<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0006" id="link2H_4_0006"></SPAN></p>
<h2> VI. The Diamond Maker </h2>
<p>"I've called, Professor Kennedy, to see if we can retain you in a case
which I am sure will tax even your resources. Heaven knows it has taxed
ours."</p>
<p>The visitor was a large, well-built man. He placed his hat on the table
and, without taking off his gloves, sat down in an easy chair which he
completely filled.</p>
<p>"Andrews is my name—third vice-president of the Great Eastern Life
Insurance Company. I am the nominal head of the company's private
detective force, and though I have some pretty clever fellows on my staff
we've got a case that, so far, none of us has been able to unravel. I'd
like to consult you about it."</p>
<p>Kennedy expressed his entire willingness to be consulted, and after the
usual formalities were over, Mr. Andrews proceeded.</p>
<p>"I suppose you are aware that the large insurance companies maintain quite
elaborate detective forces and follow very keenly such of the cases of
their policy-holders as look at all suspicious. This case which I wish to
put in your hands is that of Mr. Solomon Morowitch, a wealthy Maiden Lane
jeweller. I suppose you have read something in the papers about his sudden
death and the strange robbery of his safe?"</p>
<p>"Very little," replied Craig. "There hasn't been much to read."</p>
<p>"Of course not, of course not," said Mr. Andrews with some show of
gratification. "I flatter myself that we have pulled the wires so as to
keep the thing out of the papers as much as possible. We don't want to
frighten the quarry till the net is spread. The point is, though, to find
out who is the quarry. It's most baffling."</p>
<p>"I am at your service," interposed Craig quietly, "but you will have to
enlighten me as to the facts in the case. As to that, I know no more than
the newspapers."</p>
<p>"Oh, certainly, certainly. That is to say, you know nothing at all and can
approach it without bias." He paused and then, seeming to notice something
in Craig's manner, added hastily: "I'll be perfectly frank with you. The
policy in question is for one hundred thousand dollars, and is
incontestable. His wife is the beneficiary. The company is perfectly
willing to pay, but we want to be sure that it is all straight first.
There are certain suspicious circumstances that in justice to ourselves we
think should be cleared up. That is all—believe me. We are not
seeking to avoid an honest liability."</p>
<p>"What are these suspicious circumstances?" asked Craig, apparently
satisfied with the explanation.</p>
<p>"This is in strict confidence, gentlemen," began Mr. Andrews. "Mr.
Morowitch, according to the story as it comes to us, returned home late
one night last week, apparently from his office, in a very weakened, a
semiconscious, condition. His family physician, Doctor Thornton, was
summoned, not at once, but shortly. He pronounced Mr. Morowitch to be
suffering from a congestion of the lungs that was very like a sudden
attack of pneumonia.</p>
<p>"Mr. Morowitch had at once gone to bed, or at least was in bed, when the
doctor arrived, but his condition grew worse so rapidly that the doctor
hastily resorted to oxygen, under which treatment he seemed to revive. The
doctor had just stepped out to see another patient when a hurry call was
sent to him that Mr. Morowitch was rapidly sinking. He died before the
doctor could return. No statement whatever concerning the cause of his
sudden illness was made by Mr. Morowitch, and the death-certificate, a
copy of which I have, gives pneumonia as the cause of death. One of our
men has seen Doctor Thornton, but has been able to get nothing out of him.
Mrs. Morowitch was the only person with her, husband at the time."</p>
<p>There was something in his tone that made me take particular note of this
last fact, especially as he paused for an instant.</p>
<p>"Now, perhaps there would be nothing surprising about it all, so far at
least, were it not for the fact that the following morning, when his
junior partner, Mr. Kahan, opened the place of business, or rather went to
it, for it was to remain closed, of course, he found that during the night
someone had visited it. The lock on the great safe, which contained
thousands of dollars' worth of diamonds, was intact; but in the top of the
safe a huge hole was found—an irregular, round hole, big enough to
put your foot through. Imagine it, Professor Kennedy, a great hole in a
safe that is made of chrome steel, a safe that, short of a safety-deposit
vault, ought to be about the strongest thing on earth.</p>
<p>"Why, that steel would dull and splinter even the finest diamond-drill
before it made an impression. The mere taking out and refitting of drills
into the brace would be a most lengthy process. Eighteen or twenty hours
is the time by actual test which it would take to bore such a hole through
those laminated plates, even if there were means of exerting artificial
pressure. As for the police, they haven't even a theory yet."</p>
<p>"And the diamonds"</p>
<p>"All gone—everything of any value was gone. Even the letter-files
were ransacked. His desk was broken open, and papers of some nature had
been taken out of it. Thorough is no name for the job. Isn't that enough
to arouse suspicion?"</p>
<p>"I should like to see that safe," was all Kennedy said.</p>
<p>"So you shall, so you shall," said Mr. Andrews. "Then we may retain you in
our service? My car is waiting down-stairs. We can go right down to Maiden
Lane if you wish."</p>
<p>"You may retain me on one condition," said Craig without moving. "I am to
be free to get at the truth whether it benefits or hurts the company, and
the case is to be entirely in my hands."</p>
<p>"Hats on," agreed Mr. Andrews, reaching in his vest pocket and pulling out
three or four brevas. "My chauffeur is quite a driver. He can almost beat
the subway down."</p>
<p>"First, to my laboratory," interposed Craig. "It will take only a few
minutes."</p>
<p>We drove up to the university and stopped on the campus while Craig
hurried into the Chemistry Building to get something.</p>
<p>"I like your professor of criminal science;" said Andrews to me, blowing a
huge fragrant cloud of smoke.</p>
<p>I, for my part, liked the vice-president. He was a man who seemed
thoroughly to enjoy life, to have most of the good things, and a capacity
for getting out of them all that was humanly possible. He seemed to be
particularly enjoying this Morowitch case.</p>
<p>"He has solved some knotty cases," was all I said. "I've come to believe
there is no limit to his resourcefulness."</p>
<p>"I hope not. He's up against a tough one this trip, though, my boy."</p>
<p>I did not even resent the "my boy." Andrews was one of those men in whom
we newspaper writers instinctively believe. I knew that it would be "pens
lifted" only so long as the case was incomplete. When the time comes with
such men they are ready to furnish us the best "copy" in the world.</p>
<p>Kennedy quickly rejoined us, carrying a couple of little glass bottles
with ground-glass stoppers.</p>
<p>Morowitch & Co. was, of course, closed when we arrived, but we had no
trouble in being admitted by the Central Office man who had been detailed
to lock the barn door after the horse was stolen. It was precisely as Mr.
Andrews had said. Mr. Kahan showed us the safe. Through the top a great
hole had been made—I say made, for at the moment I was at a loss to
know whether it had been cut, drilled, burned, blown out, or what-not.</p>
<p>Kennedy examined the edges of the hole carefully, and just the trace of a
smile of satisfaction flitted over his face as he did so. Without saying a
word he took the glass stopper out of the larger bottle which he had
brought and poured the contents on the top of the safe near the hole.
There it lay, a little mound of reddish powder.</p>
<p>Kennedy took a little powder of another kind from the other bottle and
lighted it with a match.</p>
<p>"Stand back—close to the wall," he called as he dropped the burning
mass on the red powder. In two or three leaps he joined us at the far end
of the room.</p>
<p>Almost instantly a dazzling, intense flame broke out, and sizzled and
crackled. With bated breath we watched. It was almost incredible, but that
glowing mass of powder seemed literally to be sinking, sinking right down
into the cold steel. In tense silence we waited. On the ceiling we could
still see the reflection of the molten mass in the cup which it had burned
for itself in the top of the safe.</p>
<p>At last it fell through into the safe—fell as the burning roof of a
frame building would fall into the building. No one spoke a word, but as
we cautiously peered over the top of the safe we instinctively turned to
Kennedy for an explanation. The Central Office man, with eyes as big as
half-dollars, acted almost as if he would have liked to clap the irons on
Kennedy. For there in the top of the safe was another hole, smaller but
identical in nature with the first one.</p>
<p>"Thermit," was all Kennedy said.</p>
<p>"Thermit?" echoed Andrews, shifting the cigar which he had allowed to go
out in the excitement.</p>
<p>"Yes, an invention of a chemist named Goldschmidt, of Essen, Germany. It
is a compound of iron oxide, such as comes off a blacksmith's anvil or the
rolls of a rolling-mill, and powdered metallic aluminum. You could thrust
a red-hot bar into it without setting it off, but when you light a little
magnesium powder and drop it on thermit, a combustion is started that
quickly reaches fifty-four hundred degrees Fahrenheit. It has the peculiar
property of concentrating its heat to the immediate spot on which it is
placed. It is one of the most powerful oxidising agents known, and it
doesn't even melt the rest of the steel surface. You see how it ate its
way through the steel. Either black or red thermit will do the trick
equally well."</p>
<p>No one said anything. There was nothing to say.</p>
<p>"Someone uncommonly clever, or instructed by someone uncommonly clever,
must have done that job," added Craig. "Well, there is nothing more to be
done here," he added, after a cursory look about the office. "Mr. Andrews,
may I have a word with you? Come on, Jameson. Good day, Mr. Kahan. Good
day, Officer."</p>
<p>Outside we stopped for a moment at the door of Andrews's car.</p>
<p>"I shall want to see Mr. Morowitch's papers at home," said Craig, "and
also to call on Doctor Thornton. Do you think I shall have any
difficulty?"</p>
<p>"Not at all," replied Mr. Andrews, "not at all. I will go with you myself
and see that you have none. Say, Professor Kennedy," he broke out, "that
was marvellous. I never dreamed such a thing was possible. But don't you
think you could have learned something more up there in the office by
looking around?"</p>
<p>"I did learn it," answered Kennedy. "The lock on the door was intact—whoever
did the job let himself in by a key. There is no other way to get in."</p>
<p>Andrews gave a low whistle and glanced involuntarily up at the window with
the sign of Morowitch & Co. in gold letters several floors above.</p>
<p>"Don't look up. I think that was Kahan looking out at us," he said, fixing
his eyes on his cigar. "I wonder if he knows more about this than he has
told! He was the 'company,' you know, but his interest in the business was
only very slight. By George—"</p>
<p>"Not too fast, Mr. Andrews," interrupted Craig. "We have still to see Mrs.
Morowitch and the doctor before we form any theories."</p>
<p>"A very handsome woman, too," said Andrews, as we seated ourselves in the
car: "A good deal younger than Morowitch. Say, Kahan isn't a bad-looking
chap, either, is he? I hear he was a very frequent visitor at his
partner's house. Well, which first, Mrs. M. or the doctor?"</p>
<p>"The house," answered Craig.</p>
<p>Mr. Andrews introduced us to Mrs. Morowitch, who was in very deep
mourning, which served, as I could not help noticing, rather to heighten
than lessen her beauty. By contrast it brought out the rich deep colour of
her face and the graceful lines of her figure. She was altogether a very
attractive young widow.</p>
<p>She seemed to have a sort of fear of Andrews, whether merely because he
represented the insurance company on which so much depended or because
there were other reasons for fear, I could not, of course, make out.
Andrews was very courteous and polite, yet I caught myself asking if it
was not a professional rather than a personal politeness. Remembering his
stress on the fact that she was alone with her husband when he died, it
suddenly flashed across my mind that somewhere I had read of a detective
who, as his net was being woven about a victim, always grew more and more
ominously polite toward the victim. I know that Andrews suspected her of a
close connection with the case. As for myself, I don't know what I
suspected as yet.</p>
<p>No objection was offered to our request to examine Mr. Morowitch's
personal effects in the library, and accordingly Craig ransacked the desk
and the letter-file. There was practically nothing to be discovered.</p>
<p>"Had Mr. Morowitch ever received any threats of robbery?" asked Craig, as
he stood before the desk.</p>
<p>"Not that I know of," replied Mrs. Morowitch. "Of course every jeweller
who carries a large stock of diamonds must be careful. But I don't think
my husband had any special reason to fear robbery. At least he never said
anything about it. Why do you ask?"</p>
<p>"Oh, nothing. I merely thought there might be some hint as to the motives
of the robbery," said Craig. He was fingering one of those desk-calendars
which have separate leaves for each day with blank spaces for
appointments.</p>
<p>"'Close deal Poissan,'" he read slowly from one of the entries, as if to
himself. "That's strange. It was the correspondence under the letter 'P'
that was destroyed at the office, and there is nothing in the letter-file
here, either. Who was Poissan?"</p>
<p>Mrs. Morowitch hesitated, either from ignorance or from a desire to evade
the question. "A chemist, I think," she said doubtfully. "My husband had
some dealings with him—some discovery he was going to buy. I don't
know anything about it. I thought the deal was off."</p>
<p>"The deal?"</p>
<p>"Really, Mr. Kennedy, you had better ask Mr. Kahan. My husband talked
very, little to me about business affairs."</p>
<p>"But what was the discovery?"</p>
<p>"I don't know. I only heard Mr. Morowitch and Mr. Kahan refer to some deal
about a discovery regarding diamonds."</p>
<p>"Then Mr. Kahan knows about it?"</p>
<p>"I presume so."</p>
<p>"Thank you, Mrs. Morowitch," said Kennedy, when it was evident that she
either could not or would not add anything to what she had said. "Pardon
us for causing all this trouble."</p>
<p>"No trouble at all," she replied graciously, though I could see she was
intent on every word and motion of Kennedy and Andrews.</p>
<p>Kennedy stopped the car at a drug-store a few blocks away and asked for
the business telephone directory. In an instant, under chemists, he put
his finger on the name of Poissan—"Henri Poissan, electric furnaces,—William
St.," he read.</p>
<p>"I shall visit him to-morrow morning. Now for the doctor."</p>
<p>Doctor Thornton was an excellent specimen of the genus physician to the
wealthy—polished, cool, suave. One of Mr. Andrews's men, as I have
said, had seen him already, but the interview had been very
unsatisfactory. Evidently, however, the doctor had been turning something
over in his mind since then and had thought better of it. At any rate, his
manner was cordial enough now.</p>
<p>As he closed the doors to his office, he began to pace the floor. "Mr.
Andrews," he said, "I am in some doubt whether I had better tell you or
the coroner what I know. There are certain professional secrets that a
doctor must, as a duty to his patients, conceal. That is professional
ethics. But there are also cases when, as a matter of public policy, a
doctor should speak out."</p>
<p>He stopped and faced us.</p>
<p>"I don't mind telling you that I dislike the publicity that would attend
any statement I might make to the coroner."</p>
<p>"Exactly," said Andrews. "I appreciate your position exactly. Your other
patients would not care to see you involved in a scandal—or at least
you would not care to have them see you so involved, with all the
newspaper notoriety such a thing brings."</p>
<p>Doctor Thornton shot a quick glance at Andrews, as if he would like to
know just how much his visitor knew or suspected.</p>
<p>Andrews drew a paper from his pocket. "This is a copy of the
death-certificate," he said. "The Board of Health has furnished it to us.
Our physicians at the insurance company tell me it is rather
extraordinarily vague. A word from us calling the attention of the proper
authorities to it would be sufficient, I think. But, Doctor, that is just
the point. We do not desire publicity any more than you do. We could have
the body of Mr. Morowitch exhumed and examined, but I prefer to get the
facts in the case without resorting to such extreme measures."</p>
<p>"It would do no good," interrupted the doctor hastily. "And if you'll save
me the publicity, I'll tell you why."</p>
<p>Andrews nodded, but still held the death-certificate where the doctor was
constantly reminded of it.</p>
<p>"In that certificate I have put down the cause of death as congestion of
the lungs due to an acute attack of pneumonia. That is substantially
correct, as far as it goes. When I was summoned to see Mr. Morowitch I
found him in a semiconscious state and scarcely breathing. Mrs. Morowitch
told me that he had been brought home in a taxicab by a man who had picked
him up on William Street. I'm frank to say that at first sight I thought
it was a case of plain intoxication, for Mr. Morowitch sometimes indulged
a little freely when he made a splendid deal. I smelled his breath, which
was very feeble. It had a sickish sweet odour, but that did not impress me
at the time. I applied my stethoscope to his lungs. There was a very
marked congestion, and I made as my working diagnosis pneumonia. It was a
case for quick and heroic action. In a very few minutes I had a tank of
oxygen from the hospital.</p>
<p>"In the meantime I had thought over that sweetish odour, and it flashed on
my mind that it might, after all, be a case of poisoning. When the oxygen
arrived I administered it at once. As it happens, the Rockefeller
Institute has just published a report of experiments with a new antidote
for various poisons, which consists simply in a new method of enforced
breathing and throwing off the poison by oxidising it in that way. In
either case—the pneumonia theory or the poison theory—this
line of action was the best that I could have adopted on the spur of the
moment. I gave him some strychnine to strengthen his heart and by hard
work I had him resting apparently a little easier. A nurse had been sent
for, but had not arrived when a messenger came to me telling of a very
sudden illness of Mrs. Morey, the wife of the steel-magnate. As the Morey
home is only a half-block away, I left Mr. Morowitch, with very particular
instructions to his wife as to what to do.</p>
<p>"I had intended to return immediately, but before I got back Mr. Morowitch
was dead. Now I think I've told you all. You see, it was nothing but a
suspicion—hardly enough to warrant making a fuss about. I made out
the death-certificate, as you see. Probably that would have been all there
was to it if I hadn't heard of this incomprehensible robbery. That set me
thinking again. There, I'm glad I've got it out of my system. I've thought
about it a good deal since your man was here to see me."</p>
<p>"What do you suspect was the cause of that sweetish odour?" asked Kennedy.</p>
<p>The doctor hesitated. "Mind, it is only a suspicion. Cyanide of potassium
or cyanogen gas; either would give such an odour."</p>
<p>"Your treatment would have been just the same had you been certain?"</p>
<p>"Practically the same, the Rockefeller treatment."</p>
<p>"Could it have been suicide" asked Andrews.</p>
<p>"There was no motive for it, I believe," replied the doctor.</p>
<p>"But was there any such poison in the Morowitch house?"</p>
<p>"I know that they were much interested in photography. Cyanide of
potassium is used in certain processes in photography."</p>
<p>"Who was interested in photography, Mr. or Mrs. Morowitch?"</p>
<p>"Both of them."</p>
<p>"Was Mrs. Morowitch?"</p>
<p>"Both of them," repeated the doctor hastily. It was evident how Andrews's
questions were tending, and it was also evident that the doctor did not
wish to commit himself or even to be misunderstood.</p>
<p>Kennedy had sat silently for some minutes, turning the thing over in his
mind. Apparently disregarding Andrews entirely, he now asked, "Doctor,
supposing it had been cyanogen gas which caused the congestion of the
lungs, and supposing it had not been inhaled in quantities large enough to
kill outright, do you nevertheless feel that Mr. Morowitch was in a weak
enough condition to die as a result of the congestion produced by the gas
after the traces of the cyanogen had been perhaps thrown off?"</p>
<p>"That is precisely the impression which I wished to convey."</p>
<p>"Might I ask whether in his semiconscious state he said anything that
might at all serve as a clue?"</p>
<p>"He talked ramblingly, incoherently. As near as I can remember it, he
seemed to believe himself to have become a millionaire, a billionaire. He
talked of diamonds, diamonds, diamonds. He seemed to be picking them up,
running his fingers through them, and once I remember he seemed to want to
send for Mr. Kahan and tell him something. 'I can make them, Kahan,' he
said, 'the finest, the largest, the whitest—I can make them.'"</p>
<p>Kennedy was all attention as Dr. Thornton added this new evidence.</p>
<p>"You know," concluded the doctor, "that in cyanogen poisoning there might
be hallucinations of the wildest kind. But then, too, in the delirium of
pneumonia it might be the same."</p>
<p>I could see by the way Kennedy acted that for the first time a ray of
light had dawned upon him in tracing out the case. As we rose to go, the
doctor shook hands with us. His last words were said with an air of great
relief, "Gentlemen, I have eased my conscience considerably."</p>
<p>As we parted for the night Kennedy faced Andrews. "You recall that you
promised me one thing when I took up this case?" he asked.</p>
<p>Andrews nodded.</p>
<p>"Then take no steps until I tell you. Shadow Mrs. Morowitch and Mr. Kahan,
but do not let them know you suspect them of anything. Let me run down
this Poissan clue. In other words, leave the case entirely in my hands in
other respects. Let me know any new facts you may unearth, and some time
to-morrow I shall call on you, and we will determine what the next step is
to be. Good night. I want to thank you for putting me in the way of this
case. I think we shall all be surprised at the outcome."</p>
<p>It was late the following afternoon before I saw Kennedy again. He was in
his laboratory winding two strands of platinum wire carefully about a
piece of porcelain and smearing on it some peculiar black glassy granular
substance that came in a sort of pencil, like a stick of sealing-wax. I
noticed that he was very particular to keep the two wires exactly the same
distance from each other throughout the entire length of the piece of
porcelain, but I said nothing to distract his attention, though a thousand
questions about the progress of the case were at my tongue's end.</p>
<p>Instead I watched him intently. The black substance formed a sort of
bridge connecting and covering the wires. When he had finished he said:
"Now you can ask me your questions, while I heat and anneal this little
contrivance. I see you are bursting with curiosity."</p>
<p>"Well, did you see Poissan?" I asked.</p>
<p>Kennedy continued to heat the wire-covered porcelain. "I did, and he is
going to give me a demonstration of his discovery to-night."</p>
<p>"His discovery!"</p>
<p>"You remember Morowitch's 'hallucination,' as the doctor called it? That
was no hallucination; that was a reality. This man Poissan says he has
discovered a way to make diamonds artificially out of pure carbon in an
electric furnace. Morowitch, I believe, was to buy his secret. His dream
of millions was a reality—at least to him."</p>
<p>"And did Kahan and Mrs. Morowitch know it?" I asked quickly.</p>
<p>"I don't know yet," replied Craig, finishing the annealing.</p>
<p>The black glassy substance was now a dull grey.</p>
<p>"What's that stuff you were putting on the wire?" I asked.</p>
<p>"Oh, just a by-product made in the manufacture of sulphuric acid,"
answered Kennedy airily, adding, as if to change the subject: "I want you
to go with me to-night. I told Poissan I was a professor in the university
and that I would bring one of our younger trustees, the son of the banker,
T. Pierpont Spencer, who might put some capital into his scheme. Now,
Jameson, while I'm finishing up my work here, run over to the apartment
and get my automatic revolver. I may need it to-night. I have communicated
with Andrews, and he will be ready. The demonstration will take place at
half-past-eight at Poissan's laboratory. I tried to get him to give it
here, but he absolutely refused."</p>
<p>Half an hour later I rejoined Craig at his laboratory, and we rode down to
the Great Eastern Life Building.</p>
<p>Andrews was waiting for us in his solidly furnished office. Outside I
noted a couple of husky men, who seemed to be waiting for orders from
their chief.</p>
<p>From the manner in which the vice-president greeted us it was evident that
he was keenly interested in what Kennedy was about to do. "So you think
Morowitch's deal was a deal to purchase the secret of diamond-making?" he
mused.</p>
<p>"I feel sure of it," replied Craig. "I felt sure of it the moment I looked
up Poissan and found that he was a manufacturer of electric furnaces.
Don't you remember the famous Lemoine case in London and Paris?"</p>
<p>"Yes, but Lemoine was a fakir of the first water;" said Andrews. "Do you
think this man is, too?"</p>
<p>"That's what I'm going to find out to-night before I take another step,"
said Craig. "Of course there can be no doubt that by proper use the
electric furnace will make small, almost microscopic diamonds. It is not
unreasonable to suppose that some day someone will be able to make large
diamonds synthetically by the same process."</p>
<p>"Maybe this man has done it," agreed Andrews. "Who knows? I'll wager that
if he has and that if Morowitch had bought an interest in his process
Kahan knew of it. He's a sharp one. And Mrs. Morowitch doesn't let grass
grow under her feet, when it comes to seeing the main chance as to money.
Now just supposing Mr. Morowitch had bought an interest in a secret like
that and supposing Kahan was in love with Mrs. Morowitch and that they—"</p>
<p>"Let us suppose nothing, Mr. Andrews," interrupted Kennedy. "At least not
yet. Let me see; it is now ten minutes after eight. Poissan's place is
only a few blocks from here. I'd like to get there a few minutes early.
Let's start."</p>
<p>As we left the office, Andrews signalled to the two men outside, and they
quietly followed a few feet in the rear, but without seeming to be with
us.</p>
<p>Poissan's laboratory was at the top of a sort of loft building a dozen
stories or so high. It was a peculiar building, with several entrances
besides a freight elevator at the rear and fire-escapes that led to
adjoining lower roofs.</p>
<p>We stopped around the corner in the shadow, and Kennedy and Andrews talked
earnestly. As near as I could make out Kennedy was insisting that it would
be best for Andrews and his men not to enter the building at all, but wait
down-stairs while he and I went up. At last the arrangement was agreed on.</p>
<p>"Here," said Kennedy, undoing a package he had carried, "is a little
electric bell with a couple of fresh dry batteries attached to it, and
wires that will reach at least four hundred feet. You and the men wait in
the shadow here by this side entrance for five minutes after Jameson and I
go up. Then you must engage the night watchman in some way. While he is
away you will find two wires dangling down the elevator shaft. Attach them
to these wires from the bell and the batteries—these two—you
know how to do that. The wires will be hanging in the third shaft—only
one elevator is running at night, the first. The moment you hear the bell
begin to ring; jump into the elevator and come up to the twelfth floor—we'll
need you."</p>
<p>As Kennedy and I rode up in the elevator I could not help thinking what an
ideal place a down-town office building is for committing a crime, even at
this early hour of the evening. If the streets were deserted, the
office-buildings were positively uncanny in their grim, black silence with
only here and there a light.</p>
<p>The elevator in the first shaft shot down again to the ground floor, and
as it disappeared Kennedy took two spools of wire from his pocket and
hastily shoved them through the lattice work the third elevator shaft.
They quickly unrolled, and I could hear them strike the top of the empty
car below in the basement. That meant that Andrews on the ground floor
could reach the wires and attach them to the bell.</p>
<p>Quickly in the darkness Kennedy attached the ends of the wires to the
curious little coil I had seen him working on in the laboratory, and we
proceeded down the hall to the rooms occupied by Poissan, Kennedy had
allowed for the wire to reach from the elevator-shaft up this hall, also,
and as he walked he paid it out in such a manner that it fell on the floor
close to the wall, where, in the darkness, it would never be noticed or
stumbled over.</p>
<p>Around an "L" in the hall I could see a ground-glass window with a light
shining through it. Kennedy stopped at the window and quickly placed the
little coil on the ledge, close up against the glass, with the wires
running from it down the hall. Then we entered.</p>
<p>"On time to the minute, Professor," exclaimed Poissan, snapping his watch.
"And this, I presume, is the banker who is interested in my great
discovery of making artificial diamonds of any size or colour?" he added,
indicating me.</p>
<p>"Yes," answered Craig, "as I told you, a son of Mr. T. Pierpont Spencer."</p>
<p>I shook hands with as much dignity as I could assume, for the role of
impersonation was a new one to me.</p>
<p>Kennedy carelessly laid his coat and hat on the inside ledge of the
ground-glass window, just opposite the spot where he had placed the little
coil on the other side of the glass. I noted that the window was simply a
large pane of wire-glass set in the wall for the purpose of admitting
light in the daytime from the hall outside.</p>
<p>The whole thing seemed eerie to me—especially as Poissan's assistant
was a huge fellow and had an evil look such as I had seen in pictures of
the inhabitants of quarters of Paris which one does not frequent except in
the company of a safe guide. I was glad Kennedy had brought his revolver,
and rather vexed that he had not told me to do likewise. However, I
trusted that Craig knew what he was about.</p>
<p>We seated ourselves some distance from a table on which was a huge, plain,
oblong contrivance that reminded me of the diagram of a parallelopiped
which had caused so much trouble in my solid geometry at college.</p>
<p>"That's the electric furnace, sir," said Craig to me with an assumed
deference, becoming a college professor explaining things to the son of a
great financier. "You see the electrodes at either end? When the current
is turned on and led through them into the furnace you can get the most
amazing temperatures in the crucible. The most refractory of chemical
compounds can be broken up by that heat. What is the highest temperature
you have attained, Professor?"</p>
<p>"Something over three thousand degrees Centigrade," replied Poissan, as he
and his assistant busied themselves about the furnace.</p>
<p>We sat watching him in silence.</p>
<p>"Ah, gentlemen, now I am ready," he exclaimed at length, when everything
was arranged to his satisfaction. "You see, here is a lump of sugar carbon—pure
amorphous carbon: Diamonds, as you know, are composed of pure carbon
crystallised under enormous pressure. Now, my theory is that if we can
combine an enormous pressure and an enormous heat we can make diamonds
artificially. The problem of pressure is the thing, for here in the
furnace we have the necessary heat. It occurred to me that when molten
cast iron cools it exerts a tremendous pressure. That pressure is what I
use."</p>
<p>"You know, Spencer, solid iron floats on molten iron like solid water—ice—floats
on liquid water," explained Craig to me.</p>
<p>Poissan nodded. "I take this sugar carbon and place it in this soft iron
cup. Then I screw on this cap over the cup, so. Now I place this mass of
iron scraps in the crucible of the furnace and start the furnace."</p>
<p>He turned a switch, and long yellowish-blue sheets of flame spurted out
from the electrodes on either side. It was weird, gruesome. One could feel
the heat of the tremendous electric discharge.</p>
<p>As I looked at the bluish-yellow flames they gradually changed to a
beautiful purple, and a sickish sweet odour filled the room. The furnace
roared at first, but as the vapors increased it became a better conductor
of the electricity, and the roaring ceased.</p>
<p>In almost no time the mass of iron scraps became molten. Suddenly Poissan
plunged the cast-iron cup into the seething mass. The cup floated and
quickly began to melt. As it did so he waited attentively until the proper
moment. Then with a deft motion he seized the whole thing with a long pair
of tongs and plunged it into a vat of running water. A huge cloud of steam
filled the room.</p>
<p>I felt a drowsy sensation stealing over me as the sickish sweet smell from
the furnace increased. Gripping the chair, I roused myself and watched
Poissan attentively. He was working rapidly. As the molten mass cooled and
solidified he took it out of the water and laid it on an anvil.</p>
<p>Then his assistant began to hammer it with careful, sharp blows, chipping
off the outside.</p>
<p>"You see, we have to get down to the core of carbon gently," he said, as
he picked up the little pieces of iron and threw them into a scrap-box.
"First rather brittle cast iron, then hard iron, then iron and carbon,
then some black diamonds, and in the very centre the diamonds.</p>
<p>"Ah! we are getting to them. Here is a small diamond. See, Mr. Spencer—gently
Francois—we shall come to the large ones presently."</p>
<p>"One moment, Professor Poissan," interrupted Craig; "let your assistant
break them out while I stand over him."</p>
<p>"Impossible. You would not know when you saw them. They are just rough
stones."</p>
<p>"Oh, yes, I would."</p>
<p>"No, stay where you are. Unless I attend to it the diamonds might be
ruined."</p>
<p>There was something peculiar about his insistence, but after he picked out
the next diamond I was hardly prepared for Kennedy's next remark.</p>
<p>"Let me see the palms of your hands."</p>
<p>Poissan shot an angry glance at Kennedy, but he did not open his hands.</p>
<p>"I merely wish to convince you, 'Mr. Spencer,'" said Kennedy to me, "that
it is no sleight-of-hand trick and that the professor has not several
uncut stones palmed in his hand like a prestidigitator."</p>
<p>The Frenchman faced us, his face livid with rage. "You call me a
prestidigitator, a fraud—you shall suffer for that! Sacrebleu!
Ventre du Saint Gris! No man ever insults the honour of Poissan. Francois,
water on the electrodes!"</p>
<p>The assistant dashed a few drops of water on the electrodes. The sickish
odour increased tremendously. I felt myself almost going, but with an
effort I again roused myself. I wondered how Craig stood the fumes, for I
suffered an intense headache and nausea.</p>
<p>"Stop!" Craig thundered. "There's enough cyanogen in this room already. I
know your game—the water forms acetylene with the carbon, and that
uniting with the nitrogen of the air under the terrific heat of the
electric arc forms hydrocyanic acid. Would you poison us, too? Do you
think you can put me unconscious out on the street and have a society
doctor diagnose my case as pneumonia? Or do you think we shall die quietly
in some hospital as a certain New York banker did last year after he had
watched an alchemist make silver out of apparently nothing!"</p>
<p>The effect on Poissan was terrible. He advanced toward Kennedy, the veins
in his face fairly standing out. Shaking his forefinger, he shouted: "You
know that, do you? You are no professor, and this is no banker. You are
spies, spies. You come from the friends of Morowitch, do you? You have
gone too far with me."</p>
<p>Kennedy said nothing, but retreated and took his coat and hat off the
window ledge. The hideous penetrating light of the tongues of flame from
the furnace played on the ground-glass window.</p>
<p>Poissan laughed a hollow laugh.</p>
<p>"Put down your hat and coat, Mistair Kennedy," he hissed. "The door has
been locked ever since you have been here. Those windows are barred, the
telephone wire is cut, and it is three hundred feet to the street. We
shall leave you here when the fumes have overcome you. Francois and I can
stand them up to a point, and when we reach that point we are going."</p>
<p>Instead of being cowed Kennedy grew bolder, though I, for my part, felt so
weakened that I feared the outcome of a hand-to-hand encounter with either
Poissan or Francois, who appeared as fresh as if nothing had happened.
They were hurriedly preparing to leave us.</p>
<p>"That would do you no good," Kennedy rejoined, "for we have no safe full
of jewels for you to rob. There are no keys to offices to be stolen from
our pockets. And let me tell you—you are not the only man in New
York who knows the secret of thermite. I have told the secret to the
police, and they are only waiting to find who destroyed Morowitch's
correspondence under the letter 'P' to apprehend the robber of his safe.
Your secret is out."</p>
<p>"Revenge! revenge!" Poissan cried. "I will have revenge. Francois, bring
out the jewels—ha! ha!—here in this bag are the jewels of Mr.
Morowitch. To-night Francois and I will go down by the back elevator to a
secret exit. In two hours all your police in New York cannot find us. But
in two hours you two impostors will be suffocated—perhaps you will
die of cyanogen, like Morowitch, whose jewels I have at last."</p>
<p>He went to the door into the hall and stood there with a mocking laugh. I
moved to make a rush toward them, but Kennedy raised his hand.</p>
<p>"You will suffocate," Poissan hissed again.</p>
<p>Just then we heard the elevator door clang, and hurried steps came down
the long hall.</p>
<p>Craig whipped out his automatic and began pumping the bullets out in rapid
succession. As the smoke cleared I expected to see Poissan and Francois
lying on the floor. Instead, Craig had fired at the lock of the door. He
had shattered it into a thousand bits. Andrews and his men were running
down the hall.</p>
<p>"Curse you!" muttered Poissan as he banged the now useless lock, "who let
those fellows in? Are you a wizard?"</p>
<p>Craig smiled coolly as the ventilation cleared the room of the deadly
cyanogen.</p>
<p>"On the window-sill outside is a selenium cell. Selenium is a bad
conductor of electricity in the dark, and an excellent conductor when
exposed to light. I merely moved my coat and hat, and the light from the
furnace which was going to suffocate us played through the glass on the
cell, the circuit was completed without your suspecting that I could
communicate with friends outside, a bell was rung on the street, and here
they are. Andrews, there is the murderer of Morowitch, and there in his
hands are the Morowitch—"</p>
<p>Poissan had moved toward the furnace. With a quick motion he seized the
long tongs. There was a cloud of choking vapour. Kennedy leaped to the
switch and shut off the current. With the tongs he lifted out a shapeless
piece of valueless black graphite.</p>
<p>"All that is left of the priceless Morowitch jewels," he exclaimed
ruefully. "But we have the murderer."</p>
<p>"And to-morrow a certified check for one hundred thousand dollars goes to
Mrs. Morowitch with my humblest apologies and sympathy," added Andrews.
"Professor Kennedy, you have earned your retainer."</p>
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