The Poisoned Pen(Fiscle Part-3), Arthur B. Reeve [my reading book TXT] 📗
- Author: Arthur B. Reeve
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Us, Startled.
"What Was It About?" Asked Craig.
"It Was A Note From An Artist, Thurston, Who Gave The Address Of
Mrs. Boncour's Bungalow--Ah, I See You Have Heard Of Him. He Asked
Dixon's Recommendation Of A Certain Patent Headache Medicine. I
Thought It Possibly Evidential, And I Asked Dixon About It. He
Explained It By Saying That He Did Not Have A Copy Of His Reply,
But As Near As He Could Recall, He Wrote That The Compound Would
Not Cure A Headache Except At The Expense Of Reducing Heart Action
Dangerously. He Says He Sent No Prescription. Indeed, He Thought
It A Scheme To Extract Advice Without Incurring The Charge For An
Office Call And Answered It Only Because He Thought Vera Had
Become Reconciled To Thurston Again. I Can't Find That Letter Of
Thurston's. It Is Gone."
We Looked At Each Other In Amazement.
"Why, If Dixon Contemplated Anything Against Miss Lytton, Should
He Preserve This Letter From Her?" Mused Kennedy. "Why Didn't He
Destroy It?"
"That's What Puzzles Me," Remarked Leland. "Do You Suppose Some
One Has Broken In And Substituted This Lytton Letter For The
Thurston Letter?"
Kennedy Was Scrutinising The Letter, Saying Nothing. "I May Keep
It?" He Asked At Length. Leland Was Quite Willing And Even
Undertook To Obtain Some Specimens Of The Writing Of Vera Lytton.
With These And The Letter Kennedy Was Working Far Into The Night
And Long After I Had Passed Into A Land Troubled With Many Wild
Dreams Of Deadly Poisons And Secret Intrigues Of Artists.
The Next Morning A Message From Our Old Friend First Deputy
O'connor In New York Told Briefly Of Locating The Rooms Of An
Artist Named Thurston In One Of The Co-Operative Studio
Apartments. Thurston Himself Had Not Been There For Several Days
And Was Reported To Have Gone To Maine To Sketch. He Had Had A
Number Of Debts, But Before He Left They Had All Been Paid--
Strange To Say, By A Notorious Firm Of Shyster Lawyers, Kerr &
Kimmel. Kennedy Wired Back To Find Out The Facts From Kerr &
Kimmel And To Locate Thurston At Any Cost.
Even The Discovery Of The New Letter Did Not Shake The Wonderful
Self-Possession Of Dr. Dixon. He Denied Ever Having Received It
And Repeated His Story Of A Letter From Thurston To Which He Had
Replied By Sending An Answer, Care Of Mrs. Boncour, As Requested.
He Insisted That The Engagement Between Miss Lytton And Himself
Had Been Broken Before The Announcement Of His Engagement With
Miss Willard. As For Thurston, He Said The Man Was Little More
Than A Name To Him. He Had Known Perfectly All The Circumstances
Of The Divorce, But Had Had No Dealings With Thurston And No Fear
Of Him. Again And Again He Denied Ever Receiving The Letter From
Vera Lytton.
Kennedy Did Not Tell The Willards Of The New Letter. The Strain
Had Begun To Tell On Alma, And Her Father Had Had Her Quietly
Taken To A Farm Of His Up In The Country. To Escape The Curious
Eyes Of Reporters, Halsey Post Had Driven Up One Night In His
Closed Car. She Had Entered It Quickly With Her Father, And The
Journey Had Been Made In The Car, While Halsey Post Had Quietly
Dropped Off On The Outskirts Of The Town, Where Another Car Was
Waiting To Take Him Back. It Was Evident That The Willard Family
Relied Implicitly On Halsey, And His Assistance To Them Was Most
Considerate. While He Never Forced Himself Forward, He Kept In
Part 3 Chapter 1 (The Poisoned Pen) Pg 7Close Touch With The Progress Of The Case, And Now That Alma Was
Away His Watchfulness Increased Proportionately, And Twice A Day
He Wrote A Long Report Which Was Sent To Her.
Kennedy Was Now Bending Every Effort To Locate The Missing Artist.
When He Left Danbridge, He Seemed To Have Dropped Out Of Sight
Completely. However, With O'connor's Aid, The Police Of All New
England Were On The Lookout.
The Thurstons Had Been Friends Of Halsey's Before Vera Lytton Had
Ever Met Dr. Dixon, We Discovered From The Danbridge Gossips, And
I, At Least, Jumped To The Conclusion That Halsey Was Shielding
The Artist, Perhaps Through A Sense Of Friendship When He Found
That Kennedy Was Interested In Thurston's Movement. I Must Say I
Rather Liked Halsey, For He Seemed Very Thoughtful Of The
Willards, And Was Never Too Busy To Give An Hour Or So To Any
Commission They Wished Carried Out Without Publicity.
Two Days Passed With Not A Word From Thurston. Kennedy Was
Obviously Getting Impatient. One Day A Rumour Was Received That He
Was In Bar Harbour; The Next It Was A Report From Nova Scotia. At
Last, However, Came The Welcome News That He Had Been Located In
New Hampshire, Arrested, And Might Be Expected The Next Day.
At Once Kennedy Became All Energy. He Arranged For A Secret
Conference In Senator Willard's House, The Moment The Artist Was
To Arrive. The Senator And His Daughter Made A Flying Trip Back To
Town. Nothing Was Said To Any One About Thurston, But Kennedy
Quietly Arranged With The District Attorney To Be Present With The
Note And The Jar Of Ammonia Properly Safeguarded. Leland Of Course
Came, Although His Client Could Not. Halsey Post Seemed Only Too
Glad To Be With Miss Willard, Though He Seemed To Have Lost
Interest In The Case As Soon As The Willards Returned To Look
After It Themselves. Mrs. Boncour Was Well Enough To Attend, And
Even Dr. Waterworth Insisted On Coming In A Private Ambulance
Which Drove Over From A Near-By City Especially For Him. The Time
Was Fixed Just Before The Arrival Of The Train That Was To Bring
Thurston.
It Was An Anxious Gathering Of Friends And Foes Of Dr. Dixon Who
Sat Impatiently Waiting For Kennedy To Begin This Momentous
Exposition That Was To Establish The Guilt Or Innocence Of The
Calm Young Physician Who Sat Impassively In The Jail Not Half A
Mile From The Room Where His Life And Death Were Being Debated.
"In Many Respects This Is The Most Remarkable Case That It Has
Ever Been My Lot To Handle," Began Kennedy. "Never Before Have I
Felt So Keenly My Sense Of Responsibility. Therefore, Though This
Is A Somewhat Irregular Proceeding, Let Me Begin By Setting Forth
The Facts As I See Them.
"First, Let Us Consider The Dead Woman. The Question That Arises
Here Is, Was She Murdered Or Did She Commit Suicide? I Think You
Will Discover The Answer As I Proceed. Miss Lytton, As You Know,
Was, Two Years Ago, Mrs. Burgess Thurston. The Thurstons Had
Temperament, And Temperament Is Quite Often The Highway To The
Divorce Court. It Was So In This Case. Mrs. Thurston Discovered
That Her Husband Was Paying Much Attention To Other Women. She
Sued For Divorce In New York, And He Accepted Service In The
South, Where He Happened To Be. At Least It Was So Testified By
Mrs. Thurston's Lawyer.
"Now Here Comes The Remarkable Feature Of The Case. The Law Firm
Of Kerr & Kimmel, I Find, Not Long Ago Began To Investigate The
Legality Of This Divorce. Before A Notary Thurston Made An
Affidavit That He Had Never Been Served By The Lawyer For Miss
Lytton, As She Was Now Known. Her Lawyer Is Dead, But His
Representative In The South Who Served The Papers Is Alive. He Was
Brought To New York And Asserted Squarely That He Had Served The
Papers Properly.
"Here Is Where The Shrewdness Of Mose Kimmel, The Shyster Lawyer,
Came In. He Arranged To Have The Southern Attorney Identify The
Man He Had Served The Papers On. For This Purpose He Was Engaged
In Conversation With One Of His Own Clerks When The Lawyer Was Due
To Appear. Kimmel Appeared To Act Confused, As If He Had Been
Caught Napping. The Southern Lawyer, Who Had Seen Thurston Only
Once, Fell Squarely Into The Trap And Identified The Clerk As
Thurston. There Were Plenty Of Witnesses To It, And It Was Point
Number Two For The Great Mose Kimmel. Papers Were Drawn Up To Set
Aside The Divorce Decree.
"In The Meantime, Miss Lytton, Or Mrs. Thurston, Had Become
Acquainted With A Young Doctor In A New York Hospital, And Had
Become Engaged To Him. It Matters Not That The Engagement Was
Later Broken. The Fact Remains That If The Divorce Were Set Aside
An Action Would Lie Against Dr. Dixon For Alienating Mrs.
Thurston's Affections, And A Grave Scandal Would Result. I Need
Not Add That In This Quiet Little Town Of Danbridge The Most Could
Be Made Of Such A Suit."
Kennedy Was Unfolding A Piece Of Paper. As He Laid It Down,
Leland, Who Was Sitting Next To Me, Exclaimed Under His Breath:
"My God, He's Going To Let The Prosecutor Know About That Letter.
Can't You Stop Him?"
It Was Too Late. Kennedy Had Already Begun To Read Vera's Letter.
It Was Damning To Dixon, Added To The Other Note Found In The
Ammonia-Jar.
When He Had Finished Reading, You Could Almost Hear The Hearts
Throbbing In The Room. A Scowl Overspread Senator Willard's
Features. Alma Willard Was Pale And Staring Wildly At Kennedy.
Halsey Post, Ever Solicitous For Her, Handed Her A Glass Of Water
From The Table. Dr. Waterworth Had Forgotten His Pain In His
Intense Attention, And Mrs. Boncour Seemed Stunned With
Astonishment. The Prosecuting Attorney Was Eagerly Taking Notes.
"In Some Way," Pursued Kennedy In An Even Voice, "This Letter Was
Either Overlooked In The Original Correspondence Of Dr. Dixon Or
It Was Added To It Later. I Shall Come Back To That Presently. My
Next Point Is That Dr. Dixon Says He Received A Letter From
Thurston On The Day The Artist Visited The Boncour Bungalow. It
Asked About A Certain Headache Compound, And His Reply Was Brief
And, As Nearly As I Can Find Out, Read, 'This Compound Will Not
Cure Your Headache Except At The Expense Of Reducing Heart Action
Dangerously.'
"Next Comes The Tragedy. On The Evening Of The Day That Thurston
Left, After Presumably Telling Miss Lytton About What Kerr &
Kimmel Had Discovered, Miss Lytton Is Found Dying With A Bottle
Containing Cyanide And Sublimate Beside Her. You Are All Familiar
With The Circumstances And With The Note Discovered In The Jar Of
Ammonia. Now, If The Prosecutor Will Be So Kind As To Let Me See
That Note--Thank You, Sir. This Is The Identical Note. You Have
All Heard The Various Theories Of The Jar And Have Read The Note.
Here It Is In Plain, Cold Black And White--In Dr. Dixon's Own
Handwriting, As You Know, And Reads: 'This Will Cure Your
Headache. Dr. Dixon.'"
Alma Willard Seemed As One Paralysed. Was Kennedy, Who Had Been
Engaged By Her Father To Defend Her Fiance, About To Convict Him?
"Before We Draw The Final Conclusion," Continued Kennedy Gravely,
"There Are One Or Two Points I Wish To Elaborate. Walter, Will You
Open That Door Into The Main Hall?"
I Did So, And Two Policemen Stepped In With A Prisoner. It Was
Thurston, But Changed Almost Beyond Recognition. His Clothes Were
Worn, His Beard Shaved Off, And He Had A Generally Hunted
Appearance.
Part 3 Chapter 1 (The Poisoned Pen) Pg 8
Thurston Was Visibly Nervous. Apparently He Had Heard All That
Kennedy Had Said And Intended He Should Hear, For As He Entered He
Almost Broke Away From The
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