Page:Marsh--The seen and the unseen.djvu/55

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THE PHOTOGRAPHS
31

Livermore. "You will remember that these exposures followed each other at intervals of perhaps a couple of minutes. Just now the slate was blank, now the blank is filled. The name 'George Solly' remained upon the slate throughout the several exposures, so far as we could see. But 'George Solly' is not the name with which the woman, during the couple of minutes which intervened between the two exposures, has filled the blank."

Mr. Paley was peering through his spectacles at the name which, in the photograph, appeared upon the slate.

"It is certainly not 'George Solly.' It looks like 'Evan'—'Evan——’"

"It's 'Evan Bradell.' The thing's as clear as day."

"Evan Bradell—so it is. Really, doctor, this is, in its way, remarkable."

"But I venture to say that the most remarkable part is still to follow. We had, first of all, the woman sitting on the chair, on which, if we can trust the evidence of our senses throughout, no one but George Solly sat. Then we had the woman, having rubbed out the name upon the slate, George Solly now upon the chair. Then we had the woman, having substituted the one name for the other, George Solly still upon the chair. And now, in this fourth exposure, you will see that not only has the woman gone, but George Solly has vanished too, and in George Solly's chair is seated—another man! Here it is, look for yourselves."

It was as the doctor said. In the fourth photograph the woman had disappeared. There was the