“He appears to have been a rather strong, athletic man,” I remarked, looking down upon the wan, furrowed face.
“Unusually so. The disease, however, has thoroughly wrecked his constitution. He was addicted to the morphia habit of late.” And pulling down the sheet he pointed to the marks of recent punctures upon the dead man’s forearm.
We were standing together in the small shabby bedroom of the boarding-house wherein I lived in Granville Gardens, facing the recreation ground close to Shepherd’s Bush Railway Station. The stifling July day was at an end, and the narrow room was lit by the soft hazy glow of the fast-fading London sunset.
Through the open window came the shouts of children at play upon the “green” opposite, mingled with the chatter of the passers-by and the ever-increasing whirr of the electric trams. Within that faded, smoke-grimed chamber of the dead was silence. Upon the bed between us lay the dead stranger—the man who was a mystery.
“Well, has he told you anything after all?” inquired my friend, Dr Tulloch.
“Very little,” was my reply. “He was uncommunicative. He had a reason, I believe, for concealing his identity.”
“Perhaps we shall discover something when we search his things,” my friend remarked.
“We’ll do that to-morrow,” I said. “It isn’t decent to do so at once.”
Then, as Tulloch bent again, to reassure himself that his patient was actually lifeless, a silence once more fell between us. The glow of the summer sunset deepened, shining through the smoke-haze, and lighting up those dead features for a moment, but next instant the doctor, having been satisfied that no spark of life remained, tenderly drew the sheet over the white sphinx-like countenance.
The unfortunate man was a perfect stranger to us all.