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able to tap them? If so, it might be embarrassing, and perhaps it would have been more tactful

of Lanny to offer to withdraw. But Zaharoff had placed a chair, possibly with the idea that the

younger man's help might be needed for the guiding of the experiment.

Suddenly came the massive voice of the Iroquois chieftain, speaking English, as always. "Hello,

Lanny. So you are trying to bowl me out!" It certainly wasn't an Iroquois phrase, nor did it seem

exactly Polish.

Said Lanny, very solemnly: "Tecumseh, I have brought a gentleman who is deeply sincere in

his attitude to you."

"But he does not believe in me!"

"He is fully prepared to believe in you, if you will give him cause; and he will be glad to

believe."

"He is afraid to believe!" declared the voice, with great emphasis. There was a pause; and

then: "You are not a Frenchman."

"I have tried to be," said Zaharoff. Lanny had told him to answer every question promptly

and truly, but to say no more than necessary.

"But you were not born in France. I see dark people about you, and they speak a strange

language which I do not understand. It will not be easy for me to do anything for you. Many

spirits come; you have known many people, and they do not love you; it is easy to see it in their

faces. I do not know what is the matter; many of them talk at once and I cannot get the

words."

V

From where Lanny sat he could watch the face of Madame, and saw that it was disturbed, as

always when Tecumseh was making a special effort to hear or to understand. By turning his eyes

the observer could watch the face of the old munitions king, which showed strained attention.

On the arm of Lanny's chair was a notebook, in which he was setting down as much as he could of

what was spoken.

Suddenly the control exclaimed: "There is a man here who is trying to talk; to you, not to me.

He is a very thin old man with a white beard. He says, in very bad English, he was not always

like that, he had a black beard when he knew you. His name is like Hyphen; also he has another

name, Tidy; no, it is one name, very long; is it Hyphen-tidies? A Greek name, he says,

Hiphentides. Do you know that name?"

"No," said Zaharoff.

"He says you lie. Why do you come here if you mean to lie?"

"I do not recall him."

"He says you robbed him. What is it he is talking about? He keeps saying gall; you have gall;

many sackfuls of gall. Is it a joke he is making?"

"It must be." Zaharoff spoke with quiet decisiveness. Of all the persons Lanny knew, he was

the most completely self-possessed.

"He says it is no joke. Gall is something that is sold. A hundred and sixty-nine sacks of gall.

Also gum, many cases of gum. You were an agent." Tecumseh began to speak as if he were the

spirit, something which he did only when the communications came clearly. "You took my

goods and pledged them for yourself. Do you deny it?"

"Of course I do."

"You did not deny it in the London court. You pleaded guilty. You were in prison—what is it?—

the 'Old' something, Old Basin? It was more than fifty years ago, and I do not remember."

"Old Bailey?" ventured Lanny.

"That is it—Old Bailey. I was in Constantinople, and I trusted you. You said you did not know

it was wrong; but they were my goods and you got the money—"

The voice died away; it had become querulous, as of an old man complaining of something long

forgotten. If it wasn't real it was certainly well invented.

VI

Lanny stole a glance at the living old man, and it seemed to him there was a faint dew of

perspiration on his forehead. From what Robbie had told him he was prepared to believe that

the Knight Commander of the Bath and Grand Officer of the Legion of Honor had many

recollections which he would not wish to have dragged into the light of day.

Said Tecumseh, after a pause: "I keep hearing the name Mugla. What is Mugla?"

"It is the village where I was born."

"Is that in Greece?"

"It is in Turkey."

"But you are not a Turk."

"My parents were Greeks."

"Somebody keeps calling you Zack. Then I hear Ryas. Is your name Ryas?"

"Zacharias is one of my names."

"There is a man here who says he is your uncle. Anthony; no, not that. I don't know these

Greek names."

"I had an Uncle Antoniades."

"He says: 'Do you wish to talk to me?'"

"I do not especially wish it."

"He says: 'Ha, ha!' He does not like you either. You were in busi ness with him, too. It was not

so good. You made up wonderful stories about it. Do you write stories, or something like that?"

"I am not a writer."

"But you tell stories. All the spirits laugh when Uncle Antoniades says that. You have become

rich and important and you tell stories about the old days. They tell stories about you. Do you

wish to hear them?"

"That is not what I came for."

"There is a big strong man with a white beard; it looks like your own, only more of it. He

gives the name Max. He speaks good English—no, he says it is not good, it is Yankee. Do you

know the Yankee Max?"'

"I don't recognize him."

"He says he is Maxim. You were in business with him, too."

"I knew a Maxim."

"You bought him out. He made millions, but you made tens of millions. There was no stopping

you. Maxim says he did not believe in the future life, but he warns you, it is a mistake; you will

be happier if you change all that materialism. Do you know what he means?"

"It does not sound like him."

"I have put off the old man. I was a strapping fellow. I could lick anybody in the Maine

woods. I could lick anybody in Canada, and I did. I licked you once, you old snollygoster. Does

that sound more like me?"

"Yes, I recognize that."

"I once wrote the emperor's name with bullets on a target. You haven't forgotten that,

surely!"

"I remember it."

"All right, then, wake up, and figure out how you will behave in a better world. You cannot

solve your problems as you used to do, putting your fingers in your ears."

A moment's pause. "He went away laughing," said Tecumseh. "He is a wild fellow. When he

ate soup it ran down his beard; and it was the same with icecream. You do not like such

manners; you are a quiet person, Zacharias—and yet I hear loud noises going on all around you. It

is very strange! What are you?"

VII

The old Greek made no reply, and the voice of the control sank to a murmur, as if he was

asking the spirits about this mystery. For quite a while Lanny couldn't make out a word, and

he took the occasion to perfect his notes. Once or twice he glanced at the munitions king, who

did not return the glance, but sat staring before him as if he were an image of stone.

"What is this noise I keep hearing?" burst out the Indian, sud denly. "And why are these

spirits in such an uproar? A rattling and banging, and many people yelling, as if they were

frightened. What is it that you do, Zacharias?"

Sir Basil did not speak.

"Why don't you answer me?"

"Cannot the spirits tell you?"

"It is easier when you answer my questions. Don't you like what these people are saying? It is

not my fault if they hate you. Did you cheat them? Or did you hurt them?"

"Some thought that I did."

"What I keep hearing is guns. That is it! Were you a soldier? Did you fight in battles?"

"I made munitions."

"Ah, that is it; and so many people died. That is why they are screaming at you. I have never

seen so many; never in the days when I commanded a tribe of the Six Nations, and the palefaces

came against us. They had better guns and more of them, and my people died, they died

screaming and cursing the invaders of our land. So men died screaming and cursing Zacharias

the Greek. Do you run and hide from them? They come crowding after you, as if it was the first

time they ever could get at you. They stretch out their hands trying to reach you. Do you feel

them touching you?"

"No," said Zaharoff. For the first time Lanny thought there was a trace of quavering in his

voice. Another quick glance revealed distinct drops of sweat on his forehead.

"It is like a battle going on—it gives me a headache, with all the smoke and noise. I see shells

bursting away off, and men are falling out of the sky. No, no, keep back, he can't hear you, and

there is no use yelling at me. Let somebody speak for you all. Any one of you. Come forward,

you man, you with the ragged flag. What is it you want to say? No, not you! I don't want to

talk to a man with the top of his head blown off. What sense can come out of only half a head?

Keep your bloody hands off me—I don't care who you are. What's that? Oh, I see. All right, tell

him. . . . I am the Unknown Soldier. I am the man they have buried by the Arc de Triomphe.

They keep the undying flame burning for me, and they come and lay wreaths on my tomb. You

came once and laid a wreath, did you not? Answer me!"

"I did." The munitions king's voice was hardly audible.

"I saw you. I see all who come to the tomb. I want to tell them to go away and stop the next

war. I want to tell them something else that will not please them. Do you know my name?"

"Nobody knows your name."

"My name is Mordecai Izak. I am a Jew. Their Unknown Soldier is a Jew, and that would

worry them very much. Are you a Jew?"

"I have been called that, but it is not so."

"I understand, brother. Many of us have had to do it."

There was a pause, and then Tecumseh was speaking. "They are all laughing. They tell me not

to mind if you do not speak the truth. You are a very important man, they say. They push

forward a little old woman. I cannot make out her name; it sounds like Haje —is that a woman's

name? She says that she is the mother of your son. Is that possible?"

"It might be."

"She says that your name was Sahar. You changed it in Russia. It was a place called Vilkomir, a

long, long time ago. She says your son is living; he is a very poor fellow. She says you have

grandchildren, but you do not wish to know it. Does that mean anything to you?"

"Possibly."

"The wounded men crowd her away. They do not let her talk. They are shouting again: 'There

is blood on your money! You have a great deal of money, and there is a curse upon it. You

murdered a man when you were young, but that is nothing, you have murdered all of us. We

are waiting for you in the spirit world. We are the avengers—we, the men without faces,

without bowels! Some day you will come to us—' "

The voice of Tecumseh had become shrill; and suddenly the aged Greek started to his feet.

Two steps brought him to Lanny's side, and he said: "Give me the book." The younger man,

taken aback, handed over his notebook; Zaharoff grabbed it and hastened, almost running, to the

door, and went out, slamming it behind him.

VIII

That was the end of the seance. Not another word was spoken, but the medium began to

moan pitiably. Lanny was prepared for trouble, because any sort of abrupt action always had a

bad effect on her; it was something about which he had warned Zaharoff. Now she was seized by

a sort of light convulsion, and sputum began to drip from her lips. Lanny ran and got a towel

and wiped it away; he was frightened for a while, but gradually the moaning died, and after a

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