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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of In the Dark, by Ronal Kayser
+
+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: In the Dark
+
+Author: Ronal Kayser
+
+Release Date: June 1, 2010 [EBook #32638]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK IN THE DARK ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Sankar Viswanathan, Greg Weeks, and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+<div class="tr"><p class="center">Transcriber's Note:</p>
+<p class="center">This etext was produced from Weird Tales August-September 1936. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.</p></div>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;">
+<img class="img1" src="images/cover.jpg" width="400" height="608" alt="" title="" />
+</div>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<h1>In the Dark</h1>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<h2>By RONAL KAYSER</h2>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<div class="blockquot"><p><i>It was a tale of sheer horror that old Asa Gregg poured
+into the dictaphone</i></p></div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<div class="figleft"><img src="images/image_t1.jpg" alt="T" width="54" height="50" /></div>
+<p>he watchman's flashlight printed a white circle on the frosted-glass,
+black-lettered door:</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+GREGG CHEMICAL CO., MFRS.<br />
+ASA GREGG, PRES.<br />
+PRIVATE
+</p>
+
+<p>The watchman's hand closed on the knob, rattled the door in its frame.
+Queer, but tonight the sound had seemed to come from in there.... But
+that couldn't be. He knew that Mr. Gregg and Miss Carruthers carried
+the only keys to the office, so any intruder would have been forced to
+smash the lock.</p>
+
+<p>Maybe the sound came from the storage room. The watchman clumped along
+the rubber-matted corridor, flung his weight against that door. It
+opened hard, being of ponderous metal fitted into a cork casing. The
+room was an air-tight, fire-proof vault, really. His shoes gritted on
+the concrete floor as he prowled among the big porcelain vats. The
+flashlight bored through bluish haze to the concrete walls. Acid fumes
+escaping under the vat lids made the haze and seared the man's throat.</p>
+
+<p>He hurried out, coughing and wiping his eyes. It was damn funny. Every
+night lately he heard the same peculiar noise somewhere in this wing
+of the building.... Like a body groaning and turning in restless
+sleep, it was. It scared him. He didn't mention the mystery to anyone,
+though. He was an old man, and he didn't want Mr. Gregg to think he
+was getting too old for the job.</p>
+
+<p>"Asa 'd think I was crazy, if I told him about it," he mumbled.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+<div class="figleft"><img src="images/image_i.jpg" alt="I" width="19" height="40" /></div>
+<p>nside the office, Asa Gregg heard the muttered words plainly. He sat
+very still in the big, leather-cushioned chair, hardly breathing until
+the scrape of the watchman's feet had thinned away down the hall.
+There was no light in the room to betray him; only the cherry-colored
+tip of his cigar, which couldn't be visible through the frosted glass
+door. Anyway, it'd be an hour before the watchman's round brought him
+past the office again. Asa Gregg had that hour, if he could screw up
+his nerve to use it....</p>
+
+<p>He took the frayed end of the cigar from his mouth. His hand, which
+had wasted to mere skin and bone these past few months, groped through
+the darkness, slid over the polished coolness of the dictaphone hood,
+and snapped the switch. Machinery faintly whirred. His fingers found
+the tube, lifted it.</p>
+
+<p>"Miss Carruthers!" he snapped. Then he hesitated. Surely, he could
+trust Mary Carruthers! He'd never wondered about her before. She'd
+been his secretary for a dozen years&mdash;lately, since he couldn't look
+after affairs himself as he used to, she had practically run the
+business. She was forty, sensible, unbeautiful, and tight-lipped.
+Hell, he had to trust her!</p>
+
+<p>His voice plunged into the darkness.</p>
+
+<p>"What I have to say now is intended for Mrs. Gregg's ears only. She
+will take the first boat home, of course. Meet that boat and bring her
+to the office. Since my wife knows nothing about a dictaphone, it will
+be necessary for you to set this record running. As soon as you have
+done so, leave her alone in the room. Make sure she's not interrupted
+for a half-hour. That's all."</p>
+
+<p>He waited a decent interval. The invisible needle peeled its thread
+into the revolving wax cylinder.</p>
+
+<p>"Jeannette," muttered Asa Gregg, and hesitated again. This wasn't
+going to be easy to say. He decided to begin matter-of-factly. "As you
+probably know, my will and the insurance policies are in the vault at
+the First National. I believe you will find all of my papers in
+excellent order. If any questions arise, consult Miss Carruthers. What
+I have to say to you now is purely personal&mdash;I feel, my dear, that I
+owe you an explanation&mdash;that is&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>God, it came harder than he had expected.</p>
+
+<p>"Jeannette," he started in afresh, "you remember three years ago when
+I was in the hospital. You were in Palm Beach at the time, and I wired
+that there'd been an accident here at the plant. That wasn't strictly
+so. The fact is, I'd gotten mixed up with a girl&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>He paused, shivering. In the darkness a picture of Dot swam before
+him. The oval face, framed by gleaming swirls of lemon-tinted hair,
+had pouting scarlet lips, and eyes whose allure was intensified by
+violet make-up. The full-length picture of her included a streamlined,
+full-blossomed and yet delectably lithe body. A costly, enticing,
+Broadway-chorus orchid! As a matter of fact, that was where he'd found
+her.</p>
+
+<p>"I won't make any excuses for myself," Asa Gregg said harshly. "I
+might point out that you were always in Florida or Bermuda or France,
+and that I was a lonely man. But it wasn't just loneliness, and I
+didn't seek companionship. I thought I was making a last bow to
+Romance. I was successful, sixty, and silly, and I did all the damn
+fool things&mdash;I even wrote letters to her. Popsy-wopsy letters." The
+dictaphone couldn't record the grimace that jerked his lips. "She
+saved them, of course, and by and by she put a price on them&mdash;ten
+thousand dollars. Dot claimed that one of those filthy tabloids had
+offered her that much for them&mdash;and what was a poor working-girl to
+do? She lied. I knew that.</p>
+
+<p>"I told her to bring the letters to the office after business hours,
+and I'd take care of her. I took care of her, all right. I shot her,
+Jeannette!"</p>
+
+<p>He mopped his face with a handkerchief that was already damp.</p>
+
+<p>"Not on account of the money, you understand. It was the things she
+said, after she had tucked the bills into her purse ... vile things,
+about the way she had earned it ten times over by enduring my beastly
+kisses. I'd really loved that girl, and I'd thought she'd cared for me
+a little. It was her hate that maddened me, and I got the gun out of
+my desk drawer&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+<div class="figleft"><img src="images/image_a.jpg" alt="A" width="37" height="40" /></div>
+<p>sa Gregg reached through the darkness for the switch. He fumbled for
+the bottle which stood on the desk. His hand trembled, spilling some
+of the liquor onto his lap. He drank from the bottle....</p>
+
+<p>This part of the story he'd skip. It was too horrible, even to think
+about it. He didn't want to remember how the blood pooled inside Dot's
+fur coat, and how he'd managed to carry the body out of the office
+without leaking any of her blood onto the floor. He tried to forget
+the musky sweetness of the perfume on the dead girl, mingled with that
+other evil blood-smell. Especially he didn't want to remember the
+frightful time he'd had stripping the gold rings from her fingers, and
+the one gold tooth in her head....</p>
+
+<p>The horror of it coiled in the blackness about him. His own teeth
+rattled against the bottle when he gulped the second drink. He
+snapped the switch savagely, but when he spoke his voice cringed into
+the tube:</p>
+
+<p>"I carried her into the storage room. I got the lid off one of the
+acid tanks. The vat contained an acid powerful enough to destroy
+anything&mdash;except gold. In fact, the vat itself had to be lined with
+gold-leaf. I knew that in twenty-four hours there wouldn't be a
+recognizable body left, and in a week there wouldn't be anything at
+all. No matter what the police suspected, they couldn't prove a murder
+charge without a <i>corpus delicti</i>. I had committed the perfect
+crime&mdash;except for one thing. I didn't realize that there'd be a
+<i>splash</i> when she went into the vat."</p>
+
+<p>Gregg laughed, not pleasantly. His wife might think it'd been a sob,
+when she heard this record. "Now you understand why I went to the
+hospital," he jerked. "Possibly you'd call that poetic justice. Oh,
+God!"</p>
+
+<p>His voice broke. Again he thumbed off the switch, and mopped his face
+with the damp linen.</p>
+
+<p>The rest&mdash;how could he explain the rest of it?</p>
+
+<p>He spent a long minute arranging his thoughts.</p>
+
+<p>"You haven't any idea," he resumed, "no one has any idea, of how I've
+been punished for the thing I did. I don't mean the sheer physical
+agony&mdash;but the fear that I'd talk coming out of the ether at the
+hospital. The fear that she'd been traced to my office&mdash;I'd simply
+hidden her rings away, expecting to drop them into the river&mdash;or that
+she might have confided in her lover ... yes, she had one. Or, suppose
+a whopping big order came through and that tank was emptied the very
+next day. And I couldn't ask any questions&mdash;I didn't even know what
+was in the papers.</p>
+
+<p>"However, that part of it gradually cleared up. I quizzed Miss
+Carruthers, and learned that an unidentified female body had been
+fished out of the East River a few days after Dot disappeared. That's
+how the police 'solved' the case. I got rid of her rings. I ordered
+that vat left alone.</p>
+
+<p>"The other thing began about six months ago."</p>
+
+<p>A spasm contorted his face. His fingers ached their grip into the
+dictaphone tube.</p>
+
+<p>"Jeannette, you remember when I began to object to the radio, how I'd
+shout at you to turn it off in the middle of a program? You thought I
+was ill, and worried about business.... You were wrong. The thing that
+got me was <i>hearing her voice</i>&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>He gripped the cold cigar, chewed it. "It's very strange that you
+didn't notice it. No matter what station we dialed to, always that
+same voice came stealing into the room! But perhaps you did notice?
+You said, once or twice, that all those blues singers sounded alike!</p>
+
+<p>"And she was a blues singer.... It was she, all right, somewhere out
+in the ether, reminding me....</p>
+
+<p>"The next thing was&mdash;well, at first when I noticed it in the office I
+thought Miss Carruthers had suddenly taken up with young ideas. You
+see, I kept smelling perfume."</p>
+
+<p>And he smelled it now. It was like a miasma in the dark.</p>
+
+<p>"It isn't anything that Carruthers wears," he grated. "It comes
+from&mdash;yes, the storage room. I realized that about a month ago. Just
+after you sailed&mdash;one night I stayed late at the office, and I went in
+there.... It seemed to be strongest around the vat&mdash;<i>her</i> vat&mdash;and I
+lifted the lid.</p>
+
+<p>"The sweet, sticky musk-smell hit me like a blow in the face.</p>
+
+<p>"And that isn't all!"</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+<div class="figleft"><img src="images/image_t.jpg" alt="T" width="43" height="40" /></div>
+<p>error stalked in this room. Asa Gregg crouched in his chair, felt the
+weight of Fear on him like a submarine pressure. His cigar pitched to
+his knees, dropped to the floor.</p>
+
+<p>"You won't believe this, Jeannette." He hammered the words like nails
+into the darkness in front of him. "You will say that it's impossible.
+I know that. It <i>is</i> impossible. It is a physiological absurdity&mdash;it
+contradicts the laws of natural science.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>But I saw something on the bottom of that vat!</i>"</p>
+
+<p>He groped for the bottle. His wife would hear a long gurgle, and then
+a coughing gasp....</p>
+
+<p>"The vat was nearly full of this transparent, oily acid," he went on.
+"What I saw was a lot of sediment on the golden floor. And there
+shouldn't have been any sediment! The stuff utterly dissolves animal
+tissue, bone, even the common ores&mdash;keeps them in suspension.</p>
+
+<p>"It didn't look like sediment, either. It looked like a heap of mold ...
+grave-mold!</p>
+
+<p>"I replaced the lid. I spent a week convincing myself that it was all
+impossible, that I <i>couldn't</i> have seen anything of the sort. Then I
+went to the vat again&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Silence hung in the darkness while he sucked wind into his lungs. And
+the words burst&mdash;separate, yammering shrieks:</p>
+
+<p>"I looked, night after night! For hours at a time I've watched the
+change.... Did you ever see a body decompose? Of course not! Neither
+have I. But you must know in a general way what the process is. Well,
+this has been the exact opposite!</p>
+
+<p>"First, I stared at the heap of grave-mold as it shaped itself into
+<i>bones</i>, a skeleton.</p>
+
+<p>"I watched the coming of hair, a yellow tangle of it sprouting from
+the bare round skull, until&mdash;oh, God!&mdash;the flesh began making itself
+before my eyes! I couldn't bear any more. I stayed away&mdash;didn't come
+to the office for five days."</p>
+
+<p>The tube slipped from his sweating, slick fingers. Panting, Asa Gregg
+fumbled in the dark until he found it.</p>
+
+<p>Exhaustion, not self-control, flattened his voice to a deadly
+monotone. "I tried to think of a way out. If I could fish the corpse
+out of the tank! But I couldn't smuggle it out of the plant&mdash;alone.
+You know that, and so do I. Besides, what would be the use? If acid
+can't kill her, nothing can.</p>
+
+<p>"That's why I can't have the lid cemented on. It wouldn't do any good,
+either! Until three days ago, she hadn't the least color, looked as
+white as a ghost in the vat. A naked ghost, because there's been no
+resurrection for her clothing....</p>
+
+<p>"I've watched her limbs grow rosy! Her lips are scarlet! Her eyes are
+bright&mdash;they opened yesterday&mdash;and her breasts were rising and
+falling&mdash;oh, almost imperceptibly&mdash;but that was last night.</p>
+
+<p>"And tonight&mdash;I swear it&mdash;her lips moved! She muttered my name! She
+turned&mdash;she'd been lying on her side&mdash;over onto her back!"</p>
+
+<p>The record would be badly blurred. His hand shook violently, bobbled
+the tube against his lips. Gregg braced his elbow against the desk.</p>
+
+<p>"She isn't dead," he choked. "She's only asleep ... not very soundly
+asleep.... She's waking up!"</p>
+
+<p>The invisible needle quivered as it traced several noises. There was
+his tortured breathing, and the clawing of his fingernails rattling
+over the desk. The drawer clicked as it opened.</p>
+
+<p>The loud click was the cocking of the revolver.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Soon she's going to get out of that vat!</i>" Gregg bleated.
+"Jeannette, forgive me&mdash;God, forgive me&mdash;but I will not&mdash;I cannot&mdash;I
+dare not stay here to see her then!"</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+<div class="figleft"><img src="images/image_t.jpg" alt="T" width="43" height="40" /></div>
+<p>he sound of the shot brought the watchman stumbling along the
+corridor. He crashed against the office door. It banged open in a
+shower of falling frosted glass. The watchman's flashlight severed the
+darkness, and printed its white circle on the face of Asa Gregg.</p>
+
+<p>He had fallen back into the chair, a blackish gout of blood running
+from the hole in his temple. He stared sightlessly into the light with
+his eyes that were two gnarls of shrunken brown flesh, like knots in a
+pine board.</p>
+
+<p>Asa Gregg was blind ... had been, since that night three years past
+when the acid splashed....</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of In the Dark, by Ronal Kayser
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK IN THE DARK ***
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+</pre>
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+</body>
+</html>
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of In the Dark, by Ronal Kayser
+
+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: In the Dark
+
+Author: Ronal Kayser
+
+Release Date: June 1, 2010 [EBook #32638]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK IN THE DARK ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Sankar Viswanathan, Greg Weeks, and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Transcriber's Note:
+
+ This etext was produced from Weird Tales August-September 1936.
+ Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
+ copyright on this publication was renewed.
+
+
+ In the Dark
+
+
+ By RONAL KAYSER
+
+
+ _It was a tale of sheer horror that old Asa Gregg poured
+ into the dictaphone_
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+The watchman's flashlight printed a white circle on the frosted-glass,
+black-lettered door:
+
+ GREGG CHEMICAL CO., MFRS.
+ ASA GREGG, PRES.
+ PRIVATE
+
+The watchman's hand closed on the knob, rattled the door in its frame.
+Queer, but tonight the sound had seemed to come from in there.... But
+that couldn't be. He knew that Mr. Gregg and Miss Carruthers carried
+the only keys to the office, so any intruder would have been forced to
+smash the lock.
+
+Maybe the sound came from the storage room. The watchman clumped along
+the rubber-matted corridor, flung his weight against that door. It
+opened hard, being of ponderous metal fitted into a cork casing. The
+room was an air-tight, fire-proof vault, really. His shoes gritted on
+the concrete floor as he prowled among the big porcelain vats. The
+flashlight bored through bluish haze to the concrete walls. Acid fumes
+escaping under the vat lids made the haze and seared the man's throat.
+
+He hurried out, coughing and wiping his eyes. It was damn funny. Every
+night lately he heard the same peculiar noise somewhere in this wing
+of the building.... Like a body groaning and turning in restless
+sleep, it was. It scared him. He didn't mention the mystery to anyone,
+though. He was an old man, and he didn't want Mr. Gregg to think he
+was getting too old for the job.
+
+"Asa 'd think I was crazy, if I told him about it," he mumbled.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Inside the office, Asa Gregg heard the muttered words plainly. He sat
+very still in the big, leather-cushioned chair, hardly breathing until
+the scrape of the watchman's feet had thinned away down the hall.
+There was no light in the room to betray him; only the cherry-colored
+tip of his cigar, which couldn't be visible through the frosted glass
+door. Anyway, it'd be an hour before the watchman's round brought him
+past the office again. Asa Gregg had that hour, if he could screw up
+his nerve to use it....
+
+He took the frayed end of the cigar from his mouth. His hand, which
+had wasted to mere skin and bone these past few months, groped through
+the darkness, slid over the polished coolness of the dictaphone hood,
+and snapped the switch. Machinery faintly whirred. His fingers found
+the tube, lifted it.
+
+"Miss Carruthers!" he snapped. Then he hesitated. Surely, he could
+trust Mary Carruthers! He'd never wondered about her before. She'd
+been his secretary for a dozen years--lately, since he couldn't look
+after affairs himself as he used to, she had practically run the
+business. She was forty, sensible, unbeautiful, and tight-lipped.
+Hell, he had to trust her!
+
+His voice plunged into the darkness.
+
+"What I have to say now is intended for Mrs. Gregg's ears only. She
+will take the first boat home, of course. Meet that boat and bring her
+to the office. Since my wife knows nothing about a dictaphone, it will
+be necessary for you to set this record running. As soon as you have
+done so, leave her alone in the room. Make sure she's not interrupted
+for a half-hour. That's all."
+
+He waited a decent interval. The invisible needle peeled its thread
+into the revolving wax cylinder.
+
+"Jeannette," muttered Asa Gregg, and hesitated again. This wasn't
+going to be easy to say. He decided to begin matter-of-factly. "As you
+probably know, my will and the insurance policies are in the vault at
+the First National. I believe you will find all of my papers in
+excellent order. If any questions arise, consult Miss Carruthers. What
+I have to say to you now is purely personal--I feel, my dear, that I
+owe you an explanation--that is----"
+
+God, it came harder than he had expected.
+
+"Jeannette," he started in afresh, "you remember three years ago when
+I was in the hospital. You were in Palm Beach at the time, and I wired
+that there'd been an accident here at the plant. That wasn't strictly
+so. The fact is, I'd gotten mixed up with a girl----"
+
+He paused, shivering. In the darkness a picture of Dot swam before
+him. The oval face, framed by gleaming swirls of lemon-tinted hair,
+had pouting scarlet lips, and eyes whose allure was intensified by
+violet make-up. The full-length picture of her included a streamlined,
+full-blossomed and yet delectably lithe body. A costly, enticing,
+Broadway-chorus orchid! As a matter of fact, that was where he'd found
+her.
+
+"I won't make any excuses for myself," Asa Gregg said harshly. "I
+might point out that you were always in Florida or Bermuda or France,
+and that I was a lonely man. But it wasn't just loneliness, and I
+didn't seek companionship. I thought I was making a last bow to
+Romance. I was successful, sixty, and silly, and I did all the damn
+fool things--I even wrote letters to her. Popsy-wopsy letters." The
+dictaphone couldn't record the grimace that jerked his lips. "She
+saved them, of course, and by and by she put a price on them--ten
+thousand dollars. Dot claimed that one of those filthy tabloids had
+offered her that much for them--and what was a poor working-girl to
+do? She lied. I knew that.
+
+"I told her to bring the letters to the office after business hours,
+and I'd take care of her. I took care of her, all right. I shot her,
+Jeannette!"
+
+He mopped his face with a handkerchief that was already damp.
+
+"Not on account of the money, you understand. It was the things she
+said, after she had tucked the bills into her purse ... vile things,
+about the way she had earned it ten times over by enduring my beastly
+kisses. I'd really loved that girl, and I'd thought she'd cared for me
+a little. It was her hate that maddened me, and I got the gun out of
+my desk drawer----"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Asa Gregg reached through the darkness for the switch. He fumbled for
+the bottle which stood on the desk. His hand trembled, spilling some
+of the liquor onto his lap. He drank from the bottle....
+
+This part of the story he'd skip. It was too horrible, even to think
+about it. He didn't want to remember how the blood pooled inside Dot's
+fur coat, and how he'd managed to carry the body out of the office
+without leaking any of her blood onto the floor. He tried to forget
+the musky sweetness of the perfume on the dead girl, mingled with that
+other evil blood-smell. Especially he didn't want to remember the
+frightful time he'd had stripping the gold rings from her fingers, and
+the one gold tooth in her head....
+
+The horror of it coiled in the blackness about him. His own teeth
+rattled against the bottle when he gulped the second drink. He
+snapped the switch savagely, but when he spoke his voice cringed into
+the tube:
+
+"I carried her into the storage room. I got the lid off one of the
+acid tanks. The vat contained an acid powerful enough to destroy
+anything--except gold. In fact, the vat itself had to be lined with
+gold-leaf. I knew that in twenty-four hours there wouldn't be a
+recognizable body left, and in a week there wouldn't be anything at
+all. No matter what the police suspected, they couldn't prove a murder
+charge without a _corpus delicti_. I had committed the perfect
+crime--except for one thing. I didn't realize that there'd be a
+_splash_ when she went into the vat."
+
+Gregg laughed, not pleasantly. His wife might think it'd been a sob,
+when she heard this record. "Now you understand why I went to the
+hospital," he jerked. "Possibly you'd call that poetic justice. Oh,
+God!"
+
+His voice broke. Again he thumbed off the switch, and mopped his face
+with the damp linen.
+
+The rest--how could he explain the rest of it?
+
+He spent a long minute arranging his thoughts.
+
+"You haven't any idea," he resumed, "no one has any idea, of how I've
+been punished for the thing I did. I don't mean the sheer physical
+agony--but the fear that I'd talk coming out of the ether at the
+hospital. The fear that she'd been traced to my office--I'd simply
+hidden her rings away, expecting to drop them into the river--or that
+she might have confided in her lover ... yes, she had one. Or, suppose
+a whopping big order came through and that tank was emptied the very
+next day. And I couldn't ask any questions--I didn't even know what
+was in the papers.
+
+"However, that part of it gradually cleared up. I quizzed Miss
+Carruthers, and learned that an unidentified female body had been
+fished out of the East River a few days after Dot disappeared. That's
+how the police 'solved' the case. I got rid of her rings. I ordered
+that vat left alone.
+
+"The other thing began about six months ago."
+
+A spasm contorted his face. His fingers ached their grip into the
+dictaphone tube.
+
+"Jeannette, you remember when I began to object to the radio, how I'd
+shout at you to turn it off in the middle of a program? You thought I
+was ill, and worried about business.... You were wrong. The thing that
+got me was _hearing her voice_----"
+
+He gripped the cold cigar, chewed it. "It's very strange that you
+didn't notice it. No matter what station we dialed to, always that
+same voice came stealing into the room! But perhaps you did notice?
+You said, once or twice, that all those blues singers sounded alike!
+
+"And she was a blues singer.... It was she, all right, somewhere out
+in the ether, reminding me....
+
+"The next thing was--well, at first when I noticed it in the office I
+thought Miss Carruthers had suddenly taken up with young ideas. You
+see, I kept smelling perfume."
+
+And he smelled it now. It was like a miasma in the dark.
+
+"It isn't anything that Carruthers wears," he grated. "It comes
+from--yes, the storage room. I realized that about a month ago. Just
+after you sailed--one night I stayed late at the office, and I went in
+there.... It seemed to be strongest around the vat--_her_ vat--and I
+lifted the lid.
+
+"The sweet, sticky musk-smell hit me like a blow in the face.
+
+"And that isn't all!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Terror stalked in this room. Asa Gregg crouched in his chair, felt the
+weight of Fear on him like a submarine pressure. His cigar pitched to
+his knees, dropped to the floor.
+
+"You won't believe this, Jeannette." He hammered the words like nails
+into the darkness in front of him. "You will say that it's impossible.
+I know that. It _is_ impossible. It is a physiological absurdity--it
+contradicts the laws of natural science.
+
+"_But I saw something on the bottom of that vat!_"
+
+He groped for the bottle. His wife would hear a long gurgle, and then
+a coughing gasp....
+
+"The vat was nearly full of this transparent, oily acid," he went on.
+"What I saw was a lot of sediment on the golden floor. And there
+shouldn't have been any sediment! The stuff utterly dissolves animal
+tissue, bone, even the common ores--keeps them in suspension.
+
+"It didn't look like sediment, either. It looked like a heap of mold ...
+grave-mold!
+
+"I replaced the lid. I spent a week convincing myself that it was all
+impossible, that I _couldn't_ have seen anything of the sort. Then I
+went to the vat again----"
+
+Silence hung in the darkness while he sucked wind into his lungs. And
+the words burst--separate, yammering shrieks:
+
+"I looked, night after night! For hours at a time I've watched the
+change.... Did you ever see a body decompose? Of course not! Neither
+have I. But you must know in a general way what the process is. Well,
+this has been the exact opposite!
+
+"First, I stared at the heap of grave-mold as it shaped itself into
+_bones_, a skeleton.
+
+"I watched the coming of hair, a yellow tangle of it sprouting from
+the bare round skull, until--oh, God!--the flesh began making itself
+before my eyes! I couldn't bear any more. I stayed away--didn't come
+to the office for five days."
+
+The tube slipped from his sweating, slick fingers. Panting, Asa Gregg
+fumbled in the dark until he found it.
+
+Exhaustion, not self-control, flattened his voice to a deadly
+monotone. "I tried to think of a way out. If I could fish the corpse
+out of the tank! But I couldn't smuggle it out of the plant--alone.
+You know that, and so do I. Besides, what would be the use? If acid
+can't kill her, nothing can.
+
+"That's why I can't have the lid cemented on. It wouldn't do any good,
+either! Until three days ago, she hadn't the least color, looked as
+white as a ghost in the vat. A naked ghost, because there's been no
+resurrection for her clothing....
+
+"I've watched her limbs grow rosy! Her lips are scarlet! Her eyes are
+bright--they opened yesterday--and her breasts were rising and
+falling--oh, almost imperceptibly--but that was last night.
+
+"And tonight--I swear it--her lips moved! She muttered my name! She
+turned--she'd been lying on her side--over onto her back!"
+
+The record would be badly blurred. His hand shook violently, bobbled
+the tube against his lips. Gregg braced his elbow against the desk.
+
+"She isn't dead," he choked. "She's only asleep ... not very soundly
+asleep.... She's waking up!"
+
+The invisible needle quivered as it traced several noises. There was
+his tortured breathing, and the clawing of his fingernails rattling
+over the desk. The drawer clicked as it opened.
+
+The loud click was the cocking of the revolver.
+
+"_Soon she's going to get out of that vat!_" Gregg bleated.
+"Jeannette, forgive me--God, forgive me--but I will not--I cannot--I
+dare not stay here to see her then!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The sound of the shot brought the watchman stumbling along the
+corridor. He crashed against the office door. It banged open in a
+shower of falling frosted glass. The watchman's flashlight severed the
+darkness, and printed its white circle on the face of Asa Gregg.
+
+He had fallen back into the chair, a blackish gout of blood running
+from the hole in his temple. He stared sightlessly into the light with
+his eyes that were two gnarls of shrunken brown flesh, like knots in a
+pine board.
+
+Asa Gregg was blind ... had been, since that night three years past
+when the acid splashed....
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of In the Dark, by Ronal Kayser
+
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