The instant after the gong sounded
Bob Brownley was alone on the floor at the foot of
the president’s desk. His form was swaying
like a reed on the edge of the cyclone’s path.
I jumped to his side. His brother, who had during
Bob’s harangue been vainly endeavouring to beat
his way through the crowd, was there first. “For
God’s sake, Bob, hear me. Word came from
your house half an hour ago of the miracle: Beulah
has awakened to her past. Her mind is clear;
the nurses are frantic for you to come to her.”
He got no further. With a mad
bellow and a bound, like a tortured bull that sees
the arena walls go down, Bob rushed out through the
nearest door, which, I thanked God, was a side one
leading to the street where the crowd was thinnest.
He cast a wild look around. His eyes lighted on
an empty automobile whose chauffeur had deserted to
the crowd. It was the work of a second to crank
it; of another to jump into the front seat. Quick
as had been his movement, I was behind him in the rear
seat. With a bound the great machine leaped through
the crowd.
“In the name of Christ, Bob,
be careful,” I yelled, as he hurled the iron
monster through the throng, scattering it to the right
and left as the mower scatters the sheaves in the
wheat fields. Some were crushed beneath its wheels.
Bob Brownley heard not their screams, heard not the
curses of those who escaped. He was on his feet,
his body crouched low over the steering-wheel, which
he grasped in his vise-like hands. His hatless
head was thrust far out, as though it strove to get
to Beulah Sands ahead of his body. His teeth
were set, and as I had jumped into the machine I had
noted that his eyes were those of a maniac, who saw
sanity just ahead if he could but get to it in time.
His ears were deaf not only to the howl of the terrified
throng and the curses of the teamsters who frantically
pulled their horses to the curb, but to my warnings
as well. He swung the machine around the corner
at New Street and into Wall as though it had been
the broadest boulevard in the park. He took Wall
Street at a bound I was sure would land us through
the fence into Trinity’s churchyard. But
no. Again he turned the corner, throwing the Juggernaut
on its outside wheels from Wall Street into Broadway
as the crowds on the sidewalk held their breath in
horror. I, too, was on my feet, but crouching
as I hung to the sides. Thank God, that usually
crowded thoroughfare was free from vehicles as far
up as I could see, on beyond the Astor House.
What could it mean? Was that divinity which ’tis
said protects the drunkard and the idiot about to
aid the mad rush of this love-frenzied creature to
his long-lost but newly returned dear one? I
heard the frantic clang of gongs, and as we shot by
the World Building, I saw ahead of us two plunging
automobiles filled with men. ’Twas from
them the gong clamour sounded. As we drew nearer.
I saw that these were the cars of the fire chiefs
answering a call. I thanked God again and again
as I yelled into Bob’s ear, “For Beulah’s
sake, Bob, don’t pass; if you do, we’ll
run into a blockade. If we keep in the rear they’ll
clear our way, and we may get to her alive.”
I do not know whether he heard, but he held the machine
in the rear of the other cars and did not try to pass.
Away we went on our mad rush through crowded Broadway.
At Union Square we lost our way-clearers. As
our automobile jumped across Fourteenth Street into
Fourth Avenue, Bob must have opened her up to the
last notch, for she seemed to leap through the air.
We sent two wagons crashing across the sidewalks into
the buildings. Cries of rage arose above the
din of the machine, and seemed to follow in our wake.
Bob was dead to all we passed. His entire being
seemed set on what was ahead. I knew he was an
expert in the handling of the automobile, for since
his misfortune, automobiling with Beulah Sands had
been his favourite pastime, but who could expect to
carry that plunging, swaying car to Forty-second Street!
Bob seemed to be performing the wondrous task.
We shot from curb to curb and around and in front of
vehicles and foot passengers as though the driver’s
eyes and hands were inspired.
Across the square at last and on up
Fourth Avenue to Twenty-sixth Street. Then a
dizzying whirl into Madison. Was he going to keep
to it until he got to Forty-second Street and try
to make Fifth Avenue along that congested block with
its crush of Grand Central passengers and lines upon
lines of hacks and teams? No. His head must
be clear. Again he threw the great machine around
the corner and into Fortieth Street. For a part
of the block our wheels rode the sidewalk, and I awaited
the crash. It did not come. Surely the new
world Bob was speeding to must be a kind one, else
why should Hag Fate, who had been at the steer-wheel
of his life-car during the last five years, carry
him safely through what looked a dozen sure deaths?
Without slacking speed a jot we swung around the corner
of Fortieth into Fifth Avenue. The road was clear
to Forty-second; there a dense jam of cars, teams,
and carriages blocked the crossing. Bob must
have seen the solid wall for I heard his low muttered
curse. Nothing else to indicate that we were
blocked with his goal in sight. He never touched
the speed controller, but took the two blocks as though
shot from a catapult. The two? No, one,
and three-quarters of the next, for when within a
score of yards of the black wall he jammed down the
brakes, and the iron mass ground and shook as though
it would rend itself to atoms, but it stopped with
its dasher and front wheels wedged in between a car
and a dray. It had not stopped when Bob was off
and up the avenue like a hound on the end-in-sight
trail. I was after him while the astonished bystanders
stared in wonder. As we neared Bob’s house
I could see people on the stoop. I heard Bob’s
secretary shout, “Thank God, Mr. Brownley, you
have come. She is in the office. I found
her there, quiet and recovered. She did not ask
a question. She said, ’Tell Mr. Brownley
when he comes that I should like to see him.’
Then she ordered me to get the afternoon paper.
I handed it to her an hour ago. I think she believes
herself in her old office. I shut off the floor
as you instructed. I did not dare go to her for
fear she would ask questions. I have” but
Bob was up the stairs two and three steps at a time.
My breath was almost gone and it took
me minutes to get to the second floor. My feet
touched the top stair, when, O God! that sound!
For five long years I had been trying to get it out
of my ears, but now more guttural, more agonised than
before, it broke upon my tortured senses. I did
not need to seek its direction. With a bound I
was at the threshold of Beulah Sands-Brownley’s
office. In that brief time the groans had stilled.
For one instant I closed my eyes, for the very atmosphere
of that hall moaned and groaned death. I opened
them. Yes, I knew it. There at the desk
was the beautiful gray-clad figure of five years ago.
There the two arms resting on the desk. There
the two beautiful hands holding the open paper, but
the eyes, those marvellous gray-blue doors to an immortal
soul they were closed forever. The
exquisitely beautiful face was cold and white and
peaceful. Beulah Sands was dead. The hell-hounds
of the “System” had overtaken its maimed
and hunted victim; it had added her beautiful heart
to the bags and barrels and hogsheads stored away in
its big “business-is-business” safe-deposit
vaults. My eyes in sick pity sought the form
of my old schoolmate, my college chum, my partner,
my friend, the man I loved. He was on his knees.
His agonised face was turned to his wife. His
clasped hands had been raised in an awful, heart-crushing
prayer as his Maker touched the bell. Bob Brownley’s
great brown eyes were closed, his clasped hands had
dropped against his wife’s head, and in dropping
had unloosed the glorious golden-brown waves until
in fond abandon they had coiled around his arms and
brow as though she for whom he had sacrificed all
was shielding his beloved head from the chills and
dark mists of the black river that laps the brink of
the eternal rest. The “System” had
skewered Robert Brownley’s heart too. I
staggered to his side. As I touched his now fast-icing
brow my eyes fell upon the great black headlines spread
across the top of the paper that Beulah Sands had
been reading when the all-kind God had cut her bonds:
Friday the thirteenth
And beneath in one column:
Terrible tragedy in
Virginia
The richest man in
the state, Thomas Reinhart, multi-millionaire,
while
temporarily insane from
the loss of his wife and
daughter, and of his
enormous fortune, which
was shattered in to-day’s
awful panic, cut his
throat. His death
was instantaneous.
In another column:
Robert Brownley creates
the most awful panic in history,
and spreads
wreck and ruin throughout
the civilised world.