Part 14 (2/2)
”Dr. Sykes thinks it's lung trouble.”
”Consumption?”
He nodded, and an expression of anxiety came over his face.
”Good,” I exclaimed. ”Now listen to what I have to say. Before the week is out your wife will be cured. I swear it.”
He said nothing. It was plain that he was still suspicious.
”You read what they say in the papers about the Blue Disease cutting short other diseases? Well, that Blue Disease will be all over London in a day or two. Now do you understand?”
I saw that I had interested him. He settled himself on his chair, and began to examine me. His gaze travelled over my face and clothes, pausing at my cuff-links and my tie and collar. Then he looked at my card again. Inwardly he came to a decision.
”I'm willing to listen to what you've got to say,” he remarked, ”if you think it's worth saying.”
”Thank you. I think it's worth hearing.” I leaned my arms on the table in front of me. ”This Blue Disease is not an accidental thing. It was deliberately planned, by two scientists. I was one of those scientists.”
”You can't plan a disease,” he remarked, after a considerable silence.
”You're wrong. We found a way of creating new germs. We worked at the idea of creating a particular kind of germ that would kill all other germs ... and we were successful. Then we let loose the germ on the world.”
”How?”
”We infected the water supply of Birmingham at its origin in Wales.”
I watched his expression intently.
”You mean that you did this secretly, without knowing what the result would be?” he asked at last.
”We foresaw the result to a certain extent.”
He thought for some time.
”But you had no right to infect a water supply. That's criminal, surely?”
”It's criminal if the infection is dangerous to people. If you put cholera in a reservoir, of course it's criminal.”
”But this germ...?”
”This germ does not kill people. It kills the germs in people.”
”What's the difference?”
”All the difference in the world! It's like this.... By the way, what is your name?”
”Clutterbuck.” The word escaped his lips by accident. He looked annoyed. I smiled rea.s.suringly.
”It's like this, Mr. Clutterbuck. If you kill all the germs in a person's body, that person doesn't die. He lives ... indefinitely. Now do you see?”
”No, I don't see,” said Clutterbuck with great frankness. ”I don't understand what you're driving at. You tell me that you're a doctor and you give me a card bearing a well-known specialist's name. Then you say you created a germ and put it in the Birmingham water supply and that the result is the Blue Disease. This germ, you say, doesn't kill people, but does something else which I don't follow. Now I was taught that germs are dangerous things, and it seems to me that if your story is true--which I don't believe--you are guilty of a criminal act.” He pushed back his chair and reached for his hat. There was a flush on his face.
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