killed they needed neither Mr. North, nor even Mr. Sproul, to tell them. But Mr. Sproul could, better than any other man of whom Mr. North could think, tell them something of that gracious lifeâof that ancient civilizationâwhich now had ended but which might, they all hoped, one day rise again. And now it was his very great honor to introduce to themâ
âMr. Victor Leeds Sproul, distinguished author of That Was Paris . Mr. Sproulââ
Mr. North turned, smiling, with a half gesture toward the big man in the big chair. And for a second he waited, still smiling, his back half to the audience. And then, in a tone only a little raised, he repeated: âMr. Sproul.â
He repeated it because it seemed that Mr. Sproul had not heard. Mr. Sproul sat in the chair and did not move, and he seemed strangely relaxed, except that he was breathing very noisily. For a horrible moment it occurred to Mr. North that Mr. Sproul had gone to sleep.
But Mr. Sproul had not gone to sleep, and that realization was more horrible still. Mr. Sproul was in a coma and, at that moment, while Mr. North watched, the body moved a little and the eyes, which had been closed, opened. Then the mouth opened, too. But no words came out of it; never any more would words come out of it. The body, already slumped, relaxed just perceptibly and Mr. North, frozen incongruously with his smile and his half beckoning gesture, knew sickly what had happened.
Mr. Victor Leeds Sproul was no longer breathing noisily. He was not breathing at all.
2
Thursday, 8:45 P . M . to 9:10 P . M .
For an instant after he realized this, Mr. Northâs inviting hand remained extended, mutely inviting Mr. Sproul to arise and lecture. Then Mr. North became conscious that his simple gesture had become grotesque. He let his arm fall. His eyes left the flushed face of Mr. Sproul and went to the face of Mrs. Paul Williams, who had left her chair and was standing beside him. Mrs. Williamsâ face was white and horrified.
âHeâs sick!â she said. She spoke in only a normal voice, but it carried through the auditorium, grown suddenly silent. âIsnât he sick?â This was to Mr. North. He looked at her.
âI donât think so,â he said. âNot any more. A few minutes ago he wasâsick.â
She stared at him, and there was horror in her eyes.
âYes,â Mr. North said. âIâm afraid so.â
His voice was lower, but not too low to carry. There was an odd sound from the audience; it was as if the audience sighed. And then, somewhere in the rear, a woman screamed. It was not a loud scream; it lay between a scream and a sob. And then the silence broke into fragments and the audience was alive, moving, uneasy. And Mr. North turned to it.
âIâm afraid Mr. Sproul isâunwell,â he said. âIf one of you is a doctorâ?â
A middle-aged man rose in the third row and sidled toward the aisle. Mr. North caught his eye and the man nodded and came to the platform. There were no stairs, but it was a low platform and the man put one hand on it and half climbed, half vaulted up. He went over to Sproul and bent over him and felt his wrist and stared into his eyes. He leaned down and sniffed at the full, parted lips and stood up and looked at Mr. North.
âHeâs dead, you know,â the man said. He looked at Mr. North, feeling evidently that there was more to be said. âKlingman,â he added. âDr. Klingman.â It was obviously self-identification. Mr. North nodded.
âWhatâ?â he began. Dr. Klingman shook his head.
âIâd have to examine him,â he said. âAsphyxia, from his appearance. But what would asphyxiate him? Poison. A drugâopium. Or cerebral hemorrhage. Or something the matter with his brain. Youâd better call somebody. Somebody in authority. Iââ
A high, angry voice broke in. It came from the door leading to the