A. E. Merritt - Seven Footprints to Satan

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Title: Seven Footprints To Satan
Author: Abraham Merritt
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Date first posted: June 2006
Date most recently updated: June 2006
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Seven Footprints to Satan
by
Abraham Merritt
CHAPTER ONE
The clock was striking eight as I walked out of the doors of the Discoverers' Club and stood for a
moment looking down lower Fifth Avenue. As I paused, I felt with full force that uncomfortable sensation
of being watched that had both puzzled and harassed me for the past two weeks. A curiously prickly,
cold feeling somewhere deep under the skin on the side that the watchers are located; an odd sort of
tingling pressure. It is a queer sort of a sensitivity that I have in common with most men who spend much
of their lives in the jungle or desert. It is a throwback to some primitive sixth sense, since all savages have
it until they get introduced to the white man's liquor.
Trouble was I couldn't localize the sensation. It seemed to trickle in on me from all sides. I scanned the
street. Three taxis were drawn up along the curb in front of the Club. They were empty and their drivers
busy talking. There were no loiterers that I could see. The two swift side-rubbing streams of traffic swept
up and down the Avenue. I studied the windows of the opposite houses. There was no sign in them of
any watchers.
Yet eyes were upon me, intently. I knew it.
The warning had come to me in many places this last fortnight. I had felt the unseen watchers time and
again in the Museum where I had gone to look at the Yunnan jades I had made it possible for rich old
Rockbilt to put there with distinct increase to his reputation as a philanthropist; it had come to me in the
theater and while riding in the Park; in the brokers' offices where I myself had watched the money the
jades had brought me melt swiftly away in a game which I now ruefully admitted I knew less than nothing
about. I had felt it in the streets, and that was to be expected. But I had also felt it at the Club, and that
was not to be expected and it bothered me more than anything else.
Yes, I was under strictest surveillance. But why?
That was what this night I had determined to find out.
At a touch upon my shoulder, I jumped, and swept my hand halfway up to the little automatic under my
left armpit. By that, suddenly I realized how badly the mystery had gotten on my nerves. I turned, and
grinned a bit sheepishly into the face of big Lars Thorwaldsen, back in New York only a few days from
his two years in the Antarctic.
"Bit jerky, aren't you, Jim?" he asked. "What's the matter? Been on a bender?"
"Nothing like it, Lars," I answered. "Too much city, I guess. Too much continual noise and motion. And
too many people," I added with a real candor he could not suspect.
"God!" he exclaimed. "It all looks good to me. I'm eating it up--after those two years. But I suppose in a
month or two I'll be feeling the same way about it. I hear you're going away again soon. Where this time?
Back to China?"
I shook my head. I did not feel like telling Lars that my destination was entirely controlled by whatever
might turn up before I had spent the sixty-five dollars in my wallet and the seven quarters and two dimes
in my pocket.
"Not in trouble, are you, Jim?" he looked at me more keenly. "If you are, I'd be glad to--help you."
I shook my head. Everybody knew that old Rockbilt had been unusually generous about those infernal
jades. I had my pride, and staggered though I was by that amazingly rapid melting away of a golden
deposit I had confidently expected to grow into a barrier against care for the rest of my life, make me, as
a matter of fact, independent of all chance, I did not feel like telling even Lars of my folly. Besides, I was
not yet that hopeless of all things, a beachcomber in New York. Something would turn up.
"Wait," he said, as some one called him back into the Club.
But I did not wait. Even less than baring my unfortunate gamble did I feel like telling about my watchers. I
stepped down into the street.
Who was it that was watching me? And why? Some one from China who had followed after the treasure
I had taken from the ancient tomb? I could not believe it. Kin-Wang, bandit though he might be, and
accomplished graduate of American poker as well as of Cornell, would have sent no spies after me. Our,
well--call it transaction, irregular as it had been, was finished in his mind when he had lost. Crooked as he
might be with the cards, he was not the man to go back on his word. Of that I was sure. Besides, there
had been no need of letting me get this far before striking. No, they were no emissaries of Kin-Wang.
There had been that mock arrest in Paris, designed to get me quickly out of the way for a few hours, as
the ransacked condition of my room and baggage showed when I returned. A return undoubtedly much
earlier than the thieves had planned, due to my discovery of the ruse and my surprise sally which left me
with an uncomfortable knife slash under an arm but, I afterwards reflected pleasantly, had undoubtedly
left one of my guards with a broken neck and another with a head that would not do much thinking for
another month or so. Then there had been the second attempt when the auto in which I was rushing to
the steamer had been held up between Paris and the Havre. That might have been successful had not the
plaques been tucked among the baggage of an acquaintance who was going to the boat by the regular
train, thinking, by the way, that he was carrying for me some moderately rare old dishes that I did not
want to trust to the possible shocks of fast automobile travel, to which the mythical engagement on the
day of sailing had condemned me.
Were the watchers this same gang? They must know that the jades were now out of my hands and safe
in the museum. I could be of no further value to these disappointed gentlemen, unless, of course, they
were after revenge. Yet that would hardly explain this constant, furtive, patient watching. And why hadn't
they struck long before? Surely there had been plenty of opportunities.
Well, whoever the watchers were, I had determined to give them the most open of chances to get at me.
I had paid all my bills. The sixty-six dollars and ninety-five cents in my pocket comprised all my worldly
goods, but no one else had any claim on it. Whatever unknown port I was clearing for with severely bare
sticks and decks, it was with no debts left behind.
Yes, I had determined to decoy my enemies, if enemies they were, out into the open. I had even made up
my mind as to where it should be.
In all New York the loneliest spot at eight o'clock of an October night, or any night for that matter, is the
one which by day is the most crowded on all the globe. Lower Broadway, empty then of all its hordes
and its canyon-like cleft silent, its intersecting minor canyons emptier and quieter even than their desert
kin. It was there that I would go.
As I turned down Fifth Avenue from the Discoverers' Club a man passed me, a man whose gait and
carriage, figure and clothing, were oddly familiar.
I stood stock still, looking after him as he strolled leisurely up the steps and into the Club.
Then, queerly disturbed, I resumed my walk. There had been something peculiarly familiar, indeed
disquietingly familiar, about that man. What was it? Making my way over to Broadway, I went down that
street, always aware of the watchers.
But it was not until I was opposite City Hall that I realized what that truly weird familiarity had been. The
realization came to me with a distinct shock.
In gait and carriage, in figure and clothing, from light brown overcoat, gray soft hat, to strong Malacca
cane that man had been--Myself!
CHAPTER TWO
I stopped short. The natural assumption was, of course, that the resemblance had been a coincidence,
extraordinary enough, but still--coincidence. Without doubt there were at least fifty men in New York
who might easily be mistaken for me at casual glance. The chance, however, that one of them would be
dressed precisely like me at any precise moment was almost nil. Yet it could be. What else could it be?
What reason had any one to impersonate me?
But then, for that matter, what reason had any one to put a watch on me?
I hesitated, of half a mind to call a taxi, and return to the Club. Reason whispered to me that the glimpse I
had gotten had been brief, that perhaps I had been deceived by the play of light and shadow, the
resemblance been only an illusion. I cursed my jumpy nerves and went on.
Fewer and fewer became the people I passed as I left Cortlandt Street behind me. Trinity was like a
country church at midnight. As the cliffs of the silent office buildings hemmed me I felt a smothering
oppression, as though they were asleep and swaying in on me; their countless windows were like blind
eyes. But if they were blind, those other eyes, that I had never for an instant felt leave me, were not. They
seemed to become more intent, more watchful.
And now I met no one. Not a policeman, not even a watchman. The latter were, I knew, inside these
huge stone forts of capital. I loitered at corners, giving every opportunity for the lurkers to step out, the
invisible to become visible. And still I saw no one. And still the eyes never left me.
It was with a certain sense of disappointment that I reached the end of Broadway and looked out over
Battery Park. It was deserted. I walked down to the Harbor wall and sat upon a bench. A ferryboat
gliding toward Staten Island was like some great golden water bug. The full moon poured a rivulet of
rippling silver fire upon the waves. It was very still--so still that I could faintly hear Trinity's bells chiming
nine o'clock.
I had heard no one approach, but suddenly I was aware of a man sitting beside me and a pleasant voice
asking me for a match. As the flame flared up to meet his cigarette, I saw a dark, ascetic face,
smooth-shaven, the mouth and eyes kindly and the latter a bit weary, as though from study. The hand that
held the match was long and slender and beautifully kept. It gave the impression of unusual strength--a
surgeon's hand or a sculptor's. A professional man certainly, I conjectured. The thought was strengthened
by his Inverness coat and his soft, dark hat. In the broad shoulders under the cloak of the coat was
further suggestion of a muscular power much beyond the ordinary.
"A beautiful night, sir," he tossed the match from him. "A night for adventure. And behind us a city in
which any adventure is possible."
I looked at him more closely. It was an odd remark, considering that I had unquestionably started out
that night for adventure. But was it so odd after all? Perhaps it was only my overstimulated suspicion that
made it seem so. He could not possibly have known what had drawn me to this silent place. And the
kindly eyes and the face made me almost instantly dismiss the thought. Some scholar this, perhaps,
grateful for the quietness of the Park.
"That ferryboat yonder," he pointed, seemingly unaware of my scrutiny. "It is an argosy of potential
adventure. Within it are mute Alexanders, inglorious Caesars and Napoleons, incomplete Jasons each
almost able to retrieve some Golden Fleece--yes, and incomplete Helens and Cleopatras, all lacking only
one thing to round them out and send them forth to conquer."
"Lucky for the world they're incomplete, then," I laughed. "How long would it be before all these
Napoleons and Caesars and Cleopatras and all the rest of them were at each other's throats--and the
whole world on fire?"
"Never," he said, very seriously. "Never, that is, if they were under the control of a will and an intellect
greater than the sum total of all their wills and intellects. A mind greater than all of them to plan for all of
them, a will more powerful than all their wills to force them to carry out those plans exactly as the greater
mind had conceived them."
"The result, sir," I objected, "would seem to me to be not the super-pirates, super-thieves and
super-courtesans you have cited, but super-slaves."
"Less slaves than at any time in history," he replied. "The personages I have suggested as types were
always under control of Destiny--or God, if you prefer the term. The will and intellect I have in mind
would profit, since its house would be a human brain, by the mistakes of blind, mechanistic Destiny or of
a God who surely, if he exists, has too many varying worlds to look after to give minute attention to
individuals of the countless species that crawl over them. No, it would use the talents of its servants to the
utmost, not waste them. It would suitably and justly reward them, and when it punished--its punishments
would be just. It would not scatter a thousand seeds haphazardly on the chance that a few would find
fertile ground and grow. It would select the few, and see that they fell on fertile ground and that nothing
prevented their growing."
"Such a mind would have to be greater than Destiny, or, if you prefer the term, God," I said. "I repeat
that it seems to me a super-slavery and that it's mighty lucky for the world that no such mind exists."
"Ah!" he drew at his cigarette, thoughtfully, "but, you see--it does."
"Yes?" I stared at him, wondering if he were joking. "Where?"
"That," he answered, coolly, "you shall soon know--Mr. Kirkham."
"You know me!" for one amazed moment I thought that I could not have heard aright.
"Very well," he said. "And that mind whose existence you doubt knows--all of you there is to know. He
summons you! Come, Kirkham, it is time for us to go!"
So! I had met what I had started out to find! They, whoever they were, had come out into the open at
last.
"Wait a bit," I felt my anger stir at the arrogance of the hitherto courteous voice. "Whoever you may be
or whoever he may be who sent you, neither of you knows me as well as you seem to think. Let me tell
you that I go nowhere unless I know where it is I'm going, and I meet no one unless I choose. Tell me
then where you want me to go, who it is I'm to meet and the reason for it. When you do that, I'll decide
whether or not I'll answer this, what did you call it--summons."
He had listened to me quietly. Now his hand shot out and caught my wrist. I had run across many strong
men, but never one with a grip like that. My cane dropped from my paralyzed grasp.
"You have been told all that is necessary," he said, coldly. "And you are going with me--now!"
He loosed my wrist, and shaking with rage I jumped to my feet.
"Damn you," I cried. "I go where I please when I please--" I stooped to pick up my cane. Instantly his
arms were around me.
"You go," he whispered, "where he who sent me pleases and when he pleases!"
I felt his hands swiftly touching me here and there. I could no more have broken away from him than if I
had been a kitten. He found the small automatic under my left armpit and drew it out of its holster.
Quickly as he had seized me, he released me and stepped back. "Come," he ordered.
I stood, considering him and the situation. No one has ever had occasion to question my courage, but
courage, to my way of thinking, has nothing whatever to do with bull-headed rashness. Courage is the
cool weighing of the factors of an emergency within whatever time limit your judgment tells you that you
have, and then the putting of every last ounce of brain, nerve and muscle into the course chosen. I had
not the slightest doubt that this mysterious messenger had men within instant call. If I threw myself on him,
what good would it do? I had only my cane. He had my gun and probably weapons of his own. Strong
as I am, he had taught me that my strength was nothing to his. It might even be that he was counting upon
an attack by me, that it was what he hoped for.
True, I could cry out for help or I could run. Not only did both of these expedients seem to me to be
ridiculous, but, in view of the certainty of his hidden aides, useless.
Not far away were the subway stations and the elevated road. In that brilliantly lighted zone I would be
comparatively safe from any concerted attack--if I could get there. I began to walk away across the Park
toward Whitehall Street.
To my surprise he made neither objection nor comment. He paced quietly beside me. Soon we were out
of the Battery and not far ahead were the lights of the Bowling Green Station. My resentment and anger
diminished, a certain amusement took their place. Obviously it was absurd to suppose that in New York
City anyone could be forced to go anywhere against his will, once he was in the usual close touch with its
people and its police. To be snatched away from a subway station was almost unthinkable, to be
kidnapped from the subway once we got in it absolutely unthinkable. Why then was my companion so
placidly allowing each step to take me closer to this unassailable position?
It would have been so easy to have overpowered me just a few moments before. Or why had I not been
approached at the Club? There were a dozen possible ways in which I could have been lured away from
there.
There seemed only one answer. There was some paramount need for secrecy. A struggle in the Park
might have brought the police. Overtures at the Club might have left evidence behind had I disappeared.
How utterly outside the mark all this reasoning was I was soon to learn.
As we drew closer to the Bowling Green entrance of the subway, I saw a policeman standing there. I
admit without shame that his scenic effect warmed my heart.
"Listen," I said to my companion. "There's a bluecoat. Slip my gun back into my pocket. Leave me here
and go your way. If you do that, I say nothing. If you don't I'm going to order that policeman to lock you
up. They'll have the Sullivan Law on you if nothing else. Go away quietly and, if you want to, get in touch
with me at the Discoverers' Club. I'll forget all this and talk to you. But don't try any more of the rough
stuff or I'll be getting good and mad."
He smiled at me, as at some child, his face and eyes again all kindness. But he did not go. Instead, he
linked his arm firmly in mine and led me straight to the officer. And as we came within earshot he said to
me, quite loudly:
"Now come, Henry. You've had your little run. I'm sure you don't want to give this busy officer any
trouble. Come, Henry! Be good!"
The policeman stepped forward, looking us over. I did not know whether to laugh or grow angry again.
Before I could speak, the man in the Inverness had handed the bluecoat a card. He read it, touched his
hat respectfully and asked:
"And what's the trouble, doctor?"
"Sorry to bother you, officer," my astonishing companion answered. "But I'll ask you to help me a bit. My
young friend here is one of my patients. War case--aviator. He hurt his head in a crash in France and just
now he thinks he is James Kirkham, an explorer. Actually, his name is Henry Walton."
The bluecoat looked at me, doubtfully. I smiled, in my certain security.
"Go on!" I said. "What else do I think?"
"He's quite harmless," he gently patted my shoulder, "but now and then he manages to slip away from us.
Yes, harmless, but very ingenious. He evaded us this evening. I sent my men out to trace him. I found him
myself down there in the Battery. At such times, officer, he believes he is in danger of being kidnapped.
That's what he wants to tell you--that I am kidnapping him. Will you kindly listen to him, officer, and
assure him that such a thing is impossible in New York. Or, if possible, that kidnappers do not conduct
their captives up to a New York policeman as I have."
I could but admire the deftness of the story, the half humorous and yet patient, wholly professional
manner in which he told it. Safe now as I thought myself, I could afford to laugh, and I did.
"Quite right, officer," I said. "Only it happens that my name really is James Kirkham. I never even heard
of this Henry Walton. I never saw this man here until tonight. And I have every reason in the world to
know that he is trying to force me to go somewhere that I have no intention whatever of going."
"You see!" My companion nodded meaningly to the policeman, who, far from answering my smiles,
looked at me with an irritating sympathy.
"I wouldn't worry," he assured me. "As the good doctor says, kidnappers don't hunt up the police. Ye
couldn't be kidnapped in New York--at least not this way. Now go right along wit' the doctor, an' don't
ye worry no more."
It was time to terminate the absurd matter. I thrust my hand into my pocket, brought out my wallet and
dipped into it for my card. I picked out one and with it a letter or two and handed them to the bluecoat.
"Perhaps these identifications will give you another slant," I said.
He took them, read them carefully, and handed them back to me, pityingly.
"Sure, lad," his tone was soothing. "Ye're in no danger. I'm tellin' ye. Would ye want a taxi, doctor?"
I stared at him in amazement, and then down to the card and envelopes he had returned to me. I read
them once and again, unbelievingly.
For the card bore the name of "Henry Walton," and each of the envelopes was addressed to that same
gentleman "in care of Dr. Michael Consardine" at an address that I recognized as a settlement of the
highest-priced New York specialists up in the seventies. Nor was the wallet I held in my hand the one
with which I had started this eventful stroll a little more than an hour before.
I opened my coat and glanced down into the inner pocket for the tailor's label that bore my name. There
was no label there.
Very abruptly my sense of security fled. I began to realize that it might be possible to force me to go
where I did not want to, after all. Even from a New York Subway station.
"Officer," I said, and there was no laughter now in my voice, "you are making a great mistake. I met this
man a few minutes ago in Battery Park. I give you my word he is an utter stranger to me. He insisted that
I follow him to some place whose location he refused to tell, to meet some one whose name he would
not reveal. When I refused, he struggled with me, ostensibly searching for weapons. During that struggle
it is now plain that he substituted this wallet containing the cards and envelopes bearing the name of
Henry Walton in the place of my own. I demand that you search him for my wallet, and then whether you
find it or not, I demand that you take us both to Headquarters."
The bluecoat looked at me doubtfully. My earnestness and apparent sanity had shaken him. Neither my
appearance nor my manner was that of even a slightly unbalanced person. But on the other hand the
benign face, the kindly eyes, the unmistakable refinement and professionalism of the man of the Battery
bench were as far apart as the poles from the puzzled officer's conception of a kidnapper.
"I'm perfectly willing to be examined at Headquarters--and even searched there," said the man in the
Inverness. "Only I must warn you that all the excitement will certainly react very dangerously on my
patient. However--call a taxi--"
"No taxi," I said firmly. "We go in the patrol wagon, with police around us."
"Wait a minute," the bluecoat's face brightened. "Here comes the Sergeant. He'll decide what to do." The
Sergeant walked up.
"What's the trouble, Mooney?" he asked, looking us over. Succinctly, Mooney explained the situation.
The Sergeant studied us again more closely. I grinned at him cheerfully.
"All I want," I told him, "is to be taken to Headquarters. In a patrol wagon. No taxi, Dr.------what was
it? Oh, yes, Consardine. Patrol wagon with plenty of police, and Dr. Consardine sitting in it with
me--that's all I want."
"It's all right, Sergeant," said Dr. Consardine, patiently. "I'm quite ready to go. But as I warned Officer
Mooney, it means delay and excitement and you must accept the responsibility for the effect upon my
patient, whose care is, after all, my first concern. I have said he is harmless, but tonight I took from
him--this."
He handed the Sergeant the small automatic.
"Under his left arm you will find its holster," said Consardine. "Frankly, I think it best to get him back to
my sanatorium as quickly as possible."
The Sergeant stepped close to me and throwing back my coat, felt under my left arm. I knew by his face
as he touched the holster that Consardine had scored.
"I have a license to carry a gun," I said, tartly.
"Where is it?" he asked.
"In the wallet that man took from me when he lifted the gun," I answered. "If you'll search him you'll find
it."
"Oh, poor lad! Poor lad!" murmured Consardine. And so sincere seemed his distress that I was half
inclined to feel sorry for myself. He spoke again to the Sergeant.
"I think perhaps the matter can be settled without running the risk of the journey to Headquarters. As
Officer Mooney has told you, my patient's present delusion is that he is a certain James Kirkham and
living at the Discoverers' Club. It may be that the real Mr. Kirkham is there at this moment. I therefore
suggest that you call up the Discoverers' Club and ask for him. If Mr. Kirkham is there, I take it that will
end the matter. If not, we will go to Headquarters."
The Sergeant looked at me, and I looked at Consardine, amazed.
"If you can talk to James Kirkham at the Discoverers' Club," I said at last, "then I'm Henry Walton!"
We walked over to a telephone booth. I gave the Sergeant the number of the Club.
"Ask for Robert," I interposed. "He's the desk man."
I had talked to Robert a few minutes before I had gone out. He would still be on duty.
"Is that Robert? At the desk?" the Sergeant asked as the call came through. "Is Mr. James Kirkham
there? This is Police Sergeant Downey."
There was a pause. He glanced at me.
"They're paging Kirkham," he muttered--then to the phone--"What's that? You are James Kirkham! A
moment, please--put that clerk back. Hello--you Robert? That party I'm talking to Kirkham? Kirkham
the explorer? You're certain? All right--all right! Don't get excited about it. I'll admit you know him. Put
him back--Hello, Mr. Kirkham? No, it's all right. Just a case of--er--bugs! Man thinks he's you--"
I snatched the receiver from his hand, lifted it to my ear and heard a voice saying:
"--Not the first time, poor devil--"
The voice was my very own!
CHAPTER THREE
The receiver was taken from me, gently enough. Now the Sergeant was listening again. Mooney had me
by one arm, the man in the Inverness by the other. I heard the Sergeant say:
"Yes--Walton, Henry Walton, yes, that's the name. Sorry to have troubled you, Mr. Kirkham. Goo'-by."
He snapped up the 'phone and regarded me, compassionately.
"Too bad!" he said. "It's a damned shame. Do you want an ambulance, doctor?"
"No, thanks," answered Consardine. "It's a peculiar case. The kidnapping delusion is a strong one. He'll
be quieter with people around him. We'll go up on the subway. Even though his normal self is not in
control, his subconscious will surely tell him that kidnapping is impossible in the midst of a subway crowd.
Now, Henry," he patted my hand, "admit that it is. You are beginning to realize it already, aren't you--"
I broke out of my daze. The man who had passed me on Fifth Avenue! The man who had so strangely
resembled me! Fool that I was not to have thought of that before! "Wait, officer," I cried desperately.
"That was an impostor at the Club--some one made up to look like me. I saw him--"
"There, there, lad," he put a hand on my shoulder reassuringly. "You gave your word. You're not going to
welch on it, I'm sure. You're all right. I'm telling you. Go with the doctor, now."
For the first time I had the sense of futility. This net spreading around me had been woven with infernal
ingenuity. Apparently no contingency had been overlooked. I felt the shadow of a grim oppression. If
those so interested in me, or in my--withdrawal, wished it, how easy would it be to obliterate me. If this
double of mine could dupe the clerk who had known me for years and mix in with my friends at the Club
without detection--if he could do this, what could he not do in my name and in my guise? A touch of ice
went through my blood. Was that the plot? Was I to be removed so this double could take my place in
my world for a time to perpetrate some villainy that would blacken forever my memory? The situation
was no longer humorous. It was heavy with evil possibilities.
But the next step in my involuntary journey was to be the subway. As Consardine had said, no sane
person would believe a man could be kidnapped there. Surely there, if anywhere, I could escape, find
some one in the crowds who would listen to me, create if necessary such a scene that it' would be
impossible for my captor to hold me, outwit him somehow.
At any rate there was nothing to do but go with him. Further appeal to these two policemen was useless.
"Let's go--doctor," I said, quietly. We started down the subway steps, his arm in mine.
We passed through the gates. A train was waiting. 1 went into the last car, Consardine at my heels. It
was empty. I marched on. In the second car was only a nondescript passenger or two. But as I neared
the third car I saw at the far end half a dozen marines with a second lieutenant. My pulse quickened.
Here was the very opportunity I had been seeking. I made straight for them.
As I entered the car I was vaguely aware of a couple sitting in the corner close to the door. Intent upon
reaching the leathernecks, I paid no attention to them.
Before I had gone five steps I heard a faint scream, then a cry of--
"Harry! Oh, Dr. Consardine! You've found him!"
Involuntarily, I halted and turned. A girl was running toward me. She threw her arms around my neck and
cried again:
"Harry! Harry! dear! Oh, thank God he found you!"
Two of the loveliest brown eyes I had ever beheld looked up at me. They were deep and tender and
pitying, and tears trembled on the long black lashes. Even in my consternation I took note of the delicate
skin untouched by rouge, the curly, silken fine bobbed hair under the smart little hat--hair touched with
warm bronze glints, the nose a bit uplifted and the exquisite mouth and elfinly pointed chin. Under other
circumstances, exactly the girl I would have given much to meet; under the present circumstances,
well--disconcerting.
"There! There, Miss Walton!" Dr. Consardine's voice was benignly soothing. "Your brother is all right
now!"
"Now, Eve, don't fuss any more. The doctor found him just as I told you he would."
It was a third voice, that of the other occupant of the corner seat. He was a man of about my own age,
exceedingly well dressed, the face rather thin and tanned, a touch of dissipation about his eyes and
mouth.
"How are you feeling, Harry?" he asked me, and added, somewhat gruffly, "Devil of a chase you've given
us this time, I must say."
"Now, Walter," the girl rebuked him, "what matter, so he is safe?"
I disengaged the girl's arms and looked at the three of them. Outwardly they were exactly what they
purported to be--an earnest, experienced, expensive specialist anxious about a recalcitrant patient with a
defective mentality, a sweet, worried sister almost overcome with glad relief that her mind-sick runaway
brother had been found, a trusty friend, perhaps a fiance, a bit put out, but still eighteen-carat faithful and
devoted and so glad that his sweetheart's worry was over that he was ready to hand me a wallop if I
摘要:

Title:SevenFootprintsToSatanAuthor:AbrahamMerritt*AProjectGutenbergofAustraliaeBook*eBookNo.:0601971h.htmlEdition:1Language:EnglishCharactersetencoding:Latin-1(ISO-8859-1)--8bitDatefirstposted:June2006Datemostrecentlyupdated:June2006ThiseBookwasproducedby:RichardScottProjectGutenbergofAustraliaeBook...

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