The Yellow Claw
S >> Sax Rohmer >> The Yellow Claw
"My God!" cried Stringer, and fell back with upraised arms as if hoping
to fend off that giant menace.
He lurched, as the cutter was again diverted sharply from its course,
and must have fallen under the very bows of the oncoming liner, had not
one of the lookouts caught him by the collar and jerked him sharply back
into the boat.
A blaze of light burst out over them, and there were conflicting voices
raised one in opposition to another. Above them all, even above the
beating of the twin screws and the churning of the inky water, arose
that of an officer from the bridge of the steamer.
"Where the flaming hell are YOU going?" inquired this stentorian voice;
"haven't you got any blasted eyes and ears"...
High on the wash of the liner rode the police boat; down she plunged
again, and began to roll perilously; up again--swimming it seemed upon
frothing milk.
The clangor of bells, of voices, and of churning screws died, remote,
astern.
"Damn close shave!" cried Rogers. "It must be clear ahead; they've just
run into it."
One of the men on the lookout in the bows, who had never departed
from his duty for an instant throughout this frightful commotion, now
reported:
"Cutter crossing our bow, sir! Getting back to her course."
"Keep her in view," roared Rogers.
"Port, sir!"
"How's that?"
"Starboard, easy!"
"Keep her in view!"
"As she is, sir!"
Again they settled down to the pursuit, and it began to dawn upon
Stringer's mind that the boat ahead must be engined identically with
that of the police; for whilst they certainly gained nothing upon her,
neither did they lose.
"Try a hail," cried Rogers from the stern. "We may be chasing the wrong
boat!"
"Cutter 'hoy!" bellowed the man beside Stringer, using his hands in lieu
of a megaphone--"heave to!"
"Give 'em 'in the King's name!'" directed Rogers again.
"Cutter 'hoy," roared the man through his trumpeted hands,--"heave
to--in the King's name!"
Stringer glared through the fog, clutching at the shoulder of the
shouter almost convulsively.
"Take no notice, sir," reported the man.
"Then it's the gang!" cried Rogers from the stern; "and we haven't made
a mistake. Where the blazes are we?"
"Well on the way to Blackwall Reach, sir," answered someone. "Fog
lifting ahead."
"It's the rain that's doing it," said the man beside Stringer.
Even as he spoke, a drop of rain fell upon the back of Stringer's hand.
This was the prelude; then, with ever-increasing force, down came
the rain in torrents, smearing out the fog from the atmosphere, as a
painter, with a sponge, might wipe a color from his canvas. Long tails
of yellow vapor, twining--twining--but always coiling downward, floated
like snakes about them; and the oily waters of the Thames became
pock-marked in the growing light.
Stringer now quite clearly discerned the quarry--a very rakish-looking
motor cutter, painted black, and speeding seaward ahead of them. He
quivered with excitement.
"Do you know the boat?" cried Rogers, addressing his crew in general.
"No, sir," reported his second-in-command; "she's a stranger to me. They
must have kept her hidden somewhere." He turned and looked back into the
group of faces, all directed toward the strange craft. "Do any of you
know her?" he demanded.
A general shaking of heads proclaimed the negative.
"But she can shift," said one of the men. "They must have been going
slow through the fog; she's creeping up to ten or twelve knots now, I
should reckon."
"Your reckoning's a trifle out!" snapped Rogers, irritably, from the
stern; "but she's certainly showing us her heels. Can't we put somebody
ashore and have her cut off lower down?"
"While we're doing that," cried Stringer, excitedly, "she would land
somewhere and we should lose the gang!"
"That's right," reluctantly agreed Rogers. "Can you see any of her
people?"
Through the sheets of rain all peered eagerly.
"She seems to be pretty well loaded," reported the man beside Stringer,
"but I can't make her out very well."
"Are we doing our damnedest?" inquired Rogers.
"We are, sir," reported the engineer; "she hasn't got another oat in
her!"
Rogers muttered something beneath his breath, and sat there glaring
ahead at the boat ever gaining upon her pursuer.
"So long as we keep her in sight," said Stringer, "our purpose is
served. She can't land anybody."
"At her present rate," replied the man upon whose shoulders he was
leaning, "she'll be out of sight by the time we get to Tilbury or she'll
have hit a barge and gone to the bottom!"
"I'll eat my hat if I lose her!" declared Rogers angrily. "How the
blazes they slipped away from the wharf beats me!"
"They didn't slip away from the wharf," cried Stringer over his
shoulder. "You heard what Sowerby said; they lay in the creek below the
wharf, and there was some passageway underneath."
"But damn it all, man!" cried Rogers, "it's high tide; they must be a
gang of bally mermaids. Why, we were almost level with the wharf when we
left, and if they came from BELOW that, as you say, they must have been
below water!"
"There they are, anyway," growled Stringer.
Mile after mile that singular chase continued through the night. With
every revolution of the screw, the banks to right and left seemed
to recede, as the Thames grew wider and wider. A faint saltiness was
perceptible in the air; and Stringer, moistening his dry lips, noted the
saline taste.
The shipping grew more scattered. Whereas, at first, when the fog had
begun to lift, they had passed wondering faces peering at them from
lighters and small steamers, tow boats and larger anchored craft,
now they raced, pigmy and remote, upon open waters, and through the
raindrift gray hulls showed, distant, and the banks were a faint blur.
It seemed absurd that, with all those vessels about, they nevertheless
could take no steps to seek assistance in cutting off the boat which
they were pursuing, but must drive on through the rain, ever losing,
ever dropping behind that black speck ahead.
A faint swell began to be perceptible. Stringer, who throughout the
whole pursuit thus far had retained his hold upon the man in the bows,
discovered that his fingers were cramped. He had much difficulty in
releasing that convulsive grip.
"Thank you!" said the man, smiling, when at last the detective released
his grip. "I'll admit I'd scarcely noticed it myself, but now I come
to think of it, you've been fastened onto me like a vise for over two
hours!"
"Two hours!" cried Stringer; and, crouching down to steady himself, for
the cutter was beginning to roll heavily, he pulled out his watch, and
in the gray light inspected the dial.
It was true! They had been racing seaward for some hours!
"Good God!" he muttered.
He stood up again, unsteadily, feet wide apart, and peered ahead through
the grayness.
The banks he could not see. Far away on the port bow a long gray shape
lay--a moored vessel. To starboard were faint blurs, indistinguishable,
insignificant; ahead, a black dot with a faint comet-like tail--the
pursued cutter--and ahead of that, again, a streak across the blackness,
with another dot slightly to the left of the quarry...
He turned and looked along the police boat, noting that whereas, upon
the former occasion of his looking, forms and faces had been but dimly
visible, now he could distinguish them all quite clearly. The dawn was
breaking.
"Where are we?" he inquired hoarsely.
"We're about one mile northeast of Sheerness and two miles southwest
of the Nore Light!" announced Rogers--and he laughed, but not in a
particularly mirthful manner.
Stringer temporarily found himself without words.
"Cutter heading for the open sea, sir," announced a man in the bows,
unnecessarily.
"Quite so," snapped Rogers. "So are you!"
"We have got them beaten," said Stringer, a faint note of triumph in his
voice. "We've given them no chance to land."
"If this breeze freshens much," replied Rogers, with sardonic humor,
"they'll be giving US a fine chance to sink!"
Indeed, although Stringer's excitement had prevented him from heeding
the circumstance, an ever-freshening breeze was blowing in his face, and
he noted now that, quite mechanically, he had removed his bowler hat at
some time earlier in the pursuit and had placed it in the bottom of the
boat. His hair was blown in the wind, which sang merrily in his ears,
and the cutter, as her course was slightly altered by Rogers, ceased to
roll and began to pitch in a manner very disconcerting to the lands-man.
"It'll be rather fresh outside, sir," said one of the men, doubtfully.
"We're miles and miles below our proper patrol"...
"Once we're clear of the bank it'll be more than fresh," replied Rogers;
"but if they're bound for France, or Sweden, or Denmark, that's OUR
destination, too!"...
On--and on--and on they drove. The Nore Light lay astern; they were
drenched with spray. Now green water began to spout over the nose of the
laboring craft.
"I've only enough juice to run us back to Tilbury, sir, if we put about
now!" came the shouted report.
"It's easy to TALK!" roared Rogers. "If one of these big 'uns gets us
broadside on, our number's up!"...
"Cutter putting over for Sheppey coast, sir!" bellowed the man in the
bows.
Stringer raised himself, weakly, and sought to peer through the driving
spray and rain-mist.
"By God! THEY'VE TURNED--TURTLE!"...
"Stand by with belts!" bellowed Rogers.
Rapidly life belts were unlashed; and, ahead, to port, to starboard,
brine-stung eyes glared out from the reeling craft. Gray in the nascent
dawn stretched the tossing sea about them; and lonely they rode upon its
billows.
"PORT! PORT! HARD A-PORT!" screamed the lookout.
But Rogers, grimly watching the oncoming billows, knew that to essay the
maneuver at that moment meant swamping the cutter. Straight ahead they
drove. A wave, higher than any they yet had had to ride, came boiling
down upon them... and twisting, writhing, upcasting imploring arms to
the elements--the implacable elements--a girl, a dark girl, entwined,
imprisoned in silken garments, swept upon its crest!
Out shot a cork belt into the boiling sea... and fell beyond her
reach. She was swept past the cutter. A second belt was hurled from the
stern...
The Eurasian, uttering a wailing cry like that of a seabird, strove to
grasp it...
Close beside her, out of the wave, uprose a yellow hand,
grasping--seeking--clutching. It fastened itself into the meshes of her
floating hair...
"Here goes!" roared Rogers.
They plunged down into an oily trough; they turned; a second wave grew
up above them, threateningly, built its terrible wall higher and higher
over their side. Round they swung, and round, and round...
Down swept the eager wave... down--down--down... It lapped over
the stern of the cutter; the tiny craft staggered, and paused,
tremulous--dragged back by that iron grip of old Neptune--then leaped
on--away--headed back into the Thames estuary, triumphant.
"God's mercy!" whispered Stringer--"that was touch-and-go!"
No living thing moved upon the waters.
XLI
WESTMINSTER--MIDNIGHT
Detective-Sergeant Sowerby reported himself in Inspector Dunbar's room
at New Scotland Yard.
"I have completed my inquiries in Wharf-end Lane," he said; and pulling
out his bulging pocketbook, he consulted it gravely.
Inspector Dunbar looked up.
"Anything important?" he asked.
"We cannot trace the makers of the sanitary fittings, and so forth, but
they are all of American pattern. There's nothing in the nature of
a trademark to be found from end to end of the place; even the iron
sluice-gate at the bottom of the brick tunnel has had the makers'
name chipped off, apparently with a cold chisel. So you see they were
prepared for all emergencies!"
"Evidently," said Dunbar, resting his chin on the palms of his hands and
his elbows upon the table.
"The office and warehouse staff of the ginger importing concern are
innocent enough, as you know already. Kan-Suh Concessions was conducted
merely as a blind, of course, but it enabled the Chinaman, Ho-Pin,
to appear in Wharf-end Lane at all times of the day and night without
exciting suspicion. He was supposed to be the manager, of course. The
presence of the wharf is sufficient to explain how they managed to build
the place without exciting suspicion. They probably had all the material
landed there labeled as preserved ginger, and they would take it down
below at night, long after the office and warehouse staff of Concessions
had gone home. The workmen probably came and went by way of the river,
also, commencing work after nightfall and going away before business
commenced in the morning."
"It beats me," said Dunbar, reflectively, "how masons, plumbers,
decorators, and all the other artisans necessary for a job of that
description, could have been kept quiet."
"Foreigners!" said Sowerby triumphantly. "I'll undertake to say there
wasn't an Englishman on the job. The whole of the gang was probably
imported from abroad somewhere, boarded and lodged during the day-time
in the neighborhood of Limehouse, and watched by Mr. Ho-Pin or somebody
else until the job was finished; then shipped back home again. It's
easily done if money is no object."
"That's right enough," agreed Dunbar; "I have no doubt you've hit upon
the truth. But now that the place has been dismantled, what does it
look like? I haven't had time to come down myself, but I intend to do so
before it's closed up."
"Well," said Sowerby, turning over a page of his notebook, "it looks
like a series of vaults, and the Rev. Mr. Firmingham, a local vicar whom
I got to inspect it this morning, assures me, positively, that it's a
crypt."
"A crypt!" exclaimed Dunbar, fixing his eyes upon his subordinate.
"A crypt--exactly. A firm dealing in grease occupied the warehouse
before Kan-Suh Concessions rented it, and they never seem to have
suspected that the place possessed any cellars. The actual owner of
the property, Sir James Crozel, an ex-Lord Mayor, who is also ground
landlord of the big works on the other side of the lane, had no more
idea than the man in the moon that there were any cellars beneath the
place. You see the vaults are below the present level of the Thames at
high tide; that's why nobody ever suspected their existence. Also, an
examination of the bare walls--now stripped--shows that they were pretty
well filled up to the top with ancient debris, to within a few years
ago, at any rate."
"You mean that our Chinese friends excavated them?"
"No doubt about it. They were every bit of twenty feet below the present
street level, and, being right on the bank of the Thames, nobody would
have thought of looking for them unless he knew they were there."
"What do you mean exactly, Sowerby?" said Dunbar, taking out his
fountain-pen and tapping his teeth with it.
"I mean," said Sowerby, "that someone connected with the gang must have
located the site of these vaults from some very old map or book."
"I think you said that the Reverend Somebody-or-Other avers that they
were a crypt?"
"He does; and when he pointed out to me the way the pillars were placed,
as if to support the nave of a church, I felt disposed to agree with
him. The place where the golden dragon used to stand (it isn't really
gold, by the way!) would be under the central aisle, as it were; then
there's a kind of side aisle on the right and left and a large space at
top and bottom. The pillars are stone and of very early Norman pattern,
and the last three or four steps leading down to the place appear to
belong to the original structure. I tell you it's the crypt of some old
forgotten Norman church or monastery chapel."
"Most extraordinary!" muttered Dunbar.
"But I suppose it is possible enough. Probably the church was burnt or
destroyed in some other way; deposits of river mud would gradually
cover up the remaining ruins; then in later times, when the banks of
the Thames were properly attended to, the site of the place would be
entirely forgotten, of course. Most extraordinary!"
"That's the reverend gentleman's view, at any rate," said Sowerby, "and
he's written three books on the subject of early Norman churches! He
even goes so far as to say that he has heard--as a sort of legend--of
the existence of a very large Carmelite monastery, accommodating over
two hundred brothers, which stood somewhere adjoining the Thames within
the area now covered by Limehouse Causeway and Pennyfields. There is a
little turning not far from the wharf, known locally--it does not appear
upon any map--as Prickler's Lane; and my friend, the vicar, tells me
that he has held the theory for a long time"--Sowerby referred to
his notebook with great solemnity--"that this is a corruption of
Pre-aux-Clerce Lane."
"H'm!" said Dunbar; "very ingenious, at any rate. Anything else?"
"Nothing much," said Sowerby, scanning his notes, "that you don't know
already. There was some very good stuff in the place--Oriental ware and
so on, a library of books which I'm told is unique, and a tremendous
stock of opium and hashish. It's a perfect maze of doors and
observation-traps. There's a small kitchen at the end, near the head of
the tunnel--which, by the way, could be used as a means of entrance
and exit at low tide. All the electric power came through the meter of
Kan-Suh Concessions."
"I see," said Dunbar, reflectively, glancing at his watch; "in a word,
we know everything except"...
"What's that?" said Sowerby, looking up.
"The identity of Mr. King!" replied the inspector, reaching for his hat
which lay upon the table.
Sowerby replaced his book in his pocket.
"I wonder if any of the bodies will ever come ashore?" he said.
"God knows!" rapped Dunbar; "we can't even guess how many were aboard.
You might as well come along, Sowerby, I've just heard from Dr.
Cumberly. Mrs. Leroux"...
"Dead?"
"Dying," replied the inspector; "expected to go at any moment. But the
doctor tells me that she may--it's just possible--recover consciousness
before the end; and there's a bare chance"...
"I see," said Sowerby eagerly; "of course she must know!"
The two hastened to Palace Mansions. Despite the lateness of the hour,
Whitehall was thronged with vehicles, and all the glitter and noise of
midnight London surrounded them.
"It only seems like yesterday evening," said Dunbar, as they mounted the
stair of Palace Mansions, "that I came here to take charge of the case.
Damme! it's been the most exciting I've ever handled, and it's certainly
the most disappointing."
"It is indeed," said Sowerby, gloomily, pressing the bell-button at the
side of Henry Leroux's door.
The door was opened by Garnham; and these two, fresh from the noise and
bustle of London's streets, stepped into the hushed atmosphere of the
flat where already a Visitant, unseen but potent, was arrived, and now
was beckoning, shadowlike, to Mira Leroux.
"Will you please sit down and wait," said Garnham, placing chairs for
the two Scotland Yard men in the dining-room.
"Who's inside?" whispered Dunbar, with that note of awe in his voice
which such a scene always produces; and he nodded in the direction of
the lobby.
"Mr. Leroux, sir," replied the man, "the nurse, Miss Cumberly, Dr.
Cumberly and Miss Ryland"...
"No one else?" asked the detective sharply.
"And Mr. Gaston Max," added the man. "You'll find whisky and cigars upon
the table there, sir."
He left the room. Dunbar glanced across at Sowerby, his tufted brows
raised, and a wry smile upon his face.
"In at the death, Sowerby!" he said grimly, and lifted the stopper from
the cut-glass decanter.
In the room where Mira Leroux lay, so near to the Borderland that her
always ethereal appearance was now positively appalling, a hushed group
stood about the bed.
"I think she is awake, doctor," whispered the nurse softly, peering into
the emaciated face of the patient.
Mira Leroux opened her eyes and smiled at Dr. Cumberly, who was bending
over her. The poor faded eyes turned from the face of the physician
to that of Denise Ryland, then to M. Max, wonderingly; next to Helen,
whereupon an indescribable expression crept into them; and finally to
Henry Leroux, who, with bowed head, sat in the chair beside her. She
feebly extended her thin hand and laid it upon his hair. He looked up,
taking the hand in his own. The eyes of the dying woman filled with
tears as she turned them from the face of Leroux to Helen Cumberly--who
was weeping silently.
"Look after... him," whispered Mira Leroux.
Her hand dropped and she closed her eyes again. Cumberly bent forward
suddenly, glancing back at M. Max who stood in a remote corner of the
room watching this scene.
Big Ben commenced to chime the hour of midnight. That frightful
coincidence so startled Leroux that he looked up and almost rose from
his chair in his agitation. Indeed it startled Cumberly, also, but did
not divert him from his purpose.
"It is now or never!" he whispered.
He took the seemingly lifeless hand in his own, and bending over Mira
Leroux, spoke softly in her ear:
"Mrs. Leroux," he said, "there is something which we all would ask you
to tell us; we ask it for a reason--believe me."
Throughout the latter part of this scene the big clock had been chiming
the hour, and now was beating out the twelve strokes of midnight; had
struck six of them and was about to strike the seventh.
SEVEN! boomed the clock.
Mira Leroux opened her eyes and looked up into the face of the
physician.
EIGHT!...
"Who," whispered Dr. Cumberly, "is he?"
NINE!
In the silence following the clock-stroke, Mira Leroux spoke almost
inaudibly.
"You mean... MR. KING?"
TEN!
"Yes, yes! Did you ever SEE him?"...
Every head in the room was craned forward; every spectator tensed up to
the highest ultimate point.
"Yes," said Mira Leroux quite clearly; "I saw him, Dr. Cumberly... He
is"...
ELEVEN!
Mira Leroux moved her head and smiled at Helen Cumberly; then seemed
to sink deeper into the downy billows of the bed. Dr. Cumberly stood up
very slowly, and turned, looking from face to face.
"It is finished," he said--"we shall never know!"
But Henry Leroux and Helen Cumberly, their glances meeting across the
bed of the dead Mira, knew that for them it was not finished, but that
Mr. King, the invisible, invisibly had linked them.
TWELVE!...