"Poor devil," I said to myself. "I'm going to try to kill that nightmare for you, at any rate."
I gave him a minimum hypo of morphine. It might have been water for all the good it did. Then I gave him
all I dared. His eyes remained open, terror and horror undiminished. And pulse and respiration
unchanged.
Ricori had watched all these operations with intense interest. I had done all I could for the time, and told
him so.
"I can do no more," I said, "until I receive the reports of the specimens. Frankly, I am all at sea. I know
of no disease nor drug which would produce these conditions."
"But Dr. Braile," he said, "mentioned a drug-"
"A suggestion only," interposed Braile hastily. "Like Dr. Lowell, I know of no drug which would cause
such symptoms."
Ricori glanced at Peters' face and shivered.
"Now," I said, "I must ask you some questions. Has this man been ill? If so, has he been under medical
care? If he has not actually been ill, has he spoken of any discomfort? Or have you noticed anything
unusual in his manner or behavior?"
"No, to all questions," he answered. "Peters has been in closest touch with me for the past week. He has
not been ailing in the least. Tonight we were talking in my apartments, eating a late and light dinner. He
was in high spirits. In the middle of a word, he stopped, half-turned his head as though listening; then
slipped from his chair to the floor. When I bent over him he was as you see him now. That was precisely
half after midnight. I brought him here at once."
"Well," I said, "that at least gives us the exact time of the seizure. There is no use of your remaining, Mr.
Ricori, unless you wish."
He studied his hands a few moments, rubbing the carefully manicured nails.
"Dr. Lowell," he said at last, "if this man dies without your discovering what killed him, I will pay you the
customary fees and the hospital the customary charges and no more. If he dies and you make this
discovery after his death, I will give a hundred thousand dollars to any charity you name. But if you make
the discovery before he dies, and restore him to health-I will give you the same sum."
We stared at him, and then as the significance of this remarkable offer sank in, I found it hard to curb my
anger.
"Ricori," I said, "you and I live in different worlds, therefore I answer you politely, although I find it
difficult. I will do all in my power to find out what is the matter with your friend and to cure him. I would
do that if he and you were paupers. I am interested in him only as a problem which challenges me as a
physician. But I am not interested in you in the slightest. Nor in your money. Nor in your offer. Consider
it definitely rejected. Do you thoroughly understand that?"
He betrayed no resentment.
"So much so that more than ever do I wish you to take full charge," he said.
"Very well. Now where can I get you if I want to bring you here quickly?"
"With your permission," he answered, "I should like to have-well, representatives-in this room at all
times. There will be two of them. If you want me, tell them-and I will soon be here."
I smiled at that, but he did not.
"You have reminded me," he said, "that we live in different worlds. You take your precautions to go
safely in your world-and I order my life to minimize the perils of mine. Not for a moment would I
presume to advise you how to walk among the dangers of your laboratory, Dr. Lowell. I have the
counterparts of those dangers. Bene-I guard against them as best I can."
It was a most irregular request, of course. But I found myself close to liking Ricori just then, and saw
clearly his point of view. He knew that and pressed the advantage.
"My men will be no bother," he said. "They will not interfere in any way with you. If what I suspect to be
true is true they will be a protection for you and your aids as well. But they, and those who relieve them,
must stay in the room night and day. If Peters is taken from the room, they must accompany him-no
matter where it is that he is taken."
"I can arrange it," I said. Then, at his request, I sent an orderly down to the doors. He returned with one
of the men Ricori had left on guard. Ricori whispered to him, and he went out. In a little while two other
men came up. In the meantime I had explained the peculiar situation to the resident and the
superintendent and secured the necessary permission for their stay.
The two men were well-dressed, polite, of a singularly tight-lipped and cold-eyed alertness. One of them
shot a glance at Peters.
"Christ!" he muttered.
The room was a corner one with two windows, one opening out on the Drive, the other on the side
street. Besides these, there were no outer openings except the door to the hall; the private bathroom
being enclosed and having no windows. Ricori and the two inspected the room minutely, keeping away, I
noticed, from the windows. He asked me then if the room could be darkened. Much interested, I
nodded. The lights were turned off, the three went to the windows, opened them and carefully scrutinized