Scandal, such as that which Kennedy unearthed in this Pearcy case,
was never much to his liking, yet he seemed destined, about this
period of his career, to have a good deal of it.
We had scarcely finished with the indictment that followed the
arrest of young Pearcy, when we were confronted by a situation
which was as unique as it was intensely modern.
"There's absolutely no insanity in Eugenia's family," I heard a
young man remark to Kennedy, as my key turned in the lock of the
laboratory door.
For a moment I hesitated about breaking in on a confidential
conference, then reflected that, as they had probably already
heard me at the lock, I had better go in and excuse myself.
As I swung the door open, I saw a young man pacing up and down the
laboratory nervously, too preoccupied even to notice the slight
noise I had made.
He paused in his nervous walk and faced Kennedy, his back to me.
"Kennedy," he said huskily, "I wouldn't care if there was insanity
in her family--for, my God!--the tragedy of it all now--I love
her!"
He turned, following Kennedy's eyes in my direction, and I saw on
his face the most haggard, haunting look of anxiety that I had
ever seen on a young person.
Instantly I recognized from the pictures I had seen in the
newspapers young Quincy Atherton, the last of this famous line of
the family, who had attracted a great deal of attention several
months previously by what the newspapers had called his search
through society for a "eugenics bride," to infuse new blood into
the Atherton stock.
"You need have no fear that Mr. Jameson will be like the other
newspaper men," reassured Craig, as he introduced us, mindful of
the prejudice which the unpleasant notoriety of Atherton's
marriage had already engendered in his mind.
I recalled that when I had first heard of Atherton's "eugenic
marriage," I had instinctively felt a prejudice against the very
idea of such cold, calculating, materialistic, scientific mating,
as if one of the last fixed points were disappearing in the chaos
of the social and sex upheaval.
Now, I saw that one great fact of life must always remain. We
might ride in hydroaeroplanes, delve into the very soul by
psychanalysis, perhaps even run our machines by the internal
forces of radium--even marry according to Galton or Mendel. But
there would always be love, deep passionate love of the man for
the woman, love which all the discoveries of science might perhaps
direct a little less blindly, but the consuming flame of which not
all the coldness of science could ever quench. No tampering with
the roots of human nature could ever change the roots.
I must say that I rather liked young Atherton. He had a frank,
open face, the most prominent feature of which was his somewhat
aristocratic nose. Otherwise he impressed one as being the victim
of heredity in faults, if at all serious, against which he was
struggling heroically.
It was a most pathetic story which he told, a story of how his
family had degenerated from the strong stock of his ancestors
until he was the last of the line. He told of his education, how
he had fallen, a rather wild youth bent in the footsteps of his
father who had been a notoriously good clubfellow, under the
influence of a college professor, Dr. Crafts, a classmate of his
father's, of how the professor had carefully and persistently
fostered in him an idea that had completely changed him.
"Crafts always said it was a case of eugenics against euthenics,"
remarked Atherton, "of birth against environment. He would tell me
over and over that birth gave me the clay, and it wasn't such bad
clay after all, but that environment would shape the vessel."
Then Atherton launched into a description of how he had striven to
find a girl who had the strong qualities his family germ plasm
seemed to have lost, mainly, I gathered, resistance to a taint
much like manic depressive insanity. And as he talked, it was
borne in on me that, after all, contrary to my first prejudice,
there was nothing very romantic indeed about disregarding the
plain teachings of science on the subject of marriage and one's
children.
In his search for a bride, Dr. Crafts, who had founded a sort of
Eugenics Bureau, had come to advise him. Others may have looked up
their brides in Bradstreet's, or at least the Social Register.
Atherton had gone higher, had been overjoyed to find that a girl
he had met in the West, Eugenia Gilman, measured up to what his
friend told him were the latest teachings of science. He had been
overjoyed because, long before Crafts had told him, he had found
out that he loved her deeply.
"And now," he went on, half choking with emotion, "she is
apparently suffering from just the same sort of depression as I
myself might suffer from if the recessive trait became active."
"Well, for one thing, she has the delusion that my relatives are
persecuting her."
"Persecuting her?" repeated Craig, stifling the remark that that
was not in itself a new thing in this or any other family. "How?"
"Oh, making her feel that, after all, it is Atherton family rather
than Gilman health that counts--little remarks that when our baby
is born, they hope it will resemble Quincy rather than Eugenia,
and all that sort of thing, only worse and more cutting, until the
thing has begun to prey on her mind."
"I see," remarked Kennedy thoughtfully. "But don't you think this
is a case for a--a doctor, rather than a detective?"
Atherton glanced up quickly. "Kennedy," he answered slowly, "where
millions of dollars are involved, no one can guess to what lengths
the human mind will go--no one, except you."
"Y-yes--but nothing definite. Now, take this case. If I should die
childless, after my wife, the Atherton estate would descend to my
nearest relative, Burroughs Atherton, a cousin."
"I have already drawn a will," he interrupted, "and in case I
survive Eugenia and die childless, the money goes to the founding
of a larger Eugenics Bureau, to prevent in the future, as much as
possible, tragedies such as this of which I find myself a part. If
the case is reversed, Eugenia will get her third and the remainder
will go to the Bureau or the Foundation, as I call the new
venture. But," and here young Atherton leaned forward and fixed
his large eyes keenly on us, "Burroughs might break the will. He
might show that I was of unsound mind, or that Eugenia was, too."
"Burroughs is the nearest," he replied, then added frankly, "I
have a second cousin, a young lady named Edith Atherton, with whom
both Burroughs and I used to be very friendly."
It was evident from the way he spoke that he had thought a great
deal about Edith Atherton, and still thought well of her.
"Your wife thinks it is Burroughs who is persecuting her?" asked
Kennedy.
"Does she get along badly with Edith? She knows her I presume?"
"Of course. The fact is that since the death of her mother, Edith
has been living with us. She is a splendid girl, and all alone in
the world now, and I had hopes that in New York she might meet
some one and marry well."
Kennedy was looking squarely at Atherton, wondering whether he
might ask a question without seeming impertinent. Atherton caught
the look, read it, and answered quite frankly, "To tell the truth,
I suppose I might have married Edith, before I met Eugenia, if
Professor Crafts had not dissuaded me. But it wouldn't have been
real love--nor wise. You know," he went on more frankly, now that
the first hesitation was over and he realized that if he were to
gain anything at all by Kennedy's services, there must be the
utmost candor between them, "you know cousins may marry if the
stocks are known to be strong. But if there is a defect, it is
almost sure to be intensified. And so I--I gave up the idea--never
had it, in fact, so strongly as to propose to her. And when I met
Eugenia all the Athertons on the family tree couldn't have bucked
up against the combination."
He was deadly in earnest as he arose from the chair into which he
had dropped after I came in.
"Oh, it's terrible--this haunting fear, this obsession that I have
had, that, in spite of all I have tried to do, some one, somehow,
will defeat me. Then comes the situation, just at a time when
Eugenia and I feel that we have won against Fate, and she in
particular needs all the consideration and care in the world--and-
-and I am defeated."
"I have my car waiting outside," he pleaded. "I wish you would go
with me to see Eugenia--now."
It was impossible to resist him. Kennedy rose and I followed, not
without a trace of misgiving.
The Atherton mansion was one of the old houses of the city, a
somber stone dwelling with a garden about it on a downtown square,
on which business was already encroaching. We were admitted by a
servant who seemed to walk over the polished floors with stealthy
step as if there was something sacred about even the Atherton
silence. As we waited in a high-ceilinged drawing-room with
exquisite old tapestries on the walls, I could not help feeling
myself the influence of wealth and birth that seemed to cry out
from every object of art in the house.
On the longer wall of the room, I saw a group of paintings. One, I
noted especially, must have been Atherton's ancestor, the founder
of the line. There was the same nose in Atherton, for instance, a
striking instance of heredity. I studied the face carefully. There
was every element of strength in it, and I thought instinctively
that, whatever might have been the effects of in-breeding and bad
alliances, there must still be some of that strength left in the
present descendant of the house of Atherton. The more I thought
about the house, the portrait, the whole case, the more unable was
I to get out of my head a feeling that though I had not been in
such a position before, I had at least read or heard something of
which it vaguely reminded me.
Eugenia Atherton was reclining listlessly in her room in a deep
leather easy chair, when Atherton took us up at last. She did not
rise to greet us, but I noted that she was attired in what Kennedy
once called, as we strolled up the Avenue, "the expensive
sloppiness of the present styles." In her case the looseness with
which her clothes hung was exaggerated by the lack of energy with
which she wore them.
She had been a beautiful girl, I knew. In fact, one could see that
she must have been. Now, however, she showed marks of change. Her
eyes were large, and protruding, not with the fire of passion
which is often associated with large eyes, but dully, set in a
puffy face, a trifle florid. Her hands seemed, when she moved
them, to shake with an involuntary tremor, and in spite of the
fact that one almost could feel that her heart and lungs were
speeding with energy, she had lost weight and no longer had the
full, rounded figure of health. Her manner showed severe mental
disturbance, indifference, depression, a distressing
deterioration. All her attractive Western breeziness was gone. One
felt the tragedy of it only too keenly.
"I have asked Professor Kennedy, a specialist, to call, my dear,"
said Atherton gently, without mentioning what the specialty was.
There was a colorless indifference in the tone which was almost
tragic. She said the words slowly and deliberately, as though even
her mind worked that way.
From the first, I saw that Kennedy had been observing Eugenia
Atherton keenly. And in the role of specialist in nervous diseases
he was enabled to do what otherwise would have been difficult to
accomplish.
Gradually, from observing her mental condition of indifference
which made conversation extremely difficult as well as profitless,
he began to consider her physical condition. I knew him well
enough to gather from his manner alone as he went on that what had
seemed at the start to be merely a curious case, because it
concerned the Athertons, was looming up in his mind as unusual in
itself, and was interesting him because it baffled him.
Craig had just discovered that her pulse was abnormally high, and
that consequently she had a high temperature, and was sweating
profusely.
"Would you mind turning your head, Mrs. Atherton?" he asked.
She turned slowly, half way, her eyes fixed vacantly on the floor
until we could see the once striking profile.
"No, all the way around, if you please," added Kennedy.
She offered no objection, not the slightest resistance. As she
turned her head as far as she could, Kennedy quickly placed his
forefinger and thumb gently on her throat, the once beautiful
throat, now with skin harsh and rough. Softly he moved his fingers
just a fraction of an inch over the so-called "Adam's apple" and
around it for a little distance.
"Thank you," he said. "Now around to the other side."
He made no other remark as he repeated the process, but I fancied
I could tell that he had had an instant suspicion of something the
moment he touched her throat.
He rose abstractedly, bowed, and we started to leave the room,
uncertain whether she knew or cared. Quincy had fixed his eyes
silently on Craig, as if imploring him to speak, but I knew how
unlikely that was until he had confirmed his suspicion to the last
slightest detail.
We were passing through a dressing room in the suite when we met a
tall young woman, whose face I instantly recognized, not because I
had ever seen it before, but because she had the Atherton nose so
prominently developed.
We bowed and stood for a moment chatting. There seemed to be no
reason why we should leave the suite, since Mrs. Atherton paid so
little attention to us even when we had been in the same room. Yet
a slight movement in her room told me that in spite of her
lethargy she seemed to know that we were there and to recognize
who had joined us.
Edith Atherton was a noticeable woman, a woman of temperament, not
beautiful exactly, but with a stateliness about her, an aloofness.
The more I studied her face, with its thin sensitive lips and
commanding, almost imperious eyes, the more there seemed to be
something peculiar about her. She was dressed very simply in
black, but it was the simplicity that costs. One thing was quite
evident--her pride in the family of Atherton.
And as we talked, it seemed to be that she, much more than Eugenia
in her former blooming health, was a part of the somber house.
There came over me again the impression I had received before that
I had read or heard something like this case before.
She did not linger long, but continued her stately way into the
room where Eugenia sat. And at once it flashed over me what my
impression, indefinable, half formed, was. I could not help
thinking, as I saw her pass, of the lady Madeline in "The Fall of
the House of Usher."