the Imperial Hotel. You can always find me there.”

“Well, Mr. Renard, I’d like to have a talk with you later on, if I may. Just at present, I’m very busy. Perhaps you could spare a few minutes when my hands are free.”

“I shall be delighted,” Renard acquiesced. “Whenever you wish to see me, send a message. I am much worried, you understand?” he concluded, with a quiver in his voice which pierced through the official coating of Flamborough and touched the softer material inside.

X

Information Received

For the next day or two, Sir Clinton’s interest in the Hassendean case appeared to have faded out; and Inspector Flamborough, after following up one or two clues which eventually proved useless, was beginning to feel perturbed by the lack of direct progress which the investigation showed. Rather to his relief, one morning the Chief Constable summoned him to his office. Flamborough began a somewhat apologetic account of his fruitless investigations; but Sir Clinton cut him short with a word or two of appreciation of his zeal.

“Here’s something more definite for you to go on,” he suggested. “I’ve just had a preliminary report from the London man whom we put on to search for the poison. I asked him to let me have a private opinion at the earliest possible moment. His official report will come in later, of course.”

“Has he spotted it, sir?” the Inspector inquired eagerly.

“He’s reached the same conclusion as I did⁠—and as I suppose you did also,” Sir Clinton assured him.

Flamborough looked puzzled.

“I didn’t spot it myself,” he confessed diffidently. “In fact, I don’t see how there was anything to show definitely what stuff it was, barring dilatation of the eye-pupils, and that might have been due to various drugs.”

“You should never lose an opportunity of exercising your powers of inference, Inspector. I mustn’t rob you of this one. Now put together two things: the episode of the mixed melting-point and the phrase about his ‘triumph’ that young Hassendean wrote in his journal. Add the state of the girl’s pupils as a third point⁠—and there you are!”

Flamborough pondered for a while over this assortment of information, but finally shook his head.

“I don’t see it yet, sir.”

“In that case,” Sir Clinton declared, with the air of one bestowing benevolence, “I think we’d better let it dawn on you slowly. You might be angry with yourself if you realised all of a sudden how simple it is.”

He rose to his feet as he spoke.

“I think we’ll pay a visit to the Croft-Thornton Institute now, and see how Markfield has been getting along with his examination. We may as well have a check, before we begin to speculate too freely.”

They found Markfield in his laboratory, and Sir Clinton came to business at once.

“We came over to see how you were getting on with that poison business, Dr. Markfield. Can you give us any news?”

Markfield indicated a notebook on his desk.

“I’ve got it out, I think. It’s all there; but I haven’t had time to write a proper report on it yet. It was⁠—”

“Hyoscine?” Sir Clinton interrupted.

Markfield stared at him with evident appreciation.

“You’re quite right,” he confirmed, with some surprise. “I suppose you’ve got private information.”

The Chief Constable evaded the point.

“I’m asking this question only for our own information; you won’t be asked to swear to it in court. What amount of hyoscine do you think was in the body, altogether? I mean, judging from the results you obtained yourself.”

Markfield considered for a moment.

“I’m giving you a guess, but I think it’s fairly near the mark. I wouldn’t, of course, take my oath on it. But the very smallest quantity, judging from my results, would be somewhere in the neighbourhood of seven or eight milligrammes.”

“Have you looked up anything about the stuff⁠—maximum dose, and so forth?” Sir Clinton inquired.

“The maximum dose of hyoscine hydrobromide is down in the books as six-tenths of a milligramme⁠—about a hundredth of a grain in apothecaries’ weights.”

“Then she must have swallowed ten or twelve times the maximum dose,” Sir Clinton calculated, after a moment or two of mental arithmetic.

He paused for a space, then turned again to Markfield.

“I’d like to see the hyoscine in your store here, if you can lay your hands on it easily.”

Markfield made no objection.

“If you’d come in yesterday, the bottle would have been here, beside me. I’ve taken it back to the shelf now.”

“I suppose you borrowed it to do a mixed melting-point?” Sir Clinton asked.

“Yes. When there’s only a trace of a stuff to identify, it’s the easiest method. But you seem to know something about chemistry?”

“About enough to make mistakes with, I’m afraid. It simply happened that someone described the mixed melting-point business to me once; and it stuck in my mind. Now suppose we look at this store of yours.”

Markfield led them along a passage and threw open a door at the end.

“In here,” he said.

“You don’t keep it locked?” Sir Clinton inquired casually, as he passed in, followed by the Inspector.

“No,” Markfield answered in some surprise. “It’s the general chemical store for this department. There’s no point in keeping it locked. All our stuffs are here, and it would be a devilish nuisance if one had to fish out a key every time one wanted some chloroform or benzene. We keep the duty-free alcohol locked up, of course. That’s necessary under the Customs’ regulations.”

Sir Clinton readily agreed.

“You’re all trustworthy people, naturally,” he admitted. “It’s not like a place where you have junior students about who might play thoughtless tricks.”

Markfield went over to one of the cases which lined the room, searched along a shelf, and took down a tiny bottle.

“Here’s the stuff,” he explained, holding it out to the Chief Constable. “That’s the hydrobromide, of course⁠—a salt of the alkaloid itself. This is the compound that’s used in medicine.”

Now that he had got it, Sir Clinton seemed to have little interest in the substance. He handed it across to Flamborough who, after looking at it

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