Nude in Mink by Sax Rohmer (classic literature books txt) đ
- Author: Sax Rohmer
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Maitland found his voice.
âWhat would you doâassassinate them?â
âAssassinate them?â She waved her white fan languidly. âWhen one of your officers orders his troops to take a strongpoint held by the enemy, and all the defenders are killed, do you say that he has assassinated them? No. Dr. Maitland. I do not propose to assassinate; I propose to remove the ungracious, as by the surgeonâs knife, before it can spread and corrupt whole nations. But while greed, lust of power, big business, sway the destinies of men, there can be no peace. Only perfect minds in perfect bodies are fit for leadership. When beauty rules, serenity will return.â
Again Maitland heard his own voice, speaking as if from a long way off.
âThis is a dream.â
âOur present conversationâor my ideals? Neither are dreams. You are trying to recall where you have met me before. One day, perhaps, I will tell you âŠâ
A mist began to gather before Maitlandâs eyes, so that he no longer saw clearly the dais or the woman with the fan. The siren voice came to his ears from further and further away.
âIf you continue to obstruct my plans, I shall be forced to deal with you as I deal with all obstacles. For by doing this, you will have become discordant. And it is the holy mission of beauty to destroy ugliness âŠâ
Maitland became aware of a confused clamour like that of distant shouting âŠ
âYou must come and see me again, Dr. Maitlandâor perhaps I will come and see you. But cease to interfere with my plans. Sir Miles Tristram, you know, was a man of evil life. He was wholly unlovely. You must not allow his removal to disturb you. In order that a tree shall attain to perfect harmony, it is often necessary to cut away many disfiguring branches. There is no sin but ugliness. And death can sometimes be the one graceful act in an otherwise ugly lifeâŠâ
Then the musical tones which had enthralled Maitland faded like those of an Aeolian harp, and were gone. There was a floating mist before his eyesâthat, he thought, of the incense which now filled the space on the dais. It was clearing, however, by slow but perceptible degrees âŠ
2
âMaitland!â Donovan hardly recognised his own voice. âMaitland! Are you there? ⊠Maitland âŠâ
Donovan groped in darkness. Presently, he stumbled over somethingâand created a clatter of empty cans.
âWhere the devil am I!â he muttered. âIt was that damnable ⊠perfume⊠Maitland!â His voice rose to a harsh cry. âMaitland!â
But there was no reply.
Quite apart from the fact that he remained wildly uncertain about what had happened, in what dark place he now groped, there was something, something urgent, which he must do first⊠Claudette! Beyond doubt he had been followed to Jackie de Laraâs flat. Since his departure, what had occurred there?
Donovan found himself in a twilight sleep. What was fact âwhat mirage? Perhaps the things which had temporarily robbed him of sight, possessed the further property of making one peculiarly prone to hypnotic suggestion. Wherever the truth might lie, he was perfectly satisfied that he had neither dreamed nor imagined that unforgettable vision of Sumuru âfor that the woman with the peacock fan was Sumuru he had no doubt whatever.
Then, he had found himself in a large laboratoryâwith âDr. Worthingtonââand then, with Maitland, in a small, square room⊠Maitland had been taken away.
What happened next?
He could not remember! It was appalling. But he could not remember!
Was he still a prisoner?
He assured himself that his hands were free. He determined to grope his way to a wall, and then to follow it round until he came to a door. There was a strong smell of petrol. He set outâthen stood still.
âIs there anyone there?â came a distant cry.
âWhoâs that?â Donovan asked, huskily.
âI think I heard an answer, Inspector.â
Donovanâs heart gave a jump.
âWhoâs there?â he shouted.
âMr. Donovan! Is that you? Inspector Ives here!â
âIves? Thank God!â
âAre you free to move?â
âYesâbut swimmy.â
âCan you find the door, sir?â
âIâll try. But itâs pitch darkâŠâ
Donovan clutched his head. He must keep calm. What was it he had set out to do? Ah! of courseâto find a wall and follow it until he came to a door.
He set out cautiouslyâstumbled againâgroped around some obstacle, a cupboard, went on in the direction from which muffled voices came, and found a door.
âIâve found the door. But itâs locked!â
âAll right, Mr. Donovan,â came Ivesâs gruff assurance. âStand clear. Weâll soon have it open!â
Began a sound of wrenching and splintering, over which Donovan made his voice heard:
âIs Dr. Maitland there?â
âNo, sir, heâs not.â
âMy God! Theyâve got him!â
âStand clear. Here goes the door!â
Wrenching and splintering reached a crescendo, and the door gaped open to reveal a ring of police lamps, as if several giant cats crouched out here in the darkness. Inspector Ives stepped forward.
âThank heavens, Mr. Donovan! I didnât expectâerââ
âI didnât expect to be alive either! Thank you for this.â
âItâs Constable Kent, here, you have to thankânot me.â
Donovan shaded his eyes, peering from face to face.
âWhyâConstable!â he exclaimed. âAre you the man who helped me into Dr. Worthingtonâs car?â
Constable Kent grinned apologetically.
âIt was you dropping your hat that did it, Mr. Donovan. I may as well admit I wasnât satisfied with the whole thing, anyway. But when I phoned through, the inspector happened to be at the station. We got a move on!â
âThank God you did,â said Donovan. âI feel like a fly that has escaped from the web of a particularly dangerous spider! Butâwhere am I? And what time is it?â
âItâs almost exactly four a.m., sir.â Ives replied. âAs to where we are; weâre in the garage of a damaged and condemned house on Clapham Common! I had every division for miles around looking for that car in which you were carried off. Of course, thereâs no Worthington at the address in Grosvenor Place!â
âYouâre telling me!â
âNo trace was found until about half an hour ago. Then, a constable on duty on the Common noticed a car answering to the description pull up near here. He was too far away to see just what happened, and before he got here, the car had gone. The garage was lockedâbut he heard groans⊠We soon got busy.â
âInspector! That woman has Maitland! If we pull London down, we must find him!⊠Tell meâMiss Duquesne?â
There was a perceptible pause before Ives answered.
âSorry, Mr. Donovan! She left Miss de Laraâs flat shortly after you didââ
âWhat!â
âIâve interviewed Miss de Lara and she has described what occurred. It seems that shortly after you wentâof course, you fell into a trap: no one on my staff phoned youâthey heard knocking on the doorââ
âSurely they didnât openââ
âNo, they didnât. But Miss de Lara crept to the phoneâ and found it was dead.â
âLine cut?â
âNot at all. Much simpler.â Whoever phoned you just left his receiver off the hook. Thatâs all thatâs necessary to cut a line out! Well, the knocking stopped. There was a scurry on the stairs, and then a voice, which Miss de Lara described as âgentlemanly,â called out, âDonât be alarmed. This is Dr. Maitlandâ.â
âGood heavens! I begin to understand. She described this man?â
âCertainly. A tall man in a black overcoat, with a white muffler and wearing a soft black hat. âA bit of a dark âtacheâ she saidâand very keen eyesâ.â
âStop! stop!â Donovan, now, was nearly frantic. âDo you mean that Claudette went away with this man?â
âOf course she did. Why not? She thought he was your friend.â
âGod help us!â He grasped Ivesâs arm. âDo you recognise this person from his description?â
âI do, Mr. Donovan!â said Constable Kent.
âShe has gone away with the man who posed as âWorthingtonâ! Sumuru has Claudette, nowâas well as Maitland!â
âCOME in.â
âMr. Mark Donovan, sir.â
Donovan entered a small, neat room, where Chief Inspector Ives sat behind a large, neat desk. The door was closed behind him.
âGlad to welcome you to Scotland Yard, Mr. Donovan. Please sit down. But Iâm sorry I have no better news for you.â
Donovan sat down on a hard chair.
âThenâthereâs no trace of Miss Duquesne?⊠Nor of Dr. Maitland?â
âSorry, Mr. Donovanââ
âInspector Ives!â Donovan jumped upââThis inaction is driving me mad!â
âWe are not inactive, sir, I assure you,â said Ives, watching him sympathetically. âAt this present moment, a dozen men are hunting for the house described by Miss Duquesne. It canât have been very far from Bruton Street, as she ran there after her escapeââ
âIâm afraid she wonât escape a second time!â
Donovan forced himself to sit down again.
âDonât be so low spirited, sir! Scotland Yard canât be defied like thisâfor long. Hereâs a woman who commits cold-blooded murder, who abducts peopleâmen as well as girls âand all under the noses of the police! It wonât do, Mr. Donovanâit wonât do! I can only suppose sheâs mad.â
âMad or sane, sheâs a danger at least as great as Hitler was. If you saw her, heard her voice, you would understand. I have been in what she calls her Headquarters. Itâs a vast place. I didnât dream it. Itâs right thereâsomewhere near London.â
Ives, more nearly resembling an army officer than the traditional detective, rested his hands on the desk.
âMâyesâsomewhere near London. That covers a vast area, Mr. Donovan. Thereâs no doubt we are up against a gang that employs new methods. They take chances no ordinary criminal would dream of taking. But they have resources no ordinary criminal has, either. I should say this woman is a fanatical idealist with an enormous financial background.â
âSheâs a criminal genius.â
âLike enough. Sheâs a genius in a way that may not have occurred to you. I mean that from the point of view of a prosecution, we havenât a scrap of evidence! We have no case!â
âWhat!â
âItâs a fact. In the first place, we donât know who Sumuru is. We have only your testimonyâunsupportedâand the testimony of Miss Duquesne and Dr. Maitland (both missing) that such a person exists! A man was certainly murdered here in London, you were attacked and taken away to some house, and the others haveâdisappeared. But you donât know where this house is! As for the garage of the bomb-damaged property where we found you, any common crook could have got hold of a key to fit that. You were intended to be found there. For some reason or another, this woman didnât mean to detain you. If it comes to that, you canât even describe her!â
âI know I canât!â Donovan groaned. âNobody who has ever seen her has been able to describe Sumuru.â
âThatâs what I mean. You see how abominably clever, she is? No one can corroborate anotherâs evidence. Thereâs nothing to go to a jury. Then, thereâs this man who calls himself Worthingtonââ
âThe swine who had me blinded. Plenty of evidence there.â
âOf the outrage, yes. But not of the identity of Mr. Worthington. This man seems to be the same who called for Miss Duquesne, posing as Dr. Maitlandâwhom she had never met. A dangerous criminal. But who is he? We have no records, here, of such a person. He must be a foreign importation.â
âHe is Sumuruâs chief chemist. He told me so.â
âQuite. But no one heard him tell you! Bring him in here, and get him to repeat it. Then, we should know what to do!â
âThatâs your business, isnât it, Inspector?â
âA nasty one!⊠Weâre doing out best, Mr. Donovanââ
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