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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, From Whose Bourne, by Robert Barr
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: From Whose Bourne
+
+Author: Robert Barr
+
+Release Date: November 17, 2004 [eBook #9312]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK FROM WHOSE BOURNE***
+
+
+
+Produced by Juliet Sutherland, David Widger and PG Distributed
+Proofreaders from images generously made available
+by the Canadian Institute for Historical Microreproductions
+
+
+
+
+FROM WHOSE BOURNE
+
+
+BY ROBERT BARR (LUKE SHARP)
+
+AUTHOR OF "IN A STEAMER CHAIR" ETC.
+
+[Illustration: William Brenton.]
+
+
+_WITH FORTY-SEVEN ILLUSTRATIONS
+
+BY C.M.D. HAMMOND, G.D. HAMMOND, AND HAL HURST_
+
+
+1893
+
+
+
+TO
+
+AN HONEST MAN
+
+AND
+
+A GOOD WOMAN
+
+
+
+FROM WHOSE BOURNE
+
+
+
+PRINCIPAL ILLUSTRATIONS:
+
+Buel placed his portmanteau on the deck
+
+William Brenton
+
+"Do you think I shall be missed?"
+
+He again sat in the rocking-chair
+
+He saw standing beside him a stranger
+
+A Venetian Café
+
+Venice
+
+In Venice
+
+The Brenton Murder
+
+Mrs. Brenton
+
+Gold
+
+Publicity
+
+The Broken Toy
+
+"She's pretty as a picture"
+
+Raising the Veil
+
+Jane
+
+The Detective
+
+Jane Morton
+
+"Oh, why did I do it?"
+
+"How much time do you give me?"
+
+In the prisoner's dock
+
+"I feel very grateful to you"
+
+"Here's the detailed report"
+
+"Guilty! Guilty of what?"
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+
+"My dear," said William Brenton to his wife, "do you think I shall be
+missed if I go upstairs for a while? I am not feeling at all well."
+
+[Illustration: "Do you think I shall be missed?"]
+
+"Oh, I'm so sorry, Will," replied Alice, looking concerned; "I will tell
+them you are indisposed."
+
+"No, don't do that," was the answer; "they are having a very good time,
+and I suppose the dancing will begin shortly; so I don't think they will
+miss me. If I feel better I will be down in an hour or two; if not, I
+shall go to bed. Now, dear, don't worry; but have a good time with the
+rest of them."
+
+William Brenton went quietly upstairs to his room, and sat down in the
+darkness in a rocking chair. Remaining there a few minutes, and not
+feeling any better, he slowly undressed and went to bed. Faint echoes
+reached him of laughter and song; finally, music began, and he felt,
+rather than heard, the pulsation of dancing feet. Once, when the music
+had ceased for a time, Alice tiptoed into the room, and said in a quiet
+voice--
+
+"How are you feeling, Will? any better?"
+
+"A little," he answered drowsily. "Don't worry about me; I shall drop
+off to sleep presently, and shall be all right in the morning. Good
+night."
+
+He still heard in a dreamy sort of way the music, the dancing, the
+laughter; and gradually there came oblivion, which finally merged into
+a dream, the most strange and vivid vision he had ever experienced.
+It seemed to him that he sat again in the rocking chair near the bed.
+Although he knew the room was dark, he had no difficulty in seeing
+everything perfectly. He heard, now quite plainly, the music and dancing
+downstairs, but what gave a ghastly significance to his dream was the
+sight of his own person on the bed. The eyes were half open, and the
+face was drawn and rigid. The colour of the face was the white, greyish
+tint of death.
+
+"This is a nightmare," said Brenton to himself; "I must try and wake
+myself." But he seemed powerless to do this, and he sat there looking at
+his own body while the night wore on. Once he rose and went to the side
+of the bed. He seemed to have reached it merely by wishing himself
+there, and he passed his hand over the face, but no feeling of touch was
+communicated to him. He hoped his wife would come and rouse him from
+this fearful semblance of a dream, and, wishing this, he found himself
+standing at her side, amidst the throng downstairs, who were now merrily
+saying good-bye. Brenton tried to speak to his wife, but although he
+was conscious of speaking, she did not seem to hear him, or know he was
+there.
+
+[Illustration: He again sat in the rocking-chair.]
+
+The party had been one given on Christmas Eve, and as it was now two
+o'clock in the morning, the departing guests were wishing Mrs. Brenton a
+merry Christmas. Finally, the door closed on the last of the revellers,
+and Mrs. Brenton stood for a moment giving instructions to the sleepy
+servants; then, with a tired sigh, she turned and went upstairs, Brenton
+walking by her side until they came to the darkened room, which she
+entered on tiptoe.
+
+"Now," said Brenton to himself, "she will arouse me from this appalling
+dream." It was not that there was anything dreadful in the dream itself,
+but the clearness with which he saw everything, and the fact that his
+mind was perfectly wide awake, gave him an uneasiness which he found
+impossible to shake off.
+
+In the dim light from the hall his wife prepared to retire. The horrible
+thought struck Brenton that she imagined he was sleeping soundly,
+and was anxious not to awaken him--for of course she could have no
+realization of the nightmare he was in--so once again he tried to
+communicate with her. He spoke her name over and over again, but she
+proceeded quietly with her preparations for the night. At last she crept
+in at the other side of the bed, and in a few moments was asleep. Once
+more Brenton struggled to awake, but with no effect. He heard the clock
+strike three, and then four, and then five, but there was no apparent
+change in his dream. He feared that he might be in a trance, from which,
+perhaps, he would not awake until it was too late. Grey daylight began
+to brighten the window, and he noticed that snow was quietly falling
+outside, the flakes noiselessly beating against the window pane. Every
+one slept late that morning, but at last he heard the preparations for
+breakfast going on downstairs--the light clatter of china on the table,
+the rattle of the grate; and, as he thought of these things, he found
+himself in the dining-room, and saw the trim little maid, who still
+yawned every now and then, laying the plates in their places. He went
+upstairs again, and stood watching the sleeping face of his wife. Once
+she raised her hand above her head, and he thought she was going to
+awake; ultimately her eyes opened, and she gazed for a time at the
+ceiling, seemingly trying to recollect the events of the day before.
+
+"Will," she said dreamily, "are you still asleep?"
+
+There was no answer from the rigid figure at the front of the bed. After
+a few moments she placed her hand quietly over the sleeper's face. As
+she did so, her startled eyes showed that she had received a shock.
+Instantly she sat upright in bed, and looked for one brief second on the
+face of the sleeper beside her; then, with a shriek that pierced the
+stillness of the room, she sprang to the floor.
+
+"Will! Will!" she cried, "speak to me! What is the matter with you? Oh,
+my God! my God!" she cried, staggering back from the bed. Then, with
+shriek after shriek, she ran blindly through the hall to the stairway,
+and there fell fainting on the floor.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+
+William Brenton knelt beside the fallen lady, and tried to soothe and
+comfort her, but it was evident that she was insensible.
+
+"It is useless," said a voice by his side.
+
+Brenton looked up suddenly, and saw standing beside him a stranger.
+Wondering for a moment how he got there, and thinking that after all it
+was a dream, he said--
+
+"What is useless? She is not dead."
+
+"No," answered the stranger, "but _you_ are."
+
+[Illustration: He saw standing beside him a stranger.]
+
+"I am what?" cried Brenton.
+
+"You are what the material world calls dead, although in reality you
+have just begun to live."
+
+"And who are you?" asked Brenton. "And how did you get in here?"
+
+The other smiled.
+
+"How did _you_ get in here?" he said, repeating Brenton's words.
+
+"I? Why, this is my own house."
+
+"Was, you mean."
+
+"I mean that it is. I am in my own house. This lady is my wife."
+
+"_Was_," said the other.
+
+"I do not understand you," cried Brenton, very much annoyed. "But, in
+any case, your presence and your remarks are out of place here."
+
+"My dear sir," said the other, "I merely wish to aid you and to explain
+to you anything that you may desire to know about your new condition.
+You are now free from the incumbrance of your body. You have already had
+some experience of the additional powers which that riddance has given
+you. You have also, I am afraid, had an inkling of the fact that the
+spiritual condition has its limitations. If you desire to communicate
+with those whom you have left, I would strongly advise you to postpone
+the attempt, and to leave this place, where you will experience only
+pain and anxiety. Come with me, and learn something of your changed
+circumstances."
+
+"I am in a dream," said Brenton, "and you are part of it. I went to
+sleep last night, and am still dreaming. This is a nightmare and it will
+soon be over."
+
+"You are saying that," said the other, "merely to convince yourself.
+It is now becoming apparent to you that this is not a dream. If dreams
+exist, it was a dream which you left, but you have now become awake. If
+you really think it is a dream, then do as I tell you--come with me and
+leave it, because you must admit that this part of the dream is at least
+very unpleasant."
+
+"It is not very pleasant," assented Brenton. As he spoke the bewildered
+servants came rushing up the stairs, picked up their fallen mistress,
+and laid her on a sofa. They rubbed her hands and dashed water in her
+face. She opened her eyes, and then closed them again with a shudder.
+
+"Sarah," she cried, "have I been dreaming, or is your master dead?"
+
+The two girls turned pale at this, and the elder of them went boldly
+into the room which her mistress had just left. She was evidently
+a young woman who had herself under good control, but she came out
+sobbing, with her apron to her eyes.
+
+"Come, come," said the man who stood beside Brenton, "haven't you had
+enough of this? Come with me; you can return to this house if you wish;"
+and together they passed out of the room into the crisp air of Christmas
+morning. But, although Brenton knew it must be cold, he had no feeling
+of either cold or warmth.
+
+"There are a number of us," said the stranger to Brenton, "who take
+turns at watching the sick-bed when a man is about to die, and when his
+spirit leaves his body, we are there to explain, or comfort, or console.
+Your death was so sudden that we had no warning of it. You did not feel
+ill before last night, did you?"
+
+"No," replied Brenton. "I felt perfectly well, until after dinner last
+night."
+
+"Did you leave your affairs in reasonably good order?"
+
+"Yes," said Brenton, trying to recollect. "I think they will find
+everything perfectly straight."
+
+"Tell me a little of your history, if you do not mind," inquired the
+other; "it will help me in trying to initiate you into our new order of
+things here."
+
+"Well," replied Brenton, and he wondered at himself for falling so
+easily into the other's assumption that he was a dead man, "I was what
+they call on the earth in reasonably good circumstances. My estate
+should be worth $100,000. I had $75,000 insurance on my life, and if all
+that is paid, it should net my widow not far from a couple of hundred
+thousand."
+
+"How long have you been married?" said the other.
+
+[Illustration: A Venetian café.]
+
+"Only about six months. I was married last July, and we went for a trip
+abroad. We were married quietly, and left almost immediately afterwards,
+so we thought, on our return, it would not be a bad plan to give a
+Christmas Eve dinner, and invite some of our friends. That," he said,
+hesitating a moment, "was last night. Shortly after dinner, I began to
+feel rather ill, and went upstairs to rest for a while; and if what you
+say is true, the first thing I knew I found myself dead."
+
+"Alive," corrected the other.
+
+"Well, alive, though at present I feel I belong more to the world I have
+left than I do to the world I appear to be in. I must confess, although
+you are a very plausible gentleman to talk to, that I expect at any
+moment to wake and find this to have been one of the most horrible
+nightmares that I ever had the ill luck to encounter."
+
+The other smiled.
+
+"There is very little danger of your waking up, as you call it. Now, I
+will tell you the great trouble we have with people when they first come
+to the spirit-land, and that is to induce them to forget entirely
+the world they have relinquished. Men whose families are in poor
+circumstances, or men whose affairs are in a disordered state, find it
+very difficult to keep from trying to set things right again. They have
+the feeling that they can console or comfort those whom they have left
+behind them, and it is often a long time before they are convinced that
+their efforts are entirely futile, as well as very distressing for
+themselves."
+
+"Is there, then," asked Brenton, "no communication between this world
+and the one that I have given up?"
+
+The other paused for a moment before he replied.
+
+"I should hardly like to say," he answered, "that there is _no_
+communication between one world and the other; but the communication
+that exists is so slight and unsatisfactory, that if you are sensible
+you will see things with the eyes of those who have very much more
+experience in this world than you have. Of course, you can go back there
+as much as you like; there will be no interference and no hindrance.
+But when you see things going wrong, when you see a mistake about to
+be made, it is an appalling thing to stand there helpless, unable to
+influence those you love, or to point out a palpable error, and convince
+them that your clearer sight sees it as such. Of course, I understand
+that it must be very difficult for a man who is newly married, to
+entirely abandon the one who has loved him, and whom he loves. But
+I assure you that if you follow the life of one who is as young and
+handsome as your wife, you will find some one else supplying the
+consolations you are unable to bestow. Such a mission may lead you to a
+church where she is married to her second husband. I regret to say that
+even the most imperturbable spirits are ruffled when such an incident
+occurs. The wise men are those who appreciate and understand that they
+are in an entirely new world, with new powers and new limitations, and
+who govern themselves accordingly from the first, as they will certainly
+do later on."
+
+"My dear sir," said Brenton, somewhat offended, "if what you say is
+true, and I am really a dead man----"
+
+"Alive," corrected the other.
+
+"Well, alive, then. I may tell you that my wife's heart is broken. She
+will never marry again."
+
+"Of course, that is a subject of which you know a great deal more than I
+do. I all the more strongly advise you never to see her again. It is
+impossible for you to offer any consolation, and the sight of her grief
+and misery will only result in unhappiness for yourself. Therefore, take
+my advice. I have given it very often, and I assure you those who did
+not take it expressed their regret afterwards. Hold entirely aloof from
+anything relating to your former life."
+
+Brenton was silent for some moments; finally he said--
+
+"I presume your advice is well meant; but if things are as you state,
+then I may as well say, first as last, that I do not intend to accept
+it."
+
+"Very well," said the other; "it is an experience that many prefer to go
+through for themselves."
+
+"Do you have names in this spirit-land?" asked Brenton, seemingly
+desirous of changing the subject.
+
+"Yes," was the answer; "we are known by names that we have used in the
+preparatory school below. My name is Ferris."
+
+"And if I wish to find you here, how do I set about it?"
+
+"The wish is sufficient," answered Ferris. "Merely wish to be with me,
+and you _are_ with me."
+
+"Good gracious!" cried Brenton, "is locomotion so easy as that?"
+
+"Locomotion is very easy. I do not think anything could be easier
+than it is, and I do not think there could be any improvement in that
+matter."
+
+"Are there matters here, then, that you think could be improved?"
+
+"As to that I shall not say. Perhaps you will be able to give your own
+opinion before you have lived here much longer."
+
+"Taking it all in all," said Brenton, "do you think the spirit-land is
+to be preferred to the one we have left?"
+
+"I like it better," said Ferris, "although I presume there are some
+who do not. There are many advantages; and then, again, there are
+many--well, I would not say disadvantages, but still some people
+consider them such. We are free from the pangs of hunger or cold, and
+have therefore no need of money, and there is no necessity for the rush
+and the worry of the world below."
+
+"And how about heaven and hell?" said Brenton. "Are those localities all
+a myth? Is there nothing of punishment and nothing of reward in this
+spirit-land?"
+
+There was no answer to this, and when Brenton looked around he found
+that his companion had departed.
+
+[Illustration: Venice.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+
+William Brenton pondered long on the situation. He would have known
+better how to act if he could have been perfectly certain that he was
+not still the victim of a dream. However, of one thing there was no
+doubt--namely, that it was particularly harrowing to see what he had
+seen in his own house. If it were true that he was dead, he said to
+himself, was not the plan outlined for him by Ferris very much the wiser
+course to adopt? He stood now in one of the streets of the city so
+familiar to him. People passed and repassed him--men and women whom
+he had known in life--but nobody appeared to see him. He resolved, if
+possible, to solve the problem uppermost in his mind, and learn whether
+or not he could communicate with an inhabitant of the world he had left.
+He paused for a moment to consider the best method of doing this. Then
+he remembered one of his most confidential friends and advisers, and at
+once wished himself at his office. He found the office closed, but went
+in to wait for his friend. Occupying the time in thinking over his
+strange situation, he waited long, and only when the bells began to ring
+did he remember it was Christmas forenoon, and that his friend would
+not be at the office that day. The next moment he wished himself at his
+friend's house, but he was as unsuccessful as at the office; the friend
+was not at home. The household, however, was in great commotion, and,
+listening to what was said, he found that the subject of conversation
+was his own death, and he learned that his friend had gone to the
+Brenton residence as soon as he heard the startling news of Christmas
+morning.
+
+Once more Brenton paused, and did not know what to do. He went again
+into the street. Everything seemed to lead him toward his own home.
+Although he had told Ferris that he did not intend to take his advice,
+yet as a sensible man he saw that the admonition was well worth
+considering, and if he could once become convinced that there was no
+communication possible between himself and those he had left; if he
+could give them no comfort and no cheer; if he could see the things
+which they did not see, and yet be unable to give them warning, he
+realized that he would merely be adding to his own misery, without
+alleviating the troubles of others.
+
+He wished he knew where to find Ferris, so that he might have another
+talk with him. The man impressed him as being exceedingly sensible. No
+sooner, however, had he wished for the company of Mr. Ferris than he
+found himself beside that gentleman.
+
+"By George!" he said in astonishment, "you are just the man I wanted to
+see."
+
+"Exactly," said Ferris; "that is the reason you do see me."
+
+"I have been thinking over what you said," continued the other, "and it
+strikes me that after all your advice is sensible."
+
+"Thank you," replied Ferris, with something like a smile on his face.
+
+"But there is one thing I want to be perfectly certain about. I want to
+know whether it is not possible for me to communicate with my friends.
+Nothing will settle that doubt in my mind except actual experience."
+
+"And have you not had experience enough?" asked Ferris.
+
+"Well," replied the other, hesitating, "I have had some experience, but
+it seems to me that, if I encounter an old friend, I could somehow make
+myself felt by him."
+
+"In that case," answered Ferris, "if nothing will convince you but an
+actual experiment, why don't you go to some of your old friends and try
+what you can do with them?"
+
+"I have just been to the office and to the residence of one of my old
+friends. I found at his residence that he had gone to my"--Brenton
+paused for a moment--"former home. Everything seems to lead me there,
+and yet, if I take your advice, I must avoid that place of all others."
+
+"I would at present, if I were you," said Ferris. "Still, why not try it
+with any of the passers-by?"
+
+Brenton looked around him. People were passing and repassing where the
+two stood talking with each other. "Merry Christmas" was the word on all
+lips. Finally Brenton said, with a look of uncertainty on his face--
+
+"My dear fellow, I can't talk to any of these people. I don't know
+them."
+
+Ferris laughed at this, and replied--
+
+"I don't think you will shock them very much; just try it."
+
+"Ah, here's a friend of mine. You wait a moment, and I will accost him."
+Approaching him, Brenton held out his hand and spoke, but the traveller
+paid no attention. He passed by as one who had seen or heard nothing.
+
+"I assure you," said Ferris, as he noticed the look of disappointment on
+the other's face, "you will meet with a similar experience, however much
+you try. You know the old saying about one not being able to have his
+cake and eat it too. You can't have the privileges of this world and
+those of the world you left as well. I think, taking it all in all, you
+should rest content, although it always hurts those who have left the
+other world not to be able to communicate with their friends, and at
+least assure them of their present welfare."
+
+"It does seem to me," replied Brenton, "that would be a great
+consolation, both for those who are here and those who are left."
+
+"Well, I don't know about that," answered the other. "After all, what
+does life in the other world amount to? It is merely a preparation for
+this. It is of so short a space, as compared with the life we live here,
+that it is hardly worth while to interfere with it one way or another.
+By the time you are as long here as I have been, you will realize the
+truth of this."
+
+"Perhaps I shall," said Brenton, with a sigh; "but, meanwhile, what am
+I to do with myself? I feel like the man who has been all his life
+in active business, and who suddenly resolves to enjoy himself doing
+nothing. That sort of thing seems to kill a great number of men,
+especially if they put off taking a rest until too late, as most of us
+do."
+
+"Well," said Ferris, "there is no necessity of your being idle here, I
+assure you. But before you lay out any work for yourself, let me ask you
+if there is not some interesting part of the world that you would like
+to visit?"
+
+"Certainly; I have seen very little of the world. That is one of my
+regrets at leaving it."
+
+"Bless me," said the other, "you haven't left it."
+
+"Why, I thought you said I was a dead man?"
+
+"On the contrary," replied his companion, "I have several times insisted
+that you have just begun to live. Now where shall we spend the day?"
+
+"How would London do?"
+
+"I don't think it would do; London is apt to be a little gloomy at this
+time of the year. But what do you say to Naples, or Japan, or, if you
+don't wish to go out of the United States, Yellowstone Park?"
+
+"Can we reach any of those places before the day is over?" asked
+Brenton, dubiously.
+
+"Well, I will soon show you how we manage all that. Just wish to
+accompany me, and I will take you the rest of the way."
+
+"How would Venice do?" said Brenton. "I didn't see half as much of that
+city as I wanted to."
+
+"Very well," replied his companion, "Venice it is;" and the American
+city in which they stood faded away from them, and before Brenton could
+make up his mind exactly what was happening, he found himself walking
+with his comrade in St. Mark's Square.
+
+"Well, for rapid transit," said Brenton, "this beats anything I've ever
+had any idea of; but it increases the feeling that I am in a dream."
+
+"You'll soon get used to it," answered Ferris; "and, when you do, the
+cumbersome methods of travel in the world itself will show themselves in
+their right light. Hello!" he cried, "here's a man whom I should
+like you to meet. By the way, I either don't know your name or I have
+forgotten it."
+
+"William Brenton," answered the other.
+
+"Mr. Speed, I want to introduce you to Mr. Brenton."
+
+"Ah," said Speed, cordially, "a new-comer. One of your victims, Ferris?"
+
+"Say one of his pupils, rather," answered Brenton.
+
+[Illustration: In Venice.]
+
+"Well, it is pretty much the same thing," said Speed. "How long have you
+been with us, and how do you like the country?"
+
+"You see, Mr. Brenton," interrupted Ferris, "John Speed was a newspaper
+man, and he must ask strangers how they like the country. He has
+inquired so often while interviewing foreigners for his paper that now
+he cannot abandon his old phrase. Mr. Brenton has been with us but a
+short time," continued Ferris, "and so you know, Speed, you can hardly
+expect him to answer your inevitable question."
+
+"What part of the country are you from?" asked Speed.
+
+"Cincinnati," answered Brenton, feeling almost as if he were an American
+tourist doing the continent of Europe.
+
+"Cincinnati, eh? Well, I congratulate you. I do not know any place in
+America that I would sooner die in, as they call it, than Cincinnati.
+You see, I am a Chicago man myself."
+
+Brenton did not like the jocular familiarity of the newspaper man, and
+found himself rather astonished to learn that in the spirit-world there
+were likes and dislikes, just as on earth.
+
+"Chicago is a very enterprising city," he said, in a non-committal way.
+
+"Chicago, my dear sir," said Speed, earnestly, "is _the_ city. You will
+see that Chicago is going to be the great city of the world before you
+are a hundred years older. By the way, Ferris," said the Chicago man,
+suddenly recollecting something, "I have got Sommers over here with me."
+
+"Ah!" said Ferris; "doing him any good?"
+
+"Well, precious little, as far as I can see."
+
+"Perhaps it would interest Mr. Brenton to meet him," said Ferris. "I
+think, Brenton, you asked me a while ago if there was any hell here, or
+any punishment. Mr. Speed can show you a man in hell."
+
+"Really?" asked Brenton.
+
+"Yes," said Speed; "I think if ever a man was in misery, he is. The
+trouble with Sommers was this. He--well, he died of delirium tremens,
+and so, of course, you know what the matter was. Sommers had drunk
+Chicago whisky for thirty-five years straight along, and never added to
+it the additional horror of Chicago water. You see what his condition
+became, both physical and mental. Many people tried to reform Sommers,
+because he was really a brilliant man; but it was no use. Thirst had
+become a disease with him, and from the mental part of that disease,
+although his physical yearning is now gone of course, he suffers.
+Sommers would give his whole future for one glass of good old Kentucky
+whisky. He sees it on the counters, he sees men drink it, and he stands
+beside them in agony. That's why I brought him over here. I thought that
+he wouldn't see the colour of whisky as it sparkles in the glass; but
+now he is in the Café Quadra watching men drink. You may see him sitting
+there with all the agony of unsatisfied desire gleaming from his face."
+
+"And what do you do with a man like that?" asked Brenton.
+
+"Do? Well, to tell the truth, there is nothing _to_ do. I took him away
+from Chicago, hoping to ease his trouble a little; but it has had no
+effect."
+
+"It will come out all right by-and-by," said Ferris, who noticed the
+pained look on Brenton's face. "It is the period of probation that
+he has to pass through. It will wear off. He merely goes through the
+agonies he would have suffered on earth if he had suddenly been deprived
+of his favourite intoxicant."
+
+"Well," said Speed, "you won't come with me, then? All right, good-bye.
+I hope to see you again, Mr. Brenton," and with that they separated.
+
+Brenton spent two or three days in Venice, but all the time the old home
+hunger was upon him. He yearned for news of Cincinnati. He wanted to be
+back, and several times the wish brought him there, but he instantly
+returned. At last he said to Ferris--
+
+"I am tired. I must go home. I have _got_ to see how things are going."
+
+"I wouldn't if I were you," replied Ferris.
+
+"No, I know you wouldn't. Your temperament is indifferent. I would
+rather be miserable with knowledge than happy in ignorance. Good-bye."
+
+It was evening when he found himself in Cincinnati. The weather was
+bright and clear, and apparently cold. Men's feet crisped on the frozen
+pavement, and the streets had that welcome, familiar look which they
+always have to the returned traveller when he reaches the city he calls
+his home. The newsboys were rushing through the streets yelling their
+papers at the top of their voices. He heard them, but paid little
+attention.
+
+"All about the murder! Latest edition! All about the poison case!"
+
+He felt that he must have a glimpse at a paper, and, entering the office
+of an hotel where a man was reading one, he glanced over his shoulder
+at the page before him, and was horror-stricken to see the words in
+startling headlines--
+
+ THE BRENTON MURDER.
+ _The Autopsy shows that Morphine was the Poison used.
+ Enough found to have killed a Dozen Men.
+ Mrs. Brenton arrested for Committing the Horrible
+ Deed_.
+
+[Illustration: The Brenton Murder.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+
+For a moment Brenton was so bewildered and amazed at the awful headlines
+which he read, that he could hardly realize what had taken place.
+The fact that he had been poisoned, although it gave him a strange
+sensation, did not claim his attention as much as might have been
+thought. Curiously enough he was more shocked at finding himself, as
+it were, the talk of the town, the central figure of a great newspaper
+sensation. But the thing that horrified him was the fact that his wife
+had been arrested for his murder. His first impulse was to go to her at
+once, but he next thought it better to read what the paper said about
+the matter, so as to become possessed of all the facts. The headlines,
+he said to himself, often exaggerated things, and there was a
+possibility that the body of the article would not bear out the naming
+announcement above it. But as he read on and on, the situation seemed
+to become more and more appalling. He saw that his friends had been
+suspicious of his sudden death, and had insisted on a post-mortem
+examination. That examination had been conducted by three of the most
+eminent physicians of Cincinnati, and the three doctors had practically
+agreed that the deceased, in the language of the verdict, had come to
+his death through morphia poisoning, and the coroner's jury had brought
+in a verdict that "the said William Brenton had been poisoned by some
+person unknown." Then the article went on to state how suspicion had
+gradually fastened itself upon his wife, and at last her arrest had been
+ordered. The arrest had taken place that day.
+
+[Illustration: Mrs. Brenton.]
+
+After reading this, Brenton was in an agony of mind. He pictured his
+dainty and beautiful wife in a stone cell in the city prison. He foresaw
+the horrors of the public trial, and the deep grief and pain which
+the newspaper comments on the case would cause to a woman educated and
+refined. Of course, Brenton had not the slightest doubt in his own mind
+about the result of the trial. His wife would be triumphantly acquitted;
+but, all the same, the terrible suspense which she must suffer in the
+meanwhile would not be compensated for by the final verdict of the jury.
+
+Brenton at once went to the jail, and wandered through that gloomy
+building, searching for his wife. At last he found her, but it was in
+a very comfortable room in the sheriffs residence. The terror and the
+trials of the last few days had aged her perceptibly, and it cut Brenton
+to the heart to think that he stood there before her, and could not by
+any means say a soothing word that she would understand. That she had
+wept many bitter tears since the terrible Christmas morning was evident;
+there were dark circles under her beautiful eyes that told of sleepless
+nights. She sat in a comfortable armchair, facing the window; and looked
+steadily out at the dreary winter scene with eyes that apparently saw
+nothing. Her hands lay idly on her lap, and now and then she caught her
+breath in a way that was half a sob and half a gasp.
+
+Presently the sheriff himself entered the room.
+
+"Mrs. Brenton," he said, "there is a gentleman here who wishes to see
+you. Mr. Roland, he tells me his name is, an old friend of yours. Do you
+care to see any one?"
+
+The lady turned her head slowly round, and looked at the sheriff for a
+moment, seemingly not understanding what he said. Finally she answered,
+dreamily--
+
+"Roland? Oh, Stephen! Yes, I shall be very glad to see him. Ask him to
+come in, please."
+
+The next moment Stephen Roland entered, and somehow the fact that he had
+come to console Mrs. Brenton did not at all please the invisible man who
+stood between them.
+
+"My dear Mrs. Brenton," began Roland, "I hope you are feeling better
+to-day? Keep up your courage, and be brave. It is only for a very short
+time. I have retained the noted criminal lawyers, Benham and Brown, for
+the defence. You could not possibly have better men."
+
+At the word "criminal" Mrs. Brenton shuddered.
+
+"Alice," continued Roland, sitting down near her, and drawing his chair
+closer to her, "tell me that you will not lose your courage. I want you
+to be brave, for the sake of your friends."
+
+He took her listless hand in his own, and she did not withdraw it.
+
+Brenton felt passing over him the pangs of impotent rage, as he saw this
+act on the part of Roland.
+
+Roland had been an unsuccessful suitor for the hand which he now held
+in his own, and Brenton thought it the worst possible taste, to say the
+least, that he should take advantage now of her terrible situation to
+ingratiate himself into her favour.
+
+The nearest approach to a quarrel that Brenton and his wife had had
+during their short six months of wedded life was on the subject of the
+man who now held her hand in his own. It made Brenton impatient to think
+that a woman with all her boasted insight into character, her instincts
+as to what was right and what was wrong, had such little real intuition
+that she did not see into the character of the man whom they were
+discussing; but a woman never thinks it a crime for a man to have been
+in love with her, whatever opinion of that man her husband may hold.
+
+"It is awful! awful! awful!" murmured the poor lady, as the tears again
+rose to her eyes.
+
+"Of course it is," said Roland; "it is particularly awful that they
+should accuse you, of all persons in the world, of this so-called crime.
+For my part I do not believe that he was poisoned at all, but we will
+soon straighten things out. Benham and Brown will give up everything
+and devote their whole attention to this case until it is finished.
+Everything will be done that money or friends can do, and all that we
+ask is that you keep up your courage, and do not be downcast with the
+seeming awfulness of the situation."
+
+Mrs. Brenton wept silently, but made no reply. It was evident, however,
+that she was consoled by the words and the presence of her visitor.
+Strange as it may appear, this fact enraged Brenton, although he had
+gone there for the very purpose of cheering and comforting his wife. All
+the bitterness he had felt before against his former rival was revived,
+and his rage was the more agonizing because it was inarticulate. Then
+there flashed over him Ferris's sinister advice to leave things alone in
+the world that he had left. He felt that he could stand this no longer,
+and the next instant he found himself again in the wintry streets of
+Cincinnati.
+
+The name of the lawyers, Benham and Brown, kept repeating itself in his
+mind, and he resolved to go to their office and hear, if he could, what
+preparations were being made for the defence of a woman whom he knew to
+be innocent. He found, when he got to the office of these noted lawyers,
+that the two principals were locked in their private room; and going
+there, he found them discussing the case with the coolness and
+impersonal feeling that noted lawyers have even when speaking of issues
+that involve life or death.
+
+"Yes," Benham was saying, "I think that, unless anything new turns up,
+that is the best line of defence we can adopt."
+
+"What do you think might turn up?" asked Brown.
+
+"Well, you can never tell in these cases. They may find something
+else--they may find the poison, for instance, or the package that
+contained it. Perhaps a druggist will remember having sold it to this
+woman, and then, of course, we shall have to change our plans. I need
+not say that it is strictly necessary in this case to give out no
+opinions whatever to newspaper men. The papers will be full of rumours,
+and it is just as well if we can keep our line of defence hidden until
+the time for action comes."
+
+"Still," said Brown, who was the younger partner, "it is as well to keep
+in with the newspaper fellows; they'll be here as soon as they find we
+have taken charge of the defence."
+
+"Well, I have no doubt you can deal with them in such a way as to give
+them something to write up, and yet not disclose anything we do not wish
+known."
+
+"I think you can trust me to do that," said Brown, with a self-satisfied
+air.
+
+"I shall leave that part of the matter entirely in your hands," replied
+Benham. "It is better not to duplicate or mix matters, and if any
+newspaper man comes to see me I will refer him to you. I will say I know
+nothing of the case whatever."
+
+"Very well," answered Brown. "Now, between ourselves, what do you think
+of the case?"
+
+[Illustration]
+
+"Oh, it will make a great sensation. I think it will probably be one of
+the most talked-of cases that we have ever been connected with."
+
+"Yes, but what do you think of her guilt or innocence?"
+
+"As to that," said Benham, calmly, "I haven't the slightest doubt. She
+murdered him."
+
+As he said this, Brenton, forgetting himself for a moment, sprang
+forward as if to strangle the lawyer. The statement Benham had made
+seemed the most appalling piece of treachery. That men should take a
+woman's money for defending her, and actually engage in a case when they
+believed their client guilty, appeared to Brenton simply infamous.
+
+"I agree with you," said Brown. "Of course she was the only one to
+benefit by his death. The simple fool willed everything to her, and she
+knew it; and his doing so is the more astounding when you remember he
+was quite well aware that she had a former lover whom she would gladly
+have married if he had been as rich as Brenton. The supreme idiocy of
+some men as far as their wives are concerned is something awful."
+
+[Illustration: Publicity.]
+
+"Yes," answered Benham, "it is. But I tell you, Brown, she is no
+ordinary woman. The very conception of that murder had a stroke of
+originality about it that I very much admire. I do not remember anything
+like it in the annals of crime. It is the true way in which a murder
+should be committed. The very publicity of the occasion was a safeguard.
+Think of poisoning a man at a dinner that he has given himself, in the
+midst of a score of friends. I tell you that there was a dash of bravery
+about it that commands my admiration."
+
+"Do you imagine Roland had anything to do with it?"
+
+"Well, I had my doubts about that at first, but I think he is innocent,
+although from what I know of the man he will not hesitate to share the
+proceeds of the crime. You mark my words, they will be married within
+a year from now if she is acquitted. I believe Roland knows her to be
+guilty."
+
+"I thought as much," said Brown, "by his actions here, and by some
+remarks he let drop. Anyhow, our credit in the affair will be all the
+greater if we succeed in getting her off. Yes," he continued, rising and
+pushing back his chair, "Madam Brenton is a murderess."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+
+Brenton found himself once more in the streets of Cincinnati, in a state
+of mind that can hardly be described. Rage and grief struggled for the
+mastery, and added to the tumult of these passions was the uncertainty
+as to what he should do, or what he _could_ do. He could hardly ask the
+advice of Ferris again, for his whole trouble arose from his neglect of
+the counsel that gentleman had already given him. In his new sphere he
+did not know where to turn. He found himself wondering whether in the
+spirit-land there was any firm of lawyers who could advise him, and he
+remembered then how singularly ignorant he was regarding the conditions
+of existence in the world to which he now belonged. However, he felt
+that he must consult with somebody, and Ferris was the only one to whom
+he could turn. A moment later he was face to face with him.
+
+"Mr. Ferris," he said, "I am in the most grievous trouble, and I come to
+you in the hope that, if you cannot help me, you can at least advise me
+what to do."
+
+"If your trouble has come," answered Ferris, with a shade of irony in
+his voice, "through following the advice that I have already given you,
+I shall endeavour, as well as I am able, to help you out of it."
+
+"You know very well," cried Brenton, hotly, "that my whole trouble
+has occurred through neglecting your advice, or, at least, through
+deliberately not following it. I _could_ not follow it."
+
+"Very well, then," said Ferris, "I am not surprised that you are in a
+difficulty. You must remember that such a crisis is an old story with us
+here."
+
+"But, my dear sir," said Brenton, "look at the appalling condition of
+things, the knowledge of which has just come to me. It seems I was
+poisoned, but of course that doesn't matter. I feel no resentment
+against the wretch who did it. But the terrible thing is that my wife
+has been arrested for the crime, and I have just learned that her own
+lawyers actually believe her guilty."
+
+"That fact," said Ferris, calmly, "will not interfere with their
+eloquent pleading when the case comes to trial."
+
+Brenton glared at the man who was taking things so coolly, and who
+proved himself so unsympathetic; but an instant after he realized the
+futility of quarrelling with the only person who could give him advice,
+so he continued, with what patience he could command--
+
+"The situation is this: My wife has been arrested for the crime of
+murdering me. She is now in the custody of the sheriff. Her trouble and
+anxiety of mind are fearful to contemplate."
+
+"My dear sir," said Ferris, "there is no reason why you or anybody else
+should contemplate it."
+
+"How can you talk in that cold-blooded way?" cried Brenton, indignantly.
+"Could you see _your_ wife, or any one _you_ held dear, incarcerated for
+a dreadful crime, and yet remain calm and collected, as you now appear
+to be when you hear of another's misfortune?"
+
+"My dear fellow," said Ferris, "of course it is not to be expected that
+one who has had so little experience with this existence should have any
+sense of proportion. You appear to be speaking quite seriously. You do
+not seem at all to comprehend the utter triviality of all this."
+
+"Good gracious!" cried Brenton, "do you call it a trivial thing that a
+woman is in danger of her life for a crime which she never committed?"
+
+"If she is innocent," said the other, in no way moved by the indignation
+of his comrade, "surely that state of things will be brought out in the
+courts, and no great harm will be done, even looking at things from the
+standpoint of the world you have left. But I want you to get into the
+habit of looking at things from the standpoint of this world, and not
+of the other. Suppose that what you would call the worst should
+happen--suppose she is hanged--what then?"
+
+Brenton stood simply speechless with indignation at this brutal remark.
+
+"If you will just look at things correctly," continued Ferris,
+imperturbably, "you will see that there is probably a moment of anguish,
+perhaps not even that moment, and then your wife is here with you in the
+land of spirits. I am sure that is a consummation devoutly to be wished.
+Even a man in your state of mind must see the reasonableness of this.
+Now, looking at the question in what you would call its most serious
+aspect, see how little it amounts to. It isn't worth a moment's thought,
+whichever way it goes."
+
+"You think nothing, then, of the disgrace of such a death--of the bitter
+injustice of it?"
+
+[Illustration: The broken toy.]
+
+"When you were in the world did you ever see a child cry over a broken
+toy? Did the sight pain you to any extent? Did you not know that a new
+toy could be purchased that would quite obliterate all thoughts of the
+other? Did the simple griefs of childhood carry any deep and lasting
+consternation to the mind of a grown-up man? Of course it did not. You
+are sensible enough to know that. Well, we here in this world look on
+the pain and struggles and trials of people in the world you have left,
+just as an aged man looks on the tribulations of children over a broken
+doll. That is all it really amounts to. That is what I mean when I say
+that you have not yet got your sense of proportion. Any grief and misery
+there is in the world you have left is of such an ephemeral, transient
+nature, that when we think for a moment of the free, untrammelled,
+and painless life there is beyond, those petty troubles sink into
+insignificance. My dear fellow, be sensible, take my advice. I have
+really a strong interest in you, and I advise you, entirely for your own
+welfare, to forget all about it. Very soon you will have something much
+more important to do than lingering around the world you have left. If
+your wife comes amongst us I am sure you will be glad to welcome her,
+and to teach her the things that you will have already found out of your
+new life. If she does not appear, then you will know that, even from the
+old-world standpoint, things have gone what you would call 'all right.'
+Let these trivial matters go, and attend to the vastly more important
+concerns that will soon engage your attention here."
+
+Ferris talked earnestly, and it was evident, even to Brenton, that he
+meant what he said. It was hard to find a pretext for a quarrel with a
+man at once so calm and so perfectly sure of himself.
+
+"We will not talk any more about it," said Brenton. "I presume people
+here agree to differ, just as they did in the world we have both left."
+
+"Certainly, certainly," answered Ferris. "Of course, you have just heard
+my opinion; but you will find myriads of others who do not share it with
+me. You will meet a great many who are interested in the subject of
+communication with the world they have left. You will, of course, excuse
+me when I say that I consider such endeavours not worth talking about."
+
+"Do you know any one who is interested in that sort of thing? and can
+you give me an introduction to him?"
+
+"Oh! for that matter," said Ferris, "you have had an introduction to one
+of the most enthusiastic investigators of the subject. I refer to Mr.
+John Speed, late of Chicago."
+
+"Ah!" said Brenton, rather dubiously. "I must confess that I was
+not very favourably impressed with Mr. Speed. Probably I did him an
+injustice."
+
+"You certainly did," said Ferris. "You will find Speed a man well worth
+knowing, even if he does waste himself on such futile projects as a
+scheme for communicating with a community so evanescent as that of
+Chicago. You will like Speed better the more you know him. He really is
+very philanthropic, and has Sommers on his hands just now. From what he
+said after you left Venice, I imagine he does not entertain the same
+feeling toward you as you do toward him. I would see Speed if I were
+you."
+
+"I will think about it," said Brenton, as they separated.
+
+To know that a man thinks well of a person is no detriment to further
+acquaintance with that man, even if the first impressions have not been
+favourable; and after Ferris told Brenton that Speed had thought well of
+him, Brenton found less difficulty in seeking the Chicago enthusiast.
+
+"I have been in a good deal of trouble," Brenton said to Speed, "and
+have been talking to Ferris about it. I regret to say that he gave me
+very little encouragement, and did not seem at all to appreciate my
+feelings in the matter."
+
+"Oh, you mustn't mind Ferris," said Speed. "He is a first-rate fellow,
+but he is as cold and unsympathetic as--well, suppose we say as an
+oyster. His great hobby is non-intercourse with the world we have left.
+Now, in that I don't agree with him, and there are thousands who don't
+agree with him. I admit that there are cases where a man is more unhappy
+if he frequents the old world than he would be if he left it alone. But
+then there are other cases where just the reverse is true. Take my own
+experience, for example; I take a peculiar pleasure in rambling around
+Chicago. I admit that it is a grievance to me, as an old newspaper man,
+to see the number of scoops I could have on my esteemed contemporaries,
+but--"
+
+"Scoop? What is that?" asked Brenton, mystified.
+
+"Why, a scoop is a beat, you know."
+
+"Yes, but I don't know. What is a beat?"
+
+"A beat or a scoop, my dear fellow, is the getting of a piece of news
+that your contemporary does not obtain. You never were in the newspaper
+business? Well, sir, you missed it. Greatest business in the world. You
+know everything that is going on long before anybody else does, and the
+way you can reward your friends and jump with both feet on your enemies
+is one of the delights of existence down there."
+
+"Well, what I wanted to ask you was this," said Brenton. "You have made
+a speciality of finding out whether there could be any communication
+between one of us, for instance, and one who is an inhabitant of the
+other world. Is such communication possible?"
+
+"I have certainly devoted some time to it, but I can't say that my
+success has been flattering. My efforts have been mostly in the line of
+news. I have come on some startling information which my facilities here
+gave me access to, and I confess I have tried my best to put some of the
+boys on to it. But there is a link loose somewhere. Now, what is your
+trouble? Do you want to get a message to anybody?"
+
+"My trouble is this," said Brenton, briefly, "I am here because a few
+days ago I was poisoned."
+
+"George Washington!" cried the other, "you don't say so! Have the
+newspapers got on to the fact?"
+
+"I regret to say that they have."
+
+"What an item that would have been if one paper had got hold of it and
+the others hadn't! I suppose they all got on to it at the same time?"
+
+"About that," said Brenton, "I don't know, and I must confess that I do
+not care very much. But here is the trouble--my wife has been arrested
+for my murder, and she is as innocent as I am."
+
+"Sure of that?"
+
+"_Sure_ of it?" cried the other indignantly. "Of course I am sure of
+it."
+
+"Then who is the guilty person?"
+
+"Ah, that," said Brenton, "I do not yet know."
+
+"Then how can you be sure she is not guilty?"
+
+"If you talk like that," exclaimed Brenton, "I have nothing more to
+say."
+
+"Now, don't get offended, I beg of you. I am merely looking at this from
+a newspaper standpoint, you know. You must remember it is not you
+who will decide the matter, but a jury of your very stupid
+fellow-countrymen. Now, you can never tell what a jury _will_ do, except
+that it will do something idiotic. Therefore, it seems to me that the
+very first step to be taken is to find out who the guilty party is.
+Don't you see the force of that?"
+
+"Yes, I do."
+
+"Very well, then. Now, what were the circumstances of this crime? who
+was to profit by your death?"
+
+Brenton winced at this.
+
+"I see how it is," said the other, "and I understand why you don't
+answer. Now--you'll excuse me if I am frank--your wife was the one who
+benefited most by your death, was she not?"
+
+"No," cried the other indignantly, "she was not the one. That is what
+the lawyers said. Why in the world should she want to poison me, when
+she had all my wealth at her command as it was?"
+
+"Yes, that's a strong point," said Speed. "You were a reasonably good
+husband, I suppose? Rather generous with the cash?"
+
+"Generous?" cried the other. "My wife always had everything she wanted."
+
+"Ah, well, there was no--you'll excuse me, I am sure--no former lover in
+the case, was there?"
+
+Again Brenton winced, and he thought of Roland sitting beside his wife
+with her hand in his.
+
+"I see," said Speed; "you needn't answer. Now what were the
+circumstances, again?"
+
+"They were these: At a dinner which I gave, where some twenty or
+twenty-five of my friends were assembled, poison, it appears, was put
+into my cup of coffee. That is all I know of it."
+
+"Who poured out that cup of coffee?"
+
+"My wife did."
+
+"Ah! Now, I don't for a moment say she is guilty, remember; but you must
+admit that, to a stupid jury, the case _might_ look rather bad against
+her."
+
+"Well, granted that it does, there is all the more need that I should
+come to her assistance if possible."
+
+"Certainly, certainly!" said Speed. "Now, I'll tell you what we have
+to do. We must get, if possible, one of the very brightest Chicago
+reporters on the track of this thing, and we have to get him on the
+track of it early. Come with me to Chicago. We will try an experiment,
+and I am sure you will lend your mind entirely to the effort. We must
+act in conjunction in this affair, and you are just the man I've been
+wanting, some one who is earnest and who has something at stake in the
+matter. We may fail entirely, but I think it's worth the trying. Will
+you come?"
+
+"Certainly," said Brenton; "and I cannot tell you how much I appreciate
+your interest and sympathy."
+
+Arriving at a brown stone building on the corner of two of the principal
+streets in Chicago, Brenton and Speed ascended quickly to one of the top
+floors. It was nearly midnight, and two upper stories of the huge dark
+building were brilliantly lighted, as was shown on the outside by the
+long rows of glittering windows. They entered a room where a man was
+seated at a table, with coat and vest thrown off, and his hat set well
+back on his head. Cold as it was outside, it was warm in this man's
+room, and the room was blue with smoke. A black corn-cob pipe was in his
+teeth, and the man was writing away as if for dear life, on sheets of
+coarse white copy paper, stopping now and then to fill up his pipe or to
+relight it after it had gone out.
+
+"There," said Speed, waving his hand towards the writer with a certain
+air of proprietory pride, "there sits one of the very cleverest men on
+the Chicago press. That fellow, sir, is gifted with a nose for news
+which has no equal in America. He will ferret out a case that he once
+starts on with an unerringness that would charm you. Yes, sir, I got him
+his present situation on this paper, and I can tell you it was a good
+one."
+
+"He must have been a warm friend of yours?" said Brenton, indifferently,
+as if he did not take much interest in the eulogy.
+
+"Quite the contrary," said Speed. "He was a warm enemy, made it mighty
+warm for _me_ sometimes. He was on an opposition paper, but I tell you,
+although I was no chicken in newspaper business, that man would scoop
+the daylight out of me any time he tried. So, to get rid of opposition,
+I got the managing editor to appoint him to a place on our paper; and
+I tell you, he has never regretted it. Yes, sir, there sits George
+Stratton, a man who knows his business. Now," he said, "let us
+concentrate our attention on him. First let us see whether, by putting
+our whole minds to it, we can make any impression on _his_ mind
+whatever. You see how busily he is engaged. He is thoroughly absorbed in
+his work. That is George all over. Whatever his assignment is, George
+throws himself right into it, and thinks of nothing else until it is
+finished. _Now_ then."
+
+In that dingy, well-lighted room George Stratton sat busily pencilling
+out the lines that were to appear in next morning's paper. He was
+evidently very much engrossed in his task, as Speed had said. If he
+had looked about him, which he did not, he would have said that he was
+entirely alone. All at once his attention seemed to waver, and he passed
+his hand over his brow, while perplexity came into his face. Then he
+noticed that his pipe was out, and, knocking the ashes from it by
+rapping the bowl on the side of the table, he filled it with an
+absent-mindedness unusual with him. Again he turned to his writing, and
+again he passed his hand over his brow. Suddenly, without any apparent
+cause, he looked first to the right and then to the left of him. Once
+more he tried to write, but, noticing his pipe was out, he struck
+another match and nervously puffed away, until clouds of blue smoke rose
+around him. There was a look of annoyance and perplexity in his face as
+he bent resolutely to his writing. The door opened, and a man appeared
+on the threshold.
+
+"Anything more about the convention, George?" he said.
+
+"Yes; I am just finishing this. Sort of pen pictures, you know."
+
+"Perhaps you can let me have what you have done. I'll fix it up."
+
+"All right," said Stratton, bunching up the manuscript in front of him,
+and handing it to the city editor.
+
+That functionary looked at the number of pages, and then at the writer.
+
+"Much more of this, George?" he said. "We'll be a little short of room
+in the morning, you know."
+
+"Well," said the other, sitting back in his chair, "it is pretty good
+stuff that. Folks always like the pen pictures of men engaged in the
+skirmish better than the reports of what most of them say."
+
+"Yes," said the city editor, "that's so."
+
+"Still," said Stratton, "we could cut it off at the last page. Just let
+me see the last two pages, will you?"
+
+These were handed to him, and, running his eye through them, he drew his
+knife across one of the pages, and put at the bottom the cabalistic mark
+which indicated the end of the copy.
+
+"There! I think I will let it go at that. Old Rickenbeck don't amount to
+much, anyhow. We'll let him go."
+
+"All right," said the city editor. "I think we won't want anything more
+to-night."
+
+[Illustration: "She's pretty as a picture."]
+
+Stratton put his hands behind his head, with his fingers interlaced, and
+leaned back in his chair, placing his heels upon the table before him.
+A thought-reader, looking at his face, could almost have followed the
+theme that occupied his mind. Suddenly bringing his feet down with a
+crash to the floor, he rose and went into the city editor's room.
+
+"See here," he said. "Have you looked into that Cincinnati case at all?"
+
+"What Cincinnati case?" asked the local editor, looking up.
+
+"Why, that woman who is up for poisoning her husband."
+
+"Oh yes; we had something of it in the despatches this morning. It's
+rather out of the local line, you know."
+
+"Yes, I know it is. But it isn't out of the paper's line. I tell you
+that case is going to make a sensation. She's pretty as a picture. Been
+married only six months, and it seems to be a dead sure thing that
+she poisoned her husband. That trial's going to make racy reading,
+especially if they bring in a verdict of guilty."
+
+The city editor looked interested.
+
+"Want to go down there, George?"
+
+"Well, do you know, I think it'll pay."
+
+"Let me see, this is the last day of the convention, isn't it? And Clark
+comes back from his vacation to-morrow. Well, if you think it's worth
+it, take a trip down there, and look the ground over, and give us a
+special article that we can use on the first day of the trial."
+
+"I'll do it," said George.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Speed looked at Brenton.
+
+"What would old Ferris say _now_, eh?"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+
+Next morning George Stratton was on the railway train speeding towards
+Cincinnati. As he handed to the conductor his mileage book, he did not
+say to him, lightly transposing the old couplet--
+
+ "Here, railroad man, take thrice thy fee,
+ For spirits twain do ride with me."
+
+George Stratton was a practical man, and knew nothing of spirits, except
+those which were in a small flask in his natty little valise.
+
+When he reached Cincinnati, he made straight for the residence of the
+sheriff. He felt that his first duty was to become friends with such an
+important official. Besides this, he wished to have an interview with
+the prisoner. He had arranged in his mind, on the way there, just how he
+would write a preliminary article that would whet the appetite of the
+readers of the Chicago _Argus_ for any further developments that might
+occur during and after the trial. He would write the whole thing in the
+form of a story.
+
+[Illustration: "Raising the veil."]
+
+First, there would be a sketch of the life of Mrs. Brenton and her
+husband. This would be number one, and above it would be the Roman
+numeral I. Under the heading II. would be a history of the crime. Under
+III. what had occurred afterwards--the incidents that had led suspicion
+towards the unfortunate woman, and that sort of thing. Under the numeral
+IV. would be his interview with the prisoner, if he were fortunate
+enough to get one. Under V. he would give the general opinion of
+Cincinnati on the crime, and on the guilt or innocence of Mrs. Brenton.
+This article he already saw in his mind's eye occupying nearly half a
+page of the _Argus_. All would be in leaded type, and written in a style
+and manner that would attract attention, for he felt that he was
+first on the ground, and would not have the usual rush in preparing
+his copy which had been the bane of his life. It would give the
+_Argus_ practically the lead in this case, which he was convinced
+would become one of national importance.
+
+The sheriff received him courteously, and, looking at the card he
+presented, saw the name Chicago _Argus_ in the corner. Then he stood
+visibly on his guard--an attitude assumed by all wise officials when
+they find themselves brought face to face with a newspaper man; for
+they know, however carefully an article may be prepared, it will likely
+contain some unfortunate overlooked phrase which may have a damaging
+effect in a future political campaign.
+
+"I wanted to see you," began Stratton, coming straight to the point, "in
+reference to the Brenton murder."
+
+"I may say at once," replied the sheriff, "that if you wish an interview
+with the prisoner, it is utterly impossible, because her lawyers, Benham
+and Brown, have positively forbidden her to see a newspaper man."
+
+"That shows," said Stratton, "they are wise men who understand their
+business. Nevertheless, I wish to have an interview with Mrs. Brenton.
+But what I wanted to say to you is this: I believe the case will be very
+much talked about, and that before many weeks are over. Of course you
+know the standing the _Argus_ has in newspaper circles. What it says
+will have an influence, even over the Cincinnati press. I think you will
+admit that. Now a great many newspaper men consider an official their
+natural enemy. I do not; at least, I do not until I am forced to. Any
+reference that I may make to you I am more than willing to submit to you
+before it goes to Chicago. I will give you my word, if you want it, that
+nothing will be said referring to your official position, or to yourself
+personally, that you do not see before it appears in print. Of course
+you will be up for re-election. I never met a sheriff who wasn't."
+
+The sheriff smiled at this, and did not deny it.
+
+"Very well. Now, I may tell you my belief is that this case is going
+to have a powerful influence on your re-election. Here is a young and
+pretty woman who is to be tried for a terrible crime. Whether she is
+guilty or innocent, public sympathy is going to be with her. If I were
+in your place, I would prefer to be known as her friend rather than as
+her enemy."
+
+"My dear sir," said the sheriff, "my official position puts me in the
+attitude of neither friend nor enemy of the unfortunate woman. I have
+simply a certain duty to do, and that duty I intend to perform."
+
+"Oh, that's all right!" exclaimed the newspaper man, jauntily. "I, for
+one, am not going to ask you to take a step outside your duties; but an
+official may do his duty, and yet, at the same time, do a friendly act
+for a newspaper man, or even for a prisoner. In the language of the old
+chestnut, 'If you don't help me, don't help the bear.' That's all I
+ask."
+
+"You maybe sure, Mr. Stratton, that anything I can do to help you I
+shall be glad to do; and now let me give you a hint. If you want to see
+Mrs. Brenton, the best thing is to get permission from her lawyers. If
+I were you I would not see Benham--he's rather a hard nut, Benham is,
+although you needn't tell him I said so. You get on the right side of
+Brown. Brown has some political aspirations himself, and he does not
+want to offend a man on so powerful a paper as the _Argus_, even if it
+is not a Cincinnati paper. Now, if you make him the same offer you have
+made to me, I think it will be all right. If he sees your copy before it
+goes into print, and if you keep your word with him that nothing will
+appear that he does _not_ see, I think you will succeed in getting an
+interview with Mrs. Brenton. If you bring me a note from Brown, I shall
+be very glad to allow you to see her."
+
+Stratton thanked the sheriff for his hint. He took down in his note-book
+the address of the lawyers, and the name especially of Mr. Brown. The
+two men shook hands, and Stratton felt that they understood each other.
+
+When Mr. Stratton was ushered into the private office of Brown, and
+handed that gentleman his card, he noticed the lawyer perceptibly freeze
+over.
+
+"Ahem," said the legal gentleman; "you will excuse me if I say that my
+time is rather precious. Did you wish to see me professionally?"
+
+"Yes," replied Stratton, "that is, from a newspaper standpoint of the
+profession."
+
+"Ah," said the other, "in reference to what?"
+
+"To the Brenton case."
+
+"Well, my dear sir, I have had, very reluctantly, to refuse information
+that I would have been happy to give, if I could, to our own newspaper
+men; and so I may say to you at once that I scarcely think it will
+be possible for me to be of any service to an outside paper like the
+_Argus_"
+
+"Local newspaper men," said Stratton, "represent local fame. That
+you already possess. I represent national fame, which, if you will
+excuse my saying so, you do not yet possess. The fact that I am in
+Cincinnati to-day, instead of in Chicago, shows what we Chicago people
+think of the Cincinnati case. I believe, and the _Argus_ believes, that
+this case is going to be one of national importance. Now, let me ask you
+one question. Will you state frankly what your objection is to having
+a newspaper man, for instance, interview Mrs. Brenton, or get any
+information relating to this case from her or others whom you have the
+power of controlling?"
+
+"I shall answer that question," said Brown, "as frankly as you put
+it. You are a man of the world, and know, of course, that we are all
+selfish, and in business matters look entirely after our own interests.
+My interest in this case is to defend my client. Your interest in
+this case is to make a sensational article. You want to get facts if
+possible, but, in any event, you want to write up a readable column or
+two for your paper. Now, if I allowed you to see Mrs. Brenton, she might
+say something to you, and you might publish it, that would not only
+endanger her chances, but would seriously embarrass us, as her lawyers,
+in our defence of the case."
+
+"You have stated the objection very plainly and forcibly," said
+Stratton, with a look of admiration, as if the powerful arguments of
+the lawyer had had a great effect on him. "Now, if I understand your
+argument, it simply amounts to this, that you would have no objection to
+my interviewing Mrs. Brenton if you have the privilege of editing the
+copy. In other words, if nothing were printed but what you approve
+of, you would not have the slightest hesitancy about allowing me that
+interview."
+
+"No, I don't know that I would," admitted the lawyer.
+
+"Very well, then. Here is my proposition to you: I am here to look after
+the interests of our paper in this particular case. The _Argus_ is
+probably going to be the first paper outside of Cincinnati that will
+devote a large amount of space to the Brenton trial, in addition to what
+is received from the Associated Press dispatches. Now you can give me a
+great many facilities in this matter if you care to do so, and in return
+I am perfectly willing to submit to you every line of copy that concerns
+you or your client before it is sent, and I give you my word of honour
+that nothing shall appear but what you have seen and approved of. If
+you want to cut out something that I think is vitally important, then I
+shall tell you frankly that I intend to print it, but will modify it as
+much as I possibly can to suit your views."
+
+"I see," said the lawyer. "In other words, as you have just remarked,
+I am to give you special facilities in this matter, and then, when you
+find out some fact which I wish kept secret, and which you have obtained
+because of the facilities I have given to you, you will quite frankly
+tell me that it must go in, and then, of course, I shall be helpless
+except to debar you from any further facilities, as you call them. No,
+sir, I do not care to make any such bargain."
+
+"Well, suppose I strike out that clause of agreement, and say to you
+that I will send nothing but what you approve of, would you then write
+me a note to the sheriff and allow me to see the prisoner?"
+
+"I am sorry to say"--the lawyer hesitated for a moment, and glanced at
+the card, then added--"Mr. Stratton, that I do not see my way clear to
+granting your request."
+
+"I think," said Stratton, rising, "that you are doing yourself an
+injustice. You are refusing--I may as well tell you first as last--what
+is a great privilege. Now, you have had some experience in your
+business, and I have had some experience in mine, and I beg to inform
+you that men who are much more prominent in the history of their country
+than any one I can at present think of in Cincinnati, have tried to balk
+me in the pursuit of my business, and have failed."
+
+"In that matter, of course," said Brown, "I must take my chances. I
+don't see the use of prolonging this interview. As you have been so
+frank as to--I won't say threaten, perhaps warn is the better word--as
+you have been so good as to warn me, I may, before we part, just give
+_you_ a word of caution. Of course we, in Cincinnati, are perfectly
+willing to admit that Chicago people are the smartest on earth, but I
+may say that if you print a word in your paper which is untrue and which
+is damaging to our side of the case, or if you use any methods that
+are unlawful in obtaining the information you so much desire, you will
+certainly get your paper into trouble, and you will run some little
+personal risk yourself."
+
+"Well, as you remarked a moment ago, Mr. Brown, I shall have to take the
+chances of that. I am here to get the news, and if I don't succeed it
+will be the first time in my life."
+
+"Very well, sir," said the lawyer. "I wish you good evening."
+
+"Just one thing more," said the newspaper man, "before I leave you."
+
+"My dear sir," said the lawyer, impatiently, "I am very busy. I've
+already given you a liberal share of my time. I must request that this
+interview end at once."
+
+"I thought," said Mr. Stratton, calmly, "that perhaps you might be
+interested in the first article that I am going to write. I shall devote
+one column in the _Argus_ of the day after to-morrow to your defence of
+the case, and whether your theory of defence is a tenable one or not."
+
+Mr. Brown pushed back his chair and looked earnestly at the young man.
+That individual was imperturbably pulling on his gloves, and at the
+moment was buttoning one of them.
+
+"Our _defence_!" cried the lawyer. "What do you know of our defence?"
+
+"My dear sir," said Stratton, "I know _all_ about it."
+
+"Sir, that is impossible. Nobody knows what our defence is to be except
+Mr. Benham and myself."
+
+"And Mr. Stratton, of the Chicago _Argus_," replied the young man, as he
+buttoned his coat.
+
+"May I ask, then, what the defence is?"
+
+"Certainly," answered the Chicago man. "Your defence is that Mr. Brenton
+was insane, and that he committed suicide."
+
+Even Mr. Brown's habitual self-control, acquired by long years of
+training in keeping his feelings out of sight, for the moment deserted
+him. He drew his breath sharply, and cast a piercing glance at the young
+man before him, who was critically watching the lawyer's countenance,
+although he appeared to be entirely absorbed in buttoning his overcoat.
+Then Mr. Brown gave a short, dry laugh.
+
+"I have met a bluff before," he said carelessly; "but I should like to
+know what makes you think that such is our defence?"
+
+"_Think_!" cried the young man. "I don't think at all; I _know_ it."
+
+"How do you know it?"
+
+"Well, for one thing, I know it by your own actions a moment ago. What
+first gave me an inkling of your defence was that book which is on
+your table. It is Forbes Winslow on the mind and the brain; a very
+interesting book, Mr. Brown, _very_ interesting indeed. It treats of
+suicide, and the causes and conditions of the brain that will lead up
+to it. It is a very good book, indeed, to study in such a case. Good
+evening, Mr. Brown. I am sorry that we cannot co-operate in this
+matter."
+
+Stratton turned and walked toward the door, while the lawyer gazed after
+him with a look of helpless astonishment on his face. As Stratton placed
+his hand on the door knob, the lawyer seemed to wake up as from a dream.
+
+"Stop!" he cried; "I will give you a letter that will admit you to Mrs.
+Brenton."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+
+"There!" said Speed to Brenton, triumphantly, "what do you think of
+_that_? Didn't I say George Stratton was the brightest newspaper man in
+Chicago? I tell you, his getting that letter from old Brown was one of
+the cleverest bits of diplomacy I ever saw. There you had quickness of
+perception, and nerve. All the time he was talking to old Brown he was
+just taking that man's measure. See how coolly he acted while he was
+drawing on his gloves and buttoning his coat as if ready to leave. Flung
+that at Brown all of a sudden as quiet as if he was saying nothing at
+all unusual, and all the time watching Brown out of the tail of his eye.
+Well, sir, I must admit, that although I have known George Stratton for
+years, I thought he was dished by that Cincinnati lawyer. I thought that
+George was just gracefully covering up his defeat, and there he upset
+old Brown's apple-cart in the twinkling of an eye. Now, you see the
+effect of all this. Brown has practically admitted to him what the line
+of defence is. Stratton won't publish it, of course; he has promised not
+to, but you see he can hold that over Brown's head, and get everything
+he wants unless they change their defence."
+
+"Yes," remarked Brenton, slowly, "he seems to be a very sharp newspaper
+man indeed; but I don't like the idea of his going to interview my
+wife."
+
+"Why, what is there wrong about that?"
+
+"Well, there is this wrong about it--that she in her depression may say
+something that will tell against her."
+
+"Even if she does, what of it? Isn't the lawyer going to see the letter
+before it is sent to the paper?"
+
+"I am not so sure about that. Do you think Stratton will show the
+article to Brown if he gets what you call a scoop or a beat?"
+
+"Why, of course he will," answered Speed, indignantly; "hasn't he given
+him his word that he will?"
+
+"Yes, I know he has," said Brenton, dubiously; "but he is a newspaper
+man."
+
+"Certainly he is," answered Speed, with strong emphasis; "that is the
+reason he will keep his word."
+
+"I hope so, I hope so; but I must admit that the more I know you
+newspaper men, the more I see the great temptation you are under to
+preserve if possible the sensational features of an article."
+
+"I'll bet you a drink--no, we can't do that," corrected Speed; "but you
+shall see that, if Brown acts square with Stratton, he will keep his
+word to the very letter with Brown. There is no use in our talking about
+the matter here. Let us follow Stratton, and see what comes of the
+interview."
+
+"I think I prefer to go alone," said Brenton, coldly.
+
+"Oh, as you like, as you like," answered the other, shortly. "I thought
+you wanted my help in this affair; but if you don't, I am sure I shan't
+intrude."
+
+"That's all right," said Brenton; "come along. By the way, Speed, what
+do you think of that line of defence?"
+
+"Well, I don't know enough of the circumstances of the case to know what
+to think of it. It seems to me rather a good line."
+
+"It can't be a good line when it is not true. It is certain to break
+down."
+
+"That's so," said Speed; "but I'll bet you four dollars and a half that
+they'll prove you a raving maniac before they are through with you.
+They'll show very likely that you tried to poison yourself two or three
+times; bring on a dozen of your friends to prove that they knew all your
+life you were insane."
+
+"Do you think they will?" asked Brenton, uneasily.
+
+"Think it? Why, I am sure of it. You'll go down to posterity as one of
+the most complete lunatics that ever, lived in Cincinnati. Oh, there
+won't be anything left of you when _they_ get through with you."
+
+Meanwhile, Stratton was making his way to the residence of the sheriff.
+
+"Ah," said that official, when they met, "you got your letter, did you?
+Well, I thought you would."
+
+"If you had heard the conversation between my estimable friend Mr. Brown
+and myself, up to the very last moment, you wouldn't have thought it."
+
+"Well, Brown is generally very courteous towards newspaper men, and
+that's one reason you see his name in the papers a great deal."
+
+"If I were a Cincinnati newspaper man, I can assure you that his name
+wouldn't appear very much in the columns of my paper."
+
+"I am sorry to hear you say that. I thought Brown was very popular with
+the newspaper men. You got the letter, though, did you?"
+
+"Yes; I got it. Here it is. Read it."
+
+The sheriff scanned the brief note over, and put it in his pocket.
+
+"Just take a chair for a moment, will you, and I will see if Mrs.
+Brenton is ready to receive you."
+
+[Illustration: Jane.]
+
+Stratton seated himself, and, pulling a paper from his pocket, was
+busily reading when the sheriff again entered.
+
+"I am sorry to say," he began, "after you have had all this trouble,
+that Mrs. Brenton positively refuses to see you. You know I cannot
+_compel_ a prisoner to meet any one. You understand that, of course."
+
+"Perfectly," said Stratton, thinking for a moment. "See here, sheriff,
+I have simply _got_ to have a talk with that woman. Now, can't you tell
+her I knew her husband, or something of that sort? I'll make it all
+right when I see her."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"The scoundrel!" said Brenton to Speed, as Stratton made this remark.
+
+"My dear sir," said Speed, "don't you see he is just the man we want?
+This is not the time to be particular."
+
+"Yes, but think of the treachery and meanness of telling a poor
+unfortunate woman that he was acquainted with her husband, who is only a
+few days dead."
+
+"Now, see here," said Speed, "if you are going to look on matters in
+this way you will be a hindrance and not a help in the affair. Don't you
+appreciate the situation? Why, Mrs. Brenton's own lawyers, as you have
+said, think her guilty. What, then, can they learn by talking with her,
+or what good can they do her with their minds already prejudiced against
+her? Don't you see that?"
+
+Brenton made no answer to this, but it was evident he was very ill at
+ease.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"Did you know her husband?" asked the sheriff.
+
+"No, to tell you the truth, I never heard of him before. But I must see
+this lady, both for my good and hers, and I am not going to let a little
+thing like that stand between us. Won't you tell her that I have come
+with a letter from her own lawyers? Just show her the letter, and say
+that I will take up but very little of her time. I am sorry to ask this
+much of you, but you see how I am placed."
+
+"Oh, that's all right," said the sheriff, good-naturedly; "I shall be
+very glad to do what you wish," and with that he once more disappeared.
+
+The sheriff stayed away longer this time, and Stratton paced the room
+impatiently. Finally, the official returned, and said--
+
+"Mrs. Brenton has consented to see you. Come this way, please. You
+will excuse me, I know," continued the sheriff, as they walked along
+together, "but it is part of my duty to remain in the room while you
+are talking with Mrs. Brenton."
+
+"Certainly, certainly," said Stratton; "I understand that."
+
+"Very well; then, if I may make a suggestion, I would say this: you
+should be prepared to ask just what you want to know, and do it all as
+speedily as possible, for really Mrs. Brenton is in a condition of
+nervous exhaustion that renders it almost cruel to put her through any
+rigid cross-examination."
+
+"I understand that also," said Stratton; "but you must remember
+that she has a very much harder trial to undergo in the future. I am
+exceedingly anxious to get at the truth of this thing, and so, if it
+seems to you that I am asking a lot of very unnecessary questions, I
+hope you will not interfere with me as long as Mrs. Brenton consents to
+answer."
+
+"I shall not interfere at all," said the sheriff; "I only wanted to
+caution you, for the lady may break down at any moment. If you can
+marshal your questions so that the most important ones come first, I
+think it will be wise. I presume you have them pretty well arranged in
+your own mind?"
+
+"Well, I can't say that I have; you see, I am entirely in the dark. I
+got no help whatever from the lawyers, and from what I know of their
+defence I am thoroughly convinced that they are on the wrong track."
+
+"What! did Brown say anything about the defence? That is not like his
+usual caution."
+
+"He didn't intend to," answered Stratton; "but I found out all I wanted
+to know, nevertheless. You see, I shall have to ask what appears to be a
+lot of rambling, inconsequential questions because you can never tell in
+a case like this when you may get the key to the whole mystery."
+
+"Well, here we are," said the sheriff, as he knocked at a door, and then
+pushed it open.
+
+From the moment George Stratton saw Mrs. Brenton his interest in the
+case ceased to be purely journalistic.
+
+Mrs. Brenton was standing near the window, and she appeared to be very
+calm and collected, but her fingers twitched nervously, clasping and
+unclasping each other. Her modest dress of black was certainly a very
+becoming one.
+
+George thought he had never seen a woman so beautiful.
+
+As she was standing up, she evidently intended the interview to be a
+short one.
+
+"Madam," said Stratton, "I am very sorry indeed to trouble you; but I
+have taken a great interest in the solution of this mystery, and I have
+your lawyers' permission to visit you. I assure you, anything you say
+will be submitted to them, so that there will be no danger of your case
+being prejudiced by any statements made."
+
+"I am not afraid," said Mrs. Brenton, "that the truth will injure or
+prejudice my case."
+
+"I am sure of that," answered the newspaper man; and then, knowing that
+she would not sit down if he asked her to, he continued diplomatically,
+"Madam, will you permit me to sit down? I wish to write out my notes as
+carefully as possible. Accuracy is my strong point."
+
+"Certainly," said Mrs. Brenton; and, seeing that it was not probable the
+interview would be a short one, she seated herself by the window, while
+the sheriff took a chair in the corner, and drew a newspaper from his
+pocket.
+
+"Now, madam," said the special, "a great number of the questions I ask
+you may seem trivial, but as I said to the sheriff a moment ago, some
+word of yours that appears to you entirely unconnected with the case may
+give me a clue which will be exceedingly valuable. You will, therefore,
+I am sure, pardon me if some of the questions I ask you appear
+irrelevant."
+
+Mrs. Brenton bowed her head, but said nothing.
+
+"Were your husband's business affairs in good condition at the time of
+his death?"
+
+"As far as I know they were."
+
+"Did you ever see anything in your husband's actions that would lead you
+to think him a man who might have contemplated suicide?"
+
+Mrs. Brenton looked up with wide-open eyes.
+
+"Certainly not," she said.
+
+"Had he ever spoken to you on the subject of suicide?"
+
+"I do not remember that he ever did."
+
+"Was he ever queer in his actions? In short, did you ever notice
+anything about him that would lead you to doubt his sanity? I am sorry
+if questions I ask you seem painful, but I have reasons for wishing to
+be certain on this point."
+
+"No," said Mrs. Brenton; "he was perfectly sane. No man could have been
+more so. I am certain that he never thought of committing suicide."
+
+"Why are you so certain on that point?"
+
+"I do not know why. I only know I am positive of it."
+
+"Do you know if he had any enemy who might wish his death?"
+
+"I doubt if he had an enemy in the world. I do not know of any."
+
+"Have you ever heard him speak of anybody in a spirit of enmity?"
+
+"Never. He was not a man who bore enmity against people. Persons whom he
+did not like he avoided."
+
+"The poison, it is said, was put into his cup of coffee. Do you happen
+to know," said Stratton, turning to the sheriff, "how they came to that
+conclusion?"
+
+"No, I do not," answered the sheriff. "In fact, I don't see any reason
+why they should think so."
+
+"Was morphia found in the coffee cup afterwards?"
+
+"No; at the time of the inquest all the things had been cleared away. I
+think it was merely presumed that the morphine was put into his coffee."
+
+"Who poured out the coffee he drank that night?"
+
+"I did," answered his wife.
+
+"You were at one end of the table and he at the other, I suppose?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"How did the coffee cup reach him?"
+
+"I gave it to the servant, and she placed it before him."
+
+"It passed through no other hands, then?"
+
+"No."
+
+"Who was the servant?"
+
+Mrs. Brenton pondered for a moment.
+
+"I really know very little about her. She had been in our house for a
+couple of weeks only."
+
+"What was her name?"
+
+"Jane Morton, I think."
+
+"Where is she now, do you know?"
+
+"I do not know."
+
+"She appeared at the inquest, of course?" said Stratton, turning to the
+sheriff.
+
+"I think she did," was the answer. "I am not sure."
+
+He marked her name down in the note-book.
+
+"How many people were there at the dinner?"
+
+"Including my husband and myself, there were twenty-six."
+
+"Could you give me the name of each of them?"
+
+"Yes, I think so."
+
+She repeated the names, which he took down, with certain notes and
+comments on each.
+
+"Who sat next your husband at the head of the table?"
+
+"Miss Walker was at his right hand, Mr. Roland at his left."
+
+"Now, forgive me if I ask you if you have ever had any trouble with your
+husband?"
+
+"Never."
+
+"Never had any quarrel?"
+
+Mrs. Brenton hesitated for a moment.
+
+"No, I don't think we ever had what could be called a quarrel."
+
+"You had no disagreement shortly before the dinner?"
+
+Again Mrs. Brenton hesitated.
+
+"I can hardly call it a disagreement," she said. "We had a little
+discussion about some of the guests who were to be invited."
+
+"Did he object to any that were there?"
+
+"There was a gentleman there whom he did not particularly like, I think,
+but he made no objection to his coming; in fact, he seemed to feel that
+I might imagine he had an objection from a little discussion we had
+about inviting him; and afterwards, as if to make up for that, he placed
+this guest at his left hand."
+
+Stratton quickly glanced up the page of his notebook, and marked a
+little cross before the name of Stephen Roland.
+
+"You had another disagreement with him before, if I might term it so,
+had you not?"
+
+Mrs. Brenton looked at him surprised.
+
+"What makes you think so?" she said.
+
+"Because you hesitated when I spoke of it."
+
+"Well, we had what you might call a disagreement once at Lucerne,
+Switzerland."
+
+"Will you tell me what it was about?"
+
+"I would rather not."
+
+"Will you tell me this--was it about a gentleman?"
+
+"Yes," said Mrs. Brenton.
+
+"Was your husband of a jealous disposition?"
+
+"Ordinarily I do not think he was. It seemed to me at the time that he
+was a little unjust--that's all."
+
+"Was the gentleman in Lucerne?"
+
+"Oh no!"
+
+"In Cincinnati?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Was his name Stephen Roland?"
+
+Mrs. Brenton again glanced quickly at the newspaper man, and seemed
+about to say something, but, checking herself, she simply answered--
+
+"Yes."
+
+Then she leaned back in the armchair and sighed.
+
+"I am very tired," she said. "If it is not absolutely necessary, I
+prefer not to continue this conversation."
+
+Stratton immediately rose.
+
+"Madam," he said, "I am very much obliged to you for the trouble you
+have taken to answer my questions, which I am afraid must have seemed
+impertinent to you, but I assure you that I did not intend them to be
+so. Now, madam, I would like very much to get a promise from you. I wish
+that you would promise to see me if I call again, and I, on my part,
+assure you that unless I have something particularly important to tell
+you, or to ask, I shall not intrude upon you."
+
+"I shall be pleased to see you at any time, sir."
+
+When the sheriff and the newspaper man reached the other room, the
+former said--
+
+"Well, what do you think?"
+
+"I think it is an interesting case," was the answer.
+
+"Or, to put it in other words, you think Mrs. Brenton a very interesting
+lady."
+
+"Officially, sir, you have exactly stated my opinion."
+
+"And I suppose, poor woman, she will furnish an interesting article for
+the paper?"
+
+"Hang the paper!" said Stratton, with more than his usual vim.
+
+The sheriff laughed. Then he said--
+
+"I confess that to me it seems a very perplexing affair all through.
+Have you got any light on the subject?"
+
+"My dear sir, I will tell you three important things. First, Mrs.
+Brenton is innocent. Second, her lawyers are taking the wrong line of
+defence. Third," tapping his breast-pocket, "I have the name of the
+murderer in my note-book."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+
+"Now," said John Speed to William Brenton, "we have got Stratton fairly
+started on the track, and I believe that he will ferret out the truth
+in this matter. But, meanwhile, we must not be idle. You must remember
+that, with all our facilities for discovery, we really know nothing
+of the murderer ourselves. I propose we set about this thing just as
+systematically as Stratton will. The chances are that we shall penetrate
+the mystery of the whole affair very much quicker than he. As I told
+you before, I am something of a newspaper man myself; and if, with the
+facilities of getting into any room in any house, in any city and in any
+country, and being with a suspected criminal night and day when he never
+imagines any one is near him--if with all those advantages I cannot
+discover the real author of that crime before George Stratton does, then
+I'll never admit that I came from Chicago, or belonged to a newspaper."
+
+"Whom do you think Stratton suspects of the crime? He told the sheriff,"
+said Brenton, "that he had the name in his pocket-book."
+
+"I don't know," said Speed, "but I have my suspicions. You see, he has
+the names of all the guests at your banquet in that pocket-book of his;
+but the name of Stephen Roland he has marked with two crosses. The name
+of the servant he has marked with one cross. Now, I suspect that he
+believes Stephen Roland committed the crime. You know Roland; what do
+you think of him?"
+
+"I think he is quite capable of it," answered Brenton, with a frown.
+
+"Still, you are prejudiced against the man," put in Speed, "so your
+evidence is hardly impartial."
+
+"I am not prejudiced against any one," answered Brenton; "I merely know
+that man. He is a thoroughly despicable, cowardly character. The only
+thing that makes me think he would not commit a murder, is that he is
+too craven to stand the consequences if he were caught. He is a cool
+villain, but he is a coward. I do not believe he has the courage to
+commit a crime, even if he thought he would benefit by it."
+
+"Well, there is one thing, Brenton, you can't be accused of flattering
+a man, and if it is any consolation for you to know, you may be pretty
+certain that George Stratton is on his track."
+
+"I am sure I wish him success," answered Brenton, gloomily; "if he
+brings Roland to the gallows I shall not mourn over it."
+
+"That's all right," said Speed; "but now we must be up and doing
+ourselves. Have you anything to propose?"
+
+"No, I have not, except that we might play the detective on Roland."
+
+"Well, the trouble with that is we would merely be duplicating what
+Stratton is doing himself. Now, I'll tell you my proposal. Supposing
+that we consult with Lecocq."
+
+"Who is that? The novelist?"
+
+"Novelist? I don't think he has ever written any novels--not that I
+remember of."
+
+"Ah, I didn't know. It seemed to me that I remembered his name in
+connection with some novel."
+
+"Oh, very likely you did. He is the hero of more detective stories than
+any other man I know of. He was the great French detective."
+
+"What, is he dead, then?"
+
+"Dead? Not a bit of it; he's here with us. Oh, I understand what you
+mean. Yes, from your point of view, he is dead."
+
+"Where can we find him?"
+
+"Well, I presume, in Paris. He's a first-rate fellow to know, anyhow,
+and he spends most of his time around his old haunts. In fact, if you
+want to be certain to find Lecocq, you will generally get him during
+office hours in the room he used to frequent while in Paris."
+
+"Let us go and see him, then."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"Monsieur Lecocq," said Speed, a moment afterwards, "I wish to introduce
+to you a new-comer, Mr. Brenton, recently of Cincinnati."
+
+"Ah, my dear Speed," said the Frenchman, "I am very pleased indeed to
+meet any friend of yours. How is the great Chicago, the second Paris,
+and how is your circulation?--the greatest in the world, I suppose."
+
+"Well, it is in pretty good order," said Speed; "we circulated from
+Chicago to Paris here in a very much shorter time than the journey
+usually occupies down below. Now, can you give us a little of your time?
+Are you busy just now?"
+
+"My dear Speed, I am always busy. I am like the people of the second
+Paris. I lose no time, but I have always time to speak with my friends."
+
+"All right," said Speed. "I am like the people of the second Chicago,
+generally more intent on pleasure than business; but, nevertheless, I
+have a piece of business for you."
+
+"The second Chicago?" asked Lecocq. "And where is that, pray?"
+
+"Why, Paris, of course," said Speed.
+
+Lecocq laughed.
+
+"You are incorrigible, you Chicagoans. And what is the piece of
+business?"
+
+"It is the old thing, monsieur. A mystery to be unravelled. Mr. Brenton
+here wishes to retain you in his case."
+
+"And what is his case?" was the answer.
+
+Lecocq was evidently pleased to have a bit of real work given him.
+
+[Illustration: The detective.]
+
+Speed briefly recited the facts, Brenton correcting him now and then
+on little points where he was wrong. Speed seemed to think these points
+immaterial, but Lecocq said that attention to trivialities was the
+whole secret of the detective business.
+
+"Ah," said Lecocq, sorrowfully, "there is no real trouble in elucidating
+that mystery. I hoped it would be something difficult; but, you see,
+with my experience of the old world, and with the privileges one enjoys
+in this world, things which might be difficult to one below are very
+easy for us. Now, I shall show you how simple it is."
+
+"Good gracious!" cried Speed, "you don't mean to say you are going to
+read it right off the reel, like that, when we have been bothering
+ourselves with it so long, and without success?"
+
+"At the moment," replied the French detective, "I am not prepared to say
+who committed the deed. That is a matter of detail. Now, let us see what
+we know, and arrive, from that, at what we do not know. The one fact, of
+which we are assured on the statement of two physicians from Cincinnati,
+is that Mr. Brenton was poisoned."
+
+"Well," said Speed, "there are several other facts, too. Another fact is
+that Mrs. Brenton is accused of the crime."
+
+"Ah! my dear sir," said Lecocq, "that is not pertinent."
+
+"No," said Speed, "I agree with you. I call it very impertinent."
+
+Brenton frowned, at this, and his old dislike to the flippant Chicago
+man rose to the surface again.
+
+The Frenchman continued marking the points on his long forefinger.
+
+"Now, there are two ways by which that result may have been attained.
+First, Mr. Brenton may have administered to himself the poison;
+secondly, the poison may have been administered by some one else."
+
+"Yes," said Speed; "and, thirdly, the poison may have been administered
+accidentally--you do not seem to take that into account."
+
+"I do not take that into account," calmly replied the Frenchman,
+"because of its improbability. If there were an accident; if, for
+instance, the poison was in the sugar, or in some of the viands served,
+then others than Mr. Brenton would have been poisoned. The fact that one
+man out of twenty-six was poisoned, and the fact that several people are
+to benefit by his death, point, it seems to me, to murder; but to be
+sure of that, I will ask Mr. Brenton one question. My dear sir, did you
+administer this poison to yourself?"
+
+"Certainly not," answered Brenton.
+
+"Then we have two facts. First, Mr. Brenton was poisoned; secondly, he
+was poisoned by some person who had an interest in his death. Now we
+will proceed. When Mr. Brenton sat down to that dinner he was perfectly
+well. When he arose from that dinner he was feeling ill. He goes to bed.
+He sees no one but his wife after he has left the dinner-table, and he
+takes nothing between the time he leaves the dinner-table and the moment
+he becomes unconscious. Now, that poison must have been administered to
+Mr. Brenton at the dinner-table. Am I not right?"
+
+"Well, you seem to be," answered Speed.
+
+"Seem? Why, it is as plain as day. There cannot be any mistake."
+
+"All right," said Speed; "go ahead. What next?"
+
+"What next? There were twenty-six people around that table, with two
+servants to wait on them, making twenty-eight in all. There were
+twenty-six, I think you said, including Mr. Brenton."
+
+"That is correct."
+
+"Very well. One of those twenty-seven persons has poisoned Mr. Brenton.
+Do you follow me?"
+
+"We do," answered Speed; "we follow you as closely as you have ever
+followed a criminal! Go on."
+
+"Very well, so much is clear. These are all facts, not theories. Now,
+what is the thing that I should do if I were in Cincinnati? I would find
+out whether one or more of those guests had anything to gain by the
+death of their host. That done, I would follow the suspected persons. I
+would have my men find out what each of them had done for a month before
+the time of the crime. Whoever committed it made some preparation. He
+did something, too, as you say, in America, to cover up his tracks. Very
+well. By the keen detective these actions are easily traced. I shall at
+once place twenty-seven of the best men I know on the track of those
+twenty-seven persons."
+
+"I call that shadowing with a vengeance," remarked the Chicago man.
+
+"It will be very easy. The one who has committed the crime is certain,
+when he is alone in his own room, to say something, or to do something,
+that will show my detective that he is the criminal. So, gentlemen, if
+you can tell me who those twenty-seven persons are, in three days or a
+week from this time I will tell you who gave the poison to Mr. Brenton."
+
+"You seem very sure of that," said Speed.
+
+"Sure of it? It is simply child's play. It is mere waiting. If, for
+instance, at the trial Mrs. Brenton is found guilty, and sentenced, the
+one who is the guilty party is certain to betray himself or herself
+as soon as he or she is alone. If it be a man who hopes to marry Mrs.
+Brenton, he will be overcome with grief at what has happened. He will
+wring his hands and try to think what can be done to prevent the
+sentence being carried out. He will argue with himself whether it is
+better to give himself up and tell the truth, and if he is a coward he
+will conclude not to do that, but will try to get a pardon, or at least
+have the capital sentence commuted into life imprisonment. He will
+possibly be cool and calm in public, but when he enters his own room,
+when his door is locked, when he believes no one can see him, when he
+thinks he is alone, then will come his trial. Then his passions and
+his emotions will betray him. It is mere child's play, as I tell you,
+and long before there is a verdict I will give you the name of the
+murderer."
+
+"Very well, then," said Speed, "that is agreed; we will look you up in a
+week from now."
+
+"I should be pained," said Lecocq, "to put you to that trouble. As soon
+as I get the report from my men I will communicate with you and let
+you know the result. In a few days I shall give you the name of the
+assassin."
+
+"Good-bye, then, until I see you again," answered Speed; and with this
+he and Brenton took their departure.
+
+"He seems to be very sure of himself," said Brenton.
+
+[Illustration: Jane Morton.]
+
+"He will do what he says, you may depend on that."
+
+The week was not yet up when Monsieur Lecocq met John Speed in Chicago.
+
+"By the look of satisfaction on your face," said Mr. Speed, "I imagine
+you have succeeded in unravelling the mystery."
+
+"Ah," replied the Frenchman; "if I have the appearance of satisfaction,
+it is indeed misplaced."
+
+"Then you have not made any discovery?"
+
+"On the contrary, it is all as plain as your big buildings here. It
+is not for that reason, but because it is so simple that I should be
+foolish to feel satisfaction regarding it."
+
+"Then who is the person?"
+
+"The assassin," replied the Frenchman, "is one whom no one has seemed to
+think of, and yet one on whom suspicion should have been the first to
+fall. The person who did Monsieur Brenton the honour to poison him is
+none other than the servant girl, Jane Morton."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+
+"Jane Morton!" cried Speed; "who is she?"
+
+"She is, as you may remember, the girl who carried the coffee from Mrs.
+Brenton to monsieur."
+
+"And are you sure she is the criminal?"
+
+The great detective did not answer; he merely gave an expressive little
+French gesture, as though the question was not worth commenting upon.
+
+"Why, what was her motive?" asked Speed.
+
+For the first time in their acquaintance a shade of perplexity seemed to
+come over the enthusiastic face of the volatile Frenchman.
+
+"You are what you call smart, you Chicago people," he said, "and you
+have in a moment struck the only point on which we are at a loss."
+
+"My dear sir," returned Speed, "that is _the_ point in the case. Motive
+is the first thing to look for, it seems to me. You said as much
+yourself. If you haven't succeeded in finding what motive Jane Morton
+had for poisoning her employer, it appears to me that very little has
+been accomplished."
+
+"Ah, you say that before you know the particulars. I am certain we shall
+find the motive. What I know now is that Jane Morton is the one who put
+the poison in his cup of coffee."
+
+"It would take a good deal of nerve to do that with twenty-six people
+around the table. You forget, my dear sir, that she had to pass the
+whole length of the table, after taking the cup, before giving it to Mr.
+Brenton."
+
+"Half of the people had their backs to her, and the other half, I can
+assure you, were not looking at her. If the poison was ready, it was a
+very easy thing to slip it into a cup of coffee. There was ample time to
+do it, and that is how it was done."
+
+"May I ask how you arrived at that conclusion?"
+
+"Certainly, certainly, my dear sir. My detectives report that each one
+of the twenty-seven people they had to follow were shadowed night and
+day. But only two of them acted suspiciously. These two were Jane Morton
+and Stephen Roland. Stephen Roland's anxiety is accounted for by the
+fact that he is evidently in love with Mrs. Brenton. But the change
+in Jane Morton has been something terrible. She is suffering from the
+severest pangs of ineffectual remorse. She has not gone out again to
+service, but occupies a room in one of the poorer quarters of the
+city--a room that she never leaves except at night. Her whole actions
+show that she is afraid of the police--afraid of being tracked for her
+crime. She buys a newspaper every night, locks and bars the door on
+entering her room, and, with tears streaming from her eyes, reads every
+word of the criminal news. One night, when she went out to buy her
+paper, and what food she needed for the next day, she came unexpectedly
+upon a policeman at the corner. The man was not looking at her at all,
+nor for her, but she fled, running like a deer, doubling and turning
+through alleys and back streets until by a very roundabout road she
+reached her own room. There she locked herself in, and remained
+without food all next day rather than go out again. She flung herself
+terror-stricken on the bed, after her room door was bolted, and cried,
+'Oh, why did I do it? why did I do it? I shall certainly be found out.
+If Mrs. Brenton is acquitted, they will be after me next day. I did it
+to make up to John what he had suffered, and yet if John knew it, he
+would never speak to me again.'"
+
+[Illustration: "Oh, why did I do it?"]
+
+"Who is John?" asked Speed.
+
+"Ah, that," said the detective, "I do not know. When we find out who
+John is, then we shall find the motive for the crime."
+
+"In that case, if I were you, I should try to find John as quickly as
+possible."
+
+"Yes, my dear sir, that is exactly what should be done, and my detective
+is now endeavouring to discover the identity of John. He will possibly
+succeed in a few days. But there is another way of finding out who John
+is, and perhaps in that you can help me."
+
+"What other way?"
+
+"There is one man who undoubtedly knows who John is, and that is Mr.
+Brenton. Now, I thought that perhaps you, who know Brenton better than I
+do, would not mind asking him who John is."
+
+"My dear sir," said Speed, "Brenton is no particular friend of mine,
+and I only know him well enough to feel that if there is any
+cross-examination to be done, I should prefer somebody else to do it."
+
+"Why, you are not afraid of him, are you?" asked the detective.
+
+"Afraid of him? Certainly not, but I tell you that Brenton is just a
+little touchy and apt to take offence. I have found him so on several
+occasions. Now, as you have practically taken charge of this case, why
+don't you go and see him?"
+
+"I suppose I shall have to do that," said the Frenchman, "if you will
+not undertake it."
+
+"No, I will not."
+
+"You have no objection, have you, to going with me?"
+
+"It is better for you to see Brenton alone. I do not think he would care
+to be cross-examined before witnesses, you know."
+
+"Ah, then, good-bye; I shall find out from Mr. Brenton who John is."
+
+"I am sure I wish you luck," replied Speed, as Lecocq took his
+departure.
+
+Lecocq found Brenton and Ferris together. The cynical spirit seemed to
+have been rather sceptical about the accounts given him of the influence
+that Speed and Brenton, combined, had had upon the Chicago newspaper
+man. Yet he was interested in the case, and although he still maintained
+that no practical good would result, even if a channel of communication
+could be opened between the two states of existence, he had listened
+with his customary respect to what Brenton had to say.
+
+"Ah," said Brenton, when he saw the Frenchman, "have you any news for
+me?"
+
+"Yes, I have. I have news that I will exchange, but meanwhile I want
+some news from you."
+
+"I have none to give you," answered Brenton.
+
+"If you have not, will you undertake to answer any questions I shall ask
+you, and not take offence if the questions seem to be personal ones?"
+
+"Certainly," said Brenton; "I shall be glad to answer anything as long
+as it has a bearing on the case."
+
+"Very well, then, it has a very distinct bearing on the case. Do you
+remember the girl Jane Morton?"
+
+"I remember her, of course, as one of the servants in our employ. I know
+very little about her, though."
+
+"That is just what I wish to find out. Do you know _anything_ about her?"
+
+"No; she had been in our employ but a fortnight, I think, or perhaps it
+was a month. My wife attended to these details, of course. I knew the
+girl was there, that is all."
+
+The Frenchman looked very dubious as Brenton said this, while the latter
+rather bridled up.
+
+"You evidently do not believe me?" he cried.
+
+Once more the detective gave his customary gesture, and said--
+
+"Ah, pardon me, you are entirely mistaken. I have this to acquaint you
+with. Jane Morton is the one who murdered you. She did it, she says,
+partly for the sake of John, whoever he is, and partly out of revenge.
+Now, of course, you are the only man who can give me information as to
+the motive. That girl certainly had a motive, and I should like to find
+out what the motive was."
+
+Brenton meditated for a few moments, and then suddenly brightened up.
+
+"I remember, now, an incident which happened a week of two before
+Christmas, which may have a bearing on the case. One night I heard--or
+thought I heard--a movement downstairs, when I supposed everybody had
+retired. I took a revolver in my hand, and went cautiously down the
+stairs. Of course I had no light, because, if there was a burglar, I did
+not wish to make myself too conspicuous a mark. As I went along the hall
+leading to the kitchen, I saw there was a light inside; but as soon as
+they heard me coming the light was put out. When I reached the kitchen,
+I noticed a man trying to escape through the door that led to the
+coalshed. I fired at him twice, and he sank to the floor with a groan. I
+thought I had bagged a burglar sure, but it turned out to be nothing of
+the kind. He was merely a young man who had been rather late visiting
+one of the girls. I suspect now the girl he came to see was Jane
+Morton. As it was, the noise brought the two girls there, and I never
+investigated the matter or tried to find out which one it was that he
+had been visiting. They were both terror-stricken, and the young man
+himself was in a state of great fear. He thought for a moment that he
+had been killed. However, he was only shot in the leg, and I sent him to
+the house of a physician who keeps such patients as do not wish to go to
+the hospital. I did not care to have him go to the hospital, because I
+was afraid the newspapers would get hold of the incident, and make
+a sensation of it. The whole thing was accidental; the young fellow
+realized that, and so, I thought, did the girls; at least, I never
+noticed anything in their behaviour to show the contrary."
+
+"What sort of a looking girl is Jane Morton?" asked Ferris.
+
+"She is a tall brunette, with snapping black eyes."
+
+"Ah, then, I remember her going into the room where you lay," said
+Ferris, "on Christmas morning. It struck me when she came out that she
+was very cool and self-possessed, and not at all surprised."
+
+"All I can say," said Brenton, "is that I never noticed anything in her
+conduct like resentment at what had happened. I intended to give the
+young fellow a handsome compensation for his injury, but of course what
+occurred on Christmas Eve prevented that: I had really forgotten all
+about the circumstance, or I should have told you of it before."
+
+"Then," said Lecocq, "the thing now is perfectly clear. That black-eyed
+vixen murdered you out of revenge."
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+
+It was evident to George Stratton that he would have no time before
+the trial came off in which to prove Stephen Roland the guilty person.
+Besides this, he was in a strange state of mind which he himself could
+not understand. The moment he sat down to think out a plan by which
+he could run down the man he was confident had committed the crime, a
+strange wavering of mind came over him. Something seemed to say to him
+that he was on the wrong track. This became so persistent that George
+was bewildered, and seriously questioned his own sanity. Whenever he sat
+alone in his own room, the doubts arose and a feeling that he was on the
+wrong scent took possession of him. This feeling became so strong at
+times that he looked up other clues, and at one time tried to find
+out the whereabouts of the servant girls who had been employed by the
+Brentons. Curiously enough, the moment he began this search, his mind
+seemed to become clearer and easier; and when that happened, the old
+belief in the guilt of Stephen Roland resumed its sway again. But the
+instant he tried to follow up what clues he had in that direction, he
+found himself baffled and assailed again by doubts, and so every effort
+he put forth appeared to be nullified. This state of mind was so unusual
+with him that he had serious thoughts of abandoning the whole case and
+going back to Chicago. He said to himself, "I am in love with this woman
+and I shall go crazy if I stay here any longer." Then he remembered the
+trust she appeared to have in his powers of ferreting out the mystery of
+the case, and this in turn encouraged him and urged him on.
+
+All trace of the girls appeared to be lost. He hesitated to employ a
+Cincinnati detective, fearing that what he discovered would be given
+away to the Cincinnati press. Then he accused himself of disloyalty to
+Mrs. Brenton, in putting his newspaper duty before his duty to her.
+He was so torn by his conflicting ideas and emotions that at last he
+resolved to abandon the case altogether and return to Chicago. He packed
+up his valise and resolved to leave that night for big city, trial or no
+trial. He had described his symptoms to a prominent physician, and that
+physician told him that the case was driving him mad, and the best thing
+he could do was to leave at once for other scenes. He could do no good,
+and would perhaps end by going insane himself.
+
+As George Stratton was packing his valise in his room, alone, as he
+thought, the following conversation was taking place beside him.
+
+"It is no use," said Speed; "we are merely muddling him, and not doing
+any good. The only thing is to leave him alone. If he investigates the
+Roland part of the case he will soon find out for himself that he is on
+the wrong track; then he will take the right one."
+
+"Yes," said Brenton; "but the case comes on in a few days. If anything
+is to be done, it must be done now."
+
+"In that I do not agree with you," said Speed. "Perhaps everything will
+go all right at the trial, but even if it does not, there is still
+a certain amount of time. You see how we have spoiled things by
+interfering. Our first success with him has misled us. We thought we
+could do anything; we have really done worse than nothing, because all
+this valuable time has been lost. If he had been allowed to proceed in
+his own way he would have ferreted out the matter as far as Stephen
+Roland is concerned, and would have found that there was no cause for
+his suspicion. As it is he has done nothing. He still believes, if left
+alone, that Stephen Roland is the criminal. All our efforts to lead him
+to the residence of Jane Morton have been unavailing. Now, you see, he
+is on the eve of going back to Chicago."
+
+"Well, then, let him go," said Brenton, despondently.
+
+"With all my heart, say I," answered Speed; "but in any case let us
+leave him alone."
+
+Before the train started that night Stratton said to himself that he was
+a new man. Richard was himself again. He was thoroughly convinced of the
+guilt of Stephen Roland, and wondered why he had allowed his mind to
+wander off the topic and waste time with other suspicions, for which
+he now saw there was no real excuse. He had not the time, he felt, to
+investigate the subject personally, but he flattered himself he knew
+exactly the man to put on Roland's track, and, instead of going himself
+to Chicago, he sent off the following despatch:--
+
+"Meet me to-morrow morning, without fail, at the Gibson House. Answer."
+
+Before midnight he had his answer, and next morning he met a man in whom
+he had the most implicit confidence, and who had, as he said, the rare
+and valuable gift of keeping his mouth shut.
+
+"You see this portrait?" Stratton said, handing to the other a
+photograph of Stephen Roland. "Now, I do not know how many hundred
+chemist shops there are in Cincinnati, but I want you to get a list of
+them, and you must not omit the most obscure shop in town. I want you to
+visit every drug store there is in the city, show this photograph to the
+proprietor and the clerks, and find out if that man bought any chemicals
+during the week or two preceding Christmas. Find out what drugs he
+bought, and where he bought them, then bring the information to me."
+
+"How much time do you give me on this, Mr. Stratton?" was the question.
+
+"Whatever time you want. I wish the thing done thoroughly and
+completely, and, as you know, silence is golden in a case like this."
+
+[Illustration: "How much time do you give me?"]
+
+"Enough said," replied the other, and, buttoning the photograph in his
+inside pocket, he left the room.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+There is no necessity of giving an elaborate report of the trial. Any
+one who has curiosity in the matter can find the full particulars from
+the files of any paper in the country. Mrs. Brenton was very pale as she
+sat in the prisoner's dock, but George Stratton thought he never saw any
+one look so beautiful. It seemed to him that any man in that crowded
+courtroom could tell in a moment that she was not guilty of the crime
+with which she was charged, and he looked at the jury of twelve
+supposedly good men, and wondered what they thought of it.
+
+[Illustration: In the prisoner's dock.]
+
+The defence claimed that it was not their place to show who committed
+the murder. That rested with the prosecution. The prosecution, Mr.
+Benham maintained, had signally failed to do this. However, in order to
+aid the prosecution, he was quite willing to show how Mr. Brenton came
+to his death. Then witnesses were called, who, to the astonishment of
+Mrs. Brenton, testified that her husband had all along had a tendency to
+insanity. It was proved conclusively that some of his ancestors had died
+in a lunatic asylum, and one was stated to have committed suicide. The
+defence produced certain books from Mr. Brenton's library, among them
+Forbes Winslow's volume on "The Mind and the Brain," to show that
+Brenton had studied the subject of suicide.
+
+The judge's charge was very colourless. It amounted simply to this:
+If the jury thought the prosecution had shown Mrs. Brenton to have
+committed the crime, they were to bring in a verdict of guilty, and if
+they thought otherwise they were to acquit her; and so the jury retired.
+
+As they left the court-room a certain gloom fell upon all those who were
+friendly to the fair prisoner.
+
+Despite the great reputation of Benham and Brown, it was the thought
+of every one present that they had made a very poor defence. The
+prosecution, on the other hand, had been most ably conducted. It had
+been shown that Mrs. Brenton was chiefly to profit by her husband's
+death. The insurance fund alone would add seventy-five thousand dollars
+to the money she would control. A number of little points that Stratton
+had given no heed to had been magnified, and appeared then to have a
+great bearing on the case. For the first time, Stratton admitted
+to himself that the prosecution had made out a very strong case of
+circumstantial evidence. The defence, too, had been so deplorably weak
+that it added really to the strength of the prosecution. A great speech
+had been expected of Benham, but he did not rise to the occasion, and,
+as one who knew him said, Benham evidently believed his client guilty.
+
+As the jury retired, every one in the court-room felt that there was
+little hope for the prisoner; and this feeling was intensified when, a
+few moments after, the announcement was made in court, just as the
+judge was preparing to leave the bench, that the jury had agreed on the
+verdict.
+
+Stratton, in the stillness of the court-room, heard one lawyer whisper
+to another, "She's doomed."
+
+There was intense silence as the jury slowly filed into their places,
+and the foreman stood up.
+
+"Gentlemen of the jury," was the question, "have you agreed upon a
+verdict?"
+
+"We have," answered the foreman.
+
+"Do you find the prisoner guilty or not guilty?"
+
+"Not guilty," was the clear answer.
+
+At this there was first a moment of silence, and then a ripple of
+applause, promptly checked.
+
+Mrs. Brenton was free.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+
+George Stratton sat in the court-room for a moment dazed, before he
+thought of the principal figure in the trial; then he rose to go to her
+side, but he found that Roland was there before him. He heard her say,
+"Get me a carriage quickly, and take me away from here."
+
+So Stratton went back to his hotel to meet his Chicago detective. The
+latter had nothing to report. He told him the number of drug stores he
+had visited, but all without avail. No one had recognized the portrait.
+
+"All right," said Stratton; "then you will just have to go ahead until
+you find somebody who does. It is, I believe, only a question of time
+and perseverance."
+
+Next morning he arose late. He looked over the report of the trial in
+the morning paper, and then, turning to the leader page, read with
+rising indignation the following editorial:--
+
+"THE BRENTON CASE.
+
+"The decision of yesterday shows the glorious uncertainty that attends
+the finding of the average American jury. If such verdicts are to be
+rendered, we may as well blot out from the statute-book all punishment
+for all crimes in which the evidence is largely circumstantial. If ever
+a strong case was made out against a human being it was the case of the
+prosecution in the recent trial. If ever there was a case in which the
+defence was deplorably weak, although ably conducted, it was the case
+that was concluded yesterday. Should we, then, be prepared to say that
+circumstantial evidence will not be taken by an American jury as ground
+for the conviction of a murderer? The chances are that, if we draw this
+conclusion, we shall be entirely wrong. If a man stood in the dock, in
+the place of the handsome young woman who occupied it yesterday, he
+would to-day have been undoubtedly convicted of murder. The conclusion,
+then, to be arrived at seems to be that, unless there is the direct
+proof of murder against a pretty woman, it is absolutely impossible
+to get the average jury of men to convict her. It would seem that the
+sooner we get women on juries, especially where a woman is on trial, the
+better it will be for the cause of justice."
+
+Then in other parts of the paper there were little items similar to this--
+
+"If Mrs. Brenton did not poison her husband, then who did?"
+
+That afternoon George Stratton paid a visit to Mrs. Brenton. He had
+hoped she had not seen the paper in question, but he hoped in vain. He
+found Mrs. Brenton far from elated with her acquittal.
+
+"I would give everything I possess," she said, "to bring the culprit to
+justice."
+
+After a talk on that momentous question, and when George Stratton held
+her hand and said good-bye, she asked him--
+
+"When do you go to Chicago?"
+
+"Madam," he said, "I leave for Chicago the moment I find out who
+poisoned William Brenton."
+
+She answered sadly--
+
+"You may remain a long time in Cincinnati."
+
+"In some respects," said Stratton, "I like Cincinnati better than
+Chicago."
+
+"You are the first Chicago man I ever heard say that," she replied.
+
+"Ah, that was because they did not know Cincinnati as I do."
+
+"I suppose you must have seen a great deal of the town, but I must
+confess that from now on I should be very glad if I never saw Cincinnati
+again. I would like to consult with you," she continued, "about the best
+way of solving this mystery. I have been thinking of engaging some of
+the best detectives I can get. I suppose New York would be the place."
+
+"No; Chicago," answered the young man.
+
+"Well, then, that is what I wanted to see you about. I would like to get
+the very best detectives that can be had. Don't you think that, if they
+were promised ample reward, and paid well during the time they were
+working on the case, we might discover the key to this mystery?"
+
+"I do not think much of our detective system," answered Stratton,
+"although I suppose there is something in it, and sometimes they manage
+in spite of themselves to stumble on the solution of a crime. Still, I
+shall be very glad indeed to give you what advice I can on the subject.
+I may say I have constituted myself a special detective in this case,
+and that I hope to have the honour of solving the problem."
+
+"You are very good, indeed," she answered, "and I must ask you to let me
+bear the expense."
+
+"Oh, the paper will do that. I won't be out of pocket at all," said
+Stratton.
+
+"Well, I hardly know how to put it; but, whether you are successful or
+not, I feel very grateful to you, and I hope you will not be offended at
+what I am going to say. Now, promise me that you won't!"
+
+"I shall not be offended," he answered. "It is a little difficult to
+offend a Chicago newspaper man, you know."
+
+"Now, you mustn't say anything against the newspaper men, for, in spite
+of the hard things that some of them have said about me, I like them."
+
+"Individually or collectively?"
+
+[Illustration: "I feel very grateful to you."]
+
+"I am afraid I must say individually. You said you wouldn't be offended,
+so after your search is over you must let me----. The labourer is worthy
+of his hire, or I should say, his reward--you know what I mean. I presume
+that a young man who earns his living on the daily press is not
+necessarily wealthy."
+
+"Why, Mrs. Brenton, what strange ideas you have of the world! We
+newspaper men work at the business merely because we like it. It isn't
+at all for the money that's in it."
+
+"Then you are not offended at what I have said?"
+
+"Oh, not in the least. I may say, however, that I look for a higher
+reward than money if I am successful in this search."
+
+"Yes, I am sure you do," answered the lady, innocently. "If you
+succeed in this, you will be very famous."
+
+"Exactly; it's fame I'm after," said Stratton, shaking her hand once
+more, and taking his leave.
+
+When he reached his hotel, he found the Chicago detective waiting for
+him.
+
+"Well, old man," he said, "anything new?"
+
+"Yes, sir. Something very new."
+
+"What have you found out?"
+
+"Everything."
+
+"Very well, let me have it."
+
+"I found out that this man bought, on December 10th, thirty grains of
+morphia. He had this morphia put up in five-grain capsules. He bought
+this at the drug store on the corner of Blank Street and Nemo Avenue."
+
+"Good gracious!" answered Stratton. "Then to get morphia he must have
+had a physician's certificate. Did you find who the physician was that
+signed the certificate?"
+
+"My dear sir," said the Chicago man, "this person is himself a
+physician, unless I am very much mistaken. I was told that this was the
+portrait of Stephen Roland. Am I right?"
+
+"That is the name."
+
+"Well, then, he is a doctor himself. Not doing a very large practice, it
+is true, but he is a physician. Did you not know that?"
+
+[Illustration: "Here's the detailed report."]
+
+"No," said Stratton; "how stupid I am! I never thought of asking the
+man's occupation."
+
+"Very well, if that is what you wanted to know, here's the detailed
+report of my investigation."
+
+When the man left, Stratton rubbed his hands.
+
+"Now, Mr. Stephen Roland, I have you," he said.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+After receiving this information Stratton sat alone in his room and
+thought deeply over his plans. He did not wish to make a false step, yet
+there was hardly enough in the evidence he had secured to warrant his
+giving Stephen Roland up to the police. Besides this, it would put the
+suspected man at once on his guard, and there was no question but
+that gentleman had taken every precaution to prevent discovery. After
+deliberating for a long while, he thought that perhaps the best thing he
+could do was to endeavour to take Roland by surprise. Meanwhile, before
+the meditating man stood Brenton and Speed, and between them there was a
+serious disagreement of opinion.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"I tell you what it is," said Speed, "there is no use in our interfering
+with Stratton. He is on the wrong track, but, nevertheless, all the
+influence we can use on him in his present frame of mind will merely do
+what it did before--it will muddle the man up. Now, I propose that we
+leave him severely alone. Let him find out his mistake. He will find it
+out in some way or other, and then he will be in a condition of mind to
+turn to the case of Jane Morton."
+
+"But don't you see," argued Brenton, "that all the time spent on his
+present investigation is so much time lost? I will agree to leave him
+alone, as you say, but let us get somebody else on the Morton case."
+
+"I don't want to do that," said Speed; "because George Stratton has
+taken a great deal of interest in this search. He has done a great deal
+now, and I think we should he grateful to him for it."
+
+"Grateful!" growled Brenton; "he has done it from the most purely
+selfish motives that a man can act upon. He has done it entirely for his
+paper--for newspaper fame. He has done it for money."
+
+"Now," said Speed, hotly, "you must not talk like that of Stratton to
+me. I won't say what I think of that kind of language coming from you,
+but you can see how seriously we interfered with his work before, and
+how it nearly resulted in his departure for Chicago. I propose now that
+we leave him alone."
+
+"Leave him alone, then, for any sake," replied Brenton; "I am sure I
+build nothing on what he can do anyway."
+
+"All right, then," returned Speed, recovering his good nature. "Now,
+although I am not willing to put any one else on the track of Miss Jane
+Morton, yet I will tell you what I am willing to do. If you like, we
+will go to her residence, and influence her to confess her crime. I
+believe that can be done."
+
+"Very well; I want you to understand that I am perfectly reasonable
+about the matter. All I want is not to lose any more time."
+
+"Time?" cried Speed; "why, we have got all the time there is. Mrs.
+Brenton is acquitted. There is no more danger."
+
+"That is perfectly true, I admit; but still you can see the grief under
+which she labours, because her name is not yet cleared from the odium
+of the crime. You will excuse me, Speed, if I say that you seem to be
+working more in the interests of Stratton's journalistic success than in
+the interests of Mrs. Brenton's good name."
+
+"Well, we won't talk about that," said Speed; "Stratton is amply able to
+take care of himself, as you will doubtless see. Now, what do you say
+to our trying whether or not we can influence Jane Morton to do what she
+ought to do, and confess her crime?"
+
+"It is not a very promising task," replied Brenton; "it is hard to get a
+person to say words that may lead to the gallows."
+
+"I'm not so sure about that," said Speed; "you know the trouble of mind
+she is in. I think it more than probable that, after the terror of the
+last few weeks, it will be a relief for her to give herself up."
+
+"Very well; let us go."
+
+The two men shortly afterwards found themselves in the scantily
+furnished room occupied by Jane Morton. That poor woman was rocking
+herself to and fro and moaning over her trouble. Then she suddenly
+stopped rocking, and looked around the room with vague apprehension
+in her eyes. She rose and examined the bolts of the door, and, seeing
+everything was secure, sat down again.
+
+"I shall never have any peace in this world again," she cried to
+herself.
+
+She rocked back and forth silently for a few moments.
+
+"I wish," she said, "the police would find out all about it, and then
+this agony of mind would end."
+
+Again she rocked back and forth, with her hands helplessly in her lap.
+
+"Oh, I cannot do it, _I cannot do it_!" she sobbed, still rocking to and
+fro. Finally she started to her feet.
+
+"I _will_ do it," she cried; "I will confess to Mrs. Brenton herself. I
+will tell her everything. She has gone through trouble herself, and may
+have mercy on me."
+
+"There, you see," said Speed to Brenton, "we have overcome the
+difficulty, after all."
+
+"It certainly looks like it," replied Brenton. "Don't you think,
+however, that we had better stay with her until she _does_ confess? May
+she not change her mind?"
+
+"Don't let us overdo the thing," suggested Speed; "if she doesn't, come
+to time, we can easily have another interview with her. The woman's
+mind is made up. She is in torment, and will be until she confesses her
+crime. Let us go and leave her alone."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+George Stratton was not slow to act when he had once made up his mind.
+He pinned to the breast of his vest a little shield, on which was the
+word "detective." This he had often found useful, in a way that is not
+at all sanctioned by the law, in ferreting out crime in Chicago. As soon
+as it was evening he paced up and down in front of Roland's house, and
+on the opposite side of the road. There was a light in the doctor's
+study, and he thought that perhaps the best way to proceed was to go
+boldly into the house and put his scheme into operation. However, as he
+meditated on this, the light was turned low, and in a few moments the
+door opened. The doctor came down the steps, and out on the pavement,
+walking briskly along the street. The reporter followed him on the other
+side of the thoroughfare. Whether to do it in the dark or in the light,
+was the question that troubled Stratton. If he did it in the dark, he
+would miss the expression on the face of the surprised man. If he did it
+in the light, the doctor might recognize him as the Chicago reporter,
+and would know at once that he was no detective. Still, he felt that
+if there was anything in his scheme at all, it was surprise; and he
+remembered the quick gasp of the lawyer Brown when he told him he knew
+what his defence was. He must be able to note the expression of the man
+who was guilty of the terrible crime.
+
+Having made up his mind to this, he stepped smartly after the doctor,
+and, when the latter came under a lamp-post, placed his hand suddenly on
+his shoulder, and exclaimed--
+
+"Doctor Stephen Roland, I arrest you for the murder of William Brenton!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+
+Stephen Roland turned quietly around and shook the hand from his
+shoulder. It was evident that he recognized Stratton instantly.
+
+"Is this a Chicago joke?" asked the doctor.
+
+"If it is, Mr. Roland, I think you will find it a very serious one."
+
+"Aren't you afraid that _you_ may find it a serious one?"
+
+"I don't see why I should have any fears in the premises," answered the
+newspaper man.
+
+"My dear sir, do you not realize that I could knock you down or shoot
+you dead for what you have done, and be perfectly justified in doing
+so?"
+
+"If you either knock or shoot," replied the other, "you will have to do
+it very quickly, for, in the language of the wild and woolly West, I've
+got the drop on you. In my coat pocket is a cocked revolver with my
+forefinger on the trigger. If you make a hostile move I can let daylight
+through you so quickly that you won't know what has struck you."
+
+"Electric light, I think you mean," answered the doctor, quietly. "Even
+a Chicago man might find it difficult to let daylight through a person
+at this time in the evening. Now, this sort of thing may be Chicago
+manners, but I assure you it will not go down here in Cincinnati. You
+have rendered yourself liable to the law if I cared to make a point of
+it, but I do not. Come back with me to my study. I would like to talk
+with you."
+
+Stratton began to feel vaguely that he had made a fool of himself. His
+scheme had utterly failed. The doctor was a great deal cooler and more
+collected than he was. Nevertheless, he had a deep distrust of the
+gentleman, and he kept his revolver handy for fear the other would make
+a dash to escape him. They walked back without saying a word to each
+other until they came to the doctor's office. Into the house they
+entered, and the doctor bolted the door behind them. Stratton suspected
+that very likely he was walking into a trap, but he thought he would
+be equal to any emergency that might arise. The doctor walked into the
+study, and again locked the door of that. Pulling down the blinds, he
+turned up the gas to its full force and sat down by a table, motioning
+the newspaper man to a seat on the other side.
+
+"Now," he said calmly to Stratton, "the reason I did not resent your
+unwarrantable insult is this: You are conscientiously trying to get at
+the root of this mystery. So am I. Your reason is that you wish to score
+a victory for your paper. My motive is entirely different, but our
+object is exactly the same. Now, by some strange combination of
+circumstances you have come to the conclusion that I committed the
+crime. Am I right?"
+
+"You are perfectly correct, doctor," replied Stratton.
+
+"Very well, then. Now, I assure you that I am entirely innocent. Of
+course, I appreciate the fact that this assurance will not in the
+slightest degree affect your opinion, but I am interested in knowing why
+you came to your conclusion, and perhaps by putting our heads together,
+even if I dislike you and you hate me, we may see some light on this
+matter that has hitherto been hidden. I presume you have no objection at
+all to co-operate with me?"
+
+"None in the least," was the reply.
+
+"Very well, then. Now, don't mind my feelings at all, but tell me
+exactly why you have suspected me of being a murderer."
+
+"Well," answered Stratton, "in the first place we must look for a
+motive. It seems to me that you have a motive for the crime."
+
+"And might I ask what that motive is, or was?"
+
+"You will admit that you disliked Brenton?"
+
+"I will admit that, yes."
+
+"Very well. You will admit also that you were--well, how shall I put
+it?--let us say, interested in his wife before her marriage?"
+
+"I will admit that; yes."
+
+"You, perhaps, will admit that you are interested in her now?"
+
+"I do not see any necessity for admitting that; but still, for the
+purpose of getting along with the case, I will admit it. Go on."
+
+"Very good. Here is a motive for the crime, and a very strong one.
+First, we will presume that you are in love with the wife of the man
+who is murdered. Secondly, supposing that you are mercenary, quite
+a considerable amount of money will come to you in case you marry
+Brenton's widow. Next, some one at that table poisoned him. It was not
+Mrs. Brenton, who poured out the cup of coffee. The cup of coffee was
+placed before Brenton, and my opinion is that, until it was placed
+there, there was no poison in that cup. The doomed man was entirely
+unsuspicious, and therefore it was very easy for a person to slip enough
+poison in that cup unseen by anybody at that table, so that when he
+drank his coffee nothing could have saved him. He rose from the table
+feeling badly, and he went to his room and died. Now, who could have
+placed that poison in his cup of coffee? It must have been one of the
+two that sat at his right and left hand. A young lady sat at his right
+hand. She certainly did not commit the crime. You, Stephen Roland, sat
+at his left hand. Do you deny any of the facts I have recited?"
+
+"That is a very ingenious chain of circumstantial evidence. Of course,
+you do not think it strong enough to convict a man of such a serious
+crime as murder?"
+
+"No; I quite realize the weakness of the case up to this point. But
+there is more to follow. Fourteen days before that dinner you purchased
+at the drug store on the corner of Blank Street and Nemo Avenue thirty
+grains of morphia. You had the poison put up in capsules of five
+grains each. What do you say to that bit of evidence added to the
+circumstantial chain which you say is ingenious?"
+
+The doctor knit his brows and leaned back in his chair.
+
+"By the gods!" he said, "you are right. I did buy that morphia. I
+remember it now. I don't mind telling you that I had a number of
+experiments on hand, as every doctor has, and I had those capsules put
+up at the drug store, but this tragedy coming on made me forget all
+about the matter."
+
+"Did you take the morphia with you, doctor?"
+
+"No, I did not. And the box of capsules, I do not think, has been
+opened. But that is easily ascertained."
+
+The doctor rose, went to his cabinet, and unlocked it. From a number of
+packages he selected a small one, and brought it to the desk, placing it
+before the reporter.
+
+"There is the package. That contains, as you say, thirty grains of
+morphia in half a dozen five-grain capsules. You see that it is sealed
+just as it left the drug store. Now, open it and look for yourself. Here
+are scales; if you want to see whether a single grain is missing or not,
+find out for yourself.
+
+"Perhaps," said the newspaper man, "we had better leave this
+investigation for the proper authorities."
+
+"Then you still believe that I am the murderer of William Brenton?"
+
+"Yes, I still believe that."
+
+"Very well; you may do as you please. I think, however, in justice
+to myself, you should stay right here, and see that this box is not
+tampered with until the proper authorities, as you say, come."
+
+Then, placing his hand on the bell, he continued--"Whom shall I send
+for? An ordinary policeman, or some one from the central office? But,
+now that I think of it, here is a telephone. We can have any one brought
+here that you wish. I prefer that neither you nor I leave this room
+until that functionary has appeared. Name the authority you want brought
+here," said the doctor, going to the telephone, "and I will have him
+here if he is in town."
+
+The newspaper man was nonplussed. The Doctor's actions did not seem like
+those of a guilty man. If he were guilty he certainly had more nerve
+than any person Stratton had ever met. So he hesitated. Then he said--
+
+"Sit down a moment, doctor, and let us talk this thing over."
+
+"Just as you say," remarked Roland, drawing up his chair again.
+
+Stratton took the package, and looked it over carefully. It was
+certainly just in the condition in which it had left the drug store; but
+still, that could have been easily done by the doctor himself.
+
+"Suppose we open this package?" he said to Roland.
+
+"With all my heart," said the doctor, "go ahead;" and he shoved over to
+him a little penknife that was on the table.
+
+The reporter took the package, ran the knife around the edge, and opened
+it. There lay six capsules, filled, as the doctor had said. Roland
+picked up one of them, and looked at it critically.
+
+"I assure you," he said, "although I am quite aware you do not believe a
+word I say, that I have not seen those capsules before."
+
+He drew towards him a piece of paper, opened the capsule, and, let the
+white powder fall on the paper. He looked critically at the powder, and
+a shade of astonishment came over his face. He picked up the penknife,
+took a particle on the tip of it, and touched it with his tongue.
+
+"Don't fool with that thing!" said Stratton.
+
+"Oh, my dear fellow," he said, "morphia is not a poison in small
+quantities."
+
+The moment he had tasted it, however, he suddenly picked up the paper,
+put the five grains on his tongue, and swallowed them.
+
+Instantly the reporter sprang to his feet. He saw at once the reason for
+all the assumed coolness. The doctor was merely gaining time in order to
+commit suicide.
+
+"What have you done?" cried the reporter.
+
+"Done, my dear fellow? nothing very much. This is not morphia; it is
+sulphate of quinine."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+
+In the morning Jane Morton prepared to meet Mrs. Brenton, and make her
+confession. She called at the Brenton residence, but found it closed,
+as it had been ever since the tragedy of Christmas morning. It took her
+some time to discover the whereabouts of Mrs. Brenton, who, since the
+murder, had resided with a friend except while under arrest.
+
+For a moment Mrs. Brenton did not recognize the thin and pale woman who
+stood before her in a state of such extreme nervous agitation, that it
+seemed as if at any moment she might break down and cry.
+
+"I don't suppose you'll remember me, ma'am," began the girl, "but I
+worked for you two weeks before--before----"
+
+"Oh yes," said Mrs. Brenton, "I remember you now. Have you been ill? You
+look quite worn and pale, and very different from what you did the last
+time I saw you."
+
+"Yes," said the girl, "I believe I have been ill.".
+
+"You _believe_; aren't you sure?"
+
+"I have been very ill in mind, and troubled, and that is the reason I
+look so badly,--Oh, Mrs. Brenton, I wanted to tell you of something that
+has been weighing on my mind ever since that awful day! I know you can
+never forgive me, but I must tell it to you, or I shall go crazy."
+
+"Sit down, sit down," said the lady, kindly; "you know what trouble I
+have been in myself. I am sure that I am more able to sympathize now
+with one who is in trouble than ever I was before."
+
+"Yes, ma'am; but you were innocent, and I am guilty. That makes all the
+difference in the world."
+
+"Guilty!" cried Mrs. Brenton, a strange fear coming over her as she
+stared at the girl; "guilty of _what_?"
+
+"Oh, madam, let me tell you all about it. There is, of course, no
+excuse; but I'll begin at the beginning. You remember a while before
+Christmas that John came to see me one night, and we sat up very late in
+the kitchen, and your husband came down quietly, and when we heard him
+coming we put out the light and just as John was trying to get away,
+your husband shot twice at him, and hit him the second time?"
+
+"Oh yes," said Mrs. Brenton, "I remember that very well. I had forgotten
+about it in my own trouble; but I know that my husband intended to do
+something for the young man. I hope he was not seriously hurt?"
+
+[Illustration: "Guilty! Guilty of what?"]
+
+"No, ma'am; he is able to be about again now as well as ever, and is not
+even lame, which we expected he would be. But at the time I thought he
+was going to be lame all the rest of his life, and perhaps that is the
+reason I did what I did. When everything was in confusion in the house,
+and it was certain that we would all have to leave, I did a very wicked
+thing. I went to your room, and I stole some of your rings, and some
+money that was there, as well as a lot of other things that were in the
+room. It seemed to me then, although, of course, I know now how wicked
+it was, that you owed John something for what he had gone through, and
+I thought that he was to be lame, and that you would never miss the
+things; but, oh! madam, I have not slept a night since I took them. I
+have been afraid of the police and afraid of being found out. I have
+pawned nothing, and they are all just as I took them, and I have brought
+them back here to you, with every penny of the money. I know you can
+never forgive me, but I am willing now to be given up to the police,
+and I feel better in my mind than I have done ever since I took
+the things."
+
+"My poor child!" said Mrs. Brenton, sympathetically, "was that _all_?"
+
+"All?" cried the girl. "Yes, I have brought everything back."
+
+"Oh, I don't mean that, but I am sorry you have been worried over
+anything so trivial. I can see how at such a time, and feeling that you
+had been wronged, a temptation to take the things came to you. But I
+hope you will not trouble any more about the matter. I will see that
+John is compensated for all the injury he received, as far as it is
+possible for money to compensate him. I hope you will keep the money.
+The other things, of course, I shall take back, and I am glad you came
+to tell me of it before telling any one else. I think, perhaps, it is
+better never to say anything to anybody about this. People might not
+understand just what temptation you were put to, and they would not know
+the circumstances of the case, because nobody knows, I think, that John
+was hurt. Now, my dear girl, do not cry. It is all right. Of course you
+never will touch anything again that does not belong to you, and the
+suffering you have gone through has more than made up for all the wrong
+you have done. I am sure that I forgive you quite freely for it, and I
+think it was very noble of you to come and tell me about it."
+
+Mrs. Brenton took the package from the hands of the weeping girl, and
+opened it. She found everything there, as the girl had said. She took
+the money and offered it to Jane Morton. The girl shook her head.
+
+"No," she cried, "I cannot touch it. I cannot, indeed. It has been
+enough misery to me already."
+
+"Very well," said Mrs. Brenton. "I would like very much to see John.
+Will you bring him to me?"
+
+The girl looked at her with startled eyes.
+
+"You will not tell him?" she said.
+
+"No indeed, I shall tell him nothing. But I want to do what I can for
+him as I said. I suppose you are engaged to be married?"
+
+"Yes," answered the girl; "but if he knew of this he never, never would
+marry me."
+
+"If he did not," said Mrs. Brenton, "he would not be worthy of you. But
+he shall know nothing about it. You will promise to come here and see me
+with him, will you not?"
+
+"Yes, madam," said the girl.
+
+"Then good-bye, until I see you again."
+
+Mrs. Brenton sat for a long time thinking over this confession. It took
+her some time to recover her usual self-possession, because for a moment
+she had thought the girl was going to confess that she committed murder.
+In comparison with that awful crime, the theft seemed so trivial that
+Mrs. Brenton almost smiled when she thought of the girl's distress.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"Well," said John Speed to Mr. Brenton, "if that doesn't beat the Old
+Harry. Now I, for one, am very glad of it, if we come to the real truth
+of the matter."
+
+"I am glad also," said Brenton, "that the girl is not guilty, although I
+must say things looked decidedly against her."
+
+"I will tell you why I am glad," said Speed. "I am glad because it
+will take some of the superfluous conceit out of that French detective
+Lecocq. He was so awfully sure of himself. He couldn't possibly be
+mistaken. Now, think of the mistakes that man must have made while he
+was on earth, and had the power which was given into his hands in Paris.
+After all, Stratton is on the right track, and he will yet land your
+friend Roland in prison. Let us go and find Lecocq. This is too good to
+keep."
+
+"My dear sir," said Brenton, "you seem to be more elated because of your
+friend Stratton than for any other reason. Don't you want the matter
+ferreted out at all?"
+
+"Why, certainly I do; but I don't want it ferreted out by bringing an
+innocent person into trouble."
+
+"And may not Stephen Roland be an innocent person?"
+
+"Oh, I suppose so; but I do not think he is."
+
+"Why do you not think so?"
+
+"Well, if you want the real reason, simply because George Stratton
+thinks he isn't. I pin my faith to Stratton."
+
+"I think you overrate your friend Stratton."
+
+"Overrate him, sir? That is impossible. I love him so well that I hope
+he will solve this mystery himself, unaided and alone, and that in going
+back to Chicago he will be smashed to pieces in a railway accident, so
+that we can have him here to congratulate him."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+
+"I suppose," said Roland, "you thought for a moment I was trying to
+commit suicide. I think, Mr. Stratton, you will have a better opinion of
+me by-and-by. I shouldn't be at all surprised if you imagined I induced
+you to come in here to get you into a trap."
+
+"You are perfectly correct," said Stratton; "and I may say, although
+that was my belief, I was not in the least afraid of you, for I had you
+covered all the time."
+
+"Well," remarked Roland, carelessly, "I don't want to interfere with
+your business at all, but I wish you wouldn't cover me quite so much;
+that revolver of yours might go off."
+
+"Do you mean to say," said Stratton, "that there is nothing but quinine
+in those capsules?"
+
+"I'll tell you in a moment," as he opened them one by one. "No, there is
+nothing but quinine here. Thirty grains put up in five-grain capsules."
+
+George Stratton's eyes began to open. Then he slowly rose, and looked
+with horrified face at the doctor.
+
+"My God!" he cried; "who got the thirty grains of morphia?"
+
+"What do you mean?" asked the doctor.
+
+"Mean? Why, don't you see it? It is a chemist's mistake. Thirty grains
+of quinine have been sent you. Thirty grains of morphia have been sent
+to somebody else. Was it to William Brenton?"
+
+"By Jove!" said the doctor, "there's something in that. Say, let us go
+to the drug store."
+
+The two went out together, and walked to the drug store on the corner of
+Blank Street and Nemo Avenue.
+
+"Do you know this writing?" said Doctor Roland to the druggist, pointing
+to the label on the box.
+
+"Yes," answered the druggist; "that was written by one of my
+assistants."
+
+"Can we see him for a few moments?"
+
+"I don't know where he is to be found. He is a worthless fellow, and has
+gone to the devil this last few weeks with a rapidity that is something
+startling."
+
+"When did he leave?"
+
+"Well, he got drunk and stayed drunk during the holidays, and I had to
+discharge him. He was a very valuable man when he was sober; but he
+began to be so erratic in his habits that I was afraid he would make a
+ghastly mistake some time, so I discharged him before it was too late."
+
+"Are you sure you discharged him before it was too late?"
+
+The druggist looked at the doctor, whom he knew well, and said, "I never
+heard of any mistake, if he did make it."
+
+"You keep a book, of course, of all the prescriptions sent out?"
+
+"Certainly."
+
+"May we look at that book?"
+
+"I shall be very glad to show it to you. What month or week?"
+
+"I want to see what time you sent this box of morphia to me."
+
+"You don't know about what time it was, do you?
+
+"Yes; it must have been about two weeks before Christmas."
+
+The chemist looked over the pages of the book, and finally said, "Here
+it is."
+
+"Will you let me look at that page?"
+
+"Certainly."
+
+The doctor ran his finger down the column, and came to an entry written
+in the same hand.
+
+"Look here," he said to Stratton, "thirty grains of quinine sent to
+William Brenton, and next to it thirty grains of morphia sent to Stephen
+Roland. I see how it was. Those prescriptions were mixed up. My package
+went to poor Brenton."
+
+The druggist turned pale.
+
+"I hope," he said, "nothing public will come of this."
+
+"My dear sir," said Roland, "something public will _have_ to come of
+it. You will oblige me by ringing up the central police station, as this
+book must be given in charge of the authorities."
+
+"Look here," put in Stratton, his newspaper instinct coming uppermost,
+"I want to get this thing exclusively for the _Argus_."
+
+"Oh, I guess there will be no trouble about that. Nothing will be made
+public until to-morrow, and you can telegraph to-night if we find the
+box of capsules in Brenton's residence. We must take an officer with us
+for that purpose, but you can caution or bribe him to keep quiet until
+to-morrow."
+
+When the three went to William Brenton's residence they began a search
+of the room in which Brenton had died, but nothing was found. In the
+closet of the room hung the clothes of Brenton, and going through them
+Stratton found in the vest pocket of one of the suits a small box
+containing what was described as five-grain capsules of sulphate of
+quinine. The doctor tore one of these capsules apart, so as to see what
+was in it. Without a moment's hesitation he said--
+
+"There you are! That is the morphia. There were six capsules in this
+box, and one of them is missing. William Brenton poisoned himself!
+Feeling ill, he doubtless took what he thought was a dose of quinine.
+Many men indulge in what we call the quinine habit. It is getting to be
+a mild form of tippling. Brenton committed unconscious suicide!"
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+
+
+A group of men; who were really alive, but invisible to the searchers,
+stood in the room where the discovery was made. Two of the number were
+evidently angry, one in one way and one in another. The rest of the
+group appeared to be very merry. One angry man was Brenton himself, who
+was sullenly enraged. The other was the Frenchman, Lecocq, who was as
+deeply angered as Brenton, but, instead of being sullen, was exceedingly
+voluble.
+
+"I tell you," he cried, "it is not a mistake of mine. I went on correct
+principles from the first. I was misled by one who should have known
+better. You will remember, gentlemen," he continued, turning first to
+one and then the other, "that what I said was that we had certain facts
+to go on. One of those facts I got from Mr. Brenton. I said to him in
+your presence, 'Did you poison yourself?' He answered me, as I can prove
+by all of you, 'No, I did not.' I took that for a fact. I thought I was
+speaking to a reasonable man who knew what he was talking about."
+
+"Haven't I told you time and again," answered Brenton, indignantly,
+"that it was a mistake? You asked me if I poisoned myself. I answered
+you that I did not. Your question related to suicide. I did _not_ commit
+suicide. I was the victim of a druggist's mistake. If you had asked me
+if I had taken medicine before I went to bed, I should have told you
+frankly, 'Yes. I took one capsule of quinine.' It has been my habit for
+years, when I feel badly. I thought nothing of that."
+
+"My dear sir," said Lecocq, "I warned you, and I warned these gentlemen,
+that the very things that seem trivial to a thoughtless person are the
+things that sometimes count. You should have told me _everything_. If
+you took anything at all, you should have said so. If you had said to
+me, 'Monsieur Lecocq, before I retired I took five grains of quinine,'
+I should have at once said; 'Find where that quinine is, and see if it
+_is_ quinine, and see if there has not been a mistake.' I was entirely
+misled; I was stupidly misled."
+
+"Well, if there was stupidity," returned Brenton, "it was your own."
+
+"Come, come, gentlemen," laughed Speed, "all's well that ends well.
+Everybody has been mistaken, that's all about it. The best detective
+minds of Europe and America, of the world, and of the spirit-land, have
+been misled. You are _all_ wrong. Admit it, and let it end."
+
+"My dear sir," said Lecocq, "I shall not admit anything. I was not
+wrong; I was misled. It was this way----"
+
+"Oh, now, for goodness' sake don't go over it all again. We understand
+the circumstances well enough."
+
+"I tell you," cried Brenton, in an angry tone, "that----
+
+"Come, come," said Speed, "we have had enough of this discussion. I tell
+you that you are all wrong, every one of you. Come with me, Brenton, and
+we will leave this amusing crowd."
+
+"I shall do nothing of the kind," answered Brenton, shortly.
+
+"Oh, very well then, do as you please. I am glad the thing is ended, and
+I am glad it is ended by my Chicago friend."
+
+"Your Chicago friend!" sneered Brenton, slightingly; "It was discovered
+by Doctor Stephen Roland."
+
+"My dear fellow," said Speed, "Stephen Roland had all his time to
+discover the thing, and didn't do it, and never would have done it, if
+George Stratton hadn't encountered him. Well, good-bye, gentlemen; I am
+sorry to say that I have had quite enough of this discussion. But one
+thing looms up above it all, and that is that Chicago is ahead of the
+world in everything--in detection as well as in fires."
+
+"My dear sir," cried Lecocq, "it is not true. I will show you in a
+moment--"
+
+"You won't show _me_," said Speed, and he straightway disappeared.
+
+"Come, Ferris," said Brenton, "after all, you are the only friend I seem
+to have; come with me."
+
+"Where are you going?" asked Ferris, as they left.
+
+"I want to see how my wife takes the news."
+
+"Don't," said Mr. Ferris--"don't do anything of the kind. Leave matters
+just where they are. Everything has turned out what you would call all
+right. You see that your interference, as far as it went, was perfectly
+futile and useless. I want now to draw your attention to other things."
+
+"Very well, I will listen to you," said Brenton, "if you come with me
+and see how my wife takes the news. I want to enjoy for even a moment or
+two her relief and pleasure at finding that her good name is clear."
+
+"Very well," assented Ferris, "I will go with you."
+
+When they arrived they found the Chicago reporter ahead of them. He had
+evidently told Mrs. Brenton all the news, and her face flushed with
+eager pleasure as she listened to the recital.
+
+"Now," said the Chicago man, "I am going to leave Cincinnati. Are you
+sorry I am going?"
+
+"No," said Mrs. Brenton, looking him in the face, "I am not sorry."
+
+Stratton flushed at this, and then said, taking his hat in his hand,
+"Very well, madam, I shall bid you good day."
+
+"I am not sorry," said Mrs. Brenton, holding out her hand, "because I
+am going to leave Cincinnati myself, and I hope never to see the city
+again. So if you stayed here, you see, I should never meet you again,
+Mr. Stratton."
+
+"Alice," cried Stratton, impulsively grasping her hand in both of his,
+"don't you think you would like Chicago as a place of residence?"
+
+"George," she answered, "I do not know. I am going to Europe, and shall
+be there for a year or two."
+
+Then he said eagerly--
+
+"When you return, or if I go over there to see you after a year or two,
+may I ask you that question again?"
+
+"Yes," was the whispered answer.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"Come," said Brenton to Ferris, "let us go."
+
+
+
+
+
+
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