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Then, if heā€™d any sense, heā€™d lead that man a bit of a dance, and eventually double on him. No!ā ā€”I should say Baseverieā€™s back here in town! Thatā€™s about it, Mr. Hetherwick. But whatā€™s this? Hereā€™s one of my men coming to meet us. I left word where I should be found.ā€

Hetherwick looked up and saw a man, who was obviously a policeman in plain clothes, coming towards them. He was a quiet-looking, stodgy-faced man, but he had news written all over his plain face.

ā€œWell, Marler?ā€ inquired Matherfield as they met. ā€œGot something?ā€

There was nobody about in that quiet corner of Lincolnā€™s Inn Fields, yet the man looked round as if anxious to escape observation, and he spoke in a whisper.

ā€œI believe Iā€™ve got that chemist!ā€ he answered. ā€œLeastways, itā€™s like this. Thereā€™s a chemist I tried this morningā ā€”name of Macpherson, in Maiden Lane. I showed him the facsimiles of the lost labels on the medicine bottles, and asked him if he could give me any information. Heā€™s a very cautious sort of man, I think; he examined the facsimiles a long time, saying nothing. Then he said he supposed I was a policeman, and so on, and of course I had to tell him a bitā ā€”only a bit. Then he said, all of a sudden, ā€˜Look here, my friend,ā€™ he said, ā€˜youā€™d better tell me, straight outā ā€”has this to do with that Hannaford poisoning case?ā€™ So, of course, I said that, between ourselves, it had. ā€˜Isnā€™t Matherfield in charge of that?ā€™ he said. Of course, I said you were. ā€˜Very wellā€™ he said. ā€˜You send Matherfield to me. Iā€™m not going to say anything to you,ā€™ he said. ā€˜What Iā€™ve got to say Iā€™ll say to Matherfield.ā€™ So I went back to headquarters, and they told me youā€™d gone to Lincolnā€™s Inn Fields.ā€

ā€œAll right, my lad!ā€ said Matherfield. ā€œIf youā€™ve found the right man, Iā€™ll remember you. Whatā€™s his nameā ā€”Macpherson, Maiden Lane? Very goodā ā€”then Iā€™ll just step along and see him. Not a word to anybody, Marler!ā€ he added, as the man turned away. ā€œKeep close. Now, this is a bit of all right, Mr. Hetherwick!ā€ he continued, chuckling and rubbing his hands. ā€œThis beats all we heard at Penteneyā€™s! Only let me get the name and address of the man for whom that bottle of medicine was made up, and I think I shall have taken a long stride! But come alongā ā€”weā€™ll see the chemist together.ā€

The shop in Maiden Lane before which they presently paused was a small, narrow-fronted, old-fashioned establishment, with little in its windows beyond the usual coloured bottles and over the front no more than the name ā€œMacphersonā€ in faded gilt letters on a time-stained signboard. It was dark and stuffy within the shop, and Hetherwick had to strain his eyes to see a tall, thin, elderly, spectacled man, very precise and trim in appearance, who stood behind the single counter, silently regarding him and Matherfield.

ā€œMr. Macpherson?ā€ inquired Matherfield. ā€œJust so! Good morning, sir. My name is Matherfieldā ā€”Inspector Matherfield. One of my men tells meā ā€”ā€

ā€œOne moment!ā€ interrupted the chemist. He stepped behind a screen at the rear of his shop and presently returned with a young man, to whom he whispered a word or two. Then he beckoned to his two visitors, and opening a door at the further corner, ushered them into a private parlour. ā€œWe shall be to ourselves here, Mr. Matherfield,ā€ he said. ā€œAnd Iā€™ve no doubt your business is of a highly confidential nature.ā€

ā€œSomething of that sort, Mr. Macpherson,ā€ assented Matherfield, as he and Hetherwick took chairs at a centre table. ā€œBut my manā€™ll have prepared you a bit, no doubt. He tells me he showed you the photographed facsimiles of certain torn labels that are on a medicine bottle which figures in the Hannaford case, and that in consequence of your seeing them you asked to see me. Well, sir, here I am!ā€

ā€œAye, just so, Mr. Matherfield, just so, precisely,ā€ replied the chemist, turning up the gas-jet which hung above the table. ā€œAye, to be sure!ā€ He, too, sat down at the table, and folded his thin long fingers together. ā€œAye, and youā€™ll be thinking, Mr. Matherfield, that yon bottle has something to do with the poisoning of Hannaford?ā€

ā€œIā€™ll be candid with you, Mr. Macpherson,ā€ answered Matherfield. ā€œBut first let me ask you something. Have you read the newspaper accounts of this affair?ā€

ā€œIā€™ve done that, Mr. Matherfieldā ā€”yes, all I could lay hands on.ā€

ā€œThen youā€™ll be aware that there was another man poisoned as well as Hannafordā ā€”a man named Granett, who was in Hannafordā€™s company on the night when it all happened? This gentleman here is the one that was in the Underground train and saw Hannaford die, and Granett make off, as he said, to fetch a doctor.ā€

ā€œThatā€™ll be Mr. Hetherwick, Iā€™m thinking,ā€ said the chemist, with a polite bow. ā€œAye, just so!ā€

ā€œI see youā€™ve read the reports of the inquest,ā€ remarked Matherfield, with a smile. ā€œVery well, as I say, Granett was found dead later. I discovered a medicine bottle and a glass at his bedside. Thereā€™d been whisky in both, but according to the medical experts there had also been poisonā ā€”the traces, they say, were indisputable. Now, on that medicine bottle were two torn labelsā ā€”on the upper one, as you see from the facsimile photograph, thereā€™s been a name writtenā ā€”all thatā€™s left is the initial C. and the first letter of a surname, A. All the restā€™s gone. And what I want to know isā ā€”are you the chemist that made up the medicine or the tonic, or whatever it was, that was in that bottle, and, if so, who is the customer for whom you made it, and whose Christian name begins with C. and surname with A.? Do you comprehend me?ā€

ā€œAye, aye, Mr. Matherfield!ā€ answered the chemist eagerly. ā€œIā€™m appreciating every word youā€™re saying, and very lucid it all is. And Iā€™m willing to give you all the information in my power, but first Iā€™d just like to have a bit myself on

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