At ten o’clock that night the
pawnbroker sat with his friend Levi discussing a bottle
of champagne, which the open-eyed assistant had procured
from the public-house opposite.
“You’re a lucky man, Hyams,”
said his friend, as he raised his glass to his lips.
“Thirty thousand pounds! It’s a fortune,
a small fortune,” he added correctively.
“I shall give this place up,”
said the pawnbroker, “and go away for a time.
I’m not safe here.”
“Safe?” queried Levi, raising his eyebrows.
The pawnbroker related his adventures with his visitors.
“I can’t understand that
cat business,” said Levi when he had finished.
“It’s quite farcical; he must have poisoned
it.”
“He wasn’t near it,”
said the pawnbroker, “it was at the other end
of the counter.”
“Oh, hang it,” said Levi,
the more irritably because he could not think of any
solution to the mystery. “You don’t
believe in occult powers and all that sort of thing.
This is the neighborhood of the Commercial Road; time,
nineteenth century. The thing’s got on your
nerves. Keep your eyes open, and stay indoors;
they can’t hurt you here. Why not tell the
police?”
“I don’t want any questions,” said
the pawnbroker.
“I mean, just tell them that
one or two suspicious characters have been hanging
round lately,” said the other. “If
this precious couple see that they are watched they’ll
probably bolt. There’s nothing like a uniform
to scare that sort.”
“I won’t have anything
to do with the police,” said the pawnbroker
firmly.
“Well, let Bob sleep on the
premises,” suggested his friend.
“I think I will to-morrow,”
said the other. “I’ll have a bed fixed
up for him.”
“Why not to-night?” asked Levi.
“He’s gone,” said
the pawnbroker briefly. “Didn’t you
hear him shut up?”
“He was in the shop five minutes ago,”
said Levi.
“He left at ten,” said the pawnbroker.
“I’ll swear I heard somebody
only a minute or two back,” said Levi, staring.
“Nerves, as you remarked a little
while ago,” said his friend, with a grin.
“Well, I thought I heard him,”
said Levi. “You might just secure the door
anyway.”
The pawnbroker went to the door and
made it fast, giving a careless glance round the dimly
lighted shop as he did so.
“Perhaps you could stay to-night
yourself,” he said, as he returned to the sitting-room.
“I can’t possibly, to-night,”
said the other. “By the way, you might
lend me a pistol of some kind. With all these
cut-throats hanging round, visiting you is a somewhat
perilous pleasure. They might take it into their
heads to kill me to see whether I have got the stone.”
“Take your pick,” said
the pawnbroker, going to the shop and returning with
two or three secondhand revolvers and some cartridges.
“I never fired one in my life,”
said Levi dubiously, “but I believe the chief
thing is to make a bang. Which’ll make the
loudest?”
On his friend’s recommendation
he selected a revolver of the service pattern, and,
after one or two suggestions from the pawnbroker,
expressed himself as qualified to shoot anything between
a chimney-pot and a paving-stone.
“Make your room-door fast to-night,
and tomorrow let Bob have a bed there,” he said
earnestly, as he rose to go. “By the way,
why not make those chalk marks on the door just for
the night? You can laugh at them to-morrow.
Sort of suggestion of the Passover about it, isn’t
there?”
“I’m not going to mark
my door for all the assassins that ever breathed,”
said the Jew fiercely, as he rose to see the other
out.
“Well, I think you’re
safe enough in the house,” said Levi. “Beastly
dreary the shop looks. To a man of imagination
like myself it’s quite easy to fancy that there
is one of your brown friend’s pet devils crouching
under the counter ready to spring.”
The pawnbroker grunted and opened the door.
“Poof, fog,” said Levi,
as a cloud streamed in. “Bad night for pistol
practice. I shan’t be able to hit anything.”
The two men stood in the doorway for
a minute, trying to peer through the fog. A heavy,
measured tread sounded in the alley; a huge figure
loomed up, and, to the relief of Levi, a constable
halted be-fore them.
“Thick night, sir,” said he to the pawnbroker.
“Very,” was the reply.
“Just keep your eye on my place to-night, constable.
There have been one or two suspicious-looking characters
hanging about here lately.”
“I will, sir,” said the
constable, and moved off in company with Levi.
The pawnbroker closed the door hastily
behind them and bolted it securely. His friend’s
jest about the devil under the counter occurred to
him as he eyed it, and for the first time in his life,
the lonely silence of the shop became oppressive.
He half thought of opening the door again and calling
them back, but by this time they were out of earshot,
and he had a very strong idea that there might be somebody
lurking in the fog outside.
“Bah!” said he aloud, “thirty thousand
pounds.”
He turned the gas-jet on full a
man that had just made that sum could afford to burn
a little gas and, first satisfying himself
by looking under the counter and round the shop, re-entered
the sitting room.
Despite his efforts, he could not
get rid of the sense of loneliness and danger which
possessed him. The clock had stopped, and the
only sound audible was the snapping of the extinguished
coals in the grate. He crossed over to the mantelpiece,
and, taking out his watch, wound the clock up.
Then he heard something else.
With great care he laid the key softly
on the mantelpiece and listened intently. The
clock was now aggressively audible, so that he opened
the case again, and putting his finger against the
pendulum, stopped it. Then he drew his revolver
and cocked it, and, with his set face turned towards
the door, and his lips parted, waited.
At first nothing.
Then all the noises which a lonely man hears in a
house at night. The stairs creaked, something
moved in the walls. He crossed noiselessly to
the door and opened it. At the head of the staircase
he fancied the darkness moved.
“Who’s there?” he cried in a strong
voice.
Then he stepped back into the room
and lit his lamp. “I’ll get to bed,”
he said grimly; “I’ve got the horrors.”
He left the gas burning, and with
the lamp in his left hand and the pistol in his right
slowly ascended the stairs. The first landing
was clear. He opened the doors of each room,
and, holding the lamp aloft, peered in. Then
he mounted higher, and looked in the rooms, crammed
from floor to ceiling with pledges, ticketed and placed
on shelves. In one room he thought he saw something
crouching in a corner. He entered boldly, and
as he passed along one side of a row of shelves could
have sworn that he heard a stealthy footfall on the
other. He rushed back to the door, and hung listening
over the shaky balusters. Nothing stirred, and,
satisfied that he must have been mistaken, he gave
up the search and went to his bedroom. He set
the lamp down on the drawers, and turned to close
the door, when he distinctly heard a noise in the shop
below. He snatched up the lamp again and ran
hastily downstairs, pausing halfway on the lowest
flight as he saw a dark figure spreadeagled against
the side door, standing on tiptoe to draw back the
bolt.
At the noise of his approach, it turned
its head hastily, and revealed the face of the brown
man; the bolt shot back, and at the same moment the
Jew raised his pistol and fired twice.
From beneath the little cloud of smoke,
as it rose, he saw that the door stood open and that
the figure had vanished. He ran hastily down to
the door, and, with the pistol raised, stood listening,
trying to peer through the fog.
An unearthly stillness followed the
deafening noise of the shots. The fog poured
in at the doorway as he stood there hoping that the
noise had reached the ears of some chance passer-by.
He stood so for a few minutes, and then, closing the
door again, resolutely turned back and went upstairs.
His first proceeding upon entering
his room was to carefully look beneath and behind
the heavy, dusty pieces of furniture, and, satisfied
that no foe lurked there, he closed the door and locked
it Then he opened the window gently, and listened
The court below was perfectly still. He closed
the window, and, taking off his coat, barricaded the
door with all the heaviest furniture in the room.
With a feeling of perfect security, he complacently
regarded his handiwork, and then, sitting on the edge
of the bed, began to undress. He turned the lamp
down a little, and reloading the empty chambers of
his revolver, placed it by the side of the lamp on
the drawers. Then, as he turned back the clothes,
he fancied that something moved beneath them.
As he paused, it dropped lightly from the other side
of the bed to the floor.
At first he sat, with knitted brows,
trying to see what it was. He had only had a
glimpse of it, but he certainly had an idea that it
was alive. A rat perhaps. He got off the
bed again with an oath, and, taking the lamp in his
hand, peered cautiously about the floor. Twice
he walked round the room in this fashion. Then
he stooped down, and, raising the dirty bed hangings,
peered beneath.
He almost touched the wicked little
head of the brown man’s devil, and with a stifled
cry, sprang hastily backward. The lamp shattered
against the corner of the drawers, and, falling in
a shower of broken glass and oil about his stockinged
feet, left him in darkness. He threw the fragment
of glass stand which remained in his hand from him,
and, quick as thought, gained the bed again, and crouched
there, breathing heavily.
He tried to think where he had put
the matches, and remembered there were some on the
widow-sill. The room was so dark that he could
not see the foot of the bed, and in his fatuity he
had barricaded himself in the room with the loathsome
reptile which was to work the brown man’s vengeance.
For some time he lay listening intently.
Once or twice he fancied that he heard the rustle
of the snake over the dingy carpet, and he wondered
whether it would attempt to climb on to the bed.
He stood up, and tried to get his revolver from the
drawers. It was out of reach, and as the bed
creaked beneath his weight, a faint hiss sounded from
the floor, and he sat still again, hardly daring to
breathe.
The cold rawness of the room chilled
him. He cautiously drew the bed-clothes towards
him, and rolled himself up in them, leaving only his
head and arms exposed. In this position he began
to feel more secure, until the thought struck him
that the snake might be inside them. He fought
against this idea, and tried to force his nerves into
steadiness. Then his fears suggested that two
might have been placed in the bed. At this his
fears got the upper hand, and it seemed to him that
something stirred in the clothes. He drew his
body from them slowly and stealthily, and taking them
in his arms, flung them violently to the other end
of the room. On his hands and knees he now travelled
over the bare bed, feeling. There was nothing
there.
In this state of suspense and dread
time seemed to stop. Several times he thought
that the thing had got on the bed, and to stay there
in suspense in the darkness was impossible. He
felt it over again and again. At last, unable
to endure it any longer, he resolved to obtain the
matches, and stepped cautiously off the bed; but no
sooner had his feet touched the floor than his courage
forsook him, and he sprang hurriedly back to his refuge
again.
After that, in a spirit of dogged
fatalism, he sat still and waited. To his disordered
mind it seemed that footsteps were moving about the
house, but they had no terrors for him. To grapple
with a man for life and death would be play; to kill
him, joy unspeakable. He sat still, listening.
He heard rats in the walls and a babel of jeering voices
on the stair-case. The whole blackness of the
room with the devilish, writhing thing on the floor
became invested with supernatural significance.
Then, dimly at first, and hardly comprehending the
joy of it, he saw the window. A little later
he saw the outlines of the things in the room.
The night had passed and he was alive!
He raised his half-frozen body to
its full height, and, expanding his chest, planted
his feet firmly on the bed, stretching his long body
to the utmost. He clenched his fist, and felt
strong. The bed was unoccupied except by himself.
He bent down and scrutinized the floor for his enemy,
and set his teeth as he thought how he would tear it
and mangle it. It was light enough, but first
he would put on his boots. He leant over cautiously,
and lifting one on to the bed, put it on. Then
he bent down and took up the other, and, swift as lightning,
something issued from it, and, coiling round his wrist,
ran up the sleeve of his shirt.
With starting eyeballs the Jew held
his breath, and, stiffened into stone, waited helplessly.
The tightness round his arm relaxed as the snake drew
the whole of its body under the sleeve and wound round
his arm. He felt its head moving. It came
wriggling across his chest, and with a mad cry, the
wretched man clutched at the front of his shirt with
both hands and strove to tear it off. He felt
the snake in his hands, and for a moment hoped.
Then the creature got its head free, and struck him
smartly in the throat.
The Jew’s hold relaxed, and
the snake fell at his feet. He bent down and
seized it, careless now that it bit his hand, and,
with bloodshot eyes, dashed it repeatedly on the rail
of the bed. Then he flung it to the floor, and,
raising his heel, smashed its head to pulp.
His fury passed, he strove to think,
but his brain was in a whirl. He had heard of
sucking the wound, but one puncture was in his throat,
and he laughed discordantly. He had heard that
death had been prevented by drinking heavily of spirits.
He would do that first, and then obtain medical assistance.
He ran to the door, and began to drag
the furniture away. In his haste the revolver
fell from the drawers to the floor. He looked
at it steadily for a moment and then, taking it up,
handled it wistfully. He began to think more
clearly, although a numbing sensation was already
stealing over him.
“Thirty thousands pounds!”
he said slowly, and tapped his cheek lightly with
the cold barrel.
Then he slipped it in his mouth, and,
pulling the trigger, crashed heavily to the floor.