The note of appeal in her tone was powerful, but I could not so
readily shake off my first suspicions of the woman. Whether or not
she convinced Kennedy, he did not show.
"I was only a young girl when I met Mr. Thornton," she raced on.
"I was not yet eighteen when we were married. Too late, I found
out the curse of his life--and of mine. He was a drug fiend. From
the very first life with him was insupportable. I stood it as long
as I could, but when he beat me because he had no money to buy
drugs, I left him. I gave myself up to my career on the stage.
Later I heard that he was dead--a suicide. I worked, day and
night, slaved, and rose in the profession--until, at last, I met
Mr. Pitts."
She paused, and it was evident that it was with a struggle that
she could talk so.
"Three months after I was married to him, Thornton suddenly
reappeared, from the dead it seemed to me. He did not want me
back. No, indeed. All he wanted was money. I gave him money, my
own. money, for I made a great deal in my stage days. But his
demands increased. To silence him I have paid him thousands. He
squandered them faster than ever. And finally, when it became
unbearable, I appealed to a friend. That friend has now succeeded
in placing this man quietly in a sanitarium for the insane."
She looked from one to the other of us in alarm. "Before God, I
know no more of that than does Mr. Pitts."
Was she telling the truth? Would she stop at anything to avoid the
scandal and disgrace of the charge of bigamy? Was there not
something still that she was concealing? She took refuge in the
last resort--tears.
Encouraging as it was to have made such progress, it did not seem
to me that we were much nearer, after all, to the solution of the
mystery. Kennedy, as usual, had nothing to say until he was
absolutely sure of his ground. He spent the greater part of the
next day hard at work over the minute investigations of his
laboratory, leaving me to arrange the details of a meeting he
planned for that night.
There were present Mr. and Mrs. Pitts, the former in charge of Dr.
Lord. The valet, Edward, was also there, and in a neighbouring
room was Thornton in charge of two nurses from the sanitarium.
Thornton was a sad wreck of a man now, whatever he might have been
when his blackmail furnished him with an unlimited supply of his
favourite drugs.
"Let us go back to the very start of the case," began Kennedy when
we had all assembled, "the murder of the chef, Sam."
It seemed that the mere sound of his voice electrified his little
audience. I fancied a shudder passed over the slight form of Mrs.
Pitts, as she must have realised that this was the point where
Kennedy had left off, in his questioning her the night before.
"There is," he went on slowly, "a blood test so delicate that one
might almost say that he could identify a criminal by his very
blood-crystals--the fingerprints, so to speak, of his blood. It
was by means of these 'hemoglobin clues,' if I may call them so,
that I was able to get on the right trail. For the fact is that a
man's blood is not like that of any other living creature. Blood
of different men, of men and women differ. I believe that in time
we shall be able to refine this test to tell the exact individual,
too.
"What is this principle? It is that the hemoglobin or red
colouring-matter of the blood forms crystals. That has long been
known, but working on this fact Dr. Reichert and Professor Brown
of the University of Pennsylvania have made some wonderful
discoveries.
"We could distinguish human from animal blood before, it is true.
But the discovery of these two scientists takes us much further.
By means of blood-crystals we can distinguish the blood of man
from that of the animals and in addition that of white men from
that of negroes and other races. It is often the only way of
differentiating between various kinds of blood.
"The variations in crystals in the blood are in part of form and
in part of molecular structure, the latter being discovered only
by means of the polarising microscope. A blood-crystal is only one
two-thousand-two-hundred-and-fiftieth of an inch in length and one
nine-thousandth of an inch in breadth. And yet minute as these
crystals are, this discovery is of immense medico-legal
importance. Crime may now be traced by blood-crystals."
He displayed on his table a number of enlarged micro-photographs.
Some were labelled, "Characteristic crystals of white man's
blood"; others "Crystallisation of negro blood"; still others,
"Blood-crystals of the cat."
"I have here," he resumed, after we had all examined the
photographs and had seen that there was indeed a vast amount of
difference, "three characteristic kinds of crystals, all of which
I found in the various spots in the kitchen of Mr. Pitts. There
were three kinds of blood, by the infallible Reichert test."
I had been prepared for his discovery of two kinds, but three
heightened the mystery still more.
"There was only a very little of the blood which was that of the
poor, faithful, unfortunate Sam, the negro chef," Kennedy went on.
"A little more, found far from his body, is that of a white
person. But most of it is not human blood at all. It was the blood
of a cat."
The revelation was startling. Before any of us could ask, he
hastened to explain.
"It was placed there by some one who wished to exaggerate the
struggle in order to divert suspicion. That person had indeed been
wounded slightly, but wished it to appear that the wounds were
very serious. The fact of the matter is that the carving-knife is
spotted deeply with blood, but it is not human blood. It is the
blood of a cat. A few years ago even a scientific detective would
have concluded that a fierce hand-to-hand struggle had been waged
and that the murderer was, perhaps, fatally wounded. Now, another
conclusion stands, proved infallibly by this Reichert test. The
murderer was wounded, but not badly. That person even went out of
the room and returned later, probably with a can of animal blood,
sprinkled it about to give the appearance of a struggle, perhaps
thought of preparing in this way a plea of self-defence. If that
latter was the case, this Reichert test completely destroys it,
clever though it was." No one spoke, but the same thought was
openly in all our minds. Who was this wounded criminal?
I asked myself the usual query of the lawyers and the detectives--
Who would benefit most by the death of Pitts? There was but one
answer, apparently, to that. It was Minna Pitts. Yet it was
difficult for me to believe that a woman of her ordinary
gentleness could be here to-night, faced even by so great
exposure, yet be so solicitous for him as she had been and then at
the same time be plotting against him. I gave it up, determining
to let Kennedy unravel it in his own way.
Craig evidently had the same thought in his mind, however, for he
continued: "Was it a woman who killed the chef? No, for the third
specimen of blood, that of the white person, was the blood of a
man; not of a woman."
Pitts had been following closely, his unnatural eyes now gleaming.
"You said he was wounded, you remember," he interrupted, as if
casting about in his mind to recall some one who bore a recent
wound. "Perhaps it was not a bad wound, but it was a wound
nevertheless, and some one must have seen it, must know about it.
It is not three days."
Kennedy shook his head. It was a point that had bothered him a
great deal.
"As to the wounds," he added in a measured tone "although this
occurred scarcely three days ago, there is no person even remotely
suspected of the crime who can be said to bear on his hands or
face others than old scars of wounds."
He paused. Then he shot out in quick staccato, "Did you ever hear
of Dr. Carrel's most recent discovery of accelerating the healing
of wounds so that those which under ordinary circumstances might
take ten days to heal might be healed in twenty-four hours?"
Rapidly, now, he sketched the theory. "If the factors that bring
about the multiplication of cells and the growth of tissues were
discovered, Dr. Carrel said to himself, it would perhaps become
possible to hasten artificially the process of repair of the body.
Aseptic wounds could probably be made to cicatrise more rapidly.
If the rate of reparation of tissue were hastened only ten times,
a skin wound would heal in less than twenty-four hours and a
fracture of the leg in four or five days.
"For five years Dr. Carrel has been studying the subject, applying
various extracts to wounded tissues. All of them increased the
growth of connective tissue, but the degree of acceleration varied
greatly. In some cases it was as high, as forty times the normal.
Dr. Carrel's dream of ten times the normal was exceeded by
himself."
Astounded as we were by this revelation, Kennedy did not seem to
consider it as important as one that he was now hastening to show
us. He took a few cubic centimetres of some culture which he had
been preparing, placed it in a tube, and poured in eight or ten
drops of sulphuric acid. He shook it.
"I have here a culture from some of the food that I found was
being or had been prepared for Mr. Pitts. It was in the icebox."
Then he took another tube. "This," he remarked, "is a one-to-one-
thousand solution of sodium nitrite."
He held it up carefully and poured three or four cubic centimetres
of it into the first tube so that it ran carefully down the side
in a manner such as to form a sharp line of contact between the
heavier culture with the acid and the lighter nitrite solution.
"You see," he said, "the reaction is very clear cut if you do it
this way. The ordinary method in the laboratory and the text-books
is crude and uncertain."
"What is it?" asked Pitts eagerly, leaning forward with unwonted
strength and noting the pink colour that appeared at the junction
of the two liquids, contrasting sharply with the portions above
and below.
"The ring or contact test for indol," Kennedy replied, with
evident satisfaction. "When the acid and the nitrites are mixed
the colour reaction is unsatisfactory. The natural yellow tint
masks that pink tint, or sometimes causes it to disappear, if the
tube is shaken. But this is simple, clear, delicate--unescapable.
There was indol in that food of yours, Mr. Pitts."
"Is," explained Kennedy, "a chemical compound--one of the toxins
secreted by intestinal bacteria and responsible for many of the
symptoms of senility. It used to be thought that large doses of
indol might be consumed with little or no effect on normal man,
but now we know that headache, insomnia, confusion, irritability,
decreased activity of the cells, and intoxication are possible
from it. Comparatively small doses over a long time produce
changes in organs that lead to serious results.
"It is," went on Kennedy, as the full horror of the thing sank
into our minds, "the indol-and phenol-producing bacteria which are
the undesirable citizens of the body, while the lactic-acid
producing germs check the production of indol and phenol. In my
tests here to-day, I injected four one-hundredths of a grain of
indol into a guinea-pig. The animal had sclerosis or hardening of
the aorta. The liver, kidneys, and supra-renals were affected, and
there was a hardening of the brain. In short, there were all the
symptoms of old age."
We sat aghast. Indol! What black magic was this? Who put it in the
food?
"It is present," continued Craig, "in much larger quantities than
all the Metchnikoff germs could neutralise. What the chef was
ordered to put into the food to benefit you, Mr. Pitts, was
rendered valueless, and a deadly poison was added by what another-
-"
Minna Pitts had been clutching for support at the arms of her
chair as Kennedy proceeded. She now threw herself at the feet of
Emery Pitts,
"Forgive me," she sobbed. "I can stand it no longer. I had tried
to keep this thing about Thornton from you. I have tried to make
you happy and well--oh--tried so hard, so faithfully. Yet that old
skeleton of my past which I thought was buried would not stay
buried. I have bought Thornton off again and again, with money--my
money--only to find him threatening again. But about this other
thing, this poison, I am as innocent, and I believe Thornton is
as--"
Craig laid a gentle hand on her lips. She rose wildly and faced
him in passionate appeal.
"Who--who is this Thornton?" demanded Emery Pitts.
Quickly, delicately, sparing her as much as he could, Craig
hurried over our experiences.
"He is in the next room," Craig went on, then facing Pitts added:
"With you alive, Emery Pitts, this blackmail of your wife might
have gone on, although there was always the danger that you might
hear of it--and do as I see you have already done--forgive, and
plan to right the unfortunate mistake. But with you dead, this
Thornton, or rather some one using him, might take away from Minna
Pitts her whole interest in your estate, at a word. The law, or
your heirs at law, would never forgive as you would."
Pitts, long poisoned by the subtle microbic poison, stared at
Kennedy as if dazed.
"Who was caught in your kitchen, Mr. Pitts, and, to escape
detection, killed your faithful chef and covered his own traces so
cleverly?" rapped out Kennedy. "Who would have known the new
process of healing wounds? Who knew about the fatal properties of
indol? Who was willing to forego a one-hundred-thousand-dollar
prize in order to gain a fortune of many hundreds of thousands?"
Kennedy paused, then finished with irresistibly dramatic logic;
"Who else but the man who held the secret of Minna Pitts's past
and power over her future so long as he could keep alive the
unfortunate Thornton--the up-to-date doctor who substituted an
elixir of death at night for the elixir of life prescribed for you
by him in the daytime--Dr. Lord."
Kennedy had moved quietly toward the door. It was unnecessary. Dr.
Lord was cornered and knew it. He made no fight. In fact,
instantly his keen mind was busy outlining his battle in court,
relying on the conflicting testimony of hired experts.
"Minna," murmured Pitts, falling back, exhausted by the
excitement, on his pillows, "Minna--forgive? What is there to
forgive? The only thing to do is to correct. I shall be well--soon
now--my dear. Then all will be straightened out."
"Walter," whispered Kennedy to me, "while we are waiting, you can
arrange to have Thornton cared for at Dr. Hodge's Sanitarium."
He handed me a card with the directions where to take the
unfortunate man. When at last I had Thornton placed where no one
else could do any harm through him, I hastened back to the
laboratory.
"That Dr. Lord will be a tough customer," he remarked. "Of course
you're not interested in what happens in a case after we have
caught the criminal. But that often is really only the beginning
of the fight. We've got him safely lodged in the Tombs now,
however."
"I wish there was some elixir for fatigue," I remarked, as we
closed the laboratory that night.
"There is," he replied. "A homeopathic remedy--more fatigue."
We started on our usual brisk roundabout walk to the apartment.
But instead of going to bed, Kennedy drew a book from the
bookcase.
"I shall read myself to sleep to-night," he explained, settling
deeply in his chair.
As for me, I went directly to my room, planning that to-morrow I
would take several hours off and catch up in my notes.
That morning Kennedy was summoned downtown and had to interrupt
more important duties in order to appear before Dr. Leslie in the
coroner's inquest over the death of the chef. Dr. Lord was held
for the Grand Jury, but it was not until nearly noon that Craig
returned.
We were just about to go out to luncheon, when the door buzzer
sounded.
"A note for Mr. Kennedy," announced a man in a police uniform,
with a blue anchor edged with white on his coat sleeve.
Craig tore open the envelope quickly with his forefinger. Headed
"Harbour Police, Station No. 3, Staten Island," was an urgent
message from our old friend Deputy Commissioner O'Connor.
"I have taken personal charge of a case here that is sufficiently
out of the ordinary to interest you," I read when Kennedy tossed
the note over to me and nodded to the man from the harbour squad
to wait for us. "The Curtis family wish to retain a private
detective to work in conjunction with the police in investigating
the death of Bertha Curtis, whose body was found this morning in
the waters of Kill van Kull."
Kennedy and I lost no time in starting downtown with the policeman
who had brought the note.
The Curtises, as we knew, were among the prominent families of
Manhattan and I recalled having heard that at one time Bertha
Curtis had been an actress, in spite of the means and social
position of her family, from whom she had become estranged as a
result.
At the station of the harbour police, O'Connor and another man,
who was in a state of extreme excitement, greeted us almost before
we had landed.
"There have been some queer doings about here," exclaimed the
deputy as he grasped Kennedy's hand, "but first of all let me
introduce Mr. Walker Curtis."
In a lower tone as we walked up the dock O'Connor continued, "He
is the brother of the girl whose body the men in the launch at the
station found in the Kill this morning. They thought at first that
the girl had committed suicide, making it doubly sure by jumping
into the water, but he will not believe it and,--well, if you'll
just come over with us to the local undertaking establishment, I'd
like to have you take a look at the body and see if your opinion
coincides with mine.
"Ordinarily," pursued O'Connor, "there isn't much romance in
harbour police work nowadays, but in this case some other elements
seem to be present which are not usually associated with violent
deaths in the waters of the bay, and I have, as you will see,
thought it necessary to take personal charge of the investigation.
"Now, to shorten the story as much as possible, Kennedy, you know
of course that the legislature at the last session enacted laws
prohibiting the sale of such drugs as opium, morphine, cocaine,
chloral and others, under much heavier penalties than before. The
Health authorities not long ago reported to us that dope was being
sold almost openly, without orders from physicians, at several
scores of places and we have begun a crusade for the enforcement
of the law. Of course you know how prohibition works in many
places and how the law is beaten. The dope fiends seem to be doing
the same thing with this law.
"Of course nowadays everybody talks about a 'system' controlling
everything, so I suppose people would say that there is a 'dope
trust.' At any rate we have run up against at least a number of
places that seem to be banded together in some way, from the
lowest down in Chinatown to one very swell joint uptown around
what the newspapers are calling 'Crime Square.' It is not that
this place is pandering to criminals or the women of the
Tenderloin that interests us so much as that its patrons are men
and women of fashionable society whose jangled nerves seem to
demand a strong narcotic.
"This particular place seems to be a headquarters for obtaining
them, especially opium and its derivatives.
"One of the frequenters of the place was this unfortunate girl,
Bertha Curtis. I have watched her go in and out myself, wild-eyed,
nervous, mentally and physically wrecked for life. Perhaps twenty-
five or thirty persons visit the place each day. It is run by a
man known as 'Big Jack' Clendenin who was once an actor and, I
believe, met and fascinated Miss Curtis during her brief career on
the stage. He has an attendant there, a Jap, named Nichi Moto, who
is a perfect enigma. I can't understand him on any reasonable
theory. A long time ago we raided the place and packed up a lot of
opium, pipes, material and other stuff. We found Clendenin there,
this girl, several others, and the Jap. I never understood just
how it was but somehow Clendenin got off with a nominal fine and a
few days later opened up again. We were watching the place,
getting ready to raid it again and present such evidence that
Clendenin couldn't possibly beat it, when all of a sudden along
came this--this tragedy."
We had at last arrived at the private establishment which was
doing duty as a morgue. The bedraggled form that had been bandied
about by the tides all night lay covered up in the cold damp
basement. Bertha Curtis had been a girl of striking beauty once.
For a long time I gazed at the swollen features before I realised
what it was that fascinated and puzzled me about her. Kennedy,
however, after a casual glance had arrived at at least a part of
her story.
"That girl," he whispered to me so that her brother could not
hear, "has led a pretty fast life. Look at those nails, yellow and
dark. It isn't a weak face, either. I wouldn't be surprised if the
whole thing, the Oriental glamour and all that, fascinated her as
much as the drug."
So far the case with its heartrending tragedy had all the earmarks
of suicide.