'You may be wrong,' said Warren, 'and I hope you me. I don't believe anything like that. I
'Take it off,' said Morgan, 'and look at the mattress. I hope I'm wrong as much as you do.'
Peggy took one look, and then turned away, white-faced. Morgan felt a constriction in his throat as he stepped up beside Warren and Valvick. A blanket had been neatly spread under the sheet and over the mattress; but stains were already soaking through it. When they swept off the blanket, the colours of the blue-and-white striped mattress were not very distinguishable in a great sodden patch spread for some length down.
'Is it…?' asked Morgan, and took a deep draw on his cigarette. 'Is it…?'
'Oh, yes. It iss blood,' said Captain Valvick.
It was so quiet that even across that distance Morgan imagined he could hear the liner's bell. They were moving almost steadily now, with a deep throb below decks in the ship and a faint vibration of glassware. Also Morgan imagined the pale classic-faced girl lying unconscious, with the dim light burning above her in the berth, and the door opening as somebody came in…
'But what's happened to her? Where is she now?' Warren asked, in a low voice. 'Besides,' he added, with a sort of dull argumentative air—'besides, he couldn't have done
'And why should he do it, anyway?' asked Peggy, trying to control her voice. 'Oh, it's absurd! I won't believe it! You're scaring me! And — and, anyway, where did he get the linen for the bed? Where is she, and why?…
'Steady, Baby,' said Warren, taking her hand without removing his eyes from the bed. 'I don't know why he did it, or what he expected to gain by making the bed over. But we'd better cover that up again.'
Carefully putting down his pipe on the edge of the thrumming washstand, Morgan choked back his revulsion and bent over to examine the berth. The stains were still
wet, and he avoided them as much as he could. So strung up was he into that queer, clear-brained, almost fey state of mind that sometimes comes in the drugged hours of the morning, that he was not altogether surprised when he heard something rattle deep down between mattress and bulkhead. He yanked over a corner of the sheet, wound it round his fingers, and groped.
'Better not look, old girl,' he said after a pause. 'This won't be pretty.'
Shielding the find with his body so that only Captain Valvick could see, he pulled it up in the sheet and turned it over in his palm. It was a razor, of the straight, old-fashioned variety, and closed; but it had recently been used. Rather larger than the ordinary size, it was an elaborate and delicate piece of craftsmanship with a handle so curiously fashioned that Morgan wiped the blood away to examine it.
The handle was of a wood that resembled ebony. Down one side ran a design picked out in thin silver and white porcelain. At first Morgan took it for an intricate name-plate, until, under cleaning, it became a man's standing figure. The figure was possibly three inches high, and under it was a tiny plate inscribed with the word
'Ay know,' said Captain Valvick, staring at it. 'It iss one of a set of seven, one for every day of de week. Ay haff seen dose before. But what iss dat thing on it, like a man?'
The thin figure, in its silver and white and black, was picked out in a curious striped medieval costume, which 1 recalled to Morgan's mind vague associations with steel-cut engravings out of Dore. Surgeon, surgeon — barber, that was it! There was the razor in the thing's fist. But most ugly and grotesque of all, the head of the figure was subtly like a death's head, and a bandage was across the eyes so that the barber was—
'Blind,' said Warren, who was looking over his shoulder. 'Put it away, Hank! Put it away. Blind… death and barber… end of the week. Somebody used that, and lost it or left it here. Put it away. Have a drink.'
Morgan looked at the evil and smeared design. He looked at the door, then at the white-painted bulkhead in the bunk, the tumbled bedclothes and the spotty brown blanket. Again he tried to picture the girl in the yellow frock lying here under a dim light, while the outside door was opening. So who was the girl, and where was she now, wrapped round in the soaked sheets that were here before? It was five miles to the bottom of the sea. They would never find her body now. Morgan turned round.
'Yes,' he said, 'the Blind Barber has been here tonight.'
9 — More Doubts at Morning
As the hands of the travelling-clock at the head of Morgan's bed pointed to eight-thirty, he was roused out of a heavy slumber by the sound of an unmusical baritone voice singing with all the range of its off-keys. The voice singing, 'A Life on the Ocean Wave.' It brought nightmares into his doze before he struggled awake. As he opened his eyes, the heartening bray of the breakfast bugle went past in the gangway outside, and he remembered where he was.
Furthermore, it was a heartening morning. His cabin— on the boat-deck — was filled with sunshine, and a warm salt-spiced breeze fluttered the curtain at the open porthole. It was winelike May again, with a reflected glitter of water at the porthole; and the ship's engines churning steadily in a docile sea. He drew a deep breath, feeling a mighty uplift of the heart and a sensual longing for bacon and eggs. Then somebody threw a shoe at him, and he knew Warren was there.
Warren sat across from him on the couch under the porthole, smoking a cigarette. He wore white flannels, a careless blue coat, and a sportive tie; he showed not at all the rigours of last night, nor any depression of spirit. His hair was brushed smoothly again, unpropped by sticking-plaster. He said:
'Howdy, General,' and tipped his hand to his head. 'Wake up, can't you? Wow! it's a beautiful morning! Even our old sea-beetle of a skipper is going to be in better temper to-day. All the sea-sick lads are beginning to creep out of their holes and say it was only something they ate, no doubt. Haaaaa!' Breathing deeply, he arched his chest, knocked his fists against it, and beamed with seraphic good-humour. 'Get ready and come down to breakfast. This is an important morning in the lives of several people, including Captain Whistler.'
'Right,' said Morgan. 'Find something to amuse yourself with while I catch a bath and dress… I suppose there's some kind of story all over the boat about last night's activities, isn't there? We were doing a good deal of shouting out on that deck, now I remember it.'
The other grinned.
'There is. I don't know how it happens, but there's a kind of wireless telegraphy aboard these tubs that always get a story even if it's a little cockeyed. But I've only heard two versions so far. When I came out this morning, I heard an old dame in 310 raising hell with the stewardess. She was furious. She says six drunken men were standing outside her porthole all night, having a terrible argument about a giraffe, and she's going to complain to the captain. I also passed two clergymen taking a morning stroll. One of them was telling the other some kind of a complicated story — I didn't get much of it. It was something to the effect that the boat's got in her hold a cargo of cages full of dangerous wild beasts, only they're keeping it quiet so as not to alarm the passengers. In the storm last night the cages worked loose and the Bengal tiger was in danger of getting out, but a seaman named Barnacle got it back in its cage. The preacher said A. B. Barnacle was armed only with a whisky-bottle. He said the sailor must be a very brave man, although he used horrible language.'
'Come off it,' said Morgan, staring.
'So help me, it's absolutely true!' the other declared fervently. 'You'll see for yourself.' His face clouded a little. 'Look here, Hank. Have — have you thought any more about that
'The film?'
'Ah, hang the film! I'll trust you. We'll get it back somehow. No, I meant the — the
'Save it,' said Morgan.