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<h2> CHAPTER XXI </h2>
<p>THE NARRATIVE OF JOHN LEXMAN</p>
<p>“I am, as you may all know, a writer of stories which depend for their
success upon the creation and unravelment of criminological mysteries. The
Chief Commissioner has been good enough to tell you that my stories were
something more than a mere seeking after sensation, and that I endeavoured
in the course of those narratives to propound obscure but possible
situations, and, with the ingenuity that I could command, to offer to
those problems a solution acceptable, not only to the general reader, but
to the police expert.</p>
<p>“Although I did not regard my earlier work with any great seriousness and
indeed only sought after exciting situations and incidents, I can see now,
looking back, that underneath the work which seemed at the time
purposeless, there was something very much like a scheme of studies.</p>
<p>“You must forgive this egotism in me because it is necessary that I should
make this explanation and you, who are in the main police officers of
considerable experience and discernment, should appreciate the fact that
as I was able to get inside the minds of the fictitious criminals I
portrayed, so am I now able to follow the mind of the man who committed
this murder, or if not to follow his mind, to recreate the psychology of
the slayer of Remington Kara.</p>
<p>“In the possession of most of you are the vital facts concerning this man.
You know the type of man he was, you have instances of his terrible
ruthlessness, you know that he was a blot upon God's earth, a vicious
wicked ego, seeking the gratification of that strange blood-lust and
pain-lust, which is to be found in so few criminals.”</p>
<p>John Lexman went on to describe the killing of Vassalaro.</p>
<p>“I know now how that occurred,” he said. “I had received on the previous
Christmas eve amongst other presents, a pistol from an unknown admirer.
That unknown admirer was Kara, who had planned this murder some three
months ahead. He it was, who sent me the Browning, knowing as he did that
I had never used such a weapon and that therefore I would be chary about
using it. I might have put the pistol away in a cupboard out of reach and
the whole of his carefully thought out plan would have miscarried.</p>
<p>“But Kara was systematic in all things. Three weeks after I received the
weapon, a clumsy attempt was made to break into my house in the middle of
the night. It struck me at the time it was clumsy, because the burglar
made a tremendous amount of noise and disappeared soon after he began his
attempt, doing no more damage than to break a window in my dining-room.
Naturally my mind went to the possibility of a further attempt of this
kind, as my house stood on the outskirts of the village, and it was only
natural that I should take the pistol from one of my boxes and put it
somewhere handy. To make doubly sure, Kara came down the next day and
heard the full story of the outrage.</p>
<p>“He did not speak of pistols, but I remember now, though I did not
remember at the time, that I mentioned the fact that I had a handy weapon.
A fortnight later a second attempt was made to enter the house. I say an
attempt, but again I do not believe that the intention was at all serious.
The outrage was designed to keep that pistol of mine in a get-at-able
place.</p>
<p>“And again Kara came down to see us on the day following the burglary, and
again I must have told him, though I have no distinct recollection of the
fact, of what had happened the previous night. It would have been
unnatural if I had not mentioned the fact, as it was a matter which had
formed a subject of discussion between myself, my wife and the servants.</p>
<p>“Then came the threatening letter, with Kara providentially at hand. On
the night of the murder, whilst Kara was still in my house, I went out to
find his chauffeur. Kara remained a few minutes with my wife and then on
some excuse went into the library. There he loaded the pistol, placing one
cartridge in the chamber, and trusting to luck that I did not pull the
trigger until I had it pointed at my victim. Here he took his biggest
chance, because, before sending the weapon to me, he had had the spring of
the Browning so eased that the slightest touch set it off and, as you
know, the pistol being automatic, the explosion of one cartridge,
reloading and firing the next and so on, it was probably that a chance
touch would have brought his scheme to nought—probably me also.</p>
<p>“Of what happened on that night you are aware.”</p>
<p>He went on to tell of his trial and conviction and skimmed over the life
he led until that morning on Dartmoor.</p>
<p>“Kara knew my innocence had been proved and his hatred for me being his
great obsession, since I had the thing he had wanted but no longer wanted,
let that be understood—he saw the misery he had planned for me and
my dear wife being brought to a sudden end. He had, by the way, already
planned and carried his plan into execution, a system of tormenting her.</p>
<p>“You did not know,” he turned to T. X., “that scarcely a month passed, but
some disreputable villain called at her flat, with a story that he had
been released from Portland or Wormwood Scrubbs that morning and that he
had seen me. The story each messenger brought was one sufficient to break
the heart of any but the bravest woman. It was a story of ill-treatment by
brutal officials, of my illness, of my madness, of everything calculated
to harrow the feelings of a tender-hearted and faithful wife.</p>
<p>“That was Kara's scheme. Not to hurt with the whip or with the knife, but
to cut deep at the heart with his evil tongue, to cut to the raw places of
the mind. When he found that I was to be released,—he may have
guessed, or he may have discovered by some underhand method; that a pardon
was about to be signed,—he conceived his great plan. He had less
than two days to execute it.</p>
<p>“Through one of his agents he discovered a warder who had been in some
trouble with the authorities, a man who was avaricious and was even then
on the brink of being discharged from the service for trafficking with
prisoners. The bribe he offered this man was a heavy one and the warder
accepted.</p>
<p>“Kara had purchased a new monoplane and as you know he was an excellent
aviator. With this new machine he flew to Devon and arrived at dawn in one
of the unfrequented parts of the moor.</p>
<p>“The story of my own escape needs no telling. My narrative really begins
from the moment I put my foot upon the deck of the Mpret. The first person
I asked to see was, naturally, my wife. Kara, however, insisted on my
going to the cabin he had prepared and changing my clothes, and until then
I did not realise I was still in my convict's garb. A clean change was
waiting for me, and the luxury of soft shirts and well-fitting garments
after the prison uniform I cannot describe.</p>
<p>“After I was dressed I was taken by the Greek steward to the larger
stateroom and there I found my darling waiting for me.”</p>
<p>His voice sank almost to a whisper, and it was a minute or two before he
had mastered his emotions.</p>
<p>“She had been suspicious of Kara, but he had been very insistent. He had
detailed the plans and shown her the monoplane, but even then she would
not trust herself on board, and she had been waiting in a motor-boat,
moving parallel with the yacht, until she saw the landing and realized, as
she thought, that Kara was not playing her false. The motor-boat had been
hired by Kara and the two men inside were probably as well-bribed as the
warder.</p>
<p>“The joy of freedom can only be known to those who have suffered the
horrors of restraint. That is a trite enough statement, but when one is
describing elemental things there is no room for subtlety. The voyage was
a fairly eventless one. We saw very little of Kara, who did not intrude
himself upon us, and our main excitement lay in the apprehension that we
should be held up by a British destroyer or, that when we reached
Gibraltar, we should be searched by the Brit's authorities. Kara had
foreseen that possibility and had taken in enough coal to last him for the
run.</p>
<p>“We had a fairly stormy passage in the Mediterranean, but after that
nothing happened until we arrived at Durazzo. We had to go ashore in
disguise, because Kara told us that the English Consul might see us and
make some trouble. We wore Turkish dresses, Grace heavily veiled and I
wearing a greasy old kaftan which, with my somewhat emaciated face and my
unshaven appearance, passed me without comment.</p>
<p>“Kara's home was and is about eighteen miles from Durazzo. It is not on
the main road, but it is reached by following one of the rocky mountain
paths which wind and twist among the hills to the south-east of the town.
The country is wild and mainly uncultivated. We had to pass through swamps
and skirt huge lagoons as we mounted higher and higher from terrace to
terrace and came to the roads which crossed the mountains.</p>
<p>“Kara's, palace, you could call it no less, is really built within sight
of the sea. It is on the Acroceraunian Peninsula near Cape Linguetta.
Hereabouts the country is more populated and better cultivated. We passed
great slopes entirely covered with mulberry and olive trees, whilst in the
valleys there were fields of maize and corn. The palazzo stands on a lofty
plateau. It is approached by two paths, which can be and have been well
defended in the past against the Sultan's troops or against the bands
which have been raised by rival villages with the object of storming and
plundering this stronghold.</p>
<p>“The Skipetars, a blood-thirsty crowd without pity or remorse, were
faithful enough to their chief, as Kara was. He paid them so well that it
was not profitable to rob him; moreover he kept their own turbulent
elements fully occupied with the little raids which he or his agents
organized from time to time. The palazzo was built rather in the Moorish
than in the Turkish style.</p>
<p>“It was a sort of Eastern type to which was grafted an Italian
architecture—a house of white-columned courts, of big paved yards,
fountains and cool, dark rooms.</p>
<p>“When I passed through the gates I realized for the first time something
of Kara's importance. There were a score of servants, all Eastern,
perfectly trained, silent and obsequious. He led us to his own room.</p>
<p>“It was a big apartment with divans running round the wall, the most
ornate French drawing room suite and an enormous Persian carpet, one of
the finest of the kind that has ever been turned out of Shiraz. Here, let
me say, that throughout the trip his attitude to me had been perfectly
friendly and towards Grace all that I could ask of my best friend,
considerate and tactful.</p>
<p>“'We had hardly reached his room before he said to me with that bonhomie
which he had observed throughout the trip, 'You would like to see your
room?'</p>
<p>“I expressed a wish to that effect. He clapped his hands and a big
Albanian servant came through the curtained doorway, made the usual
salaam, and Kara spoke to him a few words in a language which I presume
was Turkish.</p>
<p>“'He will show you the way,' said Kara with his most genial smile.</p>
<p>“I followed the servant through the curtains which had hardly fallen
behind me before I was seized by four men, flung violently on the ground,
a filthy tarbosch was thrust into my mouth and before I knew what was
happening I was bound hand and foot.</p>
<p>“As I realised the gross treachery of the man, my first frantic thoughts
were of Grace and her safety. I struggled with the strength of three men,
but they were too many for me and I was dragged along the passage, a door
was opened and I was flung into a bare room. I must have been lying on the
floor for half an hour when they came for me, this time accompanied by a
middle-aged man named Savolio, who was either an Italian or a Greek.</p>
<p>“He spoke English fairly well and he made it clear to me that I had to
behave myself. I was led back to the room from whence I had come and found
Kara sitting in one of those big armchairs which he affected, smoking a
cigarette. Confronting him, still in her Turkish dress, was poor Grace.
She was not bound I was pleased to see, but when on my entrance she rose
and made as if to come towards me, she was unceremoniously thrown back by
the guardian who stood at her side.</p>
<p>“'Mr. John Lexman,' drawled Kara, 'you are at the beginning of a great
disillusionment. I have a few things to tell you which will make you feel
rather uncomfortable.' It was then that I heard for the first time that my
pardon had been signed and my innocence discovered.</p>
<p>“'Having taken a great deal of trouble to get you in prison,' said Kara,
'it isn't likely that I'm going to allow all my plans to be undone, and my
plan is to make you both extremely uncomfortable.'</p>
<p>“He did not raise his voice, speaking still in the same conversational
tone, suave and half amused.</p>
<p>“'I hate you for two things,' he said, and ticked them off on his fingers:
'the first is that you took the woman that I wanted. To a man of my
temperament that is an unpardonable crime. I have never wanted women
either as friends or as amusement. I am one of the few people in the world
who are self-sufficient. It happened that I wanted your wife and she
rejected me because apparently she preferred you.'</p>
<p>“He looked at me quizzically.</p>
<p>“'You are thinking at this moment,' he went on slowly, 'that I want her
now, and that it is part of my revenge that I shall put her straight in my
harem. Nothing is farther from my desires or my thoughts. The Black Roman
is not satisfied with the leavings of such poor trash as you. I hate you
both equally and for both of you there is waiting an experience more
terrible than even your elastic imagination can conjure. You understand
what that means!' he asked me still retaining his calm.</p>
<p>“I did not reply. I dared not look at Grace, to whom he turned.</p>
<p>“'I believe you love your husband, my friend,' he said; 'your love will be
put to a very severe test. You shall see him the mere wreckage of the man
he is. You shall see him brutalized below the level of the cattle in the
field. I will give you both no joys, no ease of mind. From this moment you
are slaves, and worse than slaves.'</p>
<p>“He clapped his hands. The interview was ended and from that moment I only
saw Grace once.”</p>
<p>John Lexman stopped and buried his face in his hands.</p>
<p>“They took me to an underground dungeon cut in the solid rock. In many
ways it resembled the dungeon of the Chateau of Chillon, in that its only
window looked out upon a wild, storm-swept lake and its floor was jagged
rock. I have called it underground, as indeed it was on that side, for the
palazzo was built upon a steep slope running down from the spur of the
hills.</p>
<p>“They chained me by the legs and left me to my own devices. Once a day
they gave me a little goat flesh and a pannikin of water and once a week
Kara would come in and outside the radius of my chain he would open a
little camp stool and sitting down smoke his cigarette and talk. My God!
the things that man said! The things he described! The horrors he related!
And always it was Grace who was the centre of his description. And he
would relate the stories he was telling to her about myself. I cannot
describe them. They are beyond repetition.”</p>
<p>John Lexman shuddered and closed his eyes.</p>
<p>“That was his weapon. He did not confront me with the torture of my
darling, he did not bring tangible evidence of her suffering—he just
sat and talked, describing with a remarkable clarity of language which
seemed incredible in a foreigner, the 'amusements' which he himself had
witnessed.</p>
<p>“I thought I should go mad. Twice I sprang at him and twice the chain
about my legs threw me headlong on that cruel floor. Once he brought the
jailer in to whip me, but I took the whipping with such phlegm that it
gave him no satisfaction. I told you I had seen Grace only once and this
is how it happened.</p>
<p>“It was after the flogging, and Kara, who was a veritable demon in his
rage, planned to have his revenge for my indifference. They brought Grace
out upon a boat and rowed the boat to where I could see it from my window.
There the whip which had been applied to me was applied to her. I can't
tell you any more about that,” he said brokenly, “but I wish, you don't
know how fervently, that I had broken down and given the dog the
satisfaction he wanted. My God! It was horrible!</p>
<p>“When the winter came they used to take me out with chains on my legs to
gather in wood from the forest. There was no reason why I should be given
this work, but the truth was, as I discovered from Salvolio, that Kara
thought my dungeon was too warm. It was sheltered from the winds by the
hill behind and even on the coldest days and nights it was not unbearable.
Then Kara went away for some time. I think he must have gone to England,
and he came back in a white fury. One of his big plans had gone wrong and
the mental torture he inflicted upon me was more acute than ever.</p>
<p>“In the old days he used to come once a week; now he came almost every
day. He usually arrived in the afternoon and I was surprised one night to
be awakened from my sleep to see him standing at the door, a lantern in
his hand, his inevitable cigarette in his mouth. He always wore the
Albanian costume when he was in the country, those white kilted skirts and
zouave jackets which the hillsmen affect and, if anything, it added to his
demoniacal appearance. He put down the lantern and leant against the wall.</p>
<p>“'I'm afraid that wife of yours is breaking up, Lexman,' he drawled; 'she
isn't the good, stout, English stuff that I thought she was.'</p>
<p>“I made no reply. I had found by bitter experience that if I intruded into
the conversation, I should only suffer the more.</p>
<p>“'I have sent down to Durazzo to get a doctor,' he went on; 'naturally
having taken all this trouble I don't want to lose you by death. She is
breaking up,' he repeated with relish and yet with an undertone of
annoyance in his voice; 'she asked for you three times this morning.'</p>
<p>“I kept myself under control as I had never expected that a man so
desperately circumstanced could do.</p>
<p>“'Kara,' I said as quietly as I could, 'what has she done that she should
deserve this hell in which she has lived?'</p>
<p>“He sent out a long ring of smoke and watched its progress across the
dungeon.</p>
<p>“'What has she done?' he said, keeping his eye on the ring—I shall
always remember every look, every gesture, and every intonation of his
voice. 'Why, she has done all that a woman can do for a man like me. She
has made me feel little. Until I had a rebuff from her, I had all the
world at my feet, Lexman. I did as I liked. If I crooked my little finger,
people ran after me and that one experience with her has broken me. Oh,
don't think,' he went on quickly, 'that I am broken in love. I never loved
her very much, it was just a passing passion, but she killed my
self-confidence. After then, whenever I came to a crucial moment in my
affairs, when the big manner, the big certainty was absolutely necessary
for me to carry my way, whenever I was most confident of myself and my
ability and my scheme, a vision of this damned girl rose and I felt that
momentary weakening, that memory of defeat, which made all the difference
between success and failure.</p>
<p>“'I hated her and I hate her still,' he said with vehemence; 'if she dies
I shall hate her more because she will remain everlastingly unbroken to
menace my thoughts and spoil my schemes through all eternity.'</p>
<p>“He leant forward, his elbows on his knees, his clenched fist under his
chin—how well I can see him!—and stared at me.</p>
<p>“'I could have been king here in this land,' he said, waving his hand
toward the interior, 'I could have bribed and shot my way to the throne of
Albania. Don't you realize what that means to a man like me? There is
still a chance and if I could keep your wife alive, if I could see her
broken in reason and in health, a poor, skeleton, gibbering thing that
knelt at my feet when I came near her I should recover the mastery of
myself. Believe me,' he said, nodding his head, 'your wife will have the
best medical advice that it is possible to obtain.'</p>
<p>“Kara went out and I did not see him again for a very long time. He sent
word, just a scrawled note in the morning, to say my wife had died.”</p>
<p>John Lexman rose up from his seat, and paced the apartment, his head upon
his breast.</p>
<p>“From that moment,” he said, “I lived only for one thing, to punish
Remington Kara. And gentlemen, I punished him.”</p>
<p>He stood in the centre of the room and thumped his broad chest with his
clenched hand.</p>
<p>“I killed Remington Kara,” he said, and there was a little gasp of
astonishment from every man present save one. That one was T. X. Meredith,
who had known all the time.</p>
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