"Ralph!" she said, brokenly.
Then, realizing how tenderly she had spoken— using his Christian name—she hung her graceful head in hot confusion. But he had heard her. And the wild light died from his eyes. He took both her hands in his own and held them fast; then, rather unsteadily, he stood up.
As his features came more fully into the light, we all saw that a small bruise discoloured his forehead, squarely between the brows.
Then Brearley, who had been back into the study, came running, crying:
"The papyrus! And my translation! Gone!"
I thought of the ashes in Ailsa Brearley's room.
IV
"My friends," rumbled Moris Klaw, impressively, "we are fortunate. We have passed through scorching fires unscathed!"
He applied himself with vigour to the operating of the scent spray.
"God forgive me!" said Brearley. "What did I do?"
"I will tell you, my friend," replied Klaw; "you clothed a thought in the beautiful form which you knew as your sister! Ah! You stare! Ritual, my friends, is the soul of what the ignorant call magic. With the sacred incense, kyphi (yes, I detected it!), you invoked secret powers. Those powers, Mr. Brearley, were but thoughts. All such forces are thoughts.
"Thoughts are things—and you gathered together in this house, by that ancient formula, a thought thing created by generations of worshippers who have worshipped the moon!
"The light that we saw was only the moonlight, the sounds that we heard were thought-sounds. But so powerful was this mighty thought-force, this centuries-old power which you loosed upon us, that it drove out Miss Ailsa's own thoughts from her mind, bringing what she mistook for sleep; and it implanted itself there!
"She was transformed by that mighty power which for a time dwelled within her. She was as powerful, as awful, as a goddess! None might look upon her and be sane. Hypnotism has similarities with the ancient science of thought—yes! Suggestion is the secret of all so-called occult phenomena!"
CASE OF THE VEIL OF ISIS 309
With his eyes gleaming oddly, he stepped forward, resting his long white hands upon Fairbanks shoulders.
"Doctor," he rumbled, "you have a bruise on your forehead."
"Have I?" said Fairbank, in surprise. "I hadn't noticed it."
"Because it is not a physical bruise; it is a mental bruise, physically reflected! Nearly were you slain, my friend—oh, so nearly! But another force—as great as the force of ancient thought—weakened the blow. Doctor Fairbank, it is fortunate that Miss Ailsa loves you!"
His frank words startled us all.
"Look well at the shape of this little bruise, my friends," continued Moris Klaw. "Mr. Brearley— it is a shape that will be familiar to you. See! it is thus." He drew an imaginary outline with his long forefinger—
a
And that is the sign of IsisF
THE END
The dream detective: being some account of the methods of Moris Klaw Page 22