"Will you be at home between six and nine, Dr. Lowell?" There was suppressed eagerness in his voice.
"Certainly, if it is important," I answered, after consulting my appointment book. "Have you found out
anything, Ricori?"
He hesitated.
"I do not know. I think perhaps-yes."
"You mean," I did not even try to hide my own eagerness. "You mean-the hypothetical place we
discussed?"
"Perhaps. I will know later. I go now, to where it may be."
"Tell me this, Ricori-what do you expect to find?"
"Dolls!" he answered.
And as though to avoid further questions he hung up before I could speak.
Dolls!
I sat thinking. Walters had bought a doll. And in that same unknown place where she had bought it, she
had sustained the injury which had so worried her-or rather, whose unorthodox behavior had so
worried her. Nor was there doubt in my mind, after hearing Robbins' story, that it was to that injury she
had attributed her seizure, and had tried to tell us so. We had not been mistaken in our interpretation of
that first desperate effort of will I have described. She might, of course, have been in error. The scald or,
rather, the salve had had nothing whatever to do with her condition. Yet Walters had been strongly
interested in a child. Children were the common interest of all who had died as she had. And certainly the
one great common interest of children is dolls. What was it that Ricori had discovered?
I called Braile, but could not get him. I called up Robbins and told her to bring the doll to me
immediately, which she did.
The doll was a peculiarly beautiful thing. It had been cut from wood, then covered with gesso. It was
curiously life-like. A baby doll, with an elfin little face. Its dress was exquisitely embroidered, a folk-dress
of some country I could not place. It was, I thought, almost a museum piece, and one whose price Nurse
Walters could hardly have afforded. It bore no mark by which either maker or seller could be identified.
After I had examined it minutely, I laid it away in a drawer. I waited impatiently to hear from Ricori.
At seven o'clock there was a sustained, peremptory ringing of the doorbell. Opening my study door, I
heard McCann's voice in the hall, and called to him to come up. At first glance I knew something was
very wrong. His tight-mouthed tanned face was a sallow yellow, his eyes held a dazed look. He spoke
from stiff lips:
"Come down to the car. I think the boss is dead."
"Dead!" I exclaimed, and was down the stairs and out beside the car in a breath. The chauffeur was
standing beside the door. He opened it, and I saw Ricori huddled in a corner of the rear seat. I could feel
no pulse, and when I raised the lids of his eyes they stared at me sightlessly. Yet he was not cold.
"Bring him in," I ordered.
McCann and the chauffeur carried him into the house and placed him on the examination table in my
office. I bared his breast and applied the stethoscope. I could detect no sign of the heart functioning. Nor
was there, apparently, any respiration. I made a few other rapid tests. To all appearances, Ricori was
quite dead. And yet I was not satisfied. I did the things customary in doubtful cases, but without result.
McCann and the chauffeur had been standing close beside me. They read my verdict in my face. I saw a
strange glance pass between them; and obviously each of them had a touch of panic, the chauffeur more
markedly than McCann. The latter asked in a level, monotonous voice:
"Could it have been poison?"
"Yes, it could-" I stopped.
Poison! And that mysterious errand about which he had telephoned me! And the possibility of poison in
the other cases! But this death-and again I felt the doubt-had not been like those others.
"McCann," I said, "when and where did you first notice anything wrong?"
He answered, still in that monotonous voice:
"About six blocks down the street. The boss was sitting close to me. All at once he says 'Jesu!' Like he's
scared. He shoves his hands up to his chest. He gives a kind of groan an' stiffens out. I says to him:
'What's the matter, boss, you got a pain?' He don't answer me, an' then he sort of falls against me an' I
see his eyes is wide open. He looks dead to me. So I yelps to Paul to stop the car and we both look him
over. Then we beat it here like hell."
I went to a cabinet and poured them stiff drinks of brandy. They needed it. I threw a sheet over Ricori.
"Sit down," I said, "and you, McCann, tell me exactly what occurred from the time you started out with
Mr. Ricori to wherever it was he went. Don't skip a single detail."
He said:
"About two o'clock the boss goes to Mollie's-that's Peters' sister-stays an hour, comes out, goes home
and tells Paul to be back at four-thirty. But he's doing a lot of 'phoning so we don't start till five. He tells
Paul where he wants to go, a place over in a little street down off Battery Park. He says to Paul not to go
through the street, just park the car over by the Battery. And he says to me, 'McCann, I'm going in this