round in order to recover his balance.
Vaniman did not stay to threaten the three men. He had their weapons and
he did not fear them.
He ran after Britt.
CHAPTER XXIX
THE FOX WHO WAS RUN TO EARTH
Vaniman's first impulse was to overtake the fugitive. He wanted to have
Britt in his grip, holding to him, forcing him to confess and restore.
But when Britt reached the highway and started in the direction of the
village, saner second thought controlled the pursuer. Britt had become
a self-operating proposition; Vaniman felt that, although sudden fright
were spurring Britt, a fear more inherently characteristic was pulling
the usurer on his race to the village--he had betrayed the hiding place
of hard cash! He was rushing to protect it. By running to the treasure
Britt would be betraying something of more moment to Vaniman than gold.
The young man kept his distance, keeping the quarry in sight, running a
few feet behind Britt in the fog.
In the mist the two were like the flitting figures of a fantasy. The
road was still well filled with wains and pedestrians, following after
those who had gone on ahead. The wains stopped; the pedestrians halted
and gaped and gasped. Women cried out shrilly. Vaniman and Britt
furnished an uncanny spectacle. The eyes which beheld them saw them only
for an instant; the fog's curtain allowed each observer scant time to
determine what these figures were. Britt, hairless, his face sickly
white, his night gear fluttering, was as starkly bodeful as if he were
newly risen from the grave, garbed in death's cerements. Vaniman's
presence on the scene added to the terrifying illusion produced by
Britt.
This pursuer had been officially proclaimed dead. They who beheld
believed they saw a dead man. The face was smutched with blood. The eyes
were wide and were set straight ahead. Vaniman was taking no chances on
losing the man whom he was chasing.
After the first thrill of horror, wild curiosity stung the men of Egypt.
They dropped the reins, those who were driving horses, and joined those
who had turned in their tracks and were following the phantoms of the
night.
In this fashion, with the rout and rabble behind and Vaniman close on
his heels, Tasper Britt arrived at Britt Block--and even the statue in
its niche seemed to goggle with amazed stare.
Britt did not stop to lift the loop of the leather thong over his head;
with a fierce tug he broke the cord. He unlocked the door and
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