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10. The Climber Returns
In utter darkness we groped our way through into the hallway of Slattin's house, having
entered, stealthily, from the rear; for Smith had selected the study as a suitable base of
operations. We reached it without mishap, and presently I found myself seated in the very
chair which Karamaneh had occupied; my companion took up a post just within the
widely opened door.
So we commenced our ghostly business in the house of the murdered man --a house from
which, but a few hours since, his body had been removed. This was such a vigil as I had
endured once before, when, with Nayland Smith and another, I had waited for the coming
of one of Fu-Manchu's death agents.
Of all the sounds which, one by one, now began to detach themselves from the silence,
there was a particular sound, homely enough at another time, which spoke to me more
dreadfully than the rest. It was the ticking of the clock upon the mantelpiece; and I
thought how this sound must have been familiar to Abel Slattin, how it must have formed
part and parcel of his life, as it were, and how it went on now--tick- tick-tick-tick--whilst
he, for whom it had ticked, lay unheeding-- would never heed it more.
As I grew more accustomed to the gloom, I found myself staring at his office chair; once
I found myself expecting Abel Slattin to enter the room and occupy it. There was a little
China Buddha upon the bureau in one corner, with a gilded cap upon its head, and as
some reflection of the moonlight sought out this little cap, my thoughts grotesquely
turned upon the murdered man's gold tooth.
Vague creakings from within the house, sounds as though of stealthy footsteps upon the
stair, set my nerves tingling; but Nayland Smith gave no sign, and I knew that my
imagination was magnifying these ordinary night sounds out of all proportion to their
actual significance. Leaves rustled faintly outside the window at my back: I construed
their sibilant whispers into the dreaded name--Fu-Manchu- Fu-Manchu--Fu-Manchu!
So wore on the night; and, when the ticking clock hollowly boomed the hour of one, I
almost leaped out of my chair, so highly strung were my nerves, and so appallingly did
the sudden clangor beat upon them. Smith, like a man of stone, showed no sign. He was
capable of so subduing his constitutionally high-strung temperament, at times, that
temporarily he became immune from human dreads. On such occasions he would be icily
cool amid universal panic; but, his object accomplished, I have seen him in such a state of
collapse, that utter nervous exhaustion is the only term by which I can describe it.
Tick-tick-tick-tick went the clock, and, with my heart still thumping noisily in my breast,
I began to count the tickings; one, two, three, four, five, and so on to a hundred, and from
one hundred to many hundreds.
 

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