<h2 id="id00675" style="margin-top: 4em">VIII</h2>
<h5 id="id00676">THE MUMMY CASE</h5>
<p id="id00677" style="margin-top: 2em">The horrible thought occurred to me that perhaps he was not alone. I
had seen Spencer's infatuation with his attractive librarian. The
janitor of the studio-building was positive that a woman answering her
description had been a visitor at the studio. Would she be used to get
at the millionaire and his treasures? Was she herself part of the plot
to victimise, perhaps kill, him? The woman had been much of an enigma
to me at first. She was more so now. It was barely possible that she,
too, was an absintheur, who had shaken off the curse for a time only to
relapse into it again.</p>
<p id="id00678">If there were any thoughts like these passing through Kennedy's mind he
did not show it, at least not in the shape of hesitating in the course
he had evidently mapped out to follow. He said little, but hurried off
from the studio in a cab up-town again to the laboratory. A few minutes
later we were speeding down to the museum.</p>
<p id="id00679">There was not much time for Craig to work if he hoped to be ready for
anything that might happen that night. He began by winding coil after
coil of copper wire about the storeroom in the basement of the museum.
It was not a very difficult matter to conceal it, so crowded was the
room, or to lead the ends out through a window at the opposite side
from that where the window had been broken open.</p>
<p id="id00680">Up-stairs in the art-gallery he next installed several boxes such as
those which I had seen him experimenting with during his tests of
selenium on the afternoon when Mr. Spencer had first called on us. They
were camera-like boxes, about ten inches long, three inches or so wide,
and four inches deep.</p>
<p id="id00681">One end was open, or at least looked as though the end had been shoved
several inches into the interior of the box. I looked into one of the
boxes and saw a slit in the wall that had been shoved in. Kennedy was
busy adjusting the apparatus, and paused only to remark that the boxes
contained two sensitive selenium surfaces balanced against two carbon
resistances. There was also in the box a clockwork mechanism which
Craig wound up and set ticking ever so softly. Then he moved a rod that
seemed to cover the slit, until the apparatus was adjusted to his
satisfaction, a delicate operation, judging by the care he took.
Several of these boxes were installed, and by that time it was quite
late.</p>
<p id="id00682">Wires from the apparatus in the art-gallery also led outside, and these
as well as the wires from the coils down in the basement he led across
the bit of garden back of the Spencer house and up to a room on the top
floor. In the upper room he attached the wires from the storeroom to
what looked like a piece of crystal and a telephone receiver. Those
from the art-gallery terminated in something very much like the
apparatus which a wireless operator wears over his head.</p>
<p id="id00683">Among other things which Craig had brought down from the laboratory was
a package which he had not yet unwrapped. He placed it near the window,
still wrapped. It was quite large, and must have weighed fifteen or
twenty pounds. That done, he produced a tape-measure and began, as if
he were a surveyor, to measure various distances and apparently to
calculate the angles and distances from the window-sill of the Spencer
house to the skylight, which was the exact centre of the museum. The
straight distance, if I recall correctly, was in the neighborhood of
four hundred feet.</p>
<p id="id00684">These preparations completed, there was nothing left to do but to wait
for something to happen. Spencer had declined to get alarmed about our
fears for his own safety, and only with difficulty had we been able to
dissuade him from moving heaven and earth to find Miss White, a
proceeding which must certainly have disarranged Kennedy's carefully
laid plans. So interested was he that he postponed one of the most
important business conferences of the year, growing out of the
anti-trust suits, in order to be present with Dr. Lith and ourselves in
the little upper back room.</p>
<p id="id00685">It was quite late when Kennedy completed his hasty arrangements, yet as
the night advanced we grew more and more impatient for something to
happen. Craig was apparently even more anxious than he had been the
night before, when we watched in the art-gallery itself. Spencer was
nervously smoking, lighting one cigar furiously from another until the
air was almost blue.</p>
<p id="id00686">Scarcely a word was spoken as hour after hour Craig sat with the
receiver to his ear, connected with the coils down in the storeroom.
"You might call this an electric detective," he had explained to
Spencer. "For example, if you suspected that anything out of the way
was going on in a room anywhere this would report much to you even if
you were miles away. It is the discovery of a student of Thorne Baker,
the English electrical expert. He was experimenting with high-frequency
electric currents, investigating the nature of the discharges used for
electrifying certain things. Quite by accident he found that when the
room on which he was experimenting was occupied by some person his
measuring-instruments indicated that fact. He tested the degree of
variation by passing the current first through the room and then
through a sensitive crystal to a delicate telephone receiver. There was
a distinct change in the buzzing sound heard through the telephone when
the room was occupied or unoccupied. What I have done is to wind single
loops of plain wire on each side of that room down there, as well as to
wind around the room a few turns of concealed copper wire. These
collectors are fitted to a crystal of carborundum and a telephone
receiver."</p>
<p id="id00687">We had each tried the thing and could hear a distinct buzzing in the
receiver.</p>
<p id="id00688">"The presence of a man or woman in that room would be evident to a
person listening miles away," he went on. "A high-frequency current is
constantly passing through that storeroom. That is what causes that
normal buzzing."</p>
<p id="id00689">It was verging on midnight when Kennedy suddenly cried: "Here, Walter,
take this receiver. You remember how the buzzing sounded. Listen. Tell
me if you, too, can detect the change."</p>
<p id="id00690">I clapped the receiver quickly to my ear. Indeed I could tell the
difference. In place of the load buzzing there was only a mild sound.
It was slower and lower.</p>
<p id="id00691">"That means," he said excitedly, "that some one has entered that
pitch-dark storeroom by the broken window. Let me take the receiver
back again. Ah, the buzzing is coming back. He is leaving the room. I
suppose he has found the electric light cane and the pistol where he
left them. Now, Walter, since you have become accustomed to this thing
take it and tell me what you hear."</p>
<p id="id00692">Craig had already seized the other apparatus connected with the
art-gallery and had the wireless receiver over his head. He was
listening with rapt attention, talking while he waited.</p>
<p id="id00693">"This is an apparatus," he was saying, "that was devised by Dr.
Fournier d'Albe, lecturer on physics at Birmingham University, to aid
the blind. It is known as the optophone. What I am literally doing now
is to HEAR light. The optophone translates light into sound by means of
that wonderful little element, selenium, which in darkness is a poor
conductor of electricity, but in light is a good conductor. This
property is used in the optophone in transmitting an electric current
which is interrupted by a special clockwork interrupter. It makes light
and darkness audible in the telephone. This thing over my head is like
a wireless telephone receiver, capable of detecting a current of even a
quarter of a microampere."</p>
<p id="id00694">We were all waiting expectantly for Craig to speak. Evidently the
intruder was now mounting the stairs to the art-gallery.</p>
<p id="id00695">"Actually I can hear the light of the stars shining in through that
wonderful plate glass skylight of yours, Mr. Spencer," he went on. "A
few moments ago when the moon shone through I could hear it, like the
rumble of a passing cart. I knew it was the moon both because I could
see that it must be shining in and because I recognised the sound. The
sun would thunder like a passing express-train if it were daytime now.
I can distinguish a shadow passing between the optophone and the light.
A hand moved across in front of it would give a purring sound, and a
glimpse out of a window in daylight would sound like a cinematograph
reeling off a film.</p>
<p id="id00696">"Ah, there he is." Craig was listening with intense excitement now.
"Our intruder has entered the art-gallery. He is flashing his electric
light cane about at various objects, reconnoitring. No doubt if I were
expert enough and had had time to study it, I could tell you by the
sound just what he is looking at."</p>
<p id="id00697">"Craig," I interrupted, this time very excited myself, "the buzzing
from the high-frequency current is getting lower and lower."</p>
<p id="id00698">"By George, then, there is another of them," he replied. "I'm not
surprised. Keep a sharp watch. Tell me the moment the buzzing increases
again."</p>
<p id="id00699">Spencer could scarcely control his impatience. It had been a long time
since he had been a mere spectator, and he did not seem to relish being
held in check by anybody.</p>
<p id="id00700">"Now that you are sure the vandal is there," he cut in, his cigar out
in his excitement, "can't we make a dash over there and get him before
he has a chance to do any more damage? He might be destroying thousands
of dollars' worth of stuff while we are waiting here."</p>
<p id="id00701">"And he could destroy the whole collection, building and all, including
ourselves into the bargain, if he heard so much as a whisper from us,"
added Kennedy firmly.</p>
<p id="id00702">"That second person has left the storeroom, Craig," I put in. "The
buzzing has returned again full force."</p>
<p id="id00703">Kennedy tore the wireless receiver from his ear. "Here, Walter, never
mind about that electric detective any more, then. Take the optophone.
Describe minutely to me just exactly what you hear."</p>
<p id="id00704">He had taken from his pocket a small metal ball. I seized the receiver
from him and fitted it to my ear. It took me several instants to
accustom my ears to the new sounds, but they were plain enough, and I
shouted my impressions of their variations. Kennedy was busy at the
window over the heavy package, from which he had torn the wrapping. His
back was toward us, and we could not see what he was doing.</p>
<p id="id00705">A terrific din sounded in my ears, almost splitting my ear-drums. It
was as though I had been suddenly hurled into a magnified cave of the
winds and a cataract mightier than Niagara was thundering at me. It was
so painful that I cried out in surprise and involuntarily dropped the
receiver to the floor.</p>
<p id="id00706">"It was the switching on of the full glare of the electric lights in
the art-gallery," Craig shouted. "The other person must have got up to
the room quicker than I expected. Here goes."</p>
<p id="id00707">A loud explosion took place, apparently on the very window-sill of our
room. Almost at the same instant there was a crash of glass from the
museum.</p>
<p id="id00708">We sprang to the window, I expecting to see Kennedy injured, Spencer
expecting to see his costly museum a mass of smoking ruins. Instead we
saw nothing of the sort. On the window-ledge was a peculiar little
instrument that looked like a miniature field-gun with an elaborate
system of springs and levers to break the recoil.</p>
<p id="id00709">Craig had turned from it so suddenly that he actually ran full tilt
into us. "Come on," he cried breathlessly, bolting from the room, and
seizing Dr. Lith by the arm as he did so. "Dr. Lith, the keys to the
museum, quick! We must get there before the fumes clear away."</p>
<p id="id00710">He was taking the stairs two at a time, dragging the dignified curator
with him.</p>
<p id="id00711">In fewer seconds than I can tell it we were in the museum and mounting
the broad staircase to the art-gallery. An overpowering gas seemed to
permeate everything.</p>
<p id="id00712">"Stand back a moment," cautioned Kennedy as we neared the door. "I have
just shot in here one of those asphyxiating bombs which the Paris
police invented to war against the Apaches and the motor-car bandits.
Open all the windows back here and let the air clear. Walter, breathe
as little of it as you can—but—come here—do you see?—over there,
near the other door—a figure lying on the floor? Make a dash in after
me and carry it out. There is just one thing more. If I am not back in
a minute come in and try to get me."</p>
<p id="id00713">He had already preceded me into the stifling fumes. With a last long
breath of fresh air I plunged in after him, scarcely knowing what would
happen to me. I saw the figure on the floor, seized it, and backed out
of the room as fast as I could.</p>
<p id="id00714">Dizzy and giddy from the fumes I had been forced to inhale, I managed
to drag the form to the nearest window. It was Lucille White.</p>
<p id="id00715">An instant later I felt myself unceremoniously pushed aside. Spencer
had forgotten all about the millions of dollars' worth of curios, all
about the suspicions that had been entertained against her, and had
taken the half-conscious burden from me.</p>
<p id="id00716">"This is the second time I have found you here, Edouard," she was
muttering in her half-delirium, still struggling. "The first time—that
night I hid in the mummy-case, you fled when I called for help. I have
followed you every moment since last night to prevent this. Edouard,
don't, DON'T! Remember I was—I am your wife. Listen to me. Oh, it is
the absinthe that has spoiled your art and made it worthless, not the
critics. It is not Mr. Spencer who has enticed me away, but you who
drove me away, first from Paris, and now from New York. He has been
only—No! No!—" she was shrieking now, her eyes wide open as she
realised it was Spencer himself she saw leaning over her. With a great
effort she seemed to rouse herself. "Don't stay. Run—run. Leave me. He
has a bomb that may go off at any moment. Oh—oh—it is the curse of
absinthe that pursues me. Will you not go? Vite! Vite!"</p>
<p id="id00717">She had almost fainted and was lapsing into French, laughing and crying
alternately, telling him to go, yet clinging to him.</p>
<p id="id00718">Spencer paid no attention to what she had said of the bomb. But I did.
The minute was up, and Kennedy was in there yet. I turned to rush in
again to warn him at any peril.</p>
<p id="id00719">Just then a half-conscious form staggered against me. It was Craig
himself. He was holding the infernal machine of the five glass tubes
that might at any instant blow us into eternity.</p>
<p id="id00720">Overcome himself, he stumbled. The sinking sensation in my heart I can
never describe. It was just a second that I waited for the terrific
explosion that was to end it all for us, one long interminable second.</p>
<p id="id00721">But it did not come.</p>
<p id="id00722">Limp as I was with the shock, I dropped down beside him and bent over.</p>
<p id="id00723">"A glass of water, Walter," he murmured, "and fan me a bit. I didn't
dare trust myself to carry the thing complete, so I emptied the acid
into the sarcophagus. I guess I must have stayed in there too long. But
we are safe. See if you can drag out Delaverde. He is in there by the
mummy-case."</p>
<p id="id00724">Spencer was still holding Lucille, although she was much better in the
fresh air of the hall. "I understand," he was muttering. "You have been
following this fiend of a husband of yours to protect the museum and
myself from him. Lucille, Lucille—look at me. You are mine, not his,
whether he is dead or alive. I will free you from him, from the curse
of the absinthe that has pursued you."</p>
<p id="id00725">The fumes had cleared a great deal by this time. In the centre of the
art-gallery we found a man, a tall, black-bearded Frenchman, crazy
indeed from the curse of the green absinthe that had ruined him. He was
scarcely breathing from a deadly wound in his chest. The hair-spring
ring of the Apache pistol had exploded the cartridge as he fell.</p>
<p id="id00726">Spencer did not even look at him, as he carried his own burden down to
the little office of Dr. Lith.</p>
<p id="id00727">"When a rich man marries a girl who has been earning her own living,
the newspapers always distort it," he whispered aside to me a few
minutes later. "Jameson, you're a newspaperman—I depend on you to get
the facts straight this time."</p>
<p id="id00728">Outside, Kennedy grasped my arm.</p>
<p id="id00729">"You'll do that, Walter?" he asked persuasively. "Spencer is a client
that one doesn't get every day. Just drop into the Star office and give
them the straight story, I'll promise you I'll not take another case
until you are free again to go on with me in it."</p>
<p id="id00730">There was no denying him. As briefly as I could I rehearsed the main
facts to the managing editor late that night. I was too tired to write
it at length, yet I could not help a feeling of satisfaction as he
exclaimed, "Great stuff, Jameson,—great."</p>
<p id="id00731">"I know," I replied, "but this six-cylindered existence for a week
wears you out."</p>
<p id="id00732">"My dear boy," he persisted, "if I had turned some one else loose on
that story, he'd have been dead. Go to it—it's fine."</p>
<p id="id00733">It was a bit of blarney, I knew. But somehow or other I liked it. It
was just what I needed to encourage me, and I hurried uptown promising
myself a sound sleep at any rate.</p>
<p id="id00734">"Very good," remarked Kennedy the next morning, poking his head in at
my door and holding up a copy of the Star into which a very accurate
brief account of the affair had been dropped at the last moment. "I'm
going over to the laboratory. See you there as soon as you can get
over."</p>
<p id="id00735">"Craig," I remarked an hour or so later as I sauntered in on him, hard
at work, "I don't see how you stand this feverish activity."</p>
<p id="id00736">"Stand it?" he repeated, holding up a beaker to the light to watch a
reaction. "It's my very life. Stand it? Why, man, if you want me to
pass away—stop it. As long as it lasts, I shall be all right. Let it
quit and I'll—I'll go back to research work," he laughed.</p>
<p id="id00737">Evidently he had been waiting for me, for as he talked, he laid aside
the materials with which he had been working and was preparing to go
out.</p>
<p id="id00738">"Then, too," he went on, "I like to be with people like Spencer and
Brixton. For example, while I was waiting here for you, there came a
call from Emery Pitts."</p>
<p id="id00739">"Emery Pitts?" I echoed. "What does he want?"</p>
<p id="id00740">"The best way to find out is—to find out," he answered simply. "It's
getting late and I promised to be there directly. I think we'd better
take a taxi."</p>
<p id="id00741">A few minutes later we were ushered into a large Fifth Avenue mansion
and were listening to a story which interested even Kennedy.</p>
<p id="id00742">"Not even a blood spot has been disturbed in the kitchen. Nothing has
been altered since the discovery of the murdered chef, except that his
body has been moved into the next room."</p>
<p id="id00743">Emery Pitts, one of the "thousand millionaires of steel," overwrought
as he was by a murder in his own household, sank back in his
easy-chair, exhausted.</p>
<p id="id00744">Pitts was not an old man; indeed, in years he was in the prime of life.
Yet by his looks he might almost have been double his age, the more so
in contrast with Minna Pitts, his young and very pretty wife, who stood
near him in the quaint breakfast-room and solicitously moved a pillow
back of his head.</p>
<p id="id00745">Kennedy and I looked on in amazement. We knew that he had recently
retired from active business, giving as a reason his failing health.
But neither of us had thought, when the hasty summons came early that
morning to visit him immediately at his house, that his condition was
as serious as it now appeared.</p>
<p id="id00746">"In the kitchen?" repeated Kennedy, evidently not prepared for any
trouble in that part of the house.</p>
<p id="id00747">Pitts, who had closed his eyes, now reopened them slowly and I noticed
how contracted were the pupils.</p>
<p id="id00748">"Yes," he answered somewhat wearily, "my private kitchen which I have
had fitted up. You know, I am on a diet, have been ever since I offered
the one hundred thousand dollars for the sure restoration of youth. I
shall have you taken out there presently."</p>
<p id="id00749">He lapsed again into a half dreamy state, his head bowed on one hand
resting on the arm of his chair. The morning's mail still lay on the
table, some letters open, as they had been when the discovery had been
announced. Mrs. Pitts was apparently much excited and unnerved by the
gruesome discovery in the house.</p>
<p id="id00750">"You have no idea who the murderer might be?" asked Kennedy, addressing<br/>
Pitts, but glancing keenly at his wife.<br/></p>
<p id="id00751">"No," replied Pitts, "if I had I should have called the regular police.
I wanted you to take it up before they spoiled any of the clues. In the
first place we do not think it could have been done by any of the other
servants. At least, Minna says that there was no quarrel."</p>
<p id="id00752">"How could any one have got in from the outside?" asked Craig.</p>
<p id="id00753">"There is a back way, a servants' entrance, but it is usually locked.<br/>
Of course some one might have obtained a key to it."<br/></p>
<p id="id00754">Mrs. Pitts had remained silent throughout the dialogue. I could not
help thinking that she suspected something, perhaps was concealing
something. Yet each of them seemed equally anxious to have the marauder
apprehended, whoever he might be.</p>
<p id="id00755">"My dear," he said to her at length, "will you call some one and have
them taken to the kitchen?"</p>
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