This done, he raised his voice and cried out with a monotonous
ululation, and at once a second voice cried out in a long wailing call.
Outside Li Choo's kinsman, with his face turned to the north, was calling
his spirit back, though he knew it would not come.
At the first sound of the voice crying outside, the Chinaman beside Li
Choo leaped thrice in front of the brazier, the mat and the moveless
body.
At that moment the Young Doctor came forward. He who had leaped stood
between him and the body of Li Choo.
"You must not come. Li Choo, the superior man, is dead," he protested.
"I am a doctor," was the reply. "If he is dead, the law will not touch
him, and you shall be alone with him, but the law must know that he is
dead. That is the way that prevails among the 'low people,'" he added
ironically.
The Chinaman stood aside, and the Young Doctor stooped, felt the pulse,
touched the heart and lifted up the head and looked into Li Choo's
sightless eyes.
"He is dead," he said, and he came back again to the Coroner and the
others.
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