Part 13 (1/2)

”Oh, that is easy! For instance, once in London I lodged next door to my victim. We became capital friends. And he was always calling me in for a bite of something to eat. Nothing elaborate-a bun and a cup of tea, or coffee and cake. Very much as we are doing now. He died in six months.

It is no trick, you know, to poison a man who eats and drinks with you-especially drinks!”

As he said this the hunchback reached for the coffee-pot and poured Fernet another cupful. Then he uncorked the vial again and dropped a pellet into the steaming liquid.

”I do not think that I wish any more,” protested Fernet.

”Nonsense! You are still s.h.i.+vering like an old woman with the palsy. Hot coffee will do you good.”

”No,” said Fernet, desperately, ”I never drink more than one cup at a sitting. It keeps me awake, and next morning my hand shakes and I am fit for nothing. I need a steady hand in my business.”

”And what may that be, pray?”

”At present I am a draftsman. Some day, if I live long enough, I hope to be an architect.”

”If you live long enough? You forget that you have laughed at _me_, my friend.”

Fernet tried to appear indifferent. ”What a droll fellow you are!” he cried, with sudden gaiety, rubbing his hands together. And without thinking, he reached for his coffee-cup and downed the contents in almost one gulp. He laid the cup aside quickly. He could feel the sweat starting out upon his forehead.

”There, you see,” said Minetti, ”the coffee has done you good already.

You are perspiring, and that is a good sign. A hot drink at the right moment works wonders.”

The next morning Pollitto stopped Fernet as he swung out the front gate to his work.

”What is the matter with you?” exclaimed the beggar, in a surprised tone.

”Why ... what?” demanded Fernet, in a trembling voice. ”Do I look so ...? Pray, tell me, is there anything unusual about me?”

”Why, your face.... Have you looked at yourself in the gla.s.s? Your skin is the color of stale pastry.”

Fernet tried to laugh. ”It is nothing. I have been drinking too much coffee lately. I must stop it.”

It was a fine morning. The sun was s.h.i.+ning and the air was brisk and full of little rippling breezes. The bay lay like a blue-green peac.o.c.k ruffling its gilded feathers. The city had a genial, smiling countenance. But Fernet was out of humor with all this full-blown content. He had spent a wretched night-not sleepless, but full of disturbing dreams. Dreams about Minetti and his London neighbor and the empty sugar-bowl. All night he had dreamed about this empty sugar-bowl.

It seemed that as soon as he had it filled Minetti would slyly empty it again. He tried stowing sugar away in his pockets, but when he put his hand in to draw out a lump a score or more of pellets spilled over the floor. Then he remembered saying:

”I shall call on Minetti's London neighbor. Maybe he will have some sugar.”

He walked miles and miles, and finally beat upon a strange door. A man wrapped in a black coat up to his eyebrows opened to his knock.

”Are you Flavio Minetti's London neighbor?” he demanded, boldly.

The figure bowed. Fernet drew the cracked sugar-bowl from under his arm.

”Will you oblige me with a little sugar?” he asked, more politely.

The black-cloaked figure bowed and disappeared. Presently he came back.

Fernet took the sugar-bowl from him. It struck him that the bowl felt very light. He looked down at his hands. The bowl had disappeared; only a gla.s.s vial lay in his palm. He removed the cork-a dozen or more tiny round pellets fell out. He glanced up quickly at Minetti's London neighbor; a dreadful smile glowed through the black cloak. Fernet gave a cry and hurled the vial in the face of his tormentor. Minetti's London neighbor let the black cloak fall, and Andre Fernet discovered that he was staring at himself.... He awakened soon after that and found that it was morning.

When he brushed his hair his hand had shaken so that the brush fell clattering to the floor. And he had spilled the cream for his morning coffee over the faded strip of carpet before the bureau. It had ended by his eating no breakfast at all. But he had drunk gla.s.s after gla.s.s of cold water.