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He paused. Evidently she had heard dimly, was straining every effort to hear. In her effort she caught sight of our faces.
Suddenly, as if she had seen an apparition, she raised herself with almost superhuman strength.
"Duncan!" she cried. "Duncan! Why--didn't you--get away--while there was time--after you warned me?"
Kennedy had wheeled about and was facing us. He was holding in his hand some of the letters he had taken from the trunk. Among others was a folded piece of parchment that looked like a diploma. He unfolded it and we bent over to read.
It was a diploma from the Central Western College of Nursing. As I read the name written in, it was with a shock. It was not Dora Sears, but Dora Baldwin.
"A very clever plot," he ground out, taking a step nearer us. "With the aid of your sister and a disreputable gang of chauffeurs you planned to hasten the death of Mrs. Blake, to hasten the inheritance of the Blake fortune by your future wife. I think your creditors will have less chance of collecting now than ever, Duncan Baldwin."
CHAPTER XXII
THE DEVIL WORs.h.i.+PERS
Tragic though the end of the young nurse, Dora Baldwin, had been, the scheme of her brother, in which she had become fatally involved, was by no means as diabolical as that in the case that confronted us a short time after that.
I recall this case particularly not only because it was so weird but also because of the unique manner in which it began.
"I am d.a.m.ned--Professor Kennedy--d.a.m.ned!"
The words rang out as the cry of a lost soul. A terrible look of inexpressible anguish and fear was written on the face of Craig's visitor, as she uttered them and sank back, trembling, in the easy chair, mentally and physically convulsed.
As nearly as I had been able to follow, Mrs. Veda Blair's story had dealt mostly with a Professor and Madame Rapport and something she called the "Red Lodge" of the "Temple of the Occult."
She was not exactly a young woman, although she was a very attractive one. She was of an age that is, perhaps, even more interesting than youth.
Veda Blair, I knew, had been, before her recent marriage to Seward Blair, a Treacy, of an old, though somewhat unfortunate, family. Both the Blairs and the Treacys had been intimate and old Seward Blair, when he died about a year before, had left his fortune to his son on the condition that he marry Veda Treacy.
"Sometimes," faltered Mrs. Blair, "it is as though I had two souls. One of them is dispossessed of its body and the use of its organs and is frantic at the sight of the other that has crept in."
She ended her rambling story, sobbing the terrible words, "Oh--I have committed the unpardonable sin--I am anathema--I am d.a.m.ned--d.a.m.ned!"
She said nothing of what terrible thing she had done and Kennedy, for the present, did not try to lead the conversation. But of all the stories that I have heard poured forth in the confessional of the detective's office, hers, I think, was the wildest.
Was she insane? At least I felt that she was sincere. Still, I wondered what sort of hallucination Craig had to deal with, as Veda Blair repeated the incoherent tale of her spiritual vagaries.
Almost, I had begun to fancy that this was a case for a doctor, not for a detective, when suddenly she asked a most peculiar question.
"Can people affect you for good or evil, merely by thinking about you?"
she queried. Then a shudder pa.s.sed over her. "They may be thinking about me now!" she murmured in terror.
Her fear was so real and her physical distress so evident that Kennedy, who had been listening silently for the most part, rose and hastened to rea.s.sure her.
"Not unless you make your own fears affect yourself and so play into their hands," he said earnestly.
Veda looked at him a moment, then shook her head mournfully. "I have seen Dr. Vaughn," she said slowly.
Dr. Gilbert Vaughn, I recollected, was a well-known alienist in the city.
"He tried to tell me the same thing," she resumed doubtfully.
"But--oh--I know what I know! I have felt the death thought--and he knows it!"
"What do you mean?" inquired Kennedy, leaning forward keenly.
"The death thought," she repeated, "a malicious psychic attack. Some one is driving me to death by it. I thought I could fight it off. I went away to escape it. Now I have come back--and I have not escaped.
There is always that disturbing influence--always--directed against me.
I know it will--kill me!"
I listened, startled. The death thought! What did it mean? What terrible power was it? Was it hypnotism? What was this fearsome, cruel belief, this modern witchcraft that could unnerve a rich and educated woman? Surely, after all, I felt that this was not a case for a doctor alone; it called for a detective.
"You see," she went on, heroically trying to control herself, "I have always been interested in the mysterious, the strange, the occult. In fact my father and my husband's father met through their common interest. So, you see, I come naturally by it.
"Not long ago I heard of Professor and Madame Rapport and their new Temple of the Occult. I went to it, and later Seward became interested, too. We have been taken into a sort of inner circle," she continued fearfully, as though there were some evil power in the very words themselves, "the Red Lodge."
"You have told Dr. Vaughn?" shot out Kennedy suddenly, his eyes fixed on her face to see what it would betray.
Veda leaned forward, as if to tell a secret, then whispered in a low voice, "He knows. Like us--he--he is a--Devil Wors.h.i.+per!"
"What?" exclaimed Kennedy in wide-eyed astonishment.
"A Devil Wors.h.i.+per," she repeated. "You haven't heard of the Red Lodge?"
Kennedy nodded negatively. "Could you get us--initiated?" he hazarded.
"P--perhaps," she hesitated, in a half-frightened tone. "I--I'll try to get you in to-night."
She had risen, half dazed, as if her own temerity overwhelmed her.
"You--poor girl," blurted out Kennedy, his sympathies getting the upper hand for the moment as he took the hand she extended mutely. "Trust me.
I will do all in my power, all in the power of modern science to help you fight off this--influence."
There must have been something magnetic, hypnotic in his eye.
"I will stop here for you," she murmured, as she almost fled from the room.
Personally, I cannot say that I liked the idea of spying. It is not usually clean and wholesome. But I realized that occasionally it was necessary.
"We are in for it now," remarked Kennedy half humorously, half seriously, "to see the Devil in the twentieth century."
"And I," I added, "I am, I suppose, to be the reporter to Satan."
We said nothing more about it, but I thought much about it, and the more I thought, the more incomprehensible the thing seemed. I had heard of Devil Wors.h.i.+p, but had always a.s.sociated it with far-off Indian and other heathen lands--in fact never among Caucasians in modern times, except possibly in Paris. Was there such a cult here in my own city? I felt skeptical.
That night, however, promptly at the appointed time, a cab called for us, and in it was Veda Blair, nervous but determined.