<h3><SPAN name="THE_DUST_OF_DEATH" id="THE_DUST_OF_DEATH">THE DUST OF DEATH.</SPAN></h3>
<h4>The Story of the Great Plague of
the Twentieth Century.</h4>
<p>The front door bell tinkled impatiently; evidently
somebody was in a hurry. Alan Hubert
answered the call, a thing that even a distinguished
physician might do, seeing that it
was on the stroke of midnight. The tall,
graceful figure of a woman in evening dress
stumbled into the hall. The diamonds in her
hair shimmered and trembled, her face was
full of terror.</p>
<p>"You are Dr. Hubert," she gasped. "I am
Mrs. Fillingham, the artist's wife, you know.
Will you come with me at once....
My husband.... I had been dining out.
In the studio.... Oh, please come!"</p>
<p>Hubert asked no unnecessary questions.
He knew Fillingham, the great portrait
painter, well enough by repute and by sight
also, for Fillingham's house and studio
were close by. There were many
artists in the Devonshire Park district—that
pretty suburb which was
one of the triumphs of the builder's
and landscape gardener's art. Ten
years ago it had been no more than a
swamp; to-day people spoke complacently
of the fact that they lived in
Devonshire Park.</p>
<p>Hubert walked up the drive and
past the trim lawns with Mrs. Fillingham
hanging on his arm, and in at
the front door. Mrs. Fillingham
pointed to a door on the right. She
was too exhausted to speak. There
were shaded lights gleaming everywhere,
on old oak and armour and on a large
portrait of a military-looking man propped
up on an easel. On a lay figure was a
magnificent foreign military uniform.</p>
<p>Hubert caught all this in a quick mental
flash. But the vital interest to him was a
human figure lying on his back before the
fireplace. The clean-shaven, sensitive face
of the artist had a ghastly, purple-black tinge,
there was a large swelling in the throat.</p>
<p>"He—he is not dead?" Mrs. Fillingham
asked in a frozen whisper.</p>
<p>Hubert was able to satisfy the distracted
wife on that head. Fillingham was still
breathing. Hubert stripped the shade from
a reading lamp and held the electric bulb at
the end of its long flex above the sufferer's
mouth, contriving to throw the flood of light
upon the back of the throat.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/diptheria_he_exclaimed.jpg" width-obs="350" alt="" /> <div class="caption">"Diphtheria!" he exclaimed.</div>
</div>
<p>"Diphtheria!" he exclaimed. "Label's
type unless I am greatly mistaken. Some
authorities are disposed to scoff at Dr.
Label's discovery. I was an assistant of his
for four years and I know better. Fortunately
I happen to know what the treatment—successful
in two cases—was."</p>
<p>He hurried from the house and returned a
few minutes later breathlessly. He had
some strange-looking, needle-like instruments
in his hands. He took an electric lamp
from its socket and substituted a plug on a
flex instead. Then he cleared a table
without ceremony and managed to hoist his
patient upon it.</p>
<p>"Now please hold that lamp steadily thus,"
he said. "Bravo, you are a born nurse! I
am going to apply these electric needles to
the throat."</p>
<p>Hubert talked on more for the sake of his
companion's nerves than anything else. The
still figure on the table quivered under his
touch, his lungs expanded in a long,
shuddering sigh. The heart was beating
more or less regularly now. Fillingham
opened his eyes and muttered something.</p>
<p>"Ice," Hubert snapped, "have you got
any ice in the house?"</p>
<p>It was a well-regulated establishment and
there was plenty of ice in the refrigerator.
Not until the patient was safe in bed did
Hubert's features relax.</p>
<p>"We'll pull him through yet," he said.
"I'll send you a competent nurse round in
half-an-hour. I'll call first thing in the
morning and bring Dr. Label with me. He
must not miss this on any account."</p>
<p>Half-an-hour later Hubert was spinning
along in a hansom towards Harley Street.
It was past one when he reached the house
of the great German savant. A dim light was
burning in the hall. A big man with an
enormous shaggy head and a huge frame
attired in the seediest of dress coats
welcomed Hubert with a smile.</p>
<p>"So, my young friend," Label said, "your
face promises excitement."</p>
<p>"Case of Label's diphtheria," Hubert said
crisply. "Fillingham, the artist, who lives
close by me. Fortunately they called me in.
I have arranged for you to see my patient the
first thing in the morning."</p>
<p>The big German's jocular manner vanished.
He led Hubert gravely to a chair in his
consulting-room and curtly demanded details.
He smiled approvingly as Hubert enlarged
upon his treatment of the case.</p>
<p>"Undoubtedly your diagnosis was correct,"
he said, puffing furiously at a long china pipe.
"You have not forgotten what I told you of
it. The swelling—which is caused by violent
blood poisoning—yielded to the electric
treatment. I took the virus from the cases
in the north and I tried them on scores of
animals. And they all died.</p>
<p>"I find it is the virus of what is practically
a new disease, one of the worst in the wide
world. I say it recurs again, and it does. So
I practise, and practise to find a cure. And
electricity is the cure. I inoculate five dogs
with the virus and I save two by the electric
current. You follow my plans and you go
the first stage of the way to cure Fillingham.
Did you bring any of that mucous here?"</p>
<p>Hubert produced it in a tiny glass tube.
For a little time Label examined it under his
microscope. He wanted to make assurance
doubly sure.</p>
<p>"It is the same thing," he said presently.
"I knew that it was bound to recur again.
Why, it is planted all over our big cities.
And electricity is the only way to get rid of it.
It was the best method of dealing with sewage,
only corporations found it too expensive.
Wires in the earth charged to say 10,000 volts.
Apply this and you destroy the virus that lies
buried under hundreds of houses in London.
They laughed at me when I suggested it
years ago."</p>
<p>"Underground," Hubert asked vaguely.</p>
<p>"Ach, underground, yes. Don't you
recollect that in certain parts of England
cancer is more common than in other places?
The germs have been turned up in fields. I,
myself, have proved their existence. In a
little time, perhaps, I shall open the eyes of
your complacent Londoners. You live in
a paradise, ach Gott! And what was that
paradise like ten years ago? Dreary pools
and deserted brickfields. And how do you
fill it up and level it to build houses upon?"</p>
<p>"By the carting of hundreds of thousands
of loads of refuse, of course."</p>
<p>"Ach, I will presently show you what that
refuse was and is. Now go home to bed."</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>Mrs. Fillingham remained in the studio
with Hubert whilst Label was making his examination
overhead. The patient had had a
bad night; his symptoms were very grave
indeed. Hubert listened more or less
vaguely; his mind had gone beyond the
solitary case. He was dreading what might
happen in the future.</p>
<p>"Your husband has a fine constitution," he
said soothingly.</p>
<p>"He has overtried it lately," Mrs. Fillingham
replied. "At present he is painting a portrait
of the Emperor of Asturia. His Majesty was
to have sat to-day; he spent the morning here
yesterday."</p>
<p>But Hubert was paying no attention.</p>
<p>The heavy tread of Label was heard as he
floundered down the stairs. His big voice
was booming. What mattered all the portraits
in the world so long as the verdict hung on the
German doctor's lips!</p>
<p>"Oh, there is a chance," Label exclaimed.
"Just a chance. Everything possible is
being done. This is not so much diphtheria as
a new disease. Diphtheria family, no doubt,
but the blood poisoning makes a difficult
thing of it."</p>
<p>Label presently dragged Hubert away after
parting with Mrs. Fillingham. He wanted
to find a spot where building or draining was
going on.</p>
<p>They found some men presently engaged
in connecting a new house with the main
drainage—a deep cutting some forty yards
long by seven or eight feet deep. There was
the usual crust of asphalt on the road, followed
by broken bricks and the like, and a
more or less regular stratum of blue-black rubbish,
soft, wet, and clinging, and emitting an
odour that caused Hubert to throw up his
head.</p>
<p>"You must have broken into a drain somewhere
here," he said.</p>
<p>"We ain't, sir," the foreman of the gang
replied. "It's nout but rubbidge as they
made up the road with here ten years ago.
Lord knows where it came from, but it do
smell fearful in weather like this."</p>
<p>The odour indeed was stifling. All
imaginable kinds of rubbish and refuse lay
under the external beauties of Devonshire Park
in strata ranging from five to forty feet deep.
It was little wonder that trees and flowers
flourished here. And here—wet, and dark,
and festering—was a veritable hotbed of
disease. Contaminated rags, torn paper,
road siftings, decayed vegetable matter, diseased
food, fish and bones all were represented
here.</p>
<p>"Every ounce of this ought to have gone
through the destructor," Label snorted. "But
no, it is used for the foundations of a suburban
paradise. My word, we shall see what your
paradise will be like presently. Come
along."</p>
<p>Label picked up a square slab of the blue
stratum, put it in a tin, and the tin in his pocket.
He was snorting and puffing with contempt.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/label_picks_up_strata.jpg" width-obs="400" alt="" /> <div class="caption">Label picked up a square slab of the blue strata, put it in a tin, and the tin in his pocket.</div>
</div>
<p>"Now come to Harley Street with me and
I will show you things," he said.</p>
<p>He was as good as his word. Placed
under a microscope, a minute portion of the
subsoil from Devonshire Park proved to be a
mass of living matter. There were at least
four kinds of bacillus here that Hubert had
never seen before. With his superior knowledge
Label pointed out the fact that they all
existed in the mucous taken from Fillingham
on the previous evening.</p>
<p>"There you are!" he cried excitedly.
"You get all that wet sodden refuse of
London and you dump it down here in a heap.
You mix with it a heap of vegetable matter so
that fermentation shall have every chance.
Then you cover it over with some soil, and
you let it boil, boil, boil. Then, when
millions upon millions of death-dealing
microbes are bred and bred till their virility
is beyond the scope of science, you build
good houses on the top of it. For years I
have been prophesying an outbreak of some
new disease—or some awful
form of an old one—and
here it comes. They called
me a crank because I asked
for high electric voltage to
kill the plague—to destroy
it by lightning. A couple of
high tension wires run into
the earth and there you are.
See here."</p>
<p>He took his cube of the
reeking earth and applied
the battery to it. The mass
showed no outward
change. But once
under the microscope
a fragment
of it demonstrated
that there was not
the slightest
trace of organic
life.</p>
<p>"There!"
Label cried.
"Behold the
remedy. I don't
claim that it will
cure in every case,
because we hardly
touch the diphtheretic
side of
the trouble.
When there has
been a large
loss of life
we shall
learn the
perfect
remedy by
experience.
But this thing
is coming,
and your
London is going to get a pretty bad
scare. You have laid it down like port
wine, and now that the
thing is ripe you
are going to suffer from the consequence.
I have written articles in the <i>Lancet</i>, I
have warned people, but they take not the
slightest heed."</p>
<p>Hubert went back home thoughtfully. He
found the nurse who had Fillingham's case
in hand waiting for him in
his consulting-room.</p>
<p>"I am just back from
my walk," she said. "I
wish you would call at Dr.
Walker's at Elm Crescent.
He has two cases exactly
like Mr. Fillingham's, and
he is utterly puzzled."</p>
<p>Hubert snatched his hat
and his electric needles,
and hurried away at once.
He found his colleague impatiently
waiting for him.
There were two children
this time in one of the
best appointed houses in
Devonshire Park, suffering
precisely as Fillingham had
done. In each instance the
electric treatment gave the
desired result. Hubert
hastily explained the whole
matter to Walker.</p>
<p>"It's an awful business,"
the latter said.
"Personally, I have
a great respect for
Label, and I
feel convinced
that he is
right. If
this thing
spreads,
property in
Devonshire
Park won't be
worth the price
of slum lodgings."</p>
<p>By midday nineteen
cases of the so-called
diphtheria had been
notified within the three
miles area known as Devonshire Park.
Evidently some recent excavations had liberated
the deadly microbe. But there was no
scare as yet. Label came down again hot-foot
with as many assistants as he could get,
and took up his quarters with Hubert. They
were going to have a busy time.</p>
<p>It was after two before Hubert managed
to run across to Fillingham's again. He
stood in the studio waiting for Mrs. Fillingham.
His mind was preoccupied and uneasy,
yet he seemed to miss something from
the studio. It was strange, considering that
he had only been in the room twice before.</p>
<p>"Are you looking for anything?" Mrs.
Fillingham asked.</p>
<p>"I don't know," Hubert exclaimed. "I
seem to miss something. I've got it—the
absence of the uniform."</p>
<p>"They sent for it," Mrs. Fillingham said
vaguely. She was dazed for want of sleep.
"The Emperor had to go to some function,
and that was the only uniform of the kind he
happened to have. He was to have gone
away in it after his sitting to-day. My husband
persuaded him to leave it when it was
here yesterday, and——"</p>
<p>Hubert had cried out suddenly as if in
pain.</p>
<p>"He was here yesterday—here, with your
husband, and your husband with the diphtheria
on him?"</p>
<p>Then the weary wife understood.</p>
<p>"Good heavens——"</p>
<p>But Hubert was already out of the room.
He blundered on until he came to a hansom
cab creeping along in the sunshine.</p>
<p>"Buckingham Palace," he gasped. "Drive
like mad. A five-pound note for you if you
get me there by three o'clock!"</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>Already Devonshire Park was beginning to
be talked about. It was wonderful how the
daily press got to the root of things. Hubert
caught sight of more than one contents
bill as he drove home that alluded to the
strange epidemic.</p>
<p>Dr. Label joined Hubert presently in Mrs.
Fillingham's home, rubbing his huge hands
together. He knew nothing of the new
dramatic developments. He asked where
Hubert had been spending his time.</p>
<p>"Trying to save the life of your friend, the
Emperor of Asturia," Hubert said. "He was
here yesterday with Fillingham, and, though
he seems well enough at present, he may have
the disease on him now. What do you think
of that?"</p>
<p>Hubert waited to see the great man stagger
before the blow. Label smiled and nodded
as he proceeded to light a cigarette.</p>
<p>"Good job too," he said. "I am honorary
physician to the Court of Asturia. I go back,
there, as you know, when I finish my great
work here. The Emperor I have brought
through four or five illnesses, and if anything
is wrong he always sends for me."</p>
<p>"But he might get the awful form of
diphtheria!"</p>
<p>"Very likely," Label said coolly. "All
these things are in the hands of Providence.
I know that man's constitution to a hair, and
if he gets the disease I shall pull him through
for certain. I should like him to have it."</p>
<p>"In the name of all that is practical,
why?"</p>
<p>"To startle the public," Label cried. He
was mounted on his hobby now. He paced
up and down the room in a whirl of tobacco
smoke. "It would bring the matter home to
everybody. Then perhaps something will
be done. I preach and preach in vain. Only
the <i>Lancet</i> backs me up at all. Many times
I have asked for a quarter of a million of
money, so that I can found a school for the
electrical treatment of germ diseases. I want
to destroy all malaria. All dirt in bulk, every
bit of refuse that is likely to breed fever and
the like, should be treated by electricity. I
would take huge masses of deadly scourge and
mountains of garbage, and render them
innocent by the electric current. But no;
that costs money, and your poverty-stricken
Government cannot afford it. Given a
current of 10,000 volts a year or two ago,
and I could have rendered this one of the
healthiest places in England. You only
wanted to run those high voltage wires into
the earth here and there, and behold the
millions are slain, wiped out, gone for ever.
Perhaps I will get it <i>now</i>."</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>London was beginning to get uneasy.
There had been outbreaks before, but they
were of the normal type. People, for
instance, are not so frightened of smallpox
as they used to be. Modern science has
learnt to grapple with the fell disease and rob
it of half its terrors. But this new and
virulent form of diphtheria was another matter.</p>
<p>Hubert sat over his dinner that night,
making mental calculations. There were
nearly a thousand houses of varying sizes in
Devonshire Park. Would it be necessary to
abandon these? He took down a large scale
map of London, and hastily marked in blue
pencil those areas which had developed
rapidly of recent years. In nearly all of
these a vast amount of artificial ground had
been necessary. Hubert was appalled as he
calculated the number of jerry-built erections
in these districts.</p>
<p>A servant came in and laid <i>The Evening
Wire</i> upon the table. Hubert glanced at it.
Nothing had been lost in the way of sensation.
The story of the Emperor's visit to the
district had been given great prominence.
An inquiry at Buckingham Palace had
elicited the fact that the story was true.</p>
<p>Well, perhaps no harm would come of it.
Hubert finished a cigar and prepared to go
out. As he flung the paper aside a paragraph
in the stop press column—a solitary paragraph
like an inky island in a sea of white—caught
his eye.</p>
<p>"No alarm need be experienced as to the
danger encountered by the Emperor of
Asturia, but we are informed that His
Majesty is prevented from dining at Marlborough
House to-night owing to a slight
cold and sore throat caught, it is stated, in
the draughts at Charing Cross Station. The
Emperor will go down to Cowes as arranged
to-morrow."</p>
<p>Hubert shook his head doubtfully. The
slight cold and sore throat were ominous.
His mind dwelt upon the shadow of trouble
as he made his way to the hospital. There
had been two fresh cases during the evening
and the medical staff were looking anxious
and worried. They wanted assistance badly,
and Hubert gave his to the full.</p>
<p>It was nearly eleven before Hubert
staggered home. In the main business street
of the suburb a news-shop was still open.</p>
<p>A flaming placard attracted the doctor's
attention. It struck him like a blow.</p>
<p>"Alarming illness of the Asturian
Emperor. His Majesty stricken down by
the new disease. Latest bulletin from
Buckingham Palace."</p>
<p>Almost mechanically Hubert bought a
paper. There was not much beyond the
curt information that the Emperor was
dangerously ill.</p>
<p>Arrived home Hubert found a telegram
awaiting him. He tore it open. The
message was brief but to the point.</p>
<p>"Have been called in to Buckingham
Palace, Label's diphtheria certain. Shall try
and see you to-morrow morning. Label."</p>
<p>London was touched deeply and sincerely.
A great sovereign had come over here in the
most friendly fashion to show his good
feeling for a kindred race. On the very start
of a round of pleasure he had been stricken
down like this.</p>
<p>The public knew all the details from the
progress of that fateful uniform to the
thrilling eight o'clock bulletin when the life
of Rudolph III. was declared to be in great
danger. They knew that Dr. Label had been
sent for post haste. The big German was no
longer looked upon as a clever crank, but
the one man who might be able to save
London from a terrible scourge. And from
lip to lip went the news that over two hundred
cases of the new disease had now broken out
in Devonshire Park.</p>
<p>People knew pretty well what it was and
what was the cause now. Label's warning
had come home with a force that nobody had
expected. He had stolen away quite late for
half-an-hour to his own house and there had
been quite free with the pressmen. He
extenuated nothing. The thing was bad, and
it was going to be worse. So far as he could
see, something of this kind was inevitable.
If Londoners were so blind as to build
houses on teeming heaps of filth, why, London
must be prepared to take the consequences.</p>
<p>Hubert knew nothing of this. He had
fallen back utterly exhausted in his chair with
the idea of taking a short rest—for nearly
three hours he had been fast asleep. Somebody
was shaking him roughly. He struggled
back to the consciousness that Label was
bending over him.</p>
<p>"Well, you are a nice fellow," the German
grumbled.</p>
<p>"I was dead beat and worn out," Hubert
said apologetically. "How is the Emperor?"</p>
<p>"His Majesty is doing as well as I can
expect. It is a very bad case, however. I
have left him in competent hands, so that I
could run down here. They were asking
for you at the hospital, presuming that you
were busy somewhere. The place is full,
and so are four houses in the nearest
terrace."</p>
<p>"Spreading like that?" Hubert exclaimed.</p>
<p>"Spreading like that! By this time to-morrow
we shall have a thousand cases on
our hands. The authorities are doing everything
they can to help us, fresh doctors and
nurses and stores are coming in all the
time."</p>
<p>"You turn people out of their houses to
make way then?"</p>
<p>Label smiled grimly. He laid his hand on
Hubert's shoulder, and piloted him into the
roadway. The place seemed to be alive with
cabs and vehicles of all kinds. It was as if
all the inhabitants of Devonshire Park were
going away for their summer holidays simultaneously.
The electric arcs shone down on
white and frightened faces where joyous
gaiety should have been. Here and there a
child slept peacefully, but on the whole it
was a sorry exodus.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/inhabitants_leaving.jpg" width-obs="600" alt="" /> <div class="caption">It was if all the inhabitants of Devonshire Park were going away for their summer holidays simultaneously.</div>
</div>
<p>"There you are," Label said grimly. "It
is a night flight from the plague. It has been
going on for hours. It would have been
finished now but for the difficulty in getting
conveyances. Most of the cabmen are avoiding
the place as if it were accursed. But
money can command everything, hence the
scene that you see before you."</p>
<p>Hubert stood silently watching the procession.
There was very little luggage on
any of the cabs or conveyances. Families
were going wholesale. Devonshire Park for
the most part was an exceedingly prosperous
district, so that the difficulties of emigration
were not great. In their panic the people
were abandoning everything in the wild
flight for life and safety.</p>
<p>Then he went in again to rest before the
unknown labours of to-morrow. Next morning
he anxiously opened his morning paper.</p>
<p>It was not particularly pleasant reading
beyond the information that the health of the
Emperor of Asturia was mentioned, and that
he had passed a satisfactory night. As to the
rest, the plague was spreading. There were
two hundred and fifty cases in Devonshire
Park. Label's sayings had come true at
last; it was a fearful vindication of his
prophecy. And the worst of it was that no
man could possibly say where it was going to
end.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>Strange as it may seem, London's anxiety
as to the welfare of one man blinded all to
the great common danger. For the moment
Devonshire Park was forgotten. The one
centre of vivid interest was Buckingham
Palace.</p>
<p>For three days crowds collected there until
at length Label and his colleagues were in a
position to issue a bulletin that gave something
more than hope. The Emperor of
Asturia was going to recover. Label was not
the kind of man to say so unless he was pretty
sure of his ground.</p>
<p>It was not till this fact had soaked itself
into the public mind that attention was fully
turned to the danger that threatened London.
Devonshire Park was practically in quarantine.
All those who could get away had done so,
and those who had remained were confined
to their own particular district, and provisioned
on a system. The new plague was
spreading fast.</p>
<p>In more than one quarter the suggestion
was made that all houses in certain localities
should be destroyed, and the ground
thoroughly cleansed and disinfected. It
would mean a loss of millions of money,
but in the scare of the moment London cared
nothing for that.</p>
<p>At the end of a week there were seven
thousand cases of the new form of diphtheria
under treatment. Over one thousand cases
a day came in. Devonshire Park was practically
deserted save for the poorer quarters,
whence the victims came. It seemed strange
to see fine houses abandoned to the first
comer who had the hardihood to enter.
Devonshire Park was a stricken kingdom within
itself, and the Commune of terror reigned.</p>
<p>Enterprising journalists penetrated the
barred area and wrote articles about it. One
of the fraternity bolder than the rest passed
a day and night in one of these deserted
palatial residences, and gave his sensations
to the Press. Within a few hours most of
the villas were inhabited again! There
were scores of men and women in the slums
who have not the slightest fear of disease—they
are too familiar with it for that—and they
came creeping westward in search of shelter.
The smiling paradise had become a kind
of Tom Tiddler's ground, a huge estate in
Chancery.</p>
<p>Nobody had troubled, the tenants were busy
finding pure quarters elsewhere, the owners
of the property were fighting public opinion
to save what in many cases was their sole
source of income. If Devonshire Park had
to be razed to the ground many a wealthy
man would be ruined.</p>
<p>It was nearly the end of the first week
before this abnormal state of affairs was fully
brought home to Hubert. He had been
harassed and worried and worn by want of
sleep, but tired as he was he did not fail to
notice the number of poorer patients who
dribbled regularly into the terrace of houses
that now formed the hospital. There was
something about them that suggested any
district rather than Devonshire Park.</p>
<p>"What does it mean, Walker?" he asked
one of his doctors.</p>
<p>Walker had just come in from his hour's
exercise, heated and excited.</p>
<p>"It's a perfect scandal," he cried. "The
police are fighting shy of us altogether. I've
just been up to the station and they tell me
it is a difficult matter to keep competent
officers in the district. All along Frinton
Hill and Eversley Gardens the houses are
crowded with outcasts. They have drifted
here from the East End and are making some
of those splendid residences impossible."</p>
<p>Hubert struggled into his hat and coat, and
went out. It was exactly as Walker had said.
Here was a fine residence with stables and
greenhouses and the like, actually occupied
by Whitechapel at its worst. A group of
dingy children played on the lawn, and a
woman with the accumulated grime of weeks
on her face was hanging something that passed
for washing out of an upper window.
The flower beds were trampled down, a
couple of attenuated donkeys browsed on
the lawn.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/whitechapel_in_occupation.jpg" width-obs="600" alt="" /> <div class="caption">Here was a fine residence actually occupied by Whitechapel at its worst.</div>
</div>
<p>Hubert strolled up to the house fuming.
Two men were sprawling on a couple of
morocco chairs smoking filthy pipes. They
looked up at the newcomer with languid
curiosity. They appeared quite to appreciate
the fact that they were absolutely masters of
the situation.</p>
<p>"What are you doing here?" Hubert demanded.</p>
<p>"If you're the owner well and good," was
the reply. "If not, you take an' 'ook it. We
know which side our bread's buttered."</p>
<p>There was nothing for it but to accept this
philosophical suggestion. Hubert swallowed
his rising indignation and departed. There
were other evidences of the ragged invasion
as he went down the road. Here and there
a house was closed and the blinds down; but
it was an exception rather than the rule.</p>
<p>Hubert walked away till he could find a
cab, and was driven off to Scotland Yard in a
state of indignation. The view of the matter
rather startled the officials there.</p>
<p>"We have been so busy," the Chief
Inspector said; "but the matter shall be
attended to. Dr. Label was here yesterday,
and at his suggestion we are having the whole
force electrically treated—a kind of electrical
hardening of the throat. The doctor claims
that his recent treatment is as efficacious
against the diphtheria as vaccination is against
smallpox. It is in all the papers to-day. All
London will be going mad over the new
remedy to-morrow."</p>
<p>Hubert nodded thoughtfully. The electric
treatment seemed the right thing. Label had
shown him what an effect the application of
the current had had on the teeming mass of
matter taken from the road cutting. He
thought it over until he fell asleep in his cab
on the way back to his weary labours.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>London raged for the new remedy. The
electric treatment for throat troubles is no new
thing. In this case it was simple and painless,
and it had been guaranteed by one of
the popular heroes of the hour. A week
before Label had been regarded as a crank
and a faddist; now people were ready to
swear by him. Had he not prophesied this
vile disease for years, and was he not the
only man who had a remedy? And the
Emperor of Asturia was mending rapidly.</p>
<p>Had Label bidden the people to stand on
their heads for an hour a day as a sovereign
specific they would have done so
gladly. Every private doctor and every
public institution was worked to death. At
the end of ten days practically all London
had been treated. There was nothing for it
now but to wait patiently for the result.</p>
<p>Another week passed and then suddenly the
inrush of cases began to drop. The average
at the end of the second week was down to
eighty per day. On the seventeenth and
eighteenth days there were only four cases
altogether and in each instance they proved
to be patients who had not submitted themselves
to the treatment.</p>
<p>The scourge was over. Two days elapsed
and there were no fresh cases whatever.
Some time before a strong posse of police
had swamped down upon Devonshire Park
and cleared all the slum people out of
their luxurious quarters. One or two of
the bolder dwellers in that once favoured
locality began to creep back. Now that
they were inoculated there seemed little to
fear.</p>
<p>But Label had something to say about
that. He felt that he was free to act now, he
had his royal patient practically off his hands.
A strong Royal Commission had been
appointed by Parliament to go at once
thoroughly into the matter.</p>
<p>"And I am the first witness called," he
chuckled to Hubert as the latter sat with the
great German smoking a well-earned cigar.
"I shall be able to tell a few things."</p>
<p>He shook his big head and smiled. The
exertion of the last few weeks did not seem to
have told upon him in the slightest.</p>
<p>"I also have been summoned," Hubert
said. "But you don't suggest that those fine
houses should be destroyed?"</p>
<p>"I don't suggest anything. I am going to
confine myself to facts. One of your patent
medicine advertisements says that electricity
is life. Never was a truer word spoken.
What has saved London from a great
scourge? Electricity. What kills this new
disease and renders it powerless? Electricity.
And what is the great agent to fight dirt and
filth with whenever it exists in great quantities?
Always electricity. It has not been
done before on the ground of expense, and
look at the consequences! In one way and
another it will cost London £2,000,000
to settle this matter. It was only a little
over a third of that I asked for. Wait till
you hear me talk!"</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>Naturally the greatest interest was taken in
the early sittings of the Commission. A
somewhat pompous chairman was prepared
to exploit Label for his own gratification and
self-glory. But the big German would have
none of it. From the very first he dominated
the Committee, he would give his evidence
in his own way, he would speak of facts as
he found them. And, after all, he was the
only man there who had any practical knowledge
of the subject of the inquiry.</p>
<p>"You would destroy the houses?" an
interested member asked.</p>
<p>"Nothing of the kind," Label growled.
"Not so much as a single pig-sty. If you
ask me what electricity is I cannot tell you.
It is a force in nature that as yet
we don't understand. Originally it was
employed as a destroyer of sewage,
but it was abandoned as too expensive.
You are the richest country in the world,
and one of the most densely populated. Yet
you are covering the land with jerry-built
houses, the drainages of which will frequently
want looking to. And your only way of
discovering this is when a bad epidemic
breaks out. Everything is too expensive.
You will be a jerry-built people in a jerry-built
empire. And your local authorities
adopt some cheap system and then smile
at the ratepayers and call for applause.
Electricity will save all danger. It is dear
at first, but it is far cheaper in the long
run."</p>
<p>"If you will be so good as to get to the
point," the chairman suggested.</p>
<p>Label smiled pityingly. He was like a
schoolmaster addressing a form of little boys.</p>
<p>"The remedy is simple," he said. "I
propose to have a couple of 10,000 volts
wires discharging their current into the ground
here and there over the affected area. Inoculation
against the trouble is all very well, but
it is not permanent and there is always danger
whilst the source of it remains. I propose to
remove the evil. Don't ask me what the
process is, don't ask me what wonderful
action takes place. All I know is that some
marvellous agency gets to work and that a
huge mound of live disease is rendered safe
and innocent as pure water. And I want
these things now, I don't want long sittings and
reports and discussions. Let me work the
cure and you can have all the talking and
sittings you like afterwards."</p>
<p>Label got his own way, he would have got
anything he liked at that moment. London
was quiet and humble and in a mood to be
generous.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>Label stood over the cutting whence he
had procured the original specimen of all
the mischief. He was a little quiet and subdued,
but his eyes shone and his hand was a
trifle unsteady. His fingers trembled as he
took up a fragment of the blue grey stratum
and broke it up.</p>
<p>"Marvellous mystery," he cried. "We
placed the wires in the earth and that great,
silent, powerful servant has done the rest.
Underground the current radiates, and, as it
radiates, the source of the disease grows less
and less until it ceases to be altogether. Only
try this in the tainted areas of all towns and
in a short time disease of all kinds would
cease for ever."</p>
<p>"You are sure that stuff is wholesome,
now?" Hubert asked.</p>
<p>"My future on it," Label cried. "Wait
till we get it under the microscope. I am
absolutely confident that I am correct."</p>
<p>And he was.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
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