John Russell Fearn

Voice of the Conqueror


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around the winding-room with its smell of dead carbon fumes.

      “Not coming, Simmy?” asked the youth who was second projectionist.

      “Later.” Albert’s look was faraway. “I want to check the new program which came in this morning. We’re showing it the day after tomorrow, and I can’t entirely trust it to you lads.”

      “Oh!” The boys glanced at one another, puzzled. This was the first time Albert had ever doubted their proficiency.

      “Not that I’m thinking you don’t know your jobs,” Albert amended, “but we’re having the mayor or some local bigwig coming on Saturday night, and any mistakes would be fatal. See you in the morning.”

      “Okay, Simmy.”

      “Night, Simmy.”

      To the manager Albert gave the same story, but since Albert had been in the cinema for twenty years there seemed no reason to question his purpose. In any case he had his own key. So Albert was finally left to his own devices.

      It was well after half-past one in the small hours when at last he left the cinema and went home through the silent streets. He knew Emily would not be concerned by his non­-arrival home, for very frequently he ran a midnight matinee to correct some imperfection in a program to be shown the following day. Nor was his guess wrong. Emily was snoring soundly when at last, after a cold supper, he got to bed—and the next morning did not even trouble to ask what had delayed him.

      But even Emily began to wonder a little when Albert did not come home until the small hours for a whole fortnight. She knew midnight matinees could not explain this, and her mind began to stray towards the possibility of a meek-and-mild Albert leading a double life.

      Emily was not the only one who wondered. The manager of the cinema wondered too, and since he was in command he wasted no time in getting at the truth. So, after his fort­night of mysterious nocturnal activity Albert found himself summoned to the manager’s office.

      “Just checking up on something, Albert.” The manager was breezily friendly as usual. “What’s the idea of staying behind until the small hours every night for the last two weeks? Can’t be program trouble, surely?”

      Albert hesitated, clearly a little startled. “Who says I’ve stayed behind?”

      “Nobody. It just happens that the policeman on the beat around this cinema calls back his headquarters from the police phone on the corner around one-thirty, and each night he has noticed a figure answering your description leaving the cinema. He reported it to me, wondering if all was well. Be you, of course?”

      “Yes,” Albert agreed absently. “Yes, it was.”

      “Well? Why do you do it? Don’t love the place that much after twenty years, surely?”

      “No. As a matter of fact I’ve been checking over the pro­jectors. They need a routine once-over now and again.”

      “Why? We have a service engineer for that!” Suspicion was slowly forming on the manager’s face, and his smile had gone.

      Albert was silent; then suddenly he seemed to come to a decision. “I spent the time reading,” he said quickly. “It was the only way in which I could read in peace. At home I have a somewhat talkative wife and four children, and when a man wants to study things out he—”

      “Look, Albert!” The manager’s voice was curt. “I’m not interested in your domestic life, but I am interested in the electricity bill for this cinema, and so are the owners to whom I’m responsible. You’ve no right to burn up light in the projection room for the purpose of reading until the small hours of the morning. See it doesn’t happen again, and we’ll say no more about it.”

      “Well—all right,” Albert muttered, and with that took his departure.

      But the odd thing was that he did not keep his word. That night he stayed again until the small hours—indeed, until five in the morning, having nailed a cardboard poster of a famous film star over the winding-room window to prevent the light being seen from outside. Then towards dawn, red-eyed and weary, he crawled home for a few hours’ sleep, and at break­fast found Emily staring at him with naked questions spark­ing in her eyes.

      “You’re up to something!” she declared, handing across the grilled bacon.

      “Oh, let me alone,” Albert growled, leaden from continu­ous night work and—had anybody else known it—intensely close and concentrated work.

      “I won’t let you alone! For over a fortnight you’ve never come home until early morning. This time it was half-past five! I know because I was awake.”

      “Turned into a burglar, pop?” asked the youngest daughter, and then shrieked with merriment.

      “You’ve got to be tough to burgle,” Ethel commented, shaking her head. “Doesn’t fit dad at all!”

      Albert got to his feet abruptly, his face flushed and his eyes hard. For an instant it looked as if he were going to blow his whole family wide open for the first time in his life; then he thought better of it, and without a word left the room and slammed the door.

      Ten minutes later he entered the cinema, nodded moodily to the cleaner-cum-commissionaire, and then found the manager right in front of him. The manager’s face was grim and unsmiling as he nodded towards his office.

      “Sorry, Albert,” he said quietly, following Albert in and closing the door. “The owners don’t like the way you’ve been behaving. I had to report your late hours to them to explain the use of extra electricity, and I told them you wouldn’t do it again. But you did, and left later—or earlier—than ever! Five o’clock! One of the owners had a man posted to watch.…”

      Albert was silent.

      “It’s a pity,” the manager said, sighing. “After twenty years of good service. You’ve got to go, though. Don’t blame me—I’m only doing as I’m told. Here are your insur­ance cards.”

      Albert took them and smiled wryly. “Fired, you mean?”

      “As from now. Wages up to date and a week ahead. Why the devil you were such a chump I’ll never understand.”

      “No, you’ll never understand,” Albert admitted vaguely, pushing the cards in his pocket. “Doesn’t matter much, any­way. I’ve finished what I had to do, which was why I stayed extra late last night.”

      “Your reading, you mean?”

      “Uh-huh; might as well call it that. Anyway, don’t worry over me. Twenty years in one place is too long anyhow. Wish the staff the best of luck for me, will you?’

      The manager nodded slowly, surprise obvious on his round face. He watched Albert leave the office, entirely pre­occupied, and the door closed. Still in the same lost frame of mind Albert returned home—and Emily gazed at him as though he were a visitor from Mars.

      “You! At this hour! What’s the matter? Feeling ill?”

      “No; quite well. Better than I’ve felt for twenty years. Did you never accomplish something, Emmy, just in time before the fall of the axe?”

      “Eh?”

      Albert sighed and relaxed in the armchair. “Never mind. You wouldn’t understand.”

      “I can understand that you’re at home when you ought to be at work. What’s wrong?”

      “I got fired. Working too late and burning too much light. Doesn’t matter. The firm can afford it, and I can’t. Besides, I had everything I needed there, and I haven’t here.”

      “Fired, did you say?” Emily gave a start. “Great heavens, you’ve lost your job after twenty years? What did you do?”

      “I just told you. But don’t let it worry you. I’ll take a day or two off and then get another job of a totally different type. Something scientific after my