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the minds of all of us.
"This current, as I have said, passes from each one of you in turn
over a wire and vibrates a fine quartz fibre up there in unison
with each heart here. It is one of the most delicate bits of
mechanism ever made, beside which the hairspring of a watch is
coarse. Each of you in turn, is being subjected to this test. More
than that, the record up there shows not only the beats of the
heart but the successive waves of emotion that vary the form of
those beats. Every normal individual gives what we call an
'electro-cardiogram,' which follows a certain type. The
photographic film on which this is being recorded is ruled so that
at the heart station Dr. Barron can read it. There are five waves
to each heart-beat, which he letters P, Q, R, S, and T, two below
and three above a base line on the film. They have all been found
to represent a contraction of a certain portion of the heart. Any
change of the height, width, or time of any one of those lines
shows that there is some defect or change in the contraction of
that part of the heart. Thus Dr. Barron, who has studied this
thing carefully, can tell infallibly not only disease but
emotion."
It seemed as if no one dared look at his neighbour, as if all were
trying vainly to control the beating of their own hearts.
"Now," concluded Kennedy solemnly as if to force the last secret
from the wildly beating heart of some one in the room, "it is my
belief that the person who had access to the operating-room of the
Novella was a person whose nerves were run down, and in addition
to any other treatment that person was familiar with the ether
phosphore. This person knew Miss Blaisdell well, saw her there,
knew she was there for the purpose of frustrating that person's
own dearest hopes. That person wrote her the note, and knowing
that she would ask for paper and an envelope in order to answer
it, poisoned the flap of the envelope. Phosphorus is a remedy for
hysteria, vexatious emotions, want of sympathy, disappointed and
concealed affections--but not in the quantities that this person
lavished on that flap. Whoever it was, not life, but death, and a
ghastly death, was uppermost in that person's thoughts."
Agnes screamed. "I saw him take something and rub it on her lips,
and the brightness went away. I--I didn't mean to tell, but, God
help me, I must."
"Saw whom?" demanded Kennedy, fixing her eye as he had when he had
called her back from aphasia.
"Him--Millefleur--Miller," she sobbed, shrinking back as if the
very confession appalled her.
"Yes," added Kennedy coolly, "Miller did try to remove the traces
of the poison after he discovered it, in order to protect himself
and the reputation of the Novella."
The telephone bell tinkled. Craig seized the receiver.
"Yes, Barron, this is Kennedy. You received the impulses all
right? Good. And have you had time to study the records? Yes?
What's that? Number seven? All right. I'll see you very soon and
go over the records again with you. Good-bye."
"One word more," he continued, now facing us. "The normal heart
traces its throbs in regular rhythm. The diseased or overwrought
heart throbs in degrees of irregularity that vary according to the
trouble that affects it, both organic and emotional. The expert
like Barron can tell what each wave means, just as he can tell
what the lines in a spectrum mean. He can see the invisible, hear
the inaudible, feel the intangible, with mathematical precision.
Barron has now read the electro-cardiograms. Each is a picture of
the beating of the heart that made it, and each smallest variation
has a meaning to him. Every passion, every emotion, every disease,
is recorded with inexorable truth. The person with murder in his
heart cannot hide it from the string galvanometer, nor can that
person who wrote the false note in which the very lines of the
letters betray a diseased heart hide that disease. The doctor
tells me that that person was number--"
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