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"Acquaintances must begin some time," protested the secret agent.
"To be sure. But that your acquaintance with Dr. Morse should begin last night, and that he should die to-night----"
"Well?" The keen eyes of Ashton-Kirk met the peering ones of Okiu inquiringly.
"Fate seemed determined that the friends.h.i.+p should not grow," answered the j.a.panese, gently. "It is strange how things come about, is it not?"
Ashton-Kirk also got upon his feet.
"Fate seldom consults us," he said, drily. "If it did, perhaps things would happen differently."
Just then there came the growing sound of voices without; the shuffle of feet was heard upon the walk and then more noisily upon the porch.
The bell rang in long streams of sound.
"The police," said Ashton-Kirk, looking at his watch. "Their methods are as distinguishable as their uniforms."
Fuller looked in; the secret agent nodded and the young man stepped briskly toward the hall door. In another moment a thick-set man in a sergeant's dress entered the room, and with him were two patrolmen.
"How are you?" said the sergeant, nodding to the three men. "Members of the family?"
In a few moments the status of the j.a.panese was explained; the sergeant listened to their story of the prowler with satisfaction.
"There's the party we want," said he. "Had a bag, did he? Humph! Full of swag, I'll bet." He then took Okiu's name and address. "A headquarters man will go on this case, of course," continued the sergeant, "and he'll want to hear you tell about that. And in the meantime," stuffing his note-book into his breastpocket, "I'll have to ask you all to go. We've got to look things over, and get the hang of it all, and you can see how too many people would be in the way."
As Ashton-Kirk and Fuller emerged from the house, they found the two j.a.panese standing by the gate. Dixon, who had been waiting all this time, threw on the power at sight of his employer, and the engine of the big French car began to hum in the silence.
"Good-night," said Okiu, gently, a smile upon his smooth face. "I shall see you again, sir."
Ashton-Kirk waved his hand in answer; and as the car started off, and he and Fuller settled themselves back, the latter said:
"Did you notice the way that fellow said that? It sounded to me much as though he had something against you, and meant to get square."
"Perhaps," returned Ashton-Kirk quietly, "that _is_ what he meant. One can never tell.
CHAPTER VII
THE METHYLENE STAIN
The following morning the secret agent sat in his study immersed in the newspapers. Each contained a circ.u.mstantial account of the murder of Dr.
Morse, and each, according to its policy, commented thereon. Much was made of the mysterious happenings at Sharsdale and the equally mysterious communications at Eastbury; the police had gone to apprehend Karkowsky at his lodgings, but he was missing.
The _Star_, true to its enterprising spirit, contained front page reproductions of the three drawings which young Warwick had shown Ashton-Kirk.
"The pictures," said this newspaper, "will in the end be found to contain the solution of the entire matter. What they mean and why the colors varied so is just now a puzzle. The crowned woman and the cross with the different colored strokes are at this stage of the case absolutely without meaning. But the police are working upon this phase of the affair with much interest and zeal; and any hour may bring forth amazing results. Osborne, a talented man from the central office, has the matter in hand; and judging from past performances, he should accomplish wonders."
"Well, there are worse than Osborne," commented Fuller when his employer pointed out the latter pa.s.sage, "but he'll never set the earth to rocking, at that."
"He has a healthy brain," said Ashton-Kirk, "but he seldom centers it properly. And if his mind is kept constantly between the narrow barriers of police procedure, its possessor cannot hope for moments of inspiration."
The _Standard_ dwelt at great length upon the missing bag and the disappearance of Philip Warwick. The story of the two j.a.panese convinced this newspaper that with Warwick discovered the case would end there and then.
"There can scarcely be any doubt that it was he whom Messrs. Okiu and Humadi saw leaping over the hedge fence in the moonlight," declared the _Standard_. "The leather bag which he carried was more than likely the same that Dr. Morse was fumbling with when the servant last saw him in the library. To be sure, the old woman does not definitely state that it was Warwick's voice which she heard later as she sat upon the step. But circ.u.mstances fail to point to any other possible person. The house was absolutely secure, except for the street door, and the servant sat in front of that. It would have been impossible for any one to have pa.s.sed in and she not be aware of it. The young man, Drevenoff, was in his room from first to last; we are sure of this because Miss Corbin saw him go up the stairs before Dr. Morse sent for the servant about the key, and is absolutely certain that he did not come down until after the body was discovered. Warwick, therefore, is the only person unaccounted for; and the fact that a person answering his description, even if only vaguely, was seen stealing away shortly after the time the crime must have been committed, seems almost convincing evidence of his guilt. And that this dimly seen person also carried a hand-bag, the only article learned to be missing, and that Warwick's present whereabouts is unknown, almost clinches the supposition."
Fuller nodded his head at this.
"They make a good case against him," said he. "I'm also of the opinion that Warwick, when found, will tell a mighty illuminating story--if he has the mind."
Ashton-Kirk threw the papers from him with a yawn.
"As usual," said he, "they grasp the obvious and apparently sensational features. The trouble with some of the journals and their staffs, however, is not lack of acuteness; it is the desire to get in on a good story before their rivals--to flame out into broad-faced type which will give the prospective purchaser a blow between the eyes as it lies upon the stand, or allow the newsboys a fine line to fill the streets with. But the real things are not brought forward with such a dramatic rush; they filter gradually through a ma.s.s of extraneous matter and their quality appears only to a person seeking an absolutely convincing result."
He pulled off his coat and turned up his sleeves; entering the laboratory, he opened the drawer of a stand and took out the two pieces of gla.s.s broken from the front of Dr. Morse's bookcase. Holding these up to the light he said:
"We secured two very satisfactory blood smears under most unpromising conditions. That the clot was not altogether hard was fortunate; and that I was able to take advantage of the fact without accident was doubly so."
Lighting a Bunsen burner he pa.s.sed the gla.s.s once through the flame; then he took a shallow vessel and poured out a quant.i.ty of liquid; in this he immersed one of the bits of gla.s.s with its dry stain.
"Some sort of a test?" inquired Fuller.
"Yes. This bath of alcohol will fix the smear."
"I see."
Fuller's curiosity prompted him to inquire as to what would follow this fixation; but knowledge of the other's habits of mind forbade this.
"About all that is known of the parasite for which I am going to seek,"
said Ashton-Kirk as he stood by the tray, watch in hand, "is due in the first place to a French army surgeon named Laveran. After him came the Italian, Marchiafava, the German, Koch, and a number of others. There is a monograph upon the subject by Mannaberg which is most comprehensive."
"What sort of a little beast is it?" asked Fuller.
"A lively, wriggling atom--a unicellular organism, directly upon the border-land between the animal and vegetable kingdoms."
"That sounds very exact and scientific," said the other. "But it means little to me."
"The young specimens of the plasmodia, as this particular germ is styled, develop in the red blood cells; and as they grow they destroy their habitation. I could tell you of interesting changes of color in the blood corpuscles, of the active, joyous dancing of the parasite, and of its multiplication by sporulation. But not now. All this, however, is repeated again and again; and each sporulation of the parasite is usually a.s.sociated with marked symptoms in the person whose blood it inhabits."
"You speak as though you expected to find some such condition in this,"
and Fuller nodded toward the blood smear.
"I expect nothing. I am merely about to prove or disprove a suggestion."
At the end of twenty minutes, Ashton-Kirk took the bit of gla.s.s from the fixing bath, threw the alcohol into a waste pipe and ran some water into the vessel.
"It will take some ten minutes for the slide to dry," said he. "And in the meantime we shall prepare the next step in the process."