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PAGE 12

The Germ Of Death
by [?]

“Thus,” he continued, “3 – 2 means the third column and second line. That is ‘H.’ Then 1 – 1 is ‘A’; 1 – 5 is ‘V’; 5 – 1 is ‘E’ – and we get the word ‘Have.'”

Not a soul stirred as Kennedy unfolded the cipher. What was the terrible secret in that scientific essay I had puzzled so unsuccessfully over, the night before?

“Even this can be complicated by choosing a series of fixed numbers to be added to the real numbers over and over again, Or the order of the alphabet can be changed. However, we have the straight cipher only to deal with here.”

“And what for Heaven’s sake does it reveal?” asked Saratovsky, leaning forward, forgetful of the fever that was consuming him.

Kennedy pulled out a piece of paper on which he had written the hidden message and read:

“Have successfully inoculated S. with fever. Public opinion America would condemn violence. Think best death should appear natural. Samarova infected also. Cook unfortunately took dose in food intended Kharkoff. Now have three cases. Shall stop there at present. Dangerous excite further suspicion health authorities.”

Rapidly I eliminated in my mind the persons mentioned, as Craig read. Saratovsky of course was not guilty, for the plot had centred about him. Nor was little Samarova, nor Dr. Kharkoff. I noted Revalenko and Kazanovitch glaring at each other and hastily tried to decide which I more strongly suspected.

“Will get K.,” continued Kennedy. “Think bomb perhaps all right. K. case different from S. No public sentiment.”

“So Kharkoff had been marked for slaughter,” I thought. Or was “K.” Kazanovitch? I regarded Revalenko more closely. He was suspiciously sullen.

“Must have more money. Cable ten thousand rubles at once Russian consul-general. Will advise you plot against Czar as details perfected here. Expect break up New York band with death of S.”

If Kennedy himself had thrown a bomb or scattered broadcast the contents of the test-tubes, the effect could not have been more startling than his last quiet sentence – and sentence it was in two senses.

“Signed,” he said, folding the paper up deliberately, “Ekaterina Nevsky.”

It was as if a cable had snapped and a weight had fallen. Revalenko sprang up and grasped Kazanovitch by the hand. “Forgive me, comrade, for ever suspecting you,” he cried.

“And forgive me for suspecting you,” replied Kazanovitch, “but how did you come to shadow Kharkoff?”

“I ordered him to follow Kharkoff secretly and protect him,” explained Saratovsky.

Olga and Ekaterina faced each other fiercely. Olga was trembling with emotion. Nevsky stood coldly, defiantly. If ever there was a consummate actress it was she, who had put the bomb at her own door and had rushed off to start Kennedy on a blind trail.

“You traitress,” cried Olga passionately, forgetting all in her outraged love. “You won his affections from me by your false beauty – yet all the time you would have killed him like a dog for the Czar’s gold. At last you are unmasked – you Azeff in skirts. False friend – you would have killed us all – Saratovsky, Kharkoff

“Be still, little fool,” exclaimed Nevsky contemptuously. “The spirilla fever has affected your brains. Bah! I will not stay with those who are so ready to suspect an old comrade on the mere word of a charlatan. Boris Kazanovitch, do you stand there silent and let this insult be heaped upon me?”

For answer, Kazanovitch deliberately turned his back on his lover of a moment ago and crossed the room. “Olga,” he pleaded, “I have been a fool. Some day I may be worthy of your love. Fever or not, I must beg your forgiveness.”

With a cry of delight the actress flung her arms about Boris, as he imprinted a penitent kiss on her warm lips.

“Simpleton,” hissed Nevsky with curling lips. “Now you, too, will die.”

“One moment, Ekaterina Nevsky,” interposed Kennedy, as he picked up some vacuum tubes full of a golden-yellow powder, that lay on the table. “The spirilla, as scientists now know, belong to the same family as those which cause what we call, euphemistically, the ‘black plague.’ It is the same species as that of the African sleeping sickness and the Philippine yaws. Last year a famous doctor whose photograph I see in the next room, Dr. Ehrlich of Frankfort, discovered a cure for all these diseases. It will rid the blood of your victims of the Asiatic relapsing fever germs in forty-eight hours. In these tubes I have the now famous salvarsan.”

With a piercing shriek of rage at seeing her deadly work so quickly and completely undone, Nevsky flung herself into the little laboratory behind her and bolted the door.

Her face still wore the same cold, contemptuous smile, as Kennedy gently withdrew a sharp scalpel from her breast.

“Perhaps it is best this way, after all,” he said simply.