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"Do you recall how you left the front door when you went out? I mean, was it locked?"
"No. The servants were out, and I knew there would be no one to admit me. I left it unfastened."
But it was evident that she had broken a rule of the house by doing so, for she added: "I am afraid to use the servants' entrance. It is dark there."
"The key is always hung on the nail when they are out?"
"Yes. If any one of them is out it is left there. There is only one key.
The family is out a great deal, and it saves bringing some one down from the servants' rooms at the top of the house."
But I think my knowledge of the key bothered her, for some reason. And as I read over my questions, certainly they indicated a suspicion that the situation was less simple than it appeared. She shot a quick glance at me.
"Did you examine the revolver when you picked it up?"
"I, monsieur? Non!" Then her fears, whatever they were, got the best of her. "I know nothing but what I tell you. I was out. I can prove that that is so. I went to a pharmacy; the clerk will remember. I will go with you, monsieur, and he will tell you that I used the telephone there."
I daresay my business of cross-examination, of watching evidence helped me to my next question.
"You went out to telephone when there is a telephone in the house?"
But here again, as once or twice before, a veil dropped between us.
She avoided my eyes. "There are things one does not want the family to hear," she muttered. Then, having determined on a course of action, she followed it. "I am looking for another position. I do not like it here.
The children are spoiled. I only came for a month's trial."
"And the pharmacy?"
"Elliott's, at the corner of State Avenue and McKee Street."
I told her that it would not be necessary for her to go to the pharmacy, and she muttered something about the children and went up the stairs.
When Sperry came back with the opiate she was nowhere in sight, and he was considerably annoyed.
"She knows something," I told him. "She is frightened."
Sperry eyed me with a half frown.
"Now see here, Horace," he said, "suppose we had come in here, without the thought of that seance behind us? We'd have accepted the thing as it appears to be, wouldn't we? There may be a dozen explanations for that sponge, and for the razor strop. What in heaven's name has a razor strop to do with it anyhow? One bullet was fired, and the revolver has one empty chamber. It may not be the custom to stop shaving in order to commit suicide, but that's no argument that it can't be done, and as to the key--how do I know that my own back door key isn't hung outside on a nail sometimes?"
"We might look again for that hole in the ceiling."
"I won't do it. Miss Jeremy has read of something of that sort, or heard of it, and stored it in her subconscious mind."
But he glanced up at the ceiling nevertheless, and a moment later had drawn up a chair and stepped onto it, and I did the same thing. We presented, I imagine, rather a strange picture, and I know that the presence of the rigid figure on the couch gave me a sort of ghoulish feeling.
The house was an old one, and in the center of the high ceiling a plaster ornament surrounded the chandelier. Our search gradually centered on this ornament, but the chairs were low and our long-distance examination revealed nothing. It was at that time, too, that we heard some one in the lower hall, and we had only a moment to put our chairs in place before the butler came in. He showed no surprise, but stood looking at the body on the couch, his thin face working.
"I met the detectives outside, doctor," he said. "It's a terrible thing, sir, a terrible thing."
"I'd keep the other servants out of this room, Hawkins."
"Yes, sir." He went over to the sheet, lifted the edge slowly, and then replaced it, and tip-toed to the door. "The others are not back yet.
I'll admit them, and get them up quietly. How is Mrs. Wells?"
"Sleeping," Sperry said briefly, and Hawkins went out.
I realize now that Sperry was--I am sure he will forgive this--in a state of nerves that night. For example, he returned only an impatient silence to my doubt as to whether Hawkins had really only just returned and he quite missed something downstairs which I later proved to have an important bearing on the case. This was when we were going out, and after Hawkins had opened the front door for us. It had been freezing hard, and Sperry, who has a bad ankle, looked about for a walking stick.
He found one, and I saw Hawkins take a swift step forward, and then stop, with no expression whatever in his face.
"This will answer, Hawkins."
"Yes, sir," said Hawkins impa.s.sively.
And if I realize that Sperry was nervous that night, I also realize that he was fighting a battle quite his own, and with its personal problems.
"She's got to quit this sort of thing," he said savagely and apropos of nothing, as we walked along. "It's hard on her, and besides--"
"Yes?"
"She couldn't have learned about it," he said, following his own trail of thought. "My car brought her from her home to the house-door. She was brought in to us at once. But don't you see that if there are other developments, to prove her statements she--well, she's as innocent as a child, but take Herbert, for instance. Do you suppose he'll believe she had no outside information?"
"But it was happening while we were shut in the drawing-room."
"So Elinor claims. But if there was anything to hide, it would have taken time. An hour or so, perhaps. You can see how Herbert would jump on that."
We went back, I remember, to speaking of the seance itself, and to the safer subject of the physical phenomena. As I have said, we did not then know of those experimenters who claim that the medium can evoke so-called rods of energy, and that by its means the invisible "controls"
can perform their strange feats of levitation and the movement of solid bodies. Sperry touched very lightly on the spirit side.
"At least it would mean activity," he said. "The thought of an inert eternity is not bearable."
He was inclined, however, to believe that there were laws of which we were still in ignorance, and that we might some day find and use the fourth dimension. He seemed to be able to grasp it quite clearly. "The cube of the cube, or hypercube," he explained. "Or get it this way: a cone pa.s.sed apex-downward through a plane."
"I know," I said, "that it is perfectly simple. But somehow it just sounds like words to me."
"It's perfectly clear, Horace," he insisted. "But remember this when you try to work it out; it is necessary to use motion as a translator of time into s.p.a.ce, or of s.p.a.ce into time."
"I don't intend to work it out," I said irritably. "But I mean to use motion as a translator of the time, which is 1:30 in the morning, to take me to a certain s.p.a.ce, which is where I live."
But as it happened, I did not go into my house when I reached it. I was wide awake, and I perceived, on looking up at my wife's windows, that the lights were out. As it is her custom to wait up for me on those rare occasions when I spend an evening away from home, I surmised that she was comfortably asleep, and made my way to the pharmacy to which the Wellses' governess had referred.
The night-clerk was in the prescription-room behind the shop. He had fixed himself comfortably on two chairs, with an old table-cover over his knee and a half-empty bottle of sarsaparilla on a wooden box beside him. He did not waken until I spoke to him.
"Sorry to rouse you, Jim," I said.
He flung off the cover and jumped up, upsetting the bottle, which trickled a stale stream to the floor. "Oh, that's all right, Mr.
Johnson, I wasn't asleep, anyhow."
I let that go, and went at once to the object of our visit. Yes, he remembered the governess, knew her, as a matter of fact. The Wellses'
bought a good many things there. Asked as to her telephoning, he thought it was about nine o'clock, maybe earlier. But questioned as to what she had telephoned about, he drew himself up.
"Oh, see here," he said. "I can't very well tell you that, can I? This business has got ethics, all sorts of ethics."