Part 24 (1/2)

”The last of the Fire--still waiting for its full accomplishment,” he muttered; but I heard both words and hissing as things far away, for I was still busy with the journey of the soul through the Seven Halls of Death, listening for echoes of the grandest ritual ever known to men.

The earthen plates covered with hieroglyphics still lay beside the mummy, and round it, carefully arranged at the points of the compa.s.s, stood the four jars with the heads of the hawk, the jackal, the cynocephalus, and man, the jars in which were placed the hair, the nail parings, the heart, and other special portions of the body. Even the amulets, the mirror, the blue clay statues of the Ka, and the lamp with seven wicks were there. Only the sacred scarabaeus was missing.

”Not only has it been torn from its ancient resting-place,” I heard Dr.

Silence saying in a solemn voice as he looked at Colonel Wragge with fixed gaze, ”but it has been partially unwound,”--he pointed to the wrappings of the breast,--”and--the scarabaeus has been removed from the throat.”

The hissing, that was like the hissing of an invisible flame, had ceased; only from time to time we heard it as though it pa.s.sed backwards and forwards in the tunnel; and we stood looking into each other's faces without speaking.

Presently Colonel Wragge made a great effort and braced himself. I heard the sound catch in his throat before the words actually became audible.

”My sister,” he said, very low. And then there followed a long pause, broken at length by John Silence.

”It must be replaced,” he said significantly.

”I knew nothing,” the soldier said, forcing himself to speak the words he hated saying. ”Absolutely nothing.”

”It must be returned,” repeated the other, ”if it is not now too late.

For I fear--I fear--”

Colonel Wragge made a movement of a.s.sent with his head.

”It shall be,” he said.

The place was still as the grave.

I do not know what it was then that made us all three turn round with so sudden a start, for there was no sound audible to my ears, at least.

The doctor was on the point of replacing the lid over the mummy, when he straightened up as if he had been shot.

”There's something coming,” said Colonel Wragge under his breath, and the doctor's eyes, peering down the small opening of the tunnel, showed me the true direction.

A distant shuffling noise became distinctly audible coming from a point about half-way down the tunnel we had so laboriously penetrated.

”It's the sand falling in,” I said, though I knew it was foolish.

”No,” said the Colonel calmly, in a voice that seemed to have the ring of iron, ”I've heard it for some time past. It is something alive--and it is coming nearer.”

He stared about him with a look of resolution that made his face almost n.o.ble. The horror in his heart was overmastering, yet he stood there prepared for anything that might come.

”There's no other way out,” John Silence said.

He leaned the lid against the sand, and waited. I knew by the masklike expression of his face, the pallor, and the steadiness of the eyes, that he antic.i.p.ated something that might be very terrible--appalling.

The Colonel and myself stood on either side of the opening. I still held my candle and was ashamed of the way it shook, dripping the grease all over me; but the soldier had set his into the sand just behind his feet.