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<h3> CHAPTER V </h3>
<h3> THE OCCUPANT OF THE BOX </h3>
<p>Dimly to my ears came the ceaseless murmur of London. The night now
was far advanced, and not a sound disturbed the silence of the court
below my windows.</p>
<p>Professor Deeping's "Assyrian Mythology" lay open before me, beside
it my notebook. A coal dropped from the fire, and I half started up
out of my chair. My nerves were all awry, and I had more than my
horrible memories of the murdered man to thank for it. Let me
explain what I mean.</p>
<p>When, after assisting, or endeavouring to assist, Bristol at his
elaborate inquiries, I had at last returned to my chambers, I had
become the victim of a singular delusion—though one common enough
in the case of persons whose nerves are overwrought. I had thought
myself followed.</p>
<p>During the latter part of my journey I found myself constantly
looking from the little window at the rear of the cab. I had an
impression that some vehicle was tracking us. Then, when I
discharged the man and walked up the narrow passage to the court,
it was fear of a skulking form that dodged from shadow to shadow
which obsessed me.</p>
<p>Finally, as I entered the hall and mounted the darkened stair, from
the first landing I glanced down into the black well beneath.
Blazing yellow eyes, I thought, looked up at me!</p>
<p>I will confess that I leapt up the remaining flight of stairs to my
door, and, safely within, found myself trembling as if with a palsy.</p>
<p>When I sat down to write (for sleep was an impossible proposition)
I placed my revolver upon the table beside me. I cannot say why.
It afforded me some sense of protection, I suppose. My conclusions,
thus far, amounted to the following—</p>
<p>The apparition of the phantom scimitar was due to the presence of
someone who, by means of the moonlight, or of artificial light,
cast a reflection of such a weapon as that found in the oblong chest
upon the wall of a darkened apartment—as, Deeping's stateroom on
the Mandalay, his study, etc.</p>
<p>A group of highly efficient assassins, evidently Moslem fanatics,
who might or might not be of the ancient order of the Hashishin,
had pursued the stolen slipper to England. They had severed any
hand, other than that of a Believer, which had touched the case
containing it. (The Coptic porter was a Christian.)</p>
<p>Uncertain, possibly, of Deeping's faith, or fearful of endangering
the success of their efforts by an outrage upon him en route, they
had refrained from this until his arrival at his house. He had
been warned of his impending end by Ahmad Ahmadeen.</p>
<p>Who was Ahmadeen? And who was his beautiful associate? I found
myself unable, at present, to answer either of those questions. In
order to gain access to Professor Deeping, who so carefully secluded
himself, a box had been sent to him by ordinary carrier. (As I sat
at my table, Scotland Yard was busy endeavouring to trace the
sender.) Respecting this box we had made an extraordinary discovery.</p>
<p>It was of the kind used by Eastern conjurors for what is generally
known as "the Box Trick." That is to say, it could only be opened
(short of smashing it) from the inside! You will remember what we
found within it? Consider this with the new fact, above, and to
what conclusion do you come?</p>
<p>Something (it is not possible to speak of someone in connection with
so small a box) had been concealed inside, and had killed Professor
Deeping whilst he was actually engaged in endeavouring to force it
open. This inconceivable creature had then searched the study for
the slipper—or for the key of the safe. Interrupted and trapped
by the arrival of the police, the creature had returned to the box,
re-closed it, and had actually been there when the study was
searched!</p>
<p>For a creature so small as the murderous thing in the box to slip
out during the confusion, and at some time prior to Bristol's
arrival, was no difficult matter. The inspector and I were certain
that these were the facts.</p>
<p>But what was this creature?</p>
<p>I turned to the chapter in "Assyrian Mythology"—"The Tradition
of the Hashishin."</p>
<p>The legends which the late Professor Deeping had collected relative
to this sect of religious murderers were truly extraordinary. Of
the cult's extinction at the time of writing he was clearly certain,
but he referred to the popular belief, or Moslem legend, that, since
Hassan of Khorassan, there had always been a Sheikh-al-jebal, and
that a dreadful being known as Hassan of Aleppo was the present
holder of the title.</p>
<p>He referred to the fact that De Sacy has shown the word Assassin
to be derived from Hashishin, and quoted El-Idrisi to the same
end. The Hashishin performed their murderous feats under the
influence of hashish, or Indian hemp; and during the state of
ecstasy so induced, according to Deeping, they acquired powers
almost superhuman. I read how they could scale sheer precipices,
pass fearlessly along narrow ledges which would scarce afford
foothold for a rat, cast themselves from great heights unscathed,
and track one marked for death in such a manner as to remain unseen
not only by the victim but by others about him. At this point of
my studies I started, in a sudden nervous panic, and laid my hand
upon my revolver.</p>
<p>I thought of the eyes which had seemed to look up from the black
well of the staircase—I thought of the horrible end of this man
whose book lay upon the table ... and I thought I heard a faint
sound outside my study door!</p>
<p>The key of Deeping's safe, and his letter to me, lay close by my
hand. I slipped them into a drawer and locked it. With every
nerve, it seemed, strung up almost to snapping point, I mechanically
pursued my reading.</p>
<p>"At the time of the Crusades," wrote Deeping, "there was a story
current of this awful Order which I propose to recount. It is one
of the most persistent dealing with the Hashishin, and is related
to-day of the apparently mythical Hassan of Aleppo. I am disposed
to believe that at one time it had a solid foundation, for a
similar practice was common in Ancient Egypt and is mentioned by
Georg Ebers."</p>
<p>My door began very slowly to open!</p>
<p>Merciful God! What was coming into the room!</p>
<p>So very slowly, so gently, nay, all but imperceptibly, did it move,
that had my nerves been less keenly attuned I doubt not I should
have remained unaware of the happening. Frozen with horror, I sat
and watched. Yet my mental condition was a singular one.</p>
<p>My direct gaze never quitted the door, but in some strange fashion
I saw the words of the next paragraph upon the page before me!</p>
<p>"As making peculiarly efficient assassins, when under the influence
of the drug, and as being capable of concealing themselves where
a normal man could not fail to be detected—"</p>
<p>(At this moment I remembered that my bathroom window was open, and
that the waste-pipe passed down the exterior wall.)</p>
<p>"—the Sheikh-al-jebal took young boys of a certain desert tribe,
and for eight hours of every day, until their puberty, confined them
in a wooden frame—"</p>
<p>What looked like a reed was slowly inserted through the opening
between door and doorpost! It was brought gradually around
... until it pointed directly toward me!</p>
<p>I seemed to put forth a mighty mental effort, shaking off the icy
hand of fear which held me inactive in my chair. A saving instinct
warned me—and I ducked my head.</p>
<p>Something whirred past me and struck the wall behind.</p>
<p>Revolver in hand, I leapt across the room, dashed the door open,
and fired blindly—again—and again—and again—down the
passage.</p>
<p>And in the brief gleams I saw it!</p>
<p>I cannot call it man, but I saw the thing which, I doubt not, had
killed poor Deeping with the crescent-knife and had propelled a
poison-dart at me.</p>
<p>It was a tiny dwarf! Neither within nor without a freak exhibition
had I seen so small a human being! A kind of supernatural dread
gripped me by the throat at sight of it. As it turned with animal
activity and bounded into my bathroom, I caught a three-quarter
view of the creature's swollen, incredible head—which was nearly
as large as that of a normal man!</p>
<p>Never while my mind serves me can I forget that yellow, grinning
face and those canine fangs—the tigerish, blazing eyes—set in
the great, misshapen head upon the tiny, agile body.</p>
<p>Wildly, I fired again. I hurled myself forward and dashed into
the room.</p>
<p>Like nothing so much as a cat, the gleaming body (the dwarf was
but scantily clothed) streaked through the open window!</p>
<p>Certain death, I thought, must be his lot upon the stones of the
court far below. I ran and looked down, shaking in every limb,
my mind filled with a loathing terror unlike anything I had ever
known.</p>
<p>Brilliant moonlight flooded the pavement beneath; for twenty yards
to left and right every stone was visible.</p>
<p>The court was empty!</p>
<p>Human, homely London moved and wrought intimately about me; but
there, at sight of the empty court below, a great loneliness swept
down like a mantle—a clammy mantle of the fabric of dread. I
stood remote from my fellows, in an evil world peopled with the
creatures of Hassan of Aleppo.</p>
<p>Moved by some instinct, as that of a frightened child, I dropped
to my knees and buried my face in trembling hands.</p>
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