The Pointing Man
see in the strange clearness that brings out the stars. Only in the houses of men real darkness has its habitation. Under close roofs, confined within walls, shut
filing up like heavy thoughts and sad thoughts, and casting a gloom
went softly, for sound travels far at night, and Draycott Wilder, in the next room, was a light sleeper. She was thinking
s dreaming evil dreams, and nothing of his surroundings was real to him. The room became another room, the tables and chairs grew indistinct, the face of a small Gaudama on the mantel-piece became a living face that menaced him, and the "chuck-chuck" of the lizards, the rattle of dice falling on to a board at some remote distance miles and miles away, and yet strangely audible to his dull ears. Still he sat there, and flashes of fancies came and went. Sometimes he stood in an English garden, w
m that spun itself in his brain. He wandered in a place so near actual things and yet so far from them, that the gigantic mistake of it all, and the consciousness that the inner life could at times conquer the outer life, made
ight depended upon his hearing steadily. The sound was the one thing that made him know that he was real, and once it ceased, or he ceased to hear it, he would be across the gulf and terrib
ess around him. He could hear whispering voices, and the thump of the Durwan's stick, as that musically-minded man walked round to the back of th
up and calle
is
an's whine was apologet
wants
n, the C
handkerchief and pulled open th
ing to speak naturally.
hat in his hand and stole
ow, Leh
ng habit, and even though he was angry he kept h
to my house, and at night they do not leave it. At one word from the Master, whose speech is constructed of goldnd his veins standing out on his forehead. "I will see what Mr. Hartley will do, but if y
passively and waited
k the name of the Master, but my doors are locked, my house is a hous
wn heavily on
I will see that there is no more of this poli
still, moving one
ses to me before. Can I be sure that it is n
the boy, and if the boy were found, all search would stop,"-he ey
aps, Ruler and King, the
me that,
ask," said Leh Shin, dropp
s clenched teeth. "And if you come here
would be known as fire is known when the forest is dry. To-morrow or next day, if the po
Joicey, turnin
h a sudden, oblique glance
elephants; the Durwan is now o
loudly, and he clicked off
ng to the shop itself; it dropped its black veil over the green dragons, and the china ladies, and the silver bowls and the little ivories, hiding everything out of sight; but it did not hide the figure outside in the street. The little man, with his pointed headdress and sho
like rooms near the roof, but either up above or down below, the scent of cassia and sandal-wood clung
eavy hours before dawn. He could not have been far; there was hardly any dust on his red velvet slippers, and he brushed what there was from them with a careful hand. As he placed his lamp on the floor
of inspection, he placed an alabaster Buddha in the centre of a carved table and sat down before it. The Buddha was dead white, with a red chain around his neck, and on his head a gold cap with long, gem-set ears hanging to the shoulders, and Mhtoon Pah sat long in front of the fig
with his head close to the teak boarding, and crawled with slow, noiseless care towards the door. A silk curtain covered the window, hiding the interior of the shop from the street, and,
ery feature of the curio dealer's face, changing its brown into a strange, ghastly pallor. For a moment they stood immovable, staring into each other's eyes, and the shadows behind Mhtoon Pah in the shop, and the shadows behind Leh Shin in the street, seemed to listen and wait with them, seemed t
ks of foam on his lips, and his eyes rolled as he dashed through the door and out down the steps, rending the air with cries of murder. He was too
lom," he shrieked, when the crowd had carri
nes of joyful excitement. "A devil with iron
peaking through his clenched teeth. "One
but it is known that a devil has walked in Paradise Stre
growths that climbed up the houses of the Cantonments, and dawn found the Rev. Francis Heath sleeping quietly. He was lying with one arm under his head, and his worn face in almost child-like repose. Wh
e tapping of the laurels outside the church windows, and the musty smell of red rep cushions along the pew where the hours were very slow in passing; the white clover in the field behind the garden, got at easily through a hole in the privet hedge. The play of light and shadow over the hills of home, the dusk at nightfall, and the homely cawing of rooks. All the
he slept, and the outside world grew from grey to green, and from green to misty gold. The sunlight flamed on the spire of the Pagoda, it danced up the brown river and threw long shadows before its coming, those transluc
able, where the unset stones glittered and shone on white velvet, there stood a bowl, a gold lacquer bowl of perfect symmetry and very great beauty. He poised it on his hands once or twice and examined it carefully. As it was already sold it was not to remain in the curio shop, but Mhtoon Pah was a careful man, and he desired that Mrs. Wilder should fetch it herself; besides, he
unworthy of it in his silk petticoat. A ray of sunlight fell in through the door and touched a few threads of gold in the coat as Mhtoon Pah hung it up to good advantage, and turned to see a customer come in. It was the Rev. Fra
for news of Absalom," he said, meeti
ity of his guest, who was, after all, a Hy
"The Reverend himself might know, since th
have sus
s face work
spered. "Look ther
eated befo
lf sent the
nt him and he d
here is my lacquer bowl, Mhtoon Pah?" She came in, bright as the morning o
e, how I know not. I found it outside my shop in the care of
ilder
have to pay for it. But wh
man knew of the bowl, only one man could have put it there. I sh
; you are letting yourself dream foolish things. Absalom"-she tapped the polished floor with her well-shaped
t snakes to sting him," said Mhtoon Pah. "This
lder sh
blacking boots in a New York hotel, weeks ago.-Ah
the school," he
me up the Mandarin's coat, Mhtoon P
a point of taking him in her motor, but he felt instinctively sorry for
ooking at him with her fine eyes; "it would give us grea
ring before him as the car backed round
won't ask you to a function, j
re ver
her, and, when he got out and shut the door, she
an evening later on. It
the same preoccupied voice,
in and again she put the same question to herself, not only that