Part 2 (1/2)
”I will do so,” I replied.
”Thank you--oh, thank you!” she said; and dropping her veil again she walked rapidly away from me, whispering, ”I rely upon you. Do not fail me. Good-bye!”
Her conspicuous white figure joined the hurrying throngs upon the pavement beyond. My curiosity brooked no restraint. I hurried to the end of the courtway. She was crossing the road. From the shadows where he had lurked, a man came forward to meet her. A vehicle obstructed the view ere I could confirm my impression; and when it had pa.s.sed, neither my lovely visitor nor her companion were anywhere in sight.
But, unless some accident of light and shade had deceived me, the man who had waited was Ahmad Ahmadeen!
It seemed that some astral sluice-gate was raised; a dreadful sense of foreboding for the first time flooded my mind. Whilst the girl had stood before me it had been different--the mysterious charm of her personality had swamped all else. But now, the messenger gone, it was the purport of her message which a.s.sumed supreme significance.
Written in odd, square handwriting upon the pale amethyst paper, this was the message--
Prevail upon Professor Deeping to place what he has in the brown case in the porch of his house to-night. If he fails to do so, no power on earth can save him from the Scimitar of Ha.s.san.
A FRIEND.
CHAPTER III
”Ha.s.sAN OF ALEPPO”
Professor Deeping's number was in the telephone directory, therefore, on returning to my room, where there still lingered the faint perfume of my late visitor's presence, I asked for his number.
He proved to be at home.
”Strange you should ring me up, Cavanagh,” he said; ”for I was about to ring you up.”
”First,” I replied, ”listen to the contents of an anonymous letter which I have received.”
(I remembered, and only just in time, my promise to the veiled messenger.)
”To me,” I added, having read him the note, ”it seems to mean nothing. I take it that you understand better than I do.”
”I understand very well, Cavanagh!” he replied. ”You will recall my story of the scimitar which flashed before me in the darkness of my stateroom on the Mandalay? Well, I have seen it again! I am not an imaginative man: I had always believed myself to possess the scientific mind; but I can no longer doubt that I am the object of a pursuit which commenced in Mecca! The happenings on the steamer prepared me for this, in a degree. When the man lost his hand at Port Said I doubted. I had supposed the days of such things past. The attempt to break into my stateroom even left me still uncertain. But the outrage upon the steward at the docks removed all further doubt. I perceived that the contents of a certain brown leather case were the objective of the crimes.”
I listened in growing wonder.
”It was not necessary in order to further the plan of stealing the bag that the hands were severed,” resumed the Professor. ”In fact, as was rendered evident by the case of the steward, this was a penalty visited upon any one who touched it! You are thinking of my own immunity?”
”I am!”
”This is attributable to two things. Those who sought to recover what I had in the case feared that my death en route might result in its being lost to them for ever. They awaited a suitable opportunity. They had designed to take it at Port Said certainly, I think; but the bag was too large to be readily concealed, and, after the outrage, might have led to the discovery of the culprit.
In the second place, they are uncertain of my faith. I have long pa.s.sed for a true Believer in the East! As a Moslem I visited Mecca--”
”You visited Mecca!”
”I had just returned from the hadj when I joined the Mandalay at Port Said! My death, however, has been determined upon, whether I be Moslem or Christian!”
”Why?”