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pardon," he said, stopping as suddenly. "Man of the world, eh? You'll understand that when a gentleman has grievances...." He fumbled in his waistcoat-pocket and found a black-rimmed monocle and inserted it in his eye. There was an obscenity in the appearance of this foul wreck of a man which made the lawyer feel physically sick.

      "Trespassing, by gad!" He went back to his first conceit and his voice rasped with malignity. "Gad! If I had my way with people! I'd slit their throats, I would, sir. I'd stick pins in their eyes—red-hot pins. I'd boil them alive–"

      Hitherto the lawyer had not spoken, but now his repulsion got the better of his usually equable temper.

      "What are you doing here?" he asked sternly. "You're on private property—take your beastliness elsewhere."

      The man glared at him and laughed.

      "Trespassing!" he sneered. "Trespassing! Very good—your servant, sir!"

      He swept his derby hat from his head (the lawyer saw that he was bald), and turning, strutted back through the plantation the way he had come. It was not the way out and Kitson was half-inclined to follow and see the man off the estate. Then he remembered the urgency of his errand and continued his journey to the village. On his way back he looked about, but there was no trace of the unpleasant intruder. Who was he? he wondered. Some broken derelict with nothing but the memory of former vain splendours and the rags of old fineries, nursing a dear hatred for some more fortunate fellow.

      Nearly an hour had passed before he again panted up to the levelled shelf on which the cottage stood.

      The doctor was sitting at the window as Kitson passed.

      "How is he?"

      "About the same. He had one paroxysm. Is that the strychnine? I can't tell you how much obliged I am to you."

      He took the small packet and placed it on the window-ledge and Mr. Kitson passed into the house.

      "Honestly, doctor, what do you think of his chance?" he asked.

      Dr. van Heerden shrugged his shoulders.

      "Honestly, I do not think he will recover consciousness."

      "Heavens!"

      The lawyer was shocked. The tragic suddenness of it all stunned him. He had thought vaguely that days, even weeks, might pass before the end came.

      "Not recover consciousness?" he repeated in a whisper.

      Instinctively he was drawn to the room where his friend lay and the doctor followed him.

      John Millinborn lay on his back, his eyes closed, his face a ghastly grey. His big hands were clutching at his throat, his shirt was torn open at the breast. The two windows, one at each end of the room, were wide, and a gentle breeze blew the casement curtains. The lawyer stooped, his eyes moist, and laid his hand upon the burning forehead.

      "John, John," he murmured, and turned away, blinded with tears.

      He wiped his face with a pocket-handkerchief and walked to the window, staring out at the serene loveliness of the scene. Over the weald a great aeroplane droned to the sea. The green downs were dappled white with grazing flocks, and beneath the windows the ordered beds blazed and flamed with flowers, crimson and gold and white.

      As he stood there the man he had met in the plantation came to his mind and he was half-inclined to speak to the doctor of the incident. But he was in no mood for the description and the speculation which would follow. Restlessly he paced into the bedroom. The sick man had not moved and again the lawyer returned. He thought of the girl, that girl whose name and relationship with John Millinborn he alone knew. What use would she make of the millions which, all unknown to her, she would soon inherit? What–

      "Jim, Jim!"

      He turned swiftly.

      It was John Millinborn's voice.

      "Quick—come...."

      The doctor had leapt into the room and made his way to the bed.

      Millinborn was sitting up, and as the lawyer moved swiftly in the doctor's tracks he saw his wide eyes staring.

      "Jim, he has...."

      His head dropped forward on his breast and the doctor lowered him slowly to the pillow.

      "What is it, John? Speak to me, old man...."

      "I'm afraid there is nothing to be done," said the doctor as he drew up the bedclothes.

      "Is he dead?" whispered the lawyer fearfully.

      "No—but–"

      He beckoned the other into the big room and, after a glance at the motionless figure, Kitson followed.

      "There's something very strange—who is that?"

      He pointed through the open window at the clumsy figure of a man who was blundering wildly down the slope which led to the plantation.

      Kitson recognized the man immediately. It was the uninvited visitor whom he had met in the plantation. But there was something in the haste of the shabby man, a hint of terror in the wide-thrown arms, that made the lawyer forget his tragic environment.

      "Where has he been?" he asked.

      "Who is he?"

      The doctor's face was white and drawn as though he, too, sensed some horror in that frantic flight.

      Kitson walked back to the room where the dying man lay, but was frozen stiff upon the threshold.

      "Doctor—doctor!"

      The doctor followed the eyes of the other. Something was dripping from the bed to the floor—something red and horrible. Kitson set his teeth and, stepping to the bedside, pulled down the covers.

      He stepped back with a cry, for from the side of John Millinborn protruded the ivory handle of a knife.

      CHAPTER II

      THE DRUNKEN MR. BEALE

      Dr. van Heerden's surgery occupied one of the four shops which formed the ground floor of the Krooman Chambers. This edifice had been erected by a wealthy philanthropist to provide small model flats for the professional classes who needed limited accommodation and a good address (they were in the vicinity of Oxford Street) at a moderate rental. Like many philanthropists, the owner had wearied of his hobby and had sold the block to a syndicate, whose management on more occasions than one had been the subject of police inquiry.

      They had then fallen into the hands of an intelligent woman, who had turned out the undesirable tenants, furnished the flats plainly, but comfortably, and had let them to tenants who might be described as solvent, but honest. Krooman Chambers had gradually rehabilitated itself in the eyes of the neighbourhood.

      Dr. van Heerden had had his surgery in the building for six years. During the war he was temporarily under suspicion for sympathies with the enemy, but no proof was adduced of his enmity and, though he had undoubtedly been born on the wrong side of the Border at Cranenburg, which is the Prussian frontier station on the Rotterdam-Cologne line, his name was undoubtedly van Heerden, which was Dutch. Change the "van" to "von," said the carping critics, and he was a Hun, and undoubtedly Germany was full of von Heerens and von Heerdens.

      The doctor lived down criticism, lived down suspicion, and got together a remunerative practice. He had the largest flat in the building, one room of which was fitted up as a laboratory, for he had a passion for research. The mysterious murder of John Millinborn had given him a certain advertisement which had not been without its advantages. The fact that he had been in attendance on the millionaire had brought him a larger fame.

      His theories as to how the murder had been committed by some one who had got through the open window whilst the two men were out of the room had been generally accepted, for the police had found footmarks on the flowerbeds, over which the murderer must have passed. They had not, however, traced the seedy-looking personage whom Mr. Kitson had seen. This person had disappeared as mysteriously as he had arrived.

      Three months after the murder the doctor stood on the steps of the broad entrance-hall which led to the flats, watching the stream of pedestrians passing. It was six o'clock in

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