The Poisoned Pen(Fiscle Part-3) by Arthur B. Reeve (top 10 motivational books .txt) π
Literally Throwing Things Into It From His Chiffonier, As I
Entered After A Hurried Trip Up-Town From The Star Office In
Response To An Urgent Message From Him.
"Come, Walter," He Cried, Hastily Stuffing In A Package Of Clean
Laundry Without Taking Off The Wrapping-Paper, "I've Got Your
Suit-Case Out. Pack Up Whatever You Can In Five Minutes. We Must
Take The Six O'clock Train For Danbridge."
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- Author: Arthur B. Reeve
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Gone. When Kharkoff Left, He Followed Him. I Hurried Out Quietly
And Followed Both Of Them. Then The Explosion Came. This Man
Slipped Down A Narrow Street As Soon As He Saw Kharkoff Fall. As
People Were Running To Kharkoff's Assistance, I Did The Same. He
Saw Me Following Him And Ran, And I Ran, Too, And Overtook Him.
Mr. Jameson, When I Looked Into His Face I Could Not Believe It.
Revalenko--He Is One Of The Most Ardent Members Of Our
Organisation. He Would Not Tell Me Why He Had Followed Kharkoff. I
Could Make Him Confess Nothing. But I Am Sure He Is An Agent
Provocateur Of The Russian Government, That He Is Secretly Giving
Away The Plans That We Are Making, Everything. We Have A Plot On
Now--Perhaps He Has Informed Them Of That. Of Course He Denied
Setting The Bomb Or Trying To Poison Any Of Us, But He Was Very
Frightened. I Shall Denounce Him At The First Opportunity."
I Said Nothing. Kazanovitch Regarded Me Keenly To See What
Impression The Story Made On Me, But I Did Not Let My Looks Betray
Anything, Except Proper Surprise, And He Seemed Satisfied.
It Might Be True, After All, I Reasoned, The More I Thought Of It.
I Had Heard That The Russian Consul-General Had A Very Extensive
Spy System In The City. In Fact, Even That Morning I Had Had
Pointed Out To Me Some Spies At Work In The Public Libraries,
Watching What Young Russians Were Reading. I Did Not Doubt That
There Were Spies In The Very Inner Circle Of The Revolutionists
Themselves.
At Last Kennedy Appeared. While Kazanovitch Poured Forth His
Story, With Here And There, I Fancied, An Elaboration Of A
Particularly Dramatic Point, Kennedy Quickly Examined The Walls
And Floor Of The Wrecked Office With His Magnifying-Glass. When He
Had Concluded His Search, He Turned To Kazanovitch.
"Would It Be Possible," He Asked, "To Let This Revalenko Believe
That He Could Trust You, That It Would Be Safe For Him To Visit
You To-Night At Saratovsky's? Surely You Can Find Some Way Of
Reassuring Him."
"Yes, I Think That Can Be Arranged," Said Kazanovitch. "I Will Go
To Him, Will Make Him Think I Have Misunderstood Him, That I Have
Not Lost Faith In Him, Provided He Can Explain All. He Will Come.
Part 3 Chapter 3 (The Germ Of Death) Pg 29Trust Me."
"Very Well, Then. To-Night At Eight I Shall Be There," Promised
Kennedy, As The Novelist And He Shook Hands.
"What Do You Think Of The Revalenko Story?" I Asked Of Craig, As
We Started Uptown Again.
"Anything Is Possible In This Case," He Answered Sententiously.
"Well," I Exclaimed, "This All Is Truly Russian. For Intrigue They
Are Certainly The Leaders Of The World To-Day. There Is Only One
Person That I Have Any Real Confidence In, And That Is Old
Saratovsky Himself. Somebody Is Playing Traitor, Craig. Who Is
It?"
"That Is What Science Will Tell Us To-Night," Was His Brief Reply.
There Was No Getting Anything Out Of Craig Until He Was Absolutely
Sure That His Proofs Had Piled Up Irresistibly.
Promptly At Eight We Met At The Old House On Fifth Avenue.
Kharkoff's Wounds Had Proved Less Severe Than Had At First Been
Suspected, And, Having Recovered From The Shock, He Insisted On
Being Transferred From The Hospital In A Private Ambulance So That
He Could Be Near His Friends. Saratovsky, In Spite Of His High
Fever, Ordered That The Door To His Room Be Left Open And His Bed
Moved So That He Could Hear And See What Passed In The Room Down
The Hall. Nevsky Was There And Kazanovitch, And Even Brave Olga
Samarova, Her Pretty Face Burning With The Fever, Would Not Be
Content Until She Was Carried Upstairs, Although Dr. Kharkoff
Protested Vigorously That It Might Have Fatal Consequences.
Revalenko, An Enigma Of A Man, Sat Stolidly. The Only Thing I
Noticed About Him Was An Occasional Look Of Malignity At Nevsky
And Kazanovitch When He Thought He Was Unobserved.
It Was Indeed A Strange Gathering, The Like Of Which The Old House
Had Never Before Harboured In All Its Varied History. Every One
Was On The Qui Vive, As Kennedy Placed On The Table A Small Wire
Basket Containing Some Test-Tubes, Each Tube Corked With A Small
Wadding Of Cotton. There Was Also A Receptacle Holding A Dozen
Glass-Handled Platinum Wires, A Microscope, And A Number Of
Slides. The Bomb, Now Rendered Innocuous By Having Been Crushed In
A Huge Hydraulic Press, Lay In Fragments In The Box.
"First, I Want You To Consider The Evidence Of The Bomb," Began
Kennedy." No Crime, I Firmly Believe, Is Ever Perpetrated Without
Leaving Some Clue. The Slightest Trace, Even A Drop Of Blood No
Larger Than A Pin-Head, May Suffice To Convict A Murderer. The
Impression Made On A Cartridge By The Hammer Of A Pistol, Or A
Single Hair Found On The Clothing Of A Suspected Person, May Serve
As Valid Proof Of Crime.
"Until Lately, However, Science Was Powerless Against The Bomb-
Thrower. A Bomb Explodes Into A Thousand Parts, And Its Contents
Suddenly Become Gaseous. You Can't Collect And Investigate The
Gases. Still, The Bomb-Thrower Is Sadly Deceived If He Believes
The Bomb Leaves No Trace For The Scientific Detective. It Is
Difficult For The Chemist To Find Out The Secrets Of A Shattered
Bomb. But It Can Be Done.
"I Examined The Walls Of Dr. Kharkoff's House, And Fortunately Was
Able To Pick Out A Few Small Fragments Of The Contents Of The Bomb
Which Had Been Thrown Out Before The Flame Ignited Them. I Have
Analysed Them, And Find Them To Be A Peculiar Species Of Blasting-
Gelatine. It Is Made At Only One Factory In This Country, And I
Have A List Of Purchasers For Some Time Back. One Name, Or Rather
The Description Of An Assumed Name, In The List Agrees With Other
Evidence I Have Been Able To Collect. Moreover, The Explosive Was
Placed In A Lead Tube. Lead Tubes Are Common Enough. However,
There Is No Need Of Further Evidence."
Part 3 Chapter 3 (The Germ Of Death) Pg 30
He Paused, And The Revolutionists Stared Fixedly At The Fragments
Of The Now Harmless Bomb Before Them.
"The Exploded Bomb," Concluded Craig, "Was Composed Of The Same
Materials As This, Which I Found Unexploded At The Door Of Miss
Nevsky's Room--The Same Sort Of Lead Tube, The Same Blasting-
Gelatine. The Fuse, A Long Cord Saturated In Sulphur, Was Merely A
Blind. The Real Method Of Explosion Was By Means Of A Chemical
Contained In A Glass Tube Which Was Inserted After The Bomb Was
Put In Place. The Least Jar, Such As Opening A Door, Which Would
Tip The Bomb Ever So Little Out Of The Horizontal, Was All That
Was Necessary To Explode It. The Exploded Bomb And The Unexploded
Were In All Respects Identical--The Same Hand Set Both."
A Gasp Of Astonishment Ran Through The Circle. Could It Be That
One Of Their Own Number Was Playing False? In At Least This
Instance In The Warfare Of The Chemist And The Dynamiter The
Chemist Had Come Out Ahead.
"But," Kennedy Hurried Along, "The Thing That Interests Me Most
About This Case Is Not The Evidence Of The Bombs. Bombs Are Common
Enough Weapons, After All. It Is The Evidence Of Almost Diabolical
Cunning That Has Been Shown In The Effort To Get Rid Of The Father
Of The Revolution, As You Like To Call Him."
Craig Cleared His Throat And Played With Our Feelings As A Cat
Does With A Mouse. "Strange To Say, The Most Deadly, The Most
Insidious, The Most Elusive Agency For Committing Murder Is One
That Can Be Obtained And Distributed With Practically No Legal
Restrictions. Any Doctor Can Purchase Disease Germs In Quantities
Sufficient To Cause Thousands And Thousands Of Deaths Without
Giving Any Adequate Explanation For What Purpose He Requires Them.
More Than That, Any Person Claiming To Be A Scientist Or Having
Some Acquaintance With Science And Scientists Can Usually Obtain
Germs Without Difficulty. Every Pathological Laboratory Contains
Stores Of Disease Germs, Neatly Sealed Up In Test-Tubes,
Sufficient To Depopulate Whole Cities And Even Nations. With
Almost No Effort, I Myself Have Actually Cultivated Enough Germs
To Kill Every Person Within A Radius Of A Mile Of The Washington
Arch Down The Street. They Are Here In These Test-Tubes."
We Scarcely Breathed. Suppose Kennedy Should Let Loose This Deadly
Foe, These Germs Of Death, Whatever They Were? Yet That Was
Precisely What Some Fiend Incarnate Had Done, And That Fiend Was
Sitting In The Room With Us.
"Here I Have One Of The Most Modern Dark-Field Microscopes," He
Resumed. "On This Slide I Have Placed A Little Pin-Point Of A
Culture Made From The Blood Of Saratovsky. I Will Stain The
Culture. Now--Er--Walter, Look Through The Microscope Under This
Powerful Light And Tell Us What You See On The Slide."
I Bent Over. "In The Darkened Field I See A Number Of Germs Like
Dancing Points Of Coloured Light," I Said. "They Are Wriggling
About With A Peculiar Twisting Motion."
"Like A Corkscrew," Interrupted Kennedy, Impatient To Go On. "They
Are Of The Species Known As Spirilla. Here Is Another Slide, A
Culture From The Blood Of Samarova."
"I See Them There, Too," I Exclaimed.
Every One Was Now Crowding About For A Glimpse, As I Raised My
Head.
"What Is This Germ?" Asked A Hollow Voice From The Doorway.
We Looked, Startled. There Stood Saratovsky, More Like A Ghost
Than A Living Being. Kennedy Sprang Forward And Caught Him As He
Swayed, And I Moved Up An Armchair For Him.
Part 3 Chapter 3 (The Germ Of Death) Pg 31
"It Is The Spirillum Obermeieri," Said Kennedy, "The Germ Of The
Relapsing Fever, But Of The Most Virulent Asiatic Strain.
Obermeyer, Who Discovered It, Caught The Disease And Died Of It, A
Martyr To Science."
A Shriek Of Consternation Rang Forth From Samarova. The Rest Of Us
Paled, But Repressed Our Feelings.
"One Moment," Added Kennedy Hastily. "Don't Be Unnecessarily
Alarmed. I Have Something More To Say. Be Calm For A Moment
Longer."
He Unrolled A Blue-Print And Placed It On The Table.
"This," He Continued, "Is The Photographic Copy Of A Message
Which, I Suppose, Is Now On Its Way To The Russian Minister To
France In Paris. Some One In This Room Besides Mr. Jameson And
Myself Has Seen This Letter Before. I Will Hold It Up As I Pass
Around And Let Each One See It."
In Intense Silence Kennedy Passed Before Each Of Us, Holding Up
The Blue-Print And Searchingly
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