Sax Rohmer

The Golden Scorpion & The Yellow Claw


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crossed the lobby and went to their own quarters.

      “Mr. Soames next,” muttered Dunbar, and, glancing at Cumberly as he returned from the lobby: — “Will you ring for him?” he requested.

      Dr. Cumberly nodded, and pressed a bell beside the mantelpiece. An interval followed, in which the inspector made notes and Cumberly stood looking at Leroux, who was beating his palms upon his knees, and staring unseeingly before him.

      Cumberly rang again; and in response to the second ring, the housemaid appeared at the door.

      “I rang for Soames,” said Dr. Cumberly.

      “He is not in, sir,” answered the girl.

      Inspector Dunbar started as though he had been bitten.

      “What!” he cried; “not in?”

      “No, sir,” said the girl, with wide-open, frightened eyes.

      Dunbar turned to Cumberly.

      “You said there was no other way out!”

      “There IS no other way, to my knowledge.”

      “Where's his room?”

      Cumberly led the way to a room at the end of a short corridor, and Inspector Dunbar, entering, and turning up the light, glanced about the little apartment. It was a very neat servants' bedroom; with comfortable, quite simple, furniture; but the chest-of-drawers had been hastily ransacked, and the contents of a trunk — or some of its contents — lay strewn about the floor.

      “He has packed his grip!” came Leroux's voice from the doorway. “It's gone!”

      The window was wide open. Dunbar sprang forward and leaned out over the ledge, looking to right and left, above and below.

      A sort of square courtyard was beneath, and for the convenience of tradesmen, a hand-lift was constructed outside the kitchens of the three flats comprising the house; i. e.: — Mr. Exel's, ground floor, Henry Leroux's second floor, and Dr. Cumberly's, top. It worked in a skeleton shaft which passed close to the left of Soames' window.

      For an active man, this was a good enough ladder, and the inspector withdrew his head shrugging his square shoulders, irritably.

      “My fault entirely!” he muttered, biting his wiry mustache. “I should have come and seen for myself if there was another way out.”

      Leroux, in a new flutter of excitement, now craned from the window.

      “It might be possible to climb down the shaft,” he cried, after a brief survey, “but not if one were carrying a heavy grip, such as that which he has taken!”

      “H'm!” said Dunbar. “You are a writing gentleman, I understand, and yet it does not occur to you that he could have lowered the bag on a cord, if he wanted to avoid the noise of dropping it!”

      “Yes — er — of course!” muttered Leroux. “But really — but really — oh, good God! I am bewildered! What in Heaven's name does it all mean!”

      “It means trouble,” replied Dunbar, grimly; “bad trouble.”

      They returned to the study, and Inspector Dunbar, for the first time since his arrival, walked across and examined the fragmentary message, raising his eyebrows when he discovered that it was written upon the same paper as Leroux's MSS. He glanced, too, at the pen lying on a page of “Martin Zeda” near the lamp and at the inky splash which told how hastily the pen had been dropped.

      Then — his brows drawn together — he stooped to the body of the murdered woman. Partially raising the fur cloak, he suppressed a gasp of astonishment.

      “Why! she only wears a silk night-dress, and a pair of suede slippers!”

      He glanced back over his shoulder.

      “I had noted that,” said Cumberly. “The whole business is utterly extraordinary.”

      “Extraordinary is no word for it!” growled the inspector, pursuing his examination.... “Marks of pressure at the throat — yes; and generally unhealthy appearance.”

      “Due to the drug habit,” interjected Dr. Cumberly.

      “What drug?”

      “I should not like to say out of hand; possibly morphine.”

      “No jewelry,” continued the detective, musingly; “wedding ring — not a new one. Finger nails well cared for, but recently neglected. Hair dyed to hide gray patches; dye wanted renewing. Shoes, French. Night-robe, silk; good lace; probably French, also. Faint perfume — don't know what it is — apparently proceeding from civet fur. Furs, magnificent; very costly.”...

      He slightly moved the table-lamp in order to direct its light upon the white face. The bloodless lips were parted and the detective bent, closely peering at the teeth thus revealed.

      “Her teeth were oddly discolored, doctor,” he said, taking out a magnifying glass and examining them closely. “They had been recently scaled, too; so that she was not in the habit of neglecting them.”

      Dr. Cumberly nodded.

      “The drug habit, again,” he said guardedly; “a proper examination will establish the full facts.”

      The inspector added brief notes to those already made, ere he rose from beside the body. Then: —

      “You are absolutely certain,” he said, deliberately, facing Leroux, “that you had never set eyes on this woman prior to her coming here, to-night?”

      “I can swear it!” said Leroux.

      “Good!” replied the detective, and closed his notebook with a snap. “Usual formalities will have to be gone through, but I don't think I need trouble you, gentlemen, any further, to-night.”

      V

       DOCTORS DIFFER

       Table of Contents

      Dr. Cumberly walked slowly upstairs to his own flat, a picture etched indelibly upon his mind, of Henry Leroux, with a face of despair, sitting below in his dining-room and listening to the ominous sounds proceeding from the study, where the police were now busily engaged. In the lobby he met his daughter Helen, who was waiting for him in a state of nervous suspense.

      “Father!” she began, whilst rebuke died upon the doctor's lips — “tell me quickly what has happened.”

      Perceiving that an explanation was unavoidable, Dr. Cumberly outlined the story of the night's gruesome happenings, whilst Big Ben began to chime the hour of one.

      Helen, eager-eyed, and with her charming face rather pale, hung upon every word of the narrative.

      “And now,” concluded her father, “you must go to bed. I insist.”

      “But father!” cried the girl — “there is some thing”...

      She hesitated, uneasily.

      “Well, Helen, go on,” said the doctor.

      “I am afraid you will refuse.”

      “At least give me the opportunity.”

      “Well — in the glimpse, the half-glimpse, which I had of her, I seemed”...

      Dr. Cumberly rested his hands upon his daughter's shoulders characteristically, looking into the troubled gray eyes.

      “You don't mean,” he began...

      “I thought I recognized her!” whispered the girl.

      “Good God! can it be possible?”

      “I have been trying, ever since, to recall where we had met, but without result. It might mean so much”...

      Dr.