They had learnt very little from the young doctor, but had detected a barely-contained fury behind a mask of convention. The great catch that Sarah had been was now only a memory and he hadn’t hidden the fact that he found Brian’s disappearance suspicious. He’d changed his opinion of the man as well: the clairvoyant of dazzling powers was nothing but a harbinger of bad luck and there was no doubt in his mind that his prophecy about Sarah, by plunging her into a state of anxious hysteria, was directly responsible for the tragedy. Had he any idea where Brian could be found? No, and it would be best for him if he, Meadows, didn’t find out. Before coming to the inn, the three men had stopped by the Blount residence and Bessie had invited them to partake of coffee there after eight that evening.
‘My dear friends,’ said Hurst solemnly, after having lit a cigar, ‘I don’t know whether you realise it or not, but there’s nothing,
‘You surprise me, my dear Archibald,’ replied Twist, looking up from his plate. ‘You talk as if nothing else happened.’
‘I haven’t forgotten anything!’ thundered the inspector, pushing the rebellious forelock back from his pink forehead. ‘I’m simply trying to pose the problem calmly and without any other distractions!’
The hubbub in the bar ceased for a moment as the locals stared at the stranger who dared to shout louder than they, then recommenced.
‘You’re right,’ said Redfern, pushing his plate away. ‘And I’m beginning to wonder whether I didn’t exaggerate the business, and whether I was right to call you in.’
‘There’s good reason to doubt it,’ growled Hurst. ‘The Yard’s not used to dealing with clairvoyance, divination and all the rest of it. And, to be honest with you, Hector, I doubt that I’ll be allowed to carry on my investigation for much longer. That said, I still have a few questions.’
‘Let’s be thankful for that,’ sighed Twist. ‘I’d have been disappointed if—.’
‘My dear friend,’ said the inspector through gritted teeth, ‘I’m going to cut the ground from under you by resuming the affair, as you’re dying to do. Only
‘We’re all ears,’ replied the criminologist, a mischievous gleam lurking behind his
‘Here goes. In the last century, a certain Harvey Thorne died under strange circumstances. It must be said that he was someone not in full possession of his mental faculties and who passed his time cloistered in his room writing horrible stories of an apparently divinatory tendency, because in one of them he accurately predicted the death of his own father. He was found dying on the sill of his door, in the grip of terrifying convulsions. Before he died he made a few disconcerting utterances such as “will perish by fire,” or something like that. One peculiar detail is that the carpet was wet where it touched the hearth. And, curiously enough, several members of the family did die in a fire, which led to his den being sealed off.
‘Everything seems to suggest that his great-nephew has inherited his powers and that he, too, is able to make prophecies which become reality. Just consider those where we have tangible evidence. Early last year, he predicts to Miss Bessie Blount and Dr. Mike Meadows that they will shortly fall in love and it happens the very next day. That summer, his brother Harris, who has just moved into Hatton Manor with his in-laws, decides to reopen the sealed room and use it as a study. Brian makes a new prophecy, far more sinister than the first. It’s worth noting that unsealing the cursed room seems in itself to create an atmosphere of unease, particularly in the case of the newly-wed Thornes. And, sure enough, a few days later, Harris Thorne dies from defenestration. Half an hour after that, Sarah Thorne faints upon opening the door to the damned room, apparently terrified at what she sees when she looks towards a patch on the carpet adjacent to the hearth which, once again, turns out to be wet. We can be almost certain there was nobody in the room at the time. Questioned about what she’d seen, Sarah declares she can’t remember anything.