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Title: The Eleventh Hour
Date of first publication: 1927
Author: Edwin Balmer (1883-1959) and William B. MacHarg (1872-1951)
Date first posted: Oct. 21, 2020
Date last updated: Oct. 21, 2020
Faded Page eBook #20201046

This eBook was produced by: Al Haines

This file was produced from images generously made available by Internet Archive/American Libraries




[Source: Amazing Stories, Vol. 1, No. 11, February, 1927]




The ELEVENTH HOUR


_By Edwin Balmer & William B. MacHarg_

Authors of "The Man Higher Up"




_Another of the scientific detective stories by the well-known
authors, Edwin Balmer and William B. MacHarg.  Herein Luther Trant
makes a scientific excursion into our innermost psychology.  Of the
entire human race, no one is less easily ruffled than a Chinaman.  He
has nerves of steel and a will of similar quality.  But nevertheless
even such a constitution can betray itself if the correct scientific
instruments are applied to it._




It was the third Sunday in March.  A roaring storm of mingled rain
and snow, driven by a riotous wind--wild even for the Great Lakes in
winter--had surged through the streets of Chicago all day; a little
after ten o'clock at night the temperature fell rapidly and the rain
and snow changed suddenly to sleet.  At twenty minutes past the hour,
the slush that filled the streets began to freeze.  Mr. Luther Trant,
hastening on foot back to his rooms at his club, observed that the
soft mess underfoot had become coated with tough, rubbery ice,
through which the heels of his shoes crunched at every step while his
toes left almost no mark.

Trant had been taking the day "off," away from both his office and
his club; but fifteen minutes before, he had called up the club for
the first time that day and had learned that a woman had been
inquiring for him at frequent intervals during the day over the
telephone, and that a special delivery letter which she had sent had
been awaiting him since six o'clock.  The psychologist was therefore
hastening homeward, suddenly stricken with a sense of guilt and
dereliction.

As he hurried down Michigan Avenue, he was considering the wonderful
change in his affairs that had taken place so quickly.  Six months
ago he had been a callow assistant in a psychological laboratory.
The very professor whom he had served had smiled when he had declared
his belief in his power to apply the necromancy of the new psychology
to the detection of crime.  But the delicate instruments of the
laboratory--the chronoscopes, kymographs, plethysmographs, which made
visible and recorded unerringly, unfalteringly, the most secret
emotions of the heart and the hidden workings of the brain; the
experimental investigations of Freud and Jung, of the German and
French scientists, of Munsterberg and others in America--had fired
him with a belief in them and in himself.  In the face of
misunderstanding and derision he had tried to trace the criminal, not
by the world-old method of the marks the evil-doer had left on
_things_, but by the evidences which the crime had left on the mind
of the criminal himself.  And so well had he succeeded that now not
even a Sunday was free from appeal to him for help in trouble.  As he
entered the club, the doorman addressed him hurriedly:

"She called again, Mr. Trant, at nine o'clock.  She wanted to know if
you had received the note, and said you were to have it as soon as
you came in."

Trant took the letter--a plain, coarse envelope, with the red
two-cent and the blue special delivery stamps stuck askew above an
uneven line of great, unsteady characters.  Within it, ten lines
spread this wild appeal across the paper:


_If Mr. Trant will do--for some one unknown to him--the greatest
possible service--to save perhaps a life--a life!  I beg him to come
to--Ashland Avenue between seven and nine o'clock to-night!  Eleven!
For God's sake come--between seven and nine!  Later will be too late.
Eleven!  I tell you it may be worse than useless to come after
eleven!  So for God's sake--if you are human--help me!  You will be
expected._

W. NEWBERRY.


The psychologist glanced at his watch.  It was already twenty-five
minutes to eleven!  And then he paused a full minute to scrutinize
the handwriting, a shade of perplexity on his face.

The hand--identical in note and envelope--was that of a man!

"You're sure it was a woman's voice on the 'phone?" he asked, quickly.

"Yes, sir, a lady."

Trant picked up the telephone on the desk; "Halloo!  Is this the West
End Police Station?  This is Mr. Trant.  Can you send a plain-clothes
man and a patrolman at once to--Ashland Avenue?  No; I don't know
what the trouble is, but I understand it is a matter of life and
death; I want to have help at hand if I need it.  You are sending
Detective Siler?  Because he knows the house?  Oh, there has been
trouble there before?  I see.  Tell him to hurry.  I will try and get
there myself before eleven."

Trant hurried into a waiting taxicab.  The streets were all but
empty, and into the stiffening ice the chains on the tires of the
driving wheels bit sharply; so it still lacked ten minutes of the
hour when he jumped out at his destination.  The vacant street, and
the one dim light on the first floor of the house told him the police
had not yet arrived.

The porticoed front and the battered fountain, which rose obscurely
from the ice-crusted sod of the narrow lawn, showed that the
structure had formerly been a pretentious one.  In the rear, as well
as Trant could see in the indistinct glare of the street lamps, there
was a long one-storied addition.

As the psychologist rang the bell and was admitted, he saw at once
that he had not been mistaken in believing that the cab which had
passed his motor only an instant before had come from the same house;
for the mild-eyed, white-haired little man who opened the door almost
before the bell had stopped ringing had not yet taken off his
overcoat.  Behind him, in the dim light of a shaded lamp, an equally
placid, white-haired little woman was laying off her wraps; and their
gentle faces were so completely at variance with the wild terror of
the note which Trant now held between his fingers in his pocket, that
he hesitated before he asked his question:

"Is W. Newberry here?"

"I am the Reverend Wesley Newberry," the old man answered.  "I am no
longer in the active service of the Lord; but in case of immediate
necessity, if I can be of use----"

"No, no!"  Trant checked him.  "I have not come to ask your services
as a minister, Mr. Newberry.  To-night when I returned to my club at
half past ten, I was informed that a woman--apparently in great
anxiety--had been trying to get me all day on the telephone, and had
finally referred me to this special delivery letter which was
delivered at six o'clock."  Trant extended it to the staring little
minister.  "Telephone calls and note may have been a hoax; but--  In
Heaven's name!  What is the matter, Mr. Newberry?"

The two old people, in great amazement, had taken the note.  But the
moment she glanced at it, the little woman dropped, shaking and pale,
into the nearest chair.  The little man had lost his placidity and
was shuddering in uncontrolled fear.

"This note is not from me Mr.--Mr. Trant," he said, staring at the
letter in terror, "but it is, I must not deceive myself, undoubtedly
from our son Walter.  This writing, though broken beyond anything I
have seen from him in his worst dissipations, is undoubtedly his.
Yet Walter is not here, Mr. Trant!  I mean--I mean, he should not be
here!  There have been reasons--we have not seen or heard of Walter
for two months.  He cannot be here now--surely he cannot be here now,
unless--unless--  My wife and I went to a friend's this evening; this
is as though the writer had known we were going out!  We left at half
past six and have only just returned.  Oh, it is impossible that
Walter could have come here!"  The livid terror grew stronger on his
rosy, simple face as he turned to his wife.  "We have not seen Adele,
Martha, since we came in!  And this gentleman tells us that a woman
in great trouble was sending for him.  If Walter has been here--  But
come--let us look together!"

He had turned, with no further word of explanation, and pattered
excitedly to the stairs, followed by his wife and Trant.

"Adele!  Adele!" the old man cried anxiously, knocking at the door
nearest the head of the stairs; and when he received no answer, he
pushed the door open.  The room was empty.  "There is something very
wrong here, Mr. Trant!  This is the bedroom of my daughter-in-law,
Walter's wife.  She should be here at this hour!  My son--we could
never control him, Mr. Trant, he was always unprincipled--threatened
Adele's life two months ago because she--she found it impossible to
live longer with him.  It was terrible!  We had to call the police.
We forbade Walter the house.  So if she called on you because he was
threatening her again, and he returned here to-night to carry out his
threat, then Adele----!"

"But why should _he_ have written me that note?" Trant asked.
"However--there is no time to lose, Mr. Newberry.  We must search the
entire house at once and make sure, at least, that Mrs. Walter
Newberry is not in some other part of it!"

"You are right--quite right!" answered the little man as he ran
rapidly from door to door, throwing the rooms open to the impatient
scrutiny of the psychologist.  While they were still engaged in this
search upon the upper floor, a tall clock on the landing of the
stairs struck eleven!

And scarcely had the last deep stroke of the hour ceased to resound
in the hall, when suddenly, sharply, and without other warning, a
revolver shot rang out, followed so swiftly by three others that the
four reports sounded almost as one through the silent house!  The
little woman screamed and seized her husband's arm.  He, in turn,
seized Trant's.  They stood thus for an instant, for though the shots
were plainly inside the house, the echoes made it impossible to
locate them exactly.  But almost immediately a fifth shot, seeming
louder and more distinct in its separateness, broke the stillness.

"It is in the billiard room!" the wife shrieked, with a woman's
quicker location of indoor sounds.

The little minister ran to seize the lamp, as Trant turned toward the
rear of the house.  Mrs. Newberry started with them; but at that
instant the doorbell rang furiously and she turned back perfunctorily
to answer it.  The psychologist pushed her husband on, and taking the
lamp from the elder man's shaking hand, he followed Newberry into the
one-story addition which formed the back part of the house.  The
L-shaped passage opened at one end, apparently upon a side porch.
Newberry hurried down the other branch of the passage past a door
which was plainly that of a kitchen, came to another farther down the
passage, tried it, and recoiled in fresh bewilderment to find it
locked.

"It is never locked, never!" he cried.

"We must break it down then!"  Trant drew the little man aside and
bracing himself against the opposite wall, threw his shoulder against
the door once, twice, and a third time, without effect.  Then a
uniformed patrolman, and another in plain clothes, running after them
with Mrs. Newberry, added their weight to Trant's, and the door
crashed open.

A blast of air from the outside storm instantly blew out both the
lamp in Trant's hand and another which had been burning in the room.
Siler and the patrolman, swearing softly, felt for matches.  The
psychologist ran to the window, which was open and gazed intently
into the night.  After a moment, he closed it and turned to look
about the room in the light of the lamp which Siler had succeeded in
lighting.

This room which Mrs. Newberry had called the billiard room, he saw
was really a storeroom, littered with an accumulation of old rubbish
and furniture, the arrangement of which showed plainly that the room
had recently been fitted for occupancy.  That the occupant had taken
care to conceal himself, heavy sheets of brown paper pasted over the
panes of all the windows--including that which Trant had found
open--testified; that the occupant had been well tended, a full tray
of food practically untouched and the stubs of at least a hundred
cigarettes flung in the fireplace made plain.  These things Trant
appreciated only after the first swift glance, which showed him a
huddled figure with its head under a musty lounge that stood farthest
from the window.  The figure was a man's, and the mother's shuddering
cry of recognition identified him as Walter Newberry.

Trant knelt beside the officers working over the body; the blood had
been flowing from a bullet wound in the temple, but it had ceased to
flow.  A small, silver-mounted automatic revolver, obviously a
woman's weapon, lay on the floor, with the shells which had been
ejected as it was fired.  The psychologist rose.

"We have come too late," he said, simply, to the father.  "It was
necessary, as he foresaw, to get here before eleven, if we were to
help him.  He is dead.  And now--" he checked himself, as the little
woman clutched her husband and buried her face in his sleeve, and the
little man stared up at him with a chalky face--"it will be better
for you to wait somewhere else till we are through here."

"In the name of mercy, Mr. Trant," Newberry cried, miserably, as the
psychologist picked up a lamp and lighted the two old people into the
hall, "what is this terrible thing that has happened here?  What is
it--oh, what is it, Mr. Trant?  And where--where is Adele?"

"I am here, father; I am here!" a new voice broke clearly and calmly
through the confusion, and the light of Trant's lamp fell on a
slender girl advancing down the hallway.  "And you," she said as
composedly to the psychologist, in spite of the pallor which
increased as she met his eyes, "are Mr. Trant--and you came too late!"

"You are Mrs. Walter Newberry?" Trant returned.  "You called me up
this morning and this afternoon?"

"Yes," she said.  "And he is dead!  You came too late."

She did not see the quick glance Trant gave to assure himself that
she had spoken before she could have seen the body from her place in
the hall.

"Yes, dear father and dear mother!" she began compassionately.
"Walter came back--" she broke off suddenly, her eyes staring over
Trant's shoulder at Siler, who had come to the doorway.  "You--you
brought the police, Mr. Trant!  I--I thought you had nothing to do
with the police!"

"Never mind that," the plain-clothes man checked Trant's answer.
"You were saying your husband came home, Mrs. Newberry?"

"Then--but that is all I know; I know nothing whatever about it."

"How did you get your shoes and skirt wet, Mrs. Newberry?"  The
plain-clothes man pointed at her draggled garments.

"I--I heard the shots!  That was all.  I ran to the neighbors' for
help; but I could get no one."

"Then you'll have a chance to make your statement later," Siler
answered in a business-like tone.  "Just now you'd better look after
your father and mother."

He took the lamp from Trant and held it to light them down the hall,
then turned swiftly to the patrolman.  "She is going upstairs with
them; watch the front stairs and see that she does not go out.  If
she comes down the back stairs, we can see her."

As the patrolman went out, the plain-clothes man turned back into the
room, leaving the door ajar to that the rear stairs were visible.
"These husband-and-wife cases, Mr. Trant!" he said, easily.  "The man
thinks the woman will stand everything; and she does--till he does
one thing too much.  Then, all of a sudden, she lets him have it!"

"Don't you think it's a bit premature," the psychologist suggested,
"to assume that she killed him?"

"Didn't you see how she shut up when she saw me?"  Siler's eyes met
Trant's with a flash of opposition.  "That was because she recognized
me.  I've been here before.  It's a cinch!  Regular minister's son,
he was.  The old man's a missionary, you know; spent his life till
two years ago trying to turn Chinese heathen into Christians.  And
this Walter--our station blotter'd be black with his doings; only,
ever since he made China too hot to hold him and the old man brought
him back here, everything's been hushed up on the old man's account.
But I happen to have been here before; and all winter I've known
there'd be a killing if he ever came back.  I tell you it was a
relief to me to see it was him on the floor when that door went down!
There are no powder marks, you see"--the officer pointed to the wound
in the head of the form beside the lounge.  "He could not have shot
himself.  He was shot from farther off than he could reach.  Besides,
it's on the left side."

"Yes; I see," Trant replied.

"And that little automatic gun," the officer stopped and picked up
the pistol that lay on the floor beside the body, "is hers.  I saw it
the last time I was called in here."

"But how could he have known--if she shot him--that she was going to
kill him just at eleven?" Trant objected pulling from his pocket the
note which old Mr. Newberry had returned to him and handing it to
Siler.  "He sent that to me; at least, the father says it is in his
handwriting."

"You mean," Siler's eyes rose slowly from the paper, "that she must
have told him what she was going to do--premeditated murder?"

"I mean that the first fact which we have--and which certainly seems
to me wholly incompatible with anything which you have suggested so
far--is that Walter Newberry foresaw his own death and set the hour
of its accomplishment; and that his wife--it is plain, at least, to
me--when she telephoned so often for me to-day, was trying to help
him to escape from it.  Now what are the other facts?" Trant went on
rapidly.  "I distinctly heard five shots--four together and then,
after a second or so, one.  You heard five?"

"Yes."

"And five shots," the psychologist's quick glance had been taking in
the finer details of the room, "are accounted for by the bullet
holes--one on the woodwork of the window I found open; one on the
plaster there to the side; one under the molding there, four feet to
the right; and one more, in the plaster almost as far to the left.
The one that killed him makes five."

"Exactly!" Siler followed Trant's indication, "the fifth in his head!
The first four went off in their struggle and then she got away and,
with the fifth, shot him."

"But the shells," Trant continued.  "That sort of revolver ejects the
shells as they are fired and I see only four.  Where is the fifth?"

"You're trying to fog this thing all up, Mr. Trant!"

"No; I'm trying to clear it.  How could anyone have left the room
after the firing of the last shot?  No one could have gone through
the door and not been seen by us in the hall; besides, the door was
bolted on the inside."  Trant pointed to the two bolts.  "No one
could have left except by the window which was open when we came in.
You remember I went at once to it and looked out.  I saw nothing.
The window is barred, but that might not prevent escape through it."

Trant recrossed the room swiftly and threw the window open, intently
reëxamining it.  On the outside it was barred with a heavy grating,
but he saw that the key to the grating was in the lock.

"Try your flash-light," he said to the plain-clothes man; Siler shot
its rays against the grating, and continued: "Look at the ice cracked
from it.  It must have been swung open.  He must have gone out this
way!"

The plain-clothes man had squeezed past Trant, as the grating swung
back, and flash in hand had let himself easily down to the
ice-covered walk below the window, and was holding his light,
shielded, just above the ground.  "It was she," he cried,
triumphantly.  "The woman, as I told you!  Look at her marks here!"
He showed the double, sharp little semicircles of a woman's high
heels cut into the ice; and, as Trant dropped down beside him, the
police detective followed the sharp little heel marks to the side
door of the house where they turned and led into the kitchen entry.

"Premature, was I--eh?" Siler triumphed, laconically.  "We are used
to these cases, Mr. Trant; we know what to expect in 'em."

Trant stood for an instant studying the sheet of ice.  In this
sheltered spot, freezing had not progressed so fast as in the open
streets.  Here, as an hour before on Michigan Avenue, he saw that his
heels and those of the police officer cut through the crust at every
step, while their toes left no mark.  But except for the marks they
themselves had made and the crescent stamp of the woman's high heels
leading in sharp, clear outline from the window to the side steps of
the house, there were no other imprints.  Then he followed the
detective in by the side door.

In the passage they met the patrolman.  "She came downstairs just
now," said that officer, "and went in here."

Siler laid his hand on the door of the little sitting room the
patrolman indicated, but turned to speak a terse command to the man
over his shoulder: "Go back to that room and see that things are kept
as they are.  Look for the fifth shell.  We got four; find the other!"

Then, with a warning glance at Trant, he pushed the door open.

The girl faced the two calmly as they entered; but the whiteness of
her lips showed that she was reaching the end of her control.

"You've had a little while to think this over, Mrs. Newberry," the
plain-clothes man said, not unkindly, "and I guess you've seen it's
best to make a clean breast of it.  Mr. Walter Newberry has been in
that room quite a while--the room shows it--though his father and
mother seem not to have known about it."

"He--" she hesitated, then answered suddenly and collectedly--"he had
been there six days."

"You started to tell us about it," Trant helped her.  "You said
'Walter came home.'  What brought him here?  Did he come to see you?"

"No."  The girl's pale cheeks suddenly burned blood red and then went
white again, as she made her decision.  "It was fear--deadly fear
that drove him here; but I do not know of what."

"You are going to tell us all you know, are you not, Mrs. Newberry?"
the psychologist urged, quietly; "how he came here and how both he
and you could so foresee his death that you summoned me as you did!"

"Yes; yes--I will tell you," the girl returned, resolutely.  "Six
nights ago, Monday night, Mr. Trant, Walter came here.  He waked me
by throwing pieces of ice and frozen sod against my window.  I went
down and talked to him through the closed door--the side door here.
I was afraid at first to let him in, in spite of his promises not to
hurt me.  He told me his very life was in danger, and he had no other
place to go; he must hide here--hide; and I must not let anyone--not
even mother or father--know he had come back; that I was the only one
he could trust!  So--he was my husband--I let him in.  He ran at once
into the old billiard room--the storeroom there--and tried the locks
of the door and the window gratings, and then threw himself all
sweating cold on the lounge, and went to sleep in a stupor.  In the
morning when he woke up, I saw it wasn't whisky or opium, but it was
fear--fear--fear, such as I'd never seen before.  He rolled off the
couch and half hid under it till I'd pasted brown paper over the
window panes--there were no curtains.  But he wouldn't tell me what
he was afraid of.

"As the days went by, he couldn't sleep at all; he walked the floor
all the time and he smoked continually, so that nearly every day I
had to slip out and get him cigarettes.  He got more and more afraid
of every noise outside and of every little sound within; and it made
him so much worse when I told him I must tell some one else--at least
his mother--that I didn't dare.  He said if I did he would be killed.
He was always worse at eleven o'clock at night; and he dreaded
especially eleven o'clock Sunday night--though I couldn't find out
why!

"I gave him my pistol--the one you saw on the floor in there.  That
was Friday; and he had been getting worse and worse all the time.
Eleven o'clock every night I managed to be with him; and no one found
us out.  I never thought that he might use the pistol to kill himself
until this morning; but when I came to him this morning he was
talking about it.  'I shan't shoot myself!' I heard him saying over
and over again, as I stood outside.  'They can't make me shoot
myself!  I shan't!  I shan't'--over and over, like that.  And when he
had let me in and I saw him, then I knew--I knew he meant to do it!
He asked me if it wasn't Sunday; and went whiter when I told him it
was!  So then I told him he had to trust some one now, this couldn't
go on, and I spoke to him about Mr. Trant.  He said he'd try him and
he wrote the letter I mailed you--special delivery--so you could come
when his father and mother were out--but he never once let go my
pistol; he was wild--wild with fear.  Every time I could get away to
the telephone, I tried to get Mr. Trant; and the last time I got
back--it was awful!  It was hardly ten, but he was walking up and
down with my pistol in his hand, whispering strange things over and
over to himself: 'No one can make me do it!  No one can make me do
it--even when it's eleven--even when it's eleven!'--and
staring--staring at his watch which he'd taken out and laid on the
table.  I knew I must get some one before eleven--and at last I was
running next door for help--for anyone--for anything--when--when I
heard the shots--I heard the shots!"

She sank forward and buried her face in her hands, rent by tearless
sobs.  Her fingers, white from the pressure, made long marks on her
cheeks, showing livid even in the pallor of her face.  But Siler laid
his hand upon her arm, sternly.

"Steady, steady, Mrs. Newberry!" the plain clothes man warned.  "You
cannot do that now!  You say you were with your husband a moment
before the shooting but you were not in the room when he was killed?"

"Yes; yes!" the woman cried.

"You went out the door the last time?"

"The door?  Yes; yes; of course the door.  Why not the door?"

"Because, Mrs. Newberry," the detective replied, impressively, "just
at, or a moment after, the time of the shooting, a woman left that
room by the window--unlocked the grating and went out the window.  We
have seen her marks.  And you were that woman, Mrs. Newberry!"

The girl gasped and her eyes wavered to Trant; but she recovered
herself quickly.

"Of course!  Why, of course!" she cried.  "The last time I did go out
of the window!  It was to get the neighbors--didn't I tell you?  So I
went out the window!"

"Yes; we know you went out the window, Mrs. Newberry," Siler
responded, mercilessly.  "But we know, too, you did not even start
for the neighbors.  We have traced your tracks on the ice straight to
the side door and into the house!  Now, Mrs. Newberry, you've tried
to make us believe that your husband killed himself.  But that won't
do!  Isn't it a little too strange, if you left by the window while
your husband was still alive, that he let the window stay open and
the grating unlocked?  Yes; it's altogether too strange.  You left
him dead; and what we want to know--and I'm asking you straight
out--is how you did it?"

"How I did it?" the girl repeated, mechanically; then with sharp
agony and starting eyes: "How I did it!  Oh, no, no, I did not do it!
I was there--I have not told all the truth!  But when I saw you," her
horrified gaze rested on Siler, "and remembered you had been here
before when he--he threatened me, my only thought was to hide, for
his sake and for his parents', that he had tried to carry out his
threat.  For before he killed himself, he tried to kill me!  That's
how he fired those first four shots.  He tried to kill me first!"

"Well, we're getting nearer to it," Siler approved.

"Yes; now I have told you all!" the girl cried.  "Oh, I have now--I
have!  The last time he let me in, it was almost eleven--eleven!  He
had my pistol in his hand, waiting!  And at last he cried out it was
eleven; and he raised the pistol and shot straight at me--with the
face--the face of a demon mad with fear.  I fell on my knees before
him, just as he shot at me again and again--aiming straight, not at
my eyes, but at my hair; and he shot again!  But again he missed me;
and his face--his face was so terrible that--that I covered my own
face as he aimed at me again, staring always at my hair.  And that
time, when he shot, I heard him fall and saw--saw that he had shot
himself and he was dead!

"Then I heard your footsteps coming to the door; and I saw for the
first time that Walter had opened the window before I came in.
And--all without thinking of anything except that if I was found
there everybody would know he'd tried to kill me--I took up the key
to the grating from the table where he had laid it, and went out!"

"I can't force you to confess, if you will not, Mrs. Newberry," Siler
said, meaningly, "though no jury, after they learned how he had
threatened you, would convict you if you pleaded self-defense.  We
know he didn't kill himself; for he couldn't have fired that shot!
The case is complete, I think," the detective shot a glance at Trant,
"unless Mr. Trant wants to ask you something more."

"I do!" Trant spoke for the first time.  "I want to ask Mrs.
Newberry--since she did not actually see her husband fire the last
shot that killed him--whether she was directly facing him as she
knelt.  It is most essential to know whether or not her head was
turned to one side."

"Why, what do you mean, Mr. Trant?"

"Suppose he might have shot himself before her, as she says--what's
the difference whether she heard him with her head straight or her
head turned?" the police detective demanded, sneeringly.

"A fundamental difference in this case, Siler," Trant replied, "if
taken in connection with that other most important factor of
all--that Walter Newberry foretold the hour of his own death.  But
answer me, Mrs. Newberry--if you can be certain."

"I--certainly--I can never forget--I was facing him," the girl
answered.

"That is very important!"  The psychologist took a rapid turn or two
up and down the room.  "Now you told us that your husband talked to
himself continuously, repeating over and over again such sentences as
'No one can make me do it!'  Can you remember any others?"

"I couldn't make out anything else, Mr. Trant," the girl replied
after thinking an instant.  "He seemed to have hallucinations so much
of the time."

"Hallucinations?"

"Yes; he seemed to think I was singing to him--as I used to sing to
him, you know, when we were first married--and he would catch hold of
me and say 'Don't--don't--don't sing!'  Or at other times he would
tell me to sing low--sing low!"

"Anything else?"

"Nothing else even so sensible as that," the girl responded.  "Many
things he said made me think he had lost his mind.  He would often
stare at me in an absorbed way, looking over me from head to foot,
and say, 'Look here; if anyone asks you--anyone at all--whether your
mother had large or small feet, say small--never admit she had large
feet, or you'll never get in.'"

"What?"  The psychologist stood for several moments in deep thought.
"What!  He said that?"

"A dozen times at least, Mr. Trant," the girl replied, staring at
him, startled.

"This is extraordinary!"  Trant strode up and down.  "Nobody could
have hoped for so fortunate a clew.  We knew that Walter Newberry
foresaw his own death; now we actually get from him himself, the
key--possibly the complete explanation of his danger."

"Explanation!" shouted the police detective.  "I've heard no
explanation!  You're throwing an impressive bluff, Mr. Trant; but
I've heard nothing yet to make me doubt that Newberry met his death
at the hands of his wife; and I arrest her for his murder!"

"I can't prevent your arresting Mrs. Newberry."  Trant turned to look
at the police officer.  "But I can tell you--if you care to hear
it--how Walter Newberry died!  He was not shot by his wife; he did
not die by his own hand, as she believes and has told you.  The fifth
shot--you have not found the fifth shell yet, Siler; and you will not
find it!--for it was not fired either by Walter Newberry or his wife.
As she knelt, blinding her eyes as she faced her husband, Mrs.
Newberry could not know whether the fifth shot sounded in front or
behind her.  If her head was not turned to one side, as she says it
was not, then--and this is a simple psychological fact, Siler--it
would be impossible for her to distinguish between sounds directly
ahead and directly behind.  It was not at her--at her hair--that her
husband fired the four shots whose empty shells we found, but over
her head at the window directly behind her.  And it was through this
just opened window that the fifth shot came and killed him--the shot
at eleven o'clock--which he had foreseen and dreaded!"

"You must think I'm easy, Mr. Trant," said the police officer.  "You
can't clear her by dragging into this business some third person who
never existed, and who left no traces----"

"Traces!" Trant echoed.  "If you mean marks on the window sill and
the floor, I cannot show you any.  But the murderer did leave, of
course, one trace which in the end will probably prove final, even to
you, Siler.  The shell of the fifth shot is missing because he
carried it away in his revolver.  But the bullet--only by a most
remarkable coincidence, Siler, will you find the bullet which killed
young Newberry the same as the four shot from his wife's automatic
revolver!"

"But the ice--the ice under the window!" shouted the detective.
"There were no heel marks but his wife's and there would have been
others if anyone had stood outside the window to fire through it."

"When you have reached the point, Siler," said Trant, more quietly,
"where you can think of some class of men who would have left no heel
marks, but who could have produced the effect on young Newberry's
mind which his wife has described, you will have gone far toward the
discovery of the real murderer of Walter Newberry.  In the meantime,
I have clews enough; and I hope to find help to enable me to bring
the murderer to justice.  I will ask you, Mrs. Newberry," he glanced
toward the girl, "to let me have a photograph of your husband, or--"
he hesitated, unable to tell from her manner whether she had heard
him--"I will stop on my way out to ask for his photograph from his
father."

He glanced once more from the detective to the pale girl who, since
she received notice of her arrest, had stood as though cut from
marble.  Then he left them.

The next morning's papers, which carried startling headlines of the
murder of Walter Newberry, brought Police Detective Siler a feeling
of satisfaction with his own work.  The newspaper accounts were
elaborations of his own theory of an attack by the missionary's
dissipated son on his wife and her shooting him in self-defense.

Even the discovery on the second morning that the bullet which was
removed from young Newberry's body was of 38 caliber and, as Trant
had predicted, not at all similar to the steel-jacketted 32-caliber
bullets shot by Mrs. Newberry's automatic pistol, did not disturb the
police officer's self-confidence.  And when, on the day following,
Siler received orders to report, at an hour when he was not
ordinarily on duty, at the West End police station, he pushed open
the door of the captain's room, to which the sharp nod of the desk
sergeant had directed him, with an air of confident importance.

The room had three occupants--the huge figure of Division Inspector
of Police Walker, a slight, dark man unknown to Siler, and Luther
Trant at the end of the room busy arranging a somewhat complicated
apparatus.

Trant, with a short nod of greeting, at once called Siler to his aid.

With the detective's half-suspicious, half-respectful assistance, the
psychologist stretched across the end of the room a white sheet about
ten feet long, three feet high, and divided into ten rectangles by
nine vertical lines.  Opposite this, and upon a table about ten feet
away, he set up a small electrical contrivance consisting of two
magnets and wire coils supporting a small, round mirror about an inch
in diameter and so delicately suspended that it turned at the
slightest current passing through the coils below it.  In front of
this little mirror Trant placed a shaded electric lamp in such a
position that its light was reflected from the mirror upon the sheet
at the end of the room.  Then he arranged a carbon plate and a zinc
plate on the edge of the table; set a single cell battery under the
table; connected the battery with the coils controlling the mirror,
and connected them also with the zinc and carbon plates.

When his preparations were complete, Trant rested his hands lightly
on the plates upon the table; and as he did so a slight and in fact
imperceptible current passed through him from the battery; but it was
enough to move the light spot reflected upon the screen.

"This apparatus," the psychologist said, as he saw even Walker stare
at this result, "is the newest electric psychometer--or 'the soul
machine,' as it is already becoming popularly known.  It is probably
the most delicate and efficient instrument contrived for detecting
and registering human emotions--such as anxiety, fear, and the sense
of guilt.  Like the galvanometer which you saw me use to catch
Caylis, the Bronson murderer, in the first case where I worked with
the police, Inspector Walker,"--the psychologist turned to his tall
friend--"this psychometer--which is really an improved and much more
spectacular galvanometer--is already in use by physicians to get the
truth from patients when they don't want to tell it.  No man can
control the automatic reflexes which this apparatus was particularly
designed to register, when he is examined with his hands merely
resting upon these two plates!

"As you see," he placed his hands in the test position again, "these
are arranged so that the very slight current passing through my arms,
so slight that I cannot feel it at all, moves that mirror and swings
the reflected light upon the screen according to the amount of
current coming through me.  As you see now, the light stays almost
steady in the center of the screen, because the amount of current
coming through me is very slight.  I am not under any stress or
emotion of any sort.  But if I were confronted suddenly with an
object to arouse fear--if, for instance, it reminded me of a crime I
was trying to conceal--I might be able to control every other
evidence of my fright, but I could not control the involuntary
sweating of my glands and the automatic changes in the blood pressure
which allow the electric current to flow more freely through me.  The
light would then register immediately the amount of my emotion by the
distance it swung along the screen.  But I will give you a much more
perfect demonstration of the instrument during the next half hour
while I am making the test that I have planned to determine the
murderer of Walter Newberry."

"You mean," cried Siler, "you are going to test the woman?"

"I might have thought it necessary to test Mrs. Newberry," Trant
answered, "if the evidence at the house of the presence of a third
person who was the murderer had not been so plain as to make any test
of her unnecessary."

"Then you--you still stick to that?"

"Thanks to Mr. Ferris, who is a special agent of the United States
Government," Trant motioned to the slight, dark man who was the
fourth member of the party, "I have been able to fix upon four men,
one of whom, I feel absolutely certain, shot and killed young
Newberry through the window of the billiard room that night.
Inspector Walker has had all four arrested and brought here.  Mr.
Ferris' experience and thorough knowledge enabled me to lay my hands
on them much more easily than I had hoped, though I was able to go to
him with information which would have made their detection almost
certain sooner or later."

"You mean information you got at the house?" asked Siler, somewhat
bewildered.

"Just so, Siler; and it was as much at your disposal as mine," Trant
replied.  "It seemed to mean nothing to you that Walter Newberry knew
the hour at which he was to die--which made it seem more like an
execution than a murder; or that in his terror he raved that 'he
would not do it, that they could not make him do it,' plainly meaning
commit suicide.  Perhaps you don't know that it is an Oriental
custom, under certain conditions, to allow a man who has been
sentenced to death the alternative of carrying out the decree upon
himself before a certain day and hour that has been decided upon!
But certainly his ravings, as told us by his wife, ought to have
given you a clew, if you had heard only that sentence which she
believed an injunction not to sing loudly, but which was in reality;
a name--Sing Lo!"

"Then--it was a Chinaman!" cried Siler.

"It could hardly have been any other sort of man, Siler.  For there
is no other to whom it could be commended as a matter of such vital
importance whether his mother had small feet or large, as was shown
in the other sentence Mrs. Newberry repeated to us.  It was that
sentence that sent me to Mr. Ferris."

"I see--I see!" exclaimed the crestfallen detective.  "But if it was
a Chinaman you'll never get the truth out of him."

"I know, Siler," Trant answered, "that it is absolutely hopeless to
expect a confession from a Chinaman; they are so accustomed to
control the obvious signs of fear, guilt, the slightest trace or hint
of emotion, even under the most rigid examination, that it has come
to be regarded as a characteristic of the race.  But the new
psychology does not deal with those obvious signs; it deals with the
involuntary reactions in the blood and glands which are common to all
men alike--even to Chinamen!  We have in here," the psychologist
glanced toward an inner room, "the four Chinamen--Wong Bo, Billy Lee,
Sing Lo, and Sin Chung Ming.

"My first test is to see which of them--if any--was acquainted with
Walter Newberry; and next who, if any of them, knew where he lived.
For this purpose I have brought here Newberry's photograph and a view
of his father's house, which I had taken yesterday."  He stooped to
one of his suit cases, and took out first a dozen photographs of
young men, among them Newberry's, and about twenty views of different
houses, among which was the Newberry house.  "If you are ready,
Inspector, I will go ahead with the test."

The Inspector threw open the door of the inner room, showing the four
Celestials in a group, and summoned first Wong Bo, who spoke English.

Trant, pushing a chair to the table, ordered the Oriental to sit down
and place his hands upon the plates at the table's edge before him.
The Chinaman obeyed passively, as if expecting some sort of torture.
Immediately the light moved to the center of the screen, where it had
moved when Trant was touching the plates, then kept on toward the
next line beyond.  But as Wong Bo's first suspicious
excitement--which the movement of the light betrayed--subsided, the
light returned to the center of the screen.

"You know why you have been brought here, Wong Bo?" Trant demanded.

"No," the Chinaman answered, shortly, the light moving six inches as
he did so.

"You know no reason at all why you should be brought here?"

"No," the Chinaman answered, calmly again, while the light moved
about six inches.  Trant waited till it returned to its normal
position in the center of the screen.

"Do you know an American named Paul Tobin, Wong Bo?"

"No," the Chinaman answered.  This time the light remained stationary.

"Nor one named Ralph Murray?"

"No," Still the light stayed stationary.

"Hugh Larkin, Wong Bo?"

"No," calmly again, and with the light quiet in the center of the
screen.

"Walter Newberry?" the psychologist asked in precisely the same tone
as he had put the preceding question.

"No," the Chinaman answered, laconically again; but before he
answered and almost before the name was off Trant's lips, the light
jumped quickly to one side across the screen, crossed the first
division line and moved on toward the second and stayed there.  It
had moved over a foot!  But the face of the Oriental was as quiet,
patient, and impassive as before.  The psychologist made no comment;
but waited for the light slowly to return to its normal position.
Then he took up his pile of portrait photographs.

"You say you do not know any of these men, Wong Bo," Trant said,
quietly.  "You may know them, but not by name, so I want you to look
at these pictures."  Trant showed him the first.  "Do you know that
man, Wong Bo?"

"No," the Chinaman answered, patiently.  The light remained steady.
Four more pictures of young men elicited the same answer and
precisely the same effect.  The sixth picture was the photograph of
Walter Newberry.

"You know him?" Trant asked.

"No," Wong Bo answered with precisely the same patient impassiveness.
Not a muscle of his face changed nor an eyelash quivered; but as soon
as Trant had displayed this picture and the Chinaman's eyes fell upon
it, the light on the screen again jumped a space and settled near the
second line to the left!

Trant put aside the portraits and took up the pictures of the houses.
He waited again till the light slowly resumed its central position on
the screen.

"You have never gone to this house, Wong Bo?"  He showed a large,
stone mansion, not at all like the Newberry's.

"No," the Chinaman replied, impassive as ever.  The light remained
steady.

"Nor to this--or this--or this?"  Trant showed three more with the
same result.  "Nor this?"  He displayed now a rear view of the
Newberry house.

The light swung swiftly to one side and stood trembling, again a foot
and a half to the left of its normal position as the Chinaman replied
quietly, "No."

"That will do for the present."  Trant dismissed Wong Bo.  "Send him
back to his cell, away from the others.  We will try the rest--in
turn!"

Rapidly he examined Billy Lee and Sing Lo.  Each man made precisely
the same denials and in the same manner as Wong Bo, and on each case
the result was the same, the light was steady, until Walter
Newberry's name was mentioned and his picture shown.  Then it swung
wide.  The picture of the house, however, had no effect on them.

"Bring in Sin Chung Ming!" the psychologist commanded.  Trant set the
yellow hands over the plates and started his questions in the same
quiet tone as before.  For the first two questions the light moved
three times, as it had done with the others--and as even Ferris and
Siler now seemed to be expecting it to move--only this time it seemed
even to the police officers to swing a little wider.  And at Walter
Newberry's name, for the first time in any of the tests, it crossed
the second dividing line at the first impulse, moved toward the third
and stayed there.

Even Siler now waited with bated breath, as Trant took up the pile of
pictures; and, as he came to the picture of the murdered man and the
house where he had lived, for the second and third time in that
single test the light--stationary when Sin Chung Ming glanced at the
other photographs--trembled across the screen to the third dividing
line.  For the others it had moved hardly eighteen inches, but when
Sin Chung Ming saw the pictured face of the murdered man it had swung
almost three feet.

"Inspector Walker," Trant drew the giant officer aside, "this is the
man, I think, for the final test.  You will carry it out as I
arranged with you?"

"Sin Chung Ming," the psychologist turned back to the Chinaman
swiftly, as the inspector, without comment, left the room, "you have
been watching the little light have you not?  You saw it move?  It
moved when you lied, Sin Chung Ming!  It will always move when you
lie.  It moved when you said you did not know Walter Newberry; it
moved when you said you did not recognize his picture; it moved when
you said you did not know his house.  Look how it is moving now, as
you grow afraid that you have betrayed your secret to us, Sin Chung
Ming--as you have and will."  Trant pointed to the swirling light in
triumph.

A low knock sounded on the door, but Trant, watching the light now
slowly returning to its normal place, waited an instant more.  Then
he himself rapped gently on the table.  The door to the next
room--directly opposite the Chinaman's eyes--swung slowly open, and
through it they could see the scene which Trant and the inspector had
prepared.  In the middle of the floor knelt young Mrs. Newberry, her
back toward them, her hands pressed against her face; and six feet
beyond a man stood, facing her.  It was a reproduction of the scene
of the murder in the billiard room of the Newberry house.  Siler and
Ferris stirred and stared swiftly, first at the Chinaman's
passionless and immobile face; then at the light upon the screen, and
saw it leap across bar after bar: The Chinaman saw it, and knew that
it was betraying him, but it leaped and leaped again; swung wider and
wider; until at last the impassiveness of the Celestial's attitude
was broken, and Sin Chung Ming snatched his hands from the metal
plates.

"I had guessed that, anyway, Sin Chung Ming," Trant swiftly closed
the door, as Walker returned to the room.  "So it was you that fired
the shot, after watching the house with Wong Bo, as his fright when
he saw the picture of the house showed, while Billy Lee and Sing Lo
were not needed at the house that night and had never seen it, though
they knew what was to be done.  That is all I need of you now, Sin
Chung Ming; for I have learned what I wanted to know."

As the fourth of the Chinamen was led away to his cell, Trant turned
back to Inspector Walker and Siler.

"I must acknowledge my debt to Mr. Ferris," he said, "for help in
solving this case.  Mr. Ferris, as you already know, Inspector
Walker, as special agent for the Government, has for years been
engaged in the enforcement of the Chinese exclusion laws.  The
sentence repeated to us by Mrs. Newberry, in which her husband,
delirious with fright, seemed warning some one that to acknowledge
that his mother had large feet would prevent him from 'getting in,'
seemed to me to establish a connection between young Newberry's
terror and an evasion of the exclusion laws.  I went at once to Mr.
Ferris to test this idea, and he recognized its application at once.

"As the exclusion laws against all but a very small class of Chinese
are being more strictly enforced than ever before, there has been a
large and increasing traffic among the Chinese in bogus papers to
procure the entry into this country of Chinese belonging to the
excluded classes.  The applicants of the classes excluded are
supplied with regular 'coaching papers' so that they can correctly
answer the questions asked them at San Francisco or Seattle.  The
injunction to 'say your mother had small feet' was recognized at once
by Ferris as one of the instructions of the 'coaching papers' to get
a laborer entered as a man of the merchant class.

"Mr. Ferris and I together investigated the career of Walter Newberry
after his return from China, where he had spent nearly the whole of
his life, and we were able to establish, as we expected we might, a
connection between him and the Sing Lo Trading Company--a Chinese
company which Mr. Ferris had long suspected of dealing in fraudulent
admission papers, though he had never been able to bring home to them
any proof.  We found, also, that young Newberry had spent and gambled
away much more money in the last few months than he had legitimately
received.  And we were able to make certain that this money had come
to him through the Sing Lo Company, though obviously not for such
uses.  As it is not an uncommon thing for Chinese engaged in the
fraudulent bringing in of their countrymen to confide part of the
business to unprincipled Americans--especially as all papers have to
be visaed by American consuls and disputes settled in American
courts--we became certain that young Newberry had been serving the
Sing Lo Company in this capacity.  It was plain that he had purloined
a large amount of money, and his actions, as described by his wife,
made it equally certain that he had been sentenced by the members of
the company to death, and given the Oriental alternative of
committing suicide before eleven o'clock on Sunday night.  Now
whether it will be possible to convict all four of the Chinamen we
had here for complicity in his murder, or whether Sin Chung Ming, who
fired the shot, will be the only one tried, I do not know."

"I doubt whether, under the circumstances, any force could be brought
to bear that would extort any formal confession from these Chinamen."
The Government agent shook his head.  "They would lose their 'face'
and with it all reputation among their countrymen."

At this instant the door of the room was opened, and the flushed face
of the desk sergeant appeared before them.

"Inspector!" he cried, sharply.  "The chink's dead!  The last one,
Sin Chung Ming, choked himself as soon as he was alone in his cell!"

"What?  Ah--I see!" the immigration officer comprehended after an
instant.  "He considered what we learned from him here confession
enough--especially since he implicated the others with him--so that
his 'face' was lost.  To him, it was unpardonable weakness to let us
find what we did.  I think, then, Mr. Trant," he concluded, quietly,
"that you can safely consider your case settled.  His suicide is
proof that Sin Chung Ming believed he had confessed."



THE END


[The end of _The Eleventh Hour_ by Edwin Balmer and William B. MacHarg]
