The Insidious Dr. Fu Manchu
y were in perfect order. It became more and more incomprehensible how anyone could have entered and quitted
an exhaustive examin
per beech, the grass and weeds were trampled and the surrounding laurels and r
" said Smith. "We c
to get at Caesar; his presence is dang
Redmoat? I am open to admit the possibility of someone's getting in during the day whilst the gates are open, and hidi
friend of her description of the thing which she ha
t us stick to what we can understand, and that may help us to a clearer idea of
interior of China, is warned by an official whose
ne of the Yellow group represen
presumably by his curious 'defenses.' An attempt in a train fails owing to Miss Eltha
Redmoat certain preparations are m
ath of Denb
heard and seen
eard and seen by
The prime object of these preparations, Petrie, was to enable someone to gain access to Eltham's room. The other events are incidenta
For Heaven's s
ut into the light
id in a hushed voice. "The object of that visit I hope we may
you; but do you think he has some incredible crea
ure in the known world to be hidden here. I b
e to report that he had examined the moat, the roadside, and the
moat last night, I think," he s
the neighborhood for traces of strangers, examinin
induce Fu-Manchu to abando
e. Furthermore, I have an idea that his arrangements are of such a character that they MUST go forward. He might turn aside, of cou
xact so severe a toll from one's nervous
ntal forecast; but that inactive waiting at Redmoat, for the blow which we knew full
c altar, with the priest's obsid
d so quickly. And it came suddenly enough; for there in that quiet Norfolk home we found ourselves at hand grips with one of the mysterious horrors
e of the scene gave the lie to my fears that we bordered upon tragic things. Then Caesar,
ence of the girl which prompted Denby to the rash act, a desire personally to distinguish himself. But, as I recalled afterwards, his gaze had rarely le
?" he yelled. "
edge of the shrubbery a shot sounded, and in
you enter the bushes from the west. Dr. Petrie, east. Edwards, Edwar
e gardener's voice from the lower gate, and I saw
se heart of greenwood. Then a loud cry-I th
nly broken by the ho
nium and heliotrope, and plunged in among the bushes and under the elms.
ed, and yet lo
ilence fe
tomed to gloom, and I could see fairly well what lay before me. Not daring to think
Eltham's voic
wards," I heard Nayland Smi
patch which marked a break in the elmen roof. At the foot of the copper beech I almost fell over Eltham. Th
ite still f
hispered through
re i
rds; I was too dazed with amazement
Vernon!
ng horrible about that vain calling, under the whispering beech,
the house came Ca
rapped Smith. "Ev
ut on to the lawn, a disordered company. Eltham's face
he said. "I could
mposed of stran
ally after a very brief delay; and ten minutes sufficed us to explore the entire shrubbe
he lawn, I thought that I ha
can we do?" he mutter
wer; for there was
where," said E
lose upon an hour we all searched. We searched every square yard, I think, within the wire fencing, and found no trace. Miss
race. One and then another would give up, until only Eltham and Smith were mi
rustic seat, and sank
a newly caged animal, snapping his
ntern and strode silently off across the grass and to the shrubbery once more. I followed him. I th
in he tripped and fel
the body of Denby
t conjecture. Mr. Eltham joined us, uttered one short, dry sob, and dropped upon his knees
was terrible. But the stark horror of the thing inspired him to that, which conceived earlier
are fools! LO
e dog-"
d his hand o
l lead us to it. If a MAN is there, he will fly! Why did we not think of it before. F
eme suc
on his errand when bells be
d Eltham, and
ming madly. "Above the moat," he panted. And w
a narrow ladder of thin bamboo joints and silken cord hanging by two
eamed Eltham. "
nd like a fury sprang out into the road. Straight and white it showed to the acclivity by the Ro
hissed Smith. "Without hi
aurel shrub cunningly affixed to its movable lid, which was further disguised with tufts of grass. A slender b
nts with them. They concealed themselves somewhere-probably in the shrubbery-and during the night made the cache. The excavated earth would be disposed of on the flower-beds; the dummy bush they probably had ready. You see, the problem of getting IN was never a big one. But owing to the 'defenses' it was impossible (wh
t was the Do
eyes like the eyes Miss Eltham
Manchu had planned to prevent Eltham's leaving England for
nd dragged down into the cache-to which he must have lain in such dangerous proximity as to render detection of the dummy bush possible in removing him. The quickest exp
his recovering consciousness and revealing the secret of the shrubbery. The ruse of rel
scent, consciously added not one fact to those we alrea
right of the first cervical curve of the spine, of a minute puncture-undoubtedly caused by a hypodermic syringe. Then, unconsciously, poor Denby furnished
symptoms was a mystery-a mystery which defied Western sc