Chandra Dass spoke, and his strong,
vibrant voice held a scorn that was almost pitying.
“It occurred to me that your
enterprise might enable you to escape the daggers
of my followers, and that you might trail us here,”
he said. “That is why I waited here to
see if you came.
“Search them,” he told
the other hooded figures. “Take anything
that looks like a weapon from them.”
Ennis stared, stupefied, as the gray-hooded
men obeyed. He was unable to believe entirely
in the abrupt reversal of all their hopes, of their
desperate attempt.
The hooded men took their pistols
from Ennis and Campbell, and even the small gold knife
attached to the chain of the inspector’s big,
old-fashioned gold watch. Then they stepped back,
the pistols of two of them leveled at the hearts of
the captives.
Chandra Dass had watched impassively.
Ennis, staring dazedly, noted that the Hindoo wore
on his breast a different jewel-emblem from the others,
a double star instead of a single one.
Ennis’ dazed eyes lifted from
the blazing badge to the Hindoo’s dark face.
“Where’s Ruth?” he asked a little
shrilly, and then his voice cracked and he cried,
“You damned fiend, where’s my wife?”
“Be comforted, Mr. Ennis,”
came Chandra Dass’ chill voice. “You
are going now to join your wife, and to share her
fate. You two are going with her and the other
sacrifices through the Door when it opens. It
is not usual,” he added in cold mockery, “for
our sacrificial victims to walk directly into our
hands. We ordinarily have a more difficult time
securing them.”
He made a gesture to the two hooded
men with pistols, and they ranged themselves close
behind Campbell and Ennis.
“We are going to the Cavern
of the Door,” said the Hindoo. “Inspector
Campbell, I know and respect your resourcefulness.
Be warned that your slightest attempt to escape means
a bullet in your back. You two will march ahead
of us,” he said, and added mockingly, “Remember,
while you live you can cling to the shadow of hope,
but if these guns speak, it ends even that shadow.”
Ennis and Inspector Campbell, keeping
their hands elevated, started at the Hindoo’s
command down the softly lit rock tunnel. Chandra
Dass and the two hooded men with pistols followed.
Ennis saw that the inspector’s
sagging face was expressionless, and knew that behind
that colorless mask, Campbell’s brain was racing
in an attempt to find a method of escape. For
himself, the young American had almost forgotten all
else in his eagerness to reach his wife. Whatever
happened to Ruth, whatever mysterious horror lay in
wait for her and the other victims, he would be there
beside her, sharing it!
The tunnel wound a little further
downward, then straightened out and ran straight for
a considerable length. In this straight section
of the rock passage, Ennis and Campbell for the first
time perceived that the walls of the tunnel bore crowding,
deeply chiseled inscriptions. They had not time
to read them in passing, but Ennis saw that they were
in many different languages, and that some of the
characters were wholly unfamiliar.
“God, some of those inscriptions
are in Egyptian hieroglyphics!” muttered Inspector
Campbell.
The cool voice of Chandra Dass said,
behind them, “There are pre-Egyptian inscriptions
on these walls, inspector, could you but recognize
them, carven in languages that perished from the face
of earth before Egypt was born. Yes, back through
time, back through mediaeval and Roman and Egyptian
and pre-Egyptian ages, the Brotherhood of the Door
has existed and has each year gathered in this place
to open the Door and worship with sacrifices They
Beyond it.”
The fanatic note of unearthly devotion
was in his voice now, and Ennis shuddered with a cold
not of the tunnel.
As they proceeded, they heard a muffled,
hoarse booming somewhere over their heads, a dull,
rhythmic thunder that echoed along the long passageway.
The walls of the tunnel now were damp and glistening
in the sourceless soft light, tiny trickles running
down them.
“You hear the ocean over us,”
came Chandra Dass’ voice. “The Cavern
of the Door lies several hundred yards out from shore,
beneath the rock floor of the sea.”
They passed the dark mouths of unlit
tunnels branching ahead from this illuminated one.
Then over the booming of the raging sea above them,
there came to Ennis’ ears the distant, swelling
chant they had heard in the water-cavern above.
But now it was louder, nearer. At the sound of
it, Chandra Dass quickened their pace.
Suddenly Inspector Campbell stumbled
on the slippery rock floor and went down in a heap.
Instantly Chandra Dass and his two followers recoiled
from them, the two pistols trained on the detective
as he scrambled up.
“Do not do that again, inspector,”
warned the Hindoo in a deadly voice. “All
tricks are useless now.”
“I couldn’t help slipping
on this wet floor,” complained Inspector Campbell.
“The next time you make a wrong
step of any kind, a bullet will smash your spine,”
Chandra Dass told him. “Quick march!”
The tunnel turned sharply, turned
again. As they rounded the turns, Ennis saw with
a sudden electric thrill of hope that Campbell held
clutched in his hand, concealed by his sleeve, the
heel-hilted knife from his shoe. He had drawn
it when he stumbled.
Campbell edged a little closer to
the young American as they were hastening onward,
and whispered to him, a word at a time.
“Be ready to jump them
“But they’ll shoot, your first move ”
whispered Ennis agonizedly.
Campbell did not answer. But
Ennis sensed the detective’s body tautening.
They came to another turn, the strong,
swelling chant coming loud from ahead. They started
around that turn.
Then Inspector Campbell acted.
He whirled as though on a pivot, the heel-knife flashing
toward the men behind them.
Shots coughed from the pistols that
were pressed almost against his stomach. His
body jerked as the bullets struck it, yet he remained
erect, his knife stabbing with lightning rapidity.
One of the hooded men slumped down
with a pierced throat, and as Campbell sprang at the
other, Ennis desperately launched himself at Chandra
Dass. He bore the Hindoo from his feet, but it
was as though he was fighting a demon. Inside
his gray robe, Chandra Dass writhed with fiendish
strength.
Ennis could not hold him, the Hindoo’s
body seeming of spring-steel. He rolled over,
dashed the young American to the floor, and leaped
up, his dark face and great black eyes blazing.
Then, half-way erect, he suddenly
crumpled, the fire in his eyes dulling, a call for
help smothered on his lips. He fell on his face,
and Ennis saw that the heel-knife was stuck in his
back. Inspector Campbell jerked it out, and put
it back into his shoe. And now Ennis, staggering
up, saw that Campbell had knifed the two hooded guards
and that they lay in a dead heap.
“Campbell!” cried the
American, gripping the detective’s arm.
“They’ve wounded you I saw
them shoot you.”
Campbell’s bruised face grinned
briefly. “Nothing of the kind,” he
said, and tapped the soiled gray vest he wore beneath
his coat. “Chandra Dass didn’t know
this vest is bullet-proof.”
He darted an alert glance up and down
the lighted tunnel. “We can’t stay
here or let these bodies lie here. They may be
discovered at any moment.”
“Listen!” said Ennis, turning.
The chanting from ahead swelled down
the tunnel, louder than at any time yet, waxing and
waxing, reaching a triumphant crescendo, then again
dying away.
“Campbell, they’re going
on with the ceremony now!” Ennis cried.
“Ruth!”
The detective’s desperate glance
fastened on the dark mouth of one of the branching
tunnels, a little ahead.
“That side tunnel we’ll
pull the bodies in there!” he exclaimed.
Taking the pistols of the dead men
for themselves, they rapidly dragged the three bodies
into the darkness of the unlit branching tunnel.
“Quick, on with two of these
robes,” rasped Inspector Campbell. “They’ll
give us a little better chance.”
Hastily Ennis jerked the gray robe
and hood from Chandra Dass’ dead body and donned
it, while Campbell struggled into one of the others.
In the robes and concealing hoods, they could not
be told from any other two members of the Brotherhood,
except that the badge on Ennis’ breast was the
double star instead of the single one.
Ennis then spun toward the main, lighted
tunnel, Campbell close behind him. They recoiled
suddenly into the darkness of the branching way, as
they heard hurrying steps out in the lighted passage.
Flattened in the darkness against the wall, they saw
several of the gray-hooded members of the Brotherhood
hasten past them from above, hurrying toward the gathering-place.
“The guards and robe-issuers
we saw above!” Campbell said quickly when they
were passed. “Come on, now.”
He and Ennis slipped out into the
lighted tunnel and hastened along it after the others.
Boom of thundering ocean over their
heads and rising and falling of the tremendous chanting
ahead filled their ears as they hurried around the
last turns of the tunnel. The passage widened,
and ahead they saw a massive rock portal through whose
opening they glimpsed an immense, lighted space.
Campbell and Ennis, two comparatively
tiny gray-hooded figures, hastened through the mighty
portal. Then they stopped. Ennis felt frozen
with the dazing shock of it. He heard the detective
whisper fiercely beside him.
“It’s the Cavern, all right the
Cavern of the Door!”
They looked across a colossal rock
chamber hollowed out beneath the floor of ocean.
It was elliptical in shape, three hundred feet by its
longer axis. Its black basalt sides, towering,
rough-hewn walls, rose sheer and supported the rock
ceiling which was the ocean floor, a hundred feet
over their heads.
This mighty cathedral hewn from inside
the rock of earth was lit by a soft, white, sourceless
light like that in the main tunnel. Upon the
floor of the cavern, in regular rows across it, stood
hundreds on hundreds of human figures, all gray-robed
and gray-hooded, all with their backs to Campbell
and Ennis, looking across the cavern to its farther
end. At that farther end was a flat dais of black
basalt upon which stood five hooded men, four wearing
the blazing double-star on their breasts, the fifth,
a triple-star. Two of them stood beside a cubical,
weird-looking gray metal mechanism from which upreared
a spherical web of countless fine wires, unthinkably
intricate in their network, many of them pulsing with
glowing force. The sourceless light of the cavern
and the tunnel seemed to pulse from that weird mechanism.
Up from that machine, if machine it
was, soared the black basalt wall of that end of the
cavern. But there above the gray mechanism the
rough wall had been carved with a great, smooth facet,
a giant, gleaming black oval face as smooth as though
planed and polished. Only, at the middle of the
glistening black oval face, were carven deeply four
large and wholly unfamiliar characters. As Ennis
and Campbell stared frozenly across the awe-inspiring
place, sound swelled from the hundreds of throats.
A slow, rising chant, it climbed and climbed until
the basalt roof above seemed to quiver to it, crashing
out with stupendous effect, a weird litany in an unknown
tongue. Then it began to fall.
Ennis clutched the inspector’s
gray-robed arm. “Where’s Ruth?”
he whispered frantically. “I don’t
see any prisoners.”
“They must be somewhere here,”
Campbell said swiftly. “Listen
As the chant died to silence, on the
dais at the farther end of the cavern the hooded man
who wore the triple-jeweled star stepped forward and
spoke. His deep, heavy voice rolled out and echoed
across the cavern, flung back and forth from wall
to rocky wall.
“Brothers of the Door,”
he said, “we meet again here in the Cavern of
the Door this year, as for ten thousand years past
our forefathers have met here to worship They Beyond
the Door, and bring them the sacrifices They love.
“A hundred centuries have gone
by since first They Beyond the Door sent their wisdom
through the barrier between their universe and ours,
a barrier which even They could not open from their
side, but which their wisdom taught our fathers how
to open.
“Each year since then have we
opened the Door which They taught us how to build.
Each year we have brought them sacrifices. And
in return They have given us of their wisdom and power.
They have taught us things that lie hidden from other
men, and They have given us powers that other men
have not.
“Now again comes the time appointed
for the opening of the Door. In their universe
on the other side of it, They are waiting now to take
the sacrifices which we have procured for them.
The hour strikes, so let the sacrifices be brought.”
As though at a signal, from a small
opening at one side of the cavern a triple file of
marchers entered. A file of hooded gray members
of the Brotherhood flanked on either side a line of
men and women who did not wear the hoods or robes.
They were thirty or forty in number. These men
and women were of almost all races and classes, but
all of them walked stiffly, mechanically, staring
ahead with unseeing, distended eyes, like living corpses.
“Drugged!” came Campbell’s
shaken voice. “They’re all drugged,
and don’t know what is going on.”
Ennis’ eyes fastened on a small,
slender girl with chestnut hair who walked at the
end of the line, a girl in a straight tan dress, whose
face was white, stiff, like those of the others.
“There’s Ruth!”
he exclaimed frantically, his cry muffled by his hood.
He plunged in that direction, but Campbell held him
back.
“No!” rasped the inspector.
“You can’t help her by simply getting
yourself captured!”
“I can at least go with her!”
Ennis exclaimed. “Let me go!”
Inspector Campbell’s iron grip
held him. “Wait, Ennis!” said the
detective. “You’ve no chance that
way. That robe of Chandra Dass’ you’re
wearing has a double-star badge like those of the men
up there on the dais. That means that as Chandra
Dass you’re entitled to be up there with them.
Go up there and take your place as though you were
Chandra Dass with the hood on, they can’t
tell the difference. I’ll slip around to
that side door out of which they brought the prisoners.
It must connect with the tunnels, and it’s not
far from the dais. When I fire my pistol from
there, you grab your wife and try to get to that door
with her. If you can do it, we’ll have
a chance to get up through the tunnels and escape.”
Ennis wrung the inspector’s
hand. Then, without further reply, he walked
boldly with measured steps up the main aisle of the
cavern, through the gray ranks to the dais. He
stepped up onto it, his heart racing. The chief
priest, he of the triple-star, gave him only a glance,
as of annoyance at his lateness. Ennis saw Campbell’s
gray figure slipping round to the side door.
The gray-hooded hundreds before him
had paid no attention to either of them. Their
attention was utterly, eagerly, fixed upon the stiff-moving
prisoners now being marched up onto the dais.
Ennis saw Ruth pass him, her white face an unfamiliar,
staring mask.
The prisoners were ranged at the back
of the dais, just beneath the great, gleaming black
oval facet. The guards stepped back from them,
and they remained standing stiffly there. Ennis
edged a little toward Ruth, who stood at the end of
that line of stiff figures. As he moved imperceptibly
closer to her, he saw the two priests beside the gray
mechanism reaching toward knurled knobs of ebonite
affixed to its side, beneath the spherical web of
pulsing wires.
The chief priest, at the front of
the dais, raised his hands. His voice rolled
out, heavy, commanding, reverberating again through
all the cavern.