An Eye for an Eye. Le Queux William

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will out” is truer than the majority of people believe, for even that night we had had a striking illustration in Patterson’s’ attention being attracted by the snake in the gateway.

      Beside the dead woman’s chair was lying a handkerchief, a tiny square of lawn and lace, which I picked up. It emitted an odour very sweet and subtle, such as I had never before smelt.

      Patterson sniffed it, but placed it down.

      “Some new scent,” he said. “Women are always going in for the latest inventions in perfumes.”

      “But this is an extraordinary one,” I said, again smelling it. “Terribly strong, too,” I added, for the odour had a strange, half-intoxicating effect upon me. The small red light steadily burning, the fragrance of the incense, the two dead forms lying there, still and cold, and the single gas-burner, hissing as it flared, combined to present a weird, lurid picture, each detail of which has ever since been indelibly photographed upon my memory.

      The smile of death upon that woman’s lips was horrible. That look of hers has ever since haunted me, for now that I know the truth and have realised all that had taken place in that room prior to the tragedy, that laugh of derision has a significance which renders its recollection bitter, gruesome, hideous.

      I know not what prompted me at that moment, but bending again beside the prostrate man I placed my hand inside his vest, recollecting that sometimes tailors, adopting the French mode, made pockets there, and that therein many men carried articles of value in secrecy and safety.

      As I did so, I felt that there was a pocket in the lining, that it was buttoned, and that there was something within. Quickly I unbuttoned it and drew forth a small packet wrapped in glazed writing-paper, dirty and worn through being carried for a long time. With care I opened it, and inside found an object which caused us both to give vent to an ejaculation of wonder.

      It was simply a penny.

      “His mascot, I suppose,” remarked the inspector. “A lucky coin.”

      “But it has no hole through it,” I observed.

      “The hole is of no importance. The coin may have been given him for luck,” replied my companion. “Lots of people believe in such things, especially betting men.”

      “He was evidently very careful of it,” I said, at the same time searching and finding another pocket on the other side of the vest, and from this I took a neat little cloth-covered case, not much larger than those containing cigarette tubes, and found on opening it that it contained a small hypodermic syringe, complete with its needles and accessories.

      “This shows that he was addicted to the morphia habit,” I remarked. “An overdose, perhaps.”

      My friend, who had now recovered something of his coolness and self-possession, took the tiny instrument and examined it carefully beneath the gas-light.

      “There’s been no morphia in this lately,” he said. “It’s quite dry, and certainly hasn’t been used to-day.”

      “Let’s search the whole house,” I suggested. “We may find something which will give us a clue as to who and what these people were. Funny that the servants don’t come back, isn’t it?”

      “I don’t expect they will,” answered Patterson.

      “Depend upon it that there’s more mystery in this affair than we at present suspect.”

      “Why?”

      “Look at these,” he said, passing over to me the three banknotes found upon the dead man. “They are spurious!”

      No second glance was needed to convince me that he spoke the truth. They were clever imitations of ten-pound notes, but the paper, the despair of the forger, was thick and entirely different to that of the genuine bank-note.

      Again I glanced at that beautiful woman’s face with its smile of mingled ecstatic pleasure and bitterness. Her sightless eyes seemed fixed upon me, following me as I moved.

      I drew back horrified, shuddering. Her gaze was ghastly.

      “It certainly is a most mysterious affair,” I ejaculated again, glancing around the place. “You ought at once to report it.”

      “No,” cried my companion quickly. “The discovery must be yours. You must report it, Mr Urwin.”

      “Why?”

      “Because, as I’ve already told you, I fear to do so on account of the snake.”

      I smiled at his curious objection, but an instant later grew serious because of the sharp and sudden ringing of an electric bell somewhere on the ground floor. It was the bell my companion had heard when first knocking at the door.

      We both listened for a few moments while the ringing continued, until with sudden resolve I dashed downstairs to ascertain where the bell was. Without difficulty I found it, for there in the hall, revealed by the gas-lamp we had lit, was a telephone instrument with its bell agitated violently.

      Without a second’s delay I placed the receiver to my ear and gave the usual signal —

      “Hulloa! Hulloa?”

      The whirr and clicking stopped, and a voice, squeaky as that of an elderly person, said petulantly —

      “I’ve been ringing up for an hour or more. What’s wrong that you haven’t replied? You’re at fifty-eight, aren’t you?”

      “Yes,” I answered, recollecting that fifty-eight was the number of that house. “Nothing is wrong. Why? Can’t you be patient?”

      “I felt uneasy,” answered the mysterious voice apologetically. “I thought there might possibly have been some hitch as you haven’t rung up.”

      “No,” I responded. “None.”

      “Then of course it’s all over?” inquired the voice. I started at this strange query. This unknown inquirer was evidently in possession of the truth, and believed himself to be talking to an accomplice. He knew of the commission of the crime, therefore it occurred to me that by the exercise of due caution I might be able to discover his identity.

      “Yes,” I answered, breathless in excitement.

      “Both?” asked the voice.

      “Both,” I responded.

      “Good. Then I shall see you at the place we arranged – eh?”

      “Of course,” I answered. “But when? I’ve forgotten.”

      “Forgotten!” echoed the squeaky voice in a tone of undisguised disgust. “Take care, or you’ll blunder yet. You’re a confounded idiot. Why, to-morrow at midday.”

      “I know I’m a fool,” I replied. “But in the excitement it’s quite slipped my memory where you said I was to meet you.”

      Then, holding the receiver tremblingly to my ear, I listened with quick heart-beating for the response of that mysterious, far distant voice which squeaked so strangely, sounding thin and high-pitched, more like that of a woman than of a man.

      “You’re a confounded fool to waste time like this if you’re still at fifty-eight,”

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