The Man in Lower Ten eBook

Mary Roberts Rinehart
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 250 pages of information about The Man in Lower Ten.

The Man in Lower Ten eBook

Mary Roberts Rinehart
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 250 pages of information about The Man in Lower Ten.

I have no idea how much time had passed when something threw itself violently on my chest.  I roused with a start and leaped to my feet, and a large Angora cat fell with a thump to the floor.  The fire was still bright, and there was an odor of scorched leather through the room, from Hotchkiss’ shoes.  The little detective was sound asleep, his dead pipe in his fingers.  The cat sat back on its haunches and wailed.

The curtain at the door into the hallway bellied slowly out into the room and fell again.  The cat looked toward it and opened its mouth for another howl.  I thrust at it with my foot, but it refused to move.  Hotchkiss stirred uneasily, and his pipe clattered to the floor.

The cat was standing at my feet, staring behind me.  Apparently it was following with its eyes, an object unseen to me, that moved behind me.  The tip of its tail waved threateningly, but when I wheeled I saw nothing.

I took the candle and made a circuit of the room.  Behind the curtain that had moved the door was securely closed.  The windows were shut and locked, and everywhere the silence was absolute.  The cat followed me majestically.  I stooped and stroked its head, but it persisted in its uncanny watching of the corners of the room.

When I went back to my divan, after putting a fresh log on the fire, I was reassured.  I took the precaution, and smiled at myself for doing it, to put the fire tongs within reach of my hand.  But the cat would not let me sleep.  After a time I decided that it wanted water, and I started out in search of some, carrying the candle without the stand.  I wandered through several rooms, all closed and dismantled, before I found a small lavatory opening off a billiard room.  The cat lapped steadily, and I filled a glass to take back with me.  The candle flickered in a sickly fashion that threatened to leave me there lost in the wanderings of the many hallways, and from somewhere there came an occasional violent puff of wind.  The cat stuck by my feet, with the hair on its back raised menacingly.  I don’t like cats; there is something psychic about them.

Hotchkiss was still asleep when I got back to the big room.  I moved his boots back from the fire, and trimmed the candle.  Then, with sleep gone from me, I lay back on my divan and reflected on many things:  on my idiocy in coming; on Alison West, and the fact that only a week before she had been a guest in this very house; on Richey and the constraint that had come between us.  From that I drifted back to Alison, and to the barrier my comparative poverty would be.

The emptiness, the stillness were oppressive.  Once I heard footsteps coming, rhythmical steps that neither hurried nor dragged, and seemed to mount endless staircases without coming any closer.  I realized finally that I had not quite turned off the tap, and that the lavatory, which I had circled to reach, must be quite close.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Man in Lower Ten from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.