<SPAN name="chap31"></SPAN>
<h3> CHAPTER XXXI </h3>
<h3> THE POOL OF DEATH </h3>
<p>Not a sound broke the stillness of the Gate House. It was the most
eerily silent place in which I had ever found myself. Out into the
corridor we went, noiselessly. It was stripped, uncarpeted.</p>
<p>Three doors we passed, two upon the left and one upon the right.
We tried them all. All were unfastened, and the rooms into which
they opened bare and deserted. Then we came upon a short, descending
stair, at its foot a massive oaken door.</p>
<p>Carneta glided down, noiseless as a ghost, and to one of the
blackened panels applied an ingenious little instrument which she
carried in her knapsack. It was not unlike a stethoscope; and as I
watched her listening, by means of this arrangement, for any sound
beyond the oaken door, I reflected how almost every advance made by
science places a new tool in the hand of the criminal.</p>
<p>No word had been spoken since we had discovered this door; none had
been necessary. For we both knew that the place beyond was that
from which proceeded the mysterious red light.</p>
<p>I directed the ray of the electric torch upon Carneta, as she stood
there listening, and against that sombre oaken background her face
and profile stood out with startling beauty. She seemed half
perplexed and half fearful. Then she abruptly removed the apparatus,
and, stooping to the knapsack, replaced it and took out a bunch of
wire keys, signing to me to hand her the lamp.</p>
<p>As I crept down the steps I saw her pause, glancing back over her
shoulder toward the door. The expression upon her face induced
me to direct the light in the same direction.</p>
<p>Why neither of us had observed the fact before I cannot conjecture;
but a key was in the lock!</p>
<p>Perhaps the traffic of the night afforded no more dramatic moment
than this. The house which we were come prepared burglariously
to enter was thrown open, it would seem, to us, inviting our
inspection!</p>
<p>Looking back upon that moment, it seems almost incredible that the
sight of a key in a lock should have so thrilled me. But at the
time I perceived something sinister in this failure of the Lord of
the Hashishin to close his doors to intruders. That Carneta shared
my doubts and fears was to be read in her face; but her training
had been peculiar, I learned, and such as establishes a surprising
resoluteness of character.</p>
<p>Quite noiselessly she turned the key, and holding a dainty pocket
revolver in her hand, pushed the door open slowly!</p>
<p>An odour, sickly sweet and vaguely familiar, was borne to my
nostrils. Carneta became outlined in dim, reddish light. Bending
forward slightly, she entered the room, and I, with muscles tensed
nervously, advanced and stood beside her.</p>
<p>I perceived that this was a cellar; indeed, I doubt not that in
some past age it had served as a dungeon. From the stone roof hung
the first evidence of Eastern occupation which the Gate House had
yielded; in the form of an Oriental lantern, or fanoos, of
rose-coloured waxed paper upon a copper frame. Its vague light
revealed the interior of the hideous place upon whose threshold we
stood.</p>
<p>Straight before us, deep set in the stone wall, was the tiny square
window, iron-barred without, and glazed with red glass, the light
from which had so deeply mystified us. Within a niche in the wall,
a little to the left of the window, rested an object which, at that
moment, claimed our undivided attention the sight of which so
wrought upon us that temporarily all else was forgotten.</p>
<p>It was the red slipper of the Prophet!</p>
<p>"My God!" whispered Carneta—"my God!"—and clutched at me,
swaying dizzily.</p>
<p>A few inches from our feet the floor became depressed, how deeply
I could not determine, for it was filled with water, water filthy
and slimy! The strange, nauseating odour had grown all but
unsupportable; it seemingly proceeded from this fetid pool which,
occupying the floor of the dungeon, offered a barrier, since its
depth was unknown, of fully twelve feet between ourselves and the
farther wall.</p>
<p>There was a faint, dripping sound: a whispering, echoing drip-drip
of falling water. I could not tell from whence it proceeded.</p>
<p>Almost supporting my companion, whose courage seemed suddenly to
have failed her, I stared fascinatedly at that blood-stained
relic. Something then induced me to look behind; I suppose a
warning instinct of that sort which is unexplainable. I only know
that upholding Carneta with my left arm, and nervously grasping my
revolver in my right, I turned and glanced over my shoulder.</p>
<p>Very slowly, but with a constant, regular motion, the massive door
was closing!</p>
<p>I snatched away my arm; in my left hand I held the electric torch,
and springing sharply about I directed the searching ray into the
black gap of the stairway. A yellow face, a malignant Oriental
face, came suddenly, fully, into view! Instantly I recognized it
for that of the man who had driven Hassan's car!</p>
<p>Acting upon the determination with which I had entered the Gate
House, I raised my revolver and fired straight between the evil
eyes! To the fact that I dropped my left hand in the act of
pulling the trigger with my right, and thus lost my mark, the
servant of Hassan of Aleppo owed his escape. I missed him. He
uttered a shrill cry of fear and went racing up the wooden stair.
I followed him with the light and fired twice at the retreating
figure. I heard him stumble and a second time cry out. But,
though I doubt not he was hit, he recovered himself, for I heard
his tread in the corridor above.</p>
<p>Propping wide the door with my foot, I turned to Carneta. Her
face was drawn and haggard; but her mouth set in a sort of grim
determination.</p>
<p>"Earl is dead!" she said, in a queer, toneless voice. "He died
trying to get—that thing! I will get it, and destroy it!"</p>
<p>Before I could detain her, even had I sought to do so, she stepped
into the filthy water, struggled to recover her foothold, and sank
above her waist into its sliminess. Without hesitation she began
to advance toward the niche which contained the slipper. In the
middle of the pool she stopped.</p>
<p>What memory it was which supplied the clue to the identity of that
nauseating smell, heaven alone knows; but as the girl stopped and
drew herself up rigidly—then turned and leapt wildly back toward
the door—I knew what occasioned that sickly odour!</p>
<p>She screamed once, dreadfully—shrilly—a scream of agonizing
fear that I can never forget. Then, roughly I grasped her, for the
need was urgent—and dragged her out on to the floor beside me.
With her wet garments clinging to her limbs, she fell prostrate on
the stones.</p>
<p>A yard from the brink the slimy water parted, and the yellow snout
of a huge crocodile was raised above the surface! The saurian eyes,
hungrily malevolent, rose next to view!</p>
<p>The extremity of our danger found me suddenly cool. As the thing
drew its slimy body up out of the poor I waited. The jaws were
extended toward the prostrate body, were but inches removed from
it, dripped their saliva upon the soddened skirt—when I bent
forward, and at a range of some ten inches emptied the remaining
three loaded chambers of my revolver into the creature's left
eye!</p>
<p>Upchurned in bloody foam became the water of that dreadful place....
As one recalls the incidents of a fevered dream, I recall
dragging Carneta away from the contorted body of the death-stricken
reptile. A nightmare chaos of horrid, revolting sights and sounds
forms my only recollection of quitting the dungeon of the slipper.</p>
<p>I succeeded in carrying her up the stairs and out through the empty
rooms on to the verandah; but there, from sheer exhaustion, I laid
her down. I had no means of reviving her and I lacked the strength
to carry her farther. Having recharged my revolver, I stood watching
her where she lay, wanly beautiful in the dim light.</p>
<p>There was no doubt in my mind respecting the fate of Earl Dexter,
nor could I doubt that the slipper in the dungeon below was a
duplicate of the real one. It was a death-trap into which he had
lured Dexter and which he had left baited for whomsoever might trace
the cracksman to the Gate House. Why Hassan should have remained
behind, unless from fanatic lust of killing, I could not imagine.</p>
<p>When at last the fresher night air had its effect, and Carneta
opened her eyes, I led her to the gates, nor did she offer the
slightest resistance, but looked dully before her, muttering over
and over again, "Earl, Earl!"</p>
<p>The gates were open; we passed out on to the open road. No man
pursued us, and the night was gravely still.</p>
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