I. The Thing on the Hearth
"THE
first confirmatory evidence of the thing, Excellency, was the print
of a woman's bare foot."
He
was an immense creature. He sat in an upright chair that seemed to
have been provided especially for him. The great bulk of him flowed
out and filled the chair. It did not seem to be fat that enveloped
him. It seemed rather to be some soft, tough fiber, like the pudgy
mass making up the body of a deep-sea thing. One got an impression
of
strength.
The
country was before the open window; the clusters of cultivated
shrub
on the sweep of velvet lawn extending to the great wall that
inclosed
the place, then the bend of the river and beyond the distant
mountains, blue and mysterious, blending indiscernibly into the
sky.
A soft sun, clouded with the haze of autumn, shone over it.
"You
know how the faint moisture in the bare foot will make an
impression."
He
paused as though there was some compelling force in the reflection.
It was impossible to say, with accuracy, to what race the man
belonged. He came from some queer blend of Eastern peoples. His
body
and the cast of his features were Mongolian. But one got always,
before him, a feeling of the hot East lying low down against the
stagnant Suez. One felt that he had risen slowly into our world of
hard air and sun out of the vast sweltering ooze of it.
He
spoke English with a certain care in the selection of the words,
but
with ease and an absence of effort, as though languages were
instinctive to him—as though he could speak any language. And he
impressed one with this same effortless facility in all the things
he
did.
It
is necessary to try to understand this, because it explains the
conception everybody got of the creature, when they saw him in
charge
of Rodman. I am using precisely the descriptive words; he was
exclusively in charge of Rodman, as a jinn in an Arabian tale might
have been in charge of a king's son.
The
creature was servile—with almost a groveling servility. But one
felt that this servility resulted from something potent and secret.
One looked to see Rodman take Solomon's ring out of his waistcoat
pocket.
I
suppose there is no longer any doubt about the fact that Rodman was
one of those gigantic human intelligences who sometimes appear in
the
world, and by their immense conceptions dwarf all human knowledge—a
sort of mental monster that we feel nature has no right to produce.
Lord Bayless Truxley said that Rodman was some generations in
advance
of the time; and Lord Bayless Truxley was, beyond question, the
greatest authority on synthetic chemistry in the world.
Rodman
was rich and, everybody supposed, indolent; no one ever thought
very
much about him until he published his brochure on the scientific
manufacture of precious stones. Then instantly everybody with any
pretension to a knowledge of synthetic chemistry turned toward
him.
The
brochure startled the world.
It
proposed to adapt the luster and beauty of jewels to commercial
uses.
We were being content with crude imitation colors in our commercial
glass, when we could quite as easily have the actual structure and
the actual luster of the jewel in it. We were painfully hunting
over
the earth, and in its bowels, for a few crystals and prettily
colored
stones which we hoarded and treasured, when in a manufacturing
laboratory we could easily produce them, more perfect than nature,
and in unlimited quantity.
Now,
if you want to understand what I am printing here about Rodman, you
must think about this thing as a scientific possibility and not as
a
fantastic notion. Take, for example, Rodman's address before the
Sorbonne, or his report to the International Congress of Science in
Edinburgh, and you will begin to see what I mean. The Marchese
Giovanni, who was a delegate to that congress, and Pastreaux, said
that the something in the way of an actual practical realization of
what Rodman outlined was the formulae. If Rodman could work out the
formulae, jewel-stuff could be produced as cheaply as glass, and in
any quantity—by the carload. Imagine it; sheet ruby, sheet emerald,
all the beauty and luster of jewels in the windows of the corner
drugstore!
And
there is another thing that I want you to think about. Think about
the immense destruction of value—not to us, so greatly, for our
stocks of precious stones are not large; but the thing meant,
practically, wiping out all the assembled wealth of Asia except the
actual earth and its structures.
The
destruction of value was incredible.
Put
the thing some other way and consider it. Suppose we should
suddenly
discover that pure gold could be produced by treating common yellow
clay with sulphuric acid, or that some genius should set up a
machine
on the border of the Sahara that received sand at one end and
turned
out sacked wheat at the other! What, then, would our hoarded gold
be
worth, or the wheat-lands of Australia, Canada or our
Northwest?
The
illustrations are fantastic. But the thing Rodman was after was a
practical fact. He had it on the way. Giovanni and Lord Bayless
Truxley were convinced that the man would work out the formulae.
They
tried, over their signatures, to prepare the world for it.
The
whole of Asia was appalled. The rajahs of the native states in
India
prepared a memorial and sent it to the British Government.
The
thing came out after the mysterious, incredible tragedy. I should
not
have written that final sentence. I want you to think, just now,
about the great hulk of a man that sat in his big chair beyond me
at
the window.
It
was like Rodman to turn up with an outlandish human creature
attending him hand and foot. How the thing came about reads like a
lie; it reads like a lie; the wildest lie that anybody ever put
forward to explain a big yellow Oriental following one
about.
But
it was no lie. You could not think up a lie to equal the actual
things that happened to Rodman. Take the way he died!....
The
thing began in India. Rodman had gone there to consult with the
Marchese Giovanni concerning some molecular theory that was
involved
in his formulas. Giovanni was digging up a buried temple on the
northern border of the Punjab. One night, in the explorer's tent,
near the excavations, this inscrutable creature walked in on
Rodman.
No one knew how he got into the tent or where he came from.
Giovanni
told about it. The tent-flap simply opened, and the big Oriental
appeared. He had something under his arm rolled up in a
prayer-carpet. He gave no attention to Giovanni, but he salaamed
like
a coolie to the little American.
"Master,"
he said, "you were hard to find. I have looked over the world
for you."
And
he squatted down on the dirty floor by Rodman's camp stool.
Now,
that's precisely the truth. I suppose any ordinary person would
have
started no end of fuss. But not Rodman, and not, I think, Giovanni.
There's the attitude that we can't understand in a genius—did you
ever know a man with an inventive mind who doubted a miracle? A
thing
like that did not seem unreasonable to Rodman.
The
two men spent the remainder of the night looking at the present
that
the creature brought Rodman in his prayer-carpet. They wanted to
know
where the Oriental got it, and that's how his story came
out.
He
was something—searcher, seems our nearest English word to it—in
the great Shan Monastery on the southeastern plateau of the Gobi.
He
was looking for Rodman because he had the light—here was another
word that the two men could find no term in any modern language to
translate; a little flame, was the literal meaning.
The
present was from the treasure-room of the monastery; the very
carpet
around it, Giovanni said, was worth twenty thousand lire. There was
another thing that came out in the talk that Giovanni afterward
recalled. Rodman was to accept the present and the man who brought
it
to him. The Oriental would protect him, in every way, in every
direction, from things visible and invisible. He made quite a
speech
about it. But, there was one thing from which he could not protect
him.
The
Oriental used a lot of his ancient words to explain, and he did not
get it very clear. He seemed to mean that the creative Forces of
the
spirit would not tolerate a division of worship with the creative
forces of the body—the celibate notion in the monastic idea.
Giovanni
thought Rodman did not understand it; he thought he himself
understood it better. The monk was pledging Rodman to a high
virtue,
in the lapse of which something awful was sure to happen.
Giovanni
wrote a letter to the State Department when he learned what had
happened to Rodman. The State Department turned it over to the
court
at the trial. I think it was one of the things that influenced the
judge in his decision. Still, at the time, there seemed no other
reasonable decision to make. The testimony must have appeared
incredible; it must have appeared fantastic. No man reading the
record could have come to any other conclusion about it. Yet it
seemed impossible—at least, it seemed impossible for me—to
consider this great vital bulk of a man as a monk of one of the
oldest religious orders in the world. Every common, academic
conception of such a monk he distinctly negatived. He impressed me,
instead, as possessing the ultimate qualities of clever
diplomacy—the
subtle ambassador of some new Oriental power, shrewd, suave,
accomplished.
When
one read the yellow-backed court-record, the sense of old, obscure,
mysterious agencies moving in sinister menace, invisibly, around
Rodman could not be escaped from. You believed it. Against your
reason, against all modern experience of life, you believed
it.
And
yet it could not be true! One had to find that verdict or topple
over
all human knowledge—that is, all human knowledge as we understand
it. The judge, cutting short the criminal trial, took the only way
out of the thing.
There
was one man in the world that everybody wished could have been
present at the time. That was Sir Henry Marquis. Marquis was chief
of
the Criminal Investigation Department of Scotland Yard. He had been
in charge of the English secret service on the frontier of the Shan
states, and at the time he was in Asia.
As
soon as Scotland Yard could release Sir Henry, it sent him.
Rodman's
genius was the common property of the world. The American
Government
could not, even with the verdict of a trial court, let Rodman's
death
go by under the smoke-screen of such a weird, inscrutable
mystery.
I
was to meet Sir Henry and come here with him. But my train into New
England was delayed, and when I arrived at the station, I found
that
Marquis had gone down to have a look at Rodman's country-house,
where
the thing had happened.
It
was on an isolated forest ridge of the Berkshires, no human soul
within a dozen miles of it—a comfortable stone house in the English
fashion. There was a big drawing-room across one end of it, with an
immense fireplace framed in black marble under a great white panel
to
the ceiling. It had a wide black-marble hearth. There is an
excellent
photograph of it in the record, showing the single andiron, that
mysterious andiron upon which the whole tragedy seemed to turn as
on
a hinge.
Rodman
used this drawing-room for a workshop. He kept it close-shuttered
and
locked. Not even this big, yellow, servile creature who took
exclusive care of him in the house was allowed to enter, except
under
Rodman's eye. What he saw in the final scenes of the tragedy, he
saw
looking in through a crack under the door. The earlier things he
noticed when he put logs on the fire at dark.
Time
is hardly a measure for the activities of the mind. These
reflections
winged by in a scarcely perceptible interval of it. They have taken
me some time to write out here, but they crowded past while the big
Oriental was speaking—in the pause between his words.
"The
print," he continued, "was the first confirmation of
evidence, but it was not the first indicatory sign. I doubt if the
Master himself noticed the thing at the beginning. The seductions
of
this disaster could not have come quickly; and besides that,
Excellency, the agencies behind the material world get a footing in
it only with continuous pressure. Do not receive a wrong
impression,
Excellency; to the eye a thing will suddenly appear, but the
invisible pressure will have been for some time behind that
materialization."
He
paused.
"The
Master was sunk in his labor, and while that enveloped him, the
first
advances of the lure would have gone by unnoticed—and the tension
of the pressure. But the day was at hand when the Master was
receptive. He had got his work completed; the formula, penciled
out,
were on his table. I knew by the relaxation. Of all periods this is
the one most dangerous to the human spirit."
He
sat silent for a moment, his big fingers moving on the arms of the
chair.
"I
knew," he added. Then he went on: "But it was the one thing
against which I could not protect him. The test was to be
permitted."
He
made a vague gesture.
"The
Master was indicated—but the peril antecedent to his elevation
remained.... It was to be permitted, and at its leisure and in its
choice of time."
He
turned sharply toward me, the folds of his face unsteady.
"Excellency!"
he cried. "I would have saved the Master, I would have saved him
with my soul's damnation, but it was not permitted. On that first
night in the Italian's tent I said all I could."
His
voice went into a higher note.
"Twice,
for the Master, I have been checked and reduced in merit. For that
bias I was myself encircled. I was in an agony of spirit when I
knew
that the thing was beginning to advance, but my very will to aid
was
at the time environed."
His
voice descended.
He
sat motionless, as though the whole bulk of him were devitalized,
and
maintained its outline only by the inclosing frame of the
chair.
"It
began, Excellency, on an August night. There is a chill in these
mountains at sunset. I had put wood into the fireplace, and lighted
it, and was about the house. The Master, as I have said, had worked
out his formulae. He was at leisure. I could not see him, for the
door was closed, but the odor of his cigar escaped from the room.
It
was very silent. I was placing the Master's bed-candle on the table
in the hall, when I heard his voice.... You have read it,
Excellency,
as the scriveners wrote it down before the judge."
He
paused.
"It
was an exclamation of surprise, of astonishment. Then I heard the
Master get up softly and go over to the fireplace... Presently he
returned. He got a new cigar, Excellency, clipped it and lighted
it.
I could hear the blade of the knife on the fiber of the tobacco,
and
of course, clearly the rasp of the match. A moment later I knew
that
he was in the chair again. The odor of ignited tobacco returned. It
was some time before there was another sound in the room; then
suddenly I heard the Master swear. His voice was sharp and
astonished. This time, Excellency, he got up swiftly and crossed
the
room to the fireplace... I could hear him distinctly. There was the
sound of one tapping on metal, thumping it, as with the
fingers."
He
stopped again, for a brief moment, as in reflection.
"It
was then that the Master unlocked the door and asked for the
liquor."
He indicated the court record in my pocket. "I brought it, a
goblet of brandy, with some carbonated water. He drank it all
without
putting down the glass.... His face was strange, Excellency....
Then
he looked at me.
"'Put
a log on the fire,' he said.
"I
went in and added wood to the fire and came out.
"The
Master remained in the doorway; he reentered when I came out, and
closed the door behind him.... There was a long silence after that;
them I heard the voice, permitted to the devocation thin, metallic,
offering the barter to the Master. It began and ceased because the
Master was on his feet and before the fireplace. I heard him swear
again, and presently return to his place by the table."
The
big Oriental lifted his face and looked out at the sweep of country
before the window.
"The
thing went on, Excellency, the voice offering its lure, and
presenting it in brief flashes of materialization, and the Master
endeavoring to seize and detain the visitations, which ceased
instantly at his approach to the hearth."
The
man paused.
"I
knew the Master contended in vain against the thing; if he would
acquire possession of what it offered, he must destroy what the
creative forces of the spirit had released to him."
Again
he paused.
"Toward
morning he went out of the house. I could hear him walking on the
gravel before the door. He would walk the full length of the house
and return. The night was clear; there was a chill in it, and every
sound was audible.
"That
was all, Excellency. The Master returned a little later and
ascended
to his bedroom as usual."
Then
he added:
"It
was when I went in to put wood on the fire that I saw the footprint
on the hearth."
There
was a force, compelling and vivid, in these meager details, the
severe suppression of things, big and tragic. No elaboration could
have equaled, in effect, the virtue of this restraint.
The
man was going on, directly, with the story.
"The
following night, Excellency, the thing happened. The Master had
passed the day in the open. He dined with a good appetite, like a
man
in health. And there was a change in his demeanor. He had the
aspect
of men who are determined to have a thing out at any hazard.
"After
his dinner the Master went into the drawing-room and closed the
door
behind him. He had not entered the room on this day. It had stood
locked and close-shuttered!"
The
big Oriental paused and made a gesture outward with his fingers, as
of one dismissing an absurdity.
"No
living human being could have been concealed in that room. There is
only the bare floor, the Master's table and the fireplace. The
great
wood shutters were bolted in, as they had stood since the Master
took
the room for a workshop and removed the furniture. The door was
always locked with that special thief-proof lock that the American
smiths had made for it. No one could have entered."
It
was the report of the experts at the trial. They showed by the
casing
of rust on the bolts that the shutters had not been moved; the
walls,
ceiling and floor were undisturbed; the throat of the chimney was
coated evenly with old soot. Only the door was possible as an
entry,
and this was always locked except when Rodman was himself in the
room. And at such times the big Oriental never left his post in the
hall before it. That seemed a condition of his mysterious overcare
of
Rodman.
Everybody
thought the trial court went to an excessive care. It scrutinized
in
minute detail every avenue that could possibly lead to a solution
of
the mystery. The whole country and every resident was
inquisitioned.
The conclusion was inevitable. There was no human creature on that
forest crest of the Berkshires but Rodman and his servant.
But
one can see why the trial judge kept at the thing; he was seeking
an
explanation consistent with the common experience of mankind. And
when he could not find it, he did the only thing he could do. He
was
wrong, as we now know. But he had a hold in the dark on the
truth—not
the whole truth by any means; he never had a glimmer of that. He
never had the faintest conception of the big, amazing truth. But as
I
have said, he had his fingers on one essential fact.
The
man was going on with a slow, precise articulation as though he
would
thereby make a difficult matter clear.
"The
night had fallen swiftly. It was incredibly silent. There was no
sound in the Master's room, and no light except the flicker of the
logs smoldering in the fireplace. The thin line of it appeared
faintly along the sill of the door."
He
paused.
"The
fireplace, Excellency, is at the end of the great room, directly
opposite this door into the hall, before which I always sat when
the
Master was within. The fireplace is of black marble with an immense
black-marble hearth. And the gift which I had brought the Master
stands on one side of the fire, on this marble hearth, as though it
were a single andiron."
The
man turned back into the heart of his story.
"I
knew by the vague sense of pressure that the devocations of the
thing
were again on the way. And I began to suffer in the spirit for the
Master's safety. Interference, both by act and by the will, were
denied me. But there is an anxiety of spirit, Excellency, that the
uncertainty of an issue makes intolerable."
The
man paused.
"The
pressure continued—and the silence. It was nearly midnight. I could
not distinguish any act or motion of the Master, and in fear I
crept
over to the door and looked in through the crevice along the
threshold.
"The
Master sat by his table; he was straining forward, his hands
gripping
the arms of his chair. His eyes and every tense instinct of the man
were concentrated on the fireplace. The red light of the embers was
in the room. I could see him clearly, and the table beyond him with
the calculations; but the fireplace seemed strangely out of
perspective—it extended above me.
"My
gift to the Master, not more than four handbreaths in length,
including the base, stood now like an immense bronze on an extended
marble slab beside a gigantic fireplace. This effect of extension
put
the top of the fireplace and the enlarged andiron, above its
pedestal, out of my line of vision. Everything else in the chamber,
holding its normal dimensions, was visible to me.
"The
Master's face was a little lifted. He was looking at the elevated
portions of the andiron which were invisible to me. He did not
move.
The steady light threw half of his face into shadow. But in the
other
half every feature stood out sharply as in a delicate etching. It
had
that refined sharpness and distinction which intense moments of
stress stamp on the human face. He did not move, and there was no
sound.
"I
have said, Excellency, that my angle of vision along the crevice of
the doorsill was sharply cut midway of this now enlarged fireplace.
From the direction and lift of the Master's face, he was watching
something above this line and directly over the pedestal of the
andiron. I watched, also, flattening my face against the sill, for
the thing to appear.
"And
it did appear.
"A
naked foot became slowly visible, as though some one were
descending
with extreme care from the elevation of the andiron to the great
marble hearth, under this strange enlargement, now some distance
below."
The
big Oriental paused, and looked down at me.
"I
knew then, Excellency, that the Master was lost! The creative
energies of the Spirit suffer no division of worship; those of the
body must be wholly denied. I had warned the Master. And in
travail,
Excellency, I turned over with my face to the floor.
"But
there is always hope, hope over the certainties of experience, over
the certainties of knowledge. Perhaps the Master, even now,
sustained
in the spirit, would put away the devocation.... No, Excellency, I
was not misled. I knew the Master was beyond hope! But the will to
hope moved me, and I turned back to the crevice at the
doorsill."
He
paused.
"There
was now a delicate odor, everywhere, faintly, like the blossom of
the
little bitter apple here in your country. The red embers in the
fireplace gave out a steady light; and in the glow of it, on the
marble hearth, stood the one who had descended from the elevation
of
the andiron."
Again
the man hesitated, as for an accurate method of expression.
"In
the flesh, Excellency, there was color that would not appear in the
image. The hair was yellow, and the eyes were blue; and against the
black marble of the fireplace the body was conspicuously white. But
in every other aspect of her, Excellency, the woman was on the
hearth
in the flesh as she is in the clutch of the savage male figure in
the
image.
"There
is no dress or ornament, as you will recall, Excellency. Not even
an
ear-jewel or an anklet, as though the graver of the image felt that
the inherent beauty of his figure could take nothing from these
ostentations. The woman's heavy yellow hair was wound around her
head, as in the image. She shivered a little, faintly, like a naked
child in an unaccustomed draught of air, although she stood on the
warm marble hearth and within the red glow of the fire.
"The
voice from the male figure of the image, which I had brought the
Master, and which stood as the andiron, now so immensely enlarged,
was beginning again to speak. The thin metallic sounds seemed to
splinter against the dense silence, as it went forward in the
ritual
prescribed.
"But
the Master had already decided; he stood now on the great marble
hearth with his papers crushed together. And as I looked on,
through
the crevice under the doorsill, he put out his free hand and with
his
finger touched the woman gently. The flesh under his finger
yielded,
and stooping over, he put the formulas into the fire."
Like
one who has come to the end of his story, the huge Oriental
stopped.
He remained for some moments silent. Then he continued in an even,
monotonous voice:
"I
got up from the floor then, and purified myself with water. And
after
that I went into an upper chamber, opened the window to the east,
and
sat down to write my report to the brotherhood. For the thing which
I
had been sent to do was finished."
He
put his hand somewhere into the loose folds of his Oriental garment
and brought out a roll of thin vellum like onion-skin, painted in
Chinese characters. It was of immense length, but on account of the
thinness of the vellum, the roll wound on a tiny cylinder of wood
was
not above two inches in thickness.
"Excellency,"
he said, "I have carefully concealed this report through the
misfortunes that have attended me. It is not certain that I shall
be
able to deliver it. Will you give it for me to the jewel merchant
Vanderdick, in Amsterdam? He will send it to Mahadal in Bombay, and
it will go north with the caravans."
His
voice changed into a note of solicitation.
"You
will not fail me, Excellency—already for my bias to the Master I am
reduced in merit."
I
put the scroll into my pocket and went out, for a motorcar had come
into the park, and I knew that Marquis had arrived.
I
met Sir Henry and the superintendent in the long corridor; they had
been looking in at my interview through the elevated
grating.
"Marquis,"
I cried, "the judge was right to cut short the criminal trial
and issue a lunacy warrant. This creature is the maddest lunatic in
this whole asylum. The human mind is capable of any
absurdity."
Sir
Henry looked at me with a queer ironical smile.
"The
judge was wrong," he said. "The creature, as you call him,
is as sane as any of us."
"Then
you believe this amazing story?" I said.
"I
believe Rodman was found at daylight dead on the hearth, with
practically every bone in his body crushed," he replied.
"Certainly,"
I said. "We all know that is true. But why was he killed?"
Again
Sir Henry regarded me with his ironical smile.
"Perhaps,"
he drawled, "there is some explanation in the report in your
pocket, to the Monastic Head. It's only a theory, you know."
He
smiled, showing his white, even teeth.
We
went into the superintendent's room, and sat down by a smoldering
fire of coals in the gate. I handed Marquis the roll of vellum. It
was in one of the Shan dialects. He read it aloud. With the
addition
of certain formal expressions, it contained precisely the
Oriental's
testimony before the court, and no more.
"Ah!"
he said in his curiously inflected Oxford voice.
And
he held the scroll out to the heat of the fire. The vellum baked
slowly, and as it baked, the black Chinese characters faded out and
faint blue ones began to appear.
Marquis
read the secret message in his emotionless drawl:
"'The
American is destroyed, and his accursed work is destroyed with him.
Send the news to Bangkok and west to Burma. The treasures of India
are saved."'
I
cried out in astonishment.
"An
assassin! The creature was an assassin! He killed Rodman simply by
crushing him in his arms!"
Sir
Henry's drawl lengthened.
"It's
Lal Gupta," he said, "the cleverest Oriental in the whole
of Asia. The jewel-traders sent him to watch Rodman, and to kill
him
if he was ever able to get his formulae worked out. They must have
paid him an incredible sum."
"And
that is why the creature attached himself to Rodman!" I
said.
"Surely,"
replied Sir Henry. "He brought that bronze Romulus carrying off
the Sabine woman and staged the supernatural to work out his plan
and
to save his life. I knew the bronze as soon as I got my eye on
it—old
Franz Josef gave it as a present to Mahadal in Bombay for matching
up
some rubies."
I
swore bitterly.
"And
we took him for a lunatic!"
"Ah,
yes!" replied Sir Henry. "What was it you said as I came
in? 'The human mind is capable of any absurdity!'"