THE PURSUIT OF THE PRESIDENT
Next morning five bewildered
but hilarious people took the boat for Dover.
The poor old Colonel might have had some cause to complain,
having been first forced to fight for two factions
that didn’t exist, and then knocked down with
an iron lantern. But he was a magnanimous old
gentleman, and being much relieved that neither party
had anything to do with dynamite, he saw them off on
the pier with great geniality.
The five reconciled detectives had
a hundred details to explain to each other. The
Secretary had to tell Syme how they had come to wear
masks originally in order to approach the supposed
enemy as fellow-conspirators;
Syme had to explain how they had fled
with such swiftness through a civilised country.
But above all these matters of detail which could
be explained, rose the central mountain of the matter
that they could not explain. What did it all
mean? If they were all harmless officers, what
was Sunday? If he had not seized the world, what
on earth had he been up to? Inspector Ratcliffe
was still gloomy about this.
“I can’t make head or
tail of old Sunday’s little game any more than
you can,” he said. “But whatever else
Sunday is, he isn’t a blameless citizen.
Damn it! do you remember his face?”
“I grant you,” answered
Syme, “that I have never been able to forget
it.”
“Well,” said the Secretary,
“I suppose we can find out soon, for tomorrow
we have our next general meeting. You will excuse
me,” he said, with a rather ghastly smile, “for
being well acquainted with my secretarial duties.”
“I suppose you are right,”
said the Professor reflectively. “I suppose
we might find it out from him; but I confess that I
should feel a bit afraid of asking Sunday who he really
is.”
“Why,” asked the Secretary, “for
fear of bombs?”
“No,” said the Professor, “for fear
he might tell me.”
“Let us have some drinks,” said Dr. Bull,
after a silence.
Throughout their whole journey by
boat and train they were highly convivial, but they
instinctively kept together. Dr. Bull, who had
always been the optimist of the party, endeavoured
to persuade the other four that the whole company
could take the same hansom cab from Victoria; but
this was over-ruled, and they went in a four-wheeler,
with Dr. Bull on the box, singing. They finished
their journey at an hotel in Piccadilly Circus, so
as to be close to the early breakfast next morning
in Leicester Square. Yet even then the adventures
of the day were not entirely over. Dr. Bull,
discontented with the general proposal to go to bed,
had strolled out of the hotel at about eleven to see
and taste some of the beauties of London. Twenty
minutes afterwards, however, he came back and made
quite a clamour in the hall. Syme, who tried at
first to soothe him, was forced at last to listen to
his communication with quite new attention.
“I tell you I’ve seen him!” said
Dr. Bull, with thick emphasis.
“Whom?” asked Syme quickly. “Not
the President?”
“Not so bad as that,”
said Dr. Bull, with unnecessary laughter, “not
so bad as that. I’ve got him here.”
“Got whom here?” asked Syme impatiently.
“Hairy man,” said the
other lucidly, “man that used to be hairy man—Gogol.
Here he is,” and he pulled forward by a reluctant
elbow the identical young man who five days before
had marched out of the Council with thin red hair
and a pale face, the first of all the sham anarchists
who had been exposed.
“Why do you worry with me?”
he cried. “You have expelled me as a spy.”
“We are all spies!” whispered Syme.
“We’re all spies!” shouted Dr. Bull.
“Come and have a drink.”
Next morning the battalion of the
reunited six marched stolidly towards the hotel in
Leicester Square.
“This is more cheerful,”
said Dr. Bull; “we are six men going to ask
one man what he means.”
“I think it is a bit queerer
than that,” said Syme. “I think it
is six men going to ask one man what they mean.”
They turned in silence into the Square,
and though the hotel was in the opposite corner, they
saw at once the little balcony and a figure that looked
too big for it. He was sitting alone with bent
head, poring over a newspaper. But all his councillors,
who had come to vote him down, crossed that Square
as if they were watched out of heaven by a hundred
eyes.
They had disputed much upon their
policy, about whether they should leave the unmasked
Gogol without and begin diplomatically, or whether
they should bring him in and blow up the gunpowder
at once. The influence of Syme and Bull prevailed
for the latter course, though the Secretary to the
last asked them why they attacked Sunday so rashly.
“My reason is quite simple,”
said Syme. “I attack him rashly because
I am afraid of him.”
They followed Syme up the dark stair
in silence, and they all came out simultaneously into
the broad sunlight of the morning and the broad sunlight
of Sunday’s smile.
“Delightful!” he said.
“So pleased to see you all. What an exquisite
day it is. Is the Czar dead?”
The Secretary, who happened to be
foremost, drew himself together for a dignified outburst.
“No, sir,” he said sternly
“there has been no massacre. I bring you
news of no such disgusting spectacles.”
“Disgusting spectacles?”
repeated the President, with a bright, inquiring smile.
“You mean Dr. Bull’s spectacles?”
The Secretary choked for a moment,
and the President went on with a sort of smooth appeal—
“Of course, we all have our
opinions and even our eyes, but really to call them
disgusting before the man himself—”
Dr. Bull tore off his spectacles and
broke them on the table.
“My spectacles are blackguardly,”
he said, “but I’m not. Look at my
face.”
“I dare say it’s the sort
of face that grows on one,” said the President,
“in fact, it grows on you; and who am I to quarrel
with the wild fruits upon the Tree of Life? I
dare say it will grow on me some day.”
“We have no time for tomfoolery,”
said the Secretary, breaking in savagely. “We
have come to know what all this means. Who are
you? What are you? Why did you get us all
here? Do you know who and what we are? Are
you a half-witted man playing the conspirator, or
are you a clever man playing the fool? Answer
me, I tell you.”
“Candidates,” murmured
Sunday, “are only required to answer eight out
of the seventeen questions on the paper. As far
as I can make out, you want me to tell you what I
am, and what you are, and what this table is, and
what this Council is, and what this world is for all
I know. Well, I will go so far as to rend the
veil of one mystery. If you want to know what
you are, you are a set of highly well-intentioned
young jackasses.”
“And you,” said Syme,
leaning forward, “what are you?”
“I? What am I?” roared
the President, and he rose slowly to an incredible
height, like some enormous wave about to arch above
them and break. “You want to know what I
am, do you? Bull, you are a man of science.
Grub in the roots of those trees and find out the
truth about them. Syme, you are a poet. Stare
at those morning clouds. But I tell you this,
that you will have found out the truth of the last
tree and the top-most cloud before the truth about
me. You will understand the sea, and I shall be
still a riddle; you shall know what the stars are,
and not know what I am. Since the beginning of
the world all men have hunted me like a wolf—kings
and sages, and poets and lawgivers, all the churches,
and all the philosophies. But I have never been
caught yet, and the skies will fall in the time I
turn to bay. I have given them a good run for
their money, and I will now.”
Before one of them could move, the
monstrous man had swung himself like some huge ourang-outang
over the balustrade of the balcony. Yet before
he dropped he pulled himself up again as on a horizontal
bar, and thrusting his great chin over the edge of
the balcony, said solemnly—
“There’s one thing I’ll
tell you though about who I am. I am the man
in the dark room, who made you all policemen.”
With that he fell from the balcony,
bouncing on the stones below like a great ball of
india-rubber, and went bounding off towards the corner
of the Alhambra, where he hailed a hansom-cab and sprang
inside it. The six detectives had been standing
thunderstruck and livid in the light of his last assertion;
but when he disappeared into the cab, Syme’s
practical senses returned to him, and leaping over
the balcony so recklessly as almost to break his legs,
he called another cab.
He and Bull sprang into the cab together,
the Professor and the Inspector into another, while
the Secretary and the late Gogol scrambled into a
third just in time to pursue the flying Syme, who
was pursuing the flying President. Sunday led
them a wild chase towards the north-west, his cabman,
evidently under the influence of more than common
inducements, urging the horse at breakneck speed.
But Syme was in no mood for delicacies, and he stood
up in his own cab shouting, “Stop thief!”
until crowds ran along beside his cab, and policemen
began to stop and ask questions. All this had
its influence upon the President’s cabman, who
began to look dubious, and to slow down to a trot.
He opened the trap to talk reasonably to his fare,
and in so doing let the long whip droop over the front
of the cab. Sunday leant forward, seized it, and
jerked it violently out of the man’s hand.
Then standing up in front of the cab himself, he lashed
the horse and roared aloud, so that they went down
the streets like a flying storm. Through street
after street and square after square went whirling
this preposterous vehicle, in which the fare was urging
the horse and the driver trying desperately to stop
it. The other three cabs came after it (if the
phrase be permissible of a cab) like panting hounds.
Shops and streets shot by like rattling arrows.
At the highest ecstacy of speed, Sunday
turned round on the splashboard where he stood, and
sticking his great grinning head out of the cab, with
white hair whistling in the wind, he made a horrible
face at his pursuers, like some colossal urchin.
Then raising his right hand swiftly, he flung a ball
of paper in Syme’s face and vanished. Syme
caught the thing while instinctively warding it off,
and discovered that it consisted of two crumpled papers.
One was addressed to himself, and the other to Dr.
Bull, with a very long, and it is to be feared partly
ironical, string of letters after his name. Dr.
Bull’s address was, at any rate, considerably
longer than his communication, for the communication
consisted entirely of the words:—
“What about Martin Tupper now?”
“What does the old maniac mean?”
asked Bull, staring at the words. “What
does yours say, Syme?”
Syme’s message was, at any rate,
longer, and ran as follows:—
“No one would regret anything
in the nature of an interference by the Archdeacon
more than I. I trust it will not come to that.
But, for the last time, where are your goloshes?
The thing is too bad, especially after what uncle
said.”
The President’s cabman seemed
to be regaining some control over his horse, and the
pursuers gained a little as they swept round into
the Edgware Road. And here there occurred what
seemed to the allies a providential stoppage.
Traffic of every kind was swerving to right or left
or stopping, for down the long road was coming the
unmistakable roar announcing the fire-engine, which
in a few seconds went by like a brazen thunderbolt.
But quick as it went by, Sunday had bounded out of
his cab, sprung at the fire-engine, caught it, slung
himself on to it, and was seen as he disappeared in
the noisy distance talking to the astonished fireman
with explanatory gestures.
“After him!” howled Syme.
“He can’t go astray now. There’s
no mistaking a fire-engine.”
The three cabmen, who had been stunned
for a moment, whipped up their horses and slightly
decreased the distance between themselves and their
disappearing prey. The President acknowledged
this proximity by coming to the back of the car, bowing
repeatedly, kissing his hand, and finally flinging
a neatly-folded note into the bosom of Inspector Ratcliffe.
When that gentleman opened it, not without impatience,
he found it contained the words:—
“Fly at once. The truth
about your trouser-stretchers is known. —A
friend.”
The fire-engine had struck still farther
to the north, into a region that they did not recognise;
and as it ran by a line of high railings shadowed
with trees, the six friends were startled, but somewhat
relieved, to see the President leap from the fire-engine,
though whether through another whim or the increasing
protest of his entertainers they could not see.
Before the three cabs, however, could reach up to
the spot, he had gone up the high railings like a
huge grey cat, tossed himself over, and vanished in
a darkness of leaves.
Syme with a furious gesture stopped
his cab, jumped out, and sprang also to the escalade.
When he had one leg over the fence and his friends
were following, he turned a face on them which shone
quite pale in the shadow.
“What place can this be?”
he asked. “Can it be the old devil’s
house? I’ve heard he has a house in North
London.”
“All the better,” said
the Secretary grimly, planting a foot in a foothold,
“we shall find him at home.”
“No, but it isn’t that,”
said Syme, knitting his brows. “I hear
the most horrible noises, like devils laughing and
sneezing and blowing their devilish noses!”
“His dogs barking, of course,” said the
Secretary.
“Why not say his black-beetles
barking!” said Syme furiously, “snails
barking! geraniums barking! Did you ever hear
a dog bark like that?”
He held up his hand, and there came
out of the thicket a long growling roar that seemed
to get under the skin and freeze the flesh—a
low thrilling roar that made a throbbing in the air
all about them.
“The dogs of Sunday would be
no ordinary dogs,” said Gogol, and shuddered.
Syme had jumped down on the other
side, but he still stood listening impatiently.
“Well, listen to that,”
he said, “is that a dog—anybody’s
dog?”
There broke upon their ear a hoarse
screaming as of things protesting and clamouring in
sudden pain; and then, far off like an echo, what
sounded like a long nasal trumpet.
“Well, his house ought to be
hell!” said the Secretary; “and if it
is hell, I’m going in!” and he sprang over
the tall railings almost with one swing.
The others followed. They broke
through a tangle of plants and shrubs, and came out
on an open path. Nothing was in sight, but Dr.
Bull suddenly struck his hands together.
“Why, you asses,” he cried, “it’s
the Zoo!”
As they were looking round wildly
for any trace of their wild quarry, a keeper in uniform
came running along the path with a man in plain clothes.
“Has it come this way?” gasped the keeper.
“Has what?” asked Syme.
“The elephant!” cried
the keeper. “An elephant has gone mad and
run away!”
“He has run away with an old
gentleman,” said the other stranger breathlessly,
“a poor old gentleman with white hair!”
“What sort of old gentleman?”
asked Syme, with great curiosity.
“A very large and fat old gentleman
in light grey clothes,” said the keeper eagerly.
“Well,” said Syme, “if
he’s that particular kind of old gentleman,
if you’re quite sure that he’s a large
and fat old gentleman in grey clothes, you may take
my word for it that the elephant has not run away
with him. He has run away with the elephant.
The elephant is not made by God that could run away
with him if he did not consent to the elopement.
And, by thunder, there he is!”
There was no doubt about it this time.
Clean across the space of grass, about two hundred
yards away, with a crowd screaming and scampering
vainly at his heels, went a huge grey elephant at an
awful stride, with his trunk thrown out as rigid as
a ship’s bowsprit, and trumpeting like the trumpet
of doom. On the back of the bellowing and plunging
animal sat President Sunday with all the placidity
of a sultan, but goading the animal to a furious speed
with some sharp object in his hand.
“Stop him!” screamed the
populace. “He’ll be out of the gate!”
“Stop a landslide!” said
the keeper. “He is out of the gate!”
And even as he spoke, a final crash
and roar of terror announced that the great grey elephant
had broken out of the gates of the Zoological Gardens,
and was careening down Albany Street like a new and
swift sort of omnibus.
“Great Lord!” cried Bull,
“I never knew an elephant could go so fast.
Well, it must be hansom-cabs again if we are to keep
him in sight.”
As they raced along to the gate out
of which the elephant had vanished, Syme felt a glaring
panorama of the strange animals in the cages which
they passed. Afterwards he thought it queer that
he should have seen them so clearly. He remembered
especially seeing pelicans, with their preposterous,
pendant throats. He wondered why the pelican
was the symbol of charity, except it was that it wanted
a good deal of charity to admire a pelican. He
remembered a hornbill, which was simply a huge yellow
beak with a small bird tied on behind it. The
whole gave him a sensation, the vividness of which
he could not explain, that Nature was always making
quite mysterious jokes. Sunday had told them that
they would understand him when they had understood
the stars. He wondered whether even the archangels
understood the hornbill.
The six unhappy detectives flung themselves
into cabs and followed the elephant sharing the terror
which he spread through the long stretch of the streets.
This time Sunday did not turn round, but offered them
the solid stretch of his unconscious back, which maddened
them, if possible, more than his previous mockeries.
Just before they came to Baker Street, however, he
was seen to throw something far up into the air, as
a boy does a ball meaning to catch it again.
But at their rate of racing it fell far behind, just
by the cab containing Gogol; and in faint hope of a
clue or for some impulse unexplainable, he stopped
his cab so as to pick it up. It was addressed
to himself, and was quite a bulky parcel. On
examination, however, its bulk was found to consist
of thirty-three pieces of paper of no value wrapped
one round the other. When the last covering was
torn away it reduced itself to a small slip of paper,
on which was written:—
“The word, I fancy, should be ’pink’.”
The man once known as Gogol said nothing,
but the movements of his hands and feet were like
those of a man urging a horse to renewed efforts.
Through street after street, through
district after district, went the prodigy of the flying
elephant, calling crowds to every window, and driving
the traffic left and right. And still through
all this insane publicity the three cabs toiled after
it, until they came to be regarded as part of a procession,
and perhaps the advertisement of a circus. They
went at such a rate that distances were shortened
beyond belief, and Syme saw the Albert Hall in Kensington
when he thought that he was still in Paddington.
The animal’s pace was even more fast and free
through the empty, aristocratic streets of South Kensington,
and he finally headed towards that part of the sky-line
where the enormous Wheel of Earl’s Court stood
up in the sky. The wheel grew larger and larger,
till it filled heaven like the wheel of stars.
The beast outstripped the cabs.
They lost him round several corners, and when they
came to one of the gates of the Earl’s Court
Exhibition they found themselves finally blocked.
In front of them was an enormous crowd; in the midst
of it was an enormous elephant, heaving and shuddering
as such shapeless creatures do. But the President
had disappeared.
“Where has he gone to?”
asked Syme, slipping to the ground.
“Gentleman rushed into the Exhibition,
sir!” said an official in a dazed manner.
Then he added in an injured voice: “Funny
gentleman, sir. Asked me to hold his horse, and
gave me this.”
He held out with distaste a piece
of folded paper, addressed: “To the Secretary
of the Central Anarchist Council.”
The Secretary, raging, rent it open,
and found written inside it:—
“When the herring runs a mile,
Let the Secretary smile;
When the herring tries to
fly,
Let the Secretary die.
Rustic
Proverb.”
“Why the eternal crikey,”
began the Secretary, “did you let the man in?
Do people commonly come to you Exhibition riding on
mad elephants? Do—”
“Look!” shouted Syme suddenly. “Look
over there!”
“Look at what?” asked the Secretary savagely.
“Look at the captive balloon!” said Syme,
and pointed in a frenzy.
“Why the blazes should I look
at a captive balloon?” demanded the Secretary.
“What is there queer about a captive balloon?”
“Nothing,” said Syme, “except that
it isn’t captive!”
They all turned their eyes to where
the balloon swung and swelled above the Exhibition
on a string, like a child’s balloon. A second
afterwards the string came in two just under the car,
and the balloon, broken loose, floated away with the
freedom of a soap bubble.
“Ten thousand devils!”
shrieked the Secretary. “He’s got
into it!” and he shook his fists at the sky.
The balloon, borne by some chance
wind, came right above them, and they could see the
great white head of the President peering over the
side and looking benevolently down on them.
“God bless my soul!” said
the Professor with the elderly manner that he could
never disconnect from his bleached beard and parchment
face. “God bless my soul! I seemed
to fancy that something fell on the top of my hat!”
He put up a trembling hand and took
from that shelf a piece of twisted paper, which he
opened absently only to find it inscribed with a true
lover’s knot and, the words:—
“Your beauty has not left me
indifferent.—From little Snowdrop.”
There was a short silence, and then
Syme said, biting his beard—
“I’m not beaten yet.
The blasted thing must come down somewhere. Let’s
follow it!”