THE DEAD HAND.
(Being the First of the Experiences of the Oracle of Maddox Street).
BY |
L. T. MEADE |
& ROBERT EUSTACE. |
| (1844-1914) |
(1854-1943) |
MY
name is Diana Marburg. I am a
palmist by profession. Occult phenomena,
spiritualism, clairvoyance, and many other
strange mysteries of the unseen world,
have, from my earliest years, excited my
keen interest.
Being blessed with abundant means, I
attended in my youth many foreign schools
of thought. I was a pupil of Lewis,
Darling, Braid and others. I studied
Reichenbach and Mesmer and, finally,
started my career as a thought reader and
palmist in Maddox Street.
Now I live with a brother, five years my
senior. My brother Rupert is an athletic
Englishman, and also a barrister, with a
rapidly growing practice. He loves and
pities me he casts over me the respectability
of his presence, and wonders at what he
calls my lapses from sanity. He is patient,
however, and when he saw that in spite of all
expostulation I meant to go my own way, he
ceased to try to persuade me against my
inclinations.
Gradually the success of my reading of the
lines of the human hand brought me fame
my prophecies turned out correct, my
intuition led me to right conclusions, and I was
sought after very largely by that fashionable
world which always follows anything new. I
became a favourite in society, and was
accounted both curious and bizarre.
On a certain evening in late July, I
attended Lady Fortescue's reception in
Curzon Street. I was ushered into a small
ante-room which was furnished with the view
of adding to the weird effect of my own
appearance and words. I wore an Oriental
costume, rich in colour and bespangled with
sparkling gems. On my head I had twisted
a Spanish scarf, my arms were bare to the
elbows, and my dress open at the throat.
Being tall, dark, and, I believe, graceful, my
quaint dress suited me well.
Lady Fortescue saw me for a moment
on my arrival, and inquired if I had everything
I was likely to want. As she stood by
the door she turned.
"I expect, Miss Marburg, that you will
have a few strange clients to-night. My
guests come from a varied and ever widening
circle, and to-night all sorts and conditions
of men will be present at my reception."
She left me, and soon afterwards those
who wished to inquire of Fate appeared
before me one by one.
Towards the close of the evening a tall,
dark man was ushered into my presence.
The room was shadowy, and I do not think
he could see me at once, although I observed
him quite distinctly. To the ordinary
observer he doubtless appeared as a well set up
man of the world, but to me he wore quite a
different appearance. I read fear in his eyes,
and irresolution, and at the same time cruelty
round his lips. He glanced at me as if he
meant to defy any message I might have for
him, and yet at the same time was obliged
to yield to an overpowering curiosity. I asked
him his name, which he gave me at once.
"Philip Harman" he said; "have you
ever heard of me before?"
"Never," I answered.
"I have come here because you are the
fashion, Miss Marburg, and because many of
Lady Fortescue's guests are flocking to this
room to learn something of their future. Of
course you cannot expect me to believe in
your strange art, nevertheless, I shall be glad
if yon will look at my hand and tell me what
you see there."
As he spoke he held out his hand. I
noticed that it trembled. Before touching it
I looked full at him.
"If you have no faith in me, why do you
trouble to come here?" I asked.
"Curiosity brings me to you," he
answered. "Will you grant my request or
not?"
"I will look at your hand first if I may."
I took it in mine. It was a long, thin hand,
with a certain hardness about it. I turned
the palm upward and examined it through a
powerful lens. As I did so I felt my heart
beat wildly and something of the fear in Philip
Harman's eyes was communicated to me.
I dropped the hand, shuddering inwardly as
I did so.
"Well," he asked in astonishment, "what
is the matter, what is my fate? Tell me at
once. Why do you hesitate?"
"I would rather not tell you, Mr. Harman.
You don't believe in me, go away and forget
all about me."
"I cannot do that now. Your look says
that you have seen something which you are
afraid to speak about. Is that so?"
I nodded my head. I placed my hand on
the little round table, which contained a
shaded lamp, to steady myself.
"Come," he said rudely, "out with this
horror I am quite prepared."
"I have no good news for you," I
answered. "I saw something very terrible in your hand."
"Speak."
"You are a ruined man," I said, taking
his hand again in mine, and examining it
carefully. "Yes, the marks are unmistakable.
You will perpetrate a crime which will be
discovered. You are about to commit a
murder, and will suffer a shameful death
on the scaffold."
He snatched his hand away with a violent
movement and started back. His whole face
was quivering with passion.
"How dare you say such infamous
things!" he cried. "You go very far in your
efforts to amuse, Miss Marburg."
"You asked me to tell you," was my reply.
He gave a harsh laugh, bowed low and
went out of the room. I noticed his face as
he did so; it was white as death.
I rang my little hand-bell to summon
the next guest, and a tall and very beautiful
woman between forty and fifty years of age
entered. Her dress was ablaze with diamonds,
and she wore a diamond star of peculiar
brilliancy just above her forehead. Her hair
white as snow, and the glistening diamond
star in the midst of the white hair, gave to her
whole appearance a curious effect.
"My name is Mrs. Kenyon," she said;
"you have just interviewed my nephew,
Philip Harman. But what is the matter, my
dear," she said suddenly, "you look ill."
"I have had a shock," was my vague
reply, then I pulled myself together.
"What can I do for you?" I asked.
"I want you to tell me my future."
"Will you show me your hand?"
Mrs. Kenyon held it out, I took it in mine.
The moment I glanced at it a feeling of
relief passed over me. It was full of good
qualities the Mount of Jupiter well
developed, the heart-line clear and unchained, a
deep, long life-line, and a fate-line ascending
clear upon the Mount of Saturn. I began
to speak easily and rapidly, and with that
fluency which often made me feel that my
words were prompted by an unseen presence.
"What you tell me sounds very pleasant,"
said Mrs. Kenyon, "and I only hope my
character is as good as you paint it. I fear
it is not so, however: your words are too
flattering, and you think too well of me.
But you have not yet touched upon the most
important point of all the future. What is
in store for me?"
I looked again very earnestly at the hand.
My heart sank a trifle as I did so.
"I am sorry," I said, "I have to tell
you bad news I did not notice this at first
but I see it plainly now. You are about
to undergo a severe shock, a very great
grief."
"Strange," answered Mrs. Kenyon. She
paused for a moment, then she said suddenly:
"You gave my nephew a bad report, did you
not?"
I was silent. It was one of my invariable
rules never to speak of one client to another.
"You need not speak," she continued, "I
saw it in his face."
"I hope he will take the warning," I could
not help murmuring faintly. Mrs. Kenyon
overheard the words.
"And now you tell me that I am to undergo
severe trouble. Will it come soon?"
"Yes," was my answer. "You will need
all your strength to withstand it," and then,
as if prompted by some strange impulse, I
added. "I cannot tell you what that trouble
may be, but I like you. If in the time of
your trouble I can help you I will gladly
do so."
"Thank you," answered Mrs. Kenyon,
"you are kind. I do not profess to believe
in you; that you should be able to foretell
the future is, of course, impossible, but I
also like you. I hope some day we may meet
again." She held out her hand; I clasped
it. A moment later she had passed outside
the thick curtain which shut away the ante-room
from the gay throng in the drawing-rooms.
I went home late that night. Rupert was in and waiting
for me.
"Why, what is the matter, Diana?" he said the moment I
appeared. "You look shockingly ill; this terrible
life will kill you."
"I have seen strange things to-night," was my answer. I
flung myself on the sofa and
for just a moment covered my tired eyes
with my hand.
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"Have some supper," said Rupert gently.
|
"Have some supper," said Rupert gently.
He led me to the table, and helped me to
wine and food.
"I have had a tiring and exciting evening
at Lady Fortescue's," I said. "I shall be
better when I have eaten. But where have
you been this evening?"
"At the Apollo
there was plenty of
gossip circulating there two society scandals,
and Philip Harman's crash. That is a big
affair and likely to keep things pretty lively.
But, my dear Di, what is the matter?"
I had half risen from my seat; I was gazing
at my brother with fear in my eyes, my heart
once again beat wildly.
"Did you say Philip Harman?" I asked.
"Yes, why? Do you know him?"
"Tell me about him at once, Rupert, I
must know. What do you mean by his
crash?"
"Oh, he is one of the plungers, you know.
He has run through the Harman property
and cannot touch the Kenyon."
"The Kenyon!" I exclaimed.
"Yes. His uncle, Walter Kenyon, was a
very rich man, and has left all his estates to
his young grandson, a lad of about thirteen.
That boy stands between Harman and a
quarter of a million. But why do you want to
know?"
"Only that I saw Philip Harman to-night,"
was my answer.
"You did? That is curious. He asked
you to prophesy with regard to his fate?"
"He did, Rupert."
"And you told him?"
"What I cannot tell you. You know I
never divulge what I see in my clients'
hands."
"Of course, you cannot tell me, but it is
easy to guess that you gave him bad news.
They say he wants to marry the heiress and
beauty of the season, Lady Maud Greville.
If he succeeds in this he will be on his feet
once more, but I doubt if she will have
anything to say to him. He is an attractive
man in some ways and good-looking, but the
Countess of Cheddsleigh keeps a sharp look
out on the future of her only daughter.
"Philip Harman must on no account
marry an innocent girl," was my next
impulsive remark. "Rupert, your news
troubles me very much, it confirms –" I
could not finish the sentence. I was overcome
by what Rupert chose to consider
intense nervousness.
"You must have your quinine and go to
bed," he said; "come, I insist, I won't listen
to another word."
A moment later I had left him, but try
hard as I would I could not sleep that night.
I felt that I myself was on the brink of a
great catastrophe, that I personally, was
mixed up in this affair. In all my experience
I had never seen a hand like Philip Harman's
before. There was no redeeming trait in it.
The lines which denoted crime and disaster
were too indelibly marked to be soon
forgotten. When at last I did drop asleep
that hand accompanied me into the world of
dreams.
The London season came to an end. I
heard nothing more about Philip Harman
and his affairs, and in the excitement and
interest of leaving town, was beginning more
or less to forget him, when on the 25th of
July, nearly a month after Lady Fortescue's
party, a servant entered my consulting-room
with a card. The man told me that a lady
was waiting to see me, she begged for an
interview at once on most urgent business.
I glanced at the card. It bore the name
of Mrs. Kenyon.
The moment I saw it that nervousness
which had troubled me on the night when I
saw Philip Harman and read his future in the
ghastly lines of his hand returned. I could
not speak at all for a moment; then I said,
turning to the man who stood motionless
waiting for my answer:
"Show the lady up immediately."
Mrs. Kenyon entered. She came hurriedly
forward. When last I saw her she was a
beautiful woman with great dignity of bearing
and a kindly, sunshiny face. Now as she
came into the room she was so changed that
I should scarcely have known her. Her
dress bore marks of disorder and hasty
arrangement, her eyes were red with
weeping.
"Pardon my coming so early. Miss
Marburg," she said at once; then, without
waiting for me to speak, she dropped into a
chair.
"I am overcome," she gasped, "but you
promised, if necessary, to help me. Do you
remember my showing you my hand at Lady
Fortescue's party?"
"I remember you perfectly, Mrs. Kenyon.
What can I do for you?"
"You told me then that something terrible
was about to happen. I did not believe it. I
visited you out of curiosity and had no faith
in you, but your predictions have come true,
horribly true. I have come to you now for
the help which you promised to give me
if I needed it, for I believe it lies in your
power to tell me something I wish to
discover."
"I remember everything," I replied
gravely; "what is it you wish me to do?"
"I want you to read a hand for me and to
tell me what you see in it."
"Certainly but will you make an appointment?"
"Can you come with me immediately to
Godalming? My nephew Philip Harman
has a place there."
"Philip Harman!" I muttered.
"Yes," she answered, scarcely noticing my
words, "my only son and I have been staying
with him. I want to take you there; can
you come immediately?"
"You have not mentioned the name of the
person whose hand you want me to read?"
"I would rather not do so not vet, I
mean."
"But can you not bring him or her here?
I am very busy just now."
"That is impossible," replied Mrs.
Kenyon. "I am afraid I must ask you to
postpone all your other engagements, this
thing is most imperative. I cannot bring the
person whose hand I want you to read here,
nor can there be any delay. You must see
him if possible to-day. I implore you to
come. I will give you any fee you like to
demand."
"It is not a question of money," I replied,
"I am interested in you. I will do what
you require." I rose as I spoke. "By the
way," I added, " I presume that the person
whose hand you wish me to see has no
objection to my doing so, otherwise my
journey may be thrown away."
"There is no question about that," replied
Mrs. Kenyon, "I thank you more than I can
say for agreeing to come."
A few moments later we were on our way to
the railway station. We caught our train, and
between twelve and one o'clock arrived at
Godalming. A carriage was waiting for us
at the station, we drove for nearly two miles
and presently found ourselves in a place with
large shady grounds. We drew up beside a
heavy portico, a man servant came gravely
forward to help us to alight and we entered a
large hall.
I noticed a curious hush about the place,
and I observed that the man who admitted us
did not speak, but glanced inquiringly at
Mrs. Kenyon, as if for directions.
"Show Miss Marburg into the library,"
was her order. "I will be back again in
a moment or two," she added, glancing at me.
I was ushered into a well-furnished library;
there was a writing-table one end of it on
which papers of different sorts were scattered.
I went forward mechanically and took up an
envelope. It was addressed to Philip Harman,
Esq., The Priory, Godalming. I dropped it
as though I could not bear to touch it. Once
again that queer nervousness seized me, and
I was obliged to sit down weak and trembling.
The next moment the room door was opened.
"Will you please come now, Miss Marburg?"
said Mrs. Kenyon. "I will not keep you long."
We went upstairs together, and paused
before a door on the first landing.
"We must enter softly," said the lady
turning to me. There was something in her
words and the look on her face which
seemed to prepare me, but for what I could
not tell. We found ourselves in a large
room luxuriously furnished the window
blinds were all down, but the windows
themselves were open and the blinds were gently
moving to and fro in the soft summer air.
In the centre of the room and drawn quite
away from the wall was a small iron bedstead.
I glanced towards it and a sudden
irrepressible cry burst from my lips. On
the bed lay a figure covered with a sheet
beneath which its outline was indistinctly
defined.
"What do you mean by bringing me here?"
I said, turning to the elder woman and grasping
her by the arm.
"You must not be frightened," she said
gently, "come up to the bed. Hush, try to
restrain yourself. Think of my most terrible
grief; this is the hand I want you to read."
As she spoke she drew aside the sheet and I
found myself gazing down at the beautiful
dead face of a child, a boy of about thirteen
years of age.
"Dead! my only son!" said Mrs. Kenyon,
"he was drowned this morning. Here
is his hand; yesterday it was warm and full
of life, now it is cold as marble. Will you
take it, will you look at the lines? I want
you to tell me if he met his death by accident
or by design?"
"You say that you are living in Philip
Harman's house?" I said.
"He asked us here on a visit."
"And this boy, this dead boy stood
between him and the Kenyon property?"
was my next inquiry.
"How can you tell? How do you know?"
"But answer me, is it true?"
"It is true."
I now went on my knees and took one of
the child's small white hands in mine. I
began to examine it.
"It is very strange," I said slowly, "this
child has died a violent death, and it was
caused by design."
"It was?" cried the mother. "Can you
swear it?" She clutched me by the arm.
"I see it, but I cannot quite understand it,"
I answered, "there is a strong indication
here that the child was murdered, and yet
had I seen this hand in life I should have
warned the boy against lightning, but a death
by lightning would be accidental. Tell me
how did the boy die?"
"By drowning. Early this morning he
was bathing in the pool which adjoins a wide
stream in the grounds. He did not return.
We hastened to seek for him and found his
body floating on the surface of the water.
He was quite dead."
"Was the pool deep?"
"In one part it was ten feet deep, the
rest of the pool was shallow. The doctor
has been, and said that the child must have
had a severe attack of cramp, but even then
the pool is small, and he was a good swimmer
for his age."
"Was no one with him?"
"No. His cousin, Philip Harman, often
accompanied him, but he bathed alone this
morning."
"Where was Mr. Harman this morning?"
"He went to town by an early train, and
does not know yet. You say you think
it was murder. How do you account
for it?"
"The boy may have been drowned by
accident, but I see something more in his
hand than mere drowning, something that
baffles me, yet it is plain Lightning. Is
there no mark on the body?"
"Yes, there is a small blue mark just
below the inner ankle of the right foot, but I
think that was a bruise he must have got
yesterday. The doctor said it must have
been done previously and not in the pool as
it would not have turned blue so quickly."
"May I see it?"
Mrs. Kenyon raised the end of the sheet
and showed the mark. I looked at it long
and earnestly.
"You are sure there was no thunder-storm
this morning?" I asked.
"No, it was quite fine."
I rose slowly to my feet.
"I have looked at the boy's hand as you
asked me," I said, "I must repeat my words
there are indications that he came by his
death not by accident but design."
Mrs. Kenyon's face underwent a queer
change as I spoke. She came suddenly
forward, seized me by the arms and cried:
"I believe you, I believe you. I believe
that my boy has been murdered in some
fiendish and inexplicable way. The police
have been here already, and of course there
will be an inquest, but no one is suspected.
Who are we to suspect?"
"Philip Harman," I could not help answering.
"Why? Why do you say that?"
"I am not at liberty to tell you. I make
the suggestion."
"But it cannot be the case. The boy
went to bathe alone in perfect health.
Philip went to town by an earlier train than
usual. I saw him off myself, I walked with
him as far as the end of the avenue. It was
soon afterwards that I missed my little Paul,
and began to wonder why he had not returned
to the house. I went with a servant to the
pool and I saw, oh, I saw that which will
haunt me to my dying day. He was my only
son, Miss Marburg, my one great treasure.
What you have suggested, what I myself,
alas, believe, drives me nearly mad. But you
must tell me why you suspect Philip Harman."
"Under the circumstances it may not be
wrong to tell you," I said slowly."The
night I read your hand I also as you know
read his. I saw in his hand that he was
about to be a murderer. I told him so in as
many words."
"You saw that? You told him! Oh, this
is too awful! Philip has wanted money of
late and has been in the strangest state. He
has always been somewhat wild and given to
speculation, and lately I know lost heavily
with different ventures. He proposed to a
young girl, a great friend of mine last week,
but she would have nothing to do with him.
Yes, it all seems possible. My little Paul
stood between him and a great property. But
how did he do it? There is not a particle
of evidence against him. Your word goes
for nothing, law and justice would only scout
you. But we must act, Miss Marburg, and
you must help me to prove the
murder of my boy, to discover the
murderer. I shall never rest until I
have avenged him."
"Yes, I will help you," I answered.
As I descended the stairs accompanied
by Mrs. Kenyon a strange thought struck me.
"I have promised to help you,
and we must act at once," I said.
"Will you leave this matter for the
present in my hands, and will you let
me send a telegram immediately to
my brother? I shall need his assistance.
He is a barrister and has
chambers in town, but he will come
to me at once. He is very clever
and practical."
"Is he entirely in your confidence?"
"Absolutely. But pray tell me
when do you expect Mr. Harman
back?"
"He does not know anything at
present, as he was going into the
country for the day; he will be back
as usual to-night."
"That is so much thee better. May
I send for my brother?"
"Do anything you please. You
will find some telegraph forms in the
hall and the groom can take your
message at once."
I crossed the hall, found the
telegraph forms on a table, sat down
and filled one in as follows:
"Come at once I need your help
most urgently. Diana."
I handed the telegram to a servant,
who took it away at once.
"And now," I said turning to Mrs.
Kenyon, "will you show me the pool? I
shall go there and stay till my brother
arrives."
"You will stay there, why?"
"I have my own reasons for wishing to do
so. I cannot say more now. Please show
me the way."
We went across the garden and into a
meadow beyond. At the bottom of this
meadow ran a swift-flowing stream. In the
middle of the stream was the pool evidently
made artificially. Beside it on the bank stood
a small tent for dressing. The pool itself
was a deep basin in the rock about seven
yards across, surrounded by drooping
willows which hung over it. At the upper
end the stream fell into it in a miniature
cascade at the lower end a wire fence
crossed it. This was doubtless done in order
to prevent the cattle stirring the
water.
I walked slowly round the pool, looking
down into its silent depths without speaking.
When I came back to where Mrs. Kenyon
was standing I said slowly:
"I shall remain here until my brother
comes. Will you send me down a few
sandwiches, and bring him or send him to
me directly he arrives?"
"But he cannot be with you for some
hours," said Mrs. Kenyon. "I fail to understand
your reason."
"I scarcely know that yet myself," was my
reply, "but I am certain I am acting wisely.
Will you leave me here? I wish to be alone
in order to think out a problem."
Mrs. Kenyon slowly turned and went back
to the house.
"I must unravel this mystery," I said
to myself, "I must sift from the apparent
facts of the case the awful truth which lies
beneath. That sixth sense which has helped
me up to the present shall help me to the
end. Beyond doubt foul play has taken
place. The boy met his death in this pool,
but how? Beyond doubt this is the only
spot where a solution can be found. I will
stay here and think the matter through. If
anything dangerous or fatal was put into the
pool the murderer shall not remove his awful
weapon without my knowledge."
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"Beyond doubt foul play has taken place.
The boy met his death in this pool."
|
So I thought and the moments flew. My
head ached with the intensity of my thought,
and as the afternoon advanced I was no
nearer a solution than ever.
It was between four and five o'clock when
to my infinite relief I saw Rupert hurrying
across the meadow.
"What is the meaning of this, Diana?" he
said. "Have you lost your senses? When
I got your extraordinary wire I thought you
must be ill."
I stood up, clasped his hands and looked
into his face.
"Listen," I said. "A child has been
murdered, and I want to discover the
murderer. You must help me."
"Are you mad?" was his remark.
"No, I am sane," I answered; "little Paul
Kenyon has been murdered. Do you
remember telling me that he stood between
Philip Harman and the Kenyon property?
He was drowned this morning in this pool,
the supposition being that the death occurred
through accident. Now listen, Rupert, we
have got to discover how the boy really met
his death. The child was in perfect health
when he entered the pool, his dead body was
found floating on the water half-an-hour
afterwards. The doctor said he died from
drowning due to cramp. What caused such
sudden and awful cramp as would drown a
boy of his age within a few paces of the
bank?"
"But what do you expect to find here?"
said Rupert. He looked inclined to laugh at
me when first he arrived, but his face was
grave now, and even pale.
"Come here," I said suddenly, "I have
already noticed one strange thing; it is this.
Look!"
As I spoke I took his hand and approached
the wire fence which protected the water from
the cattle. Leaning over I said:
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"That wire has been put there for some other reasons than to keep cattle out."
|
"Look down. Whoever designed this
pool, for it was, of course, made artificially,
took more precaution than is usual to
prevent the water being contaminated. Do
you see that fine wire netting which goes down
to the bottom of the pool? That wire has
been put there for some other reason than to
keep cattle out. Rupert, do you think by any
possibility it has been placed there to keep
something in the pool?"
Rupert bent down and examined the wire
carefully.
"It is curious," he said. "I see what you
mean." A frown had settled on his face.
Suddenly he turned to me.
"Your suggestion is too horrible, Diana.
What can be in the pool? Do you mean
something alive, something –" he stopped
speaking, his eyes were fixed on my face with
a dawning horror.
"Were there any marks on the boy?" was
his next question.
"One small blue mark on the
ankle. Ah! look, what is that?"
At the further end and in the
deep part of the pool I suddenly
saw the surface move and a slight
eddying swirl appear on the
water. It increased into ever
widening circles and vanished.
Rupert's bronzed face was
now almost as white as mine.
"We must drag the pool
immediately," he said. "Harman
cannot prevent us; we have seen
enough to warrant what we do;
I cannot let this pass. Stay here,
Diana, and watch. I will bring
Mrs. Kenyon with me and get her
consent."
Rupert hurriedly left me and
went back to the house across the
meadow. It was fully an hour
before he returned. The water
was once more perfectly still.
There was not the faintest movement
of any living thing beneath
its surface. At the end of the
hour I saw Mrs. Kenyon, my
brother, a gardener, and another
man coming across the meadow.
One of the men was dragging a
large net, one side of which was
loaded with leaden sinkers the
other held an old-fashioned
single-barrelled gun.
Rupert was now all activity.
Mrs. Kenyon came and stood
by my side, without speaking. Rupert gave
quick orders to the men. Under his directions
one of them waded through the shallows
just below the pool, and reaching the opposite
bank, threw the net across, then the
bottom of the net with the sinkers was let
down into the pool.
When this was done Rupert possessed
himself of the gun and stood at the upper
end of the pool beside the little waterfall.
He then gave the word to the men to begin
to drag. Slowly and gradually they
advanced, drawing the net forward, while all
our eyes were fixed upon the water. Not a
word was spoken; the men had not taken
many steps when again was seen the swirl in
the water, and a few little eddies were sucked
down. A sharp cry broke from Mrs.
Kenyon's lips. Rupert kept the gun in
readiness.
"What is it?" cried Mrs. Kenyon, but
the words had scarcely died on her lips
before a dark body lashed the surface of the
water and disappeared. What it was we
none of us had the slightest idea; we all
watched spell-bound.
Still the net moved slowly on, and now the
agitation of the water became great. The
creature, whatever it was, lashed and lunged
to and fro, now breaking back against the
net, and now attempting to spring up the
smooth rock and so escape into the stream.
As we caught a glimpse and yet another
glimpse of the long coiling body I wondered
if there was a snake in the pool.
 |
|
The next instant Rupert raised the gun, and fired.
|
"Come on, quicker now," shouted Rupert
to the men, and they pressed forward, holding
the creature in the net, and, drawing it every
moment nearer the rock. The next instant
Rupert raised the gun, and leaning over the
water, fired down. There was a burst of
spray, and as the smoke cleared we saw that
the water was stained with red blood.
Seizing the lower end of the net and
exercising all their strength the men now drew
the net up. In its meshes, struggling in
death agony, was an enormous eel. The
next moment it was on the grass coiling to
and fro. The men quickly dispatched it with
a stick, and then we all bent over it.
It was an extraordinary-looking creature,
six feet in length, yet it had none of the
ordinary appearance of the eel. I had never
seen anything like it before. Rupert went
down on his knees to examine it carefully.
He suddenly looked up. A terrible truth had
struck him his face was white.
"What is it?" gasped poor Mrs. Kenyon.
"You were right, Diana," said Rupert. "Look,
Mrs. Kenyon. My sister was absolutely right.
Call her power what you will, she was
guided by something too wonderful for explanation.
This is an electric eel, no native of these waters
it was put here by someone. This is murder. One stroke
from the tail of such an eel would give a child such a
dreadful shock that he would be paralysed, and
would drown to a certainty."
"Then that explains the mark by lightning on
the dead child's hand," I said.
"Yes," answered my brother. "The
police must take the matter up."
Before that evening Mr. Harman was
arrested. The sensational case which followed
was in all the papers. Against my will, I was
forced to attend the trial in order to give the
necessary evidence. It was all too damning
and conclusive. The crime was brought
home to the murderer, who suffered the full
penalty of the law.
(THE END)