THE PROBLEM OF A WICKED FEME SOLE
BY M-R-E C-R-LLI
I
The great pyramid towered up from
the desert with its apex toward the moon which hung
in the sky. For centuries it had stood thus,
disdaining the aid of gods or man, being, as the Sphinx
herself observed, able to stand up for itself.
And this was no small praise from that sublime yet
mysterious female who had seen the ages come and go,
empires rise and fall, novelist succeed novelist, and
who, for eons and cycles the cynosure and centre of
admiration and men’s idolatrous worship, had
yet wonderful for a woman through
it all kept her head, which now alone remained to
survey calmly the present. Indeed, at that moment
that magnificent and peaceful face seemed to have lost with
a few unimportant features its usual expression
of speculative wisdom and intense disdain; its mouth
smiled, its left eyelid seemed to droop. As the
opal tints of dawn deepened upon it, the eyelid seemed
to droop lower, closed, and quickly recovered itself
twice. You would have thought the Sphinx had
winked.
Then arose a voice like a wind on
the desert, but really from the direction
of the Nile, where a hired dahabiyeh lay moored to
the bank, “’Arry Axes!
’Arry Axes!” With it came also a flapping,
trailing vision from the water the sacred
Ibis itself and with wings aslant drifted
mournfully away to its own creaking echo: “K’raksis!
K’raksis!” Again arose the weird voice:
“‘Arry Axes! Wotcher doin’
of?” And again the Ibis croaked its wild refrain:
“K’raksis! K’raksis!”
Moonlight and the hour wove their own mystery (for
which the author is not responsible), and the voice
was heard no more. But when the full day sprang
in glory over the desert, it illuminated the few remaining
but sufficiently large features of the Sphinx with
a burning saffron radiance! The Sphinx had indeed
blushed!
II
It was the full season at Cairo.
The wealth and fashion of Bayswater, South Kensington,
and even the bosky Wood of the Evangelist had sent
their latest luxury and style to flout the tombs of
the past with the ghastly flippancy of to-day.
The cheap tripper was there the latest
example of the Darwinian theory apelike,
flea and curio hunting! Shamelessly inquisitive
and always hungry, what did he know of the Sphinx
or the pyramids or the voice and, for the
matter of that, what did they know of him? And
yet he was not half bad in comparison with the “swagger
people,” these people who pretend
to have lungs and what not, and instead of galloping
on merry hunters through the frost and snow of Piccadilly
and Park, instead of enjoying the roaring fires of
piled logs in the evening, at the first approach of
winter steal away to the Land of the Sun, and decline
to die, like honest Britons, on British soil.
And then they know nothing of the Egyptians and are
horrified at “bakshish,” which they really
ought to pay for the privilege of shocking the straight-limbed,
naked-footed Arab in his single rough garment with
their baggy elephant-legged trousers! And they
know nothing of the mystic land of the old gods, filled
with profound enigmas of the supernatural, dark
secrets yet unexplored except in this book.
Well might the great Memnon murmur after this lapse
of these thousand years, “They’re making
me tired!”
Such was the blissful, self-satisfied
ignorance of Sir Midas Pyle, or as Lord Fitz-Fulke,
with his delightful imitation of the East London accent,
called him, Sir “Myde His Pyle,” as he
leaned back on his divan in the Grand Cairo Hotel.
He was the vulgar editor and proprietor of a vulgar
London newspaper, and had brought his wife with him,
who was vainly trying to marry off his faded daughters.
There was to be a fancy-dress ball at the hotel that
night, and Lady Pyle hoped that her girls, if properly
disguised, might have a better chance. Here,
too, was Lady Fitz-Fulke, whose mother was immortalized
by Byron sixty if a day, yet still dressing
youthfully who had sought the land of the
Sphinx in the faint hope that in the contiguity of
that lady she might pass for being young. Alaster
McFeckless, a splendid young Scotchman, already
dressed as a Florentine sailor of the fifteenth century,
which enabled him to show his magnificent calves quite
as well as in his native highland dress, and who had
added with characteristic noble pride a sporran to
his costume, was lolling on another divan.
“Oh, those exquisite, those
magnificent eyes of hers! Eh, sirs!” he
murmured suddenly, as waking from a dream.
“Oh, damn her eyes!” said
Lord Fitz-Fulke languidly. “Tell you what,
old man, you’re just gone on that girl!”
“Ha!” roared McFeckless,
springing to his feet, “ye will be using such
language of the bonniest”
“You will excuse me, gentlemen,”
said Sir Midas, who hated scenes unless
he had a trusted reporter with him, “but
I think it is time for me to go upstairs and put on
my Windsor uniform, which I find exceedingly convenient
for these mixed assemblies.” He withdrew,
caressing his protuberant paunch with some dignity,
as the two men glanced fiercely at each other.
In another moment they might have
sprung at each other’s throats. But luckily
at this instant a curtain was pushed aside as if by
some waiting listener, and a thin man entered, dressed
in cap and gown, which would have been
simply academic but for his carrying in one hand behind
him a bundle of birch twigs. It was Dr. Haustus
Pilgrim, a noted London practitioner and specialist,
dressed as “Ye Olde-fashioned Pedagogue.”
He was presumably spending his holiday on the Nile
in a large dahabiyeh with a number of friends, among
whom he counted the two momentary antagonists he had
just interrupted; but those who knew the doctor’s
far-reaching knowledge and cryptic researches believed
he had his own scientific motives.
The two men turned quickly as he entered;
the angry light faded from their eyes, and an awed
and respectful submission to the intruder took its
place. He walked quietly toward them, put a lozenge
in the mouth of one and felt the pulse of the other,
gazing critically at both.
“We will be all right in a moment,”
he said with professional confidence.
“I say!” said Fitz-Fulke,
gazing at the doctor’s costume, “you look
dooced smart in those togs, don’tcherknow.”
“They suit me,” said the
doctor, with a playful swish of his birch twigs, at
which the two grave men shuddered. “But
you were speaking of somebody’s beautiful eyes.”
“The Princess Zut-Ski’s,”
returned McFeckless eagerly; “and this daft
callant said”
“He didn’t like them,” put in Fitz-Fulke
promptly.
“Ha!” said the doctor
sharply, “and why not, sir?” As Fitz-Fulke
hesitated, he added brusquely: “There!
Run away and play! I’ve business with
this young man,” pointing to McFeckless.
As Fitz-Fulke escaped gladly from
the room, the doctor turned to McFeckless. “It
won’t do, my boy. The Princess is not for
you you’ll only break your heart
and ruin your family over her! That’s my
advice. Chuck her!”
“But I cannot,” said McFeckless
humbly. “Think of her weirdly beautiful
eyes.”
“I see,” said the doctor
meditatively; “sort of makes you feel creepy?
Kind of all-overishness, eh? That’s like
her. But whom have we here?”
He was staring at a striking figure
that had just entered, closely followed by a crowd
of admiring spectators. And, indeed, he seemed
worthy of the homage. His magnificent form was
closely attired in a velveteen jacket and trousers,
with a singular display of pearl buttons along the
seams, that were absolutely lavish in their quantity;
a hat adorned with feathers and roses completed his
singularly picturesque equipment.
“Chevalier!” burst out McFeckless in breathless
greeting.
“Ah, mon ami!
What good chance?” returned the newcomer, rushing
to him and kissing him on both cheeks, to the British
horror of Sir Midas, who had followed. “Ah,
but you are perfect!” he added, kissing his fingers
in admiration of McFeckless’s Florentine dress.
“But you? what is
this ravishing costume?” asked McFeckless, with
a pang of jealousy. “You are god-like.”
“It is the dress of what you
call the Koster, a transplanted Phenician tribe,”
answered the other. “They who knocked ’em
in the road of Old Kent know you not the
legend?” As he spoke, he lifted his superb form
to a warrior’s height and gesture.
“But is this quite correct?”
asked Fitz-Fulke of the doctor.
“Perfectly,” said the
doctor oracularly. “The renowned ’’Arry
Axes’ I beg his pardon,” he
interrupted himself hastily, “I mean the Chevalier is
perfect in his archaeology and ethnology. The
Koster is originally a Gypsy, which is but a corruption
of the word ‘Egyptian,’ and, if I mistake
not, that gentleman is a lineal descendant.”
“But he is called ‘Chevalier,’
and he speaks like a Frenchman,” said Fluffy.
“And, being a Frenchman, of
course knows nothing outside of Paris,” said
Sir Midas.
“We are in the Land of Mystery,”
said the doctor gravely in a low voice. “You
have heard of the Egyptian Hall and the Temple of Mystery?”
A shudder passed through many that
were there; but the majority were following with wild
adulation the superb Koster, who, with elbows slightly
outward and hands turned inward, was passing toward
the ballroom. McFeckless accompanied him with
conflicting emotions. Would he see the incomparable
Princess, who was lovelier and even still more a mystery
than the Chevalier? Would she terrible
thought! succumb to his perfections?
III
The Princess was already there, surrounded
by a crowd of admirers, equal if not superior to those
who were following the superb Chevalier. Indeed,
they met almost as rivals! Their eyes sought
each other in splendid competition. The Chevalier
turned away, dazzled and incoherent. “She
is adorable, magnificent!” he gasped to McFeckless.
“I love her on the instant! Behold, I am
transported, ravished! Present me.”
Indeed, as she stood there in a strange
gauzy garment of exquisite colors, apparently shapeless,
yet now and then revealing her perfect figure like
a bather seen through undulating billows, she was lovely.
Two wands were held in her taper fingers, whose mystery
only added to the general curiosity, but whose weird
and cabalistic uses were to be seen later. Her
magnificent face strange in its beauty was
stranger still, since, with perfect archaeological
Egyptian correctness, she presented it only in profile,
at whatever angle the spectator stood. But such
a profile! The words of the great Poet-King rose
to McFeckless’s lips: “Her nose is
as a tower that looketh toward Damascus.”
He hesitated a moment, torn with love
and jealousy, and then presented his friend.
“You will fall in love with her and
then you will fall also by my hand,”
he hissed in his rival’s ear, and fled tumultuously.
“Voulez-vous danser,
mademoiselle?” whispered the Chevalier in
the perfect accent of the boulevardier.
“Merci, beaucoup,”
she replied in the diplomatic courtesies of the Ambassadeurs.
They danced together, not once, but
many times, to the admiration, the wonder and envy
of all; to the scandalized reprobation of a proper
few. Who was she? Who was he? It
was easy to answer the last question: the world
rang with the reputation of “Chevalier the Artist.”
But she was still a mystery.
Perhaps they were not so to each other!
He was gazing deliriously into her eyes. She
was looking at him in disdainful curiosity. “I’ve
seen you before somewhere, haven’t I?”
she said at last, with a crushing significance.
He shuddered, he knew not why, and
passed his hand over his high forehead. “Yes,
I go there very often,” he replied vacantly.
“But you, mademoiselle you I
have met before?”
“Oh, ages, ages ago!”
There was something weird in her emphasis.
“Ha!” said a voice near
them, “I thought so!” It was the doctor,
peering at them curiously. “And you both
feel rather dazed and creepy?” He suddenly
felt their pulses, lingering, however, as the Chevalier
fancied, somewhat longer than necessary over the lady’s
wrist and beautiful arm. He then put a small
round box in the Chevalier’s hand, saying, “One
before each meal,” and turning to the lady with
caressing professional accents said, “We must
wrap ourselves closely and endeavor to induce perspiration,”
and hurried away, dragging the Chevalier with him.
When they reached a secluded corner, he said, “You
had just now a kind of feeling, don’t you know,
as if you’d sort of been there before, didn’t
you?”
“Yes, what you call a preexistence,”
said the Chevalier wonderingly.
“Yes; I have often observed
that those who doubt a future state of existence have
no hesitation in accepting a previous one,” said
the doctor dryly. “But come, I see from
the way the crowd are hurrying that your divinity’s
number is up I mean,” he corrected
himself hastily, “that she is probably dancing
again.”
“Aha! with him, the imbecile
McFeckless?” gasped the Chevalier.
“No, alone.”
She was indeed alone, in the centre
of the ballroom with outstretched arms
revolving in an occult, weird, dreamy, mystic, druidical,
cabalistic circle. They now for the first time
perceived the meaning of those strange wands which
appeared to be attached to the many folds of her diaphanous
skirts and involved her in a fleecy, whirling cloud.
Yet in the wild convolutions of her garments and the
mad gyrations of her figure, her face was upturned
with the seraphic intensity of a devotee, and her
lips parted as with the impassioned appeal for “Light!
more light!” And the appeal was answered.
A flood of blue, crimson, yellow, and green radiance
was alternately poured upon her from the black box
of a mysterious Nubian slave in the gallery.
The effect was marvelous; at one moment she appeared
as a martyr in a sheet of flame, at another as an
angel wrapped in white and muffled purity, and again
as a nymph of the cerulean sea, and then suddenly a
cloud of darkness seemed to descend upon her, through
which for an instant her figure, as immaculate and
perfect as a marble statue, showed distinctly then
the light went out and she vanished!
The whole assembly burst into a rapturous
cry. Even the common Arab attendants who were
peeping in at the doors raised their melodious native
cry, “Alloe, Fullah! Aloe, Fullah!”
again and again.
A shocked silence followed.
Then the voice of Sir Midas Pyle was heard addressing
Dr. Haustus Pilgrim:
“May we not presume, sir, that
what we have just seen is not unlike that remarkable
exhibition when I was pained to meet you one evening
at the Alhambra?”
The doctor coughed slightly.
“The Alhambra ah, yes! you er refer,
I presume, to Granada and the Land of the Moor, where
we last met. The music and dance are both distinctly
Moorish which, after all, is akin to the
Egyptian. I am gratified indeed that your memory
should be so retentive and your archaeological comparison
so accurate. But see! the ladies are retiring.
Let us follow.”
IV
The intoxication produced by the performance
of the Princess naturally had its reaction.
The British moral soul, startled out of its hypocrisy
the night before, demanded the bitter beer of self-consciousness
and remorse the next morning. The ladies were
now openly shocked at what they had secretly envied.
Lady Pyle was, however, propitiated by the doctor’s
assurance that the Princess was a friend of Lady Fitz-Fulke,
who had promised to lend her youthful age and aristocratic
prestige to the return ball which the Princess had
determined to give at her own home. “Still,
I think the Princess open to criticism,” said
Sir Midas oracularly.
“Damn all criticism and critics!”
burst out McFeckless, with the noble frankness of
a passionate and yet unfettered soul. Sir Midas,
who employed critics in his business, as he did other
base and ignoble slaves, drew up himself and his paunch
and walked away.
The Chevalier cast a superb look at
McFeckless. “Voila! Regard me well!
I shall seek out this Princess when she is with herself!
Alone, comprenez? I shall seek her at her hotel
in the Egyptian Hall! Ha! ha! I shall
seek Zut-Ski! Zut!” And
he made that rapid yet graceful motion of his palm
against his thigh known only to the true Parisian.
“It’s a rum hole where
she lives, and nobody gets a sight of her,” said
Flossy. “It’s like a beastly family
vault, don’t you know, outside, and there’s
a kind of nigger doorkeeper that vises you and chucks
you out if you haven’t the straight tip.
I’ll show you the way, if you like.”
“Allons, en avant!” said
the Chevalier gayly. “I precipitate myself
there on the instant.”
“Remember!” hissed McFeckless,
grasping his arm, “you shall account to me!”
“Bien!” said the Chevalier,
shaking him off lightly. “All a-r-r-right.”
Then, in that incomparable baritone, which had so
often enthralled thousands, he moved away, trolling
the first verse of the Princess’s own faint,
sweet, sad song of the “Lotus Lily,” that
thrilled McFeckless even through the Chevalier’s
marked French accent:
“Oh, a hard zing
to get is ze Lotus Lillee!
She lif in ze
swamp in ze watair chillee;
She make your
foot wet and you look so sillee,
But you buy her
for sixpence in Piccadillee!”
In half an hour the two men reached
the remote suburb where the Princess lived, a gloomy,
windowless building. Pausing under a low archway
over which in Egyptian characters appeared the faded
legend, “Sta Ged Oor,” they found
a Nubian slave blocking the dim entrance.
“I leave you here,” said
Flossy hurriedly, “as even I left once before only
then I was lightly assisted by his sandaled foot,”
he added, rubbing himself thoughtfully. “But
better luck to you.”
As his companion retreated swiftly,
the Chevalier turned to the slave and would have passed
in, but the man stopped him. “Got a pass,
boss?”
“No,” said the Chevalier.
The man looked at him keenly. “Oh, I see!
one of de profesh.”
The Chevalier nodded haughtily.
The man preceded him by devious, narrow ways and
dark staircases, coming abruptly upon a small apartment
where the Princess sat on a low divan. A single
lamp inclosed in an ominous wire cage flared above
her. Strange things lay about the floor and
shelves, and from another door he could see hideous
masks, frightful heads, and disproportionate faces.
He shuddered slightly, but recovered himself and
fell on his knees before her. “I lofe
you,” he said madly. “I have always
lofed you!”
“For how long?” she asked, with a strange
smile.
He covertly consulted his shirt cuff.
“For tree tousand fife hundred and sixty-two
years,” he said rapidly.
She looked at him disdainfully.
“The doctor has been putting you up to that!
It won’t wash! I don’t refer to
your shirt cuff,” she added with deep satire.
“Adorable one!” he broke
out passionately, attempting to embrace her, “I
have come to take you.” Without moving,
she touched a knob in the wall. A trap-door
beyond him sank, and out of the bowels of the earth
leaped three indescribable demons. Then, rising,
she took a cake of chalk from the table and, drawing
a mystic half circle on the floor, returned to the
divan, lit a cigarette, and leaning comfortably back,
said in a low, monotonous voice, “Advance one
foot within that magic line, and on that head, although
it wore a crown, I launch the curse of Rome.”
“I only wanted to
take you with a kodak,” he said, with
a light laugh to conceal his confusion, as he produced
the instrument from his coat-tail pocket.
“Not with that cheap box,”
she said, rising with magnificent disdain. “Come
again with a decent instrument and perhaps”
Then, lightly humming in a pure contralto, “I’ve
been photographed like this I’ve
been photographed like that,” she summoned the
slave to conduct him back, and vanished through a
canvas screen, which nevertheless seemed to the dazed
Chevalier to be the stony front of the pyramids.
V
“And you saw her?” said the doctor in
French.
“Yes; but the three-thousand-year
gag did not work! She spotted you, cher ami,
on the instant. And she wouldn’t let me
take her with my kodak.”
The doctor looked grave. “I
see,” he mused thoughtfully. “You
must have my camera, a larger one and more bulky perhaps
to carry; but she will not object to that, she
who has stood for full lengths. I will give you
some private instructions.”
“But, cher doctor, this previous-existence
idea at what do you arrive?”
“There is much to say for it,”
said the doctor oracularly. “It has survived
in the belief of all ages. Who can tell?
That some men in a previous existence may have been
goats or apes,” continued the doctor, looking
at him curiously, “does not seem improbable!
From the time of Pythagoras we have known that; but
that the individual as an individual ego has been
remanded or projected, has harked back or anticipated
himself, is, we may say, with our powers of apperception, that
is, the perception that we are perceiving, is”
But the Chevalier had fled.
“No matter,” said the doctor, “I
will see McFeckless.” He did. He
found him gloomy, distraught, baleful. He felt
his pulse. “The mixture as before,”
he said briefly, “and a little innocent diversion.
There is an Aunt Sally on the esplanade two
throws for a penny. It will do you good.
Think no more of this woman! Listen, I
wish you well; your family have always been good patients
of mine. Marry some good Scotch girl; I know
one with fifty thousand pounds. Let the Princess
go!”
“To him never!
I will marry her! Yet,” he murmured softly
to himself, “feefty thousand pun’ is nae
small sum. Aye! Not that I care for siller but
feefty thousand pun’! Eh, sirs!”
VI
Dr. Haustus knew that the Chevalier
had again visited the Princess, although he had kept
the visit a secret, and indeed was himself
invisible for a day or two afterwards. At last
the doctor’s curiosity induced him to visit
the Chevalier’s apartment. Entering, he
was surprised even in that Land of Mystery to
find the room profoundly dark, smelling of Eastern
drugs, and the Chevalier sitting before a large plate
of glass which he was examining by the aid of a lurid
ruby lamp, the only light in the weird
gloom. His face was pale and distraught, his
locks were disheveled.
“Voila!” he said.
“Mon Dieu! It is my third attempt.
Always the same hideous, monstrous, unearthly!
It is she, and yet it is not she!”
The doctor, professional man as he
was and inured to such spectacles, was startled!
The plate before him showed the Princess’s face
in all its beautiful contour, but only dimly veiling
a ghastly death’s-head below. There was
the whole bony structure of the head and the eyeless
sockets; even the graceful, swan-like neck showed the
articulated vertebral column that supported it in
all its hideous reality. The beautiful shoulders
were there, dimly as in a dream but beneath
was the empty clavicle, the knotty joint, the hollow
sternum, and the ribs of a skeleton half length!
The doctor’s voice broke the
silence. “My friend,” he said dryly,
“you see only the truth! You see what
she really is, this peerless Princess of yours.
You see her as she is to-day, and you see her kinship
to the bones that have lain for centuries in yonder
pyramid. Yet they were once as fair as this,
and this was as fair as they in effect the
same! You that have madly, impiously adored her
superficial beauty, the mere dust of tomorrow, let
this be a warning to you! You that have no soul
to speak of, let that suffice you! Take her and
be happy. Adieu!”
Yet, as he passed out of the fitting
tomblike gloom of the apartment and descended the
stairs, he murmured to himself: “Odd that
I should have lent him my camera with the Röntgen-ray
attachment still on. No matter! It is
not the first time that the Princess has appeared in
two parts the same evening.”
VII
In spite of envy, jealousy, and malice,
a certain curiosity greater than all these drew everybody
to the Princess Zut-Ski’s ball. Lady
Fitz-Fulke was there in virgin white, looking more
youthful than ever, in spite of her sixty-five years
and the card labeled “Fresh Paint” which
somebody had playfully placed upon her enameled shoulder.
The McFecklesses, the Pyles, Flossy, the doctor,
and the Chevalier looking still anxious were
in attendance.
The mysterious Nubian doorkeeper admitted
the guests through the same narrow passages, much
to the disgust of Lady Pyle and the discomfiture of
her paunchy husband; but on reaching a large circular
interior hall, a greater surprise was in store for
them. It was found that the only entrance to
the body of the hall was along a narrow ledge against
the bare wall some distance from the floor, which
obliged the guests to walk slowly, in single file,
along this precarious strip, giving them the attitudes
of an Egyptian frieze, which was suggested in the
original plaster above them. It is needless to
say that, while the effect was ingenious and striking
from the centre of the room, where the Princess stood
with a few personal friends, it was exceedingly uncomfortable
to the figures themselves, in their enforced march
along the ledge, especially a figure of
Sir Midas Pyle’s proportions. Suddenly
an exclamation broke from the doctor.
“Do you see,” he said
to the Princess, pointing to the figure of the Chevalier,
who was filing along with his sinewy hands slightly
turned inward, “how surprisingly like he is
to the first attendant on the King in the real frieze
above? And that,” added the doctor, “was
none other than ’Arry Axes, the Egyptian you
are always thinking of.” And he peered
curiously at her.
“Goodness me!” murmured
the Princess, in an Arabic much more soft and fluent
than the original gum. “So he does look
like him.”
“And do you know you look like
him, too? Would you mind taking a walk around
together?”
They did, amid the acclamations
of the crowd. The likeness was perfect.
The Princess, however, was quite white as she eagerly
rejoined the doctor.
“And this means ?” she hissed in
a low whisper.
“That he is the real ’Arry
Axes! Hush, not a word now! We join the
dahabiyeh to-night. At daybreak you will meet
him at the fourth angle of the pyramid, first turning
from the Nile!”
VIII
The crescent moon hung again over
the apex of the Great Pyramid, like a silver cutting
from the rosy nail of a houri. The Sphinx mighty
guesser of riddles, reader of rebuses and universal
solver of missing words looked over the
unfathomable desert and these few pages, with the
worried, hopeless expression of one who is obliged
at last to give it up. And then the wailing
voice of a woman, toiling up the steep steps of the
pyramid, was heard above the creaking of the Ibis:
“’Arry Axes! Where are you?
Wait for me.”
“J’y suis,”
said a voice from the very summit of the stupendous
granite bulk, “yet I cannot reach it.”
And in that faint light the figure
of a man was seen, lifting his arms wildly toward
the moon.
“’Arry Axes,” persisted
the voice, drifting higher, “wait for me; we
are pursued.”
And indeed it was true. A band
of Nubians, headed by the doctor, was already swarming
like ants up the pyramid, and the unhappy pair were
secured. And when the sun rose, it was upon the
white sails of the dahabiyeh, the vacant pyramid,
and the slumbering Sphinx.
There was great excitement at the
Cairo Hotel the next morning. The Princess and
the Chevalier had disappeared, and with them Alaster
McFeckless, Lady Fitz-Fulke, the doctor, and even his
dahabiyeh! A thousand rumors had been in circulation.
Sir Midas Pyle looked up from the “Times”
with his usual I-told-you-so expression.
“It is the most extraordinary
thing, don’tcherknow,” said Fitz-Fulke.
“It seems that Dr. Haustus Pilgrim was here professionally as
a nerve specialist in the treatment of
hallucinations produced by neurotic conditions, you
know.”
“A mad doctor, here!” gasped Sir Midas.
“Yes. The Princess, the
Chevalier, McFeckless, and even my mother were all
patients of his on the dahabiyeh. He believed,
don’tcherknow, in humoring them and letting
them follow out their cranks, under his management.
The Princess was a music-hall artist who imagined
she was a dead and gone Egyptian Princess; and the
queerest of all, ’Arry Axes was also a music-hall
singer who imagined himself Chevalier you
know, the great Koster artist and that’s
how we took him for a Frenchman. McFeckless and
my poor old mother were the only ones with any real
rank and position but you know what a beastly
bounder Mac was, and the poor mater did overdo
the youthful! We never called the doctor in until
the day she wanted to go to a swell ball in London
as Little Red Riding-hood. But the doctor writes
me that the experiment was a success, and they’ll
be all right when they get back to London.”
“Then, it seems, sir, that you
and I were the only sane ones here,” said Sir
Midas furiously.
“Really it’s as much as
I can do to be certain about myself, old chappie,”
said Fitz-Fulke, turning away.