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"All right," said the coroner, inclined at once to be friendly. "My name is Pike. What'd you want to know? Sit down and take it easy."
"As much as I can learn about the case." Garrison took a proffered chair. "For instance, what did you find on the body?"
"Nothing--of any importance--a bunch of keys, a fountain-pen, and--and just some useless trash--I believe four dollars and nineteen cents."
"Anything else?"
"Oh, some sc.r.a.ps of paper and a picture postal-card."
"Any cigars?" asked Garrison.
"Yep--three, with labels on 'em--all but one, I mean." He had taken one label for his son's collection.
"What did you do with the stuff?"
"Locked it up, waiting orders from the court," replied Mr. Pike. "You bet, I know my business."
Garrison was pursuing a point. He inquired: "Do you smoke?"
"No, I don't; and if I did, I wouldn't touch one of them," said the coroner. "And don't you forget it."
"Did anyone help you to carry off the body--anyone who might have thrown a cigar away, unlighted?"
"No, siree! When Billy Ford and Tom Harris git a cigar it never gits away," said Mr. Pike.
"Did you find out where the dead man came from and what he was doing in the village?"
"He was stopping down to Hickwood with Mrs. Wilson," answered Pike.
"His friend there was Charlie Scott, who's making a flying-machine that's enough to make anybody luny. I've told him he can't borrow no money from me on no such contraption, and so has Billy Dodd."
Garrison mentally noted down the fact that Scott was in need of money.
"What can you tell me of the man's appearance?" he added, after a moment of silence. "Did his face present any signs of agony?"
"Nope. Just looked dead," said the coroner.
"Were there any signs upon him of any nature?"
"Gra.s.s stain on his knee--that's about all."
"About all?" Garrison echoed. "Was there anything else--any scratches or bruises on his hands?"
"No--nary a scratch. He had real fine hands," said the coroner. "But they did have a little dirt on 'em--right on three of the knuckles of the left hand and on one on the right--the kind of dirt you can't rub off."
"Did it look as if he'd tried to rub it off?"
"Looked as if he'd washed it a little and it wouldn't come."
"Just common black dirt?"
"Yes, kind of grimy--the kind that gits in and stays."
Garrison reflected that a sign of this nature might and might not prove important. Everything depended on further developments. One deduction was presented to his mind--the man had doubtless observed that his hands were soiled and had washed them in the dark, since anyone with the "fine" hands described by the coroner would be almost certain to keep them immaculate; but might, in the absence of a light, wash them half clean only.
He was not disposed to attach a very great importance to the matter, however, and only paused for a moment to recall a number of the various "dirts" that resist an effort to remove them--printers' ink, acid stains, axle grease, and greasy soot.
He s.h.i.+fted his line of questions abruptly.
"What did you discover about the dead man's relatives? The nephew who came to claim the body?"
"Never saw him," said the coroner. "I couldn't hang around the corpse all day. I'm the busiest man in Branchville--and I had to go down to New York the day he come."
"Did you take possession of any property that deceased might have had at his room in Hickwood?"
"Sure," said Pike. "Half a dozen collars, and some socks, a few old letters, and a box almost full of cigars."
"If these things are here in your office," said Garrison, rising, "I should like to look them over."
"You bet, I can put my hand on anything in my business in a minute,"
boasted Mr. Pike. He rose and crossed the room to a desk with a large, deep drawer, which he opened with a key.
The dead man's possessions were few, indeed. The three cigars which his pocket had disgorged were lying near a little pile of money.
Garrison noted at once that the labels on two were counterparts of the one on the broken cigar now reposing in his pocket. He opened the box beneath his hand. The cigars inside were all precisely like the others. Five only had ever been removed, of which four were accounted for already. The other had doubtless been smoked.
On the even row of dark-brown weeds lay a card, on which, written in pencil, were the words:
A BIRTHDAY GREETING--WITH LOVE.
Garrison let fall the lid and glanced with fading interest at the few insignificant papers and other trifles which the drawer contained. He had practically made up his mind that John Hardy had died, as the coroner had found, of heart disease, or apoplexy, even in the act of lighting up to smoke.
He questioned the man further, made up his mind to visit Charles Scott and Mrs. Wilson, in Hickwood, and was presently out upon the road.
CHAPTER VII
A STARTLING DISCOVERY
Garrison walked along the road to Hickwood out of sheer love of being in the open, and also the better to think.
Unfortunately for the case in hand, however, his thoughts wandered truantly back to New York and the mystery about the girl masquerading to the world as his wife. His meditations were decidedly mixed. He thought of Dorothy always with a thrill of strong emotions, despite the half-formed suspicions which had crossed his mind at least a dozen times.
Her jewels were still in his pocket--a burden she had apparently found too heavy to carry. How he wished he might accept her confidence in him freely, unreservedly--with the thrill it could bring to his heart!
The distance to Hickwood seemed to slip away beneath his feet. He arrived in the hamlet far too soon, for the day had charmed bright dreams into being, and business seemed wholly out of place.