PART II.  The Country of the Saints.
7. CHAPTER VII.  THE CONCLUSION.
 (continued)
"On entering the house this last inference was confirmed.  
 My well-booted man lay before me.  The tall one, then, had done 
 the murder, if murder there was.  There was no wound upon the 
 dead man's person, but the agitated expression upon his face 
 assured me that he had foreseen his fate before it came upon 
 him.  Men who die from heart disease, or any sudden natural 
 cause, never by any chance exhibit agitation upon their 
 features.  Having sniffed the dead man's lips I detected a 
 slightly sour smell, and I came to the conclusion that he had 
 had poison forced upon him.  Again, I argued that it had been 
 forced upon him from the hatred and fear expressed upon his 
 face.  By the method of exclusion, I had arrived at this 
 result, for no other hypothesis would meet the facts.  Do not 
 imagine that it was a very unheard of idea.  The forcible 
 administration of poison is by no means a new thing in 
 criminal annals.  The cases of Dolsky in Odessa, and of 
 Leturier in Montpellier, will occur at once to any toxicologist. 
"And now came the great question as to the reason why.  
 Robbery had not been the object of the murder, for nothing 
 was taken.  Was it politics, then, or was it a woman?  That 
 was the question which confronted me.  I was inclined from 
 the first to the latter supposition.  Political assassins are 
 only too glad to do their work and to fly.  This murder had, 
 on the contrary, been done most deliberately, and the 
 perpetrator had left his tracks all over the room, showing 
 that he had been there all the time.  It must have been a 
 private wrong, and not a political one, which called for such 
 a methodical revenge.  When the inscription was discovered 
 upon the wall I was more inclined than ever to my opinion.  
 The thing was too evidently a blind.  When the ring was 
 found, however, it settled the question.  Clearly the 
 murderer had used it to remind his victim of some dead or 
 absent woman.  It was at this point that I asked Gregson 
 whether he had enquired in his telegram to Cleveland as 
 to any particular point in Mr. Drebber's former career.  
 He answered, you remember, in the negative. 
 |