The River of Death 
A Tale of London In Peril 
by Fred M. White 
From Pearson's Magazine, 1904 
 
I. 
THE sky was as brass from the glowing East upwards, a stifling heat 
radiated from stone and wood and iron - a close, reeking heat that drove 
one back from the very mention of food. The five million odd people 
that go to make up London, even in the cream of the holiday season, 
panted and gasped and prayed for the rain that never came. For the first 
three weeks in August the furnace fires of the sun poured down till 
every building became a vapour bath with no suspicion of a breeze to 
temper the fierceness of it. Even the cheap press had given up sunstroke 
statistics. The heat seemed to have wilted up the journalists and their 
superlatives. 
More or less the drought had lasted since April. Tales came up from the 
provinces of stagnant rivers and quick, fell spurts of zymotic diseases. 
For a long time past the London water companies had restricted their 
supplies. Still, there was no suggestion of alarm, nothing as yet looked 
like a water famine. The heat was almost unbearable but, people said, 
the wave must break soon, and the metropolis would breathe again. 
Professor Owen Darbyshire shook his head as he looked at the brassy, 
star-powdered sky. He crawled homewards towards Harley Street with 
his hat in his hand, and his grey frock coat showing a wide expanse of 
white shirt below. There was a buzz of electric fans in the hall of No. 
411, a murmur of them overhead. And yet the atmosphere was hot and 
heavy. There was one solitary light in the dining-room - a room all
sombre oak and dull red walls as befitted a man of science - and a 
visiting card glistened on the table. Darbyshire read the card with a 
gesture of annoyance: 
"James P Chase, 
Morning Telephone." 
"I'll have to see him," the Professor groaned, "I'll have to see the man if 
only to put him off. Is it possible these confounded pressmen have got 
hold of the story already?" 
With just a suggestion of anxiety on his strong clean-shaven face, the 
professor parted the velvet curtains leading to a kind of 
study-laboratory, the sort of place you would expect to find in the 
house of a man whose speciality is the fighting of disease in bulk. 
Darbyshire was the one man who could grapple with an epidemic, the 
one man always sent for. 
The constant pestering of newspaper men was no new thing. Doubtless 
Chase afore-said was merely plunging around after sensations - 
journalistic curry for the hot weather. Still, the pushing little American 
might have stumbled on the truth. Darbyshire took down his telephone 
and churned the handle. 
"Are you there? Yes, give me 30795, Kensington . . . That you, 
Longdale? Yes, it's Darbyshire. Step round here at once, will you? Yes, 
I know it's hot, and I wouldn't ask you to come if it wasn't a matter of 
the last importance." 
A small thin voice promised as desired and Darbyshire hung up his 
receiver. He then lighted a cigarette, and proceeded to con over some 
notes that he had taken from his pocket. These he elaborated in pencil 
in a small but marvellously clear handwriting. As he lay back in his 
chair he did not look much like the general whose army is absolutely 
surrounded, but he was. And that square, lean head held a secret that 
would have set London almost mad at a whisper.
Darbyshire laid the sheets down and fell into a reverie. He was roused 
presently by the hall bell and Dr Longdale entered. The professor 
brightened. 
"That's right," he said. " Gad to see somebody, Longdale. I've had an 
awful day. Verity, if Mr. Chase comes again ask him in here." 
"Mr. Chase said he would return in an hour, sir," the large butler 
replied. "And I'm to show, him in here? Yes, Sir." 
But already Darbyshire had hustled his colleague beyond the velvet 
curtains. Longdale's small clear figure was quivering with excitement. 
His dark eyes fairly blazed behind a pair of gold-rimmed spectacles. 
"Well," he gasped, "I suppose it's come at last?" 
"Of course it has,' Darbyshire replied, "Sooner or later it was an 
absolute certainty. Day by day for a month I have watched the sky and 
wondered where the black hand would show. And when these things do 
come they strike where you most dread them. Still, in this case, the 
Thames--" 
"Absolutely pregnant," Longdale exclaimed. "Roughly speaking, 
four-fifths of London's water supply comes from the Thames. How 
many towns, villages drain into the river before it reaches Sunbury or 
thereabouts where most of the water companies have their intake ? 
Why, scores    
    
		
	
	
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