Part 8 (1/2)
Serviss had just written and sealed a letter to his sister, wherein he said, ”I shall remain a few days longer here in the mountains--they interest me greatly,” when a knock on the door announced the bell-boy bearing a card.
”Dr. Britt!” exclaimed Serviss, with pleasure. ”Bring him up, please,”
and to himself added, ”Now we will learn something definite about this amazing group of people.”
The manner in which Britt entered the room proclaimed a distinctive character. He edged himself through the door, not stealthily, but carelessly, casually. He, too, was tall, with a wide, dark beard curling over very pink and rather plump cheeks, and in his bright black eyes a sardonic sheen played as he loosely shook his host's hand. His expression was that of a man perpetually amused, as if antic.i.p.ating a joke or recollecting a mockery. His voice was as languid as his limbs, but his words were precise and to their mark.
Serviss greeted him heartily. ”I am glad to meet you, Dr. Britt; take a seat. I have heard of you through Miss Lambert.”
”I saw you on the street,” replied Britt, without change of expression, ”so I looked over the register to find out who you were.
I'm mighty glad to meet up with you. I know you very well by reputation, and Weissmann is an old acquaintance of our family's. What are you doing out here? Visiting the Lamberts?”
For some reason this directness disturbed Serviss a little. ”No--oh no! I just drifted in over the divide from the desert, and met Miss Lambert by accident, quite by accident. I dropped into Colorow to rest and rinse the desert dust away, before returning East. Turn about is fair play--what are you doing here?”
Britt struck his left breast with his thumb. ”Same old story--busted lung. Whenever you strike a suspicious character out here he's either a 'one-lunger' or a 'remittance man.'”
”That's what makes your country worth while.”
”I don't know about that, but you'll find a good many of us waiting.
When you fellows develop an anti-toxin for the consumption 'bug,'
we're all going back to G.o.d's country.”
”We're hot on its trail,” replied Serviss, jocularly.
”I know you are. I 'read after you,' as they say out here. In fact, I've got a little 'farm,' and take a shy at breeding the beasts myself. I'd like you to come in and give me a hint or two.”
”With pleasure,” Serviss heartily responded. ”So you know Weissmann?”
”I used to. My father was an attache of the emba.s.sy at Berlin at one time, and was a factor in getting old 'Hair and Goggles' to come over; he was a conceited a.s.s at that time, with more wool than brains, the governor always said; but the governor wanted to do something for the college.”
Serviss studied the card. ”Do I know your father?--is he still in public life?”
”He is not.” Britt's glance veered. ”The governor, I'm sorry to say, has a weakness for toddy, and I've retired him. He boards in White Plains with Patsy Cline summers, and relapses winters.”
Serviss changed the subject. ”By-the-way, I want to ask you about this man Clarke. What kind of a chap is he?”
Britt's answer was languid but adequate. ”Three parts fakir and the rest fanatic.”
”I was afraid so--and the Lamberts, what of them?”
”Mrs. Lambert is a dear old ninny. Viola is a mighty bright girl suffering from a well-developed case of hysteria and auto-hypnosis.”
”What do you mean?” asked Serviss, sharply.
Britt checked himself. ”I ought not to speak of it, I suppose, but, as you are a stranger and can keep a professional secret, I will explain.
The mother is a spiritualist--has been for years--and, being on the lookout for it, naturally discovered what she calls 'mediums.h.i.+p' in Viola when a child. By carefully nursing the delusion in herself and in her subject, she has been able to develop a rare 'up-rush of the subliminal,' as Myers would say. When I came here to take Dr.
Randall's practice, I found among his papers elaborate notes on the girl's development.”
”You amaze me!” exclaimed Serviss. ”She seems so normal and so charming.”
”In reality she's the most extraordinary puzzle I have ever undertaken to solve. It seems, according to Randall, that this power came upon her soon after the death of her little brother--a couple of years younger than herself. I'll let you see these notes if you like.