The Dream Doctor
A >>
Arthur B. Reeve >> The Dream Doctor
Pages:
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
5 |
6 |
7 |
8 |
9 |
10 |
11 |
12 |
13 |
14 |
15 |
16 |
17 |
18 |
19 |
20 |
21 | 22
He was holding the document and the copy, just an instant, as if
considering how to announce with best effect what he had
discovered.
"In order to unravel this mystery," he resumed, looking up and
facing the Elmores, Kilgore, and Hollins squarely, "I decided to
find out whether any one had had access to that closet where the
will was hidden. It was long ago, and there seemed to be little
that I could do. I knew it was useless to look for fingerprints.
"So I used what we detectives now call the law of suggestion. I
questioned closely one who was in touch with all those who might
have had such access. I hinted broadly at seeking fingerprints
which might lead to the identity of one who had entered the house
unknown to the Godwins, and placed a document where private
detectives would subsequently find it under suspicious
circumstances.
"Naturally, it would seem to one who was guilty of such an act, or
knew of it, that there might, after all, be finger-prints. I tried
it. I found out through this little tube, the detectascope, that
one really entered the room after that, and tried to wipe off any
supposed finger-prints that might still remain. That settled it.
The second will was a forgery, and the person who entered that
room so stealthily this afternoon knows that it is a forgery."
As Kennedy slapped down on the table the film from his camera,
which had been concealed, Mrs. Godwin turned her now large and
unnaturally bright eyes and met those of the other woman in the
room.
"Oh--oh--heaven help us--me, I mean!" cried Miriam, unable to bear
the strain of the turn of events longer. "I knew there would be
retribution--I knew--I knew--"
Mrs. Godwin was on her feet in a moment.
"Once my intuition was not wrong though all science and law was
against me," she pleaded with Kennedy. There was a gentleness in
her tone that fell like a soft rain on the surging passions of
those who had wronged her so shamefully. "Professor Kennedy,
Miriam could not have forged--"
Kennedy smiled. "Science was not against you, Mrs. Godwin.
Ignorance was against you. And your intuition does not go contrary
to science this time, either."
It was a splendid exhibition of fine feeling which Kennedy waited
to have impressed on the Elmores, as though burning it into their
minds.
"Miriam Elmore knew that her brothers had forged a will and hidden
it. To expose them was to convict them of a crime. She kept their
secret, which was the secret of all three. She even tried to hide
the finger-prints which would have branded her brothers.
"For ptomaine poisoning had unexpectedly hastened the end of old
Mr. Godwin. Then gossip and the 'scientists' did the rest. It was
accidental, but Bradford and Lambert Elmore were willing to let
events take their course and declare genuine the forgery which
they had made so skilfully, even though it convicted an innocent
man of murder and killed his faithful wife. As soon as the courts
can be set in motion to correct an error of science by the truth
of later science, Sing Sing will lose one prisoner from the death
house and gain two forgers in his place."
Mrs. Godwin stood before us, radiant. But as Kennedy's last words
sank into her mind, her face clouded.
"Must--must it be an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth?" she
pleaded eagerly. "Must that grim prison take in others, even if my
husband goes free?"
Kennedy looked at her long and earnestly, as if to let the beauty
of her character, trained by its long suffering, impress itself on
his mind indelibly.
He shook his head slowly.
"I'm afraid there is no other way, Mrs. Godwin," he said gently
taking her arm and leaving the others to be dealt with by a
constable whom he had dozing in the hotel lobby.
"Kahn is going up to Albany to get the pardon--there can be no
doubt about it now," he added. "Mrs. Godwin, if you care to do so,
you may stay here at the hotel, or you may go down with us on the
midnight train as far as Ossining. I will wire ahead for a
conveyance to meet you at the station. Mr. Jameson and I must go
on to New York."
"The nearer I am to Sanford now, the happier I shall be," she
answered, bravely keeping back the tears of happiness.
The ride down to New York, after our train left Ossining, was
accomplished in a day coach in which our fellow passengers slept
in every conceivable attitude of discomfort.
Yet late, or rather early, as it was, we found plenty of life
still in the great city that never sleeps. Tired, exhausted, I was
at least glad to feel that finally we were at home.
"Craig," I yawned, as I began to throw off my clothes, "I'm ready
to sleep a week."
There was no answer.
I looked up at him almost resentfully. He had picked up the mail
that lay under our letter slot and was going through it as eagerly
as if the clock registered P.M. instead of A.M.
"Let me see," I mumbled sleepily, checking over my notes, "how
many days have we been at it?"
I turned the pages slowly, after the manner in which my mind was
working.
"It was the twenty-sixth when you got that letter from Ossining,"
I calculated, "and to-day makes the thirtieth. My heavens--is
there still another day of it? Is there no rest for the wicked?"
Kennedy looked up and laughed.
He was pointing at the calendar on the desk before him.
"There are only thirty days in the month," he remarked slowly.
"Thank the Lord," I exclaimed. "I'm all in!"
He tipped his desk-chair back and bit the amber of his meerchaum
contemplatively.
"But to-day is the first," he drawled, turning the leaf on the
calendar with just a flicker of a smile.
THE END
Pages:
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
5 |
6 |
7 |
8 |
9 |
10 |
11 |
12 |
13 |
14 |
15 |
16 |
17 |
18 |
19 |
20 |
21 | 22