fussiness. “You will not come in. Recovery from shock is not a pretty sight and besides you will get in my way. Keep out until I tell you.”
He took the saucepans and put them inside on the floor. Then he closed the door in Miles' face.
With a violent uneasy hope welling up even more strongly—men do not talk like that unless they expect recovery—Miles stood back. Moonlight changed and shifted at the back of the hall; and he saw why.
Dr. Gideon Fell, smoking a very large meerschaum pipe, stood beside the window at the end of the hall. The red glow of the pipe-bowl pulsed and darkened, touching Dr. Fell's eyeglasses; a mist of smoke curled up ghostlike past the window.
“You know,” observed Dr. Fell, taking the pipe out of his mouth, “I like that man.”
“Professor Rigaud?”
“Yes. I
“So do I. And God knows I'm grateful to him.”
“He is a practical man, a thoroughly practical man. Which,” observed Dr. Fell, with a guilty air and several furious puffs at the meerschaum, “it is to be feared you and I are not. A thoroughly practical man.”
“And yet,” said Miles, “he believes in vampires.”
“Harrumph. Yes. Exactly.”
“Let's face it. What do
“My dear Hammond,” returned Dr. Fell, puffing out his cheeks and shaking his head with some vehemence, “at the moment I'm dashed if I know. That is what depresses me. Before this present affair,” he nodded towards the bedroom, “before this present affair cam to upset my calculations, I believed I was beginning to have more than a glimmer of light about the murder of Howard Brooke . . .”
“Yes,” said Miles, “I thought you were.”
“Oh, ah?”
“When I was giving you Fay Seton's account of the murder on the tower, the look on your face once of twice was enough to scare anybody. Horror? I don't know! Something like that.”
“Was it?” said Dr. Fell. The pipe pulsed and darkened. “Oh, ah! I remember! But what upset me wasn't the thought of an evil spirit. It was the thought of a motive.”
“A motive for murder?”
“Oh, no,” said Dr. Fell. “But it led to murder. A motive so damnably evil and cold-hearted that . . .” He paused. Again the pipe pulsed and darkened. “Do you think we could have a word, now, with Miss Seton?”
Chapter XI
“Miss Seton?” Miles repeated sharply.
He could make nothing of Dr. Fell's expression now. It was a mask, fleshy and colourless against the moonlight, veiled by smoke which got into Mile's lungs. Yet the ring in Dr. Fell's voice, the ring of hatred about that motive, had been unmistakable.
“Miss Seton? I suppose so. She's downstairs now.”
“Downstairs?” said Dr. Fell.
“Her bedroom is downstairs.” Miles explained the circumstances and narrated the events of that afternoon. “It's one of the pleasantest rooms in the house; only just redecorated, with the paint hardly dry. But she is up and about, if that's what you mean. She—she heard the shot.”
“Indeed!”
“As a matter of fact, she slipped up here and glanced into Marion's room. Something upset her so much that she isn't quite . . . quite . . .”
“Herself?”
“If you want to put it like that.”
And then Miles rebelled. With human nature as resilient as it is, with Marion (as he conceived) out of danger, it seemed to him that values were readjusting themselves and that common sense could burst out of its prison.
“Dr. Fell,” he said, “let's not be hypnotized. Let's not have a spell thrown over us by Rigaud's ghouls and vampires and witch-women. Granting—even granting—it would have been very difficult for someone to have climbed up outside the windows of Marion's room . . .”
“My dear fellow,” Dr. Fell said gently, “I
And he indicated the window beside which they stood.
Unlike most of the windows in the house, which were of the French-casement style, this was an ordinary sash-window. Miles pushed it up, put his head out, and looked towards the left.
The illuminated windows of Marion's room—four little windows set together, with two of their lights open— threw out bright light against pale green at the back of the house. Underneath was a blank wall fifteen feet high. Underneath also, which he had forgotten, ran an unplanted flower-bed nearly as broad as the wall was high: a flower-bed smooth and newly watered, of earth finely crushed and hoed, on which a cat could not have walked without leaving a trace.
But a fury of doggedness persisted in Miles Hammond.
“I still say,” he declared, “we'd better not be hypnotized.”
“How so?”
“We know Marion fired a shot, yes. But how do we know she fired it at something
“Aha!” chortled Dr. Fell, and a kind of glee breathed towards Miles out of pipe-smoke. “My compliments, sir. You
“We don't know it at all,” said Miles. “We only assume it because it came after all this talk of faces floating outside windows. Isn't it much more natural to think she fired at something
“Yes,” Dr. Fell assented gravely, “it is. But don't you see, my dear sir, that this doesn't in the least explain our real problem?”
“What do you mean?”
“Something,” replied Dr. Fell, “frightened you sister. Something which—without Rigaud's timely aid—would quite literally have frightened her to death.”
Dr. Fell spoke with slow, fiery emphasis, stressing every word. His pipe had gone out, and he put it down on the sill of the open window. Even his wheezing breath snorted louder with earnestness.
“Now I want you to think for a moment just what that means. Your sister is not, I take it, a nervous woman?”
“Good Lord, no!”
Dr. Fell hesitated.
“Let me—harrumph--be more explicit. She's not one of those women who
A very vivid memory returned to Miles.
“I remember,” he said, “when I was in hospital, Marion and Steve used to come there as often as they could”--how good they'd been, both of them--”with any jokes or stories hey thought would amuse me. One was a haunted house. A friend of Steve's (that's Marion's fiance) found it while he was on Home Guard duty. So they made up a party to go there.”
“With what result?”
“It seems they did find a lot of unexplained disturbances; poltergeist disturbances, not very pleasant. Steve freely confessed
“Oh, my eye!” breathed Dr. Fell.
He picked up the dead pipe, and put it down again.
“The again I ask you,” Dr. Fell went on earnestly, “to remember the circumstances. Your sister was not touched or physically attacked in any way. All the evidence shows she collapsed of nervous shock because of something she