<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XXXVI" id="CHAPTER_XXXVI"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXXVI</h2>
<h3>AT HIGHGATE CEMETERY</h3>
<p>Odette Rider sat back in a corner of the smooth-running taxicab. Her eyes
were closed, for the inevitable reaction had come. Excitement and anxiety
had combined to give her the strength to walk to the cab with a firm step
which had surprised the matron; but now, in the darkness and solitude,
she was conscious of a depression, both physical and mental, which left
her without the will or power for further effort.</p>
<p>The car sped through interminably long streets—in what direction she
neither knew nor cared. Remember that she did not even know where the
nursing home was situated. It might have been on the edge of London for
all she was aware. Once, that was as the car was crossing Bond Street
from Cavendish Square, she saw people turn and look at the cab and a
policeman pointed and shouted something. She was too preoccupied to worry
her head as to the cause.</p>
<p>She appreciated in a dim, vague way the skill of the taxi-driver, who
seemed to be able to grope his way through and around any obstruction of
traffic; and it was not until she found the cab traversing a country road
that she had any suspicion that all was not well. Even then her doubts
were allayed by her recognition of certain landmarks which told her she
was on the Hertford Road.</p>
<p>"Of course," she thought. "I should be wanted at Hertford rather than in
London," and she settled herself down again.</p>
<p>Suddenly the cab stopped, backed down a side lane, and turned in the
direction from whence they had come. When he had got his car's head
right, Sam Stay shut off his engine, descended from his seat, and opened
the door.</p>
<p>"Come on out of that!" he said sharply.</p>
<p>"Why—what——" began the bewildered girl, but before she could go much
farther the man dived in, gripped her by the wrist, and pulled her out
with such violence that she fell.</p>
<p>"You don't know me, eh?" The words were his as he thrust his face into
hers, gripping her shoulders so savagely that she could have cried out
in pain.</p>
<p>She was on her knees, struggling to get to her feet, and she looked up at
the little man wonderingly.</p>
<p>"I know you," she gasped. "You are the man who tried to get into my
flat!"</p>
<p>He grinned.</p>
<p>"And I know you!" he laughed harshly. "You're the devil that lured him
on! The best man in the world ... he's in the little vault in Highgate
Cemetery. The door is just like a church. And that's where you'll be
to-night, damn you! Down there I'm going to take you. Down, down, down,
and leave you with him, because he wanted you!"</p>
<p>He was gripping her by both wrists, glaring down into her face, and there
was something so wolfish, so inhuman, in the madman's staring eyes that
her mouth went dry, and when she tried to scream no sound came. Then she
lurched forward towards him, and he caught her under the arms and dragged
her to her feet.</p>
<p>"Fainted, eh? You'll faint, me lady," he chuckled. "Don't you wish you
might never come round, eh? I'll bet you would if you knew ... if you
knew!"</p>
<p>He dropped her on the grass by the side of the road, took a luggage strap
from the front of the cab, and bound her hands. Then he picked up the
scarf she had been wearing and tied it around her mouth.</p>
<p>With an extraordinary display of strength he lifted her without effort
and put her back into the corner of the seat. Then he slammed the door,
mounted again to his place, and sent the car at top speed in the
direction of London. They were on the outskirts of Hampstead when he saw
a sign over a tobacconist's shop, and stopped the car a little way
beyond, at the darkest part of the road. He gave a glance into the
interior. The girl had slid from the seat to the floor and lay
motionless.</p>
<p>He hurried back to the tobacconist's where the telephone sign had been.
At the back of his fuddled brain lingered an idea that there was somebody
who would be hurt. That cruel looking devil who was cross-examining him
when he fell into a fit—Tarling. Yes, that was the name, Tarling.</p>
<p>It happened to be a new telephone directory, and by chance Tarling's
name, although a new subscriber, had been included. In a few seconds he
was talking to the detective.</p>
<p>He hung up the receiver and came out of the little booth, and the
shopman, who had heard his harsh, loud voice, looked at him suspiciously;
but Sam Stay was indifferent to the suspicions of men. He half ran, half
walked back to where his cab was standing, leaped into the seat, and
again drove the machine forward.</p>
<p>To Highgate Cemetery! That was the idea. The gates would be closed, but
he could do something. Perhaps he would kill her first and then get her
over the wall afterwards. It would be a grand revenge if he could get her
into the cemetery alive and thrust her, the living, down amongst the
dead, through those little doors which opened like church doors to the
cold, dank vault below.</p>
<p>He screamed and sang with joy at the thought, and those pedestrians who
saw the cab flash past, rocking from side to side, turned at the sound of
the wild snatch of song, for Sam Stay was happy as he had not been happy
in his life before.</p>
<p>But Highgate Cemetery was closed. The gloomy iron gates barred all
entrance, and the walls were high. It was a baffling place, because
houses almost entirely surrounded it; and he was half an hour seeking a
suitable spot before he finally pulled up before a place where the wall
did not seem so difficult. There was nobody about and little fear of
interruption on the part of the girl. He had looked into the cab and had
seen nothing save a huddled figure on the floor. So she was still
unconscious, he thought.</p>
<p>He ran the car on to the sidewalk, then slipped down into the narrow
space between car and wall and jerked open the door.</p>
<p>"Come on!" he cried exultantly. He reached out his fingers—and then
something shot from the car, something lithe and supple, something that
gripped the little man by the throat and hurled him back against the
wall.</p>
<p>Stay struggled with the strength of lunacy, but Ling Chu held him in a
grip of steel.</p>
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