skipping off.
âShe just loves that funny Adelaide. Arenât children queer?â Mrs. Bartram closed the lid of the jewel box, and hurried out, all smiles. This time Carroll Bartram managed to rise, and remained standing; one elbow on the mantelshelf, his head bent, and his eyes fixed on the embers in the fireplace.
âThatâs off my mind,â he said. âIâm glad your good, kind little wife likes the things, George.â
George Bartram cleared his throat. âIt was mighty nice of you to dig âem out, old man. I never should have thought of âem.â
âWhy should you? Theyâre not very important. Well, letâs get on with it.â He did not lift his head, and his fingers tapped the ledge of the chimney piece nervously. âAnything to tell us, Mitchell? Any ideas, Mr. Gamadge?â
Gamadge said: âWe seem to be wandering in a fog, Mr. Bartram, unless we decide to adopt the gypsy theory, and write the thing off as a tragic accident.â
âBut will those poor devils of gypsies get into trouble if we do that?â
âNot serious trouble, unless we find evidence against âem,â said Mitchell. âOf course we couldnât let âem come back here, or any place within fifty miles of Oakport. The community wouldnât stand for it.â
âThat seems so brutally unfair.â
âAnd the tribe might make some kind of a fuss about it; the men, I mean.â
âThey hate trouble,â remarked Loring. âThey wouldnât fuss much.â
âWe donât exactly want to take advantage of that.â
âWe donât want to take any advantage of them at all,â said Bartram. âIf it happened through one of their children, itâs a thing that wouldnât happen again in a thousand years; I donât believe it ever happened beforeânot in this part of the world.â
âWell, if you donât like the gypsy theory, we can consider Tommy Ormistonâs evidence about a lady in a car. A harmless lunaticââ
Loring interrupted. âAs a professional man, I canât let you assume that all lunatics are necessarily well-intentioned; especially if they go about distributing poison.â
âEven a layman doesnât assume that, Doctor; but the point is that this second theory deals with a person without sane motive. Leaving it aside for the moment, we turn to theory number threeâthat a sane person had a definite reason for distributing the berries. Can you supply me with a reasonable motive which would embrace the Beasleys, the Bartrams, the Ormistons, and perhaps the gypsies? Or do I understand that thereâs some doubt about little Elias having had any atropine?â
âIâll stake my professional reputation he hadnât,â declared Loring. âBetween you and me, Cogswellâs diagnosis was a pure case of wishful thinking; he wants to pin this business on the gypsies, and get rid of it.â
âWell, how about the three other families?â
âFantastic.â
âThen weâre faced with the assumption that only one family was the real object of the attack; somebody had something to gain, or a grudge to work off. The other poisonings were carried out to confuse the issue, and keep investigation off the right trail.â
There was a silence. Then George Bartram exploded:
âThatâs the craziest thing I ever heard.â He glanced about at the others. âCarrollâLoring. Isnât that the craziest thing you ever heard of?â
âNo, George, it isnât.â Loring turned narrow eyes on him. âItâs logic. Mr. Gamadge is simply going over all the possibilities. Do face it intelligently.â
âI know what you think about my intelligence, Bob; but I say there never was any such plan as that carried out except in a dime novel.â
âI must lend you some of my criminological treatises, George.
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