Sir Arthur Conan Doyle


 
   The Lift


    Flight-Commander Stangate should  have  been  happy.  He  had  come  safely 
through the war without a hurt, and with a good name  in  the  most  heroic  of
services. He had only just turned thirty, and a  great  career  seemed  to  lie 
ahead of him. Above all, beautiful Mary MacLean was walking by his side, and he 
had her promise that she was there for life. What could a  young  man  ask  for 
more? And yet there was a heavy load upon his heart. 
    He could not explain it himself, and endeavoured to reason himself  out  of 
it. There was the blue sky above him, the blue  sea  in  front,  the  beautiful 
gardens with their throngs of happy pleasure-seekers around. Above  all,  there 
was that sweet face turned upon him with questioning concern.  Why could he not 
raise himself to so joyful an environment? He made  effort  after  effort,  but 
they were not convincing enough to deceive  the  quick  instinct  of  a  loving 
woman. 
    "What is it, Tom?" she asked  anxiously.  "I  can  see  that  something  is 
clouding you. Do tell me if I can help you in any way." 
    He laughed in shame-faced fashion. 
    "It is such a sin to spoil our little  outing,"  he  said.  "I  could  kick 
myself round these gardens when I think of it. Don't  worry,  my  darling,  for 
I know the cloud will roll off. I suppose I am a  creature  of  nerves,  though 
I should have got past that by now. The Flying Service is  supposed  either  to 
break you or to warrant you for life." 
    "It is nothing definite, then?"
    "No, it is nothing definite. That's the worst of it.  You  could  fight  it 
more easily if it was. It's just a dead, heavy depression here in my chest  and 
across my forehead. But do forgive me, dear girl! What a brute I am  to  shadow 
you like this." 
    "But I love to share even the smallest trouble." 
    "Well, it's gone-vamosed-vanished. We will talk about it no more. 
    She gave him a swift, penetrating glance. 
    "No, no, Tom; your brow shows, as well as feels. Tell me,  dear,  have  you 
often felt like this? You really look very ill. Sit here, dear,  in  the  shade 
and tell me of it." 
    They sat together in the shadow of the great latticed  Tower  which  reared 
itself six hundred feet high beside them. 
    "I have an absurd faculty," said  he;  "I  don't  know  that  I  have  ever 
mentioned it to any one before. But when  imminent  danger  is  threatening  me 
I get these strange forebodings.  Of  course  it  is  absurd  to-day  in  these 
peaceful surroundings. It only shows how queerly these things work. But  it  is 
the first time that it has deceived me." 
    "When had you it before?" 
    "When I was a lad it seized me one  morning.  I  was  nearly  drowned  that 
afternoon. I had it when the burglar came to Morton Hall and  I  got  a  bullet 
through my coat. Then twice in the war when I was overmatched  and  escaped  by 
a miracle, I had this strange feeling before ever I climbed  into  my  machine. 
Then it lifts quite suddenly, like a mist in the sunshine. Why, it  is  lifting 
now. Look at me! Can't you see that it is so?" 
    She could indeed. He  had  turned  in  a  minute  from  a  haggard  man  to 
a laughing boy. She found herself laughing in sympathy.  A rush of high spirits 
and energy had swept away his strange foreboding and filled his whole soul with 
the vivid, dancing joy of youth. 
    "Thank goodness!" he cried. "I think it is your dear eyes  that  have  done 
it. I could not stand  that  wistful  look  in  them.  What  a  silly,  foolish 
nightmare  it  all  has  been!  There's  an  end  for  ever  in  my  belief  in 
presentiments. Now, dear girl, we have just  time  for  one  good  turn  before 
luncheon. After that the gardens get so crowded  that  it  is  hopeless  to  do 
anything. Shall we have a side show, or the great wheel, or the flying boat, or 
what?" 
    "What about the Tower?" she asked, glancing upwards.  "Surely that glorious 
air and the view from the top would drive the last wisps of cloud out  of  your 
mind." 
    He looked at his watch. 
    "Well, it's past twelve, but I suppose we could do it all in an  hour.  But 
it doesn't seem to be working. What about it, conductor?" 
    The man shook his head and pointed to a little  knot  of  people  who  were 
assembled at the entrance. 
    "They've all been waiting, sir.  It's  hung  up,  but  the  gear  is  being 
overhauled, and I expect the signal  every  minute.  If  you  join  the  others 
I promise it won't be long." 
    They had hardly reached the group when the steel face of  the  lift  rolled 
aside - a sign that there was hope in the  future.  The  motley  crowd  drifted 
through the opening and waited expectantly upon the wooden platform.  They were 
not numerous, for the gardens are not crowded until  the  afternoon,  but  they 
were fair samples of the kindly,  good-humoured  north-country  folk  who  take 
their annual holiday at Northam. Their faces were all upturned  now,  and  they 
were watching with keen interest a man who was descending the steel  framework. 
It seemed a dangerous, precarious business,  but  he  came  as  swiftly  as  an 
ordinary mortal upon a staircase. 
    "My word!" said the conductor, glancing up. "Jim has got  a  move  on  this 
morning." 
    "Who is he?" asked Commander Stangate. 
    "That's Jim Barnes, sir, the best workman that ever went on a scaffold.  He 
fair lives up there: every bolt and rivet are under his care. He's a wonder, is 
Jim." 
    "But don't argue religion with him," said one of the group. 
    The attendant laughed. 
    "Ah, you know him, then," said he. "No, don't argue religion with him." 
    "Why not?" asked the officer. 
    "Well, he takes it very hard, he does. He's the shining light of his sect." 
    "It ain't hard to be that," said the knowing one.  "I've  heard  there  are 
only six folk in the fold. He's one of those who picture heaven  as  the  exact 
size of their own back street conventicle and every one else left outside it." 
    "Better not tell him so while he's got that hammer in his hand,"  said  the 
conductor, in a hurried whisper. "Hallo, Jim, how goes it this morning?" 
    The man slid swiftly down the last thirty feet, and then  balanced  himself 
on a cross-bar while he looked at the little group in the  lift.  As  he  stood 
there, clad in a leather suit, with his pliers and other  tools  dangling  from 
his brown belt, he was a figure to please the eye of an  artist.  The  man  was 
very tall and gaunt, with great straggling limbs and every appearance of  giant 
strength. His face was a remarkable one, noble and yet sinister, with dark eyes 
and hair, a prominent hooked nose, and a beard which flowed over his chest.  He 
steadied himself with one knotted hand, while the other  held  a  steel  hammer 
dangling by his knee. 
    "It's all ready aloft," said he. "I'll go up with you if I may." 
    He sprang down from his perch and joined the others in the lift. 
    "I suppose you are always watching it," said the young lady. 
    "That is what I am engaged for, miss. From morning to night, and often from 
night to morning, I am up here. There are times when I feel as if  I  were  not 
a man at all, but a fowl of the air. They fly round me, the creatures, as I lie 
out on the girders, and they cry to me until I find myself crying back  to  the 
poor soulless things." 
    "It's a great charge," said the Commander, glancing  up  at  the  wonderful 
tracery of steel outlined against the deep blue sky. 
    "Aye, sir, and there is not a nut nor a screw that is not  in  my  keeping. 
Here's my hammer to ring them true and my spanner to wrench them tight.  As the 
Lord over the earth, so am I - even I - over the Tower, with power of life  and 
power of death, aye of death and of life." 
    The hydraulic machinery  had  begun  to  work  and  the  lift  very  slowly 
ascended. As it mounted, the glorious panorama of the coast and  bay  gradually 
unfolded itself. So engrossing was the view that the passengers hardly  noticed 
it when the platform stopped abruptly between stages at the five  hundred  foot 
level. Barnes,  the  workman,  muttered  that  something  must  be  amiss,  and 
springing like a cat across the gap which separated them from the  trellis-work 
of metal he clambered out of sight. The motley little party, suspended in  mid-
air, lost something of their British shyness under such unwonted conditions and 
began to compare notes with each other. One couple, who addressed each other as 
Dolly and Billy, announced to the company that they were the particular  star's 
of the Hippodrome bill, and kept their neighbours tittering with  their  rather 
obvious wit. A buxom mother, her precocious son, and two married  couples  upon 
holiday formed an appreciative audience. 
    "You'd like to be a sailor, would you?" said Billy the comedian,  in answer 
to some remark of the boy. "Look 'ere, my nipper, you'll end up as  a  blooming 
corpse if you ain't careful. See 'im standin' at the edge. At this hour of  the 
morning I can't bear to watch it." 
    "What's the hour got to do with it?" asked a stout commercial traveller. 
    "My nerves are worth nothin' before midday. Why, lookin'  down  there,  and 
seem' those folks like dots, puts me all in a twitter. My family is  all  alike 
in the mornin'." 
    "I expect," said Dolly, a high-coloured  young  woman,  "that  they're  all 
alike the evening before." 
    There was a general laugh, which was led by the comedian. 
    "You got it across that time, Dolly. It's K.O. for  Battling  Billy - still 
senseless when last heard of. If my family is laughed at I'll leave the room." 
    "It's about time we did," said the commercial traveller,  who  was  a  red-
faced, choleric person. "It's a disgrace the way they hold us up. I'll write to 
the company." 
    "Where's the bell-push?" said Billy. "I'm goin' to ring." 
    "What for - the waiter?" asked the lady. 
    "For the conductor, the chauffeur, whoever it is that drives the old bus up 
and down. Have they run out of petrol, or broke the mainspring, or what?" 
    "We have a fine view, anyhow," said the Commander. 
    "Well, I've had that," remarked Billy. "I'm  done  with  it,  and  I'm  for 
getting on." 
    "I'm getting nervous," cried the stout mother. "I do hope there is  nothing 
wrong with the lift." 
    "I say, hold on to the slack of my coat, Dolly.  I'm going to look over and 
chance it. Oh, Lord, it makes me sick and giddy! There's a  horse  down  under, 
and it ain't bigger than a mouse. I don't see any one lookin' after us. Where's 
old Isaiah the prophet who came up with us?" 
    "He shinned out of it mighty quick when he thought trouble was coming." 
    "Look here," said Dolly, looking very perturbed, "this  is  a  nice  thing, 
I don't think. Here we are five hundred foot up, and stuck for the day as  like 
as not. I'm due for the matinee at the Hippodrome. I'm sorry for the company if 
they don't get me down in time for that. I'm billed all over the town for a new 
song. 
    "A new one! What's that, Dolly?" 
    "A real pot o' ginger, I tell you. It's called 'On the Road to Ascot.' I've 
got a hat four foot across to sing it in." 
    "Come on, Dolly, let's have a rehearsal while we wait." 
    "No, no; the young lady here wouldn't understand." 
    "I'd be very glad to hear it," cried Mary MacLean.  "Please  don't  let  me 
prevent you." 
    "The words were written to the hat.  I couldn't sing the verses without the 
hat. But there's a' nailin' good chorus to it: 

              "'If you want a little mascot 
              When you're on the way to Ascot,
              Try the lady with the cartwheel hat.'" 

    She had a tuneful voice and a sense of rhythm which set every one  nodding. 
"Try it now all together," she cried; and the strange little haphazard  company 
sang it with all their lungs. 
    "I say," said Billy, "that ought to  wake  somebody  up.  What?  Let's  try 
a shout all together." 
    It was a fine effort, but there was no response.  It  was  clear  that  the 
management down below was quite ignorant or impotent. No  sound  came  back  to 
them. 
    The passengers became alarmed. The commercial  traveller  was  rather  less 
rubicund. Billy still tried to joke, but his efforts were  not  well  received. 
The officer in his blue uniform at once took his place as  rightful  leader  in 
a crisis. They all looked to him and appealed to him. 
    "What would you advise, sir? You don't  think  there's  any  danger  of  it 
coming down, do you?" 
    "Not the least. But it's awkward to be stuck here all  the  same.  I  think 
I could jump across on to that girder. Then perhaps I could see what is wrong." 
    "No, no, Tom; for goodness' sake, don't leave us!" 
    "Some people have a nerve," said  Billy.  "Fancy  jumping  across  a  five-
hundred-foot drop!" 
    "I dare say the gentleman did worse things in the war." 
    "Well, I wouldn't do it myself - not if they starred me in the bills.  It's 
all very well for old Isaiah. It's his job, and I wouldn't do him out of it." 
    Three sides of the lift were shut in with wooden partitions,  pierced  with 
windows for the view. The fourth side, facing  the  sea,  was  clear.  Stangate 
leaned as far as he could and looked upwards. As he  did  so  there  came  from 
above him a peculiar sonorous metallic twang, as if a  mighty  harp-string  had 
been struck. Some distance up - a hundred feet, perhaps - he could see  a  long 
brown corded arm, which was working furiously among the wire cordage above. The 
form was beyond his view, but he was fascinated by this bare sinewy  arm  which 
tugged and pulled and sagged and stabbed. 
    "It's all right," he said, and a general sigh  of  relief  broke  from  his 
strange comrades at his words. "There is  some  one  above  us  setting  things 
right." 
    "It's old Isaiah," said  Billy,  stretching  his  neck  round  the  corner. 
"I can't see him, but it's his arm for a dollar. What's he  got  in  his  hand? 
Looks like a screwdriver or something. No, by George, it's a file." 
    As he spoke there  came  another  sonorous  twang  from  above.  There  was 
a troubled frown upon the officer's brow. 
    "I say, dash it all, that's the very sound our steel hawser  made  when  it 
parted, strand by strand, at Dixmude. What the deuce is the fellow about?  Hey, 
there! what are you trying to do?"
    The man had ceased his work and was now slowly descending the iron trellis.
    "All right, he's coming,"  said Stangate to his startled companions.  "It's 
all right, Mary. Don't be frightened, any of you. It's  absurd  to  suppose  he 
would really weaken the cord that holds us."
    A pair of high boots appeared from above. Then came the leathern  breeches, 
the belt with its dangling tools, the muscular form, and, finally,  the fierce, 
swarthy, eagle face of the workman. His  coat  was  off  and  his  shirt  open, 
showing the hairy chest. As he  appeared  there  came  another  sharp  snapping 
vibration from above. The man made his way down in leisurely fashion, and then, 
balancing himself upon the cross-girder and leaning against the side piece,  he 
stood with folded arms, looking from under his heavy black brows at the huddled 
passengers upon the platform.
    "Hallo!" said Stangate. "What's the matter?"
    The man stood impassive and silent, with something  indescribably  menacing 
in his fixed, unwinking stare.
    The flying officer grew angry.
    "Hallo! Are you deaf?" he cried. "How long do you mean  to  have  us  stuck 
here?"
    The man stood silent. There was something devilish in his appearance.
    "I'll complain of you, my lad," said Billy, in  a  quivering  voice.  "This 
won't stop here, I can promise you."
    "Look here!" cried the officer. "We have ladies here and you  are  alarming 
them. Why are we stuck here? Has the machinery gone wrong?"
    "You are here," said the man, "because I  have  put  a  wedge  against  the 
hawser above you.
    "You fouled the line! How dared you do such a thing! What right have you to 
frighten the women and put us all to this inconvenience? Take  that  wedge  out 
this instant, or it will be the worse for you."
    The man was silent.
    "Do you hear what I say? Why the devil don't you answer?  Is this a joke or 
what? We've had about enough of it, I tell you."
    Mary MacLean had gripped her lover by the arm in an agony of sudden panic.
    "Oh, Tom!" she cried. "Look at his eyes-look at his horrible eyes!  The man 
is a maniac."
    The workman stirred suddenly into sinister life. His dark face  broke  into 
writhing lines of passion, and his fierce eyes glowed  like  embers,  while  he 
shook one long arm in the air.
    "Behold," he cried, "those who are mad to the children of this world are in 
very truth the Lord's anointed and the dwellers in the inner temple. Lo,  I  am 
one who is prepared to testify even to the uttermost, for of a verity  the  day 
has now come when the humble will be exalted and the wicked will be cut off  in 
their sins!"
    "Mother! Mother!" cried the little boy, in terror.
    "There, there! It's all right, Jack," said the buxom woman,  and  then,  in 
a burst of womanly wrath, "What d'you want to make the child  cry  for?  You're 
a pretty man, you are!"
    "Better he should cry now than in the outer darkness. Let him  seek  safety 
while there is yet time."
    The officer measured the gap with a practised eye. It was a good eight feet 
across, and the fellow could push him over before he could steady  himself.  It 
would be a desperate thing to attempt. He tried soothing words once more. 
    "See here, my lad, you've carried this joke too far. Why should you wish to 
injure us? Just shin up and get that wedge out, and we will  agree  to  say  no 
more about it."
    Another rending snap came from above.
    "By George, the hawser is going!" cried Stangate. "Here! Stand  aside!  I'm 
coming over to see to it."
    The workman had plucked the hammer from his belt, and waved it furiously in 
the air.
    "Stand back, young man! Stand back! Or  come - if  you  would  hasten  your 
end."
    "Tom, Tom, for God's sake, don't spring! Help! Help!"
    The passengers all joined in the cry for aid. The man smiled malignantly as 
he watched them.
    "There is no one to help.  They could not come if they would.  You would be 
wiser to turn to your own souls that ye be not cast to the burning. Lo,  strand 
by strand the cable snaps which holds you. There is yet another, and with  each 
that goes there is more strain upon the rest. Five minutes  of  time,  and  all 
eternity beyond."
    A moan of fear rose from the prisoners in the lift. Stangate  felt  a  cold 
sweat upon his brow as he passed his arm round  the  shrinking  girl.  If  this 
vindictive devil could only be coaxed away  for  an  instant  he  would  spring 
across and take his chance in a hand-to-hand fight.
    "Look here, my friend! We give you best!" he cried. "We can do nothing.  Go 
up and cut the cable if you wish. Go on - do it now, and get it over!"
    "That you may come across unharmed. Having set my hand to the work,  I will 
not draw back from it."
    Fury seized the young officer.
    "You devil!" he cried. "What do you stand there grinning for? I'll give you 
something to grin about. Give me a stick, one of you."
    The man waved his hammer.
    "Come, then! Come to judgment!" he howled.
    "He'll murder you, Tom! Oh, for God's sake, don't! If we must die,  let  us 
die together."
    "I wouldn't try it, sir," cried Billy. "He'll strike you  down  before  you 
get a footing. Hold up, Dolly, my dear! Faintin' won't 'elp us.  You  speak  to 
him, miss. Maybe he'll listen to you.
    "Why should you wish to hurt us?" said Mary. "What have  we  ever  done  to 
you? Surely you will be sorry afterwards if we are injured. Now do be kind  and 
reasonable and help us to get back to the ground."
    For a moment there may have been some softening in the man's fierce eyes as 
he looked at the sweet face which was upturned to him. Then  his  features  set 
once more into their grim lines of malice.
    "My hand is set to the work, woman.  It is not for the servant to look back 
from his task."
    "But why should this be your task?"
    "Because there is a voice within me which tells me so.  In  the  night-time 
I have heard it, and in the daytime too, when I have lain out  alone  upon  the 
girders and seen the wicked dotting the streets beneath me, each  busy  on  his 
own evil intent. 'John Barnes, John Barnes,' said the voice. 'You are here that 
you may give a sign to a sinful generation - such a sign  as  shall  show  them 
that the Lord liveth and that there is a judgment upon  sin.'  Who  am  I  that 
I should disobey the voice of the Lord?"
    "The voice of the devil," said Stangate. "What is the sin of this lady,  or 
of these others, that you should seek their lives?"
    "You are as the others, neither better nor worse. All  day  they  pass  me, 
load by load, with foolish cries and empty songs and  vain  babble  of  voices. 
Their thoughts are set upon the things of the flesh.  Too  long  have  I  stood 
aside and watched and refused to testify. But now the day of wrath is come  and 
the sacrifice is ready. Think not that a woman's tongue can  turn  me  from  my 
task."
    "It is useless!" Mary cried. "Useless! I read death in his eyes."
    Another cord had snapped.
    "Repent! Repent!" cried the madman. "One more, and it is over!"
    Commander Stangate felt as if it were all some  extraordinary  dream - some 
monstrous nightmare. Could it be possible that he, after  all  his  escapes  of 
death in warfare, was now, in the heart of peaceful England, at  the  mercy  of 
a homicidal lunatic, and that his dear girl, the one being whom he would shield 
from the very shadow of danger, was helpless before this horrible man?  All his 
energy and manhood rose up in him for one last effort.
    "Here, we won't be killed like sheep in the shambles!" he  cried,  throwing 
himself against the wooden wall of the lift and kicking  with  all  his  force. 
"Come on, boys! Kick it! Beat it! It's only match-boarding, and it  is  giving. 
Smash it down! Well done! Once more all together! There she goes! Now  for  the 
side! Out with it! Splendid!"
    First the back and then the side of the little compartment had been knocked 
out, and the splinters dropped down into the  abyss.  Barnes  danced  upon  his 
girder, his hammer in the air.
    "Strive not!" he shrieked. "It avails not. The day is surely come."
    "It's not two feet from the side girder," cried the officer.  "Get  across! 
Quick! Quick! All of you. I'll hold this devil off!"  He  had  seized  a  stout 
stick from the commercial traveller and faced the madman, daring him to  spring 
across.
    "Your turn now, my friend!" he hissed. "Come on, hammer and all!  I'm ready 
for you."
    Above him he heard another snap, and the  frail  platform  began  to  rock. 
Glancing over his shoulder, he saw that his companions were all safe  upon  the 
side girder. A strange line of terrified castaways they appeared as they  clung 
in an ungainly row to the trellis-work of steel. But their  feet  were  on  the 
iron support. With two quick steps and a spring he was at their  side.  At  the 
same instant the murderer, hammer in hand, jumped the gap. They had one  vision 
of him there - a vision which will haunt their dreams - the convulsed face, the 
blazing eyes, the wind-tossed raven locks. For a  moment  he  balanced  himself 
upon the swaying platform. The next, with a rending crash, he and it were gone. 
There was a long silence and then,  far down,  the thud and clatter of a mighty 
fall.

    With white faces,  the forlorn group clung to the cold steel bars and gazed 
down into the terrible abyss.
    It was the Commander who broke the silence.
    "They'll send for us now.  It's all safe," he cried, wiping his brow. "But, 
by Jove, it was a close call!"

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