Page:Weird Tales Volume 29 Number 1 (1937-01).djvu/53

Rh still cloying his finger-tips, knew that tonight he would drink and drink and drink until that flask was empty

Ethredge’s black sedan moved slowly into the city’s crosstown traffic

Not until tomorrow would they three know that at that very moment a man lay alone on Marilyn Des Lys’ maroon couch in the Hotel Northrup, his muscles rigid, his face ghastly, his lips blue from strychnin—Nick Gallicchio, the poor brokenhearted devil who had loved the dead

Under the feet of each dancing wave There is a city the waters lave, A silent city of greenish gloom, Where pallid sailors, like wraiths of doom, Go rolling down each coral street With sea-washed eyes, with dragging feet, That make no sound, as they wander on, Where there is neither dusk nor dawn, Where there is only the ghastly glow Of starless night that the fishes know.

Their veins now deaf to the call of sin, They make their way to the Mermaid Inn, Where pale mermaidens with seaweed hair Serve them their grog and return each stare With eyes unseeing, with lips as cold As winds that wail down the snowy wold; Though sailors evermore shout and sing, When they are having their giddy fling, No song is sung and no word is said By these wan sailors who all are dead.

Like shadows lost in a river fog, They sit for hours and sip their grog, The tomb-like stillness unmarred, unbroken By shuffling feet or a word outspoken, Until the doors on the inn swing wide To let strange sailormen crowd inside, And on the instant their tongues find life To cut the silence as with a knife, "One more ship garnered to Davy Jones! And these are her crew! God rest their bones!”