Nude in Mink by Sax Rohmer (classic literature books txt) đ
- Author: Sax Rohmer
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ââNo,â I told her, âexcept that itâs so foggy! I donât know where we are at all. And thereâs something that has puzzled me very much, Jean. Why were we given new passports at that place?â
ââOfficial red tape, I expect, dear!â
ââOfficial red tape? But the warâs long over and done with. Why the new passports? You have carried them both. I have never seen mine. What do they say?â
âJean stared for a moment, and then said, âNothing much, Claudette. They must be in order. We got through everywhere without trouble, didnât we?â
âThat was true enough, and so I said no more. Presently, the car pulled up before quite an imposing mansion, and the chauffeur, a very dark and very powerful man, with simply enormous shoulders, was joined by someone I supposed to be an Arab butler. He had a face as though it had been carved out of ivory, and a perpetual smile.â
Claudette gave a convincing imitation of this manâs voice and mannerisms âŠ
ââBe pleased to follow me, ladiesâŠâ
âI said aside to Jean, âWhat an extraordinary looking creature! He appears to be walking in his sleep! Is heâa sort of butler?â
ââI suppose so,â Jean said.
ââYour things will be taken to your rooms, ladies,â he intoned. âYou must be exhausted after your tiring journey. Allow me to offer you cocktailsâor a glass of wine?â
ââOooh!â Jean squealed (she appeared to be terribly excited.) âChampagne?â
âWell, we had the champagne, and I must say it was delightful. I heard Jean say, âWe have evidently come to the right place!â and then, her words seemed to be echoedâover and over again.
ââTo the right placeâŠ
ââRight placeâŠ
ââCome to the right placeâŠâ
âI remember whispering, âJean! Jean! I feel ill! I believe I am going toâŠâ
âAnd Jeanâs voice went on, âThe right place⊠right place⊠right placeâŠâ
âI simply canât remember a thing after that; and I canât truly say if I dreamed or only half-dreamed what happened next. But I heard, or I imagined that I heard, Jeanâs voice saying, âHere she is, Our Lady. Was I right about her?â
âTwo eyes were looking at me.â Claudette extended her hands in a gesture which implied bewilderment. âI donât know if I can make you understand what I mean. But all I could see (or all I can remember) was just two eyes. They were wonderful eyes, but they seemed to hurt me, to hurt something deep, deep inside meâperhaps my spirit. I feltâ because I couldnât really seeâthat those eyes were examining me all over, from head to foot. And then I heard another voice made me really wake up. But I know, now, that I wondering if Sarah Bernhardt, whom my father raved about, had spoken like that. It said:
ââYou were right, child. She is accepted. I leave her in your charge âŠâ
âI thought at the time that the sound of this glorious voice made me really wake up. But I know, now, that I must have wakened some time later. I found myself in bed, in a charming little roomâwith not a shred of clothing on!â
Again that faint blush touched Claudetteâs cheeks and was gone.
âThere was only one bedside lamp burning, and the house seemed quite still. I got up and searched for my frock, my shoes, my stockings. But there was nothing of the kind in the room; only a pair of fur-trimmed slippers. At first, this seemed incomprehensibleâand then I grasped the idea. It was to prevent my attempting to go out!
âWellâI got angry. The door was not locked. I suppose she thought this unnecessary. I looked out on to a landing.
âIt was empty.
âI went along to the end and looked down into the entrance hall, Which I remembered. There was no one there, and I could hear no sound. What I should have done next I donât know, but, thrown over the post at the foot of the stair I saw a magnificent mink cape. Then, I made up my mind.
âI crept down and wrapped myself in the cape. Itâs in Jackieâs wardrobe, now. (It has a strange but very faint perfume which I never smelled before.) I opened the front door. I was afraid to close it behind me when I slipped out as I should have had to bang it.
âI just turned to the right, and ran!â
Claudette caught her breath and clenched her hands.
âWere you followed?â
âYes. I hadnât gone far (I donât quite know where I was) when I heard someone running after me. I groped along, and felt iron railings, and presently a gate. I pushed it open âand nearly fell down the area steps to which it led! But this saved me.
âA manâa heavy manâI think it was the chauffeurâ went racing past. I came out and ran across the street. I was beginning to feel dreadfully swimmy. It was the effects of whatever they had given me. I moved along, struggling to walk steadily, and presently I heard regular, heavy footsteps. Their sound reassured me: I was certain they were not the steps of any of Our Ladyâs men.
âI was right. A constable came up. I tried to speak naturally when I asked him to direct me to Bruton Street. I knew that Aunt Margaretâs flat could not be far away, but I was hopelessly confused. He showed me I was at the corner of George Street, and so no distance from it. When I got there, I found the outside door open, andââ
âCome on, you two love birds!â cried Jackie. âSupperâs ready. If you donât want to eat, I do!â
And even as she spoke, Donovan rememberedâas a man awakened from trance recalls reality.
âGood heavens! Look at the time! I had no idea. Jackie. I just hate to seem ungrateful, but there is something wrong! Maitland should have been here hours agoâŠâ
He hurried across to the phone and dialled his own number.
âCome on, Claudette!â snapped Jackie. âLeave him to his old âphoning!â
âHullo! Hullo! Maitland? Donovan here⊠Whatâs that?⊠Is that Inspector Ives?â
And Ivesâs voice replied, âIt is, sir! Thank the Lord you phoned. We didnât know where you were, except Shepherd MarketâŠâ
âButâDr. Maitlandââ
âWeâve just broken into the flat, sir. Heâs not here. But there are signs of a tremendous struggle in the lobbyâ
Then, Donovan knew, and his voice became a groan.
âMy God! Sumuru has got Maitland!â
2
Donovan was dazed momentarily, by recognition of that appalling factâSumuru had Maitland. His first impulse was to cry the bad news aloud; his second, to repress itâfor Claudetteâs sake. He recovered his composure, and rejoined the two girls. âMaitland isnât back, yet,â was all he said.
Then a hundred doubts, regrets, projects, jostling one another in his brain, he made a pretence of eating.
The phone bell rang.
âOooh!â Jackie exclaimed. âMade me jump â
âIt may be for me, Jackie,â said Donovan, quietly.
Jackie put down her coffee cup and went out into the lobby.
âIâll see, Mark.â They heard her voice, muffled in the cubby-hole, then: âYes! It is for you. Itâs â.he police!â
Donovan stood up, avoiding Claudetteâs glance, and went over to the phone.
âRight. Thanks, Jackie.â He raised the receiver. âMark Donovan here. Is that Inspector Ives? Line isnât too clear. What name? Sergeant Bettes? Speaking for Inspector Ives? I see.â
He listened in a puzzled way to the message.
âBut surely it would be unwise for me to return to Bruton Street and leave Miss Duquesne and her friend here alone, wouldnât it?⊠Oh, I see what you mean⊠The men are already posted? WellâI suppose I must, if thatâs Inspector Ivesâs plan ⊠Right. Good-bye.â
He replaced the receiver and walked back, as Jackie was saying: âBut, Claudette, who is this woman, Sumuru? And whatâs her game?â
âI donât know what she is, Jackie. But she has great secret influenceââ
Then, as Donovan came in, both girls turned to him, and Jackie asked, âWhatâs up, Mark? Has something gone wrong?â
âIt isnât,â Claudette whisperedââDr. Maitland? They havenât foundââ
âThereâs no news of him, Claudette, yet But Inspector Ives has changed his plan. Now, please listen carefully. This building is surrounded by the police! It seems that some of Sumuruâs people are in the neighbourhoodâbut well hidden. I am to set out for my flat in Bruton Street, and Ives hopes that when Iâm seen to leave they will come out into the open. Do you follow?â
âDo you mean,â Claudette asked⊠âleave us hereâŠ?â
âWe can lock ourselves in,â Jackie remarked.
âThatâs true,â Donovan agreed. âBut all the same you donât know, as poor Claudette knows, just what we are up against. Itâs because Sumuru is hot on her trail that the police are surrounding this building now. Sumuru knows Claudette is here!â
âMark! Itâs terrifyingâŠâ
âShucks!â Jackie cut inââIâm not scared. The inspector is counting on you, Mark, so finish your coffee and off you go. Iâll bolt the door after you. I seem to have walked into the middle of another war!â
âThank you, Jackieâand Claudetteâfor heavenâs sake be very careful. On no account open the door to anyone except to Inspector Ives.â He took his hat and coat. âThank you again, Jackie. Youâre a brick. Shut the door the moment Iâm out.â
And with one long, hungry look at Claudette, Mark Donovan went outâand heard the door closed and bolted behind him.
He groped his way down the dark stair and out into the street.
âWhoâs there?â
A dim figure was discernible some three paces away.
âQuiet, sir! Push on! Police!â
âThank God for that!â Donovan murmured, and went on his way with renewed confidence.
He was a man with a mission in life. Whilst Maitlandâs remarkable statements and the ghastly death of Sir Miles Tristram had gone far to convince him that some rare evil threatened civilisation, the impact of these grotesque happenings had, at the same time, deadened imagination. The menace of Sumuru had remained remote, abstract. Now, it was intimate, vital.
Not only Maitland, but Claudette lay in the toils of this incalculable womanâand so Sumuru was become Donovanâs personal enemy. (Although Claudette had never heard that name, there could be little room for doubt regarding the identity of âOur Lady.â) What lay behind it all, what ultimate aim Sumuru held in view, Donovan found it impossible even to guess.
ButâMaitland was missing: Claudette was marked down. This was sufficient.
Fired with that holy rage which once had fired the Crusaders, Donovan set out for Bruton Street. He had something to tell Ives which would surprise him. Clearly enough, Sumuru already had a considerable organisation. How, otherwise, could she have abducted Claudette from under the noses of the French authorities, and, quietly eliminating her identity, have had her safely transferred to a house in London?
She had agents in unsuspected quarters; witness, the behaviour of the girl called Jean Barlow. And that very night Donovan determined, the house in question should be raided by Scotland Yard: small trouble to find it, in spite of Claudetteâs hazy memory on this point.
So that he had plenty to think about, but a hopeful heart as he strode along the streets. He did not believe that Sumuru would dare to harm Maitland.
Pedestrians seemed to be even fewer in number than usual. Perhaps this was because of threatening rain-clouds which had come banking from the West. Donovan looked up.
A plane was crossing almost directly overhead. He could see its navigation lights. He thoughts of the nights he had known in London, when the sound of a plane would almost certainly have meant that soon there would be rainfallâa rainfall of bombs.
The atmosphere was vaporous. The lights looked like a veiled eye peering
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