<h2>CHAPTER XVIII</h2>
<h3>THE TRAP</h3></div>
<p class="dropcapq" ><small>“</small><span class="drop">Y</span><span class="dcap">ou</span> are ready, Miss Lawton? Nerves steady
enough for the ordeal?” asked Blaine the
following morning.</p>
<p style="clear: both; padding-top: .4em;" >“I am ready.” Anita’s voice was firm and controlled,
and there was the glint of a challenge in her eyes. A
wondrous change had come over her since the previous
day. With the rescue of the man she loved, and the certainty
that he would recover, all the latent, indomitable
courage and fighting spirit which had come to her as an
heritage from her father, and which had made of him the
ruler of men and arbiter of events which he had been,
arose again within her. The most crushing weight upon
her heart had been lifted; hope and love had revivified
her; and she was indeed ready to face the world again,
to meet her enemies, the murderers and traducers of her
father, and to give battle to them on their own ground.</p>
<p>“In a few moments, a man will enter this library––a
man whom you know well. You will be stationed behind
the curtains at this window here, and you must summon
all your self-control to restrain yourself from giving any
start or uttering a sound of surprise which would betray
your presence. While I talk to him, I want you to try
with all your might to put from your mind the fact that
you know him. Do not let his personality influence you
in any way, or his speech. Only listen to the tones of
his voice––listen and try to recall that other voice
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_256' name='page_256'></SPAN>256</span>
which you heard here on the night of your father’s death.
If in his tones you recognize that voice, step from behind
those curtains and face him. If not––and you must be
absolutely sure that you do recognize the voice, that you
could swear to it under oath in a court of justice, realizing
that it will probably mean swearing away a man’s
life––if you are not sure, remain silent.”</p>
<p>“I understand, Mr. Blaine. I will not fail you. I
could not be mistaken; the voice which I heard here that
night rings still in my ears; its echo seems yet to linger
in the room.” Her gaze wandered to the great leather
chair, which had been replaced in its usual position.
“Now that you have restored Ramon to me, I want only
to avenge my father, and I shall be content. To be murdered,
in his own home! Poisoned like a rat in a trap!
I shall not rest until the coward who killed him has been
brought to justice!”</p>
<p>“He will be, Miss Lawton! The trap has been baited
again, and unless I am greatly mistaken, the murderer
will walk straight into it.––There is the bell! I gave
orders that you were to be at home to no one except the
man I expect and that he was to be ushered in here immediately
upon his arrival, without being announced––so
take your place, now, please, behind the curtains.
Do not try to watch the man––only listen with all your
ears; and above all do not betray yourself until the
proper moment comes for disclosing your presence.”</p>
<p>Without a word Anita disappeared into the window-seat,
and the curtains fell into place behind her. The
detective had only time to step in the shadow of a dark
corner beside one of the tall bookcases, when the door
was thrown open. A man stood upon the threshold––a
tall, fair man of middle age, with a small blond mustache,
and a monocle dangling from a narrow black ribbon
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_257' name='page_257'></SPAN>257</span>
about his neck. From the very correct gardenia in
his buttonhole to the very immaculate spats upon his
feet, he was a careful prototype of the Piccadilly exquisite––a
little faded, perhaps, slightly effete, but perfect
in detail. He halted for a moment, as if he, too, were
blinded by the swift change from sunshine to gloom.
Then, advancing slowly, his pale, protruding eyes wandered
to the great chair by the fireplace, and lingered as
if fascinated. He approached it, magnetized by some
spell of his own thoughts’ weaving, until he could have
stretched out his hand and touched it. A pause, and
with a sudden swift revulsion of feeling, he turned from
it in a sort of horror and went to the center-table.
There he stood for a moment, glanced back at the chair,
then quickly about the room, his eyes passing unseeingly
over the shadowy figure by the bookcase. Then he
darted back to the chair and thrust his hand deep into
the fold between the back and seat. For a minute he
felt about with frenzied haste, until his fingers touched
the object he sought, and with a profound sigh of relief
he drew it forth––a tiny flat vial.</p>
<p>He glanced at it casually, his hand already raised
toward his breast-pocket; then he recoiled with a low,
involuntary cry. The vial was filled with a sinister
blood-red fluid.</p>
<p>At that moment Blaine stepped from behind the bookcase
and confronted him.</p>
<p>“You have succeeded in regaining your bottle, haven’t
you, Mr. Rockamore?” he asked, significantly. “Are
you surprised to find within it the blood of an innocent
man?”</p>
<p>Rockamore turned to him slowly, his dazed, horror-stricken
eyes protruding more than ever.</p>
<p>“Blood?” he repeated, thickly, as if scarcely understanding.
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_258' name='page_258'></SPAN>258</span>
Then a realization of the situation dawned
upon him, and he demanded, hoarsely: “Who are you?
What are you doing here?”</p>
<p>“My name is Blaine, and I am here to arrest the murderer
of Pennington Lawton,” the detective replied, his
dominant tones ringing through the room.</p>
<p>“Blaine––Henry Blaine!” Rockamore stepped
back a pace or two, and a sneer curled his thin lips, although
his face had suddenly paled. “I’ve heard of
you, of course––the international meddler! What sort
of sensation are you trying to work up now, my man, by
such a ridiculous assertion? Pennington Lawton––murdered!
Why, all the world knows that he died of
heart-disease!”</p>
<p>“All the world seldom knows the truth, but it shall, in
this instance,” returned Blaine, trenchantly. “Pennington
Lawton was murdered––poisoned by a draught
of prussic acid.”</p>
<p>“You’re mad!” Rockamore retorted, insolently. He
tossed the incriminating little vial carelessly on the blotter
of the writing-desk, and when he turned again to the
detective his face, with its high, thin, hooked nose and
close-drawn brows, was vulture-like in its malevolent
intensity. “You don’t deserve serious consideration!
If you make public such a ridiculous statement, you’ll
only be laughed at for your pains.”</p>
<p>“I shall prove it. The murderer’s midnight visit, his
secret conference with his victim, did not proceed unwitnessed.
His motive is known, but his act was futile.
It came too late.”</p>
<p>“This is all very interesting, no doubt, or would be if
it could be credited. However, I cannot understand
why you have elected to take me into your confidence.”
Rockamore was livid, but he controlled himself sufficiently
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_259' name='page_259'></SPAN>259</span>
to speak with a simulation of contemptuous boredom.
“I came here to see Miss Lawton, in response to
an urgent call from her; I don’t know by what authority
you are here, but I do know that I do not propose to be
further annoyed by you!”</p>
<p>“I am afraid that you will find yourself very seriously
annoyed before this affair comes to an end, Mr. Rockamore,”
said Blaine. “Miss Lawton’s butler summoned
you this afternoon by my instructions, and with gratifying
promptness you came and did just what I expected
you would do––betrayed yourself irretrievably in your
haste to recover the evidence which now will hang you!”</p>
<p>The other man laughed harshly, a discordant, jarring
laugh which jangled on the tense air.</p>
<p>“Your accusation is too absurd to be resented. I
knew that Miss Lawton herself could not have been a
party to this melodramatic hoax!”</p>
<p>Blaine walked to the desk before replying, and taking
up the crimson-tinged vial, weighed it in his hand.</p>
<p>“You did not find the poison bottle which you yourself
thrust in that chair the night Pennington Lawton
died, Mr. Rockamore, because his daughter discovered it
and communicated with me,” he said. “She anticipated
you by less than twenty-four hours. We have known
from the beginning of your nocturnal visit to this room;
every word of your conversation was overheard. It’s
no use trying to bluff it; we’ve got a clear case against
you.”</p>
<p>“You and your ‘clear case’ be d––d!” the other
man cried, his tones shaking with anger. “You’re trying
to bluff me, my man, but it won’t work! I don’t
know what the devil you mean about a midnight visit to
Lawton; the last I saw of him was at a directors’ meeting
the afternoon before his death.”</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_260' name='page_260'></SPAN>260</span></div>
<p>“Then why has that chair––the chair in which he
died––exerted such a peculiar, sinister influence over
you? Why is it that every time you have entered this
room since, you have been unable to keep away from it?
Why, this very hour, when you thought yourself unobserved,
did you walk straight to this chair and place
your hand deliberately upon the place where the poison
bottle was concealed? Why did you recoil? Why did
that cry rise from your lips when you saw what it contained?”</p>
<p>“I touched the chair inadvertently, while I waited for
Miss Lawton’s appearance, and my hand coming accidentally
in contact with a hard substance, mere idle curiosity
impelled me to draw it out. Naturally, I was
startled for the moment, when I saw what it was.” The
man’s voice deepened hoarsely, and he gave vent to
another sneering, vicious laugh. As its echo died in the
room, Blaine could have sworn that he heard a quick
gasp from behind the curtains of the window-seat, but it
did not reach the ears of Rockamore.</p>
<p>The latter continued, his voice breaking suddenly,
with a rage at last uncontrolled:</p>
<p>“I could not, of course, know that that bottle of red
ink was a cheap, theatrical trick of a mountebank, a creature
who is the laughing-stock of the press and the public,
in his idiotic attempts to draw sensational notoriety
upon himself. But I do know that this effort has failed!
You have dared to plant this outrageous, puerile trap to
attempt to ensnare me! You have dared to strike
blindly, in your mad thirst for publicity, at a man
infinitely beyond your reach. Your insolence ceases to
be amusing! If you try to push this ridiculous accusation,
I shall ruin you, Henry Blaine!”</p>
<p>“No man is beyond my reach who has broken the
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_261' name='page_261'></SPAN>261</span>
law.” The detective’s voice was quietly controlled, yet
each word pierced the silence like a sword-thrust. “I
have been threatened with ruin, with death, many times
by criminals of all classes, from defaulting financiers to
petty thieves, but I still live, and my fortunes have not
been materially impaired. I do not court publicity, but
I cannot shirk my duty because it entails that. And in
this case my duty is plain. You, Bertrand Rockamore,
came here, secretly, by night, to try to persuade Mr.
Lawton to go in with you on a crooked scheme––to
force him to, by blackmail, if necessary, on an old score.
Failing in that, you killed him, to prevent the nefarious
operations of yourself and your companions from being
brought to light!”</p>
<p>“You’re mad, I tell you!” roared Rockamore.
“Whoever stuffed you with such idiotic rot as that is
making gammon of you! That conversation is a
chimera of some disordered mind, if it isn’t merely part
of a deliberate conspiracy of yours against me! You’ll
suffer for this, my man! I’ll break you if it is the last
act of my life! Such a conference never took place, and
you know it!”</p>
<p>“‘Come, Lawton, be sensible; half a loaf is better
than no bread,’” Blaine quoted slowly. “‘There is no
blackmail about this––it is an ordinary <SPAN name='TC_8'></SPAN><ins title="Was ''busines'' in the original text">business</ins> proposition.’</p>
<p>“‘It’s a damnable crooked scheme, and I shall have
nothing to do with it. This is final! My hands are
clean, and I can look every man in the face and tell him
to go where you can go now!’</p>
<p>“You remember that, don’t you, Rockamore?” Blaine
interrupted himself to ask sharply. “Do you also recall
your reply?––‘How about poor Herbert Armstrong?
His wife––’”</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_262' name='page_262'></SPAN>262</span></div>
<p>“It’s a lie! A d––d lie!” cried Rockamore. “I
was not in this room that night! Such a conversation
never occurred! Who told you of this? Who dares
accuse me?”</p>
<p>“I do!” A clear, flute-like voice, resonant in its
firmness, rang out from behind him as he spoke, and he
wheeled abruptly, to find Anita standing with her slender
form outlined against the dark, rich velvet of the curtains.
Her head was thrown back, her eyes blazing; and
as she faced him, she slowly raised her arm and pointed a
steady finger at the recoiling figure. “I accuse you,
Bertrand Rockamore, of the murder of my father! It
was I who heard your conversation here in this room; it
was I who found the vial which contained the poison you
used when your arguments and threats failed! I am not
mistaken––I knew that I could never be mistaken if I
heard that voice again, shaken, as it was that night, with
rage and defiance––and fear! I knew that I should
hear it again some time, and all these weeks I have listened
for it, until this moment. Mr. Blaine, this is the
man!”</p>
<div class='figtag'>
<SPAN name='linki_6' id='linki_6'></SPAN></div>
<div class='figcenter'>
<ANTIMG src='images/illus-262.jpg' alt='' title='' style='width: 424px; height: 314px;' /><br/>
<p class='caption' style='margin: 0 auto; text-align:center; width: 424px;'>
Her head was thrown back, her eyes blazing: and as she faced him, she slowly raised her arm and pointed a steady finger at the recoiling figure.<br/></p>
</div>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_263' name='page_263'></SPAN>263</span></div>
<p>“Anita, you have lost your mind!” With the shock
of the girl’s appearance, a steely calm had come to the
Englishman, and although a tremor ran through his
tones, he held them well in leash. “My poor child, you
do not know what you are saying.</p>
<p>“As for you,”––he turned and looked levelly into
Blaine’s eyes,––“I am amazed that a man of your perception
and experience should for a moment entertain the
idea that he could make out a case of capital crime
against a person of my standing, solely upon the hysterical
pseudo-testimony of a girl whose brain is overwrought.
This midnight conference, which you so
glibly quote, is a figment of her distraught mind––or, if
it actually occurred (a fact of which you have no
proof), Miss Lawton admits, by the words she has just
uttered, that she did not see the mysterious visitor, but
is attempting to identify me as that person merely by the
tones of my voice. She has made no accusation against
me until this moment, yet since her father’s death she has
heard my voice almost daily for several weeks. Come,
Blaine, listen to reason! Your case has tumbled about
your ears! You can only avoid serious trouble for both
Miss Lawton and yourself by dropping this absurd matter
here and now.”</p>
<p>“It is true that I did not recognize your voice before,
but I have not until now heard it raised in anger as it
was that night––” began Anita, but Blaine silenced her
with a gesture.</p>
<p>“And the bottle of prussic acid which was found yesterday
hidden in the chair where just now you searched
for it?” he demanded, sternly. “The incontrovertible
evidence, proved late last night by an autopsy upon the
body of Pennington Lawton, which shows that he came
to his death by means of that poison––how do you account
for these facts, Rockamore?”</p>
<p>“I do not propose to account for them, whether they
are facts or not,” returned the other man, coolly.
“Since I know nothing whatever about them, they are
beyond my province. Unless you wish to bring ruin
upon yourself, and unwelcome notoriety and possibly an
official inquiry into her sanity upon Miss Lawton, you
will not repeat this incredible accusation. Only my
very real sympathy for her has enabled me to listen with
what patience I have to the unparalleled insolence of
this charge, but you are going too far. I see no necessity
for further prolonging this interview, and with your
permission I will withdraw––unless, of course,” he
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_264' name='page_264'></SPAN>264</span>
added, sneeringly, “you have a warrant for my arrest?”</p>
<p>To Anita’s astonishment, Henry Blaine stepped back
with a slight shrug and Rockamore, still with that sarcastic
leer upon his lips, bowed low to her and strode
from the room.</p>
<p>“You––you let him go, Mr. Blaine?” she gasped,
incredulously. “You let him escape!”</p>
<p>“He cannot escape.” Blaine smiled a trifle grimly.
“I’m giving him just a little more rope, that is all, to
see if he will help us secure the others. His every move
is under strict surveillance––for him there is no way
out, save one.”</p>
<p>“And that way?” asked Anita.</p>
<p>The detective made no reply. In a few minutes he
took leave of her and proceeded to his office, where he
spent a busy day, sending cables in cipher, detailing
operatives to many new assignments and receiving reports.</p>
<p>Late in the afternoon replies began to come in to his
cablegrams of the morning. Whatever their import,
they quite evidently afforded him immense satisfaction,
and as the early dusk settled down, his eyes began to
glow with the light of battle, which those closest to him
in his marvelous work had learned to recognize when victory
was in sight.</p>
<p>Suraci noted it when he entered to make his report,
and the glint of enthusiasm in his own eyes brightened
like burnished steel.</p>
<p>“I relieved Ross at noon, as you instructed me, sir,”
he began, “in the vestibule of Mr. Rockamore’s apartment
house. It was a good thing that I had the six-cylinder
car handy, for he surely led me a chase! Ten
minutes after I went on duty, Rockamore came out,
jumped into his automobile, and after circling the park,
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_265' name='page_265'></SPAN>265</span>
he turned south, zig-zagging through side streets as if
to cut off pursuit. He reached South-end Ferry, but
hovered about until the gates were on the point of closing.
Then his chauffeur shot the car forward, but before
I could reach him, Creghan stepped up with your
warrant.</p>
<p>“‘I’m sorry, sir,’ I heard him say as I came up.
‘I’m to use this only in case you insist on attempting to
leave the city, sir. Mr. Blaine’s orders.’</p>
<p>“Rockamore turned on him in a fury, but thought
better of it, and after a minute he leaned forward with a
shrug, and directed the chauffeur north again. This
time he tried the Great Western Station, but Liebler was
there, waiting for him; then the North Illington branch
depot––Schmidt was on hand. As a forlorn hope he
tried the Tropic and Oriental steamship line,––one of
their ships goes out to-night,––but Norris intercepted
him; at last he speeded down the boulevard and out on
the eastern post-road, but Kearney was on the job at the
toll-gate.</p>
<p>“He gave it up then, and went back to his rooms, and
Ross relieved me there, just now. The lights are flaring
in the windows of his rooms, and you can see his shadow––he’s
pacing up and down like a caged animal!”</p>
<p>“All right, Suraci. Go back and tell Ross to have
one of his men telephone to me at once if Rockamore
leaves his rooms before nine. That will be all for you
to-night. I’ve got to do the rest of the work myself.”</p>
<p>At nine o’clock precisely, Henry Blaine presented himself
at Rockamore’s door. As he had anticipated he was
admitted at once and ushered into the Englishman’s
presence as if his coming had been expected.</p>
<p>“I say, Blaine, what the devil do you mean by this
game you’re playing?” Rockamore demanded, as he
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_266' name='page_266'></SPAN>266</span>
stood erect and perfectly poised upon the hearth, and
faced the detective. A faint, sarcastic smile curved his
lips, and in his pale eyes there was no hint of trouble or
fear––merely a look of tolerant, half-contemptuous
amusement. Immaculate in his dinner-coat and fresh
boutonnière, his bearing superb in his ease and condescension,
he presented a picture of elegance. Blaine
glanced about the rich, somber den before he replied.</p>
<p>“I’m not playing any game, Mr. Rockamore. Why
did you try so desperately to leave the city?”</p>
<p>The Englishman shrugged.</p>
<p>“A sudden whim, I suppose. Would it be divulging
a secret of your profession if you informed me why one
of your men did not arrest me, since all had warrants on
the ridiculous charge you brought against me this morning,
of murdering my oldest and closest friend?”</p>
<p>“I merely wanted to assure myself that you would not
leave the city until I had obtained sufficient data with
which to approach you,” the detective responded, imperturbably.
“I have come to-night for a little talk
with you, Mr. Rockamore. I trust I am not intruding?”</p>
<p>“Not at all. As a matter of fact, after to-day’s incidents
I was rather expecting you.” Rockamore waved
his unbidden guest to a chair, and produced a gold cigarette-case.
“Smoke? You perhaps prefer cigars––no?
A brandy and soda?”</p>
<p>“Thank you, no. With your permission, I will get
right down to business. It will simplify matters for
both of us if you are willing to answer some questions I
wish to put to you; but, of course, there is no compulsion
about it. On the other hand, it is my duty to warn
you that anything you say may be used against you.”</p>
<p>“Fire away, Mr. Blaine!” Rockamore seated himself
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_267' name='page_267'></SPAN>267</span>
and stretched out his legs luxuriously to the open
wood-fire. “I don’t fancy that anything I shall say
will militate against me. I was an idiot to lose my temper
this morning, but I hate being made game of. Now
the whole situation merely amuses me, but it may become
tiresome. Let’s get it over.”</p>
<p>“Mr. Rockamore, you were born in Staffordshire,
England, were you not? Near a place called Handsworth?”</p>
<p>The unexpected question brought a meditative frown
to the other man’s brow, but he replied readily enough:</p>
<p>“Yes, at Handsworth Castle, to be exact. But I
can’t quite gather what bearing that insignificant fact
has upon your amazing charge this morning.”</p>
<p>“You are the only son of Gerald Cecil Rockamore,
third son of the Earl of Stafford?” The detective did
not appear to have heard the protest of the man he was
interrogating.</p>
<p>“Precisely. But what––”</p>
<p>“There were, then, four lives between you and the
title,” Blaine interrupted, tersely. “But two remain,
your father and grandfather. Your uncles died, both
of sudden attacks of heart-disease, and curiously
enough, both deaths occurred while they were visiting at
Handsworth Castle.”</p>
<p>“That is quite true.” The cynical banter was gone
from Rockamore’s tones, and he spoke with a peculiar,
hushed evenness, as if he waited, on guard, for the next
thrust.</p>
<p>“Lord Ashfrith, your father’s oldest brother, and
next in line to the old Earl, was seated in the gun-room
of the castle, sipping a brandy and soda, and carving a
peach-stone. Twenty minutes before, you had brought
the peaches in from the garden, and eaten them with him.
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_268' name='page_268'></SPAN>268</span>
He was showing you how, in his boyhood, he had carved
a watch-charm from a peach-stone, and you were close
at his side when he suddenly fell over dead. Two years
later, your Uncle Alaric, heir to the earldom since his
older brother was out of the way, dropped dead at a
hunt breakfast. You were seated next him.”</p>
<p>“Are you trying to insinuate that I had anything to
do with these deaths?” Rockamore still spoke quietly,
but there was a slight tremor in his tones, and his face
looked suddenly gray and leaden in the glow of the leaping
flames.</p>
<p>“I am recalling certain facts in your family history.
When your Uncle Alaric died, he had just set down his
cordial glass, which had contained peach brandy. An
odd coincidence, wasn’t it, that both of these men died
with the odor of peaches about them, an odor which
incidentally you had provided in both cases, for it was
you who suggested the peach brandy as a cordial at the
hunt breakfast, and induced your uncle to partake of
it.”</p>
<p>“It was a coincidence, as you say. I had not thought
of it before.” The Englishman moistened his lips nervously,
as if they suddenly felt dry. “Uncle Alaric was
a heavy, full-blooded man, and he had ridden hard that
morning, contrary to the doctor’s orders. I suggested
the brandy as a bracer, I remember.”</p>
<p>“An unfortunate suggestion, wasn’t it?” Blaine
asked, significantly. The other man made no reply.</p>
<p>“There was another coincidence.” The detective
pursued relentlessly. “The brandy-and-soda, which
Lord Ashfrith was drinking at the moment of his death,
was naturally a pale amber color. So was the brandy
which your Uncle Alaric drank as he died. And prussic
acid is amber-colored, too, Mr. Rockamore! Lord Ashfrith
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_269' name='page_269'></SPAN>269</span>
was carving a peach-stone when the end came, and
the odor of peaches clung to his body. Your Uncle
Alaric partook of peach brandy, and the same odor hovered
about him in death. Prussic acid is redolent of the
odor of peaches!”</p>
<p>Rockamore started from his chair.</p>
<p>“I understand what you are attempting to establish
by the flimsiest of circumstantial evidence!” he sneered.
“But you are away beyond your depth, my man! May
I ask where you obtained this interesting but scarcely
valuable information?”</p>
<p>“From Scotland Yard, by cable, to-day.” Blaine
rose also and faced the other man. “An investigation
was started into the second death, upon the Earl’s request,
but it was dropped for lack of evidence. About
that time, Mr. Rockamore, you decided rather suddenly,
and for no apparent reason, to come to America, where
you have remained ever since.”</p>
<p>“Mr. Blaine, if I were in the mood to be facetious, I
might employ your American vernacular and ask that
you tell me something I don’t know! Come to the point,
man; you try my patience.”</p>
<p>“In view of recent developments, I am under the impression
that Scotland Yard would welcome your reappearance
on British soil, but I fear that will be forever
impossible,” Blaine said slowly. “Just as you were beside
your uncles when each met with his end, so you were
beside Pennington Lawton when death came to him!
That has been proved. Just as brandy and soda, and
peach brandy, are amber-colored, so are Scotch high-balls,
which you and Pennington Lawton were drinking.
No odor of peaches lingered about the room, for Miss
Lawton had lighted a handful of joss-sticks in a vase
upon the mantel earlier in the evening, and their pungent
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perfume filled the air. But the odor of peaches permeated
the room when the tiny bottle which you hid in
the folds of the chair was uncorked––the odor of
peaches rose above the stench of mortifying flesh, when
the body of your victim was exhumed late last night for
a belated autopsy! The heart would have revealed the
truth, had there been no corroborative evidence, for it
was filled with arterial blood––incontrovertible proof
of death by prussic-acid poisoning.”</p>
<p>There was a tense pause, and then Rockamore spoke
sharply, his voice strained to the breaking point.</p>
<p>“If you are so certain of my guilt, Blaine, why have
you come to me secretly here and now? What is your
price?”</p>
<p>“I have no price,” the great detective answered,
simply.</p>
<p>“Then why did you not arrest me at once? Why
this purposeless interview?”</p>
<p>“Because––” Blaine paused, and when he spoke
again, a solemn hush, almost of pity, had crept into his
tones. “You come of a fine old line, Mr. Rockamore, of
a splendid race. Your grandfather, the aged Earl, is
living only in the past, proud of the record of his forebears.
Your father is a soldier and statesman, valuable
to the nation; his younger brother, Cedric, has achieved
deserved fame and glory in the Boer War. There remains
only you. For the sake of the innocent who must
suffer with you, I have come to you to-night, that you
may have an opportunity to––prepare yourself. In
the morning I must arrest you. My duty is plain.”</p>
<p>As he uttered the words, the craven fear which had
struggled through the malicious sneer on the other man’s
face faded as if an obliterating hand had passed across
his brow, and a look of indomitable courage and resignation
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took its place. There was something akin to
nobility in his expression as he turned to the detective
with head proudly erect and shoulders squared.</p>
<p>“I thank you, Mr. Blaine,” he said, simply. “I
understand. I shall not fail them––the others! You
have been far more generous to me than I deserve. And
now––good-night. You will find me here when you
come in the morning.”</p>
<p>But in the morning Henry Blaine did not carry out
his expressed intention. Instead, he sat at his desk,
staring at the headlines in a paper spread out before
him. The Honorable Bertrand Rockamore had been
found dead on the floor of his den, with a bullet through
his head. He would never allow his man to touch his
guns, and had been engaged in cleaning one of them, as
was his custom, in preparation for his annual shooting
trip to Florida, when in some fashion it had been accidentally
discharged.</p>
<p>“I wonder if I did the right thing!” mused Blaine.
“He had the courage to do it, after all. Blood will
tell, in the end.”</p>
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