Chapter 7 The Ghost Hunter

Witchcraft is not dead, nor are Satan’s winged hosts entirely banished to the Limbo of Myth. Psychic phenomena have, through the ages, been so intertwined with superstition, mental aberration, and religion, and the issue so clouded by fraudulent imposters, venal quacks, and the clumsy exposés of prejudiced conjurers that Science, engrossed in the mysticism of modern Physics and prostituting itself on the couch of commercial Chemistry, disdains to investigate, afraid that it might — as it would — uncover some shining Truth its materialistic philosophies could not explain.

Col. Herbert Watrous: A Plea for Psychical Research

The Inspector placed Rappourt in the armchair, and Quinn, like a well-trained jack-in-the-box, sprang up from his chair and was swiftly at the department’s black suitcase. He brought an ammonia ampoule which he held and broke under her nose. Merlini knelt at her side and began rubbing her wrists. After a moment her eyelids fluttered, and she moaned faintly.

The Inspector went to the door and stood there talking to Malloy, who was just outside. They spoke in undertones. Pretending to watch Rappourt, I backed in their direction until I was close enough to eavesdrop.

Gavigan asked, not very hopefully, “Well?”

Malloy said, “A blank. He doesn’t think so, but he’s hot any too sure. Lousy witness. The over-cautious type.”

The Inspector seemed to have a card up his sleeve, but apparently didn’t know whether or not it was an ace.

Rappourt showed signs of reviving, when suddenly her body tensed. Her head jerked and her eyelids flicked back, exposing white eyeballs, no pupil. Her breath was expelled in a long whistling exhalation through clenched teeth.

Quinn warned, “Hey, Chief. She’s going to throw a fit!”

Merlini, watching her closely, said, “I think she’s going into a cataleptic trance, Inspector. Fresh air should help. You’d better get her outside.”

Gavigan eyed her odd behavior with curiosity, and then alarm. “All right,” he said, “see to it, Malloy. Put her in a taxi and have a couple of the boys deliver her back at her hotel. If she’s not out of it by then they’d better get a doctor.”

Malloy and Brady carried her out.

When they had gone Gavigan looked at Merlini speculatively, then growled, “What is this trance business, anyway?”

“I don’t think she wanted to answer any more questions. She does the catalepsy well, don’t you think?”

“Oh — just an act, huh?”

“I think so. Chafing her wrists gave me a chance to feel her pulse. Instead of being subnormal, it was excited.”

“And what was the idea of aiding and abetting her by suggesting that I get her out of here?”

Merlini spread his hands wide. “What else can you do with a woman like that? Besides, you seemed to have finished with her — and she didn’t seem to want to answer my question.”

“Why not? Did it have any occult significance I didn’t get?”

“I’ll know that when we get an answer either from Watrous or the others who attended the séance. My main purpose in asking was to see if she’d recognize me.”

“If that song and dance was because she recognized you, then your effect on the ladies is damned devastating. Explain yourself.”

Merlini snapped open a cigarette case and held it toward the Inspector. “You may have noticed that I moved upstage when she came on and stuck my nose in a book. I’ve met the lady before. She’s changed a good bit, and I wasn’t quite certain until she spoke. But I couldn’t mistake that voice. In 1915 she was in London, and her name was Svoboda.”

“During the war, eh? I suppose she did a rushing ouija board business then?”

“Not ouija boards, Inspector. She’s more original than that. But she did evoke quite a few spirits of the war dead for their relatives. She’s obviously not English, and the Military Intelligence Department began eyeing her suspiciously. I was playing the Palladium, and a member of the department asked me to check up on her for them. They thought her séances might be a clearing house for spy information, foreign agents attending and going home to decode her spirit messages. ‘Heaven is just too lovely. Having wonderful time. Wish you were here. Love. Cecil’ meaning ‘Convoy embarks Liverpool Friday. Midnight,’ That sort of thing.”

“Svoboda the Secret Agent,” I said, “sounds like a dime novel.”

“That’s what I thought,” Merlini answered. “If she was a spy, you would hardly expect her to go asking for investigation with a name like that. But the M.I.D. was taking no chances.”

“Well,” Gavigan asked, “what about it? Is that what she was doing?”

“I don’t know. My presence on several of the London Psychical Society’s investigating committees had given me rather more notoriety among mediums than I’d suspected. I wore a pair of dark glasses and was introduced as a blind man, but I should have taken more pains with the disguise. She recognized me, and the séance was a complete frost. All very ordinary and nothing startling enough to require either supernatural or fraudulent aid. So she may have been a spy, or she may merely have been hostile to conjurers. I never did find out. On the way back to the hotel that night I managed to be one of the few persons in London on whom the Zeppelins successfully dropped a bomb. I got a splinter in my arm that terminated my engagement, and I sailed for home the first boat out.”

“I’ll check London on that,” Gavigan said. “What about these séances she’s giving now?”

“I don’t know. I’d have to see one. Watrous brought her over here just recently, and she’s not given any public performances as yet. But if she is fraudulent and has Watrous fooled, she’s got something good. He’s nobody’s fool, even though he does talk like it at times. Trouble is, he wants to find genuine phenomena, and that unconscious bias is his weak point. He’s never bit on anything obvious though, and the few mediums to whom he has given his okay are still bones of contention.”

“Well, just now it’s a case of does he get my okay. O’Connor! Send Colonel Watrous in here.”

The Colonel’s entrance was excited and angry. He waved his hands. Meeting the Inspector’s unsympathetic stare, he drew himself up, adjusted his pince-nez more firmly on his bulgy nose, and cleared his throat with a prefatory rumble.

“Where is Madame Rappourt?” he blurted. “What have you done to her? Why are you… I’ll have you know… ”

“Pull up, Colonel,” Gavigan ordered. “I’ll have you know something. This is a murder case, and since I happen to be in charge I’ll ask the questions. You answer ’em. Madame Rappourt gave us some answers and now it’s your turn. You were at the séance last night?”

The Colonel’s carbonated sputtering went suddenly flat. His still open mouth plopped shut. Then, after a moment, it opened again. “I was at Madame Rappourt’s apartment from ten until nearly three-thirty A.M. But what… ”

“Who tied her up in that bag?”

“Why… ah, we all did… but what did she… what has that to do… ”

“Stop asking questions! What happened after you tied her up? Come on. Talk!”

Watrous puffed up, pigeon-like. “I fail to see that any connection exists between our experiments last evening and the lamentable tragedy that has happened here.”

“I don’t see any myself, but that doesn’t mean there isn’t one. My job is to find out. All I know, at the moment, is that her specialty is the supernatural. And this case has more than its share of spook atmosphere… ”

Watrous seemed to get the idea. He took off his glasses and tapped them nervously on his hand. “I’m not at liberty at this time to release any statements concerning the results of our experiment of last night.”

“Was it a dark séance?”

Watrous looked puzzled, but nodded. “Yes, why?”

Gavigan threw a glance where Merlini had been, only to discover that he was back poking into the bookshelves again. He returned his attention to the Colonel.

“Then no one can testify that you were in the apartment continuously?”

The glasses weren’t tapping now. “On the contrary,” Watrous’ tone was indignant, “two persons at least could swear I was there every minute. During the time that the lights were out we were arranged in the usual psychic circle, each person holding the hand of the one next to him. To establish a proper contact, you know.”

Inspector Gavigan’s patience looked a bit thin. He had examined three suspects so far and had drawn three gold-plated alibis. He left it at that for the time being.

“Who is Surgat?” He flung the question at Watrous.

“I don’t know,” the latter answered. “I’ve come across the name somewhere in my researches, I’m sure, but… ” He frowned thoughtfully at the chalked incantation, shaking his head.

“Does the name Svoboda mean anything to you?”

Watrous answered with another apparently puzzled negative.

“You say you left the séance at three-thirty this morning. What did you do then?”

“I took a taxi home and went to bed. I rose at eleven, and I spent the afternoon writing up an account of the experiment in my day book. My meals were sent up. Shortly before four I left for Madame Rappourt’s.”

“Your relations with Sabbat were what?”

“I have had none for at least ten years. Before that time we were rather good friends. In 1925, however, I found it necessary through the columns of The Occult World to call attention to some rather grievous misstatements which Dr. Sabbat had made concerning… ah… concerning psychic doubles. Having been stationed for some years in India, having traveled with the Granby expedition through Tibet, I feel that I can lay some claim to first hand knowledge of that type of psychical manifestation. Sabbat, however, had traveled extensively in the East, but his none too adequate knowledge of Oriental dialects handicapped him. He took my purely impersonal criticism as a direct personal attack, even going so far as to threaten me with bodily harm. He was quite capable of carrying out such a threat, and I avoided him. I never saw him again until tonight.”

“How’d that happen?”

“Mr. David Duvallo informed me that he had recently met Mr. Sabbat, and Saturday, I think it was, he said that Cesare was extremely anxious to meet Madame Rappourt and that our old quarrel had been forgotten. Under other circumstances I might have been loath to revive such a distressing acquaintanceship, but the reports of certain occult experiments he was making quite intrigued me.”

“And they were?”

For a hard-headed skeptic who thought occult matters were on a par with the freaks at Coney Island, Gavigan was a bear for punishment.

“I am told,” Watrous said, “that he claimed to have produced levitation phenomena in himself that equalled those amazing, still unexplained, experiments of D. D. Home. I felt that this, at least, deserved investigation, though, when I knew him last, he was trying to rediscover such chimerae as the lost hermetic formulas for invisibility and the Universal Alkahest.[5] I was somewhat skeptical. But since a priori skepticism among scientific investigators is what has for so long kept the psychical sciences in a rudimentary state, I couldn’t very well—”

The Inspector had heard all he thought necessary of that. He came over on a new tack.

“Where do the LaClaires come into this?”

“I don’t know. They were not invited to the gathering here this evening, so far as I know.”

“You know them well?”

“Alfred’s father did Indian duty in my regiment.”

What do you know about Sabbat and Mrs. LaClaire?”

“Pardon?” Watrous asked. “I don’t believe I quite understand.”

“Were they having an affair?”

Watrous mounted his high horse and went into a dignified canter.

“I know no particulars as to Mr. Sabbat’s ah — er — love life, except that he did have an unsavory reputation where the ladies were concerned.”

“When are you and Madame Rappourt going to release the results of last night’s hand-holding in the dark?”

“When we are in a position to refute quite positively such skeptics as yourself, sir.”

“You may have to do that sooner than you think — if I need the information. You are fully satisfied then, I take it, that Madame Rappourt is bona fide?”

Watrous flushed slightly and then said stiffly, “My integrity as an investigator has never been questioned by any competent critic. I have discovered, as anyone who has read my books would know, several genuine instances of psychic phenomena, inexplicable on any materialistic basis. As for Madame Rappourt, I think I may safely say that if her mediumistic powers are the result of trickery, then she is by far the cleverest impostor I have ever met. And I might add that if she is genuine, modern science will be faced with something it cannot ignore. Her telekinetic phenomena, in particular, are so remarkably… ”

“Who,” Gavigan cut in impatiently, “do you think might have killed Sabbat?”

Watrous said slowly, “You are sure that someone killed him?”

“Suicide is out of the question.”

“Yes, I know. I also know that a similar case occurred in Devonshire in 1903 and that many investigators have considered it explainable only on the assumption that some enemy who held a malign control over etheric vibrations must have… ”

“Strangled by vibrations?”

“There have been stranger things, Inspector.”

Gavigan sniffed, then said abruptly, “Okay, you can go. But just stay handy. I’ll want you again.”

The Colonel placed his pince-nez firmly on his nose, glared at the Inspector a moment, then wheeled and stalked out. I thought I detected a flicker beneath his mustache of what may have been a faint smile of amusement.

When he had gone Gavigan said, “That old dodo shouldn’t be allowed out alone. He needs a nurse — and a psychoanalyst.”

Merlini walked over from the bookshelves, bringing with him, one finger between its leaves, a large and dusty volume. “Don’t judge the Colonel too hastily. I had a feeling there at the last that he might have been spoofing you a bit. He shouldn’t be a bad actor, you know. His father was the famous Shakespearian actor, Sir Herbert Watrous. And besides, some of what he says sounds silly only until you’ve looked into it a bit. He’s right when he says that science should take the field of psychical research a bit more seriously. A few men are beginning to do it. Professor Rhine’s experiments in parapsychology at Duke University have pretty well demonstrated that something suspiciously like telepathy may exist. And J. W. Dunne’s book, An Experiment with Time, gives me the willies every time I look into it. I find it difficult, though, to believe that the dead can come back, largely because they seem to act such idiots when they do return. It shouldn’t really be so difficult for a disembodied spirit to show a conjurer aces and spades. As for the occultists, if they’d just forego the dark and bring but one of their dog-headed Elementals out into the light of day—”

“I wish to heaven,” Gavigan said, “that you and Rappourt and Watrous wouldn’t be so damned technical. I’m going to have to have an occult glossary compiled for me before I get out of these woods. What in hell is an Elemental?”

Merlini laughed. “An Elemental in hell, Inspector, is at home. There’s quite a tribe of them, Ginn, Ginee, Salamanders, Undines, Efreets, Poltergeists, etc. Hindu authorities place them in the scheme of reincarnation as unattached human spirits who are waiting their next incarnation. Madame Blavatsky, whom the Colonel mentioned, used to have them about. On one occasion, when a small one pestered her by pulling at her skirt, she said that it wanted something to do. Olcutt, the Theosophical Society’s president and her mentor, suggested that she have the sprite hem some towels he had purchased. She locked the material in a bookcase with needle and thread. Twenty minutes later they heard a mouse-like squeaking, which she translated as meaning that the work was done. Olcutt opened the bookcase and found the towels hemmed, though, as he said, ‘after a fashion that would disgrace the youngest child in an infant sewing class.’ ”

“In other words,” Gavigan said slowly, almost absently, and without the ghost of a smile, “the hemstitching was elementary.”

Merlini threw a startled glance in my direction, and as Gavigan moved away toward the window, followed it with a delighted wink and whispered, “A policeman who puns! He’s defying all the ancient tradition, every canon of criminal investigation!”

“I suppose I can expect anything now,” I whispered back. “Yours are always a fearful earful when you have competition.”

The Inspector stood looking out the window thoughtfully. Half to himself, he said, “That Rappourt woman gets me down. I’ve heard alibis in my time that were miracles of watertight ingenuity, but she can pick up the marbles and take ’em away. And Watrous matched it! Three suspects questioned, and we get three alibis that are too damned slick for any good use! I never saw such a good batting average in all—”

His soliloquy petered out Merlini, seated now, was again absorbed in his book.

Gavigan shook his head wearily and turning said, “Merlini, you’ve been nosing about in those books long enough to have discovered something about our mysterious Surgat, the demon nobody knows. Let’s have it.”

Merlini nodded. “Yes, it’s about time we cleared up his identity. Listen to this.”

He glanced down at the book, open across his knees, and began to read.

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