Back again in the laboratory, Kennedy threw off his coat and
plunged again into his investigation of the blood sample he had
taken from the wound in Mendoza's body.
We had scarcely been back half an hour before the door opened and
Dr. Leslie's perplexed face looked in on us. He was carrying a
large jar, in which he had taken away the materials which he
wished to examine.
"Well," asked Kennedy, pausing with a test-tube poised over a
Bunsen burner, "have you found anything yet? I haven't had time to
get very far with my own tests yet."
"Not a blessed thing," returned the coroner. "I'm desperate. One
of the chemists suggested cyanide, another carbon monoxide. But
there is no trace of either. Then he suggested nux vomica. It
wasn't nux vomica; but my tests show that it must have been
something very much like it. I've looked for all the ordinary
known poisons and some of the little-known alkaloids, but,
Kennedy, I always get back to the same point. There must have been
a poison there. He did not die primarily of the wound. It was
asphyxia due to a poison that really killed him, though the wound
might have done so, but not quite so quickly."
I could tell by the look that crossed Kennedy's face that at last
a ray of light had pierced the darkness. He reached for a bottle
on the shelf labelled spirits of turpentine.
Then he poured a little of the blood sample from the jar which the
coroner had brought into a clean tube and added a few drops of the
spirits of turpentine. A cloudy, dark precipitate formed. He
smiled quietly, and said, half to himself, "I thought so."
"What is it?" asked the coroner eagerly, "nux vomica?"
Craig shook his head as he stared at the black precipitate. "You
were perfectly right about the asphyxiation, Doctor," he remarked
slowly, "but wrong as to the cause. It was a poison--one you would
never dream of."
"Let me take all these samples and make some further tests," he
said. "I am quite sure of it, but it is new to me. By the way, may
I trouble you and Leslie to go over to the Museum of Natural
History with a letter?"
It was evident that he wanted to work uninterrupted, and we agreed
readily, especially because by going we might also be of some use
in solving the mystery of the poison.
He sat down and wrote a hasty note to the director of the Museum,
and a few moments later we were speeding over in Leslie's car.
At the big building we had no trouble in finding the director and
presenting the note. He was a close friend of Kennedy's and more
than willing to aid him in any way.
"You will excuse me a moment?" he apologized. "I will get from the
South American exhibit just what he wants."
We waited several minutes in the office until finally he returned
carrying a gourd, incrusted on its hollow inside surface with a
kind of blackish substance.
"That is what he wants, I think," the director remarked, wrapping
it up carefully in a box. "I don't need to ask you to tell
Professor Kennedy to watch out how he handles the thing. He
understands all about it."
We thanked the director and hurried out into the car again,
carrying the package, after his warning, as though it were so much
dynamite.
Altogether, I don't suppose that we could have been gone more than
an hour.
We burst into the laboratory, but, to my surprise, I did not see
Kennedy at his table. I stopped short and looked around.
There he was over in the corner, sprawled out in a chair, a tank
of oxygen beside him, from which he was inhaling laboriously
copious draughts. He rose as he saw us and walked unsteadily
toward the table.
"Why--what's the matter?" I cried, certain that m our absence an
attempt had been made on his life, perhaps to carry out the threat
of the curse.
"N-nothing," he gasped, with an attempt at a smile. "Only I--think
I was right--about the poison."
I did not like the way he looked. His hand was unsteady and his
eyes looked badly. But he seemed quite put out when I suggested
that he was working too hard over the case and had better take a
turn outdoors with us and have a bite to eat.
"You--you got it?" he asked, seizing the package that contained
the gourd and unwrapping it nervously.
He laid the gourd on the table, on which were also several jars of
various liquids and a number of other chemicals. At the end of the
table was a large, square package, from which sounds issued, as if
it contained something alive.
"Tell me," I persisted, "what has happened. Has any one been here
since we have been gone?"
"Not a soul," he answered, working his arms and shoulders as if to
get rid of some heavy weight that oppressed his chest.
"Then what has happened that makes you use the oxygen?" I
repeated, determined to get some kind of answer from him.
He turned to Leslie. "It was no ordinary asphyxiation, Doctor," he
said quickly.
"We have to deal in this case," continued Kennedy, his will-power
overcoming his weakness, "with a poison which is apparently among
the most subtle known. A particle of matter so minute as to be
hardly distinguishable by the naked eye, on the point of a lancet
or needle, a prick of the skin not anything like that wound of
Mendoza's, were necessary. But, fortunately, more of the poison
was used, making it just that much easier to trace, though for the
time the wound, which might itself easily have been fatal, threw
us off the scent. But given these things, not all the power in the
world--unless one was fully prepared--could save the life of the
person in whose flesh the wound was made."
Craig paused a moment, and we listened breathlessly.
"This poison, I find, acts on the so-called endplates of the
muscles and nerves. It produces complete paralysis, but not loss
of consciousness, sensation, circulation, or respiration until the
end approaches. It seems to be one of the most powerful agents of
which I have ever heard. When introduced in even a minute quantity
it produces death finally by asphyxiation--by paralyzing the
muscles of respiration. This asphyxia is what puzzled you,
Leslie."
He reached over and took a white mouse from the huge box on the
corner of the table.
"Let me show you what I have found," he said. "I am now going to
inject a little of the blood serum of the murdered man into this
white mouse."
He took a needle and injected some of a liquid which he had
isolated. The mouse did not even wince, so lightly did he touch
it. But as we watched, its life seemed gently to ebb away, without
pain, without struggle. Its breath simply seemed to stop.
Next he took the gourd which we had brought and with a knife
scraped off just the minutest particle of the black, licorice-like
stuff that incrusted it. He dissolved the particle in some
alcohol, and with a sterilized needle repeated his experiment on a
second mouse. The effect was precisely similar to that produced by
the blood on the first.
I was intent on what Craig was doing when Dr. Leslie broke in with
a question. "May I ask," he queried, "whether, admitting that the
first mouse died at least apparently in the same manner as the
second, you have proved that the poison is the same in both cases?
And if it is the same, can you show that it affects human beings
in the same way, that enough of it has been discovered in the
blood of Mendoza to have caused his death? In other words, I want
the last doubt set aside."
If ever Craig startled me, it was by his quiet reply:
"I've isolated it in his blood, extracted it, sterilized it, and
I've tried it on myself."
In breathless amazement, with eyes riveted on him, we listened.
"Then that was what was the matter?" I blurted out. "You had been
trying the poison on yourself?"
He nodded unconcernedly. "Altogether," he explained, as Leslie and
I listened, speechless, "I was able to recover from both blood
samples six centigrams of the poison. It is almost unknown. I
could only be sure of what I discovered by testing the
physiological effects. I was very careful. What else was there to
do? I couldn't ask you fellows to try it, if I was afraid."
"You wouldn't have let me do it, if I hadn't got rid of you," he
smiled quietly.
Leslie shook his head. "Tried it on the dog and made himself the
dog!" exclaimed Leslie. "I need the credit of a successful case--
but I'll not take this one."
"Starting with two centigrams of the stuff as a moderate dose," he
pursued, while I listened, stunned at his daring, "I injected it
into my right arm subcutaneously. Then I slowly worked my way up
to three and then four centigrams. You see what I had recovered
was far from the real thing. They did not seem at first to produce
any very appreciable results other than to cause some dizziness,
slight vertigo, a considerable degree of lassitude, and an
extremely painful headache of rather unusual duration."
"Good night!" I exclaimed. "Didn't that satisfy you?"
"Five centigrams considerably improved on it," he continued,
paying no attention to me. "It caused a degree of lassitude and
vertigo that was most distressing, and six centigrams, the whole
amount which I had recovered from the samples of blood, gave me
the fright of my life right here in this laboratory a few minutes
before you came in."
Leslie and I looked at each other and shook our heads.
"Perhaps I was not wise in giving myself so large an injection on
a day when I was overheated and below par otherwise, because of
the strain I have been under in handling this case, as well as
other work. However that may be, the added centigram produced so
much more on top of the five centigrams I had previously taken
that for a time I had reason to fear that that additional
centigram was just the amount needed to bring my experiments to a
permanent close.
"Within three minutes of the time of injection the dizziness and
vertigo had become so great as to make walking seem impossible. In
another minute the lassitude rapidly crept over me, and the
serious disturbance of my breathing made it apparent to me that
walking, waving my arms, anything, was imperative. My lungs felt
glued up, and the muscles of my chest refused to work. Everything
swam before my eyes, and I was soon reduced to walking up and down
the laboratory floor with halting steps, only preventing falling
on the floor by holding fast to the edge of the table.
"I thought of the tank of oxygen, and managed to crawl over and
turn it on. I gulped at it. It seemed to me that I spent hours
gasping for breath. It reminded me of what I once experienced in
the Cave of the Winds of Niagara, where water is more abundant in
the atmosphere than air. Yet my watch afterward indicated only
about twenty minutes of extreme distress. But that twenty minutes
is one period I shall never forget. I advise you, Leslie, if you
are ever so foolish as to try the experiment, to remain below the
five-centigram limit."
"Believe me, I'd rather lose my job," returned Leslie.
"How much of the stuff was administered to Mendoza," went on
Kennedy, "I cannot say. But it must have been a good deal more
than I took. Six centigrams which I recovered from these small
samples are only nine-tenths of a grain. You see what effect that
much had. I trust that answers your question?"
"What is this deadly poison that was used on Mendoza?" I managed
to ask.
"You have been fortunate enough to obtain a sample of it from the
Museum of Natural History," returned Craig. "It comes in a little
gourd, or often a calabash. This is in a gourd. It is a blackish,
brittle stuff, incrusting the sides of the gourd just as if it was
poured in in the liquid state and left to dry. Indeed, that is
just what has been done by those who manufacture it after a
lengthy and somewhat secret process."
He placed the gourd on the edge of the table, where we could see
it closely. I was almost afraid even to look at it.
"The famous traveller, Sir Robert Schomburgk, first brought it
into Europe, and Darwin has described it. It is now an article of
commerce, and is to be found in the United States Pharmacoepia as
a medicine, though, of course, it is used in only very minute
quantities, as a heart stimulant."
Craig opened a book to a place he had marked. "Here's an account
of it," he said. "Two natives were one day hunting. They were
armed with blow-pipes and quivers full of poisoned darts made of
thin, charred pieces of bamboo, tipped with this stuff. One of
them aimed a dart. It missed the object overhead, glanced off the
tree, and fell down on the hunter himself. This is how the other
native reported the result:
"'Quacca takes the dart out of his shoulder. Never a word. Puts it
in his quiver and throws it in the stream. Gives me his blow-pipe
for his little son. Says to me good-bye for his wife and the
village. Then he lies down. His tongue talks no longer. No sight
in his eyes. He folds his arms. He rolls over slowly. His mouth
moves without sound. I feel his heart. It goes fast and then slow.
It stops. Quacca has shot his last woorali dart.'"
Leslie and I looked at Kennedy, and the horror of the thing sank
deep into our minds. Woorali. What was it?
"Woorali, or curare," explained Craig slowly, "is the well-known
poison with which the South American Indians of the upper Orinoco
tip their arrows. Its principal ingredient is derived from the
Strychnos toxifera tree, which yields also the drug nux vomica,
which you, Dr. Leslie, have mentioned. On the tip of that Inca
dagger must have been a large dose of the dread curare, this fatal
South American Indian arrow poison."
"Say," ejaculated Leslie, "this thing begins to look eerie to me.
How about that piece of paper that I sent to you with the warning
about the curse of Mansiche and the Gold of the Gods. What if
there should be something in it? I'd rather not be a victim of
this curare, if it's all the same to you, Kennedy."
Kennedy was thinking deeply. Who could have sent the messages to
us all? Who was likely to have known of curare? I confess that I
had not even an idea. All of them, any of them, might have known.
The deeper we got into it, the more dastardly the crime against
Mendoza seemed. Involuntarily, I thought of the beautiful little
Senorita, about whom these terrible events centred. Though I had
no reason for it, I could not forget the fear that she had for
Senora de Moche, and the woman as she had been revealed to us in
our late interview.
"I suppose a Peruvian of average intelligence might know of the
arrow poison of Indians of another country," I ventured to Craig.
"Quite possible," he returned, catching immediately the drift of
my thoughts. "But the shoe-prints indicated that it was a man who
stole the dagger from the Museum. It may be that it was already
poisoned, too. In that case the thief would not have had to know
anything of curare, would not have needed to stab so deeply if he
had known."
I must confess that I was little further along in the solution of
the mystery than I had been when I first saw Mendoza's body.
Kennedy, however, did not seem to be worried. Leslie had long
since given up trying to form an opinion and, now that the nature
of the poison was finally established, was glad to leave the case
in our hands.
As for me, I was inclined to agree with Dr. Leslie, and, long
after he had left, there kept recurring to my mind those words:
BEWARE THE CURSE OF MANSICHE ON THE GOLD OF THE GODS.