THE FEAST OF FEAR
At first the large stone stair
seemed to Syme as deserted as a pyramid; but before
he reached the top he had realised that there was
a man leaning over the parapet of the Embankment and
looking out across the river. As a figure he
was quite conventional, clad in a silk hat and frock-coat
of the more formal type of fashion; he had a red flower
in his buttonhole. As Syme drew nearer to him
step by step, he did not even move a hair; and Syme
could come close enough to notice even in the dim,
pale morning light that his face was long, pale and
intellectual, and ended in a small triangular tuft
of dark beard at the very point of the chin, all else
being clean-shaven. This scrap of hair almost
seemed a mere oversight; the rest of the face was
of the type that is best shaven—clear-cut,
ascetic, and in its way noble. Syme drew closer
and closer, noting all this, and still the figure did
not stir.
At first an instinct had told Syme
that this was the man whom he was meant to meet.
Then, seeing that the man made no sign, he had concluded
that he was not. And now again he had come back
to a certainty that the man had something to do with
his mad adventure. For the man remained more
still than would have been natural if a stranger had
come so close. He was as motionless as a wax-work,
and got on the nerves somewhat in the same way.
Syme looked again and again at the pale, dignified
and delicate face, and the face still looked blankly
across the river. Then he took out of his pocket
the note from Buttons proving his election, and put
it before that sad and beautiful face. Then the
man smiled, and his smile was a shock, for it was
all on one side, going up in the right cheek and down
in the left.
There was nothing, rationally speaking,
to scare anyone about this. Many people have
this nervous trick of a crooked smile, and in many
it is even attractive. But in all Syme’s
circumstances, with the dark dawn and the deadly errand
and the loneliness on the great dripping stones, there
was something unnerving in it.
There was the silent river and the
silent man, a man of even classic face. And there
was the last nightmare touch that his smile suddenly
went wrong.
The spasm of smile was instantaneous,
and the man’s face dropped at once into its
harmonious melancholy. He spoke without further
explanation or inquiry, like a man speaking to an old
colleague.
“If we walk up towards Leicester
Square,” he said, “we shall just be in
time for breakfast. Sunday always insists on an
early breakfast. Have you had any sleep?”
“No,” said Syme.
“Nor have I,” answered
the man in an ordinary tone. “I shall try
to get to bed after breakfast.”
He spoke with casual civility, but
in an utterly dead voice that contradicted the fanaticism
of his face. It seemed almost as if all friendly
words were to him lifeless conveniences, and that his
only life was hate. After a pause the man spoke
again.
“Of course, the Secretary of
the branch told you everything that can be told.
But the one thing that can never be told is the last
notion of the President, for his notions grow like
a tropical forest. So in case you don’t
know, I’d better tell you that he is carrying
out his notion of concealing ourselves by not concealing
ourselves to the most extraordinary lengths just now.
Originally, of course, we met in a cell underground,
just as your branch does. Then Sunday made us
take a private room at an ordinary restaurant.
He said that if you didn’t seem to be hiding
nobody hunted you out. Well, he is the only man
on earth, I know; but sometimes I really think that
his huge brain is going a little mad in its old age.
For now we flaunt ourselves before the public.
We have our breakfast on a balcony—on a
balcony, if you please—overlooking Leicester
Square.”
“And what do the people say?” asked Syme.
“It’s quite simple what they say,”
answered his guide.
“They say we are a lot of jolly
gentlemen who pretend they are anarchists.”
“It seems to me a very clever idea,” said
Syme.
“Clever! God blast your
impudence! Clever!” cried out the other
in a sudden, shrill voice which was as startling and
discordant as his crooked smile. “When
you’ve seen Sunday for a split second you’ll
leave off calling him clever.”
With this they emerged out of a narrow
street, and saw the early sunlight filling Leicester
Square. It will never be known, I suppose, why
this square itself should look so alien and in some
ways so continental. It will never be known whether
it was the foreign look that attracted the foreigners
or the foreigners who gave it the foreign look.
But on this particular morning the effect seemed singularly
bright and clear. Between the open square and
the sunlit leaves and the statue and the Saracenic
outlines of the Alhambra, it looked the replica of
some French or even Spanish public place. And
this effect increased in Syme the sensation, which
in many shapes he had had through the whole adventure,
the eerie sensation of having strayed into a new world.
As a fact, he had bought bad cigars round Leicester
Square ever since he was a boy. But as he turned
that corner, and saw the trees and the Moorish cupolas,
he could have sworn that he was turning into an unknown
Place de something or other in some foreign town.
At one corner of the square there
projected a kind of angle of a prosperous but quiet
hotel, the bulk of which belonged to a street behind.
In the wall there was one large French window, probably
the window of a large coffee-room; and outside this
window, almost literally overhanging the square, was
a formidably buttressed balcony, big enough to contain
a dining-table. In fact, it did contain a dining-table,
or more strictly a breakfast-table; and round the
breakfast-table, glowing in the sunlight and evident
to the street, were a group of noisy and talkative
men, all dressed in the insolence of fashion, with
white waistcoats and expensive button-holes.
Some of their jokes could almost be heard across the
square. Then the grave Secretary gave his unnatural
smile, and Syme knew that this boisterous breakfast
party was the secret conclave of the European Dynamiters.
Then, as Syme continued to stare at
them, he saw something that he had not seen before.
He had not seen it literally because it was too large
to see. At the nearest end of the balcony, blocking
up a great part of the perspective, was the back of
a great mountain of a man. When Syme had seen
him, his first thought was that the weight of him
must break down the balcony of stone. His vastness
did not lie only in the fact that he was abnormally
tall and quite incredibly fat. This man was planned
enormously in his original proportions, like a statue
carved deliberately as colossal. His head, crowned
with white hair, as seen from behind looked bigger
than a head ought to be. The ears that stood out
from it looked larger than human ears. He was
enlarged terribly to scale; and this sense of size
was so staggering, that when Syme saw him all the
other figures seemed quite suddenly to dwindle and
become dwarfish. They were still sitting there
as before with their flowers and frock-coats, but
now it looked as if the big man was entertaining five
children to tea.
As Syme and the guide approached the
side door of the hotel, a waiter came out smiling
with every tooth in his head.
“The gentlemen are up there,
sare,” he said. “They do talk and
they do laugh at what they talk. They do say
they will throw bombs at ze king.”
And the waiter hurried away with a
napkin over his arm, much pleased with the singular
frivolity of the gentlemen upstairs.
The two men mounted the stairs in silence.
Syme had never thought of asking whether
the monstrous man who almost filled and broke the
balcony was the great President of whom the others
stood in awe. He knew it was so, with an unaccountable
but instantaneous certainty. Syme, indeed, was
one of those men who are open to all the more nameless
psychological influences in a degree a little dangerous
to mental health. Utterly devoid of fear in physical
dangers, he was a great deal too sensitive to the smell
of spiritual evil. Twice already that night little
unmeaning things had peeped out at him almost pruriently,
and given him a sense of drawing nearer and nearer
to the head-quarters of hell. And this sense
became overpowering as he drew nearer to the great
President.
The form it took was a childish and
yet hateful fancy. As he walked across the inner
room towards the balcony, the large face of Sunday
grew larger and larger; and Syme was gripped with a
fear that when he was quite close the face would be
too big to be possible, and that he would scream aloud.
He remembered that as a child he would not look at
the mask of Memnon in the British Museum, because it
was a face, and so large.
By an effort, braver than that of
leaping over a cliff, he went to an empty seat at
the breakfast-table and sat down. The men greeted
him with good-humoured raillery as if they had always
known him. He sobered himself a little by looking
at their conventional coats and solid, shining coffee-pot;
then he looked again at Sunday. His face was
very large, but it was still possible to humanity.
In the presence of the President the
whole company looked sufficiently commonplace; nothing
about them caught the eye at first, except that by
the President’s caprice they had been dressed
up with a festive respectability, which gave the meal
the look of a wedding breakfast. One man indeed
stood out at even a superficial glance. He at
least was the common or garden Dynamiter. He wore,
indeed, the high white collar and satin tie that were
the uniform of the occasion; but out of this collar
there sprang a head quite unmanageable and quite unmistakable,
a bewildering bush of brown hair and beard that almost
obscured the eyes like those of a Skye terrier.
But the eyes did look out of the tangle, and they were
the sad eyes of some Russian serf. The effect
of this figure was not terrible like that of the President,
but it had every diablerie that can come from the
utterly grotesque. If out of that stiff tie and
collar there had come abruptly the head of a cat or
a dog, it could not have been a more idiotic contrast.
The man’s name, it seemed, was
Gogol; he was a Pole, and in this circle of days he
was called Tuesday. His soul and speech were
incurably tragic; he could not force himself to play
the prosperous and frivolous part demanded of him
by President Sunday. And, indeed, when Syme came
in the President, with that daring disregard of public
suspicion which was his policy, was actually chaffing
Gogol upon his inability to assume conventional graces.
“Our friend Tuesday,”
said the President in a deep voice at once of quietude
and volume, “our friend Tuesday doesn’t
seem to grasp the idea. He dresses up like a
gentleman, but he seems to be too great a soul to
behave like one. He insists on the ways of the
stage conspirator. Now if a gentleman goes about
London in a top hat and a frock-coat, no one need
know that he is an anarchist. But if a gentleman
puts on a top hat and a frock-coat, and then goes
about on his hands and knees—well, he may
attract attention. That’s what Brother
Gogol does. He goes about on his hands and knees
with such inexhaustible diplomacy, that by this time
he finds it quite difficult to walk upright.”
“I am not good at goncealment,”
said Gogol sulkily, with a thick foreign accent; “I
am not ashamed of the cause.”
“Yes you are, my boy, and so
is the cause of you,” said the President good-naturedly.
“You hide as much as anybody; but you can’t
do it, you see, you’re such an ass! You
try to combine two inconsistent methods. When
a householder finds a man under his bed, he will probably
pause to note the circumstance. But if he finds
a man under his bed in a top hat, you will agree with
me, my dear Tuesday, that he is not likely even to
forget it. Now when you were found under Admiral
Biffin’s bed—”
“I am not good at deception,”
said Tuesday gloomily, flushing.
“Right, my boy, right,”
said the President with a ponderous heartiness, “you
aren’t good at anything.”
While this stream of conversation
continued, Syme was looking more steadily at the men
around him. As he did so, he gradually felt all
his sense of something spiritually queer return.
He had thought at first that they
were all of common stature and costume, with the evident
exception of the hairy Gogol. But as he looked
at the others, he began to see in each of them exactly
what he had seen in the man by the river, a demoniac
detail somewhere. That lop-sided laugh, which
would suddenly disfigure the fine face of his original
guide, was typical of all these types. Each man
had something about him, perceived perhaps at the tenth
or twentieth glance, which was not normal, and which
seemed hardly human. The only metaphor he could
think of was this, that they all looked as men of
fashion and presence would look, with the additional
twist given in a false and curved mirror.
Only the individual examples will
express this half-concealed eccentricity. Syme’s
original cicerone bore the title of Monday; he was
the Secretary of the Council, and his twisted smile
was regarded with more terror than anything, except
the President’s horrible, happy laughter.
But now that Syme had more space and light to observe
him, there were other touches. His fine face
was so emaciated, that Syme thought it must be wasted
with some disease; yet somehow the very distress of
his dark eyes denied this. It was no physical
ill that troubled him. His eyes were alive with
intellectual torture, as if pure thought was pain.
He was typical of each of the tribe;
each man was subtly and differently wrong. Next
to him sat Tuesday, the tousle-headed Gogol, a man
more obviously mad. Next was Wednesday, a certain
Marquis de St. Eustache, a sufficiently characteristic
figure. The first few glances found nothing unusual
about him, except that he was the only man at table
who wore the fashionable clothes as if they were really
his own. He had a black French beard cut square
and a black English frock-coat cut even squarer.
But Syme, sensitive to such things, felt somehow that
the man carried a rich atmosphere with him, a rich
atmosphere that suffocated. It reminded one irrationally
of drowsy odours and of dying lamps in the darker
poems of Byron and Poe. With this went a sense
of his being clad, not in lighter colours, but in
softer materials; his black seemed richer and warmer
than the black shades about him, as if it were compounded
of profound colour. His black coat looked as
if it were only black by being too dense a purple.
His black beard looked as if it were only black by
being too deep a blue. And in the gloom and thickness
of the beard his dark red mouth showed sensual and
scornful. Whatever he was he was not a Frenchman;
he might be a Jew; he might be something deeper yet
in the dark heart of the East. In the bright
coloured Persian tiles and pictures showing tyrants
hunting, you may see just those almond eyes, those
blue-black beards, those cruel, crimson lips.
Then came Syme, and next a very old
man, Professor de Worms, who still kept the chair
of Friday, though every day it was expected that his
death would leave it empty. Save for his intellect,
he was in the last dissolution of senile decay.
His face was as grey as his long grey beard, his forehead
was lifted and fixed finally in a furrow of mild despair.
In no other case, not even that of Gogol, did the
bridegroom brilliancy of the morning dress express
a more painful contrast. For the red flower in
his button-hole showed up against a face that was
literally discoloured like lead; the whole hideous
effect was as if some drunken dandies had put their
clothes upon a corpse. When he rose or sat down,
which was with long labour and peril, something worse
was expressed than mere weakness, something indefinably
connected with the horror of the whole scene.
It did not express decrepitude merely, but corruption.
Another hateful fancy crossed Syme’s quivering
mind. He could not help thinking that whenever
the man moved a leg or arm might fall off.
Right at the end sat the man called
Saturday, the simplest and the most baffling of all.
He was a short, square man with a dark, square face
clean-shaven, a medical practitioner going by the name
of Bull. He had that combination of savoir-faire
with a sort of well-groomed coarseness which is not
uncommon in young doctors. He carried his fine
clothes with confidence rather than ease, and he mostly
wore a set smile. There was nothing whatever odd
about him, except that he wore a pair of dark, almost
opaque spectacles. It may have been merely a
crescendo of nervous fancy that had gone before, but
those black discs were dreadful to Syme; they reminded
him of half-remembered ugly tales, of some story about
pennies being put on the eyes of the dead. Syme’s
eye always caught the black glasses and the blind
grin. Had the dying Professor worn them, or even
the pale Secretary, they would have been appropriate.
But on the younger and grosser man they seemed only
an enigma. They took away the key of the face.
You could not tell what his smile or his gravity meant.
Partly from this, and partly because he had a vulgar
virility wanting in most of the others it seemed to
Syme that he might be the wickedest of all those wicked
men. Syme even had the thought that his eyes
might be covered up because they were too frightful
to see.