<h2 id="c7"><span class="h2line1">CHAPTER VI</span> <br/><span class="h2line2">THE SECRET OF THE IKON</span></h2>
<p>She must have dropped the telephone receiver,
for a clatter sounded dully
in her ears. The strange and baleful glare
of the man at the table held her gaze. The
blood seemed to drain away from her heart
as she met the cruel menace of those blackly
bitter eyes. The bushy dark beard had vanished
and the fleshy scarlet lips pressed
together in a hard line were clearly visible
above the squarely massive chin. But
she knew her visitor again immediately. It
was as though she recognized the extraordinary
air of authority that his presence exhaled
without requiring the additional aid to
identification that the heavy misshapen boot
presented.</p>
<p>She felt as though she must scream. The
mute telephone, the unanswered bell, the sudden
appearance of this frightening, apelike
creature in the room, above all, his forbidding,
ominous silence, produced a culminating
effect of terror upon her. And, though
she wilted before the fixed stare of those
burning eyes beneath the bristling black eyebrows,
she could not look away.</p>
<p>Suddenly there came an interruption.
Two men emerged from the bedroom door
and took up their position behind the
stranger. One was a narrow-chested youth
whose pointed nose and snarling mouth had
something of the rodent about them, his sallow
cheek slashed by a long white scar. The
other was a gross and burly fellow with a
bullet neck, close-cropped hair, and small pig
eyes.</p>
<p>“Niemand da?” asked the clubfooted
stranger.</p>
<p>“Kein Mensch, Herr Doktor!” replied the
youth with the scarred face.</p>
<p>The voices broke the spell that had seemed
to bind her. Her eager American vitality
came to her aid. She began to study with
interest this man of whom Francis Okewood
had told her. “Strong as an ox, brave as a
lion, cunning as a rogue elephant,” he had
called him. And cautious as a cat, she told
herself as she watched him peering about
the room with quick, suspicious glances, his
gaze always returning to the door as though
he feared interruption.</p>
<p>He gave a curt order in German to the
men behind him, then removed his black
wide-awake hat, displaying a glistening mass
of iron-grey stubble.</p>
<p>“Miss Maxwell,” he said with a fawning
civility that struck chill upon her, “I have
come to fetch the ikon!”</p>
<p>This time he spoke in English, harshly,
with a thick guttural accent.</p>
<p>She clasped her hands tightly together.
They were as cold as ice.</p>
<p>“I—I have not got it,” she faltered.</p>
<p>A deep furrow appeared between the
cripple’s bushy eyebrows.</p>
<p>“I advise you not to play with me,” he
said. He took a step forward. The thud of
his heavy boot shook the floor. “Where is
it?” he cried hoarsely.</p>
<p>“I . . . I left it . . . at home!” stammered
the girl.</p>
<p>His great arm shot out. A huge hairy
paw, hot and soft, clamped itself with a vice-like
grip about her wrist. Of a sudden his
face was distorted with fury, so that his
heavy sallow cheeks trembled beneath their
thatch of loose black hairs. He might have
been a huge man-ape chattering with passion
as he shook her in that iron grasp.</p>
<p>“You lie! You lie!” he spat at her. “You
brought it here to the spy, Okewood. That
ikon is here, you understand me? Donnerwetter,
are you going to give it up?” With
a supreme effort he regained his self-control.
But he did not relax his grasp on her hand.
“If you refuse, I have the means to make
you!”</p>
<p>“Herr Doktor,” said a suave voice from
the other side of the room, “won’t you let
go Miss Maxwell’s wrist? I’m afraid you’re
hurting her!”</p>
<p>With a roar Clubfoot swung round. A
large automatic was in his hand. His two
companions had likewise drawn and covered
Desmond Okewood, who, dapper and unruffled
as ever, his hat on the back of his
head, stood in the bedroom door, a brown
paper parcel under his arm.
Clubfoot laughed, a harsh and grating
laugh. “Put your hands up, my friend!” he
said menacingly.</p>
<p>Desmond wavered. “But I shall drop my
little parcel . . .” he began.</p>
<p>“Put ’em up, zum Teufel nochmal!”
roared the cripple, his tufted nostrils twitching
with rage.</p>
<p>Desmond hesitated for an instant. He
shrugged his shoulders.</p>
<p>“I’m sorry, Miss Maxwell,” he said. “If
only Francis had been here . . .”</p>
<p>And, pitching his parcel on the table, he
slowly raised his hands above his head.</p>
<p>“Keep him covered, Jungens!” cried Clubfoot
and flung himself upon the parcel.
“Francis, indeed!” he exclaimed. “He had
an important telephone summons just now,
didn’t he, Miss Maxwell?” And he chuckled
noisily.</p>
<p>But the American did not heed him. With
a pink flush on her cheeks she was staring
fixedly at Desmond.</p>
<p>The young man sought to avoid her gaze.
“It’s three to one,” he muttered, abashed.
“I’d no idea they’d be able to get in here!
I should never have brought it back if I’d
dreamed of . . . this!”</p>
<p>But now, with a shout of joy, Clubfoot had
drawn from its paper wrapping the ikon with
its blackened silver sheath. With a rapid
motion he thrust the little picture into the
capacious pocket of his overcoat. Then he
turned to Desmond.</p>
<p>“Lieber junger Herr”—he spoke in German
now—“if on this occasion I should neglect
to settle the debt which has for so long
been outstanding between us, believe me it is
because other considerations take precedence.
Do not delude yourself, however!
When I want you, I have only to stretch out
my hand”—he raised his long prehensile arm
with clutching fingers—“and crush you like
an egg! Heinrich, Max, vorwärts! Miss
Maxwell! Ich habe die Ehre!” He broke
into English. “It would have been wiser to
have accepted my offer of this morning, or,
better still, from this poor Süsslein’s point
of view, to have listened to reason last
night!”</p>
<p>He bowed to the American and, with head
erect, stumped out into the hall.</p>
<p>Hardly had the door closed upon him than
Patricia Maxwell turned on Desmond.</p>
<p>“You . . . you quitter!” she exclaimed
with withering contempt in her voice.
“Are you going to let him beat you to it all
along the line? Are there no <i>men</i> in this
town?”</p>
<p>But Desmond held up his hand. He had
altogether discarded his rather abashed air.
Now his eyes sparkled and a little smile
played about his lips.</p>
<p>“Give me five minutes’ grace,” he said,
“and I’ll explain everything!”</p>
<p>“There’s nothing to explain!” cried Patricia
hotly. “He’s got my ikon, hasn’t he?
What’s there to explain about that, I’d like
to know!”</p>
<p>But Desmond Okewood had dashed out
into the hall. She heard him rattling loudly
at the front door. In a moment he was back
in the sitting-room.</p>
<p>“They’ve wedged up the front door!” he
cried and snatched the telephone receiver.</p>
<p>“The wire’s cut!” said Patricia coldly.
“And your man doesn’t answer the bell!”</p>
<p>“Damnation!” exclaimed the young man.
“I might have known he’d come here after
you! And there’s no time to get out by the
roof! To think that he’s walking calmly
down Saint James’s Street . . .!”</p>
<p>Again he tore out into the hall. The little
flat rang to the din of his frantic assault on
the front door. Presently the noise ceased.
She heard the voice of Francis outside.</p>
<p>“. . . Decoyed me away with a
bogus message from the Chief,” he was saying,
“and Batts is imprisoned in the lift with
the cable cut. What’s happened to Patricia?”</p>
<p>He came into the room.</p>
<p>“Thank God, you’re all right!” he exclaimed.
“Desmond rushed downstairs like
a madman. What’s happened, Patricia?”</p>
<p>She surveyed him coldly. “Nothing, only
your clubfooted friend came here to fetch
the ikon . . . my ikon. And your
brother had the . . . the presence of
mind to give it to him!”</p>
<p>“Desmond gave it to him?” Francis Okewood
seemed dazed.</p>
<p>She nodded.</p>
<p>Desmond Okewood reappeared, panting.
Without speaking he crossed the sitting-room
and went into the bedroom.</p>
<p>“Are you sure?” asked Francis.</p>
<p>“Didn’t I see it with my own eyes?” said
the girl impatiently. “Without the least
show of fight!” she added contemptuously.
She gathered her furs around her. “Do you
think I could get a taxi?” she asked.</p>
<p>But Francis was staring past her.
“Des.!”</p>
<p>There was such unbounded amazement in
his exclamation that, involuntarily, the girl
turned round. Desmond Okewood stood behind
them. And on the table before him lay
the ikon. In the doorway of the bedroom
appeared a little yellow-faced man muffled
up to the eyes in an ulster and scarf.</p>
<p>Desmond’s eyes twinkled. “Let me introduce
Professor Krilenko, the celebrated Russian
art connoisseur,” he said. “Although
he is crippled with lumbago he came roof-climbing
with me to-night to help me get the
better of old Clubfoot. There’s friendship
for you!”</p>
<p>The Professor bowed and groaned piteously,
snatching at his back. “What a
man!” he said.</p>
<p>Patricia Maxwell stared in silence at the
pair. But her eyes were softer.</p>
<p>Desmond turned to the Professor. “Tell
them about it!” he said.</p>
<p>Krilenko picked up the ikon. “Fate has
placed in your hands, Madame,” he said in
fluent English, “one of the most revered
treasures of the Russian Church, none other
than the miraculous ikon of Our Lady of
Smolensk, smuggled out of Russia at the
time of the Bolshevik Revolution to save it
from desecration at the hands of the Reds.
It is probably a thousand years old, but the
tradition is that it was painted by the
evangelist Luke himself.</p>
<p>“Major Okewood, who knows this man
Grundt, doubted whether religious or artistic
fervour had anything to do with his determination
to acquire the ikon. With a perspicacity
which I can only ascribe as astounding,
he insisted that there was something
about the picture which enhanced its artistic
or intrinsic value . . .”</p>
<p>So saying he turned the ikon over on its
face. Four screws loosely set held the stout
wooden backing of the frame. He removed
the screws and lifted out the back. In four
slots sunk in the wood four little grey metal
tubes were visible. Round one of them a
slip of paper was wrapped.</p>
<p>“He suggested that we should remove the
back,” the Professor resumed, “if we could
do so without damaging the ikon. We
scraped the back and at length laid bare the
screws. Their presence had been very skilfully
concealed first beneath a layer
of . . .”</p>
<p>The Russian was evidently, like most experts,
a prosy person, but imperiously Patricia
stopped him before he could launch
out into technicalities.</p>
<p>“What are those little bits of lead?” she
asked.</p>
<p>“Radium!” Desmond replied. “Translate
the letter, Krilenko!”</p>
<p>He detached the slip of paper that was
rolled about one of the cases and handed it to
the Professor.</p>
<blockquote>
<p>I, Vladimir Lemuroff [Krilenko read out],
Professor of Chemistry in the University of
Moscow, being in imminent danger of arrest by
the Tcheka [“the Extraordinary Commission of
the Soviet Government,” Krilenko explained],
have in the presence of Bishop Tchergeroff,
whose signature is here appended, concealed for
safe custody in the blessed ikon of Our Lady of
Smolensk the four grammes of radium, the property
of the Moscow Chemical Institute, which I
took with me in my flight to save them for science
from the ruthless vandalism of the wild beasts
who are destroying Holy Russia.</p>
<p><span class="jr">(Signed) <span class="sc">Lemuroff</span></span>
<span class="jr">(Witness) <span class="sc">Tchergeroff</span></span></p>
<p>Smolensk, 13/26, July, 1919</p>
</blockquote>
<p>“By Jove!” ejaculated Francis. “Four
grammes of radium! Let’s see!—the market
price stands somewhere about £12,000
a gramme, I think. That makes these four
little tubes worth something like £50,000.
No wonder old Clubfoot wanted that picture,
Des.!”</p>
<p>“But,” remarked Patricia, perplexed, “I
<i>saw</i> you give the ikon to the man Grundt!”</p>
<p>Desmond laughed. “I had to finesse him,”
he said. “Old Clubfoot never lets the grass
grow under his feet, and I wanted to gain
time to get your ikon into a safe place before
he could seize it by force. Directly I found
out from Krilenko here that this was one of
the famous miraculous ikons, I knew, from
my experience of Russia, that thousands of
copies must be in existence, for most of the
ikons you find in Russian churches and
homes are copies of these wonder-working
pictures. Krilenko, who has been a perfect
trump all through, routed up a Russian pope
he knows who remembered that there was a
copy of the Madonna of Smolensk in one of
the Russian churches in London. It was
nice and grimy, as it had hung there for
years.</p>
<p>“Krilenko and the priest did the rest. My
intention was to hang up the copy in your
boudoir for Clubfoot to steal, for I was
virtually certain that your house would be
broken into to-night. But, when we were
scrambling over the roofs just now, I heard
old Grundt’s voice coming up through the
skylight and I just couldn’t resist the chance
of bluffing him. My word, I could hardly
keep my face straight!”</p>
<p>He glanced humorously at Patricia. She
held out her hand.</p>
<p>“I feel just terribly!” she said. “I’m
sorry I was so rude! But, oh! what an
actor!”</p>
<p>Desmond grinned. “It wasn’t bad, was
it? Especially the pathetic bit about their
being three to one . . .”</p>
<p>They all laughed.</p>
<p>“In the mean time Grundt is off again!”
observed Francis ruefully.</p>
<p>“He’s a clever devil!” said Desmond with
real admiration in his voice. “He simply
bunged up the front door and walked out,
knowing that one minute’s grace would be
enough to allow him, lame as he is, to get
away in the London crowd. Directly you
opened the door I bolted down to the street.
But I knew it was too late. We’ve just got
to wait for him to come back . . .”</p>
<p>“He might have shot you!” remarked
Francis.</p>
<p>“Not he! Clubfoot knows that you can
commit almost any crime in London as long
as you act normally. But a shot would have
aroused the whole block. Besides, he’s a
single-minded person. To-day he was after
the ikon. Next time it may be you or me.
I don’t worry about losing his trail, Francis.
He’s coming back after us . . .”</p>
<p>He chuckled with infinite relish.</p>
<p>“Des.,” said his brother, “tell us the
joke!”</p>
<p>“Well,” Desmond replied slowly, “when
we were weighting that duplicate ikon, I
couldn’t resist slipping in a note for Clubfoot.
I was just thinking of his face when
he reads it!”</p>
<p>And he chuckled again.</p>
<p class="tb">By Patricia Maxwell’s direction the
radium, duly tested and found to be genuine,
was handed over to the Russian Refugees’
Fund. The ikon of Our Lady of Smolensk
went to take the place of the copy in the Russian
church, where, night and day, a great
candle burns before it in memory of the
donor.</p>
<p>As for Clubfoot, the evening traffic of
Saint James’s swallowed up him and his companions,
and the unremitting vigilance of the
Secret Service, assisted by Scotland Yard,
threw no light on their whereabouts. But,
two days after the encounter in his flat, Desmond
Okewood found in his mail a postcard,
unsigned, with this epigrammatic message:</p>
<p class="center"><i>A sense of humour is a dangerous thing!</i></p>
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