I
“And what is it makes you think
I could be of use in this particular case?”
asked Dr. John Silence, looking across somewhat sceptically
at the Swedish lady in the chair facing him.
“Your sympathetic heart and
your knowledge of occultism ”
“Oh, please that
dreadful word!” he interrupted, holding up a
finger with a gesture of impatience.
“Well, then,” she laughed,
“your wonderful clairvoyant gift and your trained
psychic knowledge of the processes by which a personality
may be disintegrated and destroyed these
strange studies you’ve been experimenting with
all these years ”
“If it’s only a case of
multiple personality I must really cry off,”
interrupted the doctor again hastily, a bored expression
in his eyes.
“It’s not that; now, please,
be serious, for I want your help,” she said;
“and if I choose my words poorly you must be
patient with my ignorance. The case I know will
interest you, and no one else could deal with it so
well. In fact, no ordinary professional man could
deal with it at all, for I know of no treatment nor
medicine that can restore a lost sense of humour!”
“You begin to interest me with
your ‘case,’” he replied, and made
himself comfortable to listen.
Mrs. Sivendson drew a sigh of contentment
as she watched him go to the tube and heard him tell
the servant he was not to be disturbed.
“I believe you have read my
thoughts already,” she said; “your intuitive
knowledge of what goes on in other people’s minds
is positively uncanny.”
Her friend shook his head and smiled
as he drew his chair up to a convenient position and
prepared to listen attentively to what she had to
say. He closed his eyes, as he always did when
he wished to absorb the real meaning of a recital
that might be inadequately expressed, for by this
method he found it easier to set himself in tune with
the living thoughts that lay behind the broken words.
By his friends John Silence was regarded
as an eccentric, because he was rich by accident,
and by choice a doctor. That a man
of independent means should devote his time to doctoring,
chiefly doctoring folk who could not pay, passed their
comprehension entirely. The native nobility of
a soul whose first desire was to help those who could
not help themselves, puzzled them. After that,
it irritated them, and, greatly to his own satisfaction,
they left him to his own devices.
Dr. Silence was a free-lance, though,
among doctors, having neither consulting-room, bookkeeper,
nor professional manner. He took no fees, being
at heart a genuine philanthropist, yet at the same
time did no harm to his fellow-practitioners, because
he only accepted unremunerative cases, and cases that
interested him for some very special reason.
He argued that the rich could pay, and the very poor
could avail themselves of organised charity, but that
a very large class of ill-paid, self-respecting workers,
often followers of the arts, could not afford the
price of a week’s comforts merely to be told
to travel. And it was these he desired to help:
cases often requiring special and patient study things
no doctor can give for a guinea, and that no one would
dream of expecting him to give.
But there was another side to his
personality and practice, and one with which we are
now more directly concerned; for the cases that especially
appealed to him were of no ordinary kind, but rather
of that intangible, elusive, and difficult nature
best described as psychical afflictions; and, though
he would have been the last person himself to approve
of the title, it was beyond question that he was known
more or less generally as the “Psychic Doctor.”
In order to grapple with cases of
this peculiar kind, he had submitted himself to a
long and severe training, at once physical, mental,
and spiritual. What precisely this training had
been, or where undergone, no one seemed to know, for
he never spoke of it, as, indeed, he betrayed no single
other characteristic of the charlatan, but
the fact that it had involved a total disappearance
from the world for five years, and that after he returned
and began his singular practice no one ever dreamed
of applying to him the so easily acquired epithet of
quack, spoke much for the seriousness of his strange
quest and also for the genuineness of his attainments.
For the modern psychical researcher
he felt the calm tolerance of the “man who knows.”
There was a trace of pity in his voice contempt
he never showed when he spoke of their
methods.
“This classification of results
is uninspired work at best,” he said once to
me, when I had been his confidential assistant for
some years. “It leads nowhere, and after
a hundred years will lead nowhere. It is playing
with the wrong end of a rather dangerous toy.
Far better, it would be, to examine the causes, and
then the results would so easily slip into place and
explain themselves. For the sources are accessible,
and open to all who have the courage to lead the life
that alone makes practical investigation safe and
possible.”
And towards the question of clairvoyance,
too, his attitude was significantly sane, for he knew
how extremely rare the genuine power was, and that
what is commonly called clairvoyance is nothing more
than a keen power of visualising.
“It connotes a slightly increased
sensibility, nothing more,” he would say.
“The true clairvoyant deplores his power, recognising
that it adds a new horror to life, and is in the nature
of an affliction. And you will find this always
to be the real test.”
Thus it was that John Silence, this
singularly developed doctor, was able to select his
cases with a clear knowledge of the difference between
mere hysterical delusion and the kind of psychical
affliction that claimed his special powers. It
was never necessary for him to resort to the cheap
mysteries of divination; for, as I have heard him
observe, after the solution of some peculiarly intricate
problem
“Systems of divination, from
geomancy down to reading by tea-leaves, are merely
so many methods of obscuring the outer vision, in order
that the inner vision may become open. Once the
method is mastered, no system is necessary at all.”
And the words were significant of
the methods of this remarkable man, the keynote of
whose power lay, perhaps, more than anything else,
in the knowledge, first, that thought can act at a
distance, and, secondly, that thought is dynamic and
can accomplish material results.
“Learn how to think,”
he would have expressed it, “and you have learned
to tap power at its source.”
To look at he was now past
forty he was sparely built, with speaking
brown eyes in which shone the light of knowledge and
self-confidence, while at the same time they made
one think of that wondrous gentleness seen most often
in the eyes of animals. A close beard concealed
the mouth without disguising the grim determination
of lips and jaw, and the face somehow conveyed an
impression of transparency, almost of light, so delicately
were the features refined away. On the fine forehead
was that indefinable touch of peace that comes from
identifying the mind with what is permanent in the
soul, and letting the impermanent slip by without
power to wound or distress; while, from his manner, so
gentle, quiet, sympathetic, few could have
guessed the strength of purpose that burned within
like a great flame.
“I think I should describe it
as a psychical case,” continued the Swedish
lady, obviously trying to explain herself very intelligently,
“and just the kind you like. I mean a case
where the cause is hidden deep down in some spiritual
distress, and ”
“But the symptoms first, please,
my dear Svenska,” he interrupted, with a strangely
compelling seriousness of manner, “and your deductions
afterwards.”
She turned round sharply on the edge
of her chair and looked him in the face, lowering
her voice to prevent her emotion betraying itself too
obviously.
“In my opinion there’s
only one symptom,” she half whispered, as though
telling something disagreeable “fear simply
fear.”
“Physical fear?”
“I think not; though how can
I say? I think it’s a horror in the psychical
region. It’s no ordinary delusion; the man
is quite sane; but he lives in mortal terror of something ”
“I don’t know what you
mean by his ‘psychical region,’”
said the doctor, with a smile; “though I suppose
you wish me to understand that his spiritual, and
not his mental, processes are affected. Anyhow,
try and tell me briefly and pointedly what you know
about the man, his symptoms, his need for help, my
peculiar help, that is, and all that seems vital in
the case. I promise to listen devotedly.”
“I am trying,” she continued
earnestly, “but must do so in my own words and
trust to your intelligence to disentangle as I go along.
He is a young author, and lives in a tiny house off
Putney Heath somewhere. He writes humorous stories quite
a genre of his own: Pender you must
have heard the name Felix Pender?
Oh, the man had a great gift, and married on the strength
of it; his future seemed assured. I say ‘had,’
for quite suddenly his talent utterly failed him.
Worse, it became transformed into its opposite.
He can no longer write a line in the old way that was
bringing him success ”
Dr. Silence opened his eyes for a
second and looked at her.
“He still writes, then?
The force has not gone?” he asked briefly, and
then closed his eyes again to listen.
“He works like a fury,”
she went on, “but produces nothing” she
hesitated a moment “nothing that he
can use or sell. His earnings have practically
ceased, and he makes a precarious living by book-reviewing
and odd jobs very odd, some of them.
Yet, I am certain his talent has not really deserted
him finally, but is merely ”
Again Mrs. Sivendson hesitated for the appropriate
word.
“In abeyance,” he suggested, without opening
his eyes.
“Obliterated,” she went
on, after a moment to weigh the word, “merely
obliterated by something else ”
“By some one else?”
“I wish I knew. All I can
say is that he is haunted, and temporarily his sense
of humour is shrouded gone replaced
by something dreadful that writes other things.
Unless something competent is done, he will simply
starve to death. Yet he is afraid to go to a doctor
for fear of being pronounced insane; and, anyhow,
a man can hardly ask a doctor to take a guinea to
restore a vanished sense of humour, can he?”
“Has he tried any one at all ?”
“Not doctors yet. He tried
some clergymen and religious people; but they know
so little and have so little intelligent sympathy.
And most of them are so busy balancing on their own
little pedestals ”
John Silence stopped her tirade with a gesture.
“And how is it that you know so much about him?”
he asked gently.
“I know Mrs. Pender well I knew her
before she married him ”
“And is she a cause, perhaps?”
“Not in the least. She
is devoted; a woman very well educated, though without
being really intelligent, and with so little sense
of humour herself that she always laughs at the wrong
places. But she has nothing to do with the cause
of his distress; and, indeed, has chiefly guessed
it from observing him, rather than from what little
he has told her. And he, you know, is a really
lovable fellow, hard-working, patient altogether
worth saving.”
Dr. Silence opened his eyes and went
over to ring for tea. He did not know very much
more about the case of the humorist than when he first
sat down to listen; but he realised that no amount
of words from his Swedish friend would help to reveal
the real facts. A personal interview with the
author himself could alone do that.
“All humorists are worth saving,”
he said with a smile, as she poured out tea.
“We can’t afford to lose a single one in
these strenuous days. I will go and see your
friend at the first opportunity.”
She thanked him elaborately, effusively,
with many words, and he, with much difficulty, kept
the conversation thenceforward strictly to the teapot.
And, as a result of this conversation,
and a little more he had gathered by means best known
to himself and his secretary, he was whizzing in his
motor-car one afternoon a few days later up the Putney
Hill to have his first interview with Felix Pender,
the humorous writer who was the victim of some mysterious
malady in his “psychical region” that had
obliterated his sense of the comic and threatened to
wreck his life and destroy his talent. And his
desire to help was probably of equal strength with
his desire to know and to investigate.
The motor stopped with a deep purring
sound, as though a great black panther lay concealed
within its hood, and the doctor the “psychic
doctor,” as he was sometimes called stepped
out through the gathering fog, and walked across the
tiny garden that held a blackened fir tree and a stunted
laurel shrubbery. The house was very small, and
it was some time before any one answered the bell.
Then, suddenly, a light appeared in the hall, and
he saw a pretty little woman standing on the top step
begging him to come in. She was dressed in grey,
and the gaslight fell on a mass of deliberately brushed
light hair. Stuffed, dusty birds, and a shabby
array of African spears, hung on the wall behind her.
A hat-rack, with a bronze plate full of very large
cards, led his eye swiftly to a dark staircase beyond.
Mrs. Pender had round eyes like a child’s, and
she greeted him with an effusiveness that barely concealed
her emotion, yet strove to appear naturally cordial.
Evidently she had been looking out for his arrival,
and had outrun the servant girl. She was a little
breathless.
“I hope you’ve not been
kept waiting I think it’s most
good of you to come ” she began,
and then stopped sharp when she saw his face in the
gaslight. There was something in Dr. Silence’s
look that did not encourage mere talk. He was
in earnest now, if ever man was.
“Good evening, Mrs. Pender,”
he said, with a quiet smile that won confidence, yet
deprecated unnecessary words, “the fog delayed
me a little. I am glad to see you.”
They went into a dingy sitting-room
at the back of the house, neatly furnished but depressing.
Books stood in a row upon the mantelpiece. The
fire had evidently just been lit. It smoked in
great puffs into the room.
“Mrs. Sivendson said she thought
you might be able to come,” ventured the little
woman again, looking up engagingly into his face and
betraying anxiety and eagerness in every gesture.
“But I hardly dared to believe it. I think
it is really too good of you. My husband’s
case is so peculiar that well, you know,
I am quite sure any ordinary doctor would say
at once the asylum ”
“Isn’t he in, then?” asked Dr. Silence
gently.
“In the asylum?” she gasped. “Oh
dear, no not yet!”
“In the house, I meant,” he laughed.
She gave a great sigh.
“He’ll be back any minute
now,” she replied, obviously relieved to see
him laugh; “but the fact is, we didn’t
expect you so early I mean, my husband
hardly thought you would come at all.”
“I am always delighted to come when
I am really wanted, and can be of help,” he
said quickly; “and, perhaps, it’s all for
the best that your husband is out, for now that we
are alone you can tell me something about his difficulties.
So far, you know, I have heard very little.”
Her voice trembled as she thanked
him, and when he came and took a chair close beside
her she actually had difficulty in finding words with
which to begin.
“In the first place,”
she began timidly, and then continuing with a nervous
incoherent rush of words, “he will be simply
delighted that you’ve really come, because he
said you were the only person he would consent to
see at all the only doctor, I mean.
But, of course, he doesn’t know how frightened
I am, or how much I have noticed. He pretends
with me that it’s just a nervous breakdown, and
I’m sure he doesn’t realise all the odd
things I’ve noticed him doing. But the main
thing, I suppose ”
“Yes, the main thing, Mrs. Pender,”
he said, encouragingly, noticing her hesitation.
“ is that he thinks
we are not alone in the house. That’s the
chief thing.”
“Tell me more facts just facts.”
“It began last summer when I
came back from Ireland; he had been here alone for
six weeks, and I thought him looking tired and queer ragged
and scattered about the face, if you know what I mean,
and his manner worn out. He said he had been
writing hard, but his inspiration had somehow failed
him, and he was dissatisfied with his work. His
sense of humour was leaving him, or changing into
something else, he said. There was something
in the house, he declared, that” she
emphasised the words “prevented his
feeling funny.”
“Something in the house that
prevented his feeling funny,” repeated the doctor.
“Ah, now we’re getting to the heart of
it!”
“Yes,” she resumed vaguely, “that’s
what he kept saying.”
“And what was it he did
that you thought strange?” he asked sympathetically.
“Be brief, or he may be here before you finish.”
“Very small things, but significant
it seemed to me. He changed his workroom from
the library, as we call it, to the sitting-room.
He said all his characters became wrong and terrible
in the library; they altered, so that he felt like
writing tragedies vile, debased tragedies,
the tragedies of broken souls. But now he says
the same of the sitting-room, and he’s gone
back to the library.”
“Ah!”
“You see, there’s so little
I can tell you,” she went on, with increasing
speed and countless gestures. “I mean it’s
only very small things he does and says that are queer.
What frightens me is that he assumes there is some
one else in the house all the time some
one I never see. He does not actually say so,
but on the stairs I’ve seen him standing aside
to let some one pass; I’ve seen him open a door
to let some one in or out; and often in our bedrooms
he puts chairs about as though for some one else to
sit in. Oh oh yes, and once or twice,”
she cried “once or twice ”
She paused, and looked about her with a startled air.
“Yes?”
“Once or twice,” she resumed
hurriedly, as though she heard a sound that alarmed
her, “I’ve heard him running coming
in and out of the rooms breathless as if something
were after him ”
The door opened while she was still
speaking, cutting her words off in the middle, and
a man came into the room. He was dark and clean-shaven,
sallow rather, with the eyes of imagination, and dark
hair growing scantily about the temples. He was
dressed in a shabby tweed suit, and wore an untidy
flannel collar at the neck. The dominant expression
of his face was startled hunted; an expression
that might any moment leap into the dreadful stare
of terror and announce a total loss of self-control.
The moment he saw his visitor a smile
spread over his worn features, and he advanced to
shake hands.
“I hoped you would come; Mrs.
Sivendson said you might be able to find time,”
he said simply. His voice was thin and needy.
“I am very glad to see you, Dr. Silence.
It is ‘Doctor,’ is it not?”
“Well, I am entitled to the
description,” laughed the other, “but I
rarely get it. You know, I do not practise as
a regular thing; that is, I only take cases that specially
interest me, or ”
He did not finish the sentence, for
the men exchanged a glance of sympathy that rendered
it unnecessary.
“I have heard of your great kindness.”
“It’s my hobby,” said the other
quickly, “and my privilege.”
“I trust you will still think
so when you have heard what I have to tell you,”
continued the author, a little wearily. He led
the way across the hall into the little smoking-room
where they could talk freely and undisturbed.
In the smoking-room, the door shut
and privacy about them, Fender’s attitude changed
somewhat, and his manner became very grave. The
doctor sat opposite, where he could watch his face.
Already, he saw, it looked more haggard. Evidently
it cost him much to refer to his trouble at all.
“What I have is, in my belief,
a profound spiritual affliction,” he began quite
bluntly, looking straight into the other’s eyes.
“I saw that at once,” Dr. Silence said.
“Yes, you saw that, of course;
my atmosphere must convey that much to any one with
psychic perceptions. Besides which, I feel sure
from all I’ve heard, that you are really a soul-doctor,
are you not, more than a healer merely of the body?”
“You think of me too highly,”
returned the other; “though I prefer cases,
as you know, in which the spirit is disturbed first,
the body afterwards.”
“I understand, yes. Well,
I have experienced a curious disturbance in not
in my physical region primarily. I mean my nerves
are all right, and my body is all right. I have
no delusions exactly, but my spirit is tortured by
a calamitous fear which first came upon me in a strange
manner.”
John Silence leaned forward a moment
and took the speaker’s hand and held it in his
own for a few brief seconds, closing his eyes as he
did so. He was not feeling his pulse, or doing
any of the things that doctors ordinarily do; he was
merely absorbing into himself the main note of the
man’s mental condition, so as to get completely
his own point of view, and thus be able to treat his
case with true sympathy. A very close observer
might perhaps have noticed that a slight tremor ran
through his frame after he had held the hand for a
few seconds.
“Tell me quite frankly, Mr.
Pender,” he said soothingly, releasing the hand,
and with deep attention in his manner, “tell
me all the steps that led to the beginning of this
invasion. I mean tell me what the particular
drug was, and why you took it, and how it affected
you ”
“Then you know it began with
a drug!” cried the author, with undisguised
astonishment.
“I only know from what I observe
in you, and in its effect upon myself. You are
in a surprising psychical condition. Certain portions
of your atmosphere are vibrating at a far greater
rate than others. This is the effect of a drug,
but of no ordinary drug. Allow me to finish, please.
If the higher rate of vibration spreads all over, you
will become, of course, permanently cognisant of a
much larger world than the one you know normally.
If, on the other hand, the rapid portion sinks back
to the usual rate, you will lose these occasional
increased perceptions you now have.”
“You amaze me!” exclaimed
the author; “for your words exactly describe
what I have been feeling ”
“I mention this only in passing,
and to give you confidence before you approach the
account of your real affliction,” continued the
doctor. “All perception, as you know, is
the result of vibrations; and clairvoyance simply
means becoming sensitive to an increased scale of
vibrations. The awakening of the inner senses
we hear so much about means no more than that.
Your partial clairvoyance is easily explained.
The only thing that puzzles me is how you managed to
procure the drug, for it is not easy to get in pure
form, and no adulterated tincture could have given
you the terrific impetus I see you have acquired.
But, please proceed now and tell me your story in
your own way.”
“This Cannabis indica,”
the author went on, “came into my possession
last autumn while my wife was away. I need not
explain how I got it, for that has no importance;
but it was the genuine fluid extract, and I could
not resist the temptation to make an experiment.
One of its effects, as you know, is to induce torrential
laughter ”
“Yes: sometimes.”
“ I am a writer of
humorous tales, and I wished to increase my own sense
of laughter to see the ludicrous from an
abnormal point of view. I wished to study it
a bit, if possible, and ”
“Tell me!”
“I took an experimental dose.
I starved for six hours to hasten the effect, locked
myself into this room, and gave orders not to be disturbed.
Then I swallowed the stuff and waited.”
“And the effect?”
“I waited one hour, two, three,
four, five hours. Nothing happened. No laughter
came, but only a great weariness instead. Nothing
in the room or in my thoughts came within a hundred
miles of a humorous aspect.”
“Always a most uncertain drug,”
interrupted the doctor. “We make very small
use of it on that account.”
“At two o’clock in the
morning I felt so hungry and tired that I decided
to give up the experiment and wait no longer.
I drank some milk and went upstairs to bed. I
felt flat and disappointed. I fell asleep at once
and must have slept for about an hour, when I awoke
suddenly with a great noise in my ears. It was
the noise of my own laughter! I was simply shaking
with merriment. At first I was bewildered and
thought I had been laughing in dreams, but a moment
later I remembered the drug, and was delighted to
think that after all I had got an effect. It had
been working all along, only I had miscalculated the
time. The only unpleasant thing then was
an odd feeling that I had not waked naturally, but
had been wakened by some one else deliberately.
This came to me as a certainty in the middle of my
noisy laughter and distressed me.”
“Any impression who it could
have been?” asked the doctor, now listening
with close attention to every word, very much on the
alert.
Pender hesitated and tried to smile.
He brushed his hair from his forehead with a nervous
gesture.
“You must tell me all your impressions,
even your fancies; they are quite as important as
your certainties.”
“I had a vague idea that it
was some one connected with my forgotten dream, some
one who had been at me in my sleep, some one of great
strength and great ability of great force quite
an unusual personality and, I was certain,
too a woman.”
“A good woman?” asked John Silence quietly.
Pender started a little at the question
and his sallow face flushed; it seemed to surprise
him. But he shook his head quickly with an indefinable
look of horror.
“Evil,” he answered briefly,
“appallingly evil, and yet mingled with the
sheer wickedness of it was also a certain perverseness the
perversity of the unbalanced mind.”
He hesitated a moment and looked up
sharply at his interlocutor. A shade of suspicion
showed itself in his eyes.
“No,” laughed the doctor,
“you need not fear that I’m merely humouring
you, or think you mad. Far from it. Your
story interests me exceedingly and you furnish me
unconsciously with a number of clues as you tell it.
You see, I possess some knowledge of my own as to these
psychic byways.”
“I was shaking with such violent
laughter,” continued the narrator, reassured
in a moment, “though with no clear idea what
was amusing me, that I had the greatest difficulty
in getting up for the matches, and was afraid I should
frighten the servants overhead with my explosions.
When the gas was lit I found the room empty, of course,
and the door locked as usual. Then I half dressed
and went out on to the landing, my hilarity better
under control, and proceeded to go downstairs.
I wished to record my sensations. I stuffed a
handkerchief into my mouth so as not to scream aloud
and communicate my hysterics to the entire household.”
“And the presence of this this ?”
“It was hanging about me all
the time,” said Pender, “but for the moment
it seemed to have withdrawn. Probably, too, my
laughter killed all other emotions.”
“And how long did you take getting downstairs?”
“I was just coming to that.
I see you know all my ‘symptoms’ in advance,
as it were; for, of course, I thought I should never
get to the bottom. Each step seemed to take five
minutes, and crossing the narrow hall at the foot
of the stairs well, I could have sworn it
was half an hour’s journey had not my watch
certified that it was a few seconds. Yet I walked
fast and tried to push on. It was no good.
I walked apparently without advancing, and at that
rate it would have taken me a week to get down Putney
Hill.”
“An experimental dose radically
alters the scale of time and space sometimes ”
“But, when at last I got into
my study and lit the gas, the change came horridly,
and sudden as a flash of lightning. It was like
a douche of icy water, and in the middle of this storm
of laughter ”
“Yes; what?” asked the
doctor, leaning forward and peering into his eyes.
“ I was overwhelmed
with terror,” said Pender, lowering his reedy
voice at the mere recollection of it.
He paused a moment and mopped his
forehead. The scared, hunted look in his eyes
now dominated the whole face. Yet, all the time,
the corners of his mouth hinted of possible laughter
as though the recollection of that merriment still
amused him. The combination of fear and laughter
in his face was very curious, and lent great conviction
to his story; it also lent a bizarre expression of
horror to his gestures.
“Terror, was it?” repeated the doctor
soothingly.
“Yes, terror; for, though the
Thing that woke me seemed to have gone, the memory
of it still frightened me, and I collapsed into a chair.
Then I locked the door and tried to reason with myself,
but the drug made my movements so prolonged that it
took me five minutes to reach the door, and another
five to get back to the chair again. The laughter,
too, kept bubbling up inside me great wholesome
laughter that shook me like gusts of wind so
that even my terror almost made me laugh. Oh,
but I may tell you, Dr. Silence, it was altogether
vile, that mixture of fear and laughter, altogether
vile!
“Then, all at once, the things
in the room again presented their funny side to me
and set me off laughing more furiously than ever.
The bookcase was ludicrous, the arm-chair a perfect
clown, the way the clock looked at me on the mantelpiece
too comic for words; the arrangement of papers and
inkstand on the desk tickled me till I roared and shook
and held my sides and the tears streamed down my cheeks.
And that footstool! Oh, that absurd footstool!”
He lay back in his chair, laughing
to himself and holding up his hands at the thought
of it, and at the sight of him Dr. Silence laughed,
too.
“Go on, please,” he said,
“I quite understand. I know something myself
of the hashish laughter.”
The author pulled himself together
and resumed, his face growing quickly grave again.
“So, you see, side by side with
this extravagant, apparently causeless merriment,
there was also an extravagant, apparently causeless
terror. The drug produced the laughter, I knew;
but what brought in the terror I could not imagine.
Everywhere behind the fun lay the fear. It was
terror masked by cap and bells; and I became the playground
for two opposing emotions, armed and fighting to the
death. Gradually, then, the impression grew in
me that this fear was caused by the invasion so
you called it just now of the ‘person’
who had wakened me: she was utterly evil; inimical
to my soul, or at least to all in me that wished for
good. There I stood, sweating and trembling, laughing
at everything in the room, yet all the while with
this white terror mastering my heart. And this
creature was putting putting her ”
He hesitated again, using his handkerchief freely.
“Putting what?”
“ putting ideas into
my mind,” he went on glancing nervously about
the room. “Actually tapping my thought-stream
so as to switch off the usual current and inject her
own. How mad that sounds! I know it, but
it’s true. It’s the only way I can
express it. Moreover, while the operation terrified
me, the skill with which it was accomplished filled
me afresh with laughter at the clumsiness of men by
comparison. Our ignorant, bungling methods of
teaching the minds of others, of inculcating ideas,
and so on, overwhelmed me with laughter when I understood
this superior and diabolical method. Yet my laughter
seemed hollow and ghastly, and ideas of evil and tragedy
trod close upon the heels of the comic. Oh, doctor,
I tell you again, it was unnerving!”
John Silence sat with his head thrust
forward to catch every word of the story which the
other continued to pour out in nervous, jerky sentences
and lowered voice.
“You saw nothing no one all
this time?” he asked.
“Not with my eyes. There
was no visual hallucination. But in my mind there
began to grow the vivid picture of a woman large,
dark-skinned, with white teeth and masculine features,
and one eye the left so drooping
as to appear almost closed. Oh, such a face !”
“A face you would recognise again?”
Pender laughed dreadfully.
“I wish I could forget it,”
he whispered, “I only wish I could forget it!”
Then he sat forward in his chair suddenly, and grasped
the doctor’s hand with an emotional gesture.
“I must tell you how
grateful I am for your patience and sympathy,”
he cried, with a tremor in his voice, “and that
you do not think me mad. I have told no one else
a quarter of all this, and the mere freedom of speech the
relief of sharing my affliction with another has
helped me already more than I can possibly say.”
Dr. Silence pressed his hand and looked
steadily into the frightened eyes. His voice
was very gentle when he replied.
“Your case, you know, is very
singular, but of absorbing interest to me,”
he said, “for it threatens, not your physical
existence but the temple of your psychical existence the
inner life. Your mind would not be permanently
affected here and now, in this world; but in the existence
after the body is left behind, you might wake up with
your spirit so twisted, so distorted, so befouled,
that you would be spiritually insane a
far more radical condition than merely being insane
here.”
There came a strange hush over the
room, and between the two men sitting there facing
one another.
“Do you really mean Good
Lord!” stammered the author as soon as he could
find his tongue.
“What I mean in detail will
keep till a little later, and I need only say now
that I should not have spoken in this way unless I
were quite positive of being able to help you.
Oh, there’s no doubt as to that, believe me.
In the first place, I am very familiar with the workings
of this extraordinary drug, this drug which has had
the chance effect of opening you up to the forces
of another region; and, in the second, I have a firm
belief in the reality of supersensuous occurrences
as well as considerable knowledge of psychic processes
acquired by long and painful experiment. The
rest is, or should be, merely sympathetic treatment
and practical application. The hashish has partially
opened another world to you by increasing your rate
of psychical vibration, and thus rendering you abnormally
sensitive. Ancient forces attached to this house
have attacked you. For the moment I am only puzzled
as to their precise nature; for were they of an ordinary
character, I should myself be psychic enough to feel
them. Yet I am conscious of feeling nothing as
yet. But now, please continue, Mr. Pender, and
tell me the rest of your wonderful story; and when
you have finished, I will talk about the means of
cure.”
Pender shifted his chair a little
closer to the friendly doctor and then went on in
the same nervous voice with his narrative.
“After making some notes of
my impressions I finally got upstairs again to bed.
It was four o’clock in the morning. I laughed
all the way up at the grotesque banisters,
the droll physiognomy of the staircase window, the
burlesque grouping of the furniture, and the memory
of that outrageous footstool in the room below; but
nothing more happened to alarm or disturb me, and
I woke late in the morning after a dreamless sleep,
none the worse for my experiment except for a slight
headache and a coldness of the extremities due to
lowered circulation.”
“Fear gone, too?” asked the doctor.
“I seemed to have forgotten
it, or at least ascribed it to mere nervousness.
Its reality had gone, anyhow for the time, and all
that day I wrote and wrote and wrote. My sense
of laughter seemed wonderfully quickened and my characters
acted without effort out of the heart of true humour.
I was exceedingly pleased with this result of my experiment.
But when the stenographer had taken her departure and
I came to read over the pages she had typed out, I
recalled her sudden glances of surprise and the odd
way she had looked up at me while I was dictating.
I was amazed at what I read and could hardly believe
I had uttered it.”
“And why?”
“It was so distorted. The
words, indeed, were mine so far as I could remember,
but the meanings seemed strange. It frightened
me. The sense was so altered. At the very
places where my characters were intended to tickle
the ribs, only curious emotions of sinister amusement
resulted. Dreadful innuendoes had managed to
creep into the phrases. There was laughter of
a kind, but it was bizarre, horrible, distressing;
and my attempt at analysis only increased my dismay.
The story, as it read then, made me shudder, for by
virtue of these slight changes it had come somehow
to hold the soul of horror, of horror disguised as
merriment. The framework of humour was there,
if you understand me, but the characters had turned
sinister, and their laughter was evil.”
“Can you show me this writing?”
The author shook his head.
“I destroyed it,” he whispered.
“But, in the end, though of course much perturbed
about it, I persuaded myself that it was due to some
after-effect of the drug, a sort of reaction that gave
a twist to my mind and made me read macabre interpretations
into words and situations that did not properly hold
them.”
“And, meanwhile, did the presence of this person
leave you?”
“No; that stayed more or less.
When my mind was actively employed I forgot it, but
when idle, dreaming, or doing nothing in particular,
there she was beside me, influencing my mind horribly ”
“In what way, precisely?” interrupted
the doctor.
“Evil, scheming thoughts came
to me, visions of crime, hateful pictures of wickedness,
and the kind of bad imagination that so far has been
foreign, indeed impossible, to my normal nature ”
“The pressure of the Dark Powers
upon the personality,” murmured the doctor,
making a quick note.
“Eh? I didn’t quite catch ”
“Pray, go on. I am merely
making notes; you shall know their purport fully later.”
“Even when my wife returned
I was still aware of this Presence in the house; it
associated itself with my inner personality in most
intimate fashion; and outwardly I always felt oddly
constrained to be polite and respectful towards it to
open doors, provide chairs and hold myself carefully
deferential when it was about. It became very
compelling at last, and, if I failed in any little
particular, I seemed to know that it pursued me about
the house, from one room to another, haunting my very
soul in its inmost abode. It certainly came before
my wife so far as my attentions were concerned.
“But, let me first finish the
story of my experimental dose, for I took it again
the third night, and underwent a very similar experience,
delayed like the first in coming, and then carrying
me off my feet when it did come with a rush of this
false demon-laughter. This time, however, there
was a reversal of the changed scale of space and time;
it shortened instead of lengthened, so that I dressed
and got downstairs in about twenty seconds, and the
couple of hours I stayed and worked in the study passed
literally like a period of ten minutes.”
“That is often true of an overdose,”
interjected the doctor, “and you may go a mile
in a few minutes, or a few yards in a quarter of an
hour. It is quite incomprehensible to those who
have never experienced it, and is a curious proof
that time and space are merely forms of thought.”
“This time,” Pender went
on, talking more and more rapidly in his excitement,
“another extraordinary effect came to me, and
I experienced a curious changing of the senses, so
that I perceived external things through one large
main sense-channel instead of through the five divisions
known as sight, smell, touch, and so forth. You
will, I know, understand me when I tell you that I
heard sights and saw sounds. No
language can make this comprehensible, of course, and
I can only say, for instance, that the striking of
the clock I saw as a visible picture in the air before
me. I saw the sounds of the tinkling bell.
And in precisely the same way I heard the colours
in the room, especially the colours of those books
in the shelf behind you. Those red bindings I
heard in deep sounds, and the yellow covers of the
French bindings next to them made a shrill, piercing
note not unlike the chattering of starlings.
That brown bookcase muttered, and those green curtains
opposite kept up a constant sort of rippling sound
like the lower notes of a wood-horn. But I only
was conscious of these sounds when I looked steadily
at the different objects, and thought about them.
The room, you understand, was not full of a chorus
of notes; but when I concentrated my mind upon a colour,
I heard, as well as saw, it.”
“That is a known, though rarely
obtained, effect of Cannabis indica,”
observed the doctor. “And it provoked laughter
again, did it?”
“Only the muttering of the cupboard-bookcase
made me laugh. It was so like a great animal
trying to get itself noticed, and made me think of
a performing bear which is full of a kind
of pathetic humour, you know. But this mingling
of the senses produced no confusion in my brain.
On the contrary, I was unusually clear-headed and
experienced an intensification of consciousness, and
felt marvellously alive and keen-minded.
“Moreover, when I took up a
pencil in obedience to an impulse to sketch a
talent not normally mine I found that I
could draw nothing but heads, nothing, in fact, but
one head always the same the
head of a dark-skinned woman, with huge and terrible
features and a very drooping left eye; and so well
drawn, too, that I was amazed, as you may imagine ”
“And the expression of the face ?”
Pender hesitated a moment for words,
casting about with his hands in the air and hunching
his shoulders. A perceptible shudder ran over
him.
“What I can only describe as blackness,”
he replied in a low tone; “the face of a dark
and evil soul.”
“You destroyed that, too?” queried the
doctor sharply.
“No; I have kept the drawings,”
he said, with a laugh, and rose to get them from a
drawer in the writing-desk behind him.
“Here is all that remains of
the pictures, you see,” he added, pushing a
number of loose sheets under the doctor’s eyes;
“nothing but a few scrawly lines. That’s
all I found the next morning. I had really drawn
no heads at all nothing but those lines
and blots and wriggles. The pictures were entirely
subjective, and existed only in my mind which constructed
them out of a few wild strokes of the pen. Like
the altered scale of space and time it was a complete
delusion. These all passed, of course, with the
passing of the drug’s effects. But the other
thing did not pass. I mean, the presence of that
Dark Soul remained with me. It is here still.
It is real. I don’t know how I can escape
from it.”
“It is attached to the house,
not to you personally. You must leave the house.”
“Yes. Only I cannot afford
to leave the house, for my work is my sole means of
support, and well, you see, since this change
I cannot even write. They are horrible, these
mirthless tales I now write, with their mockery of
laughter, their diabolical suggestion. Horrible?
I shall go mad if this continues.”
He screwed his face up and looked
about the room as though he expected to see some haunting
shape.
“This influence in this house
induced by my experiment, has killed in a flash, in
a sudden stroke, the sources of my humour, and though
I still go on writing funny tales I have
a certain name you know my inspiration
has dried up, and much of what I write I have to burn yes,
doctor, to burn, before any one sees it.”
“As utterly alien to your own mind and personality?”
“Utterly! As though some one else had written
it ”
“Ah!”
“And shocking!” He passed
his hand over his eyes a moment and let the breath
escape softly through his teeth. “Yet most
damnably clever in the consummate way the vile suggestions
are insinuated under cover of a kind of high drollery.
My stenographer left me of course and I’ve
been afraid to take another ”
John Silence got up and began to walk
about the room leisurely without speaking; he appeared
to be examining the pictures on the wall and reading
the names of the books lying about. Presently
he paused on the hearthrug, with his back to the fire,
and turned to look his patient quietly in the eyes.
Pender’s face was grey and drawn; the hunted
expression dominated it; the long recital had told
upon him.
“Thank you, Mr. Pender,”
he said, a curious glow showing about his fine, quiet
face; “thank you for the sincerity and frankness
of your account. But I think now there is nothing
further I need ask you.” He indulged in
a long scrutiny of the author’s haggard features
drawing purposely the man’s eyes to his own
and then meeting them with a look of power and confidence
calculated to inspire even the feeblest soul with courage.
“And, to begin with,” he added, smiling
pleasantly, “let me assure you without delay
that you need have no alarm, for you are no more insane
or deluded than I myself am ”
Pender heaved a deep sigh and tried to return the
smile.
“ and this is simply
a case, so far as I can judge at present, of a very
singular psychical invasion, and a very sinister one,
too, if you perhaps understand what I mean ”
“It’s an odd expression;
you used it before, you know,” said the author
wearily, yet eagerly listening to every word of the
diagnosis, and deeply touched by the intelligent sympathy
which did not at once indicate the lunatic asylum.
“Possibly,” returned the
other, “and an odd affliction, too, you’ll
allow, yet one not unknown to the nations of antiquity,
nor to those moderns, perhaps, who recognise the freedom
of action under certain pathogenic conditions between
this world and another.”
“And you think,” asked
Pender hastily, “that it is all primarily due
to the Cannabis? There is nothing radically
amiss with myself nothing incurable, or ?”
“Due entirely to the overdose,”
Dr. Silence replied emphatically, “to the drug’s
direct action upon your psychical being. It rendered
you ultra-sensitive and made you respond to an increased
rate of vibration. And, let me tell you, Mr.
Pender, that your experiment might have had results
far more dire. It has brought you into touch with
a somewhat singular class of Invisible, but of one,
I think, chiefly human in character. You might,
however, just as easily have been drawn out of human
range altogether, and the results of such a contingency
would have been exceedingly terrible. Indeed,
you would not now be here to tell the tale. I
need not alarm you on that score, but mention it as
a warning you will not misunderstand or underrate
after what you have been through.
“You look puzzled. You
do not quite gather what I am driving at; and it is
not to be expected that you should, for you, I suppose,
are the nominal Christian with the nominal Christian’s
lofty standard of ethics, and his utter ignorance
of spiritual possibilities. Beyond a somewhat
childish understanding of ‘spiritual wickedness
in high places,’ you probably have no conception
of what is possible once you break-down the slender
gulf that is mercifully fixed between you and that
Outer World. But my studies and training have
taken me far outside these orthodox trips, and I have
made experiments that I could scarcely speak to you
about in language that would be intelligible to you.”
He paused a moment to note the breathless
interest of Pender’s face and manner. Every
word he uttered was calculated; he knew exactly the
value and effect of the emotions he desired to waken
in the heart of the afflicted being before him.
“And from certain knowledge
I have gained through various experiences,”
he continued calmly, “I can diagnose your case
as I said before to be one of psychical invasion.”
“And the nature of this er invasion?”
stammered the bewildered writer of humorous tales.
“There is no reason why I should
not say at once that I do not yet quite know,”
replied Dr. Silence. “I may first have to
make one or two experiments ”
“On me?” gasped Pender, catching his breath.
“Not exactly,” the doctor
said, with a grave smile, “but with your assistance,
perhaps. I shall want to test the conditions of
the house to ascertain, impossible, the
character of the forces, of this strange personality
that has been haunting you ”
“At present you have no idea
exactly who what why ”
asked the other in a wild flurry of interest, dread
and amazement.
“I have a very good idea, but
no proof rather,” returned the doctor.
“The effects of the drug in altering the scale
of time and space, and merging the senses have nothing
primarily to do with the invasion. They come
to any one who is fool enough to take an experimental
dose. It is the other features of your case that
are unusual. You see, you are now in touch with
certain violent emotions, desires, purposes, still
active in this house, that were produced in the past
by some powerful and evil personality that lived here.
How long ago, or why they still persist so forcibly,
I cannot positively say. But I should judge that
they are merely forces acting automatically with the
momentum of their terrific original impetus.”
“Not directed by a living being,
a conscious will, you mean?”
“Possibly not but
none the less dangerous on that account, and more
difficult to deal with. I cannot explain to you
in a few minutes the nature of such things, for you
have not made the studies that would enable you to
follow me; but I have reason to believe that on the
dissolution at death of a human being, its forces may
still persist and continue to act in a blind, unconscious
fashion. As a rule they speedily dissipate themselves,
but in the case of a very powerful personality they
may last a long time. And, in some cases of
which I incline to think this is one these
forces may coalesce with certain non-human entities
who thus continue their life indefinitely and increase
their strength to an unbelievable degree. If
the original personality was evil, the beings attracted
to the left-over forces will also be evil. In
this case, I think there has been an unusual and dreadful
aggrandisement of the thoughts and purposes left behind
long ago by a woman of consummate wickedness and great
personal power of character and intellect. Now,
do you begin to see what I am driving at a little?”
Pender stared fixedly at his companion,
plain horror showing in his eyes. But he found
nothing to say, and the doctor continued
“In your case, predisposed by
the action of the drug, you have experienced the rush
of these forces in undiluted strength. They wholly
obliterate in you the sense of humour, fancy, imagination, all
that makes for cheerfulness and hope. They seek,
though perhaps automatically only, to oust your own
thoughts and establish themselves in their place.
You are the victim of a psychical invasion. At
the same time, you have become clairvoyant in the
true sense. You are also a clairvoyant victim.”
Pender mopped his face and sighed.
He left his chair and went over to the fireplace to
warm himself.
“You must think me a quack to
talk like this, or a madman,” laughed Dr. Silence.
“But never mind that. I have come to help
you, and I can help you if you will do what I tell
you. It is very simple: you must leave this
house at once. Oh, never mind the difficulties;
we will deal with those together. I can place
another house at your disposal, or I would take the
lease here off your hands, and later have it pulled
down. Your case interests me greatly, and I mean
to see you through, so that you have no anxiety, and
can drop back into your old groove of work tomorrow!
The drug has provided you, and therefore me, with a
shortcut to a very interesting experience. I
am grateful to you.”
The author poked the fire vigorously,
emotion rising in him like a tide. He glanced
towards the door nervously.
“There is no need to alarm your
wife or to tell her the details of our conversation,”
pursued the other quietly. “Let her know
that you will soon be in possession again of your
sense of humour and your health, and explain that
I am lending you another house for six months.
Meanwhile I may have the right to use this house for
a night or two for my experiment. Is that understood
between us?”
“I can only thank you from the
bottom of my heart,” stammered Pender, unable
to find words to express his gratitude.
Then he hesitated for a moment, searching
the doctor’s face anxiously.
“And your experiment with the house?”
he said at length.
“Of the simplest character,
my dear Mr. Pender. Although I am myself an artificially
trained psychic, and consequently aware of the presence
of discarnate entities as a rule, I have so far felt
nothing here at all. This makes me sure that
the forces acting here are of an unusual description.
What I propose to do is to make an experiment with
a view of drawing out this evil, coaxing it from its
lair, so to speak, in order that it may exhaust
itself through me and become dissipated for ever.
I have already been inoculated,” he added; “I
consider myself to be immune.”
“Heavens above!” gasped
the author, collapsing on to a chair.
“Hell beneath! might be a more
appropriate exclamation,” the doctor laughed.
“But, seriously, Mr. Pender, this is what I propose
to do with your permission.”
“Of course, of course,”
cried the other, “you have my permission and
my best wishes for success. I can see no possible
objection, but ”
“But what?”
“I pray to Heaven you will not
undertake this experiment alone, will you?”
“Oh, dear, no; not alone.”
“You will take a companion with
good nerves, and reliable in case of disaster, won’t
you?”
“I shall bring two companions,” the doctor
said.
“Ah, that’s better.
I feel easier. I am sure you must have among your
acquaintances men who ”
“I shall not think of bringing men, Mr. Pender.”
The other looked up sharply.
“No, or women either; or children.”
“I don’t understand. Who will you
bring, then?”
“Animals,” explained the
doctor, unable to prevent a smile at his companion’s
expression of surprise “two animals,
a cat and a dog.”
Pender stared as if his eyes would
drop out upon the floor, and then led the way without
another word into the adjoining room where his wife
was awaiting them for tea.
II
A few days later the humorist and
his wife, with minds greatly relieved, moved into
a small furnished house placed at their free disposal
in another part of London; and John Silence, intent
upon his approaching experiment, made ready to spend
a night in the empty house on the top of Putney Hill.
Only two rooms were prepared for occupation: the
study on the ground floor and the bedroom immediately
above it; all other doors were to be locked, and no
servant was to be left in the house. The motor
had orders to call for him at nine o’clock the
following morning.
And, meanwhile, his secretary had
instructions to look up the past history and associations
of the place, and learn everything he could concerning
the character of former occupants, recent or remote.
The animals, by whose sensitiveness
he intended to test any unusual conditions in the
atmosphere of the building, Dr. Silence selected with
care and judgment. He believed (and had already
made curious experiments to prove it) that animals
were more often, and more truly, clairvoyant than
human beings. Many of them, he felt convinced,
possessed powers of perception far superior to that
mere keenness of the senses common to all dwellers
in the wilds where the senses grow specially alert;
they had what he termed “animal clairvoyance,”
and from his experiments with horses, dogs, cats,
and even birds, he had drawn certain deductions, which,
however, need not be referred to in detail here.
Cats, in particular, he believed,
were almost continuously conscious of a larger field
of vision, too detailed even for a photographic camera,
and quite beyond the reach of normal human organs.
He had, further, observed that while dogs were usually
terrified in the presence of such phenomena, cats
on the other hand were soothed and satisfied.
They welcomed manifestations as something belonging
peculiarly to their own region.
He selected his animals, therefore,
with wisdom so that they might afford a differing
test, each in its own way, and that one should not
merely communicate its own excitement to the other.
He took a dog and a cat.
The cat he chose, now full grown,
had lived with him since kittenhood, a kittenhood
of perplexing sweetness and audacious mischief.
Wayward it was and fanciful, ever playing its own
mysterious games in the corners of the room, jumping
at invisible nothings, leaping sideways into the air
and falling with tiny moccasined feet on to another
part of the carpet, yet with an air of dignified earnestness
which showed that the performance was necessary to
its own well-being, and not done merely to impress
a stupid human audience. In the middle of elaborate
washing it would look up, startled, as though to stare
at the approach of some Invisible, cocking its little
head sideways and putting out a velvet pad to inspect
cautiously. Then it would get absent-minded, and
stare with equal intentness in another direction (just
to confuse the onlookers), and suddenly go on furiously
washing its body again, but in quite a new place.
Except for a white patch on its breast it was coal
black. And its name was Smoke.
“Smoke” described its
temperament as well as its appearance. Its movements,
its individuality, its posing as a little furry mass
of concealed mysteries, its elfin-like elusiveness,
all combined to justify its name; and a subtle painter
might have pictured it as a wisp of floating smoke,
the fire below betraying itself at two points only the
glowing eyes.
All its forces ran to intelligence secret
intelligence, the wordless incalculable intuition
of the Cat. It was, indeed, the cat for
the business in hand.
The selection of the dog was not so
simple, for the doctor owned many; but after much
deliberation he chose a collie, called Flame from his
yellow coat. True, it was a trifle old, and stiff
in the joints, and even beginning to grow deaf, but,
on the other hand, it was a very particular friend
of Smoke’s, and had fathered it from kittenhood
upwards so that a subtle understanding existed between
them. It was this that turned the balance in
its favour, this and its courage. Moreover, though
good-tempered, it was a terrible fighter, and its anger
when provoked by a righteous cause was a fury of fire,
and irresistible.
It had come to him quite young, straight
from the shepherd, with the air of the hills yet in
its nostrils, and was then little more than skin and
bones and teeth. For a collie it was sturdily
built, its nose blunter than most, its yellow hair
stiff rather than silky, and it had full eyes, unlike
the slit eyes of its breed. Only its master could
touch it, for it ignored strangers, and despised their
pattings when any dared to pat it.
There was something patriarchal about the old beast.
He was in earnest, and went through life with tremendous
energy and big things in view, as though he had the
reputation of his whole race to uphold. And to
watch him fighting against odds was to understand why
he was terrible.
In his relations with Smoke he was
always absurdly gentle; also he was fatherly; and
at the same time betrayed a certain diffidence or shyness.
He recognised that Smoke called for strong yet respectful
management. The cat’s circuitous methods
puzzled him, and his elaborate pretences perhaps shocked
the dog’s liking for direct, undisguised action.
Yet, while he failed to comprehend these tortuous
feline mysteries, he was never contemptuous or condescending;
and he presided over the safety of his furry black
friend somewhat as a father, loving, but intuitive,
might superintend the vagaries of a wayward and talented
child. And, in return, Smoke rewarded him with
exhibitions of fascinating and audacious mischief.
And these brief descriptions of their
characters are necessary for the proper understanding
of what subsequently took place.
With Smoke sleeping in the folds of
his fur coat, and the collie lying watchful on the
seat opposite, John Silence went down in his motor
after dinner on the night of November 15th.
And the fog was so dense that they
were obliged to travel at quarter speed the entire
way.
It was after ten o’clock when
he dismissed the motor and entered the dingy little
house with the latchkey provided by Pender. He
found the hall gas turned low, and a fire in the study.
Books and food had also been placed ready by the servant
according to instructions. Coils of fog rushed
in after him through the open door and filled the hall
and passage with its cold discomfort.
The first thing Dr. Silence did was
to lock up Smoke in the study with a saucer of milk
before the fire, and then make a search of the house
with Flame. The dog ran cheerfully behind him
all the way while he tried the doors of the other
rooms to make sure they were locked. He nosed
about into corners and made little excursions on his
own account. His manner was expectant. He
knew there must be something unusual about the proceeding,
because it was contrary to the habits of his whole
life not to be asleep at this hour on the mat in front
of the fire. He kept looking up into his master’s
face, as door after door was tried, with an expression
of intelligent sympathy, but at the same time a certain
air of disapproval. Yet everything his master
did was good in his eyes, and he betrayed as little
impatience as possible with all this unnecessary journeying
to and fro. If the doctor was pleased to play
this sort of game at such an hour of the night, it
was surely not for him to object. So he played
it, too; and was very busy and earnest about it into
the bargain.
After an uneventful search they came
down again to the study, and here Dr. Silence discovered
Smoke washing his face calmly in front of the fire.
The saucer of milk was licked dry and clean; the preliminary
examination that cats always make in new surroundings
had evidently been satisfactorily concluded.
He drew an arm-chair up to the fire, stirred the coals
into a blaze, arranged the table and lamp to his satisfaction
for reading, and then prepared surreptitiously to watch
the animals. He wished to observe them carefully
without their being aware of it.
Now, in spite of their respective
ages, it was the regular custom of these two to play
together every night before sleep. Smoke always
made the advances, beginning with grave impudence
to pat the dog’s tail, and Flame played cumbrously,
with condescension. It was his duty, rather than
pleasure; he was glad when it was over, and sometimes
he was very determined and refused to play at all.
And this night was one of the occasions
on which he was firm.
The doctor, looking cautiously over
the top of his book, watched the cat begin the performance.
It started by gazing with an innocent expression at
the dog where he lay with nose on paws and eyes wide
open in the middle of the floor. Then it got
up and made as though it meant to walk to the door,
going deliberately and very softly. Flame’s
eyes followed it until it was beyond the range of
sight, and then the cat turned sharply and began patting
his tail tentatively with one paw. The tail moved
slightly in reply, and Smoke changed paws and tapped
it again. The dog, however, did not rise to play
as was his wont, and the cat fell to parting it briskly
with both paws. Flame still lay motionless.
This puzzled and bored the cat, and
it went round and stared hard into its friend’s
face to see what was the matter. Perhaps some
inarticulate message flashed from the dog’s
eyes into its own little brain, making it understand
that the programme for the night had better not begin
with play. Perhaps it only realised that its
friend was immovable. But, whatever the reason,
its usual persistence thenceforward deserted it, and
it made no further attempts at persuasion. Smoke
yielded at once to the dog’s mood; it sat down
where it was and began to wash.
But the washing, the doctor noted,
was by no means its real purpose; it only used it
to mask something else; it stopped at the most busy
and furious moments and began to stare about the room.
Its thoughts wandered absurdly. It peered intently
at the curtains; at the shadowy corners; at empty
space above; leaving its body in curiously awkward
positions for whole minutes together. Then it
turned sharply and stared with a sudden signal of
intelligence at the dog, and Flame at once rose somewhat
stiffly to his feet and began to wander aimlessly and
restlessly to and fro about the floor. Smoke
followed him, padding quietly at his heels. Between
them they made what seemed to be a deliberate search
of the room.
And, here, as he watched them, noting
carefully every detail of the performance over the
top of his book, yet making no effort to interfere,
it seemed to the doctor that the first beginnings of
a faint distress betrayed themselves in the collie,
and in the cat the stirrings of a vague excitement.
He observed them closely. The
fog was thick in the air, and the tobacco smoke from
his pipe added to its density; the furniture at the
far end stood mistily, and where the shadows congregated
in hanging clouds under the ceiling, it was difficult
to see clearly at all; the lamplight only reached
to a level of five feet from the floor, above which
came layers of comparative darkness, so that the room
appeared twice as lofty as it actually was. By
means of the lamp and the fire, however, the carpet
was everywhere clearly visible.
The animals made their silent tour
of the floor, sometimes the dog leading, sometimes
the cat; occasionally they looked at one another as
though exchanging signals; and once or twice, in spite
of the limited space, he lost sight of one or other
among the fog and the shadows. Their curiosity,
it appeared to him, was something more than the excitement
lurking in the unknown territory of a strange room;
yet, so far, it was impossible to test this, and he
purposely kept his mind quietly receptive lest the
smallest mental excitement on his part should communicate
itself to the animals and thus destroy the value of
their independent behaviour.
They made a very thorough journey,
leaving no piece of furniture unexamined, or unsmelt.
Flame led the way, walking slowly with lowered head,
and Smoke followed demurely at his heels, making a
transparent pretence of not being interested, yet
missing nothing. And, at length, they returned,
the old collie first, and came to rest on the mat before
the fire. Flame rested his muzzle on his master’s
knee, smiling beatifically while he patted the yellow
head and spoke his name; and Smoke, coming a little
later, pretending he came by chance, looked from the
empty saucer to his face, lapped up the milk when it
was given him to the last drop, and then sprang upon
his knees and curled round for the sleep it had fully
earned and intended to enjoy.
Silence descended upon the room.
Only the breathing of the dog upon the mat came through
the deep stillness, like the pulse of time marking
the minutes; and the steady drip, drip of the fog
outside upon the window-ledges dismally testified
to the inclemency of the night beyond. And the
soft crashings of the coals as the fire settled down
into the grate became less and less audible as the
fire sank and the flames resigned their fierceness.
It was now well after eleven o’clock,
and Dr. Silence devoted himself again to his book.
He read the words on the printed page and took in
their meaning superficially, yet without starting into
life the correlations of thought and suggestions that
should accompany interesting reading. Underneath,
all the while, his mental energies were absorbed in
watching, listening, waiting for what might come.
He was not over-sanguine himself, yet he did not wish
to be taken by surprise. Moreover, the animals,
his sensitive barometers, had incontinently gone to
sleep.
After reading a dozen pages, however,
he realised that his mind was really occupied in reviewing
the features of Pender’s extraordinary story,
and that it was no longer necessary to steady his imagination
by studying the dull paragraphs detailed in the pages
before him. He laid down his book accordingly,
and allowed his thoughts to dwell upon the features
of the Case. Speculations as to the meaning, however,
he rigorously suppressed, knowing that such thoughts
would act upon his imagination like wind upon the
glowing embers of a fire.
As the night wore on the silence grew
deeper and deeper, and only at rare intervals he heard
the sound of wheels on the main road a hundred yards
away, where the horses went at a walking pace owing
to the density of the fog. The echo of pedestrian
footsteps no longer reached him, the clamour of occasional
voices no longer came down the side street. The
night, muffled by fog, shrouded by veils of ultimate
mystery, hung about the haunted villa like a doom.
Nothing in the house stirred. Stillness, in a
thick blanket, lay over the upper storeys. Only
the mist in the room grew more dense, he thought,
and the damp cold more penetrating. Certainly,
from time to time, he shivered.
The collie, now deep in slumber, moved
occasionally, grunted, sighed, or twitched
his legs in dreams. Smoke lay on his knees, a
pool of warm, black fur, only the closest observation
detecting the movement of his sleek sides. It
was difficult to distinguish exactly where his head
and body joined in that circle of glistening hair;
only a black satin nose and a tiny tip of pink tongue
betrayed the secret.
Dr. Silence watched him, and felt
comfortable. The collie’s breathing was
soothing. The fire was well built, and would burn
for another two hours without attention. He was
not conscious of the least nervousness. He particularly
wished to remain in his ordinary and normal state of
mind, and to force nothing. If sleep came naturally,
he would let it come and even welcome it.
The coldness of the room, when the fire died down
later, would be sure to wake him again; and it would
then be time enough to carry these sleeping barometers
up to bed. From various psychic premonitions
he knew quite well that the night would not pass without
adventure; but he did not wish to force its arrival;
and he wished to remain normal, and let the animals
remain normal, so that, when it came, it would be
unattended by excitement or by any straining of the
attention. Many experiments had made him wise.
And, for the rest, he had no fear.
Accordingly, after a time, he did
fall asleep as he had expected, and the last thing
he remembered, before oblivion slipped up over his
eyes like soft wool, was the picture of Flame stretching
all four legs at once, and sighing noisily as he sought
a more comfortable position for his paws and muzzle
upon the mat.
It was a good deal later when he became
aware that a weight lay upon his chest, and that something
was pencilling over his face and mouth. A soft
touch on the cheek woke him. Something was patting
him.
He sat up with a jerk, and found himself
staring straight into a pair of brilliant eyes, half
green, half black. Smoke’s face lay level
with his own; and the cat had climbed up with its
front paws upon his chest.
The lamp had burned low and the fire
was nearly out, yet Dr. Silence saw in a moment that
the cat was in an excited state. It kneaded with
its front paws into his chest, shifting from one to
the other. He felt them prodding against him.
It lifted a leg very carefully and patted his cheek
gingerly. Its fur, he saw, was standing ridgewise
upon its back; the ears were flattened back somewhat;
the tail was switching sharply. The cat, of course,
had wakened him with a purpose, and the instant he
realised this, he set it upon the arm of the chair
and sprang up with a quick turn to face the empty
room behind him. By some curious instinct, his
arms of their own accord assumed an attitude of defence
in front of him, as though to ward off something that
threatened his safety. Yet nothing was visible.
Only shapes of fog hung about rather heavily in the
air, moving slightly to and fro.
His mind was now fully alert, and
the last vestiges of sleep gone. He turned the
lamp higher and peered about him. Two things he
became aware of at once: one, that Smoke, while
excited, was pleasurably excited; the other,
that the collie was no longer visible upon the mat
at his feet. He had crept away to the corner
of the wall farthest from the window, and lay watching
the room with wide-open eyes, in which lurked plainly
something of alarm.
Something in the dog’s behaviour
instantly struck Dr. Silence as unusual, and, calling
him by name, he moved across to pat him. Flame
got up, wagged his tail, and came over slowly to the
rug, uttering a low sound that was half growl, half
whine. He was evidently perturbed about something,
and his master was proceeding to administer comfort
when his attention was suddenly drawn to the antics
of his other four-footed companion, the cat.
And what he saw filled him with something like amazement.
Smoke had jumped down from the back
of the arm-chair and now occupied the middle of the
carpet, where, with tail erect and legs stiff as ramrods,
it was steadily pacing backwards and forwards in a
narrow space, uttering, as it did so, those curious
little guttural sounds of pleasure that only an animal
of the feline species knows how to make expressive
of supreme happiness. Its stiffened legs and arched
back made it appear larger than usual, and the black
visage wore a smile of beatific joy. Its eyes
blazed magnificently; it was in an ecstasy.
At the end of every few paces it turned
sharply and stalked back again along the same line,
padding softly, and purring like a roll of little
muffled drums. It behaved precisely as though
it were rubbing against the ankles of some one who
remained invisible. A thrill ran down the doctor’s
spine as he stood and stared. His experiment was
growing interesting at last.
He called the collie’s attention
to his friend’s performance to see whether he
too was aware of anything standing there upon the carpet,
and the dog’s behaviour was significant and
corroborative. He came as far as his master’s
knees and then stopped dead, refusing to investigate
closely. In vain Dr. Silence urged him; he wagged
his tail, whined a little, and stood in a half-crouching
attitude, staring alternately at the cat and at his
master’s face. He was, apparently, both
puzzled and alarmed, and the whine went deeper and
deeper down into his throat till it changed into an
ugly snarl of awakening anger.
Then the doctor called to him in a
tone of command he had never known to be disregarded;
but still the dog, though springing up in response,
declined to move nearer. He made tentative motions,
pranced a little like a dog about to take to water,
pretended to bark, and ran to and fro on the carpet.
So far there was no actual fear in his manner, but
he was uneasy and anxious, and nothing would induce
him to go within touching distance of the walking
cat. Once he made a complete circuit, but always
carefully out of reach; and in the end he returned
to his master’s legs and rubbed vigorously against
him. Flame did not like the performance at all:
that much was quite clear.
For several minutes John Silence watched
the performance of the cat with profound attention
and without interfering. Then he called to the
animal by name.
“Smoke, you mysterious beastie,
what in the world are you about?” he said, in
a coaxing tone.
The cat looked up at him for a moment,
smiling in its ecstasy, blinking its eyes, but too
happy to pause. He spoke to it again. He
called to it several times, and each time it turned
upon him its blazing eyes, drunk with inner delight,
opening and shutting its lips, its body large and
rigid with excitement. Yet it never for one instant
paused in its short journeys to and fro.
He noted exactly what it did:
it walked, he saw, the same number of paces each time,
some six or seven steps, and then it turned sharply
and retraced them. By the pattern of the great
roses in the carpet he measured it. It kept to
the same direction and the same line. It behaved
precisely as though it were rubbing against something
solid. Undoubtedly, there was something standing
there on that strip of carpet, something invisible
to the doctor, something that alarmed the dog, yet
caused the cat unspeakable pleasure.
“Smokie!” he called again,
“Smokie, you black mystery, what is it excites
you so?”
Again the cat looked up at him for
a brief second, and then continued its sentry-walk,
blissfully happy, intensely preoccupied. And,
for an instant, as he watched it, the doctor was aware
that a faint uneasiness stirred in the depths of his
own being, focusing itself for the moment upon this
curious behaviour of the uncanny creature before him.
There rose in him quite a new realisation
of the mystery connected with the whole feline tribe,
but especially with that common member of it, the
domestic cat their hidden lives, their strange
aloofness, their incalculable subtlety. How utterly
remote from anything that human beings understood
lay the sources of their elusive activities. As
he watched the indescribable bearing of the little
creature mincing along the strip of carpet under his
eyes, coquetting with the powers of darkness, welcoming,
maybe, some fearsome visitor, there stirred in his
heart a feeling strangely akin to awe. Its indifference
to human kind, its serene superiority to the obvious,
struck him forcibly with fresh meaning; so remote,
so inaccessible seemed the secret purposes of its
real life, so alien to the blundering honesty of other
animals. Its absolute poise of bearing brought
into his mind the opium-eater’s words that “no
dignity is perfect which does not at some point ally
itself with the mysterious”; and he became suddenly
aware that the presence of the dog in this foggy,
haunted room on the top of Putney Hill was uncommonly
welcome to him. He was glad to feel that Flame’s
dependable personality was with him. The savage
growling at his heels was a pleasant sound. He
was glad to hear it. That marching cat made him
uneasy.
Finding that Smoke paid no further
attention to his words, the doctor decided upon action.
Would it rub against his leg, too? He would take
it by surprise and see.
He stepped quickly forward and placed
himself upon the exact strip of carpet where it walked.
But no cat is ever taken by surprise!
The moment he occupied the space of the Intruder,
setting his feet on the woven roses midway in the line
of travel, Smoke suddenly stopped purring and sat down.
If lifted up its face with the most innocent stare
imaginable of its green eyes. He could have sworn
it laughed. It was a perfect child again.
In a single second it had resumed its simple, domestic
manner; and it gazed at him in such a way that he
almost felt Smoke was the normal being, and his
was the eccentric behaviour that was being watched.
It was consummate, the manner in which it brought
about this change so easily and so quickly.
“Superb little actor!”
he laughed in spite of himself, and stooped to stroke
the shining black back. But, in a flash, as he
touched its fur, the cat turned and spat at him viciously,
striking at his hand with one paw. Then, with
a hurried scutter of feet, it shot like a shadow across
the floor and a moment later was calmly sitting over
by the window-curtains washing its face as though
nothing interested it in the whole world but the cleanness
of its cheeks and whiskers.
John Silence straightened himself
up and drew a long breath. He realised that the
performance was temporarily at an end. The collie,
meanwhile, who had watched the whole proceeding with
marked disapproval, had now lain down again upon the
mat by the fire, no longer growling. It seemed
to the doctor just as though something that had entered
the room while he slept, alarming the dog, yet bringing
happiness to the cat, had now gone out again, leaving
all as it was before. Whatever it was that excited
its blissful attentions had retreated for the moment.
He realised this intuitively.
Smoke evidently realised it, too, for presently he
deigned to march back to the fireplace and jump upon
his master’s knees. Dr. Silence, patient
and determined, settled down once more to his book.
The animals soon slept; the fire blazed cheerfully;
and the cold fog from outside poured into the room
through every available chink and crannie.
For a long time silence and peace
reigned in the room and Dr. Silence availed himself
of the quietness to make careful notes of what had
happened. He entered for future use in other cases
an exhaustive analysis of what he had observed, especially
with regard to the effect upon the two animals.
It is impossible here, nor would it be intelligible
to the reader unversed in the knowledge of the region
known to a scientifically trained psychic like Dr.
Silence, to detail these observations. But to
him it was clear, up to a certain point for
the rest he must still wait and watch. So far,
at least, he realised that while he slept in the chair that
is, while his will was dormant the room
had suffered intrusion from what he recognised as an
intensely active Force, and might later be forced
to acknowledge as something more than merely a blind
force, namely, a distinct personality.
So far it had affected himself scarcely
at all, but had acted directly upon the simpler organisms
of the animals. It stimulated keenly the centres
of the cat’s psychic being, inducing a state
of instant happiness (intensifying its consciousness
probably in the same way a drug or stimulant intensifies
that of a human being); whereas it alarmed the less
sensitive dog, causing it to feel a vague apprehension
and distress.
His own sudden action and exhibition
of energy had served to disperse it temporarily, yet
he felt convinced the indications were not
lacking even while he sat there making notes that
it still remained near to him, conditionally if not
spatially, and was, as it were, gathering force for
a second attack.
And, further, he intuitively understood
that the relations between the two animals had undergone
a subtle change: that the cat had become immeasurably
superior, confident, sure of itself in its own peculiar
region, whereas Flame had been weakened by an attack
he could not comprehend and knew not how to reply
to. Though not yet afraid, he was defiant ready
to act against a fear that he felt to be approaching.
He was no longer fatherly and protective towards the
cat. Smoke held the key to the situation; and
both he and the cat knew it.
Thus, as the minutes passed, John
Silence sat and waited, keenly on the alert, wondering
how soon the attack would be renewed, and at what point
it would be diverted from the animals and directed
upon himself.
The book lay on the floor beside him,
his notes were complete. With one hand on the
cat’s fur, and the dog’s front paws resting
against his feet, the three of them dozed comfortably
before the hot fire while the night wore on and the
silence deepened towards midnight.
It was well after one o’clock
in the morning when Dr. Silence turned the lamp out
and lighted the candle preparatory to going up to bed.
Then Smoke suddenly woke with a loud sharp purr and
sat up. It neither stretched, washed nor turned:
it listened. And the doctor, watching it, realised
that a certain indefinable change had come about that
very moment in the room. A swift readjustment
of the forces within the four walls had taken place a
new disposition of their personal equations.
The balance was destroyed, the former harmony gone.
Smoke, most sensitive of barometers, had been the
first to feel it, but the dog was not slow to follow
suit, for on looking down he noted that Flame was no
longer asleep. He was lying with eyes wide open,
and that same instant he sat up on his great haunches
and began to growl.
Dr. Silence was in the act of taking
the matches to re-light the lamp when an audible movement
in the room behind him made him pause. Smoke
leaped down from his knee and moved forward a few paces
across the carpet. Then it stopped and stared
fixedly; and the doctor stood up on the rug to watch.
As he rose the sound was repeated,
and he discovered that it was not in the room as he
first thought, but outside, and that it came from more
directions than one. There was a rushing, sweeping
noise against the window-panes, and simultaneously
a sound of something brushing against the door out
in the hall. Smoke advanced sedately across the
carpet, twitching his tail, and sat down within a
foot of the door. The influence that had destroyed
the harmonious conditions of the room had apparently
moved in advance of its cause. Clearly, something
was about to happen.
For the first time that night John
Silence hesitated; the thought of that dark narrow
hall-way, choked with fog, and destitute of human
comfort, was unpleasant. He became aware of a
faint creeping of his flesh. He knew, of course,
that the actual opening of the door was not necessary
to the invasion of the room that was about to take
place, since neither doors nor windows, nor any other
solid barriers could interpose an obstacle to what
was seeking entrance. Yet the opening of the
door would be significant and symbolic, and he distinctly
shrank from it.
But for a moment only. Smoke,
turning with a show of impatience, recalled him to
his purpose, and he moved past the sitting, watching
creature, and deliberately opened the door to its full
width.
What subsequently happened, happened
in the feeble and flickering light of the solitary
candle on the mantlepiece.
Through the opened door he saw the
hall, dimly lit and thick with fog. Nothing,
of course, was visible nothing but the hat-stand,
the African spears in dark lines upon the wall and
the high-backed wooden chair standing grotesquely
underneath on the oilcloth floor. For one instant
the fog seemed to move and thicken oddly; but he set
that down to the score of the imagination. The
door had opened upon nothing.
Yet Smoke apparently thought otherwise,
and the deep growling of the collie from the mat at
the back of the room seemed to confirm his judgment.
For, proud and self-possessed, the
cat had again risen to his feet, and having advanced
to the door, was now ushering some one slowly into
the room. Nothing could have been more evident.
He paced from side to side, bowing his little head
with great empressement and holding his stiffened
tail aloft like a flag-staff. He turned this way
and that, mincing to and fro, and showing signs of
supreme satisfaction. He was in his element.
He welcomed the intrusion, and apparently reckoned
that his companions, the doctor and the dog, would
welcome it likewise.
The Intruder had returned for a second attack.
Dr. Silence moved slowly backwards
and took up his position on the hearthrug, keying
himself up to a condition of concentrated attention.
He noted that Flame stood beside him,
facing the room, with body motionless, and head moving
swiftly from side to side with a curious swaying movement.
His eyes were wide open, his back rigid, his neck and
jaws thrust forward, his legs tense and ready to leap.
Savage, ready for attack or defence, yet dreadfully
puzzled and perhaps already a little cowed, he stood
and stared, the hair on his spine and sides positively
bristling outwards as though a wind played through
it. In the dim firelight he looked like a great
yellow-haired wolf, silent, eyes shooting dark fire,
exceedingly formidable. It was Flame, the terrible.
Smoke, meanwhile, advanced from the
door towards the middle of the room, adopting the
very slow pace of an invisible companion. A few
feet away it stopped and began to smile and blink
its eyes. There was something deliberately coaxing
in its attitude as it stood there undecided on the
carpet, clearly wishing to effect some sort of introduction
between the Intruder and its canine friend and ally.
It assumed its most winning manners, purring, smiling,
looking persuasively from one to the other, and making
quick tentative steps first in one direction and then
in the other. There had always existed such perfect
understanding between them in everything. Surely
Flame would appreciate Smoke’s intention now,
and acquiesce.
But the old collie made no advances.
He bared his teeth, lifting his lips till the gums
showed, and stood stockstill with fixed eyes and heaving
sides. The doctor moved a little farther back,
watching intently the smallest movement, and it was
just then he divined suddenly from the cat’s
behaviour and attitude that it was not only a single
companion it had ushered into the room, but several.
It kept crossing over from one to the other, looking
up at each in turn. It sought to win over the
dog to friendliness with them all. The original
Intruder had come back with reinforcements. And
at the same time he further realised that the Intruder
was something more than a blindly acting force, impersonal
though destructive. It was a Personality, and
moreover a great personality. And it was accompanied
for the purposes of assistance by a host of other
personalities, minor in degree, but similar in kind.
He braced himself in the corner against
the mantelpiece and waited, his whole being roused
to defence, for he was now fully aware that the attack
had spread to include himself as well as the animals,
and he must be on the alert. He strained his
eyes through the foggy atmosphere, trying in vain
to see what the cat and dog saw; but the candlelight
threw an uncertain and flickering light across the
room and his eyes discerned nothing. On the floor
Smoke moved softly in front of him like a black shadow,
his eyes gleaming as he turned his head, still trying
with many insinuating gestures and much purring to
bring about the introductions he desired.
But it was all in vain. Flame
stood riveted to one spot, motionless as a figure
carved in stone.
Some minutes passed, during which
only the cat moved, and then there came a sharp change.
Flame began to back towards the wall. He moved
his head from side to side as he went, sometimes turning
to snap at something almost behind him. They
were advancing upon him, trying to surround him.
His distress became very marked from now onwards, and
it seemed to the doctor that his anger merged into
genuine terror and became overwhelmed by it.
The savage growl sounded perilously like a whine,
and more than once he tried to dive past his master’s
legs, as though hunting for a way of escape.
He was trying to avoid something that everywhere blocked
the way.
This terror of the indomitable fighter
impressed the doctor enormously; yet also painfully;
stirring his impatience; for he had never before seen
the dog show signs of giving in, and it distressed
him to witness it. He knew, however, that he
was not giving in easily, and understood that it was
really impossible for him to gauge the animal’s
sensations properly at all. What Flame felt,
and saw, must be terrible indeed to turn him all at
once into a coward. He faced something that made
him afraid of more than his life merely. The
doctor spoke a few quick words of encouragement to
him, and stroked the bristling hair. But without
much success. The collie seemed already beyond
the reach of comfort such as that, and the collapse
of the old dog followed indeed very speedily after
this.
And Smoke, meanwhile, remained behind,
watching the advance, but not joining in it; sitting,
pleased and expectant, considering that all was going
well and as it wished. It was kneading on the
carpet with its front paws slowly, laboriously,
as though its feet were dipped in treacle. The
sound its claws made as they caught in the threads
was distinctly audible. It was still smiling,
blinking, purring.
Suddenly the collie uttered a poignant
short bark and leaped heavily to one side. His
bared teeth traced a line of whiteness through the
gloom. The next instant he dashed past his master’s
legs, almost upsetting his balance, and shot out into
the room, where he went blundering wildly against
walls and furniture. But that bark was significant;
the doctor had heard it before and knew what it meant:
for it was the cry of the fighter against odds and
it meant that the old beast had found his courage
again. Possibly it was only the courage of despair,
but at any rate the fighting would be terrific.
And Dr. Silence understood, too, that he dared not
interfere. Flame must fight his own enemies in
his own way.
But the cat, too, had heard that dreadful
bark; and it, too, had understood. This was more
than it had bargained for. Across the dim shadows
of that haunted room there must have passed some secret
signal of distress between the animals. Smoke
stood up and looked swiftly about him. He uttered
a piteous meow and trotted smartly away into the greater
darkness by the windows. What his object was only
those endowed with the spirit-like intelligence of
cats might know. But, at any rate, he had at
last ranged himself on the side of his friend.
And the little beast meant business.
At the same moment the collie managed
to gain the door. The doctor saw him rush through
into the hall like a flash of yellow light. He
shot across the oilcloth, and tore up the stairs,
but in another second he appeared again, flying down
the steps and landing at the bottom in a tumbling
heap, whining, cringing, terrified. The doctor
saw him slink back into the room again and crawl round
by the wall towards the cat. Was, then, even
the staircase occupied? Did They stand
also in the hall? Was the whole house crowded
from floor to ceiling?
The thought came to add to the keen
distress he felt at the sight of the collie’s
discomfiture. And, indeed, his own personal distress
had increased in a marked degree during the past minutes,
and continued to increase steadily to the climax.
He recognised that the drain on his own vitality grew
steadily, and that the attack was now directed against
himself even more than against the defeated dog, and
the too much deceived cat.
It all seemed so rapid and uncalculated
after that the events that took place in
this little modern room at the top of Putney Hill between
midnight and sunrise that Dr. Silence was
hardly able to follow and remember it all. It
came about with such uncanny swiftness and terror;
the light was so uncertain; the movements of the black
cat so difficult to follow on the dark carpet, and
the doctor himself so weary and taken by surprise that
he found it almost impossible to observe accurately,
or to recall afterwards precisely what it was he had
seen or in what order the incidents had taken place.
He never could understand what defect of vision on
his part made it seem as though the cat had duplicated
itself at first, and then increased indefinitely, so
that there were at least a dozen of them darting silently
about the floor, leaping softly on to chairs and tables,
passing like shadows from the open door to the end
of the room, all black as sin, with brilliant green
eyes flashing fire in all directions. It was like
the reflections from a score of mirrors placed round
the walls at different angles. Nor could he make
out at the time why the size of the room seemed to
have altered, grown much larger, and why it extended
away behind him where ordinarily the wall should have
been. The snarling of the enraged and terrified
collie sounded sometimes so far away; the ceiling seemed
to have raised itself so much higher than before,
and much of the furniture had changed in appearance
and shifted marvellously.
It was all so confused and confusing,
as though the little room he knew had become merged
and transformed into the dimensions of quite another
chamber, that came to him, with its host of cats and
its strange distances, in a sort of vision.
But these changes came about a little
later, and at a time when his attention was so concentrated
upon the proceedings of Smoke and the collie, that
he only observed them, as it were, subconsciously.
And the excitement, the flickering candlelight, the
distress he felt for the collie, and the distorting
atmosphere of fog were the poorest possible allies
to careful observation.
At first he was only aware that the
dog was repeating his short dangerous bark from time
to time, snapping viciously at the empty air, a foot
or so from the ground. Once, indeed, he sprang
upwards and forwards, working furiously with teeth
and paws, and with a noise like wolves fighting, but
only to dash back the next minute against the wall
behind him. Then, after lying still for a bit,
he rose to a crouching position as though to spring
again, snarling horribly and making short half-circles
with lowered head. And Smoke all the while meowed
piteously by the window as though trying to draw the
attack upon himself.
Then it was that the rush of the whole
dreadful business seemed to turn aside from the dog
and direct itself upon his own person. The collie
had made another spring and fallen back with a crash
into the corner, where he made noise enough in his
savage rage to waken the dead before he fell to whining
and then finally lay still. And directly afterwards
the doctor’s own distress became intolerably
acute. He had made a half movement forward to
come to the rescue when a veil that was denser than
mere fog seemed to drop down over the scene, draping
room, walls, animals and fire in a mist of darkness
and folding also about his own mind. Other forms
moved silently across the field of vision, forms that
he recognised from previous experiments, and welcomed
not. Unholy thoughts began to crowd into his
brain, sinister suggestions of evil presented themselves
seductively. Ice seemed to settle about his heart,
and his mind trembled. He began to lose memory memory
of his identity, of where he was, of what he ought
to do. The very foundations of his strength were
shaken. His will seemed paralysed.
And it was then that the room filled
with this horde of cats, all dark as the night, all
silent, all with lamping eyes of green fire. The
dimensions of the place altered and shifted. He
was in a much larger space. The whining of the
dog sounded far away, and all about him the cats flew
busily to and fro, silently playing their tearing,
rushing game of evil, weaving the pattern of their
dark purpose upon the floor. He strove hard to
collect himself and remember the words of power he
had made use of before in similar dread positions
where his dangerous practice had sometimes led; but
he could recall nothing consecutively; a mist lay
over his mind and memory; he felt dazed and his forces
scattered. The deeps within were too troubled
for healing power to come out of them.
It was glamour, of course, he realised
afterwards, the strong glamour thrown upon his imagination
by some powerful personality behind the veil; but
at the time he was not sufficiently aware of this and,
as with all true glamour, was unable to grasp where
the true ended and the false began. He was caught
momentarily in the same vortex that had sought to
lure the cat to destruction through its delight, and
threatened utterly to overwhelm the dog through its
terror.
There came a sound in the chimney
behind him like wind booming and tearing its way down.
The windows rattled. The candle flickered and
went out. The glacial atmosphere closed round
him with the cold of death, and a great rushing sound
swept by overhead as though the ceiling had lifted
to a great height. He heard the door shut.
Far away it sounded. He felt lost, shelterless
in the depths of his soul. Yet still he held out
and resisted while the climax of the fight came nearer
and nearer.... He had stepped into the stream
of forces awakened by Pender and he knew that he must
withstand them to the end or come to a conclusion that
it was not good for a man to come to. Something
from the region of utter cold was upon him.
And then quite suddenly, through the
confused mists about him, there slowly rose up the
Personality that had been all the time directing the
battle. Some force entered his being that shook
him as the tempest shakes a leaf, and close against
his eyes clean level with his face he
found himself staring into the wreck of a vast dark
Countenance, a countenance that was terrible even
in its ruin.
For ruined it was, and terrible it
was, and the mark of spiritual evil was branded everywhere
upon its broken features. Eyes, face and hair
rose level with his own, and for a space of time he
never could properly measure, or determine, these
two, a man and a woman, looked straight into each
other’s visages and down into each other’s
hearts.
And John Silence, the soul with the
good, unselfish motive, held his own against the dark
discarnate woman whose motive was pure evil, and whose
soul was on the side of the Dark Powers.
It was the climax that touched the
depth of power within him and began to restore him
slowly to his own. He was conscious, of course,
of effort, and yet it seemed no superhuman one, for
he had recognised the character of his opponent’s
power, and he called upon the good within him to meet
and overcome it. The inner forces stirred and
trembled in response to his call. They did not
at first come readily as was their habit, for under
the spell of glamour they had already been diabolically
lulled into inactivity, but come they eventually did,
rising out of the inner spiritual nature he had learned
with so much time and pain to awaken to life.
And power and confidence came with them. He began
to breathe deeply and regularly, and at the same time
to absorb into himself the forces opposed to him,
and to turn them to his own account. By
ceasing to resist, and allowing the deadly stream to
pour into him unopposed, he used the very power supplied
by his adversary and thus enormously increased his
own.
For this spiritual alchemy he had
learned. He understood that force ultimately
is everywhere one and the same; it is the motive behind
that makes it good or evil; and his motive was entirely
unselfish. He knew provided he was
not first robbed of self-control how vicariously
to absorb these evil radiations into himself and change
them magically into his own good purposes. And,
since his motive was pure and his soul fearless, they
could not work him harm.
Thus he stood in the main stream of
evil unwittingly attracted by Pender, deflecting its
course upon himself; and after passing through the
purifying filter of his own unselfishness these energies
could only add to his store of experience, of knowledge,
and therefore of power. And, as his self-control
returned to him, he gradually accomplished this purpose,
even though trembling while he did so.
Yet the struggle was severe, and in
spite of the freezing chill of the air, the perspiration
poured down his face. Then, by slow degrees, the
dark and dreadful countenance faded, the glamour passed
from his soul, the normal proportions returned to
walls and ceiling, the forms melted back into the
fog, and the whirl of rushing shadow-cats disappeared
whence they came.
And with the return of the consciousness
of his own identity John Silence was restored to the
full control of his own will-power. In a deep,
modulated voice he began to utter certain rhythmical
sounds that slowly rolled through the air like a rising
sea, filling the room with powerful vibratory activities
that whelmed all irregularities of lesser vibrations
in its own swelling tone. He made certain sigils,
gestures and movements at the same time. For
several minutes he continued to utter these words,
until at length the growing volume dominated the whole
room and mastered the manifestation of all that opposed
it. For just as he understood the spiritual alchemy
that can transmute evil forces by raising them into
higher channels, so he knew from long study the occult
use of sound, and its direct effect upon the plastic
region wherein the powers of spiritual evil work their
fell purposes. Harmony was restored first of
all to his own soul, and thence to the room and all
its occupants.
And, after himself, the first to recognise
it was the old dog lying in his corner. Flame
began suddenly uttering sounds of pleasure, that “something”
between a growl and a grunt that dogs make upon being
restored to their master’s confidence. Dr.
Silence heard the thumping of the collie’s tail
against the floor. And the grunt and the thumping
touched the depth of affection in the man’s heart,
and gave him some inkling of what agonies the dumb
creature had suffered.
Next, from the shadows by the window,
a somewhat shrill purring announced the restoration
of the cat to its normal state. Smoke was advancing
across the carpet. He seemed very pleased with
himself, and smiled with an expression of supreme
innocence. He was no shadow-cat, but real and
full of his usual and perfect self-possession.
He marched along, picking his way delicately, but
with a stately dignity that suggested his ancestry
with the majesty of Egypt. His eyes no longer
glared; they shone steadily before him, they radiated,
not excitement, but knowledge. Clearly he was
anxious to make amends for the mischief to which he
had unwittingly lent himself owing to his subtle and
electric constitution.
Still uttering his sharp high purrings
he marched up to his master and rubbed vigorously
against his legs. Then he stood on his hind feet
and pawed his knees and stared beseechingly up into
his face. He turned his head towards the corner
where the collie still lay, thumping his tail feebly
and pathetically.
John Silence understood. He bent
down and stroked the creature’s living fur,
noting the line of bright blue sparks that followed
the motion of his hand down its back. And then
they advanced together towards the corner where the
dog was.
Smoke went first and put his nose
gently against his friend’s muzzle, purring
while he rubbed, and uttering little soft sounds of
affection in his throat. The doctor lit the candle
and brought it over. He saw the collie lying
on its side against the wall; it was utterly exhausted,
and foam still hung about its jaws. Its tail
and eyes responded to the sound of its name, but it
was evidently very weak and overcome. Smoke continued
to rub against its cheek and nose and eyes, sometimes
even standing on its body and kneading into the thick
yellow hair. Flame replied from time to time
by little licks of the tongue, most of them curiously
misdirected.
But Dr. Silence felt intuitively that
something disastrous had happened, and his heart was
wrung. He stroked the dear body, feeling it over
for bruises or broken bones, but finding none.
He fed it with what remained of the sandwiches and
milk, but the creature clumsily upset the saucer and
lost the sandwiches between its paws, so that the doctor
had to feed it with his own hand. And all the
while Smoke meowed piteously.
Then John Silence began to understand.
He went across to the farther side of the room and
called aloud to it.
“Flame, old man! come!”
At any other time the dog would have
been upon him in an instant, barking and leaping to
the shoulder. And even now he got up, though
heavily and awkwardly, to his feet. He started
to run, wagging his tail more briskly. He collided
first with a chair, and then ran straight into a table.
Smoke trotted close at his side, trying his very best
to guide him. But it was useless. Dr. Silence
had to lift him up into his own arms and carry him
like a baby. For he was blind.
III
It was a week later when John Silence
called to see the author in his new house, and found
him well on the way to recovery and already busy again
with his writing. The haunted look had left his
eyes, and he seemed cheerful and confident.
“Humour restored?” laughed
the doctor, as soon as they were comfortably settled
in the room overlooking the Park.
“I’ve had no trouble since
I left that dreadful place,” returned Pender
gratefully; “and thanks to you ”
The doctor stopped him with a gesture.
“Never mind that,” he
said, “we’ll discuss your new plans afterwards,
and my scheme for relieving you of the house and helping
you settle elsewhere. Of course it must be pulled
down, for it’s not fit for any sensitive person
to live in, and any other tenant might be afflicted
in the same way you were. Although, personally,
I think the evil has exhausted itself by now.”
He told the astonished author something
of his experiences in it with the animals.
“I don’t pretend to understand,”
Pender said, when the account was finished, “but
I and my wife are intensely relieved to be free of
it all. Only I must say I should like to know
something of the former history of the house.
When we took it six months ago I heard no word against
it.”
Dr. Silence drew a typewritten paper from his pocket.
“I can satisfy your curiosity
to some extent,” he said, running his eye over
the sheets, and then replacing them in his coat; “for
by my secretary’s investigations I have been
able to check certain information obtained in the
hypnotic trance by a ‘sensitive’ who helps
me in such cases. The former occupant who haunted
you appears to have been a woman of singularly atrocious
life and character who finally suffered death by hanging,
after a series of crimes that appalled the whole of
England and only came to light by the merest chance.
She came to her end in the year 1798, for it was not
this particular house she lived in, but a much larger
one that then stood upon the site it now occupies,
and was then, of course, not in London, but in the
country. She was a person of intellect, possessed
of a powerful, trained will, and of consummate audacity,
and I am convinced availed herself of the resources
of the lower magic to attain her ends. This goes
far to explain the virulence of the attack upon yourself,
and why she is still able to carry on after death
the evil practices that formed her main purpose during
life.”
“You think that after death
a soul can still consciously direct ”
gasped the author.
“I think, as I told you before,
that the forces of a powerful personality may still
persist after death in the line of their original
momentum,” replied the doctor; “and that
strong thoughts and purposes can still react upon
suitably prepared brains long after their originators
have passed away.
“If you knew anything of magic,”
he pursued, “you would know that thought is
dynamic, and that it may call into existence forms
and pictures that may well exist for hundreds of years.
For, not far removed from the region of our human
life is another region where float the waste and drift
of all the centuries, the limbo of the shells of the
dead; a densely populated region crammed with horror
and abomination of all descriptions, and sometimes
galvanised into active life again by the will of a
trained manipulator, a mind versed in the practices
of lower magic. That this woman understood its
vile commerce, I am persuaded, and the forces she
set going during her life have simply been accumulating
ever since, and would have continued to do so had they
not been drawn down upon yourself, and afterwards
discharged and satisfied through me.
“Anything might have brought
down the attack, for, besides drugs, there are certain
violent emotions, certain moods of the soul, certain
spiritual fevers, if I may so call them, which directly
open the inner being to a cognisance of this astral
region I have mentioned. In your case it happened
to be a peculiarly potent drug that did it.
“But now, tell me,” he
added, after a pause, handing to the perplexed author
a pencil drawing he had made of the dark countenance
that had appeared to him during the night on Putney
Hill “tell me if you recognise this
face?”
Pender looked at the drawing closely,
greatly astonished. He shuddered a little as
he looked.
“Undoubtedly,” he said,
“it is the face I kept trying to draw dark,
with the great mouth and jaw, and the drooping eye.
That is the woman.”
Dr. Silence then produced from his
pocket-book an old-fashioned woodcut of the same person
which his secretary had unearthed from the records
of the Newgate Calendar. The woodcut and the
pencil drawing were two different aspects of the same
dreadful visage. The men compared them for some
moments in silence.
“It makes me thank God for the
limitations of our senses,” said Pender quietly,
with a sigh; “continuous clairvoyance must be
a sore affliction.”
“It is indeed,” returned
John Silence significantly, “and if all the
people nowadays who claim to be clairvoyant were really
so, the statistics of suicide and lunacy would be
considerably higher than they are. It is little
wonder,” he added, “that your sense of
humour was clouded, with the mind-forces of that dead
monster trying to use your brain for their dissemination.
You have had an interesting adventure, Mr. Felix Pender,
and, let me add, a fortunate escape.”
The author was about to renew his
thanks when there came a sound of scratching at the
door, and the doctor sprang up quickly.
“It’s time for me to go.
I left my dog on the step, but I suppose ”
Before he had time to open the door,
it had yielded to the pressure behind it and flew
wide open to admit a great yellow-haired collie.
The dog, wagging his tail and contorting his whole
body with delight, tore across the floor and tried
to leap up upon his owner’s breast. And
there was laughter and happiness in the old eyes;
for they were clear again as the day.