Into a narrow corridor, through a
second door that seemed made of padded wool, and then
into a dimly lighted room John Keith followed Kao,
the Chinaman. Out of this room there was no other
exit; it was almost square, its ceiling was low, its
walls darkly somber, and that life was there Keith
knew by the heaviness of cigarette smoke in the air.
For a moment his eyes did not discern the physical
evidence of that life. And then, staring at him
out of the yellow glow, he saw a face. It was
a haunting, terrible face, a face heavy and deeply
lined by sagging flesh and with eyes sunken and staring.
They were more than staring. They greeted Keith
like living coals. Under the face was a human
form, a big, fat, sagging form that leaned outward
from its seat in a chair.
Kao, bowing, sweeping his flowing
raiment with his arms, said, “John Keith, allow
me to introduce you to Peter Kirkstone.”
For the first time amazement, shock,
came to Keith’s lips in an audible cry.
He advanced a step. Yes, in that pitiable wreck
of a man he recognized Peter Kirkstone, the fat creature
who had stood under the picture of the Madonna that
fateful night, Miriam Kirkstone’s brother!
And as he stood, speechless, Kao said:
“Peter Kirkstone, you know why I have brought
this man to you tonight. You know that he is not
Derwent Conniston. You know that he is John Keith,
the murderer of your father. Is it not so?”
The thick lips moved. The voice was husky-“Yes.”
“He does not believe. So
I have brought him that he may listen to you.
Peter Kirkstone, is it your desire that your sister,
Miriam, give herself to me, Prince Kao, tonight?”
Again the thick lips moved. This
time Keith saw the effort. He shuddered.
He knew these questions and answers had been prepared.
A doomed man was speaking.
And the voice came, choking, “Yes.”
“Why?”
The terrible face of Peter Kirkstone
seemed to contort. He looked at Kao. And
Kao’s eyes were shining in that dull room like
the eyes of a snake.
“Because-it will save my life.”
“And why will it save your life?”
Again that pause, again the sickly,
choking effort. “Because-I have
killed A man.”
Bowing, smiling, rustling, Kao turned to the door.
“That is all, Peter
Kirkstone. Good night. John Keith, will
you follow me?”
Dumbly Keith followed through the
dark corridor, into the big room mellow with candle-glow,
back to the table with its mocking tea-urn and chinaware.
He felt a thing like clammy sweat on his back.
He sat down. And Kao sat opposite him again.
“That is the reason, John Keith.
Peter Kirkstone, her brother, is a murderer, a cold-blooded
murderer. And only Miriam Kirkstone and your
humble servant, Prince Kao, know his secret. And
to buy my secret, to save his life, the golden-headed
goddess is almost ready to give herself to me-almost,
John Keith. She will decide tonight, when you
go to her. She will come. Yes, she will
come tonight. I do not fear. I have prepared
for her the candles, the bridal dais, the nuptial supper.
Oh, she will come. For if she does not, if she
fails, with tomorrow’s dawn Peter Kirkstone
and John Keith both go to the hangman!”
Keith, in spite of the horror that
had come over him, felt no excitement. The whole
situation was clear to him now, and there was nothing
to be gained by argument, no possibility of evasion.
Kao held the winning hand, the hand that put him back
to the wall in the face of impossible alternatives.
These alternatives flashed upon him swiftly.
There were two and only two-flight, and
alone, without Mary Josephine; and betrayal of Miriam
Kirkstone. Just how Kao schemed that he should
accomplish that betrayal, he could not guess.
His voice, like his face, was cold
and strange when it answered the Chinaman; it lacked
passion; there was no emphasis, no inflection that
gave to one word more than to another. And Keith,
listening to his own voice, knew what it meant.
He was cold inside, cold as ice, and his eyes were
on the dais, the sacrificial altar that Kao had prepared,
waiting in the candleglow. On the floor of that
dais was a great splash of dull-gold altar cloth,
and it made him think of Miriam Kirkstone’s
unbound and disheveled hair strewn in its outraged
glory over the thing Kao had prepared for her.
“I see. It is a trade,
Kao. You are offering me my life in return for
Miriam Kirkstone.”
“More than that, John Keith.
Mine is the small price. And yet it is great
to me, for it gives me the golden goddess. But
is she more to me than Derwent Conniston’s sister
may be to you? Yes, I am giving you her, and
I am giving you your life, and I am giving Peter Kirkstone
his life-all for one.”
“For one,” repeated Keith.
“Yes, for one.”
“And I, John Keith, in some
mysterious way unknown to me at present, am to deliver
Miriam Kirkstone to you?”
“Yes.”
“And yet, if I should kill you, now-where
you sit-”
Kao shrugged his slim shoulders, and
Keith heard that soft, gurgling laugh that McDowell
had said was like the splutter of oil.
“I have arranged. It is
all in writing. If anything should happen to
me, there are messengers who would carry it swiftly.
To harm me would be to seal your own doom. Besides,
you would not leave here alive. I am not afraid.”
“How am I to deliver Miriam Kirkstone to you?”
Kao leaned forward, his fingers interlacing
eagerly. “Ah, now you have asked the
question, John Keith! And we shall be friends,
great friends, for you see with the eyes of wisdom.
It will be easy, so easy that you will wonder at the
cheapness of the task. Ten days ago Miriam Kirkstone
was about to pay my price. And then you came.
From that moment she saw you in McDowell’s office,
there was a sudden change. Why? I don’t
know. Perhaps because of that thing you call
intuition but to which we give a greater name.
Perhaps only because you were the man who had run down
her father’s murderer. I saw her that afternoon,
before you went up at night. Ah, yes, I could
see, I could understand the spark that had begun to
grow in her, hope, a wild, impossible hope, and I prepared
for it by leaving you my message. I went away.
I knew that in a few days all that hope would be centered
in you, that it would live and die in you, that in
the end it would be your word that would bring her
to me. And that word you must speak tonight.
You must go to her, hope-broken. You must tell
her that no power on earth can save her, and that Kao
waits to make her a princess, that tomorrow will be
too late, that tonight must the bargain be closed.
She will come. She will save her brother from
the hangman, and you, in bringing her, will save John
Keith and keep Derwent Conniston’s sister.
Is it not a great reward for the little I am asking?”
It was Keith who now smiled into the
eyes of the Chinaman, but it was a smile that did
not soften that gray and rock-like hardness that had
settled in his face. “Kao, you are a devil.
I suppose that is a compliment to your dirty ears.
You’re rotten to the core of the thing that
beats in you like a heart; you’re a yellow snake
from the skin in. I came to see you because I
thought there might be a way out of this mess.
I had almost made up my mind to kill you. But
I won’t do that. There’s a better
way. In half an hour I’ll be with McDowell,
and I’ll beat you out by telling him that I’m
John Keith. And I’ll tell him this story
of Miriam Kirkstone from beginning to end. I’ll
tell him of that dais you’ve built for her-your
sacrificial altar!-and tomorrow Prince
Albert will rise to a man to drag you out of this hole
and kill you as they would kill a rat. That is
my answer, you slit-eyed, Yale-veneered yellow devil!
I may die, and Peter Kirkstone may die, but you’ll
not get Miriam Kirkstone!”
He was on his feet when he finished,
amazed at the calmness of his own voice, amazed that
his hands were steady and his brain was cool in this
hour of his sacrifice. And Kao was stunned.
Before his eyes he saw a white man throwing away his
life. Here, in the final play, was a master-stroke
he had not foreseen. A moment before the victor,
he was now the vanquished. About him he saw his
world falling, his power gone, his own life suddenly
hanging by a thread. In Keith’s face he
read the truth. This white man was not bluffing.
He would go to McDowell. He would tell the truth.
This man who had ventured so much for his own life
and freedom would now sacrifice that life to save a
girl, one girl! He could not understand, and
yet he believed. For it was there before his
eyes in that gray, passionless face that was as inexorable
as the face of one of his own stone gods.
As he uttered the words that smashed
all that Kao had planned for, Keith sensed rather
than saw the swift change of emotion sweeping through
the yellow-visaged Moloch staring up at him. For
a space the oriental’s evil eyes had widened,
exposing wider rims of saffron white, betraying his
amazement, the shock of Keith’s unexpected revolt,
and then the lids closed slowly, until only dark and
menacing gleams of fire shot between them, and Keith
thought of the eyes of a snake. Swift as the
strike of a rattler Kao was on his feet, his gown thrown
back, one clawing hand jerking a derringer from his
silken belt. In the same breath he raised his
voice in a sharp call.
Keith sprang back. The snake-like
threat in the Chinaman’s eyes had prepared him,
and his Service automatic leaped from its holster with
lightning swiftness. Yet that movement was no
swifter than the response to Kao’s cry.
The panel shot open, the screens moved, tapestries
billowed suddenly as if moved by the wind, and Kao’s
servants sprang forth and were at him like a pack
of dogs. Keith had no time to judge their number,
for his brain was centered in the race with Kao’s
derringer. He saw its silver mountings flash in
the candle-glow, saw its spurt of smoke and fire.
But its report was drowned in the roar of his automatic
as it replied with a stream of lead and flame.
He saw the derringer fall and Kao crumple up like
a jackknife. His brain turned red as he swung
his weapon on the others, and as he fired, he backed
toward the door. Then something caught him from
behind, twisting his head almost from his shoulders,
and he went down.
He lost his automatic. Weight
of bodies was upon him; yellow hands clutched for
his throat; he felt hot breaths and heard throaty cries.
A madness of horror possessed him, a horror that was
like the blind madness of Laocoon struggling with
his sons in the coils of the giant serpent. In
these moments he was not fighting men. They were
monsters, yellow, foul-smelling, unhuman, and he fought
as Laocoon fought. As if it had been a cane,
he snapped the bone of an arm whose hand was throttling
him; he twisted back a head until it snapped between
its shoulders; he struck and broke with a blind fury
and a giant strength, until at last, torn and covered
with blood, he leaped free and reached the door.
As he opened it and sprang through, he had the visual
impression that only two of his assailants were rising
from the floor.
For the space of a second he hesitated
in the little hallway. Down the stairs was light-and
people. He knew that he was bleeding and his
clothes were torn, and that flight in that direction
was impossible. At the opposite end of the hall
was a curtain which he judged must cover a window.
With a swift movement he tore down this curtain and
found that he was right. In another second he
had crashed the window outward with his shoulder,
and felt the cool air of the night in his face.
The door behind him was still closed when he crawled
out upon a narrow landing at the top of a flight of
steps leading down into the alley. He paused
long enough to convince himself that his enemies were
making no effort to follow him, and as he went down
the steps, he caught himself grimly chuckling.
He had given them enough.
In the darkness of the alley he paused
again. A cool breeze fanned his cheeks, and the
effect of it was to free him of the horror that had
gripped him in his fight with the yellow men.
Again the calmness with which he had faced Kao possessed
him. The Chinaman was dead. He was sure
of that. And for him there was not a minute to
lose.
After all, it was his fate. The
game had been played, and he had lost. There
was one thing left undone, one play Conniston would
still make, if he were there. And he, too, would
make it. It was no longer necessary for him to
give himself up to McDowell, for Kao was dead, and
Miriam Kirkstone was saved. It was still right
and just for him to fight for his life. But Mary
Josephine must know from him. It was
the last square play he could make.
No one saw him as he made his way
through alleys to the outskirts of the town.
A quarter of an hour later he came up the slope to
the Shack. It was lighted, and the curtains were
raised to brighten his way up the hill. Mary
Josephine was waiting for him.
Again there came over him the strange
and deadly calmness with which he had met the tragedy
of that night. He had tried to wipe the blood
from his face, but it was still there when he entered
and faced Mary Josephine. The wounds made by
the razor-like nails of his assailants were bleeding;
he was hatless, his hair was disheveled, and his throat
and a part of his chest were bare where his clothes
had been torn away. As Mary Josephine came toward
him, her arms reaching out to him, her face dead white,
he stretched out a restraining hand, and said,
“Please wait, Mary Josephine!”
Something stopped her-the
strangeness of his voice, the terrible hardness of
his face, gray and blood-stained, the something appalling
and commanding in the way he had spoken. He passed
her quickly on his way to the telephone. Her
lips moved; she tried to speak; one of her hands went
to her throat. He was calling Miriam Kirkstone’s
number! And now she saw that his hands, too,
were bleeding. There came the murmur of a voice
in the telephone. Someone answered. And then
she heard him say,
“Shan Tung is dead!”
That was all. He hung up the
receiver and turned toward her. With a little
cry she moved toward him.
“Derry-Derry-”
He evaded her and pointed to the big
chair in front of the fireplace. “Sit down,
Mary Josephine.”
She obeyed him. Her face was
whiter than he had thought a living face could be,
And then, from the beginning to the end, he told her
everything. Mary Josephine made no sound, and
in the big chair she seemed to crumple smaller and
smaller as he confessed the great lie to her, from
the hour Conniston and he had traded identities in
the little cabin on the Barren. Until he died
he knew she would haunt him as he saw her there for
the last time-her dead-white face, her great
eyes, her voiceless lips, her two little hands clutched
at her breast as she listened to the story of the
great lie and his love for her.
Even when he had done, she did not
move or speak. He went into his room, closed
the door, and turned on the lights. Quickly he
put into his pack what he needed. And when he
was ready, he wrote on a piece of paper:
“A thousand times I repeat,
‘I love you.’ Forgive me if you can.
If you cannot forgive, you may tell McDowell, and
the Law will find me up at the place of our dreams-the
river’s end.
-John Keith.”
This last message he left on the table
for Mary Josephine.
For a moment he listened at the door.
Outside there was no movement, no sound. Quietly,
then, he raised the window through which Kao had come
into his room.
A moment later he stood under the
light of the brilliant stars. Faintly there came
to him the sounds of the city, the sound of life, of
gayety, of laughter and of happiness, rising to him
now from out of the valley.
He faced the north. Down the
side of the hill and over the valley lay the forests.
And through the starlight he strode back to them once
more, back to their cloisters and their heritage, the
heritage of the hunted and the outcast.