THE EXPOSURE
Such were the six men who had
sworn to destroy the world. Again and again Syme
strove to pull together his common sense in their
presence. Sometimes he saw for an instant that
these notions were subjective, that he was only looking
at ordinary men, one of whom was old, another nervous,
another short-sighted. The sense of an unnatural
symbolism always settled back on him again. Each
figure seemed to be, somehow, on the borderland of
things, just as their theory was on the borderland
of thought. He knew that each one of these men
stood at the extreme end, so to speak, of some wild
road of reasoning. He could only fancy, as in
some old-world fable, that if a man went westward
to the end of the world he would find something—say
a tree—that was more or less than a tree,
a tree possessed by a spirit; and that if he went
east to the end of the world he would find something
else that was not wholly itself—a tower,
perhaps, of which the very shape was wicked. So
these figures seemed to stand up, violent and unaccountable,
against an ultimate horizon, visions from the verge.
The ends of the earth were closing in.
Talk had been going on steadily as
he took in the scene; and not the least of the contrasts
of that bewildering breakfast-table was the contrast
between the easy and unobtrusive tone of talk and its
terrible purport. They were deep in the discussion
of an actual and immediate plot. The waiter downstairs
had spoken quite correctly when he said that they
were talking about bombs and kings. Only three
days afterwards the Czar was to meet the President
of the French Republic in Paris, and over their bacon
and eggs upon their sunny balcony these beaming gentlemen
had decided how both should die. Even the instrument
was chosen; the black-bearded Marquis, it appeared,
was to carry the bomb.
Ordinarily speaking, the proximity
of this positive and objective crime would have sobered
Syme, and cured him of all his merely mystical tremors.
He would have thought of nothing but the need of saving
at least two human bodies from being ripped in pieces
with iron and roaring gas. But the truth was
that by this time he had begun to feel a third kind
of fear, more piercing and practical than either his
moral revulsion or his social responsibility.
Very simply, he had no fear to spare for the French
President or the Czar; he had begun to fear for himself.
Most of the talkers took little heed of him, debating
now with their faces closer together, and almost uniformly
grave, save when for an instant the smile of the Secretary
ran aslant across his face as the jagged lightning
runs aslant across the sky. But there was one
persistent thing which first troubled Syme and at
last terrified him. The President was always
looking at him, steadily, and with a great and baffling
interest. The enormous man was quite quiet, but
his blue eyes stood out of his head. And they
were always fixed on Syme.
Syme felt moved to spring up and leap
over the balcony. When the President’s
eyes were on him he felt as if he were made of glass.
He had hardly the shred of a doubt that in some silent
and extraordinary way Sunday had found out that he
was a spy. He looked over the edge of the balcony,
and saw a policeman, standing abstractedly just beneath,
staring at the bright railings and the sunlit trees.
Then there fell upon him the great
temptation that was to torment him for many days.
In the presence of these powerful and repulsive men,
who were the princes of anarchy, he had almost forgotten
the frail and fanciful figure of the poet Gregory,
the mere aesthete of anarchism. He even thought
of him now with an old kindness, as if they had played
together when children. But he remembered that
he was still tied to Gregory by a great promise.
He had promised never to do the very thing that he
now felt himself almost in the act of doing.
He had promised not to jump over that balcony and speak
to that policeman. He took his cold hand off
the cold stone balustrade. His soul swayed in
a vertigo of moral indecision. He had only to
snap the thread of a rash vow made to a villainous
society, and all his life could be as open and sunny
as the square beneath him. He had, on the other
hand, only to keep his antiquated honour, and be delivered
inch by inch into the power of this great enemy of
mankind, whose very intellect was a torture-chamber.
Whenever he looked down into the square he saw the
comfortable policeman, a pillar of common sense and
common order. Whenever he looked back at the
breakfast-table he saw the President still quietly
studying him with big, unbearable eyes.
In all the torrent of his thought
there were two thoughts that never crossed his mind.
First, it never occurred to him to doubt that the
President and his Council could crush him if he continued
to stand alone. The place might be public, the
project might seem impossible. But Sunday was
not the man who would carry himself thus easily without
having, somehow or somewhere, set open his iron trap.
Either by anonymous poison or sudden street accident,
by hypnotism or by fire from hell, Sunday could certainly
strike him. If he defied the man he was probably
dead, either struck stiff there in his chair or long
afterwards as by an innocent ailment. If he called
in the police promptly, arrested everyone, told all,
and set against them the whole energy of England, he
would probably escape; certainly not otherwise.
They were a balconyful of gentlemen overlooking a
bright and busy square; but he felt no more safe with
them than if they had been a boatful of armed pirates
overlooking an empty sea.
There was a second thought that never
came to him. It never occurred to him to be spiritually
won over to the enemy. Many moderns, inured to
a weak worship of intellect and force, might have
wavered in their allegiance under this oppression of
a great personality. They might have called Sunday
the super-man. If any such creature be conceivable,
he looked, indeed, somewhat like it, with his earth-shaking
abstraction, as of a stone statue walking. He
might have been called something above man, with his
large plans, which were too obvious to be detected,
with his large face, which was too frank to be understood.
But this was a kind of modern meanness to which Syme
could not sink even in his extreme morbidity.
Like any man, he was coward enough to fear great force;
but he was not quite coward enough to admire it.
The men were eating as they talked,
and even in this they were typical. Dr. Bull
and the Marquis ate casually and conventionally of
the best things on the table—cold pheasant
or Strasbourg pie. But the Secretary was a vegetarian,
and he spoke earnestly of the projected murder over
half a raw tomato and three quarters of a glass of
tepid water. The old Professor had such slops
as suggested a sickening second childhood. And
even in this President Sunday preserved his curious
predominance of mere mass. For he ate like twenty
men; he ate incredibly, with a frightful freshness
of appetite, so that it was like watching a sausage
factory. Yet continually, when he had swallowed
a dozen crumpets or drunk a quart of coffee, he would
be found with his great head on one side staring at
Syme.
“I have often wondered,”
said the Marquis, taking a great bite out of a slice
of bread and jam, “whether it wouldn’t
be better for me to do it with a knife. Most
of the best things have been brought off with a knife.
And it would be a new emotion to get a knife into
a French President and wriggle it round.”
“You are wrong,” said
the Secretary, drawing his black brows together.
“The knife was merely the expression of the old
personal quarrel with a personal tyrant. Dynamite
is not only our best tool, but our best symbol.
It is as perfect a symbol of us as is incense of the
prayers of the Christians. It expands; it only
destroys because it broadens; even so, thought only
destroys because it broadens. A man’s brain
is a bomb,” he cried out, loosening suddenly
his strange passion and striking his own skull with
violence. “My brain feels like a bomb, night
and day. It must expand! It must expand!
A man’s brain must expand, if it breaks up the
universe.”
“I don’t want the universe
broken up just yet,” drawled the Marquis.
“I want to do a lot of beastly things before
I die. I thought of one yesterday in bed.”
“No, if the only end of the
thing is nothing,” said Dr. Bull with his sphinx-like
smile, “it hardly seems worth doing.”
The old Professor was staring at the
ceiling with dull eyes.
“Every man knows in his heart,”
he said, “that nothing is worth doing.”
There was a singular silence, and
then the Secretary said—
“We are wandering, however,
from the point. The only question is how Wednesday
is to strike the blow. I take it we should all
agree with the original notion of a bomb. As
to the actual arrangements, I should suggest that
tomorrow morning he should go first of all to—”
The speech was broken off short under
a vast shadow. President Sunday had risen to
his feet, seeming to fill the sky above them.
“Before we discuss that,”
he said in a small, quiet voice, “let us go
into a private room. I have something very particular
to say.”
Syme stood up before any of the others.
The instant of choice had come at last, the pistol
was at his head. On the pavement before he could
hear the policeman idly stir and stamp, for the morning,
though bright, was cold.
A barrel-organ in the street suddenly
sprang with a jerk into a jovial tune. Syme stood
up taut, as if it had been a bugle before the battle.
He found himself filled with a supernatural courage
that came from nowhere. That jingling music seemed
full of the vivacity, the vulgarity, and the irrational
valour of the poor, who in all those unclean streets
were all clinging to the decencies and the charities
of Christendom. His youthful prank of being a
policeman had faded from his mind; he did not think
of himself as the representative of the corps of gentlemen
turned into fancy constables, or of the old eccentric
who lived in the dark room. But he did feel himself
as the ambassador of all these common and kindly people
in the street, who every day marched into battle to
the music of the barrel-organ. And this high pride
in being human had lifted him unaccountably to an
infinite height above the monstrous men around him.
For an instant, at least, he looked down upon all
their sprawling eccentricities from the starry pinnacle
of the commonplace. He felt towards them all that
unconscious and elementary superiority that a brave
man feels over powerful beasts or a wise man over
powerful errors. He knew that he had neither the
intellectual nor the physical strength of President
Sunday; but in that moment he minded it no more than
the fact that he had not the muscles of a tiger or
a horn on his nose like a rhinoceros. All was
swallowed up in an ultimate certainty that the President
was wrong and that the barrel-organ was right.
There clanged in his mind that unanswerable and terrible
truism in the song of Roland—
“Pagens ont tort et
Chretiens ont droit.”
which in the old nasal French has
the clang and groan of great iron. This liberation
of his spirit from the load of his weakness went with
a quite clear decision to embrace death. If the
people of the barrel-organ could keep their old-world
obligations, so could he. This very pride in
keeping his word was that he was keeping it to miscreants.
It was his last triumph over these lunatics to go
down into their dark room and die for something that
they could not even understand. The barrel-organ
seemed to give the marching tune with the energy and
the mingled noises of a whole orchestra; and he could
hear deep and rolling, under all the trumpets of the
pride of life, the drums of the pride of death.
The conspirators were already filing
through the open window and into the rooms behind.
Syme went last, outwardly calm, but with all his brain
and body throbbing with romantic rhythm. The President
led them down an irregular side stair, such as might
be used by servants, and into a dim, cold, empty room,
with a table and benches, like an abandoned boardroom.
When they were all in, he closed and locked the door.
The first to speak was Gogol, the
irreconcilable, who seemed bursting with inarticulate
grievance.
“Zso! Zso!” he cried,
with an obscure excitement, his heavy Polish accent
becoming almost impenetrable. “You zay you
nod ’ide. You zay you show himselves.
It is all nuzzinks. Ven you vant talk importance
you run yourselves in a dark box!”
The President seemed to take the foreigner’s
incoherent satire with entire good humour.
“You can’t get hold of
it yet, Gogol,” he said in a fatherly way.
“When once they have heard us talking nonsense
on that balcony they will not care where we go afterwards.
If we had come here first, we should have had the
whole staff at the keyhole. You don’t seem
to know anything about mankind.”
“I die for zem,” cried
the Pole in thick excitement, “and I slay zare
oppressors. I care not for these games of gonzealment.
I would zmite ze tyrant in ze open square.”
“I see, I see,” said the
President, nodding kindly as he seated himself at
the top of a long table. “You die for mankind
first, and then you get up and smite their oppressors.
So that’s all right. And now may I ask
you to control your beautiful sentiments, and sit
down with the other gentlemen at this table. For
the first time this morning something intelligent
is going to be said.”
Syme, with the perturbed promptitude
he had shown since the original summons, sat down
first. Gogol sat down last, grumbling in his
brown beard about gombromise. No one except Syme
seemed to have any notion of the blow that was about
to fall. As for him, he had merely the feeling
of a man mounting the scaffold with the intention,
at any rate, of making a good speech.
“Comrades,” said the President,
suddenly rising, “we have spun out this farce
long enough. I have called you down here to tell
you something so simple and shocking that even the
waiters upstairs (long inured to our levities) might
hear some new seriousness in my voice. Comrades,
we were discussing plans and naming places. I
propose, before saying anything else, that those plans
and places should not be voted by this meeting, but
should be left wholly in the control of some one reliable
member. I suggest Comrade Saturday, Dr. Bull.”
They all stared at him; then they
all started in their seats, for the next words, though
not loud, had a living and sensational emphasis.
Sunday struck the table.
“Not one word more about the
plans and places must be said at this meeting.
Not one tiny detail more about what we mean to do must
be mentioned in this company.”
Sunday had spent his life in astonishing
his followers; but it seemed as if he had never really
astonished them until now. They all moved feverishly
in their seats, except Syme. He sat stiff in
his, with his hand in his pocket, and on the handle
of his loaded revolver. When the attack on him
came he would sell his life dear. He would find
out at least if the President was mortal.
Sunday went on smoothly—
“You will probably understand
that there is only one possible motive for forbidding
free speech at this festival of freedom. Strangers
overhearing us matters nothing. They assume that
we are joking. But what would matter, even unto
death, is this, that there should be one actually
among us who is not of us, who knows our grave purpose,
but does not share it, who—”
The Secretary screamed out suddenly like a woman.
“It can’t be!” he cried, leaping.
“There can’t—”
The President flapped his large flat
hand on the table like the fin of some huge fish.
“Yes,” he said slowly,
“there is a spy in this room. There is a
traitor at this table. I will waste no more words.
His name—”
Syme half rose from his seat, his
finger firm on the trigger.
“His name is Gogol,” said
the President. “He is that hairy humbug
over there who pretends to be a Pole.”
Gogol sprang to his feet, a pistol
in each hand. With the same flash three men sprang
at his throat. Even the Professor made an effort
to rise. But Syme saw little of the scene, for
he was blinded with a beneficent darkness; he had
sunk down into his seat shuddering, in a palsy of
passionate relief.