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He crawled, the shovel and crowbar rubbing heavily on his shoulderblades. He crawled, the shifting strap of the lantern burning his neck raw. He crawled, the dampness biting painfully into his arthritic bones; the thick smell of stale death abusing his nostrils; the closeness of the tunnel trying his lungs. He crawled and crawled and crawled.

And at last, chopping upward almost frantically with the shovel, cutting away the last three feet of soil in one corner of the floor, he broke into the crypt of Tyron Murfee, the last Earl of Sheel.

Panting, Finch dragged himself out of the hole and leaned against the wall. He flashed his light along the bricks until it showed him an oil beacon, still partly filled from the funeral that afternoon. He snapped a wooden match and touched the wick. Flickering light spread slowly across the crypt and Finch turned off his lantern. Quietly he surveyed the room of the dead in which he stood. A cold, rough shiver jerked his body in a brief spasm, like an icy chain had been dragged up his spine. He swallowed dryly. Best not think about the dead, he told himself. Think about the living; think about yourself, man.

Finch leaned the crowbar against one of the closed coffins and went over to where the Earl lay in the open coffin. He began collecting the jewels scattered around earlier by the solicitor, delicately pinching them out one by one with thumb and forefinger, putting them into his coat pocket, silently counting the pieces as he went along.

Suddenly his blood turned cold and he stiffened in terror — as a sharp click told him that someone was unlocking the crypt.

The lock handle was slowly being lifted. Finch finally recovered his senses sufficiently to step quickly away from the bier and fade back into the shadows. An instant later, Gerald Stander entered and pushed the heavy door closed behind him. The young chauffeur paused, startled by the burning light in the crypt. Then, apparently deciding that it had been left on from the afternoon’s gathering, he merely shrugged and moved quickly to the open casket to do his obvious work, collecting the jewels Finch had not had time to gather.

Finch, watching him, became incensed. He moved back into the light, his ashen face white with outrage.

“Stop there, you dirty grave-robber!” he called out, impervious for the moment to his own like status.

Stander, hearing the condemning, self-righteous voice, all but fainted. He stumbled back from the bier in near panic, barely retaining his balance.

“How’d you get that door open?” Finch demanded to know.

“I... it... the key—” Stander babbled.

Finch’s brow wrinkled. “The key?”

Stander squinted his eyes, staring at the old man. “Yes, the key. I... I switched keys after I locked the door. I... I gave the solicitor another key.”

“Do you mean to say,” Finch’s voice rose in shocked indignation, “that I worked for a year tunneling in here from my house, and you... you found a way in by just stealing the key!”

“You dug your way in here?” Stander said incredulously. The young chauffeur, quickly regaining his composure, glanced around and saw the hand shovel stuck in the ground next to Finch’s tunnel exit. “You dug all the way from your house? Through all those — all those graves? How could you do it?”

Suddenly the whole picture of Finch’s indignation unfolded in Stander’s mind, and the younger man threw back his head and roared with laughter.

“You fool,” he said to Finch, “you poor, stupid old fool! I accomplished in two or three seconds what it took you a whole year to do. No wonder you tend graves; you’ve not enough sense to be allowed among the living!”

Finch’s face contorted in rage. He closed his fists and hurled himself toward Stander, lashing out with a blow that fell flush on the younger man’s mouth and sent him reeling back against the open coffin.

“You dirty old tramp,” Stander snarled, reaching up to touch a warm trickle of blood bubbling from the corner of his mouth. “I’ll kill you for that!”

Finch backed off in suddenly born fear as the chauffeur charged him. He stumbled back across the crypt as the full weight of Stander’s body lunged into him. His back bent over one of the closed coffins as Stander’s strong young hands closed around his throat and began to choke the consciousness from his brain. All the strength drained from the old gravetender’s frail arms; they dropped limply alongside the coffin, and Finch, was certain at that moment that he was going to die.

Then one hand touched the cold steel of the crowbar he had left there, and desperate new strength sparked to life.

Finch curled his fingers around the bar, raised it high, and slammed its edge against Stander’s temple. The chauffeur grasped his head in pain, stumbling backward. Finch struck him another blow, this one on the crown of the head. Stander pitched forward, brushing past Finch, tumbling face down across the casket lid. His body slid over the smooth brass lid and fell limply behind the casket. He lay motionless.

Finch got his lantern and peered over the casket, holding the bar raised for a third blow. The light fell on an open mouth and a pair of fixed eyes staring up sightlessly from the shadow, the eyes of a dead man.

Finch stepped back, sighing heavily. Putting down the crowbar and lantern, he gently rubbed his sore neck, remembering the strength of Stander’s fingers. Bloody fool nearly had me, he did. Finch looked around the gloomy crypt, swallowing down a dry throat. I’ll just take what’s in the Earl’s coffin, he though nervously, I’ll not try to open the others.

He went shakily back to the bier holding the coffin of Tyron Murfee. Quickly he resumed his pilfering, snatching a ring here, a pendant there, a gold signet, a silver watch.

A Sheel coat of arms, mounted in a jewelled medallion, lay nearly hidden next to the casket lining near the Earl’s left shoulder. Finch spotted it and started to reach across for it. His hand stopped midway over the great chest of Tyron Murfee and he stared down at the face of the Earl.

His eyes are open, Finch thought, confusion and fear tickling through him. Had they been open before? He tried to remember. Yes, of course, they had. No, wait. Stander’s eyes were open; Stander, lying dead behind the other coffin; but the Earl — hadn’t his eyes been closed?

Cold sweat burst out on the back of Finch’s neck. His hand, still poised over the coffin, began to tremble. What was it that doctor had said about the epilepsy making people seem dead?

Finch jerked his hand from over the coffin and backed away. I’ve got enough, he decided quickly, feeling the small bulge of jewels in his coat pocket. I’d best get out of this place while I’ve still my senses.

Hurriedly, he got the lantern and switched it on. With a handful of loose dirt, he extinguished the oil beacon. He gathered his crowbar and shovel and dropped them into the tunnel hole. Then, as he was about to step into the hole himself, he paused as a sudden thought came over him.

The door! Stander had unlocked the door! There was no need to use the tunnel at all, he could go out the door.

No, wait now, he thought, what if I’m seen by someone? Not likely, to be sure, but still there’s them in town that over-curious at times, and someone might’ve wandered down just to be looking. Better to use a bit of caution, even if it does mean crawling through that blasted tunnel again. That door, though, that’s a rub; can’t chance leaving it unlocked.

Finch hurried over and searched the body of Gerald Stander until he found the crypt key. He started for the door, the lantern beam bobbing up and down as he walked. Halfway across, the light fell upon Tyron Murfee’s coffin and Finch noticed with a start that the Earl’s eyes were closed. Now, they were open before, weren’t they? He thought frantically. Or is it Stander’s eyes I thinking of? Wait now, Stander’s eyes were open and the Earl’s closed; yes, that’s it. I’ll go daft if I don’t get out of here soon!