Walker paused. Rutledge thought that if the constable had been in his own office he would have got to his feet and begun to pace. There was more on his mind than the death, and Rutledge waited patiently to hear the rest of the story.

"Dr. Gooding came to see me at half past ten," Walker went on reluctantly. "He asked me to come with him to the surgery. I found that he'd removed the victim's clothing, and it was obvious that he had been garroted, although neither Dr. Gooding nor I had ever seen a case before. But that was not what he wanted me to see. He had probed the mouth of the victim and found that inside it, almost dried to his tongue, was an identity disc."

Rutledge turned to stare at him. "From the war?" he asked in surprise.

"Yes, sir. From the war. I recognized it. But it wasn't Mr. Jeffers's disc, if he ever had one. There was another name on it. One I didn't know-" He reached into his pocket and brought out an oiled cloth, setting it on the low table in front of the hearth before unwrapping it.

Inside were three flat fiberboard discs. In the war, both the Army and soldiers themselves had come up with ways to identify the dead and wounded, but none of them had been successful enough to see widespread use. Some men had simply sewn their names in their uniforms, a time-honored method. A variety of discs had been introduced as well, some on string, some on thin rope. These particular discs had an interesting history.

Stamped from thin layers of compressed wood fibers, they came in pairs and were worn around the neck on a thin length of rope. If a man was killed, one of the discs was placed in his mouth for the burial detail to use in marking his grave. The other of the pair was collected and sent back with his kit, eventually ending up with his family.



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