.
down the recollection of the whole thing; do nothing based upon your discovery. I cannot say more, but I am going to give you advice worth much gold. Promise me that you will forget this matter; that you will not mention it to a soul. Promise!”
Geoffrey promised, somewhat puzzled and dazed. Did Ralph know everything, or was he as ignorant as the rest?
“I will do what you like,” said Geoffrey. “But it is very hard. Can’t you tell me a little more? I am brave and strong.”
“Courage and strength have nothing to do with it. A nation could do nothing in this case. I am going to London to-day.”
“You are going to London alone?”
“Why not? I came here from the other side of the world alone. I have to see a doctor about my eyes. No, there is no hope that I can ever recover my sight again; but it is possible to allay the pain they give me.“Ralph departed. A dogcart deposited him at Biston Junction, and then the servant saw him safely into the London train. But presently Ralph alighted, and a porter guided him to a cab. A little later and the blind man was knocking at the door of a cottage in the poorer portion of the town.
A short man, with a seafaring air, opened the door.
“Is it you? Elphick?” Ralph asked.
The short man with the resolute face and keen, grey eyes exclaimed with pleasure:
“So you’ve got back at last, sir. Come in, sir. I knew you’d want me before long.”
Ralph Ravenspur felt his way to a chair. James Elphick stood watching him with something more than pleasure in his eyes.
“We have no time to spare,” Ralph exclaimed. “We must be in London to-night, James. I am going up to see Dr. Tchigorsky.”
“Dr. Tchigorsky!” Elphick exclaimed. “Didn’t I always say as how he’d get through? The man who’d get the best of him ain’t born yet. But it means danger, sir.”
“Danger you do not dream of,” Ralph said impressively. “But I cannot discuss this with you, James. You are coming with me to London. Get the disguise out, and let me see if your hand still retains its cunning.”
Apparently it had, for an hour later there walked from the cottage towards the station an elderly, stout man, with white hair and beard and whiskers. His eyes were guarded by tinted glasses; the complexion of the face was singularly clear and ruddy. All trace of those cruel criss-cross lines had gone. Wherever Elphick had learned his art, he had not failed to learn it thoroughly.
“It’s perfect; though I say it as shouldn’t,” he remarked. “It’s no use, sir; you can’t get on without me. If I’d gone with you to Lassa, all that horrible torture business would never have happened.”
Ralph Ravenspur smiled cautiously. The stiff dressing on his face made a smile difficult in any case.
“At all events, I shall want you now,” he said.
It was nearly seven when the express train reached Euston. Ralph stood on the great bustling, echoing platform as if waiting for something. An exclamation from Elphick attracted his attention.
“There’s the doctor as large as life!” he said.
“Tchigorsky!” Ralph cried. “Surely not in his natural guise. Oh, this is reckless folly! Does he court defeat at the outset of our enterprise?”
Tchigorsky bustled up. For some reason or other he chose to appear in his natural guise. Not till they were in the cab did Ravenspur venture to expostulate.
“Much learning has made you mad,” he said bitterly.
“Not a bit of it,” the Russian responded. “Unfortunately for me the priests of Lassa have discovered that I am deeply versed in their secrets. Not that they believe for a moment that Tchigorsky and the Russian who walked the valley of the Red Death are one and the same. They deem me to be the recipient of that unhappy man’s early discoveries. But your identity remains a secret. The cleverest eyes in the world could never penetrate your disguise.”
“It comforts me to hear that,” Ralph replied. “Everything depends upon my identity being concealed. Once it is discovered, every Ravenspur is doomed. But I cannot understand why you escape recognition at the hands of the foe.”
A bitter smile came over Tchigorsky’s face.
“Can you not?” he said. “If you had your eyes you would understand. Man, I have been actually in the company of those who flung me into the valley of the Red Death and they have not known me. After that I stood in the presence of my own mother, and she asked who I was.
“The marks on my face? Well, there are plenty of explorers who have been victims to the wire helmet and have never dreamt of entering Lassa. I am a broken, bowed, decrepit wreck, I who was once so proud of my inches. The horrors of that one day have changed me beyond recognition. But you know.”
Ralph shuddered from head to foot. A cold moisture stood on his forehead.
“Don’t,” he whispered. “Don’t speak of it. When the recollection comes over me I have to hold on to my senses, as a shipwrecked sailor clings to a plank. Never mind the past—the future has peril and danger enough. You know why I am here?”
“To save your house from the curse upon it. To bring the East and West together, and tell of the vilest conspiracy the world has ever seen. Do you know who the guilty creature is, whose hand is actually striking the blow?”
“I think so; in fact I am sure of it. But who would believe my accusation?”
“Who, indeed? But we shall be in a position to prove our case, now that the secrets of the prison-house lie before us. We have three to fear.”
“Yes, yes,” said, Ralph. “The two Bonzes—who have actually been seen near Ravenspur—and the Princess Zara. Could she recognise me?”
Ralph asked the question in almost passionate entreaty.
“I am certain she could not,” Tchigorsky replied. “Come, victory shall be ours yet. Here we are at my house at last. By the way, you have a name. You shall be my cousin, Nicholas Tchigorsky, a clever savant, who, by reason of a deplorable accident, has become both blind and dumb. Allons.”
VIII - A MASTER OF FENCE
Lady Mallowbloom’s reception rooms were more than usually crowded. And every other man or woman in the glittering salon was a celebrity. There was a strong sprinkling of the aristocracy to leaven the lump; here and there the flash of red cloth and gold could be seen.
In his quiet, masterly style Tchigorsky pushed his way up the stairs. Ralph Ravenspur followed, his hand upon the Russian’s arm. He could feel the swish of satin draperies go by him; he caught the perfume on the warm air.
“Why do you drag me here?” he grumbled. “I can see nothing; it only bewilders me. I should have been far happier in your study.”
“You mope too much,” Tchigorsky said gaily. “To mingle with one’s fellows is good at times. I know so many people who are here to-night.”
“And I know nobody; add to which circumstances compel me to be dumb. Place me in some secluded spot with my back to the wall, and then enjoy yourself for an hour. I dare say I shall manage to kill the time.”
There were many celebrities in the brilliantly-lighted room, and Tchigorsky indicated a few. A popular lady novelist passed on the arm of a poet on her way to the buffet.
“A wonderful woman,” the fair authoress was saying. “Eastern and full of mystery, you know. Did you notice the eyes of the Princess?”
“Who could fail to?” was the reply. “They say that she is quite five and forty,