The Soul Scar: Detective Kennedy's Case. Arthur B. Reeve

The Soul Scar: Detective Kennedy's Case - Arthur B.  Reeve


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       Arthur B. Reeve

      The Soul Scar: Detective Kennedy's Case

      Detective Craig Kennedy's Case

      Published by

      Books

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       [email protected]

      2018 OK Publishing

      ISBN 978-80-272-4300-6

      Table of Contents

       I. The Death-Dream

       II. The Marble Heart

       III. The Freud Theory

       IV. The “Hesitation Complex”

       V. The Psychanalysis

       VI. The “Other Woman”

       VII. The Crook Detective

       VIII. The Poisoned Glass

       IX. The Association Test

       X. The Ordeal Bean

       XI. The Rascon Reports

       XII. The “New Morality”

       XIII. The Mechanical Ear

       XIV. The “Jung” Method

       XV. The Conflicting Clues

       XVI. The Finesse

       XVII. The Suppressed Desire

       XVIII. The Confession

       XIX. The Lie-Detector

       XX. The Soul Scar

      Chapter I

      The Death-Dream

       Table of Contents

      "It's the most perplexing case I've been up against, Kennedy, for a long time."

      Doctor Leslie, now medical adviser to the district attorney, had dropped in at the laboratory, and, to tell the truth, I was glad of the interruption. For from a retort Kennedy was evolving an olfactory offense which was particularly annoying to me, especially as I was struggling with an article on art for The Star. The things were incongruous, and the article suffered.

      "A case?" repeated Kennedy, mechanically. "Here—stick your foot up. That's fine," he added, as he scraped the sole and heel of Leslie's shoe, while Leslie fidgeted impatiently. "This is new."

      Apparently Leslie's case was forgotten before it was begun.

      "You know," Craig went on, eagerly, "the use of all these new leather substitutes is opening a new field for detectives in the study of foot marks. I've just been analyzing the composition of some of the products. I'll soon be able to identify them all. A case, you say—eh?"

      "Yes. You know the lawyer, Vail Wilford? Well, they found him in his office—this morning—dead—the lights on; a suicide—that is, it looked like a suicide at first. I don't know. The thing's a mystery to me."

      "Oh—a suicide?" Craig frowned, as though such a thing was entirely too trivial to interrupt his analysis of rubber heels.

      "He left this letter—to his wife," persisted Leslie.

      We read the note.

      Honora (it began)—Don't think I am a coward to do this, but things cannot go on as they have been going. It is no use. I cannot work it out. This is the only way. So I shall drop out. You will find my will in the safe. Good-by forever.

      Vail.

      The peculiarly pungent smell of burning rubber had by this time completely filled the laboratory. It was stifling, sickening.

      "There—you made me forget that test, with your confounded suicide," reproached Kennedy. "That sample's ruined."

      "Glad of it," I snorted. "Now I won't need a gas-mask."

      However, in curiosity I looked at the note again. It was, strangely enough, written on a typewriter.

      "Hm!" exclaimed Kennedy, with mild interest. "Suicides don't usually write on typewriters. A hasty scrawl—that's what you usually find."

      "But Wilford was an unusual man," I suggested. "You might look for almost anything from Wilford."

      I read the note again. And as I did so I asked myself whether it was a suicide note, after all. To me, now, it seemed too calmly composed and written for that, as Kennedy had suggested.

      I knew Wilford as a lawyer, still comparatively young and well known almost to the point of notoriety, for of late he had taken many society divorce cases. Altogether, his office had become a sort of fashionable court of domestic relations.

      "Here's the strange thing," hastened Leslie, taking advantage of Kennedy's momentary interest before he could return to another retort laden with some new material. "We found in the office, on the desk, two glasses. In one there seemed to be traces of nothing at all—but in the other I have discovered decided traces of atropin."

      "That looks promising," remarked Kennedy, his analysis now entirely forgotten.

      "That's why I decided to call you in. Will you help me?"

      "Craig," I interrupted, "I don't know much about Vail Wilford, but he has had such an unsavory reputation that—well, I'd hesitate. I've always considered him a sort of society rat."

      "What difference does that make, Walter?" argued Craig, turning on me suddenly. "If a crime has been committed, I must get at it. It is my duty—even if the man is a 'rat,' as you call him. Besides, this promises to be a very interesting case. Where is the body?" he asked, abruptly, in as matter-of-fact a tone as if it had been a wrecked car towed to a garage.

      "Removed to his apartment on the Drive," replied Doctor Leslie, now much encouraged and not concealing it. "I've just come from the place. That was where I saw Honora Wilford."

      "How


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