“Nothing happened. Only, I began to feel funny. The back of my neck tightened up, and I got very warm and drowsy. My skin tingled all over, and my arms and legs seemed to get numb. I was terribly sleepy, and I lay back on the bed.—That’s all I remember.”
“Another washout,” grumbled Heath.
There was a short silence, and Vance drew his chair nearer.
“Now, Ada,” he said, “you must brace yourself for more bad news. . . . Your mother died during the night.”
The girl sat motionless for a moment, and then turned to him eyes of a despairing clearness.
“Died?” she repeated. “How did she die?”
“She was poisoned—she took an overdose of strychnine.”
“You mean . . . she committed suicide?”
This query startled us all. It expressed a possibility that had not occurred to us. After a momentary hesitation, however, Vance slowly shook his head.
“No, I hardly think so. I’m afraid the person who poisoned you also poisoned your mother.”