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18. The Silver Buddha
Museum Street certainly did not seem a likely spot for Dr. Fu-Manchu to establish
himself, yet, unless my imagination had strangely deceived me, from the window of the
antique dealer who traded under the name of J. Salaman, those wonderful eyes of
Karamaneh like the velvet midnight of the Orient, had looked out at me.
As I paced slowly along the pavement toward that lighted window, my heart was beating
far from normally, and I cursed the folly which, in spite of all, refused to die, but lingered
on, poisoning my life. Comparative quiet reigned in Museum Street, at no time a busy
thoroughfare, and, excepting another shop at the Museum end, commercial activities had
ceased there. The door of a block of residential chambers almost immediately opposite to
the shop which was my objective, threw out a beam of light across the pavement, but not
more than two or three people were visible upon either side of the street.
I turned the knob of the door and entered the shop.
The same dark and immobile individual whom I had seen before, and whose nationality
defied conjecture, came out from the curtained doorway at the back to greet me.
"Good evening, sir," he said monotonously, with a slight inclination of the head; "is there
anything which you desire to inspect?"
"I merely wish to take a look around," I replied. "I have no particular item in view."
The shop man inclined his head again, swept a yellow hand comprehensively about, as if
to include the entire stock, and seated himself on a chair behind the counter.
I lighted a cigarette with such an air of nonchalance as I could summon to the operation,
and began casually to inspect the varied objects of interest loading the shelves and tables
about me. I am bound to confess that I retain no one definite impression of this tour.
Vases I handled, statuettes, Egyptian scarabs, bead necklaces, illuminated missals,
portfolios of old prints, jade ornaments, bronzes, fragments of rare lace, early printed
books, Assyrian tablets, daggers, Roman rings, and a hundred other curiosities, leisurely,
and I trust with apparent interest, yet without forming the slightest impression respecting
any one of them.
Probably I employed myself in this way for half an hour or more, and whilst my hands
busied themselves among the stock of J. Salaman, my mind was occupied entirely
elsewhere. Furtively I was studying the shopman himself, a human presentment of a
Chinese idol; I was listening and watching; especially I was watching the curtained
doorway at the back of the shop.
"We close at about this time, sir," the man interrupted me, speaking in the emotionless,
monotonous voice which I had noted before.
 

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