Part 16 (1/2)

Phelps was red now. ”Are you insinuating anything, Mackay?”

The little district attorney was demonstrating a certain quality of dogged perseverance. ”Some one put the needle in the curtain before the company arrived. You probably were in the house at the time; or at the least your servants were. Whoever did was the one who murdered Stella Lamar.”

”And also,” rejoined Phelps, tartly, ”was the intruder who broke in here last night and ruined my window sash. If you had had better guards you might have caught him, too!”

”Are you sure of your servants? Are they reliable--”

”I never antic.i.p.ated a murder and so I didn't question them as to their poisoning proclivities when I engaged them. But you know where they are and you can examine them. If I were you, Mackay--”

”Gentlemen!” Kennedy hastened to stop the colloquy before it became an out-and-out quarrel. Then he faced the banker.

”Mr. Phelps,” Kennedy's voice was soft, coaxing, ”I don't think Mr.

Mackay quite understands. It would be a great service to me if you would give the house a quick general inspection. You are familiar with the things here, enough to state whether they have been disturbed to any appreciable degree. You see, we do not know the interior arrangements as they were before this unfortunate happening.”

With rather ill grace Phelps stalked up the steps, acceding to Kennedy's request, but disdaining to answer.

Kennedy turned to Mackay as the banker disappeared out of earshot.

”That's just to cool him off a bit. I have everything I came to get right here.” Producing a pair of pocket scissors, he cut the pierced and spotted bit of silk from the portieres, ruthlessly. It was necessary vandalism.

”What was the poison, Mr. Kennedy?” Mackay asked, in a low voice.

”I think that it was closely allied to the cyanide groups in its rapacious activity.”

”But you haven't identified it yet?”

”No. So far I haven't the slightest idea of its true nature. It seems to have a powerful affinity for important nerve centers of respiration and muscular co-ordination, as well as possessing a tendency to disorganize the blood. I should say that it produces death by respiratory paralysis and convulsions. To my mind it is an exact, though perhaps less active, counterpart of hydrocyanic acid. But that is not what it is or I would have been able to prove it before this.”

Mackay nodded, listening in silence.

”You'll say nothing of this?” Kennedy added.

”I'll be silent, of course.”

Heavy footsteps from the rear marked the return of Phelps, who had covered the upper floors, descending by the back stairs so as to have a look at the kitchen.

”Everything seems to be all right,” he remarked, half graciously.

Kennedy led the way to the front porch. There he seemed more interested in the weather than in the case, for he studied the sky intently.

Glancing up, I saw that the morning was still gray and cloudy, with no promise that the sun would be able to struggle through the overhanging moisture.

”I don't think we'll go back to the city--that is, all the way in,” he remarked, speaking for both of us. ”I want to go to the Manton studio first. This is no day for exteriors and so they'll probably be working there.” He smiled at Phelps. ”I want to see if any of our possible suspects look as though they had been engaging in nocturnal journeys.”

Phelps had been rubbing his eyes. He dropped his hand so quickly that I wanted to smile; then to cover his confusion he promptly offered to drive us in. Mackay at the same time volunteered his car.

Kennedy accepted the latter offer. As he thanked the banker I wondered if any suspicion of that individual lurked in the back of his mind.

Phelps certainly had made a very bad impression upon me with his antagonistic att.i.tude, with his readiness to transform every question into a personal affront.

”Just one other thing, Mr. Phelps,” exclaimed Kennedy, as we were about to descend to Mackay's car. ”Why did you wish the scenes in 'The Black Terror' actually taken in your library?”