The Crimson Blind by Fred M. (Frederick Merrick) White
page 172 of 453 (37%)
page 172 of 453 (37%)
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free man with a good practice to-day."
"So you are harping on that string again," Bell said, coldly. "I fancied that I had argued you out of that. You know perfectly well that it is all imagination, Heritage." Heritage passed his left hand across his eyes in a confused kind of way. "When you look at one like that I fancy so," he said. "When I was under your hands I was forgetting all about it. And now it has all come back again. Did I tell you all about it, Cross?" Bell gave Cross a significant glance, and the latter shook his head. "Well, it was this way," Heritage began, eagerly. His eyes were gleaming now, his whole aspect was changed. "I was poor and struggling, but I had a grand future before me. There was a patient of mine, a rich man, who had a deadly throat trouble. And he was going to leave me all his money if I cured him. He told me he had made a will to that effect, and he had done so. And I was in direst straits for some ready cash. When I came to operate I used an electric light, a powerful light--you know what I mean. The operation failed and my patient died. The operation failed because the electric light went out at a critical time. "People said it was a great misfortune for me, because I was on the threshold of a new discovery which would have made my name. Nothing of the kind. I deliberately cut the positive wire of the electric light so that I should fail, and so that my patient might die and I might get all his money at once. And he did die, and nobody suspected me--nobody could possibly have found me out. Then I went mad and they put me under |
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