The Golden Scorpion & The Yellow Claw. Sax Rohmer

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The Golden Scorpion & The Yellow Claw - Sax  Rohmer


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Leroux; he drew my attention to it, saying that he had left her lying on the chesterfield and NOT upon the floor.”

      “You examined her?”

      “I did. She was dead, but still warm. She exhibited signs of recent illness, and of being addicted to some drug habit; probably morphine. This, beyond doubt, contributed to her death, but the direct cause was asphyxiation. She had been strangled!”

      “My God!” groaned Leroux, dropping his face into his hands.

      “You found marks on her throat?”

      “The marks were very slight. No great pressure was required in her weak condition.”

      “You did not move the body?”

      “Certainly not; a more complete examination must be made, of course. But I extracted a piece of torn paper from her clenched right hand.”

      Inspector Dunbar lowered his tufted brows.

      “I'm not glad to know you did that,” he said. “It should have been left.”

      “It was done on the spur of the moment, but without altering the position of the hand or arm. The paper lies upon the table, yonder.”

      Inspector Dunbar took a long drink. Thus far he had made no attempt to examine the victim. Pulling out a bulging note-case from the inside pocket of his blue serge coat, he unscrewed a fountain-pen, carefully tested the nib upon his thumb nail, and made three or four brief entries. Then, stretching out one long arm, he laid the wallet and the pen beside his glass upon the top of a bookcase, without otherwise changing his position, and glancing aside at Exel, said: —

      “Now, Mr. Exel, what help can you give us?”

      “I have little to add to Dr. Cumberly's account,” answered Exel, offhandedly. “The whole thing seemed to me”...

      “What it seemed,” interrupted Dunbar, “does not interest Scotland Yard, Mr. Exel, and won't interest the jury.”

      Leroux glanced up for a moment, then set his teeth hard, so that his jaw muscles stood out prominently under the pallid skin.

      “What do you want to know, then?” asked Exel.

      “I will be wanting to know,” said Dunbar, “where you were coming from, to-night?”

      “From the House of Commons.”

      “You came direct?”

      “I left Sir Brian Malpas at the corner of Victoria Street at four minutes to twelve by Big Ben, and walked straight home, actually entering here, from the street, as the clock was chiming the last stroke of midnight.”

      “Then you would have walked up the street from an easterly direction?”

      “Certainly.”

      “Did you meet any one or anything?”

      “A taxi-cab, empty — for the hood was lowered — passed me as I turned the corner. There was no other vehicle in the street, and no person.”

      “You don't know from which door the cab came?”

      “As I turned the corner,” replied Exel, “I heard the man starting his engine, although when I actually saw the cab, it was in motion; but judging by the sound to which I refer, the cab had been stationary, if not at the door of Palace Mansions, certainly at that of the next block — St. Andrew's Mansions.”

      “Did you hear, or see anything else?”

      “I saw nothing whatever. But just as I approached the street door, I heard a peculiar whistle, apparently proceeding from the gardens in the center of the square. I attached no importance to it at the time.”

      “What kind of whistle?”

      “I have forgotten the actual notes, but the effect was very odd in some way.”

      “In what way?”

      “An impression of this sort is not entirely reliable, Inspector; but it struck me as Oriental.”

      “Ah!” said Dunbar, and reached out the long arm for his notebook.

      “Can I be of any further assistance?” said Exel, glancing at his watch.

      “You had entered the hall-way and were about to enter your own flat when the voices of Dr. Cumberly and Mr. Leroux attracted your attention?”

      “I actually had the key in my hand,” replied Exel.

      “Did you actually have the key in the lock?”

      “Let me think,” mused Exel, and he took out a bunch of keys and dangled them, reflectively, before his eyes. “No! I was fumbling for the right key when I heard the voices above me.”

      “But were you facing your door?”

      “No,” averred Exel, perceiving the drift of the inspector's inquiries; “I was facing the stairway the whole time, and although it was in darkness, there is a street lamp immediately outside on the pavement, and I can swear, positively, that no one descended; that there was no one in the hall nor on the stair, except Mr. Leroux and Dr. Cumberly.”

      “Ah!” said Dunbar again, and made further entries in his book. “I need not trouble you further, sir. Good night!”

      Exel, despite his earlier attitude of boredom, now ignored this official dismissal, and, tossing the stump of his cigar into the grate, lighted a cigarette, and with both hands thrust deep in his pockets, stood leaning back against the mantelpiece. The detective turned to Leroux.

      “Have a brandy-and-soda?” suggested Dr. Cumberly, his eyes turned upon the pathetic face of the novelist.

      But Leroux shook his head, wearily.

      “Go ahead, Inspector!” he said. “I am anxious to tell you all I know. God knows I am anxious to tell you.”

      A sound was heard of a key being inserted in the lock of a door.

      Four pairs of curious eyes were turned toward the entrance lobby, when the door opened, and a sleek man of medium height, clean shaven, but with his hair cut low upon the cheek bones, so as to give the impression of short side-whiskers, entered in a manner at once furtive and servile.

      He wore a black overcoat and a bowler hat. Reclosing the door, he turned, perceived the group in the study, and fell back as though someone had struck him a fierce blow.

      Abject terror was written upon his features, and, for a moment, the idea of flight appeared to suggest itself urgently to him; but finally, he took a step forward toward the study.

      “Who's this?” snapped Dunbar, without removing his leonine eyes from the newcomer.

      “It is Soames,” came the weary voice of Leroux.

      “Butler?”

      “Yes.”

      “Where's he been?”

      “I don't know. He remained out without my permission.”

      “He did, eh?”

      Inspector Dunbar thrust forth a long finger at the shrinking form in the doorway.

      “Mr. Soames,” he said, “you will be going to your own room and waiting there until I ring for you.”

      “Yes, sir,” said Soames, holding his hat in both bands, and speaking huskily. “Yes, sir: certainly, sir.”

      He crossed the lobby and disappeared.

      “There is no other way out, is there?” inquired the detective, glancing at Dr. Cumberly.

      “There is no other way,” was the reply; “but surely you don't suspect”...

      “I would suspect the Archbishop of Westminster,” snapped Dunbar, “if he came in like that! Now, sir,” — he turned to Leroux — “you were alone,


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