第57章 MISS VINCENT'S STARTLING DISCOVERY(4)
As she finished reading her account,she exclaimed in the passionate tones of the deepest conviction,"There,doctor!Have n't I found the true story of this strange visitor?Have n't I solved the riddle of the Sphinx?Who can this man be but the boy of that story?Look at the date of the journal when he was eleven years old,it would make him twenty-five now,and that is just about the age the people here think he must be of.What could account so entirely for his ways and actions as that strange poisoning which produces the state they call Tarantism?I am just as sure it must be that as I am that I am alive.Oh,doctor,doctor,Imust be right,--this Signprino M ...Ch ...was the boy Maurice Kirkwood,and the story accounts for everything,--his solitary habits,his dread of people,--it must be because they wear the colors he can't bear.His morning rides on horseback,his coming here just as the season was approaching which would aggravate all his symptoms,does n't all this prove that I must be right in my conjecture,--no,my conviction?"The doctor knew too much to interrupt the young enthusiast,and so he let her run on until she ran down.He was more used to the rules of evidence than she was,and could not accept her positive conclusion so readily as she would have liked to have him.He knew that beginners are very apt to make what they think are discoveries.But he had been an angler and knew the meaning of a yielding rod and an easy-running reel.He said quietly,"You are a most sagacious young lady,and a very pretty prima facie case it is that you make out.I can see no proof that Mr.Kirkwood is not the same person as the M ...Ch ...of the medical journal,--that is,if I accept your explanation of the difference in the initials of these two names.Even if there were a difference,that would not disprove their identity,for the initials of patients whose cases are reported by their physicians are often altered for the purpose of concealment.I do not know,however,that Mr.
Kirkwood has shown any special aversion to any particular color.It might be interesting to inquire whether it is so,but it is a delicate matter.I don't exactly see whose business it is to investigate Mr.Maurice Kirkwood's idiosyncrasies and constitutional history.If he should have occasion to send for me at any time,he might tell me all about himself,in confidence,you know.These old accounts from Baglivi are curious and interesting,but I am cautious about receiving any stories a hundred years old,if they involve an improbability,as his stories about the cure of the tarantula bite by music certainly do.I am disposed to wait for future developments,bearing in mind,of course,the very singular case you have unearthed.It wouldn't be very strange if our young gentleman had to send for me before the season is over.He is out a good deal before the dew is off the grass,which is rather risky in this neighborhood as autumn comes on.I am somewhat curious,I confess,about the young man,but I do not meddle where I am not asked for or wanted,and I have found that eggs hatch just as well if you let them alone in the nest as if you take them out and shake them every day.This is a wonderfully interesting supposition of yours,and may prove to be strictly in accordance with the facts.But I do not think we have all the facts in this young man's case.If it were proved that he had an aversion to any color,it would greatly strengthen your case.
His 'antipatia,'as his man called it,must be one which covers a wide ground,to account for his self-isolation,--and the color hypothesis seems as plausible as any.But,my dear Miss Vincent,I think you had better leave your singular and striking hypothesis in my keeping for a while,rather than let it get abroad in a community like this,where so many tongues are in active exercise.I will carefully study this paper,if you will leave it with me,and we will talk the whole matter over.It is a fair subject for speculation,only we must keep quiet about it."This long speech gave Lurida's perfervid brain time to cool off a little.She left the paper with the doctor,telling him she would come for it the next day,and went off to tell the result of this visit to her bosom friend,Miss Euthymia Tower.