In the hall beyond the secretary’s
room Shan Tung waited. As McDowell was the iron
and steel embodiment of the law, so Shan Tung was the
flesh and blood spirit of the mysticism and immutability
of his race. His face was the face of an image
made of an unemotional living tissue in place of wood
or stone, dispassionate, tolerant, patient. What
passed in the brain behind his yellow-tinged eyes only
Shan Tung knew. It was his secret. And McDowell
had ceased to analyze or attempt to understand him.
The law, baffled in its curiosity, had come to accept
him as a weird and wonderful mechanism-a
thing more than a man-possessed of an unholy
power. This power was the oriental’s marvelous
ability to remember faces. Once Shan Tung looked
at a face, it was photographed in his memory for years.
Time and change could not make him forget-and
the law made use of him.
Briefly McDowell had classified him
at Headquarters. “Either an exiled prime
minister of China or the devil in a yellow skin,”
he had written to the Commissioner. “Correct
age unknown and past history a mystery. Dropped
into Prince Albert in 1908 wearing diamonds and patent
leather shoes. A stranger then and a stranger
now. Proprietor and owner of the Shan Tung Cafe.
Educated, soft-spoken, womanish, but the one man on
earth I’d hate to be in a dark room with, knives
drawn. I use him, mistrust him, watch him, and
would fear him under certain conditions. As far
as we can discover, he is harmless and law-abiding.
But such a ferret must surely have played his game
somewhere, at some time.”
This was the man whom Conniston had
forgotten and Keith now dreaded to meet. For
many minutes Shan Tung had stood at a window looking
out upon the sunlit drillground and the broad sweep
of green beyond. He was toying with his slim
hands caressingly. Half a smile was on his lips.
No man had ever seen more than that half smile illuminate
Shan Tung’s face. His black hair was sleek
and carefully trimmed. His dress was immaculate.
His slimness, as McDowell had noted, was the slimness
of a young girl.
When Cruze came to announce that McDowell
would see him, Shan Tung was still visioning the golden-headed
figure of Miriam Kirkstone as he had seen her passing
through the sunshine. There was something like
a purr in his breath as he stood interlacing his tapering
fingers. The instant he heard the secretary’s
footsteps the finger play stopped, the purr died,
the half smile was gone. He turned softly.
Cruze did not speak. He simply made a movement
of his head, and Shan Tung’s feet fell noiselessly.
Only the slight sound made by the opening and closing
of a door gave evidence of his entrance into the Inspector’s
room. Shan Tung and no other could open and close
a door like that. Cruze shivered. He always
shivered when Shan Tung passed him, and always he swore
that he could smell something in the air, like a poison
left behind.
Keith, facing the window, was waiting.
The moment the door was opened, he felt Shan Tung’s
presence. Every nerve in his body was keyed to
an uncomfortable tension. The thought that his
grip on himself was weakening, and because of a Chinaman,
maddened him. And he must turn. Not to face
Shan Tung now would be but a postponement of the ordeal
and a confession of cowardice. Forcing his hand
into Conniston’s little trick of twisting a
mustache, he turned slowly, leveling his eyes squarely
to meet Shan Tung’s.
To his surprise Shan Tung seemed utterly
oblivious of his presence. He had not, apparently,
taken more than a casual glance in his direction.
In a voice which one beyond the door might have mistaken
for a woman’s, he was saying to McDowell:
“I have seen the man you sent
me to see, Mr. McDowell. It is Larsen. He
has changed much in eight years. He has grown
a beard. He has lost an eye. His hair has
whitened. But it is Larsen.” The faultlessness
of his speech and the unemotional but perfect inflection
of his words made Keith, like the young secretary,
shiver where he stood. In McDowell’s face
he saw a flash of exultation.
“He had no suspicion of you, Shan Tung?”
“He did not see me to suspect.
He will be there-when-”
Slowly he faced Keith. “-When Mr.
Conniston goes to arrest him,” he finished.
He inclined his head as he backed
noiselessly toward the door. His yellow eyes
did not leave Keith’s face. In them Keith
fancied that he caught a sinister gleam. There
was the faintest inflection of a new note in his voice,
and his fingers were playing again, but not as when
he had looked out through the window at Miriam Kirkstone.
And then-in a flash, it seemed to Keith-the
Chinaman’s eyes closed to narrow slits, and
the pupils became points of flame no larger than the
sharpened ends of a pair of pencils. The last
that Keith was conscious of seeing of Shan Tung was
the oriental’s eyes. They had seemed to
drag his soul half out of his body.
“A queer devil,” said
McDowell. “After he is gone, I always feel
as if a snake had been in the room. He still
hates you, Conniston. Three years have made no
difference. He hates you like poison. I believe
he would kill you, if he had a chance to do it and
get away with the Business. And you-you
blooming idiot-simply twiddle your mustache
and laugh at him! I’d feel differently
if I were in your boots.”
Inwardly Keith was asking himself
why it was that Shan Tung had hated Conniston.
McDowell added nothing to enlighten
him. He was gathering up a number of papers scattered
on his desk, smiling with a grim satisfaction.
“It’s Larsen all right if Shan Tung says
so,” he told Keith. And then, as if he
had only thought of the matter, he said, “You’re
going to reenlist, aren’t you, Conniston?”
“I still owe the Service a month
or so before my term expires, don’t I?
After that-yes-I believe I shall
reenlist.”
“Good!” approved the Inspector.
“I’ll have you a sergeancy within a month.
Meanwhile you’re off duty and may do anything
you please. You know Brady, the Company agent?
He’s up the Mackenzie on a trip, and here’s
the key to his shack. I know you’ll appreciate
getting under a real roof again, and Brady won’t
object as long as I collect his thirty dollars a month
rent. Of course Barracks is open to you, but it
just occurred to me you might prefer this place while
on furlough. Everything is there from a bathtub
to nutcrackers, and I know a little Jap in town who
is hunting a job as a cook. What do you say?”
“Splendid!” cried Keith.
“I’ll go up at once, and if you’ll
hustle the Jap along, I’ll appreciate it.
You might tell him to bring up stuff for dinner,”
he added.
McDowell gave him a key. Ten
minutes later he was out of sight of barracks and
climbing a green slope that led to Brady’s bungalow.
In spite of the fact that he had not
played his part brilliantly, he believed that he had
scored a triumph. Andy Duggan had not recognized
him, and the riverman had been one of his most intimate
friends. McDowell had accepted him apparently
without a suspicion. And Shan Tung-
It was Shan Tung who weighed heavily
upon his mind, even as his nerves tingled with the
thrill of success. He could not get away from
the vision of the Chinaman as he had backed through
the Inspector’s door, the flaming needle-points
of his eyes piercing him as he went. It was not
hatred he had seen in Shan Tung’s face.
He was sure of that. It was no emotion that he
could describe. It was as if a pair of mechanical
eyes fixed in the head of an amazingly efficient mechanical
monster had focused themselves on him in those few
instants. It made him think of an X-ray machine.
But Shan Tung was human. And he was clever.
Given another skin, one would not have taken him for
what he was. The immaculateness of his speech
and manners was more than unusual; it was positively
irritating, something which no Chinaman should rightfully
possess. So argued Keith as he went up to Brady’s
bungalow.
He tried to throw off the oppression
of the thing that was creeping over him, the growing
suspicion that he had not passed safely under the
battery of Shan Tung’s eyes. With physical
things he endeavored to thrust his mental uneasiness
into the background. He lighted one of the half-dozen
cigars McDowell had dropped into his pocket. It
was good to feel a cigar between his teeth again and
taste its flavor. At the crest of the slope on
which Brady’s bungalow stood, he stopped and
looked about him. Instinctively his eyes turned
first to the west. In that direction half of
the town lay under him, and beyond its edge swept the
timbered slopes, the river, and the green pathways
of the plains. His heart beat a little faster
as he looked. Half a mile away was a tiny, parklike
patch of timber, and sheltered there, with the river
running under it, was the old home. The building
was hidden, but through a break in the trees he could
see the top of the old red brick chimney glowing in
the sun, as if beckoning a welcome to him over the
tree tops. He forgot Shan Tung; he forgot McDowell;
he forgot that he was John Keith, the murderer, in
the overwhelming sea of loneliness that swept over
him. He looked out into the world that had once
been his, and all that he saw was that red brick chimney
glowing in the sun, and the chimney changed until
at last it seemed to him like a tombstone rising over
the graves of the dead. He turned to the door
of the bungalow with a thickening in his throat and
his eyes filmed by a mist through which for a few
moments it was difficult for him to see.
The bungalow was darkened by drawn
curtains when he entered. One after another he
let them up, and the sun poured in. Brady had
left his place in order, and Keith felt about him
an atmosphere of cheer that was a mighty urge to his
flagging spirits. Brady was a home man without
a wife. The Company’s agent had called
his place “The Shack” because it was built
entirely of logs, and a woman could not have made it
more comfortable. Keith stood in the big living-room.
At one end was a strong fireplace in which kindlings
and birch were already laid, waiting the touch of
a match. Brady’s reading table and his easy
chair were drawn up close; his lounging moccasins
were on a footstool; pipes, tobacco, books and magazines
littered the table; and out of this cheering disorder
rose triumphantly the amber shoulder of a half-filled
bottle of Old Rye.
Keith found himself chuckling.
His grin met the lifeless stare of a pair of glass
eyes in the huge head of an old bull moose over the
mantel, and after that his gaze rambled over the walls
ornamented with mounted heads, pictures, snowshoes,
gun-racks and the things which went to make up the
comradeship and business of Brady’s picturesque
life. Keith could look through into the little
dining-room, and beyond that was the kitchen.
He made an inventory of both and found that McDowell
was right. There were nutcrackers in Brady’s
establishment. And he found the bathroom.
It was not much larger than a piano box, but the tub
was man’s size, and Keith raised a window and
poked his head out to find that it was connected with
a rainwater tank built by a genius, just high enough
to give weight sufficient for a water system and low
enough to gather the rain as it fell from the eaves.
He laughed outright, the sort of laugh that comes
out of a man’s soul not when he is amused but
when he is pleased. By the time he had investigated
the two bedrooms, he felt a real affection for Brady.
He selected the agent’s room for his own.
Here, too, were pipes and tobacco and books and magazines,
and a reading lamp on a table close to the bedside.
Not until he had made a closer inspection of the living-room
did he discover that the Shack also had a telephone.
By that time he noted that the sun
had gone out. Driving up from the west was a
mass of storm clouds. He unlocked a door from
which he could look up the river, and the wind that
was riding softly in advance of the storm ruffled
his hair and cooled his face. In it he caught
again the old fancy-the smells of the vast
reaches of unpeopled prairie beyond the rim of the
forest, and the luring chill of the distant mountain
tops. Always storm that came down with the river
brought to him voice from the river’s end.
It came to him from the great mountains that were
a passion with him; it seemed to thunder to him the
old stories of the mightiest fastnesses of the Rockies
and stirred in him the child-bred yearning to follow
up his beloved river until he came at last to the
mystery of its birthplace in the cradle of the western
ranges. And now, as he faced the storm, the grip
of that desire held him like a strong hand.
The sky blackened swiftly, and with
the rumbling of far-away thunder he saw the lightning
slitting the dark heaven like bayonets, and the fire
of the electrical charges galloped to him and filled
his veins. His heart all at once cried out words
that his lips did not utter. Why should he not
answer the call that had come to him through all the
years? Now was the time-and why should
he not go? Why tempt fate in the hazard of a
great adventure where home and friends and even hope
were dead to him, when off there beyond the storm was
the place of his dreams? He threw out his arms.
His voice broke at last in a cry of strange ecstasy.
Not everything was gone! Not everything was dead!
Over the graveyard of his past there was sweeping
a mighty force that called him, something that was
no longer merely an urge and a demand but a thing
that was irresistible. He would go! Tomorrow-today-tonight-he
would begin making plans!
He watched the deluge as it came on
with a roar of wind, a beating, hissing wall under
which the tree tops down in the edge of the plain
bent their heads like a multitude of people in prayer.
He saw it sweeping up the slope in a mass of gray
dragoons. It caught him before he had closed
the door, and his face dripped with wet as he forced
the last inch of it against the wind with his shoulder.
It was the sort of storm Keith liked. The thunder
was the rumble of a million giant cartwheels rolling
overhead.
Inside the bungalow it was growing
dark as though evening had come. He dropped on
his knees before the pile of dry fuel in the fireplace
and struck a match. For a space the blaze smoldered;
then the birch fired up like oil-soaked tinder, and
a yellow flame crackled and roared up the flue.
Keith was sensitive in the matter of smoking other
people’s pipes, so he drew out his own and filled
it with Brady’s tobacco. It was an English
mixture, rich and aromatic, and as the fire burned
brighter and the scent of the tobacco filled the room,
he dropped into Brady’s big lounging chair and
stretched out his legs with a deep breath of satisfaction.
His thoughts wandered to the clash of the storm.
He would have a place like this out there in the mystery
of the trackless mountains, where the Saskatchewan
was born. He would build it like Brady’s
place, even to the rain-water tank midway between the
roof and the ground. And after a few years no
one would remember that a man named John Keith had
ever lived.
Something brought him suddenly to
his feet. It was the ringing of the telephone.
After four years the sound was one that roused with
an uncomfortable jump every nerve in his body.
Probably it was McDowell calling up about the Jap
or to ask how he liked the place. Probably-it
was that. He repeated the thought aloud as he
laid his pipe on the table. And yet as his hand
came in contact with the telephone, he felt an inclination
to draw back. A subtle voice whispered him not
to answer, to leave while the storm was dark, to go
back into the wilderness, to fight his way to the
western mountains.
With a jerk he unhooked the receiver
and put it to his ear.
It was not McDowell who answered him.
It was not Shan Tung. To his amazement, coming
to him through the tumult of the storm, he recognized
the voice of Miriam Kirkstone!