Part 8 (1/2)

Guy Garrick Arthur B. Reeve 42080K 2022-07-22

Dr. Mead had been standing by the cabinet as he talked. Now he opened it and took from it the bullet which he had probed out of the wound. He looked at it a minute himself, then handed it to Garrick. I bent over also and examined it as it lay in Guy's hand.

At first I thought it was an ordinary bullet. But the more I examined it the more I was convinced that there was something peculiar about it.

In the nose, which was steel-jacketed, were several little round depressions, just the least fraction of an inch in depth.

”It is no wonder Warrington was put out, even by that superficial wound,” remarked Garrick at last. ”His a.s.sailant's aim may have been bad, as it must necessarily have been from one rapidly approaching car at a person in another rapidly moving car, also. But the motor bandit, whoever he is, provided against that. That bullet is what is known as an anesthetic bullet.”

”An anesthetic bullet?” repeated both Dr. Mead and myself. ”What is that?”

”A narcotic bullet,” Garrick explained, ”a sleep-producing bullet, if you please, a sedative bullet that lulls its victim into almost instant slumber. It was invented quite recently by a Pittsburgh scientist. The anesthetic bullet provides the poor marksman with all the advantages of the expert gunman of unerring aim.”

I marvelled at the ingenuity of the man who could figure out how to overcome the seeming impossibility of accurate shooting from a car racing at high speed. Surely, he must be a desperate fellow.

While we were talking, the doctor's wife who had been attending Warrington until a nurse arrived, came to inform him that the effect of the sedative, which he had administered while Warrington was restless and groaning, was wearing off. We waited a little while, and then Dr.

Mead himself informed us that we might see our friend for a minute.

Even in his half-drowsy state of pain Warrington appeared to recognise Garrick and a.s.sume that he had come in response to his own summons.

Garrick bent down, and I could just distinguish what Warrington was trying to say to him.

”Wh--where's Violet?” he whispered huskily, ”Does she know? Don't let her get--frightened--I'll be--all right.”

Garrick laid his hand on Warrington's unbandaged shoulder, but said nothing.

”The--the letter,” he murmured ramblingly. ”I have it--in my apartment--in the little safe. I was going to Tuxedo--to see Violet--explain slander--tell her closing place--didn't know it was mine before. Good thing to close it--Forbes is a heavy loser. She doesn't know that.”

Warrington lapsed back on his pillow and Dr. Mead beckoned to us to withdraw without exciting him any further.

”What difference does it make whether she knows about Forbes or not?” I queried as we tiptoed down the hall.

Garrick shook his head doubtfully. ”Can't say,” he replied succinctly.

”It may be that Forbes, too, has aspirations.”

The idea sent me off into a maze of speculations, but it did not enlighten me much. At any rate, I felt, Warrington had said enough to explain his presence in that part of the country. On one thing, as I have said, Garrick had guessed right. The blackmailing letter and what we had seen the night before at the crooked gambling joint had been too much for him. He had not been able to rest as long as he was under a cloud with Miss Winslow until he had had a chance to set himself right in her eyes.

There seemed to be nothing that we could do for him just then. He was in excellent hands, and now that the doctor knew who he was, a trained nurse had even been sent for from the city and arrived on the train following our own, thus relieving Mrs. Mead of her faithful care of him.

Garrick gave the nurse strict instructions to make exact notes of anything that Warrington might say, and then requested the doctor to take us to the scene of the tragedy. We were about to start, when Garrick excused himself and hurried back into the house, reappearing in a few minutes.

”I thought perhaps, after all, it would be best to let Miss Winslow know of the accident, as long as it isn't likely to turn out seriously in the end for Warrington,” he explained, joining us again in Dr.

Mead's car which was waiting in front of the house. ”So I called up her aunt's at Tuxedo and when Miss Winslow answered the telephone I broke the news to her as gently as I could. Warrington need have no fear about that girl,” he added.

The wrecked car, we found, had not yet been moved, nor had the broken fence been repaired. It was, in fact, an accident worth studying topographically. That part of the road itself near the fence seemed to interest Garrick greatly. Two or three cars pa.s.sed while we waited and he noted how carefully each of them seemed to avoid that side toward the broken fence, as though it were haunted.

”I hope they've all done that,” Garrick remarked, as he continued to examine the road, which was a trifle damp under the high trees that shaded it.

As he worked, I could not believe that it was wholly fancy that caused me to think of him as searching with dilated nostrils, like a scientific human bloodhound. For, it was not long before I began to realize what he was looking for in the marks of cars left on the oiled roadway.