Read The Bram Stoker Megapack Online
Authors: Wildside Press
Tags: #Fantasy, #Horror, #vampire, #mystery, #dracula
Very carefully I took out one of these fish and held him legs upward, he making frantic efforts to seize me with his claws. He seemed a greedy one, indeed, for he was trying to eat the diamond ring which he had got half within that mysterious mouth which is covered with a flap like that over the lock of a portmanteau. Hence also projected part of the watch chain. I found that the brute had actually swallowed the watch, and it was with some difficulty that I relieved from his keeping both it and the ring. I took care to place the valuable property in the other pocket where the crabs were not.
Then I took up my head—or, rather Old Hoggen’s—and started on my way, carrying the final relic under my arm.
The storm began to decrease, and died away as quickly as it had arisen, so that, before I had traversed half the long stretch of sand that lay before me, instead of storm there was marked calm, and for blinding rain an almost insupportable heat.
I struggled on over the sand, and at length saw an opening in the cliff—which, on coming close, I found to be caused by a small stream which had worn a deep cleft in the blue-black earthy rock, and, falling and tumbling from above, became lost in the beach.
There was a look about the sand here that seemed to me to me somewhat peculiar. Its surface was smooth and shining, with a sort of odd dimple here and there. It looked so flat and inviting after my scramble over the rock and shingle and plodding through the deep sand, that with joy I hurried toward it—and at once began to sink.
By the odd shiver that traversed it I knew that I was being engulfed in quicksand.
It was a terrible position.
I had already sunk over my knees and knew that unless aid came I was utterly lost. I would at that moment have welcomed even Cousin Jemima.
It is the misfortune of such people as her that they never do make an appearance at a favorable time—such as this.
But there was no help—on one side lay the sea with never a sail in sight, and the waves still angry from the recent storm tumbling in sullenly upon the shore—on the other side was a wilderness of dark cliff; and along the shore on either way an endless waste of sand.
I tried to shout, but the misery and terror of the situation so overcame me that my voice clung to my jaws, and I could make no sound. I still kept Old Hoggen’s head under my arm. In moments of such danger the mind is quick to grasp an offered chance, and it suddenly occurred to me that, if I could get a foothold even for a moment, I might still manage to extricate myself. I was as yet but on the edge of the quicksand, and but a little help would suffice. With the thought came also the means—Old Hoggen’s head.
No sooner thought than done.
I laid the head on the sand before me, and pressing on it with my hands, felt that I was relieving my feet of part of their weight. With an effort I lifted one leg and placed the foot on the head now embedded some inches in the treacherous sand. Then pressing all my weight on this foot I made a great effort, and tearing up the imbedded foot leaped to the firm sand, where I slipped and fell and for a few minutes panted with exhaustion.
I was saved, but Old Hoggen’s head was gone forever.
Then I went toward the cliff, cautiously feeling my way, testing every spot on which my foot must rest, before trusting my weight to it. I gained the cliff, and resting on its firm base passed behind the fatal quicksand and went on my course to the stable strand beyond.
On I plodded till at last I came near a few houses built in a green cleft, whence through the cliffs a tiny stream, on whose banks stood the pretty village of Chidiock, fell into the sea.
There was a coast guard station here, with a little rope-railed plot, where before the row of trim houses the flagstaff rose.
As I drew near a coast guard and a policeman rushed toward me from behind a shed and grasped me on either side, holding me tight with a vigor which I felt to be quite disproportionate to the necessity of the occasion.
With the instinct of conscious innocence I struggled with them.
“Let me go!” I cried. “Let me go—what do you mean? Let me go I say!”
“Come now—none of this,” said the policeman.
I still struggled.
“Better keep quiet,” said the coast guard! “It’s no use struggling.”
“I will not keep quiet,” I cried, struggling more frantically than ever.
The policeman looked at me right savagely and gave my neckcloth a twist which nearly strangled me. “Tell you what,” he said sternly, “if you struggle any more, I’ll whale you over the head with my baton.”
I did not struggle anymore.
“Now,” said he, “remember that I caution you that anything you say or do will be afterward used in evidence against you.”
I thought a policy of conciliation was now best; so with what heartiness I could assume I said:
“My good fellow, you really make a mistake. Why you seize me I do not know.”
“We know,” he interrupted, with a hard laugh, “and if you say you don’t know, why then you’re a liar!”
I felt choking with anger. To be held is bad enough, but when the additional insult of calling one a liar is added, rage may surely be excused. My impulse on hearing the insult was to break free and strike the man, but he knew my intention and held me tighter.
“Take care!” he said, holding up his baton.
I took care.
“I ask you formally,” I said with all my dignity, “on what authority do you treat me thus?”
“On this authority!” he answered, holding up his baton, and again laughing with his harsh, exasperating cachinnation. He playfully twirled his baton as if to impress upon me a sense of his proficiency in its use.
He then produced a pair of handcuffs, which were put on me. I struggled very hard, but the two men were too much for me, and I had to succumb.
He then began to search me. First he put his hand into the pocket of my shooting coat and pulled out the watch and chain. He looked at it with exultation.
“That is Old Hoggen’s watch,” I said.
“I know it is,” he answered, at the same time pulling out the notebook and writing down my words. Next he produced the diamond ring, and the purse.
“That also,” said I, “and that!”
Again he wrote down my words—this time in silence. Then he put in his hand again and drew it out, saying:
“Only wet paper!”
He next to put his hand into the other pocket, but drew it out again in an instant—not in silence this time.
“Curse the thing! What is it?”
I smiled as he lifted a crab out of the pocket with great carefulness. When he had got thus far, he continued:
“Now, young fellow, what have you got to say for yourself?”
For the last few minutes a very unpleasant thought had in my mind been growing to colossal proportions. It was evidence that I was being arrested for the murder of Old Hoggen, and here I was arrested when in possession of his property, but with no witnesses to prove my innocence, and with no trace of the lost man himself to substantiate my story. I began to be a little frightened as to the result.
“What I have to tell you is very strange,” said I. “I left the Charmouth early this morning to walk to Bridport to get some crabs for my mother-in-law.”
“Why, you have got crabs with you,” said the policeman.
“I got them on the shore beyond,” said I, pointing westward.
“Come! Stow that!” said the policeman. “That won’t wash here. There isn’t a crab to be found on the shore between Bridport and Lyme.”
“That’s true, anyhow. Every fool knows that!” added the coast guard.
I went on:
“I found the body of Old Hoggen floating in the water. I tried to carry it on here, but the storm came, and it was as much as I could do to escape. Besides, the body all feel in pieces, and at last—”
“A nice story that!” said the policeman. “But if it fell to bits, why didn’t you bring one on with you?”
“I tried some, but they fell to bits.”
“The head didn’t,” said he. “Why did you not bring it? Eh?”
“I did bring it,” said I, “but I got into the quicksand and it was lost.”
The coast guard struck in.
“There’s only one bit of quicksand on all this coast, they say, for I never seen it myself. Why, man alive, it doesn’t show once in twenty years.”
“And the crabs?” asked the policeman.
“They were in Old Hoggen’s body!”
“And what were you doing with them?”
“I was bringing them to my mother-in-law.”
“Oh, the filthy scoundrel” ejaculated the coast guard.
“Did you carry them through the quicksand?” inquired the policeman.
“I did,” said I, “and when I got out, I found that the big fellow had eaten the watch and was trying to swallow the ring.”
The policeman and the coast guard seized me roughly, the latter saying:
“Come, take him off. He’s the plumpest liar I ever seen.”
“Let us finish the search first,” said the policeman, as he renewed his investigations.
The thought that I was in a really suspicious position now began to make me most uncomfortable. “My poor wife! My poor wife!” I kept saying to myself.
The policeman, in his zeal, again put his hands in the pocket with the crabs, and drew it out with a yell. Then he took out the biggest crab, which by the way, as is sometimes the case, had one claw very much larger than the other. The left claw was the larger. He threw the crab on the shore and was about to stamp on it, when the coast guard put him back, saying:
“Avast, there, mate. Crabs isn’t so plenty here that we walk on them. None here between Bridport and Lyme.”
The policeman continued his search. He took the mass of wet papers and notes from the other pocket, and threw them on the ground, and went on diving into the recesses of the pockets. The coast guard was evidently struck with something, for he stooped and looked at the papers, turned them over, and fell down on his knees beside them with a loud cry. Then, in an excited whisper, he called out:
“Look here! Mate, look here! Its all money. It’s thousands of pounds.”
The constable also dropped beside the papers, and over the mass the two men gazed at each other with excited faces.
“Take care of it—take care!” said the policeman.
“You bet!” said the other shortly.
“What a fortune!”
The two men looked at each other, and then at me furtively, and somehow I felt that they have in common some vile instinct by which I was felt to be in the way. I remained, therefore, as passive as I could.
The two men eyed the papers. Said the coast guard:
“Where are the other things?”
“Here!” said the policeman, slapping his pocket.
“Better put them all together.”
“Not at all. They are quite safe with me.”
The two men looked at each other and seemed mutually to understand, for, without a word, the policeman took the watch and ring and purse from his pocket and laid them on the shore.
Both men eyed the lot greedily. Suddenly the policeman looked round and ran down the beach like a maniac, shouting, “Stop thief! Stop thief!” At the very edge of the water, he stopped and lifted the crab, which had been making its escape. He brought it back and laid on its back beside the other things. As he eyed the heap suspiciously, as if to see that nothing has been removed, he said, shaking his fist at the crab:
“You infernal brute,
you
may have been stealing something.” The accent with which he said the word “you” was evidently meant as a caution and suspicion of the coast guard. The latter took it as such and said angrily:
“Stow that!”
The two men then proceeded to search me further. They took from me everything which could by any torturing of greed have been construed into a valuable. They opened a seem of my coat and turned out the lining.
Then, drawing away, they whispered a little together, and, returning to me, tied my legs together, put a gag in my mouth, and carried me round the point of a rock where we were out of sight of any chance comer. Then they brought hither the valuables, and, sitting down, began to record the worth of the lot.
One by one they open the bank notes and laid them flat. They were of all dates and numbers, and I felt as I looked that, from this fact, if once lost, there could be no possibility of tracing them. They laid the gold in a heap with the watch and the ring, and put the papers by themselves.
There was an immense amount of money—in gold only some 70 pounds, but in notes some 37,300 pounds.
When the two men had figured it all out, they looked at me with a look that made my blood run cold—for it meant murder.
Again they looked at each other, and, with a whisper, withdrew to a little distance.
I turned partly on my side so that I could watch them. There was no difficulty in this, and the fact of its being so added to my fear, for I knew that their being without fear of my taking notes of their movements meant that their minds were made up.
A short time sufficed them, and they turned again toward me. As they came, however, the bell of the old church at Chidiock began to ring. It was still early morning and the bell was for matins.
The coast guard stopped—some memory stirred within him, and with it came a doubt. He paused a moment and spoke:
“Mate.”
The policeman realized the intention of mercy in the faltering tone, and answered as roughly and harshly as he could, turning quickly, almost threateningly, as he spoke.
“Well!”
“Mate, must we kill him? Wouldn’t it do if he kept quiet, and let us get off with the money? No one knows the thing—why need they ever know?”
“He won’t keep quiet,” said the other. “Better cut his throat and bury him here in the sand.”
The sailor looked at me, and, reading the inquiry in his eyes, I answered as well as I could with mine:
“I will be quiet!”
It was it plain as daylight that my life hung on the alternative, so I did not hesitate or falter.
I compounded a felony with a glance.
Notwithstanding my acquiescence, a violent discussion arose between the two men—the preserver of the peace being the more dangerous of the two.
The coast guard urged and argued that it were useless to commit a murder when the end they desired was insured. The policeman stuck persistently to his one point that were safer to cut my throat.