of some kind. The clothing showed the same extraordinary skill in the making as the clothes of Diana's
doll.
I saw now that the dangling leg was not held by a thread. It was held by a wire. Evidently the doll had
been molded upon a wire frame-work. I walked over to my instrument cabinet, and selected a surgical
saw and knives.
"Wait a minute, Doc." McCann had been following my movements. "You going to cut this thing apart?"
I nodded. He reached into his pocket, pulled out a heavy hunting knife. Before I could stop him, he had
brought its blade down like an ax across the neck of the Peters doll. It cut through it cleanly. He took the
head and twisted it. A wire snapped. He dropped the head on the table, and tossed the body to me. The
head rolled. It came to rest against the cord he had called the witch's ladder.
The head seemed to twist and to look up at us. I thought for an instant the eyes flared redly, the features
to contort, the malignancy intensify-as I had seen it intensify upon Peters' living face…I caught myself up,
angrily a trick of the light, of course.
I turned to McCann and swore.
"Why did you do that?"
"You're worth more to the boss than I am," he said, cryptically.
I did not answer. I cut open the decapitated body of the doll. As I had suspected, it had been built upon
a wire framework. As I cut away the encasing material, I found this framework was a single wire, or a
single metal strand, and that as cunningly as the doll's body had been shaped, just as cunningly had this
wire been twisted into an outline of the human skeleton!
Not, of course, with minute fidelity, but still with amazing accuracy…there were no joints nor
articulations…the substance of which the doll was made was astonishingly pliant…the little hands
flexible…it was more like dissecting some living mannikin than a doll…And it was rather dreadful…
I glanced toward the severed head.
McCann was bending over it, staring down into its eyes, his own not more than a few inches away from
the glinting blue crystals. His hands clutched the table edge and I saw that they were strained and tense as
though he were making a violent effort to push himself away. When he had tossed the head upon the
table it had come to rest against the knotted cord-but now that cord was twisted around the doll's
severed neck and around its forehead as though it were a small serpent!
And distinctly I saw that McCann's face was moving closer…slowly closer…to that tiny one…as though it
were being drawn to it…and that in the little face a living evil was concentrated and that McCann's face
was a mask of horror.
"McCann!" I cried, and thrust an arm under his chin, jerking back his head. And as I did this I could have
sworn the doll's eyes turned to me, and that its lips writhed.
McCann staggered back. He stared at me for a moment, and then leaped to the table. He picked up the
doll's head, dashed it to the floor and brought his heel down upon it again and again, like one stamping
out the life of a venomous spider. Before he ceased, the head was a shapeless blotch, all semblance of
humanity or anything else crushed out of it-but within it the two blue crystals that had been its eyes still
glinted, and the knotted cord of the witch's ladder still wound through it.
"God! It was…was drawing me down to it…"
McCann lighted a cigarette with shaking hand, tossed the match away. The match fell upon what had
been the doll's head.
There followed, simultaneously, a brilliant flash, a disconcerting sobbing sound and a wave of intense
heat. Where the crushed head had been there was now only an irregularly charred spot upon the polished
wood. Within it lay the blue crystals that had been the eyes of the doll-lusterless and blackened. The
knotted cord had vanished.
And the body of the doll had disappeared. Upon the table was a nauseous puddle of black waxy liquid
out of which lifted the ribs of the wire skeleton!
The Annex 'phone rang; mechanically I answered it.
"Yes," I said. "What is it?"
"Mr. Ricori, sir. He's out of the coma. He's awake!"
I turned to McCann.
"Ricori's come through!"
He gripped my shoulders-then drew a step away, a touch of awe on his face.
"Yeah?" whispered McCann. "Yeah-he came through when the knots burned! It freed him! It's you an'
me that's got to watch our step now!"
CHAPTER VIII: NURSE WALTERS' DIARY
I took McCann up with me to Ricori's bedside. Confrontation with his chief would be the supreme test, I
felt, resolving one way or another all my doubts as to his sincerity. For I realized, almost immediately, that
bizarre as had been the occurrences I have just narrated, each and all of them could have been a part of
the elaborate hocus-pocus with which I had tentatively charged the gunman. The cutting off of the doll's
head could have been a dramatic gesture designed to impress my imagination. It was he who had called
my attention to the sinister reputation of the knotted cord. It was McCann who had found the pin. His