Classic Audiobook Collection - The Devil-Ray by Joel Martin Nichols, Jr. ~ Full Audiobook [scifi]
Episode Date: November 5, 2024The Devil-Ray by Joel Martin Nichols, Jr. audiobook. Genre: scifi George Ferris is a master thief with a problem no lockpick can solve: he cannot remember who he truly is. Living by instinct and repu...tation, he teams up with two fellow criminals for a high-risk break-in at Castle Blennerhof, an isolated stronghold rumored to hide a fortune in priceless jewels. The plan is clean, the target is legendary, and the payout could buy any of them a new life. Then the night fractures. A plane roars overhead, and a strange purple beam lances down from the clouds, striking one of Ferris' partners and killing him instantly. The heist becomes something else entirely: a frantic flight through dark corridors, suspicious villagers, and a countryside suddenly haunted by a weapon no one can explain and no one can outrun. As Ferris struggles to keep ahead of the law, rival opportunists, and the next lethal flash from the sky, his missing past starts to feel less like a weakness and more like a clue someone would kill to possess. Part crime caper, part eerie science fiction, The Devil-Ray drives toward a single question: when death can fall from above without warning, what does it take to stay alive long enough to learn the truth? For ad-free listening try our premium subscription Chapters (Approximate) (00:00:00) Chapter 01 (00:04:16) Chapter 02 (00:21:40) Chapter 03 (00:38:45) Chapter 04 (00:49:43) Chapter 05 (00:54:14) Chapter 06 (01:18:53) Chapter 07 (01:42:17) Chapter 08 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Chapter 1 of the Devil Ray by Joel Martin Nichols Jr.
Chapter 1 The Flying Devil of Blennerhoff.
It was a lane of dead grass, perhaps ten feet wide, a straight even strip of sear yellow,
extending for nearly half a mile across the green hillside.
Up near the crest of the slope, it terminated, as abruptly and as evenly as it had begun
down in the valley, had it not been a lonesome spot in an obscure Austrian,
countryside, one might have believed that some huge carpet had lain out there in the sun until the
grass beneath it had perished. Halfway down the slope, a dead cow lay athwart the yellow lane,
and around the carcass a group of four men were gathering. Only one of them, he who talked and
gesticulated so excitedly, was dressed in the native costume of the countryside. The other three,
A rather motley trio of physiques and faces might have passed for tourists, and yet this was a territory remote from the beaten path of travel.
In other ways, in cut of clothes and speech, in faces half-concealed by low-pulled cloth caps, they did not seem to fit in with a general scene, either as interested strangers or cursory wayfarers.
one of them, a tall, wiry individual whose cap visor did not wholly conceal a wide scar across his forehead,
spoke impatiently, indicating the muttering peasant.
What does he say, Lefty?
When Lefty spoke, it was in the curiously clipped phrases of an American who had lived for many years in Lower New York.
He says that a devil done this. A flying devil that goes over to country at night.
He says he's seen him once or twice, and now he finds his cap.
cow here dead.
The third man, a short-dick-set individual, stirred uneasily and began digging nervously
with the toe of his shoe in the turf near the edge of the yellow lane, his efforts
sending up a small cloud of dry dust.
The scarred man, who was obviously the leader of the other two, snorted derisively.
Nonsense.
That's just heart disease.
That's all.
Cows is subject to it the same as human beings.
There isn't a mock or a wound on her that I can find.
His speech was clipped, terse.
Nothing of Manhattan here.
It's funny, Mr. Ferris, the mister coming from lefty, was curiously deferential to the younger man,
that she should happen to fall right here in this dead grass, ain't it?
I don't suppose the grass died of heart disease, too, did it?
Look here, said the third man, who had been digging in the turf.
Here's something else that's had heart trouble?
He stooped and pulled out of the turf, and obviously,
which appeared to be a rough ball of grayish lint.
Looking into the ball, the others saw that it was a nest of field mice.
They were all quite dead.
Just the same, I'm glad I wasn't hanging around these parts last night,
ain't you lefty? said the short man to the digger.
You've sat at Spida, returned the other.
Ferris stirred impatiently.
Come on, let's get out of this.
He snapped.
We didn't come up here to fiddle around with dead cows.
We've been here a week and nothing done.
We're going to spend enough.
another night watching the castle, and tomorrow we'll get busy making our plans to get at that
villa. If we hang around here much longer, people will begin to ask questions.
His comment was made well out of earshot of the peasant as they walked slowly up the hill.
They did not speak again until they reached the crest, when lefty, looking back, muttered in an
undertone, all the same, I don't like this place, and I'll be glad when we've pulled this job and
get out. There's something queer about this air. It ain't healthy. The short man said nothing.
but glanced nervously behind him as he followed the others over the brow of the hill.
End of Chapter 1
Chapter 2 of the Devil Ray
By Joel Martin Nichols Jr.
The Slibervox Recordings in the Public Domain
Read by Ben Tucker
Chapter 2
Castle Blennerhoff
The smoky purplish gloom of an autumn
twilight had settled over the blenner sea.
The faint breath of an autumnal breeze left a parting ripple on the dull surface of the lake
and rustled its way onward through the first frost-nipped leaves of the season.
Leaves deep blood red and somber black with none of the brilliant yellows and golden browns,
with which nature is wont to brighten the last hours of a dying summer.
In a thick copse of scrubby mountain pine growing on a small promontory,
overlooking the lake. The three men had halted, and now they stood looking over the darkening surface
of the water. Their gaze absorbed not in the purple and saffron glories of the sunset on the heights
above the water, but rather in the age-blackened turrets of the great castle, which reared itself
on a ledge-like island near the farther shore. The last rays of the sun on the summits above
them flickered and died. Simultaneously, from a point three miles down the lake, there came a sudden
warming glow.
"'That's the villa,' said Spider, pointing with stubby forefinger toward the light.
"'I bet they're getting ready to sit down to child right now. But that woman is wearing about
half a ton of them jewels ready for the pickings.' Lefty stirred uneasily, but said nothing.
Veras either did not hear the remark or chose to ignore it.
He had taken from his pocket a pair of binoculars, which he directed toward the turrets,
rearing into the gloom of the fast-gathering night.
I think I see those lights in the castle again, he said suddenly.
You tried the glass spider, and tell me what you see.
My eyes may be deceiving me.
The spider had barely brought the glasses to a focus when he started and shrank back into the thicket.
The lights again, he muttered.
I see them there in the middle tower window.
"'All right,' said Ferris.
"'Stand watch there for a time while we get something to eat.
"'Keep your eye on that opening in the wall under the drawbridge,
"'and call me if you see anything.'
"'With the other man, he went back into the thicket where they built a small fire.
"'They were not cold, but the village inn where they had been staying
"'was far down in one of the valleys,
"'and they felt the lack of its cheery fireside.
"'Perhaps an hour or two past and desultory conversation
when a voice from the edge of the lake called them back to the promontory.
"'It's that plain again, Mr. Ferris,' said Spider.
"'They're bringing her out again tonight.'
Without seeming reason, his voice had grown strangely hoarse.
He shuddered slightly, and his hands trembled as he held out the binoculars.
"'All right,' said Ferris, when he had taken a look.
"'They won't try any flying, probably until after midnight, same as before.
We can stay here and watch them until then.'
By this time, Lefty was standing beside them.
It's that plain again, said Spider, pointing a shaky forefinger toward the castle.
Lefty shivered.
It might have been the wind, which seemed to be growing rapidly chill with the advancing evening.
It gets cold here early, he said, half-apologetically.
There was a snort from Ferris.
You're both getting scared.
He snapped impatiently.
Both getting frightened over this full story from a half-a-half.
baked peasant. You're both in a blue funk and ready to quit when we've come halfway around the world to get this stuff.
And we've nothing but a few old men and a girl between us and nearly half a million.
I can't pull this job unless I get a little cooperation from you spineless creatures.
Why damn it, men, both of you have police records in New York.
You've both been in gunfights and tight places.
And here you are all scared, pie-eyed because you see a little dead grass and a dead cow.
evil spirits fly devils the pair opposite him stirred uneasily it was the spider who finally broke the silence evil spirits it was or evil spirits it wasn't i don't know as it makes any difference anyways we see the cow and you can't get away from that it was that plane that flew over that field and those guys there in that castle got something which ain't healthy for you nor me to deal with in his own mind pharis
to admit that there appeared to be something in what the spider had said.
It was two nights ago, when they had been lying in the cops watching the castle.
He had discovered a faint gleam from one of its towers.
Soon afterward, he had seen an airplane glide out from under the drawbridge
and spin silently away into the night,
silently because the usual roar of the exhaust had been muffled in some uncanny way.
Thereafter the castle had become an absorption with him.
Their mission in this remote part of Europe was not an honest one,
and the prize which they were seeking might lie either in the castle which they, until now,
had supposed uninhabited, or in the villa up the lake.
Yet it was the castle which fascinated him,
and it was this fascination that was reflected in his less hearty companions.
They admitted it to themselves by cold, stark fear.
It may be that Ferris feared he was losing his grip on them,
or perhaps it was his overweening curiosity that got the better of him.
At any rate, he suddenly began to peel off his coat
and then bent over and began to unlace his shoes.
The others eyed him in dumb wonderment.
What are you going to do now, Mr. Ferris?
Ventured the spider.
Swim to the castle, said Ferris shortly.
There was a tense silence.
What for?
Ferris said nothing for.
several seconds, and then finally, just to show you panicky old women what a lot of fools you've
been. The silence became somewhat painful to the two in the shadow of the thicket. There was no
sound, save the sharp click of Ferris's shoelaces as he whipped them through the eyelids.
The spider's voice finally broke the silence. There ain't nobody ever going to say that
Spider-Laying ever was scared of any man, alive or dead, he muttered. He too began removing his
clothing. Ten minutes later, shivering with the chill of the night, they slid down into the water
with their shirts, trousers, their automatics and Ferris's flashlight strapped to their shoulders.
Fortunately, the water proved to be warmer than the air, and they struck out slowly,
their white bodies scarcely perceptible in the murky waters of the Blinner Sea.
As Ferris swam with easy strokes, he pondered on the significance of the dead cow in the open field
in the airplane in the supposedly deserted castle.
Had the two any connection?
Was the airplane from the castle the flying devil
the peasant had told of seeing over his fields,
spraying death to plants and animals alike?
If not, why was there all this secrecy with the plane at the castle?
Why this midnight flying?
Why the guarded glimmer from these supposedly deserted towers?
The whole question had a strange fascination.
for Ferris, a fascination for which even he was at a loss to account.
He already had formed a theory, a theory which startled and perplexed him, because its
details came to him with such startling clearness. He was a strange combination, intelligent,
apparently highly educated, bearing all the earmarks of at least an outward culture,
and yet there was a sinister twist in his nature which, during the past four years had made him,
one of the cleverest operatives in the history of American crime.
Four years before, he had awakened one February morning in a Chicago hospital,
with a gash across his forehead and a split in his skull.
They had to tell him what had happened.
He had been standing in a Chicago hotel two nights before
when a pickpocket, sliding, deft fingers into his pocket,
had removed his wallet.
Ferris became aware of the theft almost as soon as it was consummated
and started after the thief in hotbed.
suit. The latter, however, had laid out his course for just such an emergency, for he slipped
through a side door. This door, in keeping with the corridor wall, wherein it was set,
bore a heavy glass mirror, and the thief swung the door viciously back, catching Ferris
across the forehead, and knocking him unconscious. Escape after that was easy. Despite the fact that
his papers were gone with the wallet, a card case in the victim's pocket established his identity
as George Ferris. This was fortunate because, on his awakening two days,
later, Ferris had lost all memory of who he was or where he had come from. This in itself was no
extraordinary thing, but the case did present one novel aspect to the surgeons. Ferris had been
convalescing rapidly, regaining everything except memory, and the case was considered for the
most part normal, when one day they brought him a mirror in order that he might shave himself.
Careously had he glanced into the thing, however, when he suddenly hurled it from him with a scream of agony
that startled the whole ward.
Never after that could they induce him to glance into any mirror.
The surgeons, discussing the matter, concluded that a pathological fear of his image had developed
in some quirk of his brain.
Color was lent to this theory when it was remembered that the moment before Ferris had been
hurled into his abnormal state by the impact of the swinging door, he must have seen his
own image in the mirror before him.
And that his mind had connected this image in the nerve cells of his brain with the pain and shock
of the impact. There was a second strange angle to the case of which the surgeons were quite unaware.
When Ferris was discharged from the hospital, he found tightly rolled up at the bottom of his card
case, where it had apparently escaped notice, an envelope with canceled postage, addressed to
Captain Lindley Finshaw of Berkeley, California. On its back were some meaningless pencilled figures.
Ordinarily, Ferris would have concluded that he had picked a thing up somewhere to make use of
as a memorandum. At that time, however, the name of Finshaw was being blazoned from one end of the country to the other.
For Frank Finshaw, X-ray expert and electrical scientist at the University of California,
had disappeared from his home nine months before, under circumstances which indicated a well-planned and well-executed kidnapping.
Finshaw had not only made many discoveries and improvements with the X-ray in connection
with electropherapeutics,
but he had also been employed by the War Department
during the World War,
perfecting various electrical apparatus
of a lethal nature.
Hence, the government as well as the police
was anxious to find the man,
but a search of months
had failed to reveal a single clue to his whereabouts.
Eventually, the search,
virtually abandoned by the authorities,
had been taken up by Lindley Finshaw,
American flying ace in the World War,
and formerly captain of the war,
of the football and fencing teams at University of California,
where his father had occupied the chair of electrical science.
The younger Finshaw, it was reported, had set out incognito,
alone and unaided in the hope of running down some trace of the missing man.
Just why, a few months later,
George Ferris should have found in his possession
an old envelope addressed to Lindley Finshaw
was as much a mystery to Ferris as it would have been to the authorities themselves.
That Ferris did not turn to him.
Turned the clue over to the police, but kept it to himself would be best understood in light of the fact that Ferris, when he discovered the letter, had no desire to meet the police for any reason whatsoever.
Soon after he left the hospital, quite penniless, he discovered in himself an easy propensity for helping himself to other people's chattels.
In time, he drifted to New York, where he hit upon a very profitable, though somewhat precarious career.
It was soon discovered that he had a pair of marvelously sensitive fingers and a very delicate ear,
all of which could be put to lucrative use in twirling a steel dial
and listening to the gentle click of tumblers supposedly muffled behind many thicknesses of soft felt and chrome steel.
Mostly he had worked alone, but of late he had been hired by less gifted personages for jobs,
which contained something out of the ordinary.
It was in this connection that Lefty Fritz and Spider-Lang had prevailed upon him to go to Austria.
It was the old story of the Habsburg crown jewels.
The bulk of them had disappeared when the old Habsburg monarchy had been overthrown,
and it was rumored that some of the old diehard nobility had been entrusted with their care
until such time as they might be more profitably employed in putting the hapless Charles
or his heir back upon the throne.
Lefty, who long years ago had been a Viennese gambler,
had learned through underworld channels that they had been entrusted to old Baron von Blennerhoff.
The Baron, according to the best subterranean information available,
had carted them up to his country's states,
far away from the clutching hands of the new regime.
This rumor was colored a bit by the fact that the Baron had,
some time before, purchased a sizable Stivers-lemy wall safe,
A somewhat rare article to be brought into that part of the country.
One or two attempts had been made by the Viennese underworld gentry to test the Baron's hospitality,
but as the inevitable outcome seemed to be broken heads and no jewels, the project was finally abandoned.
Now, it was the American trio had determined to try its hand.
So far, they had done but little, merely observing the castle in the villa from a distance,
and trying so far as possible to learn the habits of the inmates.
Thus they had concluded that, aside from the dozen or so servants and guards about the place,
the principals were only three.
The old Baron himself, a fiercely but-mustache junker by the name of von Scheng,
and a young woman who appeared to be the Baron's ward.
It was only the insistence of Ferris in demanding an exhaustive survey of the estate,
which resulted in their discovering that the castle was something more.
than the moss-grown pile of stones it had seemed to be.
As Ferris swam, he pondered whether the jewels might not be at the castle rather than at the villa.
He had planned, skirting the rock on which the castle stood,
thereby approaching it from the side opposite where the airplane was now visible,
its black wings, a dark blot against the gloomy background of the farther shore.
He had purposed lying there in the water, listening to the crew's conversation,
but he was barely halfway across the lake when he began to hear their
their voices in the clang of an iron wrench.
A moment later, while he trod water, there came a spluttering roar from the darkness.
Immediately it settled down to a barely perceptible hum.
Presently the plane glided out from her berth under the drawbridge,
and like some huge bird of ill omen mounted gradually into the night and disappeared into the east.
Scarcely a sound, save that deep-throated muffled hum of her engines.
With the plane out of the way, Ferris shifted his course and struck out for the drawbridge.
A few minutes later, they found themselves in a small chamber beneath the structure.
At one end was a tiny dock, and by groping about they found an iron ladder leading upward into the castle.
It had been a long swim, hampered as they were with the loads on their shoulders,
and for a time they clung to the slippery edge of the rock before venturing into the chill air.
As they rested there, Ferris' hand, groping about for a better purchase on the masonry,
came into contact with a row of smooth cylindrical objects, each about two feet long.
By further groping, he knew that they must be carefully wired to the rocks.
One by one he traced their smooth steel bellies down until he came to the conclusion
there must be at least a dozen there within reach of his hand.
After they had drawn themselves out of the water and put on their clothing, he took his flashlight.
and sent its narrow beam down into the water.
It was a small, quick flash, and it did not penetrate far,
but it showed him enough to make him whistle softly between his teeth.
The drawbridge, and perhaps the whole castle,
had been carefully mined with cylindrical bombs,
painstakingly wired to the ledges around its base.
End of Chapter 2.
Chapter 3 of The Devil Ray by
Joel Martin Nichols Jr.
The Slivervox Recordings in the Public Domain
Read by Ben Tucker
Chapter 3
The Face at the BARD Window
They followed the iron ladder and crawled up through a narrow passageway
Into what Ferris believed to be the ancient courtyard of the castle
Here in the Stygian gloom they waited breathlessly
Hoping and yet dreading to hear some sound that would
indicate to them the whereabouts of those they knew would be their enemies.
High above them towered the great battlements, their topmost turrets lost in the upper blackness
of the night. The lights which they had observed from the farther shore had now disappeared.
They had lost all sense of direction. They had started groping their way about, step by step,
when Ferris suddenly halted, laying a restraining hand on the arm of the trembling spider.
Listen, he whispered.
the admonition was scarcely necessary.
They listened intently.
At first there came no sound
save the pounding of their own hearts,
and yet Ferris's uncanny faculties
had not deceived him.
Gradually they became aware
that the air about them
was filled not by any perceptible sound,
but by a delicate throbbing,
a disturbance of the ether
which they sensed rather than heard.
A moment's hesitation
and Ferris pressed on.
He had taken the flashlight once more from his pocket, and was carrying it in his left hand,
leaving his right free for the butt of his automatic.
Suddenly in their groping, they came upon a blank wall.
By the smoothness of the structure under their fingers, they knew it must be different
from the rough-hewn stone of the castle, a moment's further hesitation,
and then a small beam of light shot out from Ferris' left hand.
Confronting them was a wall of modern brick.
Guardedly, the narrow shaft of light crept down the wall.
At a distance of perhaps thirty feet from where they stood,
they saw that this brick barrier had been mortised to one of the castle buttresses.
Foot by foot the beam went back the other way.
Fifteen paces beyond the point where they were standing,
it showed them that the wall ended.
Still farther beyond that,
revealed for a brief second in a kaleidoscopic gleam
was the ancient portcullis of Blennerhoff,
with the drawbridge drawn up behind it.
Ferris snapped off the light.
Apparently, then, this modern structure
was a sizable brick building
built in the center of the courtyard.
They crept along to their left,
came to the corner, rounded it cautiously.
They listened.
Not a sound save that peculiar, faint throbbing
still persisting in their consciousness.
Ferris tried the flash again
and they saw themselves facing a set of
of sliding doors made of steel or galvanized iron.
Above their heads, two narrow slit-like windows looked out into the court.
The spider had begun to recover his lost nerve,
and so with a nudge on Ferris's elbow,
he held out his locked hands, stirrup-wise, for the ladder to mount.
It was an old business with them.
Ferris swung up and peered through the slit.
Finally, he tried his flash.
cautiously. The beam found its way into the murky interior, lighting up the gleaming reflectors,
the polished brass and burnished steel of what appeared to be a gigantic motor car. This modern
structure then was nothing more nor less than a garage for this huge steel beetle. Ferris breathed
easier and whistled softly through his teeth. Small wonder visitors were not welcome to Castle
Blennerhoff? Slowly as best he could, he shot his narrow beam of light.
through that narrow aperture, foot by foot his eyes wandered over the car, noting the huge
beak-like hood, the slit-like openings for the eyes of the driver, the heavily armored sides
and wheels, and most of all, the heavy steel cupola on the roof.
Plainly it was an armored car, but what puzzled him most of all was that the Coppola contained
neither rifle nor machine gun but a high, bulging dome of heavy greenish glass approximately
two feet in diameter.
It might be a gigantic third
headlight whose rays could be directed not only
to right and left, to
the front and behind, but also into the
heavens. Ferris
slipped to the ground and held a whispered consultation
with the spider. Could the
jewels then be in the castle instead
of at the villa? And had this
motor car been brought up into the mountains
for their protection?
They remembered the assertions
of others that the safe must be at the villa.
What use could they have had?
for such a huge affair as a stivers lemmy at the villa,
why had they not brought it to the castle if the jewels were really in the Baron's custody?
Very well he would find out.
Ferris had grown bolder with his flashlight now.
By aid of its narrow shaft he found an open iron-studded door at the foot of one of the towers.
Within was an ancient stone staircase, which they began to ascend.
It was a circuitous climb, leading far up into the turret,
in their ears still rang that subdued humming, growing slightly louder as they went up.
Presently they stepped through a narrow-arched doorway out upon the open battlements.
Even as they did so, the pale arc of the moon, rolling out for the first time beyond its clouds,
through a fitful gleam over the ancient pile.
Together they peered over the parapet into the gloom below.
Together they saw there something that made them both crouch hastily.
back within the shadow of the wall.
It was several minutes before they ventured it a second time.
They saw then that the castle was in reality only a shell.
Within the encircling battlements was a large interior courtyard, stone flagged.
To one side, they made out a huge pile of black lumpish material,
at the foot of which the dim outlines of two men were visible.
From below their ears caught the subdued clang of iron.
"'Cole, or I'm a liar!' whispered the spider.
It was indeed a huge pile of anthracite.
They were aware now that the humming had become louder.
Over in one corner of the courtyard, a white waving plume of steam
floated out into the night, only to be lost, long before it reached the upper battlements.
Voices from the two men below them came up in low guttrels.
One of them trundled a wheelbarrow load of coal toward the corner,
where he disappeared through a doorway.
Presently, they heard the clang of an iron door
in the metallic rattle of a slice bar.
Ferris grunted,
Dinamos, he whispered half to himself.
It was not until then that the spider recognized
the now familiar, whining, hum.
For a time, they watched the men at work on the coal pile,
wonderingly.
Ferris knew that the villa was an up-to-date affair,
equipped with electric lights and other modern improvements,
but he was virtually certain that the power for these was generated by a small gas engine in one of the outbuildings near the servant's quarters.
Furthermore, he knew that the humming in his ears indicated the presence of dynamos far more powerful than would be required for the needs of a mountain villa, no matter how extensive.
Then, too, why was it necessary for these men to work by night?
Musing thus, he crept on about the battlements until at a point ahead of him, he saw a reflection of light,
from one of the small embrasures.
They peered into it cautiously,
what they saw brought another of those low whistles from Ferris.
The chamber within had apparently been built over the engine room.
To one side was a short iron ladder,
leading up to a row of rheostats and other electrical paraphernalia,
with dials and many wheels attached to a solid rubber slab on the wall.
At the other side, jutting through the floor
were the glistening backs of two small dynamos. Between them stood the strangest apparatus of all.
It was of thick, greenish glass, shaped, not unlike a huge hourglass, with the upper end touching the ceiling,
and the lower part countersunk in the stone floor. Out of the ceiling with the upper half of the
hourglass, there jotted a U-shaped bar of a black substance, apparently carbon. A similar bar was
seen under the glass in the lower half.
Between the two bars there oscillated a strange purpleish light.
As they watched, they saw it flicker and flare,
now forking like a serpent's tongue,
now a solid ray of purple.
Even as they stood there watching,
the head and shoulders of a man arose through an opening in the floor at the farther corner.
Step by step, he mounted,
until crouching there as they were,
with their eyes just visible over the window,
ledge. They could see him plainly, his upstanding crop of thick gray hair, his thin,
gangling figure, his curiously round and impassive face with deep-set eyes veiled behind thick-lensed
glasses. He turned as he stepped out upon the floor and stooped to help a second man out of the
hole. The last comer proved to be a smooth-shaven person, with haggard features, and emaciated
frame. Even as his face came into full view beneath the glare of the land.
lamp overhead. The spider felt Ferris stiffened beside him, heard him gasp as though
struggling for breath. The tightening clutch of Ferris's hand on the spider's sleeve
sent cold shivers racing up and down the ladder's already trembling spine.
Smatter, he growled in alarm. Ferris said nothing, but continued to peer in fascination
through the window, raising his head until he must have been fully visible to those within
had they chosen to look up.
At times he paused, stepped back into the darkness,
and passed his hand over his eyes.
When he pressed his face again to the window,
the spider saw that there were great globules of perspiration on his forehead,
though the night was increasing in coolness.
The little man fidgeted nervously.
It was not his custom to question the actions of his chief,
but he knew they were losing valuable time.
Finally he laid his hand on Ferris's arm only to have it flung roughly aside.
Here again it was strange, for Ferris turned to the spider and peered long and intently into his face,
lit up as it was by the dim glow from the window.
The spider was no student of psychology, but there was, in Ferris's eyes, something which made him panicky with fear,
a certain vagueness which was alarming.
How long this went on, it seemed hours, the spider's skis.
scarcely knew. Once he thought all was lost when the second of the two men, the emaciated one,
suddenly glanced up at the window. The spider could have sworn that he had seen Ferris,
and the little man's hand flew to his automatic, his ears attuned for the cry of alarm.
Instead, and the spider could have sworn it, the man in the tower seemed to stand there for the
fraction of a second, staring in fascination at the window. Was it a look of recognition?
Then the man within took a step across the floor, and the spider raised his weapon.
One more step, but the man had stopped. He turned away. Ah, the other had spoken to him.
From out of the east came the faint hum of airplane motors, only a subtle throb of the ether.
The plane was coming back. They must be gone. As roughly as he dared, the spider pulled Ferris from the window,
and pinning him with all his strength against the wall, signaled for his.
him to listen. Zoom! Zoom!
Apparently they had cut out the silencer.
And they were coming nearer. Had Ferris lost his senses? Would the fool understand?
Ferris shuddered once or twice and rubbed his forehead in a vague, perplexed way.
It's the plane!
hissed the spider. Are you drunk or crazy? We gotta get out of here and mighty quick.
Ferris stiffened.
His expression seemed to change as he turned his ear to the night wind.
God, you're right, he mumbled.
Why didn't you say so before?
The spider swore under his breath.
They retraced their steps as quietly as possible
and made their way down through the tower to the courtyard.
More groping, for they dared not use the light now,
and they found the iron ladder leading down under the bridge to the little stone dock.
There was no time to remove their clothing now.
so they plunged in as they were.
By this time the faint zooming from the east
had grown to a deep-throated hum.
The plain would be upon them
before they were halfway across the lake.
Yet once out there in the water
they were reasonably safe.
There was small likelihood of the midnight flyers
glancing down into the waters where they were.
But what was this?
Out of the murk to the east
came a sudden purplish gleam.
Only a faint glow at first it grew brighter
with the increasing drone
of the engines. In a manner
that he had never known before, Ferris
felt the fingers of panic clawing
at his vitals. Around him
the water grew icy cold.
He heard the spider call out something from behind him.
There was panic in the little man's voice,
and it seemed to chain his own limbs.
That had been a cry of fear,
fear of the unknown. Turning his head,
he gazed into the east. There it was,
its somber wings outlined against the scutting clouds.
But now, streaming vertically down from the fuselage to the surface of the water, was a solid ray of purple light.
The plane roared on, drew nearer. Somehow, Paris knew not why. The fear that froze his limbs now struck through to his heart.
Instinctively, he felt he must avoid at all costs. That ray of purple.
The ship, of all planing now, roared on over their heads.
It was all over in a moment.
That sinister patch of purple had passed over the water between them.
It had touched no part of Ferris's body.
But it had gone directly over the head and shoulders of the spider.
There was not a cry, not even a murmur.
The spider was gone.
In frantic haste, Ferris swam about calling the spider's name as loudly as he dared.
The plane had reached the castle, and the last fitful roar of its engines shut out any chance.
of discovery. But the spider? Ferris swam around once more calling his name. He dived. Nothing.
He dived again, this time deeper, down, down, down, until his lungs seemed to spill within him.
He could stay down no longer. So he shot to the surface, his chest bursting. There, floating still
and white beside him in the sable waters of the Blenner Sea, he found the spider. But the thing that
made the spider what he was, the thing which is, the thing which
made him different from the mud on the lake bottom, the thing which made him eat and drink and
laugh and talk, that thing was gone forever.
Just a touch of the purple, and it had vanished.
Ferris finally managed to tow the body to the shore.
There, with the help of the waiting lefty, he pulled the little man out to the narrow
beach.
Together they worked on the body for two hours, two hours of fruitless effort.
Inch by inch they went over his body, but not a mark could they find.
there was no water in his lungs.
He was dead, but how?
The purple light?
It must be.
They were men used to acting in strange emergencies,
so they scraped a shallow grave on the side of the Blennercy,
and buried there the thing that had been the spider.
When they had finished, Lefty told Ferris that he was through.
Ferris could come with him if he would,
or he could stay behind and play a lone hand for the jewels.
As for Lefty Fritz, he had had enough.
he was through.
And so that night left, he tramped down out of the mountain and went his way.
But Ferris, having made his choice, stayed behind.
End of Chapter 3.
Chapter 4 of The Devil Ray by Joel Martin Nichols Jr.
The Slibervok's recording is in the public domain, read by Ben Tucker.
Chapter 4. The Girl
It was not Ferris's habit to attempt explanation.
for past experiences while there was still work to be done.
And for that reason he dismissed from his mind, at least temporarily,
the strange happenings at the castle and the tragic culmination of their trip across the lake.
That there was some sinister connection between the incident of the dead cow and the open field
and the airplane at the castle, he was quite sure.
Obviously the same destructive force that had slain the spider, had killed the cow,
and left that streak of yellow grass.
But pondering was a waste of time.
He made a few discreet inquiries among the peasants of the little village in the valley where he was staying,
but they knew as little of Blennerhof as did he,
and seemed to have no thought save for those things which surrounded their own simple existence.
Ferris had had enough of the castle for the time being,
so he decided to turn his attention to the villa,
hoping thereby to establish beyond doubt whether the jewels were in the villa or the castle.
The thing to do, he concluded, was to learn more of the habits of the inmates,
The opportunity to do this came a little sooner than he expected, and in a manner that added nothing to his satisfaction.
Two days later he was strolling down the road which led from the mountains into the valley, when he came upon the girl at a bend in the road.
It was little more than a bridle path hugging the cliffs on one side and dropping off into a precipice on the other.
Just what had happened before he rounded the corner, Ferris had no way of telling, but it must have been an altercation of some sort.
sort, for he was just in time to see her raise her riding-whip, and cut it sharply across her
companion's face. It was the Baron's ward, and she had struck the big German whom the natives
knew only under the name of Colonel von Scheng. Then, wheeling her animal, she dashed up the narrow
path toward Ferris, while the man, his face livid with anger, spurred on behind. There had been
a slight frost the night before, but the morning sun had already thawed the surface of the ground,
leaving a thin smear of slippery mud.
Whether owing to the earliest of the season,
she had neglected to have her mount shod,
or whether the sharp curve was too much for him,
would be hard to say.
Ferris, who had dodged behind a shrub in the hope of,
remaining undiscovered,
saw the beast's hind legs slip out from under him,
throwing his head against the pebbled cliff.
Some of the gravel and stones brought down
by the brushing impact must have frightened him,
for he began rearing and plaiting.
plunging madly, drawing ever nearer to the chasm which yawned on the other side of the path.
The livid rage on the face of her pursuer turned to ashen fear when he saw her impending danger.
He leaped from his own horse, then stood as if rooted with terror.
Ferris's photographic mind had registered every detail of the proceeding,
realizing instantly that the animal had been maddened by the plunge of sand and gravel about his ears and eyes,
and that the next moment might see horse and rider toppling over the precipice.
The American rushed forward and seized the bridle.
He had forgotten that his principal object in life during the past few weeks
had been to keep out of sight of just these people.
Loose the rain! he shouted to her as the horse tried to rear and strike at him.
He saw that in her terror she was pulling back with all her strength on the heavy Spanish bit,
forcing the sharp steel deeper and deeper into the beasts.
sensitive mouth. Blood-flecked foam spattered over him. She seemed not to hear him,
horse and rider edged, nearer the chasm. Another backward plunge like the last, and both of them would be
over the cliff. Seeing that she was powerless to act, Ferris dropped his hold on the rain,
and leaped to her stirrup, seizing her about the waist. With his free hand, he pulled the
leather from her nerveless fingers. She had fainted, luckily. But would her left foot become entangled
in the stirrup before he could drag her clear?
Even now the beast was toppling on the brink.
Thank God her foot had come free.
Ferris threw his body backward, with all his strength,
to find himself staggering and swaying over the abyss.
Even as he regained his balance a reddish bulk,
struck the rocks far below.
There was a thud which even he could hear.
The horse kicked once and lay still.
Strangely nauseated, Ferris stumbled across the pathway
and placed the girl down against the cliff.
The dark masses of her hair had slipped out from under her hat,
framing her bloodless face and soft outline.
He was just about to prop up her head with his coat,
preparatory to chafing her hands when he felt a hand on his shoulder.
He had forgotten the presence of the man, von Scheng,
though his mind still bore the picture of him hesitating there in the background,
while her life trembled in the balance.
Oddly enough, he paid no attention.
shook off the hand, and without so much as a glance upward, began to shave the woman's wrists.
The hand on his shoulder tightened, tried to twist him roughly about.
At the same instant he felt the sharp sting of a riding whip across his shoulders.
He turned on the instant and glanced up.
The startled look on the colonel's face told Ferris he had been recognized at once as an outlander.
Even as the two men faced each other, one crouching, the other standing,
the colonel's hand moved swiftly to his hip.
Ferris knew he must move quickly, and move quickly he did.
In one motion he let the girl's head sink back against the coat,
and with but a slight shift of his legs, he sprang at Von Chang.
The dull impact of his fist on the chin of the German,
and the clatter of a blue steel automatic on the hard gravel of the path,
came almost at one.
Von Shang's knees wobbled, and he sank heavily to the ground.
With scarcely a second look at him, Ferris picked up the pistol,
glanced at it contemptuously, and then tossed it over the cliff.
Without further ado, he turned his attention to the girl.
He found a spring nearby and dashed some of the water into her face.
Slowly the color came back into her face, and she moved her head into the hollow of his arm.
An idle breeze fanned the loose strands of her hair across his cheek,
the subtle perfume of it filtering through his nostrils and sending the blood pounding through his brain.
Another sigh, a flutter of the long lashes,
and she looked up into his eyes.
The first day's look of incomprehension
shaded to one of startled bewilderment.
She said something to him in a tongue he did not understand.
You'll be all right in a moment, he ventured in English.
Her eyes opened in amazement and then something akin to fear.
You are American? she asked.
He knew by her accent that she must be very familiar with English
as spoken in his country.
What are you doing here?
She demanded.
And then she saw the prostrate form of von Scheng.
Have you killed him?
Is he dead?
Ferris shook his head, smiling.
No such luck, he said.
Just tapped him on the chin.
He hit me with his riding whip.
And then, when he saw, I wasn't a peasant, he reached for his gun.
I had to do something, you know, half apologetically.
She got up and moved toward Ferris, clutching his sleeve.
It would have been better had you killed him, better for all.
All of us. Oh, I wish I might have gone over that cliff with poor Rallo.
But you can't stay here. See, he's stirring a little. I'm afraid. I'm afraid when he comes to
himself. Ferris misunderstood her. His eyes had narrowed to small slits, and he felt the blood
pounding through his temples, felt the throb of a hate he did not understand.
"'Madame,' he said, "'there is no need for you to fear him any longer. A little push over the cliff,
and he'll be down there with your horse.'
his short metallic laugh rang out in the stillness.
The coldness of it caused her to draw away from him.
She looked again into his face and gave a low cry.
Even as her lips parted, he turned from her and strode toward the helpless German.
Through the blur in his eyes he saw that all the world was red.
Red, red, red, he muttered.
God, how my head throbs.
Everything red.
I ought to kill him.
I've got to kill him.
him. He had not gone half the distance to the prostrate man when a small, white-faced fury hurled
itself against him. Through the red film which seemed to smother him, he felt the clutch of her
fingers on his arm. Red, red, red, he muttered. Are you mad? He heard her cry. Would you murder
a hopeless man? The red film gathered tighter about his throat, choking, smothering.
He brushed her aside. Two more steps and he stood over the German.
his fingers opening and shutting convulsively.
Even as he reached down to grasp him,
he felt the cold muzzle of a pistol pressing against his temple.
Her voice, now clear and calm, rang in his ears.
If you touch him, I'll kill you!
Just as a delicately regulated pump begins working automatically when the water reaches a certain level,
so the hair-trigger instincts of the American telegraphed to every nerves,
center of his body that another step toward that recumbent figure would mean his end.
He paused, straightened up.
The red, choking film seemed to melt away before his eyes.
That tight, strangling sensation at his neck, loosened.
He backed away, startled at the burning scorn in her eyes.
He heard her low voice miles away.
It would be better, perhaps, for all of us, if this man were...
dead, she was saying.
But I cannot see him killed in cold blood.
It is best that you go now, before he wakes.
I can promise you there will be two of us against you then.
The red had gone entirely now.
The throb in his brain, the throb across, that scar on his forehead, was passing.
He felt a great shame, an all-absorbing desire to slink away.
And so while she was bending over the other man, he hastened around the corner and down the slope.
The fresh morning air fanning to dryness the great beads of perspiration which had arisen on his brow.
End of Chapter 5 of The Devil Ray by Joel Martin Nichols Jr.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain.
Read by Ben Tucker
Chapter 5 A Lone Hand
An early autumn thunderstorm, an uncommon thing in those mountains,
had piled its black warning into the sky as the afternoon wore on.
Ferris in his room at the inn sat with his head buried in his arms.
Of the distant peals of thunder, the glowering twilight that presaged the storm, he was oblivious.
At a quarter after five a servant brought in a candle and stirred the fire.
For only a minute or two, its flicker threw grotesque shadows on the wall and then died low.
Paris did not seem to notice the coldness of the room.
Two hours later, the servant, re-entering with his victuals, found the American still musing.
By this time, fitful gusts of wind were tearing at the shutters and whistling among the gables.
Livid flashes of lightning threw pallid gleams into the murky interior.
Again the man stirred the fire, and again it leaped into the chimney, seemingly angry at being thus disturbed.
A moment later it had subsided to a dull, sulky glow
beneath a covering of half-burned wood and somber ashes.
On the hills of a heavier crash than usual,
one of the wooden shutters suddenly flung open,
letting in a swish of rain and a riot of galloping wind.
The candle on the table flickered and died.
Its feeble gleams dwarfed to insignificance
by the blue flare which flooded the room from the open window.
Before he could control himself,
Ferris was on his feet in the far corner of the room,
his fingers clutching the cold butt of his automatic,
his eyes glaring in the direction of the swinging shutter.
But there was nothing but wind and rain.
Nerves, nerves, he muttered,
losing my nerve at this stage.
He pressed the tips of his fingers together,
felt them tremble with the throb of his heart
and the twitch of tensed muscles.
Couldn't roll a tumbler tonight with these fingers.
he murmured.
He strode to the table and took a long draft of the wine.
It seemed to brace him.
He walked to the window.
The whirling torrent had subsided for the moment.
He gazed out into the night,
heard the galloping thunder of the storm,
out beyond, in the smother of darkness.
A light flickered here and there in the village.
A wild night for even these hearty peasants.
He pulled the shutters together.
Then he lit the candle with a lighted sliver of wood
from the fireplace, sensing inwardly that the sullen, glowing embers hated to yield even this tiny flame.
As he turned away, they lashed out at him in unwonted brightness.
He started, stepped back, cursed himself for a fear-bitten fool.
A fat pine not suddenly breaking into flame.
That was all.
Nerves, nerves, he muttered.
Presently he drew up his chair to the fireplace and slumped into its hard depths.
Sleep, he would have welcomed, but the uncanny rattle of windy fingers snatching at the shutters
kept him wide-eyed.
Ever in anon he turned about in his chair and peered into the room behind him, scorning himself inwardly for his lack of self-control.
At 11.30 by his watch he arose, went to his portmanteau, and drew from it a thin woolen sweater,
a pair of rubber-sold shoes, a flashlight, and a thin bar of steel hammered down.
down to the thickness of a wafer at either end. In a few minutes he had changed his shoes and
pulled on the sweater. In the outer pocket of a waterproof coat which he put on, he placed his
automatic, and the other was the bar of steel, a blackjack, and the flashlight. After all this
was done, he shot the ponderous iron bolt in the door, leading from the chamber, and extinguished
the candle. A moment's careful peering through a crack in the shutter before he opened it, and then
the five-foot dropped to the ground outside. In ten minutes, he had left the village behind,
and was well on his way into the hills.
End of Chapter 5. Chapter 6 of The Devil Ray by Joel Martin Nichols Jr.
This Livervox recordings in the public domain read by Ben Tucker.
Chapter 6 The Mirrors of Villa Blennerhoff.
Ferris stumbled up the last slope to a promontory overlooking the lake.
Here he paused for a moment.
watching the towers of the castle, all but indiscernible now through the gloom and murk that hovered over the waters.
The castle had always fascinated him, even more than did the jewels within the villa.
Even now as he watched it, he fancied he caught the gleam of dancing lights about the gloomy battlements.
But there was other and sterner work to be done, so he turned his footsteps toward the villa just beyond.
The place was in absolute darkness.
He feared for a time that the hounds and the kennels at the rear
would hear and awaken the caretakers and servants,
who were housed in an adjacent building.
But the rush and swirl of wind and rain,
the almost incessant peals of thunder,
drowned under an avalanche of sound,
the soft tread of his rubber-souled feet across the gravel.
With expertness, he chose one of the lower windows
and pulled himself up to the narrow ledge
by the sheer power of his steel-springed wrists and fingers.
Klinging there on his precarious perch, he inserted the jimmy beneath the window sash,
and with a gradually increasing pressure forced it upward.
It gave with a metallic click, audible, even above the storm.
He waited a moment, crouching there in the darkness,
knowing it must have been heard within, should any remain awake.
A glittering flash of lightning lit up for a brief moment,
the polished furniture and gleaming tableware within.
It was the dining room then.
Very good.
He swung his feet inside and slid noiselessly to the floor.
With this movement, his pistol butt protruding from his pocket caught on the window ledge,
and the weapon fell out into the night.
He debated with himself whether he should go back and risk the chance of being heard by the hounds,
but thought better of it and closed the window softly behind him.
Out of his long experience, he had concluded that the safe, being cylindrical,
would have been concealed within one of the walls.
There was small likelihood of its being in the dining room,
so he crept cautiously across the floor to the open doorway.
His flashlight made unnecessary by the bluish flares of lightning,
which lit up the interior at every third step.
He crossed the hallway carefully on his hands and knees,
and found himself in what he took to be a drawing room.
The shades had been partly drawn,
so he took out the flashlight and let a guarded beam shoot across the room to the opposite wall.
He had only to search.
a little when he realized with a propitious pounding of his heart that he had found it.
Long experience under similar circumstances told him that behind that peculiarly hung picture in drapery
was the little polished knob he had been seeking. Scarcely glancing about him, he hastened
across the floor, stumbling as he did so on an intervening chair. The subdued clatter of it he ignored,
was there not already enough sound in the air to muffle all else?
He reached the picture and groped around it until he discovered the spring that released it.
As it swung outward, he thrust his hand behind and felt, with a glow of satisfaction, the small, round knob.
Then carefully stuffing his left ear with cotton.
He laid his right close to the small steel door and began to twirl the nickel disc.
It clicked once, and he twirled it the other way.
A second tiny impact within told him it had clicked again.
The gods were indeed favorable.
The disturbing nervousness of the afternoon was gone.
His hand was as steady as a rock, his hearing well-nigh perfect.
Had his hearing been a trifle better,
he would have heard the girl as her satin-shod feet came down the great staircase in the hall.
At the foot, she paused and reached for a button on the wall.
A slight click in the great chandeliers above him poured down a flood of rose-colored light.
Ferris sprang to his feet, his hand moving instinctively to his hip.
It never reached there.
He never even saw her.
Instead, he found himself glaring into a heavy, peer glass, hanging close at his left hand.
From head to foot, it reflected his image.
His crouching hunch shoulders, his face, white, haggard.
Eyes drawn to pinpoints glared back at him.
Seemed to enlarge, to engulf him.
A livid flash from the storm without threw his features into bold relief.
A choking, struggling cry.
A spasmodic shudder.
and he had sunk to the floor,
just a bundle of limp flesh and inert muscle.
He held his hand before his eyes,
trying to shut out the light.
Then something seemed to snap in his brain.
He felt himself hurtling through miles of black space.
Out of the night faces danced and mocked him,
waved at him in derision,
then faded mercifully away.
He closed his eyes and welcomed oblivion.
The girl gave a little low cry and hurried to him,
found him limp and shuddering on the floor.
She raised his head, placed it on the silken lap of her night robe.
He opened his eyes.
This, this, he murmured.
What's all this? Where, where am I? Who are you?
She looked at him intently, thinking he might be feigning.
But what need was there for feigning?
She was a woman, helpless. He was a man, powerful.
She knew that. And then his eyes.
They were not the same bloodshot orbs she had looked into on the cliff that morning.
She began to understand a little.
You are at Villa Blennerhof, she said soothingly.
I suppose it was the jewels.
You were not the first to try, but they are gone weeks ago.
Rest quietly now for a moment, and you'll be all right.
No, no, no, he cried.
I must be out of here.
Father, father, where is father?
God, I don't know why I came here.
What day of the week is it?
Saturday?
Then I have been here since.
"'Since,' he paused, a look of half-understanding, coming into his eyes.
"'Yes, I remember now. I was chasing a thief somewhere.
"'There was a crash, but what month is it? February?'
"'It is October,' she answered, quietly.
"'October?'
"'It is October. It is October. It is October, 1926.'
He groaned and hit his face in his hands.
"'I guess—I guess I understand now,' he exclaimed.
"'I'm mighty sorry. Sorry to have disturbed you in this way.
"'Can't—one attempt to give any explanation.
"'But you said this place is Blennerhof?
"'Where's Blennerhoff?'
"'Austria,' she answered.
"'He might have cried out again, but he only shook his head.
"'O, father,' he murmured.
I guess I'm too late now.
Five years.
Five years.
Try to rest quietly, she admonished.
You'll make yourself ill.
He started to sit down in the chair she had offered him
when he stopped and put his hand over his eyes.
And yet, he said slowly,
and yet I saw him, saw him not three days ago.
Saw him somewhere behind a barred window.
Is my brain still playing tricks on me?
But no, he was there.
Let me think a moment.
He sat down and buried his head in his arms.
Yes, it comes back to me a little now.
Just as sure of it as I sit here, looking at you.
I saw him not two days ago.
There was somewhere a purple light.
He did not notice how she paled.
There was a purple light.
We were swimming in black water.
That light, it swept over us.
The spider went down.
She laid a trembling hand on his arm.
Tell me, she said.
Was there a purple light and a castle?
Yes, yes, he answered.
That was it, a purple flare.
I saw it.
It killed him.
Oh, God, she cried.
Then it must be true.
And I thought Von Shang lied,
but no, no, no, it is impossible. He must have lied.
He started to get up.
He had not heard her.
I must be getting out of here, he said.
There is no time to be lost.
In which direction lies this castle?
He felt her hand clutch his.
Listen, she whispered.
The wind and rain without seemed to hold up and hushed expectation.
As he listened, he heard the faint purr of a heavy motor swinging along the road.
near the lake. For a moment, the faint yet powerful drumming filled the air, and then died away
amid a renewed roar of the elements. Her face blanched, and she made as if to step toward the
stairs. At that moment they heard a door in the vestibule open and slammed shut. Again, he felt her
fingers on his arm, felt the terror trembling through them. "'It must be Colonel von Scheng,' she whispered.
"'He and Baron Blennerhoff were to have gone down to Heverbrook, before the terror. It was a
storm, but they must have deceived me. I know his step. I have forbidden him this house.
He is here to—no good purpose. Quick! He must not find you here.
For a moment he hesitated, still in doubt. Suppose she were to betray him. Was this a trick?
Listen, he said. I am Lindley Finshaw, the son of the man they have imprisoned at the castle.
If they know who I am, they will, no doubt, move heaven and earth to kill me. And if this is a trick of yours,
"'Why should I trust you?
"'You may be one with them.'
"'For God's sake, go!' she answered in a panic.
"'Have you not guessed it yet?
"'I am as much American as you are.
"'My father was of Austrian birth,
"'a nephew of Baron Blennerhoff.
"'He left his home in America
"'and went back to fight for Austria against the Russians.
"'He was killed.
"'My mother was a nurse.
"'She was killed behind the American lines in a bombing raid.
"'Is that not enough?
"'Can you not trust me?
"'Quick he is coming!'
"'Somehow he believed her, and yet he hesitated.
"'From the corridor beyond they heard the swish
"'of waterproofs and the thump of heavy boots.
"'Quick!' she whispered.
"'There is no time for you to go now, behind this portier.'
She had just time to thrust him behind the hanging
when the burly figure of Von Scheng entered the room.
He had discarded his hat.
His face was flushed with excitement.
The woman drew herself together with a subject.
supreme effort of the will.
You call it an unseemly hour, my lord, she said in English.
He ignored the remark, seemed not to hear.
Ah, you await me, he cried his face flush with obvious gratification.
It is even, as the great masters have said, in the hour of victory, the warrior, the woman,
you will leave the villa immediately.
Her cool, clear tones cut across his with the sharpness of steel.
He shrugged his shoulders, deprecatingly.
You are inespetable, Freilin.
I had come to accept your congratulations, for work well done.
You are the first woman in the world to know what has happened this night.
Lindley Finshaw felt her tremble through the curtain.
Before the dawn, our hour will have struck, the German continued.
Within 24 hours, we shall have arisen out of the dust.
We shall...
sinned the rest of the world to its knees.
Ah, but now it will be worse than before.
They have taught us how not to be lenient.
As he raised his arm, she saw that under his coat he was in full uniform with his decorations.
His imperial highness, he continued proudly, meets the Baron at dawn.
Ah, the fools, the fools.
They let him out of exile because they believed him harmless.
His laugh rang out in the room.
It is a monarchist uprising, then, she gasped.
He laughed again.
An uprising, if you will, Frailine Reinhardt.
Then coming a step nearer so that she could see the glint in his eyes.
But what an uprising?
The nobility of three nations.
Monday's sunset will see these Republican swine
struing the streets of three cities.
Three days more will see us in Paris.
"'Two more in England. A week beyond that, and America will be at their feet.'
Her lip curled. She was fighting for time.
"'My lord has been over long at the wine, I fear, and the means of all this victory?'
He bent toward her so that even Lindley behind a hanging could hear the hiss of his breath.
"'You scoffed when I told you before,' he said.
"'But now you shall see for yourself. It is the least.
beswry, the light of vengeance, the purple death.
You lie, again her tones cut across his.
He laughed sardonically.
Tomorrow then shall prove it to you.
We have had it perfected for weeks.
We have trite out on the lake and over the fields while others slept.
It kills as it touches.
Neither man nor beast, no plant can stand before it.
unleashed the very fires of hill and the American. These fool Americans can think their
compatriot, the great venture for placing in the hands of their enemies that which will destroy them.
Not half an hour ago the Baron and Dr. Leipich went southward, carrying the apparatus in an especially
designed car. There was a stir behind the curtain, and she gave a little cry, but the colonel did
not notice it. She was beautiful to him, standing there under the rose-colored light from the
chandeliers. She was his. He had been promised it. Why hesitate? Even as he reached for her, the curtain
was thrust aside, and Linley Finchaw stood before him. Von Schong, with an oath of astonishment,
reached for his pistol, but as he raised the weapon, Linley struck it from his hand. There was a flash
of blue steel, the crash of breaking glass, and they heard it clatter to the ground. And they heard it
clatter to the ground outside the window.
They were facing each other with nothing but their hands.
Patriot had chased the lines of lust from the colonel's features.
The girl backed away, and the two men began to circle warily.
The German did not rush in as his heavier and stronger frame would have warranted.
Instead, he backed away toward the wall.
Lindley wondered if he were trying to reach the door, and was about to ward him off accordingly,
when the girl behind him cried out a warning.
The sword on the wall! He's after it!
The warning had come a second too late.
On the very instant of it, von Scheng, without taking his eyes from the American's face,
reached up behind him and snatched from its bracket on the wall a heavy rapier.
It was a stout blade with a strong basket handle, a relic of cavalier days.
He gripped it tightly and approached the American.
"'One of you more or less will make very little difference,' the Germans snarled.
"'I know not how you came here, but I know how you will leave,
and by heaven she shall pay for this.
Violence with women has ever been repugnant to me,
but she shall pay for this.
Linley's fingers had closed on one of the chairs.
It was the lightest one in the room,
but it was too heavy for a weapon which must be swung swiftly and lightly.
Behind him the girl had slipped out of a door into the adjacent library,
without taking his eyes from Von Scheng's face,
Lindley's other hand tightened on the chair back.
Von Scheng fainted.
with his blade and the chair crashed against the wall beside him.
He had avoided it easily.
The American would have followed it, hoping to break through the colonel's guard.
But just as he was about to spring, he felt the girl's hand on his arm, felt a handle of another blade pressed into his hand.
By the weight of it, he knew immediately that it was one similar to that in the hands of the German.
The colonel smiled sarcastically.
It will salate the reckoning but a little while, he sneered.
"'Green American.'
They were at it under the rose light of the chandeliers.
Von Scheng's scarred face told Linley that he was up against an experienced swordsman.
He wondered if his skill in college fencing would stand by him now.
The first clash gave him courage.
He had not forgotten, at least, how to engage his opponent.
But this was a deadly business, with no padded vests and protected throats to ward off the lunges.
The German fainted and lunged, slipping his blade.
around the point of the other, hoping to drive it home. It was parried, the American slipping easily
out of the way. Von Scheng was surprised. He had expected to end the fight with that. Instead, it was avoided,
and he was sore put to it in pulling his heavy frame out of the path of a return thrust as
deadly as his own. The clash of the steels told him he had met a wrist, as strong and as supple as the
best. Again, he was obliged to avoid a thrust that, had it gone home, would have been his undoing.
The girl stood a little to one side, her face bloodless now.
Once she thought Lindley gone, and she gave a little half-smothered scream,
but he'd only stumbled on the edge of a rug.
He was up again, following the Germans' lunge with a strong parry.
Four, five, six minutes passed.
Von Scheng's breath was coming now in short gasps.
Over his right breast there was a widening smudge of scarlet soaking through the gray of his tunic
and dulling the gleam of his decorations.
For Linley there was a small trickle under the left arm, less obvious because of the somber hue of his woolen jersey.
He realized now that this was to be a game of endurance.
They were too evenly matched.
This must go on until one of them, a trifle weak from loss of blood, would raise his blade a fraction of a second too late.
Then he began to wonder which of them it would be.
Once or twice in their circling he caught sight of that white appealing face in the background.
He read the fear and anguish there, and his heart cried out for her.
Once, when he stumbled on the rug, he saw her cover her face with her hands.
But he was up again.
A moment later, while he carried the fight to another corner of the room, he saw her step out
and dragged the rug out of the way.
Gad, he thought, she surely was a thoroughbred.
But could he last?
It had been many years since he had touched the foils, and then it had been only in sport.
Von Scheng, he knew, must have been,
an experienced dualist with a reputation.
The scars on his face told that,
and the stakes for both of them were tremendous.
His own father was imprisoned somewhere in the castle.
For what reason?
His contributions to science, his researches with the X-ray,
had his father given these men something
which had made possible this new and terrible engine of destruction,
this death ray?
He knew that there had been fear among the nations,
that one or the other of them would hit upon the thing.
It had been only a question.
of time and research.
Had his father made this possible?
Von Scheng had said it.
But how could they have rested this secret from his father?
Torture?
Perhaps.
Yet he could not believe that his father would have consciously succumbed to any coercion.
If he had given it to them, they must have tricked him into it.
The thought of it, enraged him, gave him new strength.
He believed them capable of it.
Torture.
And now they had the purple ray.
Back to him came that murky scene in the...
lake, the whirring airplane overhead, the purple splotch on the waters, the still, dead face of
the spider. Von Scheng must be speaking the truth, and now they who had it were speeding away into
the night ready to strike at the given hour. Had he not heard the purr of heavy motors as they
went down the road on their terrible mission? It had been that giant car he had seen in the castle,
bit by bit, while he fought, he pieced the thing together as it came back to him. God, what
What was he to do? Kill the German. He must do that for the girl, if nothing else. After that,
Armageddon! The thin trickle of scarlet under his arm had weakened him. He was parrying those
glittering thrusts with increasing difficulty. One of them, turned aside a moment too late,
would mean his end. He gritted his teeth. He was going on his nerve now, this endless, thrusting
and lunging. God would it never end! There was a mist gathering before his eyes.
dimly through it he saw the colonel with his free hand wipe a fleck of white foam from his lips his blood-soaked sleeve left a red smudge across his cheek he had become a fighting foaming beast had lenly been nearer had his vision been a little clearer he would have seen that von shang's eyes were glassy with exhaustion he would have heard the hoarse whistle of the german's breath between his teeth for him it was nearing the end he knew it but von shang would not die thus not he
He measured the distance to the chandeliers with his eye.
There were three of them, separated by several feet, and high in the ceiling.
No one blow could extinguish them all.
Ah, yes, that little black button in the wall.
One turn of that in the room would be in darkness, then a window, and safety.
Von Scheng edged toward the wall, permitting himself to be driven slowly backward.
With one foot, he kicked an intervening chair aside.
Would this fiendish American notice his purpose?
Apparently he did not.
Just one backward step, and von Scheng could reach the button with his hand.
With the last bit of his strength, he rallied and drove Lindley back.
A few steps between them were necessary to give him time for his lunge toward the window.
Desperately, he struck at the American, and then turning swiftly, sprang toward the button.
There was a sharp click.
The girl screamed.
The room was submerged in darkness.
Lindley, without knowing just why he did it, shifted his weapon, and drove it spearwise into the darkness where he had last seen the German.
There was a dull impact, a loud groan, another cry from the girl.
Even as he stood there, swaying, a beam of moonlight released for the moment by the dispersing clouds without,
shone through the French window opposite.
It cut a clear pathway across the floor to the opposite wall.
As they stood there, the man and the girl, they saw the heavy bulk of Von Scheng sink slowly to the floor.
Under his left shoulder, the handle of Linley's blade wobbled in horrid grotesqueness,
That last despairing lunge had found its mark.
As Lely watched in fascination, the night about him grew blacker and blacker, engulfed him in its sable folds.
He did not hear her cry out as she hurried through the gloom toward him,
nor did he see how, with her hand over her eyes to shut out the sight,
she forced herself to step over that still figure near the switch
and turn the rose-colored flood back into the chandeliers.
Colonel von Schong's lips moved slid.
slightly.
You are too late, he croaked, his mouth trying to form a malicious grin.
The purple ray is already on its way to his imperial highness.
The amulcar left nearly an hour ago.
A stifled rattle of the throat, and he was dead.
End of chapter six.
Chapter 7 of The Devil Ray by Joel Martin Nichols Jr.
This Libervox recording is in the public domain.
Read by Ben Tucker
Chapter 7 The Man in the Tower
Linley awoke with his head in the girl's arms.
She had procured a strip of linen from somewhere
and had bound up the cut in his side.
You are weak, she said.
You must rest.
The sweet perfume from her clothing soothed him.
He would have something.
back again and welcome oblivion, but there came to him, more sharply now, the memory of the gray-haired
man and the turret of Blennerhoff.
"'My father,' he said, pulling away from the girl, and dragging himself to his feet,
"'I cannot wait here. The castle, where is it?'
She led him to the window. The storm had subsided, only a few scudding clouds effaced the moon.
She pointed down the lake to where, more serry now than before under the wan light Blennerhoff
thrust its five glimmy turrets and dark.
the sky. If you trust me now, she said, I will go with you. He looked at her, noted the light in her
eyes. I never really doubted you, he said, but I was nervous and I could not afford to lose. It is not for
myself. Come, we will go. She was but a moment in donning some extra clothing, and together they hurried
from the villa into the roadway. He had paused only long enough to pick up the German's pistol
under the window, and then they crept out and down the road, trembling lest at this moment they
be discovered by the servants in the quarters of the rear. In twenty minutes, though it seemed as
many hours to him, they were at the castle. The drawbridge is all the way down, she whispered.
I've never seen it thus before. But then they never would let me go near the place. They said
it was old and the walls might fall. They hurried over the bridge and into the somber court.
yard. Two doors yawned emptily before them. The great steel car was gone. Von Scheng had not
boasted without truth. Linley paused in the center of the courtyard, buried in thought. Yes, he said
finally. I'm sure that I've been here before. I remember there was a great armored car in there,
and then we found a stairway somewhere and went up into one of the turrets. It seemed to me now that it
was on the left. They hurried over to the nearest turret and found a little bit of the nearest turret and found
a low oaken door heavily studded with iron it was partly open and creaked ominously as he swung it farther back he snapped off his flashlight and they waited there in the darkness their hearts pounding with fear had they been heard from above there came no sound save the moan of the wind among the battlements weird music intermingling uncannily with the murmur of the waters in the moat below the place seemed as empty as a tomb he paused with one foot on the stairs
"'I cannot let you go up here,' he said.
"'There is sure to be someone there, and I shall have to fight.
"'I—I'm sorry that I brought you thus far.
"'Will you go back and wait for me on the shore?
"'If I do not come back within a few minutes, you will know that I—'
"'She laid her hand on his arm.
"'I am going with you,' she answered, with quiet finality.
"'Had it not been for the pitchy blackness, perhaps he would have noticed that she swayed a little toward him,
"'and so they crept up the stairs together.
At the parapet above, Lindley leaned cautiously over.
He waited for the moon, effaced for the moment by a fleeting cloud, to throw its light into the castle.
The greenish light came, vanished.
Yet in that quick interval, he saw the pile of coal still wet and glistening from the rain.
He saw beside it the two small barrows, but the waving plume of steam from the exhaust in the far corner was gone.
There came now no drone of dynamos from the tiny powerhouse beyond.
They had gone indeed.
Their work here was finished.
And yet the silent emptiness of it gave him some grain of comfort.
He had found the stairs, the turret, the coal, everything as it had been in his dream.
Then it had not been a dream after all.
If he could find the barred window wherein he had seen the dials and the two workmen,
he would then believe that he had in reality seen his father.
They found the embrasure at last, just where he had placed.
it in his mind. Peering through he saw in the gloom those same shining knobs and dials,
that same huge hourglass apparatus. But there was in it now no forking ray of purple light.
Gone, gone. In bitterness, he realized that, although it had been no dream, he had come too late.
Too late! And then he felt the girl's fingers on his arm.
Look up at the keep, she whispered. There is a light above us in the keep.
His eyes followed her pointing finger in the gloom, and then he saw far above them a tiny embrasure,
throwing a feeble yellow ray into the night.
Without a word, he led her back down into the courtyard, where they finally discovered the door to the keep.
Through a clutter of strange machinery, they found steps leading upward.
They climbed an interminable length of time, it seemed to him, and yet it was only a minute or so.
At every turn in the torturous stairway they paused, waiting there in the dark.
with thumping hearts, expecting momentarily to hear some challenge from above, perhaps the
crash of a pistol.
On the seventh landing he made out ahead of them a closed door.
Leaving her one landing below, he crept up to the door and applied his ear to a narrow crack.
From within there came no sound, no stir that he could hear.
His heart, he thought, thumped too loudly to permit of hearing anything else.
by a supreme effort he sought to quiet it.
And then, as he listened, not daring to breathe,
he caught a faint murmur from behind the door.
It was light breathing.
The regularity of it told that there were two of them
and that both were sleeping.
He pushed his shoulder against the door.
It gave easily.
There before him, lit by a small swinging lamp overhead,
he saw two men.
One was an old man stretched out on a pallet of straw in the corner.
The other a heavy-built person with pistol at belt,
slumped into a chair near the bed on which the old man lay.
Even as he watched there in the doorway,
cold horror struck home to his heart.
For he realized that the slight form on the straw bed was his father,
and that his father was chained.
Think heaven then, the old man had not submitted willingly.
But his father chained!
The blood seemed to well up in his eyes.
He bounded into the room,
all caution gone now.
The clatter awoke the sleeper in the chair,
and in an instant the man was facing him,
his hand going swiftly to the pistol at his belt.
In that instant, Linley's arms locked about the man's waist,
holding his arms there impotently.
He dared not trust to his own pistol,
lest the report bring the whole castle against them.
He did not know that the girl hurried up the stairs behind him,
nor did he hear her low crying as she ran to the old man on the straw palace,
He did hear his father's cries of,
Lendly, Lendley!
All that mind could encompass now was an insane hatred
for this burly beast locked in his arms.
He wondered why the man did not cry out and give the alarm.
Perhaps they were alone in the castle, perhaps.
But he was not sure enough of it to use his pistol.
In a few seconds he knew that he was likely to have the best of it.
The man in his arms seemed curiously inept at this struggle.
seemed to be attempting to wrench away rather than reach for his assailant's throat as
Lindley anticipated.
Suddenly he realized that the guard had a definite purpose in the struggle.
He seemed to be working the two of them across the room.
Lindley found himself trying to speculate on this movement.
It was not in the direction of the door, and the embrasure was too small to allow the passage
of his body.
Even if it had been wider, there remained outside only a death on the rocks below.
Then, through many intervening miles, he heard.
heard his father calling to him. What was that? Do not let him pull that switch!
The old man's voice came to him now, full and clear. What did his father mean? Was there some sort
of a signal? At that instant the man in his grip tore one arm free and reached out to the
wall. For the first time, Linley saw there a small electric switch, but on that instant the
guard's big hand closed over it and a tiny, bluish spark told him it had gone home. With that,
Lenley struck, pistol in hand, and the body went limp in his arms.
Quick, quick!
The scientist shouted,
That switch releases a mechanism, which in 18 minutes will set off bombs in the moat.
They intended blowing themselves up if ever they were caught.
There was another switch concealed somewhere below to cut it off, but we could never find it in 18 minutes.
Lenley's feverish fingers found keys on the guard's body.
It seemed hours before they were able to unlock the steel fetters on Fenshaw's wrists.
It seemed a thousand steps to the courtyard below.
The scientist glanced at his watch.
Fourteen minutes left, he said.
Time enough to get well out of here and far enough away if we hurry.
They were halfway across the drawbridge when Linley suddenly paused.
The airplane? Was it still down there in the moat?
He rushed to the wall and peering over into the gloom saw it snugly ensconced there in the black waters, intact and waiting.
Father and son looked at each other in science.
silence. Each knew what the other was thinking.
They've been gone now about an hour and a half, said the scientist. They cannot be far.
In forty-five minutes we should overtake them if you can fly a fawker.
He paused, and Lindley knew what he was thinking. If they went after the speeding car,
they themselves stood one chance in a thousand of ever coming back alive. That car must be destroyed.
It would mean death, of course. Their only hope would be to
to drive the plane into the face of the speeding motor, wreck it beyond recovery and all those within it.
Probably death for the men in the car, but most certain death for those in the plane.
We must do it.
The scientist nodded and stepped toward the edge of the bridge.
Lindley turned to the girl.
You have enough time to get out of the castle, but you must hurry, he said.
My father and I are going with the plane.
We, the Baron.
It will be the end for him and for us.
I'm sorry. I...
Well, you see, we must do it. It's for our country.
We have no choice. Come, you must hurry.
His voice choked.
He attempted to push her toward the end of the bridge, but she pulled away from him.
But I, too, am an American, she said.
My father loved America, and my mother died for it.
I cannot. Will not let you go alone.
I've come thus far I will see you through
To whatever comes
Is it not enough that I
She did not finish
He wanted to say something
But the words choked him
And then he saw that she swayed toward him
The scientist looking back saw only one figure
Where there had been two in the gloom near the end of the bridge
The moon whipped from behind a cloud for the moment
Smiled down upon them
Youth
Youth
The scientist saw her coming toward him
with his son behind her.
I'm going, it was all she said.
Being an old man and understanding he did not reply.
They found the dock under the draw, and tumbled hastily down it.
Linley, peering in at the gauges, found the tanks partly full.
Eight minutes more, came to sight his voice from the gloom.
Linley had started over the decks toward the engines,
when his eyes caught the white bellies of steel, cylinders,
hanging there quietly in the water under the bridge.
and then he remembered
bombs
bombs enough to blow the castle into the heavens
three of them taken into the plain
and dropped from a loft will be enough to do the trick
enough to destroy that speeding monster
feverishly he sought among the tools for pliers and wrench
seven minutes
a cold chill struck through the younger man's spine
he knew they would need at least four minutes to get away
god knew how far they would have to be
in order to escape the impending cataclysm
"'The bombs in the moat!' he shouted.
"'We need only three of them. Help me!'
They pulled the ship closer to the drawbridge,
and Lindley, reaching down into the water, found three of those cylinders of death,
clipped their wiring, and handed them gingerly up to his father,
who crouched in the forward cockpit.
The question now was, would they explode if dropped from a sufficient height?
"'Three minutes left,' said the professor.
"'We can't wait any longer.'
Lindley dragged himself back to the deck, slipped into the pilot seat, and adjusted the controls.
The scientist pulled himself out of the cockpit and climbed over to the propellers.
At Lindley's direction, he seized one of the blades and twisted it sharply.
Would she start?
The port engine opened up with a deafening roar.
The professor scrambled to the other side and repeated the operation on the other propeller.
A sputtering report reassured them.
But another minute gone!
Could they make it?
If they got caught now between the bridge and the wall of the moat, they would be done for her.
The plane lashed out drunkenly under the pole of her propellers, Lindley released her, and sprang back to his controls.
Could he make the passage?
She slid out, scraping only her starboard wing.
He unleashed her and swung her into the wind, raising her wing control for the long lift upward.
There could be but a minute left.
He wondered if there could even be that much, expecting with each fleeting second to hear that splitting roar behind him.
This waiting for the ship to take the air
Was worse than death itself
He glanced to the seat at his left
And saw the white face of the girl
Saw her glance back to the castle
Ahead of him his father was
Gazing back at the slowly increasing distance between them
And the death that lay behind
Would the plane never rise
How the water seemed to cling to her pontoons
How it hated to release her
Ah, she was free now
The lake seemed to fall away.
They were up at last.
He saw his father peering in his watch,
fancied that he himself could see the hands set at the hour of death.
The professor raised his hand.
Lindley felt the murderous red glare of it on his back,
before the splitting crash smote across his eardrums.
The plane rocked drunkenly, dipped her nose and plunged downward.
They were not far enough up.
They could not afford a nose dive now.
The water below, it was still too near.
Two years over the lines in Flanders had served him well.
Automatically he pulled at the controls, she rocked,
the struts, saying out even above the roar of the propellers.
Would something give way now?
One little snap and oblivion.
There was a second roaring crash behind them.
This time, not so loud.
The red glare lit up the heavens.
Would some of this hurtling debris reach the ship,
strike her down? Something saying past his head, a bit of mortar in one of those engines, a smashed
propeller. Bits of brick, stone, and mortar flung past them, thumped against the ship's body,
pattered on her wings, and dropped into the void beneath them. Back of them, the red glare was
subsiding to a sulky, sanguine glow. It was the end of Blennerhoff. Blindley veered to the
right, and they picked up the Lake Road. They followed it, a narrow ribbon of gray picked out by the
moonlight. The lake was left behind. If anything went wrong now, they were too low to vulpane to the
surface of the water. It would be the end, a crash against tree or rock. The scudding clouds, which
had almost continuously effaced the moon, were fewer now, and Lindley had little difficulty in following
the road. He soared as high as possible watching his father who peered from the forward cockpit into
the night. Once, the port engine began to skip, but it settled back once more.
That steady, reassuring drone was comforting.
Linley saw the still white face beside him,
wondered if she realized how close they were to their journey's end.
Twenty minutes, a half hour, forty minutes passed.
The scientist had risen now and was peering ahead into the moonlit countryside.
Had they missed the car?
Had there been some side road into which it had turned?
Had it drawn up for the moment beside the wayside while the ship roared on overhead,
oblivious of its quarry?
Fifty minutes.
Linley saw his father raise his hand, saw him point far away into the night.
Leaning forward, he followed with his eye the pointing finger.
There was nothing.
No, no, there it was ten miles ahead, a huge silver-skinned beetle on a ribbon of ashen gray.
Even at that distance he caught the gleam of the moon shining on that peculiar glass dome in her steel cupola.
He saw his father, reached down at his feet and laboriously hoist one of the heavy cylinders to the lip of the cockpit.
fumbling nervously with the controls, he dipped the ship downward as far as he dared.
It was necessary to be close.
It would not be an easy shot.
The bombs were clumsy cylinders, unwinged, and not intended for such work.
He wondered if the force of contact would be sufficient to explode them.
And the crash, if there was one, they must not be too low lest they be themselves blown into the skies.
Five miles now.
Three, two, had they been noticed?
They had one advantage, that of surprise.
They would not be expected.
Perhaps they could creep up near enough before their purpose was established.
But now the car had evidently shot forward with increasing speed.
One mile flicked out behind them.
Apparently they had been seen.
They were now over the speeding car.
The time had come.
Lindley saw his father looking back for the signal.
He raised his hand.
The plane jerked upward slightly.
No sound save the roar of their own engines.
the thing refused to explode. But no, there was a muffled crash from below. It had exploded,
but had it found its mark, he glanced over the side. There beneath them was the speeding car,
unscathed. They had missed it. He saw his father poised the second bomb on the edge of the cockpit,
and looked back for the signal. Glancing down, he saw they were still over the car. It was the moment.
He raised his hand, saw the black speck hurtling earthward. No sound this time. It had failed to
explode. Lingly groan inwardly. There was but one left. Failing this, there remained only that last
resort, driving the ship into the face of the speeding motor. Death for all in the car, probably,
death for all in the plane, certainly. But what was that? A flash of purple. He saw his father recoil
in the cockpit, felt his own fingers freeze on the controls. It was the purple ray, searching for
them there in the sky. He shot the plane upward and banked sharply. One,
whisk of that sinister ray across the ship, one touch on the body of any of them, and they would
be gone. That swift turn of his had saved them for the moment. There had been just a flash of
purple across her wings. He thought of his engines, knew from what he had read, that they might
be stalled by the ray. They in the car, having missed once, would try again. Turning backward,
he saw that purple finger in the sky behind them, searching, searching. They had evaded it for the
moment, but it would find them sooner or later.
Well, if it was to be the end, he would make a desperate finish of it.
He saw his father motion him to bear the ship downward.
To get the proper angle, he swooped her first upward, and then looped again, barely
missing that sinister line of purple.
Into the face of it then.
Again he banked her sharply, saw that narrow ribbon of purple sweep across the wings
closer to the fuselage this time, three feet nearer, and it would have passed over his body.
He found himself wondering if they were merely playing with them there in the air
And ground his teeth savagely
Toward them swung that purple bar once more
And again he banked the plain until the struts saying out their warning
This time that ribbon of purple had barely missed the girl
In a short pause of the engines
He heard her cry out saw her looking backward
Turning his own eyes he saw the purple of it
Shining through the thin body of the ship as if it had been tissue paper
Another swoop a shock
a sharp bank, and they were over the car once more.
He raised his hand to his father, saw the old man poised their last missile on the edge of the cockpit, into the very purple teeth of death now.
The purple was just ahead of them, barring the way.
Gritting his teeth, he sped the ship directly into the path of it, slanting her downward.
He would finish it that way if the last bomb failed.
The purple seemed to sear his eyes.
He fought down an overpowering impulse to close them.
God, he was tired. Let it come now. He found himself wondering if it would be swift. He saw the thin figure of his father in the cockpit before him, limned for a second against the glaring purple, saw him hesitate but a moment, saw the heavy cylinder, hurdle over the side. That purple lane came nearer, seemed to engulf them. He closed his eyes. Let it come. A reverberating roar from below. Their last bomb had not failed them. He opened his eyes. The purple was gone, glanced at him. Glancing.
Dancing down with the roar of the bomb, he saw the great gray beetle lift itself off the road,
saw it shatter in a thousand pieces against the rocks that lined the hillside.
He found himself muttering, the end, the end.
He shot the ship upward into the heavens and circled there in the moonlight.
Bit by bit, they made it out below them.
Torn and twisted machinery, tons and tons, it seemed, of shattered glass.
A hundred, intricate.
wheels, two limp figures which lay together by the roadside but did not move.
Would move no more.
The secret of the ray gone with its inventor.
The plane climbed in slow spirals.
Her gas would be well expended, Lely thought, and they must find a lake somewhere.
The moon was fast fading, a few minutes more in the blackness, which presage the dawn
would be under and around them, shutting out the world.
He turned to the girl beside him and saw her pointing northward toward a slim patch of
silver. Water and a place to land. Mechanically he turned the ship's nose toward it, fighting a great
weariness from mind and body. They dipped down out of the heavens just as the dawn was breaking.
End of Chapter 7. Chapter 8 of the Devil Ray by Joel Martin Nichols Jr. The Slivervox recording is
in the public domain. Read by Ben Tucker. Chapter 8. The Professor's Story
They left the girl at a peasant's hut on the shore of the lake and hurried back over the fields.
There must be no mistake.
This terrible machine must be destroyed forever.
When they arrived at the spot in the roadside, they found what they had hoped for.
Leipich was there, dead with his secret.
Near him lay the body of Baron Blenneroff.
The professor found Leepich's hat and placed it over the dead man's eyes.
Poor Leepich!
he said quietly.
If you had turned your genius to construction instead of destruction, it would not have been thus.
But how did you find me? he asked, turning to Linley eagerly.
It was chance or fate or God, said Linley.
When they gave up hope of ever finding you, I went out alone.
As I remembered, I went to Chicago and took the name of Ferris in order to conceal my identity.
I remembered some of you were experimenting during the first part of the war.
and it occurred to me this was no ordinary crime.
In Chicago, I had a little bad luck, or maybe it was good luck.
I was going under the name of Ferris, hoping thereby to get some clue
when one night in a hotel there a pickpocket got my wallet.
I chased the wretch through an open door, and he swung it back down on me, and I got a cracked skull.
He had my wallet with my real papers, so when I awoke in the hospital, with memory gone,
they'd put me down as Ferris, found a card case in my pocket with some cards I'd had printed.
I hate to be thinking what I've fallen into between then and now,
a regular Jekyll and Hyde existence, I guess.
In the hospital, they told me I'd get my memory back someday,
but that it would require some sort of a shock.
I was deathly afraid of mirrors, couldn't bear the sight of one.
They said it was a pathological fear brought on by the crash.
Two or three times I must have been on the verge of coming back,
or at any rate I felt that way, but always something intervened.
Once I wanted to commit murder
That was von Scheng
When I saw the girl fighting him on the road by the castle
I guess I was pretty near getting back then
But the shock of it wasn't enough
It required something else
And I got it with those mirrors at the villa
He related the events in detail
But you, he continued
You must have been through hell
I think I have
Said the scientist slowly
It's worse when you find out you've made a mistake like
that, even when you've been tricked into it. It was leapish, poor devil. I bear him no ill-will now,
though I could have killed him before, had he given me the chance. I suppose he's always been
a little insane. Most geniuses are. I knew him first when we studied together at Bonn during our
younger days. He was brilliant, far beyond any of the rest of us, but undoubtedly a little mad.
He was deeply interested in electropherapeutics, but he did not lose faith in the curing of ills by electricity, as most of us came to do in latter days.
I believe he carried on his long and exhaustive researches along these lines up until the time of the war.
When he hit upon the idea of the purple ray, I do not know, but presumably it was during the war.
But they never had time to develop it.
They lacked one thing, and that, as ill luck would have it, was the thing I had.
As you know at the university I'd been experimenting with an apparatus that would permit the everyday use of x-rays of tremendous power.
This had ever been our problem.
We knew we could develop an eye ray of tremendous potentiality, but we had trouble in controlling it.
It proved as dangerous to the operator and patient as it was ephacious in the cure of cancerous growths.
Eventually I hit upon and developed an apparatus, which seemed to offer the adequate protection.
We were keeping the thing a secret for the time being.
Well, what I had found was just what Leapich needed.
He had produced his own devil ray,
but the thing had killed several of his colleagues,
and nearly was his own undoing.
It seemed to be as dangerous to the operator as to the enemy.
Its effect on all forms of life,
both animal and vegetable, is instantaneous.
In the animal, it inflicts a terrible shock,
utterly destroying the nervous system
and rupturing probably every blood vessel in the brain.
The effect is somewhat similar to death by electric shock,
except there is no mark left on the body.
An autopsy would be necessary to reveal what it really happened.
The ray has a singular effect, too, on certain mechanical devices.
For instance, I've seen Leipich stop a motor with it
at the distance of several feet, back there in Blennerhof.
He said it choked the thing by developing an excess of carbon dioxide,
or nitrogen in the cylinders.
Luckily, they didn't have time to get at our airplane engines.
They undoubtedly could have put us out of business
while we were still on the horizon had they suspected in any way who we were.
But to go on, Leapage got wind of my invention,
and he determined that what I had discovered in the way of protection he must have.
They lay near me one night when I was working at the laboratory alone
and made me open the safe, where I kept my blueprint.
and formulas. To cover the thing up thoroughly, they left some old prints and papers about,
things that were quite useless. Naturally, they had either to kidnap or kill me, and they chose
the former, thinking perhaps they might need me later. When they brought me here, it was some time
before I knew what they were working on, but when I did, I went nearly mad. I could see what
was bound to happen, and I felt that I had by my carelessness been contributory to it. I tried to
disarmed their suspicions of me by pretending an interest, but they were too bright for me.
They let me have the run of the castle, but always Leepich, or one of the guards, was at my heels.
Once I tried to blow them up, pulled one of those switches, but they were ready for that and merely
cut it off somewhere from below. You see, they were in mortal fear of discovery, so they had
taken precautions to blow everything up if ever they were discovered. And then that night when I
saw your face at the window, that gave me hope because I supposed you had gotten
track of me, and were merely awaiting an opportunity to strike.
I knew that they were getting ready for a coup d'etat, and when I did not see any more of you
for days I was in despair, and then the final night you came, and now this.
He indicated with a wave of his hand, the shattered debris of the wrecked car.
They sat for a long time, looking at the ruin before them.
Finally, Lindley got up.
We'd better be getting back to the cottage, he said.
She'll be waiting for us.
They went back together toward the lake.
End of Chapter 8
End of the Devil Ray
by Joel Martin Nichols Jr.
