THE fact that the man whom he feared
had died ten years earlier did not in the
least lessen Stuart McGregor’s
obsession of horror, of a certain grim
expectancy, every time he recalled that final scene,
just before Farragut Hutchison disappeared in the
African jungle that stood, spectrally motionless as
if forged out of some blackish-green metal, in the
haggard moonlight.
As he reconstructed it, the whole scene
seemed unreal, almost oppressively, ludicrously
theatrical. The pall of sodden, stygian darkness all
around; the night sounds of soft-winged, obscene
things flapping lazily overhead or brushing against
the furry trees that held the woolly heat of the
tropical day like boiler pipes in a factory; the
slimy, swishy things that glided and crawled and
wiggled underfoot; the vibrant growl of a hunting
lioness that began in a deep basso and peaked to a
shrill, high-pitched, ridiculously inadequate treble;
a spotted hyena’s vicious, bluffing bark; the chirp
and whistle of innumerable monkeys; a warthog
breaking through the undergrowth with a clumsy,
clownish crash—and somewhere, very far away,
the staccato thumping of a signal drum, and more
faintly yet the answer from the next in line.
He had seen many such drums, made from
fire-hollowed palm trees and covered with tightly
stretched skin—often the skin of a human enemy.
Yes. He remembered it all. He remembered
the night jungle creeping in on their camp like a
sentient, malign being—and then that ghastly,
ironic moon squinting down, just as Farragut
Hutchison walked away between the six giant,
plumed, ochre-smeared Bakoto negroes, and
bringing into crass relief the tattoo mark on the
man’s back where the shirt had been torn to tatters
by camel thorns and wait-a-bit spikes and sabreshaped
palm leaves.
He recalled the occasion when Farragut
Hutchison had had himself tattooed; after a
crimson, drunken spree at Madam Céleste’s place
in Port Said, the other side of the Red Sea traders’
bazaar, to please a half-caste Swahili dancing girl
who looked like a golden madonna of evil, familiar
with all the seven sins. Doubtless the girl had gone
shares with the Levantine craftsman who had done
the work—an eagle, in bold red and blue,
surmounted by a lopsided crown, and surrounded
by a wavy design. The eagle was in profile, and its
single eye had a disconcerting trick of winking
sardonically whenever Farragut Hutchison moved
his back muscles or twitched his shoulder blades.
Always, in his memory, Stuart McGregor saw
that tattoo mark.
Always did he see the wicked, leering squint
in the eagle’s eye—and then he would scream,
wherever he happened to be, in a theatre, a
Broadway restaurant, or across some good friend’s
mahogany and beef.
Thinking back, he remembered that, for all
their bravado, for all their showing off to each
other, both he and Farragut Hutchinson had been
afraid since that day, up the hinterland, when,
drunk with fermented palm wine, they had insulted
the fetish of the Bakotos, while the men were away
hunting and none left to guard the village except
the women and children and a few feeble old men
whose curses and high-pitched maledictions were
picturesque, but hardly effectual enough to stop
him and his partner from doing a vulgar,
intoxicated dance in front of the idol, from
grinding burning cigar ends into its squat, repulsive
features, and from generally polluting the juju
hut—not to mention the thorough and profitable
looting of the place.
They had got away with the plunder, gold dust
and a handful of splendid canary diamonds, before the Bakoto warriors had returned. But fear had
followed them, stalked them, trailed them; a fear
different from any they had ever experienced
before. And be it mentioned that their path of life
had been crimson and twisted and fantastic, that
they had followed the little squinting swarthheaded,
hunchbacked djinni of adventure wherever
man’s primitive lawlessness rules above the law,
from Nome to Timbuktu, from Peru to the black
felt tents of Outer Mongolia, from the Australian
bush, to the absinth-sodden apache haunts of Paris.
Be it mentioned, furthermore, that thus, often, they
had stared death in the face and, not being fools,
had found the staring distasteful and shivery.
But what they had felt on that journey, back to
the security of the coast and the ragged Union Jack
flapping disconsolately above the British
governor’s official corrugated iron mansion, had
been something worse than mere physical fear; it
had been a nameless, brooding, sinister
apprehension which had crept through their souls,
a harshly discordant note that had pealed through
the hidden recesses of their beings.
Everything had seemed to mock them—the
crawling, sour-miasmic jungle; the slippery roots
and timber falls; the sun of the tropics, brown,
decayed, like the sun on the Day of Judgment; the
very flowers, spiky, odorous, waxen, unhealthy,
lascivious.
At night, when they had rested in some
clearing, they had even feared their own camp
fire—flaring up, twinkling, flickering, then coiling
into a ruby ball. It had seemed completely isolated
in the purple night.
Isolated!
And they had longed for human
companionship—white companionship.
White faces. White slang, White curses. White
odors. White obscenities.
Why—they would have welcomed a decent,
square, honest white murder; a knife flashing in
some yellow-haired Norse sailor’s brawny fist; a
belaying pin in the hand of some bullying
Liverpool tramp-ship skipper; some Nome
gambler’s six-gun splattering leaden death; some
apache of the Rue de Venise garroting a passerby.
But here, in the African jungle—and how
Stuart McGregor remembered it—the fear of death
had seemed pregnant with unmentionable horror.
There had been no sounds except the buzzing of
the tsetse flies and a faint rubbing of drums,
whispering through the desert and jungle like the
voices of disembodied souls, astray on the outer rim of creation.
And, overhead, the stars. Always, at night,
three stars, glittering, leering; and Stuart
McGregor, who had gone through college and had
once written his college measure of limping,
anæmic verse, had pointed at them.
“The three stars of Africa!” he had said. “The
star of violence! The star of lust! And the little
stinking star of greed!”
And he had broken into staccato laughter
which had struck Farragut Hutchinson as
singularly out of place and had caused him to blurt
forth with a wicked curse:
“Shut your trap, you——”
For already they had begun to quarrel, those
two pals of a dozen tight, riotous adventures.
Already, imperceptibly, gradually, like the shadow
of a leaf through summer dusk, a mutual hatred
had grown up between them.
But they had controlled themselves. The
diamonds were good, could be sold at a big figure;
and, even split in two, would mean a comfortable
stake.
Then, quite suddenly, had come the end—the
end for one of them.
And the twisting, gliding skill of Stuart
McGregor’s fingers had made sure that Farragut
Hutchison should be that one.
Years after, when Africa as a whole had faded
to a memory of coiling, unclean shadows, Stuart
McGregor used to say, with that rather plaintive,
monotonous drawl of his, that the end of this
phantasmal African adventure had been different
from what he had expected it to be.
In a way, he had found it disappointing.
Not that it had lacked in purely dramatic
thrills and blood-curdling trimmings. That wasn’t
it. On the contrary, it had had a plethora of thrills.
But, rather, he must have been keyed up to too
high a pitch; must have expected too much, feared
too much during that journey from the Bakoto
village back through the hinterland.
Thus when, one night, the Bakoto warriors
had come from nowhere, out of the jungle,
hundreds of them, silent, as if the wilderness had
spewed them forth, it had seemed quite prosy.
Prosy, too, had been the expectation of death.
It had even seemed a welcome relief from the
straining fatigues of the jungle pull, the recurrent
fits of fever, the flying and crawling pests, the
gnawing moroseness which is so typically African.
“An explosion of life and hatred,” Stuart
McGregor used to say, “that’s what I had expected,don’t you see? Quick and merciless. And it wasn’t.
For the end came—slow and inevitable. Solid.
Greek in a way. And so courtly! So polite! That
was the worst of it!”
For the leader of the Bakotos, a tall, broad,
frizzy, odorous warrior, with a face like a black
Nero with a dash of Manchu emperor, had bowed
before them with a great clanking of barbarous
ornaments. There had been no marring taint of
hatred in his voice as he told them that they must
pay for their insults to the fetish, He had not even
mentioned the theft of the gold dust and diamonds.
“My heart is heavy at the thought, white
chiefs,” he said. “But—you must pay!”
Stuart McGregor had stammered ineffectual,
foolish apologies:
“We—we were drunk. We didn’t know
what—oh—what we——”
“What you were doing!” the Bakoto had
finished the sentence for him, with a little
melancholy sigh. “And there is forgiveness in my
heart——”
“You—you mean to say——” Farragut
Hutchison had jumped up, with extended hand,
blurting out hectic thanks.
“Forgiveness in my heart, not the juju’s,”
gently continued the negro. “For the juju never
forgives. On the other hand, the juju is fair. He
wants his just measure of blood. Not an ounce
more. Therefore,” the Bakoto had gone on, and his
face had been as stony and as passionless as that of
the Buddha who meditates in the shade of the
cobra’s hood, “the choice will be yours.”
“Choice?” Farragut Hutchison had looked up,
a gleam of hope in his eyes.
“Yes. Choice which one of you will die.” The
Bakoto had smiled, with the same suave
courtliness which had, somehow, increased the
utter horror of the scene. “Die—oh—a slow death,
befitting the insult to the juju. befitting the juju’s
great holiness!”
Suddenly, Stuart McGregor had understood
that there would be no arguing, no bargaining
whatsoever; and, quickly, had come his hysterical
question :
“Who? I—or——”
He had slurred and stopped, somehow
ashamed, and the Bakoto had finished the
interrupted question with gentle, gliding, inhuman
laughter: “Your friend? White chief, that is for you
two to decide: I only know that the juju has spoken
to the priest, and that he is satisfied with the life of
one of you two; the life—and the death. A slow death.”
He had paused; then had continued gently, so
very, very gently: “Yes. A slow death, depending
entirely upon the vitality of the one of you two
who will be sacrificed to the juju. There will be
little knives. There will be the flying insects which
follow the smell of blood and festering flesh. Too,
there will be many, crimson-headed ants, many,
ants—and a thin river of honey to show them the
trail.”
He had yawned. Then he had gone on:
“Consider. The juju is just. He only wants the
sacrifice of one of you, and you yourselves must
decide which one shall go, and which one shall
stay. And—remember the little, little knives. Be
pleased to remember the many ants which follow
the honey trail. I shall return shortly and hear your
choice.”
He had bowed and, with his silent warriors,
had stepped back into the jungle that had closed
behind them like a curtain.
Even in that moment of stark, enormous
horror, horror too great to be grasped, horror that
swept over and beyond the barriers of fear—even
in that moment Stuart McGregor had realized that,
by leaving the choice to them, the Bakoto had
committed a refined cruelty worthy of a more
civilized race, and had added a psychic torture
fully as dreadful as the physical torture of the little
knives.
Too, in that moment of ghastly, lecherous
expectancy, he had known that it was Farragut
Hutchison who would be sacrificed to the juju—
Farragut Hutchison who sat there, staring into the
camp fire, making queer little, funny noises in his
throat.
Suddenly, Stuart McGregor had laughed—he
remembered that laugh to his dying day—and had
thrown a greasy pack of playing cards into the
circle of meager, indifferent light.
“Let the cards decide, old boy,” he had
shouted. “One hand of poker—and no drawing to
your hand. Showdown! That’s square, isn’t it?”
“Sure!” the other had replied, still staring
straight ahead of him. “Go ahead and deal——”
His voice had drifted into a mumble while
Stuart McGregor had picked up the deck, had
shuffled, slowly, mechanically.
As he shuffled, it had seemed to him as if his
brain was frantically telegraphing to his fingers, as
if all those delicate little nerves that ran from the
back of his skull down to his finger tips were
throbbing a clicking little chorus: “Do—it—Mac! Do—it—Mac! Do it—Mac!”
with a maddening, cyncopated rhythm.
And he had kept on shuffling, had kept on
watching the motions of his fingers—and had seen
that his thumb and second finger had shuffled the
ace of hearts to the bottom of the deck.
Had he done it on purpose? He did not know
then. He never found out—though, in his memory,
he lived through the scene a thousand times.
But there were the little knives. There were
the ants. There was the honey trail. There was his
own, hard decision to live. And, years earlier, he
had been a professional faro dealer at Silver City.
Another ace had joined the first at the bottom
of the deck. The third. The fourth.
And then Farragut Hutchison’s violent: “Deal,
man, deal! You’re driving me crazy. Get it over
with.”
The sweat had been pouring from Stuart
McGregor’s face. His blood had throbbed in his
veins. Something like a sledge hammer had
drummed at the base of his skull.
“Cut, won’t you?” he had said, his voice
coming as if from very far away.
The other had waved a trembling hand. “No,
no!” Deal ‘em as they lie. You won’t cheat me.”
Stuart McGregor had cleared a little space on
the ground with the point of his shoe.
He remembered the motion. He remembered
how the dead leaves had stirred with a dry, rasping,
tragic sound, how something slimy and
phosphorous-green had squirmed through the
tufted jungle grass, how a little furry scorpion had
scurried away with a clicking tchk-tchk-tchk.
He had dealt.
Mechanically, even as he was watching, them,
his fingers had given himself five cards from the
bottom of the deck. Four aces–and the queen of
diamonds. And, the next second, in answer to
Farragut Hutchison’s choked: “Show-down! I have
two pair—kings—and jacks!” his own well
simulated shriek of joy and triumph:
“I win! I’ve four aces! Every ace in the pack!”
And then Farragut Hutchison’s weak,
ridiculous exclamation—ridiculous considering the
dreadful fate that waited him:
“Geewhittaker! You’re some lucky guy,
aren’t you, Mac?”
At the same moment, the Bakoto chief had
stepped out of the jungle, followed by half a dozen
warriors.
Then the final scene—that ghastly, ironic
moon squinting down, just as Farragut Hutchison had walked away between the giant, plumed,
ochre-smeared Bakoto negroes, and bringing into
stark relief the tattoo mark on his back where the
shirt had been torn to tatters—and the leering, evil
wink in the eagle’s eye as Farragut Hutchison
twitched his shoulder blades with absurd, nervous
resignation.
Stuart McGregor remembered it every day of
his life.
He spoke of it to many. But only to Father
Aloysius O’Donnell, the priest who officiated, In
the little Gothic church around the corner, on Ninth
Avenue, did he tell the whole truth—did he
confess that he had cheated.
“Of course I cheated!” he said. “Of course!”
And, with a sort of mocking bravado: “What
would you have done, padre?”
The priest, who was old and wise and gentle,
thus not at all sure of himself, shook his head.
“I don’t know,” he replied. “I don’t know.”
“Well—I do know. You would have done
what I did. Yon wouldn’t have been able to help
yourself.” Then, in a low voice: “And you would
have paid! As I pay—every day, every minute,
every second of my life.”
“Regret, repentance,” murmured the priest,
but the other cut him short.
“Repentance—nothing.” I regret nothing! I
repent nothing! I’d do the same to-morrow, It isn’t
that—oh—that—what d’ye call it—sting of
conscience, that’s driving me crazy. It’s fear!”
“Fear of what?” asked Father O’Donnell.
“Fear of Farragut Hutchison—who is dead!”
Ten years ago!
And he knew that Farragut Hutchison had
died. For not long afterward a British trader had
come upon certain gruesome but unmistakable
remains and had brought the tale to the coast. Yet
was there fear in Stuart McGregor’s soul, fear
worse than the fear of the little knives. Fear of
Farragut Hutchison who was dead?
No. He did not believe that the man was dead.
He did not believe it, could not believe it.
“And even suppose he’s dead,” he used. to
say to the priest, “he’ll get me. He’ll get me as sure
as you’re born. I saw it in the eye of that eagle—
the squinting eye of that infernal, tattooed eagle!”
Then he would turn a grayish yellow, his
whole body would tremble with a terrible palsy
and, in a sort of whine, which was both ridiculous
and pathetic, given his size and bulk, given the
crimson, twisted adventures through which he had passed, he would exclaim:
“He’ll get me. He’ll get me. He’ll get me even
from beyond the grave.”
And then Father O’Donnell would cross
himself rapidly, just a little guiltily.
It is said that there is a morbid curiosity which
forces the murderer to view the place of his crime.
Some psychic reason of the same kind may
have caused Stuart McGregor to decorate the walls
and corners of his sitting room with the memories
of that Africa which he feared and hated, and
which, daily, he was trying to forget–with a
shimmering, cruel mass of jungle curios, sjamboks
and. assegais, signal drums and daggers,
knobkerries and rhino shields and what not.
Steadily, he added to his collection, buying in
auction rooms, in little shops on the water front,
from sailors and ship pursers and collectors who
had duplicates for sale.
He became a well-known figure in the row of
antique stores in back of Madison Square Garden,
and was so liberal when it came to payment that
Morris Newman, who specialized in African
curios, would send the pick of all the new stuff he
bought to his house.
It was on a day in August—one of those
tropical New York days when the very birds gasp
for air, when orange-flaming sun rays drop from
the brazen sky like crackling spears and the
melting asphalt picks them up again and tosses
them high—that Stuart McGregor, returning from
a short walk, found a large, round package in his
sitting room.
“Mr. Newman sent it,” his servant explained.
“He said it’s a rare curio, and he’s sure you’ll like it.”
“All right.”
The servant bowed, left, and closed the door,
while Stuart McGregor cut the twine, unwrapped
the paper, looked.
And then, suddenly, be screamed with fear;
and just as suddenly, the scream of fear turned into
a scream of maniacal joy.
For the thing which Newman had sent him
was an African signal drum, covered with tightly
stretched skin—human skin—white skin! And
square in the center there was a tattoo mark—an
eagle in red and blue, surmounted by a lopsided
crown, and surrounded by a wavy design.
Here was the final proof that Farragut
Hutchison was dead, that, forever, he was rid of his
fear. In a paroxysm of joy, he picked lip the drum
and clutched it to his heart.
And then he gave a cry of pain. His lips
quivered, frothed. His hands dropped the drum and
fanned the air, and he looked at the thing that had
fastened itself to his right wrist.
It seemed like a short length of rope, grayish
in color, spotted with dull red. Even as Stuart
McGregor dropped to the floor, dying, he knew
what had happened.
A little, venomous snake, an African fer-delance,
that had been curled up in the inside of the
drum, been numbed by the cold, and had been
revived by the splintering heat of New York.
Yes—even as he died he knew what had
happened. Even as he died, he saw that malign,
obscene squint in the eagle’s eye. Even as he died,
he knew that Farragut Hutchison had killed him—
from beyond the grave!