to the Pearcy house. They had even extended to Minturn’s too, although about that he said little yesterday. The estates up there adjoin, you know.”
Owen Minturn, I recalled, had gained a formidable reputation by his successful handling of cases from the lowest strata of society to the highest. Indeed it was a byword that his appearance in court indicated two things—the guilt of the accused and a verdict of acquittal.
“Of course,” Craig pursued as we were jolted from station to station downtown, “you know they say that Minturn never kept a record of a case. But written records were as nothing compared to what that man must have carried only in his head.”
It was a common saying that, if Minturn should tell all he knew, he might hang half a dozen prominent men in society. That was not strictly true, perhaps, but it was certain that a revelation of the things confided to him by clients which were never put down on paper would have caused a series of explosions that would have wrecked at least some portions of the social and financial world. He had heard much and told little, for he had been a sort of “father confessor.”
Had Minturn, I wondered, known the name of the real criminal?
Josephson’s was a popular bath on Forty-second Street, where many of the “sun-dodgers” were accustomed to recuperate during the day from their arduous pursuit of pleasure at night and prepare for the resumption of their toil during the coming night. It was more than that, however, for it had a reputation for being conducted really on a high plane.
We met Josephson downstairs. He had been released under bail, though the place was temporarily closed and watched over by the agents of the coroner and the police. Josephson appeared to be a man of some education and quite different from what I had imagined from hearing him over the telephone.
“Oh, Mr. Kennedy,” he exclaimed, “who now will come to my baths? Last night they were crowded, but today—”
He ended with an expressive gesture of his hands.
“One customer I have surely lost, young Mr. Pearcy,” he went on.
“Warner Pearcy?” asked Craig. “Was he here last night?”
“Nearly every night,” replied Josephson, now glib enough as his first excitement subsided and his command of English returned. “He was a neighbor of Mr. Minturn’s, I hear. Oh, what luck!” growled Josephson as the name recalled him to his present troubles.
“Well,” remarked Kennedy with an attempt at reassurance as if to gain the masseur’s confidence, “I know as well as you that it is often amazing what a tremendous shock a man may receive and yet not be killed, and no less amazing how small a shock may kill. It all depends on circumstances.”
Josephson shot a covert look at Kennedy. “Yes,” he reiterated, “but I cannot see how it could be. If the lights had become short-circuited with the bath, that might have thrown a current into the bath. But they were not. I know it.”
“Still,” pursued Kennedy, watching him keenly, “it is not all a question of current. To kill, the shock must pass through a vital organ—the brain, the heart, the upper spinal cord. So, a small shock may kill and a large one may not. If it passes in one foot and out by the other, the current isn’t likely to be as dangerous as if it passes in by a hand or foot and then out by a foot or hand. In one case it passes through no vital organ; in the other it is very likely to do so. You see, the current can flow through the body only when it has a place of entrance and a place of exit. In all cases of accident from electric light wires, the victim is touching some conductor—damp earth, salty earth, water, something that gives the current an outlet and—”
“But even if the lights had been short-circuited,” interrupted Josephson, “Mr. Minturn would have escaped injury unless he had touched the taps of the bath. Oh, no, sir, accidents in the medical use of electricity are rare. They don’t happen here in my establishment,” he maintained stoutly. “The trouble was that the coroner, without any knowledge of the physiological effects of electricity on the body, simply jumped at once to the conclusion that it was the electric bath that did it.”
“Then it was for medical treatment that Mr. Minturn was taking the bath?” asked Kennedy, quickly taking up the point.
“Yes, of course,” answered the masseur, eager to explain. “You are acquainted with the latest treatment for lead poisoning by means of the electric bath?”
Kennedy nodded. “I know that Sir Thomas Oliver, the English authority who has written much on dangerous trades, has tried it with marked success.”
“Well, sir, that was why Mr. Minturn was here. He came here introduced by a Dr. Gunther of Stratfield.”
“Indeed?” remarked Kennedy colorlessly, though I could see that it interested him, for evidently Minturn had said nothing of being himself a sufferer from the poison. “May I see the bath?”
“Surely,” said Josephson, leading the way upstairs.
It was an oaken tub with metal rods on the two long sides, from which depended prismatic carbon rods. Kennedy examined it closely.
“This is what we call a hydro-electric bath,” Josephson explained. “Those rods on the sides are the electrodes. You see there are no metal parts in the tub itself. The rods are attached by wiring to a wall switch out here.”
He pointed to the next room. Kennedy examined the switch with care.
“From it,” went on Josephson, “wires lead to an accumulator battery of perhaps thirty volts. It uses very little current. Dr. Gunther tested it and found it all right.”
Craig leaned over the bath, and from the carbon electrodes scraped off a white powder in minute crystals.
“Ordinarily,” Josephson pursued, “lead is eliminated by the skin and kidneys. But now, as you know, it is being helped along by electrolysis. I talked to Dr. Gunther about it. It is his opinion that it is probably eliminated as a chloride from the tissues of the body to the electrodes in the bath in which the patient is wholly or partly immersed. On the positive electrodes we get the peroxide. On the negative there is a spongy metallic form of lead. But it is only a small amount.”
“The body has been removed?” asked Craig.
“Not yet,” the masseur replied. “The coroner has ordered it kept here under guard until he makes up his mind what disposition to have made of it.”
We were next ushered into a little room on the same floor, at the door of which was posted an official from the coroner.
“First of all,” remarked Craig, as he drew back the sheet and began, a minute examination of the earthly remains of the great lawyer, “there are to be considered the safeguards of the human body against the passage through it of a fatal electric current—the high electric resistance of the body itself. It is particularly high when the current must pass through joints such as wrists, knees, elbows, and quite high when the bones of the head are concerned. Still, there might have been an incautious application of the current to the head, especially when the subject is a person of advanced age or latent cerebral disease, though I don’t know that that fits Mr. Minturn. That’s strange,” he muttered, looking up, puzzled. “I can find no mark of a burn on the body—absolutely no mark of anything.”
“That’s what I say,” put in Josephson, much pleased by what Kennedy said, for he had been waiting anxiously to see what Craig discovered on his own examination. “It’s impossible.”
“It’s all the more remarkable,” went on Craig, half to himself and ignoring Josephson, “because burns due to electric currents are totally unlike those produced in other ways. They occur at the point of contact, usually about the arms and hands, or the head. Electricity is much to be feared when it involves the cranial cavity.” He completed his examination of the head which once had carried secrets which themselves must have been incandescent.
“Then, too, such burns are most often something more than superficial, for considerable heat is developed which leads to massive destruction