Really they are all quite delicious."
Fernet merely shrugged. Minetti ordered Turkish delight. The girl wiped some moisture from the marble table-top and walked toward the coffee-shelf.
"So you were not able to work to-day?" Minetti began, affably. "How did you put in the time?"
"At the library, reading."
"Something droll? A French novel or-"
"Books on _poison_!" Fernet shot out with venomous triumph. "I know more than I did yesterday."
"How distressing!" purred Minetti. "Ignorance is more invulnerable than one fancies. Of course we are taught otherwise, but knowledge, you remember, was the beginning of all trouble. But you choose a fascinating, subject. Some day when we get better acquainted I shall tell you all I know about it. Poison is such a subtle thing. It is everywhere-in the air we breathe, in the water we drink, in the food we eat. And it is at once swift and sluggish, painful and stupefying, obvious and incapable of a.n.a.lysis. It is like a beautiful woman, or a great joy, or love itself."
Fernet glanced up sharply. The hunchback had slid forward in his seat and his eyes glowed like two shaded pools catching greedily at the yellow sunlight of midday. Fernet shuddered and looked about the room.
Groups of swarthy men were drinking coffee, or sipping faintly red draughts of cherry syrup and sweet soda. At a near-by table a group of six shuffled cards and marked their scores upon a slate. And, of course, there were those who played backgammon, rattling the dice and making exaggerated gestures as they spurred on their adversaries with genial taunts.
The girl came back carrying cups of thick steaming coffee and soft lemon-colored sweetmeats speared with two tiny silver forks. She set the tray down. Minetti reached for his coffee greedily, but Fernet sat back in his seat and allowed the waitress to place the second cup before him.
As she did so the table shook suddenly and half of the hot liquid spilled over on the marble tabletop. Fernet jumped up to escape the scalding trickle; the girl gave an apologetic scream; Minetti laughed strangely.
"It is all my fault!" cried the hunchback. "What stupidity! Pray be seated. My young woman, will you give the gentleman this coffee of mine?
And get me another."
"Pardon me," Fernet protested, "but I cannot think of such a thing!" And with that he attempted to pa.s.s the coffee in question back to Minetti.
But the hunchback would have none of it. Fernet broke into a terrified sweat.
"He has dropped poison into it!" he thought, in sudden panic. "Otherwise why should he be so anxious to have me drink it? He kicked the table deliberately, too. And this cup of his-why was it not spilled also? No, he was prepared-it is all a trick!"
"Come, come, my friend," broke in Minetti, briskly, "drink your coffee while it is still hot! Do not wait for me. I shall be served presently.
And try the sweetmeats; they are delicious."
"I am not hungry," replied Fernet, sullenly.
"No? Well, what of that? Sweetmeats and coffee are not matters of hunger. Really, you are more droll than you imagine!" Minetti burst into a terrifying laugh.
"He thinks I am afraid!" muttered Fernet.
And out of sheer bravado he lifted the cup to his lips. Minetti stopped laughing, but a wide smile replaced his diabolical mirth. The girl brought fresh coffee to the hunchback. He sipped it with frank enjoyment, but he did not once take his gaze from Fernet"s pale face.
"Well," thought Fernet, "one cup of poison more or less will not kill me.... It is not as if he has made up his mind to finish me at once. He is counting on the exquisite joys of a prolonged agony." And he remembered Minetti"s words: "It is like watching a green leaf fading before the breath of autumn. First a sickly pallor, then a yellowing, a sharp wind, a fluttering in the air...." He tossed off the coffee in one defiant gulp. "He thinks that he has me in his power. But Andre Fernet is not quite a fool. I shall go away to-morrow!"
They went home as soon as Minetti finished his coffee. Fernet felt a sudden nausea; by the time he reached his lodgings his steps were unsteady and his head reeled. Minetti was kindness itself.
"Let me help you into bed," he insisted. "You must have a congestion.
Presently I shall heat some water and give you a hot gin."
Fernet was too sick to protest. Minetti started the gas-stove and filled the kettle and went into his room for gin. Fernet dragged himself out of his clothes and crawled in between the sheets. Minetti came back. Fernet lay with his eyes half-closed, shivering. Finally the water boiled, and the hunchback brought Fernet a huge tumbler of gin and water with bits of lemon-peel and cloves floating in it. It tasted so good that Fernet forgot his terror for the moment. But when the tumbler was empty he felt helpless; he could scarcely lift his arms; so he lay flat upon his back, staring up at the ceiling. He tried to recall sc.r.a.ps of what he had been reading all afternoon. What was the name of the poison that left one paralyzed? He could not remember. He found his movements becoming more and more difficult; he could scarcely turn in bed. Minetti brewed another toddy. Fernet could not hold the gla.s.s! He tried to push the tumbler away from his lips, but his efforts were useless. Minetti hovered above him with a bland, gentle smile, and Fernet felt the warm liquid trickling into his mouth and down his throat. In the midst of all this he lost consciousness.... Once or twice during the night Fernet had a wakeful interlude. Whenever he opened his eyes he saw Minetti sitting before the open window, gazing down at the twisted pepper-tree.
"Yes, they are both alike!" pa.s.sed dimly through his mind. "They both are at once beautiful and hideous and they have strange secrets! It is no use, I must go away-to-morrow."
In the morning Minetti was standing by the bed. "I have sent for the doctor," he said. But his voice sounded far away.
The doctor came shortly after ten o"clock. He was a little wizened, dried-up old man with a profound air.
"He is a fraud!" thought Fernet. "He knows nothing!"
"Ah," said the doctor, putting a sly finger against his sharp nose, "our friend here has a nervous collapse. He should have a nurse!"
"A nurse!" exclaimed Minetti, with indignation. "And, pray, what do you call me? Do you not think that-"
"Well, we shall see! we shall see!" replied the doctor, rubbing his hands together. "But he will need all sorts of delicacies and-"
Minetti moistened his lips with sleek satisfaction. "You cannot name a dish that I am not able to prepare."
"How about a custard? To-day he should eat something light."
"A custard is simplicity itself," answered the hunchback, and he cracked his fingers.
Minetti went out with the doctor, and came back shortly, carrying eggs and a bottle of vanilla extract and sugar. Fernet lay helpless, watching him bustling about. Finally the delicacy was made and set away in a pan of water to cool. At noon Minetti brought a blue bowl filled with custard to the bedside. It looked inviting, but Fernet shook his head.
"I am not hungry," he lied.
The hunchback set the bowl down on a chair so that Fernet gazed upon it all day. The hunchback did not leave the room. He sat before the open window, reading from a thick book. Toward nightfall Fernet said to him:
"What do you find so interesting?"
Minetti darted a sardonic glance at his patient. "A book on _poison_. I did not realize that I had grown so rusty on the subject. Why, I remember scarcely enough to poison a field-mouse!"
He rose and crossed over to the bedside. "Do you not feel ready for the custard?"
Fernet cast a longing eye upon the yellow contents of the blue bowl.
"No. To tell the truth, I never eat it."
Minetti shrugged.
"But I should like a gla.s.s of water."
The hunchback drew water from the faucet. Fernet watched him like a ferret.
"At least," thought Fernet, "he cannot drop poison in the water secretly. It is well that I can see every move he makes at such a time.
I should not like to die of thirst."
A little later Minetti removed the bowl and threw out its contents.
Fernet looked on with half-closed eyes.