The Mystery of the Four Fingers. Fred M. White

The Mystery of the Four Fingers - Fred M. White


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Venner went on. “Six months had elapsed, and Van Fort’s widow was beginning to forget all about the startling incident, when, one night, just at the same time, and in just the same circumstances, came that wild, pitiful yell for assistance outside the Dutchman’s farm. Half mad with dread and terror the woman sat there listening. She did not dare to go outside now; she knew how futile such an act would be. Also, she knew quite well what was going to happen in the morning. She sat up half the night in a state bordering on madness. I need not insult your intelligence, my dear fellow, by asking you to guess what she found on the doorstep in the daylight.”

      “Of course, I can guess,” Gurdon said. “Beyond all question, it was the third finger of the Dutchman’s hand.”

      “Quite so,” Venner resumed. “I need not over elaborate my story or bore you by telling how, six months later, the second finger of the hand appeared in the same sensational circumstances, and how, at the end of a year, the four fingers were complete. Let me once more impress upon you the fact that this mine was called the Four Finger Mine for more than a century before these strange things happened.”

      “It is certainly an extraordinary thing,” Gurdon muttered. “I don’t think I ever listened to a weirder tale. And did the Dutch woman confess to her crime? This strikes me as being a fitting end to the story. I suppose it came from her lips.”

      “She didn’t confess, for the simple reason that she had no mind to confess with,” Venner explained. “Of course, certain neighbors knew something of what was going on, but they never knew the whole truth, because, after the appearance of the last finger, Mrs. Van Fort went stark raving mad. She lived for a few days, and at the end of that time her body was found in a waterfall close to her house. That is the story of the Four Finger Mine so far as it goes, though I should not be surprised if we manage to get to the last chapter yet. Now, you are an observant man—did you notice anything peculiar in Fenwick’s appearance to-night?”

      Gurdon shook his head slowly. It was quite evident that he had not noticed anything out of the common in the appearance of the millionaire. Venner proceeded to explain.

      “Let me tell you this,” he said. “When I married my wife, we were within an easy ride of the locality where the Four Finger Mine is situated. Mind you, our marriage was a secret one, and I presume that Fenwick is still in ignorance of it, though, of course, he was fully aware of the fact that I had more than a passing admiration for Vera. I merely mention this by way of accentuating the little point that I am going to make. It is more than probable that, when I stumbled upon Fenwick and the girl who passes for his daughter, he also was in search of the Four Finger Mine. When he came in to-night he, of course, recognised me, though I treated him as an absolute stranger whom I had met for the first time. You will see presently why I treated him in this fashion. I am glad I spoke to him, because I noticed a slight thing that throws a flood of light upon the mystery. Now, did it escape your observation, or did you notice that Fenwick took the box I gave him in his right hand?”

      “Oh, dear, no,” Gurdon said. “A little thing like that would be almost too trivial for the typical detective of the cheap story.”

      “All the same, it is very important,” Venner said. “He took the box in his right hand; he made as if to extend his left, then suddenly changed his mind, and put it in his pocket. But he was too late to disguise from me that he had—”

      “I know,” Gurdon shouted. “He had lost all the fingers on his left hand. What an amazing thing! We must get to the bottom of this business at all costs.”

      “That is precisely what we are going to do,” Venner said grimly. “I am glad you are so quick in taking up the point. When I noted the loss of those fingers, I was absolutely staggered for a moment. If he had been less agitated than he was, Fenwick would have guessed what I had seen. I need not tell you that when I last saw Fenwick his left hand was as sound as yours or mine. The inference of this is, that Fenwick has fallen under the ban of the same strange vengeance that overtook Van Fort and his wife. There is not the slightest doubt that he discovered the mine, and that he has not yet paid the penalty for his temerity.”

      “I presume the penalty is coming,” Gurdon said. “What a creepy sort of idea it is, that terrible vengeance reaching across a continent in such a sinister fashion. But don’t forget that we know something as to the way in which this thing is to be brought about. Don’t forget the cripple who sat at yonder table to-night.”

      “I am not likely to forget him,” Venner observed. “All the more because he evidently knows more about this matter than we do ourselves. When he came here to-night, he little dreamed that there was one man in the room, at least, who had a fairly good knowledge of the Four Finger Mystery. We shall have to look him out, and, if necessary, force him to speak. But it is a delicate matter, and as far as I can see, one not unattended with danger.”

      Gurdon smoked in thoughtful silence for some little time, turning the strange thing over in his mind. The more he dwelt upon it, the more wild and dramatic did it seem.

      “There is one thing in our favor,” he said, presently. “The mysterious cripple is evidently a deadly enemy of Fenwick’s. We shall doubtless find him ready to accept our offer, provided that we put it in the right way.”

      “I am not so sure of that,” Venner replied. “At any rate, we can make no move in that direction without thinking the whole thing out carefully and thoroughly. Our crippled friend is evidently a fanatic in his way, and he is not alone in his scheme. Do not forget that we have also the little man who played the part of the waiter to deal with. I am sorry that I did not notice him. A man who could carry off a thing like that with such splendid audacity is certainly a force to be reckoned with.”

      Gurdon rose from his seat with a yawn, and intimated that it was time to go to bed. It was long past twelve now and the hotel was gradually retiring to rest. The Grand Empire was not the sort of house to cater to the frivolous type of guest, and usually within an hour of the closing of the theatres the whole of the vast building was wrapped in silence.

      “I think I will go now,” Gurdon said. “Come and lunch with me to-morrow, and then you can tell me something about your own romance. What sort of a night is it, waiter?”

      “Very bad, sir,” the waiter replied. “It’s pouring in torrents. Shall I call you a cab, sir?”

      IV. IN THE LIFT

       Table of Contents

      Gurdon looked out from the shelter of the great portico to see the sheets of rain falling on the pavement. Silence reigned supreme but for the steady plash of the raindrops as they rattled on the pavements. To walk half a mile on such a night meant getting wet through; and Gurdon somewhat ruefully regarded his thin slippers and his light dust overcoat. Half a dozen times the night porter blew his whistle, but no sign of a cab could be seen.

      “We shan’t get one to-night,” Venner said. “They are all engaged. There is only one thing for it—you must take a room here, and stay till the morning. I’ve no doubt I can fit you up in the way of pyjamas and the things necessary.”

      Gurdon fell in readily enough with the suggestion. Indeed, there was nothing else for it. He took his number and key from the sleepy clerk in the office, and made his way upstairs to Venner’s bedroom.

      “I’ll just have one cigarette before I turn in,” he said. “It seems as if Fate had ordained that I am to keep in close touch with the leading characters of the mystery. By the way, we never took the trouble to find out who the handsome cripple was.”

      “That is very easily done in the morning,” Venner replied. “A striking personality like that is not soon lost sight of. Besides, he has doubtless been here before, for, if you will recollect, his attendants took him to the right table as if it had been ordered beforehand. And now, if you don’t mind, I’ll turn in—not that I expect to sleep much after an exciting evening like this. Good night, old fellow.”

      Gurdon


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