hitherto had been shadowy; and I stood
+there studying the Gate House gravely, for it might yet swallow me up, as
+apparently it had swallowed Earl Dexter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There, amid that peaceful Kentish landscape, fantasy danced and horrors unknown
+lurked in waiting...
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The eminence upon which we were commanded an extensive prospect, and eastward
+showed a tower and flagstaff which marked the site of Cadham Hall. There were
+homeward-bound labourers to be seen in the lanes now, and where like a white
+ribbon the Watling Street lay across the verdant carpet moved an insect shape,
+speedily.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was a car, and I watched it with vague interest. At a point where a dense
+coppice spread down to the roadway and a lane crossed west to east, the car
+became invisible. Then I saw it again, nearer to us and nearer to the Gate
+House. Finally it disappeared among the trees.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I turned to Carneta. She, too, had been watching. Now her gaze met mine.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Mr. Isaacs!” she said; and her voice was less musical than usual. “His
+chauffeur, who learned his business in Cairo, is probably the only one of his
+servants who remains in England.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What!” I began&mdash;and said no more.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Where the road upon which we stood wound down into the valley and lost itself
+amid the trees surrounding the Gate House, the car suddenly appeared again, and
+began to mount the slope toward us!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Heavens!” whispered Carneta. “He may have seen us&mdash;with glasses! Quick!
+Let us walk back until the hill-top conceals us; then we must hide somewhere!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I shared her excitement. Without a moment’s hesitation we both turned and
+retraced our steps. Twenty paces brought us to a spot where a stack of mangel
+wurzels stood at the roadside.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“This will do!” I said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We ran around into the field, and crouched where we could peer out on the road
+without ourselves being seen. Nor had we taken up this position a moment too
+soon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Topping the slope came a light-weight electric, driven by a man who, in his
+spruce uniform, might have passed at a glance for a very dusky European. The
+car had a limousine back, and as the chauffeur slowed down, out from the open
+windows right and left peered the solitary occupant.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He had the cast of countenance which is associated with the best type of Jew,
+with clear-cut aquiline features wholly destitute of grossness. His white beard
+was patriarchal and he wore gold-rimmed pince-nez and a glossy silk hat. Such
+figures may often be met with in the great money-markets of the world, and Mr.
+Isaacs would have passed for a successful financier in even more discerning
+communities than that of Cadham.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But I scarcely breathed until the car was past; and, beside me, my companion,
+crouching to the ground, was trembling wildly. Fifty yards toward the village
+Mr. Isaacs evidently directed the man to return.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The car was put about, and flashed past us at high speed down into the valley.
+When the sound of the humming motor had died to something no louder than the
+buzz of a sleepy wasp, I held out my hand to Carneta and she rose, pale, but
+with blazing eyes, and picked up her camera case.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“If he had detected us, everything would have been lost!” she whispered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Not everything!” I replied grimly&mdash;and showed her the revolver which I
+had held in my hand whilst those eagle eyes had been seeking us. “If he had
+made a sign to show that he had seen us, in fact, if he had once offered a safe
+mark by leaning from the car, I should have shot him dead without hesitation!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“We must not show ourselves again, but wait for dusk. He must have seen us,
+then, on the hilltop, but I hope without recognizing us. He has the sight and
+instincts of a vulture!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I nodded, slipping the revolver into my pocket, but I wondered if I should not
+have been better advised to have risked a shot at the moment that I had
+recognized “Mr. Isaacs” for Hassan of Aleppo.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap30"></a>
+CHAPTER XXX<br/>
+AT THE GATE HOUSE</h2>
+
+<p>
+From sunset to dusk I lurked about the neighbourhood of the Gate House with my
+beautiful accomplice&mdash;watching and waiting: a man bound upon stranger
+business, I dare swear, than any other in the county of Kent that night.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Our endeavour now was to avoid observation by any one, and in this, I think, we
+succeeded. At the same time, Carneta, upon whose experience I relied
+implicitly, regarded it as most important that we should observe (from a safe
+distance) any one who entered or quitted the gates.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But none entered, and none came out. When, finally, we made along the narrow
+footpath skirting the west of the grounds, the night was silent&mdash;most
+strangely still.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The trees met overhead, but no rustle disturbed their leaves and of animal life
+no indication showed itself. There was no moon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A full appreciation of my mad folly came to me, and with it a sense of heavy
+depression. This stillness that ruled all about the house which sheltered the
+awful Sheikh of the Assassins was ominous, I thought. In short, my nerves were
+playing me tricks.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“We have little to fear,” said my companion, speaking in a hushed and quivering
+voice. “The whole of the party left England some days ago.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Are you sure?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Certain! We learned that before Earl made his attempt. Hassan remains, for
+some reason; Hassan and one other&mdash;the one who drives the car.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“But the slipper?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“If Hassan remains, so does the slipper!” From the knapsack, which, as you will
+have divined, did not contain a camera, she took out an electric pocket lamp,
+and directed its beam upon the hedge above us.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“There is a gap somewhere here!” she said. “See if you can find it. I dare not
+show the light too long.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Darkness followed. I clambered up the bank and sought for the opening of which
+Carneta had spoken.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The light here a moment,” I whispered. “I think I have it!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Out shone the white beam, and momentarily fell upon a black hole in the
+thickset hedge. The light disappeared, and as I extended my hand to Carneta she
+grasped it and climbed up beside me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Put on your rubber shoes,” she directed. “Leave the others here.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There in the darkness I did as she directed, for I was provided with a pair of
+tennis shoes. Carneta already was suitably shod.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I will go first,” I said. “What is the ground like beyond?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Just unkempt bushes and weeds.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Upon hands and knees I crawled through, saw dimly that there was a short
+descent, corresponding with the ascent from the lane, and turned, whispering to
+my fellow conspirator to follow.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The grounds proved even more extensive than I had anticipated. We pressed on,
+dodging low-sweeping branches and keeping our arms up to guard our faces from
+outshoots of thorn bushes. Our progress necessarily was slow, but even so quite
+a long time seemed to have elapsed ere we came in sight of the house.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This was my first expedition of the kind; and now that my goal was actually in
+sight I became conscious of a sort of exultation hard to describe. My
+companion, on the contrary, seemed to have become icily cool. When next she
+spoke, her voice had a businesslike ring, which revealed the fact that she was
+no amateur at this class of work.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Wait here,” she directed. “I am going to pass all around the house, and I will
+rejoin you.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I could see her but dimly, and she moved off as silent as an Indian
+deer-stalker, leaving me alone there crouching at the extreme edge of the
+thicket. I looked out over a small wilderness of unkempt flower-beds; so much
+it was just possible to perceive. The plants in many instances had spread on to
+the pathways and contested survival with the flourishing weeds. All was
+wild&mdash;deserted&mdash;eerie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A sense of dampness assailed me, and I raised my eyes to the low-lying building
+wherein no light showed, no sign of life was evident. The nearer wing presented
+a verandah apparently overgrown by some climbing plant, the nature of which it
+was impossible to determine in the darkness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The zest for the nocturnal operation which temporarily had thrilled me
+succumbed now to loneliness. With keen anxiety I awaited the return of my more
+experienced accomplice. The situation was grotesque, utterly bizarre; but even
+my sense of humour could not save me from the growing dread which this
+seemingly deserted place poured into my heart.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When upon the right I heard a faint rustling I started, and grasped the
+revolver in my pocket.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Not a sound!” came in Carneta’s voice. “Keep just inside the bushes and come
+this way. There is something I want to show you.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The various profuse growths rendered concealment simple enough&mdash;if indeed
+any other concealment were necessary than that which the strangely black night
+afforded. Just within the evil-smelling thicket we made a half circuit of the
+building, and stopped.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Look!” whispered Carneta.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The word was unnecessary, for I was staring fixedly in the direction of that
+which evidently had occasioned her uneasiness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was a small square window, so low-set that I assumed it to be that of a
+cellar, and heavily cross-barred.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+From it, out upon a tangled patch of vegetation, shone a dull red light!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“There’s no other light in the place,” my companion whispered. “For God’s sake,
+what can it be?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My mind supplied no explanation. The idea that it might be a dark room no doubt
+was suggested by the assumed role of Carneta; but I knew that idea to be
+absurd. The red light meant something else.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Evidently the commencing of operations before all lights were out was
+irregular, for Carneta said slowly&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“We must wait and watch the light. There was formerly a moat around the Gate
+House; that must be the window of a dungeon.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I little relished the prospect of waiting in that swamp-like spot, but since no
+alternative presented itself I accepted the inevitable. For close upon an hour
+we stood watching the red window. No sound of bird, beast, or man disturbed our
+vigil; in fact, it would appear that the very insects shunned the neighbourhood
+of Hassan of Aleppo. But the red light still shone out.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“We must risk it!” said Carneta steadily. “There are French windows opening on
+to that verandah. Ten yards farther around the bushes come right up to the wall
+of the house. We’ll go that way and around by the other wing on to the
+verandah.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Any action was preferable to this nerve-sapping delay, and with a determination
+to shoot, and shoot to kill, any one who opposed our entrance, I passed through
+the bushes and, with Carneta, rounded the southern border of that silent house
+and slipped quietly on to the verandah.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Kneeling, Carneta opened the knapsack. My eyes were growing accustomed to the
+darkness, and I was just able to see her deft hands at work upon the
+fastenings. She made no noise, and I watched her with an ever-growing wonder. A
+female burglar is a personage difficult to imagine. Certainly, no one ever
+could have suspected this girl with the violet eyes of being an expert
+crackswoman; but of her efficiency there could be no question. I think I had
+never witnessed a more amazing spectacle than that of this cultured girl
+manipulating the tools of the house breaker with her slim white fingers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Suddenly she turned and clutched my arm.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The windows are not fastened!” she whispered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A strange courage came to me&mdash;perhaps that of desperation. For, ignoring
+the ominous circumstance, I pushed open the nearest window and stepped into the
+room beyond! A hissing breath from Carneta acknowledged my performance, and she
+entered close behind me, silent in her rubber-soled shoes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For one thrilling moment we stood listening. Then came the white beam from the
+electric lamp to cut through the surrounding blackness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The room was totally unfurnished!
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap31"></a>
+CHAPTER XXXI<br/>
+THE POOL OF DEATH</h2>
+
+<p>
+Not a sound broke the stillness of the Gate House. It was the most eerily
+silent place in which I had ever found myself. Out into the corridor we went,
+noiselessly. It was stripped, uncarpeted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Three doors we passed, two upon the left and one upon the right. We tried them
+all. All were unfastened, and the rooms into which they opened bare and
+deserted. Then we came upon a short, descending stair, at its foot a massive
+oaken door.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Carneta glided down, noiseless as a ghost, and to one of the blackened panels
+applied an ingenious little instrument which she carried in her knapsack. It
+was not unlike a stethoscope; and as I watched her listening, by means of this
+arrangement, for any sound beyond the oaken door, I reflected how almost every
+advance made by science places a new tool in the hand of the criminal.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+No word had been spoken since we had discovered this door; none had been
+necessary. For we both knew that the place beyond was that from which proceeded
+the mysterious red light.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I directed the ray of the electric torch upon Carneta, as she stood there
+listening, and against that sombre oaken background her face and profile stood
+out with startling beauty. She seemed half perplexed and half fearful. Then she
+abruptly removed the apparatus, and, stooping to the knapsack, replaced it and
+took out a bunch of wire keys, signing to me to hand her the lamp.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As I crept down the steps I saw her pause, glancing back over her shoulder
+toward the door. The expression upon her face induced me to direct the light in
+the same direction.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Why neither of us had observed the fact before I cannot conjecture; but a key
+was in the lock!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Perhaps the traffic of the night afforded no more dramatic moment than this.
+The house which we were come prepared burglariously to enter was thrown open,
+it would seem, to us, inviting our inspection!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Looking back upon that moment, it seems almost incredible that the sight of a
+key in a lock should have so thrilled me. But at the time I perceived something
+sinister in this failure of the Lord of the Hashishin to close his doors to
+intruders. That Carneta shared my doubts and fears was to be read in her face;
+but her training had been peculiar, I learned, and such as establishes a
+surprising resoluteness of character.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Quite noiselessly she turned the key, and holding a dainty pocket revolver in
+her hand, pushed the door open slowly!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+An odour, sickly sweet and vaguely familiar, was borne to my nostrils. Carneta
+became outlined in dim, reddish light. Bending forward slightly, she entered
+the room, and I, with muscles tensed nervously, advanced and stood beside her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I perceived that this was a cellar; indeed, I doubt not that in some past age
+it had served as a dungeon. From the stone roof hung the first evidence of
+Eastern occupation which the Gate House had yielded; in the form of an Oriental
+lantern, or fanoos, of rose-coloured waxed paper upon a copper frame. Its vague
+light revealed the interior of the hideous place upon whose threshold we stood.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Straight before us, deep set in the stone wall, was the tiny square window,
+iron-barred without, and glazed with red glass, the light from which had so
+deeply mystified us. Within a niche in the wall, a little to the left of the
+window, rested an object which, at that moment, claimed our undivided attention
+the sight of which so wrought upon us that temporarily all else was forgotten.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was the red slipper of the Prophet!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“My God!” whispered Carneta&mdash;“my God!”&mdash;and clutched at me, swaying
+dizzily.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A few inches from our feet the floor became depressed, how deeply I could not
+determine, for it was filled with water, water filthy and slimy! The strange,
+nauseating odour had grown all but unsupportable; it seemingly proceeded from
+this fetid pool which, occupying the floor of the dungeon, offered a barrier,
+since its depth was unknown, of fully twelve feet between ourselves and the
+farther wall.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was a faint, dripping sound: a whispering, echoing drip-drip of falling
+water. I could not tell from whence it proceeded.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Almost supporting my companion, whose courage seemed suddenly to have failed
+her, I stared fascinatedly at that blood-stained relic. Something then induced
+me to look behind; I suppose a warning instinct of that sort which is
+unexplainable. I only know that upholding Carneta with my left arm, and
+nervously grasping my revolver in my right, I turned and glanced over my
+shoulder.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Very slowly, but with a constant, regular motion, the massive door was closing!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I snatched away my arm; in my left hand I held the electric torch, and
+springing sharply about I directed the searching ray into the black gap of the
+stairway. A yellow face, a malignant Oriental face, came suddenly, fully, into
+view! Instantly I recognized it for that of the man who had driven Hassan’s
+car!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Acting upon the determination with which I had entered the Gate House, I raised
+my revolver and fired straight between the evil eyes! To the fact that I
+dropped my left hand in the act of pulling the trigger with my right, and thus
+lost my mark, the servant of Hassan of Aleppo owed his escape. I missed him. He
+uttered a shrill cry of fear and went racing up the wooden stair. I followed
+him with the light and fired twice at the retreating figure. I heard him
+stumble and a second time cry out. But, though I doubt not he was hit, he
+recovered himself, for I heard his tread in the corridor above.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Propping wide the door with my foot, I turned to Carneta. Her face was drawn
+and haggard; but her mouth set in a sort of grim determination.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Earl is dead!” she said, in a queer, toneless voice. “He died trying to
+get&mdash;that thing! I will get it, and destroy it!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Before I could detain her, even had I sought to do so, she stepped into the
+filthy water, struggled to recover her foothold, and sank above her waist into
+its sliminess. Without hesitation she began to advance toward the niche which
+contained the slipper. In the middle of the pool she stopped.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+What memory it was which supplied the clue to the identity of that nauseating
+smell, heaven alone knows; but as the girl stopped and drew herself up
+rigidly&mdash;then turned and leapt wildly back toward the door&mdash;I knew
+what occasioned that sickly odour!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She screamed once, dreadfully&mdash;shrilly&mdash;a scream of agonizing fear
+that I can never forget. Then, roughly I grasped her, for the need was
+urgent&mdash;and dragged her out on to the floor beside me. With her wet
+garments clinging to her limbs, she fell prostrate on the stones.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A yard from the brink the slimy water parted, and the yellow snout of a huge
+crocodile was raised above the surface! The saurian eyes, hungrily malevolent,
+rose next to view!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The extremity of our danger found me suddenly cool. As the thing drew its slimy
+body up out of the pool I waited. The jaws were extended toward the prostrate
+body, were but inches removed from it, dripped their saliva upon the soddened
+skirt&mdash;when I bent forward, and at a range of some ten inches emptied the
+remaining three loaded chambers of my revolver into the creature’s left eye!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Upchurned in bloody foam became the water of that dreadful place.... As one
+recalls the incidents of a fevered dream, I recall dragging Carneta away from
+the contorted body of the death-stricken reptile. A nightmare chaos of horrid,
+revolting sights and sounds forms my only recollection of quitting the dungeon
+of the slipper.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I succeeded in carrying her up the stairs and out through the empty rooms on to
+the verandah; but there, from sheer exhaustion, I laid her down. I had no means
+of reviving her and I lacked the strength to carry her farther. Having
+recharged my revolver, I stood watching her where she lay, wanly beautiful in
+the dim light.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was no doubt in my mind respecting the fate of Earl Dexter, nor could I
+doubt that the slipper in the dungeon below was a duplicate of the real one. It
+was a death-trap into which he had lured Dexter and which he had left baited
+for whomsoever might trace the cracksman to the Gate House. Why Hassan should
+have remained behind, unless from fanatic lust of killing, I could not imagine.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When at last the fresher night air had its effect, and Carneta opened her eyes,
+I led her to the gates, nor did she offer the slightest resistance, but looked
+dully before her, muttering over and over again, “Earl, Earl!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The gates were open; we passed out on to the open road. No man pursued us, and
+the night was gravely still.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap32"></a>
+CHAPTER XXXII<br/>
+SIX GRAY PATCHES</h2>
+
+<p>
+When the invitation came from my old friend Hilton to spend a week “roughing
+it” with him in Warwickshire I accepted with alacrity. If ever a man needed a
+holiday I was that man. Nervous breakdown threatened me at any moment; the
+ghastly experience at the Gate House together with Carneta’s grief-stricken
+face when I had parted from her were obsessing memories which I sought in vain
+to shake off.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A brief wire had contained the welcome invitation, and up to the time when I
+had received it I had been unaware that Hilton was back in England. Moreover,
+beyond the fact that his house, “Uplands,” was near H&mdash;, for which I was
+instructed to change at New Street Station, Birmingham, I had little idea of
+its location. But he added “Wire train and will meet at H&mdash;”; so that I
+had no uneasiness on that score.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I had contemplated catching the 2:45 from Euston, but by the time I had got my
+work into something like order, I decided that the 6:55 would be more suitable
+and decided to dine on the train.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Altogether, there was something of a rush and hustle attendant upon getting
+away, and when at last I found myself in the cab, bound for Euston, I sat back
+with a long-drawn sigh. The quest of the Prophet’s slipper was ended; in all
+probability that blood-stained relic was already Eastward bound. Hassan of
+Aleppo, its awful guardian, had triumphed and had escaped retribution. Earl
+Dexter was dead. I could not doubt that; for the memory of his beautiful
+accomplice, Carneta, as I last had seen her, broken-hearted, with her great
+violet eyes dulled in tearless agony&mdash;have I not said that it lived with
+me?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Even as the picture of her lovely, pale face presented itself to my mind, the
+cab was held up by a temporary block in the traffic&mdash;and my imagination
+played me a strange trick.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Another taxi ran close alongside, almost at the moment that the press of
+vehicles moved on again. Certainly, I had no more than a passing glimpse of the
+occupants; but I could have sworn that violet eyes looked suddenly into mine,
+and with equal conviction I could have sworn to the gaunt face of the man who
+sat beside the violet-eyed girl for that of Earl Dexter!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The travellers, however, were immediately lost to sight in the rear, and I was
+left to conjecture whether this had been a not uncommon form of optical
+delusion or whether I had seen a ghost.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At any rate, as I passed in between the big pillars, “The gateway of the
+North,” I scrutinized, and closely, the numerous hurrying figures about me.
+None of them, by any stretch of the imagination, could have been set down for
+that of Dexter, The Stetson Man. No doubt, I concluded, I had been tricked by a
+chance resemblance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Having dispatched my telegram, I boarded the 6:55. I thought I should have the
+compartment to myself, and so deep in reverie was I that the train was actually
+clear of the platforms ere I learned that I had a companion. He must have
+joined me at the moment that the train started. Certainly, I had not seen him
+enter. But, suddenly looking up, I met the eyes of this man who occupied the
+corner seat facing me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This person was olive-skinned, clean-shaven, fine featured, and perfectly
+groomed. His age might have been anything from twenty-five to forty-five, but
+his hair and brows were jet black. His eyes, too, were nearer to real black
+than any human eyes I had ever seen before&mdash;excepting the awful eyes of
+Hassan of Aleppo. Hassan of Aleppo! It was, to that hour, a mystery how his
+group of trained assassins&mdash;the Hashishin&mdash;had quitted England. Since
+none of them were known to the police, it was no insoluble mystery, I admit;
+but nevertheless it was singular that the careful watching of the ports had
+yielded no result. Could it be that some of them had not yet left the country?
+Could it be&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I looked intently into the black eyes. They were caressing, smiling eyes, and
+looked boldly into mine. I picked up a magazine, pretending to read. But I
+supported it with my left hand; my right was in my coat pocket&mdash;and it
+rested upon my Smith and Wesson!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So much had the slipper of Mohammed done for me: I went in hourly dread of
+murderous attack!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My travelling companion watched me; of that I was certain. I could feel his
+gaze. But he made no move and no word passed between us. This was the situation
+when the train slowed into Northampton. At Northampton, to my indescribable
+relief (frankly, I was as nervous in those days as a woman), the Oriental
+traveller stepped out on to the platform.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Having reclosed the door, he turned and leaned in through the open window.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Evidently you are not concerned, Mr. Cavanagh,” he said. “Be warned. Do not
+interfere with those that are!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The night swallowed him up.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My fears had been justified; the man was one of the Hashishin&mdash;a spy of
+Hassan of Aleppo! What did it mean?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I craned from the window, searching the platform right and left. But there was
+no sign of him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When the train left Northampton I found myself alone, and I should only weary
+you were I to attempt to recount the troubled conjectures that bore me company
+to Birmingham.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The train reached New Street at nine, with the result that having gulped a
+badly needed brandy and soda in the buffet, I grabbed my bag, raced
+across&mdash;and just missed the connection! More than an hour later I found
+myself standing at ten minutes to eleven upon the H&mdash; platform, watching
+the red taillight of the “local” disappear into the night. Then I realized to
+the full that with four miles of lonely England before me there hung above my
+head a mysterious threat&mdash;a vague menace. The solitary official, who but
+waited my departure to lock up the station, was the last representative of
+civilization I could hope to encounter until the gates of “Uplands” should be
+opened to me!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+What was the matter with which I was warned not to interfere? Might I not, by
+my mere presence in that place, unwittingly be interfering now?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With the station-master’s directions humming like a refrain in my ears, I
+passed through the sleeping village and out on to the road. The moon was
+exceptionally bright and unobscured, although a dense bank of cloud crept
+slowly from the west, and before me the path stretched as an unbroken thread of
+silvery white twining a sinuous way up the bracken-covered slope, to where,
+sharply defined against the moonlight sky, a coppice in grotesque silhouette
+marked the summit.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The month had been dry and tropically hot, and my footsteps rang crisply upon
+the hard ground. There is nothing more deceptive than a straight road up a
+hill; and half an hour’s steady tramping but saw me approaching the trees.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I had so far resolutely endeavoured to keep my mind away from the idea of
+surveillance. Now, as I paused to light my pipe&mdash;a never-failing friend in
+loneliness&mdash;I perceived something move in the shadows of a neighbouring
+bush.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This object was not unlike a bladder, and the very incongruity of its
+appearance served to revive all my apprehensions. Taking up my grip, as though
+I had noticed nothing of an alarming nature, I pursued my way up the slope,
+leaving a trail of tobacco smoke in my wake; and having my revolver secreted up
+my right coat-sleeve.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Successfully resisting a temptation to glance behind, I entered the cover of
+the coppice, and, now invisible to any one who might be dogging me, stood and
+looked back upon the moon-bright road.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was no living thing in sight, the road was empty as far as the eye could
+see. The coppice now remained to be negotiated, and then, if the
+station-master’s directions were not at fault, “Uplands” should be visible
+beyond. Taking, therefore, what I had designed to be a final glance back down
+the hillside, I was preparing to resume my way when I saw
+something&mdash;something that arrested me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was a long way behind&mdash;so far that, had the moon been less bright, I
+could never have discerned it. What it was I could not even conjecture; but it
+had the appearance of a vague gray patch, moving&mdash;not along the road, but
+through the undergrowth&mdash;in my direction.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For a second my eye rested upon it. Then I saw a second patch&mdash;a
+third&mdash;a fourth!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Six!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There were six gray patches creeping up the slope toward me!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The sight was unnerving. What were these things that approached, silently,
+stealthily&mdash;like snakes in the grass?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A fear, unlike anything I had known before the quest of the Prophet’s slipper
+had brought fantastic horror into my life, came upon me. Revolver in hand I
+ran&mdash;ran for my life toward the gap in the trees that marked the coppice
+end. And as I went something hummed through the darkness beside my head, some
+projectile, some venomous thing that missed its mark by a bare inch!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Painfully conversant with the uncanny weapons employed by the Hashishin, I knew
+now, beyond any possibility of doubt, that death was behind me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A pattering like naked feet sounded on the road, and, without pausing in my
+headlong career, I sent a random shot into the blackness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The crack of the Smith and Wesson reassured me. I pulled up short, turned, and
+looked back toward the trees.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nothing&mdash;no one!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Breathing heavily, I crammed my extinguished briar into my
+pocket&mdash;re-charged the empty chamber of the revolver&mdash;and started to
+run again toward a light that showed over the treetops to my left.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That, if the man’s directions were right, was “Uplands”&mdash;if his directions
+were wrong&mdash;then...
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A shrill whistle&mdash;minor, eerie, in rising cadence&mdash;sounded on the
+dead silence with piercing clearness! Six whistles&mdash;seemingly from all
+around me&mdash;replied!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Some object came humming through the air, and I ducked wildly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On and on I ran&mdash;flying from an unknown, but, as a warning instinct told
+me, deadly peril&mdash;ran as a man runs pursued by devils.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The road bent sharply to the left then forked. Overhanging trees concealed the
+house, and the light, though high up under the eaves, was no longer visible.
+Trusting to Providence to guide me, I plunged down the lane that turned to the
+left, and, almost exhausted, saw the gates before me&mdash;saw the sweep of the
+drive, and the moonlight, gleaming on the windows!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+None of the windows were illuminated.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Straight up to the iron gates I raced.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They were locked!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Without a moment’s hesitation I hurled my grip over the top and clambered up
+the bars! As I got astride, from the blackness of the lane came the ominous
+hum, and my hat went spinning away across the lawn!&mdash;the black cloud
+veiled the moon and complete darkness fell.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then I dropped and ran for the house&mdash;shouting, though all but
+winded&mdash;“Hilton! Hilton! Open the door!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Sinking exhausted on the steps, I looked toward the gates&mdash;but they showed
+only dimly in the dense shadows of the trees.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bzzz! Buzz!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I dropped flat in the portico as something struck the metal knob of the door
+and rebounded over me. A shower of gravel told of another misdirected
+projectile.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Crack! Crack! Crack! The revolver spoke its short reply into the mysterious
+darkness; but the night gave up no sound to tell of a shot gone home.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Hilton! Hilton!” I cried, banging on the panels with the butt of the weapon.
+“Open the door! Open the door!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And now I heard the coming footsteps along the hall within; heavy bolts were
+withdrawn&mdash;the door swung open&mdash;and Hilton, pale-faced, appeared. His
+hand shot out, grabbed my coat collar; and weak, exhausted, I found myself
+snatched into safety, and the door rebolted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Thank God!” I whispered. “Thank God! Hilton, look to all your bolts and
+fastenings. Hell is outside!”
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap33"></a>
+CHAPTER XXXIII<br/>
+HOW WE WERE REINFORCED</h2>
+
+<p>
+Hilton, I learned, was living the simple life at “Uplands.” The place was not
+yet decorated and was only partly furnished. But with his man, Soar, he had
+been in solitary occupation for a week.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Feel better now?” he asked anxiously.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I reached for my tumbler and blew a cloud of smoke into the air. I could hear
+Soar’s footsteps as he made the round of bolts and bars, testing each
+anxiously.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Thanks, Hilton,” I said. “I’m quite all right. You are naturally wondering
+what the devil it all means? Well, then, I wired you from Euston that I was
+coming by the 6:55.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“H&mdash; Post Office shuts at 7. I shall get your wire in the morning!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That explains your failing to meet me. Now for my explanation!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Surrounding this house at the present moment,” I continued, “are members of an
+Eastern organization&mdash;the Hashishin, founded in Khorassan in the eleventh
+century and flourishing to-day!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Do you mean it, Cavanagh?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I do! One Hassan of Aleppo is the present Sheikh of the order, and he has come
+to England, bringing a fiendish company in his train, in pursuit of the sacred
+slipper of Mohammed, which was stolen by the late Professor Deeping&mdash;-”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Surely I have read something about this?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Probably. Deeping was murdered by Hassan! The slipper was placed in the
+Antiquarian Museum&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“From which it was stolen again!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Correct&mdash;by Earl Dexter, America’s foremost crook! But the real facts
+have never got into print. I am the only pressman who knows them, and I have
+good reason for keeping my knowledge to myself! Dexter is dead (I believe I saw
+his ghost to-day). But although, to the best of my knowledge, the accursed
+slipper is in the hands of Hassan and Company, I have been watched since I left
+Euston, and on my way to ‘Uplands’ my life was attempted!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“For God’s sake, why?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I cannot surmise, Hilton. Deeping, for certain reasons that are irrelevant at
+the moment, left the keys of the case at the Museum in my perpetual
+keeping&mdash;but the case was rifled a second time&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I read of it!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“And the keys were stolen from me. I am utterly at a loss to understand why the
+Hashishin&mdash;for it is members of that awful organization who, without a
+doubt, surround this house at the present moment&mdash;should seek my life.
+Hilton, I have brought trouble with me!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It’s almost incredible!” said Hilton, staring at me. “Why do these people
+pursue you?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ere I had time to reply Soar entered, arrayed, as was Hilton, in his night
+attire. Soar was an ex-dragoon and a model man.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Everything fast, sir,” he reported; “but from the window of the bedroom over
+here&mdash;the room I got ready for Mr. Cavanagh&mdash;I thought I saw someone
+in the orchard.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Eh?” jerked Hilton&mdash;“in the orchard? Come on up, Cavanagh!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We all ran upstairs. The moonlight was streaming into the room.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Keep back!” I warned.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Well within the shadow, I crept up to the window and looked out. The night was
+hot and still. No breeze stirred the leaves, but the edge of the frowning
+thunder cloud which I had noted before spread a heavy carpet of ebony black
+upon the ground. Beyond, I could dimly discern the hills. The others stood
+behind me, constrained by the fear of this mysterious danger which I had
+brought to “Uplands.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was someone moving among the trees!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Closer came the figure, and closer, until suddenly a shaft of moonlight found
+passage and spilled a momentary pool of light amid the shadows, I could see the
+watcher very clearly. A moment he stood there, motionless, and looking up at
+the window; then as he glided again into the shade of the trees the darkness
+became complete. But I watched, crouching there nervously, for long after he
+was gone.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“For God’s sake, who is it?” whispered Hilton, with a sort of awe in his voice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It’s Hassan of Aleppo!” I replied.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Virtually, the house, with the capital of the Midlands so near upon the one
+hand, the feverish activity of the Black Country reddening the night upon the
+other, was invested by fanatic Easterns!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We descended again to the extemporized study. Soar entered with us and Hilton
+invited him to sit down.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“We must stick together to-night!” he said. “Now, Cavanagh, let us see if we
+can find any explanation of this amazing business. I can understand that at one
+period of the slipper’s history you were an object of interest to those who
+sought to recover it; but if, as you say, the Hashishin have the slipper now,
+what do they want with you? If you have never touched it, they cannot be
+prompted by desire for vengeance.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I have never touched it,” I replied grimly; “nor even any receptacle
+containing it.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As I ceased speaking came a distant muffled rumbling.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That’s the thunder,” said Hilton. “There’s a tremendous storm brewing.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He poured out three glasses of whisky, and was about to speak when Soar held up
+a warning finger.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Listen!” he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At his words, with tropical suddenness down came the rain.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hilton, his pipe in his hand, stood listening intently.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What?” he asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I don’t know, sir; the sound of the rain has drowned it.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Indeed, the rain was descending in a perfect deluge, its continuous roar
+drowning all other sounds; but as we three listened tensely we detected a noise
+which hitherto had seemed like the overflowing of some spout.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But louder and clearer it grew, until at last I knew it for what it was.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It’s a motor-car!” I cried.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“And coming here!” added Soar. “Listen! it’s in the lane!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It certainly isn’t a taxicab,” declared Hilton. “None of the men will come
+beyond the village.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That’s the gate!” said Soar, in an awed voice, and stood up, looking at
+Hilton.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Come on,” said the latter abruptly, making for the door.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Be careful, Hilton!” I cried; “it may be a trick!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Soar unbolted the front door, threw it open, and looked out. In the darkness of
+the storm it was almost impossible to see anything in the lane outside. But at
+that moment a great sheet of lightning split the gloom, and we saw a taxicab
+standing close up to the gateway!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Help! Open the gate!” came a high-pitched voice; “open the gate!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Out into the rain we ran and down the gravel path. Soar had the gate open in a
+twinkling, and a woman carrying a brown leather grip, but who was so closely
+veiled that I had no glimpse of her features, leapt through on to the drive.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Lend a hand, two of you!” cried a vaguely familiar voice&mdash;“this way!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hilton and Soar stepped out into the road. The driver of the cab was lying
+forward across the wheel, apparently insensible, but as Hilton seized his arm
+he moved and spoke feebly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“For God’s sake be quick, sir!” he said. “They’re after us! They’re on the
+other side of the lane, there!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With that he dropped limply into Hilton’s arms!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was dragged in on to the drive&mdash;and something whizzed over our heads
+and went sputtering into the gravel away up toward the house. The last to enter
+was the man who had come in the cab. As he barred the gate behind him he
+suddenly reached out through the bars and I saw a pistol in his hand.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Once&mdash;twice&mdash;thrice&mdash;he fired into the blackness of the lane.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Take that, you swine!” he shouted. “Take that!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As quickly as we could, bearing the insensible man, we hurried back to the
+door. On the step the woman was waiting for us, with her veil raised. A
+blinding flash of lightning came as we mounted the step&mdash;and I looked into
+the violet eyes of Carneta! I turned and stared at the man behind me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was Earl Dexter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Three of the mysterious missiles fell amongst us, but miraculously no one was
+struck. Amid the mighty booming of the thunder we reentered the houses and got
+the door barred. In the hall we laid down the unconscious man and stood, a
+strangely met company, peering at one another in the dim lamplight.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“We’ve got to bury the hatchet, Mr. Cavanagh!” said Dexter. “It’s a case of the
+common enemy. I’ve brought you your bag!” and he pointed to the brown grip upon
+the floor.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“My bag!” I cried. “My bag is upstairs in my room.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Wrong, sir!” snapped The Stetson Man. “They are like as two peas in a pod,
+I’ll grant you, but the bag you snatched off the platform at New Street was
+mine! That’s what I’m after; I ought to be on the way to Liverpool. That’s what
+Hassan’s after!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The bag!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You don’t need to ask what’s in the bag?” suggested Dexter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What is in the bag?” ask Hilton hoarsely.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The slipper of the Prophet, sir!” was the reply.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap34"></a>
+CHAPTER XXXIV<br/>
+MY LAST MEETING WITH HASSAN OF ALEPPO</h2>
+
+<p>
+I felt dazed, as a man must feel who has just heard the death sentence
+pronounced upon him. Hilton seemed to have become incapable of speech or
+action; and in silence we stood watching Carneta tending the unconscious man.
+She forced brandy from a flask between his teeth, kneeling there beside him
+with her face very pale and dark rings around her eyes. Presently she looked
+up.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Will you please get me a bowl of water and a sponge?” she said quietly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Soar departed without a word, and no one spoke until he returned, bringing the
+sponge and the water, when the girl set to work in a businesslike way to
+cleanse a wound which showed upon the man’s head.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“She’s a good nurse is Carneta,” said Dexter coolly. “She was the only doctor I
+had through this”&mdash;indicating his maimed wrist. “If you will fetch my bag
+down, there’s some lint in it.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I hesitated.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You needn’t worry,” said Dexter; “as well be hung for a sheep as a lamb.
+You’ve handled the bag, and I’m not asking you to do any more.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I went up to my room and lifted the grip from the chair upon which I had put
+it. Even now I found it difficult to perceive any difference between this and
+mine. Both were of identical appearance and both new. In fact, I had bought
+mine only that morning, my old one being past use, and being in a hurry, I had
+not left it to be initialled.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As I picked up the bag the lightning flashed again, and from the window I could
+see the orchard as clearly as by sunlight. At the farther end near the wall
+someone was standing watching the house.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I went downstairs carrying the fatal bag, and rejoined the group in the hall.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“He will have to be got to bed,” said Carneta, referring to the wounded man;
+“he will probably remain unconscious for a long time.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Accordingly, we took the patient into one of the few furnished bedrooms, and
+having put him to bed left him in care of the beautiful nurse. When we four men
+met again downstairs, amazement had rendered the whole scene unreal to me. Soar
+stood just within the open door, not knowing whether to go or to remain; but
+Hilton motioned to him to stay. Earl Dexter bit off the end of a cigar and
+stood with his left elbow resting on the mantelpiece.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His gaunt face looked gaunter than ever, but the daredevil gray eyes still
+nursed that humorous light in their depths.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Mr. Cavanagh,” he said, “we’re brothers! And if you’ll consider a minute,
+you’ll see that I’m not lying when I say I’m on the straight, now and for
+always!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I made no reply: I could think of none.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’m a crook,” he resumed, “or I was up to a while ago. There’s a warrant out
+for me&mdash;the first that ever bore my name. I’ve sailed near the wind often
+enough, but it was desperation that got me into hot water about that!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He jerked his cigar in the direction of his grip, which lay now on the rug at
+his feet.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I lost a useful right hand,” he went on&mdash;“and I lost every cent I had. It
+was a dead rotten speculation&mdash;for I lost my good name! I mean it! Believe
+me, I’ve handled some shady propositions in the past, but I did it right in the
+sunlight! Up to the time I went out for that damned slipper I could have had
+lunch with any detective from Broadway to the Strand! I didn’t need any false
+whiskers and the Ritz was good enough for The Stetson Man. What now? I’m
+‘wanted!’ Enough said.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He tossed the cigar&mdash;he had smoked scarce an inch of it&mdash;into the
+empty grate.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’m an Aunt Sally for any man to shy at,” he resumed bitterly. “My place
+henceforth is in the dark. Right! I’ve finished; the book’s closed. From the
+time I quit England&mdash;if I can quit&mdash;I’m on the straight! I’ve
+promised Carneta, and I mean to keep my word. See here&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Dexter turned to me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You’ll want to know how I escaped from the cursed death-trap at Hassan’s house
+in Kent? I’ll tell you. I was never in it! I was hiding and waiting my chance.
+You know what was left to guard the slipper while the Sheikh&mdash;rot
+him&mdash;was away looking after arrangements for getting his mob out of the
+country?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I nodded.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You fell into the trap&mdash;you and Carneta. By God! I didn’t know till it
+was all over! But two minutes later I was inside that place&mdash;and three
+minutes later I was away with the slipper! Oh, it wasn’t a duplicate; it was
+the goods! What then? Carneta had had a sickening of the business and she just
+invited me to say Yes or No. I said Yes; and I’m a straight man onward.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Then what were you doing on the train with the slipper?” asked Hilton sharply.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I was going to Liverpool, sir!” snapped The Stetson Man, turning on him. “I
+was going to try to get aboard the Mauretania and then make terms for my life!
+What happened? I slipped out at Birmingham for a drink&mdash;grip in hand! I
+put it down beside me, and Mr. Cavanagh here, all in a hustle, must have rushed
+in behind me, snatched a whisky and snatched my grip and started for H&mdash;!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A vivid flash of lightning flickered about the room. Then came the deafening
+boom of the thunder, right over the house it seemed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I knew from the weight of the grip it wasn’t mine,” said Dexter, “and I was
+the most surprised guy in Great Britain and Ireland when I found whose it was!
+I opened it, of course! And right on top was a waistcoat and right in the first
+pocket was a telegram. Here it is!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He passed it to me. It was that which I had received from Hilton. I had packed
+the suit which I had been wearing that morning and must previously have thrust
+the telegram into the waistcoat pocket.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Providence!” Dexter assured me. “Because I got on the station in time to see
+Hassan of Aleppo join the train for H&mdash;! I was too late, though. But I
+chartered a taxi out on Corporation Street and invited the man to race the
+local! He couldn’t do it, but we got here in time for the fireworks! Mr.
+Cavanagh, there are anything from six to ten Hashishin watching this house!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I know it!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“They’re bareheaded; and in the dark their shaven skulls look like nothing
+human. They’re armed with those damned tubes, too. I’d give a thousand
+dollars&mdash;if I had it!&mdash;to know their mechanism. Well, gentlemen,
+deeds speak. What am I here for, when I might be on the way to Liverpool, and
+safety?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You’re here to try to make up for the past a bit!” said a soft, musical voice.
+“Mr. Cavanagh’s life is in danger.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Carneta entered the room.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The light played in that wonderful hair of hers; and pale though she was, I
+thought I had never seen a more beautiful woman.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Tell them,” she said quietly, “what must be done.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Soar glanced at me out of the corner of his eyes and shifted uneasily. Hilton
+stared as if fascinated.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Now,” rapped Dexter, in his strident voice, “putting aside all questions of
+justice and right (we’re not policemen), what do we want&mdash;you and I, Mr.
+Cavanagh?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I can’t think clearly about anything,” I said dully. “Explain yourself.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Very well. Inspector Bristol, C.I.D., would want me and Hassan arrested. I
+don’t want that! What I want is peace; I want to be able to sleep in comfort; I
+want to know I’m not likely to be murdered on the next corner! Same with you?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes&mdash;yes.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“How can we manage it? One way would be to kill Hassan of Aleppo; but he wants
+a lot of killing&mdash;I’ve tried! Moreover, directly we’d done it, another
+Sheikh-al-jebal would be nominated and he’d carry on the bloody work. We’d be
+worse off than ever. Right! we’ve got to connive at letting the blood-stained
+fanatic escape, and we’ve got to give up the slipper!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’ll do that with all my heart!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Sure! But you and I have both got little scores up against Hassan, which it’s
+not in human nature to forget. But I’ve got it worked out that there’s only one
+way. It may nearly choke us to have to do it, I’ll allow. I’m working on the
+Moslem character. Mr. Hilton, make up a fire in the grate here!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hilton stared, not comprehending.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Do as he asks,” I said. “Personally, I am resigned to mutilation, since I have
+touched the bag containing the slipper, but if Dexter has a plan&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Excuse me, sir,” Soar interrupted. “I believe there’s some coal in the
+coal-box, but I shall have to break up a packing-case for firewood&mdash;or go
+out into the yard!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Let it be the packing-case,” replied Hilton hastily.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Accordingly a fire was kindled, whilst we all stood about the room in a sort of
+fearful uncertainty; and before long a big blaze was roaring up the chimney.
+Dexter turned to me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Mr. Cavanagh,” said he, “I want you to go right upstairs, open a first-floor
+window&mdash;I would suggest that of your bedroom&mdash;and invite Hassan of
+Aleppo to come and discuss terms!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Silence followed his words; we were all amazed. Then&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Why do you ask me to do this?” I inquired.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Because,” replied Dexter, “I happen to know that Hassan has some queer kind of
+respect for you&mdash;I don’t know why.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Which is probably the reason why he tried to kill me to-night!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That’s beside the question, Mr. Cavanagh. He will believe you&mdash;which is
+the important point.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Very well. I have no idea what you have in mind but I am prepared to adopt any
+plan since I have none of my own. What shall I say?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Say that we are prepared to return the slipper&mdash;on conditions.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“He will probably try to shoot me as I stand at the window.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Dexter shrugged his shoulders.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Got to risk it,” he drawled.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“And what are the conditions?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“He must come right in here and discuss them! Guarantee him safe conduct and I
+don’t think he’ll hesitate. Anyway, if he does, just tell him that the slipper
+will be destroyed immediately!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Without a word I turned on my heel and ascended the stairs.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I entered my room, crossed to the window, and threw it widely open. Hovering
+over the distant hills I could see the ominous thunder cloud, but the storm
+seemed to have passed from “Uplands,” and only a distant muttering with the
+faint dripping of water from the pipes broke the silence of the night. A great
+darkness reigned, however, and I was entirely unable to see if any one was in
+the orchard.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Like some mueddin of fantastic fable I stood there.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Hassan!” I cried&mdash;“Hassan of Aleppo!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The name rang out strangely upon the stillness&mdash;the name which for me had
+a dreadful significance; but the whole episode seemed unreal, the voice that
+had cried unlike my voice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Instantly as any magician summoning an efreet I was answered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Out from the trees strode a tall figure, a figure I could not mistake. It was
+that of Hassan of Aleppo!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I hear, effendim, and obey,” he said. “I am ready. Open the door!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“We are prepared to discuss terms. You may come and go safely”&mdash;still my
+voice sounded unfamiliar in my ears.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I know, effendim; it is so written. Open the door.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I closed the window and mechanically descended the stairs.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Mind it isn’t a trap!” cried Hilton, who, with the others, had overheard every
+word of this strange interview. “They may try to rush the door directly we open
+it.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’ll stand the chest behind it,” said Soar; “between the door and the wall, so
+that only one can enter at a time.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This was done, and the door opened.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Alone, majestic, entered Hassan of Aleppo.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was dressed in European clothes but wore the green turban of a Sherif. With
+his snowy beard and coal-black eyes he seemed like a vision of the Prophet, of
+the Prophet in whose name he had committed such ghastly atrocities.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Deigning no glance to Soar nor to Hilton, he paced into the room, passing me
+and ignoring Carneta, where Earl Dexter awaited him. I shall never forget the
+scene as Hassan entered, to stand looking with blazing eyes at The Stetson Man,
+who sat beside the fire with the slipper of Mohammed in his hand!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Hassan,” said Dexter quietly, “Mr. Cavanagh has had to promise you safe
+conduct, or as sure as God made me, I’d put a bullet in you!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Sheikh of the Hashishin glared fixedly at him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Companion of the evil one,” he said, “it is not written that I shall die by
+your hand&mdash;or by the hand of any here. But it has been revealed to me that
+to-night the gates of Paradise may be closed in my face.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I shouldn’t be at all surprised,” drawled Dexter. “But it’s up to you. You’ve
+got to swear by Mohammed&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Salla-’llahu ’aleyhi wasellem!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That you won’t lay a hand upon any living soul, or allow any of your followers
+to do so, who has touched the slipper or had anything to do with it, but that
+you will go in peace.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You are doomed to die!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You don’t agree, then?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Those who have offended must suffer the penalty!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Right!” said Dexter&mdash;and prepared to toss the slipper into the heart of
+the fire!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Stop! Infidel! Stop!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was real agony in Hassan’s voice. To my inexpressible surprise he dropped
+upon his knee, extending his lean brown hands toward the slipper.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Dexter hesitated. “You agree, then?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hassan raised his eyes to the ceiling.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I agree,” he said. “Dark are the ways. It is the will of God...”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Dimly the booming of the thunder came echoing back to us from the hills. Above
+its roll sounded a barbaric chanting to which the drums of angry heaven formed
+a fitting accompaniment.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I heard Soar shooting the bolts again upon the going of our strange visitor.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Faint and more faint grew the chanting, until it merged into the remote
+muttering of the storm&mdash;and was lost. The quest of the sacred slipper was
+ended.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 2126 ***</div>
+</body>
+
+</html>
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #2126 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/2126)
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Quest of the Sacred Slipper, by Sax Rohmer
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Quest of the Sacred Slipper
+
+Author: Sax Rohmer
+
+Posting Date: January 30, 2009 [EBook #2126]
+Release Date: March, 2000
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE QUEST OF THE SACRED SLIPPER ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by an anonymous Project Gutenberg volunteer. HTML
+version by Al Haines.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+The Quest of the Sacred Slipper
+
+
+by
+
+Sax Rohmer
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+ I. THE PHANTOM SCIMITAR.
+ II. THE GIRL WITH THE VIOLET EYES
+ III. "HASSAN OF ALEPPO"
+ IV. THE OBLONG BOX
+ V. THE OCCUPANT OF THE BOX
+ VI. THE RING OF THE PROPHET
+ VII. FIRST ATTEMPT ON THE SAFE
+ VIII. THE VIOLET EYES AGAIN
+ IX. SECOND ATTEMPT ON THE SAFE
+ X. AT THE BRITISH ANTIQUARIAN MUSEUM
+ XI. THE HOLE IN THE BLIND
+ XII. THE HASHISHIN WATCH
+ XIII. THE WHITE BEAM
+ XIV. A SCREAM IN THE NIGHT
+ XV. A SHRIVELLED HAND
+ XVI. THE DWARF
+ XVII. THE WOMAN WITH THE BASKET
+ XVIII. WHAT CAME THROUGH THE WINDOW
+ XIX. A RAPPING AT MIDNIGHT
+ XX. THE GOLDEN PAVILION
+ XXI. THE BLACK TUBE
+ XXII. THE LIGHT OF EL-MEDINEH
+ XXIII. THE THREE MESSAGES
+ XXIV. I KEEP THE APPOINTMENT
+ XXV. THE WATCHER IN BANK CHAMBERS
+ XXVI. THE STRONG-ROOM
+ XXVII. THE SLIPPER
+ XXVIII. CARNETA
+ XXIX. WE MEET MR. ISAACS
+ XXX. AT THE GATE HOUSE
+ XXXI. THE POOL OF DEATH
+ XXXII. SIX PATCHES
+ XXXIII. HOW WE WERE REENFORCED
+ XXXIV. MY LAST MEETING WITH HASSAN OF ALEPPO
+
+
+
+
+THE QUEST OF THE SACRED SLIPPER
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+THE PHANTOM SCIMITAR
+
+
+I was not the only passenger aboard the S.S. Mandalay who perceived
+the disturbance and wondered what it might portend and from whence
+proceed. A goodly number of passengers were joining the ship at
+Port Said. I was lounging against the rail, pipe in mouth, lazily
+wondering, with a large vagueness.
+
+What a heterogeneous rabble it was!--a brightly coloured rabble,
+but the colours all were dirty, like the town and the canal. Only
+the sky was clean; the sky and the hard, merciless sunlight which
+spared nothing of the uncleanness, and defied one even to think
+of the term dear to tourists, "picturesque." I was in that kind
+of mood. All the natives appeared to be pockmarked; all the
+Europeans greasy with perspiration.
+
+But what was the stir about?
+
+I turned to the dark, bespectacled young man who leaned upon the
+rail beside me. From the first I had taken to Mr. Ahmad Ahmadeen.
+
+"There is some kind of undercurrent of excitement among the natives,"
+I said, "a sort of subdued Greek chorus is audible. What's it all
+about?"
+
+Mr. Ahmadeen smiled. After a gaunt fashion, he was a handsome man
+and had a pleasant smile.
+
+"Probably," he replied, "some local celebrity is joining the ship."
+
+I stared at him curiously.
+
+"Any idea who he is?" (The soul of the copyhunter is a restless
+soul.)
+
+A group of men dressed in semi-European fashion--that is, in
+European fashion save for their turbans, which were green--passed
+close to us along the deck.
+
+Ahmadeen appeared not to have heard the question.
+
+The disturbance, which could only be defined as a subdued uproar,
+but could be traced to no particular individual or group, grew
+momentarily louder--and died away. It was only when it had
+completely ceased that one realized how pronounced it had
+been--how altogether peculiar, secret; like that incomprehensible
+murmuring in a bazaar when, unknown to the insular visitor, a
+reputed saint is present.
+
+Then it happened; the inexplicable incident which, though I knew
+it not, heralded the coming of strange things, and the dawn of a
+new power; which should set up its secret standards in England,
+which should flood Europe and the civilized world with wonder.
+
+A shrill scream marked the overture--a scream of fear and of pain,
+which dropped to a groan, and moaned out into the silence of which
+it was the cause.
+
+"My God! what's that?"
+
+I started forward. There was a general crowding rush, and a darkly
+tanned and bearded man came on board, carrying a brown leather case.
+Behind him surged those who bore the victim.
+
+"It's one of the lascars!"
+
+"No--an Egyptian!"
+
+"It was a porter--?"
+
+"What is it--?"
+
+"Someone been stabbed!"
+
+"Where's the doctor?"
+
+"Stand away there, if you please!"
+
+That was a ship's officer; and the voice of authority served to
+quell the disturbance. Through a lane walled with craning heads
+they bore the insensible man. Ahmadeen was at my elbow.
+
+"A Copt," he said softly. "Poor devil!" I turned to him. There
+was a queer expression on his lean, clean-shaven, bronze face.
+
+"Good God!" I said. "His hand has been cut off!"
+
+That was the fact of the matter. And no one knew who was
+responsible for the atrocity. And no one knew what had become of
+the severed hand! I wasted not a moment in linking up the story.
+The pressman within me acted automatically.
+
+"The gentleman just come aboard, sir," said a steward, "is Professor
+Deeping. The poor beggar who was assaulted was carrying some of the
+Professor's baggage." The whole incident struck me as most odd.
+There was an idea lurking in my mind that something else--something
+more--lay behind all this. With impatience I awaited the time
+when the injured man, having received medical attention, was conveyed
+ashore, and Professor Deeping reappeared. To the celebrated
+traveller and Oriental scholar I introduced myself.
+
+He was singularly reticent.
+
+"I was unable to see what took place, Mr. Cavanagh," he said. "The
+poor fellow was behind me, for I had stepped from the boat ahead of
+him. I had just taken a bag from his hand, but he was carrying
+another, heavier one. It is a clean cut, like that of a scimitar.
+I have seen very similar wounds in the cases of men who have
+suffered the old Moslem penalty for theft."
+
+Nothing further had come to light when the Mandalay left, but I
+found new matter for curiosity in the behaviour of the Moslem party
+who had come on board at Port Said.
+
+In conversation with Mr. Bell, the chief officer, I learned that
+the supposed leader of the party was one, Mr. Azraeel. "Obviously,"
+said Bell, "not his real name or not all it. I don't suppose
+they'll show themselves on deck; they've got their own servants with
+them, and seem to be people of consequence."
+
+This conversation was interrupted, but I found my unseen fellow
+voyagers peculiarly interesting and pursued inquiries in other
+directions. I saw members of the distinguished travellers'
+retinue going about their duties, but never obtained a glimpse
+of Mr. Azraeel nor of any of his green-turbaned companions.
+
+"Who is Mr. Azraeel?" I asked Ahmadeen.
+
+"I cannot say," replied the Egyptian, and abruptly changed the
+subject.
+
+Some curious aroma of mystery floated about the ship. Ahmadeen
+conveyed to me the idea that he was concealing something. Then,
+one night, Mr. Bell invited me to step forward with him.
+
+"Listen," he said.
+
+From somewhere in the fo'c'sle proceeded low chanting.
+
+"Hear it?"
+
+"Yes. What the devil is it?"
+
+"It's the lascars," said Bell. "They have been behaving in a most
+unusual manner ever since the mysterious Mr. Azraeel joined us. I
+may be wrong in associating the two things, but I shan't be sorry
+to see the last of our mysterious passengers."
+
+The next happening on board the Mandalay which I have to record was
+the attempt to break open the door of Professor Deeping's stateroom.
+Except when he was actually within, the Professor left his room door
+religiously locked.
+
+He made light of the affair, but later took me aside and told me a
+curious story of an apparition which had appeared to him.
+
+"It was a crescent of light," he said, "and it glittered through
+the darkness there to the left as I lay in my berth."
+
+"A reflection from something on the deck?"
+
+Deeping smiled, uneasily.
+
+"Possibly," he replied; "but it was very sharply defined. Like
+the blade of a scimitar," he added.
+
+I stared at him, my curiosity keenly aroused. "Does any explanation
+suggest itself to you?" I said.
+
+"Well," he confessed, "I have a theory, I will admit; but it is
+rather going back to the Middle Ages. You see, I have lived in the
+East a lot; perhaps I have assimilated some of their superstitions."
+
+He was oddly reticent, as ever. I felt convinced that he was
+keeping something back. I could not stifle the impression that the
+clue to these mysteries lay somewhere around the invisible
+Mohammedan party.
+
+"Do you know," said Bell to me, one morning, "this trip's giving me
+the creeps. I believe the damned ship's haunted! Three bells in the
+middle watch last night, I'll swear I saw some black animal crawling
+along the deck, in the direction of the forward companion-way."
+
+"Cat?" I suggested.
+
+"Nothing like it," said Mr. Bell. "Mr. Cavanagh, it was some
+uncanny thing! I'm afraid I can't explain quite what I mean, but
+it was something I wanted to shoot!"
+
+"Where did it go?"
+
+The chief officer shrugged his shoulders. "Just vanished," he said.
+"I hope I don't see it again."
+
+At Tilbury the Mohammedan party went ashore in a body. Among them
+were veiled women. They contrived so to surround a central figure
+that I entirely failed to get a glimpse of the mysterious Mr.
+Azraeel. Ahmadeen was standing close by the companion-way, and I
+had a momentary impression that one of the women slipped something
+into his hand. Certainly, he started; and his dusky face seemed to
+pale.
+
+Then a deck steward came out of Deeping's stateroom, carrying the
+brown bag which the Professor had brought aboard at Port Said.
+Deeping's voice came:
+
+"Hi, my man! Let me take that bag!"
+
+The bag changed hands. Five minutes later, as I was preparing to
+go ashore, arose a horrid scream above the berthing clamour. Those
+passengers yet aboard made in the direction from which the scream
+had proceeded.
+
+A steward--the one to whom Professor Deeping had spoken--lay
+writhing at the foot of the stairs leading to the saloon-deck. His
+right hand had been severed above the wrist!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+THE GIRL WITH THE VIOLET EYES
+
+
+During the next day or two my mind constantly reverted to the
+incidents of the voyage home. I was perfectly convinced that the
+curtain had been partially raised upon some fantasy in which
+Professor Deeping figured.
+
+But I had seen no more of Deeping nor had I heard from him, when
+abruptly I found myself plunged again into the very vortex of his
+troubled affairs. I was half way through a long article, I
+remember, upon the mystery of the outrage at the docks. The poor
+steward whose hand had been severed lay in a precarious condition,
+but the police had utterly failed to trace the culprit.
+
+I had laid down my pen to relight my pipe (the hour was about ten
+at night) when a faint sound from the direction of the outside
+door attracted my attention. Something had been thrust through
+the letter-box.
+
+"A circular," I thought, when the bell rang loudly, imperatively.
+
+I went to the door. A square envelope lay upon the mat--a
+curious envelope, pale amethyst in colour. Picking it up, I found
+it to bear my name--written simply--
+
+"Mr. Cavanagh."
+
+Tearing it open I glanced at the contents. I threw open the door.
+No one was visible upon the landing, but when I leaned over the
+banister a white-clad figure was crossing the hall, below.
+
+Without hesitation, hatless, I raced down the stairs. As I crossed
+the dimly lighted hall and came out into the peaceful twilight of
+the court, my elusive visitor glided under the archway opposite.
+
+Just where the dark and narrow passage opened on to Fleet Street
+I overtook her--a girl closely veiled and wrapped in a long coat
+of white ermine.
+
+"Madam," I said.
+
+She turned affrightedly.
+
+"Please do not detain me!" Her accent was puzzling, but pleasing.
+She glanced apprehensively about her.
+
+You have seen the moon through a mist?--and known it for what it
+was in spite of its veiling? So, now, through the cloudy folds
+of the veil, I saw the stranger's eyes, and knew them for the most
+beautiful eyes I had ever seen, had ever dreamt of.
+
+"But you must explain the meaning of your note!"
+
+"I cannot! I cannot! Please do not ask me!"
+
+She was breathless from her flight and seemed to be trembling.
+From behind the cloud her eyes shone brilliantly, mysteriously.
+
+I was sorely puzzled. The whole incident was bizarre--indeed, it
+had in it something of the uncanny. Yet I could not detain the girl
+against her will. That she went in apprehension of something, of
+someone, was evident.
+
+Past the head of the passage surged the noisy realities of Fleet
+Street. There were men there in quest of news; men who would
+have given much for such a story as this in which I was becoming
+entangled. Yet a story more tantalizingly incomplete could not
+well be imagined.
+
+I knew that I stood upon the margin of an arena wherein strange
+adversaries warred to a strange end. But a mist was over all.
+Here, beside me, was one who could disperse the mist--and would
+not. Her one anxiety seemed to be to escape.
+
+Suddenly she raised her veil; and I looked fully into the only
+really violet eyes I had ever beheld. Mentally, I started. For
+the face framed in the snowy fur was the most bewitchingly lovely
+imaginable. One rebellious lock of wonderful hair swept across
+the white brow. It was brown hair, with an incomprehensible
+sheen in the high lights that suggested the heart of a blood-red
+rose.
+
+"Oh," she cried, "promise me that you will never breathe a word
+to any one about my visit!"
+
+"I promise willingly," I said; "but can you give me no hint?"
+
+"Honestly, truly, I cannot, dare not, say more! Only promise that
+you will do as I ask!"
+
+Since I could perceive no alternative--
+
+"I will do so," I replied.
+
+"Thank you--oh, thank you!" she said; and dropping her veil again
+she walked rapidly away from me, whispering, "I rely upon you. Do
+not fail me. Good-bye!"
+
+Her conspicuous white figure joined the hurrying throngs upon the
+pavement beyond. My curiosity brooked no restraint. I hurried to
+the end of the courtway. She was crossing the road. From the
+shadows where he had lurked, a man came forward to meet her. A
+vehicle obstructed the view ere I could confirm my impression; and
+when it had passed, neither my lovely visitor nor her companion
+were anywhere in sight.
+
+But, unless some accident of light and shade had deceived me, the
+man who had waited was Ahmad Ahmadeen!
+
+It seemed that some astral sluice-gate was raised; a dreadful sense
+of foreboding for the first time flooded my mind. Whilst the girl
+had stood before me it had been different--the mysterious charm of
+her personality had swamped all else. But now, the messenger gone,
+it was the purport of her message which assumed supreme significance.
+
+Written in odd, square handwriting upon the pale amethyst paper,
+this was the message--
+
+ Prevail upon Professor Deeping to place what he has in the brown
+ case in the porch of his house to-night. If he fails to do so,
+ no power on earth can save him from the Scimitar of Hassan.
+
+ A FRIEND.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+"HASSAN OF ALEPPO"
+
+
+Professor Deeping's number was in the telephone directory,
+therefore, on returning to my room, where there still lingered the
+faint perfume of my late visitor's presence, I asked for his number.
+He proved to be at home.
+
+"Strange you should ring me up, Cavanagh," he said; "for I was
+about to ring you up."
+
+"First," I replied, "listen to the contents of an anonymous letter
+which I have received."
+
+(I remembered, and only just in time, my promise to the veiled
+messenger.)
+
+"To me," I added, having read him the note, "it seems to mean
+nothing. I take it that you understand better than I do."
+
+"I understand very well, Cavanagh!" he replied. "You will recall
+my story of the scimitar which flashed before me in the darkness
+of my stateroom on the Mandalay? Well, I have seen it again! I
+am not an imaginative man: I had always believed myself to possess
+the scientific mind; but I can no longer doubt that I am the object
+of a pursuit which commenced in Mecca! The happenings on the
+steamer prepared me for this, in a degree. When the man lost his
+hand at Port Said I doubted. I had supposed the days of such things
+past. The attempt to break into my stateroom even left me still
+uncertain. But the outrage upon the steward at the docks removed
+all further doubt. I perceived that the contents of a certain brown
+leather case were the objective of the crimes."
+
+I listened in growing wonder.
+
+"It was not necessary in order to further the plan of stealing the
+bag that the hands were severed," resumed the Professor. "In fact,
+as was rendered evident by the case of the steward, this was a
+penalty visited upon any one who touched it! You are thinking of
+my own immunity?"
+
+"I am!"
+
+"This is attributable to two things. Those who sought to recover
+what I had in the case feared that my death en route might result
+in its being lost to them for ever. They awaited a suitable
+opportunity. They had designed to take it at Port Said certainly,
+I think; but the bag was too large to be readily concealed, and,
+after the outrage, might have led to the discovery of the culprit.
+In the second place, they are uncertain of my faith. I have long
+passed for a true Believer in the East! As a Moslem I visited
+Mecca--"
+
+"You visited Mecca!"
+
+"I had just returned from the hadj when I joined the Mandalay at
+Port Said! My death, however, has been determined upon, whether
+I be Moslem or Christian!"
+
+"Why?"
+
+"Because," came the Professor's harsh voice over the telephone, "of
+the contents of the brown leather case! I will not divulge to you
+now the nature of these contents; to know might endanger you. But
+the case is locked in my safe here, and the key, together with a
+full statement of the true facts of the matter, is hidden behind
+the first edition copy of my book 'Assyrian Mythology,' in the
+smaller bookcase--"
+
+"Why do you tell me all this?" I interrupted.
+
+He laughed harshly.
+
+"The identity of my pursuer has just dawned upon me," he said. "I
+know that my life is in real danger. I would give up what is
+demanded of me, but I believe its possession to be my strongest
+safeguard."
+
+Mystery upon mystery! I seemed to be getting no nearer to the heart
+of this maze. What in heaven's name did it all mean? Suddenly an
+idea struck me.
+
+"Is our late fellow passenger, Mr. Ahmadeen, connected with the
+matter?" I asked.
+
+"In no way," replied Deeping earnestly. "Mr. Ahmadeen is, I
+believe, a person of some consequence in the Moslem world; but I
+have nothing to fear from him."
+
+"What steps have you taken to protect yourself?"
+
+Again the short laugh reached my ears.
+
+"I'm afraid long residence in the East has rendered me something of
+a fatalist, Cavanagh! Beyond keeping my door locked, I have taken
+no steps whatever. I fear I am quite accessible!"
+
+A while longer we talked; and with every word the conviction was
+more strongly borne in upon me that some uncanny menace threatened
+the peace, perhaps the life, of Professor Deeping.
+
+I had hung up the receiver scarce a moment when, acting upon a
+sudden determination, I called up New Scotland Yard, and asked for
+Detective-Inspector Bristol, whom I knew well. A few words were
+sufficient keenly to arouse his curiosity, and he announced his
+intention of calling upon me immediately. He was in charge of the
+case of the severed hand.
+
+I made no attempt to resume work in the interval preceding his
+arrival. I had not long to wait, however, ere Bristol was ringing
+my bell; and I hurried to the door, only too glad to confide in one
+so well equipped to analyze my doubts and fears. For Bristol is no
+ordinary policeman, but a trained observer, who, when I first made
+his acquaintance, completely upset my ideas upon the mental
+limitations of the official detective force.
+
+In appearance Bristol suggests an Anglo-Indian officer, and at the
+time of which I write he had recently returned from Jamaica and his
+face was as bronzed as a sailor's. One would never take Bristol
+for a detective. As he seated himself in the armchair, without
+preamble I plunged into my story. He listened gravely.
+
+"What sort of house is Professor Deeping's?" he asked suddenly.
+
+"I have no idea," I replied, "beyond the fact that it is somewhere
+in Dulwich."
+
+"May I use your telephone?"
+
+"Certainly."
+
+Very quickly Bristol got into communication with the superintendent
+of P Division. A brief delay, and the man came to the telephone
+whose beat included the road wherein Professor Deeping's house was
+situated.
+
+"Why!" said Bristol, hanging up the receiver after making a number
+of inquiries, "it's a sort of rambling cottage in extensive grounds.
+There's only one servant, a manservant, and he sleeps in a detached
+lodge. If the Professor is really in danger of attack he could not
+well have chosen a more likely residence for the purpose!"
+
+"What shall you do? What do you make of it all?"
+
+"As I see the case," he said slowly, "it stands something like this:
+Professor Deeping has..."
+
+The telephone bell began to ring.
+
+I took up the receiver.
+
+"Hullo! Hullo."
+
+"Cavanagh!--is that Cavanagh?"
+
+"Yes! yes! who is that?"
+
+"Deeping! I have rung up the police, and they are sending some
+one. But I wish..."
+
+His voice trailed off. The sound of a confused and singular uproar
+came to me.
+
+"Hullo!" I cried. "Hullo!"
+
+A shriek--a deathful, horrifying cry--and a distant babbling alone
+answered me. There was a crash. Clearly, Deeping had dropped the
+receiver. I suppose my face blanched.
+
+"What is it?" asked Bristol anxiously.
+
+"God knows what it is!" I said. "Deeping has met with some
+mishap--"
+
+When, over the wires--
+
+"Hassan of Aleppo!" came a dying whisper. "Hassan ... of
+Aleppo..."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+THE OBLONG BOX
+
+
+"You had better wait for us," said Bristol to the taxi-man.
+
+"Very good, sir. But I shan't be able to take you further back than
+the Brixton Garage. You can get another cab there, though."
+
+A clock chimed out--an old-world chime in keeping with the
+loneliness, the curiously remote loneliness, of the locality. Less
+than five miles from St. Paul's are spots whereto, with the
+persistence of Damascus attar, clings the aroma of former days.
+This iron gateway fronting the old chapel was such a spot.
+
+Just within stood a plain-clothes man, who saluted my companion
+respectfully.
+
+"Professor Deeping," I began.
+
+The man, with a simple gesture, conveyed the dreadful news.
+
+"Dead! dead!" I cried incredulously.
+
+He glanced at Bristol.
+
+"The most mysterious case I have ever had anything to do with,
+sir," he said.
+
+The power of speech seemed to desert me. It was unthinkable that
+Deeping, with whom I had been speaking less than an hour ago,
+should now be no more; that some malign agency should thus
+murderously have thrust him into the great borderland.
+
+In that kind of silence which seems to be peopled with whispering
+spirits we strode forward along the elm avenue. It was very dark
+where the moon failed to penetrate. The house, low and rambling,
+came into view, its facade bathed in silver light. Two of the
+visible windows were illuminated. A sort of loggia ran along one
+side.
+
+On our left, as we made for this, lay a black ocean of shrubbery.
+It intruded, raggedly, upon the weed-grown path, for neglect was
+the keynote of the place.
+
+We entered the cottage, crossed the tiny lobby, and came to the
+study. A man, evidently Deeping's servant, was sitting in a chair
+by the door, his head sunken in his hands. He looked up,
+haggard-faced.
+
+"My God! my God!" he groaned. "He was locked in, gentlemen! He
+was locked in; and yet something murdered him!"
+
+"What do you mean?" said Bristol. "Where were you?"
+
+"I was away on an errand, sir. When I returned, the police were
+knocking the door down. He was locked in!"
+
+We passed him, entering the study.
+
+It was a museum-like room, lighted by a lamp on the littered
+table. At first glance it looked as though some wild thing had
+run amok there. The disorder was indescribable.
+
+"Touched nothing, of course?" asked Bristol sharply of the officer
+on duty.
+
+"Nothing, sir. It's just as we found it when we forced the door."
+
+"Why did you force the door?"
+
+"He rung us up at the station and said that something or somebody
+had got into the house. It was evident the poor gentleman's nerve
+had broken down, sir. He said he was locked in his study. When
+we arrived it was all in darkness--but we thought we heard sounds
+in here."
+
+"What sort of sounds?"
+
+"Something crawling about!"
+
+Bristol turned.
+
+"Key is in the lock on the inside of the door," he said. "Is that
+where you found it?"
+
+"Yes, sir!"
+
+He looked across to where the brass knob of a safe gleamed dully.
+
+"Safe locked?"
+
+"Yes, sir."
+
+Professor Deeping lay half under the table, a spectacle so ghastly
+that I shall not attempt to describe it.
+
+"Merciful heavens!" whispered Bristol. "He's nearly decapitated!"
+
+I clutched dizzily at the mantelpiece. It was all so utterly,
+incredibly horrible. How had Deeping met his death? The windows
+both were latched and the door had been locked from within!
+
+"You searched for the murderer, of course?" asked Bristol.
+
+"You can see, sir," replied the officer, "that there isn't a spot
+in the room where a man could hide! And there was nobody
+in here when we forced the door!"
+
+"Why!" cried my companion suddenly. "The Professor has a chisel
+in his hand!"
+
+"Yes. I think he must have been trying to prise open that box
+yonder when he was attacked."
+
+Bristol and I looked, together, at an oblong box which lay upon
+the floor near the murdered man. It was a kind of small
+packing case, addressed to Professor Deeping, and evidently had
+not been opened.
+
+"When did this arrive?" asked Bristol. Lester, the Professor's
+man, who had entered the room, replied shakily--
+
+"It came by carrier, sir, just before I went out."
+
+"Was he expecting it?"
+
+"I don't think so."
+
+Inspector Bristol and the officer dragged the box fully into the
+light. It was some three feet long by one foot square, and solidly
+constructed.
+
+"It is perfectly evident," remarked Bristol, "that the murderer
+stayed to search for--"
+
+"The key of the safe!"
+
+"Exactly. If the men really heard sounds here, it would appear that
+the assassin was still searching at that time."
+
+"I assure you," the officer interrupted, "that there was no living
+thing in the room when we entered."
+
+Bristol and I looked at one another in horrified wonder.
+
+"It's incomprehensible!" he said.
+
+"See if the key is in the place mentioned by the Professor, Mr.
+Cavanagh, whilst I break the box."
+
+I went to a great, open bookcase, which the frantic searcher seemed
+to have overlooked. Removing the bulky "Assyrian Mythology," there,
+behind the volume, lay an envelope, containing a key, and a short
+letter. Not caring to approach more closely to the table and to
+that which lay beneath it, I was peering at the small writing, in
+the semi-gloom by the bookcase, when Bristol cried--
+
+"This box is unopenable by ordinary means! I shall have to smash
+it!"
+
+At his words, I joined him where he knelt on the floor.
+Mysteriously, the chest had defied all his efforts.
+
+"There's a pick-axe in the garden," volunteered Lester. "Shall I
+bring it?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+The man ran off.
+
+"I see the key is safe," said Bristol. "Possibly the letter may
+throw some light upon all this."
+
+"Let us hope so," I replied. "You might read it."
+
+He took the letter from my hand, stepped up to the table, and by
+the light of the lamp read as follows--
+
+My Dear Cavanagh,--
+
+It has now become apparent to me that my life is in imminent danger.
+You know of the inexplicable outrages which marked my homeward
+journey, and if this letter come to your hand it will be because
+these have culminated in my death.
+
+The idea of a pursuing scimitar is not new to me. This phenomenon,
+which I have now witnessed three times, is fairly easy of
+explanation, but its significance is singular. It is said to be
+one of the devices whereby the Hashishin warn those whom they have
+marked down for destruction, and is called, in the East, "The
+Scimitar of Hassan."
+
+The Hashishin were the members of a Moslem secret society, founded
+in 1090 by one Hassan of Khorassan. There is a persistent tradition
+in parts of the Orient that this sect still flourishes in Assyria,
+under the rule of a certain Hassan of Aleppo, the Sheikh-al-jebal,
+or supreme lord of the Hashishin. My careful inquiries, however,
+at the time that I was preparing matter for my "Assyrian Mythology,"
+failed to discover any trace of such a person or such a group.
+
+I accordingly assumed Hassan to be a myth--a first cousin to the
+ginn. I was wrong. He exists. And by my supremely rash act I
+have incurred his vengeance, for Hassan of Aleppo is the
+self-appointed guardian of the traditions and relics of Mohammed.
+And I have Stolen one of the holy slippers of the Prophet!
+
+He, with some of his servants, has followed me from Mecca to
+England. My precautions have enabled me to retain the relic, but
+you have seen what fate befell all those others who even touched
+the receptacle containing it.
+
+If I fall a victim to the Hashishin, I am uncertain how you, as my
+confidant, will fare. Therefore I have locked the slipper in my
+safe and to you entrust the key. I append particulars of the lock
+combination; but I warn you--do not open the safe. If their
+wrath be visited upon you, your possession of the key may prove a
+safeguard.
+
+Take the copy of "Assyrian Mythology." You will find in it all
+that I learned respecting the Hashishin. If I am doomed to be
+assassinated, it may aid you; if not in avenging me, in saving
+others from my fate. I fear I shall never see you again. A
+cloud of horror settles upon me like a pall. Do not touch the
+slipper, nor the case containing it.
+
+ EDWARD DEEPING.
+
+"It is almost incredible!" I said hoarsely.
+
+Bristol returned the letter to me without a word, and turning to
+Lester, who had reentered carrying a heavy pick-axe, he attacked
+the oblong box with savage energy.
+
+Through the house of death the sound of the blows echoed and rang
+with a sort of sacrilegious mockery. The box fell to pieces.
+
+"My God! look, sir!"
+
+Lester was the trembling speaker.
+
+The box, I have said, was but three feet long by one foot square,
+and had clearly defied poor Deeping's efforts to open it. But a
+crescent-shaped knife, wet with blood, lay within!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+THE OCCUPANT OF THE BOX
+
+
+Dimly to my ears came the ceaseless murmur of London. The night now
+was far advanced, and not a sound disturbed the silence of the court
+below my windows.
+
+Professor Deeping's "Assyrian Mythology" lay open before me, beside
+it my notebook. A coal dropped from the fire, and I half started up
+out of my chair. My nerves were all awry, and I had more than my
+horrible memories of the murdered man to thank for it. Let me
+explain what I mean.
+
+When, after assisting, or endeavouring to assist, Bristol at his
+elaborate inquiries, I had at last returned to my chambers, I had
+become the victim of a singular delusion--though one common enough
+in the case of persons whose nerves are overwrought. I had thought
+myself followed.
+
+During the latter part of my journey I found myself constantly
+looking from the little window at the rear of the cab. I had an
+impression that some vehicle was tracking us. Then, when I
+discharged the man and walked up the narrow passage to the court,
+it was fear of a skulking form that dodged from shadow to shadow
+which obsessed me.
+
+Finally, as I entered the hall and mounted the darkened stair, from
+the first landing I glanced down into the black well beneath.
+Blazing yellow eyes, I thought, looked up at me!
+
+I will confess that I leapt up the remaining flight of stairs to my
+door, and, safely within, found myself trembling as if with a palsy.
+
+When I sat down to write (for sleep was an impossible proposition)
+I placed my revolver upon the table beside me. I cannot say why.
+It afforded me some sense of protection, I suppose. My conclusions,
+thus far, amounted to the following--
+
+The apparition of the phantom scimitar was due to the presence of
+someone who, by means of the moonlight, or of artificial light,
+cast a reflection of such a weapon as that found in the oblong chest
+upon the wall of a darkened apartment--as, Deeping's stateroom on
+the Mandalay, his study, etc.
+
+A group of highly efficient assassins, evidently Moslem fanatics,
+who might or might not be of the ancient order of the Hashishin,
+had pursued the stolen slipper to England. They had severed any
+hand, other than that of a Believer, which had touched the case
+containing it. (The Coptic porter was a Christian.)
+
+Uncertain, possibly, of Deeping's faith, or fearful of endangering
+the success of their efforts by an outrage upon him en route, they
+had refrained from this until his arrival at his house. He had
+been warned of his impending end by Ahmad Ahmadeen.
+
+Who was Ahmadeen? And who was his beautiful associate? I found
+myself unable, at present, to answer either of those questions. In
+order to gain access to Professor Deeping, who so carefully secluded
+himself, a box had been sent to him by ordinary carrier. (As I sat
+at my table, Scotland Yard was busy endeavouring to trace the
+sender.) Respecting this box we had made an extraordinary discovery.
+
+It was of the kind used by Eastern conjurors for what is generally
+known as "the Box Trick." That is to say, it could only be opened
+(short of smashing it) from the inside! You will remember what we
+found within it? Consider this with the new fact, above, and to
+what conclusion do you come?
+
+Something (it is not possible to speak of someone in connection with
+so small a box) had been concealed inside, and had killed Professor
+Deeping whilst he was actually engaged in endeavouring to force it
+open. This inconceivable creature had then searched the study for
+the slipper--or for the key of the safe. Interrupted and trapped
+by the arrival of the police, the creature had returned to the box,
+re-closed it, and had actually been there when the study was
+searched!
+
+For a creature so small as the murderous thing in the box to slip
+out during the confusion, and at some time prior to Bristol's
+arrival, was no difficult matter. The inspector and I were certain
+that these were the facts.
+
+But what was this creature?
+
+I turned to the chapter in "Assyrian Mythology"--"The Tradition
+of the Hashishin."
+
+The legends which the late Professor Deeping had collected relative
+to this sect of religious murderers were truly extraordinary. Of
+the cult's extinction at the time of writing he was clearly certain,
+but he referred to the popular belief, or Moslem legend, that, since
+Hassan of Khorassan, there had always been a Sheikh-al-jebal, and
+that a dreadful being known as Hassan of Aleppo was the present
+holder of the title.
+
+He referred to the fact that De Sacy has shown the word Assassin
+to be derived from Hashishin, and quoted El-Idrisi to the same
+end. The Hashishin performed their murderous feats under the
+influence of hashish, or Indian hemp; and during the state of
+ecstasy so induced, according to Deeping, they acquired powers
+almost superhuman. I read how they could scale sheer precipices,
+pass fearlessly along narrow ledges which would scarce afford
+foothold for a rat, cast themselves from great heights unscathed,
+and track one marked for death in such a manner as to remain unseen
+not only by the victim but by others about him. At this point of
+my studies I started, in a sudden nervous panic, and laid my hand
+upon my revolver.
+
+I thought of the eyes which had seemed to look up from the black
+well of the staircase--I thought of the horrible end of this man
+whose book lay upon the table ... and I thought I heard a faint
+sound outside my study door!
+
+The key of Deeping's safe, and his letter to me, lay close by my
+hand. I slipped them into a drawer and locked it. With every
+nerve, it seemed, strung up almost to snapping point, I mechanically
+pursued my reading.
+
+"At the time of the Crusades," wrote Deeping, "there was a story
+current of this awful Order which I propose to recount. It is one
+of the most persistent dealing with the Hashishin, and is related
+to-day of the apparently mythical Hassan of Aleppo. I am disposed
+to believe that at one time it had a solid foundation, for a
+similar practice was common in Ancient Egypt and is mentioned by
+Georg Ebers."
+
+My door began very slowly to open!
+
+Merciful God! What was coming into the room!
+
+So very slowly, so gently, nay, all but imperceptibly, did it move,
+that had my nerves been less keenly attuned I doubt not I should
+have remained unaware of the happening. Frozen with horror, I sat
+and watched. Yet my mental condition was a singular one.
+
+My direct gaze never quitted the door, but in some strange fashion
+I saw the words of the next paragraph upon the page before me!
+
+"As making peculiarly efficient assassins, when under the influence
+of the drug, and as being capable of concealing themselves where
+a normal man could not fail to be detected--"
+
+(At this moment I remembered that my bathroom window was open, and
+that the waste-pipe passed down the exterior wall.)
+
+"--the Sheikh-al-jebal took young boys of a certain desert tribe,
+and for eight hours of every day, until their puberty, confined them
+in a wooden frame--"
+
+What looked like a reed was slowly inserted through the opening
+between door and doorpost! It was brought gradually around
+... until it pointed directly toward me!
+
+I seemed to put forth a mighty mental effort, shaking off the icy
+hand of fear which held me inactive in my chair. A saving instinct
+warned me--and I ducked my head.
+
+Something whirred past me and struck the wall behind.
+
+Revolver in hand, I leapt across the room, dashed the door open,
+and fired blindly--again--and again--and again--down the
+passage.
+
+And in the brief gleams I saw it!
+
+I cannot call it man, but I saw the thing which, I doubt not, had
+killed poor Deeping with the crescent-knife and had propelled a
+poison-dart at me.
+
+It was a tiny dwarf! Neither within nor without a freak exhibition
+had I seen so small a human being! A kind of supernatural dread
+gripped me by the throat at sight of it. As it turned with animal
+activity and bounded into my bathroom, I caught a three-quarter
+view of the creature's swollen, incredible head--which was nearly
+as large as that of a normal man!
+
+Never while my mind serves me can I forget that yellow, grinning
+face and those canine fangs--the tigerish, blazing eyes--set in
+the great, misshapen head upon the tiny, agile body.
+
+Wildly, I fired again. I hurled myself forward and dashed into
+the room.
+
+Like nothing so much as a cat, the gleaming body (the dwarf was
+but scantily clothed) streaked through the open window!
+
+Certain death, I thought, must be his lot upon the stones of the
+court far below. I ran and looked down, shaking in every limb,
+my mind filled with a loathing terror unlike anything I had ever
+known.
+
+Brilliant moonlight flooded the pavement beneath; for twenty yards
+to left and right every stone was visible.
+
+The court was empty!
+
+Human, homely London moved and wrought intimately about me; but
+there, at sight of the empty court below, a great loneliness swept
+down like a mantle--a clammy mantle of the fabric of dread. I
+stood remote from my fellows, in an evil world peopled with the
+creatures of Hassan of Aleppo.
+
+Moved by some instinct, as that of a frightened child, I dropped
+to my knees and buried my face in trembling hands.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+THE RING OF THE PROPHET
+
+
+"There is no doubt," said Mr. Rawson, "that great personal danger
+attaches to any contact with this relic. It is the first time I
+have been concerned with anything of the kind."
+
+Mr. Bristol, of Scotland Yard, standing stiffly military by the
+window, looked across at the gray-haired solicitor. We were all
+silent for a few moments.
+
+"My late client's wishes," continued Mr. Rawson, "are explicit.
+His last instructions, evidently written but a short time prior to
+his death, advise me that the holy slipper of the Prophet is
+contained in the locked safe at his house in Dulwich. He was
+clearly of opinion that you, Mr. Cavanagh, would incur risk--great
+risk--from your possession of the key. Since attempts have been
+made upon you, murderous attempts, the late Professor Deeping, my
+unfortunate client, evidently was not in error."
+
+"Mysterious outrages," said Bristol, "have marked the progress of
+the stolen slipper from Mecca almost to London."
+
+"I understand," interrupted the solicitor, "that a fanatic known
+as Hassan of Aleppo seeks to restore the relic to its former
+resting-place."
+
+"That is so."
+
+"Exactly; and it accounts for the Professor's wish that the safe
+should not be touched by any one but a Believer--and for his
+instructions that its removal to the Antiquarian Museum and the
+placing of the slipper within that institution be undertaken by a
+Moslem or Moslems."
+
+Bristol frowned.
+
+"Any one who has touched the receptacle containing the thing," he
+said, "has either been mutilated or murdered. I want to apprehend
+the authors of those outrages, but I fail to see why the slipper
+should be put on exhibition. Other crimes are sure to follow."
+
+"I can only pursue my instructions," said Mr. Rawson dryly. "They
+are, that the work be done in such a manner as to expose all
+concerned to a minimum of risk from these mysterious people; that
+if possible a Moslem be employed for the purpose; and that Mr.
+Cavanagh, here, shall always hold the key or keys to the case in
+the museum containing the slipper. Will you undertake to look for
+some--Eastern workmen, Mr. Bristol? In the course of your
+inquiries you may possibly come across such a person."
+
+"I can try," replied Bristol. "Meanwhile, I take it, the safe must
+remain at Dulwich?"
+
+"Certainly. It should be guarded."
+
+"We are guarding it and shall guard it," Bristol assured him. "I
+only hope we catch someone trying to get at it!"
+
+Shortly afterward Bristol and I left the office, and, his duties
+taking him to Scotland Yard, I returned to my chambers to survey
+the position in which I now found myself. Indeed, it was a strange
+one enough, showing how great things have small beginnings; for,
+as a result of a steamer acquaintance I found myself involved in a
+dark business worthy of the Middle Ages. That Professor Deeping
+should have stolen one of the holy slippers of Mohammed was no
+affair of mine, and that an awful being known as Hassan of Aleppo
+should have pursued it did not properly enter into my concerns; yet
+now, with a group of Eastern fanatics at large in England, I was
+become, in a sense, the custodian of the relic. Moreover, I
+perceived that I had been chosen that I might safeguard myself.
+What I knew of the matter might imperil me, but whilst I held the
+key to the reliquary, and held it fast, I might hope to remain
+immune though I must expect to be subjected to attempts. It would
+be my affair to come to terms.
+
+Contemplating these things I sat, in a world of dark dreams,
+unconscious of the comings and goings in the court below,
+unconscious of the hum which told of busy Fleet Street so near to
+me. The weather, as is its uncomfortable habit in England, had
+suddenly grown tropically hot, plunging London into the vapours of
+an African spring, and the sun was streaming through my open window
+fully upon the table.
+
+I mopped my clammy forehead, glancing with distaste at the pile of
+work which lay before me. Then my eyes turned to an open quarto
+book. It was the late Professor Deeping's "Assyrian Mythology,"
+and embodied the result of his researches into the history of the
+Hashishin, the religious murderers of whose existence he had been
+so skeptical. To the Chief of the Order, the terrible Sheikh Hassan
+of Aleppo, he referred as a "fabled being"; yet it was at the hands
+of this "fabled being" that he had met his end! How incredible it
+all seemed. But I knew full well how worthy of credence it was.
+
+Then upon my gloomy musings a sound intruded--the ringing of my door
+bell. I rose from my chair with a weary sigh, went to the door,
+and opened it. An aged Oriental stood without. He was tall and
+straight, had a snow-white beard and clear-cut, handsome features.
+He wore well-cut European garments and a green turban. As I stood
+staring he saluted me gravely.
+
+"Mr. Cavanagh?" he asked, speaking in faultless English.
+
+"I am he."
+
+"I learn that the services of a Moslem workman are required."
+
+"Quite correct, sir; but you should apply at the offices of Messrs.
+Rawson & Rawson, Chancery Lane."
+
+The old man bowed, smiling.
+
+"Many thanks; I understood so much. But, my position being a
+peculiar one, I wished to speak with you--as a friend of the late
+Professor."
+
+I hesitated. The old man looked harmless enough, but there was an
+air of mystery about the matter which put me on my guard.
+
+"You will pardon me," I said, "but the work is scarcely of a kind--"
+
+He raised his thin hand.
+
+"I am not undertaking it myself. I wished to explain to you the
+conditions under which I could arrange to furnish suitable porters."
+
+His patient explanation disposed me to believe that he was merely
+some kind of small contractor, and in any event I had nothing to
+fear from this frail old man.
+
+"Step in, sir," I said, repenting of my brusquerie--and stood
+aside for him.
+
+He entered, with that Oriental meekness in which there is
+something majestic. I placed a chair for him in the study, and
+reseated myself at the table. The old man, who from the first had
+kept his eyes lowered deferentially, turned to me with a gentle
+gesture, as if to apologize for opening the conversation.
+
+"From the papers, Mr. Cavanagh," he began, "I have learned of the
+circumstances attending the death of Professor Deeping. Your
+papers"--he smiled, and I thought I had never seen a smile of
+such sweetness--"your papers know all! Now I understand why a
+Moslem is required, and I understand what is required of him. But
+remembering that the object of his labours would be to place a
+holy relic on exhibition for the amusement of unbelievers, can you
+reasonably expect to obtain the services of one?"
+
+His point of view was fair enough.
+
+"Perhaps not," I replied. "For my own part I should wish to see
+the slipper back in Mecca, or wherever it came from. But Professor
+Deeping--"
+
+"Professor Deeping was a thorn in the flesh of the Faithful!"
+
+My visitor's voice was gravely reproachful.
+
+"Nevertheless his wishes must be considered," I said, "and the
+methods adopted by those who seek to recover the relic are such
+as to alienate all sympathy."
+
+"You speak of the Hashishin?" asked the old man. "Mr. Cavanagh, in
+your own faith you have had those who spilled the blood of infidels
+as freely!"
+
+"My good sir, the existence of such an organization cannot be
+tolerated today! This survival of the dark ages must be stamped
+out. However just a cause may be, secret murder is not permissible,
+as you, a man of culture, a Believer, and"--I glanced at his
+unusual turban--"a descendant of the Prophet, must admit."
+
+"I can admit nothing against the Guardian of the Tradition, Mr.
+Cavanagh! The Prophet taught that we should smite the Infidel. I
+ask you--have you the courage of your convictions?"
+
+"Perhaps; I trust so."
+
+"Then assist me to rid England of what you have called a survival
+of the dark ages. I will furnish porters to remove and carry the
+safe, if you will deliver to me the key!"
+
+I sprang to my feet.
+
+"That is madness!" I cried. "In the first place I should be
+compromising with my conscience, and in the second place I should
+be defenceless against those who might--"
+
+"I have with me a written promise from one highly placed--one to
+whose will Hassan of Aleppo bows!"
+
+My mind greatly disturbed, I watched the venerable speaker. I had
+determined now that he was some religious leader of Islam in
+England, who had been deputed to approach me; and, let me add, I
+was sorely tempted to accede to his proposal, for nothing would be
+gained by any one if the slipper remained for ever at the museum,
+whereas by conniving at its recovery by those who, after all, were
+its rightful owners I should be ridding England of a weird and
+undesirable visitant.
+
+I think I should have agreed, when I remembered that the Hashishin
+had murdered Professor Deeping and had mutilated others wholly
+innocent of offence. I looked across at the old man. He had drawn
+himself up to his great height, and for the first time fully
+raising the lids, had fixed upon me the piercing gaze of a pair of
+eagle eyes. I started, for the aspect of this majestic figure was
+entirely different from that of the old stranger who had stood
+suppliant before me a moment ago.
+
+"It is impossible," I said. "I can come to no terms with those
+who shield murderers."
+
+He regarded me fixedly, but did not move.
+
+"Es-selam 'aleykum!" I added ("Peace be on you!") closing the
+interview in the Eastern manner.
+
+The old man lowered his eyes, and saluted me with graceful gravity.
+
+"Wa-'aleykum!" he said ("And on you!"). I conducted him to the
+door and closed it upon his exit. In his last salute I had noticed
+the flashing of a ring which he wore upon his left hand, and he was
+gone scarce ten seconds ere my heart began to beat furiously. I
+snatched up "Assyrian Mythology" and with trembling fingers turned
+to a certain page.
+
+There I read--
+
+Each Sheikh of the Assassins is said to be invested with the "Ring
+of the Prophet." It bears a green stone, shaped in the form of a
+scimitar or crescent.
+
+My dreadful suspicion was confirmed. I knew who my visitor had
+been.
+
+"God in heaven!" I whispered. "It was Hassan of Aleppo!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+FIRST ATTEMPT ON THE SAFE
+
+
+On the following morning I was awakened by the arrival of Bristol.
+I hastened to admit him.
+
+"Your visitor of yesterday," he began, "has wasted no time!"
+
+"What has happened?"
+
+He tugged irritably at his moustache. "I don't know!" he replied.
+"Of course it was no surprise to find that there isn't a Mohammedan
+who'll lay his little finger on Professor Deeping's safe! There's
+no doubt in my mind that every lascar at the docks knows Hassan of
+Aleppo to be in England. Some other arrangement will have to be
+arrived at, if the thing is ever to be taken to the Antiquarian
+Museum. Meanwhile we stand to lose it. Last night--"
+
+He accepted a cigarette, and lighted it carefully.
+
+"Last night," he resumed, "a member of P Division was on point
+duty outside the late Professor's house, and two C.I.D. men were
+actually in the room where the safe is. Result--someone has put
+in at least an hour's work on the lock, but it proved too tough a
+job!"
+
+I stared at him amazedly.
+
+"Someone has been at the lock!" I cried. "But that is impossible,
+with two men in the room--unless--"
+
+"They were both knocked on the head!"
+
+"Both! But by whom! My God! They are not--"
+
+"Oh, no! It was done artistically. They both came round about
+four o'clock this morning."
+
+"And who attacked them?"
+
+"They had no idea. Neither of them saw a thing!"
+
+My amazement grew by leaps and bounds. "But, Bristol, one of them
+must have seen the other succumb!"
+
+"Both did! Their statements tally exactly!"
+
+"I quite fail to follow you."
+
+"That's not surprising. Listen: When I got on the scene about five
+o'clock, Marden and West, the two C.I.D. men, had quite recovered
+their senses, though they were badly shaken, and one had a cracked
+skull. The constable was conscious again, too."
+
+"What! Was he attacked?"
+
+"In exactly the same way! I'll give you Marden's story, as he gave
+it to me a few minutes after the surgeon had done with him. He said
+that they were sitting in the study, smoking, and with both windows
+wide open. It was a fearfully hot night."
+
+"Did they have lights?"
+
+"No. West sat in an armchair near the writing-table; Marden sat by
+the window next to the door. I had arranged that every hour one of
+them should go out to the gate and take the constable's report. It
+was just after Marden had been out at one o'clock that it happened.
+
+"They were sitting as I tell you when Marden thought he heard a
+curious sort of noise from the gate. West appeared to have heard
+nothing; but I have no doubt that it was the sound of the constable's
+fall. West's pipe had gone out, and he struck a match to relight
+it. As he did so, Marden saw him drop the match, clench both fists,
+and with eyes glaring in the moonlight and his teeth coming together
+with a snap, drop from his chair.
+
+"Marden says that he was half up from his seat when something struck
+him on the back of the head with fearful force. He remembered
+nothing more until he awoke, with the dawn creeping into the room,
+and heard West groaning somewhere beside him. They both had badly
+damaged skulls with great bruises behind the ear. It is instructive
+to note that their wounds corresponded almost to a fraction of an
+inch. They had been stunned by someone who thoroughly understood
+his business, and with some heavy, blunt weapon. A few minutes
+later came the man to relieve the constable; and the constable was
+found to have been treated in exactly the same way!"
+
+"But if Marden's account is true--"
+
+"West, as he lost consciousness, saw Marden go in exactly the same
+way."
+
+"Marden was seated by the open window, but I cannot conjecture how
+any one can have got at West, who sat by the table!"
+
+"The case of Marden is little less than remarkable; he was some
+distance from the window. No one could possibly have reached him
+from outside."
+
+"And the constable?"
+
+"The constable can give us no clue. He was suddenly struck down,
+as the others were. I examined the safe, of course, but didn't
+touch it, according to instructions. Someone had been at work on
+the lock, but it had defied their efforts. I'm fully expecting
+though that they'll be back to-night, with different tools!"
+
+"The place is watched during the day, of course?"
+
+"Of course. But it's unlikely that anything will be attempted in
+daylight. Tonight I am going down myself."
+
+"Could you arrange that I join you?"
+
+"I could, but you can see the danger for yourself?"
+
+"It is extraordinarily mysterious."
+
+"Mr. Cavanagh, it's uncanny!" said Bristol. "I can understand that
+one of these Hashishin could easily have got up behind the man on
+duty out in the open. I know, and so do you, that they're past
+masters of that kind of thing; but unless they possess the power to
+render themselves invisible, it's not evident how they can have got
+behind West whilst he sat at the table, with Marden actually
+watching him!"
+
+"We must lay a trap for them to-night."
+
+"Rely upon me to do so. My only fear is that they may anticipate it
+and change their tactics. Hassan of Aleppo apparently knows as much
+of our plans as we do ourselves."
+
+Inspector Bristol, though a man of considerable culture, clearly was
+infected with a species of supernatural dread.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+THE VIOLET EYES AGAIN
+
+
+At four o'clock in the afternoon I had heard nothing further from
+Bristol, but I did not doubt that he would advise me of his
+arrangements in good time. I sought by hard work to forget for a
+time the extraordinary business of the stolen slipper; but it
+persistently intruded upon my mind. Particularly, my thoughts
+turned to the night of Professor Deeping's murder, and to the
+bewitchingly pretty woman who had warned me of the impending tragedy.
+She had bound me to secrecy--a secrecy which had proved irksome,
+for it had since appeared to me that she must have been an
+accomplice of Hassan of Aleppo. At the time I had been at a loss
+to define her peculiar accent, now it seemed evidently enough to
+have been Oriental.
+
+I threw down my pen in despair, for work was impossible, went
+downstairs, and walked out under the arch into Fleet Street. Quite
+mechanically I turned to the left, and, still engaged with idle
+conjectures, strolled along westward.
+
+Passing the entrance to one of the big hotels, I was abruptly
+recalled to the realities--by a woman's voice.
+
+"Wait for me here," came musically to my ears.
+
+I stopped, and turned. A woman who had just quitted a taxi-cab was
+entering the hotel. The day was hot and thunderously oppressive,
+and this woman with the musical voice wore a delicate costume of
+flimsiest white. A few steps upward she paused and glanced back.
+I had a view of a Greek profile, and for one magnetic instant looked
+into eyes of the deepest and most wonderful violet.
+
+Then, shaking off inaction, I ran up the steps and overtook the
+lady in white as a porter swung open the door to admit her. We
+entered together.
+
+"Madame," I said in a low tone, "I must detain you for a moment.
+There is something I have to ask."
+
+She turned, exhibiting the most perfect composure, lowered her
+lashes and raised them again, the gaze of the violet eyes sweeping
+me from head to foot with a sort of frigid scorn.
+
+"I fear you have made a mistake, sir. We have never met before!"
+
+Her voice betrayed no trace of any foreign accent!
+
+"But," I began--and paused.
+
+I felt myself flush; for this encounter in the foyer of an hotel,
+with many curious onlookers, was like to prove embarrassing if my
+beautiful acquaintance persisted in her attitude. I fully realized
+what construction would be put upon my presence there, and foresaw
+that forcible and ignominious ejection must be my lot if I failed
+to establish my right to address her.
+
+She turned away, and crossed in the direction of the staircase.
+A sunbeam sought out a lock of hair that strayed across her brow,
+and kissed it to a sudden glow like that which lurks in the heart
+of a blush rose.
+
+That wonderful sheen, which I had never met with elsewhere in
+nature, but which no artifice could lend, served to remove my last
+frail doubt which had survived the evidence of the violet eyes. I
+had been deceived by no strange resemblance; this was indeed the
+woman who had been the harbinger of Professor Deeping's death. In
+three strides I was beside her again. Curious glances were set
+upon me, and I saw a servant evidently contemplating approach; but
+I ignored all save my own fixed purpose.
+
+"You must listen to what I have to say!" I whispered. "If you
+decline, I shall have no alternative but to call in the detective
+who holds a warrant for your arrest!"
+
+She stood quite still, watching me coolly. "I suppose you would
+wish to avoid a scene?" I added.
+
+"You have already made me the object of much undesirable attention,"
+she replied scornfully. "I do not need your assurance that you
+would disgrace me utterly! You are talking nonsense, as you must
+be aware--unless you are insane. But if your object be to force
+your acquaintance upon me, your methods are novel, and, under the
+circumstances, effective. Come, sir, you may talk to me--for
+three minutes!"
+
+The musical voice had lost nothing of its imperiousness, but for
+one instant the lips parted, affording a fleeting glimpse of pearl
+beyond the coral.
+
+Her sudden change of front was bewildering. Now, she entered the
+lift and I followed her. As we ascended side by side I found it
+impossible to believe that this dainty white figure was that of an
+associate of the Hashishin, that of a creature of the terrible
+Hassan of Aleppo. Yet that she was the same girl who, a few days
+after my return from the East, had shown herself conversant with
+the plans of the murderous fanatics was beyond doubt. Her accent
+on that occasion clearly had been assumed, with what object I could
+not imagine. Then, as we quitted the lift and entered a cosy
+lounge, my companion seated herself upon a Chesterfield, signing to
+me to sit beside her.
+
+As I did so she lay back smiling, and regarding me from beneath her
+black lashes. Thus, half veiled, her great violet eyes were most
+wonderful.
+
+"Now, sir," she said softly, "explain yourself."
+
+"Then you persist in pretending that we have not met before?"
+
+"There is no occasion for pretence," she replied lightly; and I
+found myself comparing her voice with her figure, her figure with
+her face, and vainly endeavouring to compute her age. Frankly,
+she was bewildering--this lovely girl who seemed so wholly a woman
+of the world.
+
+"This fencing is useless."
+
+"It is quite useless! Come, I know New York, London, and I know
+Paris, Vienna, Budapest. Therefore I know mankind! You thought I
+was pretty, I suppose? I may be; others have thought so. And you
+thought you would like to make my acquaintance without troubling
+about the usual formalities? You adopted a singularly brutal
+method of achieving your object, but I love such insolence in a man.
+Therefore I forgave you. What have you to say to me?"
+
+I perceive that I had to deal with a bold adventuress, with a
+consummate actress, who, finding herself in a dangerous situation,
+had adopted this daring line of defence, and now by her personal
+charm sought to lure me from my purpose.
+
+But with the scimitar of Hassan of Aleppo stretched over me, with
+the dangers of the night before me, I was in no mood for a veiled
+duel of words, for an interchange of glances in thrust and parry,
+however delightful such warfare might have been with so pretty an
+adversary.
+
+For a long time I looked sternly into her eyes; but their violet
+mystery defied, whilst her red-lipped smile taunted me.
+
+"Unfortunately," I said, with slow emphasis, "you are protected by
+my promise, made on the occasion of our previous meeting. But
+murder has been done, so that honour scarcely demands that I respect
+my promise further--"
+
+She raised her eyebrows slightly.
+
+"Surely that depends upon the quality of the honour!" she said.
+
+"I believe you to be a member of a murderous organization, and
+unless you can convince me that I am wrong, I shall act accordingly."
+
+At that she leaned toward me, laying her hand on my arm.
+
+"Please do not be so cruel," she whispered, "as to drag me into a
+matter with which truly I have no concern. Believe me, you are
+utterly mistaken. Wait one moment, and I will prove it."
+
+She rose, and before I could make move to detain her, quitted the
+room; but the door scarcely had closed ere I was afoot. The
+corridor beyond was empty. I ran on. The lift had just descended.
+A dark man whom I recognized stood near the closed gate.
+
+"Quick!" I said, "I am Cavanagh of the Report! Did you see a lady
+enter the lift?"
+
+"I did, Mr. Cavanagh," answered the hotel detective; for this was he.
+
+In such a giant inn as this I knew full well that one could come and
+go almost with impunity, though one had no right to the hospitality
+of the establishment; and it was with a premonition respecting what
+his answer would be, that I asked the man--
+
+"Is she staying here?"
+
+"She is not. I have never seen her before!"
+
+The girl with the violet eyes had escaped, taking all her secrets
+with her!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+SECOND ATTEMPT ON THE SAFE
+
+
+"You see," said Bristol, "the Hashishin must know that the safe
+won't remain here unopened much longer. They will therefore
+probably make another attempt to-night."
+
+"It seems likely," I replied; and was silent. Outside the open
+windows whispered the shrubbery, as a soft breeze stole through the
+bushes. Beyond, the moon made play in the dim avenue. From the
+old chapel hard by the sweet-toned bell proclaimed midnight. Our
+vigil was begun. In this room it was that Professor Deeping had
+met death at the hands of the murderous Easterns; here it was that
+Marden and West had mysteriously been struck down the night before.
+
+To-night was every whit as hot, and Bristol and I had the windows
+widely opened. My companion was seated where the detective, Marden,
+had sat, in a chair near the westerly window, and I lay back in
+the armchair that had been occupied by West.
+
+I may repeat here that the house of the late Professor Deeping was
+more properly a cottage, surrounded by a fairly large piece of
+ground, for the most part run wild. The room used as a study was
+on the ground floor, and had windows on the west and on the south.
+Those on the west (French windows) opened on a loggia; those on the
+south opened right into the dense tangle of a neglected shrubbery.
+The place possessed an oppressive atmosphere of loneliness, for
+which in some measure its history may have been responsible.
+
+The silence, seemingly intensified by each whisper that sped through
+the elms and crept about the shrubbery, grew to such a stillness
+that I told myself I had experienced nothing like it since crossing
+with a caravan I had slept in the desert. Yet noisy, whirling
+London was within gunshot of us; and this, though hard enough to
+believe, was a reflection oddly comforting. Only one train of
+thought was possible, and this I pursued at random.
+
+By what means were Marden and West struck down? In thus exposing
+ourselves, in order that we might trap the author or authors of the
+outrage, did we act wisely?
+
+"Bristol," I said suddenly, "it was someone who came through the
+open window."
+
+"No one," he replied, "came through the windows. West saw
+absolutely nothing. But if any one comes that way to-night, we
+have him!"
+
+"West may have seen nothing; but how else could any one enter?"
+
+Bristol offered no reply; and I plunged again into a maze of
+speculation.
+
+Powerful mantraps were set in such a way that any one or anything,
+ignorant of their positions, coming up to the windows must
+unavoidably be snared. These had been placed in position with
+much secrecy after dusk, and the man on duty at the gate stood
+with his back to the wall. No one could approach him except from
+the front. My thoughts took a new turn.
+
+Was the girl with the violet eyes an ally of the Hashishin? Thus
+far, although she so palpably had tricked me, I had found myself
+unable to speak of her to Bristol; for the idea had entered my mind
+that she might have learned of the plan to murder Deeping without
+directly being implicated. Now came yet another explanation. The
+publicity given to that sensational case might have interested some
+third party in the fate of the stolen slipper! Could it be that
+others, in no way connected with the dreadful Hassan of Aleppo,
+were in quest of the slipper?
+
+Scotland Yard had taken care to ensure that the general public be
+kept in ignorance of the existence of such an organization as the
+Hashishin, but I must assume that this hypothetical third party
+were well aware that they had Hassan, as well as the authorities,
+to count with. Granting the existence of such a party, my beautiful
+acquaintance might be classified as one of its members. I spoke
+again.
+
+"Bristol," I said, "has it occurred to you that there may be others,
+as well as Hassan of Aleppo, seeking to gain possession of the
+sacred slipper?"
+
+"It has not," he replied. "In the strictest sense of the expression,
+they would be out for trouble! What gave you the idea?"
+
+"I hardly know," I returned evasively, for even now I was loath to
+betray the mysterious girl with the wonderful eyes.
+
+The chapel bell sounding the half-hour, Bristol rose with a sigh
+that might have been one of relief, and went out to take the report
+of the man on duty at the gate. As his footsteps died away along
+the elm avenue, it came to me how, in the darkness about, menace
+lurked; and I felt myself succumbing to the greatest dread
+experienced by man--the dread of the unknown.
+
+All that I knew of the weird group of fanatics--survivals of a dim
+and evil past--who must now be watching this cottage as bloodlustful
+devotees watch a shrine violated, burst upon my mind. I peopled the
+still blackness with lurking assassins, armed with the murderous
+knowledge of by-gone centuries, armed with invisible weapons which
+struck down from afar, supernaturally.
+
+I glanced toward the corner of the room where the safe stood,
+reliquary of a worthless thing for which much blood had been spilled.
+
+Then sounded footsteps along the avenue, and my fear whispered that
+they were not those of Bristol but of one who had murdered him, and
+who came guilefully, to murder me!
+
+I snatched the revolver from my pocket and crossed the darkened room.
+Just to the right of one of the French windows I stood looking out
+across the loggia to the end of the avenue. The night was a bright
+one, and the room was flooded with a reflected mystic light, but
+outside the moon paved the avenue with pearl, and through the trees
+I saw a figure approaching.
+
+Was it Bristol? It had his build, it had his gait; but my fears
+remained. Then the figure crossed the patch of shrubbery and stepped
+on to the loggia.
+
+"Mr. Cavanagh!"
+
+I laughed dryly at my own cowardice, but my heart was still beating
+abnormally.
+
+"Here I am, Bristol, in a ghastly funk!"
+
+"I don't wonder! They may be on us any time now. All's well at
+the gate, but Morris says he heard, or thought he heard something
+at the side of the chapel opposite, a while ago."
+
+"Wind in the bushes?"
+
+"It may have been; but he says there was no breeze at the time."
+
+We resumed our seats.
+
+"Bristol," I said, "now that the danger grows imminent, doesn't it
+seem to you foolhardy for us thus to expose ourselves?"
+
+"Perhaps it is," he agreed; "but how otherwise are we likely to
+learn what happened to Marden and West?"
+
+"The enemy may adopt different measures to-night."
+
+"I think not. Our dispositions are the same, and I credit them with
+cunning enough to know it. At the same time I credit ourselves with
+having kept the existence of the steel traps completely secret. They
+will assume (so I've reasoned) that we intend to rely entirely upon
+our superior vigilance, therefore they will try the same game as last
+night."
+
+Silence fell.
+
+The moon rays, creeping around from the right of the avenue, crossing
+the shrubbery and encroaching upon the low wall of the loggia, now
+flooded its floor. Against the silvern light, Bristol appeared to
+me in black silhouette. The breeze, too, seemed now to blow from a
+slightly different direction. It came through the windows on my
+right, beyond which lay the unkempt bushes which extended on that
+side to the wall of the grounds.
+
+So we sat, until the moonlight poured fully in upon Bristol's back.
+So we sat when the clock chimed the hour of one.
+
+Bristol arose and once more went out to the gate. He had arranged
+to visit Morris's post every half-hour. Again I experienced the
+nervous dread that he would be attacked in the avenue; but again he
+returned unscathed.
+
+"All's well," he said.
+
+But from his tones I knew that he had not forgotten that it was at
+this hour Marden and West had suffered mysterious attack.
+
+Neither of us, I think, was disposed to talk. We both were
+unwilling to break the silence, wherein, with all our ears, we
+listened for the slightest disturbance.
+
+And now my attention turned anew to the course of the slowly creeping
+moon rays. In my mind an idea was struggling for definition. There
+was something significant in the lunar lighting of the room. Why, I
+asked myself, had the attack been made at one o'clock? Did the time
+signify anything? If so, what? I looked toward Bristol.
+
+His figure, the chair upon which he sat, were sharply outlined by
+the cold light. The wall behind me, and to my left, was illuminated
+brilliantly; but no light fell directly upon me.
+
+The idea was taking shape. From the loggia and the avenue Bristol,
+I reasoned, must be clearly visible. From the shrubbery on the
+south, through the other windows could I be seen? Yes, silhouetted
+against the moonlight!
+
+A faint sound, quite indescribable, came to my ears from somewhere
+outside-beyond.
+
+"My God!" whispered Bristol. "Did you hear it?"
+
+"Yes! What?"
+
+"It must have been Morris!--"
+
+Bristol was half standing, one hand upon the arm of the chair, the
+other concealed, but grasping his revolver as I well knew. I, too,
+had my revolver in my hand, and as I twisted in my seat, preparatory
+to rising, in sheer nervousness I dropped the weapon upon the
+carpet.
+
+With an exclamation of dismay, I stooped quickly to recover it.
+
+As I did so something whistled past my ear, so closely as almost to
+touch it--and struck with a dull thud upon the wall beyond!
+
+"Bristol!" I whispered.
+
+But as I raised my eyes to him he seemed to crumple up, and fell
+loosely forward into the patch of moonlight spread upon the floor!
+"God in heaven!" I said aloud.
+
+In a cold sweat of fear I crouched there, for it had become evident
+to me that, as I bent, I was entirely in shadow.
+
+There was a rustling in the bushes on the left; but before I could
+turn in that direction, my attention was claimed elsewhere. Over
+into the loggia leapt an almost naked brown figure!
+
+It was that of a small but strongly built man, who carried a short,
+exceedingly thick bamboo rod in his hand. My fear was too great to
+admit of my accurately observing anything at that time, but I
+noticed that some kind of leather thong or loop was attached to the
+end of the squat cane.
+
+The panic fear of the supernatural was strongly upon me, and I was
+unable to realize that this Eastern apparition was a creature of
+flesh and blood. With my nerves strung up to snapping point, I
+crouched watching him. He entered the room, bending over the body
+of Bristol.
+
+A hot breath fanned my cheek!
+
+At that my overwrought nerves betrayed me. I uttered a stifled cry,
+looking upward ... and into a pair of gleaming eyes which looked
+down into mine!
+
+A second brown man (who must have entered by one of the windows
+overlooking the shrubbery) was bending over me!
+
+Scarce knowing what I did, I raised my revolver and blazed straight
+into the dimly-seen face. Down upon me silently dropped a naked
+body, and something warm came flowing over my hand. But, knowing my
+foes to be of flesh and blood, feeling myself at handgrips now with
+a palpable enemy, I threw off the body, leapt up and fired, though
+blindly, at the flying shape that flashed across the loggia--and
+was lost in the shadow pools under the elms.
+
+Upon the din of my shooting fell silence like a cloak. A moment I
+listened, tense, still; then I turned to the table and lighted the
+lamp.
+
+In its light I saw Bristol lying like a dead man. Close beside him
+was a big and heavy lump of clay. It had been shaped as a ball,
+but now it was flattened out curiously. Bending over my unfortunate
+companion and learning that, though unconscious, he lived, I learnt,
+too, how the Hashishin contrived to strike men insensible without
+approaching them; I learnt that the one whom I had shot, who lay in
+his blood almost on the spot where Professor Deeping once had lain,
+was an expert slinger.
+
+The contrivance which he carried, as did the other who had escaped,
+was a sling, of the ancient Persian type. In place of stones, heavy
+lumps of clay were used, which operated much the same as a sand-bag,
+whilst enabling the operator to work from a considerable distance.
+
+Hidden, over by the ancient chapel it might be, one of this evil
+twain had struck down Morris, the constable; from the shelter of the
+trees, from many yards away, they had shot their singular missiles
+through the open windows at Bristol and myself. Bristol had
+succumbed, and now, with a redness showing through his close-cut
+hair immediately behind the right ear, lay wholly unconscious at my
+feet.
+
+It had been a divine accident which had caused me to drop my
+revolver, and, stooping to recover it, unknowingly to frustrate the
+design of the second slinger upon myself. The light of the lamp
+fell upon the face of the dead Hashishin. He lay forward upon his
+hands, crouching almost, but with his face, his dreadful,
+featureless face, twisted up at me from under his left shoulder.
+
+God knows he deserved his end; but that mutilated face is often
+grinning, bloodily, in my dreams.
+
+And then as I stood, between that horrid exultation which is born
+of killing and the panic which threatened me out of the darkness,
+I saw something advancing ... slowly ... slowly ... from the
+elmen shades toward the loggia.
+
+It was a shape--it was a shadow. Silent it came--on--and on.
+Where the dusk lay deepest it paused, undefined; for I could give
+it no name of man or spirit. But a horror seemed to proceed from
+it as light from a lamp.
+
+I groped about the table near to me, never taking my eyes from
+that sinister form outside. As my fingers closed upon the
+telephone, distant voices and the sound of running footsteps
+(of those who had heard the shots) came welcome to my ears.
+
+The form stirred, seeming to raise phantom arms in execration, and
+a stray moonbeam pierced the darkness shrouding it. For a fleeting
+instant something flashed venomously.
+
+The sounds grew nearer. I could tell that the newcomers had found
+Morris lying at the gate. Yet still I stood, frozen with uncanny
+fear, and watching--watching the spot to which that stray beam had
+pierced; the spot where I had seen the moon gleam upon the ring of
+the Prophet!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+AT THE BRITISH ANTIQUARIAN MUSEUM
+
+
+A little group of interested spectators stood at the head of the
+square glass case in the centre of the lofty apartment in the
+British Antiquarian Museum known as the Burton Room (by reason of
+the fact that a fine painting of Sir Richard Burton faces you as
+you enter). A few other people looked on curiously from the lower
+end of the case. It contained but one exhibit--a dirty and
+dilapidated markoob--or slipper of morocco leather that had once
+been red.
+
+"Our latest acquisition, gentlemen," said Mr. Mostyn, the curator,
+speaking in a low tone to the distinguished Oriental scholars
+around him. "It has been left to the Institution by the late
+Professor Deeping. He describes it in a document furnished by his
+solicitor as one of the slippers worn by the Prophet Mohammed, but
+gives us no further particulars. I myself cannot quite place the
+relic."
+
+"Nor I," interrupted one of the group. "It is not mentioned by
+any of the Arabian historians to my knowledge--that is, if it
+comes from Mecca, as I understand it does."
+
+"I cannot possibly assert that it comes from Mecca, Dr. Nicholson,"
+Mostyn replied. "The Professor may have taken it from Al-Madinah--perhaps
+from the mysterious inner passage of the baldaquin where
+the treasures of the place lie. But I can assure you that what
+little we do know of its history is sufficiently unsavoury."
+
+I fancied that the curator's tired cultured voice faltered as he
+spoke; and now, without apparent reason, he moved a step to the
+right and glanced oddly along the room. I followed the direction
+of his glance, and saw a tall man in conventional morning dress,
+irreproachable in every detail, whose head was instantly bent upon
+his catalogue. But before his eyes fell I knew that their long
+almond shape, as well as the peculiar burnt pallor of his
+countenance, were undoubtedly those of an Oriental.
+
+"There have been mysterious outrages committed, I believe, upon
+many of those who have come in contact with the slipper?" asked one
+of the savants.
+
+"Exactly. Professor Deeping was undoubtedly among the victims.
+His instructions were explicit that the relic should be brought here
+by a Moslem, but for a long time we failed to discover any Moslem
+who would undertake the task; and, as you are aware, while the
+slipper remained at the Professor's house attempts were made to
+steal it."
+
+He ceased uneasily, and glanced at the tall Eastern figure. It had
+edged a little nearer; the head was still bowed and the fine yellow
+waxen fingers of the hand from which he had removed his glove
+fumbled with the catalogue's leaves. It may well have been that
+in those days I read menace in every eye, yet I felt assured that
+the yellow visitor was eavesdropping--was malignantly attentive to
+the conversation.
+
+The curator spoke lower than ever now; no one beyond the circle
+could possibly hear him as he proceeded--
+
+"We discovered an Alexandrian Greek who, for personal reasons, not
+unconnected with matrimony, had turned Moslem! He carried the
+slipper here, strongly escorted, and placed it where you now see it.
+No other hand has touched it." (The speaker's voice was raised ever
+so slightly.) "You will note that there is a rail around the case,
+to prevent visitors from touching even the glass."
+
+"Ah," said Dr. Nicholson quizzically, "And has anything untoward
+happened to our Graeco-Moslem friend?"
+
+"Perhaps Inspector Bristol can tell," replied the curator.
+
+The straight, military figure of the well-known Scotland Yard man
+was conspicuous among the group of distinguished--and mostly
+round-shouldered--scholars.
+
+"Sorry, gentlemen," he said, smiling, "but Mr. Acepulos has vanished
+from his tobacco shop in Soho. I am not apprehensive that he had
+been kidnapped or anything of that kind. I think rather that the
+date of his disappearance tallies with that on which he cashed his
+cheque for service rendered! His present wife is getting most
+unbeautifully fat, too."
+
+"What precautions," someone asked, "are being taken to guard the
+slipper?"
+
+"Well," Mostyn answered, "though we have only the bare word of the
+late Professor Deeping that the slipper was actually worn by
+Mohammed, it has certainly an enormous value according to Moslem
+ideas. There can be no doubt that a group of fanatics known as
+Hashishin are in London engaged in an extraordinary endeavour to
+recover it."
+
+Mostyn's voice sank to an impressive whisper. My gaze sought again
+the tall Eastern visitor and was held fascinated by the baffled
+straining in those velvet eyes. But the lids fell as I looked; and
+the effect was that of a fire suddenly extinguished. I determined
+to draw Bristol's attention to the man.
+
+"Accordingly," Mostyn continued, "we have placed it in this room,
+from which I fancy it would puzzle the most accomplished thief to
+remove it."
+
+The party, myself included, stared about the place, as he went on
+to explain--
+
+"We have four large windows here; as you see. The Burton Room
+occupies the end of a wing; there is only one door; it communicates
+with the next room, which in turn opens into the main building by
+another door on the landing. We are on the first floor; these two
+east windows afford a view of the lawn before the main entrance;
+those two west ones face Orpington Square; all are heavily barred
+as you see. During the day there is a man always on duty in these
+two rooms. At night that communicating door is locked. Short of
+erecting a ladder in full view either of the Square or of Great
+Orchard Street, filing through four iron bars and breaking the
+window and the case, I fail to see how anybody can get at the
+slipper here."
+
+"If a duplicate key to the safe--" another voice struck in; I knew
+it afterward for that of Professor Rhys-Jenkyns.
+
+"Impossible to procure one, Professor," cried Mostyn, his eyes
+sparkling with an almost boyish interest. "Mr. Cavanagh here holds
+the keys of the case, under the will of the late Professor Deeping.
+They are of foreign workmanship and more than a little complicated."
+
+The eyes of the savants were turned now in my direction.
+
+"I suppose you have them in a place of safety?" said Dr. Nicholson.
+
+"They are at my bankers," I replied.
+
+"Then I venture to predict," said the celebrated Orientalist, "that
+the slipper of the Prophet will rest here undisturbed."
+
+He linked his arm into that of a brother scholar and the little
+group straggled away, Mostyn accompanying them to the main entrance.
+
+But I saw Inspector Bristol scratching his chin; he looked very much
+as if he doubted the accuracy of the doctor's prediction. He had
+already had some experience of the implacable devotion of the Moslem
+group to this treasure of the Faithful.
+
+"The real danger begins," I suggested to him, "when the general public
+is admitted--after to-day, is it not?"
+
+"Yes. All to-day's people are specially invited, or are using
+special invitation cards," he replied. "The people who received
+them often give their tickets away to those who will be likely
+really to appreciate the opportunity."
+
+I looked around for the tall Oriental. He seemed to have vanished,
+and for some reason I hesitated to speak of him to Bristol; for my
+gaze fell upon an excessively thin, keen-faced man whose curiously
+wide-open eyes met mine smilingly, whose gray suit spoke Stein-Bloch,
+whose felt was a Boss raw-edge unmistakably of a kind that only
+Philadelphia can produce. At the height of the season such visitors
+are not rare, but this one had an odd personality, and moreover his
+keen gaze was raking the place from ceiling to floor.
+
+Where had I met him before? To the best of my recollection I had
+never set eyes upon the man prior to that moment; and since he was
+so palpably an American I had no reason for assuming him to be
+associated with the Hashishin. But I remembered--indeed, I could
+never forget--how, in the recent past, I had met with an apparent
+associate of the Moslems as evidently European as this curiously
+alert visitor was American. Moreover ... there was something
+tauntingly familiar, yet elusive, about that gaunt face.
+
+Was it not upon the eve of the death of Professor Deeping that the
+girl with the violet eyes had first intruded her fascinating
+personality into my tangled affairs? Patently, she had then been
+seeking the holy slipper, and by craft had endeavoured to bend me
+to her will. Then had I not encountered her again, meeting the
+glance of her unforgettable violet eyes outside a Strand hotel?
+The encounter had presaged a further attempt upon the slipper!
+Certainly she acted on behalf of someone interested in it; and since
+neither Bristol nor I could conceive of any one seeking to possess
+the bloodstained thing except the mysterious leader of the
+Hashishin--Hassan of Aleppo--as a creature of that awful fanatic
+being I had written her down.
+
+Why, then, if the mysterious Eastern employed a European girl,
+should he not also employ an American man? It might well be that
+the relic, in entering the doors of the impregnable Antiquarian
+Museum, had passed where the diabolical arts of the Hashishin had
+no power to reach it--where the beauty of Western women and the
+craft of Eastern man were equally useless weapons. Perhaps Hassan's
+campaign was entering upon a new phase.
+
+Was it a shirking of plain duty on my part that wish--that
+ever-present hope--that the murderous company of fanatics who had
+pursued the stolen slipper from its ancient resting-place to London,
+should succeed in recovering it? I leave you to judge.
+
+The crescent of Islam fades to-day and grows pale, but there are yet
+fierce Believers, alust for the blood of the infidel. In such as
+these a faith dies the death of an adder, and is more venomous in
+its death-throes than in the full pulse of life. The ghastly
+indiscretion of Professor Deeping, in rifling a Moslem Sacristy, had
+led to the mutilation of many who, unwittingly, had touched the
+looted relic, had brought about his own end, had established a league
+of fantastic assassins in the heart of the metropolis.
+
+Only once had I seen the venerable Hassan of Aleppo--a stately,
+gentle old man; but I knew that the velvet eyes could blaze into a
+passionate fury that seemed to scorch whom it fell upon. I knew
+that the saintly Hassan was Sheikh of the Hashishin. And
+familiarity with that dreadful organization had by no means bred
+contempt. I was the holder of the key, and my fear of the fanatics
+grew like a magic mango, darkened the sunlight of each day, and
+filled the night with indefinable dread.
+
+You, who have not read poor Deeping's "Assyrian Mythology", cannot
+picture a creature with a huge, distorted head, and a tiny, dwarfed
+body--a thing inhuman, yet human--a man stunted and malformed by
+the cruel arts of brother men--a thing obnoxious to life, with but
+one passion, the passion to kill. You cannot conceive of the years
+of agony spent by that creature strapped to a wooden frame--in
+order to prevent his growth! You cannot conceive of his fierce
+hatred of all humanity, inflamed to madness by the Eastern drug,
+hashish, and directed against the enemies of Islam--the holders of
+the slipper--by the wonderful power of Hassan of Aleppo.
+
+But I had not only read of such beings, I had encountered one!
+
+And he was but one of the many instruments of the Hashishin. Perhaps
+the girl with the violet eyes was another. What else to be dreaded
+Hassan might hold in store for us I could not conjecture.
+
+Do you wonder that I feared? Do you wonder that I hoped (I confess
+it), hoped that the slipper might be recovered without further
+bloodshed?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+THE HOLE IN THE BLIND
+
+
+I stepped over to the door, where a constable stood on duty.
+
+"You observed a tall Eastern gentleman in the room a while ago,
+officer?"
+
+"I did, sir."
+
+"How long is he gone?"
+
+The man started and began to peer about anxiously.
+
+"That's a funny thing, sir," he said. "I was keeping my eyes
+specially upon him. I noticed him hovering around while Mr.
+Mostyn was speaking; but although I could have sworn he hadn't
+passed out, he's gone!"
+
+"You didn't notice his departure, then?"
+
+"I'm sorry to say I didn't, sir."
+
+The man clearly was perplexed, but I found small matter for wonder
+in the episode. I had more than suspected the stranger to be a spy
+of Hassan's, and members of that strange company were elusive as
+will-o'-the-wisps.
+
+Bristol, at the far end of the room, was signalling to me. I
+walked back and joined him.
+
+"Come over here," he said, in a low voice, "and pretend to examine
+these things."
+
+He glanced significantly to his left. Following the glance, my
+eyes fell upon the lean American; he was peering into the receptacle
+which held the holy slipper.
+
+Bristol led me across the room, and we both faced the wall and bent
+over a glass case. Some yellow newspaper cuttings describing its
+contents hung above it, and these we pretended to read.
+
+"Did you notice that man I glanced at?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Well, that's Earl Dexter, the first crook in America! Ssh! Only
+goes in on very big things. We had word at the Yard he was in town;
+but we can't touch him--we can only keep our eyes on him. He
+usually travels openly and in his own name, but this time he seems
+to have slipped over quietly. He always dresses the same and has
+just given me 'good day!' They call him The Stetson Man. We heard
+this morning that he had booked two first-class sailings in the
+Oceanic, leaving for New York three weeks hence. Now, Mr. Cavanagh,
+what is his game?"
+
+"It has occurred to me before, Bristol," I replied, "and you may
+remember that I mentioned the idea to you, that there might be a
+third party interested in the slipper. Why shouldn't Earl Dexter
+be that third party?"
+
+"Because he isn't a fool," rapped Bristol shortly. "Earl Dexter
+isn't a man to gather up trouble for himself. More likely if his
+visit has anything really to do with the slipper he's retained by
+Hassan and Company. Museum-breaking may be a bit out of the line
+of Hashishin!"
+
+This latter suggestion dovetailed with my own ideas, and oddly
+enough there was something positively wholesome in the notion of
+the straightforward crookedness of a mere swell cracksman.
+
+Then happened a singular thing, and one that effectually concluded
+our whispered colloquy. From the top end of the room, beyond the
+case containing the slipper, one of the yellow blinds came down
+with a run.
+
+Bristol turned in a flash. It was not a remarkable accident, and
+might portend no more than a loose cord; but when, having walked
+rapidly up the room, we stood before the lowered blind, it
+appeared that this was no accident at all.
+
+Some four feet from the bottom of the blind (or five feet from the
+floor) a piece of linen a foot square had been neatly slashed out!
+
+I glanced around the room. Several fashionably dressed visitors
+were looking idly in our direction, but I could fasten upon no one
+of them as a likely perpetrator.
+
+Bristol stared at me in perplexity.
+
+"Who on earth did it," he muttered, "and what the blazes for?"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+THE HASHISHIN WATCH
+
+
+"The American gentleman has just gone out, sir," said the sergeant
+at the door.
+
+I nodded grimly and raced down the steps. Despite my half-formed
+desire that the slipper should be recovered by those to whom
+properly it belonged, I experienced at times a curious interest in
+its welfare. I cannot explain this. Across the hall in front of
+me I saw Earl Dexter passing out of the Museum. I followed him
+through into Kingsway and thence to Fleet Street. He sauntered
+easily along, a nonchalant gray figure. I had begun to think that
+he was bound for his hotel and that I was wasting my time when he
+turned sharply into quiet Salisbury Square; it was almost deserted.
+
+My heart leapt into my mouth with a presentiment of what was coming
+as I saw an elegant and beautifully dressed woman sauntering along
+in front of us on the far side.
+
+Was it that I detected something familiar in her carriage, in the
+poise of her head--something that reminded me of former
+unforgettable encounters; encounters which without exception had
+presaged attempts upon the slipper of the Prophet? Or was it that
+I recollected how Dexter had booked two passages to America? I
+cannot say, but I felt my heart leap; I knew beyond any possibility
+of doubt that this meeting in Salisbury Square marked the opening
+of a new chapter in the history of the slipper.
+
+Dexter slipped his arm within that of the girl in front of him and
+they paced slowly forward in earnest conversation. I suppose my
+action was very amateurish and very poor detective work; but
+regardless of discovery I crossed the road and passed close by
+the pair.
+
+I am certain that Dexter was speaking as I came up, but, well out
+of earshot, his voice was suddenly arrested. His companion turned
+and looked at me.
+
+I was prepared for it, yet was thrilled electrically by the
+flashing glance of the violet eyes--for it was she--the beautiful
+harbinger of calamities!
+
+My brain was in a whirl; complication piled itself upon complication;
+yet in the heart of all this bewilderment I thought I could detect
+the key of the labyrinth, but at the time my ideas were in disorder,
+for the violet eyes were not lowered but fixed upon me in cold scorn.
+
+I knew myself helpless, and bending my head with conscious
+embarrassment I passed on hurriedly.
+
+I had work to do in plenty, but I could not apply my mind to it;
+and now, although the obvious and sensible thing was to go about
+my business, I wandered on aimlessly, my brain employed with a
+hundred idle conjectures and the query, "Where have I seen The
+Stetson Man?" seeming to beat, like a tattoo, in my brain. There
+was something magnetic about the accursed slipper, for without
+knowing by what route I had arrived there, I found myself in Great
+Orchard Street and close under the walls of the British Antiquarian
+Museum. Then I was effectually aroused from my reverie.
+
+Two men, both tall, stood in the shadow of a doorway on the Opposite
+side of the street, staring intently up at the Museum windows. It
+was a tropically hot afternoon and they stood in deepest shadow. No
+one else was in Orchard Street--that odd little backwater--at the
+time, and they stood gazing upward intently and gave me not even a
+passing glance.
+
+But I knew one for the Oriental visitor of the morning, and despite
+broad noonday and the hum of busy London about me, my blood seemed
+to turn to water. I stood rooted to the spot, held there by a most
+surprising horror.
+
+For the gray-bearded figure of the other watcher was one I could
+never forget; its benignity was associated with the most horrible
+hours of my life, with deeds so dreadful that recollection to this
+day sometimes breaks my sleep, arousing me in the still watches,
+bathed in a cold sweat of fear.
+
+It was Hassan of Aleppo!
+
+If he saw me, if either of them saw me, I cannot say. What I should
+have done, what I might have done it is useless to speak of here--for
+I did nothing. Inert, thralled by the presence of that eerie,
+dreadful being, I watched them leave the shadow of the doorway and
+pace slowly on with their dignified Eastern gait.
+
+Then, knowing how I had failed in my plain duty to my fellow-men--how,
+finding a serpent in my path, I had hesitated to crush it,
+had weakly succumbed to its uncanny fascination--I made my way
+round to the door of the Museum.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+THE WHITE BEAM
+
+
+That night the deviltry began. Mr. Mostyn found himself wholly
+unable to sleep. Many relics have curious histories, and the
+experienced archaeologist becomes callous to that uncanniness which
+seems to attach to some gruesome curios. But the slipper of the
+Prophet was different. No mere ghostly menace threatened its
+holders; an avenging scimitar followed those who came in contact
+with it; gruesome tragedies, mutilations, murders, had marked its
+progress throughout.
+
+The night was still--as still as a London night can be; for there
+is always a vague murmuring in the metropolis as though the
+sleeping city breathed gently and sometimes stirred in its sleep.
+
+Then, distinct amid these usual nocturnal noises, rose another,
+unaccountable sound, a muffled crash followed by a musical tinkling.
+
+Mostyn sprang up in bed, drew on a dressing-gown, and took from the
+small safe at his bed-head the Museum keys and a loaded revolver.
+A somewhat dishevelled figure, pale and wild-eyed, he made his way
+through the private door and into the ghostly precincts of the
+Museum. He did not hesitate, but ascended the stairs and unlocked
+the door of the Assyrian gallery.
+
+Along its ghostly aisles he passed, and before the door which gave
+admittance to the Burton Room paused, fumbling a moment for the
+key.
+
+Inside the room something was moving!
+
+Mostyn was keenly alarmed; he knew that he must enter at once or
+never. He inserted the key in the lock, swung open the heavy door,
+stepped through and closed it behind him. He was a man of
+tremendous moral courage, for now,--alone in the apartment which
+harboured the uncanny relic, alone in the discharge of his duty,
+he stood with his back to the door trembling slightly, but with
+the idea of retreat finding no place in his mind.
+
+One side of the room lay in blackest darkness; through the
+furthermost window of the other a faint yellowed luminance (the
+moonlight through the blind) spread upon the polished parquet
+flooring. But that which held the curator spell-bound--that which
+momentarily quickened into life the latent superstition, common to
+all mankind, was a beam of cold light which poured its effulgence
+fully upon the case containing the Prophet's slipper! Where the
+other exhibits lay either in utter darkness or semi-darkness this
+one it seemed was supernaturally picked out by this lunar
+searchlight!
+
+It was ghostly-unnerving; but, the first dread of it passed, Mostyn
+recalled how during the day a hole inexplicably had been cut in
+that blind; he recalled that it had not been mended, but that the
+damaged blind had merely been rolled up again.
+
+And as a dawning perception of the truth came to him, as falteringly
+he advanced a step toward the mystic beam, he saw that one side of
+the case had been shattered--he saw the broken glass upon the floor;
+and in the dense shadow behind and under the beam of light, vaguely
+he saw a dull red object.
+
+It moved--it seemed to live! It moved away from the case and in
+the direction of the eastern windows.
+
+"My God!" whispered Mostyn; "it's the Prophet's slipper!"
+
+And wildly, blindly, he fired down the room. Later he knew that he
+had fired in panic, for nothing human was or could be in the place;
+yet his shot was not without effect. In the instant of its flash,
+something struck sharply against the dimly seen blind of one of the
+east windows; he heard the crash of broken glass.
+
+He leapt to the switch and flooded the room with light. A fear of
+what it might hold possessed him, and he turned instantly.
+
+Hard by the fragments of broken glass upon the floor and midway
+between the case and the first easterly window lay the slipper. A
+bell was ringing somewhere. His shot probably had aroused the
+attention of the policeman. Someone was clamouring upon the door
+of the Museum, too. Mostyn raced forward and raised the blind--that
+toward which the slipper had seemed to move.
+
+The lower pane of the window was smashed. Blood was trickling down
+upon the floor from the jagged edges of the glass.
+
+"Hullo there! Open the door! Open the door!"
+
+Bells were going all over the place now; sounds of running footsteps
+came from below; but Mostyn stood staring at the broken window and
+at the solid iron bars which protected it without, which were intact,
+substantial--which showed him that nothing human could possibly
+have entered.
+
+Yet the case was shattered, the holy slipper lay close beside him
+upon the floor, and from the broken window-pane blood was
+falling--drip-drip-drip...
+
+That was the story as I heard it half an hour later. For Inspector
+Bristol, apprised of the happening, was promptly on the scene; and
+knowing how keen was my interest in the matter, he rang me up
+immediately. I arrived soon after Bristol and found a perplexed
+group surrounding the uncanny slipper of the Prophet. No one had
+dared to touch it; the dread vengeance of Hassan of Aleppo would
+visit any unbeliever who ventured to lay hand upon the holy, bloody
+thing. Well we knew it, and as though it had been a venomous
+scorpion we, a company of up-to-date, prosaic men of affairs, stood
+around that dilapidated markoob, and kept a respectful distance.
+
+Mostyn, an odd figure in pyjamas and dressing-gown, turned his pale,
+intellectual face to me as I entered.
+
+"It will have to be put back ... secretly," he said.
+
+His voice was very unsteady. Bristol nodded grimly and glanced at
+the two constables, who, with a plain-clothes man unknown to me,
+made up that midnight company.
+
+"I'll do it, sir," said one of the constables suddenly.
+
+"One moment"--Mostyn raised his hand!
+
+In the ensuing silence I could hear the heavy breathing of those
+around me. We were all looking at the slipper, I think.
+
+"Do you understand, fully," the curator continued, "the risk you
+run?"
+
+"I think so, sir," answered the constable; "but I'm prepared to
+chance it."
+
+"The hands," resumed Mostyn slowly, "of those who hitherto have
+ventured to touch it have been"--he hesitated--"cut off."
+
+"Your career in the Force would be finished if it happened to you,
+my lad," said Bristol shortly.
+
+"I suppose they'd look after me," said the man, with grim humour.
+
+"They would if you met with--an accident, in the discharge of your
+duty," replied the inspector; "but I haven't ordered you to do it,
+and I'm not going to."
+
+"All right, sir," said the man, with a sort of studied truculence,
+"I'll take my chance."
+
+I tried to stop him; Mostyn, too, stepped forward, and Bristol
+swore frankly. But it was all of no avail.
+
+A sort of chill seemed to claim my very soul when I saw the
+constable stoop, unconcernedly pick up the slipper, and replace it
+in the broken case.
+
+It was out of a silence cathedral-like, awesome, that he spoke.
+
+"All you want is a new pane of glass, sir," he said--"and the
+thing's done."
+
+I anticipate in mentioning it here; but since Constable Hughes
+has no further place in these records I may perhaps be excused for
+dismissing him at this point.
+
+He was picked up outside the section house on the following evening
+with his right hand severed just above the wrist.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+A SCREAM IN THE NIGHT
+
+
+The day that followed was one of the hottest which we experienced
+during the heat wave. It was a day crowded with happenings. The
+Burton Room was closed to the public, whilst a glazier worked upon
+the broken east window and a new blind was fitted to the west.
+Behind the workmen, guarded by a watchful commissionaire, yawned
+the shattered case containing the slipper.
+
+I wondered if the visitors to the other rooms of the Museum realized,
+as I realized, that despite the blazing sunlight of tropical
+London, the shadow of Hassan of Aleppo lay starkly on that haunted
+building?
+
+At about eleven o'clock, as I hurried along the Strand, I almost
+collided with the girl of the violet eyes! She turned and ran like
+the wind down Arundel Street, whilst I stood at the corner staring
+after her in blank amazement, as did other passers-by; for a man
+cannot with dignity race headlong after a pretty woman down a
+public thoroughfare!
+
+My mystification grew hourly deeper; and Bristol wallowed in
+perplexities.
+
+"It's the most horrible and confusing case," he said to me when
+I joined him at the Museum, "that the Yard has ever had to handle.
+It bristles with outrages and murders. God knows where it will
+all end. I've had London scoured for a clue to the whereabouts
+of Hassan and Company and drawn absolutely blank! Then there's
+Earl Dexter. Where does he come in? For once in a way he's
+living in hiding. I can't find his headquarters. I've been
+thinking--"
+
+He drew me aside into the small gallery which runs parallel with
+the Assyrian Room.
+
+"Dexter has booked two passages in the Oceanic. Who is his
+companion?"
+
+I wondered, I had wondered more than once, if his companion were
+my beautiful violet-eyed acquaintance. A scruple--perhaps an
+absurd scruple--hitherto had kept me silent respecting her, but
+now I determined to take Bristol fully into my confidence. A
+conviction was growing upon me that she and Earl Dexter together
+represented that third party whose existence we had long suspected.
+Whether they operated separately or on behalf of the Moslems (of
+which arrangement I could not conceive) remained to be seen. I
+was about to voice my doubts and suspicions when Bristol went on
+hurriedly--
+
+"I have thoroughly examined the Burton Room, and considering that
+the windows are thirty feet from the ground, that there is no sign
+of a ladder having stood upon the lawn, and that the iron bars are
+quite intact, it doesn't look humanly possible for any one to have
+been in the room last night prior to Mostyn's arrival!"
+
+"One of the dwarfs--"
+
+"Not even one of the dwarfs," said Bristol, "could have passed
+between those iron bars!"
+
+"But there was blood on the window!"
+
+"I know there was, and human blood. It's been examined!"
+
+He stared at me fixedly. The thing was unspeakably uncanny.
+
+"To-night," he went on, "I am remaining in here"--nodding toward
+the Assyrian Room--"and I have so arranged it that no mortal being
+can possibly know I am here. Mostyn is staying, and you can stay,
+too, if you care to. Owing to Professor Deeping's will you are
+badly involved in the beastly business, and I have no doubt you are
+keen to see it through."
+
+"I am," I admitted, "and the end I look for and hope for is the
+recovery of the slipper by its murderous owners!"
+
+"I am with you," said Bristol. "It's just a point of honour; but
+I should be glad to make them a present of it. We're ostentatiously
+placing a constable on duty in the hallway to-night--largely as a
+blind. It will appear that we're taking no other additional
+precautions."
+
+He hurried off to make arrangements for my joining him in his watch,
+and thus again I lost my opportunity of confiding in him regarding
+the mysterious girl.
+
+I half anticipated, though I cannot imagine why, that Earl Dexter
+would put in an appearance, during the day. He did not do so,
+however, for Bristol had put a constable on the door who was well
+acquainted with the appearance of The Stetson Man. The inspector,
+in the course of his investigations, had come upon what might have
+been a clue, but what was at best a confusing one. Close by the
+wall of the curator's house and lying on the gravel path he had
+found a part of a gold cuff link. It was of American manufacture.
+
+Upon such slender evidence we could not justly assume that it
+pointed to the presence of Dexter on the night of the attempted
+robbery, but it served to complicate a matter already sufficiently
+involved.
+
+In pursuance of Bristol's plan, I concealed myself that evening
+just before the closing of the Museum doors, in a recess behind a
+heavy piece of Babylonian sculpture. Bristol was similarly
+concealed in another part of the room, and Mostyn joined us later.
+
+The Museum was closed; and so far as evidence went the authorities
+had relied again upon the bolts and bars hitherto considered
+impregnable, and upon the constable in the hall. The broken window
+was mended, the cut blind replaced, and within, in its shattered
+case, reposed the slipper of the Prophet.
+
+All the blinds being lowered, the Assyrian Room was a place of
+gloom, yellowed on the western side by the moonlight through the
+blind. The door communicating with the Burton Room was closed
+but not fastened.
+
+"They operated last night," Bristol whispered to me, "at the exact
+time when the moonlight shone through the hole in the westerly
+blind on to the case. If they come to-night, and I am quite
+expecting them, they will have to dispense with that assistance;
+but they know by experience where to reach the case."
+
+"Despite our precautions," I said, "they will almost certainly
+know that a watch is being kept."
+
+"They may or they may not," replied Bristol. "Either way I'm
+disposed to think there will be another attempt. Their mysterious
+method is so rapid that they can afford to take chances."
+
+This was not my first night vigil since I had become in a sense the
+custodian of the relic, but it was quite the most dreary. Amid the
+tomb-like objects about us we seemed two puny mortals toying with
+stupendous things. We could not smoke and must converse only in
+whispers; and so the night wore on until I began to think that our
+watch would be dully uneventful.
+
+"Our big chance," whispered Mostyn, "is in the fact that any day
+may change the conditions. They can't afford to wait."
+
+He ceased abruptly, grasping my arm. From somewhere, somewhere
+outside the building, we all three had heard a soft whistle. A
+moment of tense listening followed.
+
+"If only we could have had the place surrounded," whispered Bristol--"but
+it was impossible, of course."
+
+A faint grating noise echoed through the lofty Burton Room. Bristol
+slipped past me in the semi-gloom, and gently opened the
+communicating door a few inches.
+
+A-tiptoe, I joined him, and craning across his shoulder saw a strange
+and wonderful thing.
+
+The newly glazed east window again was shattered with a booming
+crash! The yellow blind was thrust aside. A long something reached
+out toward the broken case. There was a sort of fumbling sound, and
+paralyzed with the wonder of it--for the window, remember, was
+thirty feet from the ground--I stood frozen to my post.
+
+Not so Bristol. As the weird tentacle (or more exactly it reminded
+me of a gigantic crab's claw) touched the case, the Inspector leapt
+forward. A white beam from his electric torch cut through to the
+broken cabinet.
+
+The thing was withdrawn ... and with it went the slipper of the
+Prophet.
+
+"Raise the blinds!" cried Bristol. "Mr. Cavanagh! Mr. Mostyn!
+We must not let them give us the slip!"
+
+I got up the blind of the nearer window as Bristol raised the other.
+Not a living thing was in sight from either!
+
+Mostyn was beside me, his hand resting on my shoulder. I noted how
+he trembled. Bristol turned and looked back at us. The light from
+his pocket torch flashed upon the curator's face; and I have never
+seen such an expression of horrified amazement as that which it
+wore. Faintly, I could hear the constable racing up the steps from
+the hall.
+
+Ideas of the supernatural came to us all, I know; when, with a
+scuffling sound not unlike that of a rat in a ceiling, something moved
+above us!
+
+"Damn my thick head!" roared Bristol, furiously. "He's on the roof!
+It's flat as a floor and there's enough ivy alongside the water-spout
+on your house adjoining, Mr. Mostyn, to afford foothold to an
+invading army!"
+
+He plunged off toward the open door, and I heard him racing down
+the Assyrian Room.
+
+"He had a short rope ladder fixed from the gutter!" he cried back
+at us. "Graham! Graham!" (the constable on duty in the hall)--"Get
+the front door open! Get..." His voice died away as he
+leapt down the stairs.
+
+From the direction of Orpington Square came a horrid, choking
+scream. It rose hideously; it fell, rose again--and died.
+
+The thief escaped. We saw the traces upon the ivy where he had
+hastened down. Bristol ascended by the same route, and found where
+the ladder-hooks had twice been attached to the gutterway. Constable
+Graham, who was first actually to leave the building, declared that
+he heard the whirr of a re-started motor lower down Great Orchard
+Street.
+
+Bristol's theory, later to be dreadfully substantiated, was that
+the thief had broken the glass and reached into the case with an
+arrangement similar to that employed for pruning trees, having a
+clutch at the end, worked with a cord.
+
+"Hassan has been too clever for us!" said the inspector. "But--what
+in God's name did that awful screaming mean?"
+
+I had a theory, but I did not advance it then.
+
+It was not until nearly dawn that my theory, and Bristol's, regarding
+the clutch arrangement, both were confirmed. For close under the
+railings which abut on Orpington Square, in a pool of blood we found
+just such an instrument as Bristol had described.
+
+And still clutching it was a pallid and ghastly shrunken hand that
+had been severed from above the wrist!
+
+"Merciful God!" whispered the inspector--"look at the opal ring on
+the finger! Look at the bandage where he cut himself on the
+broken window-glass that first night, when Mr. Mostyn disturbed him.
+It wasn't the Hashishin who stole the thing.... It's Earl
+Dexter's hand!"
+
+No one spoke for a moment. Then--
+
+"Which of them has--" began Mostyn huskily.
+
+"The slipper of the Prophet?" interrupted Bristol. "I wonder if we
+shall ever know?"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+A SHRIVELLED HAND
+
+
+Around a large square table in a room at New Scotland Yard stood a
+group of men, all of whom looked more or less continuously at
+something that lay upon the polished deal. One of the party, none
+other than the Commissioner himself, had just finished speaking,
+and in silence now we stood about the gruesome object which had
+furnished him with the text of his very terse address.
+
+I knew myself privileged in being admitted to such a conference at
+the C.I.D. headquarters and owed my admission partly to Inspector
+Bristol, and partly to the fact that under the will of the late
+Professor Deeping I was concerned in the uncanny business we were
+met to discuss.
+
+Novelty has a charm for every one; and to find oneself immersed in
+a maelstrom of Eastern devilry, with a group of scientific murderers
+in pursuit of a holy Moslem relic, and unexpectedly to be made a
+trustee of that dangerous curiosity, makes a certain appeal to the
+adventurous. But to read of such things and to participate in them
+are widely different matters. The slipper of the Prophet and the
+dreadful crimes connected with it, the mutilations, murders, the
+uncanny mysteries which made up its history, were filling my world
+with horror.
+
+Now, in silence we stood around that table at New Scotland Yard
+and watched, as though we expected it to move, the ghastly "clue"
+which lay there. It was a shrivelled human hand, and about the
+thumb and forefinger there still dryly hung a fragment of lint
+which had bandaged a jagged wound. On one of the shrunken fingers
+was a ring set with a large opal.
+
+Inspector Bristol broke the oppressive silence.
+
+"You see, sir," he said, addressing the Commissioner, "this marks
+a new complication in the case. Up to this week although,
+unfortunately, we had made next to no progress, the thing was
+straightforward enough. A band of Eastern murderers, working along
+lines quite novel to Europe, were concealed somewhere in London.
+We knew that much. They murdered Professor Deeping, but failed to
+recover the slipper. They mutilated everyone who touched it
+mysteriously. The best men in the department, working night and
+day, failed to effect a single arrest. In spite of the mysterious
+activity of Hassan of Aleppo the slipper was safely lodged in the
+British Antiquarian Museum."
+
+The Commissioner nodded thoughtfully.
+
+"There is no doubt," continued Bristol, "that the Hashishin were
+watching the Museum. Mr. Cavanagh, here"--he nodded in my
+direction--"saw Hassan himself lurking in the neighbourhood. We
+took every precaution, observed the greatest secrecy; but in
+spite of it all a constable who touched the accursed thing lost
+his right hand. Then the slipper was taken."
+
+He stopped, and all eyes again were turned to the table.
+
+"The Yard," resumed Bristol slowly, "had information that Earl
+Dexter, the cleverest crook in America, was in England. He was
+seen in the Museum, and the night following the slipper was stolen.
+Then outside the place I found--that!"
+
+He pointed to the severed hand. No one spoke for a moment. Then--
+
+"The new problem," said the Commissioner, "is this: who took the
+slipper, Dexter or Hassan of Aleppo?"
+
+"That's it, sir," agreed Bristol. "Dexter had two passages booked
+in the Oceanic: but he didn't sail with her, and--that's his hand!"
+
+"You say he has not been traced?" asked the Commissioner.
+
+"No doctor known to the Medical Association," replied Bristol, "is
+attending him! He's not in any of the hospitals. He has completely
+vanished. The conclusion is obvious!"
+
+"The evident deduction," I said, "is that Dexter stole the slipper
+from the Museum--God knows with what purpose--and that Hassan of
+Aleppo recovered it from him."
+
+"You think we shall next hear of Earl Dexter from the river police?"
+suggested Bristol.
+
+"Personally," replied the Commissioner, "I agree with Mr. Cavanagh.
+I think Dexter is dead, and it is very probable that Hassan and
+Company are already homeward bound with the slipper of the Prophet."
+
+With all my heart I hoped that he might be right, but an intuition
+was with me crying that he was wrong, that many bloody deeds would
+be, ere the sacred slipper should return to the East.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+THE DWARF
+
+
+The manner in which we next heard of the whereabouts of the Prophet's
+slipper was utterly unforeseen, wildly dramatic. That the Hashishin
+were aware that I, though its legal trustee, no longer had charge
+of the relic nor knowledge of its resting-place, was sufficiently
+evident from the immunity which I enjoyed at this time from that
+ceaseless haunting by members of the uncanny organization ruled by
+Hassan. I had begun to feel more secure in my chambers, and no
+longer worked with a loaded revolver upon the table beside me. But
+the slightest unusual noise in the night still sufficed to arouse
+me and set me listening intently, to chill me with dread of what
+it might portend. In short, my nerves were by no means recovered
+from the ceaseless strain of the events connected with and arising
+out of the death of my poor friend, Professor Deeping.
+
+One evening as I sat at work in my chambers, with the throb of busy
+Fleet Street and its thousand familiar sounds floating in to me
+through the open windows, my phone bell rang.
+
+Even as I turned to take up the receiver a foreboding possessed me
+that my trusteeship was no longer to be a sinecure. It was
+Bristol who had rung me up, and upon very strange business.
+
+"A development at last!" he said; "but at present I don't know what
+to make of it. Can you come down now?"
+
+"Where are you speaking from?"
+
+"From the Waterloo Road--a delightful neighbourhood. I shall be
+glad if you can meet me at the entrance to Wyatt's Buildings in
+half an hour."
+
+"What is it? Have you found Dexter?"
+
+"No, unfortunately. But it's murder!"
+
+I knew as I hung up the receiver that my brief period of peace was
+ended; that the lists of assassination were reopened. I hurried
+out through the court into Fleet Street, thinking of the key of the
+now empty case at the Museum which reposed at my bankers, thinking
+of the devils who pursued the slipper, thinking of the hundred and
+one things, strange and terrible, which went to make up the history
+of that gruesome relic.
+
+Wyatt's Buildings, Waterloo Road, are a gloomy and forbidding block
+of dwellings which seem to frown sullenly upon the high road, from
+which they are divided by a dark and dirty courtyard. Passing an
+iron gateway, you enter, by way of an arch, into this sinister place
+of uncleanness. Male residents in their shirt sleeves lounge
+against the several entrances. Bedraggled women nurse dirty infants
+and sit in groups upon the stone steps, rendering them almost
+impassable. But to-night a thing had happened in Wyatt's Buildings
+which had awakened in the inhabitants, hardened to sordid crime, a
+sort of torpid interest.
+
+Faces peered from most of the windows which commanded a view of the
+courtyard, looking like pallid blotches against the darkness; but
+a number of police confined the loungers within their several
+doorways, so that the yard itself was comparatively clear.
+
+I had had some difficulty in forcing a way through the crowd which
+thronged the entrance, but finally I found myself standing beside
+Inspector Bristol and looking down upon that which had brought us
+both to Wyatt's Buildings.
+
+There was no moon that night, and only the light of the lamp in the
+archway, with some faint glimmers from the stairways surrounding the
+court, reached the dirty paving. Bristol directed the light of a
+pocket-lamp upon the hunched-up figure which lay in the dust, and I
+saw it to be that of a dwarfish creature, yellow skinned and wearing
+only a dark loin cloth. He had a malformed and disproportionate
+head, a head that had been too large even for a big man. I knew
+after first glance that this was one of the horrible dwarfs employed
+by the Hashishin in their murderous business. It might even be the
+one who had killed Deeping; but this was impossible to determine
+by reason of the fact that the hideous, swollen head, together with
+the features, was completely crushed. I shall not describe the
+creature's appearance in further detail.
+
+Having given me an opportunity to examine the dead dwarf, Bristol
+returned the electric lamp to his pocket and stood looking at me in
+the semi-gloom. A constable stood on duty quite near to us, and
+others guarded the archway and the doors to the dwellings. The
+murmur of subdued voices echoed hollowly in the wells of the
+staircases, and a constant excited murmur proceeded from the crowd
+at the entrance. No pressmen had yet been admitted, though numbers
+of them were at the gates.
+
+"It happened less than an hour ago," said Bristol. "The place was
+much as you see it now, and from what I can gather there came the
+sound of a shot and several people saw the dwarf fall through the
+air and drop where he lies!"
+
+The light was insufficient to show the expression upon the speaker's
+face, but his voice told of a great wonder.
+
+"It is a bit like an Indian conjuring trick," I said, looking up to
+the sky above us; "who fired the shot?"
+
+"So far," replied Bristol, "I have failed to find out; but there's
+a bullet in the thing's head. He was dead before he reached the
+pavement."
+
+"Did no one see the flash of the pistol?"
+
+"No one that I have got hold of yet. Of course this kind of
+evidence is very unreliable; these people regularly go out of their
+way to mislead the police."
+
+"You think the body may have been carried here from somewhere else?"
+
+"Oh, no; this is where it fell, right enough. You can see where
+his head struck the stones."
+
+"He has not been moved at all?"
+
+"No; I shall not move him until I've worked out where in heaven's
+name he can have fallen from! You and I have seen some mysterious
+things happen, Mr. Cavanagh, since the slipper of the Prophet came
+to England and brought these people"--he nodded toward the thing
+at our feet--"in its train; but this is the most inexplicable
+incident to date. I don't know what to make of it at all. Quite
+apart from the question of where the dwarf fell from, who shot at
+him and why?"
+
+"Have you no theory?" I asked. "The incident to my mind points
+directly to one thing. We know that this uncanny creature belonged
+to the organization of Hassan of Aleppo. We know that Hassan
+implacably pursues one object--the slipper. In pursuit of the
+slipper, then, the dwarf came here. Bristol!"--I laid my hand upon
+his arm, glancing about me with a very real apprehension--"the
+slipper must be somewhere near!"
+
+Bristol turned to the constable standing hard by.
+
+"Remain here," he ordered. Then to me: "I should like you to come
+up on to the roof. From there we can survey the ground and perhaps
+arrive at some explanation of how the dwarf came to fall upon that
+spot."
+
+Passing the constable on duty at one of the doorways and making our
+way through the group of loiterers there, we ascended amid
+conflicting odours to the topmost floor. A ladder was fixed against
+the wall communicating with a trap in the ceiling. Several
+individuals in their shirt sleeves and all smoking clay pipes had
+followed us up. Bristol turned upon them.
+
+"Get downstairs," he said--"all the lot of you, and stop there!"
+
+With muttered imprecations our audience dispersed, slowly returning
+by the way they had come. Bristol mounted the ladder and opened the
+trap. Through the square opening showed a velvet patch spangled
+with starry points. As he passed up on to the roof and I followed
+him, the comparative cleanness of the air was most refreshing after
+the varied fumes of the staircase.
+
+Side by side we leaned upon the parapet looking down into the dirty
+courtyard which was the theatre of this weird mystery; looking down
+upon the stage, sordidly Western, where a mystic Eastern tragedy
+had been enacted.
+
+I could see the constable standing beside the crushed thing upon
+the stones.
+
+"Now," said Bristol, with a sort of awe in his voice, "where did he
+fall from?"
+
+And at his words, looking down at the spot where the dwarf lay, and
+noting that he could not possibly have fallen there from any of the
+buildings surrounding the courtyard, an eerie sensation crept over
+me; for I was convinced that the happening was susceptible of no
+natural explanation.
+
+I had heard--who has not heard?--of the Indian rope trick, where
+a fakir throws a rope into the air which remains magically suspended
+whilst a boy climbs upward and upward until he disappears into space.
+I had never credited accounts of the performance; but now I began
+seriously to wonder if the arts of Hassan of Aleppo were not as
+great or greater than the arts of fakir. But the crowning mystery
+to my mind was that of the Hashishin's death. It would seem that
+as he had hung suspended in space he had been shot!
+
+"You say that someone heard the sound of the shot?" I asked suddenly.
+
+"Several people," replied Bristol; "but no one knows, or no one
+will say, from what direction it came. I shall go on with the
+inquiry, of course, and cross-examine every soul in Wyatt's
+Buildings. Meanwhile, I'm open to confess that I am beaten."
+
+In the velvet sky countless points blazed tropically. The hum of
+the traffic in Waterloo Road reached us only in a muffled way.
+Sordidness lay beneath us, but up there under the heavens we seemed
+removed from it as any Babylonian astronomer communing with the
+stars.
+
+When, some ten minutes later, I passed out into the noise of
+Waterloo Road, I left behind me an unsolved mystery and took with
+me a great dread; for I knew that the quest of the sacred slipper
+was not ended, I knew that another tragedy was added to its history--and
+I feared to surmise what the future might hold for all of us.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+THE WOMAN WITH THE BASKET
+
+
+Deep in thought respecting the inexplicable nature of this latest
+mystery, I turned in the direction of the bridge, and leaving behind
+me an ever-swelling throng at the gate of Wyatt's Buildings,
+proceeded westward.
+
+The death of the dwarf had lifted the case into the realms of the
+marvellous, and I noted nothing of the bustle about me, for mentally
+I was still surveying that hunched-up body which had fallen out of
+empty space.
+
+Then in upon my preoccupation burst a woman's scream!
+
+I aroused myself from reverie, looking about to right and left.
+Evidently I had been walking slowly, for I was less than a hundred
+yards from Wyatt's Buildings, and hard by the entrance to an
+uninviting alley from which I thought the scream had proceeded.
+
+And as I hesitated, for I had no desire to become involved in a
+drunken brawl, again came the shrill scream: "Help! help!"
+
+I cannot say if I was the only passer-by who heard the cry;
+certainly I was the only one who responded to it. I ran down the
+narrow street, which was practically deserted, and heard windows
+thrown up as I passed for the cries for help continued.
+
+Just beyond a patch of light cast by a street lamp a scene was being
+enacted strange enough at any time and in any place, but doubly
+singular at that hour of the night, or early morning, in a lane off
+the Waterloo Road.
+
+An old woman, from whose hand a basket of provisions had fallen,
+was struggling in the grasp of a tall Oriental! He was evidently
+trying to stifle her screams and at the same time to pinion her
+arms behind her!
+
+I perceived that there was more in this scene than met the eye.
+Oriental footpads are rarities in the purlieus of Waterloo Road.
+So much was evident; and since I carried a short, sharp argument in
+my pocket, I hastened to advance it.
+
+At the sight of the gleaming revolver barrel the man, who was
+dressed in dark clothes and wore a turban, turned and ran swiftly
+off. I had scarce a glimpse of his pallid brown face ere he was
+gone, nor did the thought of pursuit enter my mind. I turned to
+the old woman, who was dressed in shabby black and who was
+rearranging her thick veil in an oddly composed manner, considering
+the nature of the adventure that had befallen her.
+
+She picked up her basket, and turned away. Needless to say I was
+rather shocked at her callous ingratitude, for she offered no word of
+thanks, did not even glance in my direction, but made off hurriedly
+toward Waterloo Road.
+
+I had been on the point of inquiring if she had sustained any injury,
+but I checked the words and stood looking after her in blank
+wonderment. Then my ideas were diverted into a new channel. I
+perceived, as she passed under an adjacent lamp, that her basket
+contained provisions such as a woman of her appearance would scarcely
+be expected to purchase. I noted a bottle of wine, a chicken, and a
+large melon.
+
+The nationality of the assailant from the first had marked the affair
+for no ordinary one, and now a hazy notion of what lay behind all
+this began to come to me.
+
+Keeping well in the shadows on the opposite side of the way, I
+followed the woman with the basket. The lane was quite deserted;
+for, the disturbance over, those few residents who had raised their
+windows had promptly lowered them again. She came out into
+Waterloo Road, crossed over, and stood waiting by a stopping-place
+for electric cars. I saw her arranging a cloth over her basket in
+such a way as effectually to conceal the contents. A strong mental
+excitement possessed me. The detective fever claims us all at one
+time or another, I think, and I had good reason for pursuing any
+inquiry that promised to lead to the elucidation of the slipper
+mystery. A theory, covering all the facts of the assault incident,
+now presented itself, and I stood back in the shadow, watchful; in
+a degree, exultant.
+
+A Greenwich-bound car was hailed by the woman with the basket. I
+could not be mistaken, I felt sure, in my belief that she cast
+furtive glances about her as she mounted the steps. But, having
+seen her actually aboard, my attention became elsewhere engaged.
+
+All now depended upon securing a cab before the tram car had
+passed from view!
+
+I counted it an act of Providence that a disengaged taxi appeared
+at that moment, evidently bound for Waterloo Station. I ran out
+into the road with cane upraised.
+
+As the man drew up--
+
+"Quick!" I cried. "You see that Greenwich car--nearly at the
+Ophthalmic Hospital? Follow it. Don't get too near. I will give
+you further instructions through the tube." I leapt in. We were
+off!
+
+The rocking car ahead was rounding the bend now toward St. George's
+Circus. As it passed the clock and entered South London Road it
+stopped. I raised the tube.
+
+"Pass it slowly!"
+
+We skirted the clock tower, and bore around to the right. Then I
+drew well back in the corner of the cab.
+
+The woman with the basket was descending! "Pull up a few yards
+beyond!" I directed. As the car re-started, and passed us, the
+taxi became stationary. I peered out of the little window at the
+back.
+
+The woman was returning in the direction of Waterloo Road!
+
+"Drive slowly back along Waterloo Road," was my next order.
+"Pretend you are looking for a fare; I will keep out of sight."
+
+The man nodded. It was unlikely that any one would notice the
+fact that the cab was engaged.
+
+I was borne back again upon my course. The woman kept to the right,
+and, once we were entered into the straight road which leads to the
+bridge, I again raised the speaking-tube.
+
+"Pull up," I said. "On the right-hand side is an old woman carrying
+a basket, fifty yards ahead. Do you see her? Keep well behind, but
+don't lose sight of her."
+
+The man drew up again and sat watching the figure with the basket
+until it was almost lost from sight. Then slowly we resumed our
+way. I would have continued the pursuit afoot now, but I feared
+that my quarry might again enter a vehicle. She did not do so,
+however, but coming abreast of the turning in which the mysterious
+assault had taken place, she crossed the road and disappeared from
+view.
+
+I leapt out of the cab, thrust half a crown into the man's hand,
+and ran on to the corner. The night was now far advanced, and I
+knew that the chances of detection were thereby increased. But
+the woman seemed to have abandoned her fears, and I saw her just
+ahead of me walking resolutely past the lamp beyond which a short
+time earlier she had met with a dangerous adventure.
+
+Since the opposite side of the street was comparatively in darkness,
+I slipped across, and in a state of high nervous tension pursued
+this strange work of espionage. I was convinced that I had
+forestalled Bristol and that I was hot upon the track of those who
+could explain the mystery of the dead dwarf.
+
+The woman entered the gate of the block of dwellings even more
+forbidding in appearance than those which that night had staged
+a dreadful drama.
+
+As the figure with the basket was lost from view I crept on, and
+in turn entered the evil-smelling hallway. I stepped cautiously,
+and standing beneath a gaslight protected by a wire frame, I
+congratulated myself upon having reached that point of vantage as
+silently as any Sioux stalker.
+
+Footsteps were receding up the stone stairs. Craning my neck, I
+peered up the well of the staircase. I could not see the woman,
+but from the sound of her tread it was possible to count the
+landings which she passed. When she had reached the fourth, and I
+heard her step upon yet another flight, I knew that she must be
+bound for the topmost floor; and observing every precaution, almost
+holding my breath in a nervous endeavour to make not the slightest
+sound, rapidly I mounted the stairs.
+
+I was come to the third landing in this secret fashion when quite
+distinctly I heard the grating of a key in a lock!
+
+Since four doors opened upon each of the landings, at all costs,
+I thought, I must learn by which door she entered.
+
+Throwing caution to the winds I raced up the remaining flights ...
+and there at the top the woman confronted me, with blazing eyes!--with
+eyes that thrilled every nerve; for they were violet eyes, the
+only truly violet eyes I have ever seen! They were the eyes of the
+woman who like a charming, mocking will-o'-the-wisp had danced
+through this tragic scene from the time that poor Professor Deeping
+had brought the Prophet's slipper to London up to this present hour!
+
+There at the head of those stone steps in that common dwelling-house
+I knew her--and in the violet eyes it was written that she knew,
+and feared, me!
+
+"What do you want? Why are you following me?"
+
+She made no endeavour to disguise her voice. Almost, I think, she
+spoke the words involuntarily.
+
+I stood beside her. Quickly as she had turned from the door at my
+ascent, I had noted that it was that numbered forty-eight which she
+had been about to open.
+
+"You waste words," I said grimly. "Who lives there?"
+
+I nodded in the direction of the doorway. The violet eyes watched
+me with an expression in their depths which I find myself wholly
+unable to describe. Fear predominated, but there was anger, too,
+and with it a sort of entreaty which almost made me regret that I
+had taken this task upon myself. From beneath the shabby black hat
+escaped an errant lock of wavy hair wholly inconsistent with the
+assumed appearance of the woman. The flickering gaslight on the
+landing sought out in that wonderful hair shades which seemed to
+glow with the soft light seen in the heart of a rose. The thick
+veil was raised now and all attempts at deception abandoned. At
+bay she faced me, this secret woman whom I knew to hold the key to
+some of the darkest places which we sought to explore.
+
+"I live there," she said slowly. "What do you want with me?"
+
+"I want to know," I replied, "for whom are those provisions in
+your basket?"
+
+She watched me fixedly.
+
+"And I want to know," I continued, "something that only you can
+tell me. We have met before, madam, but you have always eluded me.
+This time you shall not do so. There's much I have to ask of you,
+but particularly I want to know who killed the Hashishin who lies
+dead at no great distance from here!"
+
+"How can I tell you that? Of what are you speaking?"
+
+Her voice was low and musical; that of a cultured woman. She
+evidently recognized the futility of further subterfuge in this
+respect.
+
+"You know quite well of what I am speaking! You know that you
+can tell me if any one can! The fact that you go disguised alone
+condemns you! Why should I remind you of our previous meetings--of
+the links which bind you to the history of the Prophet's slipper?"
+She shuddered and closed her eyes. "Your present attitude is a
+sufficient admission!"
+
+She stood silent before me, with something pitiful in her pose--a
+wonderfully pretty woman, whose disarranged hair and dilapidated hat
+could not mar her beauty; whose clumsy, ill-fitting garments could
+not conceal her lithe grace.
+
+Our altercation had not thus far served to arouse any of the
+inhabitants and on that stuffy landing, beneath the flickering
+gaslight, we stood alone, a group of two which epitomized strange
+things.
+
+Then, with that quietly dramatic note which marks real life entrances
+and differentiates them from the loudly acclaimed episodes of the
+stage, a third actor took up his cue.
+
+"Both hands, Mr. Cavanagh!" directed an American voice.
+
+Nerves atwitch, I started around in its direction.
+
+From behind the slightly opened door of No. 48 protruded a steel
+barrel, pointed accurately at my head!
+
+I hesitated, glancing from the woman toward the open door.
+
+"Do it quick!" continued the voice incisively. "You are up against
+a desperate man, Mr. Cavanagh. Raise your hands. Carneta, relieve
+Mr. Cavanagh of his gun!"
+
+Instantly the girl, with deft fingers, had obtained possession of
+my revolver.
+
+"Step inside," said the crisp, strident voice. Knowing myself
+helpless and quite convinced that I was indeed in the clutches of
+desperate people, I entered the doorway, the door being held open
+from within. She whom I had heard called Carneta followed. The
+door was reclosed; and I found myself in a perfectly bare and dim
+passageway. From behind me came the order--
+
+"Go right ahead!"
+
+Into a practically unfurnished room, lighted by one gas jet, I
+walked. Some coarse matting hung before the two windows and a
+fairly large grip stood on the floor against one wall. A gas-ring
+was in the hearth, together with a few cheap cooking utensils.
+
+
+I turned and faced the door. First entered Carneta, carrying the
+basket; then came a man with a revolver in his left hand and his
+right arm strapped across his chest and swathed in bandages. One
+glance revealed the fact that his right hand had been severed--revealed
+the fact, though I knew it already, that my captor was Earl Dexter.
+
+He looked even leaner than when I had last seen him. I had no doubt
+that his ghastly wound had occasioned a tremendous loss of blood.
+His gaunt face was positively emaciated, but the steely gray eyes
+had lost nothing of their brightness. There was a good deal about
+Mr. Earl Dexter, the cracksman, that any man must have admired.
+
+"Shut the door, Carneta," he said quietly. His companion closed
+the door and Dexter sat down on the grip, regarding me with his
+oddly humorous smile.
+
+"You're a visitor I did not expect, Mr. Cavanagh," he said. "I
+expected someone worse. You've interfered a bit with my plans but
+I don't know that I can't rearrange things satisfactorily. I don't
+think I'll stop for supper, though--" He glanced at the girl, who
+stood silent by the door.
+
+"Just pack up the provisions," he directed, nodding toward the
+basket--"in the next room."
+
+She departed without a word.
+
+"That's a noticeable dust coat you're wearing, Mr. Cavanagh," said
+the American; "it gives me a great notion. I'm afraid I'll have to
+borrow it."
+
+He glanced, smiling, at the revolver in his left hand and back again
+to me. There was nothing of the bully about him, nothing
+melodramatic; but I took off the coat without demur and threw it
+across to him.
+
+"It will hide this stump," he said grimly; "and any of the Hashishin
+gentlemen who may be on the look-out--though I rather fancy the
+road is clear at the moment--will mistake me for you. See the idea?
+Carneta will be in a cab and I'll be in after her and away before
+they've got time to so much as whistle."
+
+Very awkwardly he got into the coat.
+
+"She's a clever girl, Carneta," he said. "She's doctored me all
+along since those devils cut my hand off."
+
+As he finished speaking Carneta returned.
+
+She had discarded her rags and wore a large travelling coat and a
+fashionable hat.
+
+"Ready?" asked Dexter. "We'll make a rush for it. We meant to go
+to-night anyway. It's getting too hot here!" He turned to me.
+
+"Sorry to say," he drawled, "I'll have to tie you up and gag you.
+Apologize; but it can't be helped."
+
+Carneta nodded and went out of the room again, to return almost
+immediately with a line that looked as though it might have been
+employed for drying washing.
+
+"Hands behind you," rapped Dexter, toying with the revolver--"and
+think yourself lucky you've got two!"
+
+There was no mistaking the manner of man with whom I had to deal,
+and I obeyed; but my mind was busy with a hundred projects. Very
+neatly the girl bound my wrists, and in response to a slight nod
+from Dexter threw the end of the line up over a beam in the sloping
+ceiling, for the room was right under the roof, and drew it up in
+such a way that, my wrists being raised behind me, I became utterly
+helpless. It was an ingenious device indicating considerable
+experience.
+
+"Just tie his handkerchief around his mouth," directed Dexter:
+"that will keep him quiet long enough for our purpose. I hope you
+will be released soon, Mr. Cavanagh," he added. "Greatly regret
+the necessity."
+
+Carneta bound the handkerchief over my mouth.
+
+Dexter extinguished the gas.
+
+"Mr. Cavanagh," he said, "I've gone through hell and I've lost the
+most useful four fingers and a thumb in the United States to get
+hold of the Prophet's slipper. Any one can have it that's open to
+pay for it--but I've got to retire on the deal, so I'll drive a
+hard bargain! Good-night!"
+
+There was a sound of retreating footsteps, and I heard the entrance
+door close quietly.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+WHAT CAME THROUGH THE WINDOW
+
+
+I had not been in my unnatural position for many minutes before I
+began to suffer agonies, agonies not only physical but mental; for
+standing there like some prisoner of the Inquisition, it came to me
+how this dismantled apartment must be the focus of the dreadful
+forces of Hassan of Aleppo!
+
+That Earl Dexter had the slipper of the Prophet I no longer doubted,
+and that he had sustained, in this dwelling beneath the roof, an
+uncanny siege during the days which had passed since the theft from
+the Antiquarian Museum, was equally certain. Helpless, gagged, I
+pictured those hideous creatures, evil products of the secret East,
+who might, nay, who must surround that place! I thought of the
+horrible little yellow man who lay dead in Wyatt's Buildings; and
+it became evident to me that the house in which I was now imprisoned
+must overlook the back of those unsavoury tenements. The windows,
+sack-covered now, no doubt commanded a view of the roofs of the
+buildings. One of the mysteries that had puzzled us was solved. It
+was Earl Dexter who had shot the yellow dwarf as he was bound for
+this very room! But how humanly the Hashishin had proposed to gain
+his goal, how he had travelled through empty space--for from empty
+space the shot had brought him down--I could not imagine.
+
+I knew something of the almost supernatural attributes of these
+people. From Professor Deeping's book I knew of the incredible
+feats which they could perform when under the influence of the drug
+hashish. From personal experience also I knew that they had powers
+wholly abnormal.
+
+The pain in my arms and back momentarily increased. An awesome
+silence ruled. I tortured myself with pictures of murderous
+yellow men possessed of the power claimed by the Mahatmas, of
+levitation. Mentally I could see a distorted half-animal creature
+carrying a great gleaming knife and floating supernaturally toward
+me through the night!
+
+A soft pattering sound became perceptible on the sloping roof above!
+
+I think I have never known such intense and numbing fear as that
+which now descended upon me. Perhaps I may be forgiven it. A more
+dreadful situation it would be hard to devise. Knowing that I was
+on the fifth story of a house, bound, helpless, I knew, too, that a
+second mystic guardian of the slipper was come to accomplish the
+task in which the first had failed!
+
+I began to pray fervently.
+
+Neither of the windows were closed; and now through the intense
+darkness I heard one of them being raised up--up--up...
+
+The sacking was pulled aside inch by inch.
+
+Silhouetted against the faintly luminous background I saw a hunched,
+unnatural figure. The real was more dreadful even than the
+imaginary--for some stray beam of light touched into cold radiance
+a huge curved knife which the visitant held between his teeth!
+
+My fear became a madness, and I twisted my body violently in a wild
+endeavour to free myself. A dreadful pain shot through my left
+shoulder, and the whole nightmare scene--the thing with the knife
+at the window--the low-ceiled room-began to fade away from me. I
+seemed to be falling into deep water.
+
+A splintering crash and the sound of shouting formed my last
+recollections ere unconsciousness came.
+
+I found myself lying in an armchair with Bristol forcing brandy
+between my lips. My left arm hung limply at my side and the pain
+in my dislocated shoulder was excruciating.
+
+"Thank God you are all right, Mr. Cavanagh!" said the inspector.
+"I got the surprise of my life when we smashed the door in and
+found you tied up here!"
+
+"You came none too soon," I said feebly. "God knows how Providence
+directed you here."
+
+"Providence it was," replied Bristol. "From the roof of Wyatt's
+Buildings--you know the spot?--I saw the second yellow devil
+coming. By God! They meant to have it to-night! They don't value
+their lives a brass farthing against that damned slipper!"
+
+"But how--"
+
+"Along the telegraph-wires, Mr. Cavanagh! They cross Wyatt's
+Buildings and cross this house. It was a moonless night or we
+should have seen it at once! I watched him, saw him drop to this
+roof--and brought the men around to the front."
+
+"Did he, that awful thing, escape?"
+
+"He dropped full forty feet into a tree--from the tree to the
+ground, and went off like a cat!"
+
+"Earl Dexter has escaped us," I said, "and he has the slipper!"
+
+"God help him!" replied Bristol. "For by now he has that hell-pack
+at his heels! What a case! Heavens above, it will drive me mad!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+A RAPPING AT MIDNIGHT
+
+
+Inspector Bristol finished his whisky at a gulp and stood up, a tall,
+massive figure, stretching himself and yawning.
+
+"The detective of fiction would be hard at work on this case, now,"
+he said, smiling, "but I don't even pretend to be. I am at a
+standstill and I don't care who knows it."
+
+"You have absolutely no clue to the whereabouts of Earl Dexter?"
+
+"Not the slightest, Mr. Cavanagh. You hear a lot about the machinery
+of the law, but as a matter of fact, looking for a clever man hidden
+in London is a good deal like looking for a needle in a haystack.
+Then, he may have been bluffing when he told you he had the Prophet's
+slipper. He's already had his hand cut off through interfering with
+the beastly thing, and I really can't believe he would take further
+chances by keeping it in his possession. Nevertheless, I should like
+to find him."
+
+He leaned back against the mantelpiece, scratching his head
+perplexedly. In this perplexity he had my sympathy. No such
+pursuit, I venture to say, had ever before been required of Scotland
+Yard as this of the slipper of the Prophet. An organization founded
+in 1090, which has made a science of assassination, which through
+the centuries has perfected the malign arts, which, lingering on in
+a dark spot in Syria, has suddenly migrated and established itself
+in London, is a proposition almost unthinkable.
+
+It was hard to believe that even the daring American cracksman
+should have ventured to touch that blood-stained relic of the
+Prophet, that he should have snatched it away from beneath the very
+eyes of the fanatics who fiercely guarded it. What he hoped to
+gain by his possession of the slipper was not evident, but the fact
+remained that if he could be believed, he had it, and provided
+Scotland Yard's information was accurate, he still lurked in hiding
+somewhere in London.
+
+Meanwhile, no clue offered to his hiding-place, and despite the
+ceaseless vigilance of the men acting under Bristol's orders, no
+trace could be found of Hassan of Aleppo nor of his fiendish
+associates.
+
+"My theory is," said Bristol, lighting a cigarette, "that even
+Dexter's cleverness has failed to save him. He's probably a dead
+man by now, which accounts for our failing to find him; and Hassan
+of Aleppo has recovered the slipper and returned to the East, taking
+his gruesome company with him--God knows how! But that accounts
+for our failing to find him."
+
+I stood up rather wearily. Although poor Deeping had appointed me
+legal guardian of the relic, and although I could render but a poor
+account of my stewardship, let me confess that I was anxious to
+take that comforting theory to my bosom. I would have given much
+to have known beyond any possibility of doubt that the accursed
+slipper and its blood-lustful guardian were far away from England.
+Had I known so much, life would again have had something to offer
+me besides ceaseless fear, endless watchings. I could have slept
+again, perhaps; without awaking, clammy, peering into every shadow,
+listening, nerves atwitch to each slightest sound disturbing the
+night; without groping beneath the pillow for my revolver.
+
+"Then you think," I said, "that the English phase of the slipper's
+history is closed? You think that Dexter, minus his right hand,
+has eluded British law--that Hassan and Company have evaded
+retribution?"
+
+"I do!" said Bristol grimly, "and although that means the biggest
+failure in my professional career, I am glad--damned glad!"
+
+Shortly afterward he took his departure; and I leaned from the
+window, watching him pass along the court below and out under the
+arch into Fleet Street. He was a man whose opinions I valued, and
+in all sincerity I prayed now that he might be right; that the
+surcease of horror which we had recently experienced after the
+ghastly tragedies which had clustered thick about the haunted
+slipper, might mean what he surmised it to mean.
+
+The heat to-night was very oppressive. A sort of steaming mist
+seemed to rise from the court, and no cooling breeze entered my
+opened windows. The clamour of the traffic in Fleet Street came
+to me but remotely. Big Ben began to strike midnight. So far
+as I could see, residents on the other stairs were all abed and
+a velvet shadow carpet lay unbroken across three parts of the
+court. The sky was tropically perfect, cloudless, and jewelled
+lavishly. Indeed, we were in the midst of an Indian summer; it
+seemed that the uncanny visitants had brought, together with an
+atmosphere of black Eastern deviltry, something, too, of the
+Eastern climate.
+
+The last stroke of the Cathedral bell died away. Other more
+distant bells still were sounding dimly, but save for the
+ceaseless hum of the traffic, no unusual sound now disturbed the
+archaic peace of the court.
+
+I returned to my table, for during the time that had passed I had
+badly neglected my work and now must often labour far into the
+night. I was just reseated when there came a very soft rapping
+at the outer door!
+
+No doubt my mood was in part responsible, but I found myself
+thinking of Poe's weird poem, "The Raven"; and like the character
+therein I found myself hesitating.
+
+I stole quietly into the passage. It was in darkness. How odd it
+is that in moments of doubt instinctively one shuns the dark and
+seeks the light. I pressed the switch lighting the hall lamp, and
+stood looking at the closed door.
+
+Why should this late visitor have rapped in so uncanny a fashion
+in preference to ringing the bell?
+
+I stepped back to my table and slipped a revolver into my pocket.
+
+The muffled rapping was repeated. As I stood in the study doorway
+I saw the flap of the letter-box slowly raised!
+
+Instantly I extinguished both lights. You may brand me as
+childishly timid, but incidents were fresh in my memory which
+justified all my fears.
+
+A faintly luminous slit in the door showed me that the flap was now
+fully raised. It was the dim light on the stairway shining through.
+Then quite silently the flap was lowered. Came the soft rapping
+again.
+
+"Who's there?" I cried.
+
+No one answered.
+
+Wondering if I were unduly alarming myself, yet, I confess, strung
+up tensely in anticipation that this was some device of the phantom
+enemy, I stood in doubt.
+
+The silence remained unbroken for thirty seconds or more. Then yet
+again it was disturbed by that ghostly, muffled rapping.
+
+I advanced a step nearer to the door.
+
+"Who's there?" I cried loudly. "What do you want?"
+
+The flap of the letter box began to move, and I formed a sudden
+determination. Making no sound in my heelless Turkish slippers
+I crept close up to the door and dropped upon my knees.
+
+Thereupon the flap became fully lifted, but from where I crouched
+beneath it I was unable to see who or what was looking in; yet I
+hesitated no longer. I suddenly raised myself and thrust the
+revolver barrel through the opening!
+
+"Who are you?" I cried. "Answer or I fire!"--and along the barrel
+I peered out on to the landing.
+
+Still no one answered. But something impalpable--a powder--a
+vapour--to this hour I do not know what--enveloped me with its
+nauseating fumes; was puffed fully into my face! My eyes, my
+mouth, my nostrils became choked up, it seemed, with a deadly
+stifling perfume.
+
+Wildly, feeling that everything about me was slipping away, that I
+was sinking into a void, for ought I knew that of dissolution, I
+pulled the trigger once, twice, thrice...
+
+"My God!"--the words choked in my throat and I reeled back into
+the passage--"it's not loaded!"
+
+I threw up my arms to save myself, lurched, and fell forward into
+what seemed a bottomless pit.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+THE GOLDEN PAVILION
+
+
+When I opened my eyes it was to a conviction that I dreamed. I
+lay upon a cushioned divan in a small apartment which I find myself
+at a loss adequately to describe.
+
+It was a yellow room, then, its four walls being hung with yellow
+silk, its floor being entirely covered by a yellow Persian carpet.
+One lamp, burning in a frame of some lemon coloured wood and having
+its openings filled with green glass, flooded the place with a
+ghastly illumination. The lamp hung by gold chains from the ceiling,
+which was yellow. Several low tables of the same lemon-hued wood
+as the lamp-frame stood around; they were inlaid in fanciful designs
+with gleaming green stones. Turn my eyes where I would, clutch my
+aching head as I might, this dream chamber would not disperse, but
+remained palpable before me--yellow and green and gold.
+
+There was a niche behind the divan upon which I lay framed about
+with yellow wood. In it stood a golden bowl and a tall pot of
+yellow porcelain; I lay amid yellow cushions having golden tassels.
+Some of them were figured with vivid green devices.
+
+To contemplate my surroundings assuredly must be to court madness.
+No door was visible, no window; nothing but silk and luxury, yellow
+and green and gold.
+
+To crown all, the air was heavy with a perfume wholly unmistakable
+by one acquainted with Egypt's ruling vice. It was the reek of
+smouldering hashish--a stench that seemed to take me by the throat,
+a vapour damnable and unclean. I saw that a little censer, golden
+in colour and inset with emeralds, stood upon the furthermost corner
+of the yellow carpet. From it rose a faint streak of vapour; and I
+followed the course of the sickly scented smoke upward through the
+still air until in oily spirals it lost itself near to the yellow
+ceiling. As a sick man will study the veriest trifle I studied
+that wisp of smoke, pencilled grayly against the silken draperies,
+the carven tables, against the almost terrifying persistency of the
+yellow and green and gold.
+
+I strove to rise, but was overcome by vertigo and sank back again
+upon the yellow cushions. I closed my eyes, which throbbed and
+burned, and rested my head upon my hands. I ceased to conjecture
+if I dreamed or was awake. I knew that I felt weak and ill, that
+my head throbbed agonizingly, that my eyes smarted so as to render
+it almost impossible to keep them open, that a ceaseless humming
+was in my ears.
+
+For some time I lay endeavouring to regain command of myself, to
+prepare to face again that scene which had something horrifying
+in its yellowness, touched with the green and gold.
+
+And when finally I reopened my eyes, I sat up with a suppressed cry.
+For a tall figure in a yellow robe from beneath which peeped yellow
+slippers, a figure crowned with a green turban, stood in the centre
+of the apartment!
+
+It was that of a majestic old man, white bearded, with aquiline
+nose, and the fierce eagle eyes of a fanatic set upon me sternly,
+reprovingly.
+
+With folded arms he stood watching me, and I drew a sharp breath and
+rose slowly to my feet.
+
+There amid the yellow and green and gold, amid the abominable reek
+of burning hashish I stood and faced Hassan of Aleppo!
+
+No words came to me; I was confounded.
+
+Hassan spoke in that gentle voice which I had heard only once before.
+
+"Mr. Cavanagh," he said, "I have brought you here that I might warn
+you. Your police are seeking me night and day, and I am fully alive
+to my danger whilst I stay in your midst. But for close upon a
+thousand years the Sheikh-al-jebal, Lord of the Hashishin, has
+guarded the traditions and the relics of the Prophet, Salla-'llahu
+'ale yhi wasellem! I, Hassan of Aleppo, am Sheikh of the Order
+to-day, and my sacred duty has brought me here."
+
+The piercing gaze never left my face. I was not yet by any means
+my own man and still I made no reply.
+
+"You have been wise," continued Hassan, "in that you have never
+touched the sacred slipper. Had you lain hands upon it, no secrecy
+could have availed you. The eye of the Hashishin sees all. There
+is a shaft of light which the true Believer perceives at night as
+he travels toward El-Medineh. It is the light which uprises, a
+spiritual fire, from the tomb of the Prophet (Salla-'llahu 'aleyhi
+wasellem!). The relics also are radiant, though in a lesser degree."
+
+He took a step toward me, spreading out his lean brown hands, palms
+downward.
+
+"A shaft of light," he said impressively, "shines upward now from
+London. It is the light of the holy slipper." He gazed intently
+at the yellow drapery at the left of the divan, but as though he
+were looking not at the wall but through it. His features worked
+convulsively; he was a man inspired. "I see it now!" he almost
+whispered--"that white light by which the guardians of the relic
+may always know its resting place!"
+
+I managed to force words to my lips.
+
+"If you know where the slipper is," I said, more for the sake of
+talking than for anything else, "why do you not recover it?"
+
+Hassan turned his eyes upon me again.
+
+"Because the infidel dog," he cried loudly, "who has soiled it with
+his unclean touch, defies us--mocks us! He has suffered the loss
+of the offending hand, but the evil ginn protect him; he is inspired
+by efreets! But God is great and Mohammed is His only Prophet! We
+shall triumph; but it is written, oh, daring infidel, that you again
+shall become the guardian of the slipper!"
+
+He spoke like some prophet of old and I stared at him fascinated.
+I was loth to believe his words.
+
+"When again," he continued, "the slipper shall be in the receptacle
+of which you hold the key, that key must be given to me!"
+
+I thought I saw the drift of his words now; I thought I perceived
+with what object I had been trapped and borne to this mysterious
+abode for whose whereabouts the police vainly were seeking. By the
+exercise of the gift of divination it would seem that Hassan of
+Aleppo had forecast the future history of the accursed slipper or
+believed that he had done so. According to his own words I was
+doomed once more to become trustee of the relic. The key of the
+case at the Antiquarian Museum, to which he had prophesied the
+slipper's return, would be the price of my life! But--
+
+"In order that these things may be fulfilled," he continued, "I must
+permit you to return to your house. So it is written, so it shall
+be. Your life is in my hands; beware when it is demanded of you
+that you hesitate not in yielding up the key!"
+
+He raised his hands before him, making a sort of obeisance, I doubt
+not in the direction of Mecca, drew aside one of the yellow hangings
+behind him and disappeared, leaving me alone again in that nightmare
+apartment of yellow and green and gold. A moment I stood watching
+the swaying curtain. Utter silence reigned, and a sort of panic
+seized me infinitely greater than that occasioned by the presence
+of the weird Sheikh. I felt that I must escape from the place or
+that I should become raving mad.
+
+I leapt forward to the curtain which Hassan had raised and jerked
+it aside; it had concealed a door. In this door and about level
+with my eyes was a kind of little barred window through which shone
+a dim green light. I bent forward, peering into the place beyond,
+but was unable to perceive anything save a vague greenness.
+
+And as I peered, half believing that the whole episode was a
+dreadful, fevered dream, the abominable fumes of hashish grew, or
+seemed to grow, quite suddenly insupportable. Through the square
+opening, from the green void beyond, a cloud of oily vapour, pungent,
+stifling, resembling that of burning Indian hemp, poured out and
+enveloped me!
+
+With a gasping cry I fell back, fighting for breath, for a breath
+of clean air unpolluted with hashish. But every inhalation drew
+down into my lungs the fumes that I sought to escape from. I
+experienced a deathly sickness; I seemed to be sinking into a sea
+of hashish, amid bubbles of yellow and green and gold, and I knew
+no more until, struggling again to my feet, surrounded by utter
+darkness--I struck my head on the corner of my writing-table ... for
+I lay in my own study!
+
+My revolver, unloaded, was upon the table beside me. The night was
+very still. I think it must have been near to dawn.
+
+"My God!" I whispered, "did I dream it all? Did I dream it all?"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+
+THE BLACK TUBE
+
+
+"There's no doubt in my mind," said Inspector Bristol, "that your
+experience was real enough."
+
+The sun was shining into my room now, but could not wholly disperse
+the cloud of horror which lay upon it. That I had been drugged was
+sufficiently evident from my present condition, and that I had been
+taken away from my chambers Inspector Bristol had satisfactorily
+proved by an examination of the soles of my slippers.
+
+"It was a clever trick," he said. "God knows what it was they
+puffed into your face through the letter box, but the devilish arts
+of ten centuries, we must remember, are at the command of Hassan of
+Aleppo! The repetition of the trick at the mysterious place you
+were taken to is particularly interesting. I should say you won't
+be in a hurry to peer through letter boxes and so forth in the
+future?"
+
+I shook my aching head.
+
+"That accursed yellow room," I replied, "stank with the fumes of
+hashish. It may have been some preparation of hashish that was
+used to drug me."
+
+Bristol stood looking thoughtfully from the window.
+
+"It was a nightmare business, Mr. Cavanagh," he said; "but it
+doesn't advance our inquiry a little bit. The prophecy of the old
+man with the white beard--whom you assure me to be none other than
+Hassan of Aleppo--is something we cannot very well act upon. He
+clearly believes it himself; for he has released you after having
+captured you, evidently in order that you may be at liberty to take
+up your duty as trustee of the slipper again. If the slipper really
+comes back to the Museum the fact will show Hassan to be something
+little short of a magician. I shan't envy you then, Mr. Cavanagh,
+considering that you hold the keys of the case!"
+
+"No," I replied wearily. "Poor Professor Deeping thought that he
+acted in my interests and that my possession of the keys would
+constitute a safeguard. He was wrong. It has plunged me into the
+very vortex of this ghastly affair."
+
+"It is maddening," said Bristol, "to know that Hassan and Company
+are snugly located somewhere under our very noses, and that all
+Scotland Yard can find no trace of them. Then to think that Hassan
+of Aleppo, apparently by means of some mystical light, has knowledge
+of the whereabouts of the slipper and consequently of the
+whereabouts of Earl Dexter (another badly wanted man) is extremely
+discouraging! I feel like an amateur; I'm ashamed of myself!"
+
+Bristol departed in a condition of irritable uncertainty.
+
+My head in my hands, I sat for long after his departure, with the
+phantom characters of the ghoulish drama dancing through my
+brain. The distorted yellow dwarfs seemed to gibe apish before me.
+Severed hands clenched and unclenched themselves in my face, and
+gleaming knives flashed across the mental picture. Predominant over
+all was the stately figure of Hassan of Aleppo, that benignant,
+remorseless being, that terrible guardian of the holy relic who
+directed the murderous operations. Earl Dexter, The Stetson Man,
+with his tightly bandaged arm, his gaunt, clean-shaven face and
+daredevil smile, figured, too, in my feverish daydream; nor was
+that other character missing, the girl with the violet eyes whose
+beautiful presence I had come to dread; for like a sybil announcing
+destruction her appearances in the drama had almost invariably
+presaged fresh tragedies. I recalled my previous meetings with
+this woman of mystery. I recalled my many surmises regarding her
+real identity and association with the case. I wondered why in the
+not very distant past I had promised to keep silent respecting her;
+I wondered why up to that present moment, knowing beyond doubt that
+her activities were inimical to my interests, were criminal, I had
+observed that foolish pledge.
+
+And now my door-bell was ringing--as intuitively I had anticipated.
+So certain was I of the identity of my visitor that as I walked
+along the passage I was endeavouring to make up my mind how I should
+act, how I should receive her.
+
+I opened the door; and there, wearing European garments but a green
+turban ... stood Hassan of Aleppo!
+
+When I say that amazement robbed me of the power to speak, to move,
+almost to think, I doubt not you will credit me. Indeed, I felt
+that modern London was crumbling about me and that I was become
+involved in the fantastic mazes of one of those Oriental intrigues
+such as figure in the Romance of Abu Zeyd, or with which most
+European readers have been rendered familiar by the glowing pages
+of "The Thousand and One Nights."
+
+"Effendim," said my visitor, "do not hesitate to act as I direct!"
+
+In his gloved hand he carried what appeared to be an ebony cane.
+He raised and pointed it directly at me. I perceived that it was,
+in fact, a hollow tube.
+
+"Death is in my hand," he continued; "enter slowly and I will
+follow you."
+
+Still the sense of unreality held me thralled and my brain refused
+me service. Like an hypnotic subject I walked back to my study,
+followed by my terrible visitor, who reclosed the door behind him.
+
+He sat facing me across my littered table with the mysterious tube
+held loosely in his grasp.
+
+How infinitely more terrifying are perils unknown than those known
+and appreciated! Had a European armed with a pistol attempted a
+similar act of coercion, I cannot doubt that I should have put up
+some sort of fight; had he sat before me now as Hassan of Aleppo
+sat, with a comprehensible weapon thus laid upon his knees, I
+should have taken my chance, should have attacked him with the lamp,
+with a chair, with anything that came to my hand.
+
+But before this awful, mysterious being who was turning my life
+into channels unsuspected, before that black tube with its unknown
+potentialities, I sat in a kind of passive panic which I cannot
+attempt to describe, which I had never experienced before and have
+never known since.
+
+"There is one about to visit you," he said, "whom you know, whom I
+think you expect. For it is written that she shall come and such
+events cast a shadow before them. I, too, shall be present at your
+meeting!"
+
+His eagle eyes opened widely; they burned with fanaticism.
+
+"Already she is here!" he resumed suddenly, and bent as one
+listening. "She comes under the archway; she crossed the
+courtyard--and is upon the stair! Admit her, effendim; I shall be close
+behind you!"
+
+The door-bell rang.
+
+With the consciousness that the black tube was directed toward the
+back of my head, I went and opened the door. My mind was at work
+again, and busy with plans to terminate this impossible situation.
+
+On the landing stood a girl wearing a simple white frock which
+fitted her graceful figure perfectly. A white straw hat, of the New
+York tourist type, with a long veil draped from the back suited her
+delicate beauty very well. The red mouth drooped a little at the
+corners, but the big violet eyes, like lamps of the soul, seemed
+afire with mystic light.
+
+"Mr. Cavanagh," she said, very calmly and deliberately, "there is
+only one way now to end all this trouble. I come from the man who
+can return the slipper to where it belongs; but he wants his price!"
+
+Her quiet speech served completely to restore my mental balance, and
+I noted with admiration that her words were so chosen as to commit
+her in no way. She knew quite well that thus far she might appear
+in the matter with impunity, and she clearly was determined to say
+nothing that could imperil her.
+
+"Will you please come in?" I said quietly--and stood aside to
+admit her.
+
+Exhibiting wonderful composure, she entered--and there, in the
+badly lighted hallway came face to face with my other visitor!
+
+It was a situation so dramatic as to seem unreal.
+
+Away from that tall figure retreated the girl with the violet
+eyes--and away--until she stood with her back to the wall. Even in
+the gloom I could see that her composure was deserting her; her
+beautiful face was pallid.
+
+"Oh, God!" she whispered, all but inaudible--"You!"
+
+Hassan, grasping the black rod in his hand, signed to her to enter
+the study. She stood quite near to me, with her eyes fixed upon
+him. I bent closer to her.
+
+"My revolver--in left-hand table drawer," I breathed in her ear.
+"Get it. He is watching me!"
+
+I could not tell if my words had been understood, for, never taking
+her gaze from the Sheikh of the Assassins, she sidled into the study.
+I followed her; and Hassan came last of all. Just within the
+doorway he stood, confronting us.
+
+"You have come," he said, addressing the girl and speaking in
+perfect English but with a marked accent, "to open your impudent
+negotiations through Mr. Cavanagh for the return of the thrice holy
+relic to the Museum! Your companion, the man, who is inspired by
+the Evil One, has even dared to demand ransom for the slipper from
+me!"
+
+Hassan was majestic in his wrath; but his eyes were black with
+venomous hatred.
+
+"He has suffered the penalty which the Koran lays down; he has lost
+his right hand. But the lord of all evil protects him, else ere
+this he had lost his life! Move no closer to that table!"
+
+I started. Either Hassan of Aleppo was omniscient or he had
+overheard my whispered words!
+
+"Easily I could slay you where you stand!" he continued. "But to
+do so would profit me nothing. This meeting has been revealed to
+me. Last night I witnessed it as I slept. Also it has been
+revealed to me by Erroohanee, in the mirror of ink, that the slipper
+of the Prophet, Salla-'llahu 'ale yhi wasellem! Shall indeed return
+to that place accursed, that infidel eyes may look upon it! It is
+the will of Allah, whose name be exalted, that I hold my hand, but
+it is also His will that I be here, at whatever danger to my
+worthless body."
+
+He turned his blazing eyes upon me.
+
+"To-morrow, ere noon," he said, "the slipper will again be in the
+Museum from which the man of evil stole it. So it is written;
+obscure are the ways. We met last night, you and I, but at that
+time much was dark to me that now is light. The holy 'Alee spoke
+to me in a vision, saying: 'There are two keys to the case in which
+it will be locked. Secure one, leaving the other with him who
+holds it! Let him swear to be secret. This shall be the price of
+his life!'"
+
+The black tube was pointed directly at my forehead.
+
+"Effendim," concluded the speaker, "place in my hand the key of the
+case in the Antiquarian Museum!"
+
+Hands convulsively clenched, the girl was looking from me to Hassan.
+My throat felt parched, but I forced speech to my lips.
+
+"Your omniscience fails you," I said. "Both keys are at my bank!"
+
+Blacker grew the fierce eyes--and blacker. I gave myself up for
+lost; I awaited death--death by some awful, unique means--with
+what courage I could muster.
+
+From the court below came the sound of voices, the voices of
+passers-by who so little suspected what was happening near to them
+that had someone told them they certainly had refused to credit it.
+The noise of busy Fleet Street came drumming under the archway, too.
+
+Then, above all, another sound became audible. To this day I find
+myself unable to define it; but it resembled the note of a silver
+bell.
+
+Clearly it was a signal; for, hearing it, Hassan dropped the tube
+and glanced toward the open window.
+
+In that instant I sprang upon him!
+
+That I had to deal with a fanatic, a dangerous madman, I knew; that
+it was his life or mine, I was fully convinced. I struck out then
+and caught him fairly over the heart. He reeled back, and I made
+a wild clutch for the damnable tube, horrid, unreasoning fear of
+which thus far had held me inert.
+
+I heard the girl scream affrightedly, and I knew, and felt my heart
+chill to know, that the tube had been wrenched from my hand! Hassan
+of Aleppo, old man that he appeared, had the strength of a tiger. He
+recovered himself and hurled me from him so that I came to the floor
+crashingly half under my writing-table!
+
+Something he cried back at me, furiously--and like an enraged animal,
+his teeth gleaming out from his beard, he darted from the room. The
+front door banged loudly.
+
+Shaken and quivering, I got upon my feet. On the threshold, in a
+state of pitiable hesitancy, stood the pale, beautiful accomplice
+of Earl Dexter. One quick glance she flashed at me, then turned
+and ran!
+
+Again the door slammed. I ran to the window, looking out into the
+court. The girl came hurrying down the steps, and with never a
+backward glance ran on and was lost to view in one of the passages
+opening riverward.
+
+Out under the arch, statelily passed a tall figure--and Inspector
+Bristol was entering! I saw the detective glance aside as the two
+all but met. He stood still, and looked back!
+
+"Bristol!" I cried, and waved my arms frantically.
+
+"Stop him! Stop him! It's Hassan of Aleppo!"
+
+Bristol was not the only one to hear my wild cry--not the only one
+to dash back under the arch and out into Fleet Street.
+
+But Hassan of Aleppo was gone!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII
+
+THE LIGHT OF EL-MEDINEH
+
+
+Bristol and I walked slowly in the direction of the entrance of the
+British Antiquarian Museum. It was the day following upon the
+sensational scene in my chambers.
+
+"There's very little doubt," said Bristol, "that Earl Dexter has
+the slipper and that Hassan of Aleppo knows where Dexter is in
+hiding. I don't know which of the two is more elusive. Hassan
+apparently melted into thin air yesterday; and although The Stetson
+Man has never within my experience employed disguises, no one has
+set eyes upon him since the night that he vanished from his lodgings
+off the Waterloo Road. It's always possible for a man to baffle
+the police by remaining closely within doors, but during all the
+time that has elapsed Dexter must have taken a little exercise
+occasionally, and the missing hand should have betrayed him."
+
+"The wonder to me is," I replied, "that he has escaped death at the
+hands of the Hashishin. He is a supremely daring man, for I should
+think that he must be carrying the slipper of the Prophet about
+with him!"
+
+"I would rather he did it than I!" commented Bristol. "For sheer
+audacity commend me to The Stetson Man! His idea no doubt was to
+use you as intermediary in his negotiations with the Museum
+authorities, but that plan failing, he has written them direct,
+thoughtfully omitting his address, of course!"
+
+We were, in fact, at that moment bound for the Museum to inspect
+this latest piece of evidence.
+
+"The crowning example of the man's audacity and cleverness," added
+my companion, "is his having actually approached Hassan of Aleppo
+with a similar proposition! How did he get in touch with him? All
+Scotland Yard has failed to find any trace of that weird character!"
+
+"Birds of a feather--" I suggested.
+
+"But they are not birds of a feather!" cried Bristol. "On your own
+showing, Hassan of Aleppo is simply waiting his opportunity to
+balance Dexter's account forever! I always knew Dexter was a clever
+man; I begin to think he's the most daring genius alive!"
+
+We mounted the steps of the Museum. In the hallway Mostyn, the
+curator, awaited us. Having greeted Bristol and myself he led the
+way to his private office, and from a pigeon-hole in his desk took
+out a letter typewritten upon a sheet of quarto paper.
+
+Bristol spread it out upon the blotting pad and we bent over it
+curiously.
+
+SIR--
+
+I believe I can supply information concerning the whereabouts of
+the missing slipper of Mohammed. As any inquiry of this nature
+must be extremely perilous to the inquirer and as the relic is a
+priceless one, my fee would be 10,000 pounds. The fanatics who
+seek to restore the slipper to the East must not know of any
+negotiations, therefore I omit my address, but will communicate
+further if you care to insert instructions in the agony column
+of Times.
+
+ Faithfully,
+ EARL DEXTER
+
+
+Bristol laughed grimly.
+
+"It's a daring game," he said; "a piece of barefaced impudence quite
+characteristic.
+
+"He's posing as a sort of private detective now, and is prepared for
+a trifling consideration to return the slipper which he stole
+himself! He must know, though, that we have his severed hand at
+the Yard to be used in evidence against him."
+
+"Is the Burton Room open to the public again?" I asked Mostyn.
+
+"It is open, yes," he replied, "and a quite unusual number of
+visitors come daily to gaze at the empty case which once held the
+slipper of the Prophet."
+
+"Has the case been mended?"
+
+"Yes; it is quite intact again; only the exhibit is missing."
+
+We ascended the stairs, passed along the Assyrian Room, which seemed
+to be unusually crowded, and entered the lofty apartment known as
+the Burton Room. The sunblinds were drawn, and a sort of dim,
+religious light prevailed therein. A group of visitors stood around
+an empty case at the farther end of the apartment.
+
+"You see," said Mostyn, pointing, "that empty case has a greater
+attraction than all the other full ones!"
+
+But I scarcely heeded his words, for I was intently watching the
+movements of one of the group about the empty case. I have said
+that the room was but dimly illuminated, and this fact, together
+no doubt with some effect of reflected light, enhanced by my
+imagination, perhaps produced the phenomenon which was occasioning
+me so much amazement.
+
+Remember that my mind was filled with memories of weird things,
+that I often found myself thinking of that mystic light which
+Hassan of Aleppo had called the light of El-Medineh--that light
+whereby, undeterred by distance, he claimed to be able to trace the
+whereabouts of any of the relics of the Prophet.
+
+Bristol and Mostyn walked on then; but I stood just within the
+doorway, intently, breathlessly watching an old man wearing an
+out-of-date Inverness coat and a soft felt hat. He had a gray
+beard and moustache, and long, untidy hair, walked with a stoop,
+and in short was no unusual type of Visitor to that institution.
+
+But it seemed to me, and the closer I watched him the more
+convinced I became, that this was no optical illusion, that a faint
+luminosity, a sort of elfin light, played eerily about his head!
+
+As Bristol and Mostyn approached the case the old man began to walk
+toward me and in the direction of the door. The idea flashed
+through my mind that it might be Hassan of Aleppo himself, Hassan
+who had predicted that the stolen slipper should that day be
+returned to the Museum!
+
+Then he came abreast of me, passed me, and I felt that my
+surmise had been wrong. I saw Bristol, from farther up the room,
+turn and look back. Something attracted his trained eye, I suppose,
+which was not perceptible to me. But he suddenly came striding
+along. Obviously he was pursuing the old man, who was just about
+to leave the apartment. Seeing that the latter had reached the
+doorway, Bristol began to run.
+
+The old man turned; and amid a chorus of exclamations from the
+astonished spectators, Bristol sprang upon him!
+
+How it all came about I cannot say, cannot hope to describe; but
+there was a short, sharp scuffle, the crack of a well-directed
+blow ... and Bristol was rolling on his back, the old man,
+hatless, was racing up the Assyrian Room, and everyone in the place
+seemed to be shouting at once!
+
+Bristol, with blood streaming from his face, staggered to his feet,
+clutching at me for support.
+
+"After him, Mr. Cavanagh!" he cried hoarsely. "It's your turn
+to-day! After him! That's Earl Dexter!"
+
+Mostyn waited for no more, but went running quickly through the
+Assyrian Room. I may mention here that at the head of the stairs
+he found the caped Inverness which had served to conceal Dexter's
+mutilated arm, and later, behind a piece of statuary, a wig and
+a very ingenious false beard and moustache were discovered. But
+of The Stetson Man there was no trace. His brief start had enabled
+him to make good his escape.
+
+As Mostyn went off, and a group of visitors flocked in our
+direction, Bristol, who had been badly shaken by the blow, turned
+to them.
+
+"You will please all leave the Burton Room immediately," he said.
+
+Looks of surprise greeted his words; but with his handkerchief
+raised to his face, he peremptorily repeated them. The official
+note in his voice was readily to be detected; and the wonder-stricken
+group departed with many a backward glance.
+
+As the last left the Burton Room, Bristol pointed, with a rather
+shaky finger, at the soft felt hat which lay at his feet. It had
+formed part of Dexter's disguise. Close beside it lay another
+object which had evidently fallen from the hat--a dull red thing
+lying on the polished parquet flooring.
+
+"For God's sake don't go near it!" whispered Bristol. "The room
+must be closed for the present. And now I'm off after that man.
+Step clear of it."
+
+His words were unnecessary; I shunned it as a leprous thing.
+
+It was the slipper of the Prophet!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII
+
+THE THREE MESSAGES
+
+
+I stood in the foyer of the Astoria Hotel. About me was the pulsing
+stir of transatlantic life, for the tourist season was now at its
+height, and I counted myself fortunate in that I had been able to
+secure a room at this establishment, always so popular with American
+visitors. Chatting groups surrounded me and I became acquainted
+with numberless projects for visiting the Tower of London, the
+National Gallery, the British Museum, Windsor Castle, Kew Gardens,
+and the other sights dear to the heart of our visiting cousins.
+Loaded lifts ascended and descended. Bradshaws were in great
+evidence everywhere; all was hustle and glad animation.
+
+The tall military-looking man who stood beside me glanced about him
+with a rather grim smile.
+
+"You ought to be safe enough here, Mr. Cavanagh!" he said.
+
+"I ought to be safe enough in my own chambers," I replied wearily.
+"How many of these pleasure-seeking folk would believe that a man
+can be as greatly in peril of his life in Fleet Street as in the
+most uncivilized spot upon the world map? Do you think if I told
+that prosperous New Yorker who is buying a cigar yonder, for
+instance, that I had been driven from my chambers by a band of
+Eastern assassins founded some time in the eleventh century, he
+would believe it?"
+
+"I am certain he wouldn't!" replied Bristol. "I should not have
+credited it myself before I was put in charge of this damnable case."
+
+My position at that hour was in truth an incredible one. The sacred
+slipper of Mohammed lay once more in the glass case at the
+Antiquarian Museum from which Earl Dexter had stolen it. Now, with
+apish yellow faces haunting my dreams, with ghostly menaces dogging
+me day and night, I was outcast from my own rooms and compelled, in
+self-defence, to live amid the bustle of the Astoria. So wholly
+nonplussed were the police authorities that they could afford me no
+protection. They knew that a group of scientific murderers lay
+hidden in or near to London; they knew that Earl Dexter, the foremost
+crook of his day, was also in the metropolis--and they could make no
+move, were helpless; indeed, as Bristol had confessed, were hopeless!
+
+Bristol, on the previous day, had unearthed the Greek cigar merchant,
+Acepulos, who had replaced the slipper in its case (for a monetary
+consideration). He had performed a similar service when the
+bloodstained thing had first been put upon exhibition at the Museum,
+and for a considerable period had disappeared. We had feared that
+his religious pretensions had not saved him from the avenging
+scimitar of Hassan; but quite recently he had returned again to his
+Soho shop, and in time thus to earn a second cheque.
+
+As Bristol and I stood glancing about the foyer of the hotel, a
+plain-clothes officer whom I knew by sight came in and approached
+my companion. I could not divine the fact, of course, but I was
+about to hear news of the money-loving and greatly daring
+Graeco-Moslem.
+
+The detective whispered something to Bristol, and the latter started,
+and paled. He turned to me.
+
+"They haven't overlooked him this time, Mr. Cavanagh," he said.
+"Acepulos has been found dead in his room, nearly decapitated!"
+
+I shuddered involuntarily. Even there, amid the chatter and laughter
+of those light-hearted tourists, the shadow of Hassan of Aleppo was
+falling upon me.
+
+Bristol started immediately for Soho and I parted from him in the
+Strand, he proceeding west and I eastward, for I had occasion that
+morning to call at my bank. It was the time of the year when London
+is full of foreigners, and as I proceeded in the direction of Fleet
+Street I encountered more than one Oriental. To my excited
+imagination they all seemed to glance at me furtively, with menacing
+eyes, but in any event I knew that I had little to fear whilst I
+contrived to keep to the crowded thoroughfares. Solitude I dreaded
+and with good reason.
+
+Then at the door of the bank I found fresh matter for reflection.
+The assistant manager, Mr. Colby, was escorting a lady to the door.
+As I stood aside, he walked with her to a handsome car which waited,
+and handed her in with marks of great deference. She was heavily
+veiled and I had no more than a glimpse of her, but she appeared to
+be of middle age and had gray hair and a very stately manner.
+
+I told myself that I was unduly suspicious, suspicious of everyone
+and of everything; yet as I entered the bank I found myself wondering
+where I had seen that dignified, grayhaired figure before. I even
+thought of asking the manager the name of his distinguished customer,
+but did not do so, for in the circumstances such an inquiry must
+have appeared impertinent.
+
+My business transacted, I came out again by the side entrance which
+opens on the little courtyard, for this branch of the London County
+and Provincial Bank occupies a corner site.
+
+A ragged urchin who was apparently waiting for me handed me a note.
+I looked at him inquiringly.
+
+"For me?" I said.
+
+"Yes, sir. A dark gentleman pointed you out as you was goin' into
+the bank."
+
+The note was written upon a half sheet of paper and, doubting if it
+was really intended for me, I unfolded it and read the following--
+
+ Mr. Cavanagh, take the keys of the case containing the holy slipper
+ to your hotel this evening without fail.
+ HASSAN.
+
+"Who gave you this, boy?" I asked sharply.
+
+"A foreign gentleman, sir, very dark--like an Indian."
+
+"Where is he?"
+
+"He went off in a cab, sir, after he give me the note."
+
+I handed the boy sixpence and slowly pursued my way. An idea was
+forming in my mind to trap the enemy by seeming acquiescent. I
+wondered if my movements were being watched at that moment. Since
+it was more than probable, I returned to the bank, entered, and
+made some trivial inquiry of a cashier, and then came out again and
+walked on as far as the Report office.
+
+I had not been in the office more than five minutes before I
+received a telegram from Inspector Bristol. It had been handed in
+at Soho, and the message was an odd one.
+
+ CAVANAGH, Report, London.
+ Plot afoot to steal keys. Get them from bank and join me 11 o'clock
+ at Astoria. Have planned trap.
+ BRISTOL.
+
+This was very mysterious in view of the note so recently received by
+me, but I concluded that Bristol had hit upon a similar plan to that
+which was forming in my own mind. It seemed unnecessarily hazardous,
+though, actually to withdraw the keys from their place of safety.
+
+Pondering deeply upon the perplexities of this maddening case, I
+shortly afterward found myself again at the bank. With the manager
+I descended to the strong-room, and the safe was unlocked which
+contained the much-sought-for keys of the case at the Antiquarian
+Museum.
+
+"There are the keys, quite safe!--and by the way, this is my second
+visit here this morning, Mr. Cavanagh," said the manager, with whom
+I was upon rather intimate terms. "A foreign lady who has recently
+become a customer of the bank deposited some valuable jewels here
+this morning--less than an hour ago, in fact."
+
+"Indeed," I said, and my mind was working rapidly. "The lady who
+came in the large blue car, a gray-haired lady?"
+
+"Yes," was the reply, "did you notice her, then?"
+
+I nodded and said no more, for in truth I had no more to say. I
+had good reason to respect the uncanny powers of Hassan of Aleppo,
+but I doubted if even his omniscience could tell him (since I had
+actually gone down into the strong-room) whether when I emerged I
+had the keys, or whether my visit and seeming acceptance of his
+orders had been no more than a subterfuge!
+
+That the Hashishin had some means of communicating with me at the
+Astoria was evident from the contents of the note which I had
+received, and as I walked in the direction of the hotel my mind
+was filled with all sorts of misgivings. I was playing with fire!
+Had I done rightly or should I have acted otherwise? I sighed
+wearily. The dark future would resolve all my doubts.
+
+When I reached the Astoria, Bristol had not arrived. I lighted a
+cigarette and sat down in the lounge to await his coming. Presently
+a boy approached, handing me a message which had been taken down
+from the telephone by the clerk. It was as follows--
+
+ Tell Mr. Cavanagh, who is waiting in the hotel, to take what I am
+ expecting to his chambers, and say that I will join him there in
+ twenty minutes.
+ INSPECTOR BRISTOL.
+
+Again I doubted the wisdom of Bristol's plan. Had I not fled to
+the Astoria to escape from the dangerous solitude of my rooms? That
+he was laying some trap for the Hashishin was sufficiently evident,
+and whilst I could not justly suspect him of making a pawn of me
+I was quite unable to find any other explanation of this latest move.
+
+I was torn between conflicting doubts. I glanced at my watch. Yes!
+There was just time for me to revisit the bank ere joining Bristol
+at my chambers! I hesitated. After all, in what possible way could
+it jeopardize his plans for me merely to pretend to bring the keys?
+
+"Hang it all!" I said, and jumped to my feet. "These maddening
+conjectures will turn my brain! I'll let matters stand as they
+are, and risk the consequences!"
+
+I hesitated no longer, but passed out from the hotel and once more
+directed my steps in the direction of Fleet Street.
+
+As I passed in under the arch through which streamed many busy
+workers, I told myself that to dread entering my own chambers at
+high noon was utterly childish. Yet I did dread doing so! And as
+I mounted the stair and came to the landing, which was always more
+or less dark, I paused for quite a long time before putting the
+key in the lock.
+
+The affair of the accursed slipper was playing havoc with my nerves,
+and I laughed dryly to note that my hand was not quite steady as I
+turned the key, opened my door, and slipped into the dim hallway.
+
+As I closed it behind me, something, probably a slight noise, but
+possibly something more subtle--an instinct--made me turn rapidly.
+
+There facing me stood Hassan of Aleppo.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV
+
+I KEEP THE APPOINTMENT
+
+
+That moment was pungent with drama. In the intense hush of the
+next five seconds I could fancy that the world had slipped away
+from me and that I was become an unsubstantial thing of dreams.
+I was in no sense master of myself; the effect of the presence of
+this white-bearded fanatic was of a kind which I am entirely unable
+to describe. About Hassan of Aleppo was an aroma of evil, yet of
+majesty, which marked him strangely different from other men--from
+any other that I have ever known. In his venerable presence,
+remembering how he was Sheikh of the Assassins, and recalling his
+bloody history, I was always conscious of a weakness, physical and
+mental. He appalled me; and now, with my back to the door, I stood
+watching him and watching the ominous black tube which he held in
+his hand. It was a weapon unknown to Europe and therefore more
+fearful than the most up-to-date of death-dealing instruments.
+
+Hassan of Aleppo pointed it toward me.
+
+"The keys, effendim," he said; "hand me the keys!"
+
+He advanced a step; his manner was imperious. The black tube was
+less than a foot removed from my face. That I had my revolver in
+my pocket could avail me nothing, for in my pocket it must remain,
+since I dared to make no move to reach it under cover of that
+unfamiliar, terrible weapon.
+
+The black eyes of Hassan glared insanely into mine.
+
+"You will have placed them in your pocketcase," he said. "Take it
+out; hand it to me!"
+
+I obeyed, for what else could I do? Taking the case from my pocket,
+I placed it in his lean brown hand.
+
+An expression of wild exultation crossed his features; the eagle
+eyes seemed to be burning into my brain. A puff of hot vapour
+struck me in the face--something which was expelled from the
+mysterious black tube. And with memories crowding to my mind of
+similar experiences at the hands of the Hashishin, I fell back,
+clutching at my throat, fighting for my life against the deadly,
+vaporous thing that like a palpable cloud surrounded me. I tried
+to cry out, but the words died upon my tongue. Hassan of Aleppo
+seemed to grow huge before my eyes like some ginn of Eastern lore.
+Then a curtain of darkness descended. I experienced a violent blow
+upon the forehead (I suppose I had pitched forward), and for the
+time resigned my part in the drama of the sacred slipper.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV
+
+THE WATCHER IN BANK CHAMBERS
+
+
+At about five o'clock that afternoon Inspector Bristol, who had
+spent several hours in Soho upon the scene of the murder of the
+Greek, was walking along Fleet Street, bound for the offices of the
+Report. As he passed the court, on the corner of which stands a
+branch of the London County and Provincial Bank, his eye was
+attracted by a curious phenomenon.
+
+There are reflectors above the bank windows which face the court,
+and it appeared to Bristol that there was a hole in one of these,
+the furthermost from the corner. A tiny beam of light shone from
+the bank window on to the reflector, or from the reflector on to
+the window, which circumstance in itself was not curious. But
+above the reflector, at an acute angle, this mysterious beam was
+seemingly projected upward. Walking a little way up the court he
+saw that it shone through, and cast a disc of light upon the
+ceiling of an office on the first floor of Bank Chambers above.
+
+It is every detective's business to be observant, and although
+many thousands of passersby must have cast their eyes in the same
+direction that day, there is small matter for wonder in the fact
+that Bristol alone took the trouble to inquire into the mystery--for
+his trained eye told him that there was a mystery here.
+
+Possibly he was in that passive frame of mind when the brain is
+particularly receptive of trivial impressions; for after a futile
+search of the Soho cigar store for anything resembling a clue, he
+was quite resigned to the idea of failure in the case of Hassan and
+Company. He walked down the court and into the entrance of Bank
+Chambers. An Inspection of the board upon the wall showed him that
+the first floor apparently was occupied by three firms, two of them
+legal, for this is the neighbourhood of the law courts, and the
+third a press agency. He stepped up to the first floor. Past the
+doors bearing the names of the solicitors and past that belonging
+to the press agent he proceeded to a fourth suite of offices.
+Here, pinned upon the door frame, appeared a card which bore the
+legend--
+
+ THE CONGO FIBRE COMPANY
+
+Evidently the Congo Fibre Company had so recently taken possession
+of the offices that there had been no time to inscribe their title
+either upon the doors or upon the board in the hall.
+
+Inspector Bristol was much impressed, for into one of the rooms
+occupied by the Fibre Company shone that curious disc of light
+which first had drawn his attention to Bank Chambers. He rapped
+on the door, turned the handle, and entered. The sole furniture
+of the office in which he found himself apparently consisted of
+one desk and an office stool, which stool was occupied by an office
+boy. The windows opened on the court, and a door marked "Private"
+evidently communicated with an inner office whose windows likewise
+must open on the court. It was the ceiling of this inner office,
+unless the detective's calculation erred, which he was anxious to
+inspect.
+
+"Yes, sir?" said the boy tentatively.
+
+Bristol produced a card which bore the uncompromising legend: John
+Henry Smith.
+
+"Take my card to Mr. Boulter, boy," he said tersely. The boy
+stared.
+
+"Mr. Boulter, sir? There isn't any one of that name here."
+
+"Oh!" said Bristol, looking around him in apparent surprise: "how
+long is he gone?"
+
+"I don't know, sir. I've only been here three weeks, and Mr.
+Knowlson only took the offices a month ago."
+
+"Oh," commented Bristol, "then take my card to Mr. Knowlson; he
+will probably be able to give me Mr. Boulter's present address."
+
+The boy hesitated. The detective had that authoritative manner
+which awes the youthful mind.
+
+"He's out, sir," he said, but without conviction.
+
+"Is he?" rapped Bristol. "Well, I'll leave my card."
+
+He turned and quitted the office, carefully closing the door behind
+him. Three seconds later he reopened it, and peering in, was in
+time to see the boy knock upon the private door. A little wicket,
+or movable panel, was let down, the card of John Henry Smith was
+passed through to someone unseen, and the wicket was reclosed!
+
+
+The boy turned and met the wrathful eye of the detective. Bristol
+reentered, closing the door behind him.
+
+"See here, young fellow," said he, "I don't stand for those tricks!
+Why didn't you tell me Mr. Knowlson was in?"
+
+"I'm very sorry, sir!"--the boy quailed beneath his glance--"but
+he won't see any one who hasn't an appointment."
+
+"Is there someone with him, then?"
+
+"No."
+
+"Well, what's he doing?"
+
+"I don't know, sir; I've never been in to see!"
+
+"What! never been in that room?"
+
+"Never!" declared the boy solemnly. "And I don't mind telling
+you," he added, recovering something of his natural confidence,
+"that I am leaving on the 31st. This job ain't any use to me!"
+
+"Too much work?" suggested Bristol.
+
+"No work at all!" returned the boy indignantly. "I'm just here
+for a blessed buffer, that's what I'm here for, a buffer!"
+
+"What do you mean?"
+
+"I just have to sit here and see that nobody gets into that
+office. Lively, ain't it? Where's the prospects?"
+
+Bristol surveyed him thoughtfully.
+
+"Look here, my lad," he said quietly; "is that door locked?"
+
+"Always," replied the boy.
+
+"Does Mr. Knowlson come to that shutter when you knock?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Then go and knock!"
+
+The boy obeyed with alacrity. He rapped loudly on the door, not
+noticing or not caring that the visitor was standing directly
+behind him. The shutter was lowered and a grizzled, bearded face
+showed for a moment through the opening.
+
+Bristol leant over the boy and pushed a card through into the hand
+of the man beyond. On this occasion it did not bear the legend
+"John Henry Smith," but the following--
+
+ CHIEF INSPECTOR BRISTOL
+ C.I.D.
+ NEW SCOTLAND YARD
+
+"Good afternoon, Mr. Knowlson," said the detective dryly. "I want
+to come in!"
+
+There followed a moment of silence, from which Bristol divined that
+he had blundered upon some mystery, possibly upon a big case; then
+a key was turned in the lock and the door thrown open.
+
+"Come right in, Inspector," invited a strident voice. "Carter, you
+can go home."
+
+Bristol entered warily, but not warily enough. For as the door
+was banged upon his entrance he faced around only in time to
+find himself looking down the barrel of a Colt automatic.
+
+With his back to the door which contained the wicket, now reclosed,
+stood the man with the bearded face. The revolver was held in his
+left hand; his right arm terminated in a bandaged stump. But
+without that his steel-gray eyes would have betrayed him to the
+detective.
+
+"Good God!" whispered Bristol. "It's Earl Dexter!"
+
+"It is!" replied the cracksman, "and you've looked in at a real
+inconvenient time! My visitors mostly seem to have that knack.
+I'll have to ask you to stay, Inspector. Sit down in that chair
+yonder."
+
+Bristol knew his man too well to think of opening any argument at
+that time. He sat down as directed, and ignoring the revolver
+which covered him all the time, began coolly to survey the room
+in which he found himself. In several respects it was an
+extraordinary apartment.
+
+The only bright patch in the room was the shining disc upon the
+ceiling; and the detective noted with interest that this marked
+the position of an arrangement of mirrors. A white-covered table,
+entirely bare, stood upon the floor immediately beneath this
+mysterious apparatus. With the exception of one or two ordinary
+items of furniture and a small hand lathe, the office otherwise
+was unfurnished. Bristol turned his eyes again upon the daring
+man who so audaciously had trapped him--the man who had stolen the
+slipper of the Prophet and suffered the loss of his hand by the
+scimitar of an Hashishin as a result. When he had least expected
+to find one, Fate had thrown a clue in Bristol's way. He reflected
+grimly that it was like to prove of little use to him.
+
+"Now," said Dexter, "you can do as you please, of course, but you
+know me pretty well and I advise you to sit quiet."
+
+"I am sitting quiet!" was the reply.
+
+"I am sorry," continued Dexter, with a quick glance at his maimed
+arm, "that I can't tie you up, but I am expecting a friend any
+moment now."
+
+He suddenly raised the wicket with a twitch of his elbow and,
+without removing his gaze from the watchful detective, cried
+sharply--
+
+"Carter!"
+
+But there was no reply.
+
+"Good; he's gone!"
+
+Dexter sat down facing Bristol.
+
+"I have lost my hand in this game, Mr. Bristol," he said genially,
+"and had some narrow squeaks of losing my head; but having gone so
+far and lost so much I'm going through, if I don't meet a funeral!
+You see I'm up against two tough propositions."
+
+Bristol nodded sympathetically.
+
+"The first," continued Dexter, "is you and Cavanagh, and English
+law generally. My idea--if I can get hold of the slipper again--oh! you
+needn't stare; I'm out for it!--is to get the Antiquarian
+Institution to ransom it. It's a line of commercial speculation I
+have worked successfully before. There's a dozen rich highbrows,
+cranks to a man, connected with it, and they are my likeliest
+buyers--sure. But to keep the tone of the market healthy there's
+Hassan of Aleppo, rot him! He's a dangerous customer to approach,
+but you'll note I've been in negotiation with him already and am
+still, if not booming, not much below par!"
+
+"Quite so," said Bristol. "But you've cut off a pretty hefty chew
+nevertheless. They used to call you The Stetson Man, you used to
+dress like a fashion plate and stop at the big hotels. Those days
+are past, Dexter, I'm sorry to note. You're down to the skulking
+game now and you're nearer an advert for Clarkson than Stein-Bloch!"
+
+"Yep," said Dexter sadly, "I plead guilty, but I think here's
+Carneta!"
+
+Bristol heard the door of the outer office open, and a moment later
+that upon which his gaze was set opened in turn, to admit a girl
+who was heavily veiled, and who started and stood still in the
+doorway, on perceiving the situation. Never for one unguarded
+moment did the American glance aside from his prisoner.
+
+"The Inspector's dropped in, Carneta!" he drawled in his strident
+way. "You're handy with a ball of twine; see if you can induce
+him to stay the night!"
+
+The girl, immediately recovering her composure, took off her hat
+in a businesslike way and began to look around her, evidently in
+search of a suitable length of rope with which to fasten up Bristol.
+
+"Might I suggest," said the detective, "that if you are shortly
+quitting these offices a couple of the window-cords neatly joined
+would serve admirably?"
+
+"Thanks," drawled Dexter, nodding to his companion, who went into
+the outer office, where she might be heard lowering the windows.
+She was gone but a few moments ere she returned again, carrying a
+length of knotted rope. Under cover of Dexter's revolver, Bristol
+stoically submitted to having his wrists tied behind him. The end
+of the line was then thrown through the ventilator above the door
+which communicated with the outer office and Bristol was triced up
+in such a way that, his wrists being raised behind him to an
+uncomfortable degree, he was almost forced to stand upon tiptoe.
+The line was then secured.
+
+"Very workmanlike!" commented the victim. "You'll find a large
+handkerchief in my inside breast pocket. It's a clean one, and
+I can recommend it as a gag!"
+
+Very promptly it was employed for the purpose, and Inspector
+Bristol found himself helpless and constrained in a very painful
+position. Dexter laid down his revolver.
+
+"We will now give you a free show, Inspector," he said, genially,
+"of our camera obscura!"
+
+He pulled down the blinds, which Bristol noted with interest to be
+black, but through an opening in one of them a mysterious ray of
+light--the same that he had noticed from Fleet Street--shone upon
+that point in the ceiling where the arrangement of mirrors was
+attached. Dexter made some alteration, apparently in the focus of
+the lens (for Bristol had divined that in some way a lens had been
+fixed in the reflector above the bank window below) and the disc
+of light became concentrated. The white-covered table was moved
+slightly, and in the darkness some further manipulation was
+performed.
+
+"Observe," came the strident voice--"we now have upon the screen
+here a minute moving picture. This little device, which is not
+protected in any way, is of my own invention, and proved extremely
+useful in the Arkwright jewel case, which startled Chicago. It has
+proved useful now. I know almost as much concerning the
+arrangements below as the manager himself. In confidence, Inspector,
+this is my last bid for the slipper! I have plunged on it. Madame
+Sforza, the distinguished Italian lady who recently opened an
+account below, opened it for 500 pounds cash. She has drawn a
+portion, but a balance remains which I am resigned to lose. Her
+motor-car (hired), her references (forged), the case of jewels which
+she deposited this morning (duds!)--all represent a considerable
+outlay. It's a nerve-racking line of operation, too. Any hour of
+the day may bring such a visitor as yourself, for example. In short,
+I am at the end of my tether."
+
+Bristol, ignoring the increasing pain in his arms and wrists, turned
+his eyes upon the white-covered table and there saw a minute and
+clear-cut picture, such as one sees in a focussing screen, of the
+interior of the manager's office of the London County and Provincial
+Bank!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI
+
+THE STRONG-ROOM
+
+
+I wonder how often a sense of humour has saved a man from
+desperation? Perhaps only the Easterns have thoroughly appreciated
+that divine gift. I have interpolated the adventure of Inspector
+Bristol in order that the sequence of my story be not broken;
+actually I did not learn it until later, but when, on the following
+day, the whole of the facts came into my possession, I laughed and
+was glad that I could laugh, for laughter has saved many a man from
+madness.
+
+Certainly the Fates were playing with us, for at a time very nearly
+corresponding with that when Bristol found himself bound and
+helpless in Bank Chambers I awoke to find myself tied hand and foot
+to my own bed! Nothing but the haziest recollections came to me at
+first, nothing but dim memories of the awful being who had lured me
+there; for I perceived now that all the messages proceeded, not from
+Bristol, but from Hassan of Aleppo! I had been a fool, and I was
+reaping the fruits of my folly. Could I have known that almost
+within pistol shot of me the Inspector was trussed up as helpless as
+I, then indeed my situation must have become unbearable, since upon
+him I relied for my speedy release.
+
+My ankles were firmly lashed to the rails at the foot of my bed;
+each of my wrists was tied back to a bedpost. I ached in every limb
+and my head burned feverishly, which latter symptom I ascribed to
+the powerful drug which had been expelled into my face by the
+uncanny weapon carried by Hassan of Aleppo. I reflected bitterly
+how, having transferred my quarters to the Astoria, I could not well
+hope for any visitor to my chambers; and even the event of such a
+visitor had been foreseen and provided against by the cunning lord
+of the Hashishin. A gag, of the type which Dumas has described in
+"Twenty Years After," the poire d'angoisse, was wedged firmly into
+my mouth, so that only by preserving the utmost composure could I
+breathe. I was bathed in cold perspiration. So I lay listening to
+the familiar sounds without and reflecting that it was quite
+possible so to lie, undisturbed, and to die alone, my presence there
+wholly unsuspected!
+
+Once, toward dusk, my phone bell rang, and my state of mind became
+agonizing. It was maddening to think that someone, a friend, was
+virtually within reach of me, yet actually as far removed as if an
+ocean divided us! I tasted the hellish torments of Tantalus. I
+cursed fate, heaven, everything; I prayed; I sank into bottomless
+depths of despair and rose to dizzy pinnacles of hope, when a
+footstep sounded on the landing and a thousand wild possibilities,
+vague possibilities of rescue, poured into my mind.
+
+The visitor hesitated, apparently outside my door; and a change, as
+sudden as lightning out of a cloud, transformed my errant fancies.
+A gruesome conviction seized me, as irrational as the hope which it
+displayed, that this was one of the Hashishin--an apish yellow
+dwarf, a strangler, the awful Hassan himself!
+
+The footsteps receded down the stairs. And my thoughts reverted
+into the old channels of dull despair.
+
+I weighed the chances of Bristol's seeking me there; and, eager as
+I was to give them substance, found them but airy--ultimately was
+forced to admit them to be nil.
+
+So I lay, whilst only a few hundred yards from me a singular scene
+was being enacted. Bristol, a prisoner as helpless as myself,
+watched the concluding business of the day being conducted in the
+bank beneath him; he watched the lift descend to the strongroom--the
+spying apparatus being slightly adjusted in some way; he saw
+the clerks hastening to finish their work in the outer office, and
+as he watched, absorbed by the novelty of the situation, he almost
+forgot the pain and discomfort which he suffered...
+
+"This little peep-show of ours has been real useful," Dexter
+confided out of the darkness. "I got an impression of the key of
+the strongroom door a week ago, and Carneta got one of the keys of
+the safe only this morning, when she lodged her box of jewellery
+with the bank! I was at work on that key when you interrupted me,
+and as by means of this useful apparatus I have learnt the
+combination, you ought to see some fun in the next few hours!"
+
+Bristol repressed a groan, for the prospect of remaining in that
+position was thus brought keenly home to him.
+
+The bank staff left the premises one by one until only a solitary
+clerk worked on at a back desk. His task completed, he, too, took
+his departure and the bank messenger commenced his nightly duty of
+sweeping up the offices. It was then that excitement like an
+anaesthetic dulled the detective's pain--indeed, he forgot his
+aching body and became merely a watchful intelligence.
+
+So intent had he become upon the picture before him that he had not
+noticed the fact that he was alone in the office of the Congo Fibre
+Company. Now he realized it from the absolute silence about him,
+and from another circumstance.
+
+The spying apparatus had been left focussed, and on to the screen
+beneath his eyes, bending low behind the desks and creeping,
+Indian-like, around, toward the head of the stair which communicated
+with the strongroom and the apartment used by the messenger, came the
+alert figure of Earl Dexter!
+
+It may be a surprise to some people to learn that at any time in
+the day the door of a bank, unguarded, should be left open, when
+only a solitary messenger is within the premises; yet for a few
+minutes at least each evening this happens at more than one City
+bank, where one of the duties of the resident messenger is to clean
+the outer steps. Dexter had taken advantage of the man's absence
+below in quest of scrubbing material to enter the bank through the
+open door.
+
+Watching, breathless, and utterly forgetful of his own position,
+Bristol saw the messenger, all unconscious of danger, come up the
+stairs carrying a pail and broom. As his head reached the level
+of the railings The Stetson Man neatly sand-bagged him, rushed
+across to the outer door, and closed it!
+
+Given duplicate keys and the private information which Dexter so
+ingeniously had obtained, there are many London banks vulnerable to
+similar attack. Certainly, bullion is rarely kept in a branch
+storeroom, but the detective was well aware that the keys of the
+case containing the slipper were kept in this particular safe!
+
+He was convinced, and could entertain no shadowy doubt, that at
+last Dexter had triumphed. He wondered if it had ever hitherto
+fallen to the lot of a representative of the law thus to be made
+an accessory to a daring felony!
+
+But human endurance has well-defined limits. The fading light
+rendered the ingenious picture dim and more dim. The pain
+occasioned by his position became agonizing, and uttering a stifled
+groan he ceased to take an interest in the robbery of the London
+County and Provincial Bank.
+
+Fate is a comedian; and when later I learned how I had lain strapped
+to my bed, and, so near to me, Bristol had hung helpless as a
+butchered carcass in the office of the Congo Fibre Company, whilst,
+in our absence from the stage, the drama of the slipper marched
+feverish to its final curtain, I accorded Fate her well-earned
+applause. I laughed; not altogether mirthfully.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII
+
+THE SLIPPER
+
+
+Someone was breaking in at the door of my chambers!
+
+I aroused myself from a state of coma almost death-like and listened
+to the blows. The sun was streaming in at my windows.
+
+A splintering crash told of a panel broken. Then a moment later I
+heard the grating of the lock, and a rush of footsteps along the
+passage.
+
+"Try the study!" came a voice that sounded like Bristol's, save that
+it was strangely weak and shaky.
+
+Almost simultaneously the Inspector himself threw open the bedroom
+door--and, very pale and haggard-eyed, stood there looking across at
+me. It was a scene unforgettable.
+
+"Mr. Cavanagh!" he said huskily--"Mr. Cavanagh! Thank God you're
+alive! But"--he turned--"this way, Marden!" he cried, "Untie him
+quickly! I've got no strength in my arms!"
+
+Marden, a C.I.D. man, came running, and in a minute, or less, I was
+sitting up gulping brandy.
+
+"I've had the most awful experience of my life," said Bristol.
+"You've fared badly enough, but I've been hanging by my wrists--you
+know Dexter's trick!--for close upon sixteen hours! I wasn't
+released until Carter, an office boy, came on the scene this morning!"
+
+Very feebly I nodded; I could not talk.
+
+"The strong-room of your bank was rifled under my very eyes last
+evening!" he continued, with something of his old vigour; "and five
+minutes after the Antiquarian Museum was opened to the public this
+morning quite an unusual number of visitors appeared.
+
+"I saw the bank manager the moment he arrived, and learned a piece
+of news that positively took my breath away! I was at the Museum
+seven minutes later and got another shock! There in the case was
+the red slipper!"
+
+"Then," I whispered-"it hadn't been stolen?"
+
+"Wrong! It had! This was a duplicate, as Mostyn, the curator, saw
+at a glance! Some of the early visitors--they were Easterns--had
+quite surrounded the case. They were watched, of course, but any
+number of Orientals come to see the thing; and, short of smashing
+the glass, which would immediately attract attention, the authorities
+were unprepared, of course, for any attempt. Anyway, they were
+tricked. Somebody opened the case. The real slipper of the Prophet
+is gone!"
+
+"They told you at the bank--"
+
+"That you had withdrawn the keys! If Dexter had known that!"
+
+"Hassan of Aleppo took them from me last night! At last the
+Hashishin have triumphed."
+
+Bristol sank into the armchair.
+
+"Every port is watched," he said. "But--"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII
+
+CARNETA
+
+
+"I am entirely at your mercy; you can do as you please with me. But
+before you do anything I should like you to listen to what I have
+to say."
+
+Her beautiful face was pale and troubled. Violet eyes looked sadly
+into mine.
+
+"For nearly an hour I have been waiting for this chance--until I
+knew you were alone," she continued. "If you are thinking of giving
+me up to the police, at least remember that I came here of my own
+free will. Of course, I know you are quite entitled to take
+advantage of that; but please let me say what I came to say!"
+
+She pleaded so hard, with that musical voice, with her evident
+helplessness, most of all with her wonderful eyes, that I quite
+abandoned any project I might have entertained to secure her arrest.
+I think she divined this masculine weakness, for she said, with
+greater confidence--
+
+"Your friend, Professor Deeping, was murdered by the man called
+Hassan of Aleppo. Are you content to remain idle while his murderer
+escapes?"
+
+God knows I was not. My idleness in the matter was none of my
+choosing. Since poor Deeping's murder I had come to handgrips
+with the assassins more than once, but Hassan had proved too clever
+for me, too clever for Scotland Yard. The sacred slipper was once
+more in the hands of its fanatic guardian.
+
+One man there was who might have helped the search, Earl Dexter.
+But Earl Dexter was himself wanted by Scotland Yard!
+
+From the time of the bank affair up to the moment when this
+beautiful visitor had come to my chambers I had thought Dexter, as
+well as Hassan, to have fled secretly from England. But the moment
+that I saw Carneta at my door I divined that The Stetson Man must
+still be in London.
+
+She sat watching me and awaiting my answer.
+
+"I cannot avenge my friend unless I can find his murderer."
+
+Eagerly she bent forward.
+
+"But if I can find him?"
+
+That made me think, and I hesitated before speaking again.
+
+"Say what you came to say," I replied slowly. "You must know that
+I distrust you. Indeed, my plain duty is to detain you. But I will
+listen to anything you may care to tell me, particularly if it
+enables me to trap Hassan of Aleppo."
+
+"Very well," she said, and rested her elbows upon the table before
+her. "I have come to you in desperation. I can help you to find
+the man who murdered Professor Deeping, but in return I want you to
+help me!"
+
+I watched her closely. She was very plainly, almost poorly, dressed.
+Her face was pale and there were dark marks around her eyes. This
+but served to render their strange beauty more startling; yet I
+could see that my visitor was in real trouble. The situation was an
+odd one.
+
+"You are possibly about to ask me," I suggested, "to assist Earl
+Dexter to escape the police?"
+
+She shook her head. Her voice trembled as she replied--
+
+"That would not have induced me to run the risk of coming here. I
+came because I wanted to find a man who was brave enough to help me.
+We have no friends in London, and so it became a question of terms.
+I can repay you by helping you to trace Hassan."
+
+"What is it, then, that Dexter asks me to do?"
+
+"He asks nothing. I, Carneta, am asking!"
+
+"Then you are not come from him?"
+
+At my question, all her self-possession left her. She abruptly
+dropped her face into her hands and was shaken with sobs! It was
+more than I could bear, unmoved. I forgot the shady past, forgot
+that she was the associate of a daring felon, and could only realize
+that she was a weeping woman, who had appealed to my pity and who
+asked my aid.
+
+I stood up and stared out of the window, for I experienced a not
+unnatural embarrassment. Without looking at her I said--
+
+"Don't be afraid to tell me your troubles. I don't say I should go
+out of my way to be kind to Mr. Dexter, but I have no wish whatever
+to be instrumental in"--I hesitated--"in making you responsible
+for his misdeeds. If you can tell me where to find Hassan of
+Aleppo, I won't even ask you where Dexter is--"
+
+"God help me! I don't know where he is!"
+
+There was real, poignant anguish in her cry. I turned and
+confronted her. Her lashes were all wet with tears.
+
+"What! has he disappeared?"
+
+She nodded, fought with her emotion a moment, and went on unsteadily,
+
+"I want you to help me to find him for in finding him we shall find
+Hassan!"
+
+"How so?"
+
+Her gaze avoided me now.
+
+"Mr. Cavanagh, he has staked everything upon securing the slipper--and
+the Hashishin were too clever for him. His hand--those
+Eastern fiends cut off his hand! But he would not give in. He
+made another bid--and lost again. It left him almost penniless."
+
+She spoke of Earl Dexter's felonious plans as another woman might
+have spoken of her husband's unwise investments! It was fantastic
+hearing that confession of The Stetson Man's beautiful partner, and
+I counted the interview one of the strangest I had ever known.
+
+A sudden idea came to me. "When did Dexter first conceive the plan
+to steal the slipper?" I asked.
+
+"In Egypt!" answered Carneta. "Yes! You may as well know! He is
+thoroughly familiar with the East, and he learned of the robbery of
+Professor Deeping almost as soon as it became known to Hassan. I
+know what you are going to ask--"
+
+"Ahmad Ahmadeen!"
+
+"Yes! He travelled home as Ahmadeen--the only time he ever used
+a disguise. Oh! the thing is accursed!" she cried. "I begged him,
+implored him, to abandon his attempts upon it. Day and night we
+were watched by those ghastly yellow men! But it was all in vain.
+He knew, had known for a long time, where Hassan of Aleppo was in
+hiding!"
+
+And I reflected that the best men at New Scotland Yard had failed
+to pick up the slightest clue!
+
+"The Hashishin, of whom that dreadful man is leader, are rich, or
+have supporters who are rich. The plan was to make them pay for
+the slipper."
+
+"My God! it was playing with fire!"
+
+She sat silent awhile. Emotion threatened to get the upper hand.
+Then--
+
+"Two days ago," she almost whispered, "he set out--to ... get the
+slipper!"
+
+"To steal it?"
+
+"To steal it!"
+
+"From Hassan of Aleppo?"
+
+I could scarcely believe that any man, single-handed, could have
+had the hardihood to attempt such a thing.
+
+"From Hassan, yes!"
+
+I faced her, amazed, incredulous.
+
+"Dexter had suffered mutilation, he knew that the Hashishin sought
+his life for his previous attempts upon the relic of the Prophet,
+and yet he dared to venture again into the very lions' den?"
+
+"He did, Mr. Cavanagh, two days ago. And--"
+
+"Yes?" I urged, as gently as I could, for she was shaking pitifully.
+
+"He never came back!"
+
+The words were spoken almost in a whisper. She clenched her hands
+and leapt from the chair, fighting down her grief and with such a
+stark horror in her beautiful eyes that from my very soul I longed
+to be able to help her.
+
+"Mr. Cavanagh" (she had courage, this bewildering accomplice of a
+cracksman), "I know the house he went to! I cannot hope to make you
+understand what I have suffered since then. A thousand times I have
+been on the point of going to the police, confessing all I knew, and
+leading them to that house! O God! if only he is alive, this shall
+be his last crooked deal--and mine! I dared not go to the police,
+for his sake! I waited, and watched, and hoped, through two such
+nights and days ... then I ventured. I should have gone mad if I
+had not come here. I knew you had good cause to hate, to detest me,
+but I remembered that you had a great grievance against Hassan. Not
+as great, O heaven! not as great as mine, but yet a great one. I
+remembered, too, that you were the kind of man--a woman can come
+to..."
+
+She sank back into the chair, and with her fingers twining and
+untwining, sat looking dully before her.
+
+"In brief," I said, "what do you propose?"
+
+"I propose that we endeavour to obtain admittance to the house of
+Hassan of Aleppo--secretly, of course, and all I ask of you in
+return for revealing the secret of its situation is--"
+
+"That I let Dexter go free?"
+
+Almost inaudibly she whispered: "If he lives!"
+
+Surely no stranger proposition ever had been submitted to a
+law-abiding citizen. I was asked to connive in the escape of a
+notorious criminal, and at one and the same time to embark upon an
+expedition patently burglarious! As though this were not enough,
+I was invited to beard Hassan of Aleppo, the most dreadful being I
+had ever encountered East or West, in his mysterious stronghold!
+
+I wondered what my friend, Inspector Bristol, would have thought of
+the project; I wondered if I should ever live to see Hassan meet his
+just deserts as a result of this enterprise, which I was forced to
+admit a foolhardy one. But a man who has selected the career of a
+war correspondent from amongst those which Fleet Street offers, is
+the victim of a certain craving for fresh experiences; I suppose,
+has in his character something of an adventurous turn.
+
+For a while I stood staring from the window, then faced about and
+looked into the violet eyes of my visitor.
+
+"I agree, Carneta!" I said.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIX
+
+WE MEET MR. ISAACS
+
+
+Quitting the wayside station, and walking down a short lane, we came
+out upon Watling Street, white and dusty beneath the afternoon sun.
+We were less than an hour's train journey from London but found
+ourselves amid the Kentish hop gardens, amid a rural peace unbroken.
+My companion carried a camera case slung across her shoulder, but
+its contents were less innocent than one might have supposed. In
+fact, it contained a neat set of those instruments of the burglar's
+art with whose use she appeared to be quite familiar.
+
+"There is an inn," she said, "about a mile ahead, where we can
+obtain some vital information. He last wrote to me from there."
+
+Side by side we tramped along the dusty road. We both were silent,
+occupied with our own thoughts. Respecting the nature of my
+companion's I could entertain little doubt, and my own turned upon
+the foolhardy nature of the undertaking upon which I was embarked.
+No other word passed between us then, until upon rounding a bend
+and passing a cluster of picturesque cottages, the yard of the
+Vinepole came into view.
+
+"Do they know you by sight here?" I asked abruptly.
+
+"No, of course not; we never made strategic mistakes of that kind.
+If we have tea here, no doubt we can learn all we require."
+
+I entered the little parlour of the inn, and suggested that tea
+should be served in the pretty garden which opened out of it upon
+the right.
+
+The host, who himself laid the table, viewed the camera case
+critically.
+
+"We get a lot of photographers down here," he remarked tentatively.
+
+"No doubt," said my companion. "There is some very pretty scenery
+in the neighbourhood."
+
+The landlord rested his hands upon the table.
+
+"There was a gentleman here on Wednesday last," he said; "an old
+gentleman who had met with an accident, and was staying somewhere
+hereabouts for his health. But he'd got his camera with him, and
+it was wonderful the way he could use it, considering he hadn't got
+the use of his right hand."
+
+"He must have been a very keen photographer," I said, glancing at
+the girl beside me.
+
+"He took three or four pictures of the Vinepole," replied the
+landlord (which I doubted, since probably his camera was a dummy);
+"and he wanted to know if there were any other old houses in the
+neighbourhood. I told him he ought to take Cadham Hall, and he said
+he had heard that the Gate House, which is about a mile from here,
+was one of the oldest buildings about."
+
+A girl appeared with a tea tray, and for a moment I almost feared
+that the landlord was about to retire; but he lingered, whilst the
+girl distributed the things about the table, and Carneta asked
+casually, "Would there be time for me to photograph the Gate House
+before dark?"
+
+"There might be time," was the reply, "but that's not the difficulty.
+Mr. Isaacs is the difficulty."
+
+"Who is Mr. Isaacs?" I asked.
+
+"He's the Jewish gentleman who bought the Gate House recently. Lots
+of money he's got and a big motor car. He's up and down to London
+almost every day in the week, but he won't let anybody take
+photographs of the house. I know several who've asked."
+
+"But I thought," said Carneta, innocently, "you said the old
+gentleman who was here on Wednesday went to take some?"
+
+"He went, yes, miss; but I don't know if he succeeded."
+
+Carneta poured out some tea.
+
+"Now that you speak of it," she said, "I too have heard that the
+Gate House is very picturesque. What objection can Mr. Isaacs
+have to photographers?"
+
+"Well, you see, miss, to get a picture of the house, you have to
+pass right through the grounds."
+
+"I should walk right up to the house and ask permission. Is Mr.
+Isaacs at home, I wonder?"
+
+"I couldn't say. He hasn't passed this way to-day."
+
+"We might meet him on the way," said I. "What is he like?"
+
+"A Jewish gentleman sir, very dark, with a white beard. Wears
+gold glasses. Keeps himself very much to himself. I don't know
+anything about his household; none of them ever come here."
+
+Carneta inquired the direction of Cadham Hall and of the Gate House,
+and the landlord left us to ourselves. My companion exhibited
+signs of growing agitation, and it seemed to me that she had much
+ado to restrain herself from setting out without a moment's delay
+for the Gate House, which, I readily perceived, was the place to
+which our strange venture was leading us.
+
+I found something very stimulating in the reflection that, rash
+though the expedition might be, and, viewed from whatever standpoint,
+undeniably perilous, it promised to bring me to that secret
+stronghold of deviltry where the sinister Hassan of Aleppo so
+successfully had concealed himself.
+
+The work of the modern journalist had many points of contact with
+that of the detective; and since the murder of Professor Deeping I
+had succumbed to the man-hunting fever more than once. I knew that
+Scotland Yard had failed to locate the hiding-place of the
+remarkable and evil man who, like an efreet of Oriental lore, obeyed
+the talisman of the stolen slipper, striking down whomsoever laid
+hand upon its sacredness. It was a novel sensation to know that,
+aided by this beautiful accomplice of a rogue, I had succeeded where
+the experts had failed!
+
+Misgivings I had and shall not deny. If our scheme succeeded it
+would mean that Deeping's murderer should be brought to justice.
+If it failed-well, frankly, upon that possibility I did not dare to
+reflect!
+
+It must be needless for me to say that we two strangely met allies
+were ill at ease, sometimes to the point of embarrassment. We
+proceeded on our way in almost unbroken silence, and, save for a
+couple of farm hands, without meeting any wayfarer, up to the time
+that we reached the brow of the hill and had our first sight of the
+Gate House lying in a little valley beneath. It was a small Tudor
+mansion, very compact in plan and its roof glowed redly in the
+rays of the now setting sun.
+
+From the directions given by the host of the Vinepole it was
+impossible to mistake the way or to mistake the house. Amid
+well-wooded grounds it stood, a place quite isolated, but so
+typically English that, as I stood looking down upon it, I found
+myself unable to believe that any other than a substantial country
+gentleman could be its proprietor.
+
+I glanced at Carneta. Her violet eyes were burning feverishly, but
+her lips twitched in a bravely pitiful way.
+
+Clearly now my adventure lay before me; that red-roofed homestead
+seemed to have rendered it all substantial which hitherto had been
+shadowy; and I stood there studying the Gate House gravely, for it
+might yet swallow me up, as apparently it had swallowed Earl Dexter.
+
+There, amid that peaceful Kentish landscape, fantasy danced and
+horrors unknown lurked in waiting...
+
+The eminence upon which we were commanded an extensive prospect,
+and eastward showed a tower and flagstaff which marked the site of
+Cadham Hall. There were homeward-bound labourers to be seen in the
+lanes now, and where like a white ribbon the Watling Street lay
+across the verdant carpet moved an insect shape, speedily.
+
+It was a car, and I watched it with vague interest. At a point
+where a dense coppice spread down to the roadway and a lane crossed
+west to east, the car became invisible. Then I saw it again, nearer
+to us and nearer to the Gate House. Finally it disappeared among
+the trees.
+
+I turned to Carneta. She, too, had been watching. Now her gaze met
+mine.
+
+"Mr. Isaacs!" she said; and her voice was less musical than usual.
+"His chauffeur, who learned his business in Cairo, is probably the
+only one of his servants who remains in England."
+
+"What!" I began--and said no more.
+
+Where the road upon which we stood wound down into the valley and
+lost itself amid the trees surrounding the Gate House, the car
+suddenly appeared again, and began to mount the slope toward us!
+
+"Heavens!" whispered Carneta. "He may have seen us--with glasses!
+Quick! Let us walk back until the hill-top conceals us; then we
+must hide somewhere!"
+
+I shared her excitement. Without a moment's hesitation we both
+turned and retraced our steps. Twenty paces brought us to a
+spot where a stack of mangel wurzels stood at the roadside.
+
+"This will do!" I said.
+
+We ran around into the field, and crouched where we could peer out
+on the road without ourselves being seen. Nor had we taken up this
+position a moment too soon.
+
+Topping the slope came a light-weight electric, driven by a man who,
+in his spruce uniform, might have passed at a glance for a very
+dusky European. The car had a limousine back, and as the chauffeur
+slowed down, out from the open windows right and left peered the
+solitary occupant.
+
+He had the cast of countenance which is associated with the best
+type of Jew, with clear-cut aquiline features wholly destitute of
+grossness. His white beard was patriarchal and he wore gold-rimmed
+pince-nez and a glossy silk hat. Such figures may often be met
+with in the great money-markets of the world, and Mr. Isaacs would
+have passed for a successful financier in even more discerning
+communities than that of Cadham.
+
+But I scarcely breathed until the car was past; and, beside me, my
+companion, crouching to the ground, was trembling wildly. Fifty
+yards toward the village Mr. Isaacs evidently directed the man to
+return.
+
+The car was put about, and flashed past us at high speed down into
+the valley. When the sound of the humming motor had died to
+something no louder than the buzz of a sleepy wasp, I held out my
+hand to Carneta and she rose, pale, but with blazing eyes, and
+picked up her camera case.
+
+"If he had detected us, everything would have been lost!" she
+whispered.
+
+"Not everything!" I replied grimly--and showed her the revolver
+which I had held in my hand whilst those eagle eyes had been
+seeking us. "If he had made a sign to show that he had seen us, in
+fact, if he had once offered a safe mark by leaning from the car, I
+should have shot him dead without hesitation!"
+
+"We must not show ourselves again, but wait for dusk. He must have
+seen us, then, on the hilltop, but I hope without recognizing us.
+He has the sight and instincts of a vulture!"
+
+I nodded, slipping the revolver into my pocket, but I wondered if I
+should not have been better advised to have risked a shot at the
+moment that I had recognized "Mr. Isaacs" for Hassan of Aleppo.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXX
+
+AT THE GATE HOUSE
+
+
+From sunset to dusk I lurked about the neighbourhood of the Gate
+House with my beautiful accomplice--watching and waiting: a man
+bound upon stranger business, I dare swear, than any other in the
+county of Kent that night.
+
+Our endeavour now was to avoid observation by any one, and in this,
+I think, we succeeded. At the same time, Carneta, upon whose
+experience I relied implicitly, regarded it as most important that
+we should observe (from a safe distance) any one who entered or
+quitted the gates.
+
+But none entered, and none came out. When, finally, we made along
+the narrow footpath skirting the west of the grounds, the night was
+silent--most strangely still.
+
+The trees met overhead, but no rustle disturbed their leaves and of
+animal life no indication showed itself. There was no moon.
+
+A full appreciation of my mad folly came to me, and with it a sense
+of heavy depression. This stillness that ruled all about the house
+which sheltered the awful Sheikh of the Assassins was ominous, I
+thought. In short, my nerves were playing me tricks.
+
+"We have little to fear," said my companion, speaking in a hushed
+and quivering voice. "The whole of the party left England some
+days ago."
+
+"Are you sure?"
+
+"Certain! We learned that before Earl made his attempt. Hassan
+remains, for some reason; Hassan and one other--the one who drives
+the car."
+
+"But the slipper?"
+
+"If Hassan remains, so does the slipper!" From the knapsack, which,
+as you will have divined, did not contain a camera, she took out an
+electric pocket lamp, and directed its beam upon the hedge above us.
+
+"There is a gap somewhere here!" she said. "See if you can find it.
+I dare not show the light too long."
+
+Darkness followed. I clambered up the bank and sought for the
+opening of which Carneta had spoken.
+
+"The light here a moment," I whispered. "I think I have it!"
+
+Out shone the white beam, and momentarily fell upon a black hole in
+the thickset hedge. The light disappeared, and as I extended my
+hand to Carneta she grasped it and climbed up beside me.
+
+"Put on your rubber shoes," she directed. "Leave the others here."
+
+There in the darkness I did as she directed, for I was provided with
+a pair of tennis shoes. Carneta already was suitably shod.
+
+"I will go first," I said. "What is the ground like beyond?"
+
+"Just unkempt bushes and weeds."
+
+Upon hands and knees I crawled through, saw dimly that there was a
+short descent, corresponding with the ascent from the lane, and
+turned, whispering to my fellow conspirator to follow.
+
+The grounds proved even more extensive than I had anticipated. We
+pressed on, dodging low-sweeping branches and keeping our arms up to
+guard our faces from outshoots of thorn bushes. Our progress
+necessarily was slow, but even so quite a long time seemed to have
+elapsed ere we came in sight of the house.
+
+This was my first expedition of the kind; and now that my goal was
+actually in sight I became conscious of a sort of exultation hard
+to describe. My companion, on the contrary, seemed to have become
+icily cool. When next she spoke, her voice had a businesslike ring,
+which revealed the fact that she was no amateur at this class of
+work.
+
+"Wait here," she directed. "I am going to pass all around the
+house, and I will rejoin you."
+
+I could see her but dimly, and she moved off as silent as an Indian
+deer-stalker, leaving me alone there crouching at the extreme edge
+of the thicket. I looked out over a small wilderness of unkempt
+flower-beds; so much it was just possible to perceive. The plants
+in many instances had spread on to the pathways and contested
+survival with the flourishing weeds. All was wild--deserted--eerie.
+
+A sense of dampness assailed me, and I raised my eyes to the
+low-lying building wherein no light showed, no sign of life was
+evident. The nearer wing presented a verandah apparently overgrown
+by some climbing plant, the nature of which it was impossible to
+determine in the darkness.
+
+The zest for the nocturnal operation which temporarily had thrilled
+me succumbed now to loneliness. With keen anxiety I awaited the
+return of my more experienced accomplice. The situation was
+grotesque, utterly bizarre; but even my sense of humour could not
+save me from the growing dread which this seemingly deserted place
+poured into my heart.
+
+When upon the right I heard a faint rustling I started, and grasped
+the revolver in my pocket.
+
+"Not a sound!" came in Carneta's voice. "Keep just inside the
+bushes and come this way. There is something I want to show you."
+
+The various profuse growths rendered concealment simple enough--if
+indeed any other concealment were necessary than that which the
+strangely black night afforded. Just within the evil-smelling
+thicket we made a half circuit of the building, and stopped.
+
+"Look!" whispered Carneta.
+
+The word was unnecessary, for I was staring fixedly in the direction
+of that which evidently had occasioned her uneasiness.
+
+It was a small square window, so low-set that I assumed it to be
+that of a cellar, and heavily cross-barred.
+
+From it, out upon a tangled patch of vegetation, shone a dull red
+light!
+
+"There's no other light in the place," my companion whispered.
+"For God's sake, what can it be?"
+
+My mind supplied no explanation. The idea that it might be a dark
+room no doubt was suggested by the assumed role of Carneta; but I
+knew that idea to be absurd. The red light meant something else.
+
+Evidently the commencing of operations before all lights were out
+was irregular, for Carneta said slowly--
+
+"We must wait and watch the light. There was formerly a moat
+around the Gate House; that must be the window of a dungeon."
+
+I little relished the prospect of waiting in that swamp-like spot,
+but since no alternative presented itself I accepted the inevitable.
+For close upon an hour we stood watching the red window. No sound
+of bird, beast, or man disturbed our vigil; in fact, it would
+appear that the very insects shunned the neighbourhood of Hassan of
+Aleppo. But the red light still shone out.
+
+"We must risk it!" said Carneta steadily. "There are French windows
+opening on to that verandah. Ten yards farther around the bushes
+come right up to the wall of the house. We'll go that way and
+around by the other wing on to the verandah."
+
+Any action was preferable to this nerve-sapping delay, and with a
+determination to shoot, and shoot to kill, any one who opposed
+our entrance, I passed through the bushes and, with Carneta, rounded
+the southern border of that silent house and slipped quietly on to
+the verandah.
+
+Kneeling, Carneta opened the knapsack. My eyes were growing
+accustomed to the darkness, and I was just able to see her deft
+hands at work upon the fastenings. She made no noise, and I
+watched her with an ever-growing wonder. A female burglar is a
+personage difficult to imagine. Certainly, no one ever could have
+suspected this girl with the violet eyes of being an expert
+crackswoman; but of her efficiency there could be no question. I
+think I had never witnessed a more amazing spectacle than that of
+this cultured girl manipulating the tools of the house breaker with
+her slim white fingers.
+
+Suddenly she turned and clutched my arm.
+
+"The windows are not fastened!" she whispered.
+
+A strange courage came to me--perhaps that of desperation. For,
+ignoring the ominous circumstance, I pushed open the nearest
+window and stepped into the room beyond! A hissing breath from
+Carneta acknowledged my performance, and she entered close behind
+me, silent in her rubber-soled shoes.
+
+For one thrilling moment we stood listening. Then came the white
+beam from the electric lamp to cut through the surrounding blackness.
+
+The room was totally unfurnished!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXI
+
+THE POOL OF DEATH
+
+
+Not a sound broke the stillness of the Gate House. It was the most
+eerily silent place in which I had ever found myself. Out into the
+corridor we went, noiselessly. It was stripped, uncarpeted.
+
+Three doors we passed, two upon the left and one upon the right.
+We tried them all. All were unfastened, and the rooms into which
+they opened bare and deserted. Then we came upon a short, descending
+stair, at its foot a massive oaken door.
+
+Carneta glided down, noiseless as a ghost, and to one of the
+blackened panels applied an ingenious little instrument which she
+carried in her knapsack. It was not unlike a stethoscope; and as I
+watched her listening, by means of this arrangement, for any sound
+beyond the oaken door, I reflected how almost every advance made by
+science places a new tool in the hand of the criminal.
+
+No word had been spoken since we had discovered this door; none had
+been necessary. For we both knew that the place beyond was that
+from which proceeded the mysterious red light.
+
+I directed the ray of the electric torch upon Carneta, as she stood
+there listening, and against that sombre oaken background her face
+and profile stood out with startling beauty. She seemed half
+perplexed and half fearful. Then she abruptly removed the apparatus,
+and, stooping to the knapsack, replaced it and took out a bunch of
+wire keys, signing to me to hand her the lamp.
+
+As I crept down the steps I saw her pause, glancing back over her
+shoulder toward the door. The expression upon her face induced
+me to direct the light in the same direction.
+
+Why neither of us had observed the fact before I cannot conjecture;
+but a key was in the lock!
+
+Perhaps the traffic of the night afforded no more dramatic moment
+than this. The house which we were come prepared burglariously
+to enter was thrown open, it would seem, to us, inviting our
+inspection!
+
+Looking back upon that moment, it seems almost incredible that the
+sight of a key in a lock should have so thrilled me. But at the
+time I perceived something sinister in this failure of the Lord of
+the Hashishin to close his doors to intruders. That Carneta shared
+my doubts and fears was to be read in her face; but her training
+had been peculiar, I learned, and such as establishes a surprising
+resoluteness of character.
+
+Quite noiselessly she turned the key, and holding a dainty pocket
+revolver in her hand, pushed the door open slowly!
+
+An odour, sickly sweet and vaguely familiar, was borne to my
+nostrils. Carneta became outlined in dim, reddish light. Bending
+forward slightly, she entered the room, and I, with muscles tensed
+nervously, advanced and stood beside her.
+
+I perceived that this was a cellar; indeed, I doubt not that in
+some past age it had served as a dungeon. From the stone roof hung
+the first evidence of Eastern occupation which the Gate House had
+yielded; in the form of an Oriental lantern, or fanoos, of
+rose-coloured waxed paper upon a copper frame. Its vague light
+revealed the interior of the hideous place upon whose threshold we
+stood.
+
+Straight before us, deep set in the stone wall, was the tiny square
+window, iron-barred without, and glazed with red glass, the light
+from which had so deeply mystified us. Within a niche in the wall,
+a little to the left of the window, rested an object which, at that
+moment, claimed our undivided attention the sight of which so
+wrought upon us that temporarily all else was forgotten.
+
+It was the red slipper of the Prophet!
+
+"My God!" whispered Carneta--"my God!"--and clutched at me,
+swaying dizzily.
+
+A few inches from our feet the floor became depressed, how deeply
+I could not determine, for it was filled with water, water filthy
+and slimy! The strange, nauseating odour had grown all but
+unsupportable; it seemingly proceeded from this fetid pool which,
+occupying the floor of the dungeon, offered a barrier, since its
+depth was unknown, of fully twelve feet between ourselves and the
+farther wall.
+
+There was a faint, dripping sound: a whispering, echoing drip-drip
+of falling water. I could not tell from whence it proceeded.
+
+Almost supporting my companion, whose courage seemed suddenly to
+have failed her, I stared fascinatedly at that blood-stained
+relic. Something then induced me to look behind; I suppose a
+warning instinct of that sort which is unexplainable. I only know
+that upholding Carneta with my left arm, and nervously grasping my
+revolver in my right, I turned and glanced over my shoulder.
+
+Very slowly, but with a constant, regular motion, the massive door
+was closing!
+
+I snatched away my arm; in my left hand I held the electric torch,
+and springing sharply about I directed the searching ray into the
+black gap of the stairway. A yellow face, a malignant Oriental
+face, came suddenly, fully, into view! Instantly I recognized it
+for that of the man who had driven Hassan's car!
+
+Acting upon the determination with which I had entered the Gate
+House, I raised my revolver and fired straight between the evil
+eyes! To the fact that I dropped my left hand in the act of
+pulling the trigger with my right, and thus lost my mark, the
+servant of Hassan of Aleppo owed his escape. I missed him. He
+uttered a shrill cry of fear and went racing up the wooden stair.
+I followed him with the light and fired twice at the retreating
+figure. I heard him stumble and a second time cry out. But,
+though I doubt not he was hit, he recovered himself, for I heard
+his tread in the corridor above.
+
+Propping wide the door with my foot, I turned to Carneta. Her
+face was drawn and haggard; but her mouth set in a sort of grim
+determination.
+
+"Earl is dead!" she said, in a queer, toneless voice. "He died
+trying to get--that thing! I will get it, and destroy it!"
+
+Before I could detain her, even had I sought to do so, she stepped
+into the filthy water, struggled to recover her foothold, and sank
+above her waist into its sliminess. Without hesitation she began
+to advance toward the niche which contained the slipper. In the
+middle of the pool she stopped.
+
+What memory it was which supplied the clue to the identity of that
+nauseating smell, heaven alone knows; but as the girl stopped and
+drew herself up rigidly--then turned and leapt wildly back toward
+the door--I knew what occasioned that sickly odour!
+
+She screamed once, dreadfully--shrilly--a scream of agonizing
+fear that I can never forget. Then, roughly I grasped her, for the
+need was urgent--and dragged her out on to the floor beside me.
+With her wet garments clinging to her limbs, she fell prostrate on
+the stones.
+
+A yard from the brink the slimy water parted, and the yellow snout
+of a huge crocodile was raised above the surface! The saurian eyes,
+hungrily malevolent, rose next to view!
+
+The extremity of our danger found me suddenly cool. As the thing
+drew its slimy body up out of the poor I waited. The jaws were
+extended toward the prostrate body, were but inches removed from
+it, dripped their saliva upon the soddened skirt--when I bent
+forward, and at a range of some ten inches emptied the remaining
+three loaded chambers of my revolver into the creature's left
+eye!
+
+Upchurned in bloody foam became the water of that dreadful place....
+As one recalls the incidents of a fevered dream, I recall
+dragging Carneta away from the contorted body of the death-stricken
+reptile. A nightmare chaos of horrid, revolting sights and sounds
+forms my only recollection of quitting the dungeon of the slipper.
+
+I succeeded in carrying her up the stairs and out through the empty
+rooms on to the verandah; but there, from sheer exhaustion, I laid
+her down. I had no means of reviving her and I lacked the strength
+to carry her farther. Having recharged my revolver, I stood watching
+her where she lay, wanly beautiful in the dim light.
+
+There was no doubt in my mind respecting the fate of Earl Dexter,
+nor could I doubt that the slipper in the dungeon below was a
+duplicate of the real one. It was a death-trap into which he had
+lured Dexter and which he had left baited for whomsoever might trace
+the cracksman to the Gate House. Why Hassan should have remained
+behind, unless from fanatic lust of killing, I could not imagine.
+
+When at last the fresher night air had its effect, and Carneta
+opened her eyes, I led her to the gates, nor did she offer the
+slightest resistance, but looked dully before her, muttering over
+and over again, "Earl, Earl!"
+
+The gates were open; we passed out on to the open road. No man
+pursued us, and the night was gravely still.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXII
+
+SIX GRAY PATCHES
+
+
+When the invitation came from my old friend Hilton to spend a week
+"roughing it" with him in Warwickshire I accepted with alacrity.
+If ever a man needed a holiday I was that man. Nervous breakdown
+threatened me at any moment; the ghastly experience at the Gate
+House together with Carneta's grief-stricken face when I had
+parted from her were obsessing memories which I sought in vain to
+shake off.
+
+A brief wire had contained the welcome invitation, and up to the
+time when I had received it I had been unaware that Hilton was
+back in England. Moreover, beyond the fact that his house,
+"Uplands," was near H--, for which I was instructed to change at
+New Street Station, Birmingham, I had little idea of its location.
+But he added "Wire train and will meet at H--"; so that I had no
+uneasiness on that score.
+
+I had contemplated catching the 2:45 from Euston, but by the time
+I had got my work into something like order, I decided that the
+6:55 would be more suitable and decided to dine on the train.
+
+Altogether, there was something of a rush and hustle attendant upon
+getting away, and when at last I found myself in the cab, bound for
+Euston, I sat back with a long-drawn sigh. The quest of the Prophet's
+slipper was ended; in all probability that blood-stained relic was
+already Eastward bound. Hassan of Aleppo, its awful guardian, had
+triumphed and had escaped retribution. Earl Dexter was dead. I
+could not doubt that; for the memory of his beautiful accomplice,
+Carneta, as I last had seen her, broken-hearted, with her great
+violet eyes dulled in tearless agony--have I not said that it lived
+with me?
+
+Even as the picture of her lovely, pale face presented itself to my
+mind, the cab was held up by a temporary block in the traffic--and
+my imagination played me a strange trick.
+
+Another taxi ran close alongside, almost at the moment that the
+press of vehicles moved on again. Certainly, I had no more than a
+passing glimpse of the occupants; but I could have sworn that violet
+eyes looked suddenly into mine, and with equal conviction I could
+have sworn to the gaunt face of the man who sat beside the
+violet-eyed girl for that of Earl Dexter!
+
+The travellers, however, were immediately lost to sight in the rear,
+and I was left to conjecture whether this had been a not uncommon
+form of optical delusion or whether I had seen a ghost.
+
+At any rate, as I passed in between the big pillars, "The gateway
+of the North," I scrutinized, and closely, the numerous hurrying
+figures about me. None of them, by any stretch of the imagination,
+could have been set down for that of Dexter, The Stetson Man. No
+doubt, I concluded, I had been tricked by a chance resemblance.
+
+Having dispatched my telegram, I boarded the 6:55. I thought I
+should have the compartment to myself, and so deep in reverie was
+I that the train was actually clear of the platforms ere I learned
+that I had a companion. He must have joined me at the moment that
+the train started. Certainly, I had not seen him enter. But,
+suddenly looking up, I met the eyes of this man who occupied the
+corner seat facing me.
+
+This person was olive-skinned, clean-shaven, fine featured, and
+perfectly groomed. His age might have been anything from twenty-five
+to forty-five, but his hair and brows were jet black. His eyes, too,
+were nearer to real black than any human eyes I had ever seen
+before--excepting the awful eyes of Hassan of Aleppo. Hassan of
+Aleppo! It was, to that hour, a mystery how his group of trained
+assassins--the Hashishin--had quitted England. Since none of them
+were known to the police, it was no insoluble mystery, I admit; but
+nevertheless it was singular that the careful watching of the ports
+had yielded no result. Could it be that some of them had not yet
+left the country? Could it be--
+
+I looked intently into the black eyes. They were caressing, smiling
+eyes, and looked boldly into mine. I picked up a magazine,
+pretending to read. But I supported it with my left hand; my right
+was in my coat pocket--and it rested upon my Smith and Wesson!
+
+So much had the slipper of Mohammed done for me: I went in hourly
+dread of murderous attack!
+
+My travelling companion watched me; of that I was certain. I could
+feel his gaze. But he made no move and no word passed between us.
+This was the situation when the train slowed into Northampton. At
+Northampton, to my indescribable relief (frankly, I was as nervous
+in those days as a woman), the Oriental traveller stepped out on to
+the platform.
+
+Having reclosed the door, he turned and leaned in through the open
+window.
+
+"Evidently you are not concerned, Mr. Cavanagh," he said. "Be
+warned. Do not interfere with those that are!"
+
+The night swallowed him up.
+
+My fears had been justified; the man was one of the Hashishin--a
+spy of Hassan of Aleppo! What did it mean?
+
+I craned from the window, searching the platform right and left.
+But there was no sign of him.
+
+When the train left Northampton I found myself alone, and I should
+only weary you were I to attempt to recount the troubled conjectures
+that bore me company to Birmingham.
+
+The train reached New Street at nine, with the result that having
+gulped a badly needed brandy and soda in the buffet, I grabbed my
+bag, raced across--and just missed the connection! More than an
+hour later I found myself standing at ten minutes to eleven upon
+the H-- platform, watching the red taillight of the "local"
+disappear into the night. Then I realized to the full that with
+four miles of lonely England before me there hung above my head a
+mysterious threat--a vague menace. The solitary official, who
+but waited my departure to lock up the station, was the last
+representative of civilization I could hope to encounter until the
+gates of "Uplands" should be opened to me!
+
+What was the matter with which I was warned not to interfere? Might
+I not, by my mere presence in that place, unwittingly be interfering
+now?
+
+With the station-master's directions humming like a refrain in my
+ears, I passed through the sleeping village and out on to the road.
+The moon was exceptionally bright and unobscured, although a dense
+bank of cloud crept slowly from the west, and before me the path
+stretched as an unbroken thread of silvery white twining a sinuous
+way up the bracken-covered slope, to where, sharply defined against
+the moonlight sky, a coppice in grotesque silhouette marked the
+summit.
+
+The month had been dry and tropically hot, and my footsteps rang
+crisply upon the hard ground. There is nothing more deceptive
+than a straight road up a hill; and half an hour's steady tramping
+but saw me approaching the trees.
+
+I had so far resolutely endeavoured to keep my mind away from the
+idea of surveillance. Now, as I paused to light my pipe--a
+never-failing friend in loneliness--I perceived something move in
+the shadows of a neighbouring bush.
+
+This object was not unlike a bladder, and the very incongruity of
+its appearance served to revive all my apprehensions. Taking up
+my grip, as though I had noticed nothing of an alarming nature, I
+pursued my way up the slope, leaving a trail of tobacco smoke in my
+wake; and having my revolver secreted up my right coat-sleeve.
+
+Successfully resisting a temptation to glance behind, I entered the
+cover of the coppice, and, now invisible to any one who might be
+dogging me, stood and looked back upon the moon-bright road.
+
+There was no living thing in sight, the road was empty as far as the
+eye could see. The coppice now remained to be negotiated, and then,
+if the station-master's directions were not at fault, "Uplands"
+should be visible beyond. Taking, therefore, what I had designed to
+be a final glance back down the hillside, I was preparing to resume
+my way when I saw something--something that arrested me.
+
+It was a long way behind--so far that, had the moon been less
+bright, I could never have discerned it. What it was I could not
+even conjecture; but it had the appearance of a vague gray patch,
+moving--not along the road, but through the undergrowth--in my
+direction.
+
+For a second my eye rested upon it. Then I saw a second patch--a
+third--a fourth!
+
+Six!
+
+There were six gray patches creeping up the slope toward me!
+
+The sight was unnerving. What were these things that approached,
+silently, stealthily--like snakes in the grass?
+
+A fear, unlike anything I had known before the quest of the Prophet's
+slipper had brought fantastic horror into my life, came upon me.
+Revolver in hand I ran--ran for my life toward the gap in the trees
+that marked the coppice end. And as I went something hummed through
+the darkness beside my head, some projectile, some venomous thing that
+missed its mark by a bare inch!
+
+Painfully conversant with the uncanny weapons employed by the
+Hashishin, I knew now, beyond any possibility of doubt, that death
+was behind me.
+
+A pattering like naked feet sounded on the road, and, without
+pausing in my headlong career, I sent a random shot into the
+blackness.
+
+The crack of the Smith and Wesson reassured me. I pulled up short,
+turned, and looked back toward the trees.
+
+Nothing--no one!
+
+Breathing heavily, I crammed my extinguished briar into my
+pocket--re-charged the empty chamber of the revolver--and started to
+run again toward a light that showed over the treetops to my left.
+
+That, if the man's directions were right, was "Uplands"--if his
+directions were wrong--then...
+
+A shrill whistle--minor, eerie, in rising cadence--sounded on the
+dead silence with piercing clearness! Six whistles--seemingly
+from all around me--replied!
+
+Some object came humming through the air, and I ducked wildly.
+
+On and on I ran--flying from an unknown, but, as a warning instinct
+told me, deadly peril--ran as a man runs pursued by devils.
+
+The road bent sharply to the left then forked. Overhanging trees
+concealed the house, and the light, though high up under the eaves,
+was no longer visible. Trusting to Providence to guide me, I plunged
+down the lane that turned to the left, and, almost exhausted, saw the
+gates before me--saw the sweep of the drive, and the moonlight,
+gleaming on the windows!
+
+None of the windows were illuminated.
+
+Straight up to the iron gates I raced.
+
+They were locked!
+
+Without a moment's hesitation I hurled my grip over the top and
+clambered up the bars! As I got astride, from the blackness of the
+lane came the ominous hum, and my hat went spinning away across the
+lawn!--the black cloud veiled the moon and complete darkness fell.
+
+Then I dropped and ran for the house--shouting, though all but
+winded--"Hilton! Hilton! Open the door!"
+
+Sinking exhausted on the steps, I looked toward the gates--but they
+showed only dimly in the dense shadows of the trees.
+
+Bzzz! Buzz!
+
+I dropped flat in the portico as something struck the metal knob of
+the door and rebounded over me. A shower of gravel told of another
+misdirected projectile.
+
+Crack! Crack! Crack! The revolver spoke its short reply into the
+mysterious darkness; but the night gave up no sound to tell of a
+shot gone home.
+
+"Hilton! Hilton!" I cried, banging on the panels with the butt of
+the weapon. "Open the door! Open the door!"
+
+And now I heard the coming footsteps along the hall within; heavy
+bolts were withdrawn--the door swung open--and Hilton, pale-faced,
+appeared. His hand shot out, grabbed my coat collar; and weak,
+exhausted, I found myself snatched into safety, and the door
+rebolted.
+
+"Thank God!" I whispered. "Thank God! Hilton, look to all your
+bolts and fastenings. Hell is outside!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIII
+
+HOW WE WERE REINFORCED
+
+
+Hilton, I learned, was living the simple life at "Uplands." The
+place was not yet decorated and was only partly furnished. But
+with his man, Soar, he had been in solitary occupation for a week.
+
+"Feel better now?" he asked anxiously.
+
+I reached for my tumbler and blew a cloud of smoke into the air.
+I could hear Soar's footsteps as he made the round of bolts and
+bars, testing each anxiously.
+
+"Thanks, Hilton," I said. "I'm quite all right. You are naturally
+wondering what the devil it all means? Well, then, I wired you
+from Euston that I was coming by the 6:55."
+
+"H-- Post Office shuts at 7. I shall get your wire in the morning!"
+
+"That explains your failing to meet me. Now for my explanation!"
+
+"Surrounding this house at the present moment," I continued, "are
+members of an Eastern organization--the Hashishin, founded in
+Khorassan in the eleventh century and flourishing to-day!"
+
+"Do you mean it, Cavanagh?"
+
+"I do! One Hassan of Aleppo is the present Sheikh of the order,
+and he has come to England, bringing a fiendish company in his train,
+in pursuit of the sacred slipper of Mohammed, which was stolen by
+the late Professor Deeping---"
+
+"Surely I have read something about this?"
+
+"Probably. Deeping was murdered by Hassan! The slipper was placed
+in the Antiquarian Museum--"
+
+"From which it was stolen again!"
+
+"Correct--by Earl Dexter, America's foremost crook! But the real
+facts have never got into print. I am the only pressman who knows
+them, and I have good reason for keeping my knowledge to myself!
+Dexter is dead (I believe I saw his ghost to-day). But although,
+to the best of my knowledge, the accursed slipper is in the hands
+of Hassan and Company, I have been watched since I left Euston,
+and on my way to 'Uplands' my life was attempted!"
+
+"For God's sake, why?"
+
+"I cannot surmise, Hilton. Deeping, for certain reasons that are
+irrelevant at the moment, left the keys of the case at the Museum
+in my perpetual keeping--but the case was rifled a second time--"
+
+"I read of it!"
+
+"And the keys were stolen from me. I am utterly at a loss to
+understand why the Hashishin--for it is members of that awful
+organization who, without a doubt, surround this house at the
+present moment--should seek my life. Hilton, I have brought
+trouble with me!"
+
+"It's almost incredible!" said Hilton, staring at me. "Why do
+these people pursue you?"
+
+Ere I had time to reply Soar entered, arrayed, as was Hilton, in
+his night attire. Soar was an ex-dragoon and a model man.
+
+"Everything fast, sir," he reported; "but from the window of the
+bedroom over here--the room I got ready for Mr. Cavanagh--I
+thought I saw someone in the orchard."
+
+"Eh?" jerked Hilton--"in the orchard? Come on up, Cavanagh!"
+
+We all ran upstairs. The moonlight was streaming into the room.
+
+"Keep back!" I warned.
+
+Well within the shadow, I crept up to the window and looked out.
+The night was hot and still. No breeze stirred the leaves, but
+the edge of the frowning thunder cloud which I had noted before
+spread a heavy carpet of ebony black upon the ground. Beyond, I
+could dimly discern the hills. The others stood behind me,
+constrained by the fear of this mysterious danger which I had
+brought to "Uplands."
+
+There was someone moving among the trees!
+
+Closer came the figure, and closer, until suddenly a shaft of
+moonlight found passage and spilled a momentary pool of light amid
+the shadows, I could see the watcher very clearly. A moment he
+stood there, motionless, and looking up at the window; then as he
+glided again into the shade of the trees the darkness became
+complete. But I watched, crouching there nervously, for long after
+he was gone.
+
+"For God's sake, who is it?" whispered Hilton, with a sort of awe
+in his voice.
+
+"It's Hassan of Aleppo!" I replied.
+
+Virtually, the house, with the capital of the Midlands so near upon
+the one hand, the feverish activity of the Black Country reddening
+the night upon the other, was invested by fanatic Easterns!
+
+We descended again to the extemporized study. Soar entered with us
+and Hilton invited him to sit down.
+
+"We must stick together to-night!" he said. "Now, Cavanagh, let us
+see if we can find any explanation of this amazing business. I can
+understand that at one period of the slipper's history you were an
+object of interest to those who sought to recover it; but if, as
+you say, the Hashishin have the slipper now, what do they want with
+you? If you have never touched it, they cannot be prompted by
+desire for vengeance."
+
+"I have never touched it," I replied grimly; "nor even any
+receptacle containing it."
+
+As I ceased speaking came a distant muffled rumbling.
+
+"That's the thunder," said Hilton. "There's a tremendous storm
+brewing."
+
+He poured out three glasses of whisky, and was about to speak
+when Soar held up a warning finger.
+
+"Listen!" he said.
+
+At his words, with tropical suddenness down came the rain.
+
+Hilton, his pipe in his hand, stood listening intently.
+
+"What?" he asked.
+
+"I don't know, sir; the sound of the rain has drowned it."
+
+Indeed, the rain was descending in a perfect deluge, its continuous
+roar drowning all other sounds; but as we three listened tensely
+we detected a noise which hitherto had seemed like the overflowing
+of some spout.
+
+But louder and clearer it grew, until at last I knew it for what
+it was.
+
+"It's a motor-car!" I cried.
+
+"And coming here!" added Soar. "Listen! it's in the lane!"
+
+"It certainly isn't a taxicab," declared Hilton. "None of the men
+will come beyond the village."
+
+"That's the gate!" said Soar, in an awed voice, and stood up,
+looking at Hilton.
+
+"Come on," said the latter abruptly, making for the door.
+
+"Be careful, Hilton!" I cried; "it may be a trick!"
+
+Soar unbolted the front door, threw it open, and looked out. In
+the darkness of the storm it was almost impossible to see anything
+in the lane outside. But at that moment a great sheet of lightning
+split the gloom, and we saw a taxicab standing close up to the
+gateway!
+
+"Help! Open the gate!" came a high-pitched voice; "open the gate!"
+
+Out into the rain we ran and down the gravel path. Soar had the
+gate open in a twinkling, and a woman carrying a brown leather grip,
+but who was so closely veiled that I had no glimpse of her features,
+leapt through on to the drive.
+
+"Lend a hand, two of you!" cried a vaguely familiar voice--"this way!"
+
+Hilton and Soar stepped out into the road. The driver of the cab
+was lying forward across the wheel, apparently insensible, but as
+Hilton seized his arm he moved and spoke feebly.
+
+"For God's sake be quick, sir!" he said. "They're after us!
+They're on the other side of the lane, there!"
+
+With that he dropped limply into Hilton's arms!
+
+He was dragged in on to the drive--and something whizzed over our
+heads and went sputtering into the gravel away up toward the house.
+The last to enter was the man who had come in the cab. As he barred
+the gate behind him he suddenly reached out through the bars and I
+saw a pistol in his hand.
+
+Once--twice--thrice--he fired into the blackness of the lane.
+
+"Take that, you swine!" he shouted. "Take that!"
+
+As quickly as we could, bearing the insensible man, we hurried back
+to the door. On the step the woman was waiting for us, with her
+veil raised. A blinding flash of lightning came as we mounted the
+step--and I looked into the violet eyes of Carneta! I turned and
+stared at the man behind me.
+
+It was Earl Dexter.
+
+Three of the mysterious missiles fell amongst us, but miraculously
+no one was struck. Amid the mighty booming of the thunder we
+reentered the houses and got the door barred. In the hall we laid
+down the unconscious man and stood, a strangely met company,
+peering at one another in the dim lamplight.
+
+"We've got to bury the hatchet, Mr. Cavanagh!" said Dexter. "It's
+a case of the common enemy. I've brought you your bag!" and he
+pointed to the brown grip upon the floor.
+
+"My bag!" I cried. "My bag is upstairs in my room."
+
+"Wrong, sir!" snapped The Stetson Man. "They are like as two peas
+in a pod, I'll grant you, but the bag you snatched off the platform
+at New Street was mine! That's what I'm after; I ought to be on
+the way to Liverpool. That's what Hassan's after!"
+
+"The bag!"
+
+"You don't need to ask what's in the bag?" suggested Dexter.
+
+"What is in the bag?" ask Hilton hoarsely.
+
+"The slipper of the Prophet, sir!" was the reply.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIV
+
+MY LAST MEETING WITH HASSAN OF ALEPPO
+
+
+I felt dazed, as a man must feel who has just heard the death
+sentence pronounced upon him. Hilton seemed to have become
+incapable of speech or action; and in silence we stood watching
+Carneta tending the unconscious man. She forced brandy from
+a flask between his teeth, kneeling there beside him with her
+face very pale and dark rings around her eyes. Presently she
+looked up.
+
+"Will you please get me a bowl of water and a sponge?" she said
+quietly.
+
+Soar departed without a word, and no one spoke until he returned,
+bringing the sponge and the water, when the girl set to work in a
+businesslike way to cleanse a wound which showed upon the man's
+head.
+
+"She's a good nurse is Carneta," said Dexter coolly. "She was the
+only doctor I had through this"--indicating his maimed wrist. "If
+you will fetch my bag down, there's some lint in it."
+
+I hesitated.
+
+"You needn't worry," said Dexter; "as well be hung for a sheep as
+a lamb. You've handled the bag, and I'm not asking you to do
+any more."
+
+I went up to my room and lifted the grip from the chair upon which
+I had put it. Even now I found it difficult to perceive any
+difference between this and mine. Both were of identical appearance
+and both new. In fact, I had bought mine only that morning, my old
+one being past use, and being in a hurry, I had not left it to be
+initialled.
+
+As I picked up the bag the lightning flashed again, and from the
+window I could see the orchard as clearly as by sunlight. At the
+farther end near the wall someone was standing watching the house.
+
+I went downstairs carrying the fatal bag, and rejoined the group in
+the hall.
+
+"He will have to be got to bed," said Carneta, referring to the
+wounded man; "he will probably remain unconscious for a long time."
+
+Accordingly, we took the patient into one of the few furnished
+bedrooms, and having put him to bed left him in care of the beautiful
+nurse. When we four men met again downstairs, amazement had rendered
+the whole scene unreal to me. Soar stood just within the open door,
+not knowing whether to go or to remain; but Hilton motioned to
+him to stay. Earl Dexter bit off the end of a cigar and stood with
+his left elbow resting on the mantelpiece.
+
+His gaunt face looked gaunter than ever, but the daredevil gray eyes
+still nursed that humorous light in their depths.
+
+"Mr. Cavanagh," he said, "we're brothers! And if you'll consider
+a minute, you'll see that I'm not lying when I say I'm on the
+straight, now and for always!"
+
+I made no reply: I could think of none.
+
+"I'm a crook," he resumed, "or I was up to a while ago. There's
+a warrant out for me--the first that ever bore my name. I've
+sailed near the wind often enough, but it was desperation that got
+me into hot water about that!"
+
+He jerked his cigar in the direction of his grip, which lay now on
+the rug at his feet.
+
+"I lost a useful right hand," he went on--"and I lost every cent I
+had. It was a dead rotten speculation--for I lost my good name!
+I mean it! Believe me, I've handled some shady propositions in the
+past, but I did it right in the sunlight! Up to the time I went out
+for that damned slipper I could have had lunch with any detective
+from Broadway to the Strand! I didn't need any false whiskers and
+the Ritz was good enough for The Stetson Man. What now? I'm
+'wanted!' Enough said."
+
+He tossed the cigar--he had smoked scarce an inch of it--into the
+empty grate.
+
+"I'm an Aunt Sally for any man to shy at," he resumed bitterly.
+"My place henceforth is in the dark. Right! I've finished; the
+book's closed. From the time I quit England--if I can quit--I'm
+on the straight! I've promised Carneta, and I mean to keep my
+word. See here--"
+
+Dexter turned to me.
+
+"You'll want to know how I escaped from the cursed death-trap at
+Hassan's house in Kent? I'll tell you. I was never in it! I
+was hiding and waiting my chance. You know what was left to guard
+the slipper while the Sheikh--rot him--was away looking after
+arrangements for getting his mob out of the country?"
+
+I nodded.
+
+"You fell into the trap--you and Carneta. By God! I didn't know
+till it was all over! But two minutes later I was inside that
+place--and three minutes later I was away with the slipper! Oh, it
+wasn't a duplicate; it was the goods! What then? Carneta had
+had a sickening of the business and she just invited me to say Yes
+or No. I said Yes; and I'm a straight man onward."
+
+"Then what were you doing on the train with the slipper?" asked
+Hilton sharply.
+
+"I was going to Liverpool, sir!" snapped The Stetson Man, turning
+on him. "I was going to try to get aboard the Mauretania and
+then make terms for my life! What happened? I slipped out at
+Birmingham for a drink--grip in hand! I put it down beside
+me, and Mr. Cavanagh here, all in a hustle, must have rushed in
+behind me, snatched a whisky and snatched my grip and started for
+H--!"
+
+A vivid flash of lightning flickered about the room. Then came
+the deafening boom of the thunder, right over the house it seemed.
+
+"I knew from the weight of the grip it wasn't mine," said Dexter,
+"and I was the most surprised guy in Great Britain and Ireland when
+I found whose it was! I opened it, of course! And right on top was
+a waistcoat and right in the first pocket was a telegram. Here it
+is!"
+
+He passed it to me. It was that which I had received from Hilton.
+I had packed the suit which I had been wearing that morning and
+must previously have thrust the telegram into the waistcoat pocket.
+
+"Providence!" Dexter assured me. "Because I got on the station in
+time to see Hassan of Aleppo join the train for H--! I was too late,
+though. But I chartered a taxi out on Corporation Street and
+invited the man to race the local! He couldn't do it, but we got
+here in time for the fireworks! Mr. Cavanagh, there are anything
+from six to ten Hashishin watching this house!"
+
+"I know it!"
+
+"They're bareheaded; and in the dark their shaven skulls look like
+nothing human. They're armed with those damned tubes, too. I'd
+give a thousand dollars--if I had it!--to know their mechanism.
+Well, gentlemen, deeds speak. What am I here for, when I might be
+on the way to Liverpool, and safety?"
+
+"You're here to try to make up for the past a bit!" said a soft,
+musical voice. "Mr. Cavanagh's life is in danger."
+
+Carneta entered the room.
+
+The light played in that wonderful hair of hers; and pale though she
+was, I thought I had never seen a more beautiful woman.
+
+"Tell them," she said quietly, "what must be done."
+
+Soar glanced at me out of the corner of his eyes and shifted
+uneasily. Hilton stared as if fascinated.
+
+"Now," rapped Dexter, in his strident voice, "putting aside all
+questions of justice and right (we're not policemen), what do we
+want--you and I, Mr. Cavanagh?"
+
+"I can't think clearly about anything," I said dully. "Explain
+yourself."
+
+"Very well. Inspector Bristol, C.I.D., would want me and Hassan
+arrested. I don't want that! What I want is peace; I want to be
+able to sleep in comfort; I want to know I'm not likely to be
+murdered on the next corner! Same with you?"
+
+"Yes--yes."
+
+"How can we manage it? One way would be to kill Hassan of Aleppo;
+but he wants a lot of killing--I've tried! Moreover, directly
+we'd done it, another Sheikh-al-jebal would be nominated and he'd
+carry on the bloody work. We'd be worse off than ever. Right!
+we've got to connive at letting the blood-stained fanatic escape,
+and we've got to give up the slipper!"
+
+"I'll do that with all my heart!"
+
+"Sure! But you and I have both got little scores up against Hassan,
+which it's not in human nature to forget. But I've got it worked
+out that there's only one way. It may nearly choke us to have to
+do it, I'll allow. I'm working on the Moslem character. Mr. Hilton,
+make up a fire in the grate here!"
+
+Hilton stared, not comprehending.
+
+"Do as he asks," I said. "Personally, I am resigned to mutilation,
+since I have touched the bag containing the slipper, but if
+Dexter has a plan--"
+
+"Excuse me, sir," Soar interrupted. "I believe there's some coal
+in the coal-box, but I shall have to break up a packing-case for
+firewood--or go out into the yard!"
+
+"Let it be the packing-case," replied Hilton hastily.
+
+Accordingly a fire was kindled, whilst we all stood about the room
+in a sort of fearful uncertainty; and before long a big blaze was
+roaring up the chimney. Dexter turned to me.
+
+"Mr. Cavanagh," said he, "I want you to go right upstairs, open a
+first-floor window--I would suggest that of your bedroom--and
+invite Hassan of Aleppo to come and discuss terms!"
+
+Silence followed his words; we were all amazed. Then--
+
+"Why do you ask me to do this?" I inquired.
+
+"Because," replied Dexter, "I happen to know that Hassan has some
+queer kind of respect for you--I don't know why."
+
+"Which is probably the reason why he tried to kill me to-night!"
+
+"That's beside the question, Mr. Cavanagh. He will believe you--which
+is the important point."
+
+"Very well. I have no idea what you have in mind but I am prepared
+to adopt any plan since I have none of my own. What shall I say?"
+
+"Say that we are prepared to return the slipper--on conditions."
+
+"He will probably try to shoot me as I stand at the window."
+
+Dexter shrugged his shoulders.
+
+"Got to risk it," he drawled.
+
+"And what are the conditions?"
+
+"He must come right in here and discuss them! Guarantee him safe
+conduct and I don't think he'll hesitate. Anyway, if he does, just
+tell him that the slipper will be destroyed immediately!"
+
+Without a word I turned on my heel and ascended the stairs.
+
+I entered my room, crossed to the window, and threw it widely open.
+Hovering over the distant hills I could see the ominous thunder
+cloud, but the storm seemed to have passed from "Uplands," and only
+a distant muttering with the faint dripping of water from the pipes
+broke the silence of the night. A great darkness reigned, however,
+and I was entirely unable to see if any one was in the orchard.
+
+Like some mueddin of fantastic fable I stood there.
+
+"Hassan!" I cried--"Hassan of Aleppo!"
+
+The name rang out strangely upon the stillness--the name which
+for me had a dreadful significance; but the whole episode seemed
+unreal, the voice that had cried unlike my voice.
+
+Instantly as any magician summoning an efreet I was answered.
+
+Out from the trees strode a tall figure, a figure I could not
+mistake. It was that of Hassan of Aleppo!
+
+"I hear, effendim, and obey," he said. "I am ready. Open the
+door!"
+
+"We are prepared to discuss terms. You may come and go
+safely"--still my voice sounded unfamiliar in my ears.
+
+"I know, effendim; it is so written. Open the door."
+
+I closed the window and mechanically descended the stairs.
+
+"Mind it isn't a trap!" cried Hilton, who, with the others, had
+overheard every word of this strange interview. "They may try to
+rush the door directly we open it."
+
+"I'll stand the chest behind it," said Soar; "between the door and
+the wall, so that only one can enter at a time."
+
+This was done, and the door opened.
+
+Alone, majestic, entered Hassan of Aleppo.
+
+He was dressed in European clothes but wore the green turban of a
+Sherif. With his snowy beard and coal-black eyes he seemed like a
+vision of the Prophet, of the Prophet in whose name he had committed
+such ghastly atrocities.
+
+Deigning no glance to Soar nor to Hilton, he paced into the room,
+passing me and ignoring Carneta, where Earl Dexter awaited him.
+I shall never forget the scene as Hassan entered, to stand looking
+with blazing eyes at The Stetson Man, who sat beside the fire
+with the slipper of Mohammed in his hand!
+
+"Hassan," said Dexter quietly, "Mr. Cavanagh has had to promise
+you safe conduct, or as sure as God made me, I'd put a bullet
+in you!"
+
+The Sheikh of the Hashishin glared fixedly at him.
+
+"Companion of the evil one," he said, "it is not written that I
+shall die by your hand--or by the hand of any here. But it has
+been revealed to me that to-night the gates of Paradise may be
+closed in my face."
+
+"I shouldn't be at all surprised," drawled Dexter. "But it's up
+to you. You've got to swear by Mohammed--"
+
+"Salla-'llahu 'aleyhi wasellem!"
+
+"That you won't lay a hand upon any living soul, or allow any of
+your followers to do so, who has touched the slipper or had
+anything to do with it, but that you will go in peace."
+
+"You are doomed to die!"
+
+"You don't agree, then?"
+
+"Those who have offended must suffer the penalty!"
+
+"Right!" said Dexter--and prepared to toss the slipper into the
+heart of the fire!
+
+"Stop! Infidel! Stop!"
+
+There was real agony in Hassan's voice. To my inexpressible
+surprise he dropped upon his knee, extending his lean brown hands
+toward the slipper.
+
+Dexter hesitated. "You agree, then?"
+
+Hassan raised his eyes to the ceiling.
+
+"I agree," he said. "Dark are the ways. It is the will of
+God..."
+
+Dimly the booming of the thunder came echoing back to us from the
+hills. Above its roll sounded a barbaric chanting to which the
+drums of angry heaven formed a fitting accompaniment.
+
+I heard Soar shooting the bolts again upon the going of our
+strange visitor.
+
+Faint and more faint grew the chanting, until it merged into the
+remote muttering of the storm--and was lost. The quest of the
+sacred slipper was ended.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's The Quest of the Sacred Slipper, by Sax Rohmer
+
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+The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Quest of the Sacred Slipper, by Sax Rohmer
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
+most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
+whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
+of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
+www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
+will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
+using this eBook.
+
+Title: The Quest of the Sacred Slipper
+
+Author: Sax Rohmer
+
+Release Date: March, 2000 [eBook #2126]
+[Most recently updated: October 5, 2022]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE QUEST OF THE SACRED SLIPPER ***
+
+
+
+
+The Quest of the Sacred Slipper
+
+by Sax Rohmer
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+ CHAPTER I. THE PHANTOM SCIMITAR.
+ CHAPTER II. THE GIRL WITH THE VIOLET EYES
+ CHAPTER III. "HASSAN OF ALEPPO"
+ CHAPTER IV. THE OBLONG BOX
+ CHAPTER V. THE OCCUPANT OF THE BOX
+ CHAPTER VI. THE RING OF THE PROPHET
+ CHAPTER VII. FIRST ATTEMPT ON THE SAFE
+ CHAPTER VIII. THE VIOLET EYES AGAIN
+ CHAPTER IX. SECOND ATTEMPT ON THE SAFE
+ CHAPTER X. AT THE BRITISH ANTIQUARIAN MUSEUM
+ CHAPTER XI. THE HOLE IN THE BLIND
+ CHAPTER XII. THE HASHISHIN WATCH
+ CHAPTER XIII. THE WHITE BEAM
+ CHAPTER XIV. A SCREAM IN THE NIGHT
+ CHAPTER XV. A SHRIVELLED HAND
+ CHAPTER XVI. THE DWARF
+ CHAPTER XVII. THE WOMAN WITH THE BASKET
+ CHAPTER XVIII. WHAT CAME THROUGH THE WINDOW
+ CHAPTER XIX. A RAPPING AT MIDNIGHT
+ CHAPTER XX. THE GOLDEN PAVILION
+ CHAPTER XXI. THE BLACK TUBE
+ CHAPTER XXII. THE LIGHT OF EL-MEDINEH
+ CHAPTER XXIII. THE THREE MESSAGES
+ CHAPTER XXIV. I KEEP THE APPOINTMENT
+ CHAPTER XXV. THE WATCHER IN BANK CHAMBERS
+ CHAPTER XXVI. THE STRONG-ROOM
+ CHAPTER XXVII. THE SLIPPER
+ CHAPTER XXVIII. CARNETA
+ CHAPTER XXIX. WE MEET MR. ISAACS
+ CHAPTER XXX. AT THE GATE HOUSE
+ CHAPTER XXXI. THE POOL OF DEATH
+ CHAPTER XXXII. SIX PATCHES
+ CHAPTER XXXIII. HOW WE WERE REENFORCED
+ CHAPTER XXXIV. MY LAST MEETING WITH HASSAN OF ALEPPO
+
+
+
+
+THE QUEST OF THE SACRED SLIPPER
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+THE PHANTOM SCIMITAR
+
+
+I was not the only passenger aboard the S.S. Mandalay who perceived the
+disturbance and wondered what it might portend and from whence proceed.
+A goodly number of passengers were joining the ship at Port Said. I was
+lounging against the rail, pipe in mouth, lazily wondering, with a
+large vagueness.
+
+What a heterogeneous rabble it was!—a brightly coloured rabble, but the
+colours all were dirty, like the town and the canal. Only the sky was
+clean; the sky and the hard, merciless sunlight which spared nothing of
+the uncleanness, and defied one even to think of the term dear to
+tourists, “picturesque.” I was in that kind of mood. All the natives
+appeared to be pockmarked; all the Europeans greasy with perspiration.
+
+But what was the stir about?
+
+I turned to the dark, bespectacled young man who leaned upon the rail
+beside me. From the first I had taken to Mr. Ahmad Ahmadeen.
+
+“There is some kind of undercurrent of excitement among the natives,” I
+said, “a sort of subdued Greek chorus is audible. What’s it all about?”
+
+Mr. Ahmadeen smiled. After a gaunt fashion, he was a handsome man and
+had a pleasant smile.
+
+“Probably,” he replied, “some local celebrity is joining the ship.”
+
+I stared at him curiously.
+
+“Any idea who he is?” (The soul of the copyhunter is a restless soul.)
+
+A group of men dressed in semi-European fashion—that is, in European
+fashion save for their turbans, which were green—passed close to us
+along the deck.
+
+Ahmadeen appeared not to have heard the question.
+
+The disturbance, which could only be defined as a subdued uproar, but
+could be traced to no particular individual or group, grew momentarily
+louder—and died away. It was only when it had completely ceased that
+one realized how pronounced it had been—how altogether peculiar,
+secret; like that incomprehensible murmuring in a bazaar when, unknown
+to the insular visitor, a reputed saint is present.
+
+Then it happened; the inexplicable incident which, though I knew it
+not, heralded the coming of strange things, and the dawn of a new
+power; which should set up its secret standards in England, which
+should flood Europe and the civilized world with wonder.
+
+A shrill scream marked the overture—a scream of fear and of pain, which
+dropped to a groan, and moaned out into the silence of which it was the
+cause.
+
+“My God! what’s that?”
+
+I started forward. There was a general crowding rush, and a darkly
+tanned and bearded man came on board, carrying a brown leather case.
+Behind him surged those who bore the victim.
+
+“It’s one of the lascars!”
+
+“No—an Egyptian!”
+
+“It was a porter—?”
+
+“What is it—?”
+
+“Someone been stabbed!”
+
+“Where’s the doctor?”
+
+“Stand away there, if you please!”
+
+That was a ship’s officer; and the voice of authority served to quell
+the disturbance. Through a lane walled with craning heads they bore the
+insensible man. Ahmadeen was at my elbow.
+
+“A Copt,” he said softly. “Poor devil!” I turned to him. There was a
+queer expression on his lean, clean-shaven, bronze face.
+
+“Good God!” I said. “His hand has been cut off!”
+
+That was the fact of the matter. And no one knew who was responsible
+for the atrocity. And no one knew what had become of the severed hand!
+I wasted not a moment in linking up the story. The pressman within me
+acted automatically.
+
+“The gentleman just come aboard, sir,” said a steward, “is Professor
+Deeping. The poor beggar who was assaulted was carrying some of the
+Professor’s baggage.” The whole incident struck me as most odd. There
+was an idea lurking in my mind that something else—something more—lay
+behind all this. With impatience I awaited the time when the injured
+man, having received medical attention, was conveyed ashore, and
+Professor Deeping reappeared. To the celebrated traveller and Oriental
+scholar I introduced myself.
+
+He was singularly reticent.
+
+“I was unable to see what took place, Mr. Cavanagh,” he said. “The poor
+fellow was behind me, for I had stepped from the boat ahead of him. I
+had just taken a bag from his hand, but he was carrying another,
+heavier one. It is a clean cut, like that of a scimitar. I have seen
+very similar wounds in the cases of men who have suffered the old
+Moslem penalty for theft.”
+
+Nothing further had come to light when the Mandalay left, but I found
+new matter for curiosity in the behaviour of the Moslem party who had
+come on board at Port Said.
+
+In conversation with Mr. Bell, the chief officer, I learned that the
+supposed leader of the party was one, Mr. Azraeel. “Obviously,” said
+Bell, “not his real name or not all it. I don’t suppose they’ll show
+themselves on deck; they’ve got their own servants with them, and seem
+to be people of consequence.”
+
+This conversation was interrupted, but I found my unseen fellow
+voyagers peculiarly interesting and pursued inquiries in other
+directions. I saw members of the distinguished travellers’ retinue
+going about their duties, but never obtained a glimpse of Mr. Azraeel
+nor of any of his green-turbaned companions.
+
+“Who is Mr. Azraeel?” I asked Ahmadeen.
+
+“I cannot say,” replied the Egyptian, and abruptly changed the subject.
+
+Some curious aroma of mystery floated about the ship. Ahmadeen conveyed
+to me the idea that he was concealing something. Then, one night, Mr.
+Bell invited me to step forward with him.
+
+“Listen,” he said.
+
+From somewhere in the fo’c’sle proceeded low chanting.
+
+“Hear it?”
+
+“Yes. What the devil is it?”
+
+“It’s the lascars,” said Bell. “They have been behaving in a most
+unusual manner ever since the mysterious Mr. Azraeel joined us. I may
+be wrong in associating the two things, but I shan’t be sorry to see
+the last of our mysterious passengers.”
+
+The next happening on board the Mandalay which I have to record was the
+attempt to break open the door of Professor Deeping’s stateroom. Except
+when he was actually within, the Professor left his room door
+religiously locked.
+
+He made light of the affair, but later took me aside and told me a
+curious story of an apparition which had appeared to him.
+
+“It was a crescent of light,” he said, “and it glittered through the
+darkness there to the left as I lay in my berth.”
+
+“A reflection from something on the deck?”
+
+Deeping smiled, uneasily.
+
+“Possibly,” he replied; “but it was very sharply defined. Like the
+blade of a scimitar,” he added.
+
+I stared at him, my curiosity keenly aroused. “Does any explanation
+suggest itself to you?” I said.
+
+“Well,” he confessed, “I have a theory, I will admit; but it is rather
+going back to the Middle Ages. You see, I have lived in the East a lot;
+perhaps I have assimilated some of their superstitions.”
+
+He was oddly reticent, as ever. I felt convinced that he was keeping
+something back. I could not stifle the impression that the clue to
+these mysteries lay somewhere around the invisible Mohammedan party.
+
+“Do you know,” said Bell to me, one morning, “this trip’s giving me the
+creeps. I believe the damned ship’s haunted! Three bells in the middle
+watch last night, I’ll swear I saw some black animal crawling along the
+deck, in the direction of the forward companion-way.”
+
+“Cat?” I suggested.
+
+“Nothing like it,” said Mr. Bell. “Mr. Cavanagh, it was some uncanny
+thing! I’m afraid I can’t explain quite what I mean, but it was
+something I wanted to shoot!”
+
+“Where did it go?”
+
+The chief officer shrugged his shoulders. “Just vanished,” he said. “I
+hope I don’t see it again.”
+
+At Tilbury the Mohammedan party went ashore in a body. Among them were
+veiled women. They contrived so to surround a central figure that I
+entirely failed to get a glimpse of the mysterious Mr. Azraeel.
+Ahmadeen was standing close by the companion-way, and I had a momentary
+impression that one of the women slipped something into his hand.
+Certainly, he started; and his dusky face seemed to pale.
+
+Then a deck steward came out of Deeping’s stateroom, carrying the brown
+bag which the Professor had brought aboard at Port Said. Deeping’s
+voice came:
+
+“Hi, my man! Let me take that bag!”
+
+The bag changed hands. Five minutes later, as I was preparing to go
+ashore, arose a horrid scream above the berthing clamour. Those
+passengers yet aboard made in the direction from which the scream had
+proceeded.
+
+A steward—the one to whom Professor Deeping had spoken—lay writhing at
+the foot of the stairs leading to the saloon-deck. His right hand had
+been severed above the wrist!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+THE GIRL WITH THE VIOLET EYES
+
+
+During the next day or two my mind constantly reverted to the incidents
+of the voyage home. I was perfectly convinced that the curtain had been
+partially raised upon some fantasy in which Professor Deeping figured.
+
+But I had seen no more of Deeping nor had I heard from him, when
+abruptly I found myself plunged again into the very vortex of his
+troubled affairs. I was half way through a long article, I remember,
+upon the mystery of the outrage at the docks. The poor steward whose
+hand had been severed lay in a precarious condition, but the police had
+utterly failed to trace the culprit.
+
+I had laid down my pen to relight my pipe (the hour was about ten at
+night) when a faint sound from the direction of the outside door
+attracted my attention. Something had been thrust through the
+letter-box.
+
+“A circular,” I thought, when the bell rang loudly, imperatively.
+
+I went to the door. A square envelope lay upon the mat—a curious
+envelope, pale amethyst in colour. Picking it up, I found it to bear my
+name—written simply—
+
+“Mr. Cavanagh.”
+
+Tearing it open I glanced at the contents. I threw open the door. No
+one was visible upon the landing, but when I leaned over the banister a
+white-clad figure was crossing the hall, below.
+
+Without hesitation, hatless, I raced down the stairs. As I crossed the
+dimly lighted hall and came out into the peaceful twilight of the
+court, my elusive visitor glided under the archway opposite.
+
+Just where the dark and narrow passage opened on to Fleet Street I
+overtook her—a girl closely veiled and wrapped in a long coat of white
+ermine.
+
+“Madam,” I said.
+
+She turned affrightedly.
+
+“Please do not detain me!” Her accent was puzzling, but pleasing. She
+glanced apprehensively about her.
+
+You have seen the moon through a mist?—and known it for what it was in
+spite of its veiling? So, now, through the cloudy folds of the veil, I
+saw the stranger’s eyes, and knew them for the most beautiful eyes I
+had ever seen, had ever dreamt of.
+
+“But you must explain the meaning of your note!”
+
+“I cannot! I cannot! Please do not ask me!”
+
+She was breathless from her flight and seemed to be trembling. From
+behind the cloud her eyes shone brilliantly, mysteriously.
+
+I was sorely puzzled. The whole incident was bizarre—indeed, it had in
+it something of the uncanny. Yet I could not detain the girl against
+her will. That she went in apprehension of something, of someone, was
+evident.
+
+Past the head of the passage surged the noisy realities of Fleet
+Street. There were men there in quest of news; men who would have given
+much for such a story as this in which I was becoming entangled. Yet a
+story more tantalizingly incomplete could not well be imagined.
+
+I knew that I stood upon the margin of an arena wherein strange
+adversaries warred to a strange end. But a mist was over all. Here,
+beside me, was one who could disperse the mist—and would not. Her one
+anxiety seemed to be to escape.
+
+Suddenly she raised her veil; and I looked fully into the only really
+violet eyes I had ever beheld. Mentally, I started. For the face framed
+in the snowy fur was the most bewitchingly lovely imaginable. One
+rebellious lock of wonderful hair swept across the white brow. It was
+brown hair, with an incomprehensible sheen in the high lights that
+suggested the heart of a blood-red rose.
+
+“Oh,” she cried, “promise me that you will never breathe a word to any
+one about my visit!”
+
+“I promise willingly,” I said; “but can you give me no hint?”
+
+“Honestly, truly, I cannot, dare not, say more! Only promise that you
+will do as I ask!”
+
+Since I could perceive no alternative—
+
+“I will do so,” I replied.
+
+“Thank you—oh, thank you!” she said; and dropping her veil again she
+walked rapidly away from me, whispering, “I rely upon you. Do not fail
+me. Good-bye!”
+
+Her conspicuous white figure joined the hurrying throngs upon the
+pavement beyond. My curiosity brooked no restraint. I hurried to the
+end of the courtway. She was crossing the road. From the shadows where
+he had lurked, a man came forward to meet her. A vehicle obstructed the
+view ere I could confirm my impression; and when it had passed, neither
+my lovely visitor nor her companion were anywhere in sight.
+
+But, unless some accident of light and shade had deceived me, the man
+who had waited was Ahmad Ahmadeen!
+
+It seemed that some astral sluice-gate was raised; a dreadful sense of
+foreboding for the first time flooded my mind. Whilst the girl had
+stood before me it had been different—the mysterious charm of her
+personality had swamped all else. But now, the messenger gone, it was
+the purport of her message which assumed supreme significance.
+
+Written in odd, square handwriting upon the pale amethyst paper, this
+was the message—
+
+Prevail upon Professor Deeping to place what he has in the brown case
+in the porch of his house to-night. If he fails to do so, no power on
+earth can save him from the Scimitar of Hassan.
+
+A FRIEND.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+“HASSAN OF ALEPPO”
+
+
+Professor Deeping’s number was in the telephone directory, therefore,
+on returning to my room, where there still lingered the faint perfume
+of my late visitor’s presence, I asked for his number. He proved to be
+at home.
+
+“Strange you should ring me up, Cavanagh,” he said; “for I was about to
+ring you up.”
+
+“First,” I replied, “listen to the contents of an anonymous letter
+which I have received.”
+
+(I remembered, and only just in time, my promise to the veiled
+messenger.)
+
+“To me,” I added, having read him the note, “it seems to mean nothing.
+I take it that you understand better than I do.”
+
+“I understand very well, Cavanagh!” he replied. “You will recall my
+story of the scimitar which flashed before me in the darkness of my
+stateroom on the Mandalay? Well, I have seen it again! I am not an
+imaginative man: I had always believed myself to possess the scientific
+mind; but I can no longer doubt that I am the object of a pursuit which
+commenced in Mecca! The happenings on the steamer prepared me for this,
+in a degree. When the man lost his hand at Port Said I doubted. I had
+supposed the days of such things past. The attempt to break into my
+stateroom even left me still uncertain. But the outrage upon the
+steward at the docks removed all further doubt. I perceived that the
+contents of a certain brown leather case were the objective of the
+crimes.”
+
+I listened in growing wonder.
+
+“It was not necessary in order to further the plan of stealing the bag
+that the hands were severed,” resumed the Professor. “In fact, as was
+rendered evident by the case of the steward, this was a penalty visited
+upon any one who touched it! You are thinking of my own immunity?”
+
+“I am!”
+
+“This is attributable to two things. Those who sought to recover what I
+had in the case feared that my death en route might result in its being
+lost to them for ever. They awaited a suitable opportunity. They had
+designed to take it at Port Said certainly, I think; but the bag was
+too large to be readily concealed, and, after the outrage, might have
+led to the discovery of the culprit. In the second place, they are
+uncertain of my faith. I have long passed for a true Believer in the
+East! As a Moslem I visited Mecca—”
+
+“You visited Mecca!”
+
+“I had just returned from the hadj when I joined the Mandalay at Port
+Said! My death, however, has been determined upon, whether I be Moslem
+or Christian!”
+
+“Why?”
+
+“Because,” came the Professor’s harsh voice over the telephone, “of the
+contents of the brown leather case! I will not divulge to you now the
+nature of these contents; to know might endanger you. But the case is
+locked in my safe here, and the key, together with a full statement of
+the true facts of the matter, is hidden behind the first edition copy
+of my book ‘Assyrian Mythology,’ in the smaller bookcase—”
+
+“Why do you tell me all this?” I interrupted.
+
+He laughed harshly.
+
+“The identity of my pursuer has just dawned upon me,” he said. “I know
+that my life is in real danger. I would give up what is demanded of me,
+but I believe its possession to be my strongest safeguard.”
+
+Mystery upon mystery! I seemed to be getting no nearer to the heart of
+this maze. What in heaven’s name did it all mean? Suddenly an idea
+struck me.
+
+“Is our late fellow passenger, Mr. Ahmadeen, connected with the
+matter?” I asked.
+
+“In no way,” replied Deeping earnestly. “Mr. Ahmadeen is, I believe, a
+person of some consequence in the Moslem world; but I have nothing to
+fear from him.”
+
+“What steps have you taken to protect yourself?”
+
+Again the short laugh reached my ears.
+
+“I’m afraid long residence in the East has rendered me something of a
+fatalist, Cavanagh! Beyond keeping my door locked, I have taken no
+steps whatever. I fear I am quite accessible!”
+
+A while longer we talked; and with every word the conviction was more
+strongly borne in upon me that some uncanny menace threatened the
+peace, perhaps the life, of Professor Deeping.
+
+I had hung up the receiver scarce a moment when, acting upon a sudden
+determination, I called up New Scotland Yard, and asked for
+Detective-Inspector Bristol, whom I knew well. A few words were
+sufficient keenly to arouse his curiosity, and he announced his
+intention of calling upon me immediately. He was in charge of the case
+of the severed hand.
+
+I made no attempt to resume work in the interval preceding his arrival.
+I had not long to wait, however, ere Bristol was ringing my bell; and I
+hurried to the door, only too glad to confide in one so well equipped
+to analyze my doubts and fears. For Bristol is no ordinary policeman,
+but a trained observer, who, when I first made his acquaintance,
+completely upset my ideas upon the mental limitations of the official
+detective force.
+
+In appearance Bristol suggests an Anglo-Indian officer, and at the time
+of which I write he had recently returned from Jamaica and his face was
+as bronzed as a sailor’s. One would never take Bristol for a detective.
+As he seated himself in the armchair, without preamble I plunged into
+my story. He listened gravely.
+
+“What sort of house is Professor Deeping’s?” he asked suddenly.
+
+“I have no idea,” I replied, “beyond the fact that it is somewhere in
+Dulwich.”
+
+“May I use your telephone?”
+
+“Certainly.”
+
+Very quickly Bristol got into communication with the superintendent of
+P Division. A brief delay, and the man came to the telephone whose beat
+included the road wherein Professor Deeping’s house was situated.
+
+“Why!” said Bristol, hanging up the receiver after making a number of
+inquiries, “it’s a sort of rambling cottage in extensive grounds.
+There’s only one servant, a manservant, and he sleeps in a detached
+lodge. If the Professor is really in danger of attack he could not well
+have chosen a more likely residence for the purpose!”
+
+“What shall you do? What do you make of it all?”
+
+“As I see the case,” he said slowly, “it stands something like this:
+Professor Deeping has...”
+
+The telephone bell began to ring.
+
+I took up the receiver.
+
+“Hullo! Hullo.”
+
+“Cavanagh!—is that Cavanagh?”
+
+“Yes! yes! who is that?”
+
+“Deeping! I have rung up the police, and they are sending some one. But
+I wish...”
+
+His voice trailed off. The sound of a confused and singular uproar came
+to me.
+
+“Hullo!” I cried. “Hullo!”
+
+A shriek—a deathful, horrifying cry—and a distant babbling alone
+answered me. There was a crash. Clearly, Deeping had dropped the
+receiver. I suppose my face blanched.
+
+“What is it?” asked Bristol anxiously.
+
+“God knows what it is!” I said. “Deeping has met with some mishap—”
+
+When, over the wires—
+
+“Hassan of Aleppo!” came a dying whisper. “Hassan ... of Aleppo...”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+THE OBLONG BOX
+
+
+“You had better wait for us,” said Bristol to the taxi-man.
+
+“Very good, sir. But I shan’t be able to take you further back than the
+Brixton Garage. You can get another cab there, though.”
+
+A clock chimed out—an old-world chime in keeping with the loneliness,
+the curiously remote loneliness, of the locality. Less than five miles
+from St. Paul’s are spots whereto, with the persistence of Damascus
+attar, clings the aroma of former days. This iron gateway fronting the
+old chapel was such a spot.
+
+Just within stood a plain-clothes man, who saluted my companion
+respectfully.
+
+“Professor Deeping,” I began.
+
+The man, with a simple gesture, conveyed the dreadful news.
+
+“Dead! dead!” I cried incredulously.
+
+He glanced at Bristol.
+
+“The most mysterious case I have ever had anything to do with, sir,” he
+said.
+
+The power of speech seemed to desert me. It was unthinkable that
+Deeping, with whom I had been speaking less than an hour ago, should
+now be no more; that some malign agency should thus murderously have
+thrust him into the great borderland.
+
+In that kind of silence which seems to be peopled with whispering
+spirits we strode forward along the elm avenue. It was very dark where
+the moon failed to penetrate. The house, low and rambling, came into
+view, its facade bathed in silver light. Two of the visible windows
+were illuminated. A sort of loggia ran along one side.
+
+On our left, as we made for this, lay a black ocean of shrubbery. It
+intruded, raggedly, upon the weed-grown path, for neglect was the
+keynote of the place.
+
+We entered the cottage, crossed the tiny lobby, and came to the study.
+A man, evidently Deeping’s servant, was sitting in a chair by the door,
+his head sunken in his hands. He looked up, haggard-faced.
+
+“My God! my God!” he groaned. “He was locked in, gentlemen! He was
+locked in; and yet something murdered him!”
+
+“What do you mean?” said Bristol. “Where were you?”
+
+“I was away on an errand, sir. When I returned, the police were
+knocking the door down. He was locked in!”
+
+We passed him, entering the study.
+
+It was a museum-like room, lighted by a lamp on the littered table. At
+first glance it looked as though some wild thing had run amok there.
+The disorder was indescribable.
+
+“Touched nothing, of course?” asked Bristol sharply of the officer on
+duty.
+
+“Nothing, sir. It’s just as we found it when we forced the door.”
+
+“Why did you force the door?”
+
+“He rung us up at the station and said that something or somebody had
+got into the house. It was evident the poor gentleman’s nerve had
+broken down, sir. He said he was locked in his study. When we arrived
+it was all in darkness—but we thought we heard sounds in here.”
+
+“What sort of sounds?”
+
+“Something crawling about!”
+
+Bristol turned.
+
+“Key is in the lock on the inside of the door,” he said. “Is that where
+you found it?”
+
+“Yes, sir!”
+
+He looked across to where the brass knob of a safe gleamed dully.
+
+“Safe locked?”
+
+“Yes, sir.”
+
+Professor Deeping lay half under the table, a spectacle so ghastly that
+I shall not attempt to describe it.
+
+“Merciful heavens!” whispered Bristol. “He’s nearly decapitated!”
+
+I clutched dizzily at the mantelpiece. It was all so utterly,
+incredibly horrible. How had Deeping met his death? The windows both
+were latched and the door had been locked from within!
+
+“You searched for the murderer, of course?” asked Bristol.
+
+“You can see, sir,” replied the officer, “that there isn’t a spot in
+the room where a man could hide! And there was nobody in here when we
+forced the door!”
+
+“Why!” cried my companion suddenly. “The Professor has a chisel in his
+hand!”
+
+“Yes. I think he must have been trying to prise open that box yonder
+when he was attacked.”
+
+Bristol and I looked, together, at an oblong box which lay upon the
+floor near the murdered man. It was a kind of small packing case,
+addressed to Professor Deeping, and evidently had not been opened.
+
+“When did this arrive?” asked Bristol. Lester, the Professor’s man, who
+had entered the room, replied shakily—
+
+“It came by carrier, sir, just before I went out.”
+
+“Was he expecting it?”
+
+“I don’t think so.”
+
+Inspector Bristol and the officer dragged the box fully into the light.
+It was some three feet long by one foot square, and solidly
+constructed.
+
+“It is perfectly evident,” remarked Bristol, “that the murderer stayed
+to search for—”
+
+“The key of the safe!”
+
+“Exactly. If the men really heard sounds here, it would appear that the
+assassin was still searching at that time.”
+
+“I assure you,” the officer interrupted, “that there was no living
+thing in the room when we entered.”
+
+Bristol and I looked at one another in horrified wonder.
+
+“It’s incomprehensible!” he said.
+
+“See if the key is in the place mentioned by the Professor, Mr.
+Cavanagh, whilst I break the box.”
+
+I went to a great, open bookcase, which the frantic searcher seemed to
+have overlooked. Removing the bulky “Assyrian Mythology,” there, behind
+the volume, lay an envelope, containing a key, and a short letter. Not
+caring to approach more closely to the table and to that which lay
+beneath it, I was peering at the small writing, in the semi-gloom by
+the bookcase, when Bristol cried—
+
+“This box is unopenable by ordinary means! I shall have to smash it!”
+
+At his words, I joined him where he knelt on the floor. Mysteriously,
+the chest had defied all his efforts.
+
+“There’s a pick-axe in the garden,” volunteered Lester. “Shall I bring
+it?”
+
+“Yes.”
+
+The man ran off.
+
+“I see the key is safe,” said Bristol. “Possibly the letter may throw
+some light upon all this.”
+
+“Let us hope so,” I replied. “You might read it.”
+
+He took the letter from my hand, stepped up to the table, and by the
+light of the lamp read as follows—
+
+
+My Dear Cavanagh,—
+
+It has now become apparent to me that my life is in imminent danger.
+You know of the inexplicable outrages which marked my homeward journey,
+and if this letter come to your hand it will be because these have
+culminated in my death.
+
+The idea of a pursuing scimitar is not new to me. This phenomenon,
+which I have now witnessed three times, is fairly easy of explanation,
+but its significance is singular. It is said to be one of the devices
+whereby the Hashishin warn those whom they have marked down for
+destruction, and is called, in the East, “The Scimitar of Hassan.”
+
+The Hashishin were the members of a Moslem secret society, founded in
+1090 by one Hassan of Khorassan. There is a persistent tradition in
+parts of the Orient that this sect still flourishes in Assyria, under
+the rule of a certain Hassan of Aleppo, the Sheikh-al-jebal, or supreme
+lord of the Hashishin. My careful inquiries, however, at the time that
+I was preparing matter for my “Assyrian Mythology,” failed to discover
+any trace of such a person or such a group.
+
+I accordingly assumed Hassan to be a myth—a first cousin to the ginn. I
+was wrong. He exists. And by my supremely rash act I have incurred his
+vengeance, for Hassan of Aleppo is the self-appointed guardian of the
+traditions and relics of Mohammed. And I have Stolen one of the holy
+slippers of the Prophet!
+
+He, with some of his servants, has followed me from Mecca to England.
+My precautions have enabled me to retain the relic, but you have seen
+what fate befell all those others who even touched the receptacle
+containing it.
+
+If I fall a victim to the Hashishin, I am uncertain how you, as my
+confidant, will fare. Therefore I have locked the slipper in my safe
+and to you entrust the key. I append particulars of the lock
+combination; but I warn you—do not open the safe. If their wrath be
+visited upon you, your possession of the key may prove a safeguard.
+
+Take the copy of “Assyrian Mythology.” You will find in it all that I
+learned respecting the Hashishin. If I am doomed to be assassinated, it
+may aid you; if not in avenging me, in saving others from my fate. I
+fear I shall never see you again. A cloud of horror settles upon me
+like a pall. Do not touch the slipper, nor the case containing it.
+
+
+EDWARD DEEPING.
+
+
+“It is almost incredible!” I said hoarsely.
+
+Bristol returned the letter to me without a word, and turning to
+Lester, who had reentered carrying a heavy pick-axe, he attacked the
+oblong box with savage energy.
+
+Through the house of death the sound of the blows echoed and rang with
+a sort of sacrilegious mockery. The box fell to pieces.
+
+“My God! look, sir!”
+
+Lester was the trembling speaker.
+
+The box, I have said, was but three feet long by one foot square, and
+had clearly defied poor Deeping’s efforts to open it. But a
+crescent-shaped knife, wet with blood, lay within!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+THE OCCUPANT OF THE BOX
+
+
+Dimly to my ears came the ceaseless murmur of London. The night now was
+far advanced, and not a sound disturbed the silence of the court below
+my windows.
+
+Professor Deeping’s “Assyrian Mythology” lay open before me, beside it
+my notebook. A coal dropped from the fire, and I half started up out of
+my chair. My nerves were all awry, and I had more than my horrible
+memories of the murdered man to thank for it. Let me explain what I
+mean.
+
+When, after assisting, or endeavouring to assist, Bristol at his
+elaborate inquiries, I had at last returned to my chambers, I had
+become the victim of a singular delusion—though one common enough in
+the case of persons whose nerves are overwrought. I had thought myself
+followed.
+
+During the latter part of my journey I found myself constantly looking
+from the little window at the rear of the cab. I had an impression that
+some vehicle was tracking us. Then, when I discharged the man and
+walked up the narrow passage to the court, it was fear of a skulking
+form that dodged from shadow to shadow which obsessed me.
+
+Finally, as I entered the hall and mounted the darkened stair, from the
+first landing I glanced down into the black well beneath. Blazing
+yellow eyes, I thought, looked up at me!
+
+I will confess that I leapt up the remaining flight of stairs to my
+door, and, safely within, found myself trembling as if with a palsy.
+
+When I sat down to write (for sleep was an impossible proposition) I
+placed my revolver upon the table beside me. I cannot say why. It
+afforded me some sense of protection, I suppose. My conclusions, thus
+far, amounted to the following—
+
+The apparition of the phantom scimitar was due to the presence of
+someone who, by means of the moonlight, or of artificial light, cast a
+reflection of such a weapon as that found in the oblong chest upon the
+wall of a darkened apartment—as, Deeping’s stateroom on the Mandalay,
+his study, etc.
+
+A group of highly efficient assassins, evidently Moslem fanatics, who
+might or might not be of the ancient order of the Hashishin, had
+pursued the stolen slipper to England. They had severed any hand, other
+than that of a Believer, which had touched the case containing it. (The
+Coptic porter was a Christian.)
+
+Uncertain, possibly, of Deeping’s faith, or fearful of endangering the
+success of their efforts by an outrage upon him en route, they had
+refrained from this until his arrival at his house. He had been warned
+of his impending end by Ahmad Ahmadeen.
+
+Who was Ahmadeen? And who was his beautiful associate? I found myself
+unable, at present, to answer either of those questions. In order to
+gain access to Professor Deeping, who so carefully secluded himself, a
+box had been sent to him by ordinary carrier. (As I sat at my table,
+Scotland Yard was busy endeavouring to trace the sender.) Respecting
+this box we had made an extraordinary discovery.
+
+It was of the kind used by Eastern conjurors for what is generally
+known as “the Box Trick.” That is to say, it could only be opened
+(short of smashing it) from the inside! You will remember what we found
+within it? Consider this with the new fact, above, and to what
+conclusion do you come?
+
+Something (it is not possible to speak of someone in connection with so
+small a box) had been concealed inside, and had killed Professor
+Deeping whilst he was actually engaged in endeavouring to force it
+open. This inconceivable creature had then searched the study for the
+slipper—or for the key of the safe. Interrupted and trapped by the
+arrival of the police, the creature had returned to the box, re-closed
+it, and had actually been there when the study was searched!
+
+For a creature so small as the murderous thing in the box to slip out
+during the confusion, and at some time prior to Bristol’s arrival, was
+no difficult matter. The inspector and I were certain that these were
+the facts.
+
+But what was this creature?
+
+I turned to the chapter in “Assyrian Mythology”—“The Tradition of the
+Hashishin.”
+
+The legends which the late Professor Deeping had collected relative to
+this sect of religious murderers were truly extraordinary. Of the
+cult’s extinction at the time of writing he was clearly certain, but he
+referred to the popular belief, or Moslem legend, that, since Hassan of
+Khorassan, there had always been a Sheikh-al-jebal, and that a dreadful
+being known as Hassan of Aleppo was the present holder of the title.
+
+He referred to the fact that De Sacy has shown the word Assassin to be
+derived from Hashishin, and quoted El-Idrisi to the same end. The
+Hashishin performed their murderous feats under the influence of
+hashish, or Indian hemp; and during the state of ecstasy so induced,
+according to Deeping, they acquired powers almost superhuman. I read
+how they could scale sheer precipices, pass fearlessly along narrow
+ledges which would scarce afford foothold for a rat, cast themselves
+from great heights unscathed, and track one marked for death in such a
+manner as to remain unseen not only by the victim but by others about
+him. At this point of my studies I started, in a sudden nervous panic,
+and laid my hand upon my revolver.
+
+I thought of the eyes which had seemed to look up from the black well
+of the staircase—I thought of the horrible end of this man whose book
+lay upon the table ... and I thought I heard a faint sound outside my
+study door!
+
+The key of Deeping’s safe, and his letter to me, lay close by my hand.
+I slipped them into a drawer and locked it. With every nerve, it
+seemed, strung up almost to snapping point, I mechanically pursued my
+reading.
+
+“At the time of the Crusades,” wrote Deeping, “there was a story
+current of this awful Order which I propose to recount. It is one of
+the most persistent dealing with the Hashishin, and is related to-day
+of the apparently mythical Hassan of Aleppo. I am disposed to believe
+that at one time it had a solid foundation, for a similar practice was
+common in Ancient Egypt and is mentioned by Georg Ebers.”
+
+My door began very slowly to open!
+
+Merciful God! What was coming into the room!
+
+So very slowly, so gently, nay, all but imperceptibly, did it move,
+that had my nerves been less keenly attuned I doubt not I should have
+remained unaware of the happening. Frozen with horror, I sat and
+watched. Yet my mental condition was a singular one.
+
+My direct gaze never quitted the door, but in some strange fashion I
+saw the words of the next paragraph upon the page before me!
+
+“As making peculiarly efficient assassins, when under the influence of
+the drug, and as being capable of concealing themselves where a normal
+man could not fail to be detected—”
+
+(At this moment I remembered that my bathroom window was open, and that
+the waste-pipe passed down the exterior wall.)
+
+“—the Sheikh-al-jebal took young boys of a certain desert tribe, and
+for eight hours of every day, until their puberty, confined them in a
+wooden frame—”
+
+What looked like a reed was slowly inserted through the opening between
+door and doorpost! It was brought gradually around ... until it pointed
+directly toward me!
+
+I seemed to put forth a mighty mental effort, shaking off the icy hand
+of fear which held me inactive in my chair. A saving instinct warned
+me—and I ducked my head.
+
+Something whirred past me and struck the wall behind.
+
+Revolver in hand, I leapt across the room, dashed the door open, and
+fired blindly—again—and again—and again—down the passage.
+
+And in the brief gleams I saw it!
+
+I cannot call it man, but I saw the thing which, I doubt not, had
+killed poor Deeping with the crescent-knife and had propelled a
+poison-dart at me.
+
+It was a tiny dwarf! Neither within nor without a freak exhibition had
+I seen so small a human being! A kind of supernatural dread gripped me
+by the throat at sight of it. As it turned with animal activity and
+bounded into my bathroom, I caught a three-quarter view of the
+creature’s swollen, incredible head—which was nearly as large as that
+of a normal man!
+
+Never while my mind serves me can I forget that yellow, grinning face
+and those canine fangs—the tigerish, blazing eyes—set in the great,
+misshapen head upon the tiny, agile body.
+
+Wildly, I fired again. I hurled myself forward and dashed into the
+room.
+
+Like nothing so much as a cat, the gleaming body (the dwarf was but
+scantily clothed) streaked through the open window!
+
+Certain death, I thought, must be his lot upon the stones of the court
+far below. I ran and looked down, shaking in every limb, my mind filled
+with a loathing terror unlike anything I had ever known.
+
+Brilliant moonlight flooded the pavement beneath; for twenty yards to
+left and right every stone was visible.
+
+The court was empty!
+
+Human, homely London moved and wrought intimately about me; but there,
+at sight of the empty court below, a great loneliness swept down like a
+mantle—a clammy mantle of the fabric of dread. I stood remote from my
+fellows, in an evil world peopled with the creatures of Hassan of
+Aleppo.
+
+Moved by some instinct, as that of a frightened child, I dropped to my
+knees and buried my face in trembling hands.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+THE RING OF THE PROPHET
+
+
+“There is no doubt,” said Mr. Rawson, “that great personal danger
+attaches to any contact with this relic. It is the first time I have
+been concerned with anything of the kind.”
+
+Mr. Bristol, of Scotland Yard, standing stiffly military by the window,
+looked across at the gray-haired solicitor. We were all silent for a
+few moments.
+
+“My late client’s wishes,” continued Mr. Rawson, “are explicit. His
+last instructions, evidently written but a short time prior to his
+death, advise me that the holy slipper of the Prophet is contained in
+the locked safe at his house in Dulwich. He was clearly of opinion that
+you, Mr. Cavanagh, would incur risk—great risk—from your possession of
+the key. Since attempts have been made upon you, murderous attempts,
+the late Professor Deeping, my unfortunate client, evidently was not in
+error.”
+
+“Mysterious outrages,” said Bristol, “have marked the progress of the
+stolen slipper from Mecca almost to London.”
+
+“I understand,” interrupted the solicitor, “that a fanatic known as
+Hassan of Aleppo seeks to restore the relic to its former
+resting-place.”
+
+“That is so.”
+
+“Exactly; and it accounts for the Professor’s wish that the safe should
+not be touched by any one but a Believer—and for his instructions that
+its removal to the Antiquarian Museum and the placing of the slipper
+within that institution be undertaken by a Moslem or Moslems.”
+
+Bristol frowned.
+
+“Any one who has touched the receptacle containing the thing,” he said,
+“has either been mutilated or murdered. I want to apprehend the authors
+of those outrages, but I fail to see why the slipper should be put on
+exhibition. Other crimes are sure to follow.”
+
+“I can only pursue my instructions,” said Mr. Rawson dryly. “They are,
+that the work be done in such a manner as to expose all concerned to a
+minimum of risk from these mysterious people; that if possible a Moslem
+be employed for the purpose; and that Mr. Cavanagh, here, shall always
+hold the key or keys to the case in the museum containing the slipper.
+Will you undertake to look for some—Eastern workmen, Mr. Bristol? In
+the course of your inquiries you may possibly come across such a
+person.”
+
+“I can try,” replied Bristol. “Meanwhile, I take it, the safe must
+remain at Dulwich?”
+
+“Certainly. It should be guarded.”
+
+“We are guarding it and shall guard it,” Bristol assured him. “I only
+hope we catch someone trying to get at it!”
+
+Shortly afterward Bristol and I left the office, and, his duties taking
+him to Scotland Yard, I returned to my chambers to survey the position
+in which I now found myself. Indeed, it was a strange one enough,
+showing how great things have small beginnings; for, as a result of a
+steamer acquaintance I found myself involved in a dark business worthy
+of the Middle Ages. That Professor Deeping should have stolen one of
+the holy slippers of Mohammed was no affair of mine, and that an awful
+being known as Hassan of Aleppo should have pursued it did not properly
+enter into my concerns; yet now, with a group of Eastern fanatics at
+large in England, I was become, in a sense, the custodian of the relic.
+Moreover, I perceived that I had been chosen that I might safeguard
+myself. What I knew of the matter might imperil me, but whilst I held
+the key to the reliquary, and held it fast, I might hope to remain
+immune though I must expect to be subjected to attempts. It would be my
+affair to come to terms.
+
+Contemplating these things I sat, in a world of dark dreams,
+unconscious of the comings and goings in the court below, unconscious
+of the hum which told of busy Fleet Street so near to me. The weather,
+as is its uncomfortable habit in England, had suddenly grown tropically
+hot, plunging London into the vapours of an African spring, and the sun
+was streaming through my open window fully upon the table.
+
+I mopped my clammy forehead, glancing with distaste at the pile of work
+which lay before me. Then my eyes turned to an open quarto book. It was
+the late Professor Deeping’s “Assyrian Mythology,” and embodied the
+result of his researches into the history of the Hashishin, the
+religious murderers of whose existence he had been so skeptical. To the
+Chief of the Order, the terrible Sheikh Hassan of Aleppo, he referred
+as a “fabled being”; yet it was at the hands of this “fabled being”
+that he had met his end! How incredible it all seemed. But I knew full
+well how worthy of credence it was.
+
+Then upon my gloomy musings a sound intruded—the ringing of my door
+bell. I rose from my chair with a weary sigh, went to the door, and
+opened it. An aged Oriental stood without. He was tall and straight,
+had a snow-white beard and clear-cut, handsome features. He wore
+well-cut European garments and a green turban. As I stood staring he
+saluted me gravely.
+
+“Mr. Cavanagh?” he asked, speaking in faultless English.
+
+“I am he.”
+
+“I learn that the services of a Moslem workman are required.”
+
+“Quite correct, sir; but you should apply at the offices of Messrs.
+Rawson & Rawson, Chancery Lane.”
+
+The old man bowed, smiling.
+
+“Many thanks; I understood so much. But, my position being a peculiar
+one, I wished to speak with you—as a friend of the late Professor.”
+
+I hesitated. The old man looked harmless enough, but there was an air
+of mystery about the matter which put me on my guard.
+
+“You will pardon me,” I said, “but the work is scarcely of a kind—”
+
+He raised his thin hand.
+
+“I am not undertaking it myself. I wished to explain to you the
+conditions under which I could arrange to furnish suitable porters.”
+
+His patient explanation disposed me to believe that he was merely some
+kind of small contractor, and in any event I had nothing to fear from
+this frail old man.
+
+“Step in, sir,” I said, repenting of my brusquerie—and stood aside for
+him.
+
+He entered, with that Oriental meekness in which there is something
+majestic. I placed a chair for him in the study, and reseated myself at
+the table. The old man, who from the first had kept his eyes lowered
+deferentially, turned to me with a gentle gesture, as if to apologize
+for opening the conversation.
+
+“From the papers, Mr. Cavanagh,” he began, “I have learned of the
+circumstances attending the death of Professor Deeping. Your papers”—he
+smiled, and I thought I had never seen a smile of such sweetness—“your
+papers know all! Now I understand why a Moslem is required, and I
+understand what is required of him. But remembering that the object of
+his labours would be to place a holy relic on exhibition for the
+amusement of unbelievers, can you reasonably expect to obtain the
+services of one?”
+
+His point of view was fair enough.
+
+“Perhaps not,” I replied. “For my own part I should wish to see the
+slipper back in Mecca, or wherever it came from. But Professor
+Deeping—”
+
+“Professor Deeping was a thorn in the flesh of the Faithful!”
+
+My visitor’s voice was gravely reproachful.
+
+“Nevertheless his wishes must be considered,” I said, “and the methods
+adopted by those who seek to recover the relic are such as to alienate
+all sympathy.”
+
+“You speak of the Hashishin?” asked the old man. “Mr. Cavanagh, in your
+own faith you have had those who spilled the blood of infidels as
+freely!”
+
+“My good sir, the existence of such an organization cannot be tolerated
+today! This survival of the dark ages must be stamped out. However just
+a cause may be, secret murder is not permissible, as you, a man of
+culture, a Believer, and”—I glanced at his unusual turban—“a descendant
+of the Prophet, must admit.”
+
+“I can admit nothing against the Guardian of the Tradition, Mr.
+Cavanagh! The Prophet taught that we should smite the Infidel. I ask
+you—have you the courage of your convictions?”
+
+“Perhaps; I trust so.”
+
+“Then assist me to rid England of what you have called a survival of
+the dark ages. I will furnish porters to remove and carry the safe, if
+you will deliver to me the key!”
+
+I sprang to my feet.
+
+“That is madness!” I cried. “In the first place I should be
+compromising with my conscience, and in the second place I should be
+defenceless against those who might—”
+
+“I have with me a written promise from one highly placed—one to whose
+will Hassan of Aleppo bows!”
+
+My mind greatly disturbed, I watched the venerable speaker. I had
+determined now that he was some religious leader of Islam in England,
+who had been deputed to approach me; and, let me add, I was sorely
+tempted to accede to his proposal, for nothing would be gained by any
+one if the slipper remained for ever at the museum, whereas by
+conniving at its recovery by those who, after all, were its rightful
+owners I should be ridding England of a weird and undesirable visitant.
+
+I think I should have agreed, when I remembered that the Hashishin had
+murdered Professor Deeping and had mutilated others wholly innocent of
+offence. I looked across at the old man. He had drawn himself up to his
+great height, and for the first time fully raising the lids, had fixed
+upon me the piercing gaze of a pair of eagle eyes. I started, for the
+aspect of this majestic figure was entirely different from that of the
+old stranger who had stood suppliant before me a moment ago.
+
+“It is impossible,” I said. “I can come to no terms with those who
+shield murderers.”
+
+He regarded me fixedly, but did not move.
+
+“Es-selam ’aleykum!” I added (“Peace be on you!”) closing the interview
+in the Eastern manner.
+
+The old man lowered his eyes, and saluted me with graceful gravity.
+
+“Wa-’aleykum!” he said (“And on you!”). I conducted him to the door and
+closed it upon his exit. In his last salute I had noticed the flashing
+of a ring which he wore upon his left hand, and he was gone scarce ten
+seconds ere my heart began to beat furiously. I snatched up “Assyrian
+Mythology” and with trembling fingers turned to a certain page.
+
+There I read—
+
+Each Sheikh of the Assassins is said to be invested with the “Ring of
+the Prophet.” It bears a green stone, shaped in the form of a scimitar
+or crescent.
+
+My dreadful suspicion was confirmed. I knew who my visitor had been.
+
+“God in heaven!” I whispered. “It was Hassan of Aleppo!”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+FIRST ATTEMPT ON THE SAFE
+
+
+On the following morning I was awakened by the arrival of Bristol. I
+hastened to admit him.
+
+“Your visitor of yesterday,” he began, “has wasted no time!”
+
+“What has happened?”
+
+He tugged irritably at his moustache. “I don’t know!” he replied. “Of
+course it was no surprise to find that there isn’t a Mohammedan who’ll
+lay his little finger on Professor Deeping’s safe! There’s no doubt in
+my mind that every lascar at the docks knows Hassan of Aleppo to be in
+England. Some other arrangement will have to be arrived at, if the
+thing is ever to be taken to the Antiquarian Museum. Meanwhile we stand
+to lose it. Last night—”
+
+He accepted a cigarette, and lighted it carefully.
+
+“Last night,” he resumed, “a member of P Division was on point duty
+outside the late Professor’s house, and two C.I.D. men were actually in
+the room where the safe is. Result—someone has put in at least an
+hour’s work on the lock, but it proved too tough a job!”
+
+I stared at him amazedly.
+
+“Someone has been at the lock!” I cried. “But that is impossible, with
+two men in the room—unless—”
+
+“They were both knocked on the head!”
+
+“Both! But by whom! My God! They are not—”
+
+“Oh, no! It was done artistically. They both came round about four
+o’clock this morning.”
+
+“And who attacked them?”
+
+“They had no idea. Neither of them saw a thing!”
+
+My amazement grew by leaps and bounds. “But, Bristol, one of them must
+have seen the other succumb!”
+
+“Both did! Their statements tally exactly!”
+
+“I quite fail to follow you.”
+
+“That’s not surprising. Listen: When I got on the scene about five
+o’clock, Marden and West, the two C.I.D. men, had quite recovered their
+senses, though they were badly shaken, and one had a cracked skull. The
+constable was conscious again, too.”
+
+“What! Was he attacked?”
+
+“In exactly the same way! I’ll give you Marden’s story, as he gave it
+to me a few minutes after the surgeon had done with him. He said that
+they were sitting in the study, smoking, and with both windows wide
+open. It was a fearfully hot night.”
+
+“Did they have lights?”
+
+“No. West sat in an armchair near the writing-table; Marden sat by the
+window next to the door. I had arranged that every hour one of them
+should go out to the gate and take the constable’s report. It was just
+after Marden had been out at one o’clock that it happened.
+
+“They were sitting as I tell you when Marden thought he heard a curious
+sort of noise from the gate. West appeared to have heard nothing; but I
+have no doubt that it was the sound of the constable’s fall. West’s
+pipe had gone out, and he struck a match to relight it. As he did so,
+Marden saw him drop the match, clench both fists, and with eyes glaring
+in the moonlight and his teeth coming together with a snap, drop from
+his chair.
+
+“Marden says that he was half up from his seat when something struck
+him on the back of the head with fearful force. He remembered nothing
+more until he awoke, with the dawn creeping into the room, and heard
+West groaning somewhere beside him. They both had badly damaged skulls
+with great bruises behind the ear. It is instructive to note that their
+wounds corresponded almost to a fraction of an inch. They had been
+stunned by someone who thoroughly understood his business, and with
+some heavy, blunt weapon. A few minutes later came the man to relieve
+the constable; and the constable was found to have been treated in
+exactly the same way!”
+
+“But if Marden’s account is true—”
+
+“West, as he lost consciousness, saw Marden go in exactly the same
+way.”
+
+“Marden was seated by the open window, but I cannot conjecture how any
+one can have got at West, who sat by the table!”
+
+“The case of Marden is little less than remarkable; he was some
+distance from the window. No one could possibly have reached him from
+outside.”
+
+“And the constable?”
+
+“The constable can give us no clue. He was suddenly struck down, as the
+others were. I examined the safe, of course, but didn’t touch it,
+according to instructions. Someone had been at work on the lock, but it
+had defied their efforts. I’m fully expecting though that they’ll be
+back to-night, with different tools!”
+
+“The place is watched during the day, of course?”
+
+“Of course. But it’s unlikely that anything will be attempted in
+daylight. Tonight I am going down myself.”
+
+“Could you arrange that I join you?”
+
+“I could, but you can see the danger for yourself?”
+
+“It is extraordinarily mysterious.”
+
+“Mr. Cavanagh, it’s uncanny!” said Bristol. “I can understand that one
+of these Hashishin could easily have got up behind the man on duty out
+in the open. I know, and so do you, that they’re past masters of that
+kind of thing; but unless they possess the power to render themselves
+invisible, it’s not evident how they can have got behind West whilst he
+sat at the table, with Marden actually watching him!”
+
+“We must lay a trap for them to-night.”
+
+“Rely upon me to do so. My only fear is that they may anticipate it and
+change their tactics. Hassan of Aleppo apparently knows as much of our
+plans as we do ourselves.”
+
+Inspector Bristol, though a man of considerable culture, clearly was
+infected with a species of supernatural dread.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+THE VIOLET EYES AGAIN
+
+
+At four o’clock in the afternoon I had heard nothing further from
+Bristol, but I did not doubt that he would advise me of his
+arrangements in good time. I sought by hard work to forget for a time
+the extraordinary business of the stolen slipper; but it persistently
+intruded upon my mind. Particularly, my thoughts turned to the night of
+Professor Deeping’s murder, and to the bewitchingly pretty woman who
+had warned me of the impending tragedy. She had bound me to secrecy—a
+secrecy which had proved irksome, for it had since appeared to me that
+she must have been an accomplice of Hassan of Aleppo. At the time I had
+been at a loss to define her peculiar accent, now it seemed evidently
+enough to have been Oriental.
+
+I threw down my pen in despair, for work was impossible, went
+downstairs, and walked out under the arch into Fleet Street. Quite
+mechanically I turned to the left, and, still engaged with idle
+conjectures, strolled along westward.
+
+Passing the entrance to one of the big hotels, I was abruptly recalled
+to the realities—by a woman’s voice.
+
+“Wait for me here,” came musically to my ears.
+
+I stopped, and turned. A woman who had just quitted a taxi-cab was
+entering the hotel. The day was hot and thunderously oppressive, and
+this woman with the musical voice wore a delicate costume of flimsiest
+white. A few steps upward she paused and glanced back. I had a view of
+a Greek profile, and for one magnetic instant looked into eyes of the
+deepest and most wonderful violet.
+
+Then, shaking off inaction, I ran up the steps and overtook the lady in
+white as a porter swung open the door to admit her. We entered
+together.
+
+“Madame,” I said in a low tone, “I must detain you for a moment. There
+is something I have to ask.”
+
+She turned, exhibiting the most perfect composure, lowered her lashes
+and raised them again, the gaze of the violet eyes sweeping me from
+head to foot with a sort of frigid scorn.
+
+“I fear you have made a mistake, sir. We have never met before!”
+
+Her voice betrayed no trace of any foreign accent!
+
+“But,” I began—and paused.
+
+I felt myself flush; for this encounter in the foyer of an hotel, with
+many curious onlookers, was like to prove embarrassing if my beautiful
+acquaintance persisted in her attitude. I fully realized what
+construction would be put upon my presence there, and foresaw that
+forcible and ignominious ejection must be my lot if I failed to
+establish my right to address her.
+
+She turned away, and crossed in the direction of the staircase. A
+sunbeam sought out a lock of hair that strayed across her brow, and
+kissed it to a sudden glow like that which lurks in the heart of a
+blush rose.
+
+That wonderful sheen, which I had never met with elsewhere in nature,
+but which no artifice could lend, served to remove my last frail doubt
+which had survived the evidence of the violet eyes. I had been deceived
+by no strange resemblance; this was indeed the woman who had been the
+harbinger of Professor Deeping’s death. In three strides I was beside
+her again. Curious glances were set upon me, and I saw a servant
+evidently contemplating approach; but I ignored all save my own fixed
+purpose.
+
+“You must listen to what I have to say!” I whispered. “If you decline,
+I shall have no alternative but to call in the detective who holds a
+warrant for your arrest!”
+
+She stood quite still, watching me coolly. “I suppose you would wish to
+avoid a scene?” I added.
+
+“You have already made me the object of much undesirable attention,”
+she replied scornfully. “I do not need your assurance that you would
+disgrace me utterly! You are talking nonsense, as you must be
+aware—unless you are insane. But if your object be to force your
+acquaintance upon me, your methods are novel, and, under the
+circumstances, effective. Come, sir, you may talk to me—for three
+minutes!”
+
+The musical voice had lost nothing of its imperiousness, but for one
+instant the lips parted, affording a fleeting glimpse of pearl beyond
+the coral.
+
+Her sudden change of front was bewildering. Now, she entered the lift
+and I followed her. As we ascended side by side I found it impossible
+to believe that this dainty white figure was that of an associate of
+the Hashishin, that of a creature of the terrible Hassan of Aleppo. Yet
+that she was the same girl who, a few days after my return from the
+East, had shown herself conversant with the plans of the murderous
+fanatics was beyond doubt. Her accent on that occasion clearly had been
+assumed, with what object I could not imagine. Then, as we quitted the
+lift and entered a cosy lounge, my companion seated herself upon a
+Chesterfield, signing to me to sit beside her.
+
+As I did so she lay back smiling, and regarding me from beneath her
+black lashes. Thus, half veiled, her great violet eyes were most
+wonderful.
+
+“Now, sir,” she said softly, “explain yourself.”
+
+“Then you persist in pretending that we have not met before?”
+
+“There is no occasion for pretence,” she replied lightly; and I found
+myself comparing her voice with her figure, her figure with her face,
+and vainly endeavouring to compute her age. Frankly, she was
+bewildering—this lovely girl who seemed so wholly a woman of the world.
+
+“This fencing is useless.”
+
+“It is quite useless! Come, I know New York, London, and I know Paris,
+Vienna, Budapest. Therefore I know mankind! You thought I was pretty, I
+suppose? I may be; others have thought so. And you thought you would
+like to make my acquaintance without troubling about the usual
+formalities? You adopted a singularly brutal method of achieving your
+object, but I love such insolence in a man. Therefore I forgave you.
+What have you to say to me?”
+
+I perceive that I had to deal with a bold adventuress, with a
+consummate actress, who, finding herself in a dangerous situation, had
+adopted this daring line of defence, and now by her personal charm
+sought to lure me from my purpose.
+
+But with the scimitar of Hassan of Aleppo stretched over me, with the
+dangers of the night before me, I was in no mood for a veiled duel of
+words, for an interchange of glances in thrust and parry, however
+delightful such warfare might have been with so pretty an adversary.
+
+For a long time I looked sternly into her eyes; but their violet
+mystery defied, whilst her red-lipped smile taunted me.
+
+“Unfortunately,” I said, with slow emphasis, “you are protected by my
+promise, made on the occasion of our previous meeting. But murder has
+been done, so that honour scarcely demands that I respect my promise
+further—”
+
+She raised her eyebrows slightly.
+
+“Surely that depends upon the quality of the honour!” she said.
+
+“I believe you to be a member of a murderous organization, and unless
+you can convince me that I am wrong, I shall act accordingly.”
+
+At that she leaned toward me, laying her hand on my arm.
+
+“Please do not be so cruel,” she whispered, “as to drag me into a
+matter with which truly I have no concern. Believe me, you are utterly
+mistaken. Wait one moment, and I will prove it.”
+
+She rose, and before I could make move to detain her, quitted the room;
+but the door scarcely had closed ere I was afoot. The corridor beyond
+was empty. I ran on. The lift had just descended. A dark man whom I
+recognized stood near the closed gate.
+
+“Quick!” I said, “I am Cavanagh of the Report! Did you see a lady enter
+the lift?”
+
+“I did, Mr. Cavanagh,” answered the hotel detective; for this was he.
+
+In such a giant inn as this I knew full well that one could come and go
+almost with impunity, though one had no right to the hospitality of the
+establishment; and it was with a premonition respecting what his answer
+would be, that I asked the man—
+
+“Is she staying here?”
+
+“She is not. I have never seen her before!”
+
+The girl with the violet eyes had escaped, taking all her secrets with
+her!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+SECOND ATTEMPT ON THE SAFE
+
+
+“You see,” said Bristol, “the Hashishin must know that the safe won’t
+remain here unopened much longer. They will therefore probably make
+another attempt to-night.”
+
+“It seems likely,” I replied; and was silent. Outside the open windows
+whispered the shrubbery, as a soft breeze stole through the bushes.
+Beyond, the moon made play in the dim avenue. From the old chapel hard
+by the sweet-toned bell proclaimed midnight. Our vigil was begun. In
+this room it was that Professor Deeping had met death at the hands of
+the murderous Easterns; here it was that Marden and West had
+mysteriously been struck down the night before.
+
+To-night was every whit as hot, and Bristol and I had the windows
+widely opened. My companion was seated where the detective, Marden, had
+sat, in a chair near the westerly window, and I lay back in the
+armchair that had been occupied by West.
+
+I may repeat here that the house of the late Professor Deeping was more
+properly a cottage, surrounded by a fairly large piece of ground, for
+the most part run wild. The room used as a study was on the ground
+floor, and had windows on the west and on the south. Those on the west
+(French windows) opened on a loggia; those on the south opened right
+into the dense tangle of a neglected shrubbery. The place possessed an
+oppressive atmosphere of loneliness, for which in some measure its
+history may have been responsible.
+
+The silence, seemingly intensified by each whisper that sped through
+the elms and crept about the shrubbery, grew to such a stillness that I
+told myself I had experienced nothing like it since crossing with a
+caravan I had slept in the desert. Yet noisy, whirling London was
+within gunshot of us; and this, though hard enough to believe, was a
+reflection oddly comforting. Only one train of thought was possible,
+and this I pursued at random.
+
+By what means were Marden and West struck down? In thus exposing
+ourselves, in order that we might trap the author or authors of the
+outrage, did we act wisely?
+
+“Bristol,” I said suddenly, “it was someone who came through the open
+window.”
+
+“No one,” he replied, “came through the windows. West saw absolutely
+nothing. But if any one comes that way to-night, we have him!”
+
+“West may have seen nothing; but how else could any one enter?”
+
+Bristol offered no reply; and I plunged again into a maze of
+speculation.
+
+Powerful mantraps were set in such a way that any one or anything,
+ignorant of their positions, coming up to the windows must unavoidably
+be snared. These had been placed in position with much secrecy after
+dusk, and the man on duty at the gate stood with his back to the wall.
+No one could approach him except from the front. My thoughts took a new
+turn.
+
+Was the girl with the violet eyes an ally of the Hashishin? Thus far,
+although she so palpably had tricked me, I had found myself unable to
+speak of her to Bristol; for the idea had entered my mind that she
+might have learned of the plan to murder Deeping without directly being
+implicated. Now came yet another explanation. The publicity given to
+that sensational case might have interested some third party in the
+fate of the stolen slipper! Could it be that others, in no way
+connected with the dreadful Hassan of Aleppo, were in quest of the
+slipper?
+
+Scotland Yard had taken care to ensure that the general public be kept
+in ignorance of the existence of such an organization as the Hashishin,
+but I must assume that this hypothetical third party were well aware
+that they had Hassan, as well as the authorities, to count with.
+Granting the existence of such a party, my beautiful acquaintance might
+be classified as one of its members. I spoke again.
+
+“Bristol,” I said, “has it occurred to you that there may be others, as
+well as Hassan of Aleppo, seeking to gain possession of the sacred
+slipper?”
+
+“It has not,” he replied. “In the strictest sense of the expression,
+they would be out for trouble! What gave you the idea?”
+
+“I hardly know,” I returned evasively, for even now I was loath to
+betray the mysterious girl with the wonderful eyes.
+
+The chapel bell sounding the half-hour, Bristol rose with a sigh that
+might have been one of relief, and went out to take the report of the
+man on duty at the gate. As his footsteps died away along the elm
+avenue, it came to me how, in the darkness about, menace lurked; and I
+felt myself succumbing to the greatest dread experienced by man—the
+dread of the unknown.
+
+All that I knew of the weird group of fanatics—survivals of a dim and
+evil past—who must now be watching this cottage as bloodlustful
+devotees watch a shrine violated, burst upon my mind. I peopled the
+still blackness with lurking assassins, armed with the murderous
+knowledge of by-gone centuries, armed with invisible weapons which
+struck down from afar, supernaturally.
+
+I glanced toward the corner of the room where the safe stood, reliquary
+of a worthless thing for which much blood had been spilled.
+
+Then sounded footsteps along the avenue, and my fear whispered that
+they were not those of Bristol but of one who had murdered him, and who
+came guilefully, to murder me!
+
+I snatched the revolver from my pocket and crossed the darkened room.
+Just to the right of one of the French windows I stood looking out
+across the loggia to the end of the avenue. The night was a bright one,
+and the room was flooded with a reflected mystic light, but outside the
+moon paved the avenue with pearl, and through the trees I saw a figure
+approaching.
+
+Was it Bristol? It had his build, it had his gait; but my fears
+remained. Then the figure crossed the patch of shrubbery and stepped on
+to the loggia.
+
+“Mr. Cavanagh!”
+
+I laughed dryly at my own cowardice, but my heart was still beating
+abnormally.
+
+“Here I am, Bristol, in a ghastly funk!”
+
+“I don’t wonder! They may be on us any time now. All’s well at the
+gate, but Morris says he heard, or thought he heard something at the
+side of the chapel opposite, a while ago.”
+
+“Wind in the bushes?”
+
+“It may have been; but he says there was no breeze at the time.”
+
+We resumed our seats.
+
+“Bristol,” I said, “now that the danger grows imminent, doesn’t it seem
+to you foolhardy for us thus to expose ourselves?”
+
+“Perhaps it is,” he agreed; “but how otherwise are we likely to learn
+what happened to Marden and West?”
+
+“The enemy may adopt different measures to-night.”
+
+“I think not. Our dispositions are the same, and I credit them with
+cunning enough to know it. At the same time I credit ourselves with
+having kept the existence of the steel traps completely secret. They
+will assume (so I’ve reasoned) that we intend to rely entirely upon our
+superior vigilance, therefore they will try the same game as last
+night.”
+
+Silence fell.
+
+The moon rays, creeping around from the right of the avenue, crossing
+the shrubbery and encroaching upon the low wall of the loggia, now
+flooded its floor. Against the silvern light, Bristol appeared to me in
+black silhouette. The breeze, too, seemed now to blow from a slightly
+different direction. It came through the windows on my right, beyond
+which lay the unkempt bushes which extended on that side to the wall of
+the grounds.
+
+So we sat, until the moonlight poured fully in upon Bristol’s back. So
+we sat when the clock chimed the hour of one.
+
+Bristol arose and once more went out to the gate. He had arranged to
+visit Morris’s post every half-hour. Again I experienced the nervous
+dread that he would be attacked in the avenue; but again he returned
+unscathed.
+
+“All’s well,” he said.
+
+But from his tones I knew that he had not forgotten that it was at this
+hour Marden and West had suffered mysterious attack.
+
+Neither of us, I think, was disposed to talk. We both were unwilling to
+break the silence, wherein, with all our ears, we listened for the
+slightest disturbance.
+
+And now my attention turned anew to the course of the slowly creeping
+moon rays. In my mind an idea was struggling for definition. There was
+something significant in the lunar lighting of the room. Why, I asked
+myself, had the attack been made at one o’clock? Did the time signify
+anything? If so, what? I looked toward Bristol.
+
+His figure, the chair upon which he sat, were sharply outlined by the
+cold light. The wall behind me, and to my left, was illuminated
+brilliantly; but no light fell directly upon me.
+
+The idea was taking shape. From the loggia and the avenue Bristol, I
+reasoned, must be clearly visible. From the shrubbery on the south,
+through the other windows could I be seen? Yes, silhouetted against the
+moonlight!
+
+A faint sound, quite indescribable, came to my ears from somewhere
+outside-beyond.
+
+“My God!” whispered Bristol. “Did you hear it?”
+
+“Yes! What?”
+
+“It must have been Morris!—”
+
+Bristol was half standing, one hand upon the arm of the chair, the
+other concealed, but grasping his revolver as I well knew. I, too, had
+my revolver in my hand, and as I twisted in my seat, preparatory to
+rising, in sheer nervousness I dropped the weapon upon the carpet.
+
+With an exclamation of dismay, I stooped quickly to recover it.
+
+As I did so something whistled past my ear, so closely as almost to
+touch it—and struck with a dull thud upon the wall beyond!
+
+“Bristol!” I whispered.
+
+But as I raised my eyes to him he seemed to crumple up, and fell
+loosely forward into the patch of moonlight spread upon the floor! “God
+in heaven!” I said aloud.
+
+In a cold sweat of fear I crouched there, for it had become evident to
+me that, as I bent, I was entirely in shadow.
+
+There was a rustling in the bushes on the left; but before I could turn
+in that direction, my attention was claimed elsewhere. Over into the
+loggia leapt an almost naked brown figure!
+
+It was that of a small but strongly built man, who carried a short,
+exceedingly thick bamboo rod in his hand. My fear was too great to
+admit of my accurately observing anything at that time, but I noticed
+that some kind of leather thong or loop was attached to the end of the
+squat cane.
+
+The panic fear of the supernatural was strongly upon me, and I was
+unable to realize that this Eastern apparition was a creature of flesh
+and blood. With my nerves strung up to snapping point, I crouched
+watching him. He entered the room, bending over the body of Bristol.
+
+A hot breath fanned my cheek!
+
+At that my overwrought nerves betrayed me. I uttered a stifled cry,
+looking upward ... and into a pair of gleaming eyes which looked down
+into mine!
+
+A second brown man (who must have entered by one of the windows
+overlooking the shrubbery) was bending over me!
+
+Scarce knowing what I did, I raised my revolver and blazed straight
+into the dimly-seen face. Down upon me silently dropped a naked body,
+and something warm came flowing over my hand. But, knowing my foes to
+be of flesh and blood, feeling myself at handgrips now with a palpable
+enemy, I threw off the body, leapt up and fired, though blindly, at the
+flying shape that flashed across the loggia—and was lost in the shadow
+pools under the elms.
+
+Upon the din of my shooting fell silence like a cloak. A moment I
+listened, tense, still; then I turned to the table and lighted the
+lamp.
+
+In its light I saw Bristol lying like a dead man. Close beside him was
+a big and heavy lump of clay. It had been shaped as a ball, but now it
+was flattened out curiously. Bending over my unfortunate companion and
+learning that, though unconscious, he lived, I learnt, too, how the
+Hashishin contrived to strike men insensible without approaching them;
+I learnt that the one whom I had shot, who lay in his blood almost on
+the spot where Professor Deeping once had lain, was an expert slinger.
+
+The contrivance which he carried, as did the other who had escaped, was
+a sling, of the ancient Persian type. In place of stones, heavy lumps
+of clay were used, which operated much the same as a sand-bag, whilst
+enabling the operator to work from a considerable distance.
+
+Hidden, over by the ancient chapel it might be, one of this evil twain
+had struck down Morris, the constable; from the shelter of the trees,
+from many yards away, they had shot their singular missiles through the
+open windows at Bristol and myself. Bristol had succumbed, and now,
+with a redness showing through his close-cut hair immediately behind
+the right ear, lay wholly unconscious at my feet.
+
+It had been a divine accident which had caused me to drop my revolver,
+and, stooping to recover it, unknowingly to frustrate the design of the
+second slinger upon myself. The light of the lamp fell upon the face of
+the dead Hashishin. He lay forward upon his hands, crouching almost,
+but with his face, his dreadful, featureless face, twisted up at me
+from under his left shoulder.
+
+God knows he deserved his end; but that mutilated face is often
+grinning, bloodily, in my dreams.
+
+And then as I stood, between that horrid exultation which is born of
+killing and the panic which threatened me out of the darkness, I saw
+something advancing ... slowly ... slowly ... from the elmen shades
+toward the loggia.
+
+It was a shape—it was a shadow. Silent it came—on—and on. Where the
+dusk lay deepest it paused, undefined; for I could give it no name of
+man or spirit. But a horror seemed to proceed from it as light from a
+lamp.
+
+I groped about the table near to me, never taking my eyes from that
+sinister form outside. As my fingers closed upon the telephone, distant
+voices and the sound of running footsteps (of those who had heard the
+shots) came welcome to my ears.
+
+The form stirred, seeming to raise phantom arms in execration, and a
+stray moonbeam pierced the darkness shrouding it. For a fleeting
+instant something flashed venomously.
+
+The sounds grew nearer. I could tell that the newcomers had found
+Morris lying at the gate. Yet still I stood, frozen with uncanny fear,
+and watching—watching the spot to which that stray beam had pierced;
+the spot where I had seen the moon gleam upon the ring of the Prophet!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+AT THE BRITISH ANTIQUARIAN MUSEUM
+
+
+A little group of interested spectators stood at the head of the square
+glass case in the centre of the lofty apartment in the British
+Antiquarian Museum known as the Burton Room (by reason of the fact that
+a fine painting of Sir Richard Burton faces you as you enter). A few
+other people looked on curiously from the lower end of the case. It
+contained but one exhibit—a dirty and dilapidated markoob—or slipper of
+morocco leather that had once been red.
+
+“Our latest acquisition, gentlemen,” said Mr. Mostyn, the curator,
+speaking in a low tone to the distinguished Oriental scholars around
+him. “It has been left to the Institution by the late Professor
+Deeping. He describes it in a document furnished by his solicitor as
+one of the slippers worn by the Prophet Mohammed, but gives us no
+further particulars. I myself cannot quite place the relic.”
+
+“Nor I,” interrupted one of the group. “It is not mentioned by any of
+the Arabian historians to my knowledge—that is, if it comes from Mecca,
+as I understand it does.”
+
+“I cannot possibly assert that it comes from Mecca, Dr. Nicholson,”
+Mostyn replied. “The Professor may have taken it from
+Al-Madinah—perhaps from the mysterious inner passage of the baldaquin
+where the treasures of the place lie. But I can assure you that what
+little we do know of its history is sufficiently unsavoury.”
+
+I fancied that the curator’s tired cultured voice faltered as he spoke;
+and now, without apparent reason, he moved a step to the right and
+glanced oddly along the room. I followed the direction of his glance,
+and saw a tall man in conventional morning dress, irreproachable in
+every detail, whose head was instantly bent upon his catalogue. But
+before his eyes fell I knew that their long almond shape, as well as
+the peculiar burnt pallor of his countenance, were undoubtedly those of
+an Oriental.
+
+“There have been mysterious outrages committed, I believe, upon many of
+those who have come in contact with the slipper?” asked one of the
+savants.
+
+“Exactly. Professor Deeping was undoubtedly among the victims. His
+instructions were explicit that the relic should be brought here by a
+Moslem, but for a long time we failed to discover any Moslem who would
+undertake the task; and, as you are aware, while the slipper remained
+at the Professor’s house attempts were made to steal it.”
+
+He ceased uneasily, and glanced at the tall Eastern figure. It had
+edged a little nearer; the head was still bowed and the fine yellow
+waxen fingers of the hand from which he had removed his glove fumbled
+with the catalogue’s leaves. It may well have been that in those days I
+read menace in every eye, yet I felt assured that the yellow visitor
+was eavesdropping—was malignantly attentive to the conversation.
+
+The curator spoke lower than ever now; no one beyond the circle could
+possibly hear him as he proceeded—
+
+“We discovered an Alexandrian Greek who, for personal reasons, not
+unconnected with matrimony, had turned Moslem! He carried the slipper
+here, strongly escorted, and placed it where you now see it. No other
+hand has touched it.” (The speaker’s voice was raised ever so
+slightly.) “You will note that there is a rail around the case, to
+prevent visitors from touching even the glass.”
+
+“Ah,” said Dr. Nicholson quizzically, “And has anything untoward
+happened to our Graeco-Moslem friend?”
+
+“Perhaps Inspector Bristol can tell,” replied the curator.
+
+The straight, military figure of the well-known Scotland Yard man was
+conspicuous among the group of distinguished—and mostly
+round-shouldered—scholars.
+
+“Sorry, gentlemen,” he said, smiling, “but Mr. Acepulos has vanished
+from his tobacco shop in Soho. I am not apprehensive that he had been
+kidnapped or anything of that kind. I think rather that the date of his
+disappearance tallies with that on which he cashed his cheque for
+service rendered! His present wife is getting most unbeautifully fat,
+too.”
+
+“What precautions,” someone asked, “are being taken to guard the
+slipper?”
+
+“Well,” Mostyn answered, “though we have only the bare word of the late
+Professor Deeping that the slipper was actually worn by Mohammed, it
+has certainly an enormous value according to Moslem ideas. There can be
+no doubt that a group of fanatics known as Hashishin are in London
+engaged in an extraordinary endeavour to recover it.”
+
+Mostyn’s voice sank to an impressive whisper. My gaze sought again the
+tall Eastern visitor and was held fascinated by the baffled straining
+in those velvet eyes. But the lids fell as I looked; and the effect was
+that of a fire suddenly extinguished. I determined to draw Bristol’s
+attention to the man.
+
+“Accordingly,” Mostyn continued, “we have placed it in this room, from
+which I fancy it would puzzle the most accomplished thief to remove
+it.”
+
+The party, myself included, stared about the place, as he went on to
+explain—
+
+“We have four large windows here; as you see. The Burton Room occupies
+the end of a wing; there is only one door; it communicates with the
+next room, which in turn opens into the main building by another door
+on the landing. We are on the first floor; these two east windows
+afford a view of the lawn before the main entrance; those two west ones
+face Orpington Square; all are heavily barred as you see. During the
+day there is a man always on duty in these two rooms. At night that
+communicating door is locked. Short of erecting a ladder in full view
+either of the Square or of Great Orchard Street, filing through four
+iron bars and breaking the window and the case, I fail to see how
+anybody can get at the slipper here.”
+
+“If a duplicate key to the safe—” another voice struck in; I knew it
+afterward for that of Professor Rhys-Jenkyns.
+
+“Impossible to procure one, Professor,” cried Mostyn, his eyes
+sparkling with an almost boyish interest. “Mr. Cavanagh here holds the
+keys of the case, under the will of the late Professor Deeping. They
+are of foreign workmanship and more than a little complicated.”
+
+The eyes of the savants were turned now in my direction.
+
+“I suppose you have them in a place of safety?” said Dr. Nicholson.
+
+“They are at my bankers,” I replied.
+
+“Then I venture to predict,” said the celebrated Orientalist, “that the
+slipper of the Prophet will rest here undisturbed.”
+
+He linked his arm into that of a brother scholar and the little group
+straggled away, Mostyn accompanying them to the main entrance.
+
+But I saw Inspector Bristol scratching his chin; he looked very much as
+if he doubted the accuracy of the doctor’s prediction. He had already
+had some experience of the implacable devotion of the Moslem group to
+this treasure of the Faithful.
+
+“The real danger begins,” I suggested to him, “when the general public
+is admitted—after to-day, is it not?”
+
+“Yes. All to-day’s people are specially invited, or are using special
+invitation cards,” he replied. “The people who received them often give
+their tickets away to those who will be likely really to appreciate the
+opportunity.”
+
+I looked around for the tall Oriental. He seemed to have vanished, and
+for some reason I hesitated to speak of him to Bristol; for my gaze
+fell upon an excessively thin, keen-faced man whose curiously wide-open
+eyes met mine smilingly, whose gray suit spoke Stein-Bloch, whose felt
+was a Boss raw-edge unmistakably of a kind that only Philadelphia can
+produce. At the height of the season such visitors are not rare, but
+this one had an odd personality, and moreover his keen gaze was raking
+the place from ceiling to floor.
+
+Where had I met him before? To the best of my recollection I had never
+set eyes upon the man prior to that moment; and since he was so
+palpably an American I had no reason for assuming him to be associated
+with the Hashishin. But I remembered—indeed, I could never forget—how,
+in the recent past, I had met with an apparent associate of the Moslems
+as evidently European as this curiously alert visitor was American.
+Moreover ... there was something tauntingly familiar, yet elusive,
+about that gaunt face.
+
+Was it not upon the eve of the death of Professor Deeping that the girl
+with the violet eyes had first intruded her fascinating personality
+into my tangled affairs? Patently, she had then been seeking the holy
+slipper, and by craft had endeavoured to bend me to her will. Then had
+I not encountered her again, meeting the glance of her unforgettable
+violet eyes outside a Strand hotel? The encounter had presaged a
+further attempt upon the slipper! Certainly she acted on behalf of
+someone interested in it; and since neither Bristol nor I could
+conceive of any one seeking to possess the bloodstained thing except
+the mysterious leader of the Hashishin—Hassan of Aleppo—as a creature
+of that awful fanatic being I had written her down.
+
+Why, then, if the mysterious Eastern employed a European girl, should
+he not also employ an American man? It might well be that the relic, in
+entering the doors of the impregnable Antiquarian Museum, had passed
+where the diabolical arts of the Hashishin had no power to reach
+it—where the beauty of Western women and the craft of Eastern man were
+equally useless weapons. Perhaps Hassan’s campaign was entering upon a
+new phase.
+
+Was it a shirking of plain duty on my part that wish—that ever-present
+hope—that the murderous company of fanatics who had pursued the stolen
+slipper from its ancient resting-place to London, should succeed in
+recovering it? I leave you to judge.
+
+The crescent of Islam fades to-day and grows pale, but there are yet
+fierce Believers, a lust for the blood of the infidel. In such as these
+a faith dies the death of an adder, and is more venomous in its
+death-throes than in the full pulse of life. The ghastly indiscretion
+of Professor Deeping, in rifling a Moslem Sacristy, had led to the
+mutilation of many who, unwittingly, had touched the looted relic, had
+brought about his own end, had established a league of fantastic
+assassins in the heart of the metropolis.
+
+Only once had I seen the venerable Hassan of Aleppo—a stately, gentle
+old man; but I knew that the velvet eyes could blaze into a passionate
+fury that seemed to scorch whom it fell upon. I knew that the saintly
+Hassan was Sheikh of the Hashishin. And familiarity with that dreadful
+organization had by no means bred contempt. I was the holder of the
+key, and my fear of the fanatics grew like a magic mango, darkened the
+sunlight of each day, and filled the night with indefinable dread.
+
+You, who have not read poor Deeping’s “Assyrian Mythology”, cannot
+picture a creature with a huge, distorted head, and a tiny, dwarfed
+body—a thing inhuman, yet human—a man stunted and malformed by the
+cruel arts of brother men—a thing obnoxious to life, with but one
+passion, the passion to kill. You cannot conceive of the years of agony
+spent by that creature strapped to a wooden frame—in order to prevent
+his growth! You cannot conceive of his fierce hatred of all humanity,
+inflamed to madness by the Eastern drug, hashish, and directed against
+the enemies of Islam—the holders of the slipper—by the wonderful power
+of Hassan of Aleppo.
+
+But I had not only read of such beings, I had encountered one!
+
+And he was but one of the many instruments of the Hashishin. Perhaps
+the girl with the violet eyes was another. What else to be dreaded
+Hassan might hold in store for us I could not conjecture.
+
+Do you wonder that I feared? Do you wonder that I hoped (I confess it),
+hoped that the slipper might be recovered without further bloodshed?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+THE HOLE IN THE BLIND
+
+
+I stepped over to the door, where a constable stood on duty.
+
+“You observed a tall Eastern gentleman in the room a while ago,
+officer?”
+
+“I did, sir.”
+
+“How long is he gone?”
+
+The man started and began to peer about anxiously.
+
+“That’s a funny thing, sir,” he said. “I was keeping my eyes specially
+upon him. I noticed him hovering around while Mr. Mostyn was speaking;
+but although I could have sworn he hadn’t passed out, he’s gone!”
+
+“You didn’t notice his departure, then?”
+
+“I’m sorry to say I didn’t, sir.”
+
+The man clearly was perplexed, but I found small matter for wonder in
+the episode. I had more than suspected the stranger to be a spy of
+Hassan’s, and members of that strange company were elusive as
+will-o’-the-wisps.
+
+Bristol, at the far end of the room, was signalling to me. I walked
+back and joined him.
+
+“Come over here,” he said, in a low voice, “and pretend to examine
+these things.”
+
+He glanced significantly to his left. Following the glance, my eyes
+fell upon the lean American; he was peering into the receptacle which
+held the holy slipper.
+
+Bristol led me across the room, and we both faced the wall and bent
+over a glass case. Some yellow newspaper cuttings describing its
+contents hung above it, and these we pretended to read.
+
+“Did you notice that man I glanced at?”
+
+“Yes.”
+
+“Well, that’s Earl Dexter, the first crook in America! Ssh! Only goes
+in on very big things. We had word at the Yard he was in town; but we
+can’t touch him—we can only keep our eyes on him. He usually travels
+openly and in his own name, but this time he seems to have slipped over
+quietly. He always dresses the same and has just given me ‘good day!’
+They call him The Stetson Man. We heard this morning that he had booked
+two first-class sailings in the Oceanic, leaving for New York three
+weeks hence. Now, Mr. Cavanagh, what is his game?”
+
+“It has occurred to me before, Bristol,” I replied, “and you may
+remember that I mentioned the idea to you, that there might be a third
+party interested in the slipper. Why shouldn’t Earl Dexter be that
+third party?”
+
+“Because he isn’t a fool,” rapped Bristol shortly. “Earl Dexter isn’t a
+man to gather up trouble for himself. More likely if his visit has
+anything really to do with the slipper he’s retained by Hassan and
+Company. Museum-breaking may be a bit out of the line of Hashishin!”
+
+This latter suggestion dovetailed with my own ideas, and oddly enough
+there was something positively wholesome in the notion of the
+straightforward crookedness of a mere swell cracksman.
+
+Then happened a singular thing, and one that effectually concluded our
+whispered colloquy. From the top end of the room, beyond the case
+containing the slipper, one of the yellow blinds came down with a run.
+
+Bristol turned in a flash. It was not a remarkable accident, and might
+portend no more than a loose cord; but when, having walked rapidly up
+the room, we stood before the lowered blind, it appeared that this was
+no accident at all.
+
+Some four feet from the bottom of the blind (or five feet from the
+floor) a piece of linen a foot square had been neatly slashed out!
+
+I glanced around the room. Several fashionably dressed visitors were
+looking idly in our direction, but I could fasten upon no one of them
+as a likely perpetrator.
+
+Bristol stared at me in perplexity.
+
+“Who on earth did it,” he muttered, “and what the blazes for?”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+THE HASHISHIN WATCH
+
+
+“The American gentleman has just gone out, sir,” said the sergeant at
+the door.
+
+I nodded grimly and raced down the steps. Despite my half-formed desire
+that the slipper should be recovered by those to whom properly it
+belonged, I experienced at times a curious interest in its welfare. I
+cannot explain this. Across the hall in front of me I saw Earl Dexter
+passing out of the Museum. I followed him through into Kingsway and
+thence to Fleet Street. He sauntered easily along, a nonchalant gray
+figure. I had begun to think that he was bound for his hotel and that I
+was wasting my time when he turned sharply into quiet Salisbury Square;
+it was almost deserted.
+
+My heart leapt into my mouth with a presentiment of what was coming as
+I saw an elegant and beautifully dressed woman sauntering along in
+front of us on the far side.
+
+Was it that I detected something familiar in her carriage, in the poise
+of her head—something that reminded me of former unforgettable
+encounters; encounters which without exception had presaged attempts
+upon the slipper of the Prophet? Or was it that I recollected how
+Dexter had booked two passages to America? I cannot say, but I felt my
+heart leap; I knew beyond any possibility of doubt that this meeting in
+Salisbury Square marked the opening of a new chapter in the history of
+the slipper.
+
+Dexter slipped his arm within that of the girl in front of him and they
+paced slowly forward in earnest conversation. I suppose my action was
+very amateurish and very poor detective work; but regardless of
+discovery I crossed the road and passed close by the pair.
+
+I am certain that Dexter was speaking as I came up, but, well out of
+earshot, his voice was suddenly arrested. His companion turned and
+looked at me.
+
+I was prepared for it, yet was thrilled electrically by the flashing
+glance of the violet eyes—for it was she—the beautiful harbinger of
+calamities!
+
+My brain was in a whirl; complication piled itself upon complication;
+yet in the heart of all this bewilderment I thought I could detect the
+key of the labyrinth, but at the time my ideas were in disorder, for
+the violet eyes were not lowered but fixed upon me in cold scorn.
+
+I knew myself helpless, and bending my head with conscious
+embarrassment I passed on hurriedly.
+
+I had work to do in plenty, but I could not apply my mind to it; and
+now, although the obvious and sensible thing was to go about my
+business, I wandered on aimlessly, my brain employed with a hundred
+idle conjectures and the query, “Where have I seen The Stetson Man?”
+seeming to beat, like a tattoo, in my brain. There was something
+magnetic about the accursed slipper, for without knowing by what route
+I had arrived there, I found myself in Great Orchard Street and close
+under the walls of the British Antiquarian Museum. Then I was
+effectually aroused from my reverie.
+
+Two men, both tall, stood in the shadow of a doorway on the Opposite
+side of the street, staring intently up at the Museum windows. It was a
+tropically hot afternoon and they stood in deepest shadow. No one else
+was in Orchard Street—that odd little backwater—at the time, and they
+stood gazing upward intently and gave me not even a passing glance.
+
+But I knew one for the Oriental visitor of the morning, and despite
+broad noonday and the hum of busy London about me, my blood seemed to
+turn to water. I stood rooted to the spot, held there by a most
+surprising horror.
+
+For the gray-bearded figure of the other watcher was one I could never
+forget; its benignity was associated with the most horrible hours of my
+life, with deeds so dreadful that recollection to this day sometimes
+breaks my sleep, arousing me in the still watches, bathed in a cold
+sweat of fear.
+
+It was Hassan of Aleppo!
+
+If he saw me, if either of them saw me, I cannot say. What I should
+have done, what I might have done it is useless to speak of here—for I
+did nothing. Inert, thralled by the presence of that eerie, dreadful
+being, I watched them leave the shadow of the doorway and pace slowly
+on with their dignified Eastern gait.
+
+Then, knowing how I had failed in my plain duty to my fellow-men—how,
+finding a serpent in my path, I had hesitated to crush it, had weakly
+succumbed to its uncanny fascination—I made my way round to the door of
+the Museum.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+THE WHITE BEAM
+
+
+That night the deviltry began. Mr. Mostyn found himself wholly unable
+to sleep. Many relics have curious histories, and the experienced
+archaeologist becomes callous to that uncanniness which seems to attach
+to some gruesome curios. But the slipper of the Prophet was different.
+No mere ghostly menace threatened its holders; an avenging scimitar
+followed those who came in contact with it; gruesome tragedies,
+mutilations, murders, had marked its progress throughout.
+
+The night was still—as still as a London night can be; for there is
+always a vague murmuring in the metropolis as though the sleeping city
+breathed gently and sometimes stirred in its sleep.
+
+Then, distinct amid these usual nocturnal noises, rose another,
+unaccountable sound, a muffled crash followed by a musical tinkling.
+
+Mostyn sprang up in bed, drew on a dressing-gown, and took from the
+small safe at his bed-head the Museum keys and a loaded revolver. A
+somewhat dishevelled figure, pale and wild-eyed, he made his way
+through the private door and into the ghostly precincts of the Museum.
+He did not hesitate, but ascended the stairs and unlocked the door of
+the Assyrian gallery.
+
+Along its ghostly aisles he passed, and before the door which gave
+admittance to the Burton Room paused, fumbling a moment for the key.
+
+Inside the room something was moving!
+
+Mostyn was keenly alarmed; he knew that he must enter at once or never.
+He inserted the key in the lock, swung open the heavy door, stepped
+through and closed it behind him. He was a man of tremendous moral
+courage, for now,—alone in the apartment which harboured the uncanny
+relic, alone in the discharge of his duty, he stood with his back to
+the door trembling slightly, but with the idea of retreat finding no
+place in his mind.
+
+One side of the room lay in blackest darkness; through the furthermost
+window of the other a faint yellowed luminance (the moonlight through
+the blind) spread upon the polished parquet flooring. But that which
+held the curator spell-bound—that which momentarily quickened into life
+the latent superstition, common to all mankind, was a beam of cold
+light which poured its effulgence fully upon the case containing the
+Prophet’s slipper! Where the other exhibits lay either in utter
+darkness or semi-darkness this one it seemed was supernaturally picked
+out by this lunar searchlight!
+
+It was ghostly-unnerving; but, the first dread of it passed, Mostyn
+recalled how during the day a hole inexplicably had been cut in that
+blind; he recalled that it had not been mended, but that the damaged
+blind had merely been rolled up again.
+
+And as a dawning perception of the truth came to him, as falteringly he
+advanced a step toward the mystic beam, he saw that one side of the
+case had been shattered—he saw the broken glass upon the floor; and in
+the dense shadow behind and under the beam of light, vaguely he saw a
+dull red object.
+
+It moved—it seemed to live! It moved away from the case and in the
+direction of the eastern windows.
+
+“My God!” whispered Mostyn; “it’s the Prophet’s slipper!”
+
+And wildly, blindly, he fired down the room. Later he knew that he had
+fired in panic, for nothing human was or could be in the place; yet his
+shot was not without effect. In the instant of its flash, something
+struck sharply against the dimly seen blind of one of the east windows;
+he heard the crash of broken glass.
+
+He leapt to the switch and flooded the room with light. A fear of what
+it might hold possessed him, and he turned instantly.
+
+Hard by the fragments of broken glass upon the floor and midway between
+the case and the first easterly window lay the slipper. A bell was
+ringing somewhere. His shot probably had aroused the attention of the
+policeman. Someone was clamouring upon the door of the Museum, too.
+Mostyn raced forward and raised the blind—that toward which the slipper
+had seemed to move.
+
+The lower pane of the window was smashed. Blood was trickling down upon
+the floor from the jagged edges of the glass.
+
+“Hullo there! Open the door! Open the door!”
+
+Bells were going all over the place now; sounds of running footsteps
+came from below; but Mostyn stood staring at the broken window and at
+the solid iron bars which protected it without, which were intact,
+substantial—which showed him that nothing human could possibly have
+entered.
+
+Yet the case was shattered, the holy slipper lay close beside him upon
+the floor, and from the broken window-pane blood was
+falling—drip-drip-drip...
+
+That was the story as I heard it half an hour later. For Inspector
+Bristol, apprised of the happening, was promptly on the scene; and
+knowing how keen was my interest in the matter, he rang me up
+immediately. I arrived soon after Bristol and found a perplexed group
+surrounding the uncanny slipper of the Prophet. No one had dared to
+touch it; the dread vengeance of Hassan of Aleppo would visit any
+unbeliever who ventured to lay hand upon the holy, bloody thing. Well
+we knew it, and as though it had been a venomous scorpion we, a company
+of up-to-date, prosaic men of affairs, stood around that dilapidated
+markoob, and kept a respectful distance.
+
+Mostyn, an odd figure in pyjamas and dressing-gown, turned his pale,
+intellectual face to me as I entered.
+
+“It will have to be put back ... secretly,” he said.
+
+His voice was very unsteady. Bristol nodded grimly and glanced at the
+two constables, who, with a plain-clothes man unknown to me, made up
+that midnight company.
+
+“I’ll do it, sir,” said one of the constables suddenly.
+
+“One moment”—Mostyn raised his hand!
+
+In the ensuing silence I could hear the heavy breathing of those around
+me. We were all looking at the slipper, I think.
+
+“Do you understand, fully,” the curator continued, “the risk you run?”
+
+“I think so, sir,” answered the constable; “but I’m prepared to chance
+it.”
+
+“The hands,” resumed Mostyn slowly, “of those who hitherto have
+ventured to touch it have been”—he hesitated—“cut off.”
+
+“Your career in the Force would be finished if it happened to you, my
+lad,” said Bristol shortly.
+
+“I suppose they’d look after me,” said the man, with grim humour.
+
+“They would if you met with—an accident, in the discharge of your
+duty,” replied the inspector; “but I haven’t ordered you to do it, and
+I’m not going to.”
+
+“All right, sir,” said the man, with a sort of studied truculence,
+“I’ll take my chance.”
+
+I tried to stop him; Mostyn, too, stepped forward, and Bristol swore
+frankly. But it was all of no avail.
+
+A sort of chill seemed to claim my very soul when I saw the constable
+stoop, unconcernedly pick up the slipper, and replace it in the broken
+case.
+
+It was out of a silence cathedral-like, awesome, that he spoke.
+
+“All you want is a new pane of glass, sir,” he said—“and the thing’s
+done.”
+
+I anticipate in mentioning it here; but since Constable Hughes has no
+further place in these records I may perhaps be excused for dismissing
+him at this point.
+
+He was picked up outside the section house on the following evening
+with his right hand severed just above the wrist.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+A SCREAM IN THE NIGHT
+
+
+The day that followed was one of the hottest which we experienced
+during the heat wave. It was a day crowded with happenings. The Burton
+Room was closed to the public, whilst a glazier worked upon the broken
+east window and a new blind was fitted to the west. Behind the workmen,
+guarded by a watchful commissionaire, yawned the shattered case
+containing the slipper.
+
+I wondered if the visitors to the other rooms of the Museum realized,
+as I realized, that despite the blazing sunlight of tropical London,
+the shadow of Hassan of Aleppo lay starkly on that haunted building?
+
+At about eleven o’clock, as I hurried along the Strand, I almost
+collided with the girl of the violet eyes! She turned and ran like the
+wind down Arundel Street, whilst I stood at the corner staring after
+her in blank amazement, as did other passers-by; for a man cannot with
+dignity race headlong after a pretty woman down a public thoroughfare!
+
+My mystification grew hourly deeper; and Bristol wallowed in
+perplexities.
+
+“It’s the most horrible and confusing case,” he said to me when I
+joined him at the Museum, “that the Yard has ever had to handle. It
+bristles with outrages and murders. God knows where it will all end.
+I’ve had London scoured for a clue to the whereabouts of Hassan and
+Company and drawn absolutely blank! Then there’s Earl Dexter. Where
+does he come in? For once in a way he’s living in hiding. I can’t find
+his headquarters. I’ve been thinking—”
+
+He drew me aside into the small gallery which runs parallel with the
+Assyrian Room.
+
+“Dexter has booked two passages in the Oceanic. Who is his companion?”
+
+I wondered, I had wondered more than once, if his companion were my
+beautiful violet-eyed acquaintance. A scruple—perhaps an absurd
+scruple—hitherto had kept me silent respecting her, but now I
+determined to take Bristol fully into my confidence. A conviction was
+growing upon me that she and Earl Dexter together represented that
+third party whose existence we had long suspected. Whether they
+operated separately or on behalf of the Moslems (of which arrangement I
+could not conceive) remained to be seen. I was about to voice my doubts
+and suspicions when Bristol went on hurriedly—
+
+“I have thoroughly examined the Burton Room, and considering that the
+windows are thirty feet from the ground, that there is no sign of a
+ladder having stood upon the lawn, and that the iron bars are quite
+intact, it doesn’t look humanly possible for any one to have been in
+the room last night prior to Mostyn’s arrival!”
+
+“One of the dwarfs—”
+
+“Not even one of the dwarfs,” said Bristol, “could have passed between
+those iron bars!”
+
+“But there was blood on the window!”
+
+“I know there was, and human blood. It’s been examined!”
+
+He stared at me fixedly. The thing was unspeakably uncanny.
+
+“To-night,” he went on, “I am remaining in here”—nodding toward the
+Assyrian Room—“and I have so arranged it that no mortal being can
+possibly know I am here. Mostyn is staying, and you can stay, too, if
+you care to. Owing to Professor Deeping’s will you are badly involved
+in the beastly business, and I have no doubt you are keen to see it
+through.”
+
+“I am,” I admitted, “and the end I look for and hope for is the
+recovery of the slipper by its murderous owners!”
+
+“I am with you,” said Bristol. “It’s just a point of honour; but I
+should be glad to make them a present of it. We’re ostentatiously
+placing a constable on duty in the hallway to-night—largely as a blind.
+It will appear that we’re taking no other additional precautions.”
+
+He hurried off to make arrangements for my joining him in his watch,
+and thus again I lost my opportunity of confiding in him regarding the
+mysterious girl.
+
+I half anticipated, though I cannot imagine why, that Earl Dexter would
+put in an appearance, during the day. He did not do so, however, for
+Bristol had put a constable on the door who was well acquainted with
+the appearance of The Stetson Man. The inspector, in the course of his
+investigations, had come upon what might have been a clue, but what was
+at best a confusing one. Close by the wall of the curator’s house and
+lying on the gravel path he had found a part of a gold cuff link. It
+was of American manufacture.
+
+Upon such slender evidence we could not justly assume that it pointed
+to the presence of Dexter on the night of the attempted robbery, but it
+served to complicate a matter already sufficiently involved.
+
+In pursuance of Bristol’s plan, I concealed myself that evening just
+before the closing of the Museum doors, in a recess behind a heavy
+piece of Babylonian sculpture. Bristol was similarly concealed in
+another part of the room, and Mostyn joined us later.
+
+The Museum was closed; and so far as evidence went the authorities had
+relied again upon the bolts and bars hitherto considered impregnable,
+and upon the constable in the hall. The broken window was mended, the
+cut blind replaced, and within, in its shattered case, reposed the
+slipper of the Prophet.
+
+All the blinds being lowered, the Assyrian Room was a place of gloom,
+yellowed on the western side by the moonlight through the blind. The
+door communicating with the Burton Room was closed but not fastened.
+
+“They operated last night,” Bristol whispered to me, “at the exact time
+when the moonlight shone through the hole in the westerly blind on to
+the case. If they come to-night, and I am quite expecting them, they
+will have to dispense with that assistance; but they know by experience
+where to reach the case.”
+
+“Despite our precautions,” I said, “they will almost certainly know
+that a watch is being kept.”
+
+“They may or they may not,” replied Bristol. “Either way I’m disposed
+to think there will be another attempt. Their mysterious method is so
+rapid that they can afford to take chances.”
+
+This was not my first night vigil since I had become in a sense the
+custodian of the relic, but it was quite the most dreary. Amid the
+tomb-like objects about us we seemed two puny mortals toying with
+stupendous things. We could not smoke and must converse only in
+whispers; and so the night wore on until I began to think that our
+watch would be dully uneventful.
+
+“Our big chance,” whispered Mostyn, “is in the fact that any day may
+change the conditions. They can’t afford to wait.”
+
+He ceased abruptly, grasping my arm. From somewhere, somewhere outside
+the building, we all three had heard a soft whistle. A moment of tense
+listening followed.
+
+“If only we could have had the place surrounded,” whispered
+Bristol—“but it was impossible, of course.”
+
+A faint grating noise echoed through the lofty Burton Room. Bristol
+slipped past me in the semi-gloom, and gently opened the communicating
+door a few inches.
+
+A-tiptoe, I joined him, and craning across his shoulder saw a strange
+and wonderful thing.
+
+The newly glazed east window again was shattered with a booming crash!
+The yellow blind was thrust aside. A long something reached out toward
+the broken case. There was a sort of fumbling sound, and paralyzed with
+the wonder of it—for the window, remember, was thirty feet from the
+ground—I stood frozen to my post.
+
+Not so Bristol. As the weird tentacle (or more exactly it reminded me
+of a gigantic crab’s claw) touched the case, the Inspector leapt
+forward. A white beam from his electric torch cut through to the broken
+cabinet.
+
+The thing was withdrawn ... and with it went the slipper of the
+Prophet.
+
+“Raise the blinds!” cried Bristol. “Mr. Cavanagh! Mr. Mostyn! We must
+not let them give us the slip!”
+
+I got up the blind of the nearer window as Bristol raised the other.
+Not a living thing was in sight from either!
+
+Mostyn was beside me, his hand resting on my shoulder. I noted how he
+trembled. Bristol turned and looked back at us. The light from his
+pocket torch flashed upon the curator’s face; and I have never seen
+such an expression of horrified amazement as that which it wore.
+Faintly, I could hear the constable racing up the steps from the hall.
+
+Ideas of the supernatural came to us all, I know; when, with a
+scuffling sound not unlike that of a rat in a ceiling, something moved
+above us!
+
+“Damn my thick head!” roared Bristol, furiously. “He’s on the roof!
+It’s flat as a floor and there’s enough ivy alongside the water-spout
+on your house adjoining, Mr. Mostyn, to afford foothold to an invading
+army!”
+
+He plunged off toward the open door, and I heard him racing down the
+Assyrian Room.
+
+“He had a short rope ladder fixed from the gutter!” he cried back at
+us. “Graham! Graham!” (the constable on duty in the hall)—“Get the
+front door open! Get...” His voice died away as he leapt down the
+stairs.
+
+From the direction of Orpington Square came a horrid, choking scream.
+It rose hideously; it fell, rose again—and died.
+
+The thief escaped. We saw the traces upon the ivy where he had hastened
+down. Bristol ascended by the same route, and found where the
+ladder-hooks had twice been attached to the gutterway. Constable
+Graham, who was first actually to leave the building, declared that he
+heard the whirr of a re-started motor lower down Great Orchard Street.
+
+Bristol’s theory, later to be dreadfully substantiated, was that the
+thief had broken the glass and reached into the case with an
+arrangement similar to that employed for pruning trees, having a clutch
+at the end, worked with a cord.
+
+“Hassan has been too clever for us!” said the inspector. “But—what in
+God’s name did that awful screaming mean?”
+
+I had a theory, but I did not advance it then.
+
+It was not until nearly dawn that my theory, and Bristol’s, regarding
+the clutch arrangement, both were confirmed. For close under the
+railings which abut on Orpington Square, in a pool of blood we found
+just such an instrument as Bristol had described.
+
+And still clutching it was a pallid and ghastly shrunken hand that had
+been severed from above the wrist!
+
+“Merciful God!” whispered the inspector—“look at the opal ring on the
+finger! Look at the bandage where he cut himself on the broken
+window-glass that first night, when Mr. Mostyn disturbed him. It wasn’t
+the Hashishin who stole the thing.... It’s Earl Dexter’s hand!”
+
+No one spoke for a moment. Then—
+
+“Which of them has—” began Mostyn huskily.
+
+“The slipper of the Prophet?” interrupted Bristol. “I wonder if we
+shall ever know?”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+A SHRIVELLED HAND
+
+
+Around a large square table in a room at New Scotland Yard stood a
+group of men, all of whom looked more or less continuously at something
+that lay upon the polished deal. One of the party, none other than the
+Commissioner himself, had just finished speaking, and in silence now we
+stood about the gruesome object which had furnished him with the text
+of his very terse address.
+
+I knew myself privileged in being admitted to such a conference at the
+C.I.D. headquarters and owed my admission partly to Inspector Bristol,
+and partly to the fact that under the will of the late Professor
+Deeping I was concerned in the uncanny business we were met to discuss.
+
+Novelty has a charm for every one; and to find oneself immersed in a
+maelstrom of Eastern devilry, with a group of scientific murderers in
+pursuit of a holy Moslem relic, and unexpectedly to be made a trustee
+of that dangerous curiosity, makes a certain appeal to the adventurous.
+But to read of such things and to participate in them are widely
+different matters. The slipper of the Prophet and the dreadful crimes
+connected with it, the mutilations, murders, the uncanny mysteries
+which made up its history, were filling my world with horror.
+
+Now, in silence we stood around that table at New Scotland Yard and
+watched, as though we expected it to move, the ghastly “clue” which lay
+there. It was a shrivelled human hand, and about the thumb and
+forefinger there still dryly hung a fragment of lint which had bandaged
+a jagged wound. On one of the shrunken fingers was a ring set with a
+large opal.
+
+Inspector Bristol broke the oppressive silence.
+
+“You see, sir,” he said, addressing the Commissioner, “this marks a new
+complication in the case. Up to this week although, unfortunately, we
+had made next to no progress, the thing was straightforward enough. A
+band of Eastern murderers, working along lines quite novel to Europe,
+were concealed somewhere in London. We knew that much. They murdered
+Professor Deeping, but failed to recover the slipper. They mutilated
+everyone who touched it mysteriously. The best men in the department,
+working night and day, failed to effect a single arrest. In spite of
+the mysterious activity of Hassan of Aleppo the slipper was safely
+lodged in the British Antiquarian Museum.”
+
+The Commissioner nodded thoughtfully.
+
+“There is no doubt,” continued Bristol, “that the Hashishin were
+watching the Museum. Mr. Cavanagh, here”—he nodded in my direction—“saw
+Hassan himself lurking in the neighbourhood. We took every precaution,
+observed the greatest secrecy; but in spite of it all a constable who
+touched the accursed thing lost his right hand. Then the slipper was
+taken.”
+
+He stopped, and all eyes again were turned to the table.
+
+“The Yard,” resumed Bristol slowly, “had information that Earl Dexter,
+the cleverest crook in America, was in England. He was seen in the
+Museum, and the night following the slipper was stolen. Then outside
+the place I found—that!”
+
+He pointed to the severed hand. No one spoke for a moment. Then—
+
+“The new problem,” said the Commissioner, “is this: who took the
+slipper, Dexter or Hassan of Aleppo?”
+
+“That’s it, sir,” agreed Bristol. “Dexter had two passages booked in
+the Oceanic: but he didn’t sail with her, and—that’s his hand!”
+
+“You say he has not been traced?” asked the Commissioner.
+
+“No doctor known to the Medical Association,” replied Bristol, “is
+attending him! He’s not in any of the hospitals. He has completely
+vanished. The conclusion is obvious!”
+
+“The evident deduction,” I said, “is that Dexter stole the slipper from
+the Museum—God knows with what purpose—and that Hassan of Aleppo
+recovered it from him.”
+
+“You think we shall next hear of Earl Dexter from the river police?”
+suggested Bristol.
+
+“Personally,” replied the Commissioner, “I agree with Mr. Cavanagh. I
+think Dexter is dead, and it is very probable that Hassan and Company
+are already homeward bound with the slipper of the Prophet.”
+
+With all my heart I hoped that he might be right, but an intuition was
+with me crying that he was wrong, that many bloody deeds would be, ere
+the sacred slipper should return to the East.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+THE DWARF
+
+
+The manner in which we next heard of the whereabouts of the Prophet’s
+slipper was utterly unforeseen, wildly dramatic. That the Hashishin
+were aware that I, though its legal trustee, no longer had charge of
+the relic nor knowledge of its resting-place, was sufficiently evident
+from the immunity which I enjoyed at this time from that ceaseless
+haunting by members of the uncanny organization ruled by Hassan. I had
+begun to feel more secure in my chambers, and no longer worked with a
+loaded revolver upon the table beside me. But the slightest unusual
+noise in the night still sufficed to arouse me and set me listening
+intently, to chill me with dread of what it might portend. In short, my
+nerves were by no means recovered from the ceaseless strain of the
+events connected with and arising out of the death of my poor friend,
+Professor Deeping.
+
+One evening as I sat at work in my chambers, with the throb of busy
+Fleet Street and its thousand familiar sounds floating in to me through
+the open windows, my phone bell rang.
+
+Even as I turned to take up the receiver a foreboding possessed me that
+my trusteeship was no longer to be a sinecure. It was Bristol who had
+rung me up, and upon very strange business.
+
+“A development at last!” he said; “but at present I don’t know what to
+make of it. Can you come down now?”
+
+“Where are you speaking from?”
+
+“From the Waterloo Road—a delightful neighbourhood. I shall be glad if
+you can meet me at the entrance to Wyatt’s Buildings in half an hour.”
+
+“What is it? Have you found Dexter?”
+
+“No, unfortunately. But it’s murder!”
+
+I knew as I hung up the receiver that my brief period of peace was
+ended; that the lists of assassination were reopened. I hurried out
+through the court into Fleet Street, thinking of the key of the now
+empty case at the Museum which reposed at my bankers, thinking of the
+devils who pursued the slipper, thinking of the hundred and one things,
+strange and terrible, which went to make up the history of that
+gruesome relic.
+
+Wyatt’s Buildings, Waterloo Road, are a gloomy and forbidding block of
+dwellings which seem to frown sullenly upon the high road, from which
+they are divided by a dark and dirty courtyard. Passing an iron
+gateway, you enter, by way of an arch, into this sinister place of
+uncleanness. Male residents in their shirt sleeves lounge against the
+several entrances. Bedraggled women nurse dirty infants and sit in
+groups upon the stone steps, rendering them almost impassable. But
+to-night a thing had happened in Wyatt’s Buildings which had awakened
+in the inhabitants, hardened to sordid crime, a sort of torpid
+interest.
+
+Faces peered from most of the windows which commanded a view of the
+courtyard, looking like pallid blotches against the darkness; but a
+number of police confined the loungers within their several doorways,
+so that the yard itself was comparatively clear.
+
+I had had some difficulty in forcing a way through the crowd which
+thronged the entrance, but finally I found myself standing beside
+Inspector Bristol and looking down upon that which had brought us both
+to Wyatt’s Buildings.
+
+There was no moon that night, and only the light of the lamp in the
+archway, with some faint glimmers from the stairways surrounding the
+court, reached the dirty paving. Bristol directed the light of a
+pocket-lamp upon the hunched-up figure which lay in the dust, and I saw
+it to be that of a dwarfish creature, yellow skinned and wearing only a
+dark loin cloth. He had a malformed and disproportionate head, a head
+that had been too large even for a big man. I knew after first glance
+that this was one of the horrible dwarfs employed by the Hashishin in
+their murderous business. It might even be the one who had killed
+Deeping; but this was impossible to determine by reason of the fact
+that the hideous, swollen head, together with the features, was
+completely crushed. I shall not describe the creature’s appearance in
+further detail.
+
+Having given me an opportunity to examine the dead dwarf, Bristol
+returned the electric lamp to his pocket and stood looking at me in the
+semi-gloom. A constable stood on duty quite near to us, and others
+guarded the archway and the doors to the dwellings. The murmur of
+subdued voices echoed hollowly in the wells of the staircases, and a
+constant excited murmur proceeded from the crowd at the entrance. No
+pressmen had yet been admitted, though numbers of them were at the
+gates.
+
+“It happened less than an hour ago,” said Bristol. “The place was much
+as you see it now, and from what I can gather there came the sound of a
+shot and several people saw the dwarf fall through the air and drop
+where he lies!”
+
+The light was insufficient to show the expression upon the speaker’s
+face, but his voice told of a great wonder.
+
+“It is a bit like an Indian conjuring trick,” I said, looking up to the
+sky above us; “who fired the shot?”
+
+“So far,” replied Bristol, “I have failed to find out; but there’s a
+bullet in the thing’s head. He was dead before he reached the
+pavement.”
+
+“Did no one see the flash of the pistol?”
+
+“No one that I have got hold of yet. Of course this kind of evidence is
+very unreliable; these people regularly go out of their way to mislead
+the police.”
+
+“You think the body may have been carried here from somewhere else?”
+
+“Oh, no; this is where it fell, right enough. You can see where his
+head struck the stones.”
+
+“He has not been moved at all?”
+
+“No; I shall not move him until I’ve worked out where in heaven’s name
+he can have fallen from! You and I have seen some mysterious things
+happen, Mr. Cavanagh, since the slipper of the Prophet came to England
+and brought these people”—he nodded toward the thing at our feet—“in
+its train; but this is the most inexplicable incident to date. I don’t
+know what to make of it at all. Quite apart from the question of where
+the dwarf fell from, who shot at him and why?”
+
+“Have you no theory?” I asked. “The incident to my mind points directly
+to one thing. We know that this uncanny creature belonged to the
+organization of Hassan of Aleppo. We know that Hassan implacably
+pursues one object—the slipper. In pursuit of the slipper, then, the
+dwarf came here. Bristol!”—I laid my hand upon his arm, glancing about
+me with a very real apprehension—“the slipper must be somewhere near!”
+
+Bristol turned to the constable standing hard by.
+
+“Remain here,” he ordered. Then to me: “I should like you to come up on
+to the roof. From there we can survey the ground and perhaps arrive at
+some explanation of how the dwarf came to fall upon that spot.”
+
+Passing the constable on duty at one of the doorways and making our way
+through the group of loiterers there, we ascended amid conflicting
+odours to the topmost floor. A ladder was fixed against the wall
+communicating with a trap in the ceiling. Several individuals in their
+shirt sleeves and all smoking clay pipes had followed us up. Bristol
+turned upon them.
+
+“Get downstairs,” he said—“all the lot of you, and stop there!”
+
+With muttered imprecations our audience dispersed, slowly returning by
+the way they had come. Bristol mounted the ladder and opened the trap.
+Through the square opening showed a velvet patch spangled with starry
+points. As he passed up on to the roof and I followed him, the
+comparative cleanness of the air was most refreshing after the varied
+fumes of the staircase.
+
+Side by side we leaned upon the parapet looking down into the dirty
+courtyard which was the theatre of this weird mystery; looking down
+upon the stage, sordidly Western, where a mystic Eastern tragedy had
+been enacted.
+
+I could see the constable standing beside the crushed thing upon the
+stones.
+
+“Now,” said Bristol, with a sort of awe in his voice, “where did he
+fall from?”
+
+And at his words, looking down at the spot where the dwarf lay, and
+noting that he could not possibly have fallen there from any of the
+buildings surrounding the courtyard, an eerie sensation crept over me;
+for I was convinced that the happening was susceptible of no natural
+explanation.
+
+I had heard—who has not heard?—of the Indian rope trick, where a fakir
+throws a rope into the air which remains magically suspended whilst a
+boy climbs upward and upward until he disappears into space. I had
+never credited accounts of the performance; but now I began seriously
+to wonder if the arts of Hassan of Aleppo were not as great or greater
+than the arts of fakir. But the crowning mystery to my mind was that of
+the Hashishin’s death. It would seem that as he had hung suspended in
+space he had been shot!
+
+“You say that someone heard the sound of the shot?” I asked suddenly.
+
+“Several people,” replied Bristol; “but no one knows, or no one will
+say, from what direction it came. I shall go on with the inquiry, of
+course, and cross-examine every soul in Wyatt’s Buildings. Meanwhile,
+I’m open to confess that I am beaten.”
+
+In the velvet sky countless points blazed tropically. The hum of the
+traffic in Waterloo Road reached us only in a muffled way. Sordidness
+lay beneath us, but up there under the heavens we seemed removed from
+it as any Babylonian astronomer communing with the stars.
+
+When, some ten minutes later, I passed out into the noise of Waterloo
+Road, I left behind me an unsolved mystery and took with me a great
+dread; for I knew that the quest of the sacred slipper was not ended, I
+knew that another tragedy was added to its history—and I feared to
+surmise what the future might hold for all of us.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+THE WOMAN WITH THE BASKET
+
+
+Deep in thought respecting the inexplicable nature of this latest
+mystery, I turned in the direction of the bridge, and leaving behind me
+an ever-swelling throng at the gate of Wyatt’s Buildings, proceeded
+westward.
+
+The death of the dwarf had lifted the case into the realms of the
+marvellous, and I noted nothing of the bustle about me, for mentally I
+was still surveying that hunched-up body which had fallen out of empty
+space.
+
+Then in upon my preoccupation burst a woman’s scream!
+
+I aroused myself from reverie, looking about to right and left.
+Evidently I had been walking slowly, for I was less than a hundred
+yards from Wyatt’s Buildings, and hard by the entrance to an uninviting
+alley from which I thought the scream had proceeded.
+
+And as I hesitated, for I had no desire to become involved in a drunken
+brawl, again came the shrill scream: “Help! help!”
+
+I cannot say if I was the only passer-by who heard the cry; certainly I
+was the only one who responded to it. I ran down the narrow street,
+which was practically deserted, and heard windows thrown up as I passed
+for the cries for help continued.
+
+Just beyond a patch of light cast by a street lamp a scene was being
+enacted strange enough at any time and in any place, but doubly
+singular at that hour of the night, or early morning, in a lane off the
+Waterloo Road.
+
+An old woman, from whose hand a basket of provisions had fallen, was
+struggling in the grasp of a tall Oriental! He was evidently trying to
+stifle her screams and at the same time to pinion her arms behind her!
+
+I perceived that there was more in this scene than met the eye.
+Oriental footpads are rarities in the purlieus of Waterloo Road. So
+much was evident; and since I carried a short, sharp argument in my
+pocket, I hastened to advance it.
+
+At the sight of the gleaming revolver barrel the man, who was dressed
+in dark clothes and wore a turban, turned and ran swiftly off. I had
+scarce a glimpse of his pallid brown face ere he was gone, nor did the
+thought of pursuit enter my mind. I turned to the old woman, who was
+dressed in shabby black and who was rearranging her thick veil in an
+oddly composed manner, considering the nature of the adventure that had
+befallen her.
+
+She picked up her basket, and turned away. Needless to say I was rather
+shocked at her callous ingratitude, for she offered no word of thanks,
+did not even glance in my direction, but made off hurriedly toward
+Waterloo Road.
+
+I had been on the point of inquiring if she had sustained any injury,
+but I checked the words and stood looking after her in blank
+wonderment. Then my ideas were diverted into a new channel. I
+perceived, as she passed under an adjacent lamp, that her basket
+contained provisions such as a woman of her appearance would scarcely
+be expected to purchase. I noted a bottle of wine, a chicken, and a
+large melon.
+
+The nationality of the assailant from the first had marked the affair
+for no ordinary one, and now a hazy notion of what lay behind all this
+began to come to me.
+
+Keeping well in the shadows on the opposite side of the way, I followed
+the woman with the basket. The lane was quite deserted; for, the
+disturbance over, those few residents who had raised their windows had
+promptly lowered them again. She came out into Waterloo Road, crossed
+over, and stood waiting by a stopping-place for electric cars. I saw
+her arranging a cloth over her basket in such a way as effectually to
+conceal the contents. A strong mental excitement possessed me. The
+detective fever claims us all at one time or another, I think, and I
+had good reason for pursuing any inquiry that promised to lead to the
+elucidation of the slipper mystery. A theory, covering all the facts of
+the assault incident, now presented itself, and I stood back in the
+shadow, watchful; in a degree, exultant.
+
+A Greenwich-bound car was hailed by the woman with the basket. I could
+not be mistaken, I felt sure, in my belief that she cast furtive
+glances about her as she mounted the steps. But, having seen her
+actually aboard, my attention became elsewhere engaged.
+
+All now depended upon securing a cab before the tram car had passed
+from view!
+
+I counted it an act of Providence that a disengaged taxi appeared at
+that moment, evidently bound for Waterloo Station. I ran out into the
+road with cane upraised.
+
+As the man drew up—
+
+“Quick!” I cried. “You see that Greenwich car—nearly at the Ophthalmic
+Hospital? Follow it. Don’t get too near. I will give you further
+instructions through the tube.” I leapt in. We were off!
+
+The rocking car ahead was rounding the bend now toward St. George’s
+Circus. As it passed the clock and entered South London Road it
+stopped. I raised the tube.
+
+“Pass it slowly!”
+
+We skirted the clock tower, and bore around to the right. Then I drew
+well back in the corner of the cab.
+
+The woman with the basket was descending! “Pull up a few yards beyond!”
+I directed. As the car re-started, and passed us, the taxi became
+stationary. I peered out of the little window at the back.
+
+The woman was returning in the direction of Waterloo Road!
+
+“Drive slowly back along Waterloo Road,” was my next order. “Pretend
+you are looking for a fare; I will keep out of sight.”
+
+The man nodded. It was unlikely that any one would notice the fact that
+the cab was engaged.
+
+I was borne back again upon my course. The woman kept to the right,
+and, once we were entered into the straight road which leads to the
+bridge, I again raised the speaking-tube.
+
+“Pull up,” I said. “On the right-hand side is an old woman carrying a
+basket, fifty yards ahead. Do you see her? Keep well behind, but don’t
+lose sight of her.”
+
+The man drew up again and sat watching the figure with the basket until
+it was almost lost from sight. Then slowly we resumed our way. I would
+have continued the pursuit afoot now, but I feared that my quarry might
+again enter a vehicle. She did not do so, however, but coming abreast
+of the turning in which the mysterious assault had taken place, she
+crossed the road and disappeared from view.
+
+I leapt out of the cab, thrust half a crown into the man’s hand, and
+ran on to the corner. The night was now far advanced, and I knew that
+the chances of detection were thereby increased. But the woman seemed
+to have abandoned her fears, and I saw her just ahead of me walking
+resolutely past the lamp beyond which a short time earlier she had met
+with a dangerous adventure.
+
+Since the opposite side of the street was comparatively in darkness, I
+slipped across, and in a state of high nervous tension pursued this
+strange work of espionage. I was convinced that I had forestalled
+Bristol and that I was hot upon the track of those who could explain
+the mystery of the dead dwarf.
+
+The woman entered the gate of the block of dwellings even more
+forbidding in appearance than those which that night had staged a
+dreadful drama.
+
+As the figure with the basket was lost from view I crept on, and in
+turn entered the evil-smelling hallway. I stepped cautiously, and
+standing beneath a gaslight protected by a wire frame, I congratulated
+myself upon having reached that point of vantage as silently as any
+Sioux stalker.
+
+Footsteps were receding up the stone stairs. Craning my neck, I peered
+up the well of the staircase. I could not see the woman, but from the
+sound of her tread it was possible to count the landings which she
+passed. When she had reached the fourth, and I heard her step upon yet
+another flight, I knew that she must be bound for the topmost floor;
+and observing every precaution, almost holding my breath in a nervous
+endeavour to make not the slightest sound, rapidly I mounted the
+stairs.
+
+I was come to the third landing in this secret fashion when quite
+distinctly I heard the grating of a key in a lock!
+
+Since four doors opened upon each of the landings, at all costs, I
+thought, I must learn by which door she entered.
+
+Throwing caution to the winds I raced up the remaining flights ... and
+there at the top the woman confronted me, with blazing eyes!—with eyes
+that thrilled every nerve; for they were violet eyes, the only truly
+violet eyes I have ever seen! They were the eyes of the woman who like
+a charming, mocking will-o’-the-wisp had danced through this tragic
+scene from the time that poor Professor Deeping had brought the
+Prophet’s slipper to London up to this present hour!
+
+There at the head of those stone steps in that common dwelling-house I
+knew her—and in the violet eyes it was written that she knew, and
+feared, me!
+
+“What do you want? Why are you following me?”
+
+She made no endeavour to disguise her voice. Almost, I think, she spoke
+the words involuntarily.
+
+I stood beside her. Quickly as she had turned from the door at my
+ascent, I had noted that it was that numbered forty-eight which she had
+been about to open.
+
+“You waste words,” I said grimly. “Who lives there?”
+
+I nodded in the direction of the doorway. The violet eyes watched me
+with an expression in their depths which I find myself wholly unable to
+describe. Fear predominated, but there was anger, too, and with it a
+sort of entreaty which almost made me regret that I had taken this task
+upon myself. From beneath the shabby black hat escaped an errant lock
+of wavy hair wholly inconsistent with the assumed appearance of the
+woman. The flickering gaslight on the landing sought out in that
+wonderful hair shades which seemed to glow with the soft light seen in
+the heart of a rose. The thick veil was raised now and all attempts at
+deception abandoned. At bay she faced me, this secret woman whom I knew
+to hold the key to some of the darkest places which we sought to
+explore.
+
+“I live there,” she said slowly. “What do you want with me?”
+
+“I want to know,” I replied, “for whom are those provisions in your
+basket?”
+
+She watched me fixedly.
+
+“And I want to know,” I continued, “something that only you can tell
+me. We have met before, madam, but you have always eluded me. This time
+you shall not do so. There’s much I have to ask of you, but
+particularly I want to know who killed the Hashishin who lies dead at
+no great distance from here!”
+
+“How can I tell you that? Of what are you speaking?”
+
+Her voice was low and musical; that of a cultured woman. She evidently
+recognized the futility of further subterfuge in this respect.
+
+“You know quite well of what I am speaking! You know that you can tell
+me if any one can! The fact that you go disguised alone condemns you!
+Why should I remind you of our previous meetings—of the links which
+bind you to the history of the Prophet’s slipper?” She shuddered and
+closed her eyes. “Your present attitude is a sufficient admission!”
+
+She stood silent before me, with something pitiful in her pose—a
+wonderfully pretty woman, whose disarranged hair and dilapidated hat
+could not mar her beauty; whose clumsy, ill-fitting garments could not
+conceal her lithe grace.
+
+Our altercation had not thus far served to arouse any of the
+inhabitants and on that stuffy landing, beneath the flickering
+gaslight, we stood alone, a group of two which epitomized strange
+things.
+
+Then, with that quietly dramatic note which marks real life entrances
+and differentiates them from the loudly acclaimed episodes of the
+stage, a third actor took up his cue.
+
+“Both hands, Mr. Cavanagh!” directed an American voice.
+
+Nerves atwitch, I started around in its direction.
+
+From behind the slightly opened door of No. 48 protruded a steel
+barrel, pointed accurately at my head!
+
+I hesitated, glancing from the woman toward the open door.
+
+“Do it quick!” continued the voice incisively. “You are up against a
+desperate man, Mr. Cavanagh. Raise your hands. Carneta, relieve Mr.
+Cavanagh of his gun!”
+
+Instantly the girl, with deft fingers, had obtained possession of my
+revolver.
+
+“Step inside,” said the crisp, strident voice. Knowing myself helpless
+and quite convinced that I was indeed in the clutches of desperate
+people, I entered the doorway, the door being held open from within.
+She whom I had heard called Carneta followed. The door was reclosed;
+and I found myself in a perfectly bare and dim passageway. From behind
+me came the order—
+
+“Go right ahead!”
+
+Into a practically unfurnished room, lighted by one gas jet, I walked.
+Some coarse matting hung before the two windows and a fairly large grip
+stood on the floor against one wall. A gas-ring was in the hearth,
+together with a few cheap cooking utensils.
+
+
+I turned and faced the door. First entered Carneta, carrying the
+basket; then came a man with a revolver in his left hand and his right
+arm strapped across his chest and swathed in bandages. One glance
+revealed the fact that his right hand had been severed—revealed the
+fact, though I knew it already, that my captor was Earl Dexter.
+
+He looked even leaner than when I had last seen him. I had no doubt
+that his ghastly wound had occasioned a tremendous loss of blood. His
+gaunt face was positively emaciated, but the steely gray eyes had lost
+nothing of their brightness. There was a good deal about Mr. Earl
+Dexter, the cracksman, that any man must have admired.
+
+“Shut the door, Carneta,” he said quietly. His companion closed the
+door and Dexter sat down on the grip, regarding me with his oddly
+humorous smile.
+
+“You’re a visitor I did not expect, Mr. Cavanagh,” he said. “I expected
+someone worse. You’ve interfered a bit with my plans but I don’t know
+that I can’t rearrange things satisfactorily. I don’t think I’ll stop
+for supper, though—” He glanced at the girl, who stood silent by the
+door.
+
+“Just pack up the provisions,” he directed, nodding toward the
+basket—“in the next room.”
+
+She departed without a word.
+
+“That’s a noticeable dust coat you’re wearing, Mr. Cavanagh,” said the
+American; “it gives me a great notion. I’m afraid I’ll have to borrow
+it.”
+
+He glanced, smiling, at the revolver in his left hand and back again to
+me. There was nothing of the bully about him, nothing melodramatic; but
+I took off the coat without demur and threw it across to him.
+
+“It will hide this stump,” he said grimly; “and any of the Hashishin
+gentlemen who may be on the look-out—though I rather fancy the road is
+clear at the moment—will mistake me for you. See the idea? Carneta will
+be in a cab and I’ll be in after her and away before they’ve got time
+to so much as whistle.”
+
+Very awkwardly he got into the coat.
+
+“She’s a clever girl, Carneta,” he said. “She’s doctored me all along
+since those devils cut my hand off.”
+
+As he finished speaking Carneta returned.
+
+She had discarded her rags and wore a large travelling coat and a
+fashionable hat.
+
+“Ready?” asked Dexter. “We’ll make a rush for it. We meant to go
+to-night anyway. It’s getting too hot here!” He turned to me.
+
+“Sorry to say,” he drawled, “I’ll have to tie you up and gag you.
+Apologize; but it can’t be helped.”
+
+Carneta nodded and went out of the room again, to return almost
+immediately with a line that looked as though it might have been
+employed for drying washing.
+
+“Hands behind you,” rapped Dexter, toying with the revolver—“and think
+yourself lucky you’ve got two!”
+
+There was no mistaking the manner of man with whom I had to deal, and I
+obeyed; but my mind was busy with a hundred projects. Very neatly the
+girl bound my wrists, and in response to a slight nod from Dexter threw
+the end of the line up over a beam in the sloping ceiling, for the room
+was right under the roof, and drew it up in such a way that, my wrists
+being raised behind me, I became utterly helpless. It was an ingenious
+device indicating considerable experience.
+
+“Just tie his handkerchief around his mouth,” directed Dexter: “that
+will keep him quiet long enough for our purpose. I hope you will be
+released soon, Mr. Cavanagh,” he added. “Greatly regret the necessity.”
+
+Carneta bound the handkerchief over my mouth.
+
+Dexter extinguished the gas.
+
+“Mr. Cavanagh,” he said, “I’ve gone through hell and I’ve lost the most
+useful four fingers and a thumb in the United States to get hold of the
+Prophet’s slipper. Any one can have it that’s open to pay for it—but
+I’ve got to retire on the deal, so I’ll drive a hard bargain!
+Good-night!”
+
+There was a sound of retreating footsteps, and I heard the entrance
+door close quietly.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+WHAT CAME THROUGH THE WINDOW
+
+
+I had not been in my unnatural position for many minutes before I began
+to suffer agonies, agonies not only physical but mental; for standing
+there like some prisoner of the Inquisition, it came to me how this
+dismantled apartment must be the focus of the dreadful forces of Hassan
+of Aleppo!
+
+That Earl Dexter had the slipper of the Prophet I no longer doubted,
+and that he had sustained, in this dwelling beneath the roof, an
+uncanny siege during the days which had passed since the theft from the
+Antiquarian Museum, was equally certain. Helpless, gagged, I pictured
+those hideous creatures, evil products of the secret East, who might,
+nay, who must surround that place! I thought of the horrible little
+yellow man who lay dead in Wyatt’s Buildings; and it became evident to
+me that the house in which I was now imprisoned must overlook the back
+of those unsavoury tenements. The windows, sack-covered now, no doubt
+commanded a view of the roofs of the buildings. One of the mysteries
+that had puzzled us was solved. It was Earl Dexter who had shot the
+yellow dwarf as he was bound for this very room! But how humanly the
+Hashishin had proposed to gain his goal, how he had travelled through
+empty space—for from empty space the shot had brought him down—I could
+not imagine.
+
+I knew something of the almost supernatural attributes of these people.
+From Professor Deeping’s book I knew of the incredible feats which they
+could perform when under the influence of the drug hashish. From
+personal experience also I knew that they had powers wholly abnormal.
+
+The pain in my arms and back momentarily increased. An awesome silence
+ruled. I tortured myself with pictures of murderous yellow men
+possessed of the power claimed by the Mahatmas, of levitation. Mentally
+I could see a distorted half-animal creature carrying a great gleaming
+knife and floating supernaturally toward me through the night!
+
+A soft pattering sound became perceptible on the sloping roof above!
+
+I think I have never known such intense and numbing fear as that which
+now descended upon me. Perhaps I may be forgiven it. A more dreadful
+situation it would be hard to devise. Knowing that I was on the fifth
+story of a house, bound, helpless, I knew, too, that a second mystic
+guardian of the slipper was come to accomplish the task in which the
+first had failed!
+
+I began to pray fervently.
+
+Neither of the windows were closed; and now through the intense
+darkness I heard one of them being raised up—up—up...
+
+The sacking was pulled aside inch by inch.
+
+Silhouetted against the faintly luminous background I saw a hunched,
+unnatural figure. The real was more dreadful even than the
+imaginary—for some stray beam of light touched into cold radiance a
+huge curved knife which the visitant held between his teeth!
+
+My fear became a madness, and I twisted my body violently in a wild
+endeavour to free myself. A dreadful pain shot through my left
+shoulder, and the whole nightmare scene—the thing with the knife at the
+window—the low-ceiled room-began to fade away from me. I seemed to be
+falling into deep water.
+
+A splintering crash and the sound of shouting formed my last
+recollections ere unconsciousness came.
+
+I found myself lying in an armchair with Bristol forcing brandy between
+my lips. My left arm hung limply at my side and the pain in my
+dislocated shoulder was excruciating.
+
+“Thank God you are all right, Mr. Cavanagh!” said the inspector. “I got
+the surprise of my life when we smashed the door in and found you tied
+up here!”
+
+“You came none too soon,” I said feebly. “God knows how Providence
+directed you here.”
+
+“Providence it was,” replied Bristol. “From the roof of Wyatt’s
+Buildings—you know the spot?—I saw the second yellow devil coming. By
+God! They meant to have it to-night! They don’t value their lives a
+brass farthing against that damned slipper!”
+
+“But how—”
+
+“Along the telegraph-wires, Mr. Cavanagh! They cross Wyatt’s Buildings
+and cross this house. It was a moonless night or we should have seen it
+at once! I watched him, saw him drop to this roof—and brought the men
+around to the front.”
+
+“Did he, that awful thing, escape?”
+
+“He dropped full forty feet into a tree—from the tree to the ground,
+and went off like a cat!”
+
+“Earl Dexter has escaped us,” I said, “and he has the slipper!”
+
+“God help him!” replied Bristol. “For by now he has that hell-pack at
+his heels! What a case! Heavens above, it will drive me mad!”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+A RAPPING AT MIDNIGHT
+
+
+Inspector Bristol finished his whisky at a gulp and stood up, a tall,
+massive figure, stretching himself and yawning.
+
+“The detective of fiction would be hard at work on this case, now,” he
+said, smiling, “but I don’t even pretend to be. I am at a standstill
+and I don’t care who knows it.”
+
+“You have absolutely no clue to the whereabouts of Earl Dexter?”
+
+“Not the slightest, Mr. Cavanagh. You hear a lot about the machinery of
+the law, but as a matter of fact, looking for a clever man hidden in
+London is a good deal like looking for a needle in a haystack. Then, he
+may have been bluffing when he told you he had the Prophet’s slipper.
+He’s already had his hand cut off through interfering with the beastly
+thing, and I really can’t believe he would take further chances by
+keeping it in his possession. Nevertheless, I should like to find him.”
+
+He leaned back against the mantelpiece, scratching his head
+perplexedly. In this perplexity he had my sympathy. No such pursuit, I
+venture to say, had ever before been required of Scotland Yard as this
+of the slipper of the Prophet. An organization founded in 1090, which
+has made a science of assassination, which through the centuries has
+perfected the malign arts, which, lingering on in a dark spot in Syria,
+has suddenly migrated and established itself in London, is a
+proposition almost unthinkable.
+
+It was hard to believe that even the daring American cracksman should
+have ventured to touch that blood-stained relic of the Prophet, that he
+should have snatched it away from beneath the very eyes of the fanatics
+who fiercely guarded it. What he hoped to gain by his possession of the
+slipper was not evident, but the fact remained that if he could be
+believed, he had it, and provided Scotland Yard’s information was
+accurate, he still lurked in hiding somewhere in London.
+
+Meanwhile, no clue offered to his hiding-place, and despite the
+ceaseless vigilance of the men acting under Bristol’s orders, no trace
+could be found of Hassan of Aleppo nor of his fiendish associates.
+
+“My theory is,” said Bristol, lighting a cigarette, “that even Dexter’s
+cleverness has failed to save him. He’s probably a dead man by now,
+which accounts for our failing to find him; and Hassan of Aleppo has
+recovered the slipper and returned to the East, taking his gruesome
+company with him—God knows how! But that accounts for our failing to
+find him.”
+
+I stood up rather wearily. Although poor Deeping had appointed me legal
+guardian of the relic, and although I could render but a poor account
+of my stewardship, let me confess that I was anxious to take that
+comforting theory to my bosom. I would have given much to have known
+beyond any possibility of doubt that the accursed slipper and its
+blood-lustful guardian were far away from England. Had I known so much,
+life would again have had something to offer me besides ceaseless fear,
+endless watchings. I could have slept again, perhaps; without awaking,
+clammy, peering into every shadow, listening, nerves atwitch to each
+slightest sound disturbing the night; without groping beneath the
+pillow for my revolver.
+
+“Then you think,” I said, “that the English phase of the slipper’s
+history is closed? You think that Dexter, minus his right hand, has
+eluded British law—that Hassan and Company have evaded retribution?”
+
+“I do!” said Bristol grimly, “and although that means the biggest
+failure in my professional career, I am glad—damned glad!”
+
+Shortly afterward he took his departure; and I leaned from the window,
+watching him pass along the court below and out under the arch into
+Fleet Street. He was a man whose opinions I valued, and in all
+sincerity I prayed now that he might be right; that the surcease of
+horror which we had recently experienced after the ghastly tragedies
+which had clustered thick about the haunted slipper, might mean what he
+surmised it to mean.
+
+The heat to-night was very oppressive. A sort of steaming mist seemed
+to rise from the court, and no cooling breeze entered my opened
+windows. The clamour of the traffic in Fleet Street came to me but
+remotely. Big Ben began to strike midnight. So far as I could see,
+residents on the other stairs were all abed and a velvet shadow carpet
+lay unbroken across three parts of the court. The sky was tropically
+perfect, cloudless, and jewelled lavishly. Indeed, we were in the midst
+of an Indian summer; it seemed that the uncanny visitants had brought,
+together with an atmosphere of black Eastern deviltry, something, too,
+of the Eastern climate.
+
+The last stroke of the Cathedral bell died away. Other more distant
+bells still were sounding dimly, but save for the ceaseless hum of the
+traffic, no unusual sound now disturbed the archaic peace of the court.
+
+I returned to my table, for during the time that had passed I had badly
+neglected my work and now must often labour far into the night. I was
+just reseated when there came a very soft rapping at the outer door!
+
+No doubt my mood was in part responsible, but I found myself thinking
+of Poe’s weird poem, “The Raven”; and like the character therein I
+found myself hesitating.
+
+I stole quietly into the passage. It was in darkness. How odd it is
+that in moments of doubt instinctively one shuns the dark and seeks the
+light. I pressed the switch lighting the hall lamp, and stood looking
+at the closed door.
+
+Why should this late visitor have rapped in so uncanny a fashion in
+preference to ringing the bell?
+
+I stepped back to my table and slipped a revolver into my pocket.
+
+The muffled rapping was repeated. As I stood in the study doorway I saw
+the flap of the letter-box slowly raised!
+
+Instantly I extinguished both lights. You may brand me as childishly
+timid, but incidents were fresh in my memory which justified all my
+fears.
+
+A faintly luminous slit in the door showed me that the flap was now
+fully raised. It was the dim light on the stairway shining through.
+Then quite silently the flap was lowered. Came the soft rapping again.
+
+“Who’s there?” I cried.
+
+No one answered.
+
+Wondering if I were unduly alarming myself, yet, I confess, strung up
+tensely in anticipation that this was some device of the phantom enemy,
+I stood in doubt.
+
+The silence remained unbroken for thirty seconds or more. Then yet
+again it was disturbed by that ghostly, muffled rapping.
+
+I advanced a step nearer to the door.
+
+“Who’s there?” I cried loudly. “What do you want?”
+
+The flap of the letter box began to move, and I formed a sudden
+determination. Making no sound in my heelless Turkish slippers I crept
+close up to the door and dropped upon my knees.
+
+Thereupon the flap became fully lifted, but from where I crouched
+beneath it I was unable to see who or what was looking in; yet I
+hesitated no longer. I suddenly raised myself and thrust the revolver
+barrel through the opening!
+
+“Who are you?” I cried. “Answer or I fire!”—and along the barrel I
+peered out on to the landing.
+
+Still no one answered. But something impalpable—a powder—a vapour—to
+this hour I do not know what—enveloped me with its nauseating fumes;
+was puffed fully into my face! My eyes, my mouth, my nostrils became
+choked up, it seemed, with a deadly stifling perfume.
+
+Wildly, feeling that everything about me was slipping away, that I was
+sinking into a void, for ought I knew that of dissolution, I pulled the
+trigger once, twice, thrice...
+
+“My God!”—the words choked in my throat and I reeled back into the
+passage—“it’s not loaded!”
+
+I threw up my arms to save myself, lurched, and fell forward into what
+seemed a bottomless pit.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+THE GOLDEN PAVILION
+
+
+When I opened my eyes it was to a conviction that I dreamed. I lay upon
+a cushioned divan in a small apartment which I find myself at a loss
+adequately to describe.
+
+It was a yellow room, then, its four walls being hung with yellow silk,
+its floor being entirely covered by a yellow Persian carpet. One lamp,
+burning in a frame of some lemon coloured wood and having its openings
+filled with green glass, flooded the place with a ghastly illumination.
+The lamp hung by gold chains from the ceiling, which was yellow.
+Several low tables of the same lemon-hued wood as the lamp-frame stood
+around; they were inlaid in fanciful designs with gleaming green
+stones. Turn my eyes where I would, clutch my aching head as I might,
+this dream chamber would not disperse, but remained palpable before
+me—yellow and green and gold.
+
+There was a niche behind the divan upon which I lay framed about with
+yellow wood. In it stood a golden bowl and a tall pot of yellow
+porcelain; I lay amid yellow cushions having golden tassels. Some of
+them were figured with vivid green devices.
+
+To contemplate my surroundings assuredly must be to court madness. No
+door was visible, no window; nothing but silk and luxury, yellow and
+green and gold.
+
+To crown all, the air was heavy with a perfume wholly unmistakable by
+one acquainted with Egypt’s ruling vice. It was the reek of smouldering
+hashish—a stench that seemed to take me by the throat, a vapour
+damnable and unclean. I saw that a little censer, golden in colour and
+inset with emeralds, stood upon the furthermost corner of the yellow
+carpet. From it rose a faint streak of vapour; and I followed the
+course of the sickly scented smoke upward through the still air until
+in oily spirals it lost itself near to the yellow ceiling. As a sick
+man will study the veriest trifle I studied that wisp of smoke,
+pencilled grayly against the silken draperies, the carven tables,
+against the almost terrifying persistency of the yellow and green and
+gold.
+
+I strove to rise, but was overcome by vertigo and sank back again upon
+the yellow cushions. I closed my eyes, which throbbed and burned, and
+rested my head upon my hands. I ceased to conjecture if I dreamed or
+was awake. I knew that I felt weak and ill, that my head throbbed
+agonizingly, that my eyes smarted so as to render it almost impossible
+to keep them open, that a ceaseless humming was in my ears.
+
+For some time I lay endeavouring to regain command of myself, to
+prepare to face again that scene which had something horrifying in its
+yellowness, touched with the green and gold.
+
+And when finally I reopened my eyes, I sat up with a suppressed cry.
+For a tall figure in a yellow robe from beneath which peeped yellow
+slippers, a figure crowned with a green turban, stood in the centre of
+the apartment!
+
+It was that of a majestic old man, white bearded, with aquiline nose,
+and the fierce eagle eyes of a fanatic set upon me sternly,
+reprovingly.
+
+With folded arms he stood watching me, and I drew a sharp breath and
+rose slowly to my feet.
+
+There amid the yellow and green and gold, amid the abominable reek of
+burning hashish I stood and faced Hassan of Aleppo!
+
+No words came to me; I was confounded.
+
+Hassan spoke in that gentle voice which I had heard only once before.
+
+“Mr. Cavanagh,” he said, “I have brought you here that I might warn
+you. Your police are seeking me night and day, and I am fully alive to
+my danger whilst I stay in your midst. But for close upon a thousand
+years the Sheikh-al-jebal, Lord of the Hashishin, has guarded the
+traditions and the relics of the Prophet, Salla-’llahu ’ale yhi
+wasellem! I, Hassan of Aleppo, am Sheikh of the Order to-day, and my
+sacred duty has brought me here.”
+
+The piercing gaze never left my face. I was not yet by any means my own
+man and still I made no reply.
+
+“You have been wise,” continued Hassan, “in that you have never touched
+the sacred slipper. Had you lain hands upon it, no secrecy could have
+availed you. The eye of the Hashishin sees all. There is a shaft of
+light which the true Believer perceives at night as he travels toward
+El-Medineh. It is the light which uprises, a spiritual fire, from the
+tomb of the Prophet (Salla-’llahu ’aleyhi wasellem!). The relics also
+are radiant, though in a lesser degree.”
+
+He took a step toward me, spreading out his lean brown hands, palms
+downward.
+
+“A shaft of light,” he said impressively, “shines upward now from
+London. It is the light of the holy slipper.” He gazed intently at the
+yellow drapery at the left of the divan, but as though he were looking
+not at the wall but through it. His features worked convulsively; he
+was a man inspired. “I see it now!” he almost whispered—“that white
+light by which the guardians of the relic may always know its resting
+place!”
+
+I managed to force words to my lips.
+
+“If you know where the slipper is,” I said, more for the sake of
+talking than for anything else, “why do you not recover it?”
+
+Hassan turned his eyes upon me again.
+
+“Because the infidel dog,” he cried loudly, “who has soiled it with his
+unclean touch, defies us—mocks us! He has suffered the loss of the
+offending hand, but the evil ginn protect him; he is inspired by
+efreets! But God is great and Mohammed is His only Prophet! We shall
+triumph; but it is written, oh, daring infidel, that you again shall
+become the guardian of the slipper!”
+
+He spoke like some prophet of old and I stared at him fascinated. I was
+loth to believe his words.
+
+“When again,” he continued, “the slipper shall be in the receptacle of
+which you hold the key, that key must be given to me!”
+
+I thought I saw the drift of his words now; I thought I perceived with
+what object I had been trapped and borne to this mysterious abode for
+whose whereabouts the police vainly were seeking. By the exercise of
+the gift of divination it would seem that Hassan of Aleppo had forecast
+the future history of the accursed slipper or believed that he had done
+so. According to his own words I was doomed once more to become trustee
+of the relic. The key of the case at the Antiquarian Museum, to which
+he had prophesied the slipper’s return, would be the price of my life!
+But—
+
+“In order that these things may be fulfilled,” he continued, “I must
+permit you to return to your house. So it is written, so it shall be.
+Your life is in my hands; beware when it is demanded of you that you
+hesitate not in yielding up the key!”
+
+He raised his hands before him, making a sort of obeisance, I doubt not
+in the direction of Mecca, drew aside one of the yellow hangings behind
+him and disappeared, leaving me alone again in that nightmare apartment
+of yellow and green and gold. A moment I stood watching the swaying
+curtain. Utter silence reigned, and a sort of panic seized me
+infinitely greater than that occasioned by the presence of the weird
+Sheikh. I felt that I must escape from the place or that I should
+become raving mad.
+
+I leapt forward to the curtain which Hassan had raised and jerked it
+aside; it had concealed a door. In this door and about level with my
+eyes was a kind of little barred window through which shone a dim green
+light. I bent forward, peering into the place beyond, but was unable to
+perceive anything save a vague greenness.
+
+And as I peered, half believing that the whole episode was a dreadful,
+fevered dream, the abominable fumes of hashish grew, or seemed to grow,
+quite suddenly insupportable. Through the square opening, from the
+green void beyond, a cloud of oily vapour, pungent, stifling,
+resembling that of burning Indian hemp, poured out and enveloped me!
+
+With a gasping cry I fell back, fighting for breath, for a breath of
+clean air unpolluted with hashish. But every inhalation drew down into
+my lungs the fumes that I sought to escape from. I experienced a
+deathly sickness; I seemed to be sinking into a sea of hashish, amid
+bubbles of yellow and green and gold, and I knew no more until,
+struggling again to my feet, surrounded by utter darkness—I struck my
+head on the corner of my writing-table ... for I lay in my own study!
+
+My revolver, unloaded, was upon the table beside me. The night was very
+still. I think it must have been near to dawn.
+
+“My God!” I whispered, “did I dream it all? Did I dream it all?”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+THE BLACK TUBE
+
+
+“There’s no doubt in my mind,” said Inspector Bristol, “that your
+experience was real enough.”
+
+The sun was shining into my room now, but could not wholly disperse the
+cloud of horror which lay upon it. That I had been drugged was
+sufficiently evident from my present condition, and that I had been
+taken away from my chambers Inspector Bristol had satisfactorily proved
+by an examination of the soles of my slippers.
+
+“It was a clever trick,” he said. “God knows what it was they puffed
+into your face through the letter box, but the devilish arts of ten
+centuries, we must remember, are at the command of Hassan of Aleppo!
+The repetition of the trick at the mysterious place you were taken to
+is particularly interesting. I should say you won’t be in a hurry to
+peer through letter boxes and so forth in the future?”
+
+I shook my aching head.
+
+“That accursed yellow room,” I replied, “stank with the fumes of
+hashish. It may have been some preparation of hashish that was used to
+drug me.”
+
+Bristol stood looking thoughtfully from the window.
+
+“It was a nightmare business, Mr. Cavanagh,” he said; “but it doesn’t
+advance our inquiry a little bit. The prophecy of the old man with the
+white beard—whom you assure me to be none other than Hassan of
+Aleppo—is something we cannot very well act upon. He clearly believes
+it himself; for he has released you after having captured you,
+evidently in order that you may be at liberty to take up your duty as
+trustee of the slipper again. If the slipper really comes back to the
+Museum the fact will show Hassan to be something little short of a
+magician. I shan’t envy you then, Mr. Cavanagh, considering that you
+hold the keys of the case!”
+
+“No,” I replied wearily. “Poor Professor Deeping thought that he acted
+in my interests and that my possession of the keys would constitute a
+safeguard. He was wrong. It has plunged me into the very vortex of this
+ghastly affair.”
+
+“It is maddening,” said Bristol, “to know that Hassan and Company are
+snugly located somewhere under our very noses, and that all Scotland
+Yard can find no trace of them. Then to think that Hassan of Aleppo,
+apparently by means of some mystical light, has knowledge of the
+whereabouts of the slipper and consequently of the whereabouts of Earl
+Dexter (another badly wanted man) is extremely discouraging! I feel
+like an amateur; I’m ashamed of myself!”
+
+Bristol departed in a condition of irritable uncertainty.
+
+My head in my hands, I sat for long after his departure, with the
+phantom characters of the ghoulish drama dancing through my brain. The
+distorted yellow dwarfs seemed to gibe apish before me. Severed hands
+clenched and unclenched themselves in my face, and gleaming knives
+flashed across the mental picture. Predominant over all was the stately
+figure of Hassan of Aleppo, that benignant, remorseless being, that
+terrible guardian of the holy relic who directed the murderous
+operations. Earl Dexter, The Stetson Man, with his tightly bandaged
+arm, his gaunt, clean-shaven face and daredevil smile, figured, too, in
+my feverish daydream; nor was that other character missing, the girl
+with the violet eyes whose beautiful presence I had come to dread; for
+like a sybil announcing destruction her appearances in the drama had
+almost invariably presaged fresh tragedies. I recalled my previous
+meetings with this woman of mystery. I recalled my many surmises
+regarding her real identity and association with the case. I wondered
+why in the not very distant past I had promised to keep silent
+respecting her; I wondered why up to that present moment, knowing
+beyond doubt that her activities were inimical to my interests, were
+criminal, I had observed that foolish pledge.
+
+And now my door-bell was ringing—as intuitively I had anticipated. So
+certain was I of the identity of my visitor that as I walked along the
+passage I was endeavouring to make up my mind how I should act, how I
+should receive her.
+
+I opened the door; and there, wearing European garments but a green
+turban ... stood Hassan of Aleppo!
+
+When I say that amazement robbed me of the power to speak, to move,
+almost to think, I doubt not you will credit me. Indeed, I felt that
+modern London was crumbling about me and that I was become involved in
+the fantastic mazes of one of those Oriental intrigues such as figure
+in the Romance of Abu Zeyd, or with which most European readers have
+been rendered familiar by the glowing pages of “The Thousand and One
+Nights.”
+
+“Effendim,” said my visitor, “do not hesitate to act as I direct!”
+
+In his gloved hand he carried what appeared to be an ebony cane. He
+raised and pointed it directly at me. I perceived that it was, in fact,
+a hollow tube.
+
+“Death is in my hand,” he continued; “enter slowly and I will follow
+you.”
+
+Still the sense of unreality held me thralled and my brain refused me
+service. Like an hypnotic subject I walked back to my study, followed
+by my terrible visitor, who reclosed the door behind him.
+
+He sat facing me across my littered table with the mysterious tube held
+loosely in his grasp.
+
+How infinitely more terrifying are perils unknown than those known and
+appreciated! Had a European armed with a pistol attempted a similar act
+of coercion, I cannot doubt that I should have put up some sort of
+fight; had he sat before me now as Hassan of Aleppo sat, with a
+comprehensible weapon thus laid upon his knees, I should have taken my
+chance, should have attacked him with the lamp, with a chair, with
+anything that came to my hand.
+
+But before this awful, mysterious being who was turning my life into
+channels unsuspected, before that black tube with its unknown
+potentialities, I sat in a kind of passive panic which I cannot attempt
+to describe, which I had never experienced before and have never known
+since.
+
+“There is one about to visit you,” he said, “whom you know, whom I
+think you expect. For it is written that she shall come and such events
+cast a shadow before them. I, too, shall be present at your meeting!”
+
+His eagle eyes opened widely; they burned with fanaticism.
+
+“Already she is here!” he resumed suddenly, and bent as one listening.
+“She comes under the archway; she crossed the courtyard—and is upon the
+stair! Admit her, effendim; I shall be close behind you!”
+
+The door-bell rang.
+
+With the consciousness that the black tube was directed toward the back
+of my head, I went and opened the door. My mind was at work again, and
+busy with plans to terminate this impossible situation.
+
+On the landing stood a girl wearing a simple white frock which fitted
+her graceful figure perfectly. A white straw hat, of the New York
+tourist type, with a long veil draped from the back suited her delicate
+beauty very well. The red mouth drooped a little at the corners, but
+the big violet eyes, like lamps of the soul, seemed afire with mystic
+light.
+
+“Mr. Cavanagh,” she said, very calmly and deliberately, “there is only
+one way now to end all this trouble. I come from the man who can return
+the slipper to where it belongs; but he wants his price!”
+
+Her quiet speech served completely to restore my mental balance, and I
+noted with admiration that her words were so chosen as to commit her in
+no way. She knew quite well that thus far she might appear in the
+matter with impunity, and she clearly was determined to say nothing
+that could imperil her.
+
+“Will you please come in?” I said quietly—and stood aside to admit her.
+
+Exhibiting wonderful composure, she entered—and there, in the badly
+lighted hallway came face to face with my other visitor!
+
+It was a situation so dramatic as to seem unreal.
+
+Away from that tall figure retreated the girl with the violet eyes—and
+away—until she stood with her back to the wall. Even in the gloom I
+could see that her composure was deserting her; her beautiful face was
+pallid.
+
+“Oh, God!” she whispered, all but inaudible—“You!”
+
+Hassan, grasping the black rod in his hand, signed to her to enter the
+study. She stood quite near to me, with her eyes fixed upon him. I bent
+closer to her.
+
+“My revolver—in left-hand table drawer,” I breathed in her ear. “Get
+it. He is watching me!”
+
+I could not tell if my words had been understood, for, never taking her
+gaze from the Sheikh of the Assassins, she sidled into the study. I
+followed her; and Hassan came last of all. Just within the doorway he
+stood, confronting us.
+
+“You have come,” he said, addressing the girl and speaking in perfect
+English but with a marked accent, “to open your impudent negotiations
+through Mr. Cavanagh for the return of the thrice holy relic to the
+Museum! Your companion, the man, who is inspired by the Evil One, has
+even dared to demand ransom for the slipper from me!”
+
+Hassan was majestic in his wrath; but his eyes were black with venomous
+hatred.
+
+“He has suffered the penalty which the Koran lays down; he has lost his
+right hand. But the lord of all evil protects him, else ere this he had
+lost his life! Move no closer to that table!”
+
+I started. Either Hassan of Aleppo was omniscient or he had overheard
+my whispered words!
+
+“Easily I could slay you where you stand!” he continued. “But to do so
+would profit me nothing. This meeting has been revealed to me. Last
+night I witnessed it as I slept. Also it has been revealed to me by
+Erroohanee, in the mirror of ink, that the slipper of the Prophet,
+Salla-’llahu ’ale yhi wasellem! Shall indeed return to that place
+accursed, that infidel eyes may look upon it! It is the will of Allah,
+whose name be exalted, that I hold my hand, but it is also His will
+that I be here, at whatever danger to my worthless body.”
+
+He turned his blazing eyes upon me.
+
+“To-morrow, ere noon,” he said, “the slipper will again be in the
+Museum from which the man of evil stole it. So it is written; obscure
+are the ways. We met last night, you and I, but at that time much was
+dark to me that now is light. The holy ’Alee spoke to me in a vision,
+saying: ‘There are two keys to the case in which it will be locked.
+Secure one, leaving the other with him who holds it! Let him swear to
+be secret. This shall be the price of his life!’”
+
+The black tube was pointed directly at my forehead.
+
+“Effendim,” concluded the speaker, “place in my hand the key of the
+case in the Antiquarian Museum!”
+
+Hands convulsively clenched, the girl was looking from me to Hassan. My
+throat felt parched, but I forced speech to my lips.
+
+“Your omniscience fails you,” I said. “Both keys are at my bank!”
+
+Blacker grew the fierce eyes—and blacker. I gave myself up for lost; I
+awaited death—death by some awful, unique means—with what courage I
+could muster.
+
+From the court below came the sound of voices, the voices of passers-by
+who so little suspected what was happening near to them that had
+someone told them they certainly had refused to credit it. The noise of
+busy Fleet Street came drumming under the archway, too.
+
+Then, above all, another sound became audible. To this day I find
+myself unable to define it; but it resembled the note of a silver bell.
+
+Clearly it was a signal; for, hearing it, Hassan dropped the tube and
+glanced toward the open window.
+
+In that instant I sprang upon him!
+
+That I had to deal with a fanatic, a dangerous madman, I knew; that it
+was his life or mine, I was fully convinced. I struck out then and
+caught him fairly over the heart. He reeled back, and I made a wild
+clutch for the damnable tube, horrid, unreasoning fear of which thus
+far had held me inert.
+
+I heard the girl scream affrightedly, and I knew, and felt my heart
+chill to know, that the tube had been wrenched from my hand! Hassan of
+Aleppo, old man that he appeared, had the strength of a tiger. He
+recovered himself and hurled me from him so that I came to the floor
+crashingly half under my writing-table!
+
+Something he cried back at me, furiously—and like an enraged animal,
+his teeth gleaming out from his beard, he darted from the room. The
+front door banged loudly.
+
+Shaken and quivering, I got upon my feet. On the threshold, in a state
+of pitiable hesitancy, stood the pale, beautiful accomplice of Earl
+Dexter. One quick glance she flashed at me, then turned and ran!
+
+Again the door slammed. I ran to the window, looking out into the
+court. The girl came hurrying down the steps, and with never a backward
+glance ran on and was lost to view in one of the passages opening
+riverward.
+
+Out under the arch, statelily passed a tall figure—and Inspector
+Bristol was entering! I saw the detective glance aside as the two all
+but met. He stood still, and looked back!
+
+“Bristol!” I cried, and waved my arms frantically.
+
+“Stop him! Stop him! It’s Hassan of Aleppo!”
+
+Bristol was not the only one to hear my wild cry—not the only one to
+dash back under the arch and out into Fleet Street.
+
+But Hassan of Aleppo was gone!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII
+THE LIGHT OF EL-MEDINEH
+
+
+Bristol and I walked slowly in the direction of the entrance of the
+British Antiquarian Museum. It was the day following upon the
+sensational scene in my chambers.
+
+“There’s very little doubt,” said Bristol, “that Earl Dexter has the
+slipper and that Hassan of Aleppo knows where Dexter is in hiding. I
+don’t know which of the two is more elusive. Hassan apparently melted
+into thin air yesterday; and although The Stetson Man has never within
+my experience employed disguises, no one has set eyes upon him since
+the night that he vanished from his lodgings off the Waterloo Road.
+It’s always possible for a man to baffle the police by remaining
+closely within doors, but during all the time that has elapsed Dexter
+must have taken a little exercise occasionally, and the missing hand
+should have betrayed him.”
+
+“The wonder to me is,” I replied, “that he has escaped death at the
+hands of the Hashishin. He is a supremely daring man, for I should
+think that he must be carrying the slipper of the Prophet about with
+him!”
+
+“I would rather he did it than I!” commented Bristol. “For sheer
+audacity commend me to The Stetson Man! His idea no doubt was to use
+you as intermediary in his negotiations with the Museum authorities,
+but that plan failing, he has written them direct, thoughtfully
+omitting his address, of course!”
+
+We were, in fact, at that moment bound for the Museum to inspect this
+latest piece of evidence.
+
+“The crowning example of the man’s audacity and cleverness,” added my
+companion, “is his having actually approached Hassan of Aleppo with a
+similar proposition! How did he get in touch with him? All Scotland
+Yard has failed to find any trace of that weird character!”
+
+“Birds of a feather—” I suggested.
+
+“But they are not birds of a feather!” cried Bristol. “On your own
+showing, Hassan of Aleppo is simply waiting his opportunity to balance
+Dexter’s account forever! I always knew Dexter was a clever man; I
+begin to think he’s the most daring genius alive!”
+
+We mounted the steps of the Museum. In the hallway Mostyn, the curator,
+awaited us. Having greeted Bristol and myself he led the way to his
+private office, and from a pigeon-hole in his desk took out a letter
+typewritten upon a sheet of quarto paper.
+
+Bristol spread it out upon the blotting pad and we bent over it
+curiously.
+
+SIR—
+
+
+I believe I can supply information concerning the whereabouts of the
+missing slipper of Mohammed. As any inquiry of this nature must be
+extremely perilous to the inquirer and as the relic is a priceless one,
+my fee would be 10,000 pounds. The fanatics who seek to restore the
+slipper to the East must not know of any negotiations, therefore I omit
+my address, but will communicate further if you care to insert
+instructions in the agony column of Times.
+
+Faithfully,
+EARL DEXTER
+
+
+Bristol laughed grimly.
+
+“It’s a daring game,” he said; “a piece of barefaced impudence quite
+characteristic.
+
+“He’s posing as a sort of private detective now, and is prepared for a
+trifling consideration to return the slipper which he stole himself! He
+must know, though, that we have his severed hand at the Yard to be used
+in evidence against him.”
+
+“Is the Burton Room open to the public again?” I asked Mostyn.
+
+“It is open, yes,” he replied, “and a quite unusual number of visitors
+come daily to gaze at the empty case which once held the slipper of the
+Prophet.”
+
+“Has the case been mended?”
+
+“Yes; it is quite intact again; only the exhibit is missing.”
+
+We ascended the stairs, passed along the Assyrian Room, which seemed to
+be unusually crowded, and entered the lofty apartment known as the
+Burton Room. The sunblinds were drawn, and a sort of dim, religious
+light prevailed therein. A group of visitors stood around an empty case
+at the farther end of the apartment.
+
+“You see,” said Mostyn, pointing, “that empty case has a greater
+attraction than all the other full ones!”
+
+But I scarcely heeded his words, for I was intently watching the
+movements of one of the group about the empty case. I have said that
+the room was but dimly illuminated, and this fact, together no doubt
+with some effect of reflected light, enhanced by my imagination,
+perhaps produced the phenomenon which was occasioning me so much
+amazement.
+
+Remember that my mind was filled with memories of weird things, that I
+often found myself thinking of that mystic light which Hassan of Aleppo
+had called the light of El-Medineh—that light whereby, undeterred by
+distance, he claimed to be able to trace the whereabouts of any of the
+relics of the Prophet.
+
+Bristol and Mostyn walked on then; but I stood just within the doorway,
+intently, breathlessly watching an old man wearing an out-of-date
+Inverness coat and a soft felt hat. He had a gray beard and moustache,
+and long, untidy hair, walked with a stoop, and in short was no unusual
+type of Visitor to that institution.
+
+But it seemed to me, and the closer I watched him the more convinced I
+became, that this was no optical illusion, that a faint luminosity, a
+sort of elfin light, played eerily about his head!
+
+As Bristol and Mostyn approached the case the old man began to walk
+toward me and in the direction of the door. The idea flashed through my
+mind that it might be Hassan of Aleppo himself, Hassan who had
+predicted that the stolen slipper should that day be returned to the
+Museum!
+
+Then he came abreast of me, passed me, and I felt that my surmise had
+been wrong. I saw Bristol, from farther up the room, turn and look
+back. Something attracted his trained eye, I suppose, which was not
+perceptible to me. But he suddenly came striding along. Obviously he
+was pursuing the old man, who was just about to leave the apartment.
+Seeing that the latter had reached the doorway, Bristol began to run.
+
+The old man turned; and amid a chorus of exclamations from the
+astonished spectators, Bristol sprang upon him!
+
+How it all came about I cannot say, cannot hope to describe; but there
+was a short, sharp scuffle, the crack of a well-directed blow ... and
+Bristol was rolling on his back, the old man, hatless, was racing up
+the Assyrian Room, and everyone in the place seemed to be shouting at
+once!
+
+Bristol, with blood streaming from his face, staggered to his feet,
+clutching at me for support.
+
+“After him, Mr. Cavanagh!” he cried hoarsely. “It’s your turn to-day!
+After him! That’s Earl Dexter!”
+
+Mostyn waited for no more, but went running quickly through the
+Assyrian Room. I may mention here that at the head of the stairs he
+found the caped Inverness which had served to conceal Dexter’s
+mutilated arm, and later, behind a piece of statuary, a wig and a very
+ingenious false beard and moustache were discovered. But of The Stetson
+Man there was no trace. His brief start had enabled him to make good
+his escape.
+
+As Mostyn went off, and a group of visitors flocked in our direction,
+Bristol, who had been badly shaken by the blow, turned to them.
+
+“You will please all leave the Burton Room immediately,” he said.
+
+Looks of surprise greeted his words; but with his handkerchief raised
+to his face, he peremptorily repeated them. The official note in his
+voice was readily to be detected; and the wonder-stricken group
+departed with many a backward glance.
+
+As the last left the Burton Room, Bristol pointed, with a rather shaky
+finger, at the soft felt hat which lay at his feet. It had formed part
+of Dexter’s disguise. Close beside it lay another object which had
+evidently fallen from the hat—a dull red thing lying on the polished
+parquet flooring.
+
+“For God’s sake don’t go near it!” whispered Bristol. “The room must be
+closed for the present. And now I’m off after that man. Step clear of
+it.”
+
+His words were unnecessary; I shunned it as a leprous thing.
+
+It was the slipper of the Prophet!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII
+THE THREE MESSAGES
+
+
+I stood in the foyer of the Astoria Hotel. About me was the pulsing
+stir of transatlantic life, for the tourist season was now at its
+height, and I counted myself fortunate in that I had been able to
+secure a room at this establishment, always so popular with American
+visitors. Chatting groups surrounded me and I became acquainted with
+numberless projects for visiting the Tower of London, the National
+Gallery, the British Museum, Windsor Castle, Kew Gardens, and the other
+sights dear to the heart of our visiting cousins. Loaded lifts ascended
+and descended. Bradshaws were in great evidence everywhere; all was
+hustle and glad animation.
+
+The tall military-looking man who stood beside me glanced about him
+with a rather grim smile.
+
+“You ought to be safe enough here, Mr. Cavanagh!” he said.
+
+“I ought to be safe enough in my own chambers,” I replied wearily. “How
+many of these pleasure-seeking folk would believe that a man can be as
+greatly in peril of his life in Fleet Street as in the most uncivilized
+spot upon the world map? Do you think if I told that prosperous New
+Yorker who is buying a cigar yonder, for instance, that I had been
+driven from my chambers by a band of Eastern assassins founded some
+time in the eleventh century, he would believe it?”
+
+“I am certain he wouldn’t!” replied Bristol. “I should not have
+credited it myself before I was put in charge of this damnable case.”
+
+My position at that hour was in truth an incredible one. The sacred
+slipper of Mohammed lay once more in the glass case at the Antiquarian
+Museum from which Earl Dexter had stolen it. Now, with apish yellow
+faces haunting my dreams, with ghostly menaces dogging me day and
+night, I was outcast from my own rooms and compelled, in self-defence,
+to live amid the bustle of the Astoria. So wholly nonplussed were the
+police authorities that they could afford me no protection. They knew
+that a group of scientific murderers lay hidden in or near to London;
+they knew that Earl Dexter, the foremost crook of his day, was also in
+the metropolis—and they could make no move, were helpless; indeed, as
+Bristol had confessed, were hopeless!
+
+Bristol, on the previous day, had unearthed the Greek cigar merchant,
+Acepulos, who had replaced the slipper in its case (for a monetary
+consideration). He had performed a similar service when the
+bloodstained thing had first been put upon exhibition at the Museum,
+and for a considerable period had disappeared. We had feared that his
+religious pretensions had not saved him from the avenging scimitar of
+Hassan; but quite recently he had returned again to his Soho shop, and
+in time thus to earn a second cheque.
+
+As Bristol and I stood glancing about the foyer of the hotel, a
+plain-clothes officer whom I knew by sight came in and approached my
+companion. I could not divine the fact, of course, but I was about to
+hear news of the money-loving and greatly daring Graeco-Moslem.
+
+The detective whispered something to Bristol, and the latter started,
+and paled. He turned to me.
+
+“They haven’t overlooked him this time, Mr. Cavanagh,” he said.
+“Acepulos has been found dead in his room, nearly decapitated!”
+
+I shuddered involuntarily. Even there, amid the chatter and laughter of
+those light-hearted tourists, the shadow of Hassan of Aleppo was
+falling upon me.
+
+Bristol started immediately for Soho and I parted from him in the
+Strand, he proceeding west and I eastward, for I had occasion that
+morning to call at my bank. It was the time of the year when London is
+full of foreigners, and as I proceeded in the direction of Fleet Street
+I encountered more than one Oriental. To my excited imagination they
+all seemed to glance at me furtively, with menacing eyes, but in any
+event I knew that I had little to fear whilst I contrived to keep to
+the crowded thoroughfares. Solitude I dreaded and with good reason.
+
+Then at the door of the bank I found fresh matter for reflection. The
+assistant manager, Mr. Colby, was escorting a lady to the door. As I
+stood aside, he walked with her to a handsome car which waited, and
+handed her in with marks of great deference. She was heavily veiled and
+I had no more than a glimpse of her, but she appeared to be of middle
+age and had gray hair and a very stately manner.
+
+I told myself that I was unduly suspicious, suspicious of everyone and
+of everything; yet as I entered the bank I found myself wondering where
+I had seen that dignified, grayhaired figure before. I even thought of
+asking the manager the name of his distinguished customer, but did not
+do so, for in the circumstances such an inquiry must have appeared
+impertinent.
+
+My business transacted, I came out again by the side entrance which
+opens on the little courtyard, for this branch of the London County and
+Provincial Bank occupies a corner site.
+
+A ragged urchin who was apparently waiting for me handed me a note. I
+looked at him inquiringly.
+
+“For me?” I said.
+
+“Yes, sir. A dark gentleman pointed you out as you was goin’ into the
+bank.”
+
+The note was written upon a half sheet of paper and, doubting if it was
+really intended for me, I unfolded it and read the following—
+
+Mr. Cavanagh, take the keys of the case containing the holy slipper to
+your hotel this evening without fail.
+HASSAN.
+
+
+“Who gave you this, boy?” I asked sharply.
+
+“A foreign gentleman, sir, very dark—like an Indian.”
+
+“Where is he?”
+
+“He went off in a cab, sir, after he give me the note.”
+
+I handed the boy sixpence and slowly pursued my way. An idea was
+forming in my mind to trap the enemy by seeming acquiescent. I wondered
+if my movements were being watched at that moment. Since it was more
+than probable, I returned to the bank, entered, and made some trivial
+inquiry of a cashier, and then came out again and walked on as far as
+the Report office.
+
+I had not been in the office more than five minutes before I received a
+telegram from Inspector Bristol. It had been handed in at Soho, and the
+message was an odd one.
+
+CAVANAGH, Report, London.
+Plot afoot to steal keys. Get them from bank and join me 11 o’clock at
+Astoria. Have planned trap.
+
+BRISTOL.
+
+
+This was very mysterious in view of the note so recently received by
+me, but I concluded that Bristol had hit upon a similar plan to that
+which was forming in my own mind. It seemed unnecessarily hazardous,
+though, actually to withdraw the keys from their place of safety.
+
+Pondering deeply upon the perplexities of this maddening case, I
+shortly afterward found myself again at the bank. With the manager I
+descended to the strong-room, and the safe was unlocked which contained
+the much-sought-for keys of the case at the Antiquarian Museum.
+
+“There are the keys, quite safe!—and by the way, this is my second
+visit here this morning, Mr. Cavanagh,” said the manager, with whom I
+was upon rather intimate terms. “A foreign lady who has recently become
+a customer of the bank deposited some valuable jewels here this
+morning—less than an hour ago, in fact.”
+
+“Indeed,” I said, and my mind was working rapidly. “The lady who came
+in the large blue car, a gray-haired lady?”
+
+“Yes,” was the reply, “did you notice her, then?”
+
+I nodded and said no more, for in truth I had no more to say. I had
+good reason to respect the uncanny powers of Hassan of Aleppo, but I
+doubted if even his omniscience could tell him (since I had actually
+gone down into the strong-room) whether when I emerged I had the keys,
+or whether my visit and seeming acceptance of his orders had been no
+more than a subterfuge!
+
+That the Hashishin had some means of communicating with me at the
+Astoria was evident from the contents of the note which I had received,
+and as I walked in the direction of the hotel my mind was filled with
+all sorts of misgivings. I was playing with fire! Had I done rightly or
+should I have acted otherwise? I sighed wearily. The dark future would
+resolve all my doubts.
+
+When I reached the Astoria, Bristol had not arrived. I lighted a
+cigarette and sat down in the lounge to await his coming. Presently a
+boy approached, handing me a message which had been taken down from the
+telephone by the clerk. It was as follows—
+
+Tell Mr. Cavanagh, who is waiting in the hotel, to take what I am
+expecting to his chambers, and say that I will join him there in twenty
+minutes.
+
+INSPECTOR BRISTOL.
+
+
+Again I doubted the wisdom of Bristol’s plan. Had I not fled to the
+Astoria to escape from the dangerous solitude of my rooms? That he was
+laying some trap for the Hashishin was sufficiently evident, and whilst
+I could not justly suspect him of making a pawn of me I was quite
+unable to find any other explanation of this latest move.
+
+I was torn between conflicting doubts. I glanced at my watch. Yes!
+There was just time for me to revisit the bank ere joining Bristol at
+my chambers! I hesitated. After all, in what possible way could it
+jeopardize his plans for me merely to pretend to bring the keys?
+
+“Hang it all!” I said, and jumped to my feet. “These maddening
+conjectures will turn my brain! I’ll let matters stand as they are, and
+risk the consequences!”
+
+I hesitated no longer, but passed out from the hotel and once more
+directed my steps in the direction of Fleet Street.
+
+As I passed in under the arch through which streamed many busy workers,
+I told myself that to dread entering my own chambers at high noon was
+utterly childish. Yet I did dread doing so! And as I mounted the stair
+and came to the landing, which was always more or less dark, I paused
+for quite a long time before putting the key in the lock.
+
+The affair of the accursed slipper was playing havoc with my nerves,
+and I laughed dryly to note that my hand was not quite steady as I
+turned the key, opened my door, and slipped into the dim hallway.
+
+As I closed it behind me, something, probably a slight noise, but
+possibly something more subtle—an instinct—made me turn rapidly.
+
+There facing me stood Hassan of Aleppo.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV
+I KEEP THE APPOINTMENT
+
+
+That moment was pungent with drama. In the intense hush of the next
+five seconds I could fancy that the world had slipped away from me and
+that I was become an unsubstantial thing of dreams. I was in no sense
+master of myself; the effect of the presence of this white-bearded
+fanatic was of a kind which I am entirely unable to describe. About
+Hassan of Aleppo was an aroma of evil, yet of majesty, which marked him
+strangely different from other men—from any other that I have ever
+known. In his venerable presence, remembering how he was Sheikh of the
+Assassins, and recalling his bloody history, I was always conscious of
+a weakness, physical and mental. He appalled me; and now, with my back
+to the door, I stood watching him and watching the ominous black tube
+which he held in his hand. It was a weapon unknown to Europe and
+therefore more fearful than the most up-to-date of death-dealing
+instruments.
+
+Hassan of Aleppo pointed it toward me.
+
+“The keys, effendim,” he said; “hand me the keys!”
+
+He advanced a step; his manner was imperious. The black tube was less
+than a foot removed from my face. That I had my revolver in my pocket
+could avail me nothing, for in my pocket it must remain, since I dared
+to make no move to reach it under cover of that unfamiliar, terrible
+weapon.
+
+The black eyes of Hassan glared insanely into mine.
+
+“You will have placed them in your pocketcase,” he said. “Take it out;
+hand it to me!”
+
+I obeyed, for what else could I do? Taking the case from my pocket, I
+placed it in his lean brown hand.
+
+An expression of wild exultation crossed his features; the eagle eyes
+seemed to be burning into my brain. A puff of hot vapour struck me in
+the face—something which was expelled from the mysterious black tube.
+And with memories crowding to my mind of similar experiences at the
+hands of the Hashishin, I fell back, clutching at my throat, fighting
+for my life against the deadly, vaporous thing that like a palpable
+cloud surrounded me. I tried to cry out, but the words died upon my
+tongue. Hassan of Aleppo seemed to grow huge before my eyes like some
+ginn of Eastern lore. Then a curtain of darkness descended. I
+experienced a violent blow upon the forehead (I suppose I had pitched
+forward), and for the time resigned my part in the drama of the sacred
+slipper.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV
+THE WATCHER IN BANK CHAMBERS
+
+
+At about five o’clock that afternoon Inspector Bristol, who had spent
+several hours in Soho upon the scene of the murder of the Greek, was
+walking along Fleet Street, bound for the offices of the Report. As he
+passed the court, on the corner of which stands a branch of the London
+County and Provincial Bank, his eye was attracted by a curious
+phenomenon.
+
+There are reflectors above the bank windows which face the court, and
+it appeared to Bristol that there was a hole in one of these, the
+furthermost from the corner. A tiny beam of light shone from the bank
+window on to the reflector, or from the reflector on to the window,
+which circumstance in itself was not curious. But above the reflector,
+at an acute angle, this mysterious beam was seemingly projected upward.
+Walking a little way up the court he saw that it shone through, and
+cast a disc of light upon the ceiling of an office on the first floor
+of Bank Chambers above.
+
+It is every detective’s business to be observant, and although many
+thousands of passersby must have cast their eyes in the same direction
+that day, there is small matter for wonder in the fact that Bristol
+alone took the trouble to inquire into the mystery—for his trained eye
+told him that there was a mystery here.
+
+Possibly he was in that passive frame of mind when the brain is
+particularly receptive of trivial impressions; for after a futile
+search of the Soho cigar store for anything resembling a clue, he was
+quite resigned to the idea of failure in the case of Hassan and
+Company. He walked down the court and into the entrance of Bank
+Chambers. An Inspection of the board upon the wall showed him that the
+first floor apparently was occupied by three firms, two of them legal,
+for this is the neighbourhood of the law courts, and the third a press
+agency. He stepped up to the first floor. Past the doors bearing the
+names of the solicitors and past that belonging to the press agent he
+proceeded to a fourth suite of offices. Here, pinned upon the door
+frame, appeared a card which bore the legend—
+
+THE CONGO FIBRE COMPANY
+
+Evidently the Congo Fibre Company had so recently taken possession of
+the offices that there had been no time to inscribe their title either
+upon the doors or upon the board in the hall.
+
+Inspector Bristol was much impressed, for into one of the rooms
+occupied by the Fibre Company shone that curious disc of light which
+first had drawn his attention to Bank Chambers. He rapped on the door,
+turned the handle, and entered. The sole furniture of the office in
+which he found himself apparently consisted of one desk and an office
+stool, which stool was occupied by an office boy. The windows opened on
+the court, and a door marked “Private” evidently communicated with an
+inner office whose windows likewise must open on the court. It was the
+ceiling of this inner office, unless the detective’s calculation erred,
+which he was anxious to inspect.
+
+“Yes, sir?” said the boy tentatively.
+
+Bristol produced a card which bore the uncompromising legend: John
+Henry Smith.
+
+“Take my card to Mr. Boulter, boy,” he said tersely. The boy stared.
+
+“Mr. Boulter, sir? There isn’t any one of that name here.”
+
+“Oh!” said Bristol, looking around him in apparent surprise: “how long
+is he gone?”
+
+“I don’t know, sir. I’ve only been here three weeks, and Mr. Knowlson
+only took the offices a month ago.”
+
+“Oh,” commented Bristol, “then take my card to Mr. Knowlson; he will
+probably be able to give me Mr. Boulter’s present address.”
+
+The boy hesitated. The detective had that authoritative manner which
+awes the youthful mind.
+
+“He’s out, sir,” he said, but without conviction.
+
+“Is he?” rapped Bristol. “Well, I’ll leave my card.”
+
+He turned and quitted the office, carefully closing the door behind
+him. Three seconds later he reopened it, and peering in, was in time to
+see the boy knock upon the private door. A little wicket, or movable
+panel, was let down, the card of John Henry Smith was passed through to
+someone unseen, and the wicket was reclosed!
+
+
+The boy turned and met the wrathful eye of the detective. Bristol
+reentered, closing the door behind him.
+
+“See here, young fellow,” said he, “I don’t stand for those tricks! Why
+didn’t you tell me Mr. Knowlson was in?”
+
+“I’m very sorry, sir!”—the boy quailed beneath his glance—“but he won’t
+see any one who hasn’t an appointment.”
+
+“Is there someone with him, then?”
+
+“No.”
+
+“Well, what’s he doing?”
+
+“I don’t know, sir; I’ve never been in to see!”
+
+“What! never been in that room?”
+
+“Never!” declared the boy solemnly. “And I don’t mind telling you,” he
+added, recovering something of his natural confidence, “that I am
+leaving on the 31st. This job ain’t any use to me!”
+
+“Too much work?” suggested Bristol.
+
+“No work at all!” returned the boy indignantly. “I’m just here for a
+blessed buffer, that’s what I’m here for, a buffer!”
+
+“What do you mean?”
+
+“I just have to sit here and see that nobody gets into that office.
+Lively, ain’t it? Where’s the prospects?”
+
+Bristol surveyed him thoughtfully.
+
+“Look here, my lad,” he said quietly; “is that door locked?”
+
+“Always,” replied the boy.
+
+“Does Mr. Knowlson come to that shutter when you knock?”
+
+“Yes.”
+
+“Then go and knock!”
+
+The boy obeyed with alacrity. He rapped loudly on the door, not
+noticing or not caring that the visitor was standing directly behind
+him. The shutter was lowered and a grizzled, bearded face showed for a
+moment through the opening.
+
+Bristol leant over the boy and pushed a card through into the hand of
+the man beyond. On this occasion it did not bear the legend “John Henry
+Smith,” but the following—
+
+CHIEF INSPECTOR BRISTOL
+C.I.D.
+NEW SCOTLAND YARD
+
+“Good afternoon, Mr. Knowlson,” said the detective dryly. “I want to
+come in!”
+
+There followed a moment of silence, from which Bristol divined that he
+had blundered upon some mystery, possibly upon a big case; then a key
+was turned in the lock and the door thrown open.
+
+“Come right in, Inspector,” invited a strident voice. “Carter, you can
+go home.”
+
+Bristol entered warily, but not warily enough. For as the door was
+banged upon his entrance he faced around only in time to find himself
+looking down the barrel of a Colt automatic.
+
+With his back to the door which contained the wicket, now reclosed,
+stood the man with the bearded face. The revolver was held in his left
+hand; his right arm terminated in a bandaged stump. But without that
+his steel-gray eyes would have betrayed him to the detective.
+
+“Good God!” whispered Bristol. “It’s Earl Dexter!”
+
+“It is!” replied the cracksman, “and you’ve looked in at a real
+inconvenient time! My visitors mostly seem to have that knack. I’ll
+have to ask you to stay, Inspector. Sit down in that chair yonder.”
+
+Bristol knew his man too well to think of opening any argument at that
+time. He sat down as directed, and ignoring the revolver which covered
+him all the time, began coolly to survey the room in which he found
+himself. In several respects it was an extraordinary apartment.
+
+The only bright patch in the room was the shining disc upon the
+ceiling; and the detective noted with interest that this marked the
+position of an arrangement of mirrors. A white-covered table, entirely
+bare, stood upon the floor immediately beneath this mysterious
+apparatus. With the exception of one or two ordinary items of furniture
+and a small hand lathe, the office otherwise was unfurnished. Bristol
+turned his eyes again upon the daring man who so audaciously had
+trapped him—the man who had stolen the slipper of the Prophet and
+suffered the loss of his hand by the scimitar of an Hashishin as a
+result. When he had least expected to find one, Fate had thrown a clue
+in Bristol’s way. He reflected grimly that it was like to prove of
+little use to him.
+
+“Now,” said Dexter, “you can do as you please, of course, but you know
+me pretty well and I advise you to sit quiet.”
+
+“I am sitting quiet!” was the reply.
+
+“I am sorry,” continued Dexter, with a quick glance at his maimed arm,
+“that I can’t tie you up, but I am expecting a friend any moment now.”
+
+He suddenly raised the wicket with a twitch of his elbow and, without
+removing his gaze from the watchful detective, cried sharply—
+
+“Carter!”
+
+But there was no reply.
+
+“Good; he’s gone!”
+
+Dexter sat down facing Bristol.
+
+“I have lost my hand in this game, Mr. Bristol,” he said genially, “and
+had some narrow squeaks of losing my head; but having gone so far and
+lost so much I’m going through, if I don’t meet a funeral! You see I’m
+up against two tough propositions.”
+
+Bristol nodded sympathetically.
+
+“The first,” continued Dexter, “is you and Cavanagh, and English law
+generally. My idea—if I can get hold of the slipper again—oh! you
+needn’t stare; I’m out for it!—is to get the Antiquarian Institution to
+ransom it. It’s a line of commercial speculation I have worked
+successfully before. There’s a dozen rich highbrows, cranks to a man,
+connected with it, and they are my likeliest buyers—sure. But to keep
+the tone of the market healthy there’s Hassan of Aleppo, rot him! He’s
+a dangerous customer to approach, but you’ll note I’ve been in
+negotiation with him already and am still, if not booming, not much
+below par!”
+
+“Quite so,” said Bristol. “But you’ve cut off a pretty hefty chew
+nevertheless. They used to call you The Stetson Man, you used to dress
+like a fashion plate and stop at the big hotels. Those days are past,
+Dexter, I’m sorry to note. You’re down to the skulking game now and
+you’re nearer an advert for Clarkson than Stein-Bloch!”
+
+“Yep,” said Dexter sadly, “I plead guilty, but I think here’s Carneta!”
+
+Bristol heard the door of the outer office open, and a moment later
+that upon which his gaze was set opened in turn, to admit a girl who
+was heavily veiled, and who started and stood still in the doorway, on
+perceiving the situation. Never for one unguarded moment did the
+American glance aside from his prisoner.
+
+“The Inspector’s dropped in, Carneta!” he drawled in his strident way.
+“You’re handy with a ball of twine; see if you can induce him to stay
+the night!”
+
+The girl, immediately recovering her composure, took off her hat in a
+businesslike way and began to look around her, evidently in search of a
+suitable length of rope with which to fasten up Bristol.
+
+“Might I suggest,” said the detective, “that if you are shortly
+quitting these offices a couple of the window-cords neatly joined would
+serve admirably?”
+
+“Thanks,” drawled Dexter, nodding to his companion, who went into the
+outer office, where she might be heard lowering the windows. She was
+gone but a few moments ere she returned again, carrying a length of
+knotted rope. Under cover of Dexter’s revolver, Bristol stoically
+submitted to having his wrists tied behind him. The end of the line was
+then thrown through the ventilator above the door which communicated
+with the outer office and Bristol was triced up in such a way that, his
+wrists being raised behind him to an uncomfortable degree, he was
+almost forced to stand upon tiptoe. The line was then secured.
+
+“Very workmanlike!” commented the victim. “You’ll find a large
+handkerchief in my inside breast pocket. It’s a clean one, and I can
+recommend it as a gag!”
+
+Very promptly it was employed for the purpose, and Inspector Bristol
+found himself helpless and constrained in a very painful position.
+Dexter laid down his revolver.
+
+“We will now give you a free show, Inspector,” he said, genially, “of
+our camera obscura!”
+
+He pulled down the blinds, which Bristol noted with interest to be
+black, but through an opening in one of them a mysterious ray of
+light—the same that he had noticed from Fleet Street—shone upon that
+point in the ceiling where the arrangement of mirrors was attached.
+Dexter made some alteration, apparently in the focus of the lens (for
+Bristol had divined that in some way a lens had been fixed in the
+reflector above the bank window below) and the disc of light became
+concentrated. The white-covered table was moved slightly, and in the
+darkness some further manipulation was performed.
+
+“Observe,” came the strident voice—“we now have upon the screen here a
+minute moving picture. This little device, which is not protected in
+any way, is of my own invention, and proved extremely useful in the
+Arkwright jewel case, which startled Chicago. It has proved useful now.
+I know almost as much concerning the arrangements below as the manager
+himself. In confidence, Inspector, this is my last bid for the slipper!
+I have plunged on it. Madame Sforza, the distinguished Italian lady who
+recently opened an account below, opened it for 500 pounds cash. She
+has drawn a portion, but a balance remains which I am resigned to lose.
+Her motor-car (hired), her references (forged), the case of jewels
+which she deposited this morning (duds!)—all represent a considerable
+outlay. It’s a nerve-racking line of operation, too. Any hour of the
+day may bring such a visitor as yourself, for example. In short, I am
+at the end of my tether.”
+
+Bristol, ignoring the increasing pain in his arms and wrists, turned
+his eyes upon the white-covered table and there saw a minute and
+clear-cut picture, such as one sees in a focussing screen, of the
+interior of the manager’s office of the London County and Provincial
+Bank!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI
+THE STRONG-ROOM
+
+
+I wonder how often a sense of humour has saved a man from desperation?
+Perhaps only the Easterns have thoroughly appreciated that divine gift.
+I have interpolated the adventure of Inspector Bristol in order that
+the sequence of my story be not broken; actually I did not learn it
+until later, but when, on the following day, the whole of the facts
+came into my possession, I laughed and was glad that I could laugh, for
+laughter has saved many a man from madness.
+
+Certainly the Fates were playing with us, for at a time very nearly
+corresponding with that when Bristol found himself bound and helpless
+in Bank Chambers I awoke to find myself tied hand and foot to my own
+bed! Nothing but the haziest recollections came to me at first, nothing
+but dim memories of the awful being who had lured me there; for I
+perceived now that all the messages proceeded, not from Bristol, but
+from Hassan of Aleppo! I had been a fool, and I was reaping the fruits
+of my folly. Could I have known that almost within pistol shot of me
+the Inspector was trussed up as helpless as I, then indeed my situation
+must have become unbearable, since upon him I relied for my speedy
+release.
+
+My ankles were firmly lashed to the rails at the foot of my bed; each
+of my wrists was tied back to a bedpost. I ached in every limb and my
+head burned feverishly, which latter symptom I ascribed to the powerful
+drug which had been expelled into my face by the uncanny weapon carried
+by Hassan of Aleppo. I reflected bitterly how, having transferred my
+quarters to the Astoria, I could not well hope for any visitor to my
+chambers; and even the event of such a visitor had been foreseen and
+provided against by the cunning lord of the Hashishin. A gag, of the
+type which Dumas has described in “Twenty Years After,” the poire
+d’angoisse, was wedged firmly into my mouth, so that only by preserving
+the utmost composure could I breathe. I was bathed in cold
+perspiration. So I lay listening to the familiar sounds without and
+reflecting that it was quite possible so to lie, undisturbed, and to
+die alone, my presence there wholly unsuspected!
+
+Once, toward dusk, my phone bell rang, and my state of mind became
+agonizing. It was maddening to think that someone, a friend, was
+virtually within reach of me, yet actually as far removed as if an
+ocean divided us! I tasted the hellish torments of Tantalus. I cursed
+fate, heaven, everything; I prayed; I sank into bottomless depths of
+despair and rose to dizzy pinnacles of hope, when a footstep sounded on
+the landing and a thousand wild possibilities, vague possibilities of
+rescue, poured into my mind.
+
+The visitor hesitated, apparently outside my door; and a change, as
+sudden as lightning out of a cloud, transformed my errant fancies. A
+gruesome conviction seized me, as irrational as the hope which it
+displayed, that this was one of the Hashishin—an apish yellow dwarf, a
+strangler, the awful Hassan himself!
+
+The footsteps receded down the stairs. And my thoughts reverted into
+the old channels of dull despair.
+
+I weighed the chances of Bristol’s seeking me there; and, eager as I
+was to give them substance, found them but airy—ultimately was forced
+to admit them to be nil.
+
+So I lay, whilst only a few hundred yards from me a singular scene was
+being enacted. Bristol, a prisoner as helpless as myself, watched the
+concluding business of the day being conducted in the bank beneath him;
+he watched the lift descend to the strongroom—the spying apparatus
+being slightly adjusted in some way; he saw the clerks hastening to
+finish their work in the outer office, and as he watched, absorbed by
+the novelty of the situation, he almost forgot the pain and discomfort
+which he suffered...
+
+“This little peep-show of ours has been real useful,” Dexter confided
+out of the darkness. “I got an impression of the key of the strongroom
+door a week ago, and Carneta got one of the keys of the safe only this
+morning, when she lodged her box of jewellery with the bank! I was at
+work on that key when you interrupted me, and as by means of this
+useful apparatus I have learnt the combination, you ought to see some
+fun in the next few hours!”
+
+Bristol repressed a groan, for the prospect of remaining in that
+position was thus brought keenly home to him.
+
+The bank staff left the premises one by one until only a solitary clerk
+worked on at a back desk. His task completed, he, too, took his
+departure and the bank messenger commenced his nightly duty of sweeping
+up the offices. It was then that excitement like an anaesthetic dulled
+the detective’s pain—indeed, he forgot his aching body and became
+merely a watchful intelligence.
+
+So intent had he become upon the picture before him that he had not
+noticed the fact that he was alone in the office of the Congo Fibre
+Company. Now he realized it from the absolute silence about him, and
+from another circumstance.
+
+The spying apparatus had been left focussed, and on to the screen
+beneath his eyes, bending low behind the desks and creeping,
+Indian-like, around, toward the head of the stair which communicated
+with the strongroom and the apartment used by the messenger, came the
+alert figure of Earl Dexter!
+
+It may be a surprise to some people to learn that at any time in the
+day the door of a bank, unguarded, should be left open, when only a
+solitary messenger is within the premises; yet for a few minutes at
+least each evening this happens at more than one City bank, where one
+of the duties of the resident messenger is to clean the outer steps.
+Dexter had taken advantage of the man’s absence below in quest of
+scrubbing material to enter the bank through the open door.
+
+Watching, breathless, and utterly forgetful of his own position,
+Bristol saw the messenger, all unconscious of danger, come up the
+stairs carrying a pail and broom. As his head reached the level of the
+railings The Stetson Man neatly sand-bagged him, rushed across to the
+outer door, and closed it!
+
+Given duplicate keys and the private information which Dexter so
+ingeniously had obtained, there are many London banks vulnerable to
+similar attack. Certainly, bullion is rarely kept in a branch
+storeroom, but the detective was well aware that the keys of the case
+containing the slipper were kept in this particular safe!
+
+He was convinced, and could entertain no shadowy doubt, that at last
+Dexter had triumphed. He wondered if it had ever hitherto fallen to the
+lot of a representative of the law thus to be made an accessory to a
+daring felony!
+
+But human endurance has well-defined limits. The fading light rendered
+the ingenious picture dim and more dim. The pain occasioned by his
+position became agonizing, and uttering a stifled groan he ceased to
+take an interest in the robbery of the London County and Provincial
+Bank.
+
+Fate is a comedian; and when later I learned how I had lain strapped to
+my bed, and, so near to me, Bristol had hung helpless as a butchered
+carcass in the office of the Congo Fibre Company, whilst, in our
+absence from the stage, the drama of the slipper marched feverish to
+its final curtain, I accorded Fate her well-earned applause. I laughed;
+not altogether mirthfully.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII
+THE SLIPPER
+
+
+Someone was breaking in at the door of my chambers!
+
+I aroused myself from a state of coma almost death-like and listened to
+the blows. The sun was streaming in at my windows.
+
+A splintering crash told of a panel broken. Then a moment later I heard
+the grating of the lock, and a rush of footsteps along the passage.
+
+“Try the study!” came a voice that sounded like Bristol’s, save that it
+was strangely weak and shaky.
+
+Almost simultaneously the Inspector himself threw open the bedroom
+door—and, very pale and haggard-eyed, stood there looking across at me.
+It was a scene unforgettable.
+
+“Mr. Cavanagh!” he said huskily—“Mr. Cavanagh! Thank God you’re alive!
+But”—he turned—“this way, Marden!” he cried, “Untie him quickly! I’ve
+got no strength in my arms!”
+
+Marden, a C.I.D. man, came running, and in a minute, or less, I was
+sitting up gulping brandy.
+
+“I’ve had the most awful experience of my life,” said Bristol. “You’ve
+fared badly enough, but I’ve been hanging by my wrists—you know
+Dexter’s trick!—for close upon sixteen hours! I wasn’t released until
+Carter, an office boy, came on the scene this morning!”
+
+Very feebly I nodded; I could not talk.
+
+“The strong-room of your bank was rifled under my very eyes last
+evening!” he continued, with something of his old vigour; “and five
+minutes after the Antiquarian Museum was opened to the public this
+morning quite an unusual number of visitors appeared.
+
+“I saw the bank manager the moment he arrived, and learned a piece of
+news that positively took my breath away! I was at the Museum seven
+minutes later and got another shock! There in the case was the red
+slipper!”
+
+“Then,” I whispered—“it hadn’t been stolen?”
+
+“Wrong! It had! This was a duplicate, as Mostyn, the curator, saw at a
+glance! Some of the early visitors—they were Easterns—had quite
+surrounded the case. They were watched, of course, but any number of
+Orientals come to see the thing; and, short of smashing the glass,
+which would immediately attract attention, the authorities were
+unprepared, of course, for any attempt. Anyway, they were tricked.
+Somebody opened the case. The real slipper of the Prophet is gone!”
+
+“They told you at the bank—”
+
+“That you had withdrawn the keys! If Dexter had known that!”
+
+“Hassan of Aleppo took them from me last night! At last the Hashishin
+have triumphed.”
+
+Bristol sank into the armchair.
+
+“Every port is watched,” he said. “But—”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII
+CARNETA
+
+
+“I am entirely at your mercy; you can do as you please with me. But
+before you do anything I should like you to listen to what I have to
+say.”
+
+Her beautiful face was pale and troubled. Violet eyes looked sadly into
+mine.
+
+“For nearly an hour I have been waiting for this chance—until I knew
+you were alone,” she continued. “If you are thinking of giving me up to
+the police, at least remember that I came here of my own free will. Of
+course, I know you are quite entitled to take advantage of that; but
+please let me say what I came to say!”
+
+She pleaded so hard, with that musical voice, with her evident
+helplessness, most of all with her wonderful eyes, that I quite
+abandoned any project I might have entertained to secure her arrest. I
+think she divined this masculine weakness, for she said, with greater
+confidence—
+
+“Your friend, Professor Deeping, was murdered by the man called Hassan
+of Aleppo. Are you content to remain idle while his murderer escapes?”
+
+God knows I was not. My idleness in the matter was none of my choosing.
+Since poor Deeping’s murder I had come to handgrips with the assassins
+more than once, but Hassan had proved too clever for me, too clever for
+Scotland Yard. The sacred slipper was once more in the hands of its
+fanatic guardian.
+
+One man there was who might have helped the search, Earl Dexter. But
+Earl Dexter was himself wanted by Scotland Yard!
+
+From the time of the bank affair up to the moment when this beautiful
+visitor had come to my chambers I had thought Dexter, as well as
+Hassan, to have fled secretly from England. But the moment that I saw
+Carneta at my door I divined that The Stetson Man must still be in
+London.
+
+She sat watching me and awaiting my answer.
+
+“I cannot avenge my friend unless I can find his murderer.”
+
+Eagerly she bent forward.
+
+“But if I can find him?”
+
+That made me think, and I hesitated before speaking again.
+
+“Say what you came to say,” I replied slowly. “You must know that I
+distrust you. Indeed, my plain duty is to detain you. But I will listen
+to anything you may care to tell me, particularly if it enables me to
+trap Hassan of Aleppo.”
+
+“Very well,” she said, and rested her elbows upon the table before her.
+“I have come to you in desperation. I can help you to find the man who
+murdered Professor Deeping, but in return I want you to help me!”
+
+I watched her closely. She was very plainly, almost poorly, dressed.
+Her face was pale and there were dark marks around her eyes. This but
+served to render their strange beauty more startling; yet I could see
+that my visitor was in real trouble. The situation was an odd one.
+
+“You are possibly about to ask me,” I suggested, “to assist Earl Dexter
+to escape the police?”
+
+She shook her head. Her voice trembled as she replied—
+
+“That would not have induced me to run the risk of coming here. I came
+because I wanted to find a man who was brave enough to help me. We have
+no friends in London, and so it became a question of terms. I can repay
+you by helping you to trace Hassan.”
+
+“What is it, then, that Dexter asks me to do?”
+
+“He asks nothing. I, Carneta, am asking!”
+
+“Then you are not come from him?”
+
+At my question, all her self-possession left her. She abruptly dropped
+her face into her hands and was shaken with sobs! It was more than I
+could bear, unmoved. I forgot the shady past, forgot that she was the
+associate of a daring felon, and could only realize that she was a
+weeping woman, who had appealed to my pity and who asked my aid.
+
+I stood up and stared out of the window, for I experienced a not
+unnatural embarrassment. Without looking at her I said—
+
+“Don’t be afraid to tell me your troubles. I don’t say I should go out
+of my way to be kind to Mr. Dexter, but I have no wish whatever to be
+instrumental in”—I hesitated—“in making you responsible for his
+misdeeds. If you can tell me where to find Hassan of Aleppo, I won’t
+even ask you where Dexter is—”
+
+“God help me! I don’t know where he is!”
+
+There was real, poignant anguish in her cry. I turned and confronted
+her. Her lashes were all wet with tears.
+
+“What! has he disappeared?”
+
+She nodded, fought with her emotion a moment, and went on unsteadily,
+
+“I want you to help me to find him for in finding him we shall find
+Hassan!”
+
+“How so?”
+
+Her gaze avoided me now.
+
+“Mr. Cavanagh, he has staked everything upon securing the slipper—and
+the Hashishin were too clever for him. His hand—those Eastern fiends
+cut off his hand! But he would not give in. He made another bid—and
+lost again. It left him almost penniless.”
+
+She spoke of Earl Dexter’s felonious plans as another woman might have
+spoken of her husband’s unwise investments! It was fantastic hearing
+that confession of The Stetson Man’s beautiful partner, and I counted
+the interview one of the strangest I had ever known.
+
+A sudden idea came to me. “When did Dexter first conceive the plan to
+steal the slipper?” I asked.
+
+“In Egypt!” answered Carneta. “Yes! You may as well know! He is
+thoroughly familiar with the East, and he learned of the robbery of
+Professor Deeping almost as soon as it became known to Hassan. I know
+what you are going to ask—”
+
+“Ahmad Ahmadeen!”
+
+“Yes! He travelled home as Ahmadeen—the only time he ever used a
+disguise. Oh! the thing is accursed!” she cried. “I begged him,
+implored him, to abandon his attempts upon it. Day and night we were
+watched by those ghastly yellow men! But it was all in vain. He knew,
+had known for a long time, where Hassan of Aleppo was in hiding!”
+
+And I reflected that the best men at New Scotland Yard had failed to
+pick up the slightest clue!
+
+“The Hashishin, of whom that dreadful man is leader, are rich, or have
+supporters who are rich. The plan was to make them pay for the
+slipper.”
+
+“My God! it was playing with fire!”
+
+She sat silent awhile. Emotion threatened to get the upper hand. Then—
+
+“Two days ago,” she almost whispered, “he set out—to ... get the
+slipper!”
+
+“To steal it?”
+
+“To steal it!”
+
+“From Hassan of Aleppo?”
+
+I could scarcely believe that any man, single-handed, could have had
+the hardihood to attempt such a thing.
+
+“From Hassan, yes!”
+
+I faced her, amazed, incredulous.
+
+“Dexter had suffered mutilation, he knew that the Hashishin sought his
+life for his previous attempts upon the relic of the Prophet, and yet
+he dared to venture again into the very lions’ den?”
+
+“He did, Mr. Cavanagh, two days ago. And—”
+
+“Yes?” I urged, as gently as I could, for she was shaking pitifully.
+
+“He never came back!”
+
+The words were spoken almost in a whisper. She clenched her hands and
+leapt from the chair, fighting down her grief and with such a stark
+horror in her beautiful eyes that from my very soul I longed to be able
+to help her.
+
+“Mr. Cavanagh” (she had courage, this bewildering accomplice of a
+cracksman), “I know the house he went to! I cannot hope to make you
+understand what I have suffered since then. A thousand times I have
+been on the point of going to the police, confessing all I knew, and
+leading them to that house! O God! if only he is alive, this shall be
+his last crooked deal—and mine! I dared not go to the police, for his
+sake! I waited, and watched, and hoped, through two such nights and
+days ... then I ventured. I should have gone mad if I had not come
+here. I knew you had good cause to hate, to detest me, but I remembered
+that you had a great grievance against Hassan. Not as great, O heaven!
+not as great as mine, but yet a great one. I remembered, too, that you
+were the kind of man—a woman can come to...”
+
+She sank back into the chair, and with her fingers twining and
+untwining, sat looking dully before her.
+
+“In brief,” I said, “what do you propose?”
+
+“I propose that we endeavour to obtain admittance to the house of
+Hassan of Aleppo—secretly, of course, and all I ask of you in return
+for revealing the secret of its situation is—”
+
+“That I let Dexter go free?”
+
+Almost inaudibly she whispered: “If he lives!”
+
+Surely no stranger proposition ever had been submitted to a law-abiding
+citizen. I was asked to connive in the escape of a notorious criminal,
+and at one and the same time to embark upon an expedition patently
+burglarious! As though this were not enough, I was invited to beard
+Hassan of Aleppo, the most dreadful being I had ever encountered East
+or West, in his mysterious stronghold!
+
+I wondered what my friend, Inspector Bristol, would have thought of the
+project; I wondered if I should ever live to see Hassan meet his just
+deserts as a result of this enterprise, which I was forced to admit a
+foolhardy one. But a man who has selected the career of a war
+correspondent from amongst those which Fleet Street offers, is the
+victim of a certain craving for fresh experiences; I suppose, has in
+his character something of an adventurous turn.
+
+For a while I stood staring from the window, then faced about and
+looked into the violet eyes of my visitor.
+
+“I agree, Carneta!” I said.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIX
+WE MEET MR. ISAACS
+
+
+Quitting the wayside station, and walking down a short lane, we came
+out upon Watling Street, white and dusty beneath the afternoon sun. We
+were less than an hour’s train journey from London but found ourselves
+amid the Kentish hop gardens, amid a rural peace unbroken. My companion
+carried a camera case slung across her shoulder, but its contents were
+less innocent than one might have supposed. In fact, it contained a
+neat set of those instruments of the burglar’s art with whose use she
+appeared to be quite familiar.
+
+“There is an inn,” she said, “about a mile ahead, where we can obtain
+some vital information. He last wrote to me from there.”
+
+Side by side we tramped along the dusty road. We both were silent,
+occupied with our own thoughts. Respecting the nature of my companion’s
+I could entertain little doubt, and my own turned upon the foolhardy
+nature of the undertaking upon which I was embarked. No other word
+passed between us then, until upon rounding a bend and passing a
+cluster of picturesque cottages, the yard of the Vinepole came into
+view.
+
+“Do they know you by sight here?” I asked abruptly.
+
+“No, of course not; we never made strategic mistakes of that kind. If
+we have tea here, no doubt we can learn all we require.”
+
+I entered the little parlour of the inn, and suggested that tea should
+be served in the pretty garden which opened out of it upon the right.
+
+The host, who himself laid the table, viewed the camera case
+critically.
+
+“We get a lot of photographers down here,” he remarked tentatively.
+
+“No doubt,” said my companion. “There is some very pretty scenery in
+the neighbourhood.”
+
+The landlord rested his hands upon the table.
+
+“There was a gentleman here on Wednesday last,” he said; “an old
+gentleman who had met with an accident, and was staying somewhere
+hereabouts for his health. But he’d got his camera with him, and it was
+wonderful the way he could use it, considering he hadn’t got the use of
+his right hand.”
+
+“He must have been a very keen photographer,” I said, glancing at the
+girl beside me.
+
+“He took three or four pictures of the Vinepole,” replied the landlord
+(which I doubted, since probably his camera was a dummy); “and he
+wanted to know if there were any other old houses in the neighbourhood.
+I told him he ought to take Cadham Hall, and he said he had heard that
+the Gate House, which is about a mile from here, was one of the oldest
+buildings about.”
+
+A girl appeared with a tea tray, and for a moment I almost feared that
+the landlord was about to retire; but he lingered, whilst the girl
+distributed the things about the table, and Carneta asked casually,
+“Would there be time for me to photograph the Gate House before dark?”
+
+“There might be time,” was the reply, “but that’s not the difficulty.
+Mr. Isaacs is the difficulty.”
+
+“Who is Mr. Isaacs?” I asked.
+
+“He’s the Jewish gentleman who bought the Gate House recently. Lots of
+money he’s got and a big motor car. He’s up and down to London almost
+every day in the week, but he won’t let anybody take photographs of the
+house. I know several who’ve asked.”
+
+“But I thought,” said Carneta, innocently, “you said the old gentleman
+who was here on Wednesday went to take some?”
+
+“He went, yes, miss; but I don’t know if he succeeded.”
+
+Carneta poured out some tea.
+
+“Now that you speak of it,” she said, “I too have heard that the Gate
+House is very picturesque. What objection can Mr. Isaacs have to
+photographers?”
+
+“Well, you see, miss, to get a picture of the house, you have to pass
+right through the grounds.”
+
+“I should walk right up to the house and ask permission. Is Mr. Isaacs
+at home, I wonder?”
+
+“I couldn’t say. He hasn’t passed this way to-day.”
+
+“We might meet him on the way,” said I. “What is he like?”
+
+“A Jewish gentleman sir, very dark, with a white beard. Wears gold
+glasses. Keeps himself very much to himself. I don’t know anything
+about his household; none of them ever come here.”
+
+Carneta inquired the direction of Cadham Hall and of the Gate House,
+and the landlord left us to ourselves. My companion exhibited signs of
+growing agitation, and it seemed to me that she had much ado to
+restrain herself from setting out without a moment’s delay for the Gate
+House, which, I readily perceived, was the place to which our strange
+venture was leading us.
+
+I found something very stimulating in the reflection that, rash though
+the expedition might be, and, viewed from whatever standpoint,
+undeniably perilous, it promised to bring me to that secret stronghold
+of deviltry where the sinister Hassan of Aleppo so successfully had
+concealed himself.
+
+The work of the modern journalist had many points of contact with that
+of the detective; and since the murder of Professor Deeping I had
+succumbed to the man-hunting fever more than once. I knew that Scotland
+Yard had failed to locate the hiding-place of the remarkable and evil
+man who, like an efreet of Oriental lore, obeyed the talisman of the
+stolen slipper, striking down whomsoever laid hand upon its sacredness.
+It was a novel sensation to know that, aided by this beautiful
+accomplice of a rogue, I had succeeded where the experts had failed!
+
+Misgivings I had and shall not deny. If our scheme succeeded it would
+mean that Deeping’s murderer should be brought to justice. If it
+failed-well, frankly, upon that possibility I did not dare to reflect!
+
+It must be needless for me to say that we two strangely met allies were
+ill at ease, sometimes to the point of embarrassment. We proceeded on
+our way in almost unbroken silence, and, save for a couple of farm
+hands, without meeting any wayfarer, up to the time that we reached the
+brow of the hill and had our first sight of the Gate House lying in a
+little valley beneath. It was a small Tudor mansion, very compact in
+plan and its roof glowed redly in the rays of the now setting sun.
+
+From the directions given by the host of the Vinepole it was impossible
+to mistake the way or to mistake the house. Amid well-wooded grounds it
+stood, a place quite isolated, but so typically English that, as I
+stood looking down upon it, I found myself unable to believe that any
+other than a substantial country gentleman could be its proprietor.
+
+I glanced at Carneta. Her violet eyes were burning feverishly, but her
+lips twitched in a bravely pitiful way.
+
+Clearly now my adventure lay before me; that red-roofed homestead
+seemed to have rendered it all substantial which hitherto had been
+shadowy; and I stood there studying the Gate House gravely, for it
+might yet swallow me up, as apparently it had swallowed Earl Dexter.
+
+There, amid that peaceful Kentish landscape, fantasy danced and horrors
+unknown lurked in waiting...
+
+The eminence upon which we were commanded an extensive prospect, and
+eastward showed a tower and flagstaff which marked the site of Cadham
+Hall. There were homeward-bound labourers to be seen in the lanes now,
+and where like a white ribbon the Watling Street lay across the verdant
+carpet moved an insect shape, speedily.
+
+It was a car, and I watched it with vague interest. At a point where a
+dense coppice spread down to the roadway and a lane crossed west to
+east, the car became invisible. Then I saw it again, nearer to us and
+nearer to the Gate House. Finally it disappeared among the trees.
+
+I turned to Carneta. She, too, had been watching. Now her gaze met
+mine.
+
+“Mr. Isaacs!” she said; and her voice was less musical than usual. “His
+chauffeur, who learned his business in Cairo, is probably the only one
+of his servants who remains in England.”
+
+“What!” I began—and said no more.
+
+Where the road upon which we stood wound down into the valley and lost
+itself amid the trees surrounding the Gate House, the car suddenly
+appeared again, and began to mount the slope toward us!
+
+“Heavens!” whispered Carneta. “He may have seen us—with glasses! Quick!
+Let us walk back until the hill-top conceals us; then we must hide
+somewhere!”
+
+I shared her excitement. Without a moment’s hesitation we both turned
+and retraced our steps. Twenty paces brought us to a spot where a stack
+of mangel wurzels stood at the roadside.
+
+“This will do!” I said.
+
+We ran around into the field, and crouched where we could peer out on
+the road without ourselves being seen. Nor had we taken up this
+position a moment too soon.
+
+Topping the slope came a light-weight electric, driven by a man who, in
+his spruce uniform, might have passed at a glance for a very dusky
+European. The car had a limousine back, and as the chauffeur slowed
+down, out from the open windows right and left peered the solitary
+occupant.
+
+He had the cast of countenance which is associated with the best type
+of Jew, with clear-cut aquiline features wholly destitute of grossness.
+His white beard was patriarchal and he wore gold-rimmed pince-nez and a
+glossy silk hat. Such figures may often be met with in the great
+money-markets of the world, and Mr. Isaacs would have passed for a
+successful financier in even more discerning communities than that of
+Cadham.
+
+But I scarcely breathed until the car was past; and, beside me, my
+companion, crouching to the ground, was trembling wildly. Fifty yards
+toward the village Mr. Isaacs evidently directed the man to return.
+
+The car was put about, and flashed past us at high speed down into the
+valley. When the sound of the humming motor had died to something no
+louder than the buzz of a sleepy wasp, I held out my hand to Carneta
+and she rose, pale, but with blazing eyes, and picked up her camera
+case.
+
+“If he had detected us, everything would have been lost!” she
+whispered.
+
+“Not everything!” I replied grimly—and showed her the revolver which I
+had held in my hand whilst those eagle eyes had been seeking us. “If he
+had made a sign to show that he had seen us, in fact, if he had once
+offered a safe mark by leaning from the car, I should have shot him
+dead without hesitation!”
+
+“We must not show ourselves again, but wait for dusk. He must have seen
+us, then, on the hilltop, but I hope without recognizing us. He has the
+sight and instincts of a vulture!”
+
+I nodded, slipping the revolver into my pocket, but I wondered if I
+should not have been better advised to have risked a shot at the moment
+that I had recognized “Mr. Isaacs” for Hassan of Aleppo.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXX
+AT THE GATE HOUSE
+
+
+From sunset to dusk I lurked about the neighbourhood of the Gate House
+with my beautiful accomplice—watching and waiting: a man bound upon
+stranger business, I dare swear, than any other in the county of Kent
+that night.
+
+Our endeavour now was to avoid observation by any one, and in this, I
+think, we succeeded. At the same time, Carneta, upon whose experience I
+relied implicitly, regarded it as most important that we should observe
+(from a safe distance) any one who entered or quitted the gates.
+
+But none entered, and none came out. When, finally, we made along the
+narrow footpath skirting the west of the grounds, the night was
+silent—most strangely still.
+
+The trees met overhead, but no rustle disturbed their leaves and of
+animal life no indication showed itself. There was no moon.
+
+A full appreciation of my mad folly came to me, and with it a sense of
+heavy depression. This stillness that ruled all about the house which
+sheltered the awful Sheikh of the Assassins was ominous, I thought. In
+short, my nerves were playing me tricks.
+
+“We have little to fear,” said my companion, speaking in a hushed and
+quivering voice. “The whole of the party left England some days ago.”
+
+“Are you sure?”
+
+“Certain! We learned that before Earl made his attempt. Hassan remains,
+for some reason; Hassan and one other—the one who drives the car.”
+
+“But the slipper?”
+
+“If Hassan remains, so does the slipper!” From the knapsack, which, as
+you will have divined, did not contain a camera, she took out an
+electric pocket lamp, and directed its beam upon the hedge above us.
+
+“There is a gap somewhere here!” she said. “See if you can find it. I
+dare not show the light too long.”
+
+Darkness followed. I clambered up the bank and sought for the opening
+of which Carneta had spoken.
+
+“The light here a moment,” I whispered. “I think I have it!”
+
+Out shone the white beam, and momentarily fell upon a black hole in the
+thickset hedge. The light disappeared, and as I extended my hand to
+Carneta she grasped it and climbed up beside me.
+
+“Put on your rubber shoes,” she directed. “Leave the others here.”
+
+There in the darkness I did as she directed, for I was provided with a
+pair of tennis shoes. Carneta already was suitably shod.
+
+“I will go first,” I said. “What is the ground like beyond?”
+
+“Just unkempt bushes and weeds.”
+
+Upon hands and knees I crawled through, saw dimly that there was a
+short descent, corresponding with the ascent from the lane, and turned,
+whispering to my fellow conspirator to follow.
+
+The grounds proved even more extensive than I had anticipated. We
+pressed on, dodging low-sweeping branches and keeping our arms up to
+guard our faces from outshoots of thorn bushes. Our progress
+necessarily was slow, but even so quite a long time seemed to have
+elapsed ere we came in sight of the house.
+
+This was my first expedition of the kind; and now that my goal was
+actually in sight I became conscious of a sort of exultation hard to
+describe. My companion, on the contrary, seemed to have become icily
+cool. When next she spoke, her voice had a businesslike ring, which
+revealed the fact that she was no amateur at this class of work.
+
+“Wait here,” she directed. “I am going to pass all around the house,
+and I will rejoin you.”
+
+I could see her but dimly, and she moved off as silent as an Indian
+deer-stalker, leaving me alone there crouching at the extreme edge of
+the thicket. I looked out over a small wilderness of unkempt
+flower-beds; so much it was just possible to perceive. The plants in
+many instances had spread on to the pathways and contested survival
+with the flourishing weeds. All was wild—deserted—eerie.
+
+A sense of dampness assailed me, and I raised my eyes to the low-lying
+building wherein no light showed, no sign of life was evident. The
+nearer wing presented a verandah apparently overgrown by some climbing
+plant, the nature of which it was impossible to determine in the
+darkness.
+
+The zest for the nocturnal operation which temporarily had thrilled me
+succumbed now to loneliness. With keen anxiety I awaited the return of
+my more experienced accomplice. The situation was grotesque, utterly
+bizarre; but even my sense of humour could not save me from the growing
+dread which this seemingly deserted place poured into my heart.
+
+When upon the right I heard a faint rustling I started, and grasped the
+revolver in my pocket.
+
+“Not a sound!” came in Carneta’s voice. “Keep just inside the bushes
+and come this way. There is something I want to show you.”
+
+The various profuse growths rendered concealment simple enough—if
+indeed any other concealment were necessary than that which the
+strangely black night afforded. Just within the evil-smelling thicket
+we made a half circuit of the building, and stopped.
+
+“Look!” whispered Carneta.
+
+The word was unnecessary, for I was staring fixedly in the direction of
+that which evidently had occasioned her uneasiness.
+
+It was a small square window, so low-set that I assumed it to be that
+of a cellar, and heavily cross-barred.
+
+From it, out upon a tangled patch of vegetation, shone a dull red
+light!
+
+“There’s no other light in the place,” my companion whispered. “For
+God’s sake, what can it be?”
+
+My mind supplied no explanation. The idea that it might be a dark room
+no doubt was suggested by the assumed role of Carneta; but I knew that
+idea to be absurd. The red light meant something else.
+
+Evidently the commencing of operations before all lights were out was
+irregular, for Carneta said slowly—
+
+“We must wait and watch the light. There was formerly a moat around the
+Gate House; that must be the window of a dungeon.”
+
+I little relished the prospect of waiting in that swamp-like spot, but
+since no alternative presented itself I accepted the inevitable. For
+close upon an hour we stood watching the red window. No sound of bird,
+beast, or man disturbed our vigil; in fact, it would appear that the
+very insects shunned the neighbourhood of Hassan of Aleppo. But the red
+light still shone out.
+
+“We must risk it!” said Carneta steadily. “There are French windows
+opening on to that verandah. Ten yards farther around the bushes come
+right up to the wall of the house. We’ll go that way and around by the
+other wing on to the verandah.”
+
+Any action was preferable to this nerve-sapping delay, and with a
+determination to shoot, and shoot to kill, any one who opposed our
+entrance, I passed through the bushes and, with Carneta, rounded the
+southern border of that silent house and slipped quietly on to the
+verandah.
+
+Kneeling, Carneta opened the knapsack. My eyes were growing accustomed
+to the darkness, and I was just able to see her deft hands at work upon
+the fastenings. She made no noise, and I watched her with an
+ever-growing wonder. A female burglar is a personage difficult to
+imagine. Certainly, no one ever could have suspected this girl with the
+violet eyes of being an expert crackswoman; but of her efficiency there
+could be no question. I think I had never witnessed a more amazing
+spectacle than that of this cultured girl manipulating the tools of the
+house breaker with her slim white fingers.
+
+Suddenly she turned and clutched my arm.
+
+“The windows are not fastened!” she whispered.
+
+A strange courage came to me—perhaps that of desperation. For, ignoring
+the ominous circumstance, I pushed open the nearest window and stepped
+into the room beyond! A hissing breath from Carneta acknowledged my
+performance, and she entered close behind me, silent in her
+rubber-soled shoes.
+
+For one thrilling moment we stood listening. Then came the white beam
+from the electric lamp to cut through the surrounding blackness.
+
+The room was totally unfurnished!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXI
+THE POOL OF DEATH
+
+
+Not a sound broke the stillness of the Gate House. It was the most
+eerily silent place in which I had ever found myself. Out into the
+corridor we went, noiselessly. It was stripped, uncarpeted.
+
+Three doors we passed, two upon the left and one upon the right. We
+tried them all. All were unfastened, and the rooms into which they
+opened bare and deserted. Then we came upon a short, descending stair,
+at its foot a massive oaken door.
+
+Carneta glided down, noiseless as a ghost, and to one of the blackened
+panels applied an ingenious little instrument which she carried in her
+knapsack. It was not unlike a stethoscope; and as I watched her
+listening, by means of this arrangement, for any sound beyond the oaken
+door, I reflected how almost every advance made by science places a new
+tool in the hand of the criminal.
+
+No word had been spoken since we had discovered this door; none had
+been necessary. For we both knew that the place beyond was that from
+which proceeded the mysterious red light.
+
+I directed the ray of the electric torch upon Carneta, as she stood
+there listening, and against that sombre oaken background her face and
+profile stood out with startling beauty. She seemed half perplexed and
+half fearful. Then she abruptly removed the apparatus, and, stooping to
+the knapsack, replaced it and took out a bunch of wire keys, signing to
+me to hand her the lamp.
+
+As I crept down the steps I saw her pause, glancing back over her
+shoulder toward the door. The expression upon her face induced me to
+direct the light in the same direction.
+
+Why neither of us had observed the fact before I cannot conjecture; but
+a key was in the lock!
+
+Perhaps the traffic of the night afforded no more dramatic moment than
+this. The house which we were come prepared burglariously to enter was
+thrown open, it would seem, to us, inviting our inspection!
+
+Looking back upon that moment, it seems almost incredible that the
+sight of a key in a lock should have so thrilled me. But at the time I
+perceived something sinister in this failure of the Lord of the
+Hashishin to close his doors to intruders. That Carneta shared my
+doubts and fears was to be read in her face; but her training had been
+peculiar, I learned, and such as establishes a surprising resoluteness
+of character.
+
+Quite noiselessly she turned the key, and holding a dainty pocket
+revolver in her hand, pushed the door open slowly!
+
+An odour, sickly sweet and vaguely familiar, was borne to my nostrils.
+Carneta became outlined in dim, reddish light. Bending forward
+slightly, she entered the room, and I, with muscles tensed nervously,
+advanced and stood beside her.
+
+I perceived that this was a cellar; indeed, I doubt not that in some
+past age it had served as a dungeon. From the stone roof hung the first
+evidence of Eastern occupation which the Gate House had yielded; in the
+form of an Oriental lantern, or fanoos, of rose-coloured waxed paper
+upon a copper frame. Its vague light revealed the interior of the
+hideous place upon whose threshold we stood.
+
+Straight before us, deep set in the stone wall, was the tiny square
+window, iron-barred without, and glazed with red glass, the light from
+which had so deeply mystified us. Within a niche in the wall, a little
+to the left of the window, rested an object which, at that moment,
+claimed our undivided attention the sight of which so wrought upon us
+that temporarily all else was forgotten.
+
+It was the red slipper of the Prophet!
+
+“My God!” whispered Carneta—“my God!”—and clutched at me, swaying
+dizzily.
+
+A few inches from our feet the floor became depressed, how deeply I
+could not determine, for it was filled with water, water filthy and
+slimy! The strange, nauseating odour had grown all but unsupportable;
+it seemingly proceeded from this fetid pool which, occupying the floor
+of the dungeon, offered a barrier, since its depth was unknown, of
+fully twelve feet between ourselves and the farther wall.
+
+There was a faint, dripping sound: a whispering, echoing drip-drip of
+falling water. I could not tell from whence it proceeded.
+
+Almost supporting my companion, whose courage seemed suddenly to have
+failed her, I stared fascinatedly at that blood-stained relic.
+Something then induced me to look behind; I suppose a warning instinct
+of that sort which is unexplainable. I only know that upholding Carneta
+with my left arm, and nervously grasping my revolver in my right, I
+turned and glanced over my shoulder.
+
+Very slowly, but with a constant, regular motion, the massive door was
+closing!
+
+I snatched away my arm; in my left hand I held the electric torch, and
+springing sharply about I directed the searching ray into the black gap
+of the stairway. A yellow face, a malignant Oriental face, came
+suddenly, fully, into view! Instantly I recognized it for that of the
+man who had driven Hassan’s car!
+
+Acting upon the determination with which I had entered the Gate House,
+I raised my revolver and fired straight between the evil eyes! To the
+fact that I dropped my left hand in the act of pulling the trigger with
+my right, and thus lost my mark, the servant of Hassan of Aleppo owed
+his escape. I missed him. He uttered a shrill cry of fear and went
+racing up the wooden stair. I followed him with the light and fired
+twice at the retreating figure. I heard him stumble and a second time
+cry out. But, though I doubt not he was hit, he recovered himself, for
+I heard his tread in the corridor above.
+
+Propping wide the door with my foot, I turned to Carneta. Her face was
+drawn and haggard; but her mouth set in a sort of grim determination.
+
+“Earl is dead!” she said, in a queer, toneless voice. “He died trying
+to get—that thing! I will get it, and destroy it!”
+
+Before I could detain her, even had I sought to do so, she stepped into
+the filthy water, struggled to recover her foothold, and sank above her
+waist into its sliminess. Without hesitation she began to advance
+toward the niche which contained the slipper. In the middle of the pool
+she stopped.
+
+What memory it was which supplied the clue to the identity of that
+nauseating smell, heaven alone knows; but as the girl stopped and drew
+herself up rigidly—then turned and leapt wildly back toward the door—I
+knew what occasioned that sickly odour!
+
+She screamed once, dreadfully—shrilly—a scream of agonizing fear that I
+can never forget. Then, roughly I grasped her, for the need was
+urgent—and dragged her out on to the floor beside me. With her wet
+garments clinging to her limbs, she fell prostrate on the stones.
+
+A yard from the brink the slimy water parted, and the yellow snout of a
+huge crocodile was raised above the surface! The saurian eyes, hungrily
+malevolent, rose next to view!
+
+The extremity of our danger found me suddenly cool. As the thing drew
+its slimy body up out of the poor I waited. The jaws were extended
+toward the prostrate body, were but inches removed from it, dripped
+their saliva upon the soddened skirt—when I bent forward, and at a
+range of some ten inches emptied the remaining three loaded chambers of
+my revolver into the creature’s left eye!
+
+Upchurned in bloody foam became the water of that dreadful place.... As
+one recalls the incidents of a fevered dream, I recall dragging Carneta
+away from the contorted body of the death-stricken reptile. A nightmare
+chaos of horrid, revolting sights and sounds forms my only recollection
+of quitting the dungeon of the slipper.
+
+I succeeded in carrying her up the stairs and out through the empty
+rooms on to the verandah; but there, from sheer exhaustion, I laid her
+down. I had no means of reviving her and I lacked the strength to carry
+her farther. Having recharged my revolver, I stood watching her where
+she lay, wanly beautiful in the dim light.
+
+There was no doubt in my mind respecting the fate of Earl Dexter, nor
+could I doubt that the slipper in the dungeon below was a duplicate of
+the real one. It was a death-trap into which he had lured Dexter and
+which he had left baited for whomsoever might trace the cracksman to
+the Gate House. Why Hassan should have remained behind, unless from
+fanatic lust of killing, I could not imagine.
+
+When at last the fresher night air had its effect, and Carneta opened
+her eyes, I led her to the gates, nor did she offer the slightest
+resistance, but looked dully before her, muttering over and over again,
+“Earl, Earl!”
+
+The gates were open; we passed out on to the open road. No man pursued
+us, and the night was gravely still.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXII
+SIX GRAY PATCHES
+
+
+When the invitation came from my old friend Hilton to spend a week
+“roughing it” with him in Warwickshire I accepted with alacrity. If
+ever a man needed a holiday I was that man. Nervous breakdown
+threatened me at any moment; the ghastly experience at the Gate House
+together with Carneta’s grief-stricken face when I had parted from her
+were obsessing memories which I sought in vain to shake off.
+
+A brief wire had contained the welcome invitation, and up to the time
+when I had received it I had been unaware that Hilton was back in
+England. Moreover, beyond the fact that his house, “Uplands,” was near
+H—, for which I was instructed to change at New Street Station,
+Birmingham, I had little idea of its location. But he added “Wire train
+and will meet at H—”; so that I had no uneasiness on that score.
+
+I had contemplated catching the 2:45 from Euston, but by the time I had
+got my work into something like order, I decided that the 6:55 would be
+more suitable and decided to dine on the train.
+
+Altogether, there was something of a rush and hustle attendant upon
+getting away, and when at last I found myself in the cab, bound for
+Euston, I sat back with a long-drawn sigh. The quest of the Prophet’s
+slipper was ended; in all probability that blood-stained relic was
+already Eastward bound. Hassan of Aleppo, its awful guardian, had
+triumphed and had escaped retribution. Earl Dexter was dead. I could
+not doubt that; for the memory of his beautiful accomplice, Carneta, as
+I last had seen her, broken-hearted, with her great violet eyes dulled
+in tearless agony—have I not said that it lived with me?
+
+Even as the picture of her lovely, pale face presented itself to my
+mind, the cab was held up by a temporary block in the traffic—and my
+imagination played me a strange trick.
+
+Another taxi ran close alongside, almost at the moment that the press
+of vehicles moved on again. Certainly, I had no more than a passing
+glimpse of the occupants; but I could have sworn that violet eyes
+looked suddenly into mine, and with equal conviction I could have sworn
+to the gaunt face of the man who sat beside the violet-eyed girl for
+that of Earl Dexter!
+
+The travellers, however, were immediately lost to sight in the rear,
+and I was left to conjecture whether this had been a not uncommon form
+of optical delusion or whether I had seen a ghost.
+
+At any rate, as I passed in between the big pillars, “The gateway of
+the North,” I scrutinized, and closely, the numerous hurrying figures
+about me. None of them, by any stretch of the imagination, could have
+been set down for that of Dexter, The Stetson Man. No doubt, I
+concluded, I had been tricked by a chance resemblance.
+
+Having dispatched my telegram, I boarded the 6:55. I thought I should
+have the compartment to myself, and so deep in reverie was I that the
+train was actually clear of the platforms ere I learned that I had a
+companion. He must have joined me at the moment that the train started.
+Certainly, I had not seen him enter. But, suddenly looking up, I met
+the eyes of this man who occupied the corner seat facing me.
+
+This person was olive-skinned, clean-shaven, fine featured, and
+perfectly groomed. His age might have been anything from twenty-five to
+forty-five, but his hair and brows were jet black. His eyes, too, were
+nearer to real black than any human eyes I had ever seen
+before—excepting the awful eyes of Hassan of Aleppo. Hassan of Aleppo!
+It was, to that hour, a mystery how his group of trained assassins—the
+Hashishin—had quitted England. Since none of them were known to the
+police, it was no insoluble mystery, I admit; but nevertheless it was
+singular that the careful watching of the ports had yielded no result.
+Could it be that some of them had not yet left the country? Could it
+be—
+
+I looked intently into the black eyes. They were caressing, smiling
+eyes, and looked boldly into mine. I picked up a magazine, pretending
+to read. But I supported it with my left hand; my right was in my coat
+pocket—and it rested upon my Smith and Wesson!
+
+So much had the slipper of Mohammed done for me: I went in hourly dread
+of murderous attack!
+
+My travelling companion watched me; of that I was certain. I could feel
+his gaze. But he made no move and no word passed between us. This was
+the situation when the train slowed into Northampton. At Northampton,
+to my indescribable relief (frankly, I was as nervous in those days as
+a woman), the Oriental traveller stepped out on to the platform.
+
+Having reclosed the door, he turned and leaned in through the open
+window.
+
+“Evidently you are not concerned, Mr. Cavanagh,” he said. “Be warned.
+Do not interfere with those that are!”
+
+The night swallowed him up.
+
+My fears had been justified; the man was one of the Hashishin—a spy of
+Hassan of Aleppo! What did it mean?
+
+I craned from the window, searching the platform right and left. But
+there was no sign of him.
+
+When the train left Northampton I found myself alone, and I should only
+weary you were I to attempt to recount the troubled conjectures that
+bore me company to Birmingham.
+
+The train reached New Street at nine, with the result that having
+gulped a badly needed brandy and soda in the buffet, I grabbed my bag,
+raced across—and just missed the connection! More than an hour later I
+found myself standing at ten minutes to eleven upon the H— platform,
+watching the red taillight of the “local” disappear into the night.
+Then I realized to the full that with four miles of lonely England
+before me there hung above my head a mysterious threat—a vague menace.
+The solitary official, who but waited my departure to lock up the
+station, was the last representative of civilization I could hope to
+encounter until the gates of “Uplands” should be opened to me!
+
+What was the matter with which I was warned not to interfere? Might I
+not, by my mere presence in that place, unwittingly be interfering now?
+
+With the station-master’s directions humming like a refrain in my ears,
+I passed through the sleeping village and out on to the road. The moon
+was exceptionally bright and unobscured, although a dense bank of cloud
+crept slowly from the west, and before me the path stretched as an
+unbroken thread of silvery white twining a sinuous way up the
+bracken-covered slope, to where, sharply defined against the moonlight
+sky, a coppice in grotesque silhouette marked the summit.
+
+The month had been dry and tropically hot, and my footsteps rang
+crisply upon the hard ground. There is nothing more deceptive than a
+straight road up a hill; and half an hour’s steady tramping but saw me
+approaching the trees.
+
+I had so far resolutely endeavoured to keep my mind away from the idea
+of surveillance. Now, as I paused to light my pipe—a never-failing
+friend in loneliness—I perceived something move in the shadows of a
+neighbouring bush.
+
+This object was not unlike a bladder, and the very incongruity of its
+appearance served to revive all my apprehensions. Taking up my grip, as
+though I had noticed nothing of an alarming nature, I pursued my way up
+the slope, leaving a trail of tobacco smoke in my wake; and having my
+revolver secreted up my right coat-sleeve.
+
+Successfully resisting a temptation to glance behind, I entered the
+cover of the coppice, and, now invisible to any one who might be
+dogging me, stood and looked back upon the moon-bright road.
+
+There was no living thing in sight, the road was empty as far as the
+eye could see. The coppice now remained to be negotiated, and then, if
+the station-master’s directions were not at fault, “Uplands” should be
+visible beyond. Taking, therefore, what I had designed to be a final
+glance back down the hillside, I was preparing to resume my way when I
+saw something—something that arrested me.
+
+It was a long way behind—so far that, had the moon been less bright, I
+could never have discerned it. What it was I could not even conjecture;
+but it had the appearance of a vague gray patch, moving—not along the
+road, but through the undergrowth—in my direction.
+
+For a second my eye rested upon it. Then I saw a second patch—a third—a
+fourth!
+
+Six!
+
+There were six gray patches creeping up the slope toward me!
+
+The sight was unnerving. What were these things that approached,
+silently, stealthily—like snakes in the grass?
+
+A fear, unlike anything I had known before the quest of the Prophet’s
+slipper had brought fantastic horror into my life, came upon me.
+Revolver in hand I ran—ran for my life toward the gap in the trees that
+marked the coppice end. And as I went something hummed through the
+darkness beside my head, some projectile, some venomous thing that
+missed its mark by a bare inch!
+
+Painfully conversant with the uncanny weapons employed by the
+Hashishin, I knew now, beyond any possibility of doubt, that death was
+behind me.
+
+A pattering like naked feet sounded on the road, and, without pausing
+in my headlong career, I sent a random shot into the blackness.
+
+The crack of the Smith and Wesson reassured me. I pulled up short,
+turned, and looked back toward the trees.
+
+Nothing—no one!
+
+Breathing heavily, I crammed my extinguished briar into my
+pocket—re-charged the empty chamber of the revolver—and started to run
+again toward a light that showed over the treetops to my left.
+
+That, if the man’s directions were right, was “Uplands”—if his
+directions were wrong—then...
+
+A shrill whistle—minor, eerie, in rising cadence—sounded on the dead
+silence with piercing clearness! Six whistles—seemingly from all around
+me—replied!
+
+Some object came humming through the air, and I ducked wildly.
+
+On and on I ran—flying from an unknown, but, as a warning instinct told
+me, deadly peril—ran as a man runs pursued by devils.
+
+The road bent sharply to the left then forked. Overhanging trees
+concealed the house, and the light, though high up under the eaves, was
+no longer visible. Trusting to Providence to guide me, I plunged down
+the lane that turned to the left, and, almost exhausted, saw the gates
+before me—saw the sweep of the drive, and the moonlight, gleaming on
+the windows!
+
+None of the windows were illuminated.
+
+Straight up to the iron gates I raced.
+
+They were locked!
+
+Without a moment’s hesitation I hurled my grip over the top and
+clambered up the bars! As I got astride, from the blackness of the lane
+came the ominous hum, and my hat went spinning away across the
+lawn!—the black cloud veiled the moon and complete darkness fell.
+
+Then I dropped and ran for the house—shouting, though all but
+winded—“Hilton! Hilton! Open the door!”
+
+Sinking exhausted on the steps, I looked toward the gates—but they
+showed only dimly in the dense shadows of the trees.
+
+Bzzz! Buzz!
+
+I dropped flat in the portico as something struck the metal knob of the
+door and rebounded over me. A shower of gravel told of another
+misdirected projectile.
+
+Crack! Crack! Crack! The revolver spoke its short reply into the
+mysterious darkness; but the night gave up no sound to tell of a shot
+gone home.
+
+“Hilton! Hilton!” I cried, banging on the panels with the butt of the
+weapon. “Open the door! Open the door!”
+
+And now I heard the coming footsteps along the hall within; heavy bolts
+were withdrawn—the door swung open—and Hilton, pale-faced, appeared.
+His hand shot out, grabbed my coat collar; and weak, exhausted, I found
+myself snatched into safety, and the door rebolted.
+
+“Thank God!” I whispered. “Thank God! Hilton, look to all your bolts
+and fastenings. Hell is outside!”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIII
+HOW WE WERE REINFORCED
+
+
+Hilton, I learned, was living the simple life at “Uplands.” The place
+was not yet decorated and was only partly furnished. But with his man,
+Soar, he had been in solitary occupation for a week.
+
+“Feel better now?” he asked anxiously.
+
+I reached for my tumbler and blew a cloud of smoke into the air. I
+could hear Soar’s footsteps as he made the round of bolts and bars,
+testing each anxiously.
+
+“Thanks, Hilton,” I said. “I’m quite all right. You are naturally
+wondering what the devil it all means? Well, then, I wired you from
+Euston that I was coming by the 6:55.”
+
+“H— Post Office shuts at 7. I shall get your wire in the morning!”
+
+“That explains your failing to meet me. Now for my explanation!”
+
+“Surrounding this house at the present moment,” I continued, “are
+members of an Eastern organization—the Hashishin, founded in Khorassan
+in the eleventh century and flourishing to-day!”
+
+“Do you mean it, Cavanagh?”
+
+“I do! One Hassan of Aleppo is the present Sheikh of the order, and he
+has come to England, bringing a fiendish company in his train, in
+pursuit of the sacred slipper of Mohammed, which was stolen by the late
+Professor Deeping—-”
+
+“Surely I have read something about this?”
+
+“Probably. Deeping was murdered by Hassan! The slipper was placed in
+the Antiquarian Museum—”
+
+“From which it was stolen again!”
+
+“Correct—by Earl Dexter, America’s foremost crook! But the real facts
+have never got into print. I am the only pressman who knows them, and I
+have good reason for keeping my knowledge to myself! Dexter is dead (I
+believe I saw his ghost to-day). But although, to the best of my
+knowledge, the accursed slipper is in the hands of Hassan and Company,
+I have been watched since I left Euston, and on my way to ‘Uplands’ my
+life was attempted!”
+
+“For God’s sake, why?”
+
+“I cannot surmise, Hilton. Deeping, for certain reasons that are
+irrelevant at the moment, left the keys of the case at the Museum in my
+perpetual keeping—but the case was rifled a second time—”
+
+“I read of it!”
+
+“And the keys were stolen from me. I am utterly at a loss to understand
+why the Hashishin—for it is members of that awful organization who,
+without a doubt, surround this house at the present moment—should seek
+my life. Hilton, I have brought trouble with me!”
+
+“It’s almost incredible!” said Hilton, staring at me. “Why do these
+people pursue you?”
+
+Ere I had time to reply Soar entered, arrayed, as was Hilton, in his
+night attire. Soar was an ex-dragoon and a model man.
+
+“Everything fast, sir,” he reported; “but from the window of the
+bedroom over here—the room I got ready for Mr. Cavanagh—I thought I saw
+someone in the orchard.”
+
+“Eh?” jerked Hilton—“in the orchard? Come on up, Cavanagh!”
+
+We all ran upstairs. The moonlight was streaming into the room.
+
+“Keep back!” I warned.
+
+Well within the shadow, I crept up to the window and looked out. The
+night was hot and still. No breeze stirred the leaves, but the edge of
+the frowning thunder cloud which I had noted before spread a heavy
+carpet of ebony black upon the ground. Beyond, I could dimly discern
+the hills. The others stood behind me, constrained by the fear of this
+mysterious danger which I had brought to “Uplands.”
+
+There was someone moving among the trees!
+
+Closer came the figure, and closer, until suddenly a shaft of moonlight
+found passage and spilled a momentary pool of light amid the shadows, I
+could see the watcher very clearly. A moment he stood there,
+motionless, and looking up at the window; then as he glided again into
+the shade of the trees the darkness became complete. But I watched,
+crouching there nervously, for long after he was gone.
+
+“For God’s sake, who is it?” whispered Hilton, with a sort of awe in
+his voice.
+
+“It’s Hassan of Aleppo!” I replied.
+
+Virtually, the house, with the capital of the Midlands so near upon the
+one hand, the feverish activity of the Black Country reddening the
+night upon the other, was invested by fanatic Easterns!
+
+We descended again to the extemporized study. Soar entered with us and
+Hilton invited him to sit down.
+
+“We must stick together to-night!” he said. “Now, Cavanagh, let us see
+if we can find any explanation of this amazing business. I can
+understand that at one period of the slipper’s history you were an
+object of interest to those who sought to recover it; but if, as you
+say, the Hashishin have the slipper now, what do they want with you? If
+you have never touched it, they cannot be prompted by desire for
+vengeance.”
+
+“I have never touched it,” I replied grimly; “nor even any receptacle
+containing it.”
+
+As I ceased speaking came a distant muffled rumbling.
+
+“That’s the thunder,” said Hilton. “There’s a tremendous storm
+brewing.”
+
+He poured out three glasses of whisky, and was about to speak when Soar
+held up a warning finger.
+
+“Listen!” he said.
+
+At his words, with tropical suddenness down came the rain.
+
+Hilton, his pipe in his hand, stood listening intently.
+
+“What?” he asked.
+
+“I don’t know, sir; the sound of the rain has drowned it.”
+
+Indeed, the rain was descending in a perfect deluge, its continuous
+roar drowning all other sounds; but as we three listened tensely we
+detected a noise which hitherto had seemed like the overflowing of some
+spout.
+
+But louder and clearer it grew, until at last I knew it for what it
+was.
+
+“It’s a motor-car!” I cried.
+
+“And coming here!” added Soar. “Listen! it’s in the lane!”
+
+“It certainly isn’t a taxicab,” declared Hilton. “None of the men will
+come beyond the village.”
+
+“That’s the gate!” said Soar, in an awed voice, and stood up, looking
+at Hilton.
+
+“Come on,” said the latter abruptly, making for the door.
+
+“Be careful, Hilton!” I cried; “it may be a trick!”
+
+Soar unbolted the front door, threw it open, and looked out. In the
+darkness of the storm it was almost impossible to see anything in the
+lane outside. But at that moment a great sheet of lightning split the
+gloom, and we saw a taxicab standing close up to the gateway!
+
+“Help! Open the gate!” came a high-pitched voice; “open the gate!”
+
+Out into the rain we ran and down the gravel path. Soar had the gate
+open in a twinkling, and a woman carrying a brown leather grip, but who
+was so closely veiled that I had no glimpse of her features, leapt
+through on to the drive.
+
+“Lend a hand, two of you!” cried a vaguely familiar voice—“this way!”
+
+Hilton and Soar stepped out into the road. The driver of the cab was
+lying forward across the wheel, apparently insensible, but as Hilton
+seized his arm he moved and spoke feebly.
+
+“For God’s sake be quick, sir!” he said. “They’re after us! They’re on
+the other side of the lane, there!”
+
+With that he dropped limply into Hilton’s arms!
+
+He was dragged in on to the drive—and something whizzed over our heads
+and went sputtering into the gravel away up toward the house. The last
+to enter was the man who had come in the cab. As he barred the gate
+behind him he suddenly reached out through the bars and I saw a pistol
+in his hand.
+
+Once—twice—thrice—he fired into the blackness of the lane.
+
+“Take that, you swine!” he shouted. “Take that!”
+
+As quickly as we could, bearing the insensible man, we hurried back to
+the door. On the step the woman was waiting for us, with her veil
+raised. A blinding flash of lightning came as we mounted the step—and I
+looked into the violet eyes of Carneta! I turned and stared at the man
+behind me.
+
+It was Earl Dexter.
+
+Three of the mysterious missiles fell amongst us, but miraculously no
+one was struck. Amid the mighty booming of the thunder we reentered the
+houses and got the door barred. In the hall we laid down the
+unconscious man and stood, a strangely met company, peering at one
+another in the dim lamplight.
+
+“We’ve got to bury the hatchet, Mr. Cavanagh!” said Dexter. “It’s a
+case of the common enemy. I’ve brought you your bag!” and he pointed to
+the brown grip upon the floor.
+
+“My bag!” I cried. “My bag is upstairs in my room.”
+
+“Wrong, sir!” snapped The Stetson Man. “They are like as two peas in a
+pod, I’ll grant you, but the bag you snatched off the platform at New
+Street was mine! That’s what I’m after; I ought to be on the way to
+Liverpool. That’s what Hassan’s after!”
+
+“The bag!”
+
+“You don’t need to ask what’s in the bag?” suggested Dexter.
+
+“What is in the bag?” ask Hilton hoarsely.
+
+“The slipper of the Prophet, sir!” was the reply.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIV
+MY LAST MEETING WITH HASSAN OF ALEPPO
+
+
+I felt dazed, as a man must feel who has just heard the death sentence
+pronounced upon him. Hilton seemed to have become incapable of speech
+or action; and in silence we stood watching Carneta tending the
+unconscious man. She forced brandy from a flask between his teeth,
+kneeling there beside him with her face very pale and dark rings around
+her eyes. Presently she looked up.
+
+“Will you please get me a bowl of water and a sponge?” she said
+quietly.
+
+Soar departed without a word, and no one spoke until he returned,
+bringing the sponge and the water, when the girl set to work in a
+businesslike way to cleanse a wound which showed upon the man’s head.
+
+“She’s a good nurse is Carneta,” said Dexter coolly. “She was the only
+doctor I had through this”—indicating his maimed wrist. “If you will
+fetch my bag down, there’s some lint in it.”
+
+I hesitated.
+
+“You needn’t worry,” said Dexter; “as well be hung for a sheep as a
+lamb. You’ve handled the bag, and I’m not asking you to do any more.”
+
+I went up to my room and lifted the grip from the chair upon which I
+had put it. Even now I found it difficult to perceive any difference
+between this and mine. Both were of identical appearance and both new.
+In fact, I had bought mine only that morning, my old one being past
+use, and being in a hurry, I had not left it to be initialled.
+
+As I picked up the bag the lightning flashed again, and from the window
+I could see the orchard as clearly as by sunlight. At the farther end
+near the wall someone was standing watching the house.
+
+I went downstairs carrying the fatal bag, and rejoined the group in the
+hall.
+
+“He will have to be got to bed,” said Carneta, referring to the wounded
+man; “he will probably remain unconscious for a long time.”
+
+Accordingly, we took the patient into one of the few furnished
+bedrooms, and having put him to bed left him in care of the beautiful
+nurse. When we four men met again downstairs, amazement had rendered
+the whole scene unreal to me. Soar stood just within the open door, not
+knowing whether to go or to remain; but Hilton motioned to him to stay.
+Earl Dexter bit off the end of a cigar and stood with his left elbow
+resting on the mantelpiece.
+
+His gaunt face looked gaunter than ever, but the daredevil gray eyes
+still nursed that humorous light in their depths.
+
+“Mr. Cavanagh,” he said, “we’re brothers! And if you’ll consider a
+minute, you’ll see that I’m not lying when I say I’m on the straight,
+now and for always!”
+
+I made no reply: I could think of none.
+
+“I’m a crook,” he resumed, “or I was up to a while ago. There’s a
+warrant out for me—the first that ever bore my name. I’ve sailed near
+the wind often enough, but it was desperation that got me into hot
+water about that!”
+
+He jerked his cigar in the direction of his grip, which lay now on the
+rug at his feet.
+
+“I lost a useful right hand,” he went on—“and I lost every cent I had.
+It was a dead rotten speculation—for I lost my good name! I mean it!
+Believe me, I’ve handled some shady propositions in the past, but I did
+it right in the sunlight! Up to the time I went out for that damned
+slipper I could have had lunch with any detective from Broadway to the
+Strand! I didn’t need any false whiskers and the Ritz was good enough
+for The Stetson Man. What now? I’m ‘wanted!’ Enough said.”
+
+He tossed the cigar—he had smoked scarce an inch of it—into the empty
+grate.
+
+“I’m an Aunt Sally for any man to shy at,” he resumed bitterly. “My
+place henceforth is in the dark. Right! I’ve finished; the book’s
+closed. From the time I quit England—if I can quit—I’m on the straight!
+I’ve promised Carneta, and I mean to keep my word. See here—”
+
+Dexter turned to me.
+
+“You’ll want to know how I escaped from the cursed death-trap at
+Hassan’s house in Kent? I’ll tell you. I was never in it! I was hiding
+and waiting my chance. You know what was left to guard the slipper
+while the Sheikh—rot him—was away looking after arrangements for
+getting his mob out of the country?”
+
+I nodded.
+
+“You fell into the trap—you and Carneta. By God! I didn’t know till it
+was all over! But two minutes later I was inside that place—and three
+minutes later I was away with the slipper! Oh, it wasn’t a duplicate;
+it was the goods! What then? Carneta had had a sickening of the
+business and she just invited me to say Yes or No. I said Yes; and I’m
+a straight man onward.”
+
+“Then what were you doing on the train with the slipper?” asked Hilton
+sharply.
+
+“I was going to Liverpool, sir!” snapped The Stetson Man, turning on
+him. “I was going to try to get aboard the Mauretania and then make
+terms for my life! What happened? I slipped out at Birmingham for a
+drink—grip in hand! I put it down beside me, and Mr. Cavanagh here, all
+in a hustle, must have rushed in behind me, snatched a whisky and
+snatched my grip and started for H—!”
+
+A vivid flash of lightning flickered about the room. Then came the
+deafening boom of the thunder, right over the house it seemed.
+
+“I knew from the weight of the grip it wasn’t mine,” said Dexter, “and
+I was the most surprised guy in Great Britain and Ireland when I found
+whose it was! I opened it, of course! And right on top was a waistcoat
+and right in the first pocket was a telegram. Here it is!”
+
+He passed it to me. It was that which I had received from Hilton. I had
+packed the suit which I had been wearing that morning and must
+previously have thrust the telegram into the waistcoat pocket.
+
+“Providence!” Dexter assured me. “Because I got on the station in time
+to see Hassan of Aleppo join the train for H—! I was too late, though.
+But I chartered a taxi out on Corporation Street and invited the man to
+race the local! He couldn’t do it, but we got here in time for the
+fireworks! Mr. Cavanagh, there are anything from six to ten Hashishin
+watching this house!”
+
+“I know it!”
+
+“They’re bareheaded; and in the dark their shaven skulls look like
+nothing human. They’re armed with those damned tubes, too. I’d give a
+thousand dollars—if I had it!—to know their mechanism. Well, gentlemen,
+deeds speak. What am I here for, when I might be on the way to
+Liverpool, and safety?”
+
+“You’re here to try to make up for the past a bit!” said a soft,
+musical voice. “Mr. Cavanagh’s life is in danger.”
+
+Carneta entered the room.
+
+The light played in that wonderful hair of hers; and pale though she
+was, I thought I had never seen a more beautiful woman.
+
+“Tell them,” she said quietly, “what must be done.”
+
+Soar glanced at me out of the corner of his eyes and shifted uneasily.
+Hilton stared as if fascinated.
+
+“Now,” rapped Dexter, in his strident voice, “putting aside all
+questions of justice and right (we’re not policemen), what do we
+want—you and I, Mr. Cavanagh?”
+
+“I can’t think clearly about anything,” I said dully. “Explain
+yourself.”
+
+“Very well. Inspector Bristol, C.I.D., would want me and Hassan
+arrested. I don’t want that! What I want is peace; I want to be able to
+sleep in comfort; I want to know I’m not likely to be murdered on the
+next corner! Same with you?”
+
+“Yes—yes.”
+
+“How can we manage it? One way would be to kill Hassan of Aleppo; but
+he wants a lot of killing—I’ve tried! Moreover, directly we’d done it,
+another Sheikh-al-jebal would be nominated and he’d carry on the bloody
+work. We’d be worse off than ever. Right! we’ve got to connive at
+letting the blood-stained fanatic escape, and we’ve got to give up the
+slipper!”
+
+“I’ll do that with all my heart!”
+
+“Sure! But you and I have both got little scores up against Hassan,
+which it’s not in human nature to forget. But I’ve got it worked out
+that there’s only one way. It may nearly choke us to have to do it,
+I’ll allow. I’m working on the Moslem character. Mr. Hilton, make up a
+fire in the grate here!”
+
+Hilton stared, not comprehending.
+
+“Do as he asks,” I said. “Personally, I am resigned to mutilation,
+since I have touched the bag containing the slipper, but if Dexter has
+a plan—”
+
+“Excuse me, sir,” Soar interrupted. “I believe there’s some coal in the
+coal-box, but I shall have to break up a packing-case for firewood—or
+go out into the yard!”
+
+“Let it be the packing-case,” replied Hilton hastily.
+
+Accordingly a fire was kindled, whilst we all stood about the room in a
+sort of fearful uncertainty; and before long a big blaze was roaring up
+the chimney. Dexter turned to me.
+
+“Mr. Cavanagh,” said he, “I want you to go right upstairs, open a
+first-floor window—I would suggest that of your bedroom—and invite
+Hassan of Aleppo to come and discuss terms!”
+
+Silence followed his words; we were all amazed. Then—
+
+“Why do you ask me to do this?” I inquired.
+
+“Because,” replied Dexter, “I happen to know that Hassan has some queer
+kind of respect for you—I don’t know why.”
+
+“Which is probably the reason why he tried to kill me to-night!”
+
+“That’s beside the question, Mr. Cavanagh. He will believe you—which is
+the important point.”
+
+“Very well. I have no idea what you have in mind but I am prepared to
+adopt any plan since I have none of my own. What shall I say?”
+
+“Say that we are prepared to return the slipper—on conditions.”
+
+“He will probably try to shoot me as I stand at the window.”
+
+Dexter shrugged his shoulders.
+
+“Got to risk it,” he drawled.
+
+“And what are the conditions?”
+
+“He must come right in here and discuss them! Guarantee him safe
+conduct and I don’t think he’ll hesitate. Anyway, if he does, just tell
+him that the slipper will be destroyed immediately!”
+
+Without a word I turned on my heel and ascended the stairs.
+
+I entered my room, crossed to the window, and threw it widely open.
+Hovering over the distant hills I could see the ominous thunder cloud,
+but the storm seemed to have passed from “Uplands,” and only a distant
+muttering with the faint dripping of water from the pipes broke the
+silence of the night. A great darkness reigned, however, and I was
+entirely unable to see if any one was in the orchard.
+
+Like some mueddin of fantastic fable I stood there.
+
+“Hassan!” I cried—“Hassan of Aleppo!”
+
+The name rang out strangely upon the stillness—the name which for me
+had a dreadful significance; but the whole episode seemed unreal, the
+voice that had cried unlike my voice.
+
+Instantly as any magician summoning an efreet I was answered.
+
+Out from the trees strode a tall figure, a figure I could not mistake.
+It was that of Hassan of Aleppo!
+
+“I hear, effendim, and obey,” he said. “I am ready. Open the door!”
+
+“We are prepared to discuss terms. You may come and go safely”—still my
+voice sounded unfamiliar in my ears.
+
+“I know, effendim; it is so written. Open the door.”
+
+I closed the window and mechanically descended the stairs.
+
+“Mind it isn’t a trap!” cried Hilton, who, with the others, had
+overheard every word of this strange interview. “They may try to rush
+the door directly we open it.”
+
+“I’ll stand the chest behind it,” said Soar; “between the door and the
+wall, so that only one can enter at a time.”
+
+This was done, and the door opened.
+
+Alone, majestic, entered Hassan of Aleppo.
+
+He was dressed in European clothes but wore the green turban of a
+Sherif. With his snowy beard and coal-black eyes he seemed like a
+vision of the Prophet, of the Prophet in whose name he had committed
+such ghastly atrocities.
+
+Deigning no glance to Soar nor to Hilton, he paced into the room,
+passing me and ignoring Carneta, where Earl Dexter awaited him. I shall
+never forget the scene as Hassan entered, to stand looking with blazing
+eyes at The Stetson Man, who sat beside the fire with the slipper of
+Mohammed in his hand!
+
+“Hassan,” said Dexter quietly, “Mr. Cavanagh has had to promise you
+safe conduct, or as sure as God made me, I’d put a bullet in you!”
+
+The Sheikh of the Hashishin glared fixedly at him.
+
+“Companion of the evil one,” he said, “it is not written that I shall
+die by your hand—or by the hand of any here. But it has been revealed
+to me that to-night the gates of Paradise may be closed in my face.”
+
+“I shouldn’t be at all surprised,” drawled Dexter. “But it’s up to you.
+You’ve got to swear by Mohammed—”
+
+“Salla-’llahu ’aleyhi wasellem!”
+
+“That you won’t lay a hand upon any living soul, or allow any of your
+followers to do so, who has touched the slipper or had anything to do
+with it, but that you will go in peace.”
+
+“You are doomed to die!”
+
+“You don’t agree, then?”
+
+“Those who have offended must suffer the penalty!”
+
+“Right!” said Dexter—and prepared to toss the slipper into the heart of
+the fire!
+
+“Stop! Infidel! Stop!”
+
+There was real agony in Hassan’s voice. To my inexpressible surprise he
+dropped upon his knee, extending his lean brown hands toward the
+slipper.
+
+Dexter hesitated. “You agree, then?”
+
+Hassan raised his eyes to the ceiling.
+
+“I agree,” he said. “Dark are the ways. It is the will of God...”
+
+Dimly the booming of the thunder came echoing back to us from the
+hills. Above its roll sounded a barbaric chanting to which the drums of
+angry heaven formed a fitting accompaniment.
+
+I heard Soar shooting the bolts again upon the going of our strange
+visitor.
+
+Faint and more faint grew the chanting, until it merged into the remote
+muttering of the storm—and was lost. The quest of the sacred slipper
+was ended.
+
+
+
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE QUEST OF THE SACRED SLIPPER ***
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+<div style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Quest of the Sacred Slipper, by Sax Rohmer</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
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+</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: The Quest of the Sacred Slipper</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Sax Rohmer</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: March, 2000 [eBook #2126]<br />
+[Most recently updated: October 5, 2022]</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Character set encoding: UTF-8</div>
+<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE QUEST OF THE SACRED SLIPPER ***</div>
+
+<h1>The Quest of the Sacred Slipper</h1>
+
+<h2 class="no-break">by Sax Rohmer</h2>
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2>CONTENTS</h2>
+
+<table summary="" style="">
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap01">CHAPTER I. THE PHANTOM SCIMITAR.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap02">CHAPTER II. THE GIRL WITH THE VIOLET EYES</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap03">CHAPTER III. "HASSAN OF ALEPPO"</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap04">CHAPTER IV. THE OBLONG BOX</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap05">CHAPTER V. THE OCCUPANT OF THE BOX</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap06">CHAPTER VI. THE RING OF THE PROPHET</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap07">CHAPTER VII. FIRST ATTEMPT ON THE SAFE</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap08">CHAPTER VIII. THE VIOLET EYES AGAIN</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap09">CHAPTER IX. SECOND ATTEMPT ON THE SAFE</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap10">CHAPTER X. AT THE BRITISH ANTIQUARIAN MUSEUM</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap11">CHAPTER XI. THE HOLE IN THE BLIND</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap12">CHAPTER XII. THE HASHISHIN WATCH</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap13">CHAPTER XIII. THE WHITE BEAM</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap14">CHAPTER XIV. A SCREAM IN THE NIGHT</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap15">CHAPTER XV. A SHRIVELLED HAND</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap16">CHAPTER XVI. THE DWARF</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap17">CHAPTER XVII. THE WOMAN WITH THE BASKET</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap18">CHAPTER XVIII. WHAT CAME THROUGH THE WINDOW</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap19">CHAPTER XIX. A RAPPING AT MIDNIGHT</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap20">CHAPTER XX. THE GOLDEN PAVILION</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap21">CHAPTER XXI. THE BLACK TUBE</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap22">CHAPTER XXII. THE LIGHT OF EL-MEDINEH</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap23">CHAPTER XXIII. THE THREE MESSAGES</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap24">CHAPTER XXIV. I KEEP THE APPOINTMENT</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap25">CHAPTER XXV. THE WATCHER IN BANK CHAMBERS</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap26">CHAPTER XXVI. THE STRONG-ROOM</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap27">CHAPTER XXVII. THE SLIPPER</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap28">CHAPTER XXVIII. CARNETA</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap29">CHAPTER XXIX. WE MEET MR. ISAACS</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap30">CHAPTER XXX. AT THE GATE HOUSE</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap31">CHAPTER XXXI. THE POOL OF DEATH</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap32">CHAPTER XXXII. SIX PATCHES</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap33">CHAPTER XXXIII. HOW WE WERE REENFORCED</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap34">CHAPTER XXXIV. MY LAST MEETING WITH HASSAN OF ALEPPO</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2>THE QUEST OF THE SACRED SLIPPER</h2>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap01"></a>
+CHAPTER I<br/>
+THE PHANTOM SCIMITAR</h2>
+
+<p>
+I was not the only passenger aboard the S.S. Mandalay who perceived the
+disturbance and wondered what it might portend and from whence proceed. A
+goodly number of passengers were joining the ship at Port Said. I was lounging
+against the rail, pipe in mouth, lazily wondering, with a large vagueness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+What a heterogeneous rabble it was!&mdash;a brightly coloured rabble, but the
+colours all were dirty, like the town and the canal. Only the sky was clean;
+the sky and the hard, merciless sunlight which spared nothing of the
+uncleanness, and defied one even to think of the term dear to tourists,
+“picturesque.” I was in that kind of mood. All the natives appeared to be
+pockmarked; all the Europeans greasy with perspiration.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But what was the stir about?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I turned to the dark, bespectacled young man who leaned upon the rail beside
+me. From the first I had taken to Mr. Ahmad Ahmadeen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“There is some kind of undercurrent of excitement among the natives,” I said,
+“a sort of subdued Greek chorus is audible. What’s it all about?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mr. Ahmadeen smiled. After a gaunt fashion, he was a handsome man and had a
+pleasant smile.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Probably,” he replied, “some local celebrity is joining the ship.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I stared at him curiously.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Any idea who he is?” (The soul of the copyhunter is a restless soul.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A group of men dressed in semi-European fashion&mdash;that is, in European
+fashion save for their turbans, which were green&mdash;passed close to us along
+the deck.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ahmadeen appeared not to have heard the question.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The disturbance, which could only be defined as a subdued uproar, but could be
+traced to no particular individual or group, grew momentarily louder&mdash;and
+died away. It was only when it had completely ceased that one realized how
+pronounced it had been&mdash;how altogether peculiar, secret; like that
+incomprehensible murmuring in a bazaar when, unknown to the insular visitor, a
+reputed saint is present.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then it happened; the inexplicable incident which, though I knew it not,
+heralded the coming of strange things, and the dawn of a new power; which
+should set up its secret standards in England, which should flood Europe and
+the civilized world with wonder.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A shrill scream marked the overture&mdash;a scream of fear and of pain, which
+dropped to a groan, and moaned out into the silence of which it was the cause.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“My God! what’s that?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I started forward. There was a general crowding rush, and a darkly tanned and
+bearded man came on board, carrying a brown leather case. Behind him surged
+those who bore the victim.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It’s one of the lascars!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“No&mdash;an Egyptian!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It was a porter&mdash;?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What is it&mdash;?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Someone been stabbed!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Where’s the doctor?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Stand away there, if you please!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That was a ship’s officer; and the voice of authority served to quell the
+disturbance. Through a lane walled with craning heads they bore the insensible
+man. Ahmadeen was at my elbow.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“A Copt,” he said softly. “Poor devil!” I turned to him. There was a queer
+expression on his lean, clean-shaven, bronze face.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Good God!” I said. “His hand has been cut off!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That was the fact of the matter. And no one knew who was responsible for the
+atrocity. And no one knew what had become of the severed hand! I wasted not a
+moment in linking up the story. The pressman within me acted automatically.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The gentleman just come aboard, sir,” said a steward, “is Professor Deeping.
+The poor beggar who was assaulted was carrying some of the Professor’s
+baggage.” The whole incident struck me as most odd. There was an idea lurking
+in my mind that something else&mdash;something more&mdash;lay behind all this.
+With impatience I awaited the time when the injured man, having received
+medical attention, was conveyed ashore, and Professor Deeping reappeared. To
+the celebrated traveller and Oriental scholar I introduced myself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was singularly reticent.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I was unable to see what took place, Mr. Cavanagh,” he said. “The poor fellow
+was behind me, for I had stepped from the boat ahead of him. I had just taken a
+bag from his hand, but he was carrying another, heavier one. It is a clean cut,
+like that of a scimitar. I have seen very similar wounds in the cases of men
+who have suffered the old Moslem penalty for theft.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nothing further had come to light when the Mandalay left, but I found new
+matter for curiosity in the behaviour of the Moslem party who had come on board
+at Port Said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In conversation with Mr. Bell, the chief officer, I learned that the supposed
+leader of the party was one, Mr. Azraeel. “Obviously,” said Bell, “not his real
+name or not all it. I don’t suppose they’ll show themselves on deck; they’ve
+got their own servants with them, and seem to be people of consequence.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This conversation was interrupted, but I found my unseen fellow voyagers
+peculiarly interesting and pursued inquiries in other directions. I saw members
+of the distinguished travellers’ retinue going about their duties, but never
+obtained a glimpse of Mr. Azraeel nor of any of his green-turbaned companions.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Who is Mr. Azraeel?” I asked Ahmadeen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I cannot say,” replied the Egyptian, and abruptly changed the subject.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Some curious aroma of mystery floated about the ship. Ahmadeen conveyed to me
+the idea that he was concealing something. Then, one night, Mr. Bell invited me
+to step forward with him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Listen,” he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+From somewhere in the fo’c’sle proceeded low chanting.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Hear it?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes. What the devil is it?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It’s the lascars,” said Bell. “They have been behaving in a most unusual
+manner ever since the mysterious Mr. Azraeel joined us. I may be wrong in
+associating the two things, but I shan’t be sorry to see the last of our
+mysterious passengers.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The next happening on board the Mandalay which I have to record was the attempt
+to break open the door of Professor Deeping’s stateroom. Except when he was
+actually within, the Professor left his room door religiously locked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He made light of the affair, but later took me aside and told me a curious
+story of an apparition which had appeared to him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It was a crescent of light,” he said, “and it glittered through the darkness
+there to the left as I lay in my berth.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“A reflection from something on the deck?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Deeping smiled, uneasily.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Possibly,” he replied; “but it was very sharply defined. Like the blade of a
+scimitar,” he added.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I stared at him, my curiosity keenly aroused. “Does any explanation suggest
+itself to you?” I said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Well,” he confessed, “I have a theory, I will admit; but it is rather going
+back to the Middle Ages. You see, I have lived in the East a lot; perhaps I
+have assimilated some of their superstitions.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was oddly reticent, as ever. I felt convinced that he was keeping something
+back. I could not stifle the impression that the clue to these mysteries lay
+somewhere around the invisible Mohammedan party.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Do you know,” said Bell to me, one morning, “this trip’s giving me the creeps.
+I believe the damned ship’s haunted! Three bells in the middle watch last
+night, I’ll swear I saw some black animal crawling along the deck, in the
+direction of the forward companion-way.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Cat?” I suggested.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Nothing like it,” said Mr. Bell. “Mr. Cavanagh, it was some uncanny thing! I’m
+afraid I can’t explain quite what I mean, but it was something I wanted to
+shoot!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Where did it go?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The chief officer shrugged his shoulders. “Just vanished,” he said. “I hope I
+don’t see it again.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At Tilbury the Mohammedan party went ashore in a body. Among them were veiled
+women. They contrived so to surround a central figure that I entirely failed to
+get a glimpse of the mysterious Mr. Azraeel. Ahmadeen was standing close by the
+companion-way, and I had a momentary impression that one of the women slipped
+something into his hand. Certainly, he started; and his dusky face seemed to
+pale.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then a deck steward came out of Deeping’s stateroom, carrying the brown bag
+which the Professor had brought aboard at Port Said. Deeping’s voice came:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Hi, my man! Let me take that bag!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The bag changed hands. Five minutes later, as I was preparing to go ashore,
+arose a horrid scream above the berthing clamour. Those passengers yet aboard
+made in the direction from which the scream had proceeded.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A steward&mdash;the one to whom Professor Deeping had spoken&mdash;lay writhing
+at the foot of the stairs leading to the saloon-deck. His right hand had been
+severed above the wrist!
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap02"></a>
+CHAPTER II<br/>
+THE GIRL WITH THE VIOLET EYES</h2>
+
+<p>
+During the next day or two my mind constantly reverted to the incidents of the
+voyage home. I was perfectly convinced that the curtain had been partially
+raised upon some fantasy in which Professor Deeping figured.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But I had seen no more of Deeping nor had I heard from him, when abruptly I
+found myself plunged again into the very vortex of his troubled affairs. I was
+half way through a long article, I remember, upon the mystery of the outrage at
+the docks. The poor steward whose hand had been severed lay in a precarious
+condition, but the police had utterly failed to trace the culprit.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I had laid down my pen to relight my pipe (the hour was about ten at night)
+when a faint sound from the direction of the outside door attracted my
+attention. Something had been thrust through the letter-box.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“A circular,” I thought, when the bell rang loudly, imperatively.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I went to the door. A square envelope lay upon the mat&mdash;a curious
+envelope, pale amethyst in colour. Picking it up, I found it to bear my
+name&mdash;written simply&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Mr. Cavanagh.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Tearing it open I glanced at the contents. I threw open the door. No one was
+visible upon the landing, but when I leaned over the banister a white-clad
+figure was crossing the hall, below.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Without hesitation, hatless, I raced down the stairs. As I crossed the dimly
+lighted hall and came out into the peaceful twilight of the court, my elusive
+visitor glided under the archway opposite.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Just where the dark and narrow passage opened on to Fleet Street I overtook
+her&mdash;a girl closely veiled and wrapped in a long coat of white ermine.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Madam,” I said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She turned affrightedly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Please do not detain me!” Her accent was puzzling, but pleasing. She glanced
+apprehensively about her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+You have seen the moon through a mist?&mdash;and known it for what it was in
+spite of its veiling? So, now, through the cloudy folds of the veil, I saw the
+stranger’s eyes, and knew them for the most beautiful eyes I had ever seen, had
+ever dreamt of.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“But you must explain the meaning of your note!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I cannot! I cannot! Please do not ask me!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She was breathless from her flight and seemed to be trembling. From behind the
+cloud her eyes shone brilliantly, mysteriously.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I was sorely puzzled. The whole incident was bizarre&mdash;indeed, it had in it
+something of the uncanny. Yet I could not detain the girl against her will.
+That she went in apprehension of something, of someone, was evident.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Past the head of the passage surged the noisy realities of Fleet Street. There
+were men there in quest of news; men who would have given much for such a story
+as this in which I was becoming entangled. Yet a story more tantalizingly
+incomplete could not well be imagined.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I knew that I stood upon the margin of an arena wherein strange adversaries
+warred to a strange end. But a mist was over all. Here, beside me, was one who
+could disperse the mist&mdash;and would not. Her one anxiety seemed to be to
+escape.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Suddenly she raised her veil; and I looked fully into the only really violet
+eyes I had ever beheld. Mentally, I started. For the face framed in the snowy
+fur was the most bewitchingly lovely imaginable. One rebellious lock of
+wonderful hair swept across the white brow. It was brown hair, with an
+incomprehensible sheen in the high lights that suggested the heart of a
+blood-red rose.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Oh,” she cried, “promise me that you will never breathe a word to any one
+about my visit!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I promise willingly,” I said; “but can you give me no hint?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Honestly, truly, I cannot, dare not, say more! Only promise that you will do
+as I ask!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Since I could perceive no alternative&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I will do so,” I replied.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Thank you&mdash;oh, thank you!” she said; and dropping her veil again she
+walked rapidly away from me, whispering, “I rely upon you. Do not fail me.
+Good-bye!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Her conspicuous white figure joined the hurrying throngs upon the pavement
+beyond. My curiosity brooked no restraint. I hurried to the end of the
+courtway. She was crossing the road. From the shadows where he had lurked, a
+man came forward to meet her. A vehicle obstructed the view ere I could confirm
+my impression; and when it had passed, neither my lovely visitor nor her
+companion were anywhere in sight.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But, unless some accident of light and shade had deceived me, the man who had
+waited was Ahmad Ahmadeen!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It seemed that some astral sluice-gate was raised; a dreadful sense of
+foreboding for the first time flooded my mind. Whilst the girl had stood before
+me it had been different&mdash;the mysterious charm of her personality had
+swamped all else. But now, the messenger gone, it was the purport of her
+message which assumed supreme significance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Written in odd, square handwriting upon the pale amethyst paper, this was the
+message&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p class="letter">
+Prevail upon Professor Deeping to place what he has in the brown case in the
+porch of his house to-night. If he fails to do so, no power on earth can save
+him from the Scimitar of Hassan.<br/>
+<br/>
+A FRIEND.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap03"></a>
+CHAPTER III<br/>
+“HASSAN OF ALEPPO”</h2>
+
+<p>
+Professor Deeping’s number was in the telephone directory, therefore, on
+returning to my room, where there still lingered the faint perfume of my late
+visitor’s presence, I asked for his number. He proved to be at home.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Strange you should ring me up, Cavanagh,” he said; “for I was about to ring
+you up.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“First,” I replied, “listen to the contents of an anonymous letter which I have
+received.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+(I remembered, and only just in time, my promise to the veiled messenger.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“To me,” I added, having read him the note, “it seems to mean nothing. I take
+it that you understand better than I do.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I understand very well, Cavanagh!” he replied. “You will recall my story of
+the scimitar which flashed before me in the darkness of my stateroom on the
+Mandalay? Well, I have seen it again! I am not an imaginative man: I had always
+believed myself to possess the scientific mind; but I can no longer doubt that
+I am the object of a pursuit which commenced in Mecca! The happenings on the
+steamer prepared me for this, in a degree. When the man lost his hand at Port
+Said I doubted. I had supposed the days of such things past. The attempt to
+break into my stateroom even left me still uncertain. But the outrage upon the
+steward at the docks removed all further doubt. I perceived that the contents
+of a certain brown leather case were the objective of the crimes.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I listened in growing wonder.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It was not necessary in order to further the plan of stealing the bag that the
+hands were severed,” resumed the Professor. “In fact, as was rendered evident
+by the case of the steward, this was a penalty visited upon any one who touched
+it! You are thinking of my own immunity?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I am!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“This is attributable to two things. Those who sought to recover what I had in
+the case feared that my death en route might result in its being lost to them
+for ever. They awaited a suitable opportunity. They had designed to take it at
+Port Said certainly, I think; but the bag was too large to be readily
+concealed, and, after the outrage, might have led to the discovery of the
+culprit. In the second place, they are uncertain of my faith. I have long
+passed for a true Believer in the East! As a Moslem I visited Mecca&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You visited Mecca!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I had just returned from the hadj when I joined the Mandalay at Port Said! My
+death, however, has been determined upon, whether I be Moslem or Christian!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Why?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Because,” came the Professor’s harsh voice over the telephone, “of the
+contents of the brown leather case! I will not divulge to you now the nature of
+these contents; to know might endanger you. But the case is locked in my safe
+here, and the key, together with a full statement of the true facts of the
+matter, is hidden behind the first edition copy of my book ‘Assyrian
+Mythology,’ in the smaller bookcase&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Why do you tell me all this?” I interrupted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He laughed harshly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The identity of my pursuer has just dawned upon me,” he said. “I know that my
+life is in real danger. I would give up what is demanded of me, but I believe
+its possession to be my strongest safeguard.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mystery upon mystery! I seemed to be getting no nearer to the heart of this
+maze. What in heaven’s name did it all mean? Suddenly an idea struck me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Is our late fellow passenger, Mr. Ahmadeen, connected with the matter?” I
+asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“In no way,” replied Deeping earnestly. “Mr. Ahmadeen is, I believe, a person
+of some consequence in the Moslem world; but I have nothing to fear from him.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What steps have you taken to protect yourself?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Again the short laugh reached my ears.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’m afraid long residence in the East has rendered me something of a fatalist,
+Cavanagh! Beyond keeping my door locked, I have taken no steps whatever. I fear
+I am quite accessible!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A while longer we talked; and with every word the conviction was more strongly
+borne in upon me that some uncanny menace threatened the peace, perhaps the
+life, of Professor Deeping.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I had hung up the receiver scarce a moment when, acting upon a sudden
+determination, I called up New Scotland Yard, and asked for Detective-Inspector
+Bristol, whom I knew well. A few words were sufficient keenly to arouse his
+curiosity, and he announced his intention of calling upon me immediately. He
+was in charge of the case of the severed hand.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I made no attempt to resume work in the interval preceding his arrival. I had
+not long to wait, however, ere Bristol was ringing my bell; and I hurried to
+the door, only too glad to confide in one so well equipped to analyze my doubts
+and fears. For Bristol is no ordinary policeman, but a trained observer, who,
+when I first made his acquaintance, completely upset my ideas upon the mental
+limitations of the official detective force.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In appearance Bristol suggests an Anglo-Indian officer, and at the time of
+which I write he had recently returned from Jamaica and his face was as bronzed
+as a sailor’s. One would never take Bristol for a detective. As he seated
+himself in the armchair, without preamble I plunged into my story. He listened
+gravely.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What sort of house is Professor Deeping’s?” he asked suddenly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I have no idea,” I replied, “beyond the fact that it is somewhere in Dulwich.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“May I use your telephone?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Certainly.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Very quickly Bristol got into communication with the superintendent of P
+Division. A brief delay, and the man came to the telephone whose beat included
+the road wherein Professor Deeping’s house was situated.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Why!” said Bristol, hanging up the receiver after making a number of
+inquiries, “it’s a sort of rambling cottage in extensive grounds. There’s only
+one servant, a manservant, and he sleeps in a detached lodge. If the Professor
+is really in danger of attack he could not well have chosen a more likely
+residence for the purpose!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What shall you do? What do you make of it all?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“As I see the case,” he said slowly, “it stands something like this: Professor
+Deeping has...”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The telephone bell began to ring.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I took up the receiver.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Hullo! Hullo.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Cavanagh!&mdash;is that Cavanagh?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes! yes! who is that?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Deeping! I have rung up the police, and they are sending some one. But I
+wish...”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His voice trailed off. The sound of a confused and singular uproar came to me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Hullo!” I cried. “Hullo!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A shriek&mdash;a deathful, horrifying cry&mdash;and a distant babbling alone
+answered me. There was a crash. Clearly, Deeping had dropped the receiver. I
+suppose my face blanched.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What is it?” asked Bristol anxiously.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“God knows what it is!” I said. “Deeping has met with some mishap&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When, over the wires&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Hassan of Aleppo!” came a dying whisper. “Hassan ... of Aleppo...”
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap04"></a>
+CHAPTER IV<br/>
+THE OBLONG BOX</h2>
+
+<p>
+“You had better wait for us,” said Bristol to the taxi-man.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Very good, sir. But I shan’t be able to take you further back than the Brixton
+Garage. You can get another cab there, though.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A clock chimed out&mdash;an old-world chime in keeping with the loneliness, the
+curiously remote loneliness, of the locality. Less than five miles from St.
+Paul’s are spots whereto, with the persistence of Damascus attar, clings the
+aroma of former days. This iron gateway fronting the old chapel was such a
+spot.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Just within stood a plain-clothes man, who saluted my companion respectfully.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Professor Deeping,” I began.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The man, with a simple gesture, conveyed the dreadful news.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Dead! dead!” I cried incredulously.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He glanced at Bristol.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The most mysterious case I have ever had anything to do with, sir,” he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The power of speech seemed to desert me. It was unthinkable that Deeping, with
+whom I had been speaking less than an hour ago, should now be no more; that
+some malign agency should thus murderously have thrust him into the great
+borderland.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In that kind of silence which seems to be peopled with whispering spirits we
+strode forward along the elm avenue. It was very dark where the moon failed to
+penetrate. The house, low and rambling, came into view, its facade bathed in
+silver light. Two of the visible windows were illuminated. A sort of loggia ran
+along one side.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On our left, as we made for this, lay a black ocean of shrubbery. It intruded,
+raggedly, upon the weed-grown path, for neglect was the keynote of the place.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We entered the cottage, crossed the tiny lobby, and came to the study. A man,
+evidently Deeping’s servant, was sitting in a chair by the door, his head
+sunken in his hands. He looked up, haggard-faced.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“My God! my God!” he groaned. “He was locked in, gentlemen! He was locked in;
+and yet something murdered him!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What do you mean?” said Bristol. “Where were you?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I was away on an errand, sir. When I returned, the police were knocking the
+door down. He was locked in!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We passed him, entering the study.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was a museum-like room, lighted by a lamp on the littered table. At first
+glance it looked as though some wild thing had run amok there. The disorder was
+indescribable.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Touched nothing, of course?” asked Bristol sharply of the officer on duty.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Nothing, sir. It’s just as we found it when we forced the door.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Why did you force the door?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“He rung us up at the station and said that something or somebody had got into
+the house. It was evident the poor gentleman’s nerve had broken down, sir. He
+said he was locked in his study. When we arrived it was all in
+darkness&mdash;but we thought we heard sounds in here.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What sort of sounds?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Something crawling about!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bristol turned.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Key is in the lock on the inside of the door,” he said. “Is that where you
+found it?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes, sir!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He looked across to where the brass knob of a safe gleamed dully.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Safe locked?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes, sir.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Professor Deeping lay half under the table, a spectacle so ghastly that I shall
+not attempt to describe it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Merciful heavens!” whispered Bristol. “He’s nearly decapitated!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I clutched dizzily at the mantelpiece. It was all so utterly, incredibly
+horrible. How had Deeping met his death? The windows both were latched and the
+door had been locked from within!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You searched for the murderer, of course?” asked Bristol.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You can see, sir,” replied the officer, “that there isn’t a spot in the room
+where a man could hide! And there was nobody in here when we forced the door!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Why!” cried my companion suddenly. “The Professor has a chisel in his hand!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes. I think he must have been trying to prise open that box yonder when he
+was attacked.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bristol and I looked, together, at an oblong box which lay upon the floor near
+the murdered man. It was a kind of small packing case, addressed to Professor
+Deeping, and evidently had not been opened.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“When did this arrive?” asked Bristol. Lester, the Professor’s man, who had
+entered the room, replied shakily&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It came by carrier, sir, just before I went out.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Was he expecting it?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I don’t think so.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Inspector Bristol and the officer dragged the box fully into the light. It was
+some three feet long by one foot square, and solidly constructed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It is perfectly evident,” remarked Bristol, “that the murderer stayed to
+search for&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The key of the safe!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Exactly. If the men really heard sounds here, it would appear that the
+assassin was still searching at that time.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I assure you,” the officer interrupted, “that there was no living thing in the
+room when we entered.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bristol and I looked at one another in horrified wonder.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It’s incomprehensible!” he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“See if the key is in the place mentioned by the Professor, Mr. Cavanagh,
+whilst I break the box.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I went to a great, open bookcase, which the frantic searcher seemed to have
+overlooked. Removing the bulky “Assyrian Mythology,” there, behind the volume,
+lay an envelope, containing a key, and a short letter. Not caring to approach
+more closely to the table and to that which lay beneath it, I was peering at
+the small writing, in the semi-gloom by the bookcase, when Bristol cried&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“This box is unopenable by ordinary means! I shall have to smash it!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At his words, I joined him where he knelt on the floor. Mysteriously, the chest
+had defied all his efforts.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“There’s a pick-axe in the garden,” volunteered Lester. “Shall I bring it?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The man ran off.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I see the key is safe,” said Bristol. “Possibly the letter may throw some
+light upon all this.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Let us hope so,” I replied. “You might read it.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He took the letter from my hand, stepped up to the table, and by the light of
+the lamp read as follows&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<div class="letter">
+
+<p>
+My Dear Cavanagh,&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It has now become apparent to me that my life is in imminent danger. You know
+of the inexplicable outrages which marked my homeward journey, and if this
+letter come to your hand it will be because these have culminated in my death.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The idea of a pursuing scimitar is not new to me. This phenomenon, which I have
+now witnessed three times, is fairly easy of explanation, but its significance
+is singular. It is said to be one of the devices whereby the Hashishin warn
+those whom they have marked down for destruction, and is called, in the East,
+“The Scimitar of Hassan.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Hashishin were the members of a Moslem secret society, founded in 1090 by
+one Hassan of Khorassan. There is a persistent tradition in parts of the Orient
+that this sect still flourishes in Assyria, under the rule of a certain Hassan
+of Aleppo, the Sheikh-al-jebal, or supreme lord of the Hashishin. My careful
+inquiries, however, at the time that I was preparing matter for my “Assyrian
+Mythology,” failed to discover any trace of such a person or such a group.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I accordingly assumed Hassan to be a myth&mdash;a first cousin to the ginn. I
+was wrong. He exists. And by my supremely rash act I have incurred his
+vengeance, for Hassan of Aleppo is the self-appointed guardian of the
+traditions and relics of Mohammed. And I have Stolen one of the holy slippers
+of the Prophet!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He, with some of his servants, has followed me from Mecca to England. My
+precautions have enabled me to retain the relic, but you have seen what fate
+befell all those others who even touched the receptacle containing it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+If I fall a victim to the Hashishin, I am uncertain how you, as my confidant,
+will fare. Therefore I have locked the slipper in my safe and to you entrust
+the key. I append particulars of the lock combination; but I warn you&mdash;do
+not open the safe. If their wrath be visited upon you, your possession of the
+key may prove a safeguard.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Take the copy of “Assyrian Mythology.” You will find in it all that I learned
+respecting the Hashishin. If I am doomed to be assassinated, it may aid you; if
+not in avenging me, in saving others from my fate. I fear I shall never see you
+again. A cloud of horror settles upon me like a pall. Do not touch the slipper,
+nor the case containing it.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class="right">
+EDWARD DEEPING.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It is almost incredible!” I said hoarsely.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bristol returned the letter to me without a word, and turning to Lester, who
+had reentered carrying a heavy pick-axe, he attacked the oblong box with savage
+energy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Through the house of death the sound of the blows echoed and rang with a sort
+of sacrilegious mockery. The box fell to pieces.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“My God! look, sir!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lester was the trembling speaker.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The box, I have said, was but three feet long by one foot square, and had
+clearly defied poor Deeping’s efforts to open it. But a crescent-shaped knife,
+wet with blood, lay within!
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap05"></a>
+CHAPTER V<br/>
+THE OCCUPANT OF THE BOX</h2>
+
+<p>
+Dimly to my ears came the ceaseless murmur of London. The night now was far
+advanced, and not a sound disturbed the silence of the court below my windows.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Professor Deeping’s “Assyrian Mythology” lay open before me, beside it my
+notebook. A coal dropped from the fire, and I half started up out of my chair.
+My nerves were all awry, and I had more than my horrible memories of the
+murdered man to thank for it. Let me explain what I mean.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When, after assisting, or endeavouring to assist, Bristol at his elaborate
+inquiries, I had at last returned to my chambers, I had become the victim of a
+singular delusion&mdash;though one common enough in the case of persons whose
+nerves are overwrought. I had thought myself followed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+During the latter part of my journey I found myself constantly looking from the
+little window at the rear of the cab. I had an impression that some vehicle was
+tracking us. Then, when I discharged the man and walked up the narrow passage
+to the court, it was fear of a skulking form that dodged from shadow to shadow
+which obsessed me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Finally, as I entered the hall and mounted the darkened stair, from the first
+landing I glanced down into the black well beneath. Blazing yellow eyes, I
+thought, looked up at me!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I will confess that I leapt up the remaining flight of stairs to my door, and,
+safely within, found myself trembling as if with a palsy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When I sat down to write (for sleep was an impossible proposition) I placed my
+revolver upon the table beside me. I cannot say why. It afforded me some sense
+of protection, I suppose. My conclusions, thus far, amounted to the
+following&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The apparition of the phantom scimitar was due to the presence of someone who,
+by means of the moonlight, or of artificial light, cast a reflection of such a
+weapon as that found in the oblong chest upon the wall of a darkened
+apartment&mdash;as, Deeping’s stateroom on the Mandalay, his study, etc.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A group of highly efficient assassins, evidently Moslem fanatics, who might or
+might not be of the ancient order of the Hashishin, had pursued the stolen
+slipper to England. They had severed any hand, other than that of a Believer,
+which had touched the case containing it. (The Coptic porter was a Christian.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Uncertain, possibly, of Deeping’s faith, or fearful of endangering the success
+of their efforts by an outrage upon him en route, they had refrained from this
+until his arrival at his house. He had been warned of his impending end by
+Ahmad Ahmadeen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Who was Ahmadeen? And who was his beautiful associate? I found myself unable,
+at present, to answer either of those questions. In order to gain access to
+Professor Deeping, who so carefully secluded himself, a box had been sent to
+him by ordinary carrier. (As I sat at my table, Scotland Yard was busy
+endeavouring to trace the sender.) Respecting this box we had made an
+extraordinary discovery.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was of the kind used by Eastern conjurors for what is generally known as
+“the Box Trick.” That is to say, it could only be opened (short of smashing it)
+from the inside! You will remember what we found within it? Consider this with
+the new fact, above, and to what conclusion do you come?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Something (it is not possible to speak of someone in connection with so small a
+box) had been concealed inside, and had killed Professor Deeping whilst he was
+actually engaged in endeavouring to force it open. This inconceivable creature
+had then searched the study for the slipper&mdash;or for the key of the safe.
+Interrupted and trapped by the arrival of the police, the creature had returned
+to the box, re-closed it, and had actually been there when the study was
+searched!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For a creature so small as the murderous thing in the box to slip out during
+the confusion, and at some time prior to Bristol’s arrival, was no difficult
+matter. The inspector and I were certain that these were the facts.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But what was this creature?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I turned to the chapter in “Assyrian Mythology”&mdash;“The Tradition of the
+Hashishin.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The legends which the late Professor Deeping had collected relative to this
+sect of religious murderers were truly extraordinary. Of the cult’s extinction
+at the time of writing he was clearly certain, but he referred to the popular
+belief, or Moslem legend, that, since Hassan of Khorassan, there had always
+been a Sheikh-al-jebal, and that a dreadful being known as Hassan of Aleppo was
+the present holder of the title.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He referred to the fact that De Sacy has shown the word Assassin to be derived
+from Hashishin, and quoted El-Idrisi to the same end. The Hashishin performed
+their murderous feats under the influence of hashish, or Indian hemp; and
+during the state of ecstasy so induced, according to Deeping, they acquired
+powers almost superhuman. I read how they could scale sheer precipices, pass
+fearlessly along narrow ledges which would scarce afford foothold for a rat,
+cast themselves from great heights unscathed, and track one marked for death in
+such a manner as to remain unseen not only by the victim but by others about
+him. At this point of my studies I started, in a sudden nervous panic, and laid
+my hand upon my revolver.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I thought of the eyes which had seemed to look up from the black well of the
+staircase&mdash;I thought of the horrible end of this man whose book lay upon
+the table ... and I thought I heard a faint sound outside my study door!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The key of Deeping’s safe, and his letter to me, lay close by my hand. I
+slipped them into a drawer and locked it. With every nerve, it seemed, strung
+up almost to snapping point, I mechanically pursued my reading.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“At the time of the Crusades,” wrote Deeping, “there was a story current of
+this awful Order which I propose to recount. It is one of the most persistent
+dealing with the Hashishin, and is related to-day of the apparently mythical
+Hassan of Aleppo. I am disposed to believe that at one time it had a solid
+foundation, for a similar practice was common in Ancient Egypt and is mentioned
+by Georg Ebers.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My door began very slowly to open!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Merciful God! What was coming into the room!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So very slowly, so gently, nay, all but imperceptibly, did it move, that had my
+nerves been less keenly attuned I doubt not I should have remained unaware of
+the happening. Frozen with horror, I sat and watched. Yet my mental condition
+was a singular one.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My direct gaze never quitted the door, but in some strange fashion I saw the
+words of the next paragraph upon the page before me!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“As making peculiarly efficient assassins, when under the influence of the
+drug, and as being capable of concealing themselves where a normal man could
+not fail to be detected&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+(At this moment I remembered that my bathroom window was open, and that the
+waste-pipe passed down the exterior wall.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“&mdash;the Sheikh-al-jebal took young boys of a certain desert tribe, and for
+eight hours of every day, until their puberty, confined them in a wooden
+frame&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+What looked like a reed was slowly inserted through the opening between door
+and doorpost! It was brought gradually around ... until it pointed directly
+toward me!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I seemed to put forth a mighty mental effort, shaking off the icy hand of fear
+which held me inactive in my chair. A saving instinct warned me&mdash;and I
+ducked my head.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Something whirred past me and struck the wall behind.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Revolver in hand, I leapt across the room, dashed the door open, and fired
+blindly&mdash;again&mdash;and again&mdash;and again&mdash;down the passage.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And in the brief gleams I saw it!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I cannot call it man, but I saw the thing which, I doubt not, had killed poor
+Deeping with the crescent-knife and had propelled a poison-dart at me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was a tiny dwarf! Neither within nor without a freak exhibition had I seen
+so small a human being! A kind of supernatural dread gripped me by the throat
+at sight of it. As it turned with animal activity and bounded into my bathroom,
+I caught a three-quarter view of the creature’s swollen, incredible
+head&mdash;which was nearly as large as that of a normal man!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Never while my mind serves me can I forget that yellow, grinning face and those
+canine fangs&mdash;the tigerish, blazing eyes&mdash;set in the great, misshapen
+head upon the tiny, agile body.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Wildly, I fired again. I hurled myself forward and dashed into the room.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Like nothing so much as a cat, the gleaming body (the dwarf was but scantily
+clothed) streaked through the open window!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Certain death, I thought, must be his lot upon the stones of the court far
+below. I ran and looked down, shaking in every limb, my mind filled with a
+loathing terror unlike anything I had ever known.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Brilliant moonlight flooded the pavement beneath; for twenty yards to left and
+right every stone was visible.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The court was empty!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Human, homely London moved and wrought intimately about me; but there, at sight
+of the empty court below, a great loneliness swept down like a mantle&mdash;a
+clammy mantle of the fabric of dread. I stood remote from my fellows, in an
+evil world peopled with the creatures of Hassan of Aleppo.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Moved by some instinct, as that of a frightened child, I dropped to my knees
+and buried my face in trembling hands.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap06"></a>
+CHAPTER VI<br/>
+THE RING OF THE PROPHET</h2>
+
+<p>
+“There is no doubt,” said Mr. Rawson, “that great personal danger attaches to
+any contact with this relic. It is the first time I have been concerned with
+anything of the kind.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mr. Bristol, of Scotland Yard, standing stiffly military by the window, looked
+across at the gray-haired solicitor. We were all silent for a few moments.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“My late client’s wishes,” continued Mr. Rawson, “are explicit. His last
+instructions, evidently written but a short time prior to his death, advise me
+that the holy slipper of the Prophet is contained in the locked safe at his
+house in Dulwich. He was clearly of opinion that you, Mr. Cavanagh, would incur
+risk&mdash;great risk&mdash;from your possession of the key. Since attempts
+have been made upon you, murderous attempts, the late Professor Deeping, my
+unfortunate client, evidently was not in error.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Mysterious outrages,” said Bristol, “have marked the progress of the stolen
+slipper from Mecca almost to London.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I understand,” interrupted the solicitor, “that a fanatic known as Hassan of
+Aleppo seeks to restore the relic to its former resting-place.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That is so.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Exactly; and it accounts for the Professor’s wish that the safe should not be
+touched by any one but a Believer&mdash;and for his instructions that its
+removal to the Antiquarian Museum and the placing of the slipper within that
+institution be undertaken by a Moslem or Moslems.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bristol frowned.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Any one who has touched the receptacle containing the thing,” he said, “has
+either been mutilated or murdered. I want to apprehend the authors of those
+outrages, but I fail to see why the slipper should be put on exhibition. Other
+crimes are sure to follow.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I can only pursue my instructions,” said Mr. Rawson dryly. “They are, that the
+work be done in such a manner as to expose all concerned to a minimum of risk
+from these mysterious people; that if possible a Moslem be employed for the
+purpose; and that Mr. Cavanagh, here, shall always hold the key or keys to the
+case in the museum containing the slipper. Will you undertake to look for
+some&mdash;Eastern workmen, Mr. Bristol? In the course of your inquiries you
+may possibly come across such a person.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I can try,” replied Bristol. “Meanwhile, I take it, the safe must remain at
+Dulwich?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Certainly. It should be guarded.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“We are guarding it and shall guard it,” Bristol assured him. “I only hope we
+catch someone trying to get at it!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Shortly afterward Bristol and I left the office, and, his duties taking him to
+Scotland Yard, I returned to my chambers to survey the position in which I now
+found myself. Indeed, it was a strange one enough, showing how great things
+have small beginnings; for, as a result of a steamer acquaintance I found
+myself involved in a dark business worthy of the Middle Ages. That Professor
+Deeping should have stolen one of the holy slippers of Mohammed was no affair
+of mine, and that an awful being known as Hassan of Aleppo should have pursued
+it did not properly enter into my concerns; yet now, with a group of Eastern
+fanatics at large in England, I was become, in a sense, the custodian of the
+relic. Moreover, I perceived that I had been chosen that I might safeguard
+myself. What I knew of the matter might imperil me, but whilst I held the key
+to the reliquary, and held it fast, I might hope to remain immune though I must
+expect to be subjected to attempts. It would be my affair to come to terms.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Contemplating these things I sat, in a world of dark dreams, unconscious of the
+comings and goings in the court below, unconscious of the hum which told of
+busy Fleet Street so near to me. The weather, as is its uncomfortable habit in
+England, had suddenly grown tropically hot, plunging London into the vapours of
+an African spring, and the sun was streaming through my open window fully upon
+the table.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I mopped my clammy forehead, glancing with distaste at the pile of work which
+lay before me. Then my eyes turned to an open quarto book. It was the late
+Professor Deeping’s “Assyrian Mythology,” and embodied the result of his
+researches into the history of the Hashishin, the religious murderers of whose
+existence he had been so skeptical. To the Chief of the Order, the terrible
+Sheikh Hassan of Aleppo, he referred as a “fabled being”; yet it was at the
+hands of this “fabled being” that he had met his end! How incredible it all
+seemed. But I knew full well how worthy of credence it was.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then upon my gloomy musings a sound intruded&mdash;the ringing of my door bell.
+I rose from my chair with a weary sigh, went to the door, and opened it. An
+aged Oriental stood without. He was tall and straight, had a snow-white beard
+and clear-cut, handsome features. He wore well-cut European garments and a
+green turban. As I stood staring he saluted me gravely.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Mr. Cavanagh?” he asked, speaking in faultless English.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I am he.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I learn that the services of a Moslem workman are required.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Quite correct, sir; but you should apply at the offices of Messrs. Rawson
+&amp; Rawson, Chancery Lane.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The old man bowed, smiling.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Many thanks; I understood so much. But, my position being a peculiar one, I
+wished to speak with you&mdash;as a friend of the late Professor.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I hesitated. The old man looked harmless enough, but there was an air of
+mystery about the matter which put me on my guard.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You will pardon me,” I said, “but the work is scarcely of a kind&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He raised his thin hand.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I am not undertaking it myself. I wished to explain to you the conditions
+under which I could arrange to furnish suitable porters.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His patient explanation disposed me to believe that he was merely some kind of
+small contractor, and in any event I had nothing to fear from this frail old
+man.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Step in, sir,” I said, repenting of my brusquerie&mdash;and stood aside for
+him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He entered, with that Oriental meekness in which there is something majestic. I
+placed a chair for him in the study, and reseated myself at the table. The old
+man, who from the first had kept his eyes lowered deferentially, turned to me
+with a gentle gesture, as if to apologize for opening the conversation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“From the papers, Mr. Cavanagh,” he began, “I have learned of the circumstances
+attending the death of Professor Deeping. Your papers”&mdash;he smiled, and I
+thought I had never seen a smile of such sweetness&mdash;“your papers know all!
+Now I understand why a Moslem is required, and I understand what is required of
+him. But remembering that the object of his labours would be to place a holy
+relic on exhibition for the amusement of unbelievers, can you reasonably expect
+to obtain the services of one?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His point of view was fair enough.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Perhaps not,” I replied. “For my own part I should wish to see the slipper
+back in Mecca, or wherever it came from. But Professor Deeping&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Professor Deeping was a thorn in the flesh of the Faithful!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My visitor’s voice was gravely reproachful.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Nevertheless his wishes must be considered,” I said, “and the methods adopted
+by those who seek to recover the relic are such as to alienate all sympathy.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You speak of the Hashishin?” asked the old man. “Mr. Cavanagh, in your own
+faith you have had those who spilled the blood of infidels as freely!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“My good sir, the existence of such an organization cannot be tolerated today!
+This survival of the dark ages must be stamped out. However just a cause may
+be, secret murder is not permissible, as you, a man of culture, a Believer,
+and”&mdash;I glanced at his unusual turban&mdash;“a descendant of the Prophet,
+must admit.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I can admit nothing against the Guardian of the Tradition, Mr. Cavanagh! The
+Prophet taught that we should smite the Infidel. I ask you&mdash;have you the
+courage of your convictions?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Perhaps; I trust so.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Then assist me to rid England of what you have called a survival of the dark
+ages. I will furnish porters to remove and carry the safe, if you will deliver
+to me the key!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I sprang to my feet.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That is madness!” I cried. “In the first place I should be compromising with
+my conscience, and in the second place I should be defenceless against those
+who might&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I have with me a written promise from one highly placed&mdash;one to whose
+will Hassan of Aleppo bows!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My mind greatly disturbed, I watched the venerable speaker. I had determined
+now that he was some religious leader of Islam in England, who had been deputed
+to approach me; and, let me add, I was sorely tempted to accede to his
+proposal, for nothing would be gained by any one if the slipper remained for
+ever at the museum, whereas by conniving at its recovery by those who, after
+all, were its rightful owners I should be ridding England of a weird and
+undesirable visitant.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I think I should have agreed, when I remembered that the Hashishin had murdered
+Professor Deeping and had mutilated others wholly innocent of offence. I looked
+across at the old man. He had drawn himself up to his great height, and for the
+first time fully raising the lids, had fixed upon me the piercing gaze of a
+pair of eagle eyes. I started, for the aspect of this majestic figure was
+entirely different from that of the old stranger who had stood suppliant before
+me a moment ago.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It is impossible,” I said. “I can come to no terms with those who shield
+murderers.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He regarded me fixedly, but did not move.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Es-selam ’aleykum!” I added (“Peace be on you!”) closing the interview in the
+Eastern manner.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The old man lowered his eyes, and saluted me with graceful gravity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Wa-’aleykum!” he said (“And on you!”). I conducted him to the door and closed
+it upon his exit. In his last salute I had noticed the flashing of a ring which
+he wore upon his left hand, and he was gone scarce ten seconds ere my heart
+began to beat furiously. I snatched up “Assyrian Mythology” and with trembling
+fingers turned to a certain page.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There I read&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Each Sheikh of the Assassins is said to be invested with the “Ring of the
+Prophet.” It bears a green stone, shaped in the form of a scimitar or crescent.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My dreadful suspicion was confirmed. I knew who my visitor had been.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“God in heaven!” I whispered. “It was Hassan of Aleppo!”
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap07"></a>
+CHAPTER VII<br/>
+FIRST ATTEMPT ON THE SAFE</h2>
+
+<p>
+On the following morning I was awakened by the arrival of Bristol. I hastened
+to admit him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Your visitor of yesterday,” he began, “has wasted no time!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What has happened?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He tugged irritably at his moustache. “I don’t know!” he replied. “Of course it
+was no surprise to find that there isn’t a Mohammedan who’ll lay his little
+finger on Professor Deeping’s safe! There’s no doubt in my mind that every
+lascar at the docks knows Hassan of Aleppo to be in England. Some other
+arrangement will have to be arrived at, if the thing is ever to be taken to the
+Antiquarian Museum. Meanwhile we stand to lose it. Last night&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He accepted a cigarette, and lighted it carefully.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Last night,” he resumed, “a member of P Division was on point duty outside the
+late Professor’s house, and two C.I.D. men were actually in the room where the
+safe is. Result&mdash;someone has put in at least an hour’s work on the lock,
+but it proved too tough a job!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I stared at him amazedly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Someone has been at the lock!” I cried. “But that is impossible, with two men
+in the room&mdash;unless&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“They were both knocked on the head!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Both! But by whom! My God! They are not&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Oh, no! It was done artistically. They both came round about four o’clock this
+morning.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“And who attacked them?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“They had no idea. Neither of them saw a thing!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My amazement grew by leaps and bounds. “But, Bristol, one of them must have
+seen the other succumb!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Both did! Their statements tally exactly!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I quite fail to follow you.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That’s not surprising. Listen: When I got on the scene about five o’clock,
+Marden and West, the two C.I.D. men, had quite recovered their senses, though
+they were badly shaken, and one had a cracked skull. The constable was
+conscious again, too.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What! Was he attacked?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“In exactly the same way! I’ll give you Marden’s story, as he gave it to me a
+few minutes after the surgeon had done with him. He said that they were sitting
+in the study, smoking, and with both windows wide open. It was a fearfully hot
+night.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Did they have lights?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“No. West sat in an armchair near the writing-table; Marden sat by the window
+next to the door. I had arranged that every hour one of them should go out to
+the gate and take the constable’s report. It was just after Marden had been out
+at one o’clock that it happened.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“They were sitting as I tell you when Marden thought he heard a curious sort of
+noise from the gate. West appeared to have heard nothing; but I have no doubt
+that it was the sound of the constable’s fall. West’s pipe had gone out, and he
+struck a match to relight it. As he did so, Marden saw him drop the match,
+clench both fists, and with eyes glaring in the moonlight and his teeth coming
+together with a snap, drop from his chair.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Marden says that he was half up from his seat when something struck him on the
+back of the head with fearful force. He remembered nothing more until he awoke,
+with the dawn creeping into the room, and heard West groaning somewhere beside
+him. They both had badly damaged skulls with great bruises behind the ear. It
+is instructive to note that their wounds corresponded almost to a fraction of
+an inch. They had been stunned by someone who thoroughly understood his
+business, and with some heavy, blunt weapon. A few minutes later came the man
+to relieve the constable; and the constable was found to have been treated in
+exactly the same way!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“But if Marden’s account is true&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“West, as he lost consciousness, saw Marden go in exactly the same way.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Marden was seated by the open window, but I cannot conjecture how any one can
+have got at West, who sat by the table!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The case of Marden is little less than remarkable; he was some distance from
+the window. No one could possibly have reached him from outside.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“And the constable?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The constable can give us no clue. He was suddenly struck down, as the others
+were. I examined the safe, of course, but didn’t touch it, according to
+instructions. Someone had been at work on the lock, but it had defied their
+efforts. I’m fully expecting though that they’ll be back to-night, with
+different tools!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The place is watched during the day, of course?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Of course. But it’s unlikely that anything will be attempted in daylight.
+Tonight I am going down myself.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Could you arrange that I join you?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I could, but you can see the danger for yourself?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It is extraordinarily mysterious.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Mr. Cavanagh, it’s uncanny!” said Bristol. “I can understand that one of these
+Hashishin could easily have got up behind the man on duty out in the open. I
+know, and so do you, that they’re past masters of that kind of thing; but
+unless they possess the power to render themselves invisible, it’s not evident
+how they can have got behind West whilst he sat at the table, with Marden
+actually watching him!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“We must lay a trap for them to-night.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Rely upon me to do so. My only fear is that they may anticipate it and change
+their tactics. Hassan of Aleppo apparently knows as much of our plans as we do
+ourselves.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Inspector Bristol, though a man of considerable culture, clearly was infected
+with a species of supernatural dread.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap08"></a>
+CHAPTER VIII<br/>
+THE VIOLET EYES AGAIN</h2>
+
+<p>
+At four o’clock in the afternoon I had heard nothing further from Bristol, but
+I did not doubt that he would advise me of his arrangements in good time. I
+sought by hard work to forget for a time the extraordinary business of the
+stolen slipper; but it persistently intruded upon my mind. Particularly, my
+thoughts turned to the night of Professor Deeping’s murder, and to the
+bewitchingly pretty woman who had warned me of the impending tragedy. She had
+bound me to secrecy&mdash;a secrecy which had proved irksome, for it had since
+appeared to me that she must have been an accomplice of Hassan of Aleppo. At
+the time I had been at a loss to define her peculiar accent, now it seemed
+evidently enough to have been Oriental.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I threw down my pen in despair, for work was impossible, went downstairs, and
+walked out under the arch into Fleet Street. Quite mechanically I turned to the
+left, and, still engaged with idle conjectures, strolled along westward.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Passing the entrance to one of the big hotels, I was abruptly recalled to the
+realities&mdash;by a woman’s voice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Wait for me here,” came musically to my ears.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I stopped, and turned. A woman who had just quitted a taxi-cab was entering the
+hotel. The day was hot and thunderously oppressive, and this woman with the
+musical voice wore a delicate costume of flimsiest white. A few steps upward
+she paused and glanced back. I had a view of a Greek profile, and for one
+magnetic instant looked into eyes of the deepest and most wonderful violet.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then, shaking off inaction, I ran up the steps and overtook the lady in white
+as a porter swung open the door to admit her. We entered together.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Madame,” I said in a low tone, “I must detain you for a moment. There is
+something I have to ask.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She turned, exhibiting the most perfect composure, lowered her lashes and
+raised them again, the gaze of the violet eyes sweeping me from head to foot
+with a sort of frigid scorn.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I fear you have made a mistake, sir. We have never met before!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Her voice betrayed no trace of any foreign accent!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“But,” I began&mdash;and paused.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I felt myself flush; for this encounter in the foyer of an hotel, with many
+curious onlookers, was like to prove embarrassing if my beautiful acquaintance
+persisted in her attitude. I fully realized what construction would be put upon
+my presence there, and foresaw that forcible and ignominious ejection must be
+my lot if I failed to establish my right to address her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She turned away, and crossed in the direction of the staircase. A sunbeam
+sought out a lock of hair that strayed across her brow, and kissed it to a
+sudden glow like that which lurks in the heart of a blush rose.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That wonderful sheen, which I had never met with elsewhere in nature, but which
+no artifice could lend, served to remove my last frail doubt which had survived
+the evidence of the violet eyes. I had been deceived by no strange resemblance;
+this was indeed the woman who had been the harbinger of Professor Deeping’s
+death. In three strides I was beside her again. Curious glances were set upon
+me, and I saw a servant evidently contemplating approach; but I ignored all
+save my own fixed purpose.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You must listen to what I have to say!” I whispered. “If you decline, I shall
+have no alternative but to call in the detective who holds a warrant for your
+arrest!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She stood quite still, watching me coolly. “I suppose you would wish to avoid a
+scene?” I added.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You have already made me the object of much undesirable attention,” she
+replied scornfully. “I do not need your assurance that you would disgrace me
+utterly! You are talking nonsense, as you must be aware&mdash;unless you are
+insane. But if your object be to force your acquaintance upon me, your methods
+are novel, and, under the circumstances, effective. Come, sir, you may talk to
+me&mdash;for three minutes!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The musical voice had lost nothing of its imperiousness, but for one instant
+the lips parted, affording a fleeting glimpse of pearl beyond the coral.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Her sudden change of front was bewildering. Now, she entered the lift and I
+followed her. As we ascended side by side I found it impossible to believe that
+this dainty white figure was that of an associate of the Hashishin, that of a
+creature of the terrible Hassan of Aleppo. Yet that she was the same girl who,
+a few days after my return from the East, had shown herself conversant with the
+plans of the murderous fanatics was beyond doubt. Her accent on that occasion
+clearly had been assumed, with what object I could not imagine. Then, as we
+quitted the lift and entered a cosy lounge, my companion seated herself upon a
+Chesterfield, signing to me to sit beside her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As I did so she lay back smiling, and regarding me from beneath her black
+lashes. Thus, half veiled, her great violet eyes were most wonderful.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Now, sir,” she said softly, “explain yourself.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Then you persist in pretending that we have not met before?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“There is no occasion for pretence,” she replied lightly; and I found myself
+comparing her voice with her figure, her figure with her face, and vainly
+endeavouring to compute her age. Frankly, she was bewildering&mdash;this lovely
+girl who seemed so wholly a woman of the world.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“This fencing is useless.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It is quite useless! Come, I know New York, London, and I know Paris, Vienna,
+Budapest. Therefore I know mankind! You thought I was pretty, I suppose? I may
+be; others have thought so. And you thought you would like to make my
+acquaintance without troubling about the usual formalities? You adopted a
+singularly brutal method of achieving your object, but I love such insolence in
+a man. Therefore I forgave you. What have you to say to me?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I perceive that I had to deal with a bold adventuress, with a consummate
+actress, who, finding herself in a dangerous situation, had adopted this daring
+line of defence, and now by her personal charm sought to lure me from my
+purpose.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But with the scimitar of Hassan of Aleppo stretched over me, with the dangers
+of the night before me, I was in no mood for a veiled duel of words, for an
+interchange of glances in thrust and parry, however delightful such warfare
+might have been with so pretty an adversary.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For a long time I looked sternly into her eyes; but their violet mystery
+defied, whilst her red-lipped smile taunted me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Unfortunately,” I said, with slow emphasis, “you are protected by my promise,
+made on the occasion of our previous meeting. But murder has been done, so that
+honour scarcely demands that I respect my promise further&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She raised her eyebrows slightly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Surely that depends upon the quality of the honour!” she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I believe you to be a member of a murderous organization, and unless you can
+convince me that I am wrong, I shall act accordingly.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At that she leaned toward me, laying her hand on my arm.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Please do not be so cruel,” she whispered, “as to drag me into a matter with
+which truly I have no concern. Believe me, you are utterly mistaken. Wait one
+moment, and I will prove it.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She rose, and before I could make move to detain her, quitted the room; but the
+door scarcely had closed ere I was afoot. The corridor beyond was empty. I ran
+on. The lift had just descended. A dark man whom I recognized stood near the
+closed gate.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Quick!” I said, “I am Cavanagh of the Report! Did you see a lady enter the
+lift?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I did, Mr. Cavanagh,” answered the hotel detective; for this was he.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In such a giant inn as this I knew full well that one could come and go almost
+with impunity, though one had no right to the hospitality of the establishment;
+and it was with a premonition respecting what his answer would be, that I asked
+the man&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Is she staying here?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“She is not. I have never seen her before!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The girl with the violet eyes had escaped, taking all her secrets with her!
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap09"></a>
+CHAPTER IX<br/>
+SECOND ATTEMPT ON THE SAFE</h2>
+
+<p>
+“You see,” said Bristol, “the Hashishin must know that the safe won’t remain
+here unopened much longer. They will therefore probably make another attempt
+to-night.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It seems likely,” I replied; and was silent. Outside the open windows
+whispered the shrubbery, as a soft breeze stole through the bushes. Beyond, the
+moon made play in the dim avenue. From the old chapel hard by the sweet-toned
+bell proclaimed midnight. Our vigil was begun. In this room it was that
+Professor Deeping had met death at the hands of the murderous Easterns; here it
+was that Marden and West had mysteriously been struck down the night before.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To-night was every whit as hot, and Bristol and I had the windows widely
+opened. My companion was seated where the detective, Marden, had sat, in a
+chair near the westerly window, and I lay back in the armchair that had been
+occupied by West.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I may repeat here that the house of the late Professor Deeping was more
+properly a cottage, surrounded by a fairly large piece of ground, for the most
+part run wild. The room used as a study was on the ground floor, and had
+windows on the west and on the south. Those on the west (French windows) opened
+on a loggia; those on the south opened right into the dense tangle of a
+neglected shrubbery. The place possessed an oppressive atmosphere of
+loneliness, for which in some measure its history may have been responsible.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The silence, seemingly intensified by each whisper that sped through the elms
+and crept about the shrubbery, grew to such a stillness that I told myself I
+had experienced nothing like it since crossing with a caravan I had slept in
+the desert. Yet noisy, whirling London was within gunshot of us; and this,
+though hard enough to believe, was a reflection oddly comforting. Only one
+train of thought was possible, and this I pursued at random.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+By what means were Marden and West struck down? In thus exposing ourselves, in
+order that we might trap the author or authors of the outrage, did we act
+wisely?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Bristol,” I said suddenly, “it was someone who came through the open window.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“No one,” he replied, “came through the windows. West saw absolutely nothing.
+But if any one comes that way to-night, we have him!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“West may have seen nothing; but how else could any one enter?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bristol offered no reply; and I plunged again into a maze of speculation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Powerful mantraps were set in such a way that any one or anything, ignorant of
+their positions, coming up to the windows must unavoidably be snared. These had
+been placed in position with much secrecy after dusk, and the man on duty at
+the gate stood with his back to the wall. No one could approach him except from
+the front. My thoughts took a new turn.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Was the girl with the violet eyes an ally of the Hashishin? Thus far, although
+she so palpably had tricked me, I had found myself unable to speak of her to
+Bristol; for the idea had entered my mind that she might have learned of the
+plan to murder Deeping without directly being implicated. Now came yet another
+explanation. The publicity given to that sensational case might have interested
+some third party in the fate of the stolen slipper! Could it be that others, in
+no way connected with the dreadful Hassan of Aleppo, were in quest of the
+slipper?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Scotland Yard had taken care to ensure that the general public be kept in
+ignorance of the existence of such an organization as the Hashishin, but I must
+assume that this hypothetical third party were well aware that they had Hassan,
+as well as the authorities, to count with. Granting the existence of such a
+party, my beautiful acquaintance might be classified as one of its members. I
+spoke again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Bristol,” I said, “has it occurred to you that there may be others, as well as
+Hassan of Aleppo, seeking to gain possession of the sacred slipper?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It has not,” he replied. “In the strictest sense of the expression, they would
+be out for trouble! What gave you the idea?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I hardly know,” I returned evasively, for even now I was loath to betray the
+mysterious girl with the wonderful eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The chapel bell sounding the half-hour, Bristol rose with a sigh that might
+have been one of relief, and went out to take the report of the man on duty at
+the gate. As his footsteps died away along the elm avenue, it came to me how,
+in the darkness about, menace lurked; and I felt myself succumbing to the
+greatest dread experienced by man&mdash;the dread of the unknown.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All that I knew of the weird group of fanatics&mdash;survivals of a dim and
+evil past&mdash;who must now be watching this cottage as bloodlustful devotees
+watch a shrine violated, burst upon my mind. I peopled the still blackness with
+lurking assassins, armed with the murderous knowledge of by-gone centuries,
+armed with invisible weapons which struck down from afar, supernaturally.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I glanced toward the corner of the room where the safe stood, reliquary of a
+worthless thing for which much blood had been spilled.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then sounded footsteps along the avenue, and my fear whispered that they were
+not those of Bristol but of one who had murdered him, and who came guilefully,
+to murder me!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I snatched the revolver from my pocket and crossed the darkened room. Just to
+the right of one of the French windows I stood looking out across the loggia to
+the end of the avenue. The night was a bright one, and the room was flooded
+with a reflected mystic light, but outside the moon paved the avenue with
+pearl, and through the trees I saw a figure approaching.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Was it Bristol? It had his build, it had his gait; but my fears remained. Then
+the figure crossed the patch of shrubbery and stepped on to the loggia.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Mr. Cavanagh!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I laughed dryly at my own cowardice, but my heart was still beating abnormally.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Here I am, Bristol, in a ghastly funk!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I don’t wonder! They may be on us any time now. All’s well at the gate, but
+Morris says he heard, or thought he heard something at the side of the chapel
+opposite, a while ago.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Wind in the bushes?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It may have been; but he says there was no breeze at the time.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We resumed our seats.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Bristol,” I said, “now that the danger grows imminent, doesn’t it seem to you
+foolhardy for us thus to expose ourselves?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Perhaps it is,” he agreed; “but how otherwise are we likely to learn what
+happened to Marden and West?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The enemy may adopt different measures to-night.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I think not. Our dispositions are the same, and I credit them with cunning
+enough to know it. At the same time I credit ourselves with having kept the
+existence of the steel traps completely secret. They will assume (so I’ve
+reasoned) that we intend to rely entirely upon our superior vigilance,
+therefore they will try the same game as last night.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Silence fell.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The moon rays, creeping around from the right of the avenue, crossing the
+shrubbery and encroaching upon the low wall of the loggia, now flooded its
+floor. Against the silvern light, Bristol appeared to me in black silhouette.
+The breeze, too, seemed now to blow from a slightly different direction. It
+came through the windows on my right, beyond which lay the unkempt bushes which
+extended on that side to the wall of the grounds.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So we sat, until the moonlight poured fully in upon Bristol’s back. So we sat
+when the clock chimed the hour of one.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bristol arose and once more went out to the gate. He had arranged to visit
+Morris’s post every half-hour. Again I experienced the nervous dread that he
+would be attacked in the avenue; but again he returned unscathed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“All’s well,” he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But from his tones I knew that he had not forgotten that it was at this hour
+Marden and West had suffered mysterious attack.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Neither of us, I think, was disposed to talk. We both were unwilling to break
+the silence, wherein, with all our ears, we listened for the slightest
+disturbance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And now my attention turned anew to the course of the slowly creeping moon
+rays. In my mind an idea was struggling for definition. There was something
+significant in the lunar lighting of the room. Why, I asked myself, had the
+attack been made at one o’clock? Did the time signify anything? If so, what? I
+looked toward Bristol.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His figure, the chair upon which he sat, were sharply outlined by the cold
+light. The wall behind me, and to my left, was illuminated brilliantly; but no
+light fell directly upon me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The idea was taking shape. From the loggia and the avenue Bristol, I reasoned,
+must be clearly visible. From the shrubbery on the south, through the other
+windows could I be seen? Yes, silhouetted against the moonlight!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A faint sound, quite indescribable, came to my ears from somewhere
+outside-beyond.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“My God!” whispered Bristol. “Did you hear it?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes! What?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It must have been Morris!&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bristol was half standing, one hand upon the arm of the chair, the other
+concealed, but grasping his revolver as I well knew. I, too, had my revolver in
+my hand, and as I twisted in my seat, preparatory to rising, in sheer
+nervousness I dropped the weapon upon the carpet.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With an exclamation of dismay, I stooped quickly to recover it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As I did so something whistled past my ear, so closely as almost to touch
+it&mdash;and struck with a dull thud upon the wall beyond!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Bristol!” I whispered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But as I raised my eyes to him he seemed to crumple up, and fell loosely
+forward into the patch of moonlight spread upon the floor! “God in heaven!” I
+said aloud.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In a cold sweat of fear I crouched there, for it had become evident to me that,
+as I bent, I was entirely in shadow.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was a rustling in the bushes on the left; but before I could turn in that
+direction, my attention was claimed elsewhere. Over into the loggia leapt an
+almost naked brown figure!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was that of a small but strongly built man, who carried a short, exceedingly
+thick bamboo rod in his hand. My fear was too great to admit of my accurately
+observing anything at that time, but I noticed that some kind of leather thong
+or loop was attached to the end of the squat cane.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The panic fear of the supernatural was strongly upon me, and I was unable to
+realize that this Eastern apparition was a creature of flesh and blood. With my
+nerves strung up to snapping point, I crouched watching him. He entered the
+room, bending over the body of Bristol.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A hot breath fanned my cheek!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At that my overwrought nerves betrayed me. I uttered a stifled cry, looking
+upward ... and into a pair of gleaming eyes which looked down into mine!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A second brown man (who must have entered by one of the windows overlooking the
+shrubbery) was bending over me!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Scarce knowing what I did, I raised my revolver and blazed straight into the
+dimly-seen face. Down upon me silently dropped a naked body, and something warm
+came flowing over my hand. But, knowing my foes to be of flesh and blood,
+feeling myself at handgrips now with a palpable enemy, I threw off the body,
+leapt up and fired, though blindly, at the flying shape that flashed across the
+loggia&mdash;and was lost in the shadow pools under the elms.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Upon the din of my shooting fell silence like a cloak. A moment I listened,
+tense, still; then I turned to the table and lighted the lamp.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In its light I saw Bristol lying like a dead man. Close beside him was a big
+and heavy lump of clay. It had been shaped as a ball, but now it was flattened
+out curiously. Bending over my unfortunate companion and learning that, though
+unconscious, he lived, I learnt, too, how the Hashishin contrived to strike men
+insensible without approaching them; I learnt that the one whom I had shot, who
+lay in his blood almost on the spot where Professor Deeping once had lain, was
+an expert slinger.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The contrivance which he carried, as did the other who had escaped, was a
+sling, of the ancient Persian type. In place of stones, heavy lumps of clay
+were used, which operated much the same as a sand-bag, whilst enabling the
+operator to work from a considerable distance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hidden, over by the ancient chapel it might be, one of this evil twain had
+struck down Morris, the constable; from the shelter of the trees, from many
+yards away, they had shot their singular missiles through the open windows at
+Bristol and myself. Bristol had succumbed, and now, with a redness showing
+through his close-cut hair immediately behind the right ear, lay wholly
+unconscious at my feet.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It had been a divine accident which had caused me to drop my revolver, and,
+stooping to recover it, unknowingly to frustrate the design of the second
+slinger upon myself. The light of the lamp fell upon the face of the dead
+Hashishin. He lay forward upon his hands, crouching almost, but with his face,
+his dreadful, featureless face, twisted up at me from under his left shoulder.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+God knows he deserved his end; but that mutilated face is often grinning,
+bloodily, in my dreams.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And then as I stood, between that horrid exultation which is born of killing
+and the panic which threatened me out of the darkness, I saw something
+advancing ... slowly ... slowly ... from the elmen shades toward the loggia.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was a shape&mdash;it was a shadow. Silent it came&mdash;on&mdash;and on.
+Where the dusk lay deepest it paused, undefined; for I could give it no name of
+man or spirit. But a horror seemed to proceed from it as light from a lamp.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I groped about the table near to me, never taking my eyes from that sinister
+form outside. As my fingers closed upon the telephone, distant voices and the
+sound of running footsteps (of those who had heard the shots) came welcome to
+my ears.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The form stirred, seeming to raise phantom arms in execration, and a stray
+moonbeam pierced the darkness shrouding it. For a fleeting instant something
+flashed venomously.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The sounds grew nearer. I could tell that the newcomers had found Morris lying
+at the gate. Yet still I stood, frozen with uncanny fear, and
+watching&mdash;watching the spot to which that stray beam had pierced; the spot
+where I had seen the moon gleam upon the ring of the Prophet!
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap10"></a>
+CHAPTER X<br/>
+AT THE BRITISH ANTIQUARIAN MUSEUM</h2>
+
+<p>
+A little group of interested spectators stood at the head of the square glass
+case in the centre of the lofty apartment in the British Antiquarian Museum
+known as the Burton Room (by reason of the fact that a fine painting of Sir
+Richard Burton faces you as you enter). A few other people looked on curiously
+from the lower end of the case. It contained but one exhibit&mdash;a dirty and
+dilapidated markoob&mdash;or slipper of morocco leather that had once been red.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Our latest acquisition, gentlemen,” said Mr. Mostyn, the curator, speaking in
+a low tone to the distinguished Oriental scholars around him. “It has been left
+to the Institution by the late Professor Deeping. He describes it in a document
+furnished by his solicitor as one of the slippers worn by the Prophet Mohammed,
+but gives us no further particulars. I myself cannot quite place the relic.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Nor I,” interrupted one of the group. “It is not mentioned by any of the
+Arabian historians to my knowledge&mdash;that is, if it comes from Mecca, as I
+understand it does.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I cannot possibly assert that it comes from Mecca, Dr. Nicholson,” Mostyn
+replied. “The Professor may have taken it from Al-Madinah&mdash;perhaps from
+the mysterious inner passage of the baldaquin where the treasures of the place
+lie. But I can assure you that what little we do know of its history is
+sufficiently unsavoury.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I fancied that the curator’s tired cultured voice faltered as he spoke; and
+now, without apparent reason, he moved a step to the right and glanced oddly
+along the room. I followed the direction of his glance, and saw a tall man in
+conventional morning dress, irreproachable in every detail, whose head was
+instantly bent upon his catalogue. But before his eyes fell I knew that their
+long almond shape, as well as the peculiar burnt pallor of his countenance,
+were undoubtedly those of an Oriental.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“There have been mysterious outrages committed, I believe, upon many of those
+who have come in contact with the slipper?” asked one of the savants.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Exactly. Professor Deeping was undoubtedly among the victims. His instructions
+were explicit that the relic should be brought here by a Moslem, but for a long
+time we failed to discover any Moslem who would undertake the task; and, as you
+are aware, while the slipper remained at the Professor’s house attempts were
+made to steal it.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He ceased uneasily, and glanced at the tall Eastern figure. It had edged a
+little nearer; the head was still bowed and the fine yellow waxen fingers of
+the hand from which he had removed his glove fumbled with the catalogue’s
+leaves. It may well have been that in those days I read menace in every eye,
+yet I felt assured that the yellow visitor was eavesdropping&mdash;was
+malignantly attentive to the conversation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The curator spoke lower than ever now; no one beyond the circle could possibly
+hear him as he proceeded&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“We discovered an Alexandrian Greek who, for personal reasons, not unconnected
+with matrimony, had turned Moslem! He carried the slipper here, strongly
+escorted, and placed it where you now see it. No other hand has touched it.”
+(The speaker’s voice was raised ever so slightly.) “You will note that there is
+a rail around the case, to prevent visitors from touching even the glass.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Ah,” said Dr. Nicholson quizzically, “And has anything untoward happened to
+our Graeco-Moslem friend?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Perhaps Inspector Bristol can tell,” replied the curator.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The straight, military figure of the well-known Scotland Yard man was
+conspicuous among the group of distinguished&mdash;and mostly
+round-shouldered&mdash;scholars.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Sorry, gentlemen,” he said, smiling, “but Mr. Acepulos has vanished from his
+tobacco shop in Soho. I am not apprehensive that he had been kidnapped or
+anything of that kind. I think rather that the date of his disappearance
+tallies with that on which he cashed his cheque for service rendered! His
+present wife is getting most unbeautifully fat, too.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What precautions,” someone asked, “are being taken to guard the slipper?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Well,” Mostyn answered, “though we have only the bare word of the late
+Professor Deeping that the slipper was actually worn by Mohammed, it has
+certainly an enormous value according to Moslem ideas. There can be no doubt
+that a group of fanatics known as Hashishin are in London engaged in an
+extraordinary endeavour to recover it.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mostyn’s voice sank to an impressive whisper. My gaze sought again the tall
+Eastern visitor and was held fascinated by the baffled straining in those
+velvet eyes. But the lids fell as I looked; and the effect was that of a fire
+suddenly extinguished. I determined to draw Bristol’s attention to the man.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Accordingly,” Mostyn continued, “we have placed it in this room, from which I
+fancy it would puzzle the most accomplished thief to remove it.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The party, myself included, stared about the place, as he went on to
+explain&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“We have four large windows here; as you see. The Burton Room occupies the end
+of a wing; there is only one door; it communicates with the next room, which in
+turn opens into the main building by another door on the landing. We are on the
+first floor; these two east windows afford a view of the lawn before the main
+entrance; those two west ones face Orpington Square; all are heavily barred as
+you see. During the day there is a man always on duty in these two rooms. At
+night that communicating door is locked. Short of erecting a ladder in full
+view either of the Square or of Great Orchard Street, filing through four iron
+bars and breaking the window and the case, I fail to see how anybody can get at
+the slipper here.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“If a duplicate key to the safe&mdash;” another voice struck in; I knew it
+afterward for that of Professor Rhys-Jenkyns.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Impossible to procure one, Professor,” cried Mostyn, his eyes sparkling with
+an almost boyish interest. “Mr. Cavanagh here holds the keys of the case, under
+the will of the late Professor Deeping. They are of foreign workmanship and
+more than a little complicated.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The eyes of the savants were turned now in my direction.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I suppose you have them in a place of safety?” said Dr. Nicholson.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“They are at my bankers,” I replied.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Then I venture to predict,” said the celebrated Orientalist, “that the slipper
+of the Prophet will rest here undisturbed.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He linked his arm into that of a brother scholar and the little group straggled
+away, Mostyn accompanying them to the main entrance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But I saw Inspector Bristol scratching his chin; he looked very much as if he
+doubted the accuracy of the doctor’s prediction. He had already had some
+experience of the implacable devotion of the Moslem group to this treasure of
+the Faithful.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The real danger begins,” I suggested to him, “when the general public is
+admitted&mdash;after to-day, is it not?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes. All to-day’s people are specially invited, or are using special
+invitation cards,” he replied. “The people who received them often give their
+tickets away to those who will be likely really to appreciate the opportunity.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I looked around for the tall Oriental. He seemed to have vanished, and for some
+reason I hesitated to speak of him to Bristol; for my gaze fell upon an
+excessively thin, keen-faced man whose curiously wide-open eyes met mine
+smilingly, whose gray suit spoke Stein-Bloch, whose felt was a Boss raw-edge
+unmistakably of a kind that only Philadelphia can produce. At the height of the
+season such visitors are not rare, but this one had an odd personality, and
+moreover his keen gaze was raking the place from ceiling to floor.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Where had I met him before? To the best of my recollection I had never set eyes
+upon the man prior to that moment; and since he was so palpably an American I
+had no reason for assuming him to be associated with the Hashishin. But I
+remembered&mdash;indeed, I could never forget&mdash;how, in the recent past, I
+had met with an apparent associate of the Moslems as evidently European as this
+curiously alert visitor was American. Moreover ... there was something
+tauntingly familiar, yet elusive, about that gaunt face.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Was it not upon the eve of the death of Professor Deeping that the girl with
+the violet eyes had first intruded her fascinating personality into my tangled
+affairs? Patently, she had then been seeking the holy slipper, and by craft had
+endeavoured to bend me to her will. Then had I not encountered her again,
+meeting the glance of her unforgettable violet eyes outside a Strand hotel? The
+encounter had presaged a further attempt upon the slipper! Certainly she acted
+on behalf of someone interested in it; and since neither Bristol nor I could
+conceive of any one seeking to possess the bloodstained thing except the
+mysterious leader of the Hashishin&mdash;Hassan of Aleppo&mdash;as a creature
+of that awful fanatic being I had written her down.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Why, then, if the mysterious Eastern employed a European girl, should he not
+also employ an American man? It might well be that the relic, in entering the
+doors of the impregnable Antiquarian Museum, had passed where the diabolical
+arts of the Hashishin had no power to reach it&mdash;where the beauty of
+Western women and the craft of Eastern man were equally useless weapons.
+Perhaps Hassan’s campaign was entering upon a new phase.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Was it a shirking of plain duty on my part that wish&mdash;that ever-present
+hope&mdash;that the murderous company of fanatics who had pursued the stolen
+slipper from its ancient resting-place to London, should succeed in recovering
+it? I leave you to judge.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The crescent of Islam fades to-day and grows pale, but there are yet fierce
+Believers, a lust for the blood of the infidel. In such as these a faith dies
+the death of an adder, and is more venomous in its death-throes than in the
+full pulse of life. The ghastly indiscretion of Professor Deeping, in rifling a
+Moslem Sacristy, had led to the mutilation of many who, unwittingly, had
+touched the looted relic, had brought about his own end, had established a
+league of fantastic assassins in the heart of the metropolis.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Only once had I seen the venerable Hassan of Aleppo&mdash;a stately, gentle old
+man; but I knew that the velvet eyes could blaze into a passionate fury that
+seemed to scorch whom it fell upon. I knew that the saintly Hassan was Sheikh
+of the Hashishin. And familiarity with that dreadful organization had by no
+means bred contempt. I was the holder of the key, and my fear of the fanatics
+grew like a magic mango, darkened the sunlight of each day, and filled the
+night with indefinable dread.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+You, who have not read poor Deeping’s “Assyrian Mythology”, cannot picture a
+creature with a huge, distorted head, and a tiny, dwarfed body&mdash;a thing
+inhuman, yet human&mdash;a man stunted and malformed by the cruel arts of
+brother men&mdash;a thing obnoxious to life, with but one passion, the passion
+to kill. You cannot conceive of the years of agony spent by that creature
+strapped to a wooden frame&mdash;in order to prevent his growth! You cannot
+conceive of his fierce hatred of all humanity, inflamed to madness by the
+Eastern drug, hashish, and directed against the enemies of Islam&mdash;the
+holders of the slipper&mdash;by the wonderful power of Hassan of Aleppo.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But I had not only read of such beings, I had encountered one!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And he was but one of the many instruments of the Hashishin. Perhaps the girl
+with the violet eyes was another. What else to be dreaded Hassan might hold in
+store for us I could not conjecture.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Do you wonder that I feared? Do you wonder that I hoped (I confess it), hoped
+that the slipper might be recovered without further bloodshed?
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap11"></a>
+CHAPTER XI<br/>
+THE HOLE IN THE BLIND</h2>
+
+<p>
+I stepped over to the door, where a constable stood on duty.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You observed a tall Eastern gentleman in the room a while ago, officer?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I did, sir.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“How long is he gone?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The man started and began to peer about anxiously.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That’s a funny thing, sir,” he said. “I was keeping my eyes specially upon
+him. I noticed him hovering around while Mr. Mostyn was speaking; but although
+I could have sworn he hadn’t passed out, he’s gone!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You didn’t notice his departure, then?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’m sorry to say I didn’t, sir.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The man clearly was perplexed, but I found small matter for wonder in the
+episode. I had more than suspected the stranger to be a spy of Hassan’s, and
+members of that strange company were elusive as will-o’-the-wisps.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bristol, at the far end of the room, was signalling to me. I walked back and
+joined him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Come over here,” he said, in a low voice, “and pretend to examine these
+things.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He glanced significantly to his left. Following the glance, my eyes fell upon
+the lean American; he was peering into the receptacle which held the holy
+slipper.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bristol led me across the room, and we both faced the wall and bent over a
+glass case. Some yellow newspaper cuttings describing its contents hung above
+it, and these we pretended to read.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Did you notice that man I glanced at?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Well, that’s Earl Dexter, the first crook in America! Ssh! Only goes in on
+very big things. We had word at the Yard he was in town; but we can’t touch
+him&mdash;we can only keep our eyes on him. He usually travels openly and in
+his own name, but this time he seems to have slipped over quietly. He always
+dresses the same and has just given me ‘good day!’ They call him The Stetson
+Man. We heard this morning that he had booked two first-class sailings in the
+Oceanic, leaving for New York three weeks hence. Now, Mr. Cavanagh, what is his
+game?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It has occurred to me before, Bristol,” I replied, “and you may remember that
+I mentioned the idea to you, that there might be a third party interested in
+the slipper. Why shouldn’t Earl Dexter be that third party?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Because he isn’t a fool,” rapped Bristol shortly. “Earl Dexter isn’t a man to
+gather up trouble for himself. More likely if his visit has anything really to
+do with the slipper he’s retained by Hassan and Company. Museum-breaking may be
+a bit out of the line of Hashishin!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This latter suggestion dovetailed with my own ideas, and oddly enough there was
+something positively wholesome in the notion of the straightforward crookedness
+of a mere swell cracksman.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then happened a singular thing, and one that effectually concluded our
+whispered colloquy. From the top end of the room, beyond the case containing
+the slipper, one of the yellow blinds came down with a run.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bristol turned in a flash. It was not a remarkable accident, and might portend
+no more than a loose cord; but when, having walked rapidly up the room, we
+stood before the lowered blind, it appeared that this was no accident at all.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Some four feet from the bottom of the blind (or five feet from the floor) a
+piece of linen a foot square had been neatly slashed out!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I glanced around the room. Several fashionably dressed visitors were looking
+idly in our direction, but I could fasten upon no one of them as a likely
+perpetrator.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bristol stared at me in perplexity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Who on earth did it,” he muttered, “and what the blazes for?”
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap12"></a>
+CHAPTER XII<br/>
+THE HASHISHIN WATCH</h2>
+
+<p>
+“The American gentleman has just gone out, sir,” said the sergeant at the door.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I nodded grimly and raced down the steps. Despite my half-formed desire that
+the slipper should be recovered by those to whom properly it belonged, I
+experienced at times a curious interest in its welfare. I cannot explain this.
+Across the hall in front of me I saw Earl Dexter passing out of the Museum. I
+followed him through into Kingsway and thence to Fleet Street. He sauntered
+easily along, a nonchalant gray figure. I had begun to think that he was bound
+for his hotel and that I was wasting my time when he turned sharply into quiet
+Salisbury Square; it was almost deserted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My heart leapt into my mouth with a presentiment of what was coming as I saw an
+elegant and beautifully dressed woman sauntering along in front of us on the
+far side.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Was it that I detected something familiar in her carriage, in the poise of her
+head&mdash;something that reminded me of former unforgettable encounters;
+encounters which without exception had presaged attempts upon the slipper of
+the Prophet? Or was it that I recollected how Dexter had booked two passages to
+America? I cannot say, but I felt my heart leap; I knew beyond any possibility
+of doubt that this meeting in Salisbury Square marked the opening of a new
+chapter in the history of the slipper.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Dexter slipped his arm within that of the girl in front of him and they paced
+slowly forward in earnest conversation. I suppose my action was very amateurish
+and very poor detective work; but regardless of discovery I crossed the road
+and passed close by the pair.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I am certain that Dexter was speaking as I came up, but, well out of earshot,
+his voice was suddenly arrested. His companion turned and looked at me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I was prepared for it, yet was thrilled electrically by the flashing glance of
+the violet eyes&mdash;for it was she&mdash;the beautiful harbinger of
+calamities!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My brain was in a whirl; complication piled itself upon complication; yet in
+the heart of all this bewilderment I thought I could detect the key of the
+labyrinth, but at the time my ideas were in disorder, for the violet eyes were
+not lowered but fixed upon me in cold scorn.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I knew myself helpless, and bending my head with conscious embarrassment I
+passed on hurriedly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I had work to do in plenty, but I could not apply my mind to it; and now,
+although the obvious and sensible thing was to go about my business, I wandered
+on aimlessly, my brain employed with a hundred idle conjectures and the query,
+“Where have I seen The Stetson Man?” seeming to beat, like a tattoo, in my
+brain. There was something magnetic about the accursed slipper, for without
+knowing by what route I had arrived there, I found myself in Great Orchard
+Street and close under the walls of the British Antiquarian Museum. Then I was
+effectually aroused from my reverie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Two men, both tall, stood in the shadow of a doorway on the Opposite side of
+the street, staring intently up at the Museum windows. It was a tropically hot
+afternoon and they stood in deepest shadow. No one else was in Orchard
+Street&mdash;that odd little backwater&mdash;at the time, and they stood gazing
+upward intently and gave me not even a passing glance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But I knew one for the Oriental visitor of the morning, and despite broad
+noonday and the hum of busy London about me, my blood seemed to turn to water.
+I stood rooted to the spot, held there by a most surprising horror.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For the gray-bearded figure of the other watcher was one I could never forget;
+its benignity was associated with the most horrible hours of my life, with
+deeds so dreadful that recollection to this day sometimes breaks my sleep,
+arousing me in the still watches, bathed in a cold sweat of fear.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was Hassan of Aleppo!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+If he saw me, if either of them saw me, I cannot say. What I should have done,
+what I might have done it is useless to speak of here&mdash;for I did nothing.
+Inert, thralled by the presence of that eerie, dreadful being, I watched them
+leave the shadow of the doorway and pace slowly on with their dignified Eastern
+gait.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then, knowing how I had failed in my plain duty to my fellow-men&mdash;how,
+finding a serpent in my path, I had hesitated to crush it, had weakly succumbed
+to its uncanny fascination&mdash;I made my way round to the door of the Museum.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap13"></a>
+CHAPTER XIII<br/>
+THE WHITE BEAM</h2>
+
+<p>
+That night the deviltry began. Mr. Mostyn found himself wholly unable to sleep.
+Many relics have curious histories, and the experienced archaeologist becomes
+callous to that uncanniness which seems to attach to some gruesome curios. But
+the slipper of the Prophet was different. No mere ghostly menace threatened its
+holders; an avenging scimitar followed those who came in contact with it;
+gruesome tragedies, mutilations, murders, had marked its progress throughout.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The night was still&mdash;as still as a London night can be; for there is
+always a vague murmuring in the metropolis as though the sleeping city breathed
+gently and sometimes stirred in its sleep.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then, distinct amid these usual nocturnal noises, rose another, unaccountable
+sound, a muffled crash followed by a musical tinkling.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mostyn sprang up in bed, drew on a dressing-gown, and took from the small safe
+at his bed-head the Museum keys and a loaded revolver. A somewhat dishevelled
+figure, pale and wild-eyed, he made his way through the private door and into
+the ghostly precincts of the Museum. He did not hesitate, but ascended the
+stairs and unlocked the door of the Assyrian gallery.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Along its ghostly aisles he passed, and before the door which gave admittance
+to the Burton Room paused, fumbling a moment for the key.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Inside the room something was moving!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mostyn was keenly alarmed; he knew that he must enter at once or never. He
+inserted the key in the lock, swung open the heavy door, stepped through and
+closed it behind him. He was a man of tremendous moral courage, for
+now,&mdash;alone in the apartment which harboured the uncanny relic, alone in
+the discharge of his duty, he stood with his back to the door trembling
+slightly, but with the idea of retreat finding no place in his mind.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One side of the room lay in blackest darkness; through the furthermost window
+of the other a faint yellowed luminance (the moonlight through the blind)
+spread upon the polished parquet flooring. But that which held the curator
+spell-bound&mdash;that which momentarily quickened into life the latent
+superstition, common to all mankind, was a beam of cold light which poured its
+effulgence fully upon the case containing the Prophet’s slipper! Where the
+other exhibits lay either in utter darkness or semi-darkness this one it seemed
+was supernaturally picked out by this lunar searchlight!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was ghostly-unnerving; but, the first dread of it passed, Mostyn recalled
+how during the day a hole inexplicably had been cut in that blind; he recalled
+that it had not been mended, but that the damaged blind had merely been rolled
+up again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And as a dawning perception of the truth came to him, as falteringly he
+advanced a step toward the mystic beam, he saw that one side of the case had
+been shattered&mdash;he saw the broken glass upon the floor; and in the dense
+shadow behind and under the beam of light, vaguely he saw a dull red object.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It moved&mdash;it seemed to live! It moved away from the case and in the
+direction of the eastern windows.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“My God!” whispered Mostyn; “it’s the Prophet’s slipper!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And wildly, blindly, he fired down the room. Later he knew that he had fired in
+panic, for nothing human was or could be in the place; yet his shot was not
+without effect. In the instant of its flash, something struck sharply against
+the dimly seen blind of one of the east windows; he heard the crash of broken
+glass.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He leapt to the switch and flooded the room with light. A fear of what it might
+hold possessed him, and he turned instantly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hard by the fragments of broken glass upon the floor and midway between the
+case and the first easterly window lay the slipper. A bell was ringing
+somewhere. His shot probably had aroused the attention of the policeman.
+Someone was clamouring upon the door of the Museum, too. Mostyn raced forward
+and raised the blind&mdash;that toward which the slipper had seemed to move.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The lower pane of the window was smashed. Blood was trickling down upon the
+floor from the jagged edges of the glass.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Hullo there! Open the door! Open the door!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bells were going all over the place now; sounds of running footsteps came from
+below; but Mostyn stood staring at the broken window and at the solid iron bars
+which protected it without, which were intact, substantial&mdash;which showed
+him that nothing human could possibly have entered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Yet the case was shattered, the holy slipper lay close beside him upon the
+floor, and from the broken window-pane blood was
+falling&mdash;drip-drip-drip...
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That was the story as I heard it half an hour later. For Inspector Bristol,
+apprised of the happening, was promptly on the scene; and knowing how keen was
+my interest in the matter, he rang me up immediately. I arrived soon after
+Bristol and found a perplexed group surrounding the uncanny slipper of the
+Prophet. No one had dared to touch it; the dread vengeance of Hassan of Aleppo
+would visit any unbeliever who ventured to lay hand upon the holy, bloody
+thing. Well we knew it, and as though it had been a venomous scorpion we, a
+company of up-to-date, prosaic men of affairs, stood around that dilapidated
+markoob, and kept a respectful distance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mostyn, an odd figure in pyjamas and dressing-gown, turned his pale,
+intellectual face to me as I entered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It will have to be put back ... secretly,” he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His voice was very unsteady. Bristol nodded grimly and glanced at the two
+constables, who, with a plain-clothes man unknown to me, made up that midnight
+company.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’ll do it, sir,” said one of the constables suddenly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“One moment”&mdash;Mostyn raised his hand!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the ensuing silence I could hear the heavy breathing of those around me. We
+were all looking at the slipper, I think.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Do you understand, fully,” the curator continued, “the risk you run?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I think so, sir,” answered the constable; “but I’m prepared to chance it.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The hands,” resumed Mostyn slowly, “of those who hitherto have ventured to
+touch it have been”&mdash;he hesitated&mdash;“cut off.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Your career in the Force would be finished if it happened to you, my lad,”
+said Bristol shortly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I suppose they’d look after me,” said the man, with grim humour.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“They would if you met with&mdash;an accident, in the discharge of your duty,”
+replied the inspector; “but I haven’t ordered you to do it, and I’m not going
+to.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“All right, sir,” said the man, with a sort of studied truculence, “I’ll take
+my chance.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I tried to stop him; Mostyn, too, stepped forward, and Bristol swore frankly.
+But it was all of no avail.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A sort of chill seemed to claim my very soul when I saw the constable stoop,
+unconcernedly pick up the slipper, and replace it in the broken case.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was out of a silence cathedral-like, awesome, that he spoke.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“All you want is a new pane of glass, sir,” he said&mdash;“and the thing’s
+done.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I anticipate in mentioning it here; but since Constable Hughes has no further
+place in these records I may perhaps be excused for dismissing him at this
+point.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was picked up outside the section house on the following evening with his
+right hand severed just above the wrist.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap14"></a>
+CHAPTER XIV<br/>
+A SCREAM IN THE NIGHT</h2>
+
+<p>
+The day that followed was one of the hottest which we experienced during the
+heat wave. It was a day crowded with happenings. The Burton Room was closed to
+the public, whilst a glazier worked upon the broken east window and a new blind
+was fitted to the west. Behind the workmen, guarded by a watchful
+commissionaire, yawned the shattered case containing the slipper.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I wondered if the visitors to the other rooms of the Museum realized, as I
+realized, that despite the blazing sunlight of tropical London, the shadow of
+Hassan of Aleppo lay starkly on that haunted building?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At about eleven o’clock, as I hurried along the Strand, I almost collided with
+the girl of the violet eyes! She turned and ran like the wind down Arundel
+Street, whilst I stood at the corner staring after her in blank amazement, as
+did other passers-by; for a man cannot with dignity race headlong after a
+pretty woman down a public thoroughfare!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My mystification grew hourly deeper; and Bristol wallowed in perplexities.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It’s the most horrible and confusing case,” he said to me when I joined him at
+the Museum, “that the Yard has ever had to handle. It bristles with outrages
+and murders. God knows where it will all end. I’ve had London scoured for a
+clue to the whereabouts of Hassan and Company and drawn absolutely blank! Then
+there’s Earl Dexter. Where does he come in? For once in a way he’s living in
+hiding. I can’t find his headquarters. I’ve been thinking&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He drew me aside into the small gallery which runs parallel with the Assyrian
+Room.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Dexter has booked two passages in the Oceanic. Who is his companion?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I wondered, I had wondered more than once, if his companion were my beautiful
+violet-eyed acquaintance. A scruple&mdash;perhaps an absurd
+scruple&mdash;hitherto had kept me silent respecting her, but now I determined
+to take Bristol fully into my confidence. A conviction was growing upon me that
+she and Earl Dexter together represented that third party whose existence we
+had long suspected. Whether they operated separately or on behalf of the
+Moslems (of which arrangement I could not conceive) remained to be seen. I was
+about to voice my doubts and suspicions when Bristol went on hurriedly&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I have thoroughly examined the Burton Room, and considering that the windows
+are thirty feet from the ground, that there is no sign of a ladder having stood
+upon the lawn, and that the iron bars are quite intact, it doesn’t look humanly
+possible for any one to have been in the room last night prior to Mostyn’s
+arrival!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“One of the dwarfs&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Not even one of the dwarfs,” said Bristol, “could have passed between those
+iron bars!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“But there was blood on the window!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I know there was, and human blood. It’s been examined!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He stared at me fixedly. The thing was unspeakably uncanny.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“To-night,” he went on, “I am remaining in here”&mdash;nodding toward the
+Assyrian Room&mdash;“and I have so arranged it that no mortal being can
+possibly know I am here. Mostyn is staying, and you can stay, too, if you care
+to. Owing to Professor Deeping’s will you are badly involved in the beastly
+business, and I have no doubt you are keen to see it through.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I am,” I admitted, “and the end I look for and hope for is the recovery of the
+slipper by its murderous owners!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I am with you,” said Bristol. “It’s just a point of honour; but I should be
+glad to make them a present of it. We’re ostentatiously placing a constable on
+duty in the hallway to-night&mdash;largely as a blind. It will appear that
+we’re taking no other additional precautions.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He hurried off to make arrangements for my joining him in his watch, and thus
+again I lost my opportunity of confiding in him regarding the mysterious girl.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I half anticipated, though I cannot imagine why, that Earl Dexter would put in
+an appearance, during the day. He did not do so, however, for Bristol had put a
+constable on the door who was well acquainted with the appearance of The
+Stetson Man. The inspector, in the course of his investigations, had come upon
+what might have been a clue, but what was at best a confusing one. Close by the
+wall of the curator’s house and lying on the gravel path he had found a part of
+a gold cuff link. It was of American manufacture.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Upon such slender evidence we could not justly assume that it pointed to the
+presence of Dexter on the night of the attempted robbery, but it served to
+complicate a matter already sufficiently involved.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In pursuance of Bristol’s plan, I concealed myself that evening just before the
+closing of the Museum doors, in a recess behind a heavy piece of Babylonian
+sculpture. Bristol was similarly concealed in another part of the room, and
+Mostyn joined us later.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Museum was closed; and so far as evidence went the authorities had relied
+again upon the bolts and bars hitherto considered impregnable, and upon the
+constable in the hall. The broken window was mended, the cut blind replaced,
+and within, in its shattered case, reposed the slipper of the Prophet.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All the blinds being lowered, the Assyrian Room was a place of gloom, yellowed
+on the western side by the moonlight through the blind. The door communicating
+with the Burton Room was closed but not fastened.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“They operated last night,” Bristol whispered to me, “at the exact time when
+the moonlight shone through the hole in the westerly blind on to the case. If
+they come to-night, and I am quite expecting them, they will have to dispense
+with that assistance; but they know by experience where to reach the case.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Despite our precautions,” I said, “they will almost certainly know that a
+watch is being kept.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“They may or they may not,” replied Bristol. “Either way I’m disposed to think
+there will be another attempt. Their mysterious method is so rapid that they
+can afford to take chances.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This was not my first night vigil since I had become in a sense the custodian
+of the relic, but it was quite the most dreary. Amid the tomb-like objects
+about us we seemed two puny mortals toying with stupendous things. We could not
+smoke and must converse only in whispers; and so the night wore on until I
+began to think that our watch would be dully uneventful.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Our big chance,” whispered Mostyn, “is in the fact that any day may change the
+conditions. They can’t afford to wait.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He ceased abruptly, grasping my arm. From somewhere, somewhere outside the
+building, we all three had heard a soft whistle. A moment of tense listening
+followed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“If only we could have had the place surrounded,” whispered Bristol&mdash;“but
+it was impossible, of course.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A faint grating noise echoed through the lofty Burton Room. Bristol slipped
+past me in the semi-gloom, and gently opened the communicating door a few
+inches.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A-tiptoe, I joined him, and craning across his shoulder saw a strange and
+wonderful thing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The newly glazed east window again was shattered with a booming crash! The
+yellow blind was thrust aside. A long something reached out toward the broken
+case. There was a sort of fumbling sound, and paralyzed with the wonder of
+it&mdash;for the window, remember, was thirty feet from the ground&mdash;I
+stood frozen to my post.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Not so Bristol. As the weird tentacle (or more exactly it reminded me of a
+gigantic crab’s claw) touched the case, the Inspector leapt forward. A white
+beam from his electric torch cut through to the broken cabinet.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The thing was withdrawn ... and with it went the slipper of the Prophet.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Raise the blinds!” cried Bristol. “Mr. Cavanagh! Mr. Mostyn! We must not let
+them give us the slip!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I got up the blind of the nearer window as Bristol raised the other. Not a
+living thing was in sight from either!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mostyn was beside me, his hand resting on my shoulder. I noted how he trembled.
+Bristol turned and looked back at us. The light from his pocket torch flashed
+upon the curator’s face; and I have never seen such an expression of horrified
+amazement as that which it wore. Faintly, I could hear the constable racing up
+the steps from the hall.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ideas of the supernatural came to us all, I know; when, with a scuffling sound
+not unlike that of a rat in a ceiling, something moved above us!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Damn my thick head!” roared Bristol, furiously. “He’s on the roof! It’s flat
+as a floor and there’s enough ivy alongside the water-spout on your house
+adjoining, Mr. Mostyn, to afford foothold to an invading army!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He plunged off toward the open door, and I heard him racing down the Assyrian
+Room.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“He had a short rope ladder fixed from the gutter!” he cried back at us.
+“Graham! Graham!” (the constable on duty in the hall)&mdash;“Get the front door
+open! Get...” His voice died away as he leapt down the stairs.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+From the direction of Orpington Square came a horrid, choking scream. It rose
+hideously; it fell, rose again&mdash;and died.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The thief escaped. We saw the traces upon the ivy where he had hastened down.
+Bristol ascended by the same route, and found where the ladder-hooks had twice
+been attached to the gutterway. Constable Graham, who was first actually to
+leave the building, declared that he heard the whirr of a re-started motor
+lower down Great Orchard Street.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bristol’s theory, later to be dreadfully substantiated, was that the thief had
+broken the glass and reached into the case with an arrangement similar to that
+employed for pruning trees, having a clutch at the end, worked with a cord.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Hassan has been too clever for us!” said the inspector. “But&mdash;what in
+God’s name did that awful screaming mean?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I had a theory, but I did not advance it then.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was not until nearly dawn that my theory, and Bristol’s, regarding the
+clutch arrangement, both were confirmed. For close under the railings which
+abut on Orpington Square, in a pool of blood we found just such an instrument
+as Bristol had described.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And still clutching it was a pallid and ghastly shrunken hand that had been
+severed from above the wrist!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Merciful God!” whispered the inspector&mdash;“look at the opal ring on the
+finger! Look at the bandage where he cut himself on the broken window-glass
+that first night, when Mr. Mostyn disturbed him. It wasn’t the Hashishin who
+stole the thing.... It’s Earl Dexter’s hand!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+No one spoke for a moment. Then&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Which of them has&mdash;” began Mostyn huskily.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The slipper of the Prophet?” interrupted Bristol. “I wonder if we shall ever
+know?”
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap15"></a>
+CHAPTER XV<br/>
+A SHRIVELLED HAND</h2>
+
+<p>
+Around a large square table in a room at New Scotland Yard stood a group of
+men, all of whom looked more or less continuously at something that lay upon
+the polished deal. One of the party, none other than the Commissioner himself,
+had just finished speaking, and in silence now we stood about the gruesome
+object which had furnished him with the text of his very terse address.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I knew myself privileged in being admitted to such a conference at the C.I.D.
+headquarters and owed my admission partly to Inspector Bristol, and partly to
+the fact that under the will of the late Professor Deeping I was concerned in
+the uncanny business we were met to discuss.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Novelty has a charm for every one; and to find oneself immersed in a maelstrom
+of Eastern devilry, with a group of scientific murderers in pursuit of a holy
+Moslem relic, and unexpectedly to be made a trustee of that dangerous
+curiosity, makes a certain appeal to the adventurous. But to read of such
+things and to participate in them are widely different matters. The slipper of
+the Prophet and the dreadful crimes connected with it, the mutilations,
+murders, the uncanny mysteries which made up its history, were filling my world
+with horror.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now, in silence we stood around that table at New Scotland Yard and watched, as
+though we expected it to move, the ghastly “clue” which lay there. It was a
+shrivelled human hand, and about the thumb and forefinger there still dryly
+hung a fragment of lint which had bandaged a jagged wound. On one of the
+shrunken fingers was a ring set with a large opal.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Inspector Bristol broke the oppressive silence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You see, sir,” he said, addressing the Commissioner, “this marks a new
+complication in the case. Up to this week although, unfortunately, we had made
+next to no progress, the thing was straightforward enough. A band of Eastern
+murderers, working along lines quite novel to Europe, were concealed somewhere
+in London. We knew that much. They murdered Professor Deeping, but failed to
+recover the slipper. They mutilated everyone who touched it mysteriously. The
+best men in the department, working night and day, failed to effect a single
+arrest. In spite of the mysterious activity of Hassan of Aleppo the slipper was
+safely lodged in the British Antiquarian Museum.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Commissioner nodded thoughtfully.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“There is no doubt,” continued Bristol, “that the Hashishin were watching the
+Museum. Mr. Cavanagh, here”&mdash;he nodded in my direction&mdash;“saw Hassan
+himself lurking in the neighbourhood. We took every precaution, observed the
+greatest secrecy; but in spite of it all a constable who touched the accursed
+thing lost his right hand. Then the slipper was taken.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He stopped, and all eyes again were turned to the table.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The Yard,” resumed Bristol slowly, “had information that Earl Dexter, the
+cleverest crook in America, was in England. He was seen in the Museum, and the
+night following the slipper was stolen. Then outside the place I
+found&mdash;that!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He pointed to the severed hand. No one spoke for a moment. Then&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The new problem,” said the Commissioner, “is this: who took the slipper,
+Dexter or Hassan of Aleppo?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That’s it, sir,” agreed Bristol. “Dexter had two passages booked in the
+Oceanic: but he didn’t sail with her, and&mdash;that’s his hand!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You say he has not been traced?” asked the Commissioner.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“No doctor known to the Medical Association,” replied Bristol, “is attending
+him! He’s not in any of the hospitals. He has completely vanished. The
+conclusion is obvious!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The evident deduction,” I said, “is that Dexter stole the slipper from the
+Museum&mdash;God knows with what purpose&mdash;and that Hassan of Aleppo
+recovered it from him.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You think we shall next hear of Earl Dexter from the river police?” suggested
+Bristol.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Personally,” replied the Commissioner, “I agree with Mr. Cavanagh. I think
+Dexter is dead, and it is very probable that Hassan and Company are already
+homeward bound with the slipper of the Prophet.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With all my heart I hoped that he might be right, but an intuition was with me
+crying that he was wrong, that many bloody deeds would be, ere the sacred
+slipper should return to the East.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap16"></a>
+CHAPTER XVI<br/>
+THE DWARF</h2>
+
+<p>
+The manner in which we next heard of the whereabouts of the Prophet’s slipper
+was utterly unforeseen, wildly dramatic. That the Hashishin were aware that I,
+though its legal trustee, no longer had charge of the relic nor knowledge of
+its resting-place, was sufficiently evident from the immunity which I enjoyed
+at this time from that ceaseless haunting by members of the uncanny
+organization ruled by Hassan. I had begun to feel more secure in my chambers,
+and no longer worked with a loaded revolver upon the table beside me. But the
+slightest unusual noise in the night still sufficed to arouse me and set me
+listening intently, to chill me with dread of what it might portend. In short,
+my nerves were by no means recovered from the ceaseless strain of the events
+connected with and arising out of the death of my poor friend, Professor
+Deeping.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One evening as I sat at work in my chambers, with the throb of busy Fleet
+Street and its thousand familiar sounds floating in to me through the open
+windows, my phone bell rang.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Even as I turned to take up the receiver a foreboding possessed me that my
+trusteeship was no longer to be a sinecure. It was Bristol who had rung me up,
+and upon very strange business.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“A development at last!” he said; “but at present I don’t know what to make of
+it. Can you come down now?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Where are you speaking from?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“From the Waterloo Road&mdash;a delightful neighbourhood. I shall be glad if
+you can meet me at the entrance to Wyatt’s Buildings in half an hour.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What is it? Have you found Dexter?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“No, unfortunately. But it’s murder!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I knew as I hung up the receiver that my brief period of peace was ended; that
+the lists of assassination were reopened. I hurried out through the court into
+Fleet Street, thinking of the key of the now empty case at the Museum which
+reposed at my bankers, thinking of the devils who pursued the slipper, thinking
+of the hundred and one things, strange and terrible, which went to make up the
+history of that gruesome relic.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Wyatt’s Buildings, Waterloo Road, are a gloomy and forbidding block of
+dwellings which seem to frown sullenly upon the high road, from which they are
+divided by a dark and dirty courtyard. Passing an iron gateway, you enter, by
+way of an arch, into this sinister place of uncleanness. Male residents in
+their shirt sleeves lounge against the several entrances. Bedraggled women
+nurse dirty infants and sit in groups upon the stone steps, rendering them
+almost impassable. But to-night a thing had happened in Wyatt’s Buildings which
+had awakened in the inhabitants, hardened to sordid crime, a sort of torpid
+interest.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Faces peered from most of the windows which commanded a view of the courtyard,
+looking like pallid blotches against the darkness; but a number of police
+confined the loungers within their several doorways, so that the yard itself
+was comparatively clear.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I had had some difficulty in forcing a way through the crowd which thronged the
+entrance, but finally I found myself standing beside Inspector Bristol and
+looking down upon that which had brought us both to Wyatt’s Buildings.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was no moon that night, and only the light of the lamp in the archway,
+with some faint glimmers from the stairways surrounding the court, reached the
+dirty paving. Bristol directed the light of a pocket-lamp upon the hunched-up
+figure which lay in the dust, and I saw it to be that of a dwarfish creature,
+yellow skinned and wearing only a dark loin cloth. He had a malformed and
+disproportionate head, a head that had been too large even for a big man. I
+knew after first glance that this was one of the horrible dwarfs employed by
+the Hashishin in their murderous business. It might even be the one who had
+killed Deeping; but this was impossible to determine by reason of the fact that
+the hideous, swollen head, together with the features, was completely crushed.
+I shall not describe the creature’s appearance in further detail.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Having given me an opportunity to examine the dead dwarf, Bristol returned the
+electric lamp to his pocket and stood looking at me in the semi-gloom. A
+constable stood on duty quite near to us, and others guarded the archway and
+the doors to the dwellings. The murmur of subdued voices echoed hollowly in the
+wells of the staircases, and a constant excited murmur proceeded from the crowd
+at the entrance. No pressmen had yet been admitted, though numbers of them were
+at the gates.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It happened less than an hour ago,” said Bristol. “The place was much as you
+see it now, and from what I can gather there came the sound of a shot and
+several people saw the dwarf fall through the air and drop where he lies!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The light was insufficient to show the expression upon the speaker’s face, but
+his voice told of a great wonder.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It is a bit like an Indian conjuring trick,” I said, looking up to the sky
+above us; “who fired the shot?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“So far,” replied Bristol, “I have failed to find out; but there’s a bullet in
+the thing’s head. He was dead before he reached the pavement.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Did no one see the flash of the pistol?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“No one that I have got hold of yet. Of course this kind of evidence is very
+unreliable; these people regularly go out of their way to mislead the police.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You think the body may have been carried here from somewhere else?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Oh, no; this is where it fell, right enough. You can see where his head struck
+the stones.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“He has not been moved at all?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“No; I shall not move him until I’ve worked out where in heaven’s name he can
+have fallen from! You and I have seen some mysterious things happen, Mr.
+Cavanagh, since the slipper of the Prophet came to England and brought these
+people”&mdash;he nodded toward the thing at our feet&mdash;“in its train; but
+this is the most inexplicable incident to date. I don’t know what to make of it
+at all. Quite apart from the question of where the dwarf fell from, who shot at
+him and why?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Have you no theory?” I asked. “The incident to my mind points directly to one
+thing. We know that this uncanny creature belonged to the organization of
+Hassan of Aleppo. We know that Hassan implacably pursues one object&mdash;the
+slipper. In pursuit of the slipper, then, the dwarf came here.
+Bristol!”&mdash;I laid my hand upon his arm, glancing about me with a very real
+apprehension&mdash;“the slipper must be somewhere near!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bristol turned to the constable standing hard by.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Remain here,” he ordered. Then to me: “I should like you to come up on to the
+roof. From there we can survey the ground and perhaps arrive at some
+explanation of how the dwarf came to fall upon that spot.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Passing the constable on duty at one of the doorways and making our way through
+the group of loiterers there, we ascended amid conflicting odours to the
+topmost floor. A ladder was fixed against the wall communicating with a trap in
+the ceiling. Several individuals in their shirt sleeves and all smoking clay
+pipes had followed us up. Bristol turned upon them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Get downstairs,” he said&mdash;“all the lot of you, and stop there!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With muttered imprecations our audience dispersed, slowly returning by the way
+they had come. Bristol mounted the ladder and opened the trap. Through the
+square opening showed a velvet patch spangled with starry points. As he passed
+up on to the roof and I followed him, the comparative cleanness of the air was
+most refreshing after the varied fumes of the staircase.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Side by side we leaned upon the parapet looking down into the dirty courtyard
+which was the theatre of this weird mystery; looking down upon the stage,
+sordidly Western, where a mystic Eastern tragedy had been enacted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I could see the constable standing beside the crushed thing upon the stones.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Now,” said Bristol, with a sort of awe in his voice, “where did he fall from?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And at his words, looking down at the spot where the dwarf lay, and noting that
+he could not possibly have fallen there from any of the buildings surrounding
+the courtyard, an eerie sensation crept over me; for I was convinced that the
+happening was susceptible of no natural explanation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I had heard&mdash;who has not heard?&mdash;of the Indian rope trick, where a
+fakir throws a rope into the air which remains magically suspended whilst a boy
+climbs upward and upward until he disappears into space. I had never credited
+accounts of the performance; but now I began seriously to wonder if the arts of
+Hassan of Aleppo were not as great or greater than the arts of fakir. But the
+crowning mystery to my mind was that of the Hashishin’s death. It would seem
+that as he had hung suspended in space he had been shot!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You say that someone heard the sound of the shot?” I asked suddenly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Several people,” replied Bristol; “but no one knows, or no one will say, from
+what direction it came. I shall go on with the inquiry, of course, and
+cross-examine every soul in Wyatt’s Buildings. Meanwhile, I’m open to confess
+that I am beaten.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the velvet sky countless points blazed tropically. The hum of the traffic in
+Waterloo Road reached us only in a muffled way. Sordidness lay beneath us, but
+up there under the heavens we seemed removed from it as any Babylonian
+astronomer communing with the stars.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When, some ten minutes later, I passed out into the noise of Waterloo Road, I
+left behind me an unsolved mystery and took with me a great dread; for I knew
+that the quest of the sacred slipper was not ended, I knew that another tragedy
+was added to its history&mdash;and I feared to surmise what the future might
+hold for all of us.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap17"></a>
+CHAPTER XVII<br/>
+THE WOMAN WITH THE BASKET</h2>
+
+<p>
+Deep in thought respecting the inexplicable nature of this latest mystery, I
+turned in the direction of the bridge, and leaving behind me an ever-swelling
+throng at the gate of Wyatt’s Buildings, proceeded westward.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The death of the dwarf had lifted the case into the realms of the marvellous,
+and I noted nothing of the bustle about me, for mentally I was still surveying
+that hunched-up body which had fallen out of empty space.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then in upon my preoccupation burst a woman’s scream!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I aroused myself from reverie, looking about to right and left. Evidently I had
+been walking slowly, for I was less than a hundred yards from Wyatt’s
+Buildings, and hard by the entrance to an uninviting alley from which I thought
+the scream had proceeded.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And as I hesitated, for I had no desire to become involved in a drunken brawl,
+again came the shrill scream: “Help! help!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I cannot say if I was the only passer-by who heard the cry; certainly I was the
+only one who responded to it. I ran down the narrow street, which was
+practically deserted, and heard windows thrown up as I passed for the cries for
+help continued.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Just beyond a patch of light cast by a street lamp a scene was being enacted
+strange enough at any time and in any place, but doubly singular at that hour
+of the night, or early morning, in a lane off the Waterloo Road.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+An old woman, from whose hand a basket of provisions had fallen, was struggling
+in the grasp of a tall Oriental! He was evidently trying to stifle her screams
+and at the same time to pinion her arms behind her!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I perceived that there was more in this scene than met the eye. Oriental
+footpads are rarities in the purlieus of Waterloo Road. So much was evident;
+and since I carried a short, sharp argument in my pocket, I hastened to advance
+it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At the sight of the gleaming revolver barrel the man, who was dressed in dark
+clothes and wore a turban, turned and ran swiftly off. I had scarce a glimpse
+of his pallid brown face ere he was gone, nor did the thought of pursuit enter
+my mind. I turned to the old woman, who was dressed in shabby black and who was
+rearranging her thick veil in an oddly composed manner, considering the nature
+of the adventure that had befallen her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She picked up her basket, and turned away. Needless to say I was rather shocked
+at her callous ingratitude, for she offered no word of thanks, did not even
+glance in my direction, but made off hurriedly toward Waterloo Road.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I had been on the point of inquiring if she had sustained any injury, but I
+checked the words and stood looking after her in blank wonderment. Then my
+ideas were diverted into a new channel. I perceived, as she passed under an
+adjacent lamp, that her basket contained provisions such as a woman of her
+appearance would scarcely be expected to purchase. I noted a bottle of wine, a
+chicken, and a large melon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The nationality of the assailant from the first had marked the affair for no
+ordinary one, and now a hazy notion of what lay behind all this began to come
+to me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Keeping well in the shadows on the opposite side of the way, I followed the
+woman with the basket. The lane was quite deserted; for, the disturbance over,
+those few residents who had raised their windows had promptly lowered them
+again. She came out into Waterloo Road, crossed over, and stood waiting by a
+stopping-place for electric cars. I saw her arranging a cloth over her basket
+in such a way as effectually to conceal the contents. A strong mental
+excitement possessed me. The detective fever claims us all at one time or
+another, I think, and I had good reason for pursuing any inquiry that promised
+to lead to the elucidation of the slipper mystery. A theory, covering all the
+facts of the assault incident, now presented itself, and I stood back in the
+shadow, watchful; in a degree, exultant.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A Greenwich-bound car was hailed by the woman with the basket. I could not be
+mistaken, I felt sure, in my belief that she cast furtive glances about her as
+she mounted the steps. But, having seen her actually aboard, my attention
+became elsewhere engaged.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All now depended upon securing a cab before the tram car had passed from view!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I counted it an act of Providence that a disengaged taxi appeared at that
+moment, evidently bound for Waterloo Station. I ran out into the road with cane
+upraised.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As the man drew up&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Quick!” I cried. “You see that Greenwich car&mdash;nearly at the Ophthalmic
+Hospital? Follow it. Don’t get too near. I will give you further instructions
+through the tube.” I leapt in. We were off!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The rocking car ahead was rounding the bend now toward St. George’s Circus. As
+it passed the clock and entered South London Road it stopped. I raised the
+tube.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Pass it slowly!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We skirted the clock tower, and bore around to the right. Then I drew well back
+in the corner of the cab.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The woman with the basket was descending! “Pull up a few yards beyond!” I
+directed. As the car re-started, and passed us, the taxi became stationary. I
+peered out of the little window at the back.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The woman was returning in the direction of Waterloo Road!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Drive slowly back along Waterloo Road,” was my next order. “Pretend you are
+looking for a fare; I will keep out of sight.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The man nodded. It was unlikely that any one would notice the fact that the cab
+was engaged.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I was borne back again upon my course. The woman kept to the right, and, once
+we were entered into the straight road which leads to the bridge, I again
+raised the speaking-tube.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Pull up,” I said. “On the right-hand side is an old woman carrying a basket,
+fifty yards ahead. Do you see her? Keep well behind, but don’t lose sight of
+her.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The man drew up again and sat watching the figure with the basket until it was
+almost lost from sight. Then slowly we resumed our way. I would have continued
+the pursuit afoot now, but I feared that my quarry might again enter a vehicle.
+She did not do so, however, but coming abreast of the turning in which the
+mysterious assault had taken place, she crossed the road and disappeared from
+view.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I leapt out of the cab, thrust half a crown into the man’s hand, and ran on to
+the corner. The night was now far advanced, and I knew that the chances of
+detection were thereby increased. But the woman seemed to have abandoned her
+fears, and I saw her just ahead of me walking resolutely past the lamp beyond
+which a short time earlier she had met with a dangerous adventure.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Since the opposite side of the street was comparatively in darkness, I slipped
+across, and in a state of high nervous tension pursued this strange work of
+espionage. I was convinced that I had forestalled Bristol and that I was hot
+upon the track of those who could explain the mystery of the dead dwarf.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The woman entered the gate of the block of dwellings even more forbidding in
+appearance than those which that night had staged a dreadful drama.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As the figure with the basket was lost from view I crept on, and in turn
+entered the evil-smelling hallway. I stepped cautiously, and standing beneath a
+gaslight protected by a wire frame, I congratulated myself upon having reached
+that point of vantage as silently as any Sioux stalker.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Footsteps were receding up the stone stairs. Craning my neck, I peered up the
+well of the staircase. I could not see the woman, but from the sound of her
+tread it was possible to count the landings which she passed. When she had
+reached the fourth, and I heard her step upon yet another flight, I knew that
+she must be bound for the topmost floor; and observing every precaution, almost
+holding my breath in a nervous endeavour to make not the slightest sound,
+rapidly I mounted the stairs.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I was come to the third landing in this secret fashion when quite distinctly I
+heard the grating of a key in a lock!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Since four doors opened upon each of the landings, at all costs, I thought, I
+must learn by which door she entered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Throwing caution to the winds I raced up the remaining flights ... and there at
+the top the woman confronted me, with blazing eyes!&mdash;with eyes that
+thrilled every nerve; for they were violet eyes, the only truly violet eyes I
+have ever seen! They were the eyes of the woman who like a charming, mocking
+will-o’-the-wisp had danced through this tragic scene from the time that poor
+Professor Deeping had brought the Prophet’s slipper to London up to this
+present hour!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There at the head of those stone steps in that common dwelling-house I knew
+her&mdash;and in the violet eyes it was written that she knew, and feared, me!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What do you want? Why are you following me?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She made no endeavour to disguise her voice. Almost, I think, she spoke the
+words involuntarily.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I stood beside her. Quickly as she had turned from the door at my ascent, I had
+noted that it was that numbered forty-eight which she had been about to open.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You waste words,” I said grimly. “Who lives there?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I nodded in the direction of the doorway. The violet eyes watched me with an
+expression in their depths which I find myself wholly unable to describe. Fear
+predominated, but there was anger, too, and with it a sort of entreaty which
+almost made me regret that I had taken this task upon myself. From beneath the
+shabby black hat escaped an errant lock of wavy hair wholly inconsistent with
+the assumed appearance of the woman. The flickering gaslight on the landing
+sought out in that wonderful hair shades which seemed to glow with the soft
+light seen in the heart of a rose. The thick veil was raised now and all
+attempts at deception abandoned. At bay she faced me, this secret woman whom I
+knew to hold the key to some of the darkest places which we sought to explore.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I live there,” she said slowly. “What do you want with me?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I want to know,” I replied, “for whom are those provisions in your basket?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She watched me fixedly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“And I want to know,” I continued, “something that only you can tell me. We
+have met before, madam, but you have always eluded me. This time you shall not
+do so. There’s much I have to ask of you, but particularly I want to know who
+killed the Hashishin who lies dead at no great distance from here!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“How can I tell you that? Of what are you speaking?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Her voice was low and musical; that of a cultured woman. She evidently
+recognized the futility of further subterfuge in this respect.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You know quite well of what I am speaking! You know that you can tell me if
+any one can! The fact that you go disguised alone condemns you! Why should I
+remind you of our previous meetings&mdash;of the links which bind you to the
+history of the Prophet’s slipper?” She shuddered and closed her eyes. “Your
+present attitude is a sufficient admission!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She stood silent before me, with something pitiful in her pose&mdash;a
+wonderfully pretty woman, whose disarranged hair and dilapidated hat could not
+mar her beauty; whose clumsy, ill-fitting garments could not conceal her lithe
+grace.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Our altercation had not thus far served to arouse any of the inhabitants and on
+that stuffy landing, beneath the flickering gaslight, we stood alone, a group
+of two which epitomized strange things.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then, with that quietly dramatic note which marks real life entrances and
+differentiates them from the loudly acclaimed episodes of the stage, a third
+actor took up his cue.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Both hands, Mr. Cavanagh!” directed an American voice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nerves atwitch, I started around in its direction.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+From behind the slightly opened door of No. 48 protruded a steel barrel,
+pointed accurately at my head!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I hesitated, glancing from the woman toward the open door.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Do it quick!” continued the voice incisively. “You are up against a desperate
+man, Mr. Cavanagh. Raise your hands. Carneta, relieve Mr. Cavanagh of his gun!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Instantly the girl, with deft fingers, had obtained possession of my revolver.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Step inside,” said the crisp, strident voice. Knowing myself helpless and
+quite convinced that I was indeed in the clutches of desperate people, I
+entered the doorway, the door being held open from within. She whom I had heard
+called Carneta followed. The door was reclosed; and I found myself in a
+perfectly bare and dim passageway. From behind me came the order&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Go right ahead!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Into a practically unfurnished room, lighted by one gas jet, I walked. Some
+coarse matting hung before the two windows and a fairly large grip stood on the
+floor against one wall. A gas-ring was in the hearth, together with a few cheap
+cooking utensils.
+</p>
+
+<br/>
+<p>
+I turned and faced the door. First entered Carneta, carrying the basket; then
+came a man with a revolver in his left hand and his right arm strapped across
+his chest and swathed in bandages. One glance revealed the fact that his right
+hand had been severed&mdash;revealed the fact, though I knew it already, that
+my captor was Earl Dexter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He looked even leaner than when I had last seen him. I had no doubt that his
+ghastly wound had occasioned a tremendous loss of blood. His gaunt face was
+positively emaciated, but the steely gray eyes had lost nothing of their
+brightness. There was a good deal about Mr. Earl Dexter, the cracksman, that
+any man must have admired.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Shut the door, Carneta,” he said quietly. His companion closed the door and
+Dexter sat down on the grip, regarding me with his oddly humorous smile.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You’re a visitor I did not expect, Mr. Cavanagh,” he said. “I expected someone
+worse. You’ve interfered a bit with my plans but I don’t know that I can’t
+rearrange things satisfactorily. I don’t think I’ll stop for supper,
+though&mdash;” He glanced at the girl, who stood silent by the door.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Just pack up the provisions,” he directed, nodding toward the basket&mdash;“in
+the next room.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She departed without a word.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That’s a noticeable dust coat you’re wearing, Mr. Cavanagh,” said the
+American; “it gives me a great notion. I’m afraid I’ll have to borrow it.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He glanced, smiling, at the revolver in his left hand and back again to me.
+There was nothing of the bully about him, nothing melodramatic; but I took off
+the coat without demur and threw it across to him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It will hide this stump,” he said grimly; “and any of the Hashishin gentlemen
+who may be on the look-out&mdash;though I rather fancy the road is clear at the
+moment&mdash;will mistake me for you. See the idea? Carneta will be in a cab
+and I’ll be in after her and away before they’ve got time to so much as
+whistle.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Very awkwardly he got into the coat.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“She’s a clever girl, Carneta,” he said. “She’s doctored me all along since
+those devils cut my hand off.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As he finished speaking Carneta returned.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She had discarded her rags and wore a large travelling coat and a fashionable
+hat.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Ready?” asked Dexter. “We’ll make a rush for it. We meant to go to-night
+anyway. It’s getting too hot here!” He turned to me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Sorry to say,” he drawled, “I’ll have to tie you up and gag you. Apologize;
+but it can’t be helped.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Carneta nodded and went out of the room again, to return almost immediately
+with a line that looked as though it might have been employed for drying
+washing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Hands behind you,” rapped Dexter, toying with the revolver&mdash;“and think
+yourself lucky you’ve got two!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was no mistaking the manner of man with whom I had to deal, and I obeyed;
+but my mind was busy with a hundred projects. Very neatly the girl bound my
+wrists, and in response to a slight nod from Dexter threw the end of the line
+up over a beam in the sloping ceiling, for the room was right under the roof,
+and drew it up in such a way that, my wrists being raised behind me, I became
+utterly helpless. It was an ingenious device indicating considerable
+experience.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Just tie his handkerchief around his mouth,” directed Dexter: “that will keep
+him quiet long enough for our purpose. I hope you will be released soon, Mr.
+Cavanagh,” he added. “Greatly regret the necessity.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Carneta bound the handkerchief over my mouth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Dexter extinguished the gas.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Mr. Cavanagh,” he said, “I’ve gone through hell and I’ve lost the most useful
+four fingers and a thumb in the United States to get hold of the Prophet’s
+slipper. Any one can have it that’s open to pay for it&mdash;but I’ve got to
+retire on the deal, so I’ll drive a hard bargain! Good-night!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was a sound of retreating footsteps, and I heard the entrance door close
+quietly.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap18"></a>
+CHAPTER XVIII<br/>
+WHAT CAME THROUGH THE WINDOW</h2>
+
+<p>
+I had not been in my unnatural position for many minutes before I began to
+suffer agonies, agonies not only physical but mental; for standing there like
+some prisoner of the Inquisition, it came to me how this dismantled apartment
+must be the focus of the dreadful forces of Hassan of Aleppo!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That Earl Dexter had the slipper of the Prophet I no longer doubted, and that
+he had sustained, in this dwelling beneath the roof, an uncanny siege during
+the days which had passed since the theft from the Antiquarian Museum, was
+equally certain. Helpless, gagged, I pictured those hideous creatures, evil
+products of the secret East, who might, nay, who must surround that place! I
+thought of the horrible little yellow man who lay dead in Wyatt’s Buildings;
+and it became evident to me that the house in which I was now imprisoned must
+overlook the back of those unsavoury tenements. The windows, sack-covered now,
+no doubt commanded a view of the roofs of the buildings. One of the mysteries
+that had puzzled us was solved. It was Earl Dexter who had shot the yellow
+dwarf as he was bound for this very room! But how humanly the Hashishin had
+proposed to gain his goal, how he had travelled through empty space&mdash;for
+from empty space the shot had brought him down&mdash;I could not imagine.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I knew something of the almost supernatural attributes of these people. From
+Professor Deeping’s book I knew of the incredible feats which they could
+perform when under the influence of the drug hashish. From personal experience
+also I knew that they had powers wholly abnormal.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The pain in my arms and back momentarily increased. An awesome silence ruled. I
+tortured myself with pictures of murderous yellow men possessed of the power
+claimed by the Mahatmas, of levitation. Mentally I could see a distorted
+half-animal creature carrying a great gleaming knife and floating
+supernaturally toward me through the night!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A soft pattering sound became perceptible on the sloping roof above!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I think I have never known such intense and numbing fear as that which now
+descended upon me. Perhaps I may be forgiven it. A more dreadful situation it
+would be hard to devise. Knowing that I was on the fifth story of a house,
+bound, helpless, I knew, too, that a second mystic guardian of the slipper was
+come to accomplish the task in which the first had failed!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I began to pray fervently.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Neither of the windows were closed; and now through the intense darkness I
+heard one of them being raised up&mdash;up&mdash;up...
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The sacking was pulled aside inch by inch.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Silhouetted against the faintly luminous background I saw a hunched, unnatural
+figure. The real was more dreadful even than the imaginary&mdash;for some stray
+beam of light touched into cold radiance a huge curved knife which the visitant
+held between his teeth!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My fear became a madness, and I twisted my body violently in a wild endeavour
+to free myself. A dreadful pain shot through my left shoulder, and the whole
+nightmare scene&mdash;the thing with the knife at the window&mdash;the
+low-ceiled room-began to fade away from me. I seemed to be falling into deep
+water.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A splintering crash and the sound of shouting formed my last recollections ere
+unconsciousness came.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I found myself lying in an armchair with Bristol forcing brandy between my
+lips. My left arm hung limply at my side and the pain in my dislocated shoulder
+was excruciating.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Thank God you are all right, Mr. Cavanagh!” said the inspector. “I got the
+surprise of my life when we smashed the door in and found you tied up here!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You came none too soon,” I said feebly. “God knows how Providence directed you
+here.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Providence it was,” replied Bristol. “From the roof of Wyatt’s
+Buildings&mdash;you know the spot?&mdash;I saw the second yellow devil coming.
+By God! They meant to have it to-night! They don’t value their lives a brass
+farthing against that damned slipper!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“But how&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Along the telegraph-wires, Mr. Cavanagh! They cross Wyatt’s Buildings and
+cross this house. It was a moonless night or we should have seen it at once! I
+watched him, saw him drop to this roof&mdash;and brought the men around to the
+front.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Did he, that awful thing, escape?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“He dropped full forty feet into a tree&mdash;from the tree to the ground, and
+went off like a cat!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Earl Dexter has escaped us,” I said, “and he has the slipper!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“God help him!” replied Bristol. “For by now he has that hell-pack at his
+heels! What a case! Heavens above, it will drive me mad!”
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap19"></a>
+CHAPTER XIX<br/>
+A RAPPING AT MIDNIGHT</h2>
+
+<p>
+Inspector Bristol finished his whisky at a gulp and stood up, a tall, massive
+figure, stretching himself and yawning.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The detective of fiction would be hard at work on this case, now,” he said,
+smiling, “but I don’t even pretend to be. I am at a standstill and I don’t care
+who knows it.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You have absolutely no clue to the whereabouts of Earl Dexter?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Not the slightest, Mr. Cavanagh. You hear a lot about the machinery of the
+law, but as a matter of fact, looking for a clever man hidden in London is a
+good deal like looking for a needle in a haystack. Then, he may have been
+bluffing when he told you he had the Prophet’s slipper. He’s already had his
+hand cut off through interfering with the beastly thing, and I really can’t
+believe he would take further chances by keeping it in his possession.
+Nevertheless, I should like to find him.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He leaned back against the mantelpiece, scratching his head perplexedly. In
+this perplexity he had my sympathy. No such pursuit, I venture to say, had ever
+before been required of Scotland Yard as this of the slipper of the Prophet. An
+organization founded in 1090, which has made a science of assassination, which
+through the centuries has perfected the malign arts, which, lingering on in a
+dark spot in Syria, has suddenly migrated and established itself in London, is
+a proposition almost unthinkable.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was hard to believe that even the daring American cracksman should have
+ventured to touch that blood-stained relic of the Prophet, that he should have
+snatched it away from beneath the very eyes of the fanatics who fiercely
+guarded it. What he hoped to gain by his possession of the slipper was not
+evident, but the fact remained that if he could be believed, he had it, and
+provided Scotland Yard’s information was accurate, he still lurked in hiding
+somewhere in London.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meanwhile, no clue offered to his hiding-place, and despite the ceaseless
+vigilance of the men acting under Bristol’s orders, no trace could be found of
+Hassan of Aleppo nor of his fiendish associates.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“My theory is,” said Bristol, lighting a cigarette, “that even Dexter’s
+cleverness has failed to save him. He’s probably a dead man by now, which
+accounts for our failing to find him; and Hassan of Aleppo has recovered the
+slipper and returned to the East, taking his gruesome company with
+him&mdash;God knows how! But that accounts for our failing to find him.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I stood up rather wearily. Although poor Deeping had appointed me legal
+guardian of the relic, and although I could render but a poor account of my
+stewardship, let me confess that I was anxious to take that comforting theory
+to my bosom. I would have given much to have known beyond any possibility of
+doubt that the accursed slipper and its blood-lustful guardian were far away
+from England. Had I known so much, life would again have had something to offer
+me besides ceaseless fear, endless watchings. I could have slept again,
+perhaps; without awaking, clammy, peering into every shadow, listening, nerves
+atwitch to each slightest sound disturbing the night; without groping beneath
+the pillow for my revolver.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Then you think,” I said, “that the English phase of the slipper’s history is
+closed? You think that Dexter, minus his right hand, has eluded British
+law&mdash;that Hassan and Company have evaded retribution?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I do!” said Bristol grimly, “and although that means the biggest failure in my
+professional career, I am glad&mdash;damned glad!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Shortly afterward he took his departure; and I leaned from the window, watching
+him pass along the court below and out under the arch into Fleet Street. He was
+a man whose opinions I valued, and in all sincerity I prayed now that he might
+be right; that the surcease of horror which we had recently experienced after
+the ghastly tragedies which had clustered thick about the haunted slipper,
+might mean what he surmised it to mean.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The heat to-night was very oppressive. A sort of steaming mist seemed to rise
+from the court, and no cooling breeze entered my opened windows. The clamour of
+the traffic in Fleet Street came to me but remotely. Big Ben began to strike
+midnight. So far as I could see, residents on the other stairs were all abed
+and a velvet shadow carpet lay unbroken across three parts of the court. The
+sky was tropically perfect, cloudless, and jewelled lavishly. Indeed, we were
+in the midst of an Indian summer; it seemed that the uncanny visitants had
+brought, together with an atmosphere of black Eastern deviltry, something, too,
+of the Eastern climate.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The last stroke of the Cathedral bell died away. Other more distant bells still
+were sounding dimly, but save for the ceaseless hum of the traffic, no unusual
+sound now disturbed the archaic peace of the court.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I returned to my table, for during the time that had passed I had badly
+neglected my work and now must often labour far into the night. I was just
+reseated when there came a very soft rapping at the outer door!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+No doubt my mood was in part responsible, but I found myself thinking of Poe’s
+weird poem, “The Raven”; and like the character therein I found myself
+hesitating.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I stole quietly into the passage. It was in darkness. How odd it is that in
+moments of doubt instinctively one shuns the dark and seeks the light. I
+pressed the switch lighting the hall lamp, and stood looking at the closed
+door.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Why should this late visitor have rapped in so uncanny a fashion in preference
+to ringing the bell?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I stepped back to my table and slipped a revolver into my pocket.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The muffled rapping was repeated. As I stood in the study doorway I saw the
+flap of the letter-box slowly raised!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Instantly I extinguished both lights. You may brand me as childishly timid, but
+incidents were fresh in my memory which justified all my fears.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A faintly luminous slit in the door showed me that the flap was now fully
+raised. It was the dim light on the stairway shining through. Then quite
+silently the flap was lowered. Came the soft rapping again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Who’s there?” I cried.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+No one answered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Wondering if I were unduly alarming myself, yet, I confess, strung up tensely
+in anticipation that this was some device of the phantom enemy, I stood in
+doubt.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The silence remained unbroken for thirty seconds or more. Then yet again it was
+disturbed by that ghostly, muffled rapping.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I advanced a step nearer to the door.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Who’s there?” I cried loudly. “What do you want?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The flap of the letter box began to move, and I formed a sudden determination.
+Making no sound in my heelless Turkish slippers I crept close up to the door
+and dropped upon my knees.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thereupon the flap became fully lifted, but from where I crouched beneath it I
+was unable to see who or what was looking in; yet I hesitated no longer. I
+suddenly raised myself and thrust the revolver barrel through the opening!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Who are you?” I cried. “Answer or I fire!”&mdash;and along the barrel I peered
+out on to the landing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Still no one answered. But something impalpable&mdash;a powder&mdash;a
+vapour&mdash;to this hour I do not know what&mdash;enveloped me with its
+nauseating fumes; was puffed fully into my face! My eyes, my mouth, my nostrils
+became choked up, it seemed, with a deadly stifling perfume.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Wildly, feeling that everything about me was slipping away, that I was sinking
+into a void, for ought I knew that of dissolution, I pulled the trigger once,
+twice, thrice...
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“My God!”&mdash;the words choked in my throat and I reeled back into the
+passage&mdash;“it’s not loaded!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I threw up my arms to save myself, lurched, and fell forward into what seemed a
+bottomless pit.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap20"></a>
+CHAPTER XX<br/>
+THE GOLDEN PAVILION</h2>
+
+<p>
+When I opened my eyes it was to a conviction that I dreamed. I lay upon a
+cushioned divan in a small apartment which I find myself at a loss adequately
+to describe.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was a yellow room, then, its four walls being hung with yellow silk, its
+floor being entirely covered by a yellow Persian carpet. One lamp, burning in a
+frame of some lemon coloured wood and having its openings filled with green
+glass, flooded the place with a ghastly illumination. The lamp hung by gold
+chains from the ceiling, which was yellow. Several low tables of the same
+lemon-hued wood as the lamp-frame stood around; they were inlaid in fanciful
+designs with gleaming green stones. Turn my eyes where I would, clutch my
+aching head as I might, this dream chamber would not disperse, but remained
+palpable before me&mdash;yellow and green and gold.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was a niche behind the divan upon which I lay framed about with yellow
+wood. In it stood a golden bowl and a tall pot of yellow porcelain; I lay amid
+yellow cushions having golden tassels. Some of them were figured with vivid
+green devices.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To contemplate my surroundings assuredly must be to court madness. No door was
+visible, no window; nothing but silk and luxury, yellow and green and gold.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To crown all, the air was heavy with a perfume wholly unmistakable by one
+acquainted with Egypt’s ruling vice. It was the reek of smouldering
+hashish&mdash;a stench that seemed to take me by the throat, a vapour damnable
+and unclean. I saw that a little censer, golden in colour and inset with
+emeralds, stood upon the furthermost corner of the yellow carpet. From it rose
+a faint streak of vapour; and I followed the course of the sickly scented smoke
+upward through the still air until in oily spirals it lost itself near to the
+yellow ceiling. As a sick man will study the veriest trifle I studied that wisp
+of smoke, pencilled grayly against the silken draperies, the carven tables,
+against the almost terrifying persistency of the yellow and green and gold.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I strove to rise, but was overcome by vertigo and sank back again upon the
+yellow cushions. I closed my eyes, which throbbed and burned, and rested my
+head upon my hands. I ceased to conjecture if I dreamed or was awake. I knew
+that I felt weak and ill, that my head throbbed agonizingly, that my eyes
+smarted so as to render it almost impossible to keep them open, that a
+ceaseless humming was in my ears.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For some time I lay endeavouring to regain command of myself, to prepare to
+face again that scene which had something horrifying in its yellowness, touched
+with the green and gold.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And when finally I reopened my eyes, I sat up with a suppressed cry. For a tall
+figure in a yellow robe from beneath which peeped yellow slippers, a figure
+crowned with a green turban, stood in the centre of the apartment!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was that of a majestic old man, white bearded, with aquiline nose, and the
+fierce eagle eyes of a fanatic set upon me sternly, reprovingly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With folded arms he stood watching me, and I drew a sharp breath and rose
+slowly to my feet.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There amid the yellow and green and gold, amid the abominable reek of burning
+hashish I stood and faced Hassan of Aleppo!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+No words came to me; I was confounded.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hassan spoke in that gentle voice which I had heard only once before.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Mr. Cavanagh,” he said, “I have brought you here that I might warn you. Your
+police are seeking me night and day, and I am fully alive to my danger whilst I
+stay in your midst. But for close upon a thousand years the Sheikh-al-jebal,
+Lord of the Hashishin, has guarded the traditions and the relics of the
+Prophet, Salla-’llahu ’ale yhi wasellem! I, Hassan of Aleppo, am Sheikh of the
+Order to-day, and my sacred duty has brought me here.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The piercing gaze never left my face. I was not yet by any means my own man and
+still I made no reply.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You have been wise,” continued Hassan, “in that you have never touched the
+sacred slipper. Had you lain hands upon it, no secrecy could have availed you.
+The eye of the Hashishin sees all. There is a shaft of light which the true
+Believer perceives at night as he travels toward El-Medineh. It is the light
+which uprises, a spiritual fire, from the tomb of the Prophet (Salla-’llahu
+’aleyhi wasellem!). The relics also are radiant, though in a lesser degree.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He took a step toward me, spreading out his lean brown hands, palms downward.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“A shaft of light,” he said impressively, “shines upward now from London. It is
+the light of the holy slipper.” He gazed intently at the yellow drapery at the
+left of the divan, but as though he were looking not at the wall but through
+it. His features worked convulsively; he was a man inspired. “I see it now!” he
+almost whispered&mdash;“that white light by which the guardians of the relic
+may always know its resting place!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I managed to force words to my lips.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“If you know where the slipper is,” I said, more for the sake of talking than
+for anything else, “why do you not recover it?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hassan turned his eyes upon me again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Because the infidel dog,” he cried loudly, “who has soiled it with his unclean
+touch, defies us&mdash;mocks us! He has suffered the loss of the offending
+hand, but the evil ginn protect him; he is inspired by efreets! But God is
+great and Mohammed is His only Prophet! We shall triumph; but it is written,
+oh, daring infidel, that you again shall become the guardian of the slipper!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He spoke like some prophet of old and I stared at him fascinated. I was loth to
+believe his words.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“When again,” he continued, “the slipper shall be in the receptacle of which
+you hold the key, that key must be given to me!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I thought I saw the drift of his words now; I thought I perceived with what
+object I had been trapped and borne to this mysterious abode for whose
+whereabouts the police vainly were seeking. By the exercise of the gift of
+divination it would seem that Hassan of Aleppo had forecast the future history
+of the accursed slipper or believed that he had done so. According to his own
+words I was doomed once more to become trustee of the relic. The key of the
+case at the Antiquarian Museum, to which he had prophesied the slipper’s
+return, would be the price of my life! But&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“In order that these things may be fulfilled,” he continued, “I must permit you
+to return to your house. So it is written, so it shall be. Your life is in my
+hands; beware when it is demanded of you that you hesitate not in yielding up
+the key!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He raised his hands before him, making a sort of obeisance, I doubt not in the
+direction of Mecca, drew aside one of the yellow hangings behind him and
+disappeared, leaving me alone again in that nightmare apartment of yellow and
+green and gold. A moment I stood watching the swaying curtain. Utter silence
+reigned, and a sort of panic seized me infinitely greater than that occasioned
+by the presence of the weird Sheikh. I felt that I must escape from the place
+or that I should become raving mad.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I leapt forward to the curtain which Hassan had raised and jerked it aside; it
+had concealed a door. In this door and about level with my eyes was a kind of
+little barred window through which shone a dim green light. I bent forward,
+peering into the place beyond, but was unable to perceive anything save a vague
+greenness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And as I peered, half believing that the whole episode was a dreadful, fevered
+dream, the abominable fumes of hashish grew, or seemed to grow, quite suddenly
+insupportable. Through the square opening, from the green void beyond, a cloud
+of oily vapour, pungent, stifling, resembling that of burning Indian hemp,
+poured out and enveloped me!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With a gasping cry I fell back, fighting for breath, for a breath of clean air
+unpolluted with hashish. But every inhalation drew down into my lungs the fumes
+that I sought to escape from. I experienced a deathly sickness; I seemed to be
+sinking into a sea of hashish, amid bubbles of yellow and green and gold, and I
+knew no more until, struggling again to my feet, surrounded by utter
+darkness&mdash;I struck my head on the corner of my writing-table ... for I lay
+in my own study!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My revolver, unloaded, was upon the table beside me. The night was very still.
+I think it must have been near to dawn.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“My God!” I whispered, “did I dream it all? Did I dream it all?”
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap21"></a>
+CHAPTER XXI<br/>
+THE BLACK TUBE</h2>
+
+<p>
+“There’s no doubt in my mind,” said Inspector Bristol, “that your experience
+was real enough.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The sun was shining into my room now, but could not wholly disperse the cloud
+of horror which lay upon it. That I had been drugged was sufficiently evident
+from my present condition, and that I had been taken away from my chambers
+Inspector Bristol had satisfactorily proved by an examination of the soles of
+my slippers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It was a clever trick,” he said. “God knows what it was they puffed into your
+face through the letter box, but the devilish arts of ten centuries, we must
+remember, are at the command of Hassan of Aleppo! The repetition of the trick
+at the mysterious place you were taken to is particularly interesting. I should
+say you won’t be in a hurry to peer through letter boxes and so forth in the
+future?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I shook my aching head.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That accursed yellow room,” I replied, “stank with the fumes of hashish. It
+may have been some preparation of hashish that was used to drug me.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bristol stood looking thoughtfully from the window.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It was a nightmare business, Mr. Cavanagh,” he said; “but it doesn’t advance
+our inquiry a little bit. The prophecy of the old man with the white
+beard&mdash;whom you assure me to be none other than Hassan of Aleppo&mdash;is
+something we cannot very well act upon. He clearly believes it himself; for he
+has released you after having captured you, evidently in order that you may be
+at liberty to take up your duty as trustee of the slipper again. If the slipper
+really comes back to the Museum the fact will show Hassan to be something
+little short of a magician. I shan’t envy you then, Mr. Cavanagh, considering
+that you hold the keys of the case!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“No,” I replied wearily. “Poor Professor Deeping thought that he acted in my
+interests and that my possession of the keys would constitute a safeguard. He
+was wrong. It has plunged me into the very vortex of this ghastly affair.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It is maddening,” said Bristol, “to know that Hassan and Company are snugly
+located somewhere under our very noses, and that all Scotland Yard can find no
+trace of them. Then to think that Hassan of Aleppo, apparently by means of some
+mystical light, has knowledge of the whereabouts of the slipper and
+consequently of the whereabouts of Earl Dexter (another badly wanted man) is
+extremely discouraging! I feel like an amateur; I’m ashamed of myself!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bristol departed in a condition of irritable uncertainty.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My head in my hands, I sat for long after his departure, with the phantom
+characters of the ghoulish drama dancing through my brain. The distorted yellow
+dwarfs seemed to gibe apish before me. Severed hands clenched and unclenched
+themselves in my face, and gleaming knives flashed across the mental picture.
+Predominant over all was the stately figure of Hassan of Aleppo, that
+benignant, remorseless being, that terrible guardian of the holy relic who
+directed the murderous operations. Earl Dexter, The Stetson Man, with his
+tightly bandaged arm, his gaunt, clean-shaven face and daredevil smile,
+figured, too, in my feverish daydream; nor was that other character missing,
+the girl with the violet eyes whose beautiful presence I had come to dread; for
+like a sybil announcing destruction her appearances in the drama had almost
+invariably presaged fresh tragedies. I recalled my previous meetings with this
+woman of mystery. I recalled my many surmises regarding her real identity and
+association with the case. I wondered why in the not very distant past I had
+promised to keep silent respecting her; I wondered why up to that present
+moment, knowing beyond doubt that her activities were inimical to my interests,
+were criminal, I had observed that foolish pledge.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And now my door-bell was ringing&mdash;as intuitively I had anticipated. So
+certain was I of the identity of my visitor that as I walked along the passage
+I was endeavouring to make up my mind how I should act, how I should receive
+her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I opened the door; and there, wearing European garments but a green turban ...
+stood Hassan of Aleppo!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When I say that amazement robbed me of the power to speak, to move, almost to
+think, I doubt not you will credit me. Indeed, I felt that modern London was
+crumbling about me and that I was become involved in the fantastic mazes of one
+of those Oriental intrigues such as figure in the Romance of Abu Zeyd, or with
+which most European readers have been rendered familiar by the glowing pages of
+“The Thousand and One Nights.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Effendim,” said my visitor, “do not hesitate to act as I direct!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In his gloved hand he carried what appeared to be an ebony cane. He raised and
+pointed it directly at me. I perceived that it was, in fact, a hollow tube.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Death is in my hand,” he continued; “enter slowly and I will follow you.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Still the sense of unreality held me thralled and my brain refused me service.
+Like an hypnotic subject I walked back to my study, followed by my terrible
+visitor, who reclosed the door behind him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He sat facing me across my littered table with the mysterious tube held loosely
+in his grasp.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+How infinitely more terrifying are perils unknown than those known and
+appreciated! Had a European armed with a pistol attempted a similar act of
+coercion, I cannot doubt that I should have put up some sort of fight; had he
+sat before me now as Hassan of Aleppo sat, with a comprehensible weapon thus
+laid upon his knees, I should have taken my chance, should have attacked him
+with the lamp, with a chair, with anything that came to my hand.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But before this awful, mysterious being who was turning my life into channels
+unsuspected, before that black tube with its unknown potentialities, I sat in a
+kind of passive panic which I cannot attempt to describe, which I had never
+experienced before and have never known since.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“There is one about to visit you,” he said, “whom you know, whom I think you
+expect. For it is written that she shall come and such events cast a shadow
+before them. I, too, shall be present at your meeting!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His eagle eyes opened widely; they burned with fanaticism.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Already she is here!” he resumed suddenly, and bent as one listening. “She
+comes under the archway; she crossed the courtyard&mdash;and is upon the stair!
+Admit her, effendim; I shall be close behind you!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The door-bell rang.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With the consciousness that the black tube was directed toward the back of my
+head, I went and opened the door. My mind was at work again, and busy with
+plans to terminate this impossible situation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On the landing stood a girl wearing a simple white frock which fitted her
+graceful figure perfectly. A white straw hat, of the New York tourist type,
+with a long veil draped from the back suited her delicate beauty very well. The
+red mouth drooped a little at the corners, but the big violet eyes, like lamps
+of the soul, seemed afire with mystic light.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Mr. Cavanagh,” she said, very calmly and deliberately, “there is only one way
+now to end all this trouble. I come from the man who can return the slipper to
+where it belongs; but he wants his price!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Her quiet speech served completely to restore my mental balance, and I noted
+with admiration that her words were so chosen as to commit her in no way. She
+knew quite well that thus far she might appear in the matter with impunity, and
+she clearly was determined to say nothing that could imperil her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Will you please come in?” I said quietly&mdash;and stood aside to admit her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Exhibiting wonderful composure, she entered&mdash;and there, in the badly
+lighted hallway came face to face with my other visitor!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was a situation so dramatic as to seem unreal.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Away from that tall figure retreated the girl with the violet eyes&mdash;and
+away&mdash;until she stood with her back to the wall. Even in the gloom I could
+see that her composure was deserting her; her beautiful face was pallid.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Oh, God!” she whispered, all but inaudible&mdash;“You!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hassan, grasping the black rod in his hand, signed to her to enter the study.
+She stood quite near to me, with her eyes fixed upon him. I bent closer to her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“My revolver&mdash;in left-hand table drawer,” I breathed in her ear. “Get it.
+He is watching me!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I could not tell if my words had been understood, for, never taking her gaze
+from the Sheikh of the Assassins, she sidled into the study. I followed her;
+and Hassan came last of all. Just within the doorway he stood, confronting us.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You have come,” he said, addressing the girl and speaking in perfect English
+but with a marked accent, “to open your impudent negotiations through Mr.
+Cavanagh for the return of the thrice holy relic to the Museum! Your companion,
+the man, who is inspired by the Evil One, has even dared to demand ransom for
+the slipper from me!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hassan was majestic in his wrath; but his eyes were black with venomous hatred.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“He has suffered the penalty which the Koran lays down; he has lost his right
+hand. But the lord of all evil protects him, else ere this he had lost his
+life! Move no closer to that table!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I started. Either Hassan of Aleppo was omniscient or he had overheard my
+whispered words!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Easily I could slay you where you stand!” he continued. “But to do so would
+profit me nothing. This meeting has been revealed to me. Last night I witnessed
+it as I slept. Also it has been revealed to me by Erroohanee, in the mirror of
+ink, that the slipper of the Prophet, Salla-’llahu ’ale yhi wasellem! Shall
+indeed return to that place accursed, that infidel eyes may look upon it! It is
+the will of Allah, whose name be exalted, that I hold my hand, but it is also
+His will that I be here, at whatever danger to my worthless body.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He turned his blazing eyes upon me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“To-morrow, ere noon,” he said, “the slipper will again be in the Museum from
+which the man of evil stole it. So it is written; obscure are the ways. We met
+last night, you and I, but at that time much was dark to me that now is light.
+The holy ’Alee spoke to me in a vision, saying: ‘There are two keys to the case
+in which it will be locked. Secure one, leaving the other with him who holds
+it! Let him swear to be secret. This shall be the price of his life!’”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The black tube was pointed directly at my forehead.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Effendim,” concluded the speaker, “place in my hand the key of the case in the
+Antiquarian Museum!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hands convulsively clenched, the girl was looking from me to Hassan. My throat
+felt parched, but I forced speech to my lips.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Your omniscience fails you,” I said. “Both keys are at my bank!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Blacker grew the fierce eyes&mdash;and blacker. I gave myself up for lost; I
+awaited death&mdash;death by some awful, unique means&mdash;with what courage I
+could muster.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+From the court below came the sound of voices, the voices of passers-by who so
+little suspected what was happening near to them that had someone told them
+they certainly had refused to credit it. The noise of busy Fleet Street came
+drumming under the archway, too.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then, above all, another sound became audible. To this day I find myself unable
+to define it; but it resembled the note of a silver bell.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Clearly it was a signal; for, hearing it, Hassan dropped the tube and glanced
+toward the open window.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In that instant I sprang upon him!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That I had to deal with a fanatic, a dangerous madman, I knew; that it was his
+life or mine, I was fully convinced. I struck out then and caught him fairly
+over the heart. He reeled back, and I made a wild clutch for the damnable tube,
+horrid, unreasoning fear of which thus far had held me inert.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I heard the girl scream affrightedly, and I knew, and felt my heart chill to
+know, that the tube had been wrenched from my hand! Hassan of Aleppo, old man
+that he appeared, had the strength of a tiger. He recovered himself and hurled
+me from him so that I came to the floor crashingly half under my writing-table!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Something he cried back at me, furiously&mdash;and like an enraged animal, his
+teeth gleaming out from his beard, he darted from the room. The front door
+banged loudly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Shaken and quivering, I got upon my feet. On the threshold, in a state of
+pitiable hesitancy, stood the pale, beautiful accomplice of Earl Dexter. One
+quick glance she flashed at me, then turned and ran!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Again the door slammed. I ran to the window, looking out into the court. The
+girl came hurrying down the steps, and with never a backward glance ran on and
+was lost to view in one of the passages opening riverward.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Out under the arch, statelily passed a tall figure&mdash;and Inspector Bristol
+was entering! I saw the detective glance aside as the two all but met. He stood
+still, and looked back!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Bristol!” I cried, and waved my arms frantically.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Stop him! Stop him! It’s Hassan of Aleppo!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bristol was not the only one to hear my wild cry&mdash;not the only one to dash
+back under the arch and out into Fleet Street.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Hassan of Aleppo was gone!
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap22"></a>
+CHAPTER XXII<br/>
+THE LIGHT OF EL-MEDINEH</h2>
+
+<p>
+Bristol and I walked slowly in the direction of the entrance of the British
+Antiquarian Museum. It was the day following upon the sensational scene in my
+chambers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“There’s very little doubt,” said Bristol, “that Earl Dexter has the slipper
+and that Hassan of Aleppo knows where Dexter is in hiding. I don’t know which
+of the two is more elusive. Hassan apparently melted into thin air yesterday;
+and although The Stetson Man has never within my experience employed disguises,
+no one has set eyes upon him since the night that he vanished from his lodgings
+off the Waterloo Road. It’s always possible for a man to baffle the police by
+remaining closely within doors, but during all the time that has elapsed Dexter
+must have taken a little exercise occasionally, and the missing hand should
+have betrayed him.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The wonder to me is,” I replied, “that he has escaped death at the hands of
+the Hashishin. He is a supremely daring man, for I should think that he must be
+carrying the slipper of the Prophet about with him!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I would rather he did it than I!” commented Bristol. “For sheer audacity
+commend me to The Stetson Man! His idea no doubt was to use you as intermediary
+in his negotiations with the Museum authorities, but that plan failing, he has
+written them direct, thoughtfully omitting his address, of course!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We were, in fact, at that moment bound for the Museum to inspect this latest
+piece of evidence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The crowning example of the man’s audacity and cleverness,” added my
+companion, “is his having actually approached Hassan of Aleppo with a similar
+proposition! How did he get in touch with him? All Scotland Yard has failed to
+find any trace of that weird character!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Birds of a feather&mdash;” I suggested.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“But they are not birds of a feather!” cried Bristol. “On your own showing,
+Hassan of Aleppo is simply waiting his opportunity to balance Dexter’s account
+forever! I always knew Dexter was a clever man; I begin to think he’s the most
+daring genius alive!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We mounted the steps of the Museum. In the hallway Mostyn, the curator, awaited
+us. Having greeted Bristol and myself he led the way to his private office, and
+from a pigeon-hole in his desk took out a letter typewritten upon a sheet of
+quarto paper.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bristol spread it out upon the blotting pad and we bent over it curiously.
+</p>
+
+<p class="letter">
+SIR&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p class="letter">
+I believe I can supply information concerning the whereabouts of the missing
+slipper of Mohammed. As any inquiry of this nature must be extremely perilous
+to the inquirer and as the relic is a priceless one, my fee would be 10,000
+pounds. The fanatics who seek to restore the slipper to the East must not know
+of any negotiations, therefore I omit my address, but will communicate further
+if you care to insert instructions in the agony column of Times.<br/>
+<br/>
+Faithfully,<br/>
+EARL DEXTER
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bristol laughed grimly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It’s a daring game,” he said; “a piece of barefaced impudence quite
+characteristic.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“He’s posing as a sort of private detective now, and is prepared for a trifling
+consideration to return the slipper which he stole himself! He must know,
+though, that we have his severed hand at the Yard to be used in evidence
+against him.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Is the Burton Room open to the public again?” I asked Mostyn.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It is open, yes,” he replied, “and a quite unusual number of visitors come
+daily to gaze at the empty case which once held the slipper of the Prophet.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Has the case been mended?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes; it is quite intact again; only the exhibit is missing.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We ascended the stairs, passed along the Assyrian Room, which seemed to be
+unusually crowded, and entered the lofty apartment known as the Burton Room.
+The sunblinds were drawn, and a sort of dim, religious light prevailed therein.
+A group of visitors stood around an empty case at the farther end of the
+apartment.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You see,” said Mostyn, pointing, “that empty case has a greater attraction
+than all the other full ones!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But I scarcely heeded his words, for I was intently watching the movements of
+one of the group about the empty case. I have said that the room was but dimly
+illuminated, and this fact, together no doubt with some effect of reflected
+light, enhanced by my imagination, perhaps produced the phenomenon which was
+occasioning me so much amazement.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Remember that my mind was filled with memories of weird things, that I often
+found myself thinking of that mystic light which Hassan of Aleppo had called
+the light of El-Medineh&mdash;that light whereby, undeterred by distance, he
+claimed to be able to trace the whereabouts of any of the relics of the
+Prophet.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bristol and Mostyn walked on then; but I stood just within the doorway,
+intently, breathlessly watching an old man wearing an out-of-date Inverness
+coat and a soft felt hat. He had a gray beard and moustache, and long, untidy
+hair, walked with a stoop, and in short was no unusual type of Visitor to that
+institution.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But it seemed to me, and the closer I watched him the more convinced I became,
+that this was no optical illusion, that a faint luminosity, a sort of elfin
+light, played eerily about his head!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As Bristol and Mostyn approached the case the old man began to walk toward me
+and in the direction of the door. The idea flashed through my mind that it
+might be Hassan of Aleppo himself, Hassan who had predicted that the stolen
+slipper should that day be returned to the Museum!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then he came abreast of me, passed me, and I felt that my surmise had been
+wrong. I saw Bristol, from farther up the room, turn and look back. Something
+attracted his trained eye, I suppose, which was not perceptible to me. But he
+suddenly came striding along. Obviously he was pursuing the old man, who was
+just about to leave the apartment. Seeing that the latter had reached the
+doorway, Bristol began to run.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The old man turned; and amid a chorus of exclamations from the astonished
+spectators, Bristol sprang upon him!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+How it all came about I cannot say, cannot hope to describe; but there was a
+short, sharp scuffle, the crack of a well-directed blow ... and Bristol was
+rolling on his back, the old man, hatless, was racing up the Assyrian Room, and
+everyone in the place seemed to be shouting at once!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bristol, with blood streaming from his face, staggered to his feet, clutching
+at me for support.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“After him, Mr. Cavanagh!” he cried hoarsely. “It’s your turn to-day! After
+him! That’s Earl Dexter!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mostyn waited for no more, but went running quickly through the Assyrian Room.
+I may mention here that at the head of the stairs he found the caped Inverness
+which had served to conceal Dexter’s mutilated arm, and later, behind a piece
+of statuary, a wig and a very ingenious false beard and moustache were
+discovered. But of The Stetson Man there was no trace. His brief start had
+enabled him to make good his escape.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As Mostyn went off, and a group of visitors flocked in our direction, Bristol,
+who had been badly shaken by the blow, turned to them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You will please all leave the Burton Room immediately,” he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Looks of surprise greeted his words; but with his handkerchief raised to his
+face, he peremptorily repeated them. The official note in his voice was readily
+to be detected; and the wonder-stricken group departed with many a backward
+glance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As the last left the Burton Room, Bristol pointed, with a rather shaky finger,
+at the soft felt hat which lay at his feet. It had formed part of Dexter’s
+disguise. Close beside it lay another object which had evidently fallen from
+the hat&mdash;a dull red thing lying on the polished parquet flooring.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“For God’s sake don’t go near it!” whispered Bristol. “The room must be closed
+for the present. And now I’m off after that man. Step clear of it.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His words were unnecessary; I shunned it as a leprous thing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was the slipper of the Prophet!
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap23"></a>
+CHAPTER XXIII<br/>
+THE THREE MESSAGES</h2>
+
+<p>
+I stood in the foyer of the Astoria Hotel. About me was the pulsing stir of
+transatlantic life, for the tourist season was now at its height, and I counted
+myself fortunate in that I had been able to secure a room at this
+establishment, always so popular with American visitors. Chatting groups
+surrounded me and I became acquainted with numberless projects for visiting the
+Tower of London, the National Gallery, the British Museum, Windsor Castle, Kew
+Gardens, and the other sights dear to the heart of our visiting cousins. Loaded
+lifts ascended and descended. Bradshaws were in great evidence everywhere; all
+was hustle and glad animation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The tall military-looking man who stood beside me glanced about him with a
+rather grim smile.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You ought to be safe enough here, Mr. Cavanagh!” he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I ought to be safe enough in my own chambers,” I replied wearily. “How many of
+these pleasure-seeking folk would believe that a man can be as greatly in peril
+of his life in Fleet Street as in the most uncivilized spot upon the world map?
+Do you think if I told that prosperous New Yorker who is buying a cigar yonder,
+for instance, that I had been driven from my chambers by a band of Eastern
+assassins founded some time in the eleventh century, he would believe it?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I am certain he wouldn’t!” replied Bristol. “I should not have credited it
+myself before I was put in charge of this damnable case.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My position at that hour was in truth an incredible one. The sacred slipper of
+Mohammed lay once more in the glass case at the Antiquarian Museum from which
+Earl Dexter had stolen it. Now, with apish yellow faces haunting my dreams,
+with ghostly menaces dogging me day and night, I was outcast from my own rooms
+and compelled, in self-defence, to live amid the bustle of the Astoria. So
+wholly nonplussed were the police authorities that they could afford me no
+protection. They knew that a group of scientific murderers lay hidden in or
+near to London; they knew that Earl Dexter, the foremost crook of his day, was
+also in the metropolis&mdash;and they could make no move, were helpless;
+indeed, as Bristol had confessed, were hopeless!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bristol, on the previous day, had unearthed the Greek cigar merchant, Acepulos,
+who had replaced the slipper in its case (for a monetary consideration). He had
+performed a similar service when the bloodstained thing had first been put upon
+exhibition at the Museum, and for a considerable period had disappeared. We had
+feared that his religious pretensions had not saved him from the avenging
+scimitar of Hassan; but quite recently he had returned again to his Soho shop,
+and in time thus to earn a second cheque.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As Bristol and I stood glancing about the foyer of the hotel, a plain-clothes
+officer whom I knew by sight came in and approached my companion. I could not
+divine the fact, of course, but I was about to hear news of the money-loving
+and greatly daring Graeco-Moslem.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The detective whispered something to Bristol, and the latter started, and
+paled. He turned to me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“They haven’t overlooked him this time, Mr. Cavanagh,” he said. “Acepulos has
+been found dead in his room, nearly decapitated!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I shuddered involuntarily. Even there, amid the chatter and laughter of those
+light-hearted tourists, the shadow of Hassan of Aleppo was falling upon me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bristol started immediately for Soho and I parted from him in the Strand, he
+proceeding west and I eastward, for I had occasion that morning to call at my
+bank. It was the time of the year when London is full of foreigners, and as I
+proceeded in the direction of Fleet Street I encountered more than one
+Oriental. To my excited imagination they all seemed to glance at me furtively,
+with menacing eyes, but in any event I knew that I had little to fear whilst I
+contrived to keep to the crowded thoroughfares. Solitude I dreaded and with
+good reason.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then at the door of the bank I found fresh matter for reflection. The assistant
+manager, Mr. Colby, was escorting a lady to the door. As I stood aside, he
+walked with her to a handsome car which waited, and handed her in with marks of
+great deference. She was heavily veiled and I had no more than a glimpse of
+her, but she appeared to be of middle age and had gray hair and a very stately
+manner.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I told myself that I was unduly suspicious, suspicious of everyone and of
+everything; yet as I entered the bank I found myself wondering where I had seen
+that dignified, grayhaired figure before. I even thought of asking the manager
+the name of his distinguished customer, but did not do so, for in the
+circumstances such an inquiry must have appeared impertinent.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My business transacted, I came out again by the side entrance which opens on
+the little courtyard, for this branch of the London County and Provincial Bank
+occupies a corner site.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A ragged urchin who was apparently waiting for me handed me a note. I looked at
+him inquiringly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“For me?” I said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes, sir. A dark gentleman pointed you out as you was goin’ into the bank.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The note was written upon a half sheet of paper and, doubting if it was really
+intended for me, I unfolded it and read the following&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p class="letter">
+Mr. Cavanagh, take the keys of the case containing the holy slipper to your
+hotel this evening without fail.<br/>
+HASSAN.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Who gave you this, boy?” I asked sharply.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“A foreign gentleman, sir, very dark&mdash;like an Indian.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Where is he?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“He went off in a cab, sir, after he give me the note.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I handed the boy sixpence and slowly pursued my way. An idea was forming in my
+mind to trap the enemy by seeming acquiescent. I wondered if my movements were
+being watched at that moment. Since it was more than probable, I returned to
+the bank, entered, and made some trivial inquiry of a cashier, and then came
+out again and walked on as far as the Report office.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I had not been in the office more than five minutes before I received a
+telegram from Inspector Bristol. It had been handed in at Soho, and the message
+was an odd one.
+</p>
+
+<p class="letter">
+CAVANAGH, Report, London.<br/>
+Plot afoot to steal keys. Get them from bank and join me 11 o’clock at Astoria.
+Have planned trap.<br/>
+<br/>
+BRISTOL.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This was very mysterious in view of the note so recently received by me, but I
+concluded that Bristol had hit upon a similar plan to that which was forming in
+my own mind. It seemed unnecessarily hazardous, though, actually to withdraw
+the keys from their place of safety.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Pondering deeply upon the perplexities of this maddening case, I shortly
+afterward found myself again at the bank. With the manager I descended to the
+strong-room, and the safe was unlocked which contained the much-sought-for keys
+of the case at the Antiquarian Museum.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“There are the keys, quite safe!&mdash;and by the way, this is my second visit
+here this morning, Mr. Cavanagh,” said the manager, with whom I was upon rather
+intimate terms. “A foreign lady who has recently become a customer of the bank
+deposited some valuable jewels here this morning&mdash;less than an hour ago,
+in fact.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Indeed,” I said, and my mind was working rapidly. “The lady who came in the
+large blue car, a gray-haired lady?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes,” was the reply, “did you notice her, then?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I nodded and said no more, for in truth I had no more to say. I had good reason
+to respect the uncanny powers of Hassan of Aleppo, but I doubted if even his
+omniscience could tell him (since I had actually gone down into the
+strong-room) whether when I emerged I had the keys, or whether my visit and
+seeming acceptance of his orders had been no more than a subterfuge!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That the Hashishin had some means of communicating with me at the Astoria was
+evident from the contents of the note which I had received, and as I walked in
+the direction of the hotel my mind was filled with all sorts of misgivings. I
+was playing with fire! Had I done rightly or should I have acted otherwise? I
+sighed wearily. The dark future would resolve all my doubts.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When I reached the Astoria, Bristol had not arrived. I lighted a cigarette and
+sat down in the lounge to await his coming. Presently a boy approached, handing
+me a message which had been taken down from the telephone by the clerk. It was
+as follows&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p class="letter">
+Tell Mr. Cavanagh, who is waiting in the hotel, to take what I am expecting to
+his chambers, and say that I will join him there in twenty minutes.<br/>
+<br/>
+INSPECTOR BRISTOL.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Again I doubted the wisdom of Bristol’s plan. Had I not fled to the Astoria to
+escape from the dangerous solitude of my rooms? That he was laying some trap
+for the Hashishin was sufficiently evident, and whilst I could not justly
+suspect him of making a pawn of me I was quite unable to find any other
+explanation of this latest move.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I was torn between conflicting doubts. I glanced at my watch. Yes! There was
+just time for me to revisit the bank ere joining Bristol at my chambers! I
+hesitated. After all, in what possible way could it jeopardize his plans for me
+merely to pretend to bring the keys?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Hang it all!” I said, and jumped to my feet. “These maddening conjectures will
+turn my brain! I’ll let matters stand as they are, and risk the consequences!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I hesitated no longer, but passed out from the hotel and once more directed my
+steps in the direction of Fleet Street.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As I passed in under the arch through which streamed many busy workers, I told
+myself that to dread entering my own chambers at high noon was utterly
+childish. Yet I did dread doing so! And as I mounted the stair and came to the
+landing, which was always more or less dark, I paused for quite a long time
+before putting the key in the lock.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The affair of the accursed slipper was playing havoc with my nerves, and I
+laughed dryly to note that my hand was not quite steady as I turned the key,
+opened my door, and slipped into the dim hallway.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As I closed it behind me, something, probably a slight noise, but possibly
+something more subtle&mdash;an instinct&mdash;made me turn rapidly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There facing me stood Hassan of Aleppo.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap24"></a>
+CHAPTER XXIV<br/>
+I KEEP THE APPOINTMENT</h2>
+
+<p>
+That moment was pungent with drama. In the intense hush of the next five
+seconds I could fancy that the world had slipped away from me and that I was
+become an unsubstantial thing of dreams. I was in no sense master of myself;
+the effect of the presence of this white-bearded fanatic was of a kind which I
+am entirely unable to describe. About Hassan of Aleppo was an aroma of evil,
+yet of majesty, which marked him strangely different from other men&mdash;from
+any other that I have ever known. In his venerable presence, remembering how he
+was Sheikh of the Assassins, and recalling his bloody history, I was always
+conscious of a weakness, physical and mental. He appalled me; and now, with my
+back to the door, I stood watching him and watching the ominous black tube
+which he held in his hand. It was a weapon unknown to Europe and therefore more
+fearful than the most up-to-date of death-dealing instruments.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hassan of Aleppo pointed it toward me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The keys, effendim,” he said; “hand me the keys!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He advanced a step; his manner was imperious. The black tube was less than a
+foot removed from my face. That I had my revolver in my pocket could avail me
+nothing, for in my pocket it must remain, since I dared to make no move to
+reach it under cover of that unfamiliar, terrible weapon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The black eyes of Hassan glared insanely into mine.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You will have placed them in your pocketcase,” he said. “Take it out; hand it
+to me!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I obeyed, for what else could I do? Taking the case from my pocket, I placed it
+in his lean brown hand.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+An expression of wild exultation crossed his features; the eagle eyes seemed to
+be burning into my brain. A puff of hot vapour struck me in the
+face&mdash;something which was expelled from the mysterious black tube. And
+with memories crowding to my mind of similar experiences at the hands of the
+Hashishin, I fell back, clutching at my throat, fighting for my life against
+the deadly, vaporous thing that like a palpable cloud surrounded me. I tried to
+cry out, but the words died upon my tongue. Hassan of Aleppo seemed to grow
+huge before my eyes like some ginn of Eastern lore. Then a curtain of darkness
+descended. I experienced a violent blow upon the forehead (I suppose I had
+pitched forward), and for the time resigned my part in the drama of the sacred
+slipper.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap25"></a>
+CHAPTER XXV<br/>
+THE WATCHER IN BANK CHAMBERS</h2>
+
+<p>
+At about five o’clock that afternoon Inspector Bristol, who had spent several
+hours in Soho upon the scene of the murder of the Greek, was walking along
+Fleet Street, bound for the offices of the Report. As he passed the court, on
+the corner of which stands a branch of the London County and Provincial Bank,
+his eye was attracted by a curious phenomenon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There are reflectors above the bank windows which face the court, and it
+appeared to Bristol that there was a hole in one of these, the furthermost from
+the corner. A tiny beam of light shone from the bank window on to the
+reflector, or from the reflector on to the window, which circumstance in itself
+was not curious. But above the reflector, at an acute angle, this mysterious
+beam was seemingly projected upward. Walking a little way up the court he saw
+that it shone through, and cast a disc of light upon the ceiling of an office
+on the first floor of Bank Chambers above.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is every detective’s business to be observant, and although many thousands
+of passersby must have cast their eyes in the same direction that day, there is
+small matter for wonder in the fact that Bristol alone took the trouble to
+inquire into the mystery&mdash;for his trained eye told him that there was a
+mystery here.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Possibly he was in that passive frame of mind when the brain is particularly
+receptive of trivial impressions; for after a futile search of the Soho cigar
+store for anything resembling a clue, he was quite resigned to the idea of
+failure in the case of Hassan and Company. He walked down the court and into
+the entrance of Bank Chambers. An Inspection of the board upon the wall showed
+him that the first floor apparently was occupied by three firms, two of them
+legal, for this is the neighbourhood of the law courts, and the third a press
+agency. He stepped up to the first floor. Past the doors bearing the names of
+the solicitors and past that belonging to the press agent he proceeded to a
+fourth suite of offices. Here, pinned upon the door frame, appeared a card
+which bore the legend&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<h4>THE CONGO FIBRE COMPANY</h4>
+
+<p>
+Evidently the Congo Fibre Company had so recently taken possession of the
+offices that there had been no time to inscribe their title either upon the
+doors or upon the board in the hall.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Inspector Bristol was much impressed, for into one of the rooms occupied by the
+Fibre Company shone that curious disc of light which first had drawn his
+attention to Bank Chambers. He rapped on the door, turned the handle, and
+entered. The sole furniture of the office in which he found himself apparently
+consisted of one desk and an office stool, which stool was occupied by an
+office boy. The windows opened on the court, and a door marked “Private”
+evidently communicated with an inner office whose windows likewise must open on
+the court. It was the ceiling of this inner office, unless the detective’s
+calculation erred, which he was anxious to inspect.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes, sir?” said the boy tentatively.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bristol produced a card which bore the uncompromising legend: John Henry Smith.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Take my card to Mr. Boulter, boy,” he said tersely. The boy stared.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Mr. Boulter, sir? There isn’t any one of that name here.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Oh!” said Bristol, looking around him in apparent surprise: “how long is he
+gone?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I don’t know, sir. I’ve only been here three weeks, and Mr. Knowlson only took
+the offices a month ago.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Oh,” commented Bristol, “then take my card to Mr. Knowlson; he will probably
+be able to give me Mr. Boulter’s present address.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The boy hesitated. The detective had that authoritative manner which awes the
+youthful mind.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“He’s out, sir,” he said, but without conviction.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Is he?” rapped Bristol. “Well, I’ll leave my card.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He turned and quitted the office, carefully closing the door behind him. Three
+seconds later he reopened it, and peering in, was in time to see the boy knock
+upon the private door. A little wicket, or movable panel, was let down, the
+card of John Henry Smith was passed through to someone unseen, and the wicket
+was reclosed!
+</p>
+
+<br/>
+<p>
+The boy turned and met the wrathful eye of the detective. Bristol reentered,
+closing the door behind him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“See here, young fellow,” said he, “I don’t stand for those tricks! Why didn’t
+you tell me Mr. Knowlson was in?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’m very sorry, sir!”&mdash;the boy quailed beneath his glance&mdash;“but he
+won’t see any one who hasn’t an appointment.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Is there someone with him, then?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“No.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Well, what’s he doing?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I don’t know, sir; I’ve never been in to see!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What! never been in that room?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Never!” declared the boy solemnly. “And I don’t mind telling you,” he added,
+recovering something of his natural confidence, “that I am leaving on the 31st.
+This job ain’t any use to me!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Too much work?” suggested Bristol.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“No work at all!” returned the boy indignantly. “I’m just here for a blessed
+buffer, that’s what I’m here for, a buffer!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What do you mean?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I just have to sit here and see that nobody gets into that office. Lively,
+ain’t it? Where’s the prospects?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bristol surveyed him thoughtfully.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Look here, my lad,” he said quietly; “is that door locked?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Always,” replied the boy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Does Mr. Knowlson come to that shutter when you knock?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Then go and knock!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The boy obeyed with alacrity. He rapped loudly on the door, not noticing or not
+caring that the visitor was standing directly behind him. The shutter was
+lowered and a grizzled, bearded face showed for a moment through the opening.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bristol leant over the boy and pushed a card through into the hand of the man
+beyond. On this occasion it did not bear the legend “John Henry Smith,” but the
+following&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<h4>CHIEF INSPECTOR BRISTOL<br/>
+C.I.D.<br/>
+NEW SCOTLAND YARD</h4>
+
+<p>
+“Good afternoon, Mr. Knowlson,” said the detective dryly. “I want to come in!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There followed a moment of silence, from which Bristol divined that he had
+blundered upon some mystery, possibly upon a big case; then a key was turned in
+the lock and the door thrown open.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Come right in, Inspector,” invited a strident voice. “Carter, you can go
+home.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bristol entered warily, but not warily enough. For as the door was banged upon
+his entrance he faced around only in time to find himself looking down the
+barrel of a Colt automatic.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With his back to the door which contained the wicket, now reclosed, stood the
+man with the bearded face. The revolver was held in his left hand; his right
+arm terminated in a bandaged stump. But without that his steel-gray eyes would
+have betrayed him to the detective.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Good God!” whispered Bristol. “It’s Earl Dexter!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It is!” replied the cracksman, “and you’ve looked in at a real inconvenient
+time! My visitors mostly seem to have that knack. I’ll have to ask you to stay,
+Inspector. Sit down in that chair yonder.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bristol knew his man too well to think of opening any argument at that time. He
+sat down as directed, and ignoring the revolver which covered him all the time,
+began coolly to survey the room in which he found himself. In several respects
+it was an extraordinary apartment.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The only bright patch in the room was the shining disc upon the ceiling; and
+the detective noted with interest that this marked the position of an
+arrangement of mirrors. A white-covered table, entirely bare, stood upon the
+floor immediately beneath this mysterious apparatus. With the exception of one
+or two ordinary items of furniture and a small hand lathe, the office otherwise
+was unfurnished. Bristol turned his eyes again upon the daring man who so
+audaciously had trapped him&mdash;the man who had stolen the slipper of the
+Prophet and suffered the loss of his hand by the scimitar of an Hashishin as a
+result. When he had least expected to find one, Fate had thrown a clue in
+Bristol’s way. He reflected grimly that it was like to prove of little use to
+him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Now,” said Dexter, “you can do as you please, of course, but you know me
+pretty well and I advise you to sit quiet.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I am sitting quiet!” was the reply.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I am sorry,” continued Dexter, with a quick glance at his maimed arm, “that I
+can’t tie you up, but I am expecting a friend any moment now.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He suddenly raised the wicket with a twitch of his elbow and, without removing
+his gaze from the watchful detective, cried sharply&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Carter!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But there was no reply.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Good; he’s gone!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Dexter sat down facing Bristol.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I have lost my hand in this game, Mr. Bristol,” he said genially, “and had
+some narrow squeaks of losing my head; but having gone so far and lost so much
+I’m going through, if I don’t meet a funeral! You see I’m up against two tough
+propositions.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bristol nodded sympathetically.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The first,” continued Dexter, “is you and Cavanagh, and English law generally.
+My idea&mdash;if I can get hold of the slipper again&mdash;oh! you needn’t
+stare; I’m out for it!&mdash;is to get the Antiquarian Institution to ransom
+it. It’s a line of commercial speculation I have worked successfully before.
+There’s a dozen rich highbrows, cranks to a man, connected with it, and they
+are my likeliest buyers&mdash;sure. But to keep the tone of the market healthy
+there’s Hassan of Aleppo, rot him! He’s a dangerous customer to approach, but
+you’ll note I’ve been in negotiation with him already and am still, if not
+booming, not much below par!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Quite so,” said Bristol. “But you’ve cut off a pretty hefty chew nevertheless.
+They used to call you The Stetson Man, you used to dress like a fashion plate
+and stop at the big hotels. Those days are past, Dexter, I’m sorry to note.
+You’re down to the skulking game now and you’re nearer an advert for Clarkson
+than Stein-Bloch!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yep,” said Dexter sadly, “I plead guilty, but I think here’s Carneta!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bristol heard the door of the outer office open, and a moment later that upon
+which his gaze was set opened in turn, to admit a girl who was heavily veiled,
+and who started and stood still in the doorway, on perceiving the situation.
+Never for one unguarded moment did the American glance aside from his prisoner.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The Inspector’s dropped in, Carneta!” he drawled in his strident way. “You’re
+handy with a ball of twine; see if you can induce him to stay the night!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The girl, immediately recovering her composure, took off her hat in a
+businesslike way and began to look around her, evidently in search of a
+suitable length of rope with which to fasten up Bristol.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Might I suggest,” said the detective, “that if you are shortly quitting these
+offices a couple of the window-cords neatly joined would serve admirably?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Thanks,” drawled Dexter, nodding to his companion, who went into the outer
+office, where she might be heard lowering the windows. She was gone but a few
+moments ere she returned again, carrying a length of knotted rope. Under cover
+of Dexter’s revolver, Bristol stoically submitted to having his wrists tied
+behind him. The end of the line was then thrown through the ventilator above
+the door which communicated with the outer office and Bristol was triced up in
+such a way that, his wrists being raised behind him to an uncomfortable degree,
+he was almost forced to stand upon tiptoe. The line was then secured.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Very workmanlike!” commented the victim. “You’ll find a large handkerchief in
+my inside breast pocket. It’s a clean one, and I can recommend it as a gag!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Very promptly it was employed for the purpose, and Inspector Bristol found
+himself helpless and constrained in a very painful position. Dexter laid down
+his revolver.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“We will now give you a free show, Inspector,” he said, genially, “of our
+camera obscura!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He pulled down the blinds, which Bristol noted with interest to be black, but
+through an opening in one of them a mysterious ray of light&mdash;the same that
+he had noticed from Fleet Street&mdash;shone upon that point in the ceiling
+where the arrangement of mirrors was attached. Dexter made some alteration,
+apparently in the focus of the lens (for Bristol had divined that in some way a
+lens had been fixed in the reflector above the bank window below) and the disc
+of light became concentrated. The white-covered table was moved slightly, and
+in the darkness some further manipulation was performed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Observe,” came the strident voice&mdash;“we now have upon the screen here a
+minute moving picture. This little device, which is not protected in any way,
+is of my own invention, and proved extremely useful in the Arkwright jewel
+case, which startled Chicago. It has proved useful now. I know almost as much
+concerning the arrangements below as the manager himself. In confidence,
+Inspector, this is my last bid for the slipper! I have plunged on it. Madame
+Sforza, the distinguished Italian lady who recently opened an account below,
+opened it for 500 pounds cash. She has drawn a portion, but a balance remains
+which I am resigned to lose. Her motor-car (hired), her references (forged),
+the case of jewels which she deposited this morning (duds!)&mdash;all represent
+a considerable outlay. It’s a nerve-racking line of operation, too. Any hour of
+the day may bring such a visitor as yourself, for example. In short, I am at
+the end of my tether.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bristol, ignoring the increasing pain in his arms and wrists, turned his eyes
+upon the white-covered table and there saw a minute and clear-cut picture, such
+as one sees in a focussing screen, of the interior of the manager’s office of
+the London County and Provincial Bank!
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap26"></a>
+CHAPTER XXVI<br/>
+THE STRONG-ROOM</h2>
+
+<p>
+I wonder how often a sense of humour has saved a man from desperation? Perhaps
+only the Easterns have thoroughly appreciated that divine gift. I have
+interpolated the adventure of Inspector Bristol in order that the sequence of
+my story be not broken; actually I did not learn it until later, but when, on
+the following day, the whole of the facts came into my possession, I laughed
+and was glad that I could laugh, for laughter has saved many a man from
+madness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Certainly the Fates were playing with us, for at a time very nearly
+corresponding with that when Bristol found himself bound and helpless in Bank
+Chambers I awoke to find myself tied hand and foot to my own bed! Nothing but
+the haziest recollections came to me at first, nothing but dim memories of the
+awful being who had lured me there; for I perceived now that all the messages
+proceeded, not from Bristol, but from Hassan of Aleppo! I had been a fool, and
+I was reaping the fruits of my folly. Could I have known that almost within
+pistol shot of me the Inspector was trussed up as helpless as I, then indeed my
+situation must have become unbearable, since upon him I relied for my speedy
+release.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My ankles were firmly lashed to the rails at the foot of my bed; each of my
+wrists was tied back to a bedpost. I ached in every limb and my head burned
+feverishly, which latter symptom I ascribed to the powerful drug which had been
+expelled into my face by the uncanny weapon carried by Hassan of Aleppo. I
+reflected bitterly how, having transferred my quarters to the Astoria, I could
+not well hope for any visitor to my chambers; and even the event of such a
+visitor had been foreseen and provided against by the cunning lord of the
+Hashishin. A gag, of the type which Dumas has described in “Twenty Years
+After,” the poire d’angoisse, was wedged firmly into my mouth, so that only by
+preserving the utmost composure could I breathe. I was bathed in cold
+perspiration. So I lay listening to the familiar sounds without and reflecting
+that it was quite possible so to lie, undisturbed, and to die alone, my
+presence there wholly unsuspected!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Once, toward dusk, my phone bell rang, and my state of mind became agonizing.
+It was maddening to think that someone, a friend, was virtually within reach of
+me, yet actually as far removed as if an ocean divided us! I tasted the hellish
+torments of Tantalus. I cursed fate, heaven, everything; I prayed; I sank into
+bottomless depths of despair and rose to dizzy pinnacles of hope, when a
+footstep sounded on the landing and a thousand wild possibilities, vague
+possibilities of rescue, poured into my mind.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The visitor hesitated, apparently outside my door; and a change, as sudden as
+lightning out of a cloud, transformed my errant fancies. A gruesome conviction
+seized me, as irrational as the hope which it displayed, that this was one of
+the Hashishin&mdash;an apish yellow dwarf, a strangler, the awful Hassan
+himself!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The footsteps receded down the stairs. And my thoughts reverted into the old
+channels of dull despair.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I weighed the chances of Bristol’s seeking me there; and, eager as I was to
+give them substance, found them but airy&mdash;ultimately was forced to admit
+them to be nil.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So I lay, whilst only a few hundred yards from me a singular scene was being
+enacted. Bristol, a prisoner as helpless as myself, watched the concluding
+business of the day being conducted in the bank beneath him; he watched the
+lift descend to the strongroom&mdash;the spying apparatus being slightly
+adjusted in some way; he saw the clerks hastening to finish their work in the
+outer office, and as he watched, absorbed by the novelty of the situation, he
+almost forgot the pain and discomfort which he suffered...
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“This little peep-show of ours has been real useful,” Dexter confided out of
+the darkness. “I got an impression of the key of the strongroom door a week
+ago, and Carneta got one of the keys of the safe only this morning, when she
+lodged her box of jewellery with the bank! I was at work on that key when you
+interrupted me, and as by means of this useful apparatus I have learnt the
+combination, you ought to see some fun in the next few hours!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bristol repressed a groan, for the prospect of remaining in that position was
+thus brought keenly home to him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The bank staff left the premises one by one until only a solitary clerk worked
+on at a back desk. His task completed, he, too, took his departure and the bank
+messenger commenced his nightly duty of sweeping up the offices. It was then
+that excitement like an anaesthetic dulled the detective’s pain&mdash;indeed,
+he forgot his aching body and became merely a watchful intelligence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So intent had he become upon the picture before him that he had not noticed the
+fact that he was alone in the office of the Congo Fibre Company. Now he
+realized it from the absolute silence about him, and from another circumstance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The spying apparatus had been left focussed, and on to the screen beneath his
+eyes, bending low behind the desks and creeping, Indian-like, around, toward
+the head of the stair which communicated with the strongroom and the apartment
+used by the messenger, came the alert figure of Earl Dexter!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It may be a surprise to some people to learn that at any time in the day the
+door of a bank, unguarded, should be left open, when only a solitary messenger
+is within the premises; yet for a few minutes at least each evening this
+happens at more than one City bank, where one of the duties of the resident
+messenger is to clean the outer steps. Dexter had taken advantage of the man’s
+absence below in quest of scrubbing material to enter the bank through the open
+door.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Watching, breathless, and utterly forgetful of his own position, Bristol saw
+the messenger, all unconscious of danger, come up the stairs carrying a pail
+and broom. As his head reached the level of the railings The Stetson Man neatly
+sand-bagged him, rushed across to the outer door, and closed it!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Given duplicate keys and the private information which Dexter so ingeniously
+had obtained, there are many London banks vulnerable to similar attack.
+Certainly, bullion is rarely kept in a branch storeroom, but the detective was
+well aware that the keys of the case containing the slipper were kept in this
+particular safe!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was convinced, and could entertain no shadowy doubt, that at last Dexter had
+triumphed. He wondered if it had ever hitherto fallen to the lot of a
+representative of the law thus to be made an accessory to a daring felony!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But human endurance has well-defined limits. The fading light rendered the
+ingenious picture dim and more dim. The pain occasioned by his position became
+agonizing, and uttering a stifled groan he ceased to take an interest in the
+robbery of the London County and Provincial Bank.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Fate is a comedian; and when later I learned how I had lain strapped to my bed,
+and, so near to me, Bristol had hung helpless as a butchered carcass in the
+office of the Congo Fibre Company, whilst, in our absence from the stage, the
+drama of the slipper marched feverish to its final curtain, I accorded Fate her
+well-earned applause. I laughed; not altogether mirthfully.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap27"></a>
+CHAPTER XXVII<br/>
+THE SLIPPER</h2>
+
+<p>
+Someone was breaking in at the door of my chambers!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I aroused myself from a state of coma almost death-like and listened to the
+blows. The sun was streaming in at my windows.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A splintering crash told of a panel broken. Then a moment later I heard the
+grating of the lock, and a rush of footsteps along the passage.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Try the study!” came a voice that sounded like Bristol’s, save that it was
+strangely weak and shaky.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Almost simultaneously the Inspector himself threw open the bedroom
+door&mdash;and, very pale and haggard-eyed, stood there looking across at me.
+It was a scene unforgettable.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Mr. Cavanagh!” he said huskily&mdash;“Mr. Cavanagh! Thank God you’re alive!
+But”&mdash;he turned&mdash;“this way, Marden!” he cried, “Untie him quickly!
+I’ve got no strength in my arms!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Marden, a C.I.D. man, came running, and in a minute, or less, I was sitting up
+gulping brandy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’ve had the most awful experience of my life,” said Bristol. “You’ve fared
+badly enough, but I’ve been hanging by my wrists&mdash;you know Dexter’s
+trick!&mdash;for close upon sixteen hours! I wasn’t released until Carter, an
+office boy, came on the scene this morning!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Very feebly I nodded; I could not talk.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The strong-room of your bank was rifled under my very eyes last evening!” he
+continued, with something of his old vigour; “and five minutes after the
+Antiquarian Museum was opened to the public this morning quite an unusual
+number of visitors appeared.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I saw the bank manager the moment he arrived, and learned a piece of news that
+positively took my breath away! I was at the Museum seven minutes later and got
+another shock! There in the case was the red slipper!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Then,” I whispered&mdash;“it hadn’t been stolen?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Wrong! It had! This was a duplicate, as Mostyn, the curator, saw at a glance!
+Some of the early visitors&mdash;they were Easterns&mdash;had quite surrounded
+the case. They were watched, of course, but any number of Orientals come to see
+the thing; and, short of smashing the glass, which would immediately attract
+attention, the authorities were unprepared, of course, for any attempt. Anyway,
+they were tricked. Somebody opened the case. The real slipper of the Prophet is
+gone!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“They told you at the bank&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That you had withdrawn the keys! If Dexter had known that!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Hassan of Aleppo took them from me last night! At last the Hashishin have
+triumphed.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bristol sank into the armchair.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Every port is watched,” he said. “But&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap28"></a>
+CHAPTER XXVIII<br/>
+CARNETA</h2>
+
+<p>
+“I am entirely at your mercy; you can do as you please with me. But before you
+do anything I should like you to listen to what I have to say.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Her beautiful face was pale and troubled. Violet eyes looked sadly into mine.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“For nearly an hour I have been waiting for this chance&mdash;until I knew you
+were alone,” she continued. “If you are thinking of giving me up to the police,
+at least remember that I came here of my own free will. Of course, I know you
+are quite entitled to take advantage of that; but please let me say what I came
+to say!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She pleaded so hard, with that musical voice, with her evident helplessness,
+most of all with her wonderful eyes, that I quite abandoned any project I might
+have entertained to secure her arrest. I think she divined this masculine
+weakness, for she said, with greater confidence&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Your friend, Professor Deeping, was murdered by the man called Hassan of
+Aleppo. Are you content to remain idle while his murderer escapes?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+God knows I was not. My idleness in the matter was none of my choosing. Since
+poor Deeping’s murder I had come to handgrips with the assassins more than
+once, but Hassan had proved too clever for me, too clever for Scotland Yard.
+The sacred slipper was once more in the hands of its fanatic guardian.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One man there was who might have helped the search, Earl Dexter. But Earl
+Dexter was himself wanted by Scotland Yard!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+From the time of the bank affair up to the moment when this beautiful visitor
+had come to my chambers I had thought Dexter, as well as Hassan, to have fled
+secretly from England. But the moment that I saw Carneta at my door I divined
+that The Stetson Man must still be in London.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She sat watching me and awaiting my answer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I cannot avenge my friend unless I can find his murderer.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Eagerly she bent forward.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“But if I can find him?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That made me think, and I hesitated before speaking again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Say what you came to say,” I replied slowly. “You must know that I distrust
+you. Indeed, my plain duty is to detain you. But I will listen to anything you
+may care to tell me, particularly if it enables me to trap Hassan of Aleppo.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Very well,” she said, and rested her elbows upon the table before her. “I have
+come to you in desperation. I can help you to find the man who murdered
+Professor Deeping, but in return I want you to help me!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I watched her closely. She was very plainly, almost poorly, dressed. Her face
+was pale and there were dark marks around her eyes. This but served to render
+their strange beauty more startling; yet I could see that my visitor was in
+real trouble. The situation was an odd one.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You are possibly about to ask me,” I suggested, “to assist Earl Dexter to
+escape the police?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She shook her head. Her voice trembled as she replied&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That would not have induced me to run the risk of coming here. I came because
+I wanted to find a man who was brave enough to help me. We have no friends in
+London, and so it became a question of terms. I can repay you by helping you to
+trace Hassan.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What is it, then, that Dexter asks me to do?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“He asks nothing. I, Carneta, am asking!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Then you are not come from him?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At my question, all her self-possession left her. She abruptly dropped her face
+into her hands and was shaken with sobs! It was more than I could bear,
+unmoved. I forgot the shady past, forgot that she was the associate of a daring
+felon, and could only realize that she was a weeping woman, who had appealed to
+my pity and who asked my aid.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I stood up and stared out of the window, for I experienced a not unnatural
+embarrassment. Without looking at her I said&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Don’t be afraid to tell me your troubles. I don’t say I should go out of my
+way to be kind to Mr. Dexter, but I have no wish whatever to be instrumental
+in”&mdash;I hesitated&mdash;“in making you responsible for his misdeeds. If you
+can tell me where to find Hassan of Aleppo, I won’t even ask you where Dexter
+is&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“God help me! I don’t know where he is!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was real, poignant anguish in her cry. I turned and confronted her. Her
+lashes were all wet with tears.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What! has he disappeared?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She nodded, fought with her emotion a moment, and went on unsteadily,
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I want you to help me to find him for in finding him we shall find Hassan!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“How so?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Her gaze avoided me now.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Mr. Cavanagh, he has staked everything upon securing the slipper&mdash;and the
+Hashishin were too clever for him. His hand&mdash;those Eastern fiends cut off
+his hand! But he would not give in. He made another bid&mdash;and lost again.
+It left him almost penniless.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She spoke of Earl Dexter’s felonious plans as another woman might have spoken
+of her husband’s unwise investments! It was fantastic hearing that confession
+of The Stetson Man’s beautiful partner, and I counted the interview one of the
+strangest I had ever known.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A sudden idea came to me. “When did Dexter first conceive the plan to steal the
+slipper?” I asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“In Egypt!” answered Carneta. “Yes! You may as well know! He is thoroughly
+familiar with the East, and he learned of the robbery of Professor Deeping
+almost as soon as it became known to Hassan. I know what you are going to
+ask&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Ahmad Ahmadeen!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes! He travelled home as Ahmadeen&mdash;the only time he ever used a
+disguise. Oh! the thing is accursed!” she cried. “I begged him, implored him,
+to abandon his attempts upon it. Day and night we were watched by those ghastly
+yellow men! But it was all in vain. He knew, had known for a long time, where
+Hassan of Aleppo was in hiding!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And I reflected that the best men at New Scotland Yard had failed to pick up
+the slightest clue!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The Hashishin, of whom that dreadful man is leader, are rich, or have
+supporters who are rich. The plan was to make them pay for the slipper.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“My God! it was playing with fire!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She sat silent awhile. Emotion threatened to get the upper hand. Then&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Two days ago,” she almost whispered, “he set out&mdash;to ... get the
+slipper!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“To steal it?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“To steal it!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“From Hassan of Aleppo?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I could scarcely believe that any man, single-handed, could have had the
+hardihood to attempt such a thing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“From Hassan, yes!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I faced her, amazed, incredulous.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Dexter had suffered mutilation, he knew that the Hashishin sought his life for
+his previous attempts upon the relic of the Prophet, and yet he dared to
+venture again into the very lions’ den?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“He did, Mr. Cavanagh, two days ago. And&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes?” I urged, as gently as I could, for she was shaking pitifully.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“He never came back!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The words were spoken almost in a whisper. She clenched her hands and leapt
+from the chair, fighting down her grief and with such a stark horror in her
+beautiful eyes that from my very soul I longed to be able to help her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Mr. Cavanagh” (she had courage, this bewildering accomplice of a cracksman),
+“I know the house he went to! I cannot hope to make you understand what I have
+suffered since then. A thousand times I have been on the point of going to the
+police, confessing all I knew, and leading them to that house! O God! if only
+he is alive, this shall be his last crooked deal&mdash;and mine! I dared not go
+to the police, for his sake! I waited, and watched, and hoped, through two such
+nights and days ... then I ventured. I should have gone mad if I had not come
+here. I knew you had good cause to hate, to detest me, but I remembered that
+you had a great grievance against Hassan. Not as great, O heaven! not as great
+as mine, but yet a great one. I remembered, too, that you were the kind of
+man&mdash;a woman can come to...”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She sank back into the chair, and with her fingers twining and untwining, sat
+looking dully before her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“In brief,” I said, “what do you propose?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I propose that we endeavour to obtain admittance to the house of Hassan of
+Aleppo&mdash;secretly, of course, and all I ask of you in return for revealing
+the secret of its situation is&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That I let Dexter go free?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Almost inaudibly she whispered: “If he lives!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Surely no stranger proposition ever had been submitted to a law-abiding
+citizen. I was asked to connive in the escape of a notorious criminal, and at
+one and the same time to embark upon an expedition patently burglarious! As
+though this were not enough, I was invited to beard Hassan of Aleppo, the most
+dreadful being I had ever encountered East or West, in his mysterious
+stronghold!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I wondered what my friend, Inspector Bristol, would have thought of the
+project; I wondered if I should ever live to see Hassan meet his just deserts
+as a result of this enterprise, which I was forced to admit a foolhardy one.
+But a man who has selected the career of a war correspondent from amongst those
+which Fleet Street offers, is the victim of a certain craving for fresh
+experiences; I suppose, has in his character something of an adventurous turn.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For a while I stood staring from the window, then faced about and looked into
+the violet eyes of my visitor.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I agree, Carneta!” I said.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap29"></a>
+CHAPTER XXIX<br/>
+WE MEET MR. ISAACS</h2>
+
+<p>
+Quitting the wayside station, and walking down a short lane, we came out upon
+Watling Street, white and dusty beneath the afternoon sun. We were less than an
+hour’s train journey from London but found ourselves amid the Kentish hop
+gardens, amid a rural peace unbroken. My companion carried a camera case slung
+across her shoulder, but its contents were less innocent than one might have
+supposed. In fact, it contained a neat set of those instruments of the
+burglar’s art with whose use she appeared to be quite familiar.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“There is an inn,” she said, “about a mile ahead, where we can obtain some
+vital information. He last wrote to me from there.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Side by side we tramped along the dusty road. We both were silent, occupied
+with our own thoughts. Respecting the nature of my companion’s I could
+entertain little doubt, and my own turned upon the foolhardy nature of the
+undertaking upon which I was embarked. No other word passed between us then,
+until upon rounding a bend and passing a cluster of picturesque cottages, the
+yard of the Vinepole came into view.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Do they know you by sight here?” I asked abruptly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“No, of course not; we never made strategic mistakes of that kind. If we have
+tea here, no doubt we can learn all we require.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I entered the little parlour of the inn, and suggested that tea should be
+served in the pretty garden which opened out of it upon the right.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The host, who himself laid the table, viewed the camera case critically.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“We get a lot of photographers down here,” he remarked tentatively.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“No doubt,” said my companion. “There is some very pretty scenery in the
+neighbourhood.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The landlord rested his hands upon the table.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“There was a gentleman here on Wednesday last,” he said; “an old gentleman who
+had met with an accident, and was staying somewhere hereabouts for his health.
+But he’d got his camera with him, and it was wonderful the way he could use it,
+considering he hadn’t got the use of his right hand.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“He must have been a very keen photographer,” I said, glancing at the girl
+beside me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“He took three or four pictures of the Vinepole,” replied the landlord (which I
+doubted, since probably his camera was a dummy); “and he wanted to know if
+there were any other old houses in the neighbourhood. I told him he ought to
+take Cadham Hall, and he said he had heard that the Gate House, which is about
+a mile from here, was one of the oldest buildings about.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A girl appeared with a tea tray, and for a moment I almost feared that the
+landlord was about to retire; but he lingered, whilst the girl distributed the
+things about the table, and Carneta asked casually, “Would there be time for me
+to photograph the Gate House before dark?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“There might be time,” was the reply, “but that’s not the difficulty. Mr.
+Isaacs is the difficulty.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Who is Mr. Isaacs?” I asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“He’s the Jewish gentleman who bought the Gate House recently. Lots of money
+he’s got and a big motor car. He’s up and down to London almost every day in
+the week, but he won’t let anybody take photographs of the house. I know
+several who’ve asked.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“But I thought,” said Carneta, innocently, “you said the old gentleman who was
+here on Wednesday went to take some?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“He went, yes, miss; but I don’t know if he succeeded.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Carneta poured out some tea.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Now that you speak of it,” she said, “I too have heard that the Gate House is
+very picturesque. What objection can Mr. Isaacs have to photographers?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Well, you see, miss, to get a picture of the house, you have to pass right
+through the grounds.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I should walk right up to the house and ask permission. Is Mr. Isaacs at home,
+I wonder?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I couldn’t say. He hasn’t passed this way to-day.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“We might meet him on the way,” said I. “What is he like?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“A Jewish gentleman sir, very dark, with a white beard. Wears gold glasses.
+Keeps himself very much to himself. I don’t know anything about his household;
+none of them ever come here.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Carneta inquired the direction of Cadham Hall and of the Gate House, and the
+landlord left us to ourselves. My companion exhibited signs of growing
+agitation, and it seemed to me that she had much ado to restrain herself from
+setting out without a moment’s delay for the Gate House, which, I readily
+perceived, was the place to which our strange venture was leading us.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I found something very stimulating in the reflection that, rash though the
+expedition might be, and, viewed from whatever standpoint, undeniably perilous,
+it promised to bring me to that secret stronghold of deviltry where the
+sinister Hassan of Aleppo so successfully had concealed himself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The work of the modern journalist had many points of contact with that of the
+detective; and since the murder of Professor Deeping I had succumbed to the
+man-hunting fever more than once. I knew that Scotland Yard had failed to
+locate the hiding-place of the remarkable and evil man who, like an efreet of
+Oriental lore, obeyed the talisman of the stolen slipper, striking down
+whomsoever laid hand upon its sacredness. It was a novel sensation to know
+that, aided by this beautiful accomplice of a rogue, I had succeeded where the
+experts had failed!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Misgivings I had and shall not deny. If our scheme succeeded it would mean that
+Deeping’s murderer should be brought to justice. If it failed-well, frankly,
+upon that possibility I did not dare to reflect!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It must be needless for me to say that we two strangely met allies were ill at
+ease, sometimes to the point of embarrassment. We proceeded on our way in
+almost unbroken silence, and, save for a couple of farm hands, without meeting
+any wayfarer, up to the time that we reached the brow of the hill and had our
+first sight of the Gate House lying in a little valley beneath. It was a small
+Tudor mansion, very compact in plan and its roof glowed redly in the rays of
+the now setting sun.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+From the directions given by the host of the Vinepole it was impossible to
+mistake the way or to mistake the house. Amid well-wooded grounds it stood, a
+place quite isolated, but so typically English that, as I stood looking down
+upon it, I found myself unable to believe that any other than a substantial
+country gentleman could be its proprietor.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I glanced at Carneta. Her violet eyes were burning feverishly, but her lips
+twitched in a bravely pitiful way.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Clearly now my adventure lay before me; that red-roofed homestead seemed to
+have rendered it all substantial which hitherto had been shadowy; and I stood
+there studying the Gate House gravely, for it might yet swallow me up, as
+apparently it had swallowed Earl Dexter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There, amid that peaceful Kentish landscape, fantasy danced and horrors unknown
+lurked in waiting...
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The eminence upon which we were commanded an extensive prospect, and eastward
+showed a tower and flagstaff which marked the site of Cadham Hall. There were
+homeward-bound labourers to be seen in the lanes now, and where like a white
+ribbon the Watling Street lay across the verdant carpet moved an insect shape,
+speedily.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was a car, and I watched it with vague interest. At a point where a dense
+coppice spread down to the roadway and a lane crossed west to east, the car
+became invisible. Then I saw it again, nearer to us and nearer to the Gate
+House. Finally it disappeared among the trees.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I turned to Carneta. She, too, had been watching. Now her gaze met mine.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Mr. Isaacs!” she said; and her voice was less musical than usual. “His
+chauffeur, who learned his business in Cairo, is probably the only one of his
+servants who remains in England.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What!” I began&mdash;and said no more.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Where the road upon which we stood wound down into the valley and lost itself
+amid the trees surrounding the Gate House, the car suddenly appeared again, and
+began to mount the slope toward us!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Heavens!” whispered Carneta. “He may have seen us&mdash;with glasses! Quick!
+Let us walk back until the hill-top conceals us; then we must hide somewhere!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I shared her excitement. Without a moment’s hesitation we both turned and
+retraced our steps. Twenty paces brought us to a spot where a stack of mangel
+wurzels stood at the roadside.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“This will do!” I said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We ran around into the field, and crouched where we could peer out on the road
+without ourselves being seen. Nor had we taken up this position a moment too
+soon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Topping the slope came a light-weight electric, driven by a man who, in his
+spruce uniform, might have passed at a glance for a very dusky European. The
+car had a limousine back, and as the chauffeur slowed down, out from the open
+windows right and left peered the solitary occupant.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He had the cast of countenance which is associated with the best type of Jew,
+with clear-cut aquiline features wholly destitute of grossness. His white beard
+was patriarchal and he wore gold-rimmed pince-nez and a glossy silk hat. Such
+figures may often be met with in the great money-markets of the world, and Mr.
+Isaacs would have passed for a successful financier in even more discerning
+communities than that of Cadham.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But I scarcely breathed until the car was past; and, beside me, my companion,
+crouching to the ground, was trembling wildly. Fifty yards toward the village
+Mr. Isaacs evidently directed the man to return.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The car was put about, and flashed past us at high speed down into the valley.
+When the sound of the humming motor had died to something no louder than the
+buzz of a sleepy wasp, I held out my hand to Carneta and she rose, pale, but
+with blazing eyes, and picked up her camera case.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“If he had detected us, everything would have been lost!” she whispered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Not everything!” I replied grimly&mdash;and showed her the revolver which I
+had held in my hand whilst those eagle eyes had been seeking us. “If he had
+made a sign to show that he had seen us, in fact, if he had once offered a safe
+mark by leaning from the car, I should have shot him dead without hesitation!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“We must not show ourselves again, but wait for dusk. He must have seen us,
+then, on the hilltop, but I hope without recognizing us. He has the sight and
+instincts of a vulture!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I nodded, slipping the revolver into my pocket, but I wondered if I should not
+have been better advised to have risked a shot at the moment that I had
+recognized “Mr. Isaacs” for Hassan of Aleppo.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap30"></a>
+CHAPTER XXX<br/>
+AT THE GATE HOUSE</h2>
+
+<p>
+From sunset to dusk I lurked about the neighbourhood of the Gate House with my
+beautiful accomplice&mdash;watching and waiting: a man bound upon stranger
+business, I dare swear, than any other in the county of Kent that night.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Our endeavour now was to avoid observation by any one, and in this, I think, we
+succeeded. At the same time, Carneta, upon whose experience I relied
+implicitly, regarded it as most important that we should observe (from a safe
+distance) any one who entered or quitted the gates.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But none entered, and none came out. When, finally, we made along the narrow
+footpath skirting the west of the grounds, the night was silent&mdash;most
+strangely still.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The trees met overhead, but no rustle disturbed their leaves and of animal life
+no indication showed itself. There was no moon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A full appreciation of my mad folly came to me, and with it a sense of heavy
+depression. This stillness that ruled all about the house which sheltered the
+awful Sheikh of the Assassins was ominous, I thought. In short, my nerves were
+playing me tricks.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“We have little to fear,” said my companion, speaking in a hushed and quivering
+voice. “The whole of the party left England some days ago.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Are you sure?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Certain! We learned that before Earl made his attempt. Hassan remains, for
+some reason; Hassan and one other&mdash;the one who drives the car.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“But the slipper?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“If Hassan remains, so does the slipper!” From the knapsack, which, as you will
+have divined, did not contain a camera, she took out an electric pocket lamp,
+and directed its beam upon the hedge above us.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“There is a gap somewhere here!” she said. “See if you can find it. I dare not
+show the light too long.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Darkness followed. I clambered up the bank and sought for the opening of which
+Carneta had spoken.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The light here a moment,” I whispered. “I think I have it!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Out shone the white beam, and momentarily fell upon a black hole in the
+thickset hedge. The light disappeared, and as I extended my hand to Carneta she
+grasped it and climbed up beside me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Put on your rubber shoes,” she directed. “Leave the others here.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There in the darkness I did as she directed, for I was provided with a pair of
+tennis shoes. Carneta already was suitably shod.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I will go first,” I said. “What is the ground like beyond?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Just unkempt bushes and weeds.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Upon hands and knees I crawled through, saw dimly that there was a short
+descent, corresponding with the ascent from the lane, and turned, whispering to
+my fellow conspirator to follow.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The grounds proved even more extensive than I had anticipated. We pressed on,
+dodging low-sweeping branches and keeping our arms up to guard our faces from
+outshoots of thorn bushes. Our progress necessarily was slow, but even so quite
+a long time seemed to have elapsed ere we came in sight of the house.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This was my first expedition of the kind; and now that my goal was actually in
+sight I became conscious of a sort of exultation hard to describe. My
+companion, on the contrary, seemed to have become icily cool. When next she
+spoke, her voice had a businesslike ring, which revealed the fact that she was
+no amateur at this class of work.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Wait here,” she directed. “I am going to pass all around the house, and I will
+rejoin you.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I could see her but dimly, and she moved off as silent as an Indian
+deer-stalker, leaving me alone there crouching at the extreme edge of the
+thicket. I looked out over a small wilderness of unkempt flower-beds; so much
+it was just possible to perceive. The plants in many instances had spread on to
+the pathways and contested survival with the flourishing weeds. All was
+wild&mdash;deserted&mdash;eerie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A sense of dampness assailed me, and I raised my eyes to the low-lying building
+wherein no light showed, no sign of life was evident. The nearer wing presented
+a verandah apparently overgrown by some climbing plant, the nature of which it
+was impossible to determine in the darkness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The zest for the nocturnal operation which temporarily had thrilled me
+succumbed now to loneliness. With keen anxiety I awaited the return of my more
+experienced accomplice. The situation was grotesque, utterly bizarre; but even
+my sense of humour could not save me from the growing dread which this
+seemingly deserted place poured into my heart.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When upon the right I heard a faint rustling I started, and grasped the
+revolver in my pocket.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Not a sound!” came in Carneta’s voice. “Keep just inside the bushes and come
+this way. There is something I want to show you.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The various profuse growths rendered concealment simple enough&mdash;if indeed
+any other concealment were necessary than that which the strangely black night
+afforded. Just within the evil-smelling thicket we made a half circuit of the
+building, and stopped.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Look!” whispered Carneta.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The word was unnecessary, for I was staring fixedly in the direction of that
+which evidently had occasioned her uneasiness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was a small square window, so low-set that I assumed it to be that of a
+cellar, and heavily cross-barred.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+From it, out upon a tangled patch of vegetation, shone a dull red light!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“There’s no other light in the place,” my companion whispered. “For God’s sake,
+what can it be?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My mind supplied no explanation. The idea that it might be a dark room no doubt
+was suggested by the assumed role of Carneta; but I knew that idea to be
+absurd. The red light meant something else.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Evidently the commencing of operations before all lights were out was
+irregular, for Carneta said slowly&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“We must wait and watch the light. There was formerly a moat around the Gate
+House; that must be the window of a dungeon.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I little relished the prospect of waiting in that swamp-like spot, but since no
+alternative presented itself I accepted the inevitable. For close upon an hour
+we stood watching the red window. No sound of bird, beast, or man disturbed our
+vigil; in fact, it would appear that the very insects shunned the neighbourhood
+of Hassan of Aleppo. But the red light still shone out.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“We must risk it!” said Carneta steadily. “There are French windows opening on
+to that verandah. Ten yards farther around the bushes come right up to the wall
+of the house. We’ll go that way and around by the other wing on to the
+verandah.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Any action was preferable to this nerve-sapping delay, and with a determination
+to shoot, and shoot to kill, any one who opposed our entrance, I passed through
+the bushes and, with Carneta, rounded the southern border of that silent house
+and slipped quietly on to the verandah.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Kneeling, Carneta opened the knapsack. My eyes were growing accustomed to the
+darkness, and I was just able to see her deft hands at work upon the
+fastenings. She made no noise, and I watched her with an ever-growing wonder. A
+female burglar is a personage difficult to imagine. Certainly, no one ever
+could have suspected this girl with the violet eyes of being an expert
+crackswoman; but of her efficiency there could be no question. I think I had
+never witnessed a more amazing spectacle than that of this cultured girl
+manipulating the tools of the house breaker with her slim white fingers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Suddenly she turned and clutched my arm.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The windows are not fastened!” she whispered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A strange courage came to me&mdash;perhaps that of desperation. For, ignoring
+the ominous circumstance, I pushed open the nearest window and stepped into the
+room beyond! A hissing breath from Carneta acknowledged my performance, and she
+entered close behind me, silent in her rubber-soled shoes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For one thrilling moment we stood listening. Then came the white beam from the
+electric lamp to cut through the surrounding blackness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The room was totally unfurnished!
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap31"></a>
+CHAPTER XXXI<br/>
+THE POOL OF DEATH</h2>
+
+<p>
+Not a sound broke the stillness of the Gate House. It was the most eerily
+silent place in which I had ever found myself. Out into the corridor we went,
+noiselessly. It was stripped, uncarpeted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Three doors we passed, two upon the left and one upon the right. We tried them
+all. All were unfastened, and the rooms into which they opened bare and
+deserted. Then we came upon a short, descending stair, at its foot a massive
+oaken door.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Carneta glided down, noiseless as a ghost, and to one of the blackened panels
+applied an ingenious little instrument which she carried in her knapsack. It
+was not unlike a stethoscope; and as I watched her listening, by means of this
+arrangement, for any sound beyond the oaken door, I reflected how almost every
+advance made by science places a new tool in the hand of the criminal.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+No word had been spoken since we had discovered this door; none had been
+necessary. For we both knew that the place beyond was that from which proceeded
+the mysterious red light.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I directed the ray of the electric torch upon Carneta, as she stood there
+listening, and against that sombre oaken background her face and profile stood
+out with startling beauty. She seemed half perplexed and half fearful. Then she
+abruptly removed the apparatus, and, stooping to the knapsack, replaced it and
+took out a bunch of wire keys, signing to me to hand her the lamp.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As I crept down the steps I saw her pause, glancing back over her shoulder
+toward the door. The expression upon her face induced me to direct the light in
+the same direction.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Why neither of us had observed the fact before I cannot conjecture; but a key
+was in the lock!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Perhaps the traffic of the night afforded no more dramatic moment than this.
+The house which we were come prepared burglariously to enter was thrown open,
+it would seem, to us, inviting our inspection!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Looking back upon that moment, it seems almost incredible that the sight of a
+key in a lock should have so thrilled me. But at the time I perceived something
+sinister in this failure of the Lord of the Hashishin to close his doors to
+intruders. That Carneta shared my doubts and fears was to be read in her face;
+but her training had been peculiar, I learned, and such as establishes a
+surprising resoluteness of character.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Quite noiselessly she turned the key, and holding a dainty pocket revolver in
+her hand, pushed the door open slowly!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+An odour, sickly sweet and vaguely familiar, was borne to my nostrils. Carneta
+became outlined in dim, reddish light. Bending forward slightly, she entered
+the room, and I, with muscles tensed nervously, advanced and stood beside her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I perceived that this was a cellar; indeed, I doubt not that in some past age
+it had served as a dungeon. From the stone roof hung the first evidence of
+Eastern occupation which the Gate House had yielded; in the form of an Oriental
+lantern, or fanoos, of rose-coloured waxed paper upon a copper frame. Its vague
+light revealed the interior of the hideous place upon whose threshold we stood.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Straight before us, deep set in the stone wall, was the tiny square window,
+iron-barred without, and glazed with red glass, the light from which had so
+deeply mystified us. Within a niche in the wall, a little to the left of the
+window, rested an object which, at that moment, claimed our undivided attention
+the sight of which so wrought upon us that temporarily all else was forgotten.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was the red slipper of the Prophet!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“My God!” whispered Carneta&mdash;“my God!”&mdash;and clutched at me, swaying
+dizzily.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A few inches from our feet the floor became depressed, how deeply I could not
+determine, for it was filled with water, water filthy and slimy! The strange,
+nauseating odour had grown all but unsupportable; it seemingly proceeded from
+this fetid pool which, occupying the floor of the dungeon, offered a barrier,
+since its depth was unknown, of fully twelve feet between ourselves and the
+farther wall.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was a faint, dripping sound: a whispering, echoing drip-drip of falling
+water. I could not tell from whence it proceeded.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Almost supporting my companion, whose courage seemed suddenly to have failed
+her, I stared fascinatedly at that blood-stained relic. Something then induced
+me to look behind; I suppose a warning instinct of that sort which is
+unexplainable. I only know that upholding Carneta with my left arm, and
+nervously grasping my revolver in my right, I turned and glanced over my
+shoulder.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Very slowly, but with a constant, regular motion, the massive door was closing!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I snatched away my arm; in my left hand I held the electric torch, and
+springing sharply about I directed the searching ray into the black gap of the
+stairway. A yellow face, a malignant Oriental face, came suddenly, fully, into
+view! Instantly I recognized it for that of the man who had driven Hassan’s
+car!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Acting upon the determination with which I had entered the Gate House, I raised
+my revolver and fired straight between the evil eyes! To the fact that I
+dropped my left hand in the act of pulling the trigger with my right, and thus
+lost my mark, the servant of Hassan of Aleppo owed his escape. I missed him. He
+uttered a shrill cry of fear and went racing up the wooden stair. I followed
+him with the light and fired twice at the retreating figure. I heard him
+stumble and a second time cry out. But, though I doubt not he was hit, he
+recovered himself, for I heard his tread in the corridor above.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Propping wide the door with my foot, I turned to Carneta. Her face was drawn
+and haggard; but her mouth set in a sort of grim determination.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Earl is dead!” she said, in a queer, toneless voice. “He died trying to
+get&mdash;that thing! I will get it, and destroy it!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Before I could detain her, even had I sought to do so, she stepped into the
+filthy water, struggled to recover her foothold, and sank above her waist into
+its sliminess. Without hesitation she began to advance toward the niche which
+contained the slipper. In the middle of the pool she stopped.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+What memory it was which supplied the clue to the identity of that nauseating
+smell, heaven alone knows; but as the girl stopped and drew herself up
+rigidly&mdash;then turned and leapt wildly back toward the door&mdash;I knew
+what occasioned that sickly odour!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She screamed once, dreadfully&mdash;shrilly&mdash;a scream of agonizing fear
+that I can never forget. Then, roughly I grasped her, for the need was
+urgent&mdash;and dragged her out on to the floor beside me. With her wet
+garments clinging to her limbs, she fell prostrate on the stones.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A yard from the brink the slimy water parted, and the yellow snout of a huge
+crocodile was raised above the surface! The saurian eyes, hungrily malevolent,
+rose next to view!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The extremity of our danger found me suddenly cool. As the thing drew its slimy
+body up out of the poor I waited. The jaws were extended toward the prostrate
+body, were but inches removed from it, dripped their saliva upon the soddened
+skirt&mdash;when I bent forward, and at a range of some ten inches emptied the
+remaining three loaded chambers of my revolver into the creature’s left eye!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Upchurned in bloody foam became the water of that dreadful place.... As one
+recalls the incidents of a fevered dream, I recall dragging Carneta away from
+the contorted body of the death-stricken reptile. A nightmare chaos of horrid,
+revolting sights and sounds forms my only recollection of quitting the dungeon
+of the slipper.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I succeeded in carrying her up the stairs and out through the empty rooms on to
+the verandah; but there, from sheer exhaustion, I laid her down. I had no means
+of reviving her and I lacked the strength to carry her farther. Having
+recharged my revolver, I stood watching her where she lay, wanly beautiful in
+the dim light.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was no doubt in my mind respecting the fate of Earl Dexter, nor could I
+doubt that the slipper in the dungeon below was a duplicate of the real one. It
+was a death-trap into which he had lured Dexter and which he had left baited
+for whomsoever might trace the cracksman to the Gate House. Why Hassan should
+have remained behind, unless from fanatic lust of killing, I could not imagine.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When at last the fresher night air had its effect, and Carneta opened her eyes,
+I led her to the gates, nor did she offer the slightest resistance, but looked
+dully before her, muttering over and over again, “Earl, Earl!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The gates were open; we passed out on to the open road. No man pursued us, and
+the night was gravely still.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap32"></a>
+CHAPTER XXXII<br/>
+SIX GRAY PATCHES</h2>
+
+<p>
+When the invitation came from my old friend Hilton to spend a week “roughing
+it” with him in Warwickshire I accepted with alacrity. If ever a man needed a
+holiday I was that man. Nervous breakdown threatened me at any moment; the
+ghastly experience at the Gate House together with Carneta’s grief-stricken
+face when I had parted from her were obsessing memories which I sought in vain
+to shake off.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A brief wire had contained the welcome invitation, and up to the time when I
+had received it I had been unaware that Hilton was back in England. Moreover,
+beyond the fact that his house, “Uplands,” was near H&mdash;, for which I was
+instructed to change at New Street Station, Birmingham, I had little idea of
+its location. But he added “Wire train and will meet at H&mdash;”; so that I
+had no uneasiness on that score.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I had contemplated catching the 2:45 from Euston, but by the time I had got my
+work into something like order, I decided that the 6:55 would be more suitable
+and decided to dine on the train.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Altogether, there was something of a rush and hustle attendant upon getting
+away, and when at last I found myself in the cab, bound for Euston, I sat back
+with a long-drawn sigh. The quest of the Prophet’s slipper was ended; in all
+probability that blood-stained relic was already Eastward bound. Hassan of
+Aleppo, its awful guardian, had triumphed and had escaped retribution. Earl
+Dexter was dead. I could not doubt that; for the memory of his beautiful
+accomplice, Carneta, as I last had seen her, broken-hearted, with her great
+violet eyes dulled in tearless agony&mdash;have I not said that it lived with
+me?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Even as the picture of her lovely, pale face presented itself to my mind, the
+cab was held up by a temporary block in the traffic&mdash;and my imagination
+played me a strange trick.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Another taxi ran close alongside, almost at the moment that the press of
+vehicles moved on again. Certainly, I had no more than a passing glimpse of the
+occupants; but I could have sworn that violet eyes looked suddenly into mine,
+and with equal conviction I could have sworn to the gaunt face of the man who
+sat beside the violet-eyed girl for that of Earl Dexter!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The travellers, however, were immediately lost to sight in the rear, and I was
+left to conjecture whether this had been a not uncommon form of optical
+delusion or whether I had seen a ghost.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At any rate, as I passed in between the big pillars, “The gateway of the
+North,” I scrutinized, and closely, the numerous hurrying figures about me.
+None of them, by any stretch of the imagination, could have been set down for
+that of Dexter, The Stetson Man. No doubt, I concluded, I had been tricked by a
+chance resemblance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Having dispatched my telegram, I boarded the 6:55. I thought I should have the
+compartment to myself, and so deep in reverie was I that the train was actually
+clear of the platforms ere I learned that I had a companion. He must have
+joined me at the moment that the train started. Certainly, I had not seen him
+enter. But, suddenly looking up, I met the eyes of this man who occupied the
+corner seat facing me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This person was olive-skinned, clean-shaven, fine featured, and perfectly
+groomed. His age might have been anything from twenty-five to forty-five, but
+his hair and brows were jet black. His eyes, too, were nearer to real black
+than any human eyes I had ever seen before&mdash;excepting the awful eyes of
+Hassan of Aleppo. Hassan of Aleppo! It was, to that hour, a mystery how his
+group of trained assassins&mdash;the Hashishin&mdash;had quitted England. Since
+none of them were known to the police, it was no insoluble mystery, I admit;
+but nevertheless it was singular that the careful watching of the ports had
+yielded no result. Could it be that some of them had not yet left the country?
+Could it be&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I looked intently into the black eyes. They were caressing, smiling eyes, and
+looked boldly into mine. I picked up a magazine, pretending to read. But I
+supported it with my left hand; my right was in my coat pocket&mdash;and it
+rested upon my Smith and Wesson!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So much had the slipper of Mohammed done for me: I went in hourly dread of
+murderous attack!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My travelling companion watched me; of that I was certain. I could feel his
+gaze. But he made no move and no word passed between us. This was the situation
+when the train slowed into Northampton. At Northampton, to my indescribable
+relief (frankly, I was as nervous in those days as a woman), the Oriental
+traveller stepped out on to the platform.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Having reclosed the door, he turned and leaned in through the open window.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Evidently you are not concerned, Mr. Cavanagh,” he said. “Be warned. Do not
+interfere with those that are!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The night swallowed him up.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My fears had been justified; the man was one of the Hashishin&mdash;a spy of
+Hassan of Aleppo! What did it mean?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I craned from the window, searching the platform right and left. But there was
+no sign of him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When the train left Northampton I found myself alone, and I should only weary
+you were I to attempt to recount the troubled conjectures that bore me company
+to Birmingham.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The train reached New Street at nine, with the result that having gulped a
+badly needed brandy and soda in the buffet, I grabbed my bag, raced
+across&mdash;and just missed the connection! More than an hour later I found
+myself standing at ten minutes to eleven upon the H&mdash; platform, watching
+the red taillight of the “local” disappear into the night. Then I realized to
+the full that with four miles of lonely England before me there hung above my
+head a mysterious threat&mdash;a vague menace. The solitary official, who but
+waited my departure to lock up the station, was the last representative of
+civilization I could hope to encounter until the gates of “Uplands” should be
+opened to me!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+What was the matter with which I was warned not to interfere? Might I not, by
+my mere presence in that place, unwittingly be interfering now?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With the station-master’s directions humming like a refrain in my ears, I
+passed through the sleeping village and out on to the road. The moon was
+exceptionally bright and unobscured, although a dense bank of cloud crept
+slowly from the west, and before me the path stretched as an unbroken thread of
+silvery white twining a sinuous way up the bracken-covered slope, to where,
+sharply defined against the moonlight sky, a coppice in grotesque silhouette
+marked the summit.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The month had been dry and tropically hot, and my footsteps rang crisply upon
+the hard ground. There is nothing more deceptive than a straight road up a
+hill; and half an hour’s steady tramping but saw me approaching the trees.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I had so far resolutely endeavoured to keep my mind away from the idea of
+surveillance. Now, as I paused to light my pipe&mdash;a never-failing friend in
+loneliness&mdash;I perceived something move in the shadows of a neighbouring
+bush.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This object was not unlike a bladder, and the very incongruity of its
+appearance served to revive all my apprehensions. Taking up my grip, as though
+I had noticed nothing of an alarming nature, I pursued my way up the slope,
+leaving a trail of tobacco smoke in my wake; and having my revolver secreted up
+my right coat-sleeve.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Successfully resisting a temptation to glance behind, I entered the cover of
+the coppice, and, now invisible to any one who might be dogging me, stood and
+looked back upon the moon-bright road.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was no living thing in sight, the road was empty as far as the eye could
+see. The coppice now remained to be negotiated, and then, if the
+station-master’s directions were not at fault, “Uplands” should be visible
+beyond. Taking, therefore, what I had designed to be a final glance back down
+the hillside, I was preparing to resume my way when I saw
+something&mdash;something that arrested me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was a long way behind&mdash;so far that, had the moon been less bright, I
+could never have discerned it. What it was I could not even conjecture; but it
+had the appearance of a vague gray patch, moving&mdash;not along the road, but
+through the undergrowth&mdash;in my direction.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For a second my eye rested upon it. Then I saw a second patch&mdash;a
+third&mdash;a fourth!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Six!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There were six gray patches creeping up the slope toward me!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The sight was unnerving. What were these things that approached, silently,
+stealthily&mdash;like snakes in the grass?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A fear, unlike anything I had known before the quest of the Prophet’s slipper
+had brought fantastic horror into my life, came upon me. Revolver in hand I
+ran&mdash;ran for my life toward the gap in the trees that marked the coppice
+end. And as I went something hummed through the darkness beside my head, some
+projectile, some venomous thing that missed its mark by a bare inch!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Painfully conversant with the uncanny weapons employed by the Hashishin, I knew
+now, beyond any possibility of doubt, that death was behind me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A pattering like naked feet sounded on the road, and, without pausing in my
+headlong career, I sent a random shot into the blackness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The crack of the Smith and Wesson reassured me. I pulled up short, turned, and
+looked back toward the trees.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nothing&mdash;no one!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Breathing heavily, I crammed my extinguished briar into my
+pocket&mdash;re-charged the empty chamber of the revolver&mdash;and started to
+run again toward a light that showed over the treetops to my left.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That, if the man’s directions were right, was “Uplands”&mdash;if his directions
+were wrong&mdash;then...
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A shrill whistle&mdash;minor, eerie, in rising cadence&mdash;sounded on the
+dead silence with piercing clearness! Six whistles&mdash;seemingly from all
+around me&mdash;replied!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Some object came humming through the air, and I ducked wildly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On and on I ran&mdash;flying from an unknown, but, as a warning instinct told
+me, deadly peril&mdash;ran as a man runs pursued by devils.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The road bent sharply to the left then forked. Overhanging trees concealed the
+house, and the light, though high up under the eaves, was no longer visible.
+Trusting to Providence to guide me, I plunged down the lane that turned to the
+left, and, almost exhausted, saw the gates before me&mdash;saw the sweep of the
+drive, and the moonlight, gleaming on the windows!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+None of the windows were illuminated.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Straight up to the iron gates I raced.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They were locked!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Without a moment’s hesitation I hurled my grip over the top and clambered up
+the bars! As I got astride, from the blackness of the lane came the ominous
+hum, and my hat went spinning away across the lawn!&mdash;the black cloud
+veiled the moon and complete darkness fell.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then I dropped and ran for the house&mdash;shouting, though all but
+winded&mdash;“Hilton! Hilton! Open the door!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Sinking exhausted on the steps, I looked toward the gates&mdash;but they showed
+only dimly in the dense shadows of the trees.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bzzz! Buzz!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I dropped flat in the portico as something struck the metal knob of the door
+and rebounded over me. A shower of gravel told of another misdirected
+projectile.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Crack! Crack! Crack! The revolver spoke its short reply into the mysterious
+darkness; but the night gave up no sound to tell of a shot gone home.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Hilton! Hilton!” I cried, banging on the panels with the butt of the weapon.
+“Open the door! Open the door!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And now I heard the coming footsteps along the hall within; heavy bolts were
+withdrawn&mdash;the door swung open&mdash;and Hilton, pale-faced, appeared. His
+hand shot out, grabbed my coat collar; and weak, exhausted, I found myself
+snatched into safety, and the door rebolted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Thank God!” I whispered. “Thank God! Hilton, look to all your bolts and
+fastenings. Hell is outside!”
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap33"></a>
+CHAPTER XXXIII<br/>
+HOW WE WERE REINFORCED</h2>
+
+<p>
+Hilton, I learned, was living the simple life at “Uplands.” The place was not
+yet decorated and was only partly furnished. But with his man, Soar, he had
+been in solitary occupation for a week.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Feel better now?” he asked anxiously.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I reached for my tumbler and blew a cloud of smoke into the air. I could hear
+Soar’s footsteps as he made the round of bolts and bars, testing each
+anxiously.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Thanks, Hilton,” I said. “I’m quite all right. You are naturally wondering
+what the devil it all means? Well, then, I wired you from Euston that I was
+coming by the 6:55.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“H&mdash; Post Office shuts at 7. I shall get your wire in the morning!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That explains your failing to meet me. Now for my explanation!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Surrounding this house at the present moment,” I continued, “are members of an
+Eastern organization&mdash;the Hashishin, founded in Khorassan in the eleventh
+century and flourishing to-day!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Do you mean it, Cavanagh?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I do! One Hassan of Aleppo is the present Sheikh of the order, and he has come
+to England, bringing a fiendish company in his train, in pursuit of the sacred
+slipper of Mohammed, which was stolen by the late Professor Deeping&mdash;-”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Surely I have read something about this?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Probably. Deeping was murdered by Hassan! The slipper was placed in the
+Antiquarian Museum&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“From which it was stolen again!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Correct&mdash;by Earl Dexter, America’s foremost crook! But the real facts
+have never got into print. I am the only pressman who knows them, and I have
+good reason for keeping my knowledge to myself! Dexter is dead (I believe I saw
+his ghost to-day). But although, to the best of my knowledge, the accursed
+slipper is in the hands of Hassan and Company, I have been watched since I left
+Euston, and on my way to ‘Uplands’ my life was attempted!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“For God’s sake, why?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I cannot surmise, Hilton. Deeping, for certain reasons that are irrelevant at
+the moment, left the keys of the case at the Museum in my perpetual
+keeping&mdash;but the case was rifled a second time&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I read of it!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“And the keys were stolen from me. I am utterly at a loss to understand why the
+Hashishin&mdash;for it is members of that awful organization who, without a
+doubt, surround this house at the present moment&mdash;should seek my life.
+Hilton, I have brought trouble with me!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It’s almost incredible!” said Hilton, staring at me. “Why do these people
+pursue you?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ere I had time to reply Soar entered, arrayed, as was Hilton, in his night
+attire. Soar was an ex-dragoon and a model man.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Everything fast, sir,” he reported; “but from the window of the bedroom over
+here&mdash;the room I got ready for Mr. Cavanagh&mdash;I thought I saw someone
+in the orchard.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Eh?” jerked Hilton&mdash;“in the orchard? Come on up, Cavanagh!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We all ran upstairs. The moonlight was streaming into the room.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Keep back!” I warned.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Well within the shadow, I crept up to the window and looked out. The night was
+hot and still. No breeze stirred the leaves, but the edge of the frowning
+thunder cloud which I had noted before spread a heavy carpet of ebony black
+upon the ground. Beyond, I could dimly discern the hills. The others stood
+behind me, constrained by the fear of this mysterious danger which I had
+brought to “Uplands.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was someone moving among the trees!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Closer came the figure, and closer, until suddenly a shaft of moonlight found
+passage and spilled a momentary pool of light amid the shadows, I could see the
+watcher very clearly. A moment he stood there, motionless, and looking up at
+the window; then as he glided again into the shade of the trees the darkness
+became complete. But I watched, crouching there nervously, for long after he
+was gone.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“For God’s sake, who is it?” whispered Hilton, with a sort of awe in his voice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It’s Hassan of Aleppo!” I replied.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Virtually, the house, with the capital of the Midlands so near upon the one
+hand, the feverish activity of the Black Country reddening the night upon the
+other, was invested by fanatic Easterns!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We descended again to the extemporized study. Soar entered with us and Hilton
+invited him to sit down.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“We must stick together to-night!” he said. “Now, Cavanagh, let us see if we
+can find any explanation of this amazing business. I can understand that at one
+period of the slipper’s history you were an object of interest to those who
+sought to recover it; but if, as you say, the Hashishin have the slipper now,
+what do they want with you? If you have never touched it, they cannot be
+prompted by desire for vengeance.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I have never touched it,” I replied grimly; “nor even any receptacle
+containing it.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As I ceased speaking came a distant muffled rumbling.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That’s the thunder,” said Hilton. “There’s a tremendous storm brewing.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He poured out three glasses of whisky, and was about to speak when Soar held up
+a warning finger.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Listen!” he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At his words, with tropical suddenness down came the rain.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hilton, his pipe in his hand, stood listening intently.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What?” he asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I don’t know, sir; the sound of the rain has drowned it.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Indeed, the rain was descending in a perfect deluge, its continuous roar
+drowning all other sounds; but as we three listened tensely we detected a noise
+which hitherto had seemed like the overflowing of some spout.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But louder and clearer it grew, until at last I knew it for what it was.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It’s a motor-car!” I cried.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“And coming here!” added Soar. “Listen! it’s in the lane!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It certainly isn’t a taxicab,” declared Hilton. “None of the men will come
+beyond the village.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That’s the gate!” said Soar, in an awed voice, and stood up, looking at
+Hilton.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Come on,” said the latter abruptly, making for the door.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Be careful, Hilton!” I cried; “it may be a trick!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Soar unbolted the front door, threw it open, and looked out. In the darkness of
+the storm it was almost impossible to see anything in the lane outside. But at
+that moment a great sheet of lightning split the gloom, and we saw a taxicab
+standing close up to the gateway!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Help! Open the gate!” came a high-pitched voice; “open the gate!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Out into the rain we ran and down the gravel path. Soar had the gate open in a
+twinkling, and a woman carrying a brown leather grip, but who was so closely
+veiled that I had no glimpse of her features, leapt through on to the drive.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Lend a hand, two of you!” cried a vaguely familiar voice&mdash;“this way!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hilton and Soar stepped out into the road. The driver of the cab was lying
+forward across the wheel, apparently insensible, but as Hilton seized his arm
+he moved and spoke feebly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“For God’s sake be quick, sir!” he said. “They’re after us! They’re on the
+other side of the lane, there!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With that he dropped limply into Hilton’s arms!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was dragged in on to the drive&mdash;and something whizzed over our heads
+and went sputtering into the gravel away up toward the house. The last to enter
+was the man who had come in the cab. As he barred the gate behind him he
+suddenly reached out through the bars and I saw a pistol in his hand.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Once&mdash;twice&mdash;thrice&mdash;he fired into the blackness of the lane.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Take that, you swine!” he shouted. “Take that!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As quickly as we could, bearing the insensible man, we hurried back to the
+door. On the step the woman was waiting for us, with her veil raised. A
+blinding flash of lightning came as we mounted the step&mdash;and I looked into
+the violet eyes of Carneta! I turned and stared at the man behind me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was Earl Dexter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Three of the mysterious missiles fell amongst us, but miraculously no one was
+struck. Amid the mighty booming of the thunder we reentered the houses and got
+the door barred. In the hall we laid down the unconscious man and stood, a
+strangely met company, peering at one another in the dim lamplight.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“We’ve got to bury the hatchet, Mr. Cavanagh!” said Dexter. “It’s a case of the
+common enemy. I’ve brought you your bag!” and he pointed to the brown grip upon
+the floor.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“My bag!” I cried. “My bag is upstairs in my room.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Wrong, sir!” snapped The Stetson Man. “They are like as two peas in a pod,
+I’ll grant you, but the bag you snatched off the platform at New Street was
+mine! That’s what I’m after; I ought to be on the way to Liverpool. That’s what
+Hassan’s after!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The bag!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You don’t need to ask what’s in the bag?” suggested Dexter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What is in the bag?” ask Hilton hoarsely.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The slipper of the Prophet, sir!” was the reply.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap34"></a>
+CHAPTER XXXIV<br/>
+MY LAST MEETING WITH HASSAN OF ALEPPO</h2>
+
+<p>
+I felt dazed, as a man must feel who has just heard the death sentence
+pronounced upon him. Hilton seemed to have become incapable of speech or
+action; and in silence we stood watching Carneta tending the unconscious man.
+She forced brandy from a flask between his teeth, kneeling there beside him
+with her face very pale and dark rings around her eyes. Presently she looked
+up.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Will you please get me a bowl of water and a sponge?” she said quietly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Soar departed without a word, and no one spoke until he returned, bringing the
+sponge and the water, when the girl set to work in a businesslike way to
+cleanse a wound which showed upon the man’s head.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“She’s a good nurse is Carneta,” said Dexter coolly. “She was the only doctor I
+had through this”&mdash;indicating his maimed wrist. “If you will fetch my bag
+down, there’s some lint in it.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I hesitated.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You needn’t worry,” said Dexter; “as well be hung for a sheep as a lamb.
+You’ve handled the bag, and I’m not asking you to do any more.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I went up to my room and lifted the grip from the chair upon which I had put
+it. Even now I found it difficult to perceive any difference between this and
+mine. Both were of identical appearance and both new. In fact, I had bought
+mine only that morning, my old one being past use, and being in a hurry, I had
+not left it to be initialled.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As I picked up the bag the lightning flashed again, and from the window I could
+see the orchard as clearly as by sunlight. At the farther end near the wall
+someone was standing watching the house.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I went downstairs carrying the fatal bag, and rejoined the group in the hall.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“He will have to be got to bed,” said Carneta, referring to the wounded man;
+“he will probably remain unconscious for a long time.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Accordingly, we took the patient into one of the few furnished bedrooms, and
+having put him to bed left him in care of the beautiful nurse. When we four men
+met again downstairs, amazement had rendered the whole scene unreal to me. Soar
+stood just within the open door, not knowing whether to go or to remain; but
+Hilton motioned to him to stay. Earl Dexter bit off the end of a cigar and
+stood with his left elbow resting on the mantelpiece.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His gaunt face looked gaunter than ever, but the daredevil gray eyes still
+nursed that humorous light in their depths.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Mr. Cavanagh,” he said, “we’re brothers! And if you’ll consider a minute,
+you’ll see that I’m not lying when I say I’m on the straight, now and for
+always!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I made no reply: I could think of none.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’m a crook,” he resumed, “or I was up to a while ago. There’s a warrant out
+for me&mdash;the first that ever bore my name. I’ve sailed near the wind often
+enough, but it was desperation that got me into hot water about that!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He jerked his cigar in the direction of his grip, which lay now on the rug at
+his feet.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I lost a useful right hand,” he went on&mdash;“and I lost every cent I had. It
+was a dead rotten speculation&mdash;for I lost my good name! I mean it! Believe
+me, I’ve handled some shady propositions in the past, but I did it right in the
+sunlight! Up to the time I went out for that damned slipper I could have had
+lunch with any detective from Broadway to the Strand! I didn’t need any false
+whiskers and the Ritz was good enough for The Stetson Man. What now? I’m
+‘wanted!’ Enough said.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He tossed the cigar&mdash;he had smoked scarce an inch of it&mdash;into the
+empty grate.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’m an Aunt Sally for any man to shy at,” he resumed bitterly. “My place
+henceforth is in the dark. Right! I’ve finished; the book’s closed. From the
+time I quit England&mdash;if I can quit&mdash;I’m on the straight! I’ve
+promised Carneta, and I mean to keep my word. See here&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Dexter turned to me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You’ll want to know how I escaped from the cursed death-trap at Hassan’s house
+in Kent? I’ll tell you. I was never in it! I was hiding and waiting my chance.
+You know what was left to guard the slipper while the Sheikh&mdash;rot
+him&mdash;was away looking after arrangements for getting his mob out of the
+country?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I nodded.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You fell into the trap&mdash;you and Carneta. By God! I didn’t know till it
+was all over! But two minutes later I was inside that place&mdash;and three
+minutes later I was away with the slipper! Oh, it wasn’t a duplicate; it was
+the goods! What then? Carneta had had a sickening of the business and she just
+invited me to say Yes or No. I said Yes; and I’m a straight man onward.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Then what were you doing on the train with the slipper?” asked Hilton sharply.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I was going to Liverpool, sir!” snapped The Stetson Man, turning on him. “I
+was going to try to get aboard the Mauretania and then make terms for my life!
+What happened? I slipped out at Birmingham for a drink&mdash;grip in hand! I
+put it down beside me, and Mr. Cavanagh here, all in a hustle, must have rushed
+in behind me, snatched a whisky and snatched my grip and started for H&mdash;!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A vivid flash of lightning flickered about the room. Then came the deafening
+boom of the thunder, right over the house it seemed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I knew from the weight of the grip it wasn’t mine,” said Dexter, “and I was
+the most surprised guy in Great Britain and Ireland when I found whose it was!
+I opened it, of course! And right on top was a waistcoat and right in the first
+pocket was a telegram. Here it is!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He passed it to me. It was that which I had received from Hilton. I had packed
+the suit which I had been wearing that morning and must previously have thrust
+the telegram into the waistcoat pocket.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Providence!” Dexter assured me. “Because I got on the station in time to see
+Hassan of Aleppo join the train for H&mdash;! I was too late, though. But I
+chartered a taxi out on Corporation Street and invited the man to race the
+local! He couldn’t do it, but we got here in time for the fireworks! Mr.
+Cavanagh, there are anything from six to ten Hashishin watching this house!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I know it!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“They’re bareheaded; and in the dark their shaven skulls look like nothing
+human. They’re armed with those damned tubes, too. I’d give a thousand
+dollars&mdash;if I had it!&mdash;to know their mechanism. Well, gentlemen,
+deeds speak. What am I here for, when I might be on the way to Liverpool, and
+safety?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You’re here to try to make up for the past a bit!” said a soft, musical voice.
+“Mr. Cavanagh’s life is in danger.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Carneta entered the room.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The light played in that wonderful hair of hers; and pale though she was, I
+thought I had never seen a more beautiful woman.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Tell them,” she said quietly, “what must be done.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Soar glanced at me out of the corner of his eyes and shifted uneasily. Hilton
+stared as if fascinated.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Now,” rapped Dexter, in his strident voice, “putting aside all questions of
+justice and right (we’re not policemen), what do we want&mdash;you and I, Mr.
+Cavanagh?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I can’t think clearly about anything,” I said dully. “Explain yourself.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Very well. Inspector Bristol, C.I.D., would want me and Hassan arrested. I
+don’t want that! What I want is peace; I want to be able to sleep in comfort; I
+want to know I’m not likely to be murdered on the next corner! Same with you?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes&mdash;yes.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“How can we manage it? One way would be to kill Hassan of Aleppo; but he wants
+a lot of killing&mdash;I’ve tried! Moreover, directly we’d done it, another
+Sheikh-al-jebal would be nominated and he’d carry on the bloody work. We’d be
+worse off than ever. Right! we’ve got to connive at letting the blood-stained
+fanatic escape, and we’ve got to give up the slipper!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’ll do that with all my heart!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Sure! But you and I have both got little scores up against Hassan, which it’s
+not in human nature to forget. But I’ve got it worked out that there’s only one
+way. It may nearly choke us to have to do it, I’ll allow. I’m working on the
+Moslem character. Mr. Hilton, make up a fire in the grate here!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hilton stared, not comprehending.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Do as he asks,” I said. “Personally, I am resigned to mutilation, since I have
+touched the bag containing the slipper, but if Dexter has a plan&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Excuse me, sir,” Soar interrupted. “I believe there’s some coal in the
+coal-box, but I shall have to break up a packing-case for firewood&mdash;or go
+out into the yard!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Let it be the packing-case,” replied Hilton hastily.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Accordingly a fire was kindled, whilst we all stood about the room in a sort of
+fearful uncertainty; and before long a big blaze was roaring up the chimney.
+Dexter turned to me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Mr. Cavanagh,” said he, “I want you to go right upstairs, open a first-floor
+window&mdash;I would suggest that of your bedroom&mdash;and invite Hassan of
+Aleppo to come and discuss terms!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Silence followed his words; we were all amazed. Then&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Why do you ask me to do this?” I inquired.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Because,” replied Dexter, “I happen to know that Hassan has some queer kind of
+respect for you&mdash;I don’t know why.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Which is probably the reason why he tried to kill me to-night!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That’s beside the question, Mr. Cavanagh. He will believe you&mdash;which is
+the important point.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Very well. I have no idea what you have in mind but I am prepared to adopt any
+plan since I have none of my own. What shall I say?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Say that we are prepared to return the slipper&mdash;on conditions.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“He will probably try to shoot me as I stand at the window.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Dexter shrugged his shoulders.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Got to risk it,” he drawled.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“And what are the conditions?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“He must come right in here and discuss them! Guarantee him safe conduct and I
+don’t think he’ll hesitate. Anyway, if he does, just tell him that the slipper
+will be destroyed immediately!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Without a word I turned on my heel and ascended the stairs.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I entered my room, crossed to the window, and threw it widely open. Hovering
+over the distant hills I could see the ominous thunder cloud, but the storm
+seemed to have passed from “Uplands,” and only a distant muttering with the
+faint dripping of water from the pipes broke the silence of the night. A great
+darkness reigned, however, and I was entirely unable to see if any one was in
+the orchard.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Like some mueddin of fantastic fable I stood there.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Hassan!” I cried&mdash;“Hassan of Aleppo!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The name rang out strangely upon the stillness&mdash;the name which for me had
+a dreadful significance; but the whole episode seemed unreal, the voice that
+had cried unlike my voice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Instantly as any magician summoning an efreet I was answered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Out from the trees strode a tall figure, a figure I could not mistake. It was
+that of Hassan of Aleppo!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I hear, effendim, and obey,” he said. “I am ready. Open the door!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“We are prepared to discuss terms. You may come and go safely”&mdash;still my
+voice sounded unfamiliar in my ears.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I know, effendim; it is so written. Open the door.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I closed the window and mechanically descended the stairs.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Mind it isn’t a trap!” cried Hilton, who, with the others, had overheard every
+word of this strange interview. “They may try to rush the door directly we open
+it.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’ll stand the chest behind it,” said Soar; “between the door and the wall, so
+that only one can enter at a time.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This was done, and the door opened.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Alone, majestic, entered Hassan of Aleppo.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was dressed in European clothes but wore the green turban of a Sherif. With
+his snowy beard and coal-black eyes he seemed like a vision of the Prophet, of
+the Prophet in whose name he had committed such ghastly atrocities.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Deigning no glance to Soar nor to Hilton, he paced into the room, passing me
+and ignoring Carneta, where Earl Dexter awaited him. I shall never forget the
+scene as Hassan entered, to stand looking with blazing eyes at The Stetson Man,
+who sat beside the fire with the slipper of Mohammed in his hand!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Hassan,” said Dexter quietly, “Mr. Cavanagh has had to promise you safe
+conduct, or as sure as God made me, I’d put a bullet in you!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Sheikh of the Hashishin glared fixedly at him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Companion of the evil one,” he said, “it is not written that I shall die by
+your hand&mdash;or by the hand of any here. But it has been revealed to me that
+to-night the gates of Paradise may be closed in my face.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I shouldn’t be at all surprised,” drawled Dexter. “But it’s up to you. You’ve
+got to swear by Mohammed&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Salla-’llahu ’aleyhi wasellem!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That you won’t lay a hand upon any living soul, or allow any of your followers
+to do so, who has touched the slipper or had anything to do with it, but that
+you will go in peace.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You are doomed to die!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You don’t agree, then?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Those who have offended must suffer the penalty!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Right!” said Dexter&mdash;and prepared to toss the slipper into the heart of
+the fire!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Stop! Infidel! Stop!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was real agony in Hassan’s voice. To my inexpressible surprise he dropped
+upon his knee, extending his lean brown hands toward the slipper.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Dexter hesitated. “You agree, then?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hassan raised his eyes to the ceiling.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I agree,” he said. “Dark are the ways. It is the will of God...”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Dimly the booming of the thunder came echoing back to us from the hills. Above
+its roll sounded a barbaric chanting to which the drums of angry heaven formed
+a fitting accompaniment.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I heard Soar shooting the bolts again upon the going of our strange visitor.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Faint and more faint grew the chanting, until it merged into the remote
+muttering of the storm&mdash;and was lost. The quest of the sacred slipper was
+ended.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div style='display:block; margin-top:4em'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE QUEST OF THE SACRED SLIPPER ***</div>
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diff --git a/old/qotss10.txt b/old/qotss10.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..9943459
--- /dev/null
+++ b/old/qotss10.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,7234 @@
+Project Gutenberg Etext of Quest of the Sacred Slipper, by Rohmer
+#6 in our series by Sax Rohmer
+
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+The Quest of the Sacred Slipper
+
+by Sax Rohmer
+
+March, 2000 [Etext #2126]
+[Date last updated: July 21, 2005]
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+This Etext prepared by an anonymous Project Gutenberg volunteer.
+
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+
+
+The Quest of the Sacred Slipper
+
+by Sax Rohmer
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+I. THE PHANTOM SCIMITAR.
+
+II. THE GIRL WITH THE VIOLET EYES
+
+III. "HASSAN OF ALEPPO"
+
+IV. THE OBLONG BOX
+
+V. THE OCCUPANT OF THE BOX
+
+VI. THE RING OF THE PROPHET
+
+VII. FIRST ATTEMPT ON THE SAFE
+
+VIII. THE VIOLET EYES AGAIN
+
+IX. SECOND ATTEMPT ON THE SAFE
+
+X. AT THE BRITISH ANTIQUARIAN MUSEUM
+
+XI. THE HOLE IN THE BLIND
+
+XII. THE HASHISHIN WATCH
+
+XIII. THE WHITE BEAM
+
+XIV. A SCREAM IN THE NIGHT
+
+XV. A SHRIVELLED HAND
+
+XVI. THE DWARF
+
+XVII. THE WOMAN WITH THE BASKET
+
+XVIII. WHAT CAME THROUGH THE WINDOW
+
+XIX. A RAPPING AT MIDNIGHT
+
+XX. THE GOLDEN PAVILION
+
+XXI. THE BLACK TUBE
+
+XXII. THE LIGHT OF EL-MEDINEH
+
+XXIII. THE THREE MESSAGES
+
+XXIV. I KEEP THE APPOINTMENT
+
+XXV. THE WATCHER IN BANK CHAMBERS
+
+XXVI. THE STRONG-ROOM
+
+XXVII. THE SLIPPER
+
+XXVIII. CARNETA
+
+XXIX. WE MEET MR. ISAACS
+
+XXX. AT THE GATE HOUSE
+
+XXXI. THE POOL OF DEATH
+
+XXXII. SIX PATCHES
+
+XXXIII. HOW WE WERE REENFORCED
+
+XXXIV. MY LAST MEETING WITH HASSAN OF ALEPPO
+
+
+
+
+THE QUEST OF THE SACRED SLIPPER
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+THE PHANTOM SCIMITAR
+
+
+I was not the only passenger aboard the S.S. Mandalay who perceived
+the disturbance and wondered what it might portend and from whence
+proceed. A goodly number of passengers were joining the ship at
+Port Said. I was lounging against the rail, pipe in mouth, lazily
+wondering, with a large vagueness.
+
+What a heterogeneous rabble it was!--a brightly coloured rabble,
+but the colours all were dirty, like the town and the canal. Only
+the sky was clean; the sky and the hard, merciless sunlight which
+spared nothing of the uncleanness, and defied one even to think
+of the term dear to tourists, "picturesque." I was in that kind
+of mood. All the natives appeared to be pockmarked; all the
+Europeans greasy with perspiration.
+
+But what was the stir about?
+
+I turned to the dark, bespectacled young man who leaned upon the
+rail beside me. From the first I had taken to Mr. Ahmad Ahmadeen.
+
+"There is some kind of undercurrent of excitement among the natives,"
+I said, "a sort of subdued Greek chorus is audible. What's it all
+about?"
+
+Mr. Ahmadeen smiled. After a gaunt fashion, he was a handsome man
+and had a pleasant smile.
+
+"Probably," he replied, "some local celebrity is joining the ship."
+
+I stared at him curiously.
+
+"Any idea who he is?" (The soul of the copyhunter is a restless
+soul.)
+
+A group of men dressed in semi-European fashion--that is, in
+European fashion save for their turbans, which were green--passed
+close to us along the deck.
+
+Ahmadeen appeared not to have heard the question.
+
+The disturbance, which could only be defined as a subdued uproar,
+but could be traced to no particular individual or group, grew
+momentarily louder--and died away. It was only when it had
+completely ceased that one realized how pronounced it had been
+--how altogether peculiar, secret; like that incomprehensible
+murmuring in a bazaar when, unknown to the insular visitor, a
+reputed saint is present.
+
+Then it happened; the inexplicable incident which, though I knew
+it not, heralded the coming of strange things, and the dawn of a
+new power; which should set up its secret standards in England,
+which should flood Europe and the civilized world with wonder.
+
+A shrill scream marked the overture--a scream of fear and of pain,
+which dropped to a groan, and moaned out into the silence of which
+it was the cause.
+
+"My God! what's that?"
+
+I started forward. There was a general crowding rush, and a darkly
+tanned and bearded man came on board, carrying a brown leather case.
+Behind him surged those who bore the victim.
+
+"It's one of the lascars!"
+
+"No--an Egyptian!"
+
+"It was a porter--?"
+
+"What is it--?"
+
+"Someone been stabbed!"
+
+"Where's the doctor?"
+
+"Stand away there, if you please!"
+
+That was a ship's officer; and the voice of authority served to
+quell the disturbance. Through a lane walled with craning heads
+they bore the insensible man. Ahmadeen was at my elbow.
+
+"A Copt," he said softly. "Poor devil!" I turned to him. There
+was a queer expression on his lean, clean-shaven, bronze face.
+
+"Good God!" I said. "His hand has been cut off!"
+
+That was the fact of the matter. And no one knew who was
+responsible for the atrocity. And no one knew what had become of
+the severed hand! I wasted not a moment in linking up the story.
+The pressman within me acted automatically.
+
+"The gentleman just come aboard, sir," said a steward, "is Professor
+Deeping. The poor beggar who was assaulted was carrying some of the
+Professor's baggage." The whole incident struck me as most odd.
+There was an idea lurking in my mind that something else--something
+more--lay behind all this. With impatience I awaited the time
+when the injured man, having received medical attention, was conveyed
+ashore, and Professor Deeping reappeared. To the celebrated
+traveller and Oriental scholar I introduced myself.
+
+He was singularly reticent.
+
+"I was unable to see what took place, Mr. Cavanagh," he said. "The
+poor fellow was behind me, for I had stepped from the boat ahead of
+him. I had just taken a bag from his hand, but he was carrying
+another, heavier one. It is a clean cut, like that of a scimitar.
+I have seen very similar wounds in the cases of men who have
+suffered the old Moslem penalty for theft."
+
+Nothing further had come to light when the Mandalay left, but I
+found new matter for curiosity in the behaviour of the Moslem party
+who had come on board at Port Said.
+
+In conversation with Mr. Bell, the chief officer, I learned that
+the supposed leader of the party was one, Mr. Azraeel. "Obviously,"
+said Bell, "not his real name or not all it. I don't suppose
+they'll show themselves on deck; they've got their own servants with
+them, and seem to be people of consequence."
+
+This conversation was interrupted, but I found my unseen fellow
+voyagers peculiarly interesting and pursued inquiries in other
+directions. I saw members of the distinguished travellers'
+retinue going about their duties, but never obtained a glimpse
+of Mr. Azraeel nor of any of his green-turbaned companions.
+
+"Who is Mr. Azraeel?" I asked Ahmadeen.
+
+"I cannot say," replied the Egyptian, and abruptly changed the
+subject.
+
+Some curious aroma of mystery floated about the ship. Ahmadeen
+conveyed to me the idea that he was concealing something. Then,
+one night, Mr. Bell invited me to step forward with him.
+
+"Listen," he said.
+
+From somewhere in the fo'c'sle proceeded low chanting.
+
+"Hear it?"
+
+"Yes. What the devil is it?"
+
+"It's the lascars," said Bell. "They have been behaving in a most
+unusual manner ever since the mysterious Mr. Azraeel joined us. I
+may be wrong in associating the two things, but I shan't be sorry
+to see the last of our mysterious passengers."
+
+The next happening on board the Mandalay which I have to record was
+the attempt to break open the door of Professor Deeping's stateroom.
+Except when he was actually within, the Professor left his room door
+religiously locked.
+
+He made light of the affair, but later took me aside and told me a
+curious story of an apparition which had appeared to him.
+
+"It was a crescent of light," he said, "and it glittered through
+the darkness there to the left as I lay in my berth."
+
+"A reflection from something on the deck?"
+
+Deeping smiled, uneasily.
+
+"Possibly," he replied; "but it was very sharply defined. Like
+the blade of a scimitar," he added.
+
+I stared at him, my curiosity keenly aroused. "Does any explanation
+suggest itself to you?" I said.
+
+"Well," he confessed, "I have a theory, I will admit; but it is
+rather going back to the Middle Ages. You see, I have lived in the
+East a lot; perhaps I have assimilated some of their superstitions."
+
+He was oddly reticent, as ever. I felt convinced that he was
+keeping something back. I could not stifle the impression that the
+clue to these mysteries lay somewhere around the invisible
+Mohammedan party.
+
+"Do you know," said Bell to me, one morning, "this trip's giving me
+the creeps. I believe the damned ship's haunted! Three bells in the
+middle watch last night, I'll swear I saw some black animal crawling
+along the deck, in the direction of the forward companion-way."
+
+"Cat?" I suggested.
+
+"Nothing like it," said Mr. Bell. "Mr. Cavanagh, it was some
+uncanny thing! I'm afraid I can't explain quite what I mean, but
+it was something I wanted to shoot!"
+
+"Where did it go?"
+
+The chief officer shrugged his shoulders. "Just vanished," he said.
+"I hope I don't see it again."
+
+At Tilbury the Mohammedan party went ashore in a body. Among them
+were veiled women. They contrived so to surround a central figure
+that I entirely failed to get a glimpse of the mysterious Mr.
+Azraeel. Ahmadeen was standing close by the companion-way, and I
+had a momentary impression that one of the women slipped something
+into his hand. Certainly, he started; and his dusky face seemed to
+pale.
+
+Then a deck steward came out of Deeping's stateroom, carrying the
+brown bag which the Professor had brought aboard at Port Said.
+Deeping's voice came:
+
+"Hi, my man! Let me take that bag!"
+
+The bag changed hands. Five minutes later, as I was preparing to
+go ashore, arose a horrid scream above the berthing clamour. Those
+passengers yet aboard made in the direction from which the scream
+had proceeded.
+
+A steward--the one to whom Professor Deeping had spoken--lay
+writhing at the foot of the stairs leading to the saloon-deck. His
+right hand had been severed above the wrist!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+THE GIRL WITH THE VIOLET EYES
+
+
+During the next day or two my mind constantly reverted to the
+incidents of the voyage home. I was perfectly convinced that the
+curtain had been partially raised upon some fantasy in which
+Professor Deeping figured.
+
+But I had seen no more of Deeping nor had I heard from him, when
+abruptly I found myself plunged again into the very vortex of his
+troubled affairs. I was half way through a long article, I
+remember, upon the mystery of the outrage at the docks. The poor
+steward whose hand had been severed lay in a precarious condition,
+but the police had utterly failed to trace the culprit.
+
+I had laid down my pen to relight my pipe (the hour was about ten
+at night) when a faint sound from the direction of the outside
+door attracted my attention. Something had been thrust through
+the letter-box.
+
+"A circular," I thought, when the bell rang loudly, imperatively.
+
+I went to the door. A square envelope lay upon the mat--a
+curious envelope, pale amethyst in colour. Picking it up, I found
+it to bear my name--written simply--
+
+"Mr. Cavanagh."
+
+Tearing it open I glanced at the contents. I threw open the door.
+No one was visible upon the landing, but when I leaned over the
+banister a white-clad figure was crossing the hall, below.
+
+Without hesitation, hatless, I raced down the stairs. As I crossed
+the dimly lighted hall and came out into the peaceful twilight of
+the court, my elusive visitor glided under the archway opposite.
+
+Just where the dark and narrow passage opened on to Fleet Street
+I overtook her--a girl closely veiled and wrapped in a long coat
+of white ermine.
+
+"Madam," I said.
+
+She turned affrightedly.
+
+"Please do not detain me!" Her accent was puzzling, but pleasing.
+She glanced apprehensively about her.
+
+You have seen the moon through a mist? --and known it for what it
+was in spite of its veiling? So, now, through the cloudy folds
+of the veil, I saw the stranger's eyes, and knew them for the most
+beautiful eyes I had ever seen, had ever dreamt of.
+
+"But you must explain the meaning of your note!"
+
+"I cannot! I cannot! Please do not ask me!"
+
+She was breathless from her flight and seemed to be trembling.
+From behind the cloud her eyes shone brilliantly, mysteriously.
+
+I was sorely puzzled. The whole incident was bizarre--indeed, it
+had in it something of the uncanny. Yet I could not detain the girl
+against her will. That she went in apprehension of something, of
+someone, was evident.
+
+Past the head of the passage surged the noisy realities of Fleet
+Street. There were men there in quest of news; men who would
+have given much for such a story as this in which I was becoming
+entangled. Yet a story more tantalizingly incomplete could not
+well be imagined.
+
+I knew that I stood upon the margin of an arena wherein strange
+adversaries warred to a strange end. But a mist was over all.
+Here, beside me, was one who could disperse the mist--and would
+not. Her one anxiety seemed to be to escape.
+
+Suddenly she raised her veil; and I looked fully into the only
+really violet eyes I had ever beheld. Mentally, I started. For
+the face framed in the snowy fur was the most bewitchingly lovely
+imaginable. One rebellious lock of wonderful hair swept across
+the white brow. It was brown hair, with an incomprehensible
+sheen in the high lights that suggested the heart of a blood-red
+rose.
+
+"Oh," she cried, "promise me that you will never breathe a word
+to any one about my visit!"
+
+"I promise willingly," I said; "but can you give me no hint?"
+
+"Honestly, truly, I cannot, dare not, say more! Only promise that
+you will do as I ask!"
+
+Since I could perceive no alternative--
+
+"I will do so," I replied.
+
+"Thank you--oh, thank you!" she said; and dropping her veil again
+she walked rapidly away from me, whispering, "I rely upon you. Do
+not fail me. Good-bye!"
+
+Her conspicuous white figure joined the hurrying throngs upon the
+pavement beyond. My curiosity brooked no restraint. I hurried to
+the end of the courtway. She was crossing the road. From the
+shadows where he had lurked, a man came forward to meet her. A
+vehicle obstructed the view ere I could confirm my impression; and
+when it had passed, neither my lovely visitor nor her companion
+were anywhere in sight.
+
+But, unless some accident of light and shade had deceived me, the
+man who had waited was Ahmad Ahmadeen!
+
+It seemed that some astral sluice-gate was raised; a dreadful sense
+of foreboding for the first time flooded my mind. Whilst the girl
+had stood before me it had been different--the mysterious charm of
+her personality had swamped all else. But now, the messenger gone,
+it was the purport of her message which assumed supreme significance.
+
+Written in odd, square handwriting upon the pale amethyst paper,
+this was the message--
+
+ Prevail upon Professor Deeping to place what he has in the brown
+ case in the porch of his house to-night. If he fails to do so,
+ no power on earth can save him from the Scimitar of Hassan.
+
+ A FRIEND.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+"HASSAN OF ALEPPO"
+
+Professor Deeping's number was in the telephone directory,
+therefore, on returning to my room, where there still lingered the
+faint perfume of my late visitor's presence, I asked for his number.
+He proved to be at home.
+
+"Strange you should ring me up, Cavanagh," he said; "for I was
+about to ring you up."
+
+"First," I replied, "listen to the contents of an anonymous letter
+which I have received."
+
+(I remembered, and only just in time, my promise to the veiled
+messenger.)
+
+"To me," I added, having read him the note, "it seems to mean
+nothing. I take it that you understand better than I do."
+
+"I understand very well, Cavanagh!" he replied. "You will recall
+my story of the scimitar which flashed before me in the darkness
+of my stateroom on the Mandalay? Well, I have seen it again! I
+am not an imaginative man: I had always believed myself to possess
+the scientific mind; but I can no longer doubt that I am the object
+of a pursuit which commenced in Mecca! The happenings on the
+steamer prepared me for this, in a degree. When the man lost his
+hand at Port Said I doubted. I had supposed the days of such things
+past. The attempt to break into my stateroom even left me still
+uncertain. But the outrage upon the steward at the docks removed
+all further doubt. I perceived that the contents of a certain brown
+leather case were the objective of the crimes."
+
+I listened in growing wonder.
+
+"It was not necessary in order to further the plan of stealing the
+bag that the hands were severed," resumed the Professor. "In fact,
+as was rendered evident by the case of the steward, this was a
+penalty visited upon any one who touched it! You are thinking of
+my own immunity?"
+
+"I am!"
+
+"This is attributable to two things. Those who sought to recover
+what I had in the case feared that my death en route might result
+in its being lost to them for ever. They awaited a suitable
+opportunity. They had designed to take it at Port Said certainly,
+I think; but the bag was too large to be readily concealed, and,
+after the outrage, might have led to the discovery of the culprit.
+In the second place, they are uncertain of my faith. I have long
+passed for a true Believer in the East! As a Moslem I visited
+Mecca--"
+
+"You visited Mecca!"
+
+"I had just returned from the hadj when I joined the Mandalay at
+Port Said! My death, however, has been determined upon, whether
+I be Moslem or Christian!"
+
+"Why?"
+
+"Because," came the Professor's harsh voice over the telephone, "of
+the contents of the brown leather case! I will not divulge to you
+now the nature of these contents; to know might endanger you. But
+the case is locked in my safe here, and the key, together with a
+full statement of the true facts of the matter, is hidden behind
+the first edition copy of my book 'Assyrian Mythology,' in the
+smaller bookcase--"
+
+"Why do you tell me all this?" I interrupted.
+
+He laughed harshly.
+
+"The identity of my pursuer has just dawned upon me," he said. "I
+know that my life is in real danger. I would give up what is
+demanded of me, but I believe its possession to be my strongest
+safeguard."
+
+Mystery upon mystery! I seemed to be getting no nearer to the heart
+of this maze. What in heaven's name did it all mean? Suddenly an
+idea struck me.
+
+"Is our late fellow passenger, Mr. Ahmadeen, connected with the
+matter?" I asked.
+
+"In no way," replied Deeping earnestly. "Mr. Ahmadeen is, I
+believe, a person of some consequence in the Moslem world; but I
+have nothing to fear from him."
+
+"What steps have you taken to protect yourself?"
+
+Again the short laugh reached my ears.
+
+"I'm afraid long residence in the East has rendered me something of
+a fatalist, Cavanagh! Beyond keeping my door locked, I have taken
+no steps whatever. I fear I am quite accessible!"
+
+A while longer we talked; and with every word the conviction was
+more strongly borne in upon me that some uncanny menace threatened
+the peace, perhaps the life, of Professor Deeping.
+
+I had hung up the receiver scarce a moment when, acting upon a
+sudden determination, I called up New Scotland Yard, and asked for
+Detective-Inspector Bristol, whom I knew well. A few words were
+sufficient keenly to arouse his curiosity, and he announced his
+intention of calling upon me immediately. He was in charge of the
+case of the severed hand.
+
+I made no attempt to resume work in the interval preceding his
+arrival. I had not long to wait, however, ere Bristol was ringing
+my bell; and I hurried to the door, only too glad to confide in one
+so well equipped to analyze my doubts and fears. For Bristol is no
+ordinary policeman, but a trained observer, who, when I first made
+his acquaintance, completely upset my ideas upon the mental
+limitations of the official detective force.
+
+In appearance Bristol suggests an Anglo-Indian officer, and at the
+time of which I write he had recently returned from Jamaica and his
+face was as bronzed as a sailor's. One would never take Bristol
+for a detective. As he seated himself in the armchair, without
+preamble I plunged into my story. He listened gravely.
+
+"What sort of house is Professor Deeping's?" he asked suddenly.
+
+"I have no idea," I replied, "beyond the fact that it is somewhere
+in Dulwich."
+
+"May I use your telephone?"
+
+"Certainly."
+
+Very quickly Bristol got into communication with the superintendent
+of P Division. A brief delay, and the man came to the telephone
+whose beat included the road wherein Professor Deeping's house was
+situated.
+
+"Why!" said Bristol, hanging up the receiver after making a number
+of inquiries, "it's a sort of rambling cottage in extensive grounds.
+There's only one servant, a manservant, and he sleeps in a detached
+lodge. If the Professor is really in danger of attack he could not
+well have chosen a more likely residence for the purpose!"
+
+"What shall you do? What do you make of it all?"
+
+"As I see the case," he said slowly, "it stands something like this:
+Professor Deeping has . . . "
+
+The telephone bell began to ring.
+
+I took up the receiver.
+
+"Hullo! Hullo."
+
+"Cavanagh!--is that Cavanagh?"
+
+"Yes! yes! who is that?"
+
+"Deeping! I have rung up the police, and they are sending some
+one. But I wish . . . "
+
+His voice trailed off. The sound of a confused and singular uproar
+came to me.
+
+"Hullo!" I cried. "Hullo!"
+
+A shriek--a deathful, horrifying cry--and a distant babbling alone
+answered me. There was a crash. Clearly, Deeping had dropped the
+receiver. I suppose my face blanched.
+
+"What is it?" asked Bristol anxiously.
+
+"God knows what it is!" I said. "Deeping has met with some
+mishap--"
+
+When, over the wires--
+
+"Hassan of Aleppo!" came a dying whisper. "Hassan . . . of
+Aleppo . . . "
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+THE OBLONG BOX
+
+
+"You had better wait for us," said Bristol to the taxi-man.
+
+"Very good, sir. But I shan't be able to take you further back than
+the Brixton Garage. You can get another cab there, though."
+
+A clock chimed out--an old-world chime in keeping with the
+loneliness, the curiously remote loneliness, of the locality. Less
+than five miles from St. Paul's are spots whereto, with the
+persistence of Damascus attar, clings the aroma of former days.
+This iron gateway fronting the old chapel was such a spot.
+
+Just within stood a plain-clothes man, who saluted my companion
+respectfully.
+
+"Professor Deeping," I began.
+
+The man, with a simple gesture, conveyed the dreadful news.
+
+"Dead! dead!" I cried incredulously.
+
+He glanced at Bristol.
+
+"The most mysterious case I have ever had anything to do with,
+sir," he said.
+
+The power of speech seemed to desert me. It was unthinkable that
+Deeping, with whom I had been speaking less than an hour ago,
+should now be no more; that some malign agency should thus
+murderously have thrust him into the great borderland.
+
+In that kind of silence which seems to be peopled with whispering
+spirits we strode forward along the elm avenue. It was very dark
+where the moon failed to penetrate. The house, low and rambling,
+came into view, its facade bathed in silver light. Two of the
+visible windows were illuminated. A sort of loggia ran along one
+side.
+
+On our left, as we made for this, lay a black ocean of shrubbery.
+It intruded, raggedly, upon the weed-grown path, for neglect was
+the keynote of the place.
+
+We entered the cottage, crossed the tiny lobby, and came to the
+study. A man, evidently Deeping's servant, was sitting in a chair
+by the door, his head sunken in his hands. He looked up,
+haggard-faced.
+
+"My God! my God!" he groaned. "He was locked in, gentlemen! He
+was locked in; and yet something murdered him!"
+
+"What do you mean?" said Bristol. "Where were you?"
+
+"I was away on an errand, sir. When I returned, the police were
+knocking the door down. He was locked in!"
+
+We passed him, entering the study.
+
+It was a museum-like room, lighted by a lamp on the littered
+table. At first glance it looked as though some wild thing had
+run amok there. The disorder was indescribable.
+
+"Touched nothing, of course?" asked Bristol sharply of the officer
+on duty.
+
+"Nothing, sir. It's just as we found it when we forced the door."
+
+"Why did you force the door?"
+
+"He rung us up at the station and said that something or somebody
+had got into the house. It was evident the poor gentleman's nerve
+had broken down, sir. He said he was locked in his study. When
+we arrived it was all in darkness--but we thought we heard sounds
+in here."
+
+"What sort of sounds?"
+
+"Something crawling about!"
+
+Bristol turned.
+
+"Key is in the lock on the inside of the door," he said. "Is that
+where you found it?"
+
+"Yes, sir!"
+
+He looked across to where the brass knob of a safe gleamed dully.
+
+"Safe locked?"
+
+"Yes, sir."
+
+Professor Deeping lay half under the table, a spectacle so ghastly
+that I shall not attempt to describe it.
+
+"Merciful heavens!" whispered Bristol. "He's nearly decapitated!"
+
+I clutched dizzily at the mantelpiece. It was all so utterly,
+incredibly horrible. How had Deeping met his death? The windows
+both were latched and the door had been locked from within!
+
+"You searched for the murderer, of course?" asked Bristol.
+
+"You can see, sir," replied the officer, "that there isn't a spot
+in the room where a man could hide! And there was nobody
+in here when we forced the door!"
+
+"Why!" cried my companion suddenly. "The Professor has a chisel
+in his hand!"
+
+"Yes. I think he must have been trying to prise open that box
+yonder when he was attacked."
+
+Bristol and I looked, together, at an oblong box which lay upon
+the floor near the murdered man. It was a kind of small
+packing case, addressed to Professor Deeping, and evidently had
+not been opened.
+
+"When did this arrive?" asked Bristol. Lester, the Professor's
+man, who had entered the room, replied shakily--
+
+"It came by carrier, sir, just before I went out."
+
+"Was he expecting it?"
+
+"I don't think so."
+
+Inspector Bristol and the officer dragged the box fully into the
+light. It was some three feet long by one foot square, and solidly
+constructed.
+
+"It is perfectly evident," remarked Bristol, "that the murderer
+stayed to search for--"
+
+"The key of the safe!"
+
+"Exactly. If the men really heard sounds here, it would appear that
+the assassin was still searching at that time."
+
+"I assure you," the officer interrupted, "that there was no living
+thing in the room when we entered."
+
+Bristol and I looked at one another in horrified wonder.
+
+"It's incomprehensible!" he said.
+
+"See if the key is in the place mentioned by the Professor, Mr.
+Cavanagh, whilst I break the box."
+
+I went to a great, open bookcase, which the frantic searcher seemed
+to have overlooked. Removing the bulky "Assyrian Mythology," there,
+behind the volume, lay an envelope, containing a key, and a short
+letter. Not caring to approach more closely to the table and to
+that which lay beneath it, I was peering at the small writing, in
+the semi-gloom by the bookcase, when Bristol cried--
+
+"This box is unopenable by ordinary means! I shall have to smash
+it!"
+
+At his words, I joined him where he knelt on the floor.
+Mysteriously, the chest had defied all his efforts.
+
+"There's a pick-axe in the garden," volunteered Lester. "Shall I
+bring it?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+The man ran off.
+
+"I see the key is safe," said Bristol. "Possibly the letter may
+throw some light upon all this."
+
+"Let us hope so," I replied. "You might read it."
+
+He took the letter from my hand, stepped up to the table, and by
+the light of the lamp read as follows--
+
+My Dear Cavanagh,--
+
+It has now become apparent to me that my life is in imminent danger.
+You know of the inexplicable outrages which marked my homeward
+journey, and if this letter come to your hand it will be because
+these have culminated in my death.
+
+The idea of a pursuing scimitar is not new to me. This phenomenon,
+which I have now witnessed three times, is fairly easy of
+explanation, but its significance is singular. It is said to be
+one of the devices whereby the Hashishin warn those whom they have
+marked down for destruction, and is called, in the East, "The
+Scimitar of Hassan."
+
+The Hashishin were the members of a Moslem secret society, founded
+in 1090 by one Hassan of Khorassan. There is a persistent tradition
+in parts of the Orient that this sect still flourishes in Assyria,
+under the rule of a certain Hassan of Aleppo, the Sheikh-al-jebal,
+or supreme lord of the Hashishin. My careful inquiries, however,
+at the time that I was preparing matter for my "Assyrian Mythology,"
+failed to discover any trace of such a person or such a group.
+
+I accordingly assumed Hassan to be a myth--a first cousin to the
+ginn. I was wrong. He exists. And by my supremely rash act I
+have incurred his vengeance, for Hassan of Aleppo is the
+self-appointed guardian of the traditions and relics of Mohammed.
+And I have Stolen one of the holy slippers of the Prophet!
+
+He, with some of his servants, has followed me from Mecca to
+England. My precautions have enabled me to retain the relic, but
+you have seen what fate befell all those others who even touched
+the receptacle containing it.
+
+If I fall a victim to the Hashishin, I am uncertain how you, as my
+confidant, will fare. Therefore I have locked the slipper in my
+safe and to you entrust the key. I append particulars of the lock
+combination; but I warn you--do not open the safe. If their
+wrath be visited upon you, your possession of the key may prove a
+safeguard.
+
+Take the copy of "Assyrian Mythology." You will find in it all
+that I learned respecting the Hashishin. If I am doomed to be
+assassinated, it may aid you; if not in avenging me, in saving
+others from my fate. I fear I shall never see you again. A
+cloud of horror settles upon me like a pall. Do not touch the
+slipper, nor the case containing it.
+
+ EDWARD DEEPING.
+
+"It is almost incredible!" I said hoarsely.
+
+Bristol returned the letter to me without a word, and turning to
+Lester, who had reentered carrying a heavy pick-axe, he attacked
+the oblong box with savage energy.
+
+Through the house of death the sound of the blows echoed and rang
+with a sort of sacrilegious mockery. The box fell to pieces.
+
+"My God! look, sir!"
+
+Lester was the trembling speaker.
+
+The box, I have said, was but three feet long by one foot square,
+and had clearly defied poor Deeping's efforts to open it. But a
+crescent-shaped knife, wet with blood, lay within!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+THE OCCUPANT OF THE BOX
+
+
+Dimly to my ears came the ceaseless murmur of London. The night now
+was far advanced, and not a sound disturbed the silence of the court
+below my windows.
+
+Professor Deeping's "Assyrian Mythology" lay open before me, beside
+it my notebook. A coal dropped from the fire, and I half started up
+out of my chair. My nerves were all awry, and I had more than my
+horrible memories of the murdered man to thank for it. Let me
+explain what I mean.
+
+When, after assisting, or endeavouring to assist, Bristol at his
+elaborate inquiries, I had at last returned to my chambers, I had
+become the victim of a singular delusion--though one common enough
+in the case of persons whose nerves are overwrought. I had thought
+myself followed.
+
+During the latter part of my journey I found myself constantly
+looking from the little window at the rear of the cab. I had an
+impression that some vehicle was tracking us. Then, when I
+discharged the man and walked up the narrow passage to the court,
+it was fear of a skulking form that dodged from shadow to shadow
+which obsessed me.
+
+Finally, as I entered the hall and mounted the darkened stair, from
+the first landing I glanced down into the black well beneath.
+Blazing yellow eyes, I thought, looked up at me!
+
+I will confess that I leapt up the remaining flight of stairs to my
+door, and, safely within, found myself trembling as if with a palsy.
+
+When I sat down to write (for sleep was an impossible proposition)
+I placed my revolver upon the table beside me. I cannot say why.
+It afforded me some sense of protection, I suppose. My conclusions,
+thus far, amounted to the following--
+
+The apparition of the phantom scimitar was due to the presence of
+someone who, by means of the moonlight, or of artificial light,
+cast a reflection of such a weapon as that found in the oblong chest
+upon the wall of a darkened apartment--as, Deeping's stateroom on
+the Mandalay, his study, etc.
+
+A group of highly efficient assassins, evidently Moslem fanatics,
+who might or might not be of the ancient order of the Hashishin,
+had pursued the stolen slipper to England. They had severed any
+hand, other than that of a Believer, which had touched the case
+containing it. (The Coptic porter was a Christian.)
+
+Uncertain, possibly, of Deeping's faith, or fearful of endangering
+the success of their efforts by an outrage upon him en route, they
+had refrained from this until his arrival at his house. He had
+been warned of his impending end by Ahmad Ahmadeen.
+
+Who was Ahmadeen? And who was his beautiful associate? I found
+myself unable, at present, to answer either of those questions. In
+order to gain access to Professor Deeping, who so carefully secluded
+himself, a box had been sent to him by ordinary carrier. (As I sat
+at my table, Scotland Yard was busy endeavouring to trace the
+sender.) Respecting this box we had made an extraordinary discovery.
+
+It was of the kind used by Eastern conjurors for what is generally
+known as "the Box Trick." That is to say, it could only be opened
+(short of smashing it) from the inside! You will remember what we
+found within it? Consider this with the new fact, above, and to
+what conclusion do you come?
+
+Something (it is not possible to speak of someone in connection with
+so small a box) had been concealed inside, and had killed Professor
+Deeping whilst he was actually engaged in endeavouring to force it
+open. This inconceivable creature had then searched the study for
+the slipper--or for the key of the safe. Interrupted and trapped
+by the arrival of the police, the creature had returned to the box,
+re-closed it, and had actually been there when the study was
+searched!
+
+For a creature so small as the murderous thing in the box to slip
+out during the confusion, and at some time prior to Bristol's
+arrival, was no difficult matter. The inspector and I were certain
+that these were the facts.
+
+But what was this creature?
+
+I turned to the chapter in "Assyrian Mythology"--"The Tradition
+of the Hashishin."
+
+The legends which the late Professor Deeping had collected relative
+to this sect of religious murderers were truly extraordinary. Of
+the cult's extinction at the time of writing he was clearly certain,
+but he referred to the popular belief, or Moslem legend, that, since
+Hassan of Khorassan, there had always been a Sheikh-al-jebal, and
+that a dreadful being known as Hassan of Aleppo was the present
+holder of the title.
+
+He referred to the fact that De Sacy has shown the word Assassin
+to be derived from Hashishin, and quoted El-Idrisi to the same
+end. The Hashishin performed their murderous feats under the
+influence of hashish, or Indian hemp; and during the state of
+ecstasy so induced, according to Deeping, they acquired powers
+almost superhuman. I read how they could scale sheer precipices,
+pass fearlessly along narrow ledges which would scarce afford
+foothold for a rat, cast themselves from great heights unscathed,
+and track one marked for death in such a manner as to remain unseen
+not only by the victim but by others about him. At this point of
+my studies I started, in a sudden nervous panic, and laid my hand
+upon my revolver.
+
+I thought of the eyes which had seemed to look up from the black
+well of the staircase--I thought of the horrible end of this man
+whose book lay upon the table . . . and I thought I heard a faint
+sound outside my study door!
+
+The key of Deeping's safe, and his letter to me, lay close by my
+hand. I slipped them into a drawer and locked it. With every
+nerve, it seemed, strung up almost to snapping point, I mechanically
+pursued my reading.
+
+"At the time of the Crusades," wrote Deeping, "there was a story
+current of this awful Order which I propose to recount. It is one
+of the most persistent dealing with the Hashishin, and is related
+to-day of the apparently mythical Hassan of Aleppo. I am disposed
+to believe that at one time it had a solid foundation, for a
+similar practice was common in Ancient Egypt and is mentioned by
+Georg Ebers."
+
+My door began very slowly to open!
+
+Merciful God! What was coming into the room!
+
+So very slowly, so gently, nay, all but imperceptibly, did it move,
+that had my nerves been less keenly attuned I doubt not I should
+have remained unaware of the happening. Frozen with horror, I sat
+and watched. Yet my mental condition was a singular one.
+
+My direct gaze never quitted the door, but in some strange fashion
+I saw the words of the next paragraph upon the page before me!
+
+"As making peculiarly efficient assassins, when under the influence
+of the drug, and as being capable of concealing themselves where
+a normal man could not fail to be detected--"
+
+(At this moment I remembered that my bathroom window was open, and
+that the waste-pipe passed down the exterior wall.)
+
+"--the Sheikh-al-jebal took young boys of a certain desert tribe,
+and for eight hours of every day, until their puberty, confined them
+in a wooden frame--"
+
+What looked like a reed was slowly inserted through the opening
+between door and doorpost! It was brought gradually around
+. . . until it pointed directly toward me!
+
+I seemed to put forth a mighty mental effort, shaking off the icy
+hand of fear which held me inactive in my chair. A saving instinct
+warned me--and I ducked my head.
+
+Something whirred past me and struck the wall behind.
+
+Revolver in hand, I leapt across the room, dashed the door open,
+and fired blindly--again--and again--and again--down the
+passage.
+
+And in the brief gleams I saw it!
+
+I cannot call it man, but I saw the thing which, I doubt not, had
+killed poor Deeping with the crescent-knife and had propelled a
+poison-dart at me.
+
+It was a tiny dwarf! Neither within nor without a freak exhibition
+had I seen so small a human being! A kind of supernatural dread
+gripped me by the throat at sight of it. As it turned with animal
+activity and bounded into my bathroom, I caught a three-quarter
+view of the creature's swollen, incredible head--which was nearly
+as large as that of a normal man!
+
+Never while my mind serves me can I forget that yellow, grinning
+face and those canine fangs--the tigerish, blazing eyes--set in
+the great, misshapen head upon the tiny, agile body.
+
+Wildly, I fired again. I hurled myself forward and dashed into
+the room.
+
+Like nothing so much as a cat, the gleaming body (the dwarf was
+but scantily clothed) streaked through the open window!
+
+Certain death, I thought, must be his lot upon the stones of the
+court far below. I ran and looked down, shaking in every limb,
+my mind filled with a loathing terror unlike anything I had ever
+known.
+
+Brilliant moonlight flooded the pavement beneath; for twenty yards
+to left and right every stone was visible.
+
+The court was empty!
+
+Human, homely London moved and wrought intimately about me; but
+there, at sight of the empty court below, a great loneliness swept
+down like a mantle--a clammy mantle of the fabric of dread. I
+stood remote from my fellows, in an evil world peopled with the
+creatures of Hassan of Aleppo.
+
+Moved by some instinct, as that of a frightened child, I dropped
+to my knees and buried my face in trembling hands.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+THE RING OF THE PROPHET
+
+
+"There is no doubt," said Mr. Rawson, "that great personal danger
+attaches to any contact with this relic. It is the first time I
+have been concerned with anything of the kind."
+
+Mr. Bristol, of Scotland Yard, standing stiffly military by the
+window, looked across at the gray-haired solicitor. We were all
+silent for a few moments.
+
+"My late client's wishes," continued Mr. Rawson, "are explicit.
+His last instructions, evidently written but a short time prior to
+his death, advise me that the holy slipper of the Prophet is
+contained in the locked safe at his house in Dulwich. He was
+clearly of opinion that you, Mr. Cavanagh, would incur risk--great
+risk--from your possession of the key. Since attempts have been
+made upon you, murderous attempts, the late Professor Deeping, my
+unfortunate client, evidently was not in error."
+
+"Mysterious outrages," said Bristol, "have marked the progress of
+the stolen slipper from Mecca almost to London."
+
+"I understand," interrupted the solicitor, "that a fanatic known
+as Hassan of Aleppo seeks to restore the relic to its former
+resting-place."
+
+"That is so."
+
+"Exactly; and it accounts for the Professor's wish that the safe
+should not be touched by any one but a Believer--and for his
+instructions that its removal to the Antiquarian Museum and the
+placing of the slipper within that institution be undertaken by a
+Moslem or Moslems."
+
+Bristol frowned.
+
+"Any one who has touched the receptacle containing the thing," he
+said, "has either been mutilated or murdered. I want to apprehend
+the authors of those outrages, but I fail to see why the slipper
+should be put on exhibition. Other crimes are sure to follow."
+
+"I can only pursue my instructions," said Mr. Rawson dryly. "They
+are, that the work be done in such a manner as to expose all
+concerned to a minimum of risk from these mysterious people; that
+if possible a Moslem be employed for the purpose; and that Mr.
+Cavanagh, here, shall always hold the key or keys to the case in
+the museum containing the slipper. Will you undertake to look for
+some--Eastern workmen, Mr. Bristol? In the course of your
+inquiries you may possibly come across such a person."
+
+"I can try," replied Bristol. "Meanwhile, I take it, the safe must
+remain at Dulwich?"
+
+"Certainly. It should be guarded."
+
+"We are guarding it and shall guard it," Bristol assured him. "I
+only hope we catch someone trying to get at it!"
+
+Shortly afterward Bristol and I left the office, and, his duties
+taking him to Scotland Yard, I returned to my chambers to survey
+the position in which I now found myself. Indeed, it was a strange
+one enough, showing how great things have small beginnings; for,
+as a result of a steamer acquaintance I found myself involved in a
+dark business worthy of the Middle Ages. That Professor Deeping
+should have stolen one of the holy slippers of Mohammed was no
+affair of mine, and that an awful being known as Hassan of Aleppo
+should have pursued it did not properly enter into my concerns; yet
+now, with a group of Eastern fanatics at large in England, I was
+become, in a sense, the custodian of the relic. Moreover, I
+perceived that I had been chosen that I might safeguard myself.
+What I knew of the matter might imperil me, but whilst I held the
+key to the reliquary, and held it fast, I might hope to remain
+immune though I must expect to be subjected to attempts. It would
+be my affair to come to terms.
+
+Contemplating these things I sat, in a world of dark dreams,
+unconscious of the comings and goings in the court below,
+unconscious of the hum which told of busy Fleet Street so near to
+me. The weather, as is its uncomfortable habit in England, had
+suddenly grown tropically hot, plunging London into the vapours of
+an African spring, and the sun was streaming through my open window
+fully upon the table.
+
+I mopped my clammy forehead, glancing with distaste at the pile of
+work which lay before me. Then my eyes turned to an open quarto
+book. It was the late Professor Deeping's "Assyrian Mythology,"
+and embodied the result of his researches into the history of the
+Hashishin, the religious murderers of whose existence he had been
+so skeptical. To the Chief of the Order, the terrible Sheikh Hassan
+of Aleppo, he referred as a "fabled being"; yet it was at the hands
+of this "fabled being" that he had met his end! How incredible it
+all seemed. But I knew full well how worthy of credence it was.
+
+Then upon my gloomy musings a sound intruded--the ringing of my door
+bell. I rose from my chair with a weary sigh, went to the door,
+and opened it. An aged Oriental stood without. He was tall and
+straight, had a snow-white beard and clear-cut, handsome features.
+He wore well-cut European garments and a green turban. As I stood
+staring he saluted me gravely.
+
+"Mr. Cavanagh?" he asked, speaking in faultless English.
+
+"I am he."
+
+"I learn that the services of a Moslem workman are required."
+
+"Quite correct, sir; but you should apply at the offices of Messrs.
+Rawson & Rawson, Chancery Lane."
+
+The old man bowed, smiling.
+
+"Many thanks; I understood so much. But, my position being a
+peculiar one, I wished to speak with you--as a friend of the late
+Professor."
+
+I hesitated. The old man looked harmless enough, but there was an
+air of mystery about the matter which put me on my guard.
+
+"You will pardon me," I said, "but the work is scarcely of a kind--"
+
+He raised his thin hand.
+
+"I am not undertaking it myself. I wished to explain to you the
+conditions under which I could arrange to furnish suitable porters."
+
+His patient explanation disposed me to believe that he was merely
+some kind of small contractor, and in any event I had nothing to
+fear from this frail old man.
+
+"Step in, sir," I said, repenting of my brusquerie--and stood
+aside for him.
+
+He entered, with that Oriental meekness in which there is
+something majestic. I placed a chair for him in the study, and
+reseated myself at the table. The old man, who from the first had
+kept his eyes lowered deferentially, turned to me with a gentle
+gesture, as if to apologize for opening the conversation.
+
+"From the papers, Mr. Cavanagh," he began, "I have learned of the
+circumstances attending the death of Professor Deeping. Your
+papers"--he smiled, and I thought I had never seen a smile of
+such sweetness--"your papers know all! Now I understand why a
+Moslem is required, and I understand what is required of him. But
+remembering that the object of his labours would be to place a
+holy relic on exhibition for the amusement of unbelievers, can you
+reasonably expect to obtain the services of one?"
+
+His point of view was fair enough.
+
+"Perhaps not," I replied. "For my own part I should wish to see
+the slipper back in Mecca, or wherever it came from. But Professor
+Deeping--"
+
+"Professor Deeping was a thorn in the flesh of the Faithful!"
+
+My visitor's voice was gravely reproachful.
+
+"Nevertheless his wishes must be considered," I said, "and the
+methods adopted by those who seek to recover the relic are such
+as to alienate all sympathy."
+
+"You speak of the Hashishin?" asked the old man. "Mr. Cavanagh, in
+your own faith you have had those who spilled the blood of infidels
+as freely!"
+
+"My good sir, the existence of such an organization cannot be
+tolerated today! This survival of the dark ages must be stamped
+out. However just a cause may be, secret murder is not permissible,
+as you, a man of culture, a Believer, and"--I glanced at his
+unusual turban--"a descendant of the Prophet, must admit."
+
+"I can admit nothing against the Guardian of the Tradition, Mr.
+Cavanagh! The Prophet taught that we should smite the Infidel. I
+ask you--have you the courage of your convictions?"
+
+"Perhaps; I trust so."
+
+"Then assist me to rid England of what you have called a survival
+of the dark ages. I will furnish porters to remove and carry the
+safe, if you will deliver to me the key!"
+
+I sprang to my feet.
+
+"That is madness!" I cried. "In the first place I should be
+compromising with my conscience, and in the second place I should
+be defenceless against those who might--"
+
+"I have with me a written promise from one highly placed--one to
+whose will Hassan of Aleppo bows!"
+
+My mind greatly disturbed, I watched the venerable speaker. I had
+determined now that he was some religious leader of Islam in
+England, who had been deputed to approach me; and, let me add, I
+was sorely tempted to accede to his proposal, for nothing would be
+gained by any one if the slipper remained for ever at the museum,
+whereas by conniving at its recovery by those who, after all, were
+its rightful owners I should be ridding England of a weird and
+undesirable visitant.
+
+I think I should have agreed, when I remembered that the Hashishin
+had murdered Professor Deeping and had mutilated others wholly
+innocent of offence. I looked across at the old man. He had drawn
+himself up to his great height, and for the first time fully
+raising the lids, had fixed upon me the piercing gaze of a pair of
+eagle eyes. I started, for the aspect of this majestic figure was
+entirely different from that of the old stranger who had stood
+suppliant before me a moment ago.
+
+"It is impossible," I said. "I can come to no terms with those
+who shield murderers."
+
+He regarded me fixedly, but did not move.
+
+"Es-selam 'aleykum!" I added ("Peace be on you!") closing the
+interview in the Eastern manner.
+
+The old man lowered his eyes, and saluted me with graceful gravity.
+
+"Wa-'aleykum!" he said ("And on you!"). I conducted him to the
+door and closed it upon his exit. In his last salute I had noticed
+the flashing of a ring which he wore upon his left hand, and he was
+gone scarce ten seconds ere my heart began to beat furiously. I
+snatched up "Assyrian Mythology" and with trembling fingers turned
+to a certain page.
+
+There I read--
+
+Each Sheikh of the Assassins is said to be invested with the "Ring
+of the Prophet." It bears a green stone, shaped in the form of a
+scimitar or crescent.
+
+My dreadful suspicion was confirmed. I knew who my visitor had
+been.
+
+"God in heaven!" I whispered. "It was Hassan of Aleppo!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+FIRST ATTEMPT ON THE SAFE
+
+
+On the following morning I was awakened by the arrival of Bristol.
+I hastened to admit him.
+
+"Your visitor of yesterday," he began, "has wasted no time!"
+
+"What has happened?"
+
+He tugged irritably at his moustache. "I don't know!" he replied.
+"Of course it was no surprise to find that there isn't a Mohammedan
+who'll lay his little finger on Professor Deeping's safe! There's
+no doubt in my mind that every lascar at the docks knows Hassan of
+Aleppo to be in England. Some other arrangement will have to be
+arrived at, if the thing is ever to be taken to the Antiquarian
+Museum. Meanwhile we stand to lose it. Last night--"
+
+He accepted a cigarette, and lighted it carefully.
+
+"Last night," he resumed, "a member of P Division was on point
+duty outside the late Professor's house, and two C.I.D. men were
+actually in the room where the safe is. Result--someone has put
+in at least an hour's work on the lock, but it proved too tough a
+job!"
+
+I stared at him amazedly.
+
+"Someone has been at the lock!" I cried. "But that is impossible,
+with two men in the room--unless--"
+
+"They were both knocked on the head!"
+
+"Both! But by whom! My God! They are not--"
+
+"Oh, no! It was done artistically. They both came round about
+four o'clock this morning."
+
+"And who attacked them?"
+
+"They had no idea. Neither of them saw a thing!"
+
+My amazement grew by leaps and bounds. "But, Bristol, one of them
+must have seen the other succumb!"
+
+"Both did! Their statements tally exactly!"
+
+"I quite fail to follow you."
+
+"That's not surprising. Listen: When I got on the scene about five
+o'clock, Marden and West, the two C.I.D. men, had quite recovered
+their senses, though they were badly shaken, and one had a cracked
+skull. The constable was conscious again, too."
+
+"What! Was he attacked?"
+
+"In exactly the same way! I'll give you Marden's story, as he gave
+it to me a few minutes after the surgeon had done with him. He said
+that they were sitting in the study, smoking, and with both windows
+wide open. It was a fearfully hot night."
+
+"Did they have lights?"
+
+"No. West sat in an armchair near the writing-table; Marden sat by
+the window next to the door. I had arranged that every hour one of
+them should go out to the gate and take the constable's report. It
+was just after Marden had been out at one o'clock that it happened.
+
+"They were sitting as I tell you when Marden thought he heard a
+curious sort of noise from the gate. West appeared to have heard
+nothing; but I have no doubt that it was the sound of the constable's
+fall. West's pipe had gone out, and he struck a match to relight
+it. As he did so, Marden saw him drop the match, clench both fists,
+and with eyes glaring in the moonlight and his teeth coming together
+with a snap, drop from his chair.
+
+"Marden says that he was half up from his seat when something struck
+him on the back of the head with fearful force. He remembered
+nothing more until he awoke, with the dawn creeping into the room,
+and heard West groaning somewhere beside him. They both had badly
+damaged skulls with great bruises behind the ear. It is instructive
+to note that their wounds corresponded almost to a fraction of an
+inch. They had been stunned by someone who thoroughly understood
+his business, and with some heavy, blunt weapon. A few minutes
+later came the man to relieve the constable; and the constable was
+found to have been treated in exactly the same way!"
+
+"But if Marden's account is true--"
+
+"West, as he lost consciousness, saw Marden go in exactly the same
+way."
+
+"Marden was seated by the open window, but I cannot conjecture how
+any one can have got at West, who sat by the table!"
+
+"The case of Marden is little less than remarkable; he was some
+distance from the window. No one could possibly have reached him
+from outside."
+
+"And the constable?"
+
+"The constable can give us no clue. He was suddenly struck down,
+as the others were. I examined the safe, of course, but didn't
+touch it, according to instructions. Someone had been at work on
+the lock, but it had defied their efforts. I'm fully expecting
+though that they'll be back to-night, with different tools!"
+
+"The place is watched during the day, of course?"
+
+"Of course. But it's unlikely that anything will be attempted in
+daylight. Tonight I am going down myself."
+
+"Could you arrange that I join you?"
+
+"I could, but you can see the danger for yourself?"
+
+"It is extraordinarily mysterious."
+
+"Mr. Cavanagh, it's uncanny!" said Bristol. "I can understand that
+one of these Hashishin could easily have got up behind the man on
+duty out in the open. I know, and so do you, that they're past
+masters of that kind of thing; but unless they possess the power to
+render themselves invisible, it's not evident how they can have got
+behind West whilst he sat at the table, with Marden actually
+watching him!"
+
+"We must lay a trap for them to-night."
+
+"Rely upon me to do so. My only fear is that they may anticipate it
+and change their tactics. Hassan of Aleppo apparently knows as much
+of our plans as we do ourselves."
+
+Inspector Bristol, though a man of considerable culture, clearly was
+infected with a species of supernatural dread.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+THE VIOLET EYES AGAIN
+
+
+At four o'clock in the afternoon I had heard nothing further from
+Bristol, but I did not doubt that he would advise me of his
+arrangements in good time. I sought by hard work to forget for a
+time the extraordinary business of the stolen slipper; but it
+persistently intruded upon my mind. Particularly, my thoughts
+turned to the night of Professor Deeping's murder, and to the
+bewitchingly pretty woman who had warned me of the impending tragedy.
+She had bound me to secrecy--a secrecy which had proved irksome,
+for it had since appeared to me that she must have been an
+accomplice of Hassan of Aleppo. At the time I had been at a loss
+to define her peculiar accent, now it seemed evidently enough to
+have been Oriental.
+
+I threw down my pen in despair, for work was impossible, went
+downstairs, and walked out under the arch into Fleet Street. Quite
+mechanically I turned to the left, and, still engaged with idle
+conjectures, strolled along westward.
+
+Passing the entrance to one of the big hotels, I was abruptly
+recalled to the realities--by a woman's voice.
+
+"Wait for me here," came musically to my ears.
+
+I stopped, and turned. A woman who had just quitted a taxi-cab was
+entering the hotel. The day was hot and thunderously oppressive,
+and this woman with the musical voice wore a delicate costume of
+flimsiest white. A few steps upward she paused and glanced back.
+I had a view of a Greek profile, and for one magnetic instant looked
+into eyes of the deepest and most wonderful violet.
+
+Then, shaking off inaction, I ran up the steps and overtook the
+lady in white as a porter swung open the door to admit her. We
+entered together.
+
+"Madame," I said in a low tone, "I must detain you for a moment.
+There is something I have to ask."
+
+She turned, exhibiting the most perfect composure, lowered her
+lashes and raised them again, the gaze of the violet eyes sweeping
+me from head to foot with a sort of frigid scorn.
+
+"I fear you have made a mistake, sir. We have never met before!"
+
+Her voice betrayed no trace of any foreign accent!
+
+"But," I began--and paused.
+
+I felt myself flush; for this encounter in the foyer of an hotel,
+with many curious onlookers, was like to prove embarrassing if my
+beautiful acquaintance persisted in her attitude. I fully realized
+what construction would be put upon my presence there, and foresaw
+that forcible and ignominious ejection must be my lot if I failed
+to establish my right to address her.
+
+She turned away, and crossed in the direction of the staircase.
+A sunbeam sought out a lock of hair that strayed across her brow,
+and kissed it to a sudden glow like that which lurks in the heart
+of a blush rose.
+
+That wonderful sheen, which I had never met with elsewhere in
+nature, but which no artifice could lend, served to remove my last
+frail doubt which had survived the evidence of the violet eyes. I
+had been deceived by no strange resemblance; this was indeed the
+woman who had been the harbinger of Professor Deeping's death. In
+three strides I was beside her again. Curious glances were set
+upon me, and I saw a servant evidently contemplating approach; but
+I ignored all save my own fixed purpose.
+
+"You must listen to what I have to say!" I whispered. "If you
+decline, I shall have no alternative but to call in the detective
+who holds a warrant for your arrest!"
+
+She stood quite still, watching me coolly. "I suppose you would
+wish to avoid a scene?" I added.
+
+"You have already made me the object of much undesirable attention,"
+she replied scornfully. "I do not need your assurance that you
+would disgrace me utterly! You are talking nonsense, as you must
+be aware--unless you are insane. But if your object be to force
+your acquaintance upon me, your methods are novel, and, under the
+circumstances, effective. Come, sir, you may talk to me--for
+three minutes!"
+
+The musical voice had lost nothing of its imperiousness, but for
+one instant the lips parted, affording a fleeting glimpse of pearl
+beyond the coral.
+
+Her sudden change of front was bewildering. Now, she entered the
+lift and I followed her. As we ascended side by side I found it
+impossible to believe that this dainty white figure was that of an
+associate of the Hashishin, that of a creature of the terrible
+Hassan of Aleppo. Yet that she was the same girl who, a few days
+after my return from the East, had shown herself conversant with
+the plans of the murderous fanatics was beyond doubt. Her accent
+on that occasion clearly had been assumed, with what object I could
+not imagine. Then, as we quitted the lift and entered a cosy
+lounge, my companion seated herself upon a Chesterfield, signing to
+me to sit beside her.
+
+As I did so she lay back smiling, and regarding me from beneath her
+black lashes. Thus, half veiled, her great violet eyes were most
+wonderful.
+
+"Now, sir," she said softly, "explain yourself."
+
+"Then you persist in pretending that we have not met before?"
+
+"There is no occasion for pretence," she replied lightly; and I
+found myself comparing her voice with her figure, her figure with
+her face, and vainly endeavouring to compute her age. Frankly,
+she was bewildering--this lovely girl who seemed so wholly a woman
+of the world.
+
+"This fencing is useless."
+
+"It is quite useless! Come, I know New York, London, and I know
+Paris, Vienna, Budapest. Therefore I know mankind! You thought I
+was pretty, I suppose? I may be; others have thought so. And you
+thought you would like to make my acquaintance without troubling
+about the usual formalities? You adopted a singularly brutal
+method of achieving your object, but I love such insolence in a man.
+Therefore I forgave you. What have you to say to me?"
+
+I perceive that I had to deal with a bold adventuress, with a
+consummate actress, who, finding herself in a dangerous situation,
+had adopted this daring line of defence, and now by her personal
+charm sought to lure me from my purpose.
+
+But with the scimitar of Hassan of Aleppo stretched over me, with
+the dangers of the night before me, I was in no mood for a veiled
+duel of words, for an interchange of glances in thrust and parry,
+however delightful such warfare might have been with so pretty an
+adversary.
+
+For a long time I looked sternly into her eyes; but their violet
+mystery defied, whilst her red-lipped smile taunted me.
+
+"Unfortunately," I said, with slow emphasis, "you are protected by
+my promise, made on the occasion of our previous meeting. But
+murder has been done, so that honour scarcely demands that I respect
+my promise further--"
+
+She raised her eyebrows slightly.
+
+"Surely that depends upon the quality of the honour!" she said.
+
+"I believe you to be a member of a murderous organization, and
+unless you can convince me that I am wrong, I shall act accordingly."
+
+At that she leaned toward me, laying her hand on my arm.
+
+"Please do not be so cruel," she whispered, "as to drag me into a
+matter with which truly I have no concern. Believe me, you are
+utterly mistaken. Wait one moment, and I will prove it."
+
+She rose, and before I could make move to detain her, quitted the
+room; but the door scarcely had closed ere I was afoot. The
+corridor beyond was empty. I ran on. The lift had just descended.
+A dark man whom I recognized stood near the closed gate.
+
+"Quick!" I said, "I am Cavanagh of the Report! Did you see a lady
+enter the lift?"
+
+"I did, Mr. Cavanagh," answered the hotel detective; for this was he.
+
+In such a giant inn as this I knew full well that one could come and
+go almost with impunity, though one had no right to the hospitality
+of the establishment; and it was with a premonition respecting what
+his answer would be, that I asked the man--
+
+"Is she staying here?"
+
+"She is not. I have never seen her before!"
+
+The girl with the violet eyes had escaped, taking all her secrets
+with her!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+SECOND ATTEMPT ON THE SAFE
+
+
+"You see," said Bristol, "the Hashishin must know that the safe
+won't remain here unopened much longer. They will therefore
+probably make another attempt to-night."
+
+"It seems likely," I replied; and was silent. Outside the open
+windows whispered the shrubbery, as a soft breeze stole through the
+bushes. Beyond, the moon made play in the dim avenue. From the
+old chapel hard by the sweet-toned bell proclaimed midnight. Our
+vigil was begun. In this room it was that Professor Deeping had
+met death at the hands of the murderous Easterns; here it was that
+Marden and West had mysteriously been struck down the night before.
+
+To-night was every whit as hot, and Bristol and I had the windows
+widely opened. My companion was seated where the detective, Marden,
+had sat, in a chair near the westerly window, and I lay back in
+the armchair that had been occupied by West.
+
+I may repeat here that the house of the late Professor Deeping was
+more properly a cottage, surrounded by a fairly large piece of
+ground, for the most part run wild. The room used as a study was
+on the ground floor, and had windows on the west and on the south.
+Those on the west (French windows) opened on a loggia; those on the
+south opened right into the dense tangle of a neglected shrubbery.
+The place possessed an oppressive atmosphere of loneliness, for
+which in some measure its history may have been responsible.
+
+The silence, seemingly intensified by each whisper that sped through
+the elms and crept about the shrubbery, grew to such a stillness
+that I told myself I had experienced nothing like it since crossing
+with a caravan I had slept in the desert. Yet noisy, whirling
+London was within gunshot of us; and this, though hard enough to
+believe, was a reflection oddly comforting. Only one train of
+thought was possible, and this I pursued at random.
+
+By what means were Marden and West struck down? In thus exposing
+ourselves, in order that we might trap the author or authors of the
+outrage, did we act wisely?
+
+"Bristol," I said suddenly, "it was someone who came through the
+open window."
+
+"No one," he replied, "came through the windows. West saw
+absolutely nothing. But if any one comes that way to-night, we
+have him!"
+
+"West may have seen nothing; but how else could any one enter?"
+
+Bristol offered no reply; and I plunged again into a maze of
+speculation.
+
+Powerful mantraps were set in such a way that any one or anything,
+ignorant of their positions, coming up to the windows must
+unavoidably be snared. These had been placed in position with
+much secrecy after dusk, and the man on duty at the gate stood
+with his back to the wall. No one could approach him except from
+the front. My thoughts took a new turn.
+
+Was the girl with the violet eyes an ally of the Hashishin? Thus
+far, although she so palpably had tricked me, I had found myself
+unable to speak of her to Bristol; for the idea had entered my mind
+that she might have learned of the plan to murder Deeping without
+directly being implicated. Now came yet another explanation. The
+publicity given to that sensational case might have interested some
+third party in the fate of the stolen slipper! Could it be that
+others, in no way connected with the dreadful Hassan of Aleppo,
+were in quest of the slipper?
+
+Scotland Yard had taken care to ensure that the general public be
+kept in ignorance of the existence of such an organization as the
+Hashishin, but I must assume that this hypothetical third party
+were well aware that they had Hassan, as well as the authorities,
+to count with. Granting the existence of such a party, my beautiful
+acquaintance might be classified as one of its members. I spoke
+again.
+
+"Bristol," I said, "has it occurred to you that there may be others,
+as well as Hassan of Aleppo, seeking to gain possession of the
+sacred slipper?"
+
+"It has not," he replied. "In the strictest sense of the expression,
+they would be out for trouble! What gave you the idea?"
+
+"I hardly know," I returned evasively, for even now I was loath to
+betray the mysterious girl with the wonderful eyes.
+
+The chapel bell sounding the half-hour, Bristol rose with a sigh
+that might have been one of relief, and went out to take the report
+of the man on duty at the gate. As his footsteps died away along
+the elm avenue, it came to me how, in the darkness about, menace
+lurked; and I felt myself succumbing to the greatest dread
+experienced by man--the dread of the unknown.
+
+All that I knew of the weird group of fanatics--survivals of a dim
+and evil past--who must now be watching this cottage as bloodlustful
+devotees watch a shrine violated, burst upon my mind. I peopled the
+still blackness with lurking assassins, armed with the murderous
+knowledge of by-gone centuries, armed with invisible weapons which
+struck down from afar, supernaturally.
+
+I glanced toward the corner of the room where the safe stood,
+reliquary of a worthless thing for which much blood had been spilled.
+
+Then sounded footsteps along the avenue, and my fear whispered that
+they were not those of Bristol but of one who had murdered him, and
+who came guilefully, to murder me!
+
+I snatched the revolver from my pocket and crossed the darkened room.
+Just to the right of one of the French windows I stood looking out
+across the loggia to the end of the avenue. The night was a bright
+one, and the room was flooded with a reflected mystic light, but
+outside the moon paved the avenue with pearl, and through the trees
+I saw a figure approaching.
+
+Was it Bristol? It had his build, it had his gait; but my fears
+remained. Then the figure crossed the patch of shrubbery and stepped
+on to the loggia.
+
+"Mr. Cavanagh!"
+
+I laughed dryly at my own cowardice, but my heart was still beating
+abnormally.
+
+"Here I am, Bristol, in a ghastly funk!"
+
+"I don't wonder! They may be on us any time now. All's well at
+the gate, but Morris says he heard, or thought he heard something
+at the side of the chapel opposite, a while ago."
+
+"Wind in the bushes?"
+
+"It may have been; but he says there was no breeze at the time."
+
+We resumed our seats.
+
+"Bristol," I said, "now that the danger grows imminent, doesn't it
+seem to you foolhardy for us thus to expose ourselves?"
+
+"Perhaps it is," he agreed; "but how otherwise are we likely to
+learn what happened to Marden and West?"
+
+"The enemy may adopt different measures to-night."
+
+"I think not. Our dispositions are the same, and I credit them with
+cunning enough to know it. At the same time I credit ourselves with
+having kept the existence of the steel traps completely secret. They
+will assume (so I've reasoned) that we intend to rely entirely upon
+our superior vigilance, therefore they will try the same game as last
+night."
+
+Silence fell.
+
+The moon rays, creeping around from the right of the avenue, crossing
+the shrubbery and encroaching upon the low wall of the loggia, now
+flooded its floor. Against the silvern light, Bristol appeared to
+me in black silhouette. The breeze, too, seemed now to blow from a
+slightly different direction. It came through the windows on my
+right, beyond which lay the unkempt bushes which extended on that
+side to the wall of the grounds.
+
+So we sat, until the moonlight poured fully in upon Bristol's back.
+So we sat when the clock chimed the hour of one.
+
+Bristol arose and once more went out to the gate. He had arranged
+to visit Morris's post every half-hour. Again I experienced the
+nervous dread that he would be attacked in the avenue; but again he
+returned unscathed.
+
+"All's well," he said.
+
+But from his tones I knew that he had not forgotten that it was at
+this hour Marden and West had suffered mysterious attack.
+
+Neither of us, I think, was disposed to talk. We both were
+unwilling to break the silence, wherein, with all our ears, we
+listened for the slightest disturbance.
+
+And now my attention turned anew to the course of the slowly creeping
+moon rays. In my mind an idea was struggling for definition. There
+was something significant in the lunar lighting of the room. Why, I
+asked myself, had the attack been made at one o'clock? Did the time
+signify anything? If so, what? I looked toward Bristol.
+
+His figure, the chair upon which he sat, were sharply outlined by
+the cold light. The wall behind me, and to my left, was illuminated
+brilliantly; but no light fell directly upon me.
+
+The idea was taking shape. From the loggia and the avenue Bristol,
+I reasoned, must be clearly visible. From the shrubbery on the
+south, through the other windows could I be seen? Yes, silhouetted
+against the moonlight!
+
+A faint sound, quite indescribable, came to my ears from somewhere
+outside-beyond.
+
+"My God!" whispered Bristol. "Did you hear it?"
+
+"Yes! What?"
+
+"It must have been Morris!--"
+
+Bristol was half standing, one hand upon the arm of the chair, the
+other concealed, but grasping his revolver as I well knew. I, too,
+had my revolver in my hand, and as I twisted in my seat, preparatory
+to rising, in sheer nervousness I dropped the weapon upon the
+carpet.
+
+With an exclamation of dismay, I stooped quickly to recover it.
+
+As I did so something whistled past my ear, so closely as almost to
+touch it--and struck with a dull thud upon the wall beyond!
+
+"Bristol!" I whispered.
+
+But as I raised my eyes to him he seemed to crumple up, and fell
+loosely forward into the patch of moonlight spread upon the floor!
+"God in heaven!" I said aloud.
+
+In a cold sweat of fear I crouched there, for it had become evident
+to me that, as I bent, I was entirely in shadow.
+
+There was a rustling in the bushes on the left; but before I could
+turn in that direction, my attention was claimed elsewhere. Over
+into the loggia leapt an almost naked brown figure!
+
+It was that of a small but strongly built man, who carried a short,
+exceedingly thick bamboo rod in his hand. My fear was too great to
+admit of my accurately observing anything at that time, but I
+noticed that some kind of leather thong or loop was attached to the
+end of the squat cane.
+
+The panic fear of the supernatural was strongly upon me, and I was
+unable to realize that this Eastern apparition was a creature of
+flesh and blood. With my nerves strung up to snapping point, I
+crouched watching him. He entered the room, bending over the body
+of Bristol.
+
+A hot breath fanned my cheek!
+
+At that my overwrought nerves betrayed me. I uttered a stifled cry,
+looking upward . . . and into a pair of gleaming eyes which looked
+down into mine!
+
+A second brown man (who must have entered by one of the windows
+overlooking the shrubbery) was bending over me!
+
+Scarce knowing what I did, I raised my revolver and blazed straight
+into the dimly-seen face. Down upon me silently dropped a naked
+body, and something warm came flowing over my hand. But, knowing my
+foes to be of flesh and blood, feeling myself at handgrips now with
+a palpable enemy, I threw off the body, leapt up and fired, though
+blindly, at the flying shape that flashed across the loggia--and
+was lost in the shadow pools under the elms.
+
+Upon the din of my shooting fell silence like a cloak. A moment I
+listened, tense, still; then I turned to the table and lighted the
+lamp.
+
+In its light I saw Bristol lying like a dead man. Close beside him
+was a big and heavy lump of clay. It had been shaped as a ball,
+but now it was flattened out curiously. Bending over my unfortunate
+companion and learning that, though unconscious, he lived, I learnt,
+too, how the Hashishin contrived to strike men insensible without
+approaching them; I learnt that the one whom I had shot, who lay in
+his blood almost on the spot where Professor Deeping once had lain,
+was an expert slinger.
+
+The contrivance which he carried, as did the other who had escaped,
+was a sling, of the ancient Persian type. In place of stones, heavy
+lumps of clay were used, which operated much the same as a sand-bag,
+whilst enabling the operator to work from a considerable distance.
+
+Hidden, over by the ancient chapel it might be, one of this evil
+twain had struck down Morris, the constable; from the shelter of the
+trees, from many yards away, they had shot their singular missiles
+through the open windows at Bristol and myself. Bristol had
+succumbed, and now, with a redness showing through his close-cut
+hair immediately behind the right ear, lay wholly unconscious at my
+feet.
+
+It had been a divine accident which had caused me to drop my
+revolver, and, stooping to recover it, unknowingly to frustrate the
+design of the second slinger upon myself. The light of the lamp
+fell upon the face of the dead Hashishin. He lay forward upon his
+hands, crouching almost, but with his face, his dreadful,
+featureless face, twisted up at me from under his left shoulder.
+
+God knows he deserved his end; but that mutilated face is often
+grinning, bloodily, in my dreams.
+
+And then as I stood, between that horrid exultation which is born
+of killing and the panic which threatened me out of the darkness,
+I saw something advancing . . . slowly . . . slowly . . . from the
+elmen shades toward the loggia.
+
+It was a shape--it was a shadow. Silent it came--on--and on.
+Where the dusk lay deepest it paused, undefined; for I could give
+it no name of man or spirit. But a horror seemed to proceed from
+it as light from a lamp.
+
+I groped about the table near to me, never taking my eyes from
+that sinister form outside. As my fingers closed upon the
+telephone, distant voices and the sound of running footsteps
+(of those who had heard the shots) came welcome to my ears.
+
+The form stirred, seeming to raise phantom arms in execration, and
+a stray moonbeam pierced the darkness shrouding it. For a fleeting
+instant something flashed venomously.
+
+The sounds grew nearer. I could tell that the newcomers had found
+Morris lying at the gate. Yet still I stood, frozen with uncanny
+fear, and watching--watching the spot to which that stray beam had
+pierced; the spot where I had seen the moon gleam upon the ring of
+the Prophet!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+AT THE BRITISH ANTIQUARIAN MUSEUM
+
+
+A little group of interested spectators stood at the head of the
+square glass case in the centre of the lofty apartment in the
+British Antiquarian Museum known as the Burton Room (by reason of
+the fact that a fine painting of Sir Richard Burton faces you as
+you enter). A few other people looked on curiously from the lower
+end of the case. It contained but one exhibit--a dirty and
+dilapidated markoob--or slipper of morocco leather that had once
+been red.
+
+"Our latest acquisition, gentlemen," said Mr. Mostyn, the curator,
+speaking in a low tone to the distinguished Oriental scholars
+around him. "It has been left to the Institution by the late
+Professor Deeping. He describes it in a document furnished by his
+solicitor as one of the slippers worn by the Prophet Mohammed, but
+gives us no further particulars. I myself cannot quite place the
+relic."
+
+"Nor I," interrupted one of the group. "It is not mentioned by
+any of the Arabian historians to my knowledge--that is, if it
+comes from Mecca, as I understand it does."
+
+"I cannot possibly assert that it comes from Mecca, Dr. Nicholson,"
+Mostyn replied. "The Professor may have taken it from Al-Madinah
+--perhaps from the mysterious inner passage of the baldaquin where
+the treasures of the place lie. But I can assure you that what
+little we do know of its history is sufficiently unsavoury."
+
+I fancied that the curator's tired cultured voice faltered as he
+spoke; and now, without apparent reason, he moved a step to the
+right and glanced oddly along the room. I followed the direction
+of his glance, and saw a tall man in conventional morning dress,
+irreproachable in every detail, whose head was instantly bent upon
+his catalogue. But before his eyes fell I knew that their long
+almond shape, as well as the peculiar burnt pallor of his
+countenance, were undoubtedly those of an Oriental.
+
+"There have been mysterious outrages committed, I believe, upon
+many of those who have come in contact with the slipper?" asked one
+of the savants.
+
+"Exactly. Professor Deeping was undoubtedly among the victims.
+His instructions were explicit that the relic should be brought here
+by a Moslem, but for a long time we failed to discover any Moslem
+who would undertake the task; and, as you are aware, while the
+slipper remained at the Professor's house attempts were made to
+steal it."
+
+He ceased uneasily, and glanced at the tall Eastern figure. It had
+edged a little nearer; the head was still bowed and the fine yellow
+waxen fingers of the hand from which he had removed his glove
+fumbled with the catalogue's leaves. It may well have been that
+in those days I read menace in every eye, yet I felt assured that
+the yellow visitor was eavesdropping--was malignantly attentive to
+the conversation.
+
+The curator spoke lower than ever now; no one beyond the circle
+could possibly hear him as he proceeded--
+
+"We discovered an Alexandrian Greek who, for personal reasons, not
+unconnected with matrimony, had turned Moslem! He carried the
+slipper here, strongly escorted, and placed it where you now see it.
+No other hand has touched it." (The speaker's voice was raised ever
+so slightly.) "You will note that there is a rail around the case,
+to prevent visitors from touching even the glass."
+
+"Ah," said Dr. Nicholson quizzically, "And has anything untoward
+happened to our Graeco-Moslem friend?"
+
+"Perhaps Inspector Bristol can tell," replied the curator.
+
+The straight, military figure of the well-known Scotland Yard man
+was conspicuous among the group of distinguished--and mostly
+round-shouldered--scholars.
+
+"Sorry, gentlemen," he said, smiling, "but Mr. Acepulos has vanished
+from his tobacco shop in Soho. I am not apprehensive that he had
+been kidnapped or anything of that kind. I think rather that the
+date of his disappearance tallies with that on which he cashed his
+cheque for service rendered! His present wife is getting most
+unbeautifully fat, too."
+
+"What precautions," someone asked, "are being taken to guard the
+slipper?"
+
+"Well," Mostyn answered, "though we have only the bare word of the
+late Professor Deeping that the slipper was actually worn by
+Mohammed, it has certainly an enormous value according to Moslem
+ideas. There can be no doubt that a group of fanatics known as
+Hashishin are in London engaged in an extraordinary endeavour to
+recover it."
+
+Mostyn's voice sank to an impressive whisper. My gaze sought again
+the tall Eastern visitor and was held fascinated by the baffled
+straining in those velvet eyes. But the lids fell as I looked; and
+the effect was that of a fire suddenly extinguished. I determined
+to draw Bristol's attention to the man.
+
+"Accordingly," Mostyn continued, "we have placed it in this room,
+from which I fancy it would puzzle the most accomplished thief to
+remove it."
+
+The party, myself included, stared about the place, as he went on
+to explain--
+
+"We have four large windows here; as you see. The Burton Room
+occupies the end of a wing; there is only one door; it communicates
+with the next room, which in turn opens into the main building by
+another door on the landing. We are on the first floor; these two
+east windows afford a view of the lawn before the main entrance;
+those two west ones face Orpington Square; all are heavily barred
+as you see. During the day there is a man always on duty in these
+two rooms. At night that communicating door is locked. Short of
+erecting a ladder in full view either of the Square or of Great
+Orchard Street, filing through four iron bars and breaking the
+window and the case, I fail to see how anybody can get at the
+slipper here."
+
+"If a duplicate key to the safe--" another voice struck in; I knew
+it afterward for that of Professor Rhys-Jenkyns.
+
+"Impossible to procure one, Professor," cried Mostyn, his eyes
+sparkling with an almost boyish interest. "Mr. Cavanagh here holds
+the keys of the case, under the will of the late Professor Deeping.
+They are of foreign workmanship and more than a little complicated."
+
+The eyes of the savants were turned now in my direction.
+
+"I suppose you have them in a place of safety?" said Dr. Nicholson.
+
+"They are at my bankers," I replied.
+
+"Then I venture to predict," said the celebrated Orientalist, "that
+the slipper of the Prophet will rest here undisturbed."
+
+He linked his arm into that of a brother scholar and the little
+group straggled away, Mostyn accompanying them to the main entrance.
+
+But I saw Inspector Bristol scratching his chin; he looked very much
+as if he doubted the accuracy of the doctor's prediction. He had
+already had some experience of the implacable devotion of the Moslem
+group to this treasure of the Faithful.
+
+"The real danger begins," I suggested to him, "when the general public
+is admitted--after to-day, is it not?"
+
+"Yes. All to-day's people are specially invited, or are using
+special invitation cards," he replied. "The people who received
+them often give their tickets away to those who will be likely
+really to appreciate the opportunity."
+
+I looked around for the tall Oriental. He seemed to have vanished,
+and for some reason I hesitated to speak of him to Bristol; for my
+gaze fell upon an excessively thin, keen-faced man whose curiously
+wide-open eyes met mine smilingly, whose gray suit spoke Stein-Bloch,
+whose felt was a Boss raw-edge unmistakably of a kind that only
+Philadelphia can produce. At the height of the season such visitors
+are not rare, but this one had an odd personality, and moreover his
+keen gaze was raking the place from ceiling to floor.
+
+Where had I met him before? To the best of my recollection I had
+never set eyes upon the man prior to that moment; and since he was
+so palpably an American I had no reason for assuming him to be
+associated with the Hashishin. But I remembered--indeed, I could
+never forget--how, in the recent past, I had met with an apparent
+associate of the Moslems as evidently European as this curiously
+alert visitor was American. Moreover . . . there was something
+tauntingly familiar, yet elusive, about that gaunt face.
+
+Was it not upon the eve of the death of Professor Deeping that the
+girl with the violet eyes had first intruded her fascinating
+personality into my tangled affairs? Patently, she had then been
+seeking the holy slipper, and by craft had endeavoured to bend me
+to her will. Then had I not encountered her again, meeting the
+glance of her unforgettable violet eyes outside a Strand hotel?
+The encounter had presaged a further attempt upon the slipper!
+Certainly she acted on behalf of someone interested in it; and since
+neither Bristol nor I could conceive of any one seeking to possess
+the bloodstained thing except the mysterious leader of the
+Hashishin--Hassan of Aleppo--as a creature of that awful fanatic
+being I had written her down.
+
+Why, then, if the mysterious Eastern employed a European girl,
+should he not also employ an American man? It might well be that
+the relic, in entering the doors of the impregnable Antiquarian
+Museum, had passed where the diabolical arts of the Hashishin had
+no power to reach it--where the beauty of Western women and the
+craft of Eastern man were equally useless weapons. Perhaps Hassan's
+campaign was entering upon a new phase.
+
+Was it a shirking of plain duty on my part that wish--that
+ever-present hope--that the murderous company of fanatics who had
+pursued the stolen slipper from its ancient resting-place to London,
+should succeed in recovering it? I leave you to judge.
+
+The crescent of Islam fades to-day and grows pale, but there are yet
+fierce Believers, alust for the blood of the infidel. In such as
+these a faith dies the death of an adder, and is more venomous in
+its death-throes than in the full pulse of life. The ghastly
+indiscretion of Professor Deeping, in rifling a Moslem Sacristy, had
+led to the mutilation of many who, unwittingly, had touched the
+looted relic, had brought about his own end, had established a league
+of fantastic assassins in the heart of the metropolis.
+
+Only once had I seen the venerable Hassan of Aleppo--a stately,
+gentle old man; but I knew that the velvet eyes could blaze into a
+passionate fury that seemed to scorch whom it fell upon. I knew
+that the saintly Hassan was Sheikh of the Hashishin. And
+familiarity with that dreadful organization had by no means bred
+contempt. I was the holder of the key, and my fear of the fanatics
+grew like a magic mango, darkened the sunlight of each day, and
+filled the night with indefinable dread.
+
+You, who have not read poor Deeping's "Assyrian Mythology", cannot
+picture a creature with a huge, distorted head, and a tiny, dwarfed
+body--a thing inhuman, yet human--a man stunted and malformed by
+the cruel arts of brother men--a thing obnoxious to life, with but
+one passion, the passion to kill. You cannot conceive of the years
+of agony spent by that creature strapped to a wooden frame--in
+order to prevent his growth! You cannot conceive of his fierce
+hatred of all humanity, inflamed to madness by the Eastern drug,
+hashish, and directed against the enemies of Islam--the holders of
+the slipper--by the wonderful power of Hassan of Aleppo.
+
+But I had not only read of such beings, I had encountered one!
+
+And he was but one of the many instruments of the Hashishin. Perhaps
+the girl with the violet eyes was another. What else to be dreaded
+Hassan might hold in store for us I could not conjecture.
+
+Do you wonder that I feared? Do you wonder that I hoped (I confess
+it), hoped that the slipper might be recovered without further
+bloodshed?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+THE HOLE IN THE BLIND
+
+
+I stepped over to the door, where a constable stood on duty.
+
+"You observed a tall Eastern gentleman in the room a while ago,
+officer?"
+
+"I did, sir."
+
+"How long is he gone?"
+
+The man started and began to peer about anxiously.
+
+"That's a funny thing, sir," he said. "I was keeping my eyes
+specially upon him. I noticed him hovering around while Mr.
+Mostyn was speaking; but although I could have sworn he hadn't
+passed out, he's gone!"
+
+"You didn't notice his departure, then?"
+
+"I'm sorry to say I didn't, sir."
+
+The man clearly was perplexed, but I found small matter for wonder
+in the episode. I had more than suspected the stranger to be a spy
+of Hassan's, and members of that strange company were elusive as
+will-o'-the-wisps.
+
+Bristol, at the far end of the room, was signalling to me. I
+walked back and joined him.
+
+"Come over here," he said, in a low voice, "and pretend to examine
+these things."
+
+He glanced significantly to his left. Following the glance, my
+eyes fell upon the lean American; he was peering into the receptacle
+which held the holy slipper.
+
+Bristol led me across the room, and we both faced the wall and bent
+over a glass case. Some yellow newspaper cuttings describing its
+contents hung above it, and these we pretended to read.
+
+"Did you notice that man I glanced at?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Well, that's Earl Dexter, the first crook in America! Ssh! Only
+goes in on very big things. We had word at the Yard he was in town;
+but we can't touch him--we can only keep our eyes on him. He
+usually travels openly and in his own name, but this time he seems
+to have slipped over quietly. He always dresses the same and has
+just given me 'good day!' They call him The Stetson Man. We heard
+this morning that he had booked two first-class sailings in the
+Oceanic, leaving for New York three weeks hence. Now, Mr. Cavanagh,
+what is his game?"
+
+"It has occurred to me before, Bristol," I replied, "and you may
+remember that I mentioned the idea to you, that there might be a
+third party interested in the slipper. Why shouldn't Earl Dexter
+be that third party?"
+
+"Because he isn't a fool," rapped Bristol shortly. "Earl Dexter
+isn't a man to gather up trouble for himself. More likely if his
+visit has anything really to do with the slipper he's retained by
+Hassan and Company. Museum-breaking may be a bit out of the line
+of Hashishin!"
+
+This latter suggestion dovetailed with my own ideas, and oddly
+enough there was something positively wholesome in the notion of
+the straightforward crookedness of a mere swell cracksman.
+
+Then happened a singular thing, and one that effectually concluded
+our whispered colloquy. From the top end of the room, beyond the
+case containing the slipper, one of the yellow blinds came down
+with a run.
+
+Bristol turned in a flash. It was not a remarkable accident, and
+might portend no more than a loose cord; but when, having walked
+rapidly up the room, we stood before the lowered blind, it
+appeared that this was no accident at all.
+
+Some four feet from the bottom of the blind (or five feet from the
+floor) a piece of linen a foot square had been neatly slashed out!
+
+I glanced around the room. Several fashionably dressed visitors
+were looking idly in our direction, but I could fasten upon no one
+of them as a likely perpetrator.
+
+Bristol stared at me in perplexity.
+
+"Who on earth did it," he muttered, "and what the blazes for?"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+THE HASHISHIN WATCH
+
+
+"The American gentleman has just gone out, sir," said the sergeant
+at the door.
+
+I nodded grimly and raced down the steps. Despite my half-formed
+desire that the slipper should be recovered by those to whom
+properly it belonged, I experienced at times a curious interest in
+its welfare. I cannot explain this. Across the hall in front of
+me I saw Earl Dexter passing out of the Museum. I followed him
+through into Kingsway and thence to Fleet Street. He sauntered
+easily along, a nonchalant gray figure. I had begun to think that
+he was bound for his hotel and that I was wasting my time when he
+turned sharply into quiet Salisbury Square; it was almost deserted.
+
+My heart leapt into my mouth with a presentiment of what was coming
+as I saw an elegant and beautifully dressed woman sauntering along
+in front of us on the far side.
+
+Was it that I detected something familiar in her carriage, in the
+poise of her head--something that reminded me of former
+unforgettable encounters; encounters which without exception had
+presaged attempts upon the slipper of the Prophet? Or was it that
+I recollected how Dexter had booked two passages to America? I
+cannot say, but I felt my heart leap; I knew beyond any possibility
+of doubt that this meeting in Salisbury Square marked the opening
+of a new chapter in the history of the slipper.
+
+Dexter slipped his arm within that of the girl in front of him and
+they paced slowly forward in earnest conversation. I suppose my
+action was very amateurish and very poor detective work; but
+regardless of discovery I crossed the road and passed close by
+the pair.
+
+I am certain that Dexter was speaking as I came up, but, well out
+of earshot, his voice was suddenly arrested. His companion turned
+and looked at me.
+
+I was prepared for it, yet was thrilled electrically by the
+flashing glance of the violet eyes--for it was she--the beautiful
+harbinger of calamities!
+
+My brain was in a whirl; complication piled itself upon complication;
+yet in the heart of all this bewilderment I thought I could detect
+the key of the labyrinth, but at the time my ideas were in disorder,
+for the violet eyes were not lowered but fixed upon me in cold scorn.
+
+I knew myself helpless, and bending my head with conscious
+embarrassment I passed on hurriedly.
+
+I had work to do in plenty, but I could not apply my mind to it;
+and now, although the obvious and sensible thing was to go about
+my business, I wandered on aimlessly, my brain employed with a
+hundred idle conjectures and the query, "Where have I seen The
+Stetson Man?" seeming to beat, like a tattoo, in my brain. There
+was something magnetic about the accursed slipper, for without
+knowing by what route I had arrived there, I found myself in Great
+Orchard Street and close under the walls of the British Antiquarian
+Museum. Then I was effectually aroused from my reverie.
+
+Two men, both tall, stood in the shadow of a doorway on the Opposite
+side of the street, staring intently up at the Museum windows. It
+was a tropically hot afternoon and they stood in deepest shadow. No
+one else was in Orchard Street--that odd little backwater--at the
+time, and they stood gazing upward intently and gave me not even a
+passing glance.
+
+But I knew one for the Oriental visitor of the morning, and despite
+broad noonday and the hum of busy London about me, my blood seemed
+to turn to water. I stood rooted to the spot, held there by a most
+surprising horror.
+
+For the gray-bearded figure of the other watcher was one I could
+never forget; its benignity was associated with the most horrible
+hours of my life, with deeds so dreadful that recollection to this
+day sometimes breaks my sleep, arousing me in the still watches,
+bathed in a cold sweat of fear.
+
+It was Hassan of Aleppo!
+
+If he saw me, if either of them saw me, I cannot say. What I should
+have done, what I might have done it is useless to speak of here
+--for I did nothing. Inert, thralled by the presence of that eerie,
+dreadful being, I watched them leave the shadow of the doorway and
+pace slowly on with their dignified Eastern gait.
+
+Then, knowing how I had failed in my plain duty to my fellow-men
+--how, finding a serpent in my path, I had hesitated to crush it,
+had weakly succumbed to its uncanny fascination--I made my way
+round to the door of the Museum.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+THE WHITE BEAM
+
+
+That night the deviltry began. Mr. Mostyn found himself wholly
+unable to sleep. Many relics have curious histories, and the
+experienced archaeologist becomes callous to that uncanniness which
+seems to attach to some gruesome curios. But the slipper of the
+Prophet was different. No mere ghostly menace threatened its
+holders; an avenging scimitar followed those who came in contact
+with it; gruesome tragedies, mutilations, murders, had marked its
+progress throughout.
+
+The night was still--as still as a London night can be; for there
+is always a vague murmuring in the metropolis as though the
+sleeping city breathed gently and sometimes stirred in its sleep.
+
+Then, distinct amid these usual nocturnal noises, rose another,
+unaccountable sound, a muffled crash followed by a musical tinkling.
+
+Mostyn sprang up in bed, drew on a dressing-gown, and took from the
+small safe at his bed-head the Museum keys and a loaded revolver.
+A somewhat dishevelled figure, pale and wild-eyed, he made his way
+through the private door and into the ghostly precincts of the
+Museum. He did not hesitate, but ascended the stairs and unlocked
+the door of the Assyrian gallery.
+
+Along its ghostly aisles he passed, and before the door which gave
+admittance to the Burton Room paused, fumbling a moment for the
+key.
+
+Inside the room something was moving!
+
+Mostyn was keenly alarmed; he knew that he must enter at once or
+never. He inserted the key in the lock, swung open the heavy door,
+stepped through and closed it behind him. He was a man of
+tremendous moral courage, for now,--alone in the apartment which
+harboured the uncanny relic, alone in the discharge of his duty,
+he stood with his back to the door trembling slightly, but with
+the idea of retreat finding no place in his mind.
+
+One side of the room lay in blackest darkness; through the
+furthermost window of the other a faint yellowed luminance (the
+moonlight through the blind) spread upon the polished parquet
+flooring. But that which held the curator spell-bound--that which
+momentarily quickened into life the latent superstition, common to
+all mankind, was a beam of cold light which poured its effulgence
+fully upon the case containing the Prophet's slipper! Where the
+other exhibits lay either in utter darkness or semi-darkness this
+one it seemed was supernaturally picked out by this lunar
+searchlight!
+
+It was ghostly-unnerving; but, the first dread of it passed, Mostyn
+recalled how during the day a hole inexplicably had been cut in
+that blind; he recalled that it had not been mended, but that the
+damaged blind had merely been rolled up again.
+
+And as a dawning perception of the truth came to him, as falteringly
+he advanced a step toward the mystic beam, he saw that one side of
+the case had been shattered--he saw the broken glass upon the floor;
+and in the dense shadow behind and under the beam of light, vaguely
+he saw a dull red object.
+
+It moved--it seemed to live! It moved away from the case and in
+the direction of the eastern windows.
+
+"My God!" whispered Mostyn; "it's the Prophet's slipper!"
+
+And wildly, blindly, he fired down the room. Later he knew that he
+had fired in panic, for nothing human was or could be in the place;
+yet his shot was not without effect. In the instant of its flash,
+something struck sharply against the dimly seen blind of one of the
+east windows; he heard the crash of broken glass.
+
+He leapt to the switch and flooded the room with light. A fear of
+what it might hold possessed him, and he turned instantly.
+
+Hard by the fragments of broken glass upon the floor and midway
+between the case and the first easterly window lay the slipper. A
+bell was ringing somewhere. His shot probably had aroused the
+attention of the policeman. Someone was clamouring upon the door
+of the Museum, too. Mostyn raced forward and raised the blind
+--that toward which the slipper had seemed to move.
+
+The lower pane of the window was smashed. Blood was trickling down
+upon the floor from the jagged edges of the glass.
+
+"Hullo there! Open the door! Open the door!"
+
+Bells were going all over the place now; sounds of running footsteps
+came from below; but Mostyn stood staring at the broken window and
+at the solid iron bars which protected it without, which were intact,
+substantial--which showed him that nothing human could possibly
+have entered.
+
+Yet the case was shattered, the holy slipper lay close beside him
+upon the floor, and from the broken window-pane blood was falling
+--drip-drip-drip . . .
+
+That was the story as I heard it half an hour later. For Inspector
+Bristol, apprised of the happening, was promptly on the scene; and
+knowing how keen was my interest in the matter, he rang me up
+immediately. I arrived soon after Bristol and found a perplexed
+group surrounding the uncanny slipper of the Prophet. No one had
+dared to touch it; the dread vengeance of Hassan of Aleppo would
+visit any unbeliever who ventured to lay hand upon the holy, bloody
+thing. Well we knew it, and as though it had been a venomous
+scorpion we, a company of up-to-date, prosaic men of affairs, stood
+around that dilapidated markoob, and kept a respectful distance.
+
+Mostyn, an odd figure in pyjamas and dressing-gown, turned his pale,
+intellectual face to me as I entered.
+
+"It will have to be put back . . . secretly," he said.
+
+His voice was very unsteady. Bristol nodded grimly and glanced at
+the two constables, who, with a plain-clothes man unknown to me,
+made up that midnight company.
+
+"I'll do it, sir," said one of the constables suddenly.
+
+"One moment"--Mostyn raised his hand!
+
+In the ensuing silence I could hear the heavy breathing of those
+around me. We were all looking at the slipper, I think.
+
+"Do you understand, fully," the curator continued, "the risk you
+run?"
+
+"I think so, sir," answered the constable; "but I'm prepared to
+chance it."
+
+"The hands," resumed Mostyn slowly, "of those who hitherto have
+ventured to touch it have been"--he hesitated--"cut off."
+
+"Your career in the Force would be finished if it happened to you,
+my lad," said Bristol shortly.
+
+"I suppose they'd look after me," said the man, with grim humour.
+
+"They would if you met with--an accident, in the discharge of your
+duty," replied the inspector; "but I haven't ordered you to do it,
+and I'm not going to."
+
+"All right, sir," said the man, with a sort of studied truculence,
+"I'll take my chance."
+
+I tried to stop him; Mostyn, too, stepped forward, and Bristol
+swore frankly. But it was all of no avail.
+
+A sort of chill seemed to claim my very soul when I saw the
+constable stoop, unconcernedly pick up the slipper, and replace it
+in the broken case.
+
+It was out of a silence cathedral-like, awesome, that he spoke.
+
+"All you want is a new pane of glass, sir," he said--"and the
+thing's done."
+
+I anticipate in mentioning it here; but since Constable Hughes
+has no further place in these records I may perhaps be excused for
+dismissing him at this point.
+
+He was picked up outside the section house on the following evening
+with his right hand severed just above the wrist.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+A SCREAM IN THE NIGHT
+
+
+The day that followed was one of the hottest which we experienced
+during the heat wave. It was a day crowded with happenings. The
+Burton Room was closed to the public, whilst a glazier worked upon
+the broken east window and a new blind was fitted to the west.
+Behind the workmen, guarded by a watchful commissionaire, yawned
+the shattered case containing the slipper.
+
+I wondered if the visitors to the other rooms of the Museum realized,
+as I realized, that despite the blazing sunlight of tropical
+London, the shadow of Hassan of Aleppo lay starkly on that haunted
+building?
+
+At about eleven o'clock, as I hurried along the Strand, I almost
+collided with the girl of the violet eyes! She turned and ran like
+the wind down Arundel Street, whilst I stood at the corner staring
+after her in blank amazement, as did other passers-by; for a man
+cannot with dignity race headlong after a pretty woman down a
+public thoroughfare!
+
+My mystification grew hourly deeper; and Bristol wallowed in
+perplexities.
+
+"It's the most horrible and confusing case," he said to me when
+I joined him at the Museum, "that the Yard has ever had to handle.
+It bristles with outrages and murders. God knows where it will
+all end. I've had London scoured for a clue to the whereabouts
+of Hassan and Company and drawn absolutely blank! Then there's
+Earl Dexter. Where does he come in? For once in a way he's
+living in hiding. I can't find his headquarters. I've been
+thinking--"
+
+He drew me aside into the small gallery which runs parallel with
+the Assyrian Room.
+
+"Dexter has booked two passages in the Oceanic. Who is his
+companion?"
+
+I wondered, I had wondered more than once, if his companion were
+my beautiful violet-eyed acquaintance. A scruple--perhaps an
+absurd scruple--hitherto had kept me silent respecting her, but
+now I determined to take Bristol fully into my confidence. A
+conviction was growing upon me that she and Earl Dexter together
+represented that third party whose existence we had long suspected.
+Whether they operated separately or on behalf of the Moslems (of
+which arrangement I could not conceive) remained to be seen. I
+was about to voice my doubts and suspicions when Bristol went on
+hurriedly--
+
+"I have thoroughly examined the Burton Room, and considering that
+the windows are thirty feet from the ground, that there is no sign
+of a ladder having stood upon the lawn, and that the iron bars are
+quite intact, it doesn't look humanly possible for any one to have
+been in the room last night prior to Mostyn's arrival!"
+
+"One of the dwarfs--"
+
+"Not even one of the dwarfs," said Bristol, "could have passed
+between those iron bars!"
+
+"But there was blood on the window!"
+
+"I know there was, and human blood. It's been examined!"
+
+He stared at me fixedly. The thing was unspeakably uncanny.
+
+"To-night," he went on, "I am remaining in here"--nodding toward
+the Assyrian Room--"and I have so arranged it that no mortal being
+can possibly know I am here. Mostyn is staying, and you can stay,
+too, if you care to. Owing to Professor Deeping's will you are
+badly involved in the beastly business, and I have no doubt you are
+keen to see it through."
+
+"I am," I admitted, "and the end I look for and hope for is the
+recovery of the slipper by its murderous owners!"
+
+"I am with you," said Bristol. "It's just a point of honour; but
+I should be glad to make them a present of it. We're ostentatiously
+placing a constable on duty in the hallway to-night--largely as a
+blind. It will appear that we're taking no other additional
+precautions."
+
+He hurried off to make arrangements for my joining him in his watch,
+and thus again I lost my opportunity of confiding in him regarding
+the mysterious girl.
+
+I half anticipated, though I cannot imagine why, that Earl Dexter
+would put in an appearance, during the day. He did not do so,
+however, for Bristol had put a constable on the door who was well
+acquainted with the appearance of The Stetson Man. The inspector,
+in the course of his investigations, had come upon what might have
+been a clue, but what was at best a confusing one. Close by the
+wall of the curator's house and lying on the gravel path he had
+found a part of a gold cuff link. It was of American manufacture.
+
+Upon such slender evidence we could not justly assume that it
+pointed to the presence of Dexter on the night of the attempted
+robbery, but it served to complicate a matter already sufficiently
+involved.
+
+In pursuance of Bristol's plan, I concealed myself that evening
+just before the closing of the Museum doors, in a recess behind a
+heavy piece of Babylonian sculpture. Bristol was similarly
+concealed in another part of the room, and Mostyn joined us later.
+
+The Museum was closed; and so far as evidence went the authorities
+had relied again upon the bolts and bars hitherto considered
+impregnable, and upon the constable in the hall. The broken window
+was mended, the cut blind replaced, and within, in its shattered
+case, reposed the slipper of the Prophet.
+
+All the blinds being lowered, the Assyrian Room was a place of
+gloom, yellowed on the western side by the moonlight through the
+blind. The door communicating with the Burton Room was closed
+but not fastened.
+
+"They operated last night," Bristol whispered to me, "at the exact
+time when the moonlight shone through the hole in the westerly
+blind on to the case. If they come to-night, and I am quite
+expecting them, they will have to dispense with that assistance;
+but they know by experience where to reach the case."
+
+"Despite our precautions," I said, "they will almost certainly
+know that a watch is being kept."
+
+"They may or they may not," replied Bristol. "Either way I'm
+disposed to think there will be another attempt. Their mysterious
+method is so rapid that they can afford to take chances."
+
+This was not my first night vigil since I had become in a sense the
+custodian of the relic, but it was quite the most dreary. Amid the
+tomb-like objects about us we seemed two puny mortals toying with
+stupendous things. We could not smoke and must converse only in
+whispers; and so the night wore on until I began to think that our
+watch would be dully uneventful.
+
+"Our big chance," whispered Mostyn, "is in the fact that any day
+may change the conditions. They can't afford to wait."
+
+He ceased abruptly, grasping my arm. From somewhere, somewhere
+outside the building, we all three had heard a soft whistle. A
+moment of tense listening followed.
+
+"If only we could have had the place surrounded," whispered Bristol--
+"but it was impossible, of course."
+
+A faint grating noise echoed through the lofty Burton Room. Bristol
+slipped past me in the semi-gloom, and gently opened the
+communicating door a few inches.
+
+A-tiptoe, I joined him, and craning across his shoulder saw a strange
+and wonderful thing.
+
+The newly glazed east window again was shattered with a booming
+crash! The yellow blind was thrust aside. A long something reached
+out toward the broken case. There was a sort of fumbling sound, and
+paralyzed with the wonder of it--for the window, remember, was
+thirty feet from the ground--I stood frozen to my post.
+
+Not so Bristol. As the weird tentacle (or more exactly it reminded
+me of a gigantic crab's claw) touched the case, the Inspector leapt
+forward. A white beam from his electric torch cut through to the
+broken cabinet.
+
+The thing was withdrawn . . . and with it went the slipper of the
+Prophet.
+
+"Raise the blinds!" cried Bristol. "Mr. Cavanagh! Mr. Mostyn!
+We must not let them give us the slip!"
+
+I got up the blind of the nearer window as Bristol raised the other.
+Not a living thing was in sight from either!
+
+Mostyn was beside me, his hand resting on my shoulder. I noted how
+he trembled. Bristol turned and looked back at us. The light from
+his pocket torch flashed upon the curator's face; and I have never
+seen such an expression of horrified amazement as that which it
+wore. Faintly, I could hear the constable racing up the steps from
+the hall.
+
+Ideas of the supernatural came to us all, I know; when, with a
+scuffling sound not unlike that of a rat in a ceiling, something moved
+above us!
+
+"Damn my thick head!" roared Bristol, furiously. "He's on the roof!
+It's flat as a floor and there's enough ivy alongside the water-spout
+on your house adjoining, Mr. Mostyn, to afford foothold to an
+invading army!"
+
+He plunged off toward the open door, and I heard him racing down
+the Assyrian Room.
+
+"He had a short rope ladder fixed from the gutter!" he cried back
+at us. "Graham! Graham!" (the constable on duty in the hall)--
+"Get the front door open! Get . . . " His voice died away as he
+leapt down the stairs.
+
+From the direction of Orpington Square came a horrid, choking
+scream. It rose hideously; it fell, rose again--and died.
+
+The thief escaped. We saw the traces upon the ivy where he had
+hastened down. Bristol ascended by the same route, and found where
+the ladder-hooks had twice been attached to the gutterway. Constable
+Graham, who was first actually to leave the building, declared that
+he heard the whirr of a re-started motor lower down Great Orchard
+Street.
+
+Bristol's theory, later to be dreadfully substantiated, was that
+the thief had broken the glass and reached into the case with an
+arrangement similar to that employed for pruning trees, having a
+clutch at the end, worked with a cord.
+
+"Hassan has been too clever for us!" said the inspector. "But--
+what in God's name did that awful screaming mean?"
+
+I had a theory, but I did not advance it then.
+
+It was not until nearly dawn that my theory, and Bristol's, regarding
+the clutch arrangement, both were confirmed. For close under the
+railings which abut on Orpington Square, in a pool of blood we found
+just such an instrument as Bristol had described.
+
+And still clutching it was a pallid and ghastly shrunken hand that
+had been severed from above the wrist!
+
+"Merciful God!" whispered the inspector--"look at the opal ring on
+the finger! Look at the bandage where he cut himself on the
+broken window-glass that first night, when Mr. Mostyn disturbed him.
+It wasn't the Hashishin who stole the thing . . . . It's Earl
+Dexter's hand!"
+
+No one spoke for a moment. Then--
+
+"Which of them has--" began Mostyn huskily.
+
+"The slipper of the Prophet?" interrupted Bristol. "I wonder if we
+shall ever know?"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+A SHRIVELLED HAND
+
+
+Around a large square table in a room at New Scotland Yard stood a
+group of men, all of whom looked more or less continuously at
+something that lay upon the polished deal. One of the party, none
+other than the Commissioner himself, had just finished speaking,
+and in silence now we stood about the gruesome object which had
+furnished him with the text of his very terse address.
+
+I knew myself privileged in being admitted to such a conference at
+the C.I.D. headquarters and owed my admission partly to Inspector
+Bristol, and partly to the fact that under the will of the late
+Professor Deeping I was concerned in the uncanny business we were
+met to discuss.
+
+Novelty has a charm for every one; and to find oneself immersed in
+a maelstrom of Eastern devilry, with a group of scientific murderers
+in pursuit of a holy Moslem relic, and unexpectedly to be made a
+trustee of that dangerous curiosity, makes a certain appeal to the
+adventurous. But to read of such things and to participate in them
+are widely different matters. The slipper of the Prophet and the
+dreadful crimes connected with it, the mutilations, murders, the
+uncanny mysteries which made up its history, were filling my world
+with horror.
+
+Now, in silence we stood around that table at New Scotland Yard
+and watched, as though we expected it to move, the ghastly "clue"
+which lay there. It was a shrivelled human hand, and about the
+thumb and forefinger there still dryly hung a fragment of lint
+which had bandaged a jagged wound. On one of the shrunken fingers
+was a ring set with a large opal.
+
+Inspector Bristol broke the oppressive silence.
+
+"You see, sir," he said, addressing the Commissioner, "this marks
+a new complication in the case. Up to this week although,
+unfortunately, we had made next to no progress, the thing was
+straightforward enough. A band of Eastern murderers, working along
+lines quite novel to Europe, were concealed somewhere in London.
+We knew that much. They murdered Professor Deeping, but failed to
+recover the slipper. They mutilated everyone who touched it
+mysteriously. The best men in the department, working night and
+day, failed to effect a single arrest. In spite of the mysterious
+activity of Hassan of Aleppo the slipper was safely lodged in the
+British Antiquarian Museum."
+
+The Commissioner nodded thoughtfully.
+
+"There is no doubt," continued Bristol, "that the Hashishin were
+watching the Museum. Mr. Cavanagh, here"--he nodded in my
+direction--"saw Hassan himself lurking in the neighbourhood. We
+took every precaution, observed the greatest secrecy; but in
+spite of it all a constable who touched the accursed thing lost
+his right hand. Then the slipper was taken."
+
+He stopped, and all eyes again were turned to the table.
+
+"The Yard," resumed Bristol slowly, "had information that Earl
+Dexter, the cleverest crook in America, was in England. He was
+seen in the Museum, and the night following the slipper was stolen.
+Then outside the place I found--that!"
+
+He pointed to the severed hand. No one spoke for a moment. Then--
+
+"The new problem," said the Commissioner, "is this: who took the
+slipper, Dexter or Hassan of Aleppo?"
+
+"That's it, sir," agreed Bristol. "Dexter had two passages booked
+in the Oceanic: but he didn't sail with her, and--that's his hand!"
+
+"You say he has not been traced?" asked the Commissioner.
+
+"No doctor known to the Medical Association," replied Bristol, "is
+attending him! He's not in any of the hospitals. He has completely
+vanished. The conclusion is obvious!"
+
+"The evident deduction," I said, "is that Dexter stole the slipper
+from the Museum--God knows with what purpose--and that Hassan of
+Aleppo recovered it from him."
+
+"You think we shall next hear of Earl Dexter from the river police?"
+suggested Bristol.
+
+"Personally," replied the Commissioner, "I agree with Mr. Cavanagh.
+I think Dexter is dead, and it is very probable that Hassan and
+Company are already homeward bound with the slipper of the Prophet."
+
+With all my heart I hoped that he might be right, but an intuition
+was with me crying that he was wrong, that many bloody deeds would
+be, ere the sacred slipper should return to the East.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+THE DWARF
+
+
+The manner in which we next heard of the whereabouts of the Prophet's
+slipper was utterly unforeseen, wildly dramatic. That the Hashishin
+were aware that I, though its legal trustee, no longer had charge
+of the relic nor knowledge of its resting-place, was sufficiently
+evident from the immunity which I enjoyed at this time from that
+ceaseless haunting by members of the uncanny organization ruled by
+Hassan. I had begun to feel more secure in my chambers, and no
+longer worked with a loaded revolver upon the table beside me. But
+the slightest unusual noise in the night still sufficed to arouse
+me and set me listening intently, to chill me with dread of what
+it might portend. In short, my nerves were by no means recovered
+from the ceaseless strain of the events connected with and arising
+out of the death of my poor friend, Professor Deeping.
+
+One evening as I sat at work in my chambers, with the throb of busy
+Fleet Street and its thousand familiar sounds floating in to me
+through the open windows, my phone bell rang.
+
+Even as I turned to take up the receiver a foreboding possessed me
+that my trusteeship was no longer to be a sinecure. It was
+Bristol who had rung me up, and upon very strange business.
+
+"A development at last!" he said; "but at present I don't know what
+to make of it. Can you come down now?"
+
+"Where are you speaking from?"
+
+"From the Waterloo Road--a delightful neighbourhood. I shall be
+glad if you can meet me at the entrance to Wyatt's Buildings in
+half an hour."
+
+"What is it? Have you found Dexter?"
+
+"No, unfortunately. But it's murder!"
+
+I knew as I hung up the receiver that my brief period of peace was
+ended; that the lists of assassination were reopened. I hurried
+out through the court into Fleet Street, thinking of the key of the
+now empty case at the Museum which reposed at my bankers, thinking
+of the devils who pursued the slipper, thinking of the hundred and
+one things, strange and terrible, which went to make up the history
+of that gruesome relic.
+
+Wyatt's Buildings, Waterloo Road, are a gloomy and forbidding block
+of dwellings which seem to frown sullenly upon the high road, from
+which they are divided by a dark and dirty courtyard. Passing an
+iron gateway, you enter, by way of an arch, into this sinister place
+of uncleanness. Male residents in their shirt sleeves lounge
+against the several entrances. Bedraggled women nurse dirty infants
+and sit in groups upon the stone steps, rendering them almost
+impassable. But to-night a thing had happened in Wyatt's Buildings
+which had awakened in the inhabitants, hardened to sordid crime, a
+sort of torpid interest.
+
+Faces peered from most of the windows which commanded a view of the
+courtyard, looking like pallid blotches against the darkness; but
+a number of police confined the loungers within their several
+doorways, so that the yard itself was comparatively clear.
+
+I had had some difficulty in forcing a way through the crowd which
+thronged the entrance, but finally I found myself standing beside
+Inspector Bristol and looking down upon that which had brought us
+both to Wyatt's Buildings.
+
+There was no moon that night, and only the light of the lamp in the
+archway, with some faint glimmers from the stairways surrounding the
+court, reached the dirty paving. Bristol directed the light of a
+pocket-lamp upon the hunched-up figure which lay in the dust, and I
+saw it to be that of a dwarfish creature, yellow skinned and wearing
+only a dark loin cloth. He had a malformed and disproportionate
+head, a head that had been too large even for a big man. I knew
+after first glance that this was one of the horrible dwarfs employed
+by the Hashishin in their murderous business. It might even be the
+one who had killed Deeping; but this was impossible to determine
+by reason of the fact that the hideous, swollen head, together with
+the features, was completely crushed. I shall not describe the
+creature's appearance in further detail.
+
+Having given me an opportunity to examine the dead dwarf, Bristol
+returned the electric lamp to his pocket and stood looking at me in
+the semi-gloom. A constable stood on duty quite near to us, and
+others guarded the archway and the doors to the dwellings. The
+murmur of subdued voices echoed hollowly in the wells of the
+staircases, and a constant excited murmur proceeded from the crowd
+at the entrance. No pressmen had yet been admitted, though numbers
+of them were at the gates.
+
+"It happened less than an hour ago," said Bristol. "The place was
+much as you see it now, and from what I can gather there came the
+sound of a shot and several people saw the dwarf fall through the
+air and drop where he lies!"
+
+The light was insufficient to show the expression upon the speaker's
+face, but his voice told of a great wonder.
+
+"It is a bit like an Indian conjuring trick," I said, looking up to
+the sky above us; "who fired the shot?"
+
+"So far," replied Bristol, "I have failed to find out; but there's
+a bullet in the thing's head. He was dead before he reached the
+pavement."
+
+"Did no one see the flash of the pistol?"
+
+"No one that I have got hold of yet. Of course this kind of
+evidence is very unreliable; these people regularly go out of their
+way to mislead the police."
+
+"You think the body may have been carried here from somewhere else?"
+
+"Oh, no; this is where it fell, right enough. You can see where
+his head struck the stones."
+
+"He has not been moved at all?"
+
+"No; I shall not move him until I've worked out where in heaven's
+name he can have fallen from! You and I have seen some mysterious
+things happen, Mr. Cavanagh, since the slipper of the Prophet came
+to England and brought these people"--he nodded toward the thing
+at our feet--"in its train; but this is the most inexplicable
+incident to date. I don't know what to make of it at all. Quite
+apart from the question of where the dwarf fell from, who shot at
+him and why?"
+
+"Have you no theory?" I asked. "The incident to my mind points
+directly to one thing. We know that this uncanny creature belonged
+to the organization of Hassan of Aleppo. We know that Hassan
+implacably pursues one object--the slipper. In pursuit of the
+slipper, then, the dwarf came here. Bristol!"--I laid my hand upon
+his arm, glancing about me with a very real apprehension--"the
+slipper must be somewhere near!"
+
+Bristol turned to the constable standing hard by.
+
+"Remain here," he ordered. Then to me: "I should like you to come
+up on to the roof. From there we can survey the ground and perhaps
+arrive at some explanation of how the dwarf came to fall upon that
+spot."
+
+Passing the constable on duty at one of the doorways and making our
+way through the group of loiterers there, we ascended amid
+conflicting odours to the topmost floor. A ladder was fixed against
+the wall communicating with a trap in the ceiling. Several
+individuals in their shirt sleeves and all smoking clay pipes had
+followed us up. Bristol turned upon them.
+
+"Get downstairs," he said--"all the lot of you, and stop there!"
+
+With muttered imprecations our audience dispersed, slowly returning
+by the way they had come. Bristol mounted the ladder and opened the
+trap. Through the square opening showed a velvet patch spangled
+with starry points. As he passed up on to the roof and I followed
+him, the comparative cleanness of the air was most refreshing after
+the varied fumes of the staircase.
+
+Side by side we leaned upon the parapet looking down into the dirty
+courtyard which was the theatre of this weird mystery; looking down
+upon the stage, sordidly Western, where a mystic Eastern tragedy
+had been enacted.
+
+I could see the constable standing beside the crushed thing upon
+the stones.
+
+"Now," said Bristol, with a sort of awe in his voice, "where did he
+fall from?"
+
+And at his words, looking down at the spot where the dwarf lay, and
+noting that he could not possibly have fallen there from any of the
+buildings surrounding the courtyard, an eerie sensation crept over
+me; for I was convinced that the happening was susceptible of no
+natural explanation.
+
+I had heard--who has not heard?--of the Indian rope trick, where
+a fakir throws a rope into the air which remains magically suspended
+whilst a boy climbs upward and upward until he disappears into space.
+I had never credited accounts of the performance; but now I began
+seriously to wonder if the arts of Hassan of Aleppo were not as
+great or greater than the arts of fakir. But the crowning mystery
+to my mind was that of the Hashishin's death. It would seem that
+as he had hung suspended in space he had been shot!
+
+"You say that someone heard the sound of the shot?" I asked suddenly.
+
+"Several people," replied Bristol; "but no one knows, or no one
+will say, from what direction it came. I shall go on with the
+inquiry, of course, and cross-examine every soul in Wyatt's
+Buildings. Meanwhile, I'm open to confess that I am beaten."
+
+In the velvet sky countless points blazed tropically. The hum of
+the traffic in Waterloo Road reached us only in a muffled way.
+Sordidness lay beneath us, but up there under the heavens we seemed
+removed from it as any Babylonian astronomer communing with the
+stars.
+
+When, some ten minutes later, I passed out into the noise of
+Waterloo Road, I left behind me an unsolved mystery and took with
+me a great dread; for I knew that the quest of the sacred slipper
+was not ended, I knew that another tragedy was added to its history
+--and I feared to surmise what the future might hold for all of us.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+THE WOMAN WITH THE BASKET
+
+
+Deep in thought respecting the inexplicable nature of this latest
+mystery, I turned in the direction of the bridge, and leaving behind
+me an ever-swelling throng at the gate of Wyatt's Buildings,
+proceeded westward.
+
+The death of the dwarf had lifted the case into the realms of the
+marvellous, and I noted nothing of the bustle about me, for mentally
+I was still surveying that hunched-up body which had fallen out of
+empty space.
+
+Then in upon my preoccupation burst a woman's scream!
+
+I aroused myself from reverie, looking about to right and left.
+Evidently I had been walking slowly, for I was less than a hundred
+yards from Wyatt's Buildings, and hard by the entrance to an
+uninviting alley from which I thought the scream had proceeded.
+
+And as I hesitated, for I had no desire to become involved in a
+drunken brawl, again came the shrill scream: "Help! help!"
+
+I cannot say if I was the only passer-by who heard the cry;
+certainly I was the only one who responded to it. I ran down the
+narrow street, which was practically deserted, and heard windows
+thrown up as I passed for the cries for help continued.
+
+Just beyond a patch of light cast by a street lamp a scene was being
+enacted strange enough at any time and in any place, but doubly
+singular at that hour of the night, or early morning, in a lane off
+the Waterloo Road.
+
+An old woman, from whose hand a basket of provisions had fallen,
+was struggling in the grasp of a tall Oriental! He was evidently
+trying to stifle her screams and at the same time to pinion her
+arms behind her!
+
+I perceived that there was more in this scene than met the eye.
+Oriental footpads are rarities in the purlieus of Waterloo Road.
+So much was evident; and since I carried a short, sharp argument in
+my pocket, I hastened to advance it.
+
+At the sight of the gleaming revolver barrel the man, who was
+dressed in dark clothes and wore a turban, turned and ran swiftly
+off. I had scarce a glimpse of his pallid brown face ere he was
+gone, nor did the thought of pursuit enter my mind. I turned to
+the old woman, who was dressed in shabby black and who was
+rearranging her thick veil in an oddly composed manner, considering
+the nature of the adventure that had befallen her.
+
+She picked up her basket, and turned away. Needless to say I was
+rather shocked at her callous ingratitude, for she offered no word of
+thanks, did not even glance in my direction, but made off hurriedly
+toward Waterloo Road.
+
+I had been on the point of inquiring if she had sustained any injury,
+but I checked the words and stood looking after her in blank
+wonderment. Then my ideas were diverted into a new channel. I
+perceived, as she passed under an adjacent lamp, that her basket
+contained provisions such as a woman of her appearance would scarcely
+be expected to purchase. I noted a bottle of wine, a chicken, and a
+large melon.
+
+The nationality of the assailant from the first had marked the affair
+for no ordinary one, and now a hazy notion of what lay behind all
+this began to come to me.
+
+Keeping well in the shadows on the opposite side of the way, I
+followed the woman with the basket. The lane was quite deserted;
+for, the disturbance over, those few residents who had raised their
+windows had promptly lowered them again. She came out into
+Waterloo Road, crossed over, and stood waiting by a stopping-place
+for electric cars. I saw her arranging a cloth over her basket in
+such a way as effectually to conceal the contents. A strong mental
+excitement possessed me. The detective fever claims us all at one
+time or another, I think, and I had good reason for pursuing any
+inquiry that promised to lead to the elucidation of the slipper
+mystery. A theory, covering all the facts of the assault incident,
+now presented itself, and I stood back in the shadow, watchful; in
+a degree, exultant.
+
+A Greenwich-bound car was hailed by the woman with the basket. I
+could not be mistaken, I felt sure, in my belief that she cast
+furtive glances about her as she mounted the steps. But, having
+seen her actually aboard, my attention became elsewhere engaged.
+
+All now depended upon securing a cab before the tram car had
+passed from view!
+
+I counted it an act of Providence that a disengaged taxi appeared
+at that moment, evidently bound for Waterloo Station. I ran out
+into the road with cane upraised.
+
+As the man drew up--
+
+"Quick!" I cried. "You see that Greenwich car--nearly at the
+Ophthalmic Hospital? Follow it. Don't get too near. I will give
+you further instructions through the tube." I leapt in. We were
+off!
+
+The rocking car ahead was rounding the bend now toward St. George's
+Circus. As it passed the clock and entered South London Road it
+stopped. I raised the tube.
+
+"Pass it slowly!"
+
+We skirted the clock tower, and bore around to the right. Then I
+drew well back in the corner of the cab.
+
+The woman with the basket was descending! "Pull up a few yards
+beyond!" I directed. As the car re-started, and passed us, the
+taxi became stationary. I peered out of the little window at the
+back.
+
+The woman was returning in the direction of Waterloo Road!
+
+"Drive slowly back along Waterloo Road," was my next order.
+"Pretend you are looking for a fare; I will keep out of sight."
+
+The man nodded. It was unlikely that any one would notice the
+fact that the cab was engaged.
+
+I was borne back again upon my course. The woman kept to the right,
+and, once we were entered into the straight road which leads to the
+bridge, I again raised the speaking-tube.
+
+"Pull up," I said. "On the right-hand side is an old woman carrying
+a basket, fifty yards ahead. Do you see her? Keep well behind, but
+don't lose sight of her."
+
+The man drew up again and sat watching the figure with the basket
+until it was almost lost from sight. Then slowly we resumed our
+way. I would have continued the pursuit afoot now, but I feared
+that my quarry might again enter a vehicle. She did not do so,
+however, but coming abreast of the turning in which the mysterious
+assault had taken place, she crossed the road and disappeared from
+view.
+
+I leapt out of the cab, thrust half a crown into the man's hand,
+and ran on to the corner. The night was now far advanced, and I
+knew that the chances of detection were thereby increased. But
+the woman seemed to have abandoned her fears, and I saw her just
+ahead of me walking resolutely past the lamp beyond which a short
+time earlier she had met with a dangerous adventure.
+
+Since the opposite side of the street was comparatively in darkness,
+I slipped across, and in a state of high nervous tension pursued
+this strange work of espionage. I was convinced that I had
+forestalled Bristol and that I was hot upon the track of those who
+could explain the mystery of the dead dwarf.
+
+The woman entered the gate of the block of dwellings even more
+forbidding in appearance than those which that night had staged
+a dreadful drama.
+
+As the figure with the basket was lost from view I crept on, and
+in turn entered the evil-smelling hallway. I stepped cautiously,
+and standing beneath a gaslight protected by a wire frame, I
+congratulated myself upon having reached that point of vantage as
+silently as any Sioux stalker.
+
+Footsteps were receding up the stone stairs. Craning my neck, I
+peered up the well of the staircase. I could not see the woman,
+but from the sound of her tread it was possible to count the
+landings which she passed. When she had reached the fourth, and I
+heard her step upon yet another flight, I knew that she must be
+bound for the topmost floor; and observing every precaution, almost
+holding my breath in a nervous endeavour to make not the slightest
+sound, rapidly I mounted the stairs.
+
+I was come to the third landing in this secret fashion when quite
+distinctly I heard the grating of a key in a lock!
+
+Since four doors opened upon each of the landings, at all costs,
+I thought, I must learn by which door she entered.
+
+Throwing caution to the winds I raced up the remaining flights . . .
+and there at the top the woman confronted me, with blazing eyes!--
+with eyes that thrilled every nerve; for they were violet eyes, the
+only truly violet eyes I have ever seen! They were the eyes of the
+woman who like a charming, mocking will-o'-the-wisp had danced
+through this tragic scene from the time that poor Professor Deeping
+had brought the Prophet's slipper to London up to this present hour!
+
+There at the head of those stone steps in that common dwelling-house
+I knew her--and in the violet eyes it was written that she knew,
+and feared, me!
+
+"What do you want? Why are you following me?"
+
+She made no endeavour to disguise her voice. Almost, I think, she
+spoke the words involuntarily.
+
+I stood beside her. Quickly as she had turned from the door at my
+ascent, I had noted that it was that numbered forty-eight which she
+had been about to open.
+
+"You waste words," I said grimly. "Who lives there?"
+
+I nodded in the direction of the doorway. The violet eyes watched
+me with an expression in their depths which I find myself wholly
+unable to describe. Fear predominated, but there was anger, too,
+and with it a sort of entreaty which almost made me regret that I
+had taken this task upon myself. From beneath the shabby black hat
+escaped an errant lock of wavy hair wholly inconsistent with the
+assumed appearance of the woman. The flickering gaslight on the
+landing sought out in that wonderful hair shades which seemed to
+glow with the soft light seen in the heart of a rose. The thick
+veil was raised now and all attempts at deception abandoned. At
+bay she faced me, this secret woman whom I knew to hold the key to
+some of the darkest places which we sought to explore.
+
+"I live there," she said slowly. "What do you want with me?"
+
+"I want to know," I replied, "for whom are those provisions in
+your basket?"
+
+She watched me fixedly.
+
+"And I want to know," I continued, "something that only you can
+tell me. We have met before, madam, but you have always eluded me.
+This time you shall not do so. There's much I have to ask of you,
+but particularly I want to know who killed the Hashishin who lies
+dead at no great distance from here!"
+
+"How can I tell you that? Of what are you speaking?"
+
+Her voice was low and musical; that of a cultured woman. She
+evidently recognized the futility of further subterfuge in this
+respect.
+
+"You know quite well of what I am speaking! You know that you
+can tell me if any one can! The fact that you go disguised alone
+condemns you! Why should I remind you of our previous meetings--of
+the links which bind you to the history of the Prophet's slipper?"
+She shuddered and closed her eyes. "Your present attitude is a
+sufficient admission!"
+
+She stood silent before me, with something pitiful in her pose--a
+wonderfully pretty woman, whose disarranged hair and dilapidated hat
+could not mar her beauty; whose clumsy, ill-fitting garments could
+not conceal her lithe grace.
+
+Our altercation had not thus far served to arouse any of the
+inhabitants and on that stuffy landing, beneath the flickering
+gaslight, we stood alone, a group of two which epitomized strange
+things.
+
+Then, with that quietly dramatic note which marks real life entrances
+and differentiates them from the loudly acclaimed episodes of the
+stage, a third actor took up his cue.
+
+"Both hands, Mr. Cavanagh!" directed an American voice.
+
+Nerves atwitch, I started around in its direction.
+
+From behind the slightly opened door of No. 48 protruded a steel
+barrel, pointed accurately at my head!
+
+I hesitated, glancing from the woman toward the open door.
+
+"Do it quick!" continued the voice incisively. "You are up against
+a desperate man, Mr. Cavanagh. Raise your hands. Carneta, relieve
+Mr. Cavanagh of his gun!"
+
+Instantly the girl, with deft fingers, had obtained possession of
+my revolver.
+
+"Step inside," said the crisp, strident voice. Knowing myself
+helpless and quite convinced that I was indeed in the clutches of
+desperate people, I entered the doorway, the door being held open
+from within. She whom I had heard called Carneta followed. The
+door was reclosed; and I found myself in a perfectly bare and dim
+passageway. From behind me came the order--
+
+"Go right ahead!"
+
+Into a practically unfurnished room, lighted by one gas jet, I
+walked. Some coarse matting hung before the two windows and a
+fairly large grip stood on the floor against one wall. A gas-ring
+was in the hearth, together with a few cheap cooking utensils.
+
+
+I turned and faced the door. First entered Carneta, carrying the
+basket; then came a man with a revolver in his left hand and his
+right arm strapped across his chest and swathed in bandages. One
+glance revealed the fact that his right hand had been severed--
+revealed the fact, though I knew it already, that my captor was
+Earl Dexter.
+
+He looked even leaner than when I had last seen him. I had no doubt
+that his ghastly wound had occasioned a tremendous loss of blood.
+His gaunt face was positively emaciated, but the steely gray eyes
+had lost nothing of their brightness. There was a good deal about
+Mr. Earl Dexter, the cracksman, that any man must have admired.
+
+"Shut the door, Carneta," he said quietly. His companion closed
+the door and Dexter sat down on the grip, regarding me with his
+oddly humorous smile.
+
+"You're a visitor I did not expect, Mr. Cavanagh," he said. "I
+expected someone worse. You've interfered a bit with my plans but
+I don't know that I can't rearrange things satisfactorily. I don't
+think I'll stop for supper, though--" He glanced at the girl, who
+stood silent by the door.
+
+"Just pack up the provisions," he directed, nodding toward the
+basket--"in the next room."
+
+She departed without a word.
+
+"That's a noticeable dust coat you're wearing, Mr. Cavanagh," said
+the American; "it gives me a great notion. I'm afraid I'll have to
+borrow it."
+
+He glanced, smiling, at the revolver in his left hand and back again
+to me. There was nothing of the bully about him, nothing
+melodramatic; but I took off the coat without demur and threw it
+across to him.
+
+"It will hide this stump," he said grimly; "and any of the Hashishin
+gentlemen who may be on the look-out--though I rather fancy the
+road is clear at the moment--will mistake me for you. See the idea?
+Carneta will be in a cab and I'll be in after her and away before
+they've got time to so much as whistle."
+
+Very awkwardly he got into the coat.
+
+"She's a clever girl, Carneta," he said. "She's doctored me all
+along since those devils cut my hand off."
+
+As he finished speaking Carneta returned.
+
+She had discarded her rags and wore a large travelling coat and a
+fashionable hat.
+
+"Ready?" asked Dexter. "We'll make a rush for it. We meant to go
+to-night anyway. It's getting too hot here!" He turned to me.
+
+"Sorry to say," he drawled, "I'll have to tie you up and gag you.
+Apologize; but it can't be helped."
+
+Carneta nodded and went out of the room again, to return almost
+immediately with a line that looked as though it might have been
+employed for drying washing.
+
+"Hands behind you," rapped Dexter, toying with the revolver--"and
+think yourself lucky you've got two!"
+
+There was no mistaking the manner of man with whom I had to deal,
+and I obeyed; but my mind was busy with a hundred projects. Very
+neatly the girl bound my wrists, and in response to a slight nod
+from Dexter threw the end of the line up over a beam in the sloping
+ceiling, for the room was right under the roof, and drew it up in
+such a way that, my wrists being raised behind me, I became utterly
+helpless. It was an ingenious device indicating considerable
+experience.
+
+"Just tie his handkerchief around his mouth," directed Dexter:
+"that will keep him quiet long enough for our purpose. I hope you
+will be released soon, Mr. Cavanagh," he added. "Greatly regret
+the necessity."
+
+Carneta bound the handkerchief over my mouth.
+
+Dexter extinguished the gas.
+
+"Mr. Cavanagh," he said, "I've gone through hell and I've lost the
+most useful four fingers and a thumb in the United States to get
+hold of the Prophet's slipper. Any one can have it that's open to
+pay for it--but I've got to retire on the deal, so I'll drive a
+hard bargain! Good-night!"
+
+There was a sound of retreating footsteps, and I heard the entrance
+door close quietly.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+WHAT CAME THROUGH THE WINDOW
+
+
+I had not been in my unnatural position for many minutes before I
+began to suffer agonies, agonies not only physical but mental; for
+standing there like some prisoner of the Inquisition, it came to me
+how this dismantled apartment must be the focus of the dreadful
+forces of Hassan of Aleppo!
+
+That Earl Dexter had the slipper of the Prophet I no longer doubted,
+and that he had sustained, in this dwelling beneath the roof, an
+uncanny siege during the days which had passed since the theft from
+the Antiquarian Museum, was equally certain. Helpless, gagged, I
+pictured those hideous creatures, evil products of the secret East,
+who might, nay, who must surround that place! I thought of the
+horrible little yellow man who lay dead in Wyatt's Buildings; and
+it became evident to me that the house in which I was now imprisoned
+must overlook the back of those unsavoury tenements. The windows,
+sack-covered now, no doubt commanded a view of the roofs of the
+buildings. One of the mysteries that had puzzled us was solved. It
+was Earl Dexter who had shot the yellow dwarf as he was bound for
+this very room! But how humanly the Hashishin had proposed to gain
+his goal, how he had travelled through empty space--for from empty
+space the shot had brought him down--I could not imagine.
+
+I knew something of the almost supernatural attributes of these
+people. From Professor Deeping's book I knew of the incredible
+feats which they could perform when under the influence of the drug
+hashish. From personal experience also I knew that they had powers
+wholly abnormal.
+
+The pain in my arms and back momentarily increased. An awesome
+silence ruled. I tortured myself with pictures of murderous
+yellow men possessed of the power claimed by the Mahatmas, of
+levitation. Mentally I could see a distorted half-animal creature
+carrying a great gleaming knife and floating supernaturally toward
+me through the night!
+
+A soft pattering sound became perceptible on the sloping roof above!
+
+I think I have never known such intense and numbing fear as that
+which now descended upon me. Perhaps I may be forgiven it. A more
+dreadful situation it would be hard to devise. Knowing that I was
+on the fifth story of a house, bound, helpless, I knew, too, that a
+second mystic guardian of the slipper was come to accomplish the
+task in which the first had failed!
+
+I began to pray fervently.
+
+Neither of the windows were closed; and now through the intense
+darkness I heard one of them being raised up--up--up . . .
+
+The sacking was pulled aside inch by inch.
+
+Silhouetted against the faintly luminous background I saw a hunched,
+unnatural figure. The real was more dreadful even than the
+imaginary--for some stray beam of light touched into cold radiance
+a huge curved knife which the visitant held between his teeth!
+
+My fear became a madness, and I twisted my body violently in a wild
+endeavour to free myself. A dreadful pain shot through my left
+shoulder, and the whole nightmare scene--the thing with the knife
+at the window--the low-ceiled room-began to fade away from me. I
+seemed to be falling into deep water.
+
+A splintering crash and the sound of shouting formed my last
+recollections ere unconsciousness came.
+
+I found myself lying in an armchair with Bristol forcing brandy
+between my lips. My left arm hung limply at my side and the pain
+in my dislocated shoulder was excruciating.
+
+"Thank God you are all right, Mr. Cavanagh!" said the inspector.
+"I got the surprise of my life when we smashed the door in and
+found you tied up here!"
+
+"You came none too soon," I said feebly. "God knows how Providence
+directed you here."
+
+"Providence it was," replied Bristol. "From the roof of Wyatt's
+Buildings--you know the spot?--I saw the second yellow devil
+coming. By God! They meant to have it to-night! They don't value
+their lives a brass farthing against that damned slipper!"
+
+"But how--"
+
+"Along the telegraph-wires, Mr. Cavanagh! They cross Wyatt's
+Buildings and cross this house. It was a moonless night or we
+should have seen it at once! I watched him, saw him drop to this
+roof--and brought the men around to the front."
+
+"Did he, that awful thing, escape?"
+
+"He dropped full forty feet into a tree--from the tree to the
+ground, and went off like a cat!"
+
+"Earl Dexter has escaped us," I said, "and he has the slipper!"
+
+"God help him!" replied Bristol. "For by now he has that hell-pack
+at his heels! What a case! Heavens above, it will drive me mad!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+A RAPPING AT MIDNIGHT
+
+
+Inspector Bristol finished his whisky at a gulp and stood up, a tall,
+massive figure, stretching himself and yawning.
+
+"The detective of fiction would be hard at work on this case, now,"
+he said, smiling, "but I don't even pretend to be. I am at a
+standstill and I don't care who knows it."
+
+"You have absolutely no clue to the whereabouts of Earl Dexter?"
+
+"Not the slightest, Mr. Cavanagh. You hear a lot about the machinery
+of the law, but as a matter of fact, looking for a clever man hidden
+in London is a good deal like looking for a needle in a haystack.
+Then, he may have been bluffing when he told you he had the Prophet's
+slipper. He's already had his hand cut off through interfering with
+the beastly thing, and I really can't believe he would take further
+chances by keeping it in his possession. Nevertheless, I should like
+to find him."
+
+He leaned back against the mantelpiece, scratching his head
+perplexedly. In this perplexity he had my sympathy. No such
+pursuit, I venture to say, had ever before been required of Scotland
+Yard as this of the slipper of the Prophet. An organization founded
+in 1090, which has made a science of assassination, which through
+the centuries has perfected the malign arts, which, lingering on in
+a dark spot in Syria, has suddenly migrated and established itself
+in London, is a proposition almost unthinkable.
+
+It was hard to believe that even the daring American cracksman
+should have ventured to touch that blood-stained relic of the
+Prophet, that he should have snatched it away from beneath the very
+eyes of the fanatics who fiercely guarded it. What he hoped to
+gain by his possession of the slipper was not evident, but the fact
+remained that if he could be believed, he had it, and provided
+Scotland Yard's information was accurate, he still lurked in hiding
+somewhere in London.
+
+Meanwhile, no clue offered to his hiding-place, and despite the
+ceaseless vigilance of the men acting under Bristol's orders, no
+trace could be found of Hassan of Aleppo nor of his fiendish
+associates.
+
+"My theory is," said Bristol, lighting a cigarette, "that even
+Dexter's cleverness has failed to save him. He's probably a dead
+man by now, which accounts for our failing to find him; and Hassan
+of Aleppo has recovered the slipper and returned to the East, taking
+his gruesome company with him--God knows how! But that accounts
+for our failing to find him."
+
+I stood up rather wearily. Although poor Deeping had appointed me
+legal guardian of the relic, and although I could render but a poor
+account of my stewardship, let me confess that I was anxious to
+take that comforting theory to my bosom. I would have given much
+to have known beyond any possibility of doubt that the accursed
+slipper and its blood-lustful guardian were far away from England.
+Had I known so much, life would again have had something to offer
+me besides ceaseless fear, endless watchings. I could have slept
+again, perhaps; without awaking, clammy, peering into every shadow,
+listening, nerves atwitch to each slightest sound disturbing the
+night; without groping beneath the pillow for my revolver.
+
+"Then you think," I said, "that the English phase of the slipper's
+history is closed? You think that Dexter, minus his right hand,
+has eluded British law--that Hassan and Company have evaded
+retribution?"
+
+"I do!" said Bristol grimly, "and although that means the biggest
+failure in my professional career, I am glad--damned glad!"
+
+Shortly afterward he took his departure; and I leaned from the
+window, watching him pass along the court below and out under the
+arch into Fleet Street. He was a man whose opinions I valued, and
+in all sincerity I prayed now that he might be right; that the
+surcease of horror which we had recently experienced after the
+ghastly tragedies which had clustered thick about the haunted
+slipper, might mean what he surmised it to mean.
+
+The heat to-night was very oppressive. A sort of steaming mist
+seemed to rise from the court, and no cooling breeze entered my
+opened windows. The clamour of the traffic in Fleet Street came
+to me but remotely. Big Ben began to strike midnight. So far
+as I could see, residents on the other stairs were all abed and
+a velvet shadow carpet lay unbroken across three parts of the
+court. The sky was tropically perfect, cloudless, and jewelled
+lavishly. Indeed, we were in the midst of an Indian summer; it
+seemed that the uncanny visitants had brought, together with an
+atmosphere of black Eastern deviltry, something, too, of the
+Eastern climate.
+
+The last stroke of the Cathedral bell died away. Other more
+distant bells still were sounding dimly, but save for the
+ceaseless hum of the traffic, no unusual sound now disturbed the
+archaic peace of the court.
+
+I returned to my table, for during the time that had passed I had
+badly neglected my work and now must often labour far into the
+night. I was just reseated when there came a very soft rapping
+at the outer door!
+
+No doubt my mood was in part responsible, but I found myself
+thinking of Poe's weird poem, "The Raven"; and like the character
+therein I found myself hesitating.
+
+I stole quietly into the passage. It was in darkness. How odd it
+is that in moments of doubt instinctively one shuns the dark and
+seeks the light. I pressed the switch lighting the hall lamp, and
+stood looking at the closed door.
+
+Why should this late visitor have rapped in so uncanny a fashion
+in preference to ringing the bell?
+
+I stepped back to my table and slipped a revolver into my pocket.
+
+The muffled rapping was repeated. As I stood in the study doorway
+I saw the flap of the letter-box slowly raised!
+
+Instantly I extinguished both lights. You may brand me as
+childishly timid, but incidents were fresh in my memory which
+justified all my fears.
+
+A faintly luminous slit in the door showed me that the flap was now
+fully raised. It was the dim light on the stairway shining through.
+Then quite silently the flap was lowered. Came the soft rapping
+again.
+
+"Who's there?" I cried.
+
+No one answered.
+
+Wondering if I were unduly alarming myself, yet, I confess, strung
+up tensely in anticipation that this was some device of the phantom
+enemy, I stood in doubt.
+
+The silence remained unbroken for thirty seconds or more. Then yet
+again it was disturbed by that ghostly, muffled rapping.
+
+I advanced a step nearer to the door.
+
+"Who's there?" I cried loudly. "What do you want?"
+
+The flap of the letter box began to move, and I formed a sudden
+determination. Making no sound in my heelless Turkish slippers
+I crept close up to the door and dropped upon my knees.
+
+Thereupon the flap became fully lifted, but from where I crouched
+beneath it I was unable to see who or what was looking in; yet I
+hesitated no longer. I suddenly raised myself and thrust the
+revolver barrel through the opening!
+
+"Who are you?" I cried. "Answer or I fire!"--and along the barrel
+I peered out on to the landing.
+
+Still no one answered. But something impalpable--a powder--a
+vapour--to this hour I do not know what--enveloped me with its
+nauseating fumes; was puffed fully into my face! My eyes, my
+mouth, my nostrils became choked up, it seemed, with a deadly
+stifling perfume.
+
+Wildly, feeling that everything about me was slipping away, that I
+was sinking into a void, for ought I knew that of dissolution, I
+pulled the trigger once, twice, thrice ...
+
+"My God!"--the words choked in my throat and I reeled back into
+the passage--"it's not loaded!"
+
+I threw up my arms to save myself, lurched, and fell forward into
+what seemed a bottomless pit.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+THE GOLDEN PAVILION
+
+
+When I opened my eyes it was to a conviction that I dreamed. I
+lay upon a cushioned divan in a small apartment which I find myself
+at a loss adequately to describe.
+
+It was a yellow room, then, its four walls being hung with yellow
+silk, its floor being entirely covered by a yellow Persian carpet.
+One lamp, burning in a frame of some lemon coloured wood and having
+its openings filled with green glass, flooded the place with a
+ghastly illumination. The lamp hung by gold chains from the ceiling,
+which was yellow. Several low tables of the same lemon-hued wood
+as the lamp-frame stood around; they were inlaid in fanciful designs
+with gleaming green stones. Turn my eyes where I would, clutch my
+aching head as I might, this dream chamber would not disperse, but
+remained palpable before me--yellow and green and gold.
+
+There was a niche behind the divan upon which I lay framed about
+with yellow wood. In it stood a golden bowl and a tall pot of
+yellow porcelain; I lay amid yellow cushions having golden tassels.
+Some of them were figured with vivid green devices.
+
+To contemplate my surroundings assuredly must be to court madness.
+No door was visible, no window; nothing but silk and luxury, yellow
+and green and gold.
+
+To crown all, the air was heavy with a perfume wholly unmistakable
+by one acquainted with Egypt's ruling vice. It was the reek of
+smouldering hashish--a stench that seemed to take me by the throat,
+a vapour damnable and unclean. I saw that a little censer, golden
+in colour and inset with emeralds, stood upon the furthermost corner
+of the yellow carpet. From it rose a faint streak of vapour; and I
+followed the course of the sickly scented smoke upward through the
+still air until in oily spirals it lost itself near to the yellow
+ceiling. As a sick man will study the veriest trifle I studied
+that wisp of smoke, pencilled grayly against the silken draperies,
+the carven tables, against the almost terrifying persistency of the
+yellow and green and gold.
+
+I strove to rise, but was overcome by vertigo and sank back again
+upon the yellow cushions. I closed my eyes, which throbbed and
+burned, and rested my head upon my hands. I ceased to conjecture
+if I dreamed or was awake. I knew that I felt weak and ill, that
+my head throbbed agonizingly, that my eyes smarted so as to render
+it almost impossible to keep them open, that a ceaseless humming
+was in my ears.
+
+For some time I lay endeavouring to regain command of myself, to
+prepare to face again that scene which had something horrifying
+in its yellowness, touched with the green and gold.
+
+And when finally I reopened my eyes, I sat up with a suppressed cry.
+For a tall figure in a yellow robe from beneath which peeped yellow
+slippers, a figure crowned with a green turban, stood in the centre
+of the apartment!
+
+It was that of a majestic old man, white bearded, with aquiline
+nose, and the fierce eagle eyes of a fanatic set upon me sternly,
+reprovingly.
+
+With folded arms he stood watching me, and I drew a sharp breath and
+rose slowly to my feet.
+
+There amid the yellow and green and gold, amid the abominable reek
+of burning hashish I stood and faced Hassan of Aleppo!
+
+No words came to me; I was confounded.
+
+Hassan spoke in that gentle voice which I had heard only once before.
+
+"Mr. Cavanagh," he said, "I have brought you here that I might warn
+you. Your police are seeking me night and day, and I am fully alive
+to my danger whilst I stay in your midst. But for close upon a
+thousand years the Sheikh-al-jebal, Lord of the Hashishin, has
+guarded the traditions and the relics of the Prophet, Salla-'llahu
+'ale yhi wasellem! I, Hassan of Aleppo, am Sheikh of the Order
+to-day, and my sacred duty has brought me here."
+
+The piercing gaze never left my face. I was not yet by any means
+my own man and still I made no reply.
+
+"You have been wise," continued Hassan, "in that you have never
+touched the sacred slipper. Had you lain hands upon it, no secrecy
+could have availed you. The eye of the Hashishin sees all. There
+is a shaft of light which the true Believer perceives at night as
+he travels toward El-Medineh. It is the light which uprises, a
+spiritual fire, from the tomb of the Prophet (Salla-'llahu 'aleyhi
+wasellem!). The relics also are radiant, though in a lesser degree."
+
+He took a step toward me, spreading out his lean brown hands, palms
+downward.
+
+"A shaft of light," he said impressively, "shines upward now from
+London. It is the light of the holy slipper." He gazed intently
+at the yellow drapery at the left of the divan, but as though he
+were looking not at the wall but through it. His features worked
+convulsively; he was a man inspired. "I see it now!" he almost
+whispered--"that white light by which the guardians of the relic
+may always know its resting place!"
+
+I managed to force words to my lips.
+
+"If you know where the slipper is," I said, more for the sake of
+talking than for anything else, "why do you not recover it?"
+
+Hassan turned his eyes upon me again.
+
+"Because the infidel dog," he cried loudly, "who has soiled it with
+his unclean touch, defies us--mocks us! He has suffered the loss
+of the offending hand, but the evil ginn protect him; he is inspired
+by efreets! But God is great and Mohammed is His only Prophet! We
+shall triumph; but it is written, oh, daring infidel, that you again
+shall become the guardian of the slipper!"
+
+He spoke like some prophet of old and I stared at him fascinated.
+I was loth to believe his words.
+
+"When again," he continued, "the slipper shall be in the receptacle
+of which you hold the key, that key must be given to me!"
+
+I thought I saw the drift of his words now; I thought I perceived
+with what object I had been trapped and borne to this mysterious
+abode for whose whereabouts the police vainly were seeking. By the
+exercise of the gift of divination it would seem that Hassan of
+Aleppo had forecast the future history of the accursed slipper or
+believed that he had done so. According to his own words I was
+doomed once more to become trustee of the relic. The key of the
+case at the Antiquarian Museum, to which he had prophesied the
+slipper's return, would be the price of my life! But--
+
+"In order that these things may be fulfilled," he continued, "I must
+permit you to return to your house. So it is written, so it shall
+be. Your life is in my hands; beware when it is demanded of you
+that you hesitate not in yielding up the key!"
+
+He raised his hands before him, making a sort of obeisance, I doubt
+not in the direction of Mecca, drew aside one of the yellow hangings
+behind him and disappeared, leaving me alone again in that nightmare
+apartment of yellow and green and gold. A moment I stood watching
+the swaying curtain. Utter silence reigned, and a sort of panic
+seized me infinitely greater than that occasioned by the presence
+of the weird Sheikh. I felt that I must escape from the place or
+that I should become raving mad.
+
+I leapt forward to the curtain which Hassan had raised and jerked
+it aside; it had concealed a door. In this door and about level
+with my eyes was a kind of little barred window through which shone
+a dim green light. I bent forward, peering into the place beyond,
+but was unable to perceive anything save a vague greenness.
+
+And as I peered, half believing that the whole episode was a
+dreadful, fevered dream, the abominable fumes of hashish grew, or
+seemed to grow, quite suddenly insupportable. Through the square
+opening, from the green void beyond, a cloud of oily vapour, pungent,
+stifling, resembling that of burning Indian hemp, poured out and
+enveloped me!
+
+With a gasping cry I fell back, fighting for breath, for a breath
+of clean air unpolluted with hashish. But every inhalation drew
+down into my lungs the fumes that I sought to escape from. I
+experienced a deathly sickness; I seemed to be sinking into a sea
+of hashish, amid bubbles of yellow and green and gold, and I knew
+no more until, struggling again to my feet, surrounded by utter
+darkness--I struck my head on the corner of my writing-table . . .
+for I lay in my own study!
+
+My revolver, unloaded, was upon the table beside me. The night was
+very still. I think it must have been near to dawn.
+
+"My God!" I whispered, "did I dream it all? Did I dream it all?"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+
+THE BLACK TUBE
+
+
+"There's no doubt in my mind," said Inspector Bristol, "that your
+experience was real enough."
+
+The sun was shining into my room now, but could not wholly disperse
+the cloud of horror which lay upon it. That I had been drugged was
+sufficiently evident from my present condition, and that I had been
+taken away from my chambers Inspector Bristol had satisfactorily
+proved by an examination of the soles of my slippers.
+
+"It was a clever trick," he said. "God knows what it was they
+puffed into your face through the letter box, but the devilish arts
+of ten centuries, we must remember, are at the command of Hassan of
+Aleppo! The repetition of the trick at the mysterious place you
+were taken to is particularly interesting. I should say you won't
+be in a hurry to peer through letter boxes and so forth in the
+future?"
+
+I shook my aching head.
+
+"That accursed yellow room," I replied, "stank with the fumes of
+hashish. It may have been some preparation of hashish that was
+used to drug me."
+
+Bristol stood looking thoughtfully from the window.
+
+"It was a nightmare business, Mr. Cavanagh," he said; "but it
+doesn't advance our inquiry a little bit. The prophecy of the old
+man with the white beard--whom you assure me to be none other than
+Hassan of Aleppo--is something we cannot very well act upon. He
+clearly believes it himself; for he has released you after having
+captured you, evidently in order that you may be at liberty to take
+up your duty as trustee of the slipper again. If the slipper really
+comes back to the Museum the fact will show Hassan to be something
+little short of a magician. I shan't envy you then, Mr. Cavanagh,
+considering that you hold the keys of the case!"
+
+"No," I replied wearily. "Poor Professor Deeping thought that he
+acted in my interests and that my possession of the keys would
+constitute a safeguard. He was wrong. It has plunged me into the
+very vortex of this ghastly affair."
+
+"It is maddening," said Bristol, "to know that Hassan and Company
+are snugly located somewhere under our very noses, and that all
+Scotland Yard can find no trace of them. Then to think that Hassan
+of Aleppo, apparently by means of some mystical light, has knowledge
+of the whereabouts of the slipper and consequently of the
+whereabouts of Earl Dexter (another badly wanted man) is extremely
+discouraging! I feel like an amateur; I'm ashamed of myself!"
+
+Bristol departed in a condition of irritable uncertainty.
+
+My head in my hands, I sat for long after his departure, with the
+phantom characters of the ghoulish drama dancing through my
+brain. The distorted yellow dwarfs seemed to gibe apish before me.
+Severed hands clenched and unclenched themselves in my face, and
+gleaming knives flashed across the mental picture. Predominant over
+all was the stately figure of Hassan of Aleppo, that benignant,
+remorseless being, that terrible guardian of the holy relic who
+directed the murderous operations. Earl Dexter, The Stetson Man,
+with his tightly bandaged arm, his gaunt, clean-shaven face and
+daredevil smile, figured, too, in my feverish daydream; nor was
+that other character missing, the girl with the violet eyes whose
+beautiful presence I had come to dread; for like a sybil announcing
+destruction her appearances in the drama had almost invariably
+presaged fresh tragedies. I recalled my previous meetings with
+this woman of mystery. I recalled my many surmises regarding her
+real identity and association with the case. I wondered why in the
+not very distant past I had promised to keep silent respecting her;
+I wondered why up to that present moment, knowing beyond doubt that
+her activities were inimical to my interests, were criminal, I had
+observed that foolish pledge.
+
+And now my door-bell was ringing--as intuitively I had anticipated.
+So certain was I of the identity of my visitor that as I walked
+along the passage I was endeavouring to make up my mind how I should
+act, how I should receive her.
+
+I opened the door; and there, wearing European garments but a green
+turban . . . stood Hassan of Aleppo!
+
+When I say that amazement robbed me of the power to speak, to move,
+almost to think, I doubt not you will credit me. Indeed, I felt
+that modern London was crumbling about me and that I was become
+involved in the fantastic mazes of one of those Oriental intrigues
+such as figure in the Romance of Abu Zeyd, or with which most
+European readers have been rendered familiar by the glowing pages
+of "The Thousand and One Nights."
+
+"Effendim," said my visitor, "do not hesitate to act as I direct!"
+
+In his gloved hand he carried what appeared to be an ebony cane.
+He raised and pointed it directly at me. I perceived that it was,
+in fact, a hollow tube.
+
+"Death is in my hand," he continued; "enter slowly and I will
+follow you."
+
+Still the sense of unreality held me thralled and my brain refused
+me service. Like an hypnotic subject I walked back to my study,
+followed by my terrible visitor, who reclosed the door behind him.
+
+He sat facing me across my littered table with the mysterious tube
+held loosely in his grasp.
+
+How infinitely more terrifying are perils unknown than those known
+and appreciated! Had a European armed with a pistol attempted a
+similar act of coercion, I cannot doubt that I should have put up
+some sort of fight; had he sat before me now as Hassan of Aleppo
+sat, with a comprehensible weapon thus laid upon his knees, I
+should have taken my chance, should have attacked him with the lamp,
+with a chair, with anything that came to my hand.
+
+But before this awful, mysterious being who was turning my life
+into channels unsuspected, before that black tube with its unknown
+potentialities, I sat in a kind of passive panic which I cannot
+attempt to describe, which I had never experienced before and have
+never known since.
+
+"There is one about to visit you," he said, "whom you know, whom I
+think you expect. For it is written that she shall come and such
+events cast a shadow before them. I, too, shall be present at your
+meeting!"
+
+His eagle eyes opened widely; they burned with fanaticism.
+
+"Already she is here!" he resumed suddenly, and bent as one
+listening. "She comes under the archway; she crossed the courtyard
+--and is upon the stair! Admit her, effendim; I shall be close
+behind you!"
+
+The door-bell rang.
+
+With the consciousness that the black tube was directed toward the
+back of my head, I went and opened the door. My mind was at work
+again, and busy with plans to terminate this impossible situation.
+
+On the landing stood a girl wearing a simple white frock which
+fitted her graceful figure perfectly. A white straw hat, of the New
+York tourist type, with a long veil draped from the back suited her
+delicate beauty very well. The red mouth drooped a little at the
+corners, but the big violet eyes, like lamps of the soul, seemed
+afire with mystic light.
+
+"Mr. Cavanagh," she said, very calmly and deliberately, "there is
+only one way now to end all this trouble. I come from the man who
+can return the slipper to where it belongs; but he wants his price!"
+
+Her quiet speech served completely to restore my mental balance, and
+I noted with admiration that her words were so chosen as to commit
+her in no way. She knew quite well that thus far she might appear
+in the matter with impunity, and she clearly was determined to say
+nothing that could imperil her.
+
+"Will you please come in?" I said quietly--and stood aside to
+admit her.
+
+Exhibiting wonderful composure, she entered--and there, in the
+badly lighted hallway came face to face with my other visitor!
+
+It was a situation so dramatic as to seem unreal.
+
+Away from that tall figure retreated the girl with the violet eyes
+--and away--until she stood with her back to the wall. Even in
+the gloom I could see that her composure was deserting her; her
+beautiful face was pallid.
+
+"Oh, God!" she whispered, all but inaudible--"You!"
+
+Hassan, grasping the black rod in his hand, signed to her to enter
+the study. She stood quite near to me, with her eyes fixed upon
+him. I bent closer to her.
+
+"My revolver--in left-hand table drawer," I breathed in her ear.
+"Get it. He is watching me!"
+
+I could not tell if my words had been understood, for, never taking
+her gaze from the Sheikh of the Assassins, she sidled into the study.
+I followed her; and Hassan came last of all. Just within the
+doorway he stood, confronting us.
+
+"You have come," he said, addressing the girl and speaking in
+perfect English but with a marked accent, "to open your impudent
+negotiations through Mr. Cavanagh for the return of the thrice holy
+relic to the Museum! Your companion, the man, who is inspired by
+the Evil One, has even dared to demand ransom for the slipper from
+me!"
+
+Hassan was majestic in his wrath; but his eyes were black with
+venomous hatred.
+
+"He has suffered the penalty which the Koran lays down; he has lost
+his right hand. But the lord of all evil protects him, else ere
+this he had lost his life! Move no closer to that table!"
+
+I started. Either Hassan of Aleppo was omniscient or he had
+overheard my whispered words!
+
+"Easily I could slay you where you stand!" he continued. "But to
+do so would profit me nothing. This meeting has been revealed to
+me. Last night I witnessed it as I slept. Also it has been
+revealed to me by Erroohanee, in the mirror of ink, that the slipper
+of the Prophet, Salla-'llahu 'ale yhi wasellem! Shall indeed return
+to that place accursed, that infidel eyes may look upon it! It is
+the will of Allah, whose name be exalted, that I hold my hand, but
+it is also His will that I be here, at whatever danger to my
+worthless body."
+
+He turned his blazing eyes upon me.
+
+"To-morrow, ere noon," he said, "the slipper will again be in the
+Museum from which the man of evil stole it. So it is written;
+obscure are the ways. We met last night, you and I, but at that
+time much was dark to me that now is light. The holy 'Alee spoke
+to me in a vision, saying: 'There are two keys to the case in which
+it will be locked. Secure one, leaving the other with him who
+holds it! Let him swear to be secret. This shall be the price of
+his life!'"
+
+The black tube was pointed directly at my forehead.
+
+"Effendim," concluded the speaker, "place in my hand the key of the
+case in the Antiquarian Museum!"
+
+Hands convulsively clenched, the girl was looking from me to Hassan.
+My throat felt parched. but I forced speech to my lips.
+
+"Your omniscience fails you," I said. "Both keys are at my bank!"
+
+Blacker grew the fierce eyes--and blacker. I gave myself up for
+lost; I awaited death--death by some awful, unique means--with
+what courage I could muster.
+
+From the court below came the sound of voices, the voices of
+passers-by who so little suspected what was happening near to them
+that had someone told them they certainly had refused to credit it.
+The noise of busy Fleet Street came drumming under the archway, too.
+
+Then, above all, another sound became audible. To this day I find
+myself unable to define it; but it resembled the note of a silver
+bell.
+
+Clearly it was a signal; for, hearing it, Hassan dropped the tube
+and glanced toward the open window.
+
+In that instant I sprang upon him!
+
+That I had to deal with a fanatic, a dangerous madman, I knew; that
+it was his life or mine, I was fully convinced. I struck out then
+and caught him fairly over the heart. He reeled back, and I made
+a wild clutch for the damnable tube, horrid, unreasoning fear of
+which thus far had held me inert.
+
+I heard the girl scream affrightedly, and I knew, and felt my heart
+chill to know, that the tube had been wrenched from my hand! Hassan
+of Aleppo, old man that he appeared, had the strength of a tiger. He
+recovered himself and hurled me from him so that I came to the floor
+crashingly half under my writing-table!
+
+Something he cried back at me, furiously--and like an enraged animal,
+his teeth gleaming out from his beard, he darted from the room. The
+front door banged loudly.
+
+Shaken and quivering, I got upon my feet. On the threshold, in a
+state of pitiable hesitancy, stood the pale, beautiful accomplice
+of Earl Dexter. One quick glance she flashed at me, then turned
+and ran!
+
+Again the door slammed. I ran to the window, looking out into the
+court. The girl came hurrying down the steps, and with never a
+backward glance ran on and was lost to view in one of the passages
+opening riverward.
+
+Out under the arch, statelily passed a tall figure--and Inspector
+Bristol was entering! I saw the detective glance aside as the two
+all but met. He stood still, and looked back!
+
+"Bristol!" I cried, and waved my arms frantically.
+
+"Stop him! Stop him! It's Hassan of Aleppo!"
+
+Bristol was not the only one to hear my wild cry--not the only one
+to dash back under the arch and out into Fleet Street.
+
+But Hassan of Aleppo was gone!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII
+
+THE LIGHT OF EL-MEDINEH
+
+
+Bristol and I walked slowly in the direction of the entrance of the
+British Antiquarian Museum. It was the day following upon the
+sensational scene in my chambers.
+
+"There's very little doubt," said Bristol, "that Earl Dexter has
+the slipper and that Hassan of Aleppo knows where Dexter is in
+hiding. I don't know which of the two is more elusive. Hassan
+apparently melted into thin air yesterday; and although The Stetson
+Man has never within my experience employed disguises, no one has
+set eyes upon him since the night that he vanished from his lodgings
+off the Waterloo Road. It's always possible for a man to baffle
+the police by remaining closely within doors, but during all the
+time that has elapsed Dexter must have taken a little exercise
+occasionally, and the missing hand should have betrayed him."
+
+"The wonder to me is," I replied, "that he has escaped death at the
+hands of the Hashishin. He is a supremely daring man, for I should
+think that he must be carrying the slipper of the Prophet about
+with him!"
+
+"I would rather he did it than I!" commented Bristol. "For sheer
+audacity commend me to The Stetson Man! His idea no doubt was to
+use you as intermediary in his negotiations with the Museum
+authorities, but that plan failing, he has written them direct,
+thoughtfully omitting his address, of course!"
+
+We were, in fact, at that moment bound for the Museum to inspect
+this latest piece of evidence.
+
+"The crowning example of the man's audacity and cleverness," added
+my companion, "is his having actually approached Hassan of Aleppo
+with a similar proposition! How did he get in touch with him? All
+Scotland Yard has failed to find any trace of that weird character!"
+
+"Birds of a feather--" I suggested.
+
+"But they are not birds of a feather!" cried Bristol. "On your own
+showing, Hassan of Aleppo is simply waiting his opportunity to
+balance Dexter's account forever! I always knew Dexter was a clever
+man; I begin to think he's the most daring genius alive!"
+
+We mounted the steps of the Museum. In the hallway Mostyn, the
+curator, awaited us. Having greeted Bristol and myself he led the
+way to his private office, and from a pigeon-hole in his desk took
+out a letter typewritten upon a sheet of quarto paper.
+
+Bristol spread it out upon the blotting pad and we bent over it
+curiously.
+
+SIR--
+
+I believe I can supply information concerning the whereabouts of
+the missing slipper of Mohammed. As any inquiry of this nature
+must be extremely perilous to the inquirer and as the relic is a
+priceless one, my fee would be 10,000 pounds. The fanatics who
+seek to restore the slipper to the East must not know of any
+negotiations, therefore I omit my address, but will communicate
+further if you care to insert instructions in the agony column
+of Times.
+
+ Faithfully,
+ EARL DEXTER
+
+
+Bristol laughed grimly.
+
+"It's a daring game," he said; "a piece of barefaced impudence quite
+characteristic.
+
+"He's posing as a sort of private detective now, and is prepared for
+a trifling consideration to return the slipper which he stole
+himself! He must know, though, that we have his severed hand at
+the Yard to be used in evidence against him."
+
+"Is the Burton Room open to the public again?" I asked Mostyn.
+
+"It is open, yes," he replied, "and a quite unusual number of
+visitors come daily to gaze at the empty case which once held the
+slipper of the Prophet."
+
+"Has the case been mended?"
+
+"Yes; it is quite intact again; only the exhibit is missing."
+
+We ascended the stairs, passed along the Assyrian Room, which seemed
+to be unusually crowded, and entered the lofty apartment known as
+the Burton Room. The sunblinds were drawn, and a sort of dim,
+religious light prevailed therein. A group of visitors stood around
+an empty case at the farther end of the apartment.
+
+"You see," said Mostyn, pointing, "that empty case has a greater
+attraction than all the other full ones!"
+
+But I scarcely heeded his words, for I was intently watching the
+movements of one of the group about the empty case. I have said
+that the room was but dimly illuminated, and this fact, together
+no doubt with some effect of reflected light, enhanced by my
+imagination, perhaps produced the phenomenon which was occasioning
+me so much amazement.
+
+Remember that my mind was filled with memories of weird things,
+that I often found myself thinking of that mystic light which
+Hassan of Aleppo had called the light of El-Medineh--that light
+whereby, undeterred by distance, he claimed to be able to trace the
+whereabouts of any of the relics of the Prophet.
+
+Bristol and Mostyn walked on then; but I stood just within the
+doorway, intently, breathlessly watching an old man wearing an
+out-of-date Inverness coat and a soft felt hat. He had a gray
+beard and moustache, and long, untidy hair, walked with a stoop,
+and in short was no unusual type of Visitor to that institution.
+
+But it seemed to me, and the closer I watched him the more
+convinced I became, that this was no optical illusion, that a faint
+luminosity, a sort of elfin light, played eerily about his head!
+
+As Bristol and Mostyn approached the case the old man began to walk
+toward me and in the direction of the door. The idea flashed
+through my mind that it might be Hassan of Aleppo himself, Hassan
+who had predicted that the stolen slipper should that day be
+returned to the Museum!
+
+Then he came abreast of me, passed me, and I felt that my
+surmise had been wrong. I saw Bristol, from farther up the room,
+turn and look back. Something attracted his trained eye, I suppose,
+which was not perceptible to me. But he suddenly came striding
+along. Obviously he was pursuing the old man, who was just about
+to leave the apartment. Seeing that the latter had reached the
+doorway, Bristol began to run.
+
+The old man turned; and amid a chorus of exclamations from the
+astonished spectators, Bristol sprang upon him!
+
+How it all came about I cannot say, cannot hope to describe; but
+there was a short, sharp scuffle, the crack of a well-directed
+blow . . . and Bristol was rolling on his back, the old man,
+hatless, was racing up the Assyrian Room, and everyone in the place
+seemed to be shouting at once!
+
+Bristol, with blood streaming from his face, staggered to his feet,
+clutching at me for support.
+
+"After him, Mr. Cavanagh!" he cried hoarsely. "It's your turn
+to-day! After him! That's Earl Dexter!"
+
+Mostyn waited for no more, but went running quickly through the
+Assyrian Room. I may mention here that at the head of the stairs
+he found the caped Inverness which had served to conceal Dexter's
+mutilated arm, and later, behind a piece of statuary, a wig and
+a very ingenious false beard and moustache were discovered. But
+of The Stetson Man there was no trace. His brief start had enabled
+him to make good his escape.
+
+As Mostyn went off, and a group of visitors flocked in our
+direction, Bristol, who had been badly shaken by the blow, turned
+to them.
+
+"You will please all leave the Burton Room immediately," he said.
+
+Looks of surprise greeted his words; but with his handkerchief
+raised to his face, he peremptorily repeated them. The official
+note in his voice was readily to be detected; and the wonder-stricken
+group departed with many a backward glance.
+
+As the last left the Burton Room, Bristol pointed, with a rather
+shaky finger, at the soft felt hat which lay at his feet. It had
+formed part of Dexter's disguise. Close beside it lay another
+object which had evidently fallen from the hat--a dull red thing
+lying on the polished parquet flooring.
+
+"For God's sake don't go near it!" whispered Bristol. "The room
+must be closed for the present. And now I'm off after that man.
+Step clear of it."
+
+His words were unnecessary; I shunned it as a leprous thing.
+
+It was the slipper of the Prophet!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII
+
+THE THREE MESSAGES
+
+
+I stood in the foyer of the Astoria Hotel. About me was the pulsing
+stir of transatlantic life, for the tourist season was now at its
+height, and I counted myself fortunate in that I had been able to
+secure a room at this establishment, always so popular with American
+visitors. Chatting groups surrounded me and I became acquainted
+with numberless projects for visiting the Tower of London, the
+National Gallery, the British Museum, Windsor Castle, Kew Gardens,
+and the other sights dear to the heart of our visiting cousins.
+Loaded lifts ascended and descended. Bradshaws were in great
+evidence everywhere; all was hustle and glad animation.
+
+The tall military-looking man who stood beside me glanced about him
+with a rather grim smile.
+
+"You ought to be safe enough here, Mr. Cavanagh!" he said.
+
+"I ought to be safe enough in my own chambers," I replied wearily.
+"How many of these pleasure-seeking folk would believe that a man
+can be as greatly in peril of his life in Fleet Street as in the
+most uncivilized spot upon the world map? Do you think if I told
+that prosperous New Yorker who is buying a cigar yonder, for
+instance, that I had been driven from my chambers by a band of
+Eastern assassins founded some time in the eleventh century, he
+would believe it?"
+
+"I am certain he wouldn't!" replied Bristol. "I should not have
+credited it myself before I was put in charge of this damnable case."
+
+My position at that hour was in truth an incredible one. The sacred
+slipper of Mohammed lay once more in the glass case at the
+Antiquarian Museum from which Earl Dexter had stolen it. Now, with
+apish yellow faces haunting my dreams, with ghostly menaces dogging
+me day and night, I was outcast from my own rooms and compelled, in
+self-defence, to live amid the bustle of the Astoria. So wholly
+nonplussed were the police authorities that they could afford me no
+protection. They knew that a group of scientific murderers lay
+hidden in or near to London; they knew that Earl Dexter, the foremost
+crook of his day, was also in the metropolis--and they could make no
+move, were helpless; indeed, as Bristol had confessed, were hopeless!
+
+Bristol, on the previous day, had unearthed the Greek cigar merchant,
+Acepulos, who had replaced the slipper in its case (for a monetary
+consideration). He had performed a similar service when the
+bloodstained thing had first been put upon exhibition at the Museum,
+and for a considerable period had disappeared. We had feared that
+his religious pretensions had not saved him from the avenging
+scimitar of Hassan; but quite recently he had returned again to his
+Soho shop, and in time thus to earn a second cheque.
+
+As Bristol and I stood glancing about the foyer of the hotel, a
+plain-clothes officer whom I knew by sight came in and approached
+my companion. I could not divine the fact, of course, but I was
+about to hear news of the money-loving and greatly daring
+Graeco-Moslem.
+
+The detective whispered something to Bristol, and the latter started,
+and paled. He turned to me.
+
+"They haven't overlooked him this time, Mr. Cavanagh," he said.
+"Acepulos has been found dead in his room, nearly decapitated!"
+
+I shuddered involuntarily. Even there, amid the chatter and laughter
+of those light-hearted tourists, the shadow of Hassan of Aleppo was
+falling upon me.
+
+Bristol started immediately for Soho and I parted from him in the
+Strand, he proceeding west and I eastward, for I had occasion that
+morning to call at my bank. It was the time of the year when London
+is full of foreigners, and as I proceeded in the direction of Fleet
+Street I encountered more than one Oriental. To my excited
+imagination they all seemed to glance at me furtively, with menacing
+eyes, but in any event I knew that I had little to fear whilst I
+contrived to keep to the crowded thoroughfares. Solitude I dreaded
+and with good reason.
+
+Then at the door of the bank I found fresh matter for reflection.
+The assistant manager, Mr. Colby, was escorting a lady to the door.
+As I stood aside, he walked with her to a handsome car which waited,
+and handed her in with marks of great deference. She was heavily
+veiled and I had no more than a glimpse of her, but she appeared to
+be of middle age and had gray hair and a very stately manner.
+
+I told myself that I was unduly suspicious, suspicious of everyone
+and of everything; yet as I entered the bank I found myself wondering
+where I had seen that dignified, grayhaired figure before. I even
+thought of asking the manager the name of his distinguished customer,
+but did not do so, for in the circumstances such an inquiry must
+have appeared impertinent.
+
+My business transacted, I came out again by the side entrance which
+opens on the little courtyard, for this branch of the London County
+and Provincial Bank occupies a corner site.
+
+A ragged urchin who was apparently waiting for me handed me a note.
+I looked at him inquiringly.
+
+"For me?" I said.
+
+"Yes, sir. A dark gentleman pointed you out as you was goin' into
+the bank."
+
+The note was written upon a half sheet of paper and, doubting if it
+was really intended for me, I unfolded it and read the following--
+
+Mr. Cavanagh, take the keys of the case containing the holy slipper
+to your hotel this evening without fail.
+ HASSAN.
+
+"Who gave you this, boy?" I asked sharply.
+
+"A foreign gentleman, sir, very dark--like an Indian."
+
+"Where is he?"
+
+"He went off in a cab, sir, after he give me the note."
+
+I handed the boy sixpence and slowly pursued my way. An idea was
+forming in my mind to trap the enemy by seeming acquiescent. I
+wondered if my movements were being watched at that moment. Since
+it was more than probable, I returned to the bank, entered, and
+made some trivial inquiry of a cashier, and then came out again and
+walked on as far as the Report office.
+
+I had not been in the office more than five minutes before I
+received a telegram from Inspector Bristol. It had been handed in
+at Soho, and the message was an odd one.
+
+CAVANAGH, Report, London.
+Plot afoot to steal keys. Get them from bank and join me 11 o'clock
+at Astoria. Have planned trap.
+ BRISTOL.
+
+This was very mysterious in view of the note so recently received by
+me, but I concluded that Bristol had hit upon a similar plan to that
+which was forming in my own mind. It seemed unnecessarily hazardous,
+though, actually to withdraw the keys from their place of safety.
+
+Pondering deeply upon the perplexities of this maddening case, I
+shortly afterward found myself again at the bank. With the manager
+I descended to the strong-room, and the safe was unlocked which
+contained the much-sought-for keys of the case at the Antiquarian
+Museum.
+
+"There are the keys, quite safe!--and by the way, this is my second
+visit here this morning, Mr. Cavanagh," said the manager, with whom
+I was upon rather intimate terms. "A foreign lady who has recently
+become a customer of the bank deposited some valuable jewels here
+this morning--less than an hour ago, in fact."
+
+"Indeed," I said, and my mind was working rapidly. "The lady who
+came in the large blue car, a gray-haired lady?"
+
+"Yes," was the reply, "did you notice her, then?"
+
+I nodded and said no more, for in truth I had no more to say. I
+had good reason to respect the uncanny powers of Hassan of Aleppo,
+but I doubted if even his omniscience could tell him (since I had
+actually gone down into the strong-room) whether when I emerged I
+had the keys, or whether my visit and seeming acceptance of his
+orders had been no more than a subterfuge!
+
+That the Hashishin had some means of communicating with me at the
+Astoria was evident from the contents of the note which I had
+received, and as I walked in the direction of the hotel my mind
+was filled with all sorts of misgivings. I was playing with fire!
+Had I done rightly or should I have acted otherwise? I sighed
+wearily. The dark future would resolve all my doubts.
+
+When I reached the Astoria, Bristol had not arrived. I lighted a
+cigarette and sat down in the lounge to await his coming. Presently
+a boy approached, handing me a message which had been taken down
+from the telephone by the clerk. It was as follows--
+
+Tell Mr. Cavanagh, who is waiting in the hotel, to take what I am
+expecting to his chambers, and say that I will join him there in
+twenty minutes.
+ INSPECTOR BRISTOL.
+
+Again I doubted the wisdom of Bristol's plan. Had I not fled to
+the Astoria to escape from the dangerous solitude of my rooms? That
+he was laying some trap for the Hashishin was sufficiently evident,
+and whilst I could not justly suspect him of making a pawn of me
+I was quite unable to find any other explanation of this latest move.
+
+I was torn between conflicting doubts. I glanced at my watch. Yes!
+There was just time for me to revisit the bank ere joining Bristol
+at my chambers! I hesitated. After all, in what possible way could
+it jeopardize his plans for me merely to pretend to bring the keys?
+
+"Hang it all!" I said, and jumped to my feet. "These maddening
+conjectures will turn my brain! I'll let matters stand as they
+are, and risk the consequences!"
+
+I hesitated no longer, but passed out from the hotel and once more
+directed my steps in the direction of Fleet Street.
+
+As I passed in under the arch through which streamed many busy
+workers, I told myself that to dread entering my own chambers at
+high noon was utterly childish. Yet I did dread doing so! And as
+I mounted the stair and came to the landing, which was always more
+or less dark, I paused for quite a long time before putting the
+key in the lock.
+
+The affair of the accursed slipper was playing havoc with my nerves,
+and I laughed dryly to note that my hand was not quite steady as I
+turned the key, opened my door, and slipped into the dim hallway.
+
+As I closed it behind me, something, probably a slight noise, but
+possibly something more subtle--an instinct--made me turn rapidly.
+
+There facing me stood Hassan of Aleppo.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV
+
+I KEEP THE APPOINTMENT
+
+
+That moment was pungent with drama. In the intense hush of the
+next five seconds I could fancy that the world had slipped away
+from me and that I was become an unsubstantial thing of dreams.
+I was in no sense master of myself; the effect of the presence of
+this white-bearded fanatic was of a kind which I am entirely unable
+to describe. About Hassan of Aleppo was an aroma of evil, yet of
+majesty, which marked him strangely different from other men--from
+any other that I have ever known. In his venerable presence,
+remembering how he was Sheikh of the Assassins, and recalling his
+bloody history, I was always conscious of a weakness, physical and
+mental. He appalled me; and now, with my back to the door, I stood
+watching him and watching the ominous black tube which he held in
+his hand. It was a weapon unknown to Europe and therefore more
+fearful than the most up-to-date of death-dealing instruments.
+
+Hassan of Aleppo pointed it toward me.
+
+"The keys, effendim," he said; "hand me the keys!"
+
+He advanced a step; his manner was imperious. The black tube was
+less than a foot removed from my face. That I had my revolver in
+my pocket could avail me nothing, for in my pocket it must remain,
+since I dared to make no move to reach it under cover of that
+unfamiliar, terrible weapon.
+
+The black eyes of Hassan glared insanely into mine.
+
+"You will have placed them in your pocketcase," he said. "Take it
+out; hand it to me!"
+
+I obeyed, for what else could I do? Taking the case from my pocket,
+I placed it in his lean brown hand.
+
+An expression of wild exultation crossed his features; the eagle
+eyes seemed to be burning into my brain. A puff of hot vapour
+struck me in the face--something which was expelled from the
+mysterious black tube. And with memories crowding to my mind of
+similar experiences at the hands of the Hashishin, I fell back,
+clutching at my throat, fighting for my life against the deadly,
+vaporous thing that like a palpable cloud surrounded me. I tried
+to cry out, but the words died upon my tongue. Hassan of Aleppo
+seemed to grow huge before my eyes like some ginn of Eastern lore.
+Then a curtain of darkness descended. I experienced a violent blow
+upon the forehead (I suppose I had pitched forward), and for the
+time resigned my part in the drama of the sacred slipper.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV
+
+THE WATCHER IN BANK CHAMBERS
+
+
+At about five o'clock that afternoon Inspector Bristol, who had
+spent several hours in Soho upon the scene of the murder of the
+Greek, was walking along Fleet Street, bound for the offices of the
+Report. As he passed the court, on the corner of which stands a
+branch of the London County and Provincial Bank, his eye was
+attracted by a curious phenomenon.
+
+There are reflectors above the bank windows which face the court,
+and it appeared to Bristol that there was a hole in one of these,
+the furthermost from the corner. A tiny beam of light shone from
+the bank window on to the reflector, or from the reflector on to
+the window, which circumstance in itself was not curious. But
+above the reflector, at an acute angle, this mysterious beam was
+seemingly projected upward. Walking a little way up the court he
+saw that it shone through, and cast a disc of light upon the
+ceiling of an office on the first floor of Bank Chambers above.
+
+It is every detective's business to be observant, and although
+many thousands of passersby must have cast their eyes in the same
+direction that day, there is small matter for wonder in the fact
+that Bristol alone took the trouble to inquire into the mystery
+--for his trained eye told him that there was a mystery here.
+
+Possibly he was in that passive frame of mind when the brain is
+particularly receptive of trivial impressions; for after a futile
+search of the Soho cigar store for anything resembling a clue, he
+was quite resigned to the idea of failure in the case of Hassan and
+Company. He walked down the court and into the entrance of Bank
+Chambers. An Inspection of the board upon the wall showed him that
+the first floor apparently was occupied by three firms, two of them
+legal, for this is the neighbourhood of the law courts, and the
+third a press agency. He stepped up to the first floor. Past the
+doors bearing the names of the solicitors and past that belonging
+to the press agent he proceeded to a fourth suite of offices.
+Here, pinned upon the door frame, appeared a card which bore the
+legend--
+
+ THE CONGO FIBRE COMPANY
+
+Evidently the Congo Fibre Company had so recently taken possession
+of the offices that there had been no time to inscribe their title
+either upon the doors or upon the board in the hall.
+
+Inspector Bristol was much impressed, for into one of the rooms
+occupied by the Fibre Company shone that curious disc of light
+which first had drawn his attention to Bank Chambers. He rapped
+on the door, turned the handle, and entered. The sole furniture
+of the office in which he found himself apparently consisted of
+one desk and an office stool, which stool was occupied by an office
+boy. The windows opened on the court, and a door marked "Private"
+evidently communicated with an inner office whose windows likewise
+must open on the court. It was the ceiling of this inner office,
+unless the detective's calculation erred, which he was anxious to
+inspect.
+
+"Yes, sir?" said the boy tentatively.
+
+Bristol produced a card which bore the uncompromising legend: John
+Henry Smith.
+
+"Take my card to Mr. Boulter, boy," he said tersely. The boy
+stared.
+
+"Mr. Boulter, sir? There isn't any one of that name here."
+
+"Oh!" said Bristol, looking around him in apparent surprise: "how
+long is he gone?"
+
+"I don't know, sir. I've only been here three weeks, and Mr.
+Knowlson only took the offices a month ago."
+
+"Oh," commented Bristol, "then take my card to Mr. Knowlson; he
+will probably be able to give me Mr. Boulter's present address."
+
+The boy hesitated. The detective had that authoritative manner
+which awes the youthful mind.
+
+"He's out, sir," he said, but without conviction.
+
+"Is he?" rapped Bristol. "Well, I'll leave my card."
+
+He turned and quitted the office, carefully closing the door behind
+him. Three seconds later he reopened it, and peering in, was in
+time to see the boy knock upon the private door. A little wicket,
+or movable panel, was let down, the card of John Henry Smith was
+passed through to someone unseen, and the wicket was reclosed!
+
+
+The boy turned and met the wrathful eye of the detective. Bristol
+reentered, closing the door behind him.
+
+"See here, young fellow," said he, "I don't stand for those tricks!
+Why didn't you tell me Mr. Knowlson was in?"
+
+"I'm very sorry, sir!"--the boy quailed beneath his glance--"but
+he won't see any one who hasn't an appointment."
+
+"Is there someone with him, then?"
+
+"No."
+
+"Well, what's he doing?"
+
+"I don't know, sir; I've never been in to see!"
+
+"What! never been in that room?"
+
+"Never!" declared the boy solemnly. "And I don't mind telling
+you," he added, recovering something of his natural confidence,
+"that I am leaving on the 31st. This job ain't any use to me!"
+
+"Too much work?" suggested Bristol.
+
+"No work at all!" returned the boy indignantly. "I'm just here
+for a blessed buffer, that's what I'm here for, a buffer!"
+
+"What do you mean?"
+
+"I just have to sit here and see that nobody gets into that
+office. Lively, ain't it? Where's the prospects?"
+
+Bristol surveyed him thoughtfully.
+
+"Look here, my lad," he said quietly; "is that door locked?"
+
+"Always," replied the boy.
+
+"Does Mr. Knowlson come to that shutter when you knock?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Then go and knock!"
+
+The boy obeyed with alacrity. He rapped loudly on the door, not
+noticing or not caring that the visitor was standing directly
+behind him. The shutter was lowered and a grizzled, bearded face
+showed for a moment through the opening.
+
+Bristol leant over the boy and pushed a card through into the hand
+of the man beyond. On this occasion it did not bear the legend
+"John Henry Smith," but the following--
+
+ CHIEF INSPECTOR BRISTOL
+ C.I.D.
+ NEW SCOTLAND YARD
+
+"Good afternoon, Mr. Knowlson," said the detective dryly. "I want
+to come in!"
+
+There followed a moment of silence, from which Bristol divined that
+he had blundered upon some mystery, possibly upon a big case; then
+a key was turned in the lock and the door thrown open.
+
+"Come right in, Inspector," invited a strident voice. "Carter, you
+can go home."
+
+Bristol entered warily, but not warily enough. For as the door
+was banged upon his entrance he faced around only in time to
+find himself looking down the barrel of a Colt automatic.
+
+With his back to the door which contained the wicket, now reclosed,
+stood the man with the bearded face. The revolver was held in his
+left hand; his right arm terminated in a bandaged stump. But
+without that his steel-gray eyes would have betrayed him to the
+detective.
+
+"Good God!" whispered Bristol. "It's Earl Dexter!"
+
+"It is!" replied the cracksman, "and you've looked in at a real
+inconvenient time! My visitors mostly seem to have that knack.
+I'll have to ask you to stay, Inspector. Sit down in that chair
+yonder."
+
+Bristol knew his man too well to think of opening any argument at
+that time. He sat down as directed, and ignoring the revolver
+which covered him all the time, began coolly to survey the room
+in which he found himself. In several respects it was an
+extraordinary apartment.
+
+The only bright patch in the room was the shining disc upon the
+ceiling; and the detective noted with interest that this marked
+the position of an arrangement of mirrors. A white-covered table,
+entirely bare, stood upon the floor immediately beneath this
+mysterious apparatus. With the exception of one or two ordinary
+items of furniture and a small hand lathe, the office otherwise
+was unfurnished. Bristol turned his eyes again upon the daring
+man who so audaciously had trapped him--the man who had stolen the
+slipper of the Prophet and suffered the loss of his hand by the
+scimitar of an Hashishin as a result. When he had least expected
+to find one, Fate had thrown a clue in Bristol's way. He reflected
+grimly that it was like to prove of little use to him.
+
+"Now," said Dexter, "you can do as you please, of course, but you
+know me pretty well and I advise you to sit quiet."
+
+"I am sitting quiet!" was the reply.
+
+"I am sorry," continued Dexter, with a quick glance at his maimed
+arm, "that I can't tie you up, but I am expecting a friend any
+moment now."
+
+He suddenly raised the wicket with a twitch of his elbow and,
+without removing his gaze from the watchful detective, cried
+sharply--
+
+"Carter!"
+
+But there was no reply.
+
+"Good; he's gone!"
+
+Dexter sat down facing Bristol.
+
+"I have lost my hand in this game, Mr. Bristol," he said genially,
+"and had some narrow squeaks of losing my head; but having gone so
+far and lost so much I'm going through, if I don't meet a funeral!
+You see I'm up against two tough propositions."
+
+Bristol nodded sympathetically.
+
+"The first," continued Dexter, "is you and Cavanagh, and English
+law generally. My idea--if I can get hold of the slipper again--
+oh! you needn't stare; I'm out for it!--is to get the Antiquarian
+Institution to ransom it. It's a line of commercial speculation I
+have worked successfully before. There's a dozen rich highbrows,
+cranks to a man, connected with it, and they are my likeliest
+buyers--sure. But to keep the tone of the market healthy there's
+Hassan of Aleppo, rot him! He's a dangerous customer to approach,
+but you'll note I've been in negotiation with him already and am
+still, if not booming, not much below par!"
+
+"Quite so," said Bristol. "But you've cut off a pretty hefty chew
+nevertheless. They used to call you The Stetson Man, you used to
+dress like a fashion plate and stop at the big hotels. Those days
+are past, Dexter, I'm sorry to note. You're down to the skulking
+game now and you're nearer an advert for Clarkson than Stein-Bloch!"
+
+"Yep," said Dexter sadly, "I plead guilty, but I think here's
+Carneta!"
+
+Bristol heard the door of the outer office open, and a moment later
+that upon which his gaze was set opened in turn, to admit a girl
+who was heavily veiled, and who started and stood still in the
+doorway, on perceiving the situation. Never for one unguarded
+moment did the American glance aside from his prisoner.
+
+"The Inspector's dropped in, Carneta!" he drawled in his strident
+way. "You're handy with a ball of twine; see if you can induce
+him to stay the night!"
+
+The girl, immediately recovering her composure, took off her hat
+in a businesslike way and began to look around her, evidently in
+search of a suitable length of rope with which to fasten up Bristol.
+
+"Might I suggest," said the detective, "that if you are shortly
+quitting these offices a couple of the window-cords neatly joined
+would serve admirably?"
+
+"Thanks," drawled Dexter, nodding to his companion, who went into
+the outer office, where she might be heard lowering the windows.
+She was gone but a few moments ere she returned again, carrying a
+length of knotted rope. Under cover of Dexter's revolver, Bristol
+stoically submitted to having his wrists tied behind him. The end
+of the line was then thrown through the ventilator above the door
+which communicated with the outer office and Bristol was triced up
+in such a way that, his wrists being raised behind him to an
+uncomfortable degree, he was almost forced to stand upon tiptoe.
+The line was then secured.
+
+"Very workmanlike!" commented the victim. "You'll find a large
+handkerchief in my inside breast pocket. It's a clean one, and
+I can recommend it as a gag!"
+
+Very promptly it was employed for the purpose, and Inspector
+Bristol found himself helpless and constrained in a very painful
+position. Dexter laid down his revolver.
+
+"We will now give you a free show, Inspector," he said, genially,
+"of our camera obscura!"
+
+He pulled down the blinds, which Bristol noted with interest to be
+black, but through an opening in one of them a mysterious ray of
+light--the same that he had noticed from Fleet Street--shone upon
+that point in the ceiling where the arrangement of mirrors was
+attached. Dexter made some alteration, apparently in the focus of
+the lens (for Bristol had divined that in some way a lens had been
+fixed in the reflector above the bank window below) and the disc
+of light became concentrated. The white-covered table was moved
+slightly, and in the darkness some further manipulation was
+performed.
+
+"Observe," came the strident voice--"we now have upon the screen
+here a minute moving picture. This little device, which is not
+protected in any way, is of my own invention, and proved extremely
+useful in the Arkwright jewel case, which startled Chicago. It has
+proved useful now. I know almost as much concerning the
+arrangements below as the manager himself. In confidence, Inspector,
+this is my last bid for the slipper! I have plunged on it. Madame
+Sforza, the distinguished Italian lady who recently opened an
+account below, opened it for 500 pounds cash. She has drawn a
+portion, but a balance remains which I am resigned to lose. Her
+motor-car (hired), her references (forged), the case of jewels which
+she deposited this morning (duds!)--all represent a considerable
+outlay. It's a nerve-racking line of operation, too. Any hour of
+the day may bring such a visitor as yourself, for example. In short,
+I am at the end of my tether."
+
+Bristol, ignoring the increasing pain in his arms and wrists, turned
+his eyes upon the white-covered table and there saw a minute and
+clear-cut picture, such as one sees in a focussing screen, of the
+interior of the manager's office of the London County and Provincial
+Bank!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI
+
+THE STRONG-ROOM
+
+
+I wonder how often a sense of humour has saved a man from
+desperation? Perhaps only the Easterns have thoroughly appreciated
+that divine gift. I have interpolated the adventure of Inspector
+Bristol in order that the sequence of my story be not broken;
+actually I did not learn it until later, but when, on the following
+day, the whole of the facts came into my possession, I laughed and
+was glad that I could laugh, for laughter has saved many a man from
+madness.
+
+Certainly the Fates were playing with us, for at a time very nearly
+corresponding with that when Bristol found himself bound and
+helpless in Bank Chambers I awoke to find myself tied hand and foot
+to my own bed! Nothing but the haziest recollections came to me at
+first, nothing but dim memories of the awful being who had lured me
+there; for I perceived now that all the messages proceeded, not from
+Bristol, but from Hassan of Aleppo! I had been a fool, and I was
+reaping the fruits of my folly. Could I have known that almost
+within pistol shot of me the Inspector was trussed up as helpless as
+I, then indeed my situation must have become unbearable, since upon
+him I relied for my speedy release.
+
+My ankles were firmly lashed to the rails at the foot of my bed;
+each of my wrists was tied back to a bedpost. I ached in every limb
+and my head burned feverishly, which latter symptom I ascribed to
+the powerful drug which had been expelled into my face by the
+uncanny weapon carried by Hassan of Aleppo. I reflected bitterly
+how, having transferred my quarters to the Astoria, I could not well
+hope for any visitor to my chambers; and even the event of such a
+visitor had been foreseen and provided against by the cunning lord
+of the Hashishin. A gag, of the type which Dumas has described in
+"Twenty Years After," the poire d'angoisse, was wedged firmly into
+my mouth, so that only by preserving the utmost composure could I
+breathe. I was bathed in cold perspiration. So I lay listening to
+the familiar sounds without and reflecting that it was quite
+possible so to lie, undisturbed, and to die alone, my presence there
+wholly unsuspected!
+
+Once, toward dusk, my phone bell rang, and my state of mind became
+agonizing. It was maddening to think that someone, a friend, was
+virtually within reach of me, yet actually as far removed as if an
+ocean divided us! I tasted the hellish torments of Tantalus. I
+cursed fate, heaven, everything; I prayed; I sank into bottomless
+depths of despair and rose to dizzy pinnacles of hope, when a
+footstep sounded on the landing and a thousand wild possibilities,
+vague possibilities of rescue, poured into my mind.
+
+The visitor hesitated, apparently outside my door; and a change, as
+sudden as lightning out of a cloud, transformed my errant fancies.
+A gruesome conviction seized me, as irrational as the hope which it
+displayed, that this was one of the Hashishin--an apish yellow
+dwarf, a strangler, the awful Hassan himself!
+
+The footsteps receded down the stairs. And my thoughts reverted
+into the old channels of dull despair.
+
+I weighed the chances of Bristol's seeking me there; and, eager as
+I was to give them substance, found them but airy--ultimately was
+forced to admit them to be nil.
+
+So I lay, whilst only a few hundred yards from me a singular scene
+was being enacted. Bristol, a prisoner as helpless as myself,
+watched the concluding business of the day being conducted in the
+bank beneath him; he watched the lift descend to the strongroom
+--the spying apparatus being slightly adjusted in some way; he saw
+the clerks hastening to finish their work in the outer office, and
+as he watched, absorbed by the novelty of the situation, he almost
+forgot the pain and discomfort which he suffered . . .
+
+"This little peep-show of ours has been real useful," Dexter
+confided out of the darkness. "I got an impression of the key of
+the strongroom door a week ago, and Carneta got one of the keys of
+the safe only this morning, when she lodged her box of jewellery
+with the bank! I was at work on that key when you interrupted me,
+and as by means of this useful apparatus I have learnt the
+combination, you ought to see some fun in the next few hours!"
+
+Bristol repressed a groan, for the prospect of remaining in that
+position was thus brought keenly home to him.
+
+The bank staff left the premises one by one until only a solitary
+clerk worked on at a back desk. His task completed, he, too, took
+his departure and the bank messenger commenced his nightly duty of
+sweeping up the offices. It was then that excitement like an
+anaesthetic dulled the detective's pain--indeed, he forgot his
+aching body and became merely a watchful intelligence.
+
+So intent had he become upon the picture before him that he had not
+noticed the fact that he was alone in the office of the Congo Fibre
+Company. Now he realized it from the absolute silence about him,
+and from another circumstance.
+
+The spying apparatus had been left focussed, and on to the screen
+beneath his eyes, bending low behind the desks and creeping,
+Indian-like, around, toward the head of the stair which communicated
+with the strongroom and the apartment used by the messenger, came the
+alert figure of Earl Dexter!
+
+It may be a surprise to some people to learn that at any time in
+the day the door of a bank, unguarded, should be left open, when
+only a solitary messenger is within the premises; yet for a few
+minutes at least each evening this happens at more than one City
+bank, where one of the duties of the resident messenger is to clean
+the outer steps. Dexter had taken advantage of the man's absence
+below in quest of scrubbing material to enter the bank through the
+open door.
+
+Watching, breathless, and utterly forgetful of his own position,
+Bristol saw the messenger, all unconscious of danger, come up the
+stairs carrying a pail and broom. As his head reached the level
+of the railings The Stetson Man neatly sand-bagged him, rushed
+across to the outer door, and closed it!
+
+Given duplicate keys and the private information which Dexter so
+ingeniously had obtained, there are many London banks vulnerable to
+similar attack. Certainly, bullion is rarely kept in a branch
+storeroom, but the detective was well aware that the keys of the
+case containing the slipper were kept in this particular safe!
+
+He was convinced, and could entertain no shadowy doubt, that at
+last Dexter had triumphed. He wondered if it had ever hitherto
+fallen to the lot of a representative of the law thus to be made
+an accessory to a daring felony!
+
+But human endurance has well-defined limits. The fading light
+rendered the ingenious picture dim and more dim. The pain
+occasioned by his position became agonizing, and uttering a stifled
+groan he ceased to take an interest in the robbery of the London
+County and Provincial Bank.
+
+Fate is a comedian; and when later I learned how I had lain strapped
+to my bed, and, so near to me, Bristol had hung helpless as a
+butchered carcass in the office of the Congo Fibre Company, whilst,
+in our absence from the stage, the drama of the slipper marched
+feverish to its final curtain, I accorded Fate her well-earned
+applause. I laughed; not altogether mirthfully.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII
+
+THE SLIPPER
+
+
+Someone was breaking in at the door of my chambers!
+
+I aroused myself from a state of coma almost death-like and listened
+to the blows. The sun was streaming in at my windows.
+
+A splintering crash told of a panel broken. Then a moment later I
+heard the grating of the lock, and a rush of footsteps along the
+passage.
+
+"Try the study!" came a voice that sounded like Bristol's, save that
+it was strangely weak and shaky.
+
+Almost simultaneously the Inspector himself threw open the bedroom
+door--and, very pale and haggard-eyed, stood there looking across at
+me. It was a scene unforgettable.
+
+"Mr. Cavanagh!" he said huskily--"Mr. Cavanagh! Thank God you're
+alive! But"--he turned--"this way, Marden!" he cried, "Untie him
+quickly! I've got no strength in my arms!"
+
+Marden, a C.I.D. man, came running, and in a minute, or less, I was
+sitting up gulping brandy.
+
+"I've had the most awful experience of my life," said Bristol.
+"You've fared badly enough, but I've been hanging by my wrists--you
+know Dexter's trick!--for close upon sixteen hours! I wasn't
+released until Carter, an office boy, came on the scene this morning!"
+
+Very feebly I nodded; I could not talk.
+
+"The strong-room of your bank was rifled under my very eyes last
+evening!" he continued, with something of his old vigour; "and five
+minutes after the Antiquarian Museum was opened to the public this
+morning quite an unusual number of visitors appeared.
+
+"I saw the bank manager the moment he arrived, and learned a piece
+of news that positively took my breath away! I was at the Museum
+seven minutes later and got another shock! There in the case was
+the red slipper!"
+
+"Then," I whispered-"it hadn't been stolen?"
+
+"Wrong! It had! This was a duplicate, as Mostyn, the curator, saw
+at a glance! Some of the early visitors--they were Easterns--had
+quite surrounded the case. They were watched, of course, but any
+number of Orientals come to see the thing; and, short of smashing
+the glass, which would immediately attract attention, the authorities
+were unprepared, of course, for any attempt. Anyway, they were
+tricked. Somebody opened the case. The real slipper of the Prophet
+is gone!"
+
+"They told you at the bank--"
+
+"That you had withdrawn the keys! If Dexter had known that!"
+
+"Hassan of Aleppo took them from me last night! At last the
+Hashishin have triumphed."
+
+Bristol sank into the armchair.
+
+"Every port is watched," he said. "But--"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII
+
+CARNETA
+
+
+"I am entirely at your mercy; you can do as you please with me. But
+before you do anything I should like you to listen to what I have
+to say."
+
+Her beautiful face was pale and troubled. Violet eyes looked sadly
+into mine.
+
+"For nearly an hour I have been waiting for this chance--until I
+knew you were alone," she continued. "If you are thinking of giving
+me up to the police, at least remember that I came here of my own
+free will. Of course, I know you are quite entitled to take
+advantage of that; but please let me say what I came to say!"
+
+She pleaded so hard, with that musical voice, with her evident
+helplessness, most of all with her wonderful eyes, that I quite
+abandoned any project I might have entertained to secure her arrest.
+I think she divined this masculine weakness, for she said, with
+greater confidence--
+
+"Your friend, Professor Deeping, was murdered by the man called
+Hassan of Aleppo. Are you content to remain idle while his murderer
+escapes?"
+
+God knows I was not. My idleness in the matter was none of my
+choosing. Since poor Deeping's murder I had come to handgrips
+with the assassins more than once, but Hassan had proved too clever
+for me, too clever for Scotland Yard. The sacred slipper was once
+more in the hands of its fanatic guardian.
+
+One man there was who might have helped the search, Earl Dexter.
+But Earl Dexter was himself wanted by Scotland Yard!
+
+From the time of the bank affair up to the moment when this
+beautiful visitor had come to my chambers I had thought Dexter, as
+well as Hassan, to have fled secretly from England. But the moment
+that I saw Carneta at my door I divined that The Stetson Man must
+still be in London.
+
+She sat watching me and awaiting my answer.
+
+"I cannot avenge my friend unless I can find his murderer."
+
+Eagerly she bent forward.
+
+"But if I can find him?"
+
+That made me think, and I hesitated before speaking again.
+
+"Say what you came to say," I replied slowly. "You must know that
+I distrust you. Indeed, my plain duty is to detain you. But I will
+listen to anything you may care to tell me, particularly if it
+enables me to trap Hassan of Aleppo."
+
+"Very well," she said, and rested her elbows upon the table before
+her. "I have come to you in desperation. I can help you to find
+the man who murdered Professor Deeping, but in return I want you to
+help me!"
+
+I watched her closely. She was very plainly, almost poorly, dressed.
+Her face was pale and there were dark marks around her eyes. This
+but served to render their strange beauty more startling; yet I
+could see that my visitor was in real trouble. The situation was an
+odd one.
+
+"You are possibly about to ask me," I suggested, "to assist Earl
+Dexter to escape the police?"
+
+She shook her head. Her voice trembled as she replied--
+
+"That would not have induced me to run the risk of coming here. I
+came because I wanted to find a man who was brave enough to help me.
+We have no friends in London, and so it became a question of terms.
+I can repay you by helping you to trace Hassan."
+
+"What is it, then, that Dexter asks me to do?"
+
+"He asks nothing. I, Carneta, am asking!"
+
+"Then you are not come from him?"
+
+At my question, all her self-possession left her. She abruptly
+dropped her face into her hands and was shaken with sobs! It was
+more than I could bear, unmoved. I forgot the shady past, forgot
+that she was the associate of a daring felon, and could only realize
+that she was a weeping woman, who had appealed to my pity and who
+asked my aid.
+
+I stood up and stared out of the window, for I experienced a not
+unnatural embarrassment. Without looking at her I said--
+
+"Don't be afraid to tell me your troubles. I don't say I should go
+out of my way to be kind to Mr. Dexter, but I have no wish whatever
+to be instrumental in"--I hesitated--"in making you responsible
+for his misdeeds. If you can tell me where to find Hassan of
+Aleppo, I won't even ask you where Dexter is--"
+
+"God help me! I don't know where he is!"
+
+There was real, poignant anguish in her cry. I turned and
+confronted her. Her lashes were all wet with tears.
+
+"What! has he disappeared?"
+
+She nodded, fought with her emotion a moment, and went on unsteadily,
+
+"I want you to help me to find him for in finding him we shall find
+Hassan!"
+
+"How so?"
+
+Her gaze avoided me now.
+
+"Mr. Cavanagh, he has staked everything upon securing the slipper
+--and the Hashishin were too clever for him. His hand--those
+Eastern fiends cut off his hand! But he would not give in. He
+made another bid--and lost again. It left him almost penniless."
+
+She spoke of Earl Dexter's felonious plans as another woman might
+have spoken of her husband's unwise investments! It was fantastic
+hearing that confession of The Stetson Man's beautiful partner, and
+I counted the interview one of the strangest I had ever known.
+
+A sudden idea came to me. "When did Dexter first conceive the plan
+to steal the slipper?" I asked.
+
+"In Egypt!" answered Carneta. "Yes! You may as well know! He is
+thoroughly familiar with the East, and he learned of the robbery of
+Professor Deeping almost as soon as it became known to Hassan. I
+know what you are going to ask--"
+
+"Ahmad Ahmadeen!"
+
+"Yes! He travelled home as Ahmadeen--the only time he ever used
+a disguise. Oh! the thing is accursed!" she cried. "I begged him,
+implored him, to abandon his attempts upon it. Day and night we
+were watched by those ghastly yellow men! But it was all in vain.
+He knew, had known for a long time, where Hassan of Aleppo was in
+hiding!"
+
+And I reflected that the best men at New Scotland Yard had failed
+to pick up the slightest clue!
+
+"The Hashishin, of whom that dreadful man is leader, are rich, or
+have supporters who are rich. The plan was to make them pay for
+the slipper."
+
+"My God! it was playing with fire!"
+
+She sat silent awhile. Emotion threatened to get the upper hand.
+Then--
+
+"Two days ago," she almost whispered, "he set out--to . . . get the
+slipper!"
+
+"To steal it?"
+
+"To steal it!"
+
+"From Hassan of Aleppo?"
+
+I could scarcely believe that any man, single-handed, could have
+had the hardihood to attempt such a thing.
+
+"From Hassan, yes!"
+
+I faced her, amazed, incredulous.
+
+"Dexter had suffered mutilation, he knew that the Hashishin sought
+his life for his previous attempts upon the relic of the Prophet,
+and yet he dared to venture again into the very lions' den?"
+
+"He did, Mr. Cavanagh, two days ago. And--"
+
+"Yes?" I urged, as gently as I could, for she was shaking pitifully.
+
+"He never came back!"
+
+The words were spoken almost in a whisper. She clenched her hands
+and leapt from the chair, fighting down her grief and with such a
+stark horror in her beautiful eyes that from my very soul I longed
+to be able to help her.
+
+"Mr. Cavanagh" (she had courage, this bewildering accomplice of a
+cracksman), "I know the house he went to! I cannot hope to make you
+understand what I have suffered since then. A thousand times I have
+been on the point of going to the police, confessing all I knew, and
+leading them to that house! O God! if only he is alive, this shall
+be his last crooked deal--and mine! I dared not go to the police,
+for his sake! I waited, and watched, and hoped, through two such
+nights and days . . . then I ventured. I should have gone mad if I
+had not come here. I knew you had good cause to hate, to detest me,
+but I remembered that you had a great grievance against Hassan. Not
+as great, O heaven! not as great as mine, but yet a great one. I
+remembered, too, that you were the kind of man--a woman can come
+to . . . "
+
+She sank back into the chair, and with her fingers twining and
+untwining, sat looking dully before her.
+
+"In brief," I said, "what do you propose?"
+
+"I propose that we endeavour to obtain admittance to the house of
+Hassan of Aleppo--secretly, of course, and all I ask of you in
+return for revealing the secret of its situation is--"
+
+"That I let Dexter go free?"
+
+Almost inaudibly she whispered: "If he lives!"
+
+Surely no stranger proposition ever had been submitted to a
+law-abiding citizen. I was asked to connive in the escape of a
+notorious criminal, and at one and the same time to embark upon an
+expedition patently burglarious! As though this were not enough,
+I was invited to beard Hassan of Aleppo, the most dreadful being I
+had ever encountered East or West, in his mysterious stronghold!
+
+I wondered what my friend, Inspector Bristol, would have thought of
+the project; I wondered if I should ever live to see Hassan meet his
+just deserts as a result of this enterprise, which I was forced to
+admit a foolhardy one. But a man who has selected the career of a
+war correspondent from amongst those which Fleet Street offers, is
+the victim of a certain craving for fresh experiences; I suppose,
+has in his character something of an adventurous turn.
+
+For a while I stood staring from the window, then faced about and
+looked into the violet eyes of my visitor.
+
+"I agree, Carneta!" I said.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIX
+
+WE MEET MR. ISAACS
+
+
+Quitting the wayside station, and walking down a short lane, we came
+out upon Watling Street, white and dusty beneath the afternoon sun.
+We were less than an hour's train journey from London but found
+ourselves amid the Kentish hop gardens, amid a rural peace unbroken.
+My companion carried a camera case slung across her shoulder, but
+its contents were less innocent than one might have supposed. In
+fact, it contained a neat set of those instruments of the burglar's
+art with whose use she appeared to be quite familiar.
+
+"There is an inn," she said, "about a mile ahead, where we can
+obtain some vital information. He last wrote to me from there."
+
+Side by side we tramped along the dusty road. We both were silent,
+occupied with our own thoughts. Respecting the nature of my
+companion's I could entertain little doubt, and my own turned upon
+the foolhardy nature of the undertaking upon which I was embarked.
+No other word passed between us then, until upon rounding a bend
+and passing a cluster of picturesque cottages, the yard of the
+Vinepole came into view.
+
+"Do they know you by sight here?" I asked abruptly.
+
+"No, of course not; we never made strategic mistakes of that kind.
+If we have tea here, no doubt we can learn all we require."
+
+I entered the little parlour of the inn, and suggested that tea
+should be served in the pretty garden which opened out of it upon
+the right.
+
+The host, who himself laid the table, viewed the camera case
+critically.
+
+"We get a lot of photographers down here," he remarked tentatively.
+
+"No doubt," said my companion. "There is some very pretty scenery
+in the neighbourhood."
+
+The landlord rested his hands upon the table.
+
+"There was a gentleman here on Wednesday last," he said; "an old
+gentleman who had met with an accident, and was staying somewhere
+hereabouts for his health. But he'd got his camera with him, and
+it was wonderful the way he could use it, considering he hadn't got
+the use of his right hand."
+
+"He must have been a very keen photographer," I said, glancing at
+the girl beside me.
+
+"He took three or four pictures of the Vinepole," replied the
+landlord (which I doubted, since probably his camera was a dummy);
+"and he wanted to know if there were any other old houses in the
+neighbourhood. I told him he ought to take Cadham Hall, and he said
+he had heard that the Gate House, which is about a mile from here,
+was one of the oldest buildings about."
+
+A girl appeared with a tea tray, and for a moment I almost feared
+that the landlord was about to retire; but he lingered, whilst the
+girl distributed the things about the table, and Carneta asked
+casually, "Would there be time for me to photograph the Gate House
+before dark?"
+
+"There might be time," was the reply, "but that's not the difficulty.
+Mr. Isaacs is the difficulty."
+
+"Who is Mr. Isaacs?" I asked.
+
+"He's the Jewish gentleman who bought the Gate House recently. Lots
+of money he's got and a big motor car. He's up and down to London
+almost every day in the week, but he won't let anybody take
+photographs of the house. I know several who've asked."
+
+"But I thought," said Carneta, innocently, "you said the old
+gentleman who was here on Wednesday went to take some?"
+
+"He went, yes, miss; but I don't know if he succeeded."
+
+Carneta poured out some tea.
+
+"Now that you speak of it," she said, "I too have heard that the
+Gate House is very picturesque. What objection can Mr. Isaacs
+have to photographers?"
+
+"Well, you see, miss, to get a picture of the house, you have to
+pass right through the grounds."
+
+"I should walk right up to the house and ask permission. Is Mr.
+Isaacs at home, I wonder?"
+
+"I couldn't say. He hasn't passed this way to-day."
+
+"We might meet him on the way," said I. "What is he like?"
+
+"A Jewish gentleman sir, very dark, with a white beard. Wears
+gold glasses. Keeps himself very much to himself. I don't know
+anything about his household; none of them ever come here."
+
+Carneta inquired the direction of Cadham Hall and of the Gate House,
+and the landlord left us to ourselves. My companion exhibited
+signs of growing agitation, and it seemed to me that she had much
+ado to restrain herself from setting out without a moment's delay
+for the Gate House, which, I readily perceived, was the place to
+which our strange venture was leading us.
+
+I found something very stimulating in the reflection that, rash
+though the expedition might be, and, viewed from whatever standpoint,
+undeniably perilous, it promised to bring me to that secret
+stronghold of deviltry where the sinister Hassan of Aleppo so
+successfully had concealed himself.
+
+The work of the modern journalist had many points of contact with
+that of the detective; and since the murder of Professor Deeping I
+had succumbed to the man-hunting fever more than once. I knew that
+Scotland Yard had failed to locate the hiding-place of the
+remarkable and evil man who, like an efreet of Oriental lore, obeyed
+the talisman of the stolen slipper, striking down whomsoever laid
+hand upon its sacredness. It was a novel sensation to know that,
+aided by this beautiful accomplice of a rogue, I had succeeded where
+the experts had failed!
+
+Misgivings I had and shall not deny. If our scheme succeeded it
+would mean that Deeping's murderer should be brought to justice.
+If it failed-well, frankly, upon that possibility I did not dare to
+reflect!
+
+It must be needless for me to say that we two strangely met allies
+were ill at ease, sometimes to the point of embarrassment. We
+proceeded on our way in almost unbroken silence, and, save for a
+couple of farm hands, without meeting any wayfarer, up to the time
+that we reached the brow of the hill and had our first sight of the
+Gate House lying in a little valley beneath. It was a small Tudor
+mansion, very compact in plan and its roof glowed redly in the
+rays of the now setting sun.
+
+From the directions given by the host of the Vinepole it was
+impossible to mistake the way or to mistake the house. Amid
+well-wooded grounds it stood, a place quite isolated, but so
+typically English that, as I stood looking down upon it, I found
+myself unable to believe that any other than a substantial country
+gentleman could be its proprietor.
+
+I glanced at Carneta. Her violet eyes were burning feverishly, but
+her lips twitched in a bravely pitiful way.
+
+Clearly now my adventure lay before me; that red-roofed homestead
+seemed to have rendered it all substantial which hitherto had been
+shadowy; and I stood there studying the Gate House gravely, for it
+might yet swallow me up, as apparently it had swallowed Earl Dexter.
+
+There, amid that peaceful Kentish landscape, fantasy danced and
+horrors unknown lurked in waiting. . .
+
+The eminence upon which we were commanded an extensive prospect,
+and eastward showed a tower and flagstaff which marked the site of
+Cadham Hall. There were homeward-bound labourers to be seen in the
+lanes now, and where like a white ribbon the Watling Street lay
+across the verdant carpet moved an insect shape, speedily.
+
+It was a car, and I watched it with vague interest. At a point
+where a dense coppice spread down to the roadway and a lane crossed
+west to east, the car became invisible. Then I saw it again, nearer
+to us and nearer to the Gate House. Finally it disappeared among
+the trees.
+
+I turned to Carneta. She, too, had been watching. Now her gaze met
+mine.
+
+"Mr. Isaacs!" she said; and her voice was less musical than usual.
+"His chauffeur, who learned his business in Cairo, is probably the
+only one of his servants who remains in England."
+
+"What!" I began--and said no more.
+
+Where the road upon which we stood wound down into the valley and
+lost itself amid the trees surrounding the Gate House, the car
+suddenly appeared again, and began to mount the slope toward us!
+
+"Heavens!" whispered Carneta. "He may have seen us--with glasses!
+Quick! Let us walk back until the hill-top conceals us; then we
+must hide somewhere!"
+
+I shared her excitement. Without a moment's hesitation we both
+turned and retraced our steps. Twenty paces brought us to a
+spot where a stack of mangel wurzels stood at the roadside.
+
+"This will do!" I said.
+
+We ran around into the field, and crouched where we could peer out
+on the road without ourselves being seen. Nor had we taken up this
+position a moment too soon.
+
+Topping the slope came a light-weight electric, driven by a man who,
+in his spruce uniform, might have passed at a glance for a very
+dusky European. The car had a limousine back, and as the chauffeur
+slowed down, out from the open windows right and left peered the
+solitary occupant.
+
+He had the cast of countenance which is associated with the best
+type of Jew, with clear-cut aquiline features wholly destitute of
+grossness. His white beard was patriarchal and he wore gold-rimmed
+pince-nez and a glossy silk hat. Such figures may often be met
+with in the great money-markets of the world, and Mr. Isaacs would
+have passed for a successful financier in even more discerning
+communities than that of Cadham.
+
+But I scarcely breathed until the car was past; and, beside me, my
+companion, crouching to the ground, was trembling wildly. Fifty
+yards toward the village Mr. Isaacs evidently directed the man to
+return.
+
+The car was put about, and flashed past us at high speed down into
+the valley. When the sound of the humming motor had died to
+something no louder than the buzz of a sleepy wasp, I held out my
+hand to Carneta and she rose, pale, but with blazing eyes, and
+picked up her camera case.
+
+"If he had detected us, everything would have been lost!" she
+whispered.
+
+"Not everything!" I replied grimly--and showed her the revolver
+which I had held in my hand whilst those eagle eyes had been
+seeking us. "If he had made a sign to show that he had seen us, in
+fact, if he had once offered a safe mark by leaning from the car, I
+should have shot him dead without hesitation!"
+
+"We must not show ourselves again, but wait for dusk. He must have
+seen us, then, on the hilltop, but I hope without recognizing us.
+He has the sight and instincts of a vulture!"
+
+I nodded, slipping the revolver into my pocket, but I wondered if I
+should not have been better advised to have risked a shot at the
+moment that I had recognized "Mr. Isaacs" for Hassan of Aleppo.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXX
+
+AT THE GATE HOUSE
+
+
+From sunset to dusk I lurked about the neighbourhood of the Gate
+House with my beautiful accomplice--watching and waiting: a man
+bound upon stranger business, I dare swear, than any other in the
+county of Kent that night.
+
+Our endeavour now was to avoid observation by any one, and in this,
+I think, we succeeded. At the same time, Carneta, upon whose
+experience I relied implicitly, regarded it as most important that
+we should observe (from a safe distance) any one who entered or
+quitted the gates.
+
+But none entered, and none came out. When, finally, we made along
+the narrow footpath skirting the west of the grounds, the night was
+silent--most strangely still.
+
+The trees met overhead, but no rustle disturbed their leaves and of
+animal life no indication showed itself. There was no moon.
+
+A full appreciation of my mad folly came to me, and with it a sense
+of heavy depression. This stillness that ruled all about the house
+which sheltered the awful Sheikh of the Assassins was ominous, I
+thought. In short, my nerves were playing me tricks.
+
+"We have little to fear," said my companion, speaking in a hushed
+and quivering voice. "The whole of the party left England some
+days ago."
+
+"Are you sure?"
+
+"Certain! We learned that before Earl made his attempt. Hassan
+remains, for some reason; Hassan and one other--the one who drives
+the car."
+
+"But the slipper?"
+
+"If Hassan remains, so does the slipper!" From the knapsack, which,
+as you will have divined, did not contain a camera, she took out an
+electric pocket lamp, and directed its beam upon the hedge above us.
+
+"There is a gap somewhere here!" she said. "See if you can find it.
+I dare not show the light too long."
+
+Darkness followed. I clambered up the bank and sought for the
+opening of which Carneta had spoken.
+
+"The light here a moment," I whispered. "I think I have it!"
+
+Out shone the white beam, and momentarily fell upon a black hole in
+the thickset hedge. The light disappeared, and as I extended my
+hand to Carneta she grasped it and climbed up beside me.
+
+"Put on your rubber shoes," she directed. "Leave the others here."
+
+There in the darkness I did as she directed, for I was provided with
+a pair of tennis shoes. Carneta already was suitably shod.
+
+"I will go first," I said. "What is the ground like beyond?"
+
+"Just unkempt bushes and weeds."
+
+Upon hands and knees I crawled through, saw dimly that there was a
+short descent, corresponding with the ascent from the lane, and
+turned, whispering to my fellow conspirator to follow.
+
+The grounds proved even more extensive than I had anticipated. We
+pressed on, dodging low-sweeping branches and keeping our arms up to
+guard our faces from outshoots of thorn bushes. Our progress
+necessarily was slow, but even so quite a long time seemed to have
+elapsed ere we came in sight of the house.
+
+This was my first expedition of the kind; and now that my goal was
+actually in sight I became conscious of a sort of exultation hard
+to describe. My companion, on the contrary, seemed to have become
+icily cool. When next she spoke, her voice had a businesslike ring,
+which revealed the fact that she was no amateur at this class og
+work.
+
+"Wait here," she directed. "I am going to pass all around the
+house, and I will rejoin you."
+
+I could see her but dimly, and she moved off as silent as an Indian
+deer-stalker, leaving me alone there crouching at the extreme edge
+of the thicket. I looked out over a small wilderness of unkempt
+flower-beds; so much it was just possible to perceive. The plants
+in many instances had spread on to the pathways and contested
+survival with the flourishing weeds. All was wild--deserted--eerie.
+
+A sense of dampness assailed me, and I raised my eyes to the
+low-lying building wherein no light showed, no sign of life was
+evident. The nearer wing presented a verandah apparently overgrown
+by some climbing plant, the nature of which it was impossible to
+determine in the darkness.
+
+The zest for the nocturnal operation which temporarily had thrilled
+me succumbed now to loneliness. With keen anxiety I awaited the
+return of my more experienced accomplice. The situation was
+grotesque, utterly bizarre; but even my sense of humour could not
+save me from the growing dread which this seemingly deserted place
+poured into my heart.
+
+When upon the right I heard a faint rustling I started, and grasped
+the revolver in my pocket.
+
+"Not a sound!" came in Carneta's voice. "Keep just inside the
+bushes and come this way. There is something I want to show you."
+
+The various profuse growths rendered concealment simple enough--if
+indeed any other concealment were necessary than that which the
+strangely black night afforded. Just within the evil-smelling
+thicket we made a half circuit of the building, and stopped.
+
+"Look!" whispered Carneta.
+
+The word was unnecessary, for I was staring fixedly in the direction
+of that which evidently had occasioned her uneasiness.
+
+It was a small square window, so low-set that I assumed it to be
+that of a cellar, and heavily cross-barred.
+
+From it, out upon a tangled patch of vegetation, shone a dull red
+light!
+
+"There's no other light in the place," my companion whispered.
+"For God's sake, what can it be?"
+
+My mind supplied no explanation. The idea that it might be a dark
+room no doubt was suggested by the assumed role of Carneta; but I
+knew that idea to be absurd. The red light meant something else.
+
+Evidently the commencing of operations before all lights were out
+was irregular, for Carneta said slowly--
+
+"We must wait and watch the light. There was formerly a moat
+around the Gate House; that must be the window of a dungeon."
+
+I little relished the prospect of waiting in that swamp-like spot,
+but since no alternative presented itself I accepted the inevitable.
+For close upon an hour we stood watching the red window. No sound
+of bird, beast, or man disturbed our vigil; in fact, it would
+appear that the very insects shunned the neighbourhood of Hassan of
+Aleppo. But the red light still shone out.
+
+"We must risk it!" said Carneta steadily. "There are French windows
+opening on to that verandah. Ten yards farther around the bushes
+come right up to the wall of the house. We'll go that way and
+around by the other wing on to the verandah."
+
+Any action was preferable to this nerve-sapping delay, and with a
+determination to shoot, and shoot to kill, any one who opposed
+our entrance, I passed through the bushes and, with Carneta, rounded
+the southern border of that silent house and slipped quietly on to
+the verandah.
+
+Kneeling, Carneta opened the knapsack. My eyes were growing
+accustomed to the darkness, and I was just able to see her deft
+hands at work upon the fastenings. She made no noise, and I
+watched her with an ever-growing wonder. A female burglar is a
+personage difficult to imagine. Certainly, no one ever could have
+suspected this girl with the violet eyes of being an expert
+crackswoman; but of her efficiency there could be no question. I
+think I had never witnessed a more amazing spectacle than that of
+this cultured girl manipulating the tools of the house breaker with
+her slim white fingers.
+
+Suddenly she turned and clutched my arm.
+
+"The windows are not fastened!" she whispered.
+
+A strange courage came to me--perhaps that of desperation. For,
+ignoring the ominous circumstance, I pushed open the nearest
+window and stepped into the room beyond! A hissing breath from
+Carneta acknowledged my performance, and she entered close behind
+me, silent in her rubber-soled shoes.
+
+For one thrilling moment we stood listening. Then came the white
+beam from the electric lamp to cut through the surrounding blackness.
+
+The room was totally unfurnished!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXI
+
+THE POOL OF DEATH
+
+
+Not a sound broke the stillness of the Gate House. It was the most
+eerily silent place in which I had ever found myself. Out into the
+corridor we went, noiselessly. It was stripped, uncarpeted.
+
+Three doors we passed, two upon the left and one upon the right.
+We tried them all. All were unfastened, and the rooms into which
+they opened bare and deserted. Then we came upon a short, descending
+stair, at its foot a massive oaken door.
+
+Carneta glided down, noiseless as a ghost, and to one of the
+blackened panels applied an ingenious little instrument which she
+carried in her knapsack. It was not unlike a stethoscope; and as I
+watched her listening, by means of this arrangement, for any sound
+beyond the oaken door, I reflected how almost every advance made by
+science places a new tool in the hand of the criminal.
+
+No word had been spoken since we had discovered this door; none had
+been necessary. For we both knew that the place beyond was that
+from which proceeded the mysterious red light.
+
+I directed the ray of the electric torch upon Carneta, as she stood
+there listening, and against that sombre oaken background her face
+and profile stood out with startling beauty. She seemed half
+perplexed and half fearful. Then she abruptly removed the apparatus,
+and, stooping to the knapsack, replaced it and took out a bunch of
+wire keys, signing to me to hand her the lamp.
+
+As I crept down the steps I saw her pause, glancing back over her
+shoulder toward the door. The expression upon her face induced
+me to direct the light in the same direction.
+
+Why neither of us had observed the fact before I cannot conjecture;
+but a key was in the lock!
+
+Perhaps the traffic of the night afforded no more dramatic moment
+than this. The house which we were come prepared burglariously
+to enter was thrown open, it would seem, to us, inviting our
+inspection!
+
+Looking back upon that moment, it seems almost incredible that the
+sight of a key in a lock should have so thrilled me. But at the
+time I perceived something sinister in this failure of the Lord of
+the Hashishin to close his doors to intruders. That Carneta shared
+my doubts and fears was to be read in her face; but her training
+had been peculiar, I learned, and such as establishes a surprising
+resoluteness of character.
+
+Quite noiselessly she turned the key, and holding a dainty pocket
+revolver in her hand, pushed the door open slowly!
+
+An odour, sickly sweet and vaguely familiar, was borne to my
+nostrils. Carneta became outlined in dim, reddish light. Bending
+forward slightly, she entered the room, and I, with muscles tensed
+nervously, advanced and stood beside her.
+
+I perceived that this was a cellar; indeed, I doubt not that in
+some past age it had served as a dungeon. From the stone roof hung
+the first evidence of Eastern occupation which the Gate House had
+yielded; in the form of an Oriental lantern, or fanoos, of
+rose-coloured waxed paper upon a copper frame. Its vague light
+revealed the interior of the hideous place upon whose threshold we
+stood.
+
+Straight before us, deep set in the stone wall, was the tiny square
+window, iron-barred without, and glazed with red glass, the light
+from which had so deeply mystified us. Within a niche in the wall,
+a little to the left of the window, rested an object which, at that
+moment, claimed our undivided attention the sight of which so
+wrought upon us that temporarily all else was forgotten.
+
+It was the red slipper of the Prophet!
+
+"My God!" whispered Carneta--"my God!"--and clutched at me,
+swaying dizzily.
+
+A few inches from our feet the floor became depressed, how deeply
+I could not determine, for it was filled with water, water filthy
+and slimy! The strange, nauseating odour had grown all but
+unsupportable; it seemingly proceeded from this fetid pool which,
+occupying the floor of the dungeon, offered a barrier, since its
+depth was unknown, of fully twelve feet between ourselves and the
+farther wall.
+
+There was a faint, dripping sound: a whispering, echoing drip-drip
+of falling water. I could not tell from whence it proceeded.
+
+Almost supporting my companion, whose courage seemed suddenly to
+have failed her, I stared fascinatedly at that blood-stained
+relic. Something then induced me to look behind; I suppose a
+warning instinct of that sort which is unexplainable. I only know
+that upholding Carneta with my left arm, and nervously grasping my
+revolver in my right, I turned and glanced over my shoulder.
+
+Very slowly, but with a constant, regular motion, the massive door
+was closing!
+
+I snatched away my arm; in my left hand I held the electric torch,
+and springing sharply about I directed the searching ray into the
+black gap of the stairway. A yellow face, a malignant Oriental
+face, came suddenly, fully, into view! Instantly I recognized it
+for that of the man who had driven Hassan's car!
+
+Acting upon the determination with which I had entered the Gate
+House, I raised my revolver and fired straight between the evil
+eyes! To the fact that I dropped my left hand in the act of
+pulling the trigger with my right, and thus lost my mark, the
+servant of Hassan of Aleppo owed his escape. I missed him. He
+uttered a shrill cry of fear and went racing up the wooden stair.
+I followed him with the light and fired twice at the retreating
+figure. I heard him stumble and a second time cry out. But,
+though I doubt not he was hit, he recovered himself, for I heard
+his tread in the corridor above.
+
+Propping wide the door with my foot, I turned to Carneta. Her
+face was drawn and haggard; but her mouth set in a sort of grim
+determination.
+
+"Earl is dead!" she said, in a queer, toneless voice. "He died
+trying to get--that thing! I will get it, and destroy it!"
+
+Before I could detain her, even had I sought to do so, she stepped
+into the filthy water, struggled to recover her foothold, and sank
+above her waist into its sliminess. Without hesitation she began
+to advance toward the niche which contained the slipper. In the
+middle of the pool she stopped.
+
+What memory it was which supplied the clue to the identity of that
+nauseating smell, heaven alone knows; but as the girl stopped and
+drew herself up rigidly--then turned and leapt wildly back toward
+the door--I knew what occasioned that sickly odour!
+
+She screamed once, dreadfully--shrilly--a scream of agonizing
+fear that I can never forget. Then, roughly I grasped her, for the
+need was urgent--and dragged her out on to the floor beside me.
+With her wet garments clinging to her limbs, she fell prostrate on
+the stones.
+
+A yard from the brink the slimy water parted, and the yellow snout
+of a huge crocodile was raised above the surface! The saurian eyes,
+hungrily malevolent, rose next to view!
+
+The extremity of our danger found me suddenly cool. As the thing
+drew its slimy body up out of the poor I waited. The jaws were
+extended toward the prostrate body, were but inches removed from
+it, dripped their saliva upon the soddened skirt--when I bent
+forward, and at a range of some ten inches emptied the remaining
+three loaded chambers of my revolver into the creature's left
+eye!
+
+Upchurned in bloody foam became the water of that dreadful place
+. . . . As one recalls the incidents of a fevered dream, I recall
+dragging Carneta away from the contorted body of the death-stricken
+reptile. A nightmare chaos of horrid, revolting sights and sounds
+forms my only recollection of quitting the dungeon of the slipper.
+
+I succeeded in carrying her up the stairs and out through the empty
+rooms on to the verandah; but there, from sheer exhaustion, I laid
+her down. I had no means of reviving her and I lacked the strength
+to carry her farther. Having recharged my revolver, I stood watching
+her where she lay, wanly beautiful in the dim light.
+
+There was no doubt in my mind respecting the fate of Earl Dexter,
+nor could I doubt that the slipper in the dungeon below was a
+duplicate of the real one. It was a death-trap into which he had
+lured Dexter and which he had left baited for whomsoever might trace
+the cracksman to the Gate House. Why Hassan should have remained
+behind, unless from fanatic lust of killing, I could not imagine.
+
+When at last the fresher night air had its effect, and Carneta
+opened her eyes, I led her to the gates, nor did she offer the
+slightest resistance, but looked dully before her, muttering over
+and over again, "Earl, Earl!"
+
+The gates were open; we passed out on to the open road. No man
+pursued us, and the night was gravely still.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXII
+
+SIX GRAY PATCHES
+
+
+When the invitation came from my old friend Hilton to spend a week
+"roughing it" with him in Warwickshire I accepted with alacrity.
+If ever a man needed a holiday I was that man. Nervous breakdown
+threatened me at any moment; the ghastly experience at the Gate
+House together with Carneta's grief-stricken face when I had
+parted from her were obsessing memories which I sought in vain to
+shake off.
+
+A brief wire had contained the welcome invitation, and up to the
+time when I had received it I had been unaware that Hilton was
+back in England. Moreover, beyond the fact that his house,
+"Uplands," was near H--, for which I was instructed to change at
+New Street Station, Birmingham, I had little idea of its location.
+But he added "Wire train and will meet at H--"; so that I had no
+uneasiness on that score.
+
+I had contemplated catching the 2:45 from Euston, but by the time
+I had got my work into something like order, I decided that the
+6:55 would be more suitable and decided to dine on the train.
+
+Altogether, there was something of a rush and hustle attendant upon
+getting away, and when at last I found myself in the cab, bound for
+Euston, I sat back with a long-drawn sigh. The quest of the Prophet's
+slipper was ended; in all probability that blood-stained relic was
+already Eastward bound. Hassan of Aleppo, its awful guardian, had
+triumphed and had escaped retribution. Earl Dexter was dead. I
+could not doubt that; for the memory of his beautiful accomplice,
+Carneta, as I last had seen her, broken-hearted, with her great
+violet eyes dulled in tearless agony--have I not said that it lived
+with me?
+
+Even as the picture of her lovely, pale face presented itself to my
+mind, the cab was held up by a temporary block in the traffic--and
+my imagination played me a strange trick.
+
+Another taxi ran close alongside, almost at the moment that the
+press of vehicles moved on again. Certainly, I had no more than a
+passing glimpse of the occupants; but I could have sworn that violet
+eyes looked suddenly into mine, and with equal conviction I could
+have sworn to the gaunt face of the man who sat beside the
+violet-eyed girl for that of Earl Dexter!
+
+The travellers, however, were immediately lost to sight in the rear,
+and I was left to conjecture whether this had been a not uncommon
+form of optical delusion or whether I had seen a ghost.
+
+At any rate, as I passed in between the big pillars, "The gateway
+of the North," I scrutinized, and closely, the numerous hurrying
+figures about me. None of them, by any stretch of the imagination,
+could have been set down for that of Dexter, The Stetson Man. No
+doubt, I concluded, I had been tricked by a chance resemblance.
+
+Having dispatched my telegram, I boarded the 6:55. I thought I
+should have the compartment to myself, and so deep in reverie was
+I that the train was actually clear of the platforms ere I learned
+that I had a companion. He must have joined me at the moment that
+the train started. Certainly, I had not seen him enter. But,
+suddenly looking up, I met the eyes of this man who occupied the
+corner seat facing me.
+
+This person was olive-skinned, clean-shaven, fine featured, and
+perfectly groomed. His age might have been anything from twenty-five
+to forty-five, but his hair and brows were jet black. His eyes, too,
+were nearer to real black than any human eyes I had ever seen
+before--excepting the awful eyes of Hassan of Aleppo. Hassan of
+Aleppo! It was, to that hour, a mystery how his group of trained
+assassins--the Hashishin--had quitted England. Since none of them
+were known to the police, it was no insoluble mystery, I admit; but
+nevertheless it was singular that the careful watching of the ports
+had yielded no result. Could it be that some of them had not yet
+left the country? Could it be--
+
+I looked intently into the black eyes. They were caressing, smiling
+eyes, and looked boldly into mine. I picked up a magazine,
+pretending to read. But I supported it with my left hand; my right
+was in my coat pocket--and it rested upon my Smith and Wesson!
+
+So much had the slipper of Mohammed done for me: I went in hourly
+dread of murderous attack!
+
+My travelling companion watched me; of that I was certain. I could
+feel his gaze. But he made no move and no word passed between us.
+This was the situation when the train slowed into Northampton. At
+Northampton, to my indescribable relief (frankly, I was as nervous
+in those days as a woman), the Oriental traveller stepped out on to
+the platform.
+
+Having reclosed the door, he turned and leaned in through the open
+window.
+
+"Evidently you are not concerned, Mr. Cavanagh," he said. "Be
+warned. Do not interfere with those that are!"
+
+The night swallowed him up.
+
+My fears had been justified; the man was one of the Hashishin--a
+spy of Hassan of Aleppo! What did it mean?
+
+I craned from the window, searching the platform right and left.
+But there was no sign of him.
+
+When the train left Northampton I found myself alone, and I should
+only weary you were I to attempt to recount the troubled conjectures
+that bore me company to Birmingham.
+
+The train reached New Street at nine, with the result that having
+gulped a badly needed brandy and soda in the buffet, I grabbed my
+bag, raced across--and just missed the connection! More than an
+hour later I found myself standing at ten minutes to eleven upon
+the H-- platform, watching the red taillight of the "local"
+disappear into the night. Then I realized to the full that with
+four miles of lonely England before me there hung above my head a
+mysterious threat--a vague menace. The solitary official, who
+but waited my departure to lock up the station, was the last
+representative of civilization I could hope to encounter until the
+gates of "Uplands" should be opened to me!
+
+What was the matter with which I was warned not to interfere? Might
+I not, by my mere presence in that place, unwittingly be interfering
+now?
+
+With the station-master's directions humming like a refrain in my
+ears, I passed through the sleeping village and out on to the road.
+The moon was exceptionally bright and unobscured, although a dense
+bank of cloud crept slowly from the west, and before me the path
+stretched as an unbroken thread of silvery white twining a sinuous
+way up the bracken-covered slope, to where, sharply defined against
+the moonlight sky, a coppice in grotesque silhouette marked the
+summit.
+
+The month had been dry and tropically hot, and my footsteps rang
+crisply upon the hard ground. There is nothing more deceptive
+than a straight road up a hill; and half an hour's steady tramping
+but saw me approaching the trees.
+
+I had so far resolutely endeavoured to keep my mind away from the
+idea of surveillance. Now, as I paused to light my pipe--a
+never-failing friend in loneliness--I perceived something move in
+the shadows of a neighbouring bush.
+
+This object was not unlike a bladder, and the very incongruity of
+its appearance served to revive all my apprehensions. Taking up
+my grip, as though I had noticed nothing of an alarming nature, I
+pursued my way up the slope, leaving a trail of tobacco smoke in my
+wake; and having my revolver secreted up my right coat-sleeve.
+
+Successfully resisting a temptation to glance behind, I entered the
+cover of the coppice, and, now invisible to any one who might be
+dogging me, stood and looked back upon the moon-bright road.
+
+There was no living thing in sight, the road was empty as far as the
+eye could see. The coppice now remained to be negotiated, and then,
+if the station-master's directions were not at fault, "Uplands"
+should be visible beyond. Taking, therefore, what I had designed to
+be a final glance back down the hillside, I was preparing to resume
+my way when I saw something--something that arrested me.
+
+It was a long way behind--so far that, had the moon been less
+bright, I could never have discerned it. What it was I could not
+even conjecture; but it had the appearance of a vague gray patch,
+moving--not along the road, but through the undergrowth--in my
+direction.
+
+For a second my eye rested upon it. Then I saw a second patch--a
+third--a fourth!
+
+Six!
+
+There were six gray patches creeping up the slope toward me!
+
+The sight was unnerving. What were these things that approached,
+silently, stealthily--like snakes in the grass?
+
+A fear, unlike anything I had known before the quest of the Prophet's
+slipper had brought fantastic horror into my life, came upon me.
+Revolver in hand I ran--ran for my life toward the gap in the trees
+that marked the coppice end. And as I went something hummed through
+the darkness beside my head, some projectile, some venomous thing that
+missed its mark by a bare inch!
+
+Painfully conversant with the uncanny weapons employed by the
+Hashishin, I knew now, beyond any possibility of doubt, that death
+was behind me.
+
+A pattering like naked feet sounded on the road, and, without
+pausing in my headlong career, I sent a random shot into the
+blackness.
+
+The crack of the Smith and Wesson reassured me. I pulled up short,
+turned, and looked back toward the trees.
+
+Nothing--no one!
+
+Breathing heavily, I crammed my extinguished briar into my pocket
+--re-charged the empty chamber of the revolver--and started to
+run again toward a light that showed over the treetops to my left.
+
+That, if the man's directions were right, was "Uplands"--if his
+directions were wrong--then . . .
+
+A shrill whistle--minor, eerie, in rising cadence--sounded on the
+dead silence with piercing clearness! Six whistles--seemingly
+from all around me--replied!
+
+Some object came humming through the air, and I ducked wildly.
+
+On and on I ran--flying from an unknown, but, as a warning instinct
+told me, deadly peril--ran as a man runs pursued by devils.
+
+The road bent sharply to the left then forked. Overhanging trees
+concealed the house, and the light, though high up under the eaves,
+was no longer visible. Trusting to Providence to guide me, I plunged
+down the lane that turned to the left, and, almost exhausted, saw the
+gates before me--saw the sweep of the drive, and the moonlight,
+gleaming on the windows!
+
+None of the windows were illuminated.
+
+Straight up to the iron gates I raced.
+
+They were locked!
+
+Without a moment's hesitation I hurled my grip over the top and
+clambered up the bars! As I got astride, from the blackness of the
+lane came the ominous hum, and my hat went spinning away across the
+lawn!--the black cloud veiled the moon and complete darkness fell.
+
+Then I dropped and ran for the house--shouting, though all but
+winded--"Hilton! Hilton! Open the door!"
+
+Sinking exhausted on the steps, I looked toward the gates--but they
+showed only dimly in the dense shadows of the trees.
+
+Bzzz! Buzz!
+
+I dropped flat in the portico as something struck the metal knob of
+the door and rebounded over me. A shower of gravel told of another
+misdirected projectile.
+
+Crack! Crack! Crack! The revolver spoke its short reply into the
+mysterious darkness; but the night gave up no sound to tell of a
+shot gone home.
+
+"Hilton! Hilton!" I cried, banging on the panels with the butt of
+the weapon. "Open the door! Open the door!"
+
+And now I heard the coming footsteps along the hall within; heavy
+bolts were withdrawn--the door swung open--and Hilton, pale-faced,
+appeared. His hand shot out, grabbed my coat collar; and weak,
+exhausted, I found myself snatched into safety, and the door
+rebolted.
+
+"Thank God!" I whispered. "Thank God! Hilton, look to all your
+bolts and fastenings. Hell is outside!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIII
+
+HOW WE WERE REINFORCED
+
+
+Hilton, I learned, was living the simple life at "Uplands." The
+place was not yet decorated and was only partly furnished. But
+with his man, Soar, he had been in solitary occupation for a week.
+
+"Feel better now?" he asked anxiously.
+
+I reached for my tumbler and blew a cloud of smoke into the air.
+I could hear Soar's footsteps as he made the round of bolts and
+bars, testing each anxiously.
+
+"Thanks, Hilton," I said. "I'm quite all right. You are naturally
+wondering what the devil it all means? Well, then, I wired you
+from Euston that I was coming by the 6:55."
+
+"H-- Post Office shuts at 7. I shall get your wire in the morning!"
+
+"That explains your failing to meet me. Now for my explanation!"
+
+"Surrounding this house at the present moment," I continued, "are
+members of an Eastern organization--the Hashishin, founded in
+Khorassan in the eleventh century and flourishing to-day!"
+
+"Do you mean it, Cavanagh?"
+
+"I do! One Hassan of Aleppo is the present Sheikh of the order,
+and he has come to England, bringing a fiendish company in his train,
+in pursuit of the sacred slipper of Mohammed, which was stolen by
+the late Professor Deeping---"
+
+"Surely I have read something about this?"
+
+"Probably. Deeping was murdered by Hassan! The slipper was placed
+in the Antiquarian Museum--"
+
+"From which it was stolen again!"
+
+"Correct--by Earl Dexter, America's foremost crook! But the real
+facts have never got into print. I am the only pressman who knows
+them, and I have good reason for keeping my knowledge to myself!
+Dexter is dead (I believe I saw his ghost to-day). But although,
+to the best of my knowledge, the accursed slipper is in the hands
+of Hassan and Company, I have been watched since I left Euston,
+and on my way to 'Uplands' my life was attempted!"
+
+"For God's sake, why?"
+
+"I cannot surmise, Hilton. Deeping, for certain reasons that are
+irrelevant at the moment, left the keys of the case at the Museum
+in my perpetual keeping--but the case was rifled a second time--"
+
+"I read of it!"
+
+"And the keys were stolen from me. I am utterly at a loss to
+understand why the Hashishin--for it is members of that awful
+organization who, without a doubt, surround this house at the
+present moment--should seek my life. Hilton, I have brought
+trouble with me!"
+
+"It's almost incredible!" said Hilton, staring at me. "Why do
+these people pursue you?"
+
+Ere I had time to reply Soar entered, arrayed, as was Hilton, in
+his night attire. Soar was an ex-dragoon and a model man.
+
+"Everything fast, sir," he reported; "but from the window of the
+bedroom over here--the room I got ready for Mr. Cavanagh--I
+thought I saw someone in the orchard."
+
+"Eh?" jerked Hilton--"in the orchard? Come on up, Cavanagh!"
+
+We all ran upstairs. The moonlight was streaming into the room.
+
+"Keep back!" I warned.
+
+Well within the shadow, I crept up to the window and looked out.
+The night was hot and still. No breeze stirred the leaves, but
+the edge of the frowning thunder cloud which I had noted before
+spread a heavy carpet of ebony black upon the ground. Beyond, I
+could dimly discern the hills. The others stood behind me,
+constrained by the fear of this mysterious danger which I had
+brought to "Uplands."
+
+There was someone moving among the trees!
+
+Closer came the figure, and closer, until suddenly a shaft of
+moonlight found passage and spilled a momentary pool of light amid
+the shadows, I could see the watcher very clearly. A moment he
+stood there, motionless, and looking up at the window; then as he
+glided again into the shade of the trees the darkness became
+complete. But I watched, crouching there nervously, for long after
+he was gone.
+
+"For God's sake, who is it?" whispered Hilton, with a sort of awe
+in his voice.
+
+"It's Hassan of Aleppo!" I replied.
+
+Virtually, the house, with the capital of the Midlands so near upon
+the one hand, the feverish activity of the Black Country reddening
+the night upon the other, was invested by fanatic Easterns!
+
+We descended again to the extemporized study. Soar entered with us
+and Hilton invited him to sit down.
+
+"We must stick together to-night!" he said. "Now, Cavanagh, let us
+see if we can find any explanation of this amazing business. I can
+understand that at one period of the slipper's history you were an
+object of interest to those who sought to recover it; but if, as
+you say, the Hashishin have the slipper now, what do they want with
+you? If you have never touched it, they cannot be prompted by
+desire for vengeance."
+
+"I have never touched it," I replied grimly; "nor even any
+receptacle containing it."
+
+As I ceased speaking came a distant muffled rumbling.
+
+"That's the thunder," said Hilton. "There's a tremendous storm
+brewing."
+
+He poured out three glasses of whisky, and was about to speak
+when Soar held up a warning finger.
+
+"Listen!" he said.
+
+At his words, with tropical suddenness down came the rain.
+
+Hilton, his pipe in his hand, stood listening intently.
+
+"What?" he asked.
+
+"I don't know, sir; the sound of the rain has drowned it."
+
+Indeed, the rain was descending in a perfect deluge, its continuous
+roar drowning all other sounds; but as we three listened tensely
+we detected a noise which hitherto had seemed like the overflowing
+of some spout.
+
+But louder and clearer it grew, until at last I knew it for what
+it was.
+
+"It's a motor-car!" I cried.
+
+"And coming here!" added Soar. "Listen! it's in the lane!"
+
+"It certainly isn't a taxicab," declared Hilton. "None of the men
+will come beyond the village."
+
+"That's the gate!" said Soar, in an awed voice, and stood up,
+looking at Hilton.
+
+"Come on," said the latter abruptly, making for the door.
+
+"Be careful, Hilton!" I cried; "it may be a trick!"
+
+Soar unbolted the front door, threw it open, and looked out. In
+the darkness of the storm it was almost impossible to see anything
+in the lane outside. But at that moment a great sheet of lightning
+split the gloom, and we saw a taxicab standing close up to the
+gateway!
+
+"Help! Open the gate!" came a high-pitched voice; "open the gate!"
+
+Out into the rain we ran and down the gravel path. Soar had the
+gate open in a twinkling, and a woman carrying a brown leather grip,
+but who was so closely veiled that I had no glimpse of her features,
+leapt through on to the drive.
+
+"Lend a hand, two of you!" cried a vaguely familiar voice--"this way!"
+
+Hilton and Soar stepped out into the road. The driver of the cab
+was lying forward across the wheel, apparently insensible, but as
+Hilton seized his arm he moved and spoke feebly.
+
+"For God's sake be quick, sir!" he said. "They're after us!
+They're on the other side of the lane, there!"
+
+With that he dropped limply into Hilton's arms!
+
+He was dragged in on to the drive--and something whizzed over our
+heads and went sputtering into the gravel away up toward the house.
+The last to enter was the man who had come in the cab. As he barred
+the gate behind him he suddenly reached out through the bars and I
+saw a pistol in his hand.
+
+Once--twice--thrice--he fired into the blackness of the lane.
+
+"Take that, you swine!" he shouted. "Take that!"
+
+As quickly as we could, bearing the insensible man, we hurried back
+to the door. On the step the woman was waiting for us, with her
+veil raised. A blinding flash of lightning came as we mounted the
+step--and I looked into the violet eyes of Carneta! I turned and
+stared at the man behind me.
+
+It was Earl Dexter.
+
+Three of the mysterious missiles fell amongst us, but miraculously
+no one was struck. Amid the mighty booming of the thunder we
+reentered the houses and got the door barred. In the hall we laid
+down the unconscious man and stood, a strangely met company,
+peering at one another in the dim lamplight.
+
+"We've got to bury the hatchet, Mr. Cavanagh!" said Dexter. "It's
+a case of the common enemy. I've brought you your bag!" and he
+pointed to the brown grip upon the floor.
+
+"My bag!" I cried. "My bag is upstairs in my room."
+
+"Wrong, sir!" snapped The Stetson Man. "They are like as two peas
+in a pod, I'll grant you, but the bag you snatched off the platform
+at New Street was mine! That's what I'm after; I ought to be on
+the way to Liverpool. That's what Hassan's after!"
+
+"The bag!"
+
+"You don't need to ask what's in the bag?" suggested Dexter.
+
+"What is in the bag?" ask Hilton hoarsely.
+
+"The slipper of the Prophet, sir!" was the reply.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIV
+
+MY LAST MEETING WITH HASSAN OF ALEPPO
+
+
+I felt dazed, as a man must feel who has just heard the death
+sentence pronounced upon him. Hilton seemed to have become
+incapable of speech or action; and in silence we stood watching
+Carneta tending the unconscious man. She forced brandy from
+a flask between his teeth, kneeling there beside him with her
+face very pale and dark rings around her eyes. Presently she
+looked up.
+
+"Will you please get me a bowl of water and a sponge?" she said
+quietly.
+
+Soar departed without a word, and no one spoke until he returned,
+bringing the sponge and the water, when the girl set to work in a
+businesslike way to cleanse a wound which showed upon the man's
+head.
+
+"She's a good nurse is Carneta," said Dexter coolly. "She was the
+only doctor I had through this"--indicating his maimed wrist. "If
+you will fetch my bag down, there's some lint in it."
+
+I hesitated.
+
+"You needn't worry," said Dexter; "as well be hung for a sheep as
+a lamb. You've handled the bag, and I'm not asking you to do
+any more."
+
+I went up to my room and lifted the grip from the chair upon which
+I had put it. Even now I found it difficult to perceive any
+difference between this and mine. Both were of identical appearance
+and both new. In fact, I had bought mine only that morning, my old
+one being past use, and being in a hurry, I had not left it to be
+initialled.
+
+As I picked up the bag the lightning flashed again, and from the
+window I could see the orchard as clearly as by sunlight. At the
+farther end near the wall someone was standing watching the house.
+
+I went downstairs carrying the fatal bag, and rejoined the group in
+the hall.
+
+"He will have to be got to bed," said Carneta, referring to the
+wounded man; "he will probably remain unconscious for a long time."
+
+Accordingly, we took the patient into one of the few furnished
+bedrooms, and having put him to bed left him in care of the beautiful
+nurse. When we four men met again downstairs, amazement had rendered
+the whole scene unreal to me. Soar stood just within the open door,
+not knowing whether to go or to remain; but Hilton motioned to
+him to stay. Earl Dexter bit off the end of a cigar and stood with
+his left elbow resting on the mantelpiece.
+
+His gaunt face looked gaunter than ever, but the daredevil gray eyes
+still nursed that humorous light in their depths.
+
+"Mr. Cavanagh," he said, "we're brothers! And if you'll consider
+a minute, you'll see that I'm not lying when I say I'm on the
+straight, now and for always!"
+
+I made no reply: I could think of none.
+
+"I'm a crook," he resumed, "or I was up to a while ago. There's
+a warrant out for me--the first that ever bore my name. I've
+sailed near the wind often enough, but it was desperation that got
+me into hot water about that!"
+
+He jerked his cigar in the direction of his grip, which lay now on
+the rug at his feet.
+
+"I lost a useful right hand," he went on--"and I lost every cent I
+had. It was a dead rotten speculation--for I lost my good name!
+I mean it! Believe me, I've handled some shady propositions in the
+past, but I did it right in the sunlight! Up to the time I went out
+for that damned slipper I could have had lunch with any detective
+from Broadway to the Strand! I didn't need any false whiskers and
+the Ritz was good enough for The Stetson Man. What now? I'm
+'wanted!' Enough said."
+
+He tossed the cigar--he had smoked scarce an inch of it--into the
+empty grate.
+
+"I'm an Aunt Sally for any man to shy at," he resumed bitterly.
+"My place henceforth is in the dark. Right! I've finished; the
+book's closed. From the time I quit England--if I can quit--I'm
+on the straight! I've promised Carneta, and I mean to keep my
+word. See here--"
+
+Dexter turned to me.
+
+"You'll want to know how I escaped from the cursed death-trap at
+Hassan's house in Kent? I'll tell you. I was never in it! I
+was hiding and waiting my chance. You know what was left to guard
+the slipper while the Sheikh--rot him--was away looking after
+arrangements for getting his mob out of the country?"
+
+I nodded.
+
+"You fell into the trap--you and Carneta. By God! I didn't know
+till it was all over! But two minutes later I was inside that place
+--and three minutes later I was away with the slipper! Oh, it
+wasn't a duplicate; it was the goods! What then? Carneta had
+had a sickening of the business and she just invited me to say Yes
+or No. I said Yes; and I'm a straight man onward."
+
+"Then what were you doing on the train with the slipper?" asked
+Hilton sharply.
+
+"I was going to Liverpool, sir!" snapped The Stetson Man, turning
+on him. "I was going to try to get aboard the Mauretania and
+then make terms for my life! What happened? I slipped out at
+Birmingham for a drink--grip in hand! I put it down beside
+me, and Mr. Cavanagh here, all in a hustle, must have rushed in
+behind me, snatched a whisky and snatched my grip and started for
+H--!"
+
+A vivid flash of lightning flickered about the room. Then came
+the deafening boom of the thunder, right over the house it seemed.
+
+"I knew from the weight of the grip it wasn't mine," said Dexter,
+"and I was the most surprised guy in Great Britain and Ireland when
+I found whose it was! I opened it, of course! And right on top was
+a waistcoat and right in the first pocket was a telegram. Here it
+is!"
+
+He passed it to me. It was that which I had received from Hilton.
+I had packed the suit which I had been wearing that morning and
+must previously have thrust the telegram into the waistcoat pocket.
+
+"Providence!" Dexter assured me. "Because I got on the station in
+time to see Hassan of Aleppo join the train for H--! I was too late,
+though. But I chartered a taxi out on Corporation Street and
+invited the man to race the local! He couldn't do it, but we got
+here in time for the fireworks! Mr. Cavanagh, there are anything
+from six to ten Hashishin watching this house!"
+
+"I know it!"
+
+"They're bareheaded; and in the dark their shaven skulls look like
+nothing human. They're armed with those damned tubes, too. I'd
+give a thousand dollars--if I had it!--to know their mechanism.
+Well, gentlemen, deeds speak. What am I here for, when I might be
+on the way to Liverpool, and safety?"
+
+"You're here to try to make up for the past a bit!" said a soft,
+musical voice. "Mr. Cavanagh's life is in danger."
+
+Carneta entered the room.
+
+The light played in that wonderful hair of hers; and pale though she
+was, I thought I had never seen a more beautiful woman.
+
+"Tell them," she said quietly, "what must be done."
+
+Soar glanced at me out of the corner of his eyes and shifted
+uneasily. Hilton stared as if fascinated.
+
+"Now," rapped Dexter, in his strident voice, "putting aside all
+questions of justice and right (we're not policemen), what do we
+want--you and I, Mr. Cavanagh?"
+
+"I can't think clearly about anything," I said dully. "Explain
+yourself."
+
+"Very well. Inspector Bristol, C.I.D., would want me and Hassan
+arrested. I don't want that! What I want is peace; I want to be
+able to sleep in comfort; I want to know I'm not likely to be
+murdered on the next corner! Same with you?"
+
+"Yes--yes."
+
+"How can we manage it? One way would be to kill Hassan of Aleppo;
+but he wants a lot of killing--I've tried! Moreover, directly
+we'd done it, another Sheikh-al-jebal would be nominated and he'd
+carry on the bloody work. We'd be worse off than ever. Right!
+we've got to connive at letting the blood-stained fanatic escape,
+and we've got to give up the slipper!"
+
+"I'll do that with all my heart!"
+
+"Sure! But you and I have both got little scores up against Hassan,
+which it's not in human nature to forget. But I've got it worked
+out that there's only one way. It may nearly choke us to have to
+do it, I'll allow. I'm working on the Moslem character. Mr. Hilton,
+make up a fire in the grate here!"
+
+Hilton stared, not comprehending.
+
+"Do as he asks," I said. "Personally, I am resigned to mutilation,
+since I have touched the bag containing the slipper, but if
+Dexter has a plan--"
+
+"Excuse me, sir," Soar interrupted. "I believe there's some coal
+in the coal-box, but I shall have to break up a packing-case for
+firewood--or go out into the yard!"
+
+"Let it be the packing-case," replied Hilton hastily.
+
+Accordingly a fire was kindled, whilst we all stood about the room
+in a sort of fearful uncertainty; and before long a big blaze was
+roaring up the chimney. Dexter turned to me.
+
+"Mr. Cavanagh," said he, "I want you to go right upstairs, open a
+first-floor window--I would suggest that of your bedroom--and
+invite Hassan of Aleppo to come and discuss terms!"
+
+Silence followed his words; we were all amazed. Then--
+
+"Why do you ask me to do this?" I inquired.
+
+"Because," replied Dexter, "I happen to know that Hassan has some
+queer kind of respect for you--I don't know why."
+
+"Which is probably the reason why he tried to kill me to-night!"
+
+"That's beside the question, Mr. Cavanagh. He will believe you
+--which is the important point."
+
+"Very well. I have no idea what you have in mind but I am prepared
+to adopt any plan since I have none of my own. What shall I say?"
+
+"Say that we are prepared to return the slipper--on conditions."
+
+"He will probably try to shoot me as I stand at the window."
+
+Dexter shrugged his shoulders.
+
+"Got to risk it," he drawled.
+
+"And what are the conditions?"
+
+"He must come right in here and discuss them! Guarantee him safe
+conduct and I don't think he'll hesitate. Anyway, if he does, just
+tell him that the slipper will be destroyed immediately!"
+
+Without a word I turned on my heel and ascended the stairs.
+
+I entered my room, crossed to the window, and threw it widely open.
+Hovering over the distant hills I could see the ominous thunder
+cloud, but the storm seemed to have passed from "Uplands," and only
+a distant muttering with the faint dripping of water from the pipes
+broke the silence of the night. A great darkness reigned, however,
+and I was entirely unable to see if any one was in the orchard.
+
+Like some mueddin of fantastic fable I stood there.
+
+"Hassan!" I cried--"Hassan of Aleppo!"
+
+The name rang out strangely upon the stillness--the name which
+for me had a dreadful significance; but the whole episode seemed
+unreal, the voice that had cried unlike my voice.
+
+Instantly as any magician summoning an efreet I was answered.
+
+Out from the trees strode a tall figure, a figure I could not
+mistake. It was that of Hassan of Aleppo!
+
+"I hear, effendim, and obey," he said. "I am ready. Open the
+door!"
+
+"We are prepared to discuss terms. You may come and go safely"
+--still my voice sounded unfamiliar in my ears.
+
+"I know, effendim; it is so written. Open the door."
+
+I closed the window and mechanically descended the stairs.
+
+"Mind it isn't a trap!" cried Hilton, who, with the others, had
+overheard every word of this strange interview. "They may try to
+rush the door directly we open it."
+
+"I'll stand the chest behind it," said Soar; "between the door and
+the wall, so that only one can enter at a time."
+
+This was done, and the door opened.
+
+Alone, majestic, entered Hassan of Aleppo.
+
+He was dressed in European clothes but wore the green turban of a
+Sherif. With his snowy beard and coal-black eyes he seemed like a
+vision of the Prophet, of the Prophet in whose name he had committed
+such ghastly atrocities.
+
+Deigning no glance to Soar nor to Hilton, he paced into the room,
+passing me and ignoring Carneta, where Earl Dexter awaited him.
+I shall never forget the scene as Hassan entered, to stand looking
+with blazing eyes at The Stetson Man, who sat beside the fire
+with the slipper of Mohammed in his hand!
+
+"Hassan," said Dexter quietly, "Mr. Cavanagh has had to promise
+you safe conduct, or as sure as God made me, I'd put a bullet
+in you!"
+
+The Sheikh of the Hashishin glared fixedly at him.
+
+"Companion of the evil one," he said, "it is not written that I
+shall die by your hand--or by the hand of any here. But it has
+been revealed to me that to-night the gates of Paradise may be
+closed in my face."
+
+"I shouldn't be at all surprised," drawled Dexter. "But it's up
+to you. You've got to swear by Mohammed--"
+
+"Salla-'llahu 'aleyhi wasellem!"
+
+"That you won't lay a hand upon any living soul, or allow any of
+your followers to do so, who has touched the slipper or had
+anything to do with it, but that you will go in peace."
+
+"You are doomed to die!"
+
+"You don't agree, then?"
+
+"Those who have offended must suffer the penalty!"
+
+"Right!" said Dexter--and prepared to toss the slipper into the
+heart of the fire!
+
+"Stop! Infidel! Stop!"
+
+There was real agony in Hassan's voice. To my inexpressible
+surprise he dropped upon his knee, extending his lean brown hands
+toward the slipper.
+
+Dexter hesitated. "You agree, then?"
+
+Hassan raised his eyes to the ceiling.
+
+"I agree," he said. "Dark are the ways. It is the will of
+God. . ."
+
+Dimly the booming of the thunder came echoing back to us from the
+hills. Above its roll sounded a barbaric chanting to which the
+drums of angry heaven formed a fitting accompaniment.
+
+I heard Soar shooting the bolts again upon the going of our
+strange visitor.
+
+Faint and more faint grew the chanting, until it merged into the
+remote muttering of the storm--and was lost. The quest of the
+sacred slipper was ended.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg Etext of Quest of the Sacred Slipper, by Rohmer
+
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