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if I had thought of murder—’

      ‘Never mind. There’s no law against your moving him or examining him, even if you had suspected murder—as long as you weren’t trying to hide anything. People think there’s some such law, but there isn’t.’

      ‘The medical examiner’ll probably be sore, though.’

      ‘Let him. We’ve got more than the medical examiner to worry about.’

      ‘Yes. You’ve got a few questions to ask.’

      ‘And answer. How, when, where, why, and who? Oh, I’m great at questions. But the answers—’

      ‘Well, we’ve the “when” narrowed down to a half-hour period.’ Dr Archer glanced at his watch. ‘That would be between ten-thirty and eleven. And “where” shouldn’t be hard to verify—right here in his own chair, if those two fellows are telling it straight. “Why” and “who”—those’ll be your little red wagon. “How” right now is mine. I can’t imagine—’

      Again he turned to the supine figure, staring. Suddenly his lean countenance grew blanker than usual. Still staring, he took the detective by the arm. ‘Dart,’ he said reflectively, ‘we smart people are often amazingly—dumb.’

      ‘You’re telling me?’

      ‘We waste precious moments in useless speculation. We indulge ourselves in the extravagance of reason when a frugal bit of observation would suffice.’

      ‘Does prescription liquor affect you like that, doc?’

      ‘Look at that face.’

      ‘Well—if you insist—’

      ‘Just the general appearance of that face—the eyes—the open mouth. What does it look like?’

      ‘Looks like he’s gasping for breath.’

      ‘Exactly. Dart, this man might—might, you understand—have been choked.’

      ‘Ch—’

      ‘Stunned by a blow over the ear—’

      ‘To prevent a struggle!’

      ‘—and choked to death. As simple as that.’

      ‘Choked! But just how?’

      Eagerly, Dr Archer once more bent over the lifeless countenance. ‘There are two ways,’ he dissertated in his roundabout fashion, ‘of interrupting respiration.’ He was peering into the mouth. ‘What we shall call, for simplicity, the external and the internal. In this case the external would be rather indeterminate, since we could hardly make out the usual bluish discolourations on a neck of this complexion.’ He procured two tongue depressors and, one in each hand, examined as far back into the throat as he could. He stopped talking as some discovery further elevated his already high interest. He discarded one depressor, reached for his flashlight with the hand thus freed, and, still holding the first depressor in place, directed his light into the mouth as if he were examining tonsils. With a little grunt of discovery, he now discarded the flashlight also, took a pair of long steel thumb-forceps from a flap in the side of his bag, and inserted the instrument into the victim’s mouth alongside the guiding tongue-depressor. Dart and the uniformed officer watched silently as the doctor apparently tried to remove something from the throat of the corpse. Once, twice, the prongs snapped together, and he withdrew the instrument empty. But the next time the forceps caught hold of the physician’s discovery and drew it forth.

      It was a large, blue-bordered, white handkerchief.

       CHAPTER III

      ‘DOC,’ said Dart, ‘you don’t mind hanging around with us a while?’

      ‘Try and shake me loose,’ grinned Dr Archer. ‘This promises to be worth seeing.’

      ‘If you’d said no,’ Dart grinned back, ‘I’d have held you anyhow as a suspect. I’m going to need some of your brains. I’m not one of these bright ones that can do all the answers in my head. I’m just a poor boy trying to make a living, and this kind of a riddle hasn’t been popped often enough in my life to be easy yet. I’ve seen some funny ones, but this is funnier. One thing I can see—that this guy wasn’t put out by any beginner.’

      ‘The man that did this,’ agreed the physician, ‘thought about it first. I’ve seen autopsies that could have missed that handkerchief. It was pushed back almost out of sight.’

      ‘That makes you a smart boy.’

      ‘I admit it. Wonder whose handkerchief?’

      ‘Stick it in your bag and hang on to it. And let’s get going.’

      ‘Whither?’

      ‘To get acquainted with this layout first. Whoever’s here will keep a while. The bird that pulled the job is probably in Egypt by now.’

      ‘That wouldn’t be my guess.’

      ‘You think he’d hang around?’

      ‘He wouldn’t do the expected thing—not if he was bright enough to think up a gag like this.’

      ‘Gag is good. Let’s start with the roof. Brady, you come with me and the doc—and be ready for surprises. Where’s Day?’

      The doctor closed and picked up his bag. They passed into the hallway. Officer Day was on guard in the front vestibule according to his orders.

      ‘There are four more men and the medical examiner coming,’ the detective told him. ‘The four will be right over. Put one on the rear of the house and send the others upstairs. Come on, doc.’

      The three men ascended two flights of stairs to the top floor. The slim Dart led, the tall doctor followed, the stalwart Brady brought up the rear. Along the uppermost hallway they made their way to the front of the third story of the house, moving with purposeful resoluteness, yet with a sharp-eyed caution that anticipated almost any eventuality. The physician and the detective carried their flashlights, the policeman his revolver.

      At the front end of the hallway they found a closed door. It was unlocked. Dart flung it open, to find the ceiling light on, probably left by Officer Johnson in obedience to instructions.

      This room was a large bedchamber, reaching, except for the width of the hallway, across the breadth of the house. It was luxuriously appointed. The bed was a massive four-poster of mahogany, intricately carved and set off by a counterpane of gold satin. It occupied the mid-portion of a large black-and-yellow Chinese rug which covered almost the entire floor. Two upholstered chairs, done also in gold satin, flanked the bed, and a settee of similar design guarded its foot. An elaborate smoking stand sat beside the head of the bed. A mahogany chest and bureau, each as substantial as the four-poster, completed the furniture.

      ‘No question as to whose room this is,’ said Dart.

      ‘A man’s,’ diagnosed Archer. ‘A man of means and definite ideas, good or bad—but definite. Too bare to be a woman’s room—look—the walls are stark naked. There aren’t any frills’—he sniffed—‘and there isn’t any perfume.’

      ‘I guess you’ve been in enough women’s rooms to know.’

      ‘Men’s too. But this is odd. Notice anything conspicuous by its absence?’

      ‘I’ll bite.’

      ‘Photographs of women.’

      The detective’s eyes swept the room in verification.

      ‘Woman hater?’

      ‘Maybe,’ said the doctor, ‘but—’

      ‘Wait a minute,’ said the detective. There was a clothes closet to the left of the entrance. He turned, opened its door, and played

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