suddenly dealt me three hearty 
smacks--one on the shoulder, one on the arm and one in the small of 
the back. I removed myself hastily out of range. 
"Tarantulas, or Peruvian ant-bears, crawling all over you," Miss Brown
explained. "Fortunate I saw them in time, as their suck is fatal in 
ninety-nine cases out of a million, or so GARIBALDI says in the 
Origin of Species." She sniffed. "Tell me, do you smell blood?" 
I told her that I did not. 
"I do," she said, "quite close at hand too. Yum-yum, I like warm 
blood." She looked at me through half-closed eyelids. "I should think 
you'd bleed very prettily, very prettily." 
I removed myself still further out of range, assuring her that in spite of 
my complexion I was in reality anæmic. 
She pointed a finger at me. "I know where those policemen are. They're 
in the garden digging for the body." 
"What body?" I gasped. 
"Why, EINSTEIN'S, of course," said Miss Brown. "Edward murdered 
him last night for his theory. Didn't you suspect?" 
I confessed that I had not. 
"Oh, yes," she said; "smothered him with a pen-wiper. I saw him do it, 
but I said nothing for Angela's sake, she's so refined." 
She darted from me into the drawing-room. I followed and found her 
standing before the fireplace waving the candle wildly in one hand, a 
poker in the other and sniffing loudly. 
"We must save Edward," she said; "we must find the body and hide it 
before they can bring in a writ of Habeas Corpus. It is here. I can smell 
blood. Look under the sofa." 
She made a flourish at me with her weapon and I at once dived under 
the sofa. I am a brave man, but I know better than to withstand people 
in Miss Brown's state of mind. 
"Is it there?" she inquired.
"No." 
"Then search under the carpet--quickly!" 
She swung the poker round her head and I searched quickly under the 
carpet. During the next hour, at the dictates of her and her poker, I 
burrowed under a score of carpets, swarmed numerous book-cases, 
explored a host of cupboards, dived under a multitude of furniture and 
even climbed into the open chimney-place of the study, because Miss 
Brown's nose imagined it smelt roasting flesh up there. These people 
must be humoured. When I came down (accompanied by a heavy fall 
of soot) the lady had vanished. I rushed into the hall. She was mounting 
the stairs. 
"Where are you going now?" I demanded. 
She leaned over the balustrade and nodded to me, yawning broadly: 
"To Edward's room. He must have taken the corpse to bed with him." 
"Stop! Hold on! Come back," I implored, panic-stricken. Miss Brown 
held imperviously on. I sped after her, but mercifully she had got the 
rooms mixed in her decomposed brain and, instead of turning into 
Edward's, walked straight into her own and shut the door behind her. I 
wedged a chair against the handle to prevent any further excursions for 
the night and crept softly away. 
As I went I heard a soft chuckle from within, the senseless laughter, as 
I diagnosed it, of a raving maniac. 
* * * * * 
I got down to breakfast early next morning, determined to tell the 
whole sad story and have Miss Brown put under restraint without 
further ado. 
Before I could get a word out, however, the lunatic herself appeared, 
looking, I thought, absolutely full of beans. She and Aunt Angela 
exchanged salutations.
"I hope you slept better last night, Jane." 
"Splendidly, thank you, Angela, except for an hour or so; but I got up 
and walked it off." 
"Walked it off! Where?" 
"All over the house. Most exciting." 
"Do you mean to say you were walking about the house last night all by 
yourself?" Aunt Angela exclaimed in horror. 
Miss Brown shook her grey head. "Oh, no, not by myself. Our 
sympathetic young friend had a touch of insomnia himself for once and 
was good enough to keep me company." She smiled sweetly in my 
direction. "He was most entertaining. I've been chuckling ever since." 
PATLANDER. 
* * * * * 
[Illustration: Urchin (_who has been "moved on" by emaciated 
policeman_). "AIN'T YER GOT A COOK ON YOUR BEAT?"] 
* * * * * 
OUR SPARTAN EDITORS. 
"WANTED: THE CAT. By Horatio Bottomley."--_John Bull._ 
* * * * * 
MARDI GRAS. 
(_With the British Army in France._) 
"Have you reflected, mon chou," said M'sieur Bonneton, complacently 
regarding the green carnations on his carpet-slippers, "that to-morrow is 
Mardi Gras?"
"I have," replied Madame shortly. 
"One may expect then, _ma petite,_ that there will be _crêpes_ for 
dinner?" 
"With eggs at twelve francs the dozen?" said Madame decidedly. "One 
may not." 
On any other matter M'sieur would probably have taken his    
    
		
	
	
	Continue reading on your phone by scaning this QR Code
 
	 	
	
	
	    Tip: The current page has been bookmarked automatically. If you wish to continue reading later, just open the 
Dertz Homepage, and click on the 'continue reading' link at the bottom of the page.
	    
	    
