Brixton had evidently been waiting impatiently for our arrival.
"Mr. Kennedy?" he inquired, adding quickly without waiting for an
answer: "I am glad to see you. I suppose you have noticed the
precautions we are taking against intruders? Yet it seems to be
all of no avail. I can not be alone even here. If a telephone
message comes to me over my private wire, if I talk with my own
office in the city, it seems that it is known. I don't know what
to make of it. It is terrible. I don't know what to expect next."
Brixton had been standing beside a huge mahogany desk as we
entered. I had seen him before at a distance as a somewhat pompous
speaker at banquets and the cynosure of the financial district.
But there was something different about his looks now. He seemed
to have aged, to have grown yellower. Even the whites of his eyes
were yellow.
I thought at first that perhaps it might be the effect of the
light in the centre of the room, a huge affair set in the ceiling
in a sort of inverted hemisphere of glass, concealing and
softening the rays of a powerful incandescent bulb which it
enclosed. It was not the light that gave him the altered
appearance, as I concluded from catching a casual confirmatory
glance of perplexity from Kennedy himself.
"My personal physician says I am suffering from jaundice,"
explained Brixton. Rather than seeming to be offended at our
notice of his condition he seemed to take it as a good evidence of
Kennedy's keenness that he had at once hit on one of the things
that were weighing on Brixton's own mind. "I feel pretty badly,
too. Curse it," he added bitterly, "coming at a time when it is
absolutely necessary that I should have all my strength to carry
through a negotiation that is only a beginning, important not so
much for myself as for the whole world. It is one of the first
times New York bankers have had a chance to engage in big dealings
in that part of the world. I suppose Yvonne has shown you one of
the letters I am receiving?"
He rustled a sheaf of them which he drew from a drawer of his
desk, and continued, not waiting for Kennedy even to nod:
"Here are a dozen or more of them. I get one or two every day,
either here or at my town house or at the office."
"One moment more," Brixton interrupted, still holding them. "I
shall come back to the letters. That is not the worst. I've had
threatening letters before. Have you noticed this room?"
"Let me tell you more about it," he went on. "It was designed
especially to be, among other things, absolutely soundproof."
We gazed curiously about the strong room. It was beautifully
decorated and furnished. On the walls was a sort of heavy, velvety
green wall-paper. Exquisite hangings were draped about, and on the
floor were thick rugs. In all I noticed that the prevailing tint
was green.
"I had experiments carried out," he explained languidly, "with the
object of discovering methods and means for rendering walls and
ceilings capable of effective resistance to sound transmission.
One of the methods devised involved the use under the ceiling or
parallel to the wall, as the case might be, of a network of wire
stretched tightly by means of pulleys in the adjacent walls and
not touching at any point the surface to be protected against
sound. Upon the wire network is plastered a composition formed of
strong glue, plaster of Paris, and granulated cork, so as to make
a flat slab, between which and the wall or ceiling is a cushion of
confined air. The method is good in two respects: the absence of
contact between the protective and protected surfaces and the
colloid nature of the composition used. I have gone into the thing
at length because it will make all the more remarkable what I am
about to tell you."
Kennedy had been listening attentively. As Brixton proceeded I had
noticed Kennedy's nostrils dilating almost as if he were a hound
and had scented his quarry. I sniffed, too. Yes, there was a faint
odour, almost as if of garlic in the room. It was unmistakable.
Craig was looking about curiously, as if to discover a window by
which the odour might have entered. Brixton, with his eyes
following keenly every move, noticed him.
"More than that" he added quickly, "I have had the most perfect
system of modern ventilation installed in this room, absolutely
independent from that in the house."
"A moment ago, Mr. Kennedy, I saw you and Mr. Jameson glancing up
at the ceiling. Sound-proof as this room is, or as I believe it to
be, I--I hear voices, voices from--not through, you understand,
but from--that very ceiling. I do not hear them now. It is only at
certain times when I am alone. They repeat the words in some of
these letters--'You must not take up those bonds. You must not
endanger the peace of the world. You will never live to get the
interest.' Over and over I have heard such sentences spoken in
this very room. I have rushed out and up the corridor. There has
been no one there. I have locked the steel door. Still I have
heard the voices. And it is absolutely impossible that a human
being could get close enough to say them without my knowing and
finding out where he is."
Kennedy betrayed by not so much as the motion of a muscle even a
shade of a doubt of Brixton's incredible story. Whether because he
believed it or because he was diplomatic, Craig took the thing at
its face value. He moved a blotter so that he could stand on the
top of Brixton's desk in the centre of the room. Then he
unfastened and took down the glass hemisphere over the light.
"It is an Osram lamp of about a hundred candlepower, I should
judge," he observed.
Apparently he had satisfied himself that there was nothing
concealed in the light itself. Laboriously, with such assistance
as the memory of Mr. Brixton could give, he began tracing out the
course of both the electric light and telephone wires that led
down into the den.
Next came a close examination of the ceiling and side walls, the
floor, the hangings, the pictures, the rugs, everything. Kennedy
was tapping here and there all over the wall, as if to discover
whether there was any such hollow sound as a cavity might make.
There was none.
A low exclamation from him attracted my attention, though it
escaped Brixton. His tapping had raised the dust from the velvety
wall-paper wherever he had tried it. Hastily, from a corner where
it would not be noticed, he pulled off a piece of the paper and
stuffed it into his pocket. Then followed a hasty examination of
the intake of the ventilating apparatus.
Apparently satisfied with his examination of things in the den,
Craig now prepared to trace out the course of the telephone and
light wires in the house. Brixton excused himself, asking us to
join him in the library up-stairs after Craig had completed his
investigation.
Nothing was discovered by tracing the lines back, as best we
could, from the den. Kennedy therefore began at the other end, and
having found the points in the huge cellar of the house where the
main trunk and feed wires entered, he began a systematic search in
that direction.
A separate line led, apparently, to the den, and where this line
feeding the Osram lamp passed near a dark storeroom in a corner
Craig examined more closely than ever. Seemingly his search was
rewarded, for he dived into the dark storeroom and commenced
lighting matches furiously to discover what was there.
"Look, Walter," he exclaimed, holding a match so that I could see
what he had unearthed. There, in a corner concealed by an old
chest of drawers, stood a battery of five storage-cells connected
with an instrument that looked very much like a telephone
transmitter, a rheostat, and a small transformer coil.
"I suppose this is a direct-current lighting circuit," he
remarked, thoughtfully regarding his find. "I think I know what
this is, all right. Any amateur could do it, with a little
knowledge of electricity and a source of direct current. The thing
is easily constructed, the materials are common, and a wonderfully
complicated result can be obtained. What's this?"
He had continued to poke about in the darkness as he was speaking.
In another corner he had discovered two ordinary telephone
receivers.
"Connected up with something, too, by George!" he ejaculated.
Evidently some one had tapped the regular telephone wires running
into the house, had run extensions into the little storeroom, and
was prepared to overhear everything that was said either to or by
those in the house.
Further examination disclosed that there were two separate
telephone systems running into Brixton's house. One, with its many
extensions, was used by the household and by the housekeeper; the
other was the private wire which led, ultimately, down into
Brixton's den. No sooner had he discovered it than Kennedy became
intensely interested. For the moment he seemed entirely to forget
the electric-light wires and became absorbed in tracing out the
course of the telephone trunk-line and its extensions. Continued
search rewarded him with the discovery that both the household
line and the private line were connected by hastily improvised
extensions with the two receivers he had discovered in the out-of-
the-way corner of a little dark storeroom.
"Don't disturb a thing," remarked Kennedy, cautiously picking up
even the burnt matches he had dropped in his hasty search. "We
must devise some means of catching the eavesdropper red handed. It
has all the marks of being an inside job."
We had completed our investigation of the basement without
attracting any attention, and Craig was careful to make it seem
that in entering the library we came from the den, not from the
cellar. As we waited in the big leather chairs Kennedy was
sketching roughly on a sheet of paper the plan of the house,
drawing in the location of the various wires.
The door opened. We had expected John Brixton. Instead, a tall,
spare foreigner with a close-cropped moustache entered. I knew at
once that it must be Count Wachtmann, although I had never seen
him.
"Ah, I beg your pardon," he exclaimed in English which betrayed
that he had been under good teachers in London. "I thought Miss
Brixton was here."
"Ah! Gentlemen of the press?" He elevated his eyebrows the
fraction of an inch. It was so politely contemptuous that I could
almost have throttled him.
"We are waiting to see Mr. Brixton," explained Kennedy.
"What is the latest from the Near East?" Wachtmann asked, with the
air of a man expecting to hear what he could have told you
yesterday if he had chosen.
There was a movement of the portieres, and a woman entered. She
stopped a moment. I knew it was Miss Brixton. She had recognised
Kennedy, but her part was evidently to treat him as a total
stranger.
"Who are these men, Conrad?" she asked, turning to Wachtmann.
"Gentlemen of the press, I believe, to see your father, Yvonne,"
replied the count.
It was evident that it had not been mere newspaper talk about this
latest rumored international engagement.
"How did you enjoy it?" he asked, noticing the title of a history
which she had come to replace in the library.
"Very well--all but the assassinations and the intrigues," she
replied with a little shudder.
He shot a quick, searching look at her face. "They are a violent
people--some of them," he commented quickly.
"You are going into town to-morrow?" I heard him ask Miss Brixton,
as they walked slowly down the wide hall to the conservatory a few
moments later.
"What do you think of him?" I whispered to Kennedy.
I suppose my native distrust of his kind showed through, for Craig
merely shrugged his shoulders. Before he could reply Mr. Brixton
joined us.
"There's another one--just came," he ejaculated, throwing a letter
down on the library table. It was only a few lines this time:
"The bonds will not be subject to a tax by the government, they
say. No--because if there is a war there won't be any government
to tax them!"
The note did not appear to interest Kennedy as much as what he had
discovered. "One thing is self-evident, Mr. Brixton," he remarked.
"Some one inside this house is spying, is in constant
communication with a person or persons outside. All the watchmen
and Great Danes on the estate are of no avail against the subtle,
underground connection that I believe exists. It is still early in
the afternoon. I shall make a hasty trip to New York and return
after dinner. I should like to watch with you in the den this
evening."
"Very well," agreed Brixton. "I shall arrange to have you met at
the station and brought here as secretly as I can."
He sighed, as if admitting that he was no longer master of even
his own house.
Kennedy was silent during most of our return trip to New York. As
for myself, I was deeply mired in an attempt to fathom Wachtmann.
He baffled me. However, I felt that if there was indeed some
subtle, underground connection between some one inside and someone
outside Brixton's house, Craig would prepare an equally subtle
method of meeting it on his own account. Very little was said by
either of us on the journey up to the laboratory, or on the return
to Woodrock. I realised that there was very little excuse for a
commuter not to be well informed. I, at least, had plenty of time
to exhaust the newspapers I had bought.
Whether or not we returned without being observed, I did not know,
but at least we did find that the basement and dark storeroom were
deserted, as we cautiously made our way again it to the corner
where Craig had made his enigmatical discoveries of the afternoon.
While I held a pocket flashlight Craig was busy concealing another
instrument of his own in the little storeroom. It seemed to be a
little black disk about as big as a watch, with a number of
perforated holes in one face. Carelessly he tossed it into the top
drawer of the chest under some old rubbish, shut the drawer tight
and ran a flexible wire out of the back of the chest. It was a
simple matter to lay the wire through some bins next the storeroom
and then around to the passageway down to the subterranean den of
Brixton. There Craig deposited a little black box about the size
of an ordinary kodak.
For an hour or so we sat with Brixton. Neither of us said
anything, and Brixton was uncommunicatively engaged in reading a
railroad report. Suddenly a sort of muttering, singing noise
seemed to fill the room.
"There it is!" cried Brixton, clapping the book shut and looking
eagerly at Kennedy.
Gradually the sound increased in pitch. It seemed to come from the
ceiling, not from any particular part of the room, but merely from
somewhere overhead. There was no hallucination about it. We all
heard. As the vibrations increased it was evident that they were
shaping themselves into words.
Kennedy had grasped the black box the moment the sound began and
was holding two black rubber disks to his ears.
At last the sound from overhead became articulate It was weird,
uncanny. Suddenly a voice said distinctly: "Let American dollars
beware. They will not protect American daughters."
Craig had dropped the two ear-pieces and was gazing intently at
the Osram lamp in the ceiling. Was he, too, crazy?
"Here, Mr. Brixton, take these two receivers of the detectaphone,"
said Kennedy. "Tell me whether you can recognise the voice."
"Why, it's familiar," he remarked slowly. "I can't place it, but
I've heard it before. Where is it? What is this thing, anyhow?"
"It is someone hidden in the storeroom in the basement," answered
Craig. "He is talking into a very sensitive telephone transmitter
and--"
"But the voice--here?" interrupted Brixton impatiently.
Kennedy pointed to the incandescent lamp in the ceiling. "The
incandescent lamp," he said, "is not always the mute electrical
apparatus it is supposed to be. Under the right conditions it can
be made to speak exactly as the famous 'speaking-arc,' as it was
called by Professor Duddell, who investigated it. Both the arc-
light and the metal-filament lamp can be made to act as telephone
receivers."
It seemed unbelievable, but Kennedy was positive. "In the case of
the speaking-arc or 'arcophone,' as it might be called," he
continued, "the fact that the electric arc is sensitive to such
small variations in the current over a wide range of frequency has
suggested that a direct-current arc might be used as a telephone
receiver. All that is necessary is to superimpose a microphone
current on the main arc current, and the arc reproduces sounds and
speech distinctly, loud enough to be heard several feet. Indeed,
the arc could be used as a transmitter, too, if a sensitive
receiver replaced the transmitter at the other end. The things
needed are an arc-lamp, an impedance coil, or small transformer-
coil, a rheostat, and a source of energy. The alternating current
is not adapted to reproduce speech, but the ordinary direct
current is. Of course, the theory isn't half as simple as the
apparatus I have described."
He had unscrewed the Osram lamp. The talking ceased immediately.
"Two investigators named Ort and Ridger have used a lamp like this
as a receiver," he continued. "They found that words spoken were
reproduced in the lamp. The telephonic current variations
superposed on the current passing through the lamp produce
corresponding variations of heat in the filament, which are
radiated to the glass of the bulb, causing it to expand and
contract proportionately, and thus transmitting vibrations to the
exterior air. Of course, in sixteen-and thirty-two-candle-power
lamps the glass is too thick, and the heat variations are too
feeble."
Who was it whose voice Brixton had recognised as familiar over
Kennedy's hastily installed detectaphone? Certainly he must have
been a scientist of no mean attainment. That did not surprise me,
for I realised that from that part of Europe where this mystical
Red Brotherhood operated some of the most famous scientists of the
world had sprung.
A hasty excursion into the basement netted us nothing. The place
was deserted.
We could only wait. With parting instructions to Brixton in the
use of the detectaphone we said good night, were met by a watchman
and escorted as far as the lodge safely.
Only one remark did Kennedy make as we settled ourselves for the
long ride in the accommodation train to the city. "That warning
means that we have two people to protect--both Brixton and his
daughter."
Speculate as I might, I could find no answer to the mystery, nor
to the question, which was also unsolved, as to the queer malady
of Brixton himself, which his physician diagnosed as jaundice.