Nude in Mink by Sax Rohmer (classic literature books txt) đ
- Author: Sax Rohmer
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He began dreaming again about that wondrous meeting with ClaudetteâClaudette of the deep violet eyes. He put up a silent prayer that she be spared from further harm, and granted happinessâwith him.
Then came the rain. It was almost tropical, that sudden downpour. In a matter of seconds the gutters were turned into cataracts. Donovan hurried, to try to reach shelter, and heard someone hurrying behind him. He stepped aside to avoid a collision with this person, who seemed to be running at racing speedâand plunged one foot into three inches of water.
âDamn!â he exclaimed, feeling his trouser leg saturated.
He stepped back on to the sidewalk. A second runner was following the first. And the first, a heavy; squat figure, bore right down upon him. A flash of bluish light shot straight into his eyes from what looked like a flashlamp.
Donovan staggered, stifled a scream of pain, and groped blindly for something to hang on to. Vaguely, he was aware of swift footsteps, in retreat. He grasped an iron railing.
He had been blinded! Someoneâfor no possible reason âhad deliberately blinded him by means of some device carried in a flashlamp.
Clinging to the iron railingsâthe pain in his eyes was agonisingâhe tried to think. The rain, now, was a deluge. What could he do? Should he shout for help? And then he became aware of footsteps againâthis time, approaching. Next, of a car moving slowly.
âTaxi! Hi! Taxi!â he shouted hoarsely.
Not only could he see nothing; he was beginning to feel faint and dizzy.
His shout was answered by a manâs voice. But it wasnât the voice of a taxi driver.
âIs something wrong? This isnât a taxi. But I shall be only too glad to give you a liftâŠâ
More footsteps. He had learnt to know them. A London policeman was coming along. He must think, he must think!
âConstable!â he called.
But that other, suave voice, drowned his own.
âIâm afraid, Constable, this poor fellow has had one over the eight.â
Donovan released his grip on the railings. His hat fell off. He swayed, and clutched widely to recover his hold. The smooth voice went on, as a firm grip steadied him:
âFortunately, I happen to know his address. Itâs in my direction. Iâll drop him home with pleasure. Dâyou mind lending me a hand, Officer?â
âVery good of you, sir. Okay.â
Donovanâs brain was now swimming. Between pain, frustration, and a deadly nausea, he was beyond speech. He felt himself being lifted into a car. Dimly, he heard:
âWhat is his address, sir? I ought to have that.â
âNumber fourteen, Grosvenor Place, Constable. I live only a block away. Number twenty-four. My name is WorthingtonâŠâ
A door banged. Donovan knew no more about it.
But the constable stood looking after the departing car and scratching his chin thoughtfully. It was raining as hard as ever and he was drenched, but he paused, looking about himâand saw Donovanâs hat lying a yard away.
He stooped, picked it up, shoot the wet from the brim, and shone a light inside.
On the leather band he read:
âMark Donovan. Alliance Press Association. Greystone House, Fleet StreetâŠâ
3
Caspar stood before My Lady, his lids lowered, but his glance absorbing the scarcely veiled outlines of her perfect body. His sleepy eyes were not asleep.
âMy orders concerning Claudette Duquesne have been carried out?â
âYes, Madonna.â
âSend Philo to me.â
âAt once.â
Caspar withdrew, walking like a somnambulist. And presently came echoing calls, diminishing in volume.
âPhilo⊠PhiloâŠâ
Then, further away: âPhilo⊠PhiloâŠâ
Philo crossed the marble floor with those lithe, catlike steps, to stand, eyes also downcast, before the woman on the dais.
âMy Lady?â
âBe seated there, Philo, and make your report.â
Philo sat on an Egyptian stool, inclining his dark head obediently.
âYes, Madonna. Abdul and I intercepted the American journalist. We used the blue light.â
âHe went with Ariosto?â
âHe did, My Lady. But a constable helped to get him into the carâwhere Varro took charge of him.â
âProper precautions were taken to ensure that the car could not be traced?â
âAll precautions. Madonna.â
âWhere is he now?â
âIn the laboratory, Madonna.â
âLeave me. I shall consider what must be done nextâŠâ
DONOVANâS emotions during that journey he could never afterwards adequately describe. That he was being taken to his own execution he did not doubt. His mental faculties had been rendered vague by the action of that awful blue glare which had been shone into his eyes. His sight had apparently gone for ever.
He was in the hands of Sumuru!
Whether or not rigor Kubus would supervene he had no means of learning. But he feared the worst. It was almost certain, he saw now, that he had been followed to Shepherd Marketâand he could not bear to think of the fate of Claudetteânor the fate of Maitland⊠Maitlandâs fearful respect for the genius of Sumuru was justified. If the woman be worthy of her hirelings, then indeed she was a criminal genius.
Even as Donovan sat there in darkness, helpless in the powerful grasp of the man who sat beside him, he found it hard to believe that he had been drugged in a Mayfair street and kidnapped with the assistance of the Metropolitan police!
âNumber fourteen, Grosvenor Place⊠My name is Worthington âŠâ
The cool resourcefulness of the man who called himself Worthington marked him for a highly accomplished rogue. One thing, and one thing only, might turn the tablesâthe constable might go to the trouble to check up. No doubt he would include this incident in his report. ThenâScotland Yard would move.
But could they move in time?
There came a sort of hiatus, haunted by distant bells⊠âNumber fourteen⊠ding-dong⊠Grosvenor Place⊠ding-dongâŠâ Then followed a sudden, acute keenness of smell. Donovan became aware of an intolerably heavy perfume. But he could not identify itâŠ
He thought that he was facing a long, low wall, a wall covered by a piece of Oriental tapestry. Seeming to observe that its character was changing in some subtle way, he found himself studying this tapestry intently. Its design was conventional Chinese, representing dragons and a pagoda, but, as he watched, these dragons appeared to move, insidiously, and the pagoda to become mysteriously lighted. The gold of the dragon scales glittered like real gold and then grew red as though molten. The pagoda receded into uttermost distance, until, as he continued to gaze, he thought that it stood on the edge of a vast golden plain peopled with fiery dragons and so far away that now it became impossible to make it out even as a pin point.
And as his gaze was drawn on further and further into this moving design, so he, himself, began bodily to follow.
He stepped into the tapestry!
In no other way could he have described what happened. The fiery dragons slithered away before his advancing footsteps, noiselessly, like lizards in the desert sand. The illuminated pagoda no longer seemed inaccessible, for in a few strides he had reached it. Gently tinkling bells greeted his approach and he entered through a cloud of incense to find himself confronting a decorated shrine.
Upon a lacquered couch set upon a dais, a woman reclined, fanning herself. She wore a white robe of Grecian simplicity bordered with gold, and her long fan was composed of white peacock feathers. Donovan knew, without being able to analyse his impressions, that this woman was more wonderful than any he had known. He could not have said why, nor in what way.
âSo you are Mark Donovan âŠâ
Had she vanished at that moment he could not have described her. He could never describe her, afterwards; for no one had ever been able to describe the Marquise Sumuru. But he could never forget her voice âŠ
He awoke from this dream (if it had been a dream) to find himself in what looked like a hospital.
And he could see!
The man whom he knew, when he spoke, to be âWorthington,â stood watching him. He wore a white coat.
âQuite restored? Donât worry about your eyes. The effect of 365 is quite transient.â
âGlad to hear it.â
âStill feel a bit swimmy?â
âI feel fit to knock your block off!â
âAh, well! We shall no doubt get to know one another better.â
âWhen you get to know me youâll be surprised,â Donovan snapped. âIs this a private insane asylum youâve run me into?â
âNot at all.â The man began to remove his white jacket. âIt is the experimental laboratory attached to Our Ladyâs London headquarters. I am in charge of it. Experiments are proceeding here, Mr. Donovan, which would stagger your American scientistsâso called.â
âI bet they would.â
âHumanity is faced with only two alternatives, you see. Complete, and speedy, destruction, or complete, and speedy, reconstruction. Our Lady plans to reconstruct mankind. I regret keeping you under restraint. You have only to give me a promise of good behaviour and I will free you at once.â
âCanât be done,â said Donovan quietly.
He had discovered that his hands were tied together.
âYou owe your present circumstances entirely to your friend Dr. Steel Maitland. This man imagines that he has a sacred mission to destroy the work of Our Lady Sumuru. Others have thought this, Mr. Donovan. They might as well attempt to destroy the Himalayas. But if you will follow me (you insist on keeping your hands tied?âvery well?)âyou can talk over the position with Dr. Maitlandââ
âMaitland! Maitland is here?ââ The words were jerked out of Donovan almost against his will.
âYou are fellow guests of Our Lady. Please follow me closely. Some of our laboratory equipment is delicateâand dangerous.â
âDr. Worthingtonâ had replaced the white jacket with a black coat, and was moving towards the shadows. Donovan stood up, and followedâŠ
âA beautiful culture here, Mr. Donovan. It is the minute fungus which produces rigor Kubus⊠Avoid those tubes. Lower your head. I wish I had time to show you some of our latest experiments⊠Here we are!â He rapped on a white door, and threw it open. âA friend to see you, Dr. Maitland!â
The door was closed, and locked quietly, and Donovanâs guide departed.
In a small, square room, furnished like a waiting-room, Steel Maitland was standingâfacing the doorway.
âMaitland!â
âDonovan! God forgive me!ââhe stepped forward; his features were haggardâI dragged you into this!â
âForget it.â Donovanâs voice sounded slightly unsteady. âIâm the prize fool. I fell into a booby trap a babe in arms would have seen through⊠and left Claudette at the mercy of these devils! Even now they may have herâŠâ
Indeed, at the moment that Donovan spoke her name, Claudette had sprung to her feet, pale, tense, in Jackie de Laraâs flat. The two girls stared at one another.
âThere it is again!â Claudette whispered.
âSsh! honey! Theyâll hear you!â
Someone was knocking, softly but insistently, on the outer door âŠ
âDonât stir, Jackie!â
Jackie shook her head. âI must get to the phone.â
âOh, listen! That knocking! If only they would ringâor speak!â
âThe bellâs out of order,â said Jackie. âThe stair light is broken, too.â Knocking continuedâa gentle but imperative summons. âOh! I must get to the phone!â
âBut the phone is right by the door, Jackie. They will see you through the letter-box!â All the time the sound continued. It had in it something almost hypnotic. âThat knocking! Itâs Our Lady, itâs Our Lady! I know it is. She is outside thereâwaiting for me! Jackie! let me go. It will be best for youâŠâ
âIâll break your neck it you donât shut up!â Jackie snapped. âLet me think⊠Itâll drive me mad, toe, if I canât stop it. Now, donât panic, dear. Iâm going to put the light out and
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