Part 25 (1/2)
”Then I was invited by the 'controls'--so Clarke said--to come up and sit beside the medium, which I did, very loathly. It gave me a keen pang to look down on that lovely creature pretending to sleep, knowing perfectly well that she was planning some deep deception.”
”You _are_ bitter. What next?”
”I took a seat beside her, determined to see if she really had a hand in the deception. I thought I could prevent anything happening.”
”Did you?”
”No. Everything went on quite as briskly as before, and all the while I thought I could see her arms lying limp along her chair--lovely arms they were, too. She isn't poor, you must understand that, Kate; and that really makes the crime worse, for she has not the usual excuse--she is not doing it for her daily bread.”
Kate sat like a judge, ”Go on. You seized her, of course?”
”Yes; just when the cone was emitting an old man's pompous harangue I laid my hand on her arm. The horn dropped, the circle rose in confusion, and I came away.”
”I expected you'd do that. All sceptics do, I believe. But I want to know _all_ that took place. You're so concise. You say the cone emitted a man's voice. Now, how could--”
”It produced the _impression_ of a man's voice. It is easy to deceive under such conditions. The cone was pa.s.sed from her hand to Clarke's at the proper moments, and, as you say, there might have been a child--”
”You must not infer, Mort--my faith in that girl is at stake. Was there nothing in her favor? Nothing that justified her claim?”
He hesitated and Kate leaned forward in excess of interest. ”Go on, Morton, be honest.”
”Well, now, as I think of it there was one little thing which was rather curious. I don't know how she or Clarke or any one there should know what we used to call Uncle Ben.”
”What? Did you get a message from him?”
”A voice from the megaphone asked for me, and when I requested the name of 'the party speaking,' as Clarke says, it replied with an oily chuckle, exactly like the old duffer, '_It's old Loggy._'”
”It did?” Her voice was sharp with surprise. ”Well, now, that is as wonderful as my experience. How do you account for _that_? How _do_ you account for such things?” she repeated, insistently.
”Clarke must have known--”
”Nonsense. No one outside our immediate family knows of that nickname.
Besides, how would he know the way 'Loggy' laughed? I'd forgotten it myself.”
”So had I. But what would you say? Would you jump to the conclusion--”
”_You_ are jumping at the conclusion, Mort. If there is one single thing that you can't understand, you must give that girl the benefit of the doubt. What did 'Loggy' say?”
”There you go! You're ready to swallow the whole lump of humb.u.g.g.e.ry, just because there is one little puzzling plum in it.”
Kate was not to be put down. ”What did uncle _say_?”
He submitted. ”Nothing else. Like most of those dead folk, he was there just to manifest, not to impart wisdom.”
Kate leaned back in her chair and grew thoughtful. ”Morton, that was wonderful. No one knew you were coming, no one knew you except those people, and they're from, the other end of the earth--and yet _somebody_ speaks, using a pet name we've both forgotten. Now, I call that a most important thing to dwell upon. How can _you_, a scientist, overlook it?”
”But you must remember all this happened in the house of jugglery.
There is no value in a performance of that kind. There was no test applied. Confederates had full opportunity to come and go. To have weight with me these wonders must take place under conditions of my making, not theirs.”
”That's what she wants.”