The Chaser
Alan Austen, as nervous as a
kitten, went up certain dark and creaky stairs in the neighborhood of Pell
Street, and peered about for a long time on the dime landing before he found
the name he wanted written obscurely on one of the doors.
He pushed open this door, as
he had been told to do, and found himself in a tiny room, which contained no
furniture but a plain kitchen table, a rocking-chair, and an ordinary chair. On
one of the dirty buff-coloured walls were a couple of shelves, containing in
all perhaps a dozen bottles and jars. An old man sat in the rocking-chair,
reading a newspaper. Alan, without a
word, handed him the card he had been given.
"Sit down, Mr.
Austen," said the old man very politely.
"I am glad to make your
acquaintance."
"Is it true," asked
Alan, "that you have a certain mixture that has-er-quite extraordinary
effects?"
"My dear sir,"
replied the old man, "my stock in trade is not very large-I don't deal in
laxatives and teething mixtures-but such as it is, it is varied. I think
nothing I sell has effects which could be precisely described as
ordinary."
"Well, the fact is. .
." began Alan.
"Here, for
example," interrupted the old man, reaching for a bottle from the shelf.
"Here is a liquid as colourless as water, almost tasteless, quite
imperceptible in coffee, wine, or any other beverage. It is also quite
imperceptible to any known method of autopsy."
"Do you mean it is a
poison?" cried Alan, very much horrified.
"Call it a glove-cleaner
if you like," said the old man indifferently. "Maybe it will clean
gloves. I have never tried. One might call it a life-cleaner. Lives need
cleaning sometimes."
"I want nothing of that
sort," said Alan.
"Probably it is just as
well," said the old man. "Do you know the price of this? For one
teaspoonful, which is sufficient, I ask five thousand dollars. Never less. Not
a penny less."
"I hope all your
mixtures are not as expensive," said Alan apprehensively.
"Oh dear, no," said
the old man. "It would be no good charging that sort of price for a love
potion, for example. Young people who need a love potion very seldom have five
thousand dollars. Otherwise they would not need a love potion."
"I am glad to hear
that," said Alan.
"I look at it like
this," said the old man. "Please a customer with one article, and he
will come back when he needs another.
Even if it is more costly. He will save up for it, if necessary."
"So," said Alan,
"you really do sell love potions?"
"If I did not sell love
potions," said the old man, reaching for another bottle, "I should
not have mentioned the other matter to you. It is only when one is in a
position to oblige that one can afford to be so confidential."
"And these
potions," said Alan. "They are not just-just-er-"
"Oh, no," said the
old man. "Their effects are permanent, and extend far beyond the mere
casual impulse. But they include it. Oh, yes they include it. Bountifully,
insistently. Everlastingly."
"Dear me!" said
Alan, attempting a look of scientific detachment. "How very
interesting!"
"But consider the
spiritual side," said the old man.
"I do, indeed,"
said Alan.
"For indifference,"
said the old man, they substitute devotion. For scorn, adoration. Give one tiny
measure of this to the young lady-its flavour is imperceptible in orange juice,
soup, or cocktails-and however gay and giddy she is, she will change
altogether. She will want nothing but solitude and you."
"I can hardly believe
it," said Alan. "She is so fond of parties."
"She will not like them
any more," said the old man. "She will be afraid of the pretty girls
you may meet."
"She will actually be
jealous?" cried Alan in a rapture. "Of me?"
"Yes, she will want to
be everything to you."
"She is, already. Only
she doesn't care about it."
"She will, when she has
taken this. She will care intensely. You will be her sole interest in
life."
"Wonderful!" cried
Alan.
"She will want to know
all you do," said the old man. "All that has happened to you during
the day. Every word of it. She will want to know what you are thinking about,
why you smile suddenly, why you are looking sad."
"That is love!"
cried Alan.
"Yes," said the old
man. "How carefully she will look after you! She will never allow you to
be tired, to sit in a draught, to neglect your food. If you are an hour late,
she will be terrified. She will think you are killed, or that some siren has
caught you."
"I can hardly imagine
Diana like that!" cried Alan, overwhelmed with joy.
"You will not have to
use your imagination," said the old man. "And, by the way, since
there are always sirens, if by any chance you should, later on, slip a little,
you need not worry. She will forgive you, in the end. She will be terribly
hurt, of course, but she will forgive you-in the end."
"That will not
happen," said Alan fervently.
"Of course not,"
said the old man. "But, if it did, you need not worry. She would never
divorce you. Oh, no! And, of course, she will never give you the least, the
very least, grounds for-uneasiness."
"And how much,"
said Alan, "is this wonderful mixture?"
"It is not as
dear," said the old man, "as the glove-cleaner, or life-cleaner, as I
sometimes call it. No. That is five thousand dollars, never a penny less. One
has to be older than you are, to indulge in that sort of thing. One has to save
up for it."
"But the love
potion?" said Alan.
"Oh, that," said
the old man, opening the drawer in the kitchen table, and taking out a tiny,
rather dirty-looking phial. "That is just a dollar."
"I can't tell you how
grateful I am," said Alan, watching him fill it.
"I like to oblige,"
said the old man. "Then customers come back, later in life, when they are
better off, and want more expensive things. Here you are. You will find it very
effective."
"Thank you again,"
said Alan. "Good-bye."
"Au revoir," said
the man.