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dreadful Chinese doctor in the flesh. Smith began incoherent mutterings.

“Sandbagged!⁠ ⁠… Look out, Petrie!⁠ ⁠… He has us at last!⁠ ⁠… Oh, Heavens!”⁠ ⁠… He struggled on to his knees, clutching at my hand.

“All right, old man,” I said. “We are both alive! So let’s be thankful.”

A moment’s silence, a groan, then:

“Petrie, I have dragged you into this. God forgive me⁠—”

“Dry up, Smith,” I said slowly. “I’m not a child. There is no question of being dragged into the matter. I’m here; and if I can be of any use, I’m glad I am here!”

He grasped my hand.

“There were two Chinese, in European clothes⁠—lord, how my head throbs!⁠—in that office door. They sandbagged us, Petrie⁠—think of it!⁠—in broad daylight, within hail of the Strand! We were rushed into the car⁠—and it was all over, before⁠—” His voice grew faint. “God! they gave me an awful knock!”

“Why have we been spared, Smith? Do you think he is saving us for⁠—”

“Don’t, Petrie! If you had been in China, if you had seen what I have seen⁠—”

Footsteps sounded on the flagged passage. A blade of light crept across the floor towards us. My brain was growing clearer. The place had a damp, earthen smell. It was slimy⁠—some noisome cellar. A door was thrown open and a man entered, carrying a lantern. Its light showed my surmise to be accurate, showed the slime-coated walls of a dungeon some fifteen feet square⁠—shone upon the long yellow robe of the man who stood watching us, upon the malignant, intellectual countenance.

It was Dr. Fu-Manchu.

At last they were face to face⁠—the head of the great Yellow Movement, and the man who fought on behalf of the entire white race. How can I paint the individual who now stood before us⁠—perhaps the greatest genius of modern times?

Of him it had been fitly said that he had a brow like Shakespeare and a face like Satan. Something serpentine, hypnotic, was in his very presence. Smith drew one sharp breath, and was silent. Together, chained to the wall, two medieval captives, living mockeries of our boasted modern security, we crouched before Dr. Fu-Manchu.

He came forward with an indescribable gait, cat-like yet awkward, carrying his high shoulders almost hunched. He placed the lantern in a niche in the wall, never turning away the reptilian gaze of those eyes which must haunt my dreams forever. They possessed a viridescence which hitherto I had supposed possible only in the eye of the cat⁠—and the film intermittently clouded their brightness⁠—but I can speak of them no more.

I had never supposed, prior to meeting Dr. Fu-Manchu, that so intense a force of malignancy could radiate⁠—from any human being. He spoke. His English was perfect, though at times his words were oddly chosen; his delivery alternately was guttural and sibilant.

“Mr. Smith and Dr. Petrie, your interference with my plans has gone too far. I have seriously turned my attention to you.”

He displayed his teeth, small and evenly separated, but discolored in a way that was familiar to me. I studied his eyes with a new professional interest, which even the extremity of our danger could not wholly banish. Their greenness seemed to be of the iris; the pupil was oddly contracted⁠—a pinpoint.

Smith leaned his back against the wall with assumed indifference.

“You have presumed,” continued Fu-Manchu, “to meddle with a world-change. Poor spiders⁠—caught in the wheels of the inevitable! You have linked my name with the futility of the Young China Movement⁠—the name of Fu-Manchu! Mr. Smith, you are an incompetent meddler⁠—I despise you! Dr. Petrie, you are a fool⁠—I am sorry for you!”

He rested one bony hand on his hip, narrowing the long eyes as he looked down on us. The purposeful cruelty of the man was inherent; it was entirely untheatrical. Still Smith remained silent.

“So I am determined to remove you from the scene of your blunders!” added Fu-Manchu.

“Opium will very shortly do the same for you!” I rapped at him savagely.

Without emotion he turned the narrowed eyes upon me.

“That is a matter of opinion, Doctor,” he said. “You may have lacked the opportunities which have been mine for studying that subject⁠—and in any event I shall not be privileged to enjoy your advice in the future.”

“You will not long outlive me,” I replied. “And our deaths will not profit you, incidentally; because⁠—” Smith’s foot touched mine.

“Because?” inquired Fu-Manchu softly.

“Ah! Mr. Smith is so prudent! He is thinking that I have files!” He pronounced the word in a way that made me shudder. “Mr. Smith has seen a wire jacket! Have you ever seen a wire jacket? As a surgeon its functions would interest you!”

I stifled a cry that rose to my lips; for, with a shrill whistling sound, a small shape came bounding into the dimly lit vault, then shot upward. A marmoset landed on the shoulder of Dr. Fu-Manchu and peered grotesquely into the dreadful yellow face. The Doctor raised his bony hand and fondled the little creature, crooning to it.

“One of my pets, Mr. Smith,” he said, suddenly opening his eyes fully so that they blazed like green lamps. “I have others, equally useful. My scorpions⁠—have you met my scorpions? No? My pythons and hamadryads? Then there are my fungi and my tiny allies, the bacilli. I have a collection in my laboratory quite unique. Have you ever visited Molokai, the leper island, Doctor? No? But Mr. Nayland Smith will be familiar with the asylum at Rangoon! And we must not forget my black spiders, with their diamond eyes⁠—my spiders, that sit in the dark and watch⁠—then leap!”

He raised his lean hands, so that the sleeve of the robe fell back to the elbow, and the ape dropped, chattering, to the floor and ran from the cellar.

“O God of Cathay!” he cried, “by what death shall these die⁠—these miserable ones who would bind thine Empire, which is boundless!”

Like some priest of Tezcat he stood, his eyes upraised to the roof, his lean body quivering⁠—a sight to shock the most unimpressionable mind.

“He is mad!” I whispered to Smith. “God help us, the man is a dangerous homicidal maniac!”

Nayland Smith’s tanned

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