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+<title>The Case of The Lamp That Went Out</title>
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Grace Isabel Colbron and Augusta Groner
+by The Lamp That Went Out
+
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+*****These eBooks Were Prepared By Thousands of Volunteers!*****
+
+
+Title: Grace Isabel Colbron and Augusta Groner
+
+Author: The Lamp That Went Out
+
+Release Date: July, 1999 [EBook #1832]
+[Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule]
+[This file was first posted on February 26, 2003]
+
+Edition: 10
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK COLBURN AND GRONER ***
+
+
+
+This eBook was produced by Walter Debeuf
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+<h2><br>
+ The Case of The Lamp That Went Out</h2>
+
+<p>INTRODUCTION TO JOE MULLER</p>
+
+<p>Joseph Muller, Secret Service detective of the Imperial
+Austrian<br>
+ police, is one of the great experts in his profession. In<br>
+ personality he differs greatly from other famous detectives.
+He<br>
+ has neither the impressive authority of Sherlock Holmes, nor
+the<br>
+ keen brilliancy of Monsieur Lecoq. Muller is a small,
+slight,<br>
+ plain-looking man, of indefinite age, and of much humbleness
+of<br>
+ mien. A naturally retiring, modest disposition, and two
+external<br>
+ causes are the reasons for Muller's humbleness of manner,
+which<br>
+ is his chief characteristic. One cause is the fact that in
+early<br>
+ youth a miscarriage of justice gave him several years in
+prison,<br>
+ an experience which cast a stigma on his name and which made
+it<br>
+ impossible for him, for many years after, to obtain honest<br>
+ employment. But the world is richer, and safer, by Muller's<br>
+ early misfortune. For it was this experience which threw him<br>
+ back on his own peculiar talents for a livelihood, and drove
+him<br>
+ into the police force. Had he been able to enter any other<br>
+ profession, his genius might have been stunted to a mere
+pastime,<br>
+ instead of being, as now, utilised for the public good.</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ Then, the red tape and bureaucratic etiquette which attaches
+to<br>
+ every governmental department, puts the secret service men of
+the<br>
+ Imperial police on a par with the lower ranks of the
+subordinates.<br>
+ Muller's official rank is scarcely much higher than that of
+a<br>
+ policeman, although kings and councillors consult him and
+the<br>
+ Police Department realises to the full what a treasure it has
+in<br>
+ him. But official red tape, and his early misfortune ...
+prevent<br>
+ the giving of any higher official standing to even such a
+genius.<br>
+ Born and bred to such conditions, Muller understands them,
+and<br>
+ his natural modesty of disposition asks for no outward
+honours,<br>
+ asks for nothing but an income sufficient for his simple
+needs,<br>
+ and for aid and opportunity to occupy himself in the way he
+most<br>
+ enjoys.</p>
+
+<p>Joseph Muller's character is a strange mixture. The<br>
+ kindest-hearted man in the world, he is a human bloodhound
+when<br>
+ once the lure of the trail has caught him. He scarcely eats
+or<br>
+ sleeps when the chase is on, he does not seem to know human<br>
+ weakness nor fatigue, in spite of his frail body. Once put
+on<br>
+ a case his mind delves and delves until it finds a clue,
+then<br>
+ something awakes within him, a spirit akin to that which
+holds<br>
+ the bloodhound nose to trail, and he will accomplish the
+apparently<br>
+ impossible, he will track down his victim when the entire
+machinery<br>
+ of a great police department seems helpless to discover
+anything.<br>
+ The high chiefs and commissioners grant a condescending
+permission<br>
+ when Muller asks, "May I do this? ... or may I handle this
+case<br>
+ this way?" both parties knowing all the while that it is a
+farce,<br>
+ and that the department waits helpless until this humble
+little<br>
+ man saves its honour by solving some problem before which
+its<br>
+ intricate machinery has stood dazed and puzzled.</p>
+
+<p>This call of the trail is something that is stronger than
+anything<br>
+ else in Muller's mentality, and now and then it brings him
+into<br>
+ conflict with the department, ... or with his own better
+nature.<br>
+ Sometimes his unerring instinct discovers secrets in high
+places,<br>
+ secrets which the Police Department is bidden to hush up and
+leave<br>
+ untouched. Muller is then taken off the case, and left idle
+for<br>
+ a while if he persists in his opinion as to the true facts.
+And<br>
+ at other times, Muller's own warm heart gets him into trouble.
+He<br>
+ will track down his victim, driven by the power in his soul
+which<br>
+ is stronger than all volition; but when he has this victim in
+the<br>
+ net, he will sometimes discover him to be a much finer, better
+man<br>
+ than the other individual, whose wrong at this particular
+criminal's<br>
+ hand set in motion the machinery of justice. Several times
+that<br>
+ has happened to Muller, and each time his heart got the better
+of<br>
+ his professional instincts, of his practical common-sense,
+too,<br>
+ perhaps, ... at least as far as his own advancement was
+concerned,<br>
+ and he warned the victim, defeating his own work. This
+peculiarity<br>
+ of Muller's character caused his undoing at last, his
+official<br>
+ undoing that is, and compelled his retirement from the force.
+But<br>
+ his advice is often sought unofficially by the Department, and
+to<br>
+ those who know, Muller's hand can be seen in the unravelling
+of<br>
+ many a famous case.</p>
+
+<p>The following stories are but a few of the many interesting
+cases<br>
+ that have come within the experience of this great
+detective.<br>
+ But they give a fair portrayal of Muller's peculiar method
+of<br>
+ working, his looking on himself as merely an humble member of
+the<br>
+ Department, and the comedy of his acting under "official
+orders"<br>
+ when the Department is in reality following out his
+directions.</p>
+
+<h2>THE CASE OF THE LAMP THAT WENT OUT</h2>
+
+<h3>by Grace Isabel Colbron and Augusta Groner</h3>
+
+<h2>CHAPTER I</h2>
+
+<h3>THE DISCOVERY</h3>
+
+<p><br>
+ The radiance of a clear September morning lay over Vienna.
+The<br>
+ air was so pure that the sky shone in brightest azure even
+where<br>
+ the city's buildings clustered thickest. On the outskirts of
+the<br>
+ town the rays of the awakening sun danced in crystalline
+ether<br>
+ and struck answering gleams from the dew on grass and shrub
+in<br>
+ the myriad gardens of the suburban streets.</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ It was still very early. The old-fashioned steeple clock on
+the<br>
+ church of the Holy Virgin in Hietzing had boomed out six
+slow<br>
+ strokes but a short time back. Anna, the pretty blonde girl
+who<br>
+ carried out the milk for the dwellers in several streets of
+this<br>
+ aristocratic residential suburb, was just coming around the
+corner<br>
+ of the main street into a quiet lane. This lane could hardly
+be<br>
+ dignified by the name of street as yet, it was so very quiet.
+It<br>
+ had been opened and named scarcely a year back and it was
+bordered<br>
+ mostly by open gardens or fenced-in building lots. There were
+four<br>
+ houses in this street, two by two opposite each other, and
+another,<br>
+ an old-fashioned manor house, lying almost hidden in its
+great<br>
+ garden. But the quiet street could not presume to ownership
+of<br>
+ this last house, for the front of it opened on a parallel
+street,<br>
+ which gave it its number. Only the garden had a gate as
+outlet<br>
+ onto our quiet lane.</p>
+
+<p>Anna stopped in front of this gate and pulled the bell. She
+had<br>
+ to wait for some little time until the gardener's wife, who
+acted<br>
+ as janitress, could open the door. But Anna was not
+impatient,<br>
+ for she knew that it was quite a distance from the
+gardener's<br>
+ house in the centre of the great stretch of park to the
+little<br>
+ gate where she waited. In a few moments, however, the door
+was<br>
+ opened and a pleasant-faced woman exchanged a friendly
+greeting<br>
+ with the girl and took the cans from her.</p>
+
+<p>Anna hastened onward with her usual energetic step. The four
+houses<br>
+ in that street were already served and she was now bound for
+the<br>
+ homes of customers several squares away. Then her step slowed
+just<br>
+ a bit. She was a quiet, thoughtful girl and the lovely peace
+of<br>
+ this bright morning sank into her heart and made her rejoice
+in<br>
+ its beauty. All around her the foliage was turning gently to
+its<br>
+ autumn glory of colouring and the dewdrops on the rich-hued
+leaves<br>
+ sparkled with an unusual radiance. A thrush looked down at
+her<br>
+ from a bough and began its morning song. Anna smiled up at
+the<br>
+ little bird and began herself to sing a merry tune.</p>
+
+<p> </p>
+
+<p><br>
+ But suddenly her voice died away, the colour faded from her
+flushed<br>
+ cheeks, her eyes opened wide and she stood as if riveted to
+the<br>
+ ground. With a deep breath as of unconscious terror she let
+the<br>
+ burden of the milk cans drop gently from her shoulder to the
+ground.<br>
+ In following the bird's flight her eyes had wandered to the side
+of<br>
+ the street, to the edge of one of the vacant lots, there where
+a<br>
+ shallow ditch separated it from the roadway. An elder-tree,
+the<br>
+ great size of which attested its age, hung its berry-laden
+branches<br>
+ over the ditch. And in front of this tree the bird had
+stopped<br>
+ suddenly, then fluttered off with the quick movement of the
+wild<br>
+ creature surprised by fright. What the bird had seen was the
+same<br>
+ vision that halted the song on Anna's lips and arrested her
+foot.<br>
+ It was the body of a man - a young and well-dressed man, who
+lay<br>
+ there with his face turned toward the street. And his face was
+the<br>
+ white frozen face of a corpse.</p>
+
+<p>Anna stood still, looking down at him for a few moments,
+in<br>
+ wide-eyed terror: then she walked on slowly as if trying to
+pull<br>
+ herself together again. A few steps and then she turned and
+broke<br>
+ into a run. When she reached the end of the street,
+breathless<br>
+ from haste and excitement, she found herself in one of the
+main<br>
+ arteries of traffic of the suburb, but owing to the early
+hour<br>
+ this street was almost as quiet as the lane she had just
+left.<br>
+ Finally the frightened girl's eyes caught sight of the figure
+of<br>
+ a policeman coming around the next corner. She flew to meet
+him<br>
+ and recognised him as the officer of that beat.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, what is the matter?" he asked. "Why are you so
+excited?"</p>
+
+<p>"Down there-in the lane, there's a dead man," answered the
+girl,<br>
+ gasping for breath.</p>
+
+<p>"A dead man?" repeated the policeman gravely, looking at the
+girl.<br>
+ "Are you sure he's dead?"</p>
+
+<p>Anna nodded. "His eyes are all glassy and I saw blood on his
+back."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, you're evidently very much frightened, and I suppose
+you<br>
+ don't want to go down there again. I'll look into the matter,
+if<br>
+ you will go to the police station and make the announcement.
+Will<br>
+ you do it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir."</p>
+
+<p>"All right, then, that will gain time for us. Good-bye, Miss
+Anna."</p>
+
+<p>The man walked quickly down the street, while the girl hurried
+off<br>
+ in the opposite direction, to the nearest police station, where
+she<br>
+ told what she had seen.</p>
+
+<p>The policeman reached his goal even earlier. The first glance
+told<br>
+ him that the man lying there by the wayside was indeed
+lifeless.<br>
+ And the icy stiffness of the hand which he touched showed him
+that<br>
+ life must have fled many hours back. Anna had been right about
+the<br>
+ blood also. The dead man lay on the farther side of the ditch,
+half<br>
+ down into it. His right arm was bent under his body, his left
+arm<br>
+ was stretched out, and the stiffened fingers ... they were
+slender<br>
+ white fingers ... had sought for something to break his fall.
+All<br>
+ they had found was a tall stem of wild aster with its purple
+blossoms,<br>
+ which they were holding fast in the death grip. On the dead
+man's<br>
+ back was a small bullet-wound and around the edges of it his
+light<br>
+ grey coat was stained with blood. His face was distorted in
+pain<br>
+ and terror. It was a nice face, or would have been, did it not
+show<br>
+ all too plainly the marks of dissipation in spite of the fact
+that<br>
+ the man could not have been much past thirty years old. He was
+a<br>
+ stranger to the policeman, although the latter had been on
+this<br>
+ beat for over three years.</p>
+
+<p>When the guardian of the law had convinced himself that there
+was<br>
+ nothing more to do for the man who lay there, he rose from
+his<br>
+ stooping position and stepped back. His gaze wandered up and
+down<br>
+ the quiet lane, which was still absolutely empty of human
+life.<br>
+ He stood there quietly waiting, watching over the ghastly
+discovery.<br>
+ In about ten minutes the police commissioner and the
+coroner,<br>
+ followed by two roundsmen with a litter, joined the solitary
+watcher,<br>
+ and the latter could return to his post.</p>
+
+<p>The policemen set down their litter and waited for orders,
+while<br>
+ the coroner and the commissioner bent over the corpse. There
+was<br>
+ nothing for the physician to do but to declare that the
+unfortunate<br>
+ man had been dead for many hours. The bullet which struck him
+in<br>
+ the back had killed him at once. The commissioner examined
+the<br>
+ ground immediately around the corpse, but could find nothing
+that<br>
+ pointed to a struggle. There remained only to prove whether
+there<br>
+ had been a robbery as well as a murder.</p>
+
+<p>"Judging from the man's position the bullet must have come
+from<br>
+ that direction," said the commissioner, pointing towards the<br>
+ cottages down the lane.</p>
+
+<p>"People who are killed by bullets may turn several times
+before<br>
+ they fall," said a gentle voice behind the police officer.
+The<br>
+ voice seemed to suit the thin little man who stood there
+meekly,<br>
+ his hat in his hand.</p>
+
+<p>The commissioner turned quickly. "Ah, are you there
+already,<br>
+ Muller?" he said, as if greatly pleased, while the physician
+broke<br>
+ in with the remark:</p>
+
+<p>"That's just what I was about to observe. This man did not
+die<br>
+ so quickly that he could not have made a voluntary or
+involuntary<br>
+ movement before life fled. The shot that killed him might
+have<br>
+ come from any direction."</p>
+
+<p>The commissioner nodded thoughtfully and there was silence for
+a<br>
+ few moments. Muller - for the little thin man was none other<br>
+ than the celebrated Joseph Muller, one of the most brilliant<br>
+ detectives in the service of the Austrian police - looked down
+at<br>
+ the corpse carefully.. He took plenty of time to do it and<br>
+ nobody hurried him. For nobody ever hurried Muller; his
+well-known<br>
+ and almost laughable thoroughness and pedantry were too valuable
+in<br>
+ their results. It was a tradition in the police that Muller was
+to<br>
+ have all the time he wanted for everything. It paid in the
+end,<br>
+ for Muller made few mistakes. Therefore, his superior the
+police<br>
+ commissioner, and the coroner waited quietly while the little
+man<br>
+ made his inspection of the corpse.</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you," said Muller finally, with a polite bow to the<br>
+ commissioner, before he bent to brush away the dust on his
+knees.</p>
+
+<p>"Well?" asked Commissioner Holzer.</p>
+
+<p>Muller smiled an embarrassed smile as he replied:</p>
+
+<p>"Well ... I haven't found out anything yet except that he is
+dead,<br>
+ and that he has been shot in the back. His pockets may tell
+us<br>
+ something more."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, we can examine them at once," said the commissioner.
+"I<br>
+ have been delaying that for I wanted you here; but I had no
+idea<br>
+ that you would come so soon. I told them to fetch you if you
+were<br>
+ awake, but doubted you would be, for I know you have had no
+sleep<br>
+ for forty-eight hours."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I can sleep, at least with one eye, when I'm on the
+chase,"<br>
+ answered the detective. "So it's really only twenty-four
+hours,<br>
+ you see." Muller had just returned from tracking down an<br>
+ aristocratic swindler whom he had found finally in a little
+French<br>
+ city and had brought back to a Viennese prison. He had
+returned<br>
+ well along in the past night and Holzer knew that the tired
+man<br>
+ would need his rest. Still he had sent for Muller, who lived
+near<br>
+ the police station, for the girl's report had warned him that
+this<br>
+ was a serious case. And in serious cases the police did not
+like<br>
+ to do without Muller's help.</p>
+
+<p>And as usual when his work called him, Muller was as wide
+awake as<br>
+ if he had had a good night's sleep behind him. The interest of
+a<br>
+ new case robbed him of every trace of fatigue. It was he alone -
+at<br>
+ his own request - who raised the body and laid it on its back
+before<br>
+ he stepped aside to make way for the doctor.</p>
+
+<p>The physician opened the dead man's vest to see whether the
+bullet<br>
+ had passed completely through the body. But it had not; there
+was<br>
+ not the slightest trace of blood upon the shirt.</p>
+
+<p>"There's nothing more for me to do here, Muller," said the<br>
+ physician, as he bowed to the commissioner and left the
+place.</p>
+
+<p>Muller examined the pockets of the dead man.</p>
+
+<p>"It's probably a case of robbery, too," remarked the
+commissioner.<br>
+ "A man as well-dressed as this one is would be likely to have
+a<br>
+ watch."</p>
+
+<p>"And a purse," added the detective. "But this man has neither
+- or<br>
+ at least he has them no longer."</p>
+
+<p>In the various pockets of the dead man's clothes Muller found
+the<br>
+ following articles: a handkerchief, several tramway tickets,
+a<br>
+ penknife, a tiny mirror, and comb, and a little book, a
+cheap<br>
+ novel. He wrapped them all in the handkerchief and put them in
+his<br>
+ own pocket. The dead man's coat had fallen back from his
+body<br>
+ during the examination, and as Muller turned the stiffened
+limbs<br>
+ a little he saw the opening of another pocket high up over
+the<br>
+ right hip of the trousers. The detective passed his hand over
+the<br>
+ pocket and heard something rattle. Then he put his hand in
+the<br>
+ pocket and drew out a thin narrow envelope which he handed to
+the<br>
+ commissioner. Holzer looked at it carefully. It was made of
+very<br>
+ thin expensive paper and bore no address. But it was sealed,<br>
+ although not very carefully, for the gummed edges were open
+in<br>
+ spots. It must have been hastily closed and was slightly
+crushed<br>
+ as if it had been carried in a clenched hand. The
+commissioner<br>
+ cut open the envelope with his penknife. He gave an
+exclamation<br>
+ of surprise as he showed Muller the contents. In the
+envelope<br>
+ there were three hundred-gulden notes.</p>
+
+<p>The commissioner looked at Muller without a word, but the
+detective<br>
+ understood and shook his head. "No," he said calmly, "it may be
+a<br>
+ case of robbery just the same. This pocket was not very easy
+to<br>
+ find, and the money in it was safer than the dead man's watch
+and<br>
+ purse would be. That is, if he had a watch and purse - and he
+very<br>
+ probably had a watch," he added more quickly.</p>
+
+<p>For Muller had made a little discovery. On the lower hem of
+the<br>
+ left side of the dead man's waistcoat he saw a little lump,
+and<br>
+ feeling of it he discovered that it was a watch key which
+had<br>
+ slipped down out of the torn pocket between the lining and
+the<br>
+ material of the vest. A sure proof that the dead man had had
+a<br>
+ watch, which in all probability had been taken from him by
+his<br>
+ murderer. There was no loose change or small bills to be
+found<br>
+ in any of the pockets, so that it was more than likely that
+the<br>
+ dead man had had his money in a purse. It seemed to be a
+case<br>
+ of murder for the sake of robbery. At least Muller and the<br>
+ commissioner believed it to be one, from what they had
+discovered<br>
+ thus far.</p>
+
+<p>The police officer gave his men orders to raise the body and
+to<br>
+ take it to the morgue. An hour later the unknown man lay in
+the<br>
+ bare room in which the only spot of brightness were the rays
+of<br>
+ the sun that crept through the high barred windows and touched
+his<br>
+ cold face and stiffened form as with a pitying caress. But
+no,<br>
+ there was one other little spot of brightness in the silent
+place.<br>
+ It was the wild aster which the dead man's hand still held
+tightly<br>
+ clasped. The little purple flowers were quite fresh yet, and
+the<br>
+ dewdrops clinging to them greeted the kiss of the sun's rays
+with<br>
+ an answering smile.</p>
+
+<h2><br>
+ CHAPTER II</h2>
+
+<h3>THE BROKEN WILLOW TWIG</h3>
+
+<p><br>
+ As soon as the corpse had been taken away, the police
+commissioner<br>
+ returned to the station. But Muller remained there all alone
+to<br>
+ make a thorough examination of the entire vicinity.</p>
+
+<p>It was not a very attractive spot, this particular part of
+the<br>
+ street. There must have been a nursery there at one time,
+for<br>
+ there were still several ordered rows of small trees to be
+seen.<br>
+ There were traces of flower cultivation as well, for several<br>
+ trailing vines and overgrown bushes showed where shrubs had
+been<br>
+ grown which do not usually grow without man's assistance.<br>
+ Immediately back of the old elder tree Muller found several
+fine<br>
+ examples of rare flowers, or rather he found the shrubs which
+his<br>
+ experienced eye recognised as having once borne these
+unusual<br>
+ blossoms. One or two blooms still hung to the bushes and the<br>
+ detective, who was a great lover of flowers, picked them and
+put<br>
+ them in his buttonhole. While he did this, his keen eyes
+were<br>
+ darting about the place taking in all the details. This
+vacant<br>
+ lot had evidently been used as an unlicensed dumping ground
+for<br>
+ some time, for all sorts of odds and ends, old boots, bits
+of<br>
+ stuff, silk and rags, broken bottles and empty tin cans, lay
+about<br>
+ between the bushes or half buried in the earth. What had
+once<br>
+ been an orderly garden was now an untidy receptacle for
+waste.<br>
+ The pedantically neat detective looked about him in disgust,
+then<br>
+ suddenly he forgot his displeasure and a gleam shot up in his
+eye.<br>
+ It was very little, the thing this man had seen, this man who
+saw<br>
+ so much more than others.</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ About ten paces from where he stood a high wooden fence hemmed
+in<br>
+ the lot. The fence belonged to the neighbouring property, as
+the<br>
+ lot in which he stood was not protected in any way. To the
+back<br>
+ it was closed off by a corn field where the tall stalks
+rustled<br>
+ gently in the faint morning breeze. All this could be seen
+by<br>
+ anybody and Muller had seen it all at his first glance. But
+now<br>
+ he had seen something else. Something that excited him
+because<br>
+ it might possibly have some connection with the newly
+discovered<br>
+ crime. His keen eyes, in glancing along the wooden fence at
+his<br>
+ right hand, had caught sight of a little twig which had worked
+its<br>
+ way through the fence. This twig belonged to a willow tree
+which<br>
+ grew on the other side, and which spread its grey-green
+foliage<br>
+ over the fence or through its wide openings. One of the
+little<br>
+ twigs which had crept in between the planks was broken, and
+it<br>
+ had been broken very recently, for the leaves were still
+fresh<br>
+ and the sap was oozing from the crushed stem. Muller walked
+over<br>
+ to the fence and examined the twig carefully. He soon saw
+how<br>
+ it came to be broken. The broken part was about the height of
+a<br>
+ man's knee from the ground. And just at this height there
+was<br>
+ quite a space between two of the planks of the fence, heavy<br>
+ planks which were laid cross-ways and nailed to thick posts.
+It<br>
+ would have been very easy for anybody to get a foothold in
+this<br>
+ open space between the planks.</p>
+
+<p>It was very evidently some foot thrust in between the planks
+which<br>
+ had broken the little willow twig, and its soft rind had left
+a<br>
+ green mark on the lower plank. "I wonder if that has anything
+to<br>
+ do with the murder," thought Muller, looking over the fence<br>
+ into the lot on the other side.</p>
+
+<p>This neighbouring plot was evidently a neglected garden. It
+had<br>
+ once worn an aristocratic air, with stone statues and
+artistic<br>
+ arrangement of flower beds and shrubs. It was still
+attractive<br>
+ even in its neglected condition. Beyond it, through the
+foliage<br>
+ of its heavy trees, glass windows caught the sunlight.
+Muller<br>
+ remembered that there was a handsome old house in this
+direction,<br>
+ a house with a mansard roof and wide-reaching wings. He did
+not<br>
+ now know to whom this handsome old house belonged, a house
+that<br>
+ must have been built in the time of Maria Theresa, ... but he
+was<br>
+ sure of one thing, and that was that he would soon find out
+to<br>
+ whom it belonged. At present it was the garden which
+interested<br>
+ him, and he was anxious to see where it ended. A few
+moments'<br>
+ further inspection showed him what he wanted to know. The
+garden<br>
+ extended to the beginning of the park-like grounds which
+surrounded<br>
+ the old house with the mansard roof. A tall iron railing
+separated<br>
+ the garden from the park, but this railing did not extend down
+as<br>
+ far as the quiet lane. Where it ended there was a light,
+well-built<br>
+ wooden fence. Along the street side of the fence there was a
+high<br>
+ thick hedge. Muller walked along this hedge until he came to
+a<br>
+ little gate. Then crossing the street, he saw that the house
+whose<br>
+ windows glistened in the sunlight was a house which he knew
+well<br>
+ from its other side, its front facade.</p>
+
+<p>Now he went back to the elder tree and then walked slowly away
+from<br>
+ this to the spot where he found the broken willow twig. He
+examined<br>
+ every foot of the ground, but there was nothing to be seen
+that<br>
+ was of any interest to him-not a footprint, or anything to
+prove<br>
+ that some one else had passed that way a short time before.
+And<br>
+ yet it would have been impossible to pass that way without
+leaving<br>
+ some trace, for the ground was cut up in all directions by
+mole<br>
+ hills.</p>
+
+<p>Next the detective scrutinised as much of the surroundings as
+would<br>
+ come into immediate connection with the spot where the corpse
+had<br>
+ been found. There was nothing to be seen there either, and
+Muller<br>
+ was obliged to acknowledge that he had discovered nothing
+that<br>
+ would lead to an understanding of the crime, unless, indeed,
+the<br>
+ broken willow twig should prove to be a clue. He sprang back<br>
+ across the ditch, turned up the edges of his trousers where
+they<br>
+ had been moistened by the dew and walked slowly along the
+dusty<br>
+ street. He was no longer alone in the lane. An old man,
+accompanied<br>
+ by a large dog, came out from one of the new houses and
+walked<br>
+ towards the detective, he was very evidently going in the
+direction<br>
+ of the elder-tree, which had already been such a centre of
+interest<br>
+ that morning. When he met Muller, the old man halted, touched
+his<br>
+ cap and asked in a confidential tone: "I suppose you've been
+to<br>
+ see the place already?"</p>
+
+<p>"Which place?" was Muller's reserved answer.</p>
+
+<p>Why, I mean the place where they found the man who was
+murdered.<br>
+ They found him under that elder-tree. My wife just heard of it
+and<br>
+ told me. I suppose everybody round here will know it soon."</p>
+
+<p>"Was there a man murdered here?" asked Muller, as if surprised
+by<br>
+ the news.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, he was shot last night. Only I don't understand why I
+didn't<br>
+ hear the shot. I couldn't sleep a wink all night for the pain
+in<br>
+ my bones."</p>
+
+<p>"You live near here, then?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I live in No.1. Didn't you see me coming out?"</p>
+
+<p>"I didn't notice it. I came across the wet meadows and I
+stooped<br>
+ to turn up my trousers so that they wouldn't get dusty - it
+must<br>
+ have been then you came out."</p>
+
+<p>"Why, then you must have been right near the place I was
+talking<br>
+ about. Do you see that elder tree there? It's the only one
+in<br>
+ the street, and the girl who brings the milk found the man under
+it.<br>
+ The police have been here already and have taken him away.
+They<br>
+ discovered him about six o'clock and now it's just seven."</p>
+
+<p>"And you hadn't any suspicion that this dreadful thing was<br>
+ happening so near you?" asked the detective casually.</p>
+
+<p>"I didn't know a thing, sir, not a thing. There couldn't
+have<br>
+ been a fight or I would have heard it. But I don't know why
+I<br>
+ didn't hear the shot."</p>
+
+<p>"Why, then you must have been asleep after all, in spite of
+your<br>
+ pain," said Muller with a smile, as he walked along beside
+the<br>
+ man back to the place from which he had just come.</p>
+
+<p>The old man shook his head. "No, I tell you I didn't close
+an<br>
+ eye all night. I went to bed at half-past nine and I smoked
+two<br>
+ pipes before I put out the light, and then I heard every
+hour<br>
+ strike all night long and it wasn't until nearly five
+o'clock,<br>
+ when it was almost dawn, that I dozed off a bit."</p>
+
+<p>"Then it is astonishing that you didn't hear anything!"</p>
+
+<p>"Sure it's astonishing! But it's still more astonishing that
+my<br>
+ dog Sultan didn't hear anything. Sultan is a famous watchdog,
+I'd<br>
+ have you know. He'll growl if anybody passes through the
+street<br>
+ after dark, and I don't see why he didn't notice what was going
+on<br>
+ over there last night. If a man's attacked, he generally calls
+for<br>
+ help; it's a queer business all right."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, Sultan, why didn't you make a noise?" asked Muller,
+patting<br>
+ the dog's broad head. Sultan growled and walked on
+indifferently,<br>
+ after he had shaken off the strange hand.</p>
+
+<p>"He must have slept more soundly than usual. He went off into
+the<br>
+ country with me yesterday. We had an errand to do there and on
+the<br>
+ way back we stopped in for a drink. Sultan takes a drop or
+two<br>
+ himself occasionally, and that usually makes him sleep. I had
+hard<br>
+ work to bring him home. We got here just a few minutes
+before<br>
+ half-past nine and I tell you we were both good and tired."</p>
+
+<p>By this time they had come to the elder-tree and the old
+man's<br>
+ stream of talk ceased as he stood before the spot where the<br>
+ mysterious crime had occurred. He looked down thoughtfully at
+the<br>
+ grass, now trampled by many feet. "Who could have done it?"
+he<br>
+ murmured finally, with a sigh that expressed his pity for the
+victim.</p>
+
+<p>"Hietzing is known to be one of the safest spots in
+Vienna,"<br>
+ remarked Muller.</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed it is, sir; indeed it is. As it would well have to be
+with<br>
+ the royal castles right here in the neighbourhood! Indeed it
+would<br>
+ have to be safe with the Court coming here all the time."</p>
+
+<p>"Why, yes, you see more police here than anywhere else in the
+city."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, they're always sticking their nose in where they're
+not<br>
+ necessary," remarked the old man, not realising to whom he
+was<br>
+ speaking. "They fuss about everything you do or don't do, and
+yet<br>
+ a man can be shot down right under our very noses here and
+the<br>
+ police can't help it."</p>
+
+<p>"But, my dear sir, it isn't always possible for the police
+to<br>
+ prevent a criminal carrying out his evil intention," said
+Muller<br>
+ good-naturedly.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, why not? if they watch out sharp enough?"</p>
+
+<p>"The police watch out sharper than most people think. But
+they<br>
+ can't catch a man until he has committed his crime, can
+they?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, I suppose not," said the old man, with another glance at
+the<br>
+ elder-tree. He bowed to Muller and turned and walked away.</p>
+
+<p>Muller followed him slowly, very much pleased with this
+meeting, for<br>
+ it had given him a new clue. There was no reason to doubt the
+old<br>
+ man's story. And if this story was true, then the crime had
+been<br>
+ committed before half-past nine of the evening previous. For
+the<br>
+ old man - he was evidently the janitor in No.1 - had not heard
+the<br>
+ shot.</p>
+
+<p>Muller left the scene of the crime and walked towards the
+four<br>
+ houses. Before he reached them he had to pass the garden
+which<br>
+ belonged to the house with the mansard roof. Right and left
+of<br>
+ this garden were vacant lots, as well as on the opposite
+side<br>
+ of the street. Then came to the right and left the four new
+houses<br>
+ which stood at the beginning of the quiet lane. Muller passed
+them,<br>
+ turned up a cross street and then down again, into the
+street<br>
+ running parallel, to the lane, a quiet aristocratic street
+on<br>
+ which fronted the house with the mansard roof.</p>
+
+<p>A carriage stood in front of this house, two great trunks
+piled<br>
+ up on the box beside the driver. A young girl and an old man
+in<br>
+ livery were placing bags and bundles of rugs inside the
+carriage.<br>
+ Muller walked slowly toward the carriage. Just as he reached
+the<br>
+ open gate of the garden he was obliged to halt, to his own
+great<br>
+ satisfaction. For at this moment a group of people came out
+from<br>
+ the house, the owners of it evidently, prepared for a journey
+and<br>
+ surrounded by their servants.</p>
+
+<p>Beside the old man and the young girl, there were two other
+women,<br>
+ one evidently the housekeeper, the other possibly the cook.
+The<br>
+ latter was weeping openly and devoutly kissing the hand of
+her<br>
+ mistress. The housekeeper discovered that a rug was missing
+and<br>
+ sent the maid back for it, while the old servant helped the
+lady<br>
+ into the carriage. The door of the carriage was wide open
+and<br>
+ Muller had a good glimpse of the pale, sweet-faced and<br>
+ delicate-looking young women who leaned back in her corner,<br>
+ shivering and evidently ill. The servants bustled about,
+making<br>
+ her comfortable, while her husband superintended the work
+with<br>
+ anxious tenderness. He was a tall, fine-looking man with
+deep-set<br>
+ grey eyes and a rich, sympathetic voice. He gave his orders
+to<br>
+ his servants with calm authority, but he also was evidently<br>
+ suffering from the disease of our century - nervousness, for<br>
+ Muller saw that the man's hands clenched feverishly and that
+his<br>
+ lips were trembling under his drooping moustache.</p>
+
+<p>The maid hastened down with the rug and spread it over her<br>
+ mistress's knees, as the gentleman exclaimed nervously: "Do<br>
+ hurry with that! Do you want us to miss the train?"</p>
+
+<p>The butler closed the door of the carriage, the coachman
+gathered<br>
+ up the reins and raised his whip. The housekeeper bowed low
+and<br>
+ murmured a few words in farewell and the other servants
+followed<br>
+ her example with tears in their eyes. "You'll see us again
+in<br>
+ six weeks," the lady called out and her husband added: "If
+all<br>
+ goes well." Then he motioned to the waiting driver and the<br>
+ carriage moved off swiftly, turning the corner in a few
+moments.</p>
+
+<p>The little group of servants returned to the courtyard behind
+the<br>
+ high gates. Muller, whom they had not noticed, was about to
+resume<br>
+ his walk, when he halted again. The courtyard of the house led
+back<br>
+ through a flagged walk to the park-like garden that surrounded
+it<br>
+ on the sides and rear. Down this walk came a young woman. She
+came<br>
+ so quickly that one might almost call it running. She was
+evidently<br>
+ excited about something. Muller imagined what this something
+might<br>
+ be, and he remained to hear what she had to say. He was not<br>
+ mistaken. The woman, it was Mrs. Schmiedler, the gardener's
+wife,<br>
+ began her story at once. "Haven't you heard yet?" she said<br>
+ breathlessly. "No, you can't have heard it yet or you
+wouldn't<br>
+ stand there so quietly, Mrs. Bernauer."</p>
+
+<p>"What's the matter?" asked the woman whom Muller took to be
+the<br>
+ housekeeper.</p>
+
+<p>"They killed a man last night out here! They found his body
+just<br>
+ now in the lane back of our garden. The janitor from No.1 told
+me<br>
+ as I was going to the store, so I went right back to look at
+the<br>
+ place, and I came to tell you, as I didn't think you'd heard it
+yet."</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Bernauer was evidently a woman of strong constitution and
+of<br>
+ an equable mind. The other three servants broke out into an<br>
+ excited hubbub of talk while she remained quite indifferent
+and<br>
+ calm. "One more poor fellow who had to leave the world before
+he<br>
+ was ready," she remarked calmly, with just the natural touch
+of<br>
+ pity in her voice that would come to any warm-hearted human
+being<br>
+ upon hearing of such an occurrence. She did not seem at all<br>
+ excited or alarmed to think that the scene of the crime had
+been<br>
+ so near.</p>
+
+<p>The other servants were very much more excited and had
+already<br>
+ rushed off, under the guidance of the gardener's wife, to look
+at<br>
+ the dreadful spot. Franz, the butler, had quite forgotten to<br>
+ close the front gate in his excitement, and the housekeeper
+turned<br>
+ to do it now.</p>
+
+<br>
+"The fools, see them run," she exclaimed half aloud. "As if<br>
+there was anything for them to do there."
+
+<p>The gate closed, Mrs. Bernauer turned and walked slowly to
+the<br>
+ house. Muller walked on also, going first to the police
+station<br>
+ to report what he had discovered. Then he went to his own
+rooms<br>
+ and slept until nearly noon. On his return to the police
+station<br>
+ he found that notices of the occurrence had already been sent
+out<br>
+ to the papers.</p>
+
+<p><br>
+</p>
+
+<h2>CHAPTER III</h2>
+
+<h3>THE EVENING PAPER</h3>
+
+<p><br>
+ The autopsy proved beyond a doubt that the murdered man had
+been<br>
+ dead for many hours before the discovery of his body. The
+bullet<br>
+ which had struck him in the back had pierced the trachea and<br>
+ death had occurred within a few minutes. The only marks for<br>
+ identification of the body were the initials L. W. on his
+underwear.<br>
+ The evening paper printed an exact description of the man's<br>
+ appearance and his clothing.</p>
+
+<p>It was about ten o'clock next morning when Mrs. Klingmayer, a
+widow<br>
+ living in a quiet street at the opposite end of the city
+from<br>
+ Hietzing, returned from her morning marketing. It was only a
+few<br>
+ little bundles that she brought with her and she set about
+preparing<br>
+ her simple dinner. Her packages were wrapped in newspapers,
+which<br>
+ she carefully smoothed out and laid on the dresser.</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ Mrs. Klingmayer was the widow of a street-car conductor and
+the<br>
+ little pension which she received from the company, as well as
+the<br>
+ money she could earn for herself, did not permit of the
+indulgence<br>
+ in a daily newspaper. And yet the reading of the papers was
+the<br>
+ one luxury for which the simple woman longed. Her grocer, who
+was<br>
+ a friend of years, knew this and would wrap up her purchases
+in<br>
+ papers of recent date, knowing that she could then enjoy them
+in<br>
+ her few moments of leisure. To-day this leisure came
+unexpectedly<br>
+ early, for Mrs. Klingmayer had less work than usual to attend
+to.</p>
+
+<p>Her little flat consisted of two rooms and a kitchen with a
+large<br>
+ closet opening out from it. She lived in the kitchen and
+rented<br>
+ the front rooms. Her tenants were a middle-aged man,
+inspector<br>
+ in a factory, who had the larger room; and a younger man who
+was<br>
+ bookkeeper in an importing house in the city. But this young
+man<br>
+ had not been at home for forty-eight hours, a fact, however,
+which<br>
+ did not greatly worry his landlady. The gentleman in
+question<br>
+ lived a rather dissipated life and it was not the first time
+that<br>
+ he had remained away from home over night. It is true that it
+was<br>
+ the first time that he had not been home for two successive
+nights.<br>
+ But as Mrs. Klingmayer thought, everything has to happen the
+first<br>
+ time sometime. "It's not likely to be the last time," the
+worthy<br>
+ woman thought.</p>
+
+<p>At all events she was rather glad of it to-day, for she
+suffered<br>
+ from rheumatism and it was difficult for her to get about.
+The<br>
+ young man's absence saved her the work of fixing up his room
+that<br>
+ morning and allowed her to get to her reading earlier than
+usual.<br>
+ When she had put the pot of soup on the fire, she sat down by
+the<br>
+ window, adjusted her big spectacles and began to read. To
+her<br>
+ great delight she discovered that the paper she held in her
+hand<br>
+ bore the date of the previous afternoon. In spite of the
+good<br>
+ intentions of her friend the grocer, it was not always that
+she<br>
+ could get a paper of so recent date, and she began to read
+with<br>
+ doubled anticipation of pleasure.</p>
+
+<p>She did not waste time on the leading articles, for she
+understood<br>
+ little about politics. The serial stories were a great delight
+to<br>
+ her, or would have been, if she had ever been able to follow
+them<br>
+ consecutively. But her principal joy were the everyday
+happenings<br>
+ of varied interest which she found in the news columns. To-day
+she<br>
+ was so absorbed in the reading of them that the soup pot began
+to<br>
+ boil over and send out rivulets down onto the stove.
+Ordinarily<br>
+ this would have shocked Mrs. Klingmayer, for the neatness of
+her<br>
+ pots and pans was the one great care of her life. But now,
+strange<br>
+ to relate, she paid no attention to the soup, nor to the smell
+and<br>
+ the smoke that arose from the stove. She had just come upon
+a<br>
+ notice in the paper which took her entire attention. She read
+it<br>
+ through three times, and each time with growing excitement.
+This<br>
+ is what she read:</p>
+
+<p>MURDER IN HIETZING</p>
+
+<p>This morning at six o'clock the body of a man about 30
+years<br>
+ old was discovered in a lane in Hietzing. The man must have<br>
+ been dead many hours. He had been shot from behind. The dead<br>
+ man was tall and thin, with brown eyes, brown hair and
+moustache.<br>
+ The letters L. W. were embroidered in his underwear. There
+was<br>
+ nothing else discovered on him that could reveal- his
+identity.<br>
+ His watch and purse were not in his pockets: presumably they
+had<br>
+ been taken by the murderer. A strange fact is that in one of<br>
+ his pockets - a hidden pocket it is true - there was the sum
+of<br>
+ 300 guldens in bills.</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ This was the notice which made Mrs. Klingmayer neglect the soup
+pot.</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ Finally the old woman stood up very slowly, threw a glance at
+the<br>
+ stove and opened the window mechanically. Then she lifted the
+pots<br>
+ from the fire and set them on the outer edge of the range.
+And<br>
+ then she did something that ordinarily would have shocked
+her<br>
+ economical soul - she poured water on the fire to put it
+out.</p>
+
+<p>When she saw that there was not a spark left in the stove, she
+went<br>
+ into her own little room and prepared to go out. Her
+excitement<br>
+ caused her to forget her rheumatism entirely. One more look
+around<br>
+ her little kitchen, then she locked it up and set out for the
+centre<br>
+ of the city.</p>
+
+<p>She went to the office of the importing house where her
+tenant,<br>
+ Leopold Winkler, was employed as bookkeeper. The clerk at the
+door<br>
+ noticed the woman's excitement and asked her kindly what the
+trouble<br>
+ was.</p>
+
+<p>"I'd like to speak to Mr. Winkler," she said eagerly.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Winkler hasn't come in yet," answered the young man.
+"Is<br>
+ anything the matter? You look so white! Winkler will
+probably<br>
+ show up soon, he's never very punctual. But it's after
+eleven<br>
+ o'clock now and he's never been as late as this before."</p>
+
+<p>"I 'don't believe he'll ever come again," said the old
+woman,<br>
+ sinking down on a bench beside the 'door.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, what do you mean?" asked the clerk. "Why shouldn't he
+come<br>
+ again?"</p>
+
+<p>"Is the head of the firm here?" asked Mrs. Klingmayer, wiping
+her<br>
+ forehead with her handkerchief. The clerk nodded and hurried
+away<br>
+ to tell his employer about the woman with the white face who
+came<br>
+ to ask for a man who, as she expressed it, "would never come
+there<br>
+ again."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't think she's quite right in the head," he volunteered.
+The<br>
+ head of the firm told him to bring the woman into the inner
+office.</p>
+
+<p>"Who are you, my good woman?" he asked kindly, softened by
+the<br>
+ evident agitation of this poorly though neatly dressed
+woman.</p>
+
+<p>"I am Mr. Winkler's landlady," she answered.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah! and he wants you to tell me that he's sick? I'm afraid I
+can't<br>
+ believe all that this gentleman says. I hope he's not asking
+your<br>
+ help to lie to me. Are you sure that his illness is anything
+else<br>
+ but a case of being up late?"</p>
+
+<p>"I don't think that he'll ever be sick again - I didn't come
+with<br>
+ any message from him, sir; please read this, sir." And she
+handed<br>
+ him the newspaper, showing him the notice. While the gentleman
+was<br>
+ reading she added: "Mr. Winkler didn't come home last night
+either."</p>
+
+<p>Winkler's employer read the few lines, then laid the paper
+aside<br>
+ with a very serious face. "When did you see him last?" he asked
+of<br>
+ the woman.</p>
+
+<p>"Day before yesterday in the morning. He went away about
+half-past<br>
+ eight as he usually does," she replied. And then she added a<br>
+ question of her own: "Was he here day before yesterday?"</p>
+
+<p>The merchant nodded and pressed an electric bell. Then he rose
+from<br>
+ his seat and pulled up a chair for his visitor. "Sit down
+here.<br>
+ This thing has frightened you and you are no longer young."
+When<br>
+ the servant entered, the merchant told him to ask the head
+bookkeeper<br>
+ to come to the inner office.</p>
+
+<p>When this official appeared, his employer inquired:<br>
+ "When did Winkler leave here day before yesterday?"</p>
+
+<p>"At six o'clock, sir, as usual."</p>
+
+<p>"He was here all day without interruption?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir, with the exception of the usual luncheon hour."</p>
+
+<p>"Did he have the handling of any money Monday?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, sir."</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you, Mr. Pokorny," said the merchant, handing his
+employee<br>
+ the evening paper and pointing to the notice which had so
+interested<br>
+ him.</p>
+
+<p>Pokorny read it, his face, like his employer's, growing more
+serious.<br>
+ "It looks almost as if it must be Winkler, sir," he said, in a
+few<br>
+ moments.</p>
+
+<p>"We will soon find that out. I should like to go to the
+police<br>
+ station myself with this woman; she is Winkler's landlady - but
+I<br>
+ think it will be better for you to accompany her. They will
+ask<br>
+ questions about the man which you will be better able to
+answer<br>
+ than I."</p>
+
+<p>Pokorny bowed and left the room. Mrs. Klingmayer rose and was
+about<br>
+ to follow, when the merchant asked her to wait a moment and
+inquired<br>
+ whether Winkler owed her anything. "I am sorry that you should
+have<br>
+ had this shock and the annoyances and trouble which will come of
+it,<br>
+ but I don't want you to be out of pocket by it."</p>
+
+<p>"No, he doesn't owe me anything," replied the honest old
+woman,<br>
+ shaking her head. A few big tears rolled down over her
+withered<br>
+ cheeks, possibly the only tears that were shed for the dead
+man<br>
+ under the elder-tree. But even this sympathetic soul could
+find<br>
+ nothing to say in his praise. She could feel pity for his
+dreadful<br>
+ death, but she could not assert that the world had lost
+anything<br>
+ by his going out of it. As if saddened by the impossibility
+of<br>
+ finding a single good word to say about the dead man, she left
+the<br>
+ office with drooping head and lagging step.</p>
+
+<p>Pokorny helped her into the cab that was already waiting
+before the<br>
+ door. The office force had got wind of the fact that
+something<br>
+ unusual had occurred and were all at the windows to see them
+drive<br>
+ off. The three clerks who worked in the department to which
+Winkler<br>
+ belonged gathered together to talk the matter over. They were
+none<br>
+ of them particularly hit by it, but naturally they were
+interested<br>
+ in the discovery in Hietzing, and equally naturally, they tried
+to<br>
+ find a few good words to say about the man whose life had ended
+so<br>
+ suddenly.</p>
+
+<p>The youngest of them, Fritz Bormann, said some kind words and
+was<br>
+ about to wax more enthusiastic, when Degenhart, the eldest
+clerk,<br>
+ cut in with the words: "Oh, don't trouble yourself. Nobody
+ever<br>
+ liked Winkler here. 'He was not a good man - he was not even
+a<br>
+ good worker. This is the first time that he has a reasonable
+excuse<br>
+ for neglecting his duties."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, come, see here! how can you talk about the poor man that
+way<br>
+ when he's scarcely cold in death yet," said Fritz
+indignantly.</p>
+
+<p>Degenhart laughed harshly.</p>
+
+<p>"Did I ever say anything else about him while he was warm and
+alive?<br>
+ Death is no reason for changing one's opinion about a man who
+was<br>
+ good-for-nothing in life. And his death was a stroke of good
+luck<br>
+ that he scarcely deserved. He died without a moment's pain, with
+a<br>
+ merry thought in his head, perhaps, while many another better
+man<br>
+ has to linger in torture for weeks. No, Bormann, the best I
+can<br>
+ say about Winkler is that his death makes one nonentity the less
+on<br>
+ earth."</p>
+
+<p>The older man turned to his desk again and the two younger
+clerks<br>
+ continued the conversation: "Degenhart appears to be a hard
+man,"<br>
+ said Fritz, "but he's the best and kindest person I know, and
+he's<br>
+ dead right in what he says. It was simply a case of
+conventional<br>
+ superstition. I never did like that Winkler."</p>
+
+<p>"No, you're right," said the other. Neither did I and I
+don't<br>
+ know why, for the matter of that. He seemed just like a
+thousand<br>
+ others. I never heard of anything particularly wrong that he
+did."</p>
+
+<p>"No, no more did I," continued Bormann, "but I never heard
+of<br>
+ anything good about him either. And don't you think that it's
+worse<br>
+ for a man to seem to repel people by his very personality,
+rather<br>
+ than by any particular bad thing that he does?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. I don't know how to explain it, but that's just how I
+feel<br>
+ about it. I had an instinctive feeling that there was
+something<br>
+ wrong about Winkler, the sort of a creepy, crawly feeling that
+a<br>
+ snake gives you."</p>
+
+<h2><br>
+ CHAPTER IV</h2>
+
+<h3>SPEAK WELL OF THE DEAD</h3>
+
+<p><br>
+ Meanwhile Pokomy and Mrs. Klingmayer had reached the police
+station<br>
+ and were going upstairs to the rooms of the commissioner on
+service<br>
+ for the day. Like all people of her class, Mrs. Klingmayer
+stood<br>
+ in great awe and terror of anything connected with the police
+or<br>
+ the law generally. She crept slowly and tremblingly up the
+stairs<br>
+ behind the head bookkeeper and was very glad when she was left
+alone<br>
+ for a few minutes while Pokorny went in to see the
+commissioner.<br>
+ But as soon as his errand was known, both the bookkeeper and
+his<br>
+ companion were led into the office of Head Commissioner Dr.
+von<br>
+ Riedau, who had charge of the Hietzing murder case.</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ When Dr. von Riedau heard the reason of their coming, his
+interest<br>
+ was immediately aroused, and he pulled a chair to his side for
+the<br>
+ little thin man with whom he had been talking when the two
+strangers<br>
+ were ushered in.</p>
+
+<p>"Then you believe you could identify the murdered man?" asked
+the<br>
+ commissioner.</p>
+
+<p>"From the general description and the initials on his linen,
+I<br>
+ believe it must be Leopold Winkler," answered Pokorny. "Mrs.<br>
+ Klingmayer has not seen him since Monday morning, nor has she
+had<br>
+ any message from him. He left the office Monday afternoon at
+6<br>
+ o'clock and that was the last time that we saw him. The only
+thing<br>
+ that makes me doubt his identity is that the paper reports
+that<br>
+ three hundred gulden were found in his pocket. Winkler never
+seemed<br>
+ to have money, and I do not understand how he should have been
+in<br>
+ possession of such a sum."</p>
+
+<p>"The money was found in the dead man's pockets," said the<br>
+ commissioner. "And yet it may be Winkler, the man you know.<br>
+ Muller, will you order a cab, please?"</p>
+
+<p>I have a cab waiting for me. But it only holds two,"
+volunteered<br>
+ Pokorny.</p>
+
+<p>"That doesn't matter, I'll sit on the box," answered the
+man<br>
+ addressed as Muller.</p>
+
+<p>"You are going with us?" asked Pokorny.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, he will accompany you," replied the commissioner. "This
+is<br>
+ detective Muller, sir. By a mere chance, he happened to be on
+hand<br>
+ to take charge of this case and he will remain in charge,
+although<br>
+ it may be wasting his talents which we need for more
+difficult<br>
+ problems. If you or any one else have anything to tell us, it
+must<br>
+ be told only to me or to Muller. And before you leave to look
+at<br>
+ the body, I would like to know whether the dead man owned a
+watch,<br>
+ or rather whether he had it with him on the day of the
+murder."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir; he did have a watch, a gold watch," answered
+Mrs.<br>
+ Klingmayer.</p>
+
+<p>Riedau looked at the bookkeeper, who nodded and said: "Yes,
+sir;<br>
+ Winkler had a watch, a gold watch with a double case. It was
+a<br>
+ large watch, very thick. I happen to have noticed it by
+chance<br>
+ and also I happen to know that he had not had the watch for
+very<br>
+ long."</p>
+
+<p>"Can you tell us anything more about the watch?" asked the<br>
+ commissioner of the landlady.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir; there was engraving on the outside cover, initials,
+and<br>
+ a crown on the other side."</p>
+
+<p>"What were the initials?"</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know that, sir; at least I'm not sure about it.
+There<br>
+ were so many twists and curves to them that I couldn't make
+them<br>
+ out. I think one of them was a W though, sir."</p>
+
+<p>"The other was probably an L then."</p>
+
+<p>"That might be, sir."</p>
+
+<p>"The younger clerks in the office may be able to tell
+something more<br>
+ about the watch," said Pokorny, "for they were quite interested
+in<br>
+ it for a while. It was a handsome watch and they were envious
+of<br>
+ Winkler's possession of it. But he was so tactless in his
+boasting<br>
+ about it that they paid no further attention to him after the
+first<br>
+ excitement."</p>
+
+<p>"You say he didn't have the watch long?"</p>
+
+<p>"Since spring I think, sir."</p>
+
+<p>"He brought it home on the 19th of March," interrupted
+Mrs.<br>
+ Klingmayer. "I remember the day because it was my birthday.
+I<br>
+ pretended that he had brought it home to me for a present."</p>
+
+<p>"Was he in the habit of making you presents?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, no, sir; he was very close with his money, sir.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, perhaps he didn't have much money to be generous with.
+Now<br>
+ tell me about his watch chain. I suppose he had a watch
+chain?"</p>
+
+<p>Both the bookkeeper and the landlady nodded and the latter
+exclaimed:<br>
+ "Oh, yes, sir; I could recognise it in a minute."</p>
+
+<p>"How?"</p>
+
+<p>"It was broken once and Mr. Winkler mended it himself. I lent
+him<br>
+ my pliers and he bent the two links together with them. It
+didn't<br>
+ look very nice after that, but it was strong again. You could
+see<br>
+ the mark of the pliers easily."</p>
+
+<p>"Why didn't he take the chain to the jeweler's to be fixed?"
+asked<br>
+ the commissioner.</p>
+
+<p>The woman smiled. "It wouldn't have been worth the money, sir;
+the<br>
+ chain wasn't real gold."</p>
+
+<p>"But the watch was real, wasn't it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes, sir; that was real gold. I pawned it once for Mr.
+Winkler<br>
+ and they gave me 24 gulden for it."</p>
+
+<p>"One question more, did he have a purse? And did he have it
+with<br>
+ him on the day of the murder?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir; he had a purse, and he must have taken it with
+him<br>
+ because he didn't leave it in his room."</p>
+
+<p>"What sort of a purse was it?"</p>
+
+<p>"A brown leather purse, sir."</p>
+
+<p>"Was it a new one?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, no, sir; it was well worn."</p>
+
+<p>"How big was it? About like mine?" Riedau took out his own<br>
+ pocketbook.</p>
+
+<p>"No, sir; it was a little smaller. It had three pockets in
+it.<br>
+ I mended it for him once, so I know it well. I didn't have
+any<br>
+ brown thread so I mended it with yellow."</p>
+
+<p>Dr. von Riedau nodded to Muller. The latter had been sitting
+at a<br>
+ little side-table writing down the questions and answers.
+When<br>
+ Riedau saw this he did not send for a clerk to do the work,
+for<br>
+ Muller preferred to attend to such matters himself as much
+as<br>
+ possible. The facts gained in the examination were impressed
+upon<br>
+ his mind while he was writing them, and he did not have to
+wade<br>
+ through pages of manuscript to get at what he needed. Now he
+handed<br>
+ his superior officer the paper.</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you," said Riedau, "I'll send it out to the other
+police<br>
+ stations. I will attend to this myself. You go on with these<br>
+ people to see. whether they can identify the corpse."</p>
+
+<p>Fifteen minutes later the three stood before the body in the
+morgue<br>
+ and both the bookkeeper and his companion identified the dead
+man<br>
+ positively as Leopold Winkler.</p>
+
+<p>When the identification was made, a notice was sent out to
+all<br>
+ Austrian police stations and to all pawnshops with an exact<br>
+ description of the stolen watch and purse.</p>
+
+<p>Muller led his companions back to the commissioner's office
+and they<br>
+ made their report to Dr. von Riedau. Upon being questioned
+further,<br>
+ Pokorny stated: "I had very little to do with Winkler. We met
+only<br>
+ when he had a report to make to me or to show me his books, and
+we<br>
+ never met outside the office. The clerks who worked in the
+same<br>
+ room with him, may know him better.. I know only that he was a
+very<br>
+ reserved man and very little liked."</p>
+
+<p>"Then I do not need to detain you any longer, nor to trouble
+you<br>
+ further in this affair. I thank you for coming to us so
+promptly.<br>
+ It has been of great assistance."</p>
+
+<p>The bookkeeper left the station, but Mrs. Klingmayer, who was
+now<br>
+ quite reassured as to the harmlessness of the police, was asked
+to<br>
+ remain and to tell what she knew of the private life of the
+murdered<br>
+ man. Her answers to the various questions put to her proved
+that<br>
+ she knew very little about her tenant. But this much was
+learned<br>
+ from her: that he was very close with his money at times, but
+that<br>
+ again at other times he seemed to have all he wanted to spend.
+At<br>
+ such times he paid all his debts, and when he stayed home for
+supper,<br>
+ he would send her out for all sorts of expensive delicacies.
+These<br>
+ extravagant days seemed to have nothing whatever to do with
+Winkler's<br>
+ business pay day, but came at odd times.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Klingmayer remembered two separate times when he had
+received<br>
+ a postal money order. But she did not know from whom the
+letters<br>
+ came, nor even whether they were sent from the city or from
+some<br>
+ other town. Winkler received other letters now and then, but
+his<br>
+ landlady was not of the prying kind, and she had paid very
+little<br>
+ attention to them.</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ He seemed to have few friends or even acquaintances. She did
+not<br>
+ know of any love affair, at least of nothing "regular." He
+had<br>
+ remained away over night two or three times during the year
+that<br>
+ he had been her tenant. This was about all that Mrs.
+Klingmayer<br>
+ could say, and she returned to her home in a cab furnished her
+by<br>
+ the kind commissioner.</p>
+
+<p>About two hours later, a police attendant announced that a
+gentleman<br>
+ would like to see Dr. von Riedan on business concerning the
+murder in<br>
+ Hietzing. "Friedrich Bormann" was the name on the card.</p>
+
+<p>"Ask him to step in here," said the commissioner. "And please
+ask<br>
+ Mr. Muller to join us."</p>
+
+<p>The good-looking young clerk entered the office bashfully and
+Muller<br>
+ slipped in behind him, seating himself inconspicuously by the
+door.<br>
+ At a sign from the commissioner the visitor began. "I am an<br>
+ employee of Braun &amp; Co. I have the desk next to Leopold
+Winkler,<br>
+ during the year that he has been with us - the year and a
+quarter to<br>
+ be exact -"</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, then you know him rather well?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why, yes. At least we were together all day, although I never
+met<br>
+ him outside the office."</p>
+
+<p>"Then you cannot tell us much about his private life?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, sir, but there was something happened on Monday, and in
+talking<br>
+ it over with Mr. Braun, he suggested that I should come to you
+and<br>
+ tell you about it. It wasn't really very important, and it
+doesn't<br>
+ seem as if it could have anything to do with this murder and
+robbery;<br>
+ still it may be of some use."</p>
+
+<p>"Everything that would throw light on the dead man's life
+could be<br>
+ of use," said Dr. von Riedau. "Please tell us what it is you
+know."</p>
+
+<p>Fritz Bormann began: "Winkler came to the office as usual on
+Monday<br>
+ morning and worked steadily at his desk. But I happened to
+notice<br>
+ that he spoiled several letters and had to rewrite them,
+which<br>
+ showed me that his thoughts were not on his work, a frequent<br>
+ occurrence with him. However, everything went along as usual
+until<br>
+ 11 o'clock. Then Winkler became very uneasy. He looked
+constantly<br>
+ toward the door, compared his watch with the office clock,
+and<br>
+ sprang up impatiently as the special letter carrier, who
+usually<br>
+ comes about 11 with money orders, finally appeared."</p>
+
+<p>"Then he was expecting money you think?"</p>
+
+<p>"It must have been so. For as the letter carrier passed him,
+he<br>
+ called out: 'Haven't you anything for me?' and as the man shook
+his<br>
+ head Winkler seemed greatly disappointed and depressed. Before
+he<br>
+ left to go to lunch, he wrote a hasty letter, which he put in
+his<br>
+ pocket.</p>
+
+<p>"He came in half an hour later than the rest of us. He had
+often<br>
+ been reprimanded for his lack of punctuality, but it seemed to
+do<br>
+ no good. He was almost always late. Monday was no exception,<br>
+ although he was later than usual that day."</p>
+
+<p>"And what sort of a mood was he in when he came back?"</p>
+
+<p>"He was irritable and depressed. He seemed to be awaiting a
+message<br>
+ which did not come. His excitement hindered him from working,
+he<br>
+ scarcely did anything the entire afternoon. Finally at five
+o'clock<br>
+ a messenger boy came with a letter for him. I saw that
+Winkler<br>
+ turned pale as he took the note in his hand. It seemed to be
+only<br>
+ a few words written hastily on a card, thrust into an
+envelope.<br>
+ Winkler's teeth were set as he opened the letter. The messenger
+had<br>
+ already gone away."</p>
+
+<p>"Did you notice his number?" asked Dr. von Riedau.</p>
+
+<p>"No, I scarcely noticed the man at all. I was looking at
+Winkler,<br>
+ whose behaviour was so peculiar. When he read the card his
+face<br>
+ brightened. He read it through once more, then he tore both
+card<br>
+ and envelope into little bits and threw the pieces out of the
+open<br>
+ window.</p>
+
+<p>"Then he evidently did not want anybody to see the contents of
+this<br>
+ note," said a voice from the corner of the room.</p>
+
+<p>Fritz Bormann looked around astonished and rather doubtful at
+the<br>
+ little man who had risen from his chair and now came
+forward.<br>
+ Without waiting for an answer from the clerk, the other
+continued:<br>
+ "Did Winkler have money sent him frequently?"</p>
+
+<p>Bormann looked inquiringly at the commissioner, who replied
+with a<br>
+ smile: "You may answer. Answer anything that Mr. Muller has to
+ask<br>
+ of you, as he is in charge of this case."</p>
+
+<p>"As far as I can remember, it happened three times," was
+Bormann's<br>
+ answer.</p>
+
+<p>"How close together?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why - about once in every three or four months, I think."</p>
+
+<p>"That looks almost like a regular income," exclaimed Riedau.
+His<br>
+ eyes met Muller's, which were lit up in sudden fire. "Well,
+what<br>
+ are you thinking of?" asked the commissioner.</p>
+
+<p>"A woman," answered Muller; and continued more as if
+thinking<br>
+ aloud than as if addressing the others: "Winkler was a
+good-looking<br>
+ man. Might he not have had a rich love somewhere? Might not
+the<br>
+ money have come from her, the money that was found in his
+pocket?"<br>
+ Muller's voice trailed off into indistinctness at the last
+words,<br>
+ and the fire died out of his eyes. Then he laughed aloud.</p>
+
+<p>The commissioner smiled also, a good-natured smile, such as
+one<br>
+ would give to a child who has been over-eager. "It doesn't
+matter<br>
+ to us where the money came from. All that matters here is
+where<br>
+ the bullet came from - the bullet which prevented his enjoying
+this<br>
+ money. And it is of more interest to us to find out who robbed
+him<br>
+ of his life and his property, rather than the source from which
+this<br>
+ property came.</p>
+
+<p>The commissioner's tone was friendly, but Muller's face
+flushed red,<br>
+ and his, head dropped. Riedau turned to Bormann and continued:
+"And<br>
+ because it is of no interest to us where his money came from -
+for<br>
+ it can have nothing whatever to do with his murder and the
+subsequent<br>
+ robbery - therefore what you noticed of his behaviour cannot be
+of<br>
+ any importance or bearing in the case in any way. Unless,
+indeed,<br>
+ you should find out anything more. But we appreciate the<br>
+ thoughtfulness of yourself and your employer and your readiness
+to<br>
+ help us."</p>
+
+<p>Bormann rose to leave, but the commissioner put out a hand to
+stop<br>
+ him. "A few moments more, please; you may know of something
+else<br>
+ that will be of assistance to us. We have heard that Winkler<br>
+ boasted of his belongings-did he talk about his private affairs
+in<br>
+ any way?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, sir, I do not think he did."</p>
+
+<p>"You say that he destroyed the note at once, evidently
+realising<br>
+ that no one must see it - this note may have been a promise for
+the<br>
+ money which had not yet come. Did he, however, tell any one
+later<br>
+ that he expected a certain sum? Do you think he would have
+been<br>
+ likely to tell any one?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, I do not think that he would tell any one. He never
+mentioned<br>
+ to any of us that he had received money, or even that he
+expected<br>
+ to receive it. None of us knew what outside resources he might
+have,<br>
+ or whence they came. If it had not been that the money was paid
+him<br>
+ by the carrier in the office two or three times - so, that we
+could<br>
+ see it - we would none of us have known of this income, except
+for<br>
+ the fact that he was freer in spending after the money came.
+He<br>
+ would dine at expensive restaurants, and this fact he would
+mention<br>
+ to us, whereas at other times he would go to the cheap
+cafe."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you know anything about the people he was acquainted
+with<br>
+ outside the office?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, sir. I seldom met him outside of the office. One evening
+it<br>
+ did happen that I saw him at Ronacher's. He was there with a<br>
+ lady - that is, a so-called 'lady '-and it must have been one
+of<br>
+ the times that he had money, for they were enjoying an
+expensive<br>
+ supper. At other times, some of the other clerks met him at
+various<br>
+ resorts, always with the same sort of woman. But not always
+with<br>
+ the same woman, for they were different in appearance."</p>
+
+<p>"He was never seen anywhere with other men?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, sir; at least not by any of us."</p>
+
+<p>"He was not liked in the office?"</p>
+
+<p>"No." Bormann's answer was sharp.</p>
+
+<p>"For what reason?"</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know; we just didn't like him. We had very little to
+do<br>
+ with him at first because of this, and soon we noticed that
+he<br>
+ seemed just as anxious to avoid us as we were to avoid him."</p>
+
+<p>The commissioner rose and Bormann followed his example. "I am
+very<br>
+ sorry, sir, if I have taken up your time to no purpose," said
+the<br>
+ latter modestly, as he took up his hat.</p>
+
+<p>"I am not so sure that what you have said may not be of great
+value<br>
+ to us," said a voice behind them. Muller stood there, looking
+at<br>
+ Riedau with a glance almost of defiance. His eyes were again
+lit<br>
+ up with the strange fire that shone in them when he was on the
+trail.<br>
+ The commissioner shrugged his shoulders, bowed to the
+departing<br>
+ visitor, and then turned without an answer to some documents on
+his<br>
+ desk. There was silence in the room for a few moments. Finally
+a<br>
+ gentle voice came from Muller's corner again: "Dr. von
+Riedau?"</p>
+
+<p>The commissioner raised his head and looked around. "Oh, are
+you<br>
+ still there?" he asked with a drawl.</p>
+
+<p>Muller knew what this drawl meant. It was the manner adopted
+by<br>
+ the amiable commissioner when he was in a mood which was not
+amiable.<br>
+ And Muller knew also the cause of the mood. It was his own
+last<br>
+ remark, the words he addressed to Bormann. Muller himself
+recognised<br>
+ the fact that this remark was out of place, that it was almost
+an<br>
+ impertinence, because it was in direct contradiction to a
+statement<br>
+ made a few moments before by his superior officer. Also he
+realised<br>
+ that his remark had been quite unnecessary, because it was a
+matter<br>
+ of indifference to the young man, who was only obeying his
+employer's<br>
+ orders in reporting what he had seen, whether his report was
+of<br>
+ value or not. Muller had simply uttered aloud the thought that
+came<br>
+ into his mind, a habit of his which years of official training
+had<br>
+ not yet succeeded in breaking. It was annoying to himself
+sometimes,<br>
+ for these half-formed thoughts were mere instinct - they were
+the<br>
+ workings of his own genius that made him catch a suspicion of
+the<br>
+ truth long before his conscious mind could reason it out or<br>
+ appreciate its value. But that sort of thing was not popular
+in<br>
+ official police life.</p>
+
+<p>"Well," asked the commissioner, as Muller did not continue,
+"your<br>
+ tongue is not usually so slow - as you have proved just a
+few<br>
+ moments back - what were you going to say now?"</p>
+
+<p>"I was about to ask your pardon for my interruption. It
+was<br>
+ unnecessary, I should not have said it."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I realise that you know better yourself," said Riedau,
+now<br>
+ quite friendly again, "and now what else have you to say? Do
+you<br>
+ really think that what the young man has just told us is of
+any<br>
+ value at all for this case?"</p>
+
+<p>"It seems to me as if it might be of value to us."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, it seems to you, eh? Your imagination is working
+overtime<br>
+ again, Muller," said the commissioner with a laugh. But the
+laugh<br>
+ turned to seriousness as he realised how many times Muller's<br>
+ imagination had helped the clumsy official mind to its
+proudest<br>
+ triumphs. The commissioner was an intelligent man, as far as
+his<br>
+ lights went, and he was a good-hearted man. He rose from his
+chair<br>
+ and walked over to where the detective stood. "You needn't look
+so<br>
+ embarrassed, Muller," he said. "There is no cause for you to
+feel<br>
+ bad about it. And - I am quite willing to admit that my
+remark<br>
+ just now was unnecessary. You may give your imagination full
+rein,<br>
+ we can trust to your intelligence and your devotion to duty to
+keep<br>
+ it from unnecessary flights. So curbed, I know it will be of
+as<br>
+ much assistance to us this time as it always has been."</p>
+
+<br>
+Muller's quiet face lit up, and his eyes shone in a happiness
+that<br>
+made him appear ten years younger. That was one of the
+strange<br>
+things about Joseph Muller. This genius in his profession was
+in<br>
+all other ways a man of such simplicity of heart and bearing,
+that<br>
+the slightest word of approval from one of the officials for
+whom<br>
+he worked could make him as happy as praise from the teacher
+will<br>
+make a schoolboy. The moments when he was in command of any<br>
+difficult case, when these same superiors would wait for a word
+from<br>
+him, when high officials would take his orders or would be
+obliged<br>
+to acknowledge that without him they were helpless, these
+moments<br>
+were forgotten as soon as the problem was solved and Muller
+became<br>
+again the simple subordinate and the obscure member of the
+Imperial<br>
+police force.
+
+<p>When Muller left the commissioner's room and walked through
+the<br>
+ outer office, one of the clerks looked after him and whispered
+to<br>
+ his companion: "Do you think he's found the Hietzing murderer
+yet?"<br>
+ The other answered: "I don't think so, but he looks as if he
+had<br>
+ found a clue. He'll find him sooner or later. He always
+does."</p>
+
+<p>Muller did not hear these words, although they also would
+have<br>
+ pleased him. He walked slowly down the stairs murmuring to
+himself:<br>
+ "I think I was right just the same. We are following a false
+trail."</p>
+
+<h2><br>
+ CHAPTER V</h2>
+
+<h3>BY A THREAD</h3>
+
+<p><br>
+ It was on Monday, the 27th of September, that Leopold Winkler
+was<br>
+ murdered and robbed, and early on Tuesday, the 28th, his body
+was<br>
+ found. That day the evening papers printed the report of the
+murder<br>
+ and the description of the dead man, and on Wednesday, the
+29th,<br>
+ Mrs. Klingmayer read the news and went to see Winkler's
+employer.<br>
+ By noon of that day the body was identified and a description
+of<br>
+ the stolen purse and watch telegraphed to police headquarters
+in<br>
+ various cities. A few hours later, these police stations had
+sent<br>
+ out notices by messenger to all pawnshops and dealers in<br>
+ second-hand clothing, and now the machinery of the law sat
+waiting<br>
+ for some news of an attempt on the part of the
+robber-and-murderer<br>
+ to get rid of his plunder.</p>
+
+<p>On this same Wednesday, about the twilight hour, David
+Goldstamm,<br>
+ dealer in second-hand clothing, stood before the door of his
+shop<br>
+ in a side street of the old Hungarian city of Pressburg and
+watched<br>
+ his assistant take down the clothes which were hanging outside
+and<br>
+ carry them into the store. The old man's eyes glanced
+carelessly<br>
+ up and down the street and caught sight of a man who turned
+the<br>
+ corner and came hurrying towards him. This man was a very<br>
+ seedy-looking individual. An old faded overcoat hung about
+his<br>
+ thin figure, and a torn and dusty hat fell over his left eye.
+He<br>
+ seemed also to be much the worse for liquor and very wobbly on
+his<br>
+ feet. And yet he seemed anxious to hurry onward in spite of
+the<br>
+ unevenness of his walk.</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ Then he slowed up suddenly, glanced across the street to
+Goldstamm's<br>
+ store, and crossed over.</p>
+
+<p>"Have you any boots for me?" he asked, sticking out his right
+foot<br>
+ that the dealer might see whether he had anything the requisite
+size.</p>
+
+<p>"I think there's something there," answered the old man in
+his<br>
+ usual businesslike tone, leading the way into the store.</p>
+
+<p>The stranger followed. Goldstamm lit the one light in the
+little<br>
+ place and groped about in an untidy heap of shoes of all kinds
+and<br>
+ sizes until he found several pairs that he thought might fit.
+These<br>
+ he brought out and put them in front of his customer. But in
+spite<br>
+ of his bleary eyes, the man caught sight of some patches on
+the<br>
+ uppers of one pair, and pushed them away from him.</p>
+
+<p>"Give me something better than that. I can pay for it. I
+don't<br>
+ have to wear patched shoes," he grunted.</p>
+
+<p>Goldstamm didn't like the looks of the man, but he felt that
+he<br>
+ had better be careful and not make him angry. "Have patience,
+sir,<br>
+ I'll find you something better," he said gently, tossing the
+heap<br>
+ about again, but now keeping his face turned towards his
+customer.</p>
+
+<p>"I want a coat also and a warm pair of trousers," said the
+stranger<br>
+ in a rough voice. He bent down to loosen the shabby boot from
+his<br>
+ right foot, and as he did so something fell out of the pocket
+of<br>
+ his coat. An unconscious motion of his own raised foot
+struck<br>
+ this small object and tossed it into the middle of the heap
+of<br>
+ shoes close by Goldstamm's hand. The old man reached out after
+it<br>
+ and caught it. It was just an ordinary brown leather
+pocketbook,<br>
+ of medium size, old and shabby, like a thousand others. But
+the<br>
+ eyes of the little old man widened as if in terror, his face
+turned<br>
+ pale and his hands trembled. For he had seen, hanging from
+one<br>
+ side of this worn brown leather pocketbook, the end of a
+yellow<br>
+ thread, the loosened end of the thread with which one side of
+the<br>
+ purse was mended. The thread told David Goldstamm who it was
+that<br>
+ had come into his shop.</p>
+
+<p>He regained his control with a desperate effort of the will.
+It<br>
+ took him but a few seconds to do so, and, thanks to his
+partial<br>
+ intoxication, the customer had not noticed the shopkeeper's
+start<br>
+ of alarm. But he appeared anxious and impatient to regain<br>
+ possession of his purse.</p>
+
+<p>"Haven't you found it yet?" he exclaimed.</p>
+
+<p>Goldstamm hastened to give it back. The tramp put the purse in
+his<br>
+ pocket with a sigh of relief. Goldstamm had regained his calm
+and<br>
+ his mind was working eagerly. He put several pairs of shoes
+before<br>
+ his customer, with the remark: "You must try them on. We'll
+find<br>
+ something to suit you. And meanwhile I will bring in several<br>
+ pairs of trousers from those outside. I have some fine coats
+to<br>
+ show you too."</p>
+
+<p>Goldstamm went out to the door, almost colliding there with
+his<br>
+ assistant who was coming in with his arm full of garments. The
+old<br>
+ man motioned to the boy, who retreated until they were both
+hidden<br>
+ from the view of the man within the store.</p>
+
+<p>"Give me those blue trousers there," said Goldstamm in a loud
+voice.<br>
+ Then in a whisper he said to the boy: "Run to the police
+station.<br>
+ The man with the watch and the purse is in there."</p>
+
+<p>The boy understood and set off at once at a fast pace, while
+the<br>
+ old man returned to his store with a heavy heart. He
+wondered<br>
+ whether he would be able to keep the murderer there until
+the<br>
+ police could come. And he also wondered what it might cost
+him,<br>
+ an old and feeble man, who would be as a weak reed in the hands
+of<br>
+ the strong tramp in there. But he knew it was his duty to do<br>
+ whatever he could to help in the arrest of one who had just
+taken<br>
+ the life of a fellow creature. The realisation of this gave
+the<br>
+ old man strength and calmness.</p>
+
+<p>"A nice sort of an eye for size you have," cried the tramp as
+the<br>
+ old man came up to him. "I suppose you've brought me in a
+boy's<br>
+ suit? What do you take me for? Any girl could go to a ball in
+the<br>
+ shoes you brought me to try on here."</p>
+
+<p>"Are they so much too small?" asked the dealer in an innocent
+tone.<br>
+ "Well, there's plenty more there. And perhaps you had better
+be<br>
+ trying on this suit behind the curtain here while I'm hunting up
+the<br>
+ shoes."</p>
+
+<p>This suggestion seemed to please the stranger, as he was
+evidently<br>
+ in a hurry. He passed in behind the curtain and began to
+undress.<br>
+ Goldstamm's keen eyes watched him through a crack. There was
+not<br>
+ much to be seen except that the tramp seemed anxious to keep
+his<br>
+ overcoat within reach of his hand. He had carefully put the
+purse<br>
+ in one of its<br>
+ pockets.</p>
+
+<p>We'll get the things all together pretty soon," said the
+dealer.<br>
+ "I've found a pair of boots here, fine boots of good quality,
+and<br>
+ sure to fit."</p>
+
+<p>"Stop your talk," growled the other, "and come here and help
+me<br>
+ so that I can get away."</p>
+
+<p>Goldstamm came forward, and though his heart was very heavy
+within<br>
+ him, he aided this man, this man about whom so many hundreds
+were<br>
+ now thinking in terror, as calmly as he had aided his other
+poor<br>
+ but honest customers.</p>
+
+<p>With hands that did not tremble, the dealer busied himself
+about<br>
+ his customer, listening all the while to sounds in the street
+in<br>
+ the hope that his tete-e-tete with the murderer would soon be
+over.<br>
+ But in spite of all his natural anxiety, the old man's sharp
+eyes<br>
+ took cognizance of various things, one of which was that the
+man<br>
+ whom he was helping to dress in his new clothes did not have
+the<br>
+ watch which was described in the police notice. This fact,
+however,<br>
+ did not make the old man's heart any lighter, for the purse
+mended<br>
+ with yellow thread was too clearly the one stolen from the
+murdered<br>
+ man found in the quiet street in Hietzing.</p>
+
+<p>"What's the matter with you, you're so slow? I can get
+along<br>
+ better myself," growled the tramp, pushing the old man away
+from<br>
+ him. Goldstamm had really begun to tremble now in spite of
+his<br>
+ control, in the fear that the man would get away from him before
+the<br>
+ police came.</p>
+
+<p>The tramp was already dressed in the new suit, into a pocket
+of<br>
+ which he put the old purse.</p>
+
+<p>"There, now the boots and then we're finished," said the
+dealer<br>
+ with an attempt at a smile. In his heart he prayed that the
+pair<br>
+ he now held in his hand might not fit, that he might gain a
+few<br>
+ minutes more. But the shoes did fit. A little pushing and
+stamping<br>
+ and the man was ready to leave the store. He was evidently in
+a<br>
+ hurry, for he paid what was asked without any attempt to
+bargain.<br>
+ Had Goldstamm not known whom he had before him now, he would
+have<br>
+ been very much astonished at this, and might perhaps have been
+sorry<br>
+ that he had not named a higher sum. But under the circumstances
+he<br>
+ understood only too well the man's desire to get away, and
+would<br>
+ much rather have had some talk as to the payment, anything
+that<br>
+ would keep his customer a little longer in his store.</p>
+
+<p>"There, now we're ready. I'll pack up your old things for you.
+Or<br>
+ perhaps we can make a deal for them. I pay the highest prices
+in<br>
+ the city," said Goldstamm, with an apparent eagerness which he
+hoped<br>
+ would deceive the customer.</p>
+
+<p>But the man had already turned towards the door, and called
+hack<br>
+ over his shoulder: "You can keep the old things, I don't want
+them."</p>
+
+<p>As he spoke he opened the door of the store and stood face to
+face<br>
+ with a policeman holding a revolver. He turned, with a curse,
+back<br>
+ into the room, but the dealer was nowhere to be seen. David<br>
+ Goldstamm had done his duty to the public, in spite of his
+fear.<br>
+ Now, seeing that the police had arrived, he could think of his
+duty<br>
+ to his family. This duty was plainly to save his own life,
+and<br>
+ when the tramp turned again to look for him, he had disappeared
+out<br>
+ of the back door.</p>
+
+<p>"Not a move or I will shoot," cried the policeman, and now
+two<br>
+ others appeared behind him, and came into the store. But the<br>
+ tramp made no attempt to escape. He stood pale and trembling
+while<br>
+ they put the handcuffs on him, and let them take him away
+without<br>
+ any resistance. He was put on the evening express for Vienna,
+and<br>
+ taken to Police Headquarters in that city. He made no protest
+nor<br>
+ any attempt to escape, but he refused to utter a word on the
+entire<br>
+ journey.</p>
+
+<h2><br>
+ CHAPTER VI</h2>
+
+<h3>ALMOST CONVICTED</h3>
+
+<p><br>
+ The evening was already far gone when Muller entered Riedau's
+office.</p>
+
+<p>"You're in time, the man isn't here yet. The train is
+evidently<br>
+ late," said the commissioner. "We're working this case off<br>
+ quickly. We will have the murderer here in half an hour at
+the<br>
+ latest. He did not have much time to enjoy the stolen property.
+He<br>
+ was here in Vienna this morning, and was arrested in Pressburg
+this<br>
+ afternoon. Here is the telegram, read it."</p>
+
+<p>Dr. von Riedau handed Muller the message. The commissioner
+was<br>
+ evidently pleased and excited. The telegram read as follows:
+"Man<br>
+ arrested here in possession of described purse containing four
+ten<br>
+ gulden notes and four guldens in silver. Arrested in store
+of<br>
+ second-hand clothes dealer Goldstamm. Will arrive this evening
+in<br>
+ Vienna under guard."</p>
+
+<p>The message was signed by the Chief of the Pressburg
+police.</p>
+
+<p>Muller laid the paper on the desk without a word. There was a
+watch<br>
+ on this desk already; it was a heavy gold watch, unusually
+thick,<br>
+ with the initials L. W. on the cover. Just as Muller laid down
+the<br>
+ telegram, a door outside was opened and the commissioner covered
+the<br>
+ watch hastily. There was a loud knock at his own door and an<br>
+ attendant entered to announce that the party from Pressburg
+had<br>
+ arrived He was followed by one of the Pressburg police force,
+who<br>
+ brought the official report.</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ "Did you have any difficulty with him?" asked the
+commissioner.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, no, sir; it was a very easy job. He made no resistance at
+all,<br>
+ and he seems to be quite sober now. But he hasn't said a word
+since<br>
+ we arrested him."</p>
+
+<p>Then followed the detailed report of the arrest, and the
+delivery of<br>
+ the described pocketbook to the commissioner.</p>
+
+<p>"Is that all?" asked Dr. von Riedau.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir."</p>
+
+<p>"Then you may go home now, we will take charge of the
+man."</p>
+
+<p>The policeman bowed and left the room. A few moments later
+the<br>
+ tramp was brought in, guarded by two armed roundsmen. His
+guards<br>
+ remained at the door, while the prisoner himself walked forward
+to<br>
+ the middle of the room. Commissioner von Riedau sat at his
+desk,<br>
+ his clerk beside him ready to take down the evidence. Muller
+sat<br>
+ near a window with a paper on his lap, looking the least
+interested<br>
+ of anybody in the proceedings.</p>
+
+<p>For a moment there was complete silence in the room, which
+was<br>
+ broken in a rather unusual manner. A deep voice, more like a
+growl,<br>
+ although it had a queer strain of comic good-nature in it, began
+the<br>
+ proceedings with the remark: "Well now, say, what do you want of
+me,<br>
+ anyway?"</p>
+
+<p>The commissioner looked at the man in astonishment, then
+turned<br>
+ aside that the prisoner might not notice his smile. But he
+might<br>
+ have spared himself the trouble, for Muller, the clerk, and the
+two<br>
+ policemen at the door were all on a broad grin.</p>
+
+<p>Then the commissioner pulled himself together again, and began
+with<br>
+ his usual official gravity: "It is I who ask questions here. Is
+it<br>
+ possible that you do not know this? You look to me as if you
+had<br>
+ had experience in police courts before." The commissioner gazed
+at<br>
+ the prisoner with eyes that were not altogether friendly. The
+tramp<br>
+ seemed to feel this, and his own eyes dropped, while the
+good-natured<br>
+ impertinence in his bearing disappeared. It was evidently the
+last<br>
+ remains of his intoxication. He was now quite sober.</p>
+
+<p>"What is your name?" asked the commissioner.</p>
+
+<p>"Johann Knoll."</p>
+
+<p>"Where were you born?"</p>
+
+<p>"Near Brunn."</p>
+
+<p>"Your age?"</p>
+
+<p>"I'm - I'll be forty next Christmas."</p>
+
+<p>"Your religion?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, you can see I'm no Jew, can't you?"</p>
+
+<p>"You will please answer my questions in a proper manner.
+This<br>
+ impertinence will not make things easier for you."</p>
+
+<p>"All right, sir," said the tramp humbly. "I am a
+Catholic."</p>
+
+<p>"You have been in prison before?" This was scarcely a
+question.</p>
+
+<p>"No, sir," said Knoll firmly.</p>
+
+<p>"What is your business?"</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know what to say, sir," answered Knoll, shrugging
+his<br>
+ shoulders. "I've done a lot of things in my life. I'm a
+cattle<br>
+ drover and a lumber man, and I -"</p>
+
+<p>"Did you learn any trade?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, sir, I never learned anything."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you mean to tell me that without having learned any trade
+you've<br>
+ gotten through life thus far honestly?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I've worked hard enough - I've worked good and hard
+sometimes."</p>
+
+<p>"The last few days particularly, eh?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why, no, sir, not these last days - I was drover on a
+transport of<br>
+ pigs; we brought 'em down from Hungary, 200 of 'em, to the
+slaughter<br>
+ house here."</p>
+
+<p>"When was that?"</p>
+
+<p>"That was - that was Monday."</p>
+
+<p>"This last Monday?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir.</p>
+
+<p>"And then you went to Hietzing?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir, that's right."</p>
+
+<p>"Why did you go to Hietzing?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why, see here, sir, if I had gone to Ottakring, then I
+suppose you<br>
+ would have asked why did I go to Ottakring. I just went to
+Hietzing.<br>
+ A fellow has to go somewhere. You don't stay in the same spot
+all<br>
+ the time, do you?"</p>
+
+<p>Again the commissioner turned his head and another smile
+went<br>
+ through the room. This Hietzing murderer had a sense of
+humour.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, then, we'll go to Hietzing again, in our minds at
+least,"<br>
+ said the commissioner, turning back to Knoll when he had
+controlled<br>
+ his merriment. "You went there on Monday, then - and the day
+was<br>
+ coming to an end. What did you do when you reached
+Hietzing?"</p>
+
+<p>"I looked about for a place to sleep."</p>
+
+<p>"Where did you look for a place to sleep?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why, in Hietzing."</p>
+
+<p>"That is not definite enough."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, in a garden."</p>
+
+<p>"You were trespassing, you mean?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why, yes, sir. There wasn't anybody that seemed to want to
+invite<br>
+ me to dinner or to give me a place to sleep. I just had to
+look<br>
+ out for myself."</p>
+
+<p>"You evidently know how to look out for yourself at the cost
+of<br>
+ others, a heavy cost." The commissioner's easy tone had changed
+to<br>
+ sternness. Knoll felt this, and a sharp gleam shot out from
+his<br>
+ dull little eyes, while the tone of his voice was gruff and<br>
+ impertinent again as he asked: "What do you mean by that?"</p>
+
+<p>"You know well enough. You had better not waste any more time,
+but<br>
+ tell us at once how you came into possession of this purse."</p>
+
+<p>"It's my purse," Knoll answered with calm impertinence. "I got
+it<br>
+ the way most people get it. I bought it."</p>
+
+<p>"This purse?" the commissioner emphasised both words
+distinctly.</p>
+
+<p>"This purse - yes," answered the tramp with a perfect
+imitation of<br>
+ Riedau's voice. "Why shouldn't I have bought this purse just
+like<br>
+ any other?"</p>
+
+<p>"Because you stole this purse from the man whom you -
+murdered,"<br>
+ was the commissioner's reply.</p>
+
+<p>There was another moment of dead silence in the room. The<br>
+ commissioner and Muller watched intently for any change of<br>
+ expression in the face of the man who had just had such an<br>
+ accusation hurled at him. Even the clerk and the two policemen
+at<br>
+ the door were interested to see what would happen.</p>
+
+<p>Knoll's calm impertinence vanished, a deadly pallor spread
+over his<br>
+ face, and he seemed frozen to stone. He attempted to speak, but
+was<br>
+ not able to control his voice. His hands were clenched and
+tremors<br>
+ shook his gaunt but strong-muscled frame.</p>
+
+<p>"When did I murder anybody?" he gasped finally in a hoarse
+croak.<br>
+ "You'll have to prove it to me that I am a murderer."</p>
+
+<p>"That is easily proved. Here is one of the proofs," said
+Riedan<br>
+ coldly, pointing to the purse. "The purse and the watch of
+the<br>
+ murdered man are fatal witnesses against you."</p>
+
+<p>"The watch? I haven't any watch. Where should I get a
+watch?"</p>
+
+<p>"You didn't have one until Monday, possibly; I can believe
+that.<br>
+ But you were in possession of a watch between the evening of
+Monday,<br>
+ the 27th, and the morning of Wednesday, the 29th."</p>
+
+<p>Knoll's eyes dropped again and he did not trust himself to
+speak.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, you do not deny this statement?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, I can't," said Knoll, still trying to control his
+voice.<br>
+ "You must have the watch yourself now, or else you wouldn't be
+so<br>
+ certain about it."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, you see, I thought you'd had experience with police
+courts<br>
+ before," said the commissioner amiably. "Of course I have
+the<br>
+ watch already. The man whom you sold it to this morning knew
+by<br>
+ three o'clock this afternoon where this watch came from. He
+brought<br>
+ it here at once and gave us your description. A very exact<br>
+ description. The man will be brought here to identify you
+to-morrow.<br>
+ We must send for him anyway, to return his money to him. He
+paid<br>
+ you fifty-two gulden for the watch. And how much money was in
+the<br>
+ purse that you took from the murdered man?"</p>
+
+<p>"Three gulden eighty-five."</p>
+
+<p>"That was a very small sum for which to commit a murder."</p>
+
+<p>Knoll groaned and bit his lips until they bled.</p>
+
+<p>Commissioner von Riedau raised the paper that covered the
+watch and<br>
+ continued: "You presumably recognised that the chain on which
+this<br>
+ watch hung was valueless, also that it could easily be
+recognised.<br>
+ Did you throw it away, or have you it still?"</p>
+
+<p>"I threw it in the river."</p>
+
+<p>"That will not make any difference. We do not need the chain,
+we<br>
+ have quite enough evidence without it. The purse, for instance:
+you<br>
+ thought, I suppose, that it was just a purse like a thousand
+others,<br>
+ but it is not. This purse is absolutely individual and
+easily<br>
+ recognised, because it is mended in one spot with yellow
+thread.<br>
+ The thread has become loosened and hangs down in a very
+noticeable<br>
+ manner. It was this yellow thread on the purse, which he
+happened<br>
+ to see by chance, that showed the dealer Goldstamm who it was
+that<br>
+ had entered his store."</p>
+
+<p>Knoll stood quite silent, staring at the floor. Drops of<br>
+ perspiration stood out on his forehead, some of them rolling
+like<br>
+ tears down his cheek.</p>
+
+<p>The commissioner rose from his seat and walked slowly to where
+the<br>
+ prisoner stood. He laid one hand on the man's shoulder and said
+in<br>
+ a voice that was quite gentle and kind again: "Johann Knoll, do
+not<br>
+ waste your time, or ours, in thinking up useless lies. You
+are<br>
+ almost convicted of this crime now. You have already
+acknowledged<br>
+ so much, that there is but little more for you to say. If you
+make<br>
+ an open confession, it will be greatly to your advantage."</p>
+
+<p>Again the room was quiet while the others waited for what
+would<br>
+ happen. For a moment the tramp stood silent, with the
+commissioner's<br>
+ right hand resting on his shoulder. Then there was a sudden
+movement,<br>
+ a struggle and a shout, and the two policemen had overpowered
+the<br>
+ prisoner and held him firmly. Muller rose quickly and sprang to
+his<br>
+ chief's side. Riedau had not even changed colour, and he
+said<br>
+ calmly: "Oh, never mind, Muller; sit down again. The man had<br>
+ handcuffs on and he is quite quiet now. I think he has sense
+enough<br>
+ to see that he is only harming himself by his violence.</p>
+
+<p>The commissioner returned to his desk and Muller went back to
+his<br>
+ chair by the window. The prisoner was quiet again, although
+his<br>
+ face wore a dark flush and the veins on throat and forehead
+were<br>
+ swollen thick. He trembled noticeably and the heavy drops<br>
+ besprinkled his brow.</p>
+
+<p>"I - I have something to say, sir," he began, "but first I
+want to<br>
+ beg your pardon -"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, never mind that. I am not angry when a man is fighting
+for his<br>
+ life, even if he doesn't choose quite the right way," answered
+the<br>
+ commissioner calmly, playing with a lead pencil.</p>
+
+<p>Knoll's expression was defiant now. He laughed harshly and
+began<br>
+ again: "What I'm tellin' you now is the truth whether you
+believe<br>
+ it or not. I didn't kill the man. I took the watch and purse<br>
+ from him. I thought he was drunk. If he was killed, I didn't<br>
+ do it."</p>
+
+<p>"He was killed by a shot."</p>
+
+<p>"A shot? Why, yes, I heard a shot, but I didn't think any
+more<br>
+ about it, I didn't think there was anythin' doing, I thought
+somebody<br>
+ was shootin' a cat, or else-"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, don't bother to invent things. It was a man who was shot
+at,<br>
+ the man whom you robbed. But go on, go on. I am anxious to
+hear<br>
+ what you will tell me."</p>
+
+<p>Knoll's hands, clenched to fists and his eyes glowed in hate
+and<br>
+ defiance. Then he dropped them to the floor again and began
+to<br>
+ talk slowly in a monotonous tone that sounded as if he were<br>
+ repeating a lesson. His manner was rather unfortunate and did
+not<br>
+ tend to induce belief in the truth of his story. The gist of
+what<br>
+ he said was as follows:</p>
+
+<p>He had reached Hietzing on Monday evening about 8 o'clock. He
+was<br>
+ thirsty, as usual, and had about two gulden in his possession,
+his<br>
+ wages for the last day's work. He turned into a tavern in
+Hietzing<br>
+ and ate and drank until his money was all gone, and he had not
+even<br>
+ enough left to pay for a night's lodging. But Knoll was not
+worried<br>
+ about that. He was accustomed to sleeping out of doors, and as
+this<br>
+ was a particularly fine evening, there was nothing in the
+prospect<br>
+ to alarm him. He set about finding a suitable place where he
+would<br>
+ not be disturbed by the guardians of the law. His search led
+him<br>
+ by chance into a newly opened street. This suited him
+exactly.<br>
+ The fences were easy to climb, and there were several little
+summer<br>
+ houses in sight which made much more agreeable lodgings than
+the<br>
+ ground under a bush. And above all, the street was so quiet
+and<br>
+ deserted that he knew it was just the place for him. He had
+never<br>
+ been in the street before, and did not know its name. He
+passed<br>
+ the four houses at the end of the street - he was on the
+left<br>
+ sidewalk - and then he came to two fenced-in building lots.
+These<br>
+ interested him. He was very agile, raised himself up on the
+fences<br>
+ easily and took stock of the situation. One of the lots did
+not<br>
+ appeal to him particularly, but the second one did. It
+bordered<br>
+ on a large garden, in the middle of which he could see a
+little<br>
+ house of some kind. It was after sunset but he could see
+things<br>
+ quite plainly yet for the air was clear and the moon was
+just<br>
+ rising. He saw also that in the vacant lot adjoining the
+garden,<br>
+ a lot which appeared to have been a garden itself once, there
+was<br>
+ a sort of shed. It looked very much damaged but appeared to
+offer<br>
+ shelter sufficient for a fine night.</p>
+
+<p>The shed stood on a little raise of the ground near the high
+iron<br>
+ fence that protected the large garden. Knoll decided that
+the<br>
+ shed would make a good place to spend the night. He climbed
+the<br>
+ fence easily and walked across the lot. When he was just
+settling<br>
+ himself for his nap, he heard the clock on a near-by church
+strike<br>
+ nine. The various drinks he had had for supper put him in a
+mood<br>
+ that would not allow him to get to sleep at once. The bench
+in<br>
+ the old shed was decidedly rickety and very uncomfortable, and
+as<br>
+ he was tossing about to find a good position, a thought came
+into<br>
+ his mind which he acknowledged was not a commendable one. It<br>
+ occurred to him that if he pursued his investigations in the<br>
+ neighbourhood a little further, he might be able to pick up<br>
+ something that would be of advantage to him on his
+wanderings.<br>
+ His eyes and his thoughts were directed towards the handsome
+house<br>
+ which he could see beyond the trees of the old garden.</p>
+
+<p>The moon was now well up in the sky and it shone brightly on
+the<br>
+ mansard roof of the fine old mansion. The windows of the
+long<br>
+ wing which stretched out towards the garden glistened in the<br>
+ moonbeams, and the light coloured wall of the house made a
+bright<br>
+ background for the dark mask of trees waving gently in the
+night<br>
+ breeze. Knoll's little shed was sufficiently raised on its<br>
+ hillock for him to have a good view of the garden. There was
+no<br>
+ door to the shed and he could see the neighbouring property
+clearly<br>
+ from where he lay on his bench. While he lay there watching,
+he<br>
+ saw a woman walking through the garden. He could see her
+only<br>
+ when she passed back of or between the lower shrubs and bushes.
+As<br>
+ far as he could see, she came from the main building and was
+walking<br>
+ towards a pretty little house which lay in the centre of the
+garden.<br>
+ Knoll had imagined this house to be the gardener's dwelling and
+as<br>
+ it lay quite dark he supposed the inmates were either asleep or
+out<br>
+ for the evening. It had been this house which he was intending
+to<br>
+ honour by a visit. But seeing the woman walking towards it,
+he<br>
+ decided it would not be safe to carry out his plan just yet
+awhile.</p>
+
+<br>
+A few moments later he was certain that this last decision had
+been<br>
+a wise one, for he saw a man come from the main building and
+walk<br>
+along the path the woman had taken. "No, nothing doing
+there,"<br>
+thought Knoll, and concluded he had better go to sleep. He
+could<br>
+not remember just how long he may have dozed but it seemed to
+him<br>
+that during that time he had heard a shot. It did not interest
+him<br>
+much. He supposed some one was shooting at a thieving cat or
+at<br>
+some small night animal. He did not even remember whether he
+had<br>
+been really sound asleep, before he was aroused by the
+breaking<br>
+down of the bench on which he lay. The noise of it more than
+the<br>
+shock of the short fall, awoke him and he sprang tip in alarm
+and<br>
+listened intently to hear whether any one had been attracted by
+it.<br>
+His first glance was towards the building behind the garden.
+There<br>
+was no sound nor no light in the garden house but there was a
+light<br>
+in the main building. While the tramp was wondering what hour
+it<br>
+might be, the church clock answered him by ten loud strokes.
+
+<p>His head was already aching from the wine and he did not
+feel<br>
+ comfortable in the drafty old building. He came out from it,
+crept<br>
+ along to the spot where he had climbed the fence before, and
+after<br>
+ listening carefully and hearing nothing on either side, he
+climbed<br>
+ back to the road. The Street lay silent and empty, which was
+just<br>
+ what he was hoping for. He held carefully to the shadow thrown
+by<br>
+ the high board fence over which he had climbed until he came to
+its<br>
+ end. Then he remembered that he hadn't done anything wrong
+and<br>
+ stepped out boldly into the moonlight. The moon was well up
+now<br>
+ and the street was almost as light as day. Knoll was attracted
+by<br>
+ the queer shadows thrown by a big elder tree, waving its
+long<br>
+ branches in the wind. As he came nearer he saw that part of
+the<br>
+ shadow was no shadow at all but was the body of a man lying
+in<br>
+ the street near the bush. "I thought sure he was drunk" was
+the<br>
+ way Knoll described it. "I've been like that myself often
+until<br>
+ somebody came along and found me."</p>
+
+<p>When he came to this spot in his story, he halted and drew a
+long<br>
+ breath. Commissioner von Riedau had begun to make some figures
+on<br>
+ the paper in front of him, then changed the lines until the
+head<br>
+ of a pretty woman in a fur hat took shape under his fingers.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, go on," he said, looking with interest at his drawing
+and<br>
+ improving it with several quick strokes.</p>
+
+<p>Johann Knoll continued:</p>
+
+<p>"Then the devil came over me and I thought I better take this
+good<br>
+ opportunity - well - I did. The man was lying on his back and
+I<br>
+ saw a watch chain on his dark vest. I bent over him and took
+his<br>
+ watch and chain. Then I felt around in his pocket and found
+his<br>
+ purse. And then - well then I felt sorry for him lying out in
+the<br>
+ open road like that, and I thought I'd lift him up and put
+him<br>
+ somewhere where he could sleep it off more convenient. But I
+didn't<br>
+ see there was a little ditch there and I stumbled over it
+and<br>
+ dropped him. 'It's a good thing he's so drunk that even this
+don't<br>
+ wake him up,' I thought, and ran off. Then I thought I heard<br>
+ something moving and I was scared stiff, but there was nothing
+in<br>
+ the street at all. I thought I had better take to the fields
+though<br>
+ and I crossed through some corn and then out onto another
+street.<br>
+ Finally I walked into the city, stayed there till this morning,
+sold<br>
+ the watch, then went to Pressburg."</p>
+
+<p>"So that was the way it was," said the commissioner, pushing
+his<br>
+ drawing away from him and motioning to the policemen at the
+door.<br>
+ "You may take this man away now," he added in a voice of
+cool<br>
+ indifference, without looking at the prisoner.</p>
+
+<p>Knoll's head drooped and he walked out quietly between his
+two<br>
+ guards. The clock on the office wall struck eleven.</p>
+
+<p>"Dear me! what a lot of time the man wasted," said the
+commissioner,<br>
+ putting the report of the proceedings, the watch and the purse
+in a<br>
+ drawer of his desk. "When anybody has been almost convicted of
+a<br>
+ crime, it's really quite unnecessary to invent such a long
+story.</p>
+
+<p>A few minutes later, the room was empty and Muller, as the
+last of<br>
+ the group, walked slowly down the stairs. He was in such a
+brown<br>
+ study that he scarcely heard the commissioner's friendly
+"goodnight,"<br>
+ nor did he notice that he was walking down the quiet street
+under a<br>
+ star-gilded sky. "Almost convicted - almost. Almost?"
+Muller's<br>
+ lips murmured while his head was full of a chaotic rush of
+thought,<br>
+ dim pictures that came and went, something that seemed to be on
+the<br>
+ point of bringing light into the darkness, then vanishing
+again.<br>
+ "Almost - but not quite. There is something here I must find
+out<br>
+ first. What is it? I must know -"</p>
+
+<h2><br>
+ CHAPTER VII</h2>
+
+<h3>THE FACE AT THE GATE</h3>
+
+<p><br>
+ The second examination of the prisoner brought nothing new.
+Johann<br>
+ Knoll refused to speak at all, or else simply repeated what he
+had<br>
+ said before. This second examination took place early the
+next<br>
+ morning, but Muller was not present. He was taking a walk in<br>
+ Hietzing.</p>
+
+<p>When they took Johann Knoll in the police wagon to the City
+Prison,<br>
+ Muller was just sauntering slowly through the street where
+the<br>
+ murder had been committed. And as the door of the cell shut<br>
+ clangingly behind the man whose face was distorted in impotent
+rage<br>
+ and despair, Joseph Muller was standing in deep thought before
+the<br>
+ broken willow twig, which now hung brown and dry across the
+planks<br>
+ of the fence. He looked at it for a long time. That is, he
+seemed<br>
+ to be looking at it, but in reality his eyes were looking out
+and<br>
+ beyond the willow twig, out into the unknown, where the
+unknown<br>
+ murderer was still at large. Leopold Winkler's body had
+already<br>
+ been committed to the earth. How long will it be before his
+death<br>
+ is avenged? Or perhaps how long may it even be before it is<br>
+ discovered from what motive this murder was committed. Was it
+a<br>
+ murder for robbery, or a murder for personal revenge perhaps?
+Were<br>
+ the two crimes committed here by one and the same person, or
+were<br>
+ there two people concerned? And if two, did they work as<br>
+ accomplices? Or is it possible that Knoll's story was true?
+Did<br>
+ he really only rob the body, not realising that it was a dead
+man<br>
+ and not merely an intoxicated sleeper as he had supposed?
+These<br>
+ and many more thoughts rushed tumultuously through Muller's
+brain<br>
+ until he sighed despairingly under the pressure. Then he
+smiled<br>
+ in amusement at the wish that had crossed his brain, the wish
+that<br>
+ this case might seem as simple to him as it apparently did to
+the<br>
+ commissioner. It would certainly have saved him a lot of work
+and<br>
+ trouble if he could believe the obvious as most people did.
+What<br>
+ was this devil that rode him and spurred him on to delve into
+the<br>
+ hidden facts concerning matters that seemed so simple on the<br>
+ surface? The devil that spurred him on to understand that
+there<br>
+ always was some hidden side to every case? Then the sigh and
+the<br>
+ smile passed, and Muller raised his head in one of the rare
+moments<br>
+ of pride in his own gifts that this shy unassuming little man
+ever<br>
+ allowed himself. This was the work that he was intended by<br>
+ Providence to do or he wouldn't have been fitted for it, and it
+was<br>
+ work for the common good, for the public safety. Thinking back
+over<br>
+ the troubles of his early youth, Muller's heart rejoiced and
+he<br>
+ was glad in his own genius. Then the moment of unwonted
+elation<br>
+ passed and he bent his mind again to the problem before him.</p>
+
+<p> </p>
+
+<p><br>
+ He sauntered slowly through the quiet street in the direction
+of<br>
+ the four houses. To reach them he passed the fence that
+enclosed<br>
+ this end of the Thorne property. Muller had already known,
+for<br>
+ the last twenty-four hours at least, that the owner of the
+fine<br>
+ old estate was an artist by the name of Herbert Thorne. His
+own<br>
+ landlady had informed him of this. He himself was new to the<br>
+ neighbourhood, having moved out there recently, and he had
+verified<br>
+ her statements by the city directory. As he was now passing
+the<br>
+ Thorne property, in his slow, sauntering walk, he had just
+come<br>
+ within a dozen paces of the little wooden gate in the fence
+when<br>
+ this gate opened. Muller's naturally soft tread was made
+still<br>
+ more noiseless by the fact that he wore wide soft shoes.
+Years<br>
+ before he had acquired a bad case of chilblains, in fact had
+been<br>
+ in imminent danger of having his feet frozen by standing for
+five<br>
+ hours in the snow in front of a house, to intercept several<br>
+ aristocratic gentlemen who sooner or later would be obliged
+to<br>
+ leave that house. The police had long suspected the existence
+of<br>
+ this high-class gambling den; but it was not until they had
+put<br>
+ Muller in charge of the case, that there were any results
+attained.<br>
+ The arrests were made at the risk of permanent injury to the<br>
+ celebrated detective. Since then, Muller's step was more
+noiseless<br>
+ than usual, and now the woman who opened the gate and peered
+out<br>
+ cautiously did not hear his approach nor did she see him
+standing<br>
+ in the shadow of the fence. She looked towards the other end
+of<br>
+ the street, then turned and spoke to somebody behind her.
+"There's<br>
+ nobody coming from that direction," he said. Then she turned
+her<br>
+ head the other way and saw Muller. She looked at him for a
+moment<br>
+ and slammed the gate shut, disappearing behind it. Muller
+heard<br>
+ the lock click and heard the beat of running feet hastening
+rapidly<br>
+ over the gravel path through the garden.</p>
+
+<p>The detective stood immediately in front of the gate, shaking
+his<br>
+ head. "What was the matter with the woman? What was it that
+she<br>
+ wanted to see or do in the street? Why should she run away
+when<br>
+ she saw me?" These were his thoughts. But he didn't waste
+time<br>
+ in merely thinking. Muller never did. Action followed
+thought<br>
+ with him very quickly. He saw a knot-hole in the fence just<br>
+ beside the gate and he applied his eyes to this knot-hole.
+And<br>
+ through the knot-hole he saw something that interested and<br>
+ surprised him.</p>
+
+<p>The woman whose face had appeared so suddenly at the gate,
+and<br>
+ disappeared still more suddenly, was the same woman whom he
+had<br>
+ seen bidding farewell to Mr. Thorne and his wife on the
+Tuesday<br>
+ morning previous, the woman whom he took to be the
+housekeeper.<br>
+ The old butler stood beside her. It was undoubtedly the same
+man,<br>
+ although he had worn a livery then and was now dressed in a<br>
+ comfortable old house coat. He stood beside the woman,
+shaking<br>
+ his head and asking her just the questions that Muller was
+asking<br>
+ himself at the moment.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, what is the matter with you, Mrs. Bernaner? You're
+so<br>
+ nervous since yesterday. Are you ill? Everything seems to<br>
+ frighten you? Why did you run away from that gate so suddenly?
+I<br>
+ thought you wanted me to show you the place?"</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Bernauer raised her head and Muller saw that her face
+looked<br>
+ pale and haggard and that her eyes shone with an uneasy
+feverish<br>
+ light. She did not answer the old man's questions, but made
+a<br>
+ gesture of farewell and then turned and walked slowly towards
+the<br>
+ house. She realised, apparently, and feared, perhaps, that
+the<br>
+ man who was passing the gate might have, noticed her sudden
+change<br>
+ of demeanour and that he was listening to what she might say.
+She<br>
+ did not think of the knot-hole in the board fence, or she
+might<br>
+ have been more careful in hiding her distraught face from
+possible<br>
+ observers.</p>
+
+<p>Muller stood watching through this knot-hole for some little
+time.<br>
+ He took a careful observation of the garden, and from his point
+of<br>
+ vantage he could easily see the little house which was
+apparently<br>
+ the dwelling of the gardener, as well as the mansard roof of
+the<br>
+ main building. There was considerable distance between the
+two<br>
+ houses. The detective decided that it might interest him to
+know<br>
+ something more about this garden, this house and the people
+who<br>
+ lived there. And when Muller made such a decision it was
+usually<br>
+ not very long before he carried it out.</p>
+
+<p>The other street, upon which the main front of the mansard
+house<br>
+ opened, contained a few isolated dwellings surrounded by
+gardens<br>
+ and a number of newly built apartment houses. On the ground
+floor<br>
+ of these latter houses were a number of stores and
+immediately<br>
+ opposite the Thorne mansion was a little cafe. This suited
+Muller<br>
+ exactly, for he had been there before and he remembered that
+from<br>
+ one of the windows there was an excellent view of the gate and
+the<br>
+ front entrance of the mansion opposite. It was a very modest
+little<br>
+ cafe, but there was a fairly good wine to be had there and
+the<br>
+ detective made it an excuse to sit down by the window, as if<br>
+ enjoying his bottle while admiring the changing colours of
+the<br>
+ foliage in the gardens opposite.</p>
+
+<p>Another rather good chance, he discovered, was the fact that
+the<br>
+ landlord belonged to the talkative sort, and believed that
+the<br>
+ refreshments he had to sell were rendered doubly agreeable
+when<br>
+ spiced by conversation. In this case the good man was not
+mistaken.<br>
+ It was scarcely ten o'clock in the forenoon and there were
+very<br>
+ few people in the cafe. The landlord was quite at leisure to<br>
+ devote himself to this stranger in the window seat, whom he did
+not<br>
+ remember to have seen before, and who was therefore doubly<br>
+ interesting to him. Several subjects of conversation usual in
+such<br>
+ cases, such as politics and the weather, seemed to arouse no<br>
+ particular enthusiasm in his patron's manner. Finally the
+portly<br>
+ landlord decided that he would touch upon the theme which was
+still<br>
+ absorbing all Hietzing.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, by the way, sir, do you know that you are in the
+immediate<br>
+ vicinity of the place where the murder of Monday evening was<br>
+ committed? People are still talking about it around here. And
+I<br>
+ see by the papers that the murderer was arrested in
+Pressburg<br>
+ yesterday and brought to Vienna last night."</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed, is that so? I haven't seen a paper to-day,"
+replied<br>
+ Muller, awakening from his apparent indifference.</p>
+
+<p>The landlord was flattered by the success of the new subject,
+and<br>
+ stood ready to unloose the floodgates of his eloquence. His
+customer<br>
+ sat up and asked the question for which the landlord was
+waiting.</p>
+
+<p>"So it was around here that the man was shot?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. His name was Leopold Winkler, that was in the papers
+to-day<br>
+ too. You see that pretty house opposite? Well, right behind
+this<br>
+ house is the garden that belongs to it and back of that, an
+old<br>
+ garden which has been neglected for some time. It was at the
+end<br>
+ of this garden where it touches the other street, that they
+found<br>
+ the man under a big elder-tree, early Tuesday morning, day
+before<br>
+ yesterday."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, indeed!" said. Muller, greatly interested, as if this
+was<br>
+ the first he had heard of it. The landlord took a deep breath
+and<br>
+ was about to begin again when his customer, who decided to keep
+the<br>
+ talkative man to a certain phase of the subject, now took
+command<br>
+ of the conversation himself.</p>
+
+<p>"I should think that the people opposite, who live so near
+the<br>
+ place where the murder was committed, wouldn't be very much
+pleased,"<br>
+ he said. "I shouldn't care to look out on such a spot every
+time<br>
+ I went to my window."</p>
+
+<p>"There aren't any windows there," exclaimed the landlord,
+"for<br>
+ there aren't any houses there. There's only the old garden,
+and<br>
+ then the large garden and the park belonging to Mr. Thorne's
+house,<br>
+ that fine old house you see just opposite here. It's a good
+thing<br>
+ that Mr. Thorne and his wife went away before the murder
+became<br>
+ known. The lady hasn't been well for some weeks, she's very
+nervous<br>
+ and frail, and it probably would have frightened her to think
+that<br>
+ such things were happening right close to her home."</p>
+
+<p>"The lady is sick? What's the matter with her?"</p>
+
+<p>"Goodness knows, nerves, heart trouble, something like that.
+The<br>
+ things these fine ladies are always having. But she wasn't
+always<br>
+ that way, not until about a year ago. She was fresh and
+blooming<br>
+ and very pretty to look at before that."</p>
+
+<p>"She is a young lady then?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, indeed, sir; she's very young still and very pretty. It
+makes<br>
+ you feel sorry to see her so miserable, and you feel sorry for
+her<br>
+ husband. Now there's a young couple with everything in the
+world<br>
+ to make them happy and so fond of each other, and the poor
+little<br>
+ lady has to be so sick."</p>
+
+<p>"They are very happy, you say?" asked Muller carelessly. He
+had<br>
+ no particular set purpose in following up this inquiry, none
+but<br>
+ his usual understanding of the fact that a man in his business
+can<br>
+ never amass too much knowledge, and that it will sometimes
+happen<br>
+ that a chance bit of information comes in very handy.</p>
+
+<p>The landlord was pleased at the encouragement and continued:
+"Indeed<br>
+ they are very happy. They've only been married two years. The
+lady<br>
+ comes from a distance, from Graz. Her father is an army officer
+I<br>
+ believe, and I don't think she was over-rich. But she's a
+very<br>
+ sweet-looking lady and her rich husband is very fond of her, any
+one<br>
+ can see that."</p>
+
+<p>"You said just now that they had gone away, where have they
+gone to?"</p>
+
+<p>"They've gone to Italy, sir. Mrs. Thorne was one of the few
+people<br>
+ who do not know Venice. Franz, that's the butler, sir, told
+me<br>
+ yesterday evening that he had received a telegram saying that
+the<br>
+ lady and gentleman had arrived safely and were very
+comfortably<br>
+ fixed in the Hotel Danieli. You know Danieli's?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I do. I also was one of the few people who did not
+know<br>
+ Venice, that is I was until two years ago. Then, however, I
+had<br>
+ the pleasure of riding over the Bridge of Mestre," answered
+Muller.<br>
+ He did not add that he was not alone at the time, but had
+ridden<br>
+ across the long bridge in company with a pale haggard-faced man
+who<br>
+ did not dare to look to the right or to the left because of
+the<br>
+ revolver which he knew was held in the detective's hand under
+his<br>
+ loose overcoat. Muller's visit to Venice, like most of his<br>
+ journeyings, had been one of business. This time to capture
+and<br>
+ bring home a notorious and long sought embezzler. He did not<br>
+ volunteer any of this information, however, but merely asked in
+a<br>
+ politely interested manner whether the landlord himself had
+been<br>
+ to Venice.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, indeed," replied the latter proudly. "I was head waiter
+at<br>
+ Baner's for two years."</p>
+
+<p>"Then you must make me some Italian dishes soon," said
+Muller.<br>
+ Further conversation was interrupted by the entrance of Franz,
+the<br>
+ old butler of the house opposite.</p>
+
+<p>"Excuse me, sir; I must get him his glass of wine," said
+the<br>
+ landlord, hurrying away to the bar. He returned in a moment
+with<br>
+ a small bottle and a glass and set it down on Muller's
+table.</p>
+
+<p>"You don't mind, sir, if he sits down here?" he asked. "He
+usually<br>
+ sits here at this table because then he can see if he is needed
+over<br>
+ at the house."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, please let him come here. He has prior rights to this
+table<br>
+ undoubtedly," said the stranger politely. The old butler sat
+down<br>
+ with an embarrassed murmur, as the voluble landlord explained
+that<br>
+ the stranger had no objection. Then the boniface hurried off
+to<br>
+ attend to some newly entered customers and the detective,
+greatly<br>
+ pleased at the prospect, found himself alone with the old
+servant.</p>
+
+<p>"You come here frequently?" he began, to open the
+conversation.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir, since my master and myself have settled down here -
+we<br>
+ travelled most of the time until several years ago - I find
+this<br>
+ place very convenient. It's a cosy little room, the wine is
+good<br>
+ and not expensive, I'm near home and yet I can see some new
+faces<br>
+ occasionally."</p>
+
+<p>"I hope the faces that you see about you at home are not
+so<br>
+ unpleasant that you are glad to get away from them?" asked
+Muller<br>
+ with a smile.</p>
+
+<p>The old man gave a start of alarm. "Oh, dear, no, sir," he<br>
+ exclaimed eagerly; "that wasn't what I meant. Indeed I'm fond
+of<br>
+ everybody in the house from our dear lady down to the poor
+little<br>
+ dog."</p>
+
+<p>Here Muller gained another little bit of knowledge, the fact
+that<br>
+ the lady of the house was the favourite of her servants, or
+that<br>
+ she seemed to them even more an object of adoration than the
+master.</p>
+
+<p>"Then you evidently have a very good place, since you seem so
+fond<br>
+ of every one."</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed I have a good place, sir."</p>
+
+<p>"You've had this place a long time?"</p>
+
+<p>"More than twenty years. My master was only eleven years old
+when<br>
+ I took service with the family."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, indeed! then you must be a person of importance in the
+house<br>
+ if you have been there so long?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well more or less I might say I am," the old man smiled
+and<br>
+ looked flattered, then added: "But the housekeeper, Mrs.
+Bernaner,<br>
+ is even more important than I am, to tell you the truth. She
+was<br>
+ nurse to our present young master, and she's been in the house
+ever<br>
+ since. When his parents died, it's some years ago now, she
+took<br>
+ entire charge of the housekeeping. She was a fine active
+woman<br>
+ then, and now the young master and mistress couldn't get
+along<br>
+ without her. They treat her as if she was one of the
+family."</p>
+
+<p>"And she is ill also? I say also," explained Muller, "because
+the<br>
+ landlord has just been telling me that your mistress is
+ill."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, indeed, more's the pity! our poor dear young lady has
+been<br>
+ miserable for nearly a year now. It's a shame to see such a
+sweet<br>
+ angel as she is suffer like that and the master's quite
+heart-broken<br>
+ over it. But there's nothing the matter with Mrs. Bernaner.
+How<br>
+ did you come to think that she was sick?"</p>
+
+<p>Muller did not intend to explain that the change in the
+housekeeper's<br>
+ appearance, a change which had come about between Tuesday
+morning<br>
+ and Thursday morning, might easily have made any one think that
+she<br>
+ was ill. He gave as excuse for his question the old man's own
+words:<br>
+ "Why, I thought that she might be ill also because you said
+yourself<br>
+ that the housekeeper - what did you say her name was?"</p>
+
+<p>"Bernauer, Mrs. Adele Bernauer. She was a widow when she came
+to<br>
+ take care of the master. Her husband was a sergeant of
+artillery."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I mean," continued Muller, "you said yourself that when
+the<br>
+ gentleman's parents died, Mrs. Bernauer was a fine active
+woman,<br>
+ therefore I supposed she was no longer so."</p>
+
+<p>Franz thought the matter over for a while. "I don't know just
+why<br>
+ I put it that way. Indeed she's still as active as ever and
+always<br>
+ fresh and well. It's true that for the last two or three days
+she's<br>
+ been very nervous and since yesterday it is as if she was a
+changed<br>
+ woman. She must be ill, I don't know how to explain it
+otherwise."</p>
+
+<p>"What seems to be the matter with her?" asked Muller and then
+to<br>
+ explain his interest in the housekeeper's health, he fabricated
+a<br>
+ story: "I studied medicine at one time and although I didn't
+finish<br>
+ my course or get a diploma, I've always had a great interest in
+such<br>
+ things, and every now and then I'll take a case,
+particularly<br>
+ nervous diseases. That was my specialty." Muller took up his
+glass<br>
+ and turned away from the window, for be felt a slow flush
+rising<br>
+ to his cheeks. It was another of Muller's peculiarities that
+he<br>
+ always felt an inward embarrassment at the lies he was obliged
+to<br>
+ tell in his profession.</p>
+
+<p>The butler did not seem to have noticed it however, and
+appeared<br>
+ eager to tell of what concerned him in the housekeeper's
+appearance<br>
+ and demeanour. "Why, yesterday at dinner time was the first
+that<br>
+ we began to notice anything wrong with Mrs. Bernauer. The rest
+of<br>
+ us, that is, Lizzie the upstairs girl, the cook and myself.
+She<br>
+ began to eat her dinner with a good appetite, then suddenly,
+when<br>
+ we got as far as the pudding, she let her fork fall and
+turned<br>
+ deathly white. She got up without saying a word and left the
+room.<br>
+ Lizzie ran after her to ask if anything was the matter, but
+she<br>
+ said no, it was nothing of importance. After dinner, she went
+right<br>
+ out, saying she was doing some errands. She brought in a lot
+of<br>
+ newspapers, which was quite unusual, for she sometimes does not
+look<br>
+ at a newspaper once a week even. I wouldn't have noticed it
+but<br>
+ Lizzie's the kind that sees and hears everything and she told
+us<br>
+ about it." Franz stopped to take a drink, and Muller said<br>
+ indifferently, "I suppose Mrs. Bernauer was interested in the
+murder<br>
+ case. The whole neighbourhood seems to be aroused about it."</p>
+
+<p>"No, I don't think that was it," answered the old servant,
+"because<br>
+ then she would have sent for a paper this morning too."</p>
+
+<p>"And she didn't do that?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, unless she might have gone out for it herself. There's a
+news<br>
+ stand right next door here. But I don't think she did because
+I<br>
+ would have seen the paper around the house then."</p>
+
+<p>"And is that all that's the matter with her?" asked Muller in
+a<br>
+ tone of disappointment. "Why, I thought you'd have something
+really<br>
+ interesting to tell me."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, no, that isn't all, sir," exclaimed the old man
+eagerly.</p>
+
+<p>Muller leaned forward, really interested now, while Franz
+continued:<br>
+ "She was uneasy all the afternoon yesterday. She walked up and
+down<br>
+ stairs and through the halls - I remember Lizzie making some
+joke<br>
+ about it - and then in the evening to our surprise she suddenly
+began<br>
+ a great rummaging in the first story."</p>
+
+<p>"Is that where she lives ?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, no; her room is in the wing out towards the garden. The
+rooms<br>
+ on the first floor all belong to the master and mistress.
+This<br>
+ morning we found out that Mrs. Bernauer's cleaning up of the
+evening<br>
+ before had been done because she remembered that the master
+wanted<br>
+ to take some papers with him but couldn't find them and had
+asked<br>
+ her to look for them and send them right on."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I shouldn't call that a sign of any particular
+nervousness,<br>
+ but rather an evidence of Mrs. Bernaner's devotion to her
+duty."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes, sir - but it certainly is queer that she should go
+into<br>
+ the garden at four o'clock this morning and appear to be
+looking<br>
+ for something along the paths and under the bushes. Even if a
+few<br>
+ of the papers blew out of the window, or blew away from the
+summer<br>
+ house, where the master writes sometimes, they couldn't have<br>
+ scattered all over the garden like that."</p>
+
+<p>Muller didn't follow up this subject any longer. There might
+come<br>
+ a time when he would be interested in finding out the reason
+for<br>
+ the housekeeper's search in the garden, but just at present
+he<br>
+ wanted something else. He remembered some remark of the old
+man's<br>
+ about the "poor little dog," and on this he built his plan.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, well," he said carelessly, "almost everybody is nervous
+and<br>
+ impatient now-a-days. I suppose Mrs. Bernauer felt uneasy
+because<br>
+ she couldn't find the paper right away. There's nothing
+particularly<br>
+ interesting or noticeable about that. Anyway, I've been
+occupying<br>
+ myself much more these last years with sick animals rather than
+with<br>
+ sick people. I've had some very successful cures there."</p>
+
+<p>"No, really, have you? Then you could do us a great
+favour,"<br>
+ exclaimed Franz in apparent eagerness. Muller's heart rejoiced.
+He<br>
+ had apparently hit it right this time. He knew that in a house
+like<br>
+ that "a poor dog" could only mean a "sick dog." But his voice
+was<br>
+ quite calm as he asked: "How can I do you a favour?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why, you see, sir, we've got a little terrier," explained the
+old<br>
+ man, who had quite forgotten the fact that he had mentioned the
+dog<br>
+ before. "And there's been something the matter with the poor
+little<br>
+ chap for several days. He won't eat or drink, he bites at the
+grass<br>
+ and rolls around on his stomach and cries - it's a pity to see
+him.<br>
+ If you're fond of animals and know how to take care of them, you
+may<br>
+ be able to help us there."</p>
+
+<p>"You want me to look at the little dog? Why, yes, I suppose I
+can."</p>
+
+<p>"We'll appreciate it," said the old man with an embarrassed
+smile.<br>
+ But Muller shook his head and continued: "No, never mind the
+payment,<br>
+ I wouldn't take any money for it. But I'll tell you what you
+can<br>
+ do for me. I'm very fond of flowers. If you think you can take
+the responsibility of letting me<br>
+ walk around in the garden for a little<br>
+ while, and pick a rose or two, I will be greatly pleased."</p>
+
+<p>"Why, of course you may," said Franz. "Take any of the roses
+you<br>
+ see there that please you. They're nearly over for the season
+now<br>
+ and it's better they should be picked rather than left to fade
+on<br>
+ the bush. We don't use so many flowers in the house now when
+the<br>
+ family are not there."</p>
+
+<p>"All right, then, it's a bargain," laughed Muller, signalling
+to<br>
+ the landlord. "Are you, going already?" asked the old
+servant.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I must be going if I am to spend any time with the
+little dog."</p>
+
+<p>"I suppose I ought to be at home myself," said Franz.
+"Something's<br>
+ the matter with the electric wiring in our place. The bell in
+the<br>
+ master's room keeps ringing. I wrote to Siemens &amp; Halske to
+send us<br>
+ a man out to fix it. He's likely to come any minute now." The
+two<br>
+ men rose, paid their checks, and went out together. Outside
+the<br>
+ cafe Muller hesitated a moment. "You go on ahead," he said to
+Franz.<br>
+ "I want to go in here and get a cigar."</p>
+
+<p>While buying his cigar and lighting it, he asked for
+several<br>
+ newspapers, choosing those which his quick eye had told him were
+no<br>
+ longer among the piles on the counter. "I'm very sorry, sir,"
+said<br>
+ the clerk; "we have only a few of those papers, just two or
+three<br>
+ more than we need for our regular customers, and this morning
+they<br>
+ are all sold. The housekeeper from the Thorne mansion took the
+very<br>
+ last ones."</p>
+
+<p>This was exactly what Muller wanted to know. He left the store
+and<br>
+ caught up with the old butler as the latter was opening the
+handsome<br>
+ iron gate that led from the Thorne property out onto the
+street.</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ "Well, where's our little patient?" asked the detective as
+he<br>
+ walked through the courtyard with Franz.</p>
+
+<p>"You'll see him in a minute," answered the old servant. He
+led<br>
+ the way through a light roomy corridor furnished with handsome
+old<br>
+ pieces in empire style, and opened a door at its further
+end.</p>
+
+<p>"This is my room."</p>
+
+<p>It was a large light room with two windows opening on the
+garden.<br>
+ Muller was not at all pleased that the journey through the hall
+had<br>
+ been such a short one. However he was in the house, that was<br>
+ something, and he could afford to trust to chance for the
+rest.<br>
+ Meanwhile he would look at the dog. The little terrier lay in
+a<br>
+ corner by the stove and it did not take Muller more than two
+or<br>
+ three minutes to discover that there was nothing the matter
+with<br>
+ the small patient but a simple case of over-eating. But he put
+on<br>
+ a very wise expression as he handled the little dog and looking
+up,<br>
+ asked if he could get some chamomile tea.</p>
+
+<p>"I'll go for it, I think there's some in the house. Do you
+want it<br>
+ made fresh?" said Franz.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, that will be better, about a cupful will do," was
+Muller's<br>
+ answer. He knew that this harmless remedy would be likely to
+do<br>
+ the dog good and at the present moment he wanted to be left
+alone<br>
+ in the room. As soon as Franz had gone, the detective hastened
+to<br>
+ the window, placing himself behind the curtain so that he
+could<br>
+ not be seen from outside. He himself could see first a wide<br>
+ courtyard lying between the two wings of the house, then beyond
+it<br>
+ the garden, an immense square plot of ground beautifully
+cultivated.<br>
+ The left wing of the house was about six windows longer than
+the<br>
+ other, and from the first story of it it would be quite easy to
+look<br>
+ out over the vacant lot where the old shed stood which had
+served<br>
+ as a night's lodging for Johann Knoll.</p>
+
+<p>There was not the slightest doubt in Muller's mind that this
+part<br>
+ of the tramp's story was true, for by a natural process of<br>
+ elimination he knew there was nothing to be gained by inventing
+any<br>
+ such tale. Besides which the detective himself had been to look
+at<br>
+ the shed. His well-known pedantic thoroughness would not
+permit<br>
+ him to take any one's word for anything that he might find out
+for<br>
+ himself, In his investigations on Tuesday morning he had
+already<br>
+ seen the half-ruined shed, now he knew that it contained a
+broken<br>
+ bench.</p>
+
+<p>Thus far, therefore, Knoll's story was proved to be true-but
+there<br>
+ was something that didn't quite hitch in another way. The tramp
+had<br>
+ said that he had seen first a woman and then a man come from the
+main<br>
+ house and go in the direction of the smaller house which he took
+to<br>
+ be the gardener's dwelling. This Muller discovered now was
+quite<br>
+ impossible. A tall hedge, fully seven or eight feet high and
+very<br>
+ thick, stretched from the courtyard far down into the garden
+past<br>
+ the gardener's little house. There was a broad path on the
+right<br>
+ and the left of this green wall. From his position in the
+shed,<br>
+ Knoll could have seen people passing only when they were on
+the<br>
+ right side of the hedge. But to reach the gardener's house
+from<br>
+ the main dwelling, the shortest way would be on the left side
+of<br>
+ the hedge. This much Muller saw, then he heard the butler's
+steps<br>
+ along the hall and he went back to the corner where the dog
+lay.</p>
+
+<p>Franz was not alone. There was some one else with him, the<br>
+ housekeeper, Mrs. Bernauer. Just as they opened the door,
+Muller<br>
+ heard her say: "If the gentleman is a veterinary, then we'd
+better<br>
+ ask him about the parrot- "</p>
+
+<p>The sentence was never finished. Muller never found out what
+was<br>
+ the matter with the parrot, for as he looked up with a polite
+smile<br>
+ of interest, he looked into a pale face, into a pair of eyes
+that<br>
+ opened wide in terror, and heard trembling lips frame the
+words:<br>
+ "There he is again!"</p>
+
+<p>A moment later Mrs. Bernauer would have been glad to have
+recalled<br>
+ her exclamation, but it was too late.</p>
+
+<p>Muller bowed before her and asked: "'There he is again,' you
+said;<br>
+ have you ever seen me before?"</p>
+
+<p>The woman looked at him as if hypnotised and answered almost
+in a<br>
+ whisper: "I saw you Tuesday morning for the first time,
+Tuesday<br>
+ morning when the family were going away. Then I saw you pass<br>
+ through our street twice again that same day. This morning you
+went<br>
+ past the garden gate and now I find you here. What-what is it
+you<br>
+ want of us?"</p>
+
+<p>"I will tell you what I want, Mrs. Bernauer, but first I want
+to<br>
+ speak to you alone. Mr. Franz doesn't mind leaving us for a
+while,<br>
+ does he?"</p>
+
+<p>"But why?" said the old man hesitatingly. He didn't
+understand<br>
+ at all what was going on and he would much rather have
+remained.</p>
+
+<p>"Because I came here for the special purpose of speaking to
+Mrs.<br>
+ Bernauer," replied Muller calmly.</p>
+
+<p>"Then you didn't come on account of the dog?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, I didn't come on account of the dog."</p>
+
+<p>"Then you - you lied to me?"</p>
+
+<p>"Partly."</p>
+
+<p>"And you're no veterinary?"</p>
+
+<p>"No - I can help your dog, but I am not a veterinary and never
+have<br>
+ been."</p>
+
+<p>"What are you then?"</p>
+
+<p>"I will tell Mrs. Bernauer who and what I am when you are
+outside<br>
+ - outside in the courtyard there. You can walk about in the
+garden<br>
+ if you want to, or else go and get some simple purgative for
+this<br>
+ dog. That is all he needs; he has been over-fed."</p>
+
+<p>Franz was quite bewildered. These new developments promised to
+be<br>
+ interesting and he was torn between his desire to know more,
+and<br>
+ his doubts as to the propriety of leaving the housekeeper with
+this<br>
+ queer stranger. He hesitated until the woman herself motioned
+to<br>
+ him to go. He went out into the hall, then into the
+courtyard,<br>
+ watched by the two in the room who stood silently in the
+window<br>
+ until they saw the butler pass down into the garden. Then
+they<br>
+ looked at each other.</p>
+
+<p>"You belong to the police?" asked Adele Bernauer finally with
+a<br>
+ deep sigh.</p>
+
+<p>"That was a good guess," replied Muller with an ironic
+smile,<br>
+ adding: "All who have any reason to fear us are very quick
+in<br>
+ recognising us."</p>
+
+<p>"What do you mean by that?" she exclaimed with a start.
+"What<br>
+ are you thinking of?"</p>
+
+<p>"I am thinking about the same thing that you are thinking of -
+that<br>
+ I have proved you are thinking of - the same thing that drove
+you<br>
+ out into the street yesterday and this morning to buy the
+papers.<br>
+ These papers print news which is interesting many people just
+now,<br>
+ and some people a great deals. I am thinking of the same
+thing<br>
+ that was evidently in your thoughts as you peered out of the
+garden<br>
+ gate this morning, although you would not come out into the
+street.<br>
+ I know that you do not read even one newspaper regularly. I
+know<br>
+ also that yesterday and today you bought a great many
+papers,<br>
+ apparently to get every possible detail about a certain
+subject.<br>
+ Do you deny this?"</p>
+
+<p>She did not deny it, she did not answer at all. She sank down
+on<br>
+ a chair, her wide staring eyes looking straight ahead of her,
+and<br>
+ trembling so that the old chair cracked underneath her weight.
+But<br>
+ this condition did not last long. The woman had herself well
+under<br>
+ control. Muller's coming, or something else, perhaps, may
+have<br>
+ overwhelmed her for a moment, but she soon regained her
+usual<br>
+ self-possession.</p>
+
+<p>"Still you have not told me what you want here," she began
+coldly,<br>
+ and as he did not answer she continued: "I have a feeling that
+you<br>
+ are watching us. I had this feeling when I saw you the first
+time<br>
+ and noticed then - pardon my frankness - that you stared at
+us<br>
+ sharply while we were saying goodbye to our master and
+mistress.<br>
+ Then I saw you pass twice again through the street and look up
+at<br>
+ our windows. This morning I find you at our garden gate and<br>
+ now - you will pardon me if I tell the exact truth - now you
+have<br>
+ wormed yourself in here under false pretenses because you have
+no<br>
+ right whatever to force an entrance into this house. And I
+ask<br>
+ you again, what do you want here?"</p>
+
+<p>Muller was embarrassed. That did not happen very often. Also
+it<br>
+ did not happen very often that he was in the wrong as he was
+now.<br>
+ The woman was absolutely right. He had wormed himself into
+the<br>
+ house under false pretenses to follow up the new clue which
+almost<br>
+ unconsciously as yet was leading him on with a stronger and
+stronger<br>
+ attraction. He could not have explained it and he certainly was
+not<br>
+ ready to say anything about it at police headquarters, even at
+the<br>
+ risk of being obliged to continue to enter this mysterious
+house<br>
+ under false pretenses and to be told that he was doing so.
+Of<br>
+ course this sort of thing was necessary in his business, it
+was<br>
+ the only way in which he could follow up the criminals.</p>
+
+<p>But there was something in this woman's words that cut into
+a<br>
+ sensitive spot and drove the blood to his cheeks. There was<br>
+ something in the bearing and manner of this one-time nurse
+that<br>
+ impressed him, although he was not a man to be lightly
+impressed.<br>
+ He had a feeling that be had made a fool of himself and it
+bothered<br>
+ him. For a moment he did not know what he should say to this
+woman<br>
+ who stood before him with so much quiet energy in her bearing.
+But<br>
+ the something in his brain, the something that made him what he
+was,<br>
+ whispered to him that he had done right, and that he must
+follow<br>
+ up the trail he had found. That gave him back his usual
+calm.</p>
+
+<p>He took up his hat, and standing before the pale-faced
+woman,<br>
+ looking her firmly in the eyes, he said: "It is true that I
+have<br>
+ no right as yet to force my way into your house, therefore I
+have<br>
+ been obliged to enter it as best I could. I have done this
+often<br>
+ in my work, but I do it for the safety of society. And those
+who<br>
+ reproach me for doing it are generally those whom I have
+been<br>
+ obliged to persecute in the name of the law. Mrs. Bernauer,
+I<br>
+ will confess that there are moments in which I feel ashamed that
+I<br>
+ have chosen this profession that compels me to hunt down
+human<br>
+ beings. But I do not believe that this is one of those
+moments.<br>
+ You have read this morning's papers; you must know, therefore,
+that<br>
+ a man has been arrested and accused of the murder which
+interests<br>
+ you so much; you must be able to realise the terror and
+anxiety<br>
+ which are now filling this man's heart. For to-day's papers -
+I<br>
+ have read them myself - expressed the public sentiment that
+the<br>
+ police may succeed in convicting this man of the crime, that
+the<br>
+ death may be avenged and justice have her due. Several of
+these<br>
+ papers, the papers I know you have bought and presumably read,
+do<br>
+ not doubt that Johann Knoll is the murderer of Leopold
+Winkler.</p>
+
+<p>"Now there are at least two people who do not believe that
+Knoll is<br>
+ the murderer. I am one of them, and you, Mrs. Bernauer, you
+are<br>
+ the other. I am going now and when I come again, as I
+doubtless<br>
+ will come again, I will come with full right to enter this
+house.<br>
+ I acknowledge frankly that I have no justification in causing
+your<br>
+ arrest as yet, but you are quite clever enough to know that if
+I<br>
+ had the faintest justification I would not leave here alone.
+And<br>
+ one thing more I have to say. You may not know that I have had
+the<br>
+ most extraordinary luck in my profession, that in more than
+a<br>
+ hundred cases there have been but two where the criminal I
+was<br>
+ hunting escaped me. And now, Mrs. Bernauer, I will bid you
+good<br>
+ day."</p>
+
+<p>Muller stepped towards the window and motioned to Franz, who
+was<br>
+ walking up and down outside. The old man ran to the door and
+met<br>
+ the detective in the hall.</p>
+
+<p>"You'd better go in and look after Mrs. Bernauer," said
+the<br>
+ latter, "I can find my way out alone."</p>
+
+<p>Franz looked after him, shaking his head in bewilderment and
+then<br>
+ entered his own room. "Merciful God!" he exclaimed, bending
+down<br>
+ in terror over the housekeeper, who lay on the floor. In his
+shock<br>
+ and bewilderment he imagined that she too had been murdered,
+until<br>
+ he realised that it was only a swoon from which she recovered
+in<br>
+ a moment. He helped her regain her feet and she looked about
+as<br>
+ if still dazed, stammering: "Has he gone?"</p>
+
+<p>"The strange man? ... Yes, he went some time ago. But what<br>
+ happened to you? Did he give you something to make you faint?
+Do<br>
+ you think he was a thief?"</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Bernauer shook her head and murmured: "Oh, no, quite
+the<br>
+ contrary." A remark which did not enlighten Franz
+particularly<br>
+ as to the status of the man who had just left them. There was
+a<br>
+ note of fear in the housekeepers s voice and she added
+hastily:<br>
+ "Does any one besides ourselves know that he was here?"</p>
+
+<p>No. Lizzie and the cook are in the kitchen talking about
+the<br>
+ murder."</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Bernauer shivered again and went slowly out of the room
+and<br>
+ up the stairs.</p>
+
+<p>If Franz believed that the stranger had left the house by
+the<br>
+ front entrance he was very much mistaken. When Muller found<br>
+ himself alone in the corridor he turned quickly and hurried
+out<br>
+ into the garden. None of the servants had seen him. Lizzie
+and<br>
+ the cook were engaged in an earnest conversation in the
+kitchen<br>
+ and Franz was fully occupied with Mrs. Bernauer. The
+gardener<br>
+ was away and his wife busy at her wash tubs. No one was
+aware,<br>
+ therefore, that Muller spent about ten minutes wandering about
+the<br>
+ garden, and ten minutes were quite sufficient for him to become
+so<br>
+ well acquainted with the place that he could have drawn a map
+of<br>
+ it. He left the garden through the rear gate, the latch of
+which<br>
+ he was obliged to leave open. The gardener's wife found it
+that<br>
+ way several hours later and was rather surprised thereat.
+Muller<br>
+ walked down the street rapidly and caught a passing tramway.
+His<br>
+ mood was not of the best, for he could not make up his mind
+whether<br>
+ or no this morning had been a lost one. His mind sorted and<br>
+ rearranged all that he knew or could imagine concerning Mrs.<br>
+ Bernaner. But there was hardly enough of these facts to
+reassure<br>
+ him that he was not on a false trail, that he had not
+allowed<br>
+ himself to waste precious hours all because he had seen a
+woman's<br>
+ haggard face appear for a moment at the little gate in the quiet
+street.</p>
+
+<h2><br>
+ CHAPTER VIII</h2>
+
+<h3>JOHANN KNOLL REMEMBERS SOMETHING ELSE</h3>
+
+<p><br>
+ Muller's goal was the prison where Johann Knoll was awaiting
+his<br>
+ fate. The detective had permission to see the man as often
+as<br>
+ he wished to. Knoll had been proven a thief, but the
+accusation<br>
+ of murder against him had not been strengthened by anything
+but<br>
+ the most superficial circumstantial evidence, therefore it
+was<br>
+ necessary that Muller should talk with him in the hope of<br>
+ discovering something more definite.</p>
+
+<p>Knoll lay asleep on his cot as the detective and the warder
+entered<br>
+ the cell. Muller motioned the attendant to leave him alone
+with<br>
+ the prisoner and he stood beside the cot looking down at the
+man.<br>
+ The face on the hard pillow was not a very pleasant one to look
+at.<br>
+ The skin was roughened and swollen and had that brown-purple
+tinge<br>
+ which comes from being constantly in the open air, and from
+habitual<br>
+ drinking. The weather-beaten look may be seen often in the faces
+of<br>
+ men whose honest work keeps them out of doors; but this man had
+not<br>
+ earned his colouring honestly, for he was one of the sort who
+worked<br>
+ only from time to time when it was absolutely necessary and
+there<br>
+ was no other way of getting a penny. His hands proved this,
+for<br>
+ although soiled and grimy they had soft, slender fingers
+which<br>
+ showed no signs of a life of toil. But even a man who has
+spent<br>
+ forty years in useless idling need not be all bad. There must
+have<br>
+ been some good left in this man or he could not have lain there
+so<br>
+ quietly, breathing easily, wrapped in a slumber as undisturbed
+as<br>
+ that of a child. It did not seem possible that any man could
+lie<br>
+ there like that with the guilt of murder on his conscience, or
+even<br>
+ with the knowledge in his soul that he had plundered a
+corpse.</p>
+
+<p> </p>
+
+<p><br>
+ Muller had never believed the first to be the case, but he
+had<br>
+ thought it possible that Knoll knew perfectly well that it was
+a<br>
+ lifeless body he was robbing. He had believed it at least
+until<br>
+ the moment when he stood looking down at the sleeping tramp.
+Now,<br>
+ with the deep knowledge of the human heart which was his by<br>
+ instinct and which his profession had increased a
+thousand-fold,<br>
+ Muller knew that this man before him had no heavy crime upon
+his<br>
+ conscience - that it was really as he had said - that he had
+taken<br>
+ the watch and purse from one whom he believed to be
+intoxicated<br>
+ only. Of course it was not a very commendable deed for which
+the<br>
+ tramp was now in prison, but it was slight in comparison to
+the<br>
+ crimes of which he was suspected.</p>
+
+<p>Muller bent lower over the unconscious form and was surprised
+to<br>
+ see a gentle smile spread over the face before him. It
+brightened<br>
+ and changed the coarse rough face and gave it for a moment a
+look<br>
+ of almost child-like innocence. Somewhere within the
+coarsened<br>
+ soul there must be a spot of brightness from which such a
+smile<br>
+ could come.</p>
+
+<p>But the face grew ugly again as Knoll opened his eyes and
+looked<br>
+ up. He shook off the clouds of slumber as he felt Muller's
+hand<br>
+ on his shoulder and raised himself to a sitting position,
+grumbling:<br>
+ "Can't I have any rest? Are they going to question me again?
+I'm<br>
+ getting tired of this. I've said everything I know anyhow."</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps not everything. Perhaps you will answer a few of
+my<br>
+ questions when I tell you that I believe the story you told
+us<br>
+ yesterday, and that I want to be your friend and help you."</p>
+
+<p>Knoll's little eyes glanced up without embarrassment at the
+man<br>
+ who spoke to him. They were sharp eyes and had a certain spark
+of<br>
+ intelligence in them. Muller had noticed that yesterday, and
+he<br>
+ saw it again now. But he saw also the gleam of distrust in
+these<br>
+ eyes, a distrust which found expression in Knoll's next
+words.<br>
+ "You think you can catch me with your good words, but you're
+makin'<br>
+ a mistake. I've got nothin' new to say. And you needn't
+think<br>
+ that you can blind me, I know you're one of the police, and
+I'm<br>
+ not going to say anything at all."</p>
+
+<p>"Just as you like. I was trying to help you, I believe I
+really<br>
+ could help you. I have just come from Hietzing - but of course
+if<br>
+ you don't want to talk to me - " Muller shrugged his shoulders
+and<br>
+ turned toward the door.</p>
+
+<p>But before he reached it Knoll stood at his side. "You really
+mean<br>
+ to help me?" he gasped.</p>
+
+<p>"I do," said the detective calmly.</p>
+
+<p>"Then swear, on your mother's soul - or is your mother still
+alive?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, she has been dead some time."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, then, will you swear it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Would you believe an oath like that?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why shouldn't I?"</p>
+
+<p>"With the life you've been leading?"</p>
+
+<p>"My life's no worse than a lot of others. Stealing those
+things on<br>
+ Monday was the worst thing I've done yet. Will you swear?"</p>
+
+<p>"Is it something so very important you have to tell me?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, I ain't got nothin' at all new to tell you. But I'd just
+like<br>
+ to know - in this black hole I've got into - I'd just like to
+know<br>
+ that there's one human being who means well with me - I'd like
+to<br>
+ know that there's one man in the world who don't think I'm
+quite<br>
+ good-for-nothin'."</p>
+
+<p>The tramp covered his face with his hands and gave a
+heart-rending<br>
+ sob. Deep pity moved the detective's breast. He led Knoll back
+to<br>
+ his cot, and put both hands on his shoulders, saying gravely:
+"I<br>
+ believe that this theft was the worst thing you have done. By
+my<br>
+ mother's salvation, Knoll, I believe your words and I will try
+to<br>
+ help you."</p>
+
+<p>Knoll raised his head, looking up at Muller with a glance
+of<br>
+ unspeakable gratitude. With trembling lips he kissed the
+hand<br>
+ which a moment before had pressed kindly on his shoulder,
+clinging<br>
+ fast to it as if he could not bear to let it go. Muller was
+almost<br>
+ embarrassed. "Oh, come now, Knoll, don't be foolish. Pull
+yourself<br>
+ together and answer my questions carefully, for I am asking
+you<br>
+ these questions more for your own sake than for anything
+else."</p>
+
+<p>The tramp nodded and wiped the tears from his face. He
+looked<br>
+ almost happy again, and there was a softness in his eyes
+that<br>
+ showed there was something in the man which might be saved
+and<br>
+ which was worth saving.</p>
+
+<p>Muller sat beside him on the cot and began: "There was one
+mistake<br>
+ in your story yesterday. I want you to think it over
+carefully.<br>
+ You said that you saw first a woman and then a man going
+through<br>
+ the neighbouring garden. I believe that one or both of these<br>
+ people is the criminal for whom we are looking. Therefore, I
+want<br>
+ you to try and remember everything that you can connect with
+them,<br>
+ every slightest detail. Anything that you can tell us may be
+of<br>
+ the greatest importance. Therefore, think very carefully."</p>
+
+<p>Knoll sat still a few moments, evidently trying hard to put
+his<br>
+ hazy recollections into useful form and shape. But it was
+also<br>
+ evident that orderly thinking was an unusual work for him, and
+he<br>
+ found it almost too difficult. "I guess you 'better ask me<br>
+ questions, maybe that'll go," he said after a pause.</p>
+
+<p>Then Muller began to question. With his usual thoroughness
+he<br>
+ began at the very beginning: "When was it that you climbed
+the<br>
+ fence to get into the shed?"</p>
+
+<p>"It just struck nine o'clock when I put my foot on the lowest
+bar."</p>
+
+<p>"Are you sure of that?"</p>
+
+<p>"Quite sure. I counted every stroke. You see, I wanted to
+know<br>
+ how long the night was going to be, seein' I'd have to sleep
+in<br>
+ that shed. I was in the garden just exactly an hour. I came
+out<br>
+ of the shed as it struck ten and it wasn't but a few minutes
+before<br>
+ I was in the street again."</p>
+
+<p>"And when was it that you saw the woman in the garden next
+door?"</p>
+
+<p>"H'm, I don't just know when that was. I'd been in on the
+bench<br>
+ quite a while."</p>
+
+<p>"And the man? When did you see the man?"</p>
+
+<p>"He came past a few minutes after the woman had gone towards
+the<br>
+ little house in the garden."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah! there you see, that's where you made your mistake. It
+is<br>
+ more than likely that these two did not go to the little house,
+but<br>
+ that they went somewhere else. Did they walk slowly and
+quietly?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not a bit of it. They ran almost ... Went past as quick as a
+bat<br>
+ in the night."</p>
+
+<p>"Then they both appeared to be in a hurry?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes indeed they did."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, ha, you see! Now when any one's in a hurry he doesn't go
+the<br>
+ longest way round, as a rule. And it would have been the
+longest<br>
+ way round for these two people to go from the big house to
+the<br>
+ gardener's cottage - for the little house you saw was the
+gardener's<br>
+ cottage. There is tall thick hedge that starts from the main<br>
+ building and goes right down through the garden, quite a
+distance<br>
+ past the gardener's cottage. The vegetable garden is on the
+left<br>
+ side of this hedge and in the middle of the vegetable garden is
+the<br>
+ gardener's cottage. But you could have seen the man and the
+woman<br>
+ only because they passed down the right side of the hedge, and
+this<br>
+ would have given them a detour of fifty paces or more to
+reach<br>
+ the gardener's house. Nov do you think that two people who
+were<br>
+ very much in a hurry would have gone down the right side of
+the<br>
+ hedge, to reach a place which they could have gotten to much
+quicker<br>
+ on the left side?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, that would have been a fool thing to do."</p>
+
+<p>"And you are quite sure that these people were in a
+hurry?"</p>
+
+<p>"That's dead sure. I scarcely saw them before they'd gone
+again."</p>
+
+<p>"And you didn't see them come back?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, at least I didn't pay any further attention to them. When
+I<br>
+ thought it wouldn't be any good to look about in there I
+turned<br>
+ around and dozed off."</p>
+
+<p>"And it was during this dozing that you thought you heard the
+shot?"</p>
+
+<p>Yes, sir, that's right."</p>
+
+<p>"And you didn't notice anything else? You didn't hear
+anything<br>
+ else."</p>
+
+<p>"No, nothin' at all, there was so much noise anyway. There was
+a<br>
+ high wind that night and the trees were rattling and
+creaking."</p>
+
+<p>"And you didn't see anything else, anything that attracted
+your<br>
+ attention?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, nothing - " Knoll did not finish his sentence, but
+began<br>
+ another instead. He had suddenly remembered something which
+had<br>
+ seemed to him of no importance before. "There was a light
+that<br>
+ went out suddenly."</p>
+
+<p>"Where?"</p>
+
+<p>"In the side of the house that I could see from my place.
+There<br>
+ was a lamp in the last window of the second story, a lamp with
+a<br>
+ red shade. That lamp went out all at once."</p>
+
+<p>"Was the window open?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>"There was a strong wind that night, might not the wind have
+blown<br>
+ the lamp out?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, that wasn't it," said Knoll, rising hastily.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, how was it?" asked Muller calmly.</p>
+
+<p>"A hand put out the lamp."</p>
+
+<p>"Whose hand?"</p>
+
+<p>"I couldn't see that. The light was so low on account of the
+shade<br>
+ that I couldn't see the person who stood there."</p>
+
+<p>"And you don't know whether it was a man or a woman?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, I just saw a hand, more like a shadow it was."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, it doesn't matter much anyway. It was after nine
+o'clock<br>
+ and many people go to bed about that time," said Muller, who
+did<br>
+ not see much value in this incident.</p>
+
+<p>But Knoll shook his head. "The person who put out that light
+didn't<br>
+ go to bed, at least not right away," he said eagerly. "I
+looked<br>
+ over after a while to the place where the red light was and I
+saw<br>
+ something else."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, what was it you saw?"</p>
+
+<p>"The window had been closed."</p>
+
+<p>"Who closed it? Didn't you see the person that time? The
+moonlight<br>
+ lay full on the house."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, when there weren't any clouds. But there was a heavy
+cloud<br>
+ over the moon just then and when it came out again the window
+was<br>
+ shut and there was a white curtain drawn in front of it."</p>
+
+<p>"How could you see that?"</p>
+
+<p>"I could see it when the lamp was lit again."</p>
+
+<p>"Then the lamp was lit again?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I could see the red light behind the curtain."</p>
+
+<p>"And what happened then?"</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing more then, except that the man went through the
+garden."</p>
+
+<p>Muller rose now and took up his hat. He was evidently excited
+and<br>
+ Knoll looked at him uneasily. "You're goin' already?" he
+asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I have a great deal to do to-day," replied the detective
+and<br>
+ nodded to the prisoner as he knocked on the door. "I am glad
+you<br>
+ remembered that," he added, "it will be of use to us, I
+think."</p>
+
+<p>The warder opened the door, let Muller out, and the heavy
+iron<br>
+ portal clanged again between Knoll and freedom.</p>
+
+<p>Muller was quite satisfied with the result of his visit to
+the<br>
+ accused. He hurried to the nearest cab stand and entered one
+of<br>
+ the carriages waiting there. He gave the driver Mrs.
+Klingmayer's<br>
+ address. It was about two o'clock in the afternoon now and
+Muller<br>
+ had had nothing to eat yet. But he was quite unaware of the
+fact<br>
+ as his mind was so busy that no mere physical sensation
+could<br>
+ divert his attention for a moment. Muller never seemed to
+need<br>
+ sleep or food when he was on the trail, particularly not in
+the<br>
+ fascinating first stages of the case when it was his
+imagination<br>
+ alone, catching at trifles unnoticed by others, combining them
+in<br>
+ masterly fashion to an ordered whole, that first led the
+seekers<br>
+ to the truth. Now he went over once more all the little
+apparently<br>
+ trivial incidents that had caused him first to watch the
+Thorne<br>
+ household and then had drawn his attention, and his
+suspicion,<br>
+ to Adele Bernauer. It was the broken willow twig that had
+first<br>
+ drawn his attention to the old garden next the Thorne
+property.<br>
+ This twig, this garden, and perhaps some one who could reach
+his<br>
+ home again, unseen and unendangered through this garden -
+might<br>
+ not this have something to do with the murder?</p>
+
+<p>The breaking of the twig was already explained. It was
+Johann<br>
+ Knoll who had stepped on it. But he had not climbed the wall
+at<br>
+ all, had only crept along it looking for a night's shelter.
+And<br>
+ there was no connection between Knoll and the people who
+lived<br>
+ in the Thorne house. Muller had not the slightest doubt that
+the<br>
+ tramp had told the entire truth that day and the day
+preceding.</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ Then the detective's mind went back to the happenings of
+Tuesday<br>
+ morning. The little twig had first drawn his attention to
+the<br>
+ Thorne estate and the people who lived there. He had seen
+the<br>
+ departure of the young couple and had passed the house again
+that<br>
+ afternoon and the following day, drawn to it as if by a
+magnet.<br>
+ He had not been able then to explain what it was that
+attracted<br>
+ him; there had been nothing definite in his mind as he
+strolled<br>
+ past the old mansion. But his repeated appearance had been
+noticed<br>
+ by some one - by one person only - the housekeeper. Why should
+she<br>
+ have noticed it? Had she any reason for believing that she
+might<br>
+ be watched? People with an uneasy conscience are very apt to<br>
+ connect even perfectly natural trivial circumstances with their
+own<br>
+ doings. Adele Bernauer had evidently connected Muller's
+repeated<br>
+ passing with something that concerned herself even before
+the<br>
+ detective had thought of her at all.</p>
+
+<p>Muller had not noticed her until he had seen her peculiar
+conduct<br>
+ that very morning. When he heard Franz's words and saw how<br>
+ disturbed the woman was, he asked himself: "Why did this
+woman<br>
+ want to be shown the spot of the murder? Didn't she know
+that<br>
+ place, living so near it, as well as any of the many who
+stood<br>
+ there staring in morbid curiosity? Did she ask to have it
+shown<br>
+ her that the others might believe she had nothing whatever to
+do<br>
+ with the occurrences that had happened there? Or was she
+drawn<br>
+ thither by that queer attraction that brings the criminal back
+to<br>
+ the scene of his crime?"</p>
+
+<p>The sudden vision of Mrs. Bernauer's head at the garden gate,
+and<br>
+ its equally sudden disappearance had attracted Muller's
+attention<br>
+ and his thoughts to the woman. What he had been able to
+learn<br>
+ about her had increased his suspicions and her involuntary<br>
+ exclamation when she met him face to face in the house had
+proved<br>
+ beyond a doubt that there was something on her mind. His
+open<br>
+ accusation, her demeanour, and finally her swoon, were all links
+in<br>
+ the chain of evidence that this woman knew something about
+the<br>
+ murder in the quiet lane.</p>
+
+<p>With this suspicion in his mind what Muller had learned from
+Knoll<br>
+ was of great value to him, at all events of great interest.
+Was<br>
+ it the housekeeper who had put out the light? For now Muller
+did<br>
+ not doubt for a moment that this sudden extinguishing of the
+lamp<br>
+ was a signal. He believed that Knoll had seen clearly and that
+he<br>
+ had told truly what he had seen. A lamp that is blown out by
+the<br>
+ wind flickers uneasily before going out. A sudden extinguishing
+of<br>
+ the light means human agency. And the lamp was lit again a
+few<br>
+ moments afterward and burned on steadily as before. A short
+time<br>
+ after the lamp had been put out the man had been seen going
+through<br>
+ the garden. And it could not have been much later before the
+shot<br>
+ was heard. This shot had been fired between the hours of nine
+and<br>
+ ten, for it was during this hour only that Knoll was in the
+garden<br>
+ house and heard the shot. But it was not necessary to depend
+upon<br>
+ the tramp's evidence alone to determine the exact hour of the
+shot.<br>
+ It must have been before half past nine, or otherwise the
+janitor<br>
+ of No.1, who came home at that hour and lay awake so long,
+would<br>
+ undoubtedly have heard a shot fired so near his domicile, in
+spite<br>
+ of the noise occasioned by the high wind. There would have
+been<br>
+ sufficient time for Mrs. Bernauer to have reached the place of
+the<br>
+ murder between the putting out of the lamp and the firing of
+the<br>
+ shot. But perhaps she may have rested quietly in her room;
+she<br>
+ may have been only the inciter or the accomplice of the deed.
+But<br>
+ at all events, she knew something about it, she was in some
+way<br>
+ connected with it.</p>
+
+<p>Muller drew a deep breath. He felt much easier now that he
+had<br>
+ arranged his thoughts and marshalled in orderly array all the
+facts<br>
+ he had already gathered. There was nothing to do now but to
+follow<br>
+ up a given path step by step and he could no longer reproach
+himself<br>
+ that he might have cast suspicion on an innocent soul. No,
+his<br>
+ bearing towards Mrs. Bernauer had not been sheer brutality.
+His<br>
+ instinct, which had led him so unerringly so many times, had
+again<br>
+ shown him the right way when he had thrust the accusation in
+her<br>
+ face.</p>
+
+<p>Now that his mind was easier he realised that he was very
+hungry.<br>
+ He drove to a restaurant and ordered a hasty meal.</p>
+
+<p>"Beer, sir?' asked the waiter for the third time.</p>
+
+<p>"No," answered Muller, also for the third time.</p>
+
+<p>"Then you'll take wine, sir?" asked the insistent
+Ganymede.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, go to the devil! When I want anything I'll ask for
+it,"<br>
+ growled the detective, this time effectively scaring the
+waiter.<br>
+ It did not often happen that a customer refused drinks, but
+then<br>
+ there were not many customers who needed as clear, a head as<br>
+ Muller knew he would have to have to-day. Always a light
+drinker,<br>
+ it was one of his rules never to touch a drop of liquor
+during<br>
+ this first stage of the mental working out of any new
+problem<br>
+ which presented itself. But soft-hearted as he was, he
+repented<br>
+ of his irritation a moment later and soothed the waiter's
+wounded<br>
+ feelings by a rich tip. The boy ran out to open the cab door
+for<br>
+ his strange customer and looked after him, wondering whether
+the<br>
+ man was a cranky millionaire or merely a poet. For Joseph<br>
+ Muller, by name and by reputation one of the best known men
+in<br>
+ Vienna, was by sight unknown to all except the few with whom
+he<br>
+ had to do on the police force. His appearance, in every way<br>
+ inconspicuous, and the fact that he never sought acquaintance
+with<br>
+ any one, was indeed of the greatest possible assistance to him
+in<br>
+ his work. Many of those who saw him several times in a day
+would<br>
+ pass him or look him full in the face without recognising him.
+It<br>
+ was only, as in the case of Mrs. Bernauer, the guilty
+conscience<br>
+ that remembered face and figure of this quiet-looking man who
+was<br>
+ one of the most-feared servants of the law in Austria.</p>
+
+<h2><br>
+ CHAPTER IX</h2>
+
+<h3>THE ELECTRICIAN</h3>
+
+<p><br>
+ When Muller reached the house where Mrs. Klingmayer lived he
+ordered<br>
+ the cabman to wait and hurried up to the widow's little
+apartment.<br>
+ He had the key to Leopold Winkler's room in his own pocket,
+for<br>
+ Mrs. Klingmayer had given this key to Commissioner von Riedau
+at<br>
+ the latter's request and the commissioner had given it to
+Muller.<br>
+ The detective told the good woman not to bother about him as
+he<br>
+ wanted to make an examination of the place alone. Left to
+himself<br>
+ in the little room, Muller made a thorough search of it,
+opening<br>
+ the cupboard, the bureau drawers, every possible receptacle
+where<br>
+ any article could be kept or hidden. What he wanted to find
+was<br>
+ some letter, some bit of paper, some memoranda perhaps,
+anything<br>
+ that would show any connection existing between the murdered
+man<br>
+ and Mrs. Bernauer, who lived so near the place where this man
+had<br>
+ died and who was so greatly interested in his murder.</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ The detective's search was not quite in vain, although he could
+not<br>
+ tell yet whether what he had found would be of any value.
+Leopold<br>
+ Winkler had had very little correspondence, or else he had had
+no<br>
+ reason to keep the letters he received. Muller found only about
+a<br>
+ half dozen letters in all. Three of them were from women of
+the<br>
+ half-world, giving dates for meetings. Another was written by
+a<br>
+ man and signed "Theo." This "Theo" appeared to be the same
+sort<br>
+ of a cheap rounder that Winkler was. And he seemed to have
+sunk<br>
+ one grade deeper than the dead man, in spite of the latter's
+bad<br>
+ reputation. For this other addressed Winkler as his "Dear
+Friend"<br>
+ and pleaded with him for "greater discretion," alluding
+evidently<br>
+ to something which made this discretion necessary.</p>
+
+<p>"I wonder what rascality it was that made these two
+friends?"<br>
+ murmured Muller, putting "Theo's letter with the three he
+had<br>
+ already read. But before he slipped it in his pocket he glanced
+at<br>
+ the postmark. The letters of the three women had all been
+posted<br>
+ from different quarters of the city some months ago. Theo's
+letter<br>
+ was postmarked "Marburg," and dated on the 1st of September
+of<br>
+ the present year.</p>
+
+<p>Then Muller looked at the postmark of the two remaining
+letters<br>
+ which he had not yet read, and whistled softly to himself.
+Both<br>
+ these letters were posted from a certain station in Hietzing,
+the<br>
+ station which was nearest his own lodgings and also nearest
+the<br>
+ Thorne house. He looked at the postmark more sharply. They
+both<br>
+ bore the dates of the present year, one of them being stamped
+"March<br>
+ 17th," the other "September 24th." This last letter
+interested<br>
+ the detective most.</p>
+
+<p>Muller was not of a nervous disposition, but his hand
+trembled<br>
+ slightly as he took the letter from its envelope. It was
+clear<br>
+ that this letter had been torn open hastily, for the edges of
+the<br>
+ opening were jagged and uneven.</p>
+
+<p>When the detective had read the letter - it contained but a
+few<br>
+ lines and bore neither address nor signature - he glanced
+over<br>
+ it once more as if to memorise the words. They were as
+follows:<br>
+ "Do not come again. In a day or two I will be able to do what
+I<br>
+ have to do. I will send you later news to your office.
+Impatience<br>
+ will not help you." - These words were written hastily on a
+piece<br>
+ of paper that looked as if it had been torn from a pad. In
+spite<br>
+ of the haste the writer had been at some pains to disguise
+the<br>
+ handwriting. But it was a clumsy disguise, done by one not<br>
+ accustomed to such tricks, and it was evidently done by a
+woman.<br>
+ All she had known how to do to disguise her writing had been
+to<br>
+ twist and turn the paper while writing, so that every letter
+had<br>
+ a different position. The letters were also made unusually
+long.<br>
+ This peculiarity of the writing was seen on both letters and
+both<br>
+ envelopes. The earlier letter was still shorter and seemed to
+have<br>
+ been written with the same haste, and with the same disgust,
+or<br>
+ perhaps even hatred, for the man to whom it was written.</p>
+
+<p>"Come to-morrow, but not before eight o'clock. He has gone
+away.<br>
+ God forgive him and you." This was the contents of the letter
+of<br>
+ the 17th of March. That is, the writer had penned the letter
+this<br>
+ way. But the last two words, "and you," had evidently not
+come<br>
+ from her heart, for she had annulled them by a heavy stroke of
+the<br>
+ pen. A stroke that seemed like a knife thrust, so full of
+rage<br>
+ and hate it was.</p>
+
+<p>"So he was called to a rendezvous in Hietzing, too,"
+murmured<br>
+ Muller, then he added after a few moments: "But this rendezvous
+had<br>
+ nothing whatever to do with love."</p>
+
+<p>There was nothing else in Winkler's room which could be of any
+value<br>
+ to Muller in the problem that was now before him. And yet he
+was<br>
+ very well satisfied with the result of his errand.</p>
+
+<p>He entered his cab again, ordering the driver to take him
+to<br>
+ Hietzing. Just before he had reached the corner where he had
+told<br>
+ the man to stop, another cab passed them, a coupe, in which was
+a<br>
+ solitary woman. Muller had just time enough to recognise this
+woman<br>
+ as Adele Bernauer, and to see that she looked even more haggard
+and<br>
+ miserable than she had that morning. She did not look up as
+the<br>
+ other cab passed her carriage, therefore she did not see
+Muller.<br>
+ The detective looked at his watch and saw that it was almost<br>
+ half-past four. The unexpected meeting changed, his plans for
+the<br>
+ afternoon. He had decided that he must enter the Thorne
+mansion<br>
+ again that very day, for he must find out the meaning of the<br>
+ red-shaded lamp. And now that the housekeeper was away it
+would<br>
+ be easier for him to get into the house, therefore it must be
+done<br>
+ at once. His excuse was all ready, for he had been weighing<br>
+ possibilities. He dismissed his cab a block from his own home
+and<br>
+ entered his house cautiously.</p>
+
+<p>Muller's lodgings consisted of two large rooms, really much
+too<br>
+ large for a lone man who was at home so little. But Muller
+had<br>
+ engaged them at first sight, for the apartment possessed one<br>
+ qualification which was absolutely necessary for him. Its<br>
+ situation and the arrangement of its doors made it possible
+for<br>
+ him to enter and leave his rooms without being seen either by
+his<br>
+ own landlady or by the other lodgers in the house. The
+little<br>
+ apartment was on the ground floor, and Muller's own rooms had
+a<br>
+ separate entrance opening on to the main corridor almost
+immediately<br>
+ behind the door. Nine times out of ten, he could come and go<br>
+ without being seen by any one in the house. To-day was the
+first<br>
+ time, however, that Muller had had occasion to try this
+particular<br>
+ qualification of his new lodgings.</p>
+
+<p>He opened the street door and slipped into his own room
+without<br>
+ having seen or been seen by any one.</p>
+
+<p>Fifteen minutes later he left the apartment again, but left
+it<br>
+ such a changed man that nobody who had seen him go in would
+have<br>
+ recognised him. Before he came out, however, he looked about<br>
+ carefully to see whether there was any one in sight He came
+out<br>
+ unseen and was just closing the main door behind him, when he
+met<br>
+ the janitress.</p>
+
+<p>"Were you looking for anybody in the house?" said the
+woman,<br>
+ glancing sharply at the stranger, who answered in a slightly
+veiled<br>
+ voice: "No, I made a mistake in the number. The place I am
+looking<br>
+ for is two houses further down."</p>
+
+<p>He walked down the street and the woman looked after him until
+she<br>
+ saw him turn into the doorway of the second house. Then she
+went<br>
+ into her own rooms. The house Muller entered happened to be
+a<br>
+ corner house with an entrance on the other street, through
+which<br>
+ the detective passed and went on his way. He was quite
+satisfied<br>
+ with the security of his disguise, for the woman who knew him
+well<br>
+ had not recognised him at all. If his own janitress did not
+know<br>
+ him, the people in the Thorne house would never imagine it was
+he.</p>
+
+<p>And indeed Muller was entirely changed. In actuality small
+and<br>
+ thin, with sparse brown hair and smooth shaven face, he was now
+an<br>
+ inch or two taller and very much stouter. He wore thick curly
+blond<br>
+ hair, a little pointed blond beard and moustache. His eyes
+were<br>
+ hidden by heavy-rimmed spectacles.</p>
+
+<p>It was just half-past five when he rang the bell at the
+entrance<br>
+ gate to the Thorne property. He had spent the intervening time
+in<br>
+ the cafe, as he was in no hurry to enter the house. Franz came
+down<br>
+ the path and opened the door. "'What do you want?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>"I come from Siemens &amp; Halske; I was to ask whether the
+other man - "</p>
+
+<p>"Has been here already?" interrupted Franz, adding in an
+irritated<br>
+ tone, "No, he hasn't been here at all."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I guess he didn't get through at the other place in
+time.<br>
+ I'll see what the trouble is," said the stranger, whom Franz<br>
+ naturally supposed to be the electrician, lie opened the gate
+and<br>
+ asked the other to come in, leading him into the house. Under
+a<br>
+ cloudy sky the day was fading rapidly. Muller knew that it
+would<br>
+ not occur to the real electrician to begin any work as late as
+this,<br>
+ and that he was perfectly safe in the examination he wanted to
+make.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, what's the trouble here? Why did you write to our
+firm?"<br>
+ asked the supposed electrician.</p>
+
+<p>"The wires must cross somewhere, or there's something wrong
+with<br>
+ the bells. When the housekeeper touches the button in her room
+to<br>
+ ring for the cook or the upstairs girl, the bell rings in Mr.
+Thorne's<br>
+ room. It starts ringing and it keeps up with a deuce of a
+noise.<br>
+ Fortunately the family are away."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, we'll fix it all right for you. First of all I want to
+look<br>
+ at the button in the housekeeper's room."</p>
+
+<p>"I'll take you up there," said Franz.</p>
+
+<p>They walked through the wide corridor, then turned into a
+shorter,<br>
+ darker hall and went up a narrow winding stairway. Franz
+halted<br>
+ before a door in the second story. It was the last of the
+three<br>
+ doors in the hall." Muller took off his hat as the door
+opened<br>
+ and murmured a "good-evening."</p>
+
+<p>"There's no one there; Mrs. Bernaner's out."</p>
+
+<p>"Has she gone away, too?" asked the electrician hastily.</p>
+
+<p>Franz did not notice that there was a slight change in the
+stranger's<br>
+ voice at this question, and he answered calmly as ever: "Oh,
+no;<br>
+ she's just driven to town. I think she went to see the doctor
+who<br>
+ lives quite a distance away. She hasn't been feeling at all
+well.<br>
+ She took a cab to-day. I told her she ought to, as she wasn't
+well<br>
+ enough to go by the tram. She ought to be home any moment
+now."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I'll hurry up with the job so that I'll be out of the
+way<br>
+ when the lady comes," said Muller, as Franz led him to the<br>
+ misbehaving bell.</p>
+
+<p>It was in the wall immediately above a large table which
+filled the<br>
+ window niche so completely that there was but scant space left
+for<br>
+ the comfortable armchair that stood in front of it. The window
+was<br>
+ open and Muller leaned out, looking down at the garden
+below.</p>
+
+<p>"What a fine old garden!" he exclaimed aloud. To himself he
+said:<br>
+ "This is the last window in the left wing. It is the window
+where<br>
+ Johann Knoll saw the red light."</p>
+
+<p>And when he turned back into the room again he found the
+source of<br>
+ this light right at his hand on the handsome old table at which
+Mrs.<br>
+ Bernauer evidently spent many of her hours. A row of books
+stood<br>
+ against the wall, framing the back of the table. Well-worn
+volumes<br>
+ of the classics among them gave proof that the one-time nurse
+was a<br>
+ woman of education. A sewing basket and neat piles of house
+linen,<br>
+ awaiting repairs, covered a large part of the table-top, and
+beside<br>
+ them stood a gracefully shaped lamp, covered by a shade of soft
+red<br>
+ silk.</p>
+
+<p>It took Muller but a few seconds to see all this. Then he set
+about<br>
+ his investigation of the electric button. He unscrewed the
+plate<br>
+ and examined the wires meeting under it. While doing so he
+cast<br>
+ another glance at the table and saw a letter lying there, an
+open<br>
+ letter half out of its envelope. This envelope was of unusual
+shape,<br>
+ long and narrow, and the paper was heavy and high-glossed.</p>
+
+<p>"Your housekeeper evidently has no secrets from the rest of
+you,"<br>
+ Muller remarked with a laugh, still busy at the wires, "or
+she<br>
+ wouldn't leave her letters lying about like that."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, we've all heard what's in that letter," replied Franz.
+"She<br>
+ read it to us when it came this morning. It's from the Madam.
+She<br>
+ sent messages to all of us and orders, so Mrs. Bernauer read us
+the<br>
+ whole letter. There's no secrets in that."</p>
+
+<p>"The button has been pressed in too far and caught down. That
+seems<br>
+ to be the main trouble," said Muller, readjusting the little
+knob.<br>
+ "I'd like a candle here if I may have one."</p>
+
+<p>"I'll get you a light at once," said Franz. But his
+intentions,<br>
+ however excellent, seemed difficult of fulfilment. It was
+rapidly<br>
+ growing dark, and the old butler peered about uncertainly.
+"Stupid,"<br>
+ he muttered. "I don't know where she keeps the matches. I
+can't<br>
+ find them anywhere. I'm not a smoker, so I haven't any in my
+pocket."</p>
+
+<p>"Nor I," said Muller calmly, letting his hand close
+protectingly<br>
+ over a new full box of them in his own pocket.</p>
+
+<p>"I'll get you some from my own room," and Franz hurried away,
+his<br>
+ loose slippers clattering down the stairs. He was no sooner
+well<br>
+ out of the room than Muller had the letter in his hand and
+was<br>
+ standing close by the window to catch the fading light. But on
+the<br>
+ old servant's return the supposed electrician stood calmly
+awaiting<br>
+ the coming of the light, and the letter was back on the table
+half<br>
+ hidden by a piece of linen. Franz did not notice that the
+envelope<br>
+ was missing. And the housekeeper, whose mind was so upset by
+the<br>
+ events of the day, and whose thoughts were on other more
+absorbing<br>
+ matters, would hardly be likely to remember whether she had
+returned<br>
+ this quite unimportant letter to its envelope or not.</p>
+
+<p>Franz brought a lighted candle with him, and Muller, who
+really did<br>
+ possess a creditable knowledge of electricity, saw that the
+wires<br>
+ in the room were all in good condition. As he had seen at
+first,<br>
+ there was really nothing the matter except with the position
+of<br>
+ the button. But it did not suit his purpose to enlighten Franz
+on<br>
+ the matter just yet.</p>
+
+<p>"Now I'd better look at the wires in the gentleman's room,"
+he<br>
+ said, when he had returned plate and button to their place.</p>
+
+<p>"Just as you say," replied Franz, taking up his candle and
+leading<br>
+ the way out into the hail and down the winding stair. They
+crossed<br>
+ the lower corridor, mounted another staircase and entered a
+large,<br>
+ handsomely furnished room, half studio, half library. The wall
+was<br>
+ covered with pictures and sketches, several easels stood piled
+up<br>
+ in the corner, and a broad table beside them held paint
+boxes,<br>
+ colour tubes, brushes, all the paraphernalia of the painter,
+now<br>
+ carefully ordered and covered for a term of idleness. Great<br>
+ bookcases towered to the ceiling, and a huge flat top desk,
+a<br>
+ costly piece of furniture, was covered with books and papers.
+It<br>
+ was the room of a man of brains and breeding, a man of talent
+and<br>
+ ability, possessing, furthermore, the means to indulge his
+tastes<br>
+ freely. Even now, with its master absent, the handsome
+apartment<br>
+ bore the impress of his personality. The detective's quick<br>
+ imagination called up the attractive, sympathetic figure of
+the<br>
+ man he had seen at the gate, as his quick eye took in the
+details<br>
+ of the room. All the charm of Herbert Thorne's personality,
+which<br>
+ the keen-sensed Muller had felt so strongly even in that
+fleeting<br>
+ glimpse of him, came back again here in the room which was his
+own<br>
+ little kingdom and the expression of his mentality.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, what's the trouble here? Where are the wires?" asked
+the<br>
+ detective, after the momentary pause which had followed his
+entrance<br>
+ into the room. Franz led him to a spot on the wall hidden by
+a<br>
+ marquetry cabinet. "Here's the bell, it rings for several
+minutes<br>
+ before it stops."</p>
+
+<p>The light of the candle which the butler held fell upon a
+portrait<br>
+ hanging above the cabinet. It was a sketch in water-colours,
+the<br>
+ life-sized head of a man who may have been about thirty years
+old,<br>
+ perhaps, but who had none of the freshness and vigour of
+youth.<br>
+ The scanty hair, the sunken temples, and the faded skin,
+emphasised<br>
+ the look of dissipation given by the lines about the sensual
+mouth<br>
+ and the shifty eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, say, can't your master find anything better to paint
+than a<br>
+ face like that?" Muller asked with a laugh.</p>
+
+<p>"Goodness me! you mustn't say such things!" exclaimed Franz
+in<br>
+ alarm; "that's the Madam's brother. He's an officer, I'd have
+you<br>
+ know. It's true, he doesn't look like much there, but that's<br>
+ because he's not in uniform. It makes such a difference."</p>
+
+<p>"Is the lady anything like her brother?" asked the
+detective<br>
+ indifferently, bending to examine the wiring.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, dear, no, not a bit; they're as different as day and
+night.<br>
+ He's only her half-brother anyway. She was the daughter of
+the<br>
+ Colonel's second wife. Our Madam is the sweetest, gentlest
+lady<br>
+ you can imagine, an angel of goodness. But the Lieutenant
+here<br>
+ has always been a care to his family, they say. I guess he's<br>
+ quieted down a bit now, for his father - he's Colonel
+Leining,<br>
+ retired - made him get exchanged from the city to a small
+garrison<br>
+ town. There's nothing much to do in Marburg, I dare say -
+well!<br>
+ you are a merry sort, aren't you?" These last words, spoken in
+a<br>
+ tone of surprise, were called forth by a sudden sharp whistle
+from<br>
+ the detective, a whistle which went off into a few merry
+bars.</p>
+
+<p>A sudden whistle like that from Muller's lips was something
+that<br>
+ made the Imperial Police Force sit up and take notice, for it
+meant<br>
+ that things were happening, and that the happenings were likely
+to<br>
+ become exciting. It was a habit he could control only by the<br>
+ severest effort of the will, an effort which he kept for
+occasions<br>
+ when it was absolutely necessary. Here, alone with the
+harmless<br>
+ old man, he was not so much on his guard, and the sudden
+vibrating<br>
+ of every nerve at the word "Marburg," found vent in the
+whistle<br>
+ which surprised old Franz. One young police commissioner with
+a<br>
+ fancy for metaphor had likened this sudden involuntary whistle
+of<br>
+ Muller's to the bay of the hound when he strikes the trail;
+which<br>
+ was about what it was.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I am merry sometimes," he said with a laugh. "It's a
+habit<br>
+ I have. Something occurred to me just then, something I had<br>
+ forgotten. Hope you don't mind."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, no, there's no one here now, whistle all you like."</p>
+
+<p>But Muller's whistle was not a continuous performance, and he
+had<br>
+ now completely mastered the excitation of his nerves which
+had<br>
+ called it forth. He threw another sharp look at the picture of
+the<br>
+ man who lived in Marburg, and then asked: "And now where is
+the<br>
+ button?"</p>
+
+<p>"By the window there, beside the desk." Franz led the way
+with<br>
+ his candle.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, how funny! What are those mirrors there for?" asked
+the<br>
+ electrician in a tone of surprise, pointing to two small
+mirrors<br>
+ hanging in the window niche. They were placed at a height and
+at<br>
+ such a peculiar angle that no one could possibly see his
+face<br>
+ in them.</p>
+
+<p>"Something the master is experimenting with, I guess. He's
+always<br>
+ making queer experiments; he knows a lot about scientific
+things."</p>
+
+<p>Muller shook his head as if in wonderment, and bent to
+investigate<br>
+ the button which was fastened into the wall beneath the window
+sill.<br>
+ His quick ear heard a carriage stopping in front of the house,
+and<br>
+ heard the closing of the front door a moment later. To
+facilitate<br>
+ his examination of the button, the detective had seated himself
+in<br>
+ the armchair which stood beside the desk. He half raised
+himself<br>
+ now to let the light of the candle fall more clearly on the
+wiring<br>
+ - then he started up altogether and threw a hasty glance at
+the<br>
+ mirrors above his head. A ray of light had suddenly flashed
+down<br>
+ upon him - a ray of red light, and it came reflected from
+the<br>
+ mirrors. Muller bit his lips to keep back the betraying
+whistle.</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ "What's the matter?" asked the butler. "Did you drop
+anything?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, the wooden rim of the button," replied Muller, telling
+the<br>
+ truth this time. For he had held the little wooden circlet in
+his<br>
+ hands at the moment when the red light, reflected down from
+the<br>
+ mirrors, struck full upon his eyes. He had dropped it in his<br>
+ surprise and excitement. Franz found the little ring in the
+centre<br>
+ of the room where it had rolled, and the supposed
+electrician<br>
+ replaced it and rose to his feet, saying: "There, I've finished
+now."</p>
+
+<p>Franz did not recognise the double meaning in the words. "Yes,
+it's<br>
+ all right! I've finished here now," Muller repeated to
+himself.<br>
+ For now he knew beyond a doubt that the red light was a signal -
+and<br>
+ he knew also for whom this signal was intended. It was a signal
+for<br>
+ Herbert Thorne! - Herbert Thorne, whom no single thought or
+suspicion<br>
+ of Muller's had yet connected with the murder of Leopold
+Winkler.</p>
+
+<p>The detective was very much surprised and greatly excited.
+But<br>
+ Franz did not notice it, and indeed a far keener observer than
+the<br>
+ slow-witted old butler might have failed to see the sudden
+gleam<br>
+ which shot up in the grey eyes behind the heavy spectacles,
+might<br>
+ have failed to notice the tightening of the lips beneath the
+blond<br>
+ moustache, or the tenseness of the slight frame under the
+assumed<br>
+ embonpoint. Muller's every nerve was tingling, but he had
+himself<br>
+ completely in hand.</p>
+
+<p>"What do we owe you?" asked Franz.</p>
+
+<p>"They'll send you a bill from the office. It won't amount to
+much.<br>
+ I must be getting on now."</p>
+
+<p>Muller hastened out of the door and down the street to the
+nearest<br>
+ cab stand. There were not very many cab stands in this
+vicinity,<br>
+ and the detective reasoned that Mrs. Bernauer would naturally
+have<br>
+ taken her cab from the nearest station. He had heard her return
+in<br>
+ her carriage, presumably the same in which she had started
+out.</p>
+
+<p>There was but one cab at the stand. Muller walked to it and
+laid<br>
+ his hand on the door.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Jimmy! must I go out again?" asked the driver
+hoarsely.<br>
+ "Can't you see the poor beast is all wet from the last ride?
+We've<br>
+ just come in." He pointed with his whip to the tired-looking
+animal<br>
+ under his blanket.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, he does look warm. You must have been making a tour out
+into<br>
+ the country," said the blond gentleman in a friendly tone.</p>
+
+<p>"No, sir, not quite so far as that. I've just taken a woman to
+the<br>
+ main telegraph office in the city and back again. But she was in
+a<br>
+ hurry and he's not a young horse, sir."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, never mind, then; I can get another cab across the
+bridge,"<br>
+ replied the stout blond man, turning away and strolling off
+leisurely<br>
+ in the direction of the bridge. It was now quite dark, and a
+few<br>
+ steps further on Muller could safely turn and take the road to
+his<br>
+ own lodging. No one saw him go in, and in a few moments the
+real<br>
+ Muller, slight, smooth-shaven, sat down at his desk, looking at
+the<br>
+ papers that lay before him. They were three letters and an
+empty<br>
+ envelope.</p>
+
+<p>He took up the last, and compared it carefully with the
+envelope of<br>
+ one of the letters found in Winkler's room - the unsigned
+letter<br>
+ postmarked Hietzing, September 24th. The two envelopes were
+exactly<br>
+ alike. They were of the same size and shape, made of the
+same<br>
+ cream-tinted, heavy, glossy paper, and the address was written
+by<br>
+ the same hand. This any keen observer, who need not necessarily
+be<br>
+ an expert, could see. The same hand which had addressed the<br>
+ envelope to Mrs. Adele Bernauer on the letter which was
+postmarked<br>
+ "Venice," about thirty-six hours previous - this hand had, in
+an<br>
+ awkward and childish attempt at disguise, written Winkler's
+address<br>
+ on the envelope which bore the date of September 24th.</p>
+
+<p>The writer of the harmless letter to Mrs. Bernauer, a letter
+which<br>
+ chatted of household topics and touched lightly on the beauties
+of<br>
+ Venice, was Mrs. Thorne. It was Mrs. Thorne, therefore, who,<br>
+ reluctantly and in anger and distaste, had called Leopold
+Winkler<br>
+ to Hietzing, to his death.</p>
+
+<p>And whose hand had fired the shot that caused his death?
+The<br>
+ question, at this stage in Muller's meditation, could hardly
+be<br>
+ called a question any more. It was all too sadly clear to him
+now.<br>
+ Winkler met his death at the hand of the husband, who,
+discovering<br>
+ the planned rendezvous, had misunderstood its motive.</p>
+
+<p>For truly this had been no lovers' meeting. It had been a
+meeting<br>
+ to which the woman was driven by fear and hate; the man by greed
+of<br>
+ gain. This was clearly proved by the 300 guldens found in the
+dead<br>
+ man's pocket, money enclosed in a delicate little envelope,
+sealed<br>
+ hastily, and crumpled as if it had been carried in a hot and<br>
+ trembling hand.</p>
+
+<p>It was already known that Winkler never had any money except
+at<br>
+ certain irregular intervals, when he appeared to have come
+into<br>
+ possession of considerable sums. During these days he indulged
+in<br>
+ extravagant pleasures and spent his money with a recklessness
+which<br>
+ proved that he had not earned it by honest work.</p>
+
+<p>Leopold Winkler was a blackmailer.</p>
+
+<p>Colonel Leining, retired, the father of two such widely
+different<br>
+ children, was doubtless a man of stern principles, and an
+army<br>
+ officer as well, therefore a man with a doubly sensitive code
+of<br>
+ honour and a social position to maintain; and this man,
+morbidly<br>
+ sensitive probably, had a daughter who had inherited his<br>
+ sensitiveness and his high ideals of honour, a daughter married
+to<br>
+ a rich husband. But he had another child, a son without any
+sense<br>
+ of honour at all, who, although also an officer, failed to live
+in<br>
+ a manner worthy his position. This son was now in Marburg,
+where<br>
+ there were no expensive pleasures, no all-night cafes and
+gambling<br>
+ dens, for a man to lose his time in, his money, and his honour
+also.</p>
+
+<p>For such must have been the case with Colonel Leining's son
+before<br>
+ his exile to Marburg. The old butler had hinted at the truth.
+The<br>
+ portrait drawn by Herbert Thorne, a picture of such
+technical<br>
+ excellence that it was doubtless a good likeness also, had given
+an<br>
+ ugly illustration to Franz's remarks. And there was something
+even<br>
+ more tangible to prove it: "Theo's" letter from Marburg
+pleading<br>
+ with Winkler for "discretion and silence," not knowing ("let
+us<br>
+ hope he did not know!" murmured Muller between set teeth) that
+the<br>
+ man who held him in his power because of some rascality, was
+being<br>
+ paid for his silence by the Lieutenant's sister.</p>
+
+<p>It is easy to frighten a sensitive woman, so easy to make
+her<br>
+ believe the worst! And there is little such a tender-hearted
+woman<br>
+ will not do to save her aging father from pain and sorrow,
+perhaps<br>
+ even disgrace!</p>
+
+<p>It must have been in this way that Mrs. Thorne came into the
+power<br>
+ of the scoundrel who paid with his life for his last attempt
+at<br>
+ blackmail.</p>
+
+<p>When Muller reached this point in his chain of thought, he
+closed<br>
+ his eyes and covered his face with his hands, letting two
+pictures<br>
+ stand out clear before his mental vision.</p>
+
+<p>He saw the little anxious group around the carriage in front
+of the<br>
+ Thorne mansion. He saw the pale, frail woman leaning back on
+the<br>
+ cushions, and the husband bending over her in tender care.
+And<br>
+ then he saw Johann Knoll in his cell, a man with little manhood
+left<br>
+ in him, a man sunk to the level of the brutes, a man who had
+already<br>
+ committed one crime against society, and who could never rise to
+the<br>
+ mental or spiritual standard of even the most mediocre of
+decent<br>
+ citizens.</p>
+
+<p>If Herbert Thorne were to suffer the just punishment for his
+deed<br>
+ of doubly blind jealousy, then it was not only his own life, a
+life<br>
+ full of gracious promise, that would be ruined, but the
+happiness of<br>
+ his delicate, sweet-faced wife, who was doubtless still in
+blessed<br>
+ ignorance of what had happened. And still one other would be
+dragged<br>
+ down by this tragedy; a respected, upright man would bow his
+white<br>
+ hairs in disgrace. Thorne's father-in-law could not escape
+the<br>
+ scandal and his own share in the responsibility for it. And to
+a<br>
+ veteran officer, bred in the exaggerated social ethics of
+his<br>
+ profession. such a disgrace means ruin, sometimes even
+voluntary<br>
+ death.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, dear, if it had only been Knoll who did it," said Muller
+with<br>
+ a sigh that was almost a groan.</p>
+
+<p>Then he rose slowly and heavily, and slowly and heavily, as if
+borne<br>
+ down by the weight of great weariness, he reached for his hat
+and<br>
+ coat and left the house.</p>
+
+<p>Whether he wished it or not, he knew it was his duty to go on
+to the<br>
+ bitter end on this trail he had followed up all day from the
+moment<br>
+ that he caught that fleeting glimpse of Mrs. Bernauer's haggard
+face<br>
+ at the garden gate. He was almost angry with the woman, because
+she<br>
+ chanced to look out of the gate at just that moment, showing him
+her<br>
+ face distorted with anxiety. For it was her face that had
+drawn<br>
+ Muller to the trail, a trail at the end of which misery awaited
+those<br>
+ for whom this woman had worked for years, those whom she loved
+and<br>
+ who treated her as one of the family.</p>
+
+<p>Muller knew now that the one-time nurse was in league with
+her<br>
+ former charge; that Thorne and Adele Bernauer were in each
+other's<br>
+ confidence; that the man sat waiting for the signal which she
+was<br>
+ to give him, a signal bringing so much disgrace and sorrow in
+its<br>
+ train.</p>
+
+<p>If the woman had not spied upon and betrayed her mistress,
+this<br>
+ terrible event, which now weighed upon her own soul, would not
+have<br>
+ happened.</p>
+
+<p>"A faithful servant, indeed," said Muller, with a harsh
+laugh.</p>
+
+<p>Then maturer consideration came and forced him to acknowledge
+that<br>
+ it was indeed devotion that had swayed Adele Bernauer, devotion
+to<br>
+ her master more than to her mistress. This was hardly to be<br>
+ wondered at. But she had not thought what might come from
+her<br>
+ revelations, what had come of them. For now her pet, the baby
+who<br>
+ had once lain in her arms, the handsome, gifted man whom she
+adored<br>
+ with more than the love of many a mother for the child of her
+own<br>
+ blood, was under the shadow of hideous disgrace and doom, was
+the<br>
+ just prey of the law for open trial and condemnation as a
+murderer.</p>
+
+<p>Muller sighed deeply once more and then came one of those
+moments<br>
+ which he had spoken of to the unhappy woman that very day. He
+felt<br>
+ like cursing the fatal gift that was his, the gift to see what
+was<br>
+ hidden from others, this something within him that forced
+him<br>
+ relentlessly onward until he had uncovered the truth, and
+brought<br>
+ misery to many.</p>
+
+<p>Muller need not do anything, he need simply do nothing. Not a
+soul<br>
+ besides himself suspected the dwellers in the Thorne mansion of
+any<br>
+ connection with the murder. If he were silent, nothing could
+be<br>
+ proven against Knoll after all, except the robbery which he
+himself<br>
+ had confessed. Then the memory of the terror in the tramp's
+little<br>
+ reddened eyes came back to the detective's mind.</p>
+
+<p>"A human soul after all, and a soul trembling in the shadow of
+a<br>
+ great fear. And even he's a better man than the blackmailer
+who<br>
+ was killed. A miscarriage of justice will often make a
+criminal<br>
+ of a poor fellow whose worst fault is idleness." Muller's
+face<br>
+ darkened as the things of the past, shut down in the depths of
+his<br>
+ own soul, rose up again. "No; that's why I took up this
+work.<br>
+ Justice must be done - but it's bitter hard sometimes. I
+could<br>
+ almost wish now that I hadn't seen that face at the gate."</p>
+
+<p><br>
+</p>
+
+<h2>CHAPTER X</h2>
+
+<h3>MULLER RETURNS TO THE THORNE MANSION</h3>
+
+<p><br>
+ It was striking eight as Muller came out of a cafe in the heart
+of<br>
+ the city. He had been in there but a few moments, for his
+purpose<br>
+ was merely to look through the Army lists of the current year.
+The<br>
+ result of his search proved the correctness of his
+conclusions.</p>
+
+<p>There was a Lieutenant Theobald Leining in the single
+infantry<br>
+ regiment stationed at Marburg.</p>
+
+<p>Muller took a cab and drove to the main telegraph office. He
+asked<br>
+ for the original of the telegram which had been sent that
+afternoon<br>
+ to the address; "Herbert Thorne, Hotel Danieli, Venice."
+This<br>
+ closed the circle of the chain.</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ The detective re-entered his waiting cab and drove back to
+Hietzing.<br>
+ He told the driver to halt at the corner of the street on
+which<br>
+ fronted the Thorne mansion and to wait for him there. He
+himself<br>
+ walked slowly down the quiet Street and rang the bell at the
+iron<br>
+ gate.</p>
+
+<p>"You come to this house again?" asked Franz, starting back
+in<br>
+ alarm when he saw who it was that had called him to the
+door.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, my good friend; I want to get into this house again. But
+not<br>
+ on false pretenses this time. And before you let me in you can
+go<br>
+ upstairs and ask Mrs. Bernauer if she will receive me in her
+own<br>
+ room - in her own room, mind. But make haste; I am in a
+hurry."<br>
+ The detective's tone was calm and he strolled slowly up and down
+in<br>
+ front of the gate when he had finished speaking.</p>
+
+<p>The old butler hesitated a moment, then walked into the
+house.<br>
+ When he returned, rather more quickly, he looked alarmed and
+his<br>
+ tone was very humble as he asked Muller to follow him.</p>
+
+<p>When the detective entered Mrs. Bernauer's room the
+housekeeper<br>
+ rose slowly from the large armchair in front of her table. She
+was<br>
+ very pale and her eyes were full of terror. She made no move
+to<br>
+ speak, so Muller began the conversation. He put down his
+hat,<br>
+ brought up a chair and placed it near the window at which
+the<br>
+ housekeeper had been sitting. Then he sat down and motioned
+to<br>
+ her to do the same.</p>
+
+<p>"You are a faithful servant, all too faithful," he began.
+"But<br>
+ you are faithful only to your master. You have no devotion
+for<br>
+ his wife."</p>
+
+<p>"You are mistaken," replied the woman in a low tone.</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps, but I do not think so. One does not betray the
+people<br>
+ to whom one is devoted."</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Bernauer looked up in surprise. "What - what do you
+know?"<br>
+ she stammered.</p>
+
+<p>Muller did not answer the question directly, but continued:
+"Mrs.<br>
+ Thorne had a meeting recently with a strange man. It was not
+their<br>
+ first meeting, and somehow you discovered it. But before this
+last<br>
+ meeting occurred you spoke to the lady's husband about it, and
+it<br>
+ was arranged between you that you should give him a signal
+which<br>
+ would mean to him, 'Your wife is going to the meeting.' Mrs.
+Thorne<br>
+ did go to the meeting. This happened on Monday evening at
+about<br>
+ quarter past nine. Some one, who was in the neighbourhood by<br>
+ chance, saw a woman's figure hurrying through the garden, down
+to<br>
+ the other street, and a moment after this, the light of this
+lamp<br>
+ in your window was seen to go out. A hand had turned down
+the<br>
+ wick - it was your hand.</p>
+
+<p>"This was the signal to Mr. Thorne. The mirrors over his
+desk<br>
+ reflected in his eyes the light he could not otherwise have
+seen<br>
+ as he sat by his own window. The signal, therefore, told him
+that<br>
+ the time had come to act. This same chance watcher, who had
+seen<br>
+ the woman going through the garden, had seen the lamp go out,
+and<br>
+ now saw a man's figure hurrying down the path the woman had
+taken.<br>
+ The man as well as the woman came from this house and went in
+the<br>
+ direction of the lower end of the garden.</p>
+
+<p>"A little while later a shot was heard, and the next morning
+Leopold<br>
+ Winkler was found with a bullet in his back. The crime was<br>
+ generally taken to be a murder for the sake of robbery. But you
+and<br>
+ I, and Mr. Herbert Thorne, know very well that it was not.</p>
+
+<p>"You know this since Wednesday noon. Then it was that the
+idea<br>
+ suddenly came to you, falling like a heavy weight on your soul,
+the<br>
+ idea that Winkler might not have been killed for the sake of
+robbery,<br>
+ but because of the hatred that some one bore him. Then it was
+that<br>
+ you lost your appetite suddenly, that you drove into the city
+with<br>
+ the excuse of errands to do, in order to read the papers
+without<br>
+ being seen by any one who knew you. When you came home you
+searched<br>
+ everywhere in your master's room: you made an excuse for this
+search,<br>
+ but what you wanted to find out was whether he had left
+anything<br>
+ that could betray him. Your fright had already confused your
+mind.<br>
+ You were searching probably for the weapon from which he had
+fired<br>
+ the bullet. You did not realise that he would naturally have
+taken<br>
+ it with him and thrown it somewhere into a ravine or river
+beside<br>
+ the railway track between here and Venice. How could you think
+for<br>
+ a moment that he would leave it behind him, here in his room,
+or<br>
+ dropped in the garden? But this was doubtless due to the
+confusion<br>
+ owing to your sudden alarm and anxiety - a confusion which
+prevented<br>
+ you from realising the danger of the two peculiarly hung mirrors
+in<br>
+ Mr. Thorne's room. These should have been taken away at once.
+This<br>
+ morning my sudden appearance at the garden gate prevented you
+from<br>
+ making an examination of the place of the murder. Your swoon,
+after<br>
+ I had spoken to you in the butler's room, showed me that you
+were<br>
+ carrying a burden too heavy for your strength. Finally, this<br>
+ afternoon, you drove to the main telegraph office in the city,
+as<br>
+ you thought that it would be safer to telegraph Mr. Thorne
+from<br>
+ there. Your telegram was very cleverly written. But you might
+have<br>
+ spared the last sentence, the request that Mr. Thorne should get
+the<br>
+ Viennese papers of these last days. Believe me, he has already
+read<br>
+ these papers. Who could be more interested in what they have to
+tell<br>
+ than he?"</p>
+
+<p>The housekeeper had sat as if frozen to stone during Muller's
+long<br>
+ speech. Her face was ashen and her eyes wild with horror. When
+the<br>
+ detective ceased speaking, there was dead silence in the room
+for<br>
+ some time. Finally Muller asked: "Is this what happened?" His
+voice<br>
+ was cutting and the glance of his eyes keen and sharp.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Bernauer trembled. Her head sank on her breast. Muller
+waited<br>
+ a moment more and then he said quietly: "Then it is true."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, it is true," came the answer in a low hoarse tone.</p>
+
+<p>Again there was silence for an appreciable interval.</p>
+
+<p>"If you had been faithful to your mistress as well, if you had
+not<br>
+ spied upon her and betrayed her to her husband, all this might
+not<br>
+ have happened," continued the detective pitilessly, adding with
+a<br>
+ bitter smile: "And it was not even a case of sinful love.
+Your<br>
+ mistress had no such relations with this Winkler as you - I
+say<br>
+ this to excuse you - seemed to believe."</p>
+
+<p>Adele Bernauer sprang up. "I do not need this excuse," she
+cried,<br>
+ trembling in excitement. "I do not need any excuse. What I
+have<br>
+ done I did after due consideration and in the realisation that
+it<br>
+ was absolutely necessary to do it. Never for one moment did
+I<br>
+ believe that my mistress was untrue to her husband. Never for
+one<br>
+ moment could I believe such an evil thing of her, for I knew her
+to<br>
+ be an angel of goodness. A woman who is deceiving her husband
+is<br>
+ not as unhappy as this poor lady has been for months. A woman
+does<br>
+ not write to a successful lover with so much sorrow, with so
+many<br>
+ tears. I had long suspected these meetings before I
+discovered<br>
+ them, but I knew that these meetings had nothing whatever to
+do<br>
+ with love. Because I knew this, and only because I knew it, did
+I<br>
+ tell my master about them. I wanted him to protect his wife,
+to<br>
+ free her from the wretch who had obtained some power over her,
+I<br>
+ knew not how."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah! then that was it?" exclaimed Muller, and his eyes
+softened<br>
+ as he looked at the sobbing woman who had sunk back into her
+chair.<br>
+ He laid his hand on her cold fingers and continued gently:
+"Then<br>
+ you have really done right, you have done only what was your
+duty.<br>
+ I pity you deeply that you - "</p>
+
+<p>"That I have brought suspicion upon my master by my own
+foolishness?"<br>
+ she finished the sentence with a pitifully sad smile. "If I
+could<br>
+ have controlled myself, could have kept calm, nobody would have
+had<br>
+ a thought or a suspicion that he - my pet, my darling - that it
+was<br>
+ he who was forced, through some terrible circumstance of which I
+do<br>
+ not know, to free his wife, in this manner, from the wretch
+who<br>
+ persecuted her."</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Bernauer wrung her hands and gazed with despairing eyes
+at the<br>
+ man who sat before her, himself deeply moved.</p>
+
+<p>Again there was a long silence. Muller could not find a word
+to<br>
+ comfort the weeping woman. There was no longer anger in his
+heart,<br>
+ nothing but the deepest pity. He took out his handkerchief
+and<br>
+ wiped away the drops that were dimming his own eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"You know that I will have to go to Venice?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Bernauer sprang up. "Officially?" she gasped, pale to
+her<br>
+ lips.</p>
+
+<p>He nodded. "Yes, officially of course. I must make a report
+at<br>
+ once to headquarters about what I have learned. You can
+imagine<br>
+ yourself what the next steps will be."</p>
+
+<p>Her deep sigh showed him that she knew as well as he. In the
+same<br>
+ second, however, a thought shot through her brain, changing
+her<br>
+ whole king. Her pale face glowed, her dulled eyes shot fire,
+and<br>
+ the fingers with which she held Muller's hand tightly clasped,
+were<br>
+ suddenly feverishly hot.</p>
+
+<p>"And you - you are still the only person who knows the truth?"
+she<br>
+ gasped in his ear.</p>
+
+<p>The detective nodded. "And you thought you might silence me?"
+he<br>
+ asked calmly. "That will not be easy - for you can imagine that
+I<br>
+ did not come unarmed."</p>
+
+<p>Adele Bernauer smiled sadly. "I would take even this way to
+save<br>
+ Herbert Thorne from disgrace, if I thought that it could be<br>
+ successful, and if I had not thought of a milder way to silence
+a<br>
+ man who cannot be a millionaire. I have served in this house
+for<br>
+ thirty-two years, I have been treated with such generosity that
+I<br>
+ have been able to save almost every cent of my wages for my
+old<br>
+ age. With the interest that has rolled up, my little fortune
+must<br>
+ amount to nearly eight thousand gulden. I will gladly give it
+to<br>
+ you, if you will but keep silence, if you will not tell what
+you<br>
+ have discovered." She spoke gaspingly and sank down on her
+knees<br>
+ before she had finished.</p>
+
+<p>"And Mr. Thorne also - " she continued hastily, as she saw no
+sign<br>
+ of interest in Muller's calm face. Then her voice failed
+her.</p>
+
+<p>The detective looked down kindly on her grey hairs and
+answered:<br>
+ "No, no, my good woman; that won't do. One cannot conceal
+one<br>
+ crime by committing another. I myself would naturally not
+listen<br>
+ to your suggestion for a moment, but I am also convinced that
+Mr.<br>
+ Thorne, to whom you are so devoted, and who, I acknowledge,
+pleased<br>
+ me the very first sight I had of him - I am convinced that he
+would<br>
+ not agree for a moment to any such solution of the problem."</p>
+
+<p>"Then I can only hope that you will not find him in
+Venice,"<br>
+ replied Mrs. Bernauer, with utter despair in her voice and
+eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"I am not at all certain that I will find him in Venice when
+I<br>
+ leave here to-morrow morning," said Muller calmly.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! then you don't want to find him! Oh God! how good,
+how<br>
+ inexpressibly good you are," stammered the woman, seizing at
+some<br>
+ vague hope in her distraught heart.</p>
+
+<p>"No, you are mistaken again, Mrs. Bernauer. I will find Mr.
+Thorne<br>
+ wherever he may be. But I may arrive in Venice too late to
+meet<br>
+ him there. He may already be on his way home."</p>
+
+<p>"On his way home?" cried the housekeeper in terror,
+staggering<br>
+ where she stood.</p>
+
+<p>Muller led her gently to a chair. "Sit down here and listen to
+me<br>
+ calmly. This is what I mean. If Mr. Thorne has seen in the
+papers<br>
+ that a man has been arrested and accused of the murder of
+Leopold<br>
+ Winkler, then he will take the next train back and give himself
+up<br>
+ to the authorities. That he makes no such move as long as he
+thinks<br>
+ there is no suspicion on any one else, no possibility that any
+one<br>
+ else could suffer the consequences of his deed - is quite<br>
+ comprehensible - it is only natural and human."</p>
+
+<p>Adele Bernauer sighed deeply again and heavy tears ran down
+her<br>
+ cheeks, in strange contrast to the ghost of a smile that
+parted<br>
+ her lips and shone in her dimmed eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"You know him better than I do," she murmured almost
+inaudibly,<br>
+ "you know him better than I do, and I have known him for so
+long."</p>
+
+<p>A moment later Muller had parted from the housekeeper with a
+warm,<br>
+ sincere pressure of the hand.</p>
+
+<p>"Lieutenant Theobald Leining was here on a visit to his sister
+last<br>
+ March, wasn't he?" the detective asked as Franz led him out of
+the<br>
+ gate.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir; the Lieutenant was here just about that time,"
+answered<br>
+ the old man.</p>
+
+<p>And he left here on the 16th of March?"</p>
+
+<p>"On the 16th? Why, it may have been - yes, it was the 16th -
+that<br>
+ is our lady's birthday. He went away that day." Franz bowed
+a<br>
+ farewell to this stranger who began to appear uncanny in his
+eyes,<br>
+ and shutting the gate carefully he returned to the house.</p>
+
+<p>"What does the man want anyway?" he murmured to himself,
+shivering<br>
+ involuntarily. Without knowing why he turned his steps towards
+Mrs.<br>
+ Bernauer s room. He opened the door hesitatingly as if afraid
+of<br>
+ what he might see there. He would not have been at all surprised
+if<br>
+ he had found the housekeeper fainting on the floor as
+before.</p>
+
+<p>But she was not fainting this time. She was very much alive,
+for,<br>
+ to Franz's great astonishment, she was busied at the packing of
+a<br>
+ valise.</p>
+
+<p>"Are you going away too?" asked Franz. Mrs. Bernauer answered
+in<br>
+ a voice that was dull with weariness: "Yes, Franz, I am going
+away.<br>
+ Will you please look up the time-tables of the Southern
+railroad<br>
+ and let me know when the morning express leaves? And please
+order<br>
+ a cab in time for it. I will depend upon you to look after
+the<br>
+ house in my absence. You can imagine that it must be
+something<br>
+ very important that takes me to Venice."</p>
+
+<p>"To Venice? Why, what are you going to Venice for?"</p>
+
+<p>"Never mind about that, Franz, but help me to pray that I may
+get<br>
+ there in time."</p>
+
+<p>She almost pushed the old man out of the door with these
+last<br>
+ words and shut and locked it behind him.</p>
+
+<p>She wanted to be alone with this hideous fear that was
+clutching<br>
+ at her heart. For it was not to Franz that she could tell
+the<br>
+ thoughts that came to her lips now as she sank down, wringing
+her<br>
+ hands, before a picture of the Madonna: "Oh Holy Virgin,
+Mother<br>
+ of our Lord, plead for me! let me be with my dear mistress
+when<br>
+ the terrible time comes and they take her husband away from
+her,<br>
+ or, if preferring death to disgrace, he ends his life by his
+own<br>
+ hand!"</p>
+
+<h2><br>
+ CHAPTER XI</h2>
+
+<h3>IN THE POLICE COURT</h3>
+
+<p><br>
+ Commissioner Von Riedau sat at his desk late that evening,<br>
+ finishing up some important papers. The quiet of an
+undisturbed<br>
+ night watch had settled down on the busy police station. An<br>
+ occasional low murmur of whispering voices floated up from
+the<br>
+ guardroom below, but otherwise the stillness was broken only
+by<br>
+ the scratching of the commissioner's pen and the rustle of
+the<br>
+ paper as he turned the leaves. It was a silence so complete
+that<br>
+ a light step on the stair outside and the gentle turning of
+the<br>
+ doorknob was heard distinctly and the commissioner looked up<br>
+ with almost a start to see who was coming to his room so
+late.<br>
+ Joseph Muller stood in the open door, awaiting his chief's
+official<br>
+ recognition.</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ "Oh ! it's you, Muller. So late? Come in. Anything new?"
+asked<br>
+ the commissioner. "Have you succeeded in drawing a confession
+from<br>
+ that stubborn tramp yet? You've been interviewing him, I take
+it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I had a long talk with Johann Knoll to-day."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, that ought to help matters along. Has he confessed?
+What<br>
+ could you get out of him?"</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing, or almost nothing more than he told us here in the
+station,<br>
+ sir.</p>
+
+<p>"The man's incredibly stubborn," said the commissioner. "If
+he<br>
+ could only be made to understand that a free confession would
+benefit<br>
+ him more than any one else! Well, don't look so down-cast about
+it,<br>
+ Muller. This thing is going to take longer than we thought at
+first<br>
+ for such a simple affair. But it's only a question of time until
+the<br>
+ man comes to his senses. You'll get him to talk soon. You
+always<br>
+ do. And even if you should fail here, this matter is not so
+very<br>
+ important, when we think of all the other things you have
+done."<br>
+ Muller, standing front of the desk, shook his head sadly.</p>
+
+<p>"But I haven't failed here, sir. More's the pity, I had
+almost<br>
+ said."</p>
+
+<p>"What!" The commissioner looked up in surprise. "I thought
+you<br>
+ just said that you couldn't get anything more out of the
+accused."</p>
+
+<p>"Knoll has told us all he knows, sir. He did not murder
+Leopold<br>
+ Winkler."</p>
+
+<p>"Hmph!" The commissioner's exclamation had a touch of acidity
+in<br>
+ it. "Then, if he didn't murder him, who did?"</p>
+
+<p>"Herbert Thorne, painter, living in the Thorne mansion in B.
+Street,<br>
+ Hietzing, now in Venice, Hotel Danieli. I ask for a warrant
+for<br>
+ his arrest, sir, and orders to start for Venice on the early
+morning<br>
+ express to-morrow."</p>
+
+<p>"Muller! ... what the deuce does all this mean?" The
+commissioner<br>
+ sprang up, his face flushing deeply as he leaned over the
+desk<br>
+ staring at the sad quiet face of the little man opposite.
+"What<br>
+ are you talking about? What does all this mean?"</p>
+
+<p>"It means, sir, that we now know who committed the murder
+in<br>
+ Hietzing. Johann Knoll is innocent of anything more than the
+theft<br>
+ confessed by himself. He took the purse and watch from the<br>
+ senseless form of the just murdered man. The body was warm
+and<br>
+ still supple and the tramp supposed the victim to be merely<br>
+ intoxicated. His story was in every respect true, sir."</p>
+
+<p>The commissioner flushed still deeper. "And who do you say
+murdered<br>
+ this man?"</p>
+
+<p>"Herbert Thorne, sir.</p>
+
+<p>"But Thome! I know of him ... have even a slight personal<br>
+ acquaintance with him. Thorne is a rich man, of excellent
+family.<br>
+ Why should he murder and rob an obscure clerk like this
+Winkler?"</p>
+
+<p>"He did not rob him sir, Knoll did that."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes. But why should Thorne commit murder on this man
+who<br>
+ scarcely touched his life at any point ... It's incredible!<br>
+ Muller! Muller! are you sure you are not letting your
+imagination<br>
+ run away with you again? It is a serious thing to make such
+an<br>
+ accusation against any man, much less against a man in
+Thorne's<br>
+ position. Are you sure of what you are saying?" The
+commissioner's<br>
+ excitement rendered him almost inarticulate. The shock of
+the<br>
+ surprise occasioned by the detective's words produced a feeling
+of<br>
+ irritation ... a phenomenon not unusual in the minds of worthy
+but<br>
+ pedantic men of affairs when confronted by a startling new
+thought.</p>
+
+<p>"I am quite sure of what I am saying, sir. I have just heard
+the<br>
+ confession of one who might be called an accomplice of the
+murderer."</p>
+
+<p>"It is incredible ... incredible! An accomplice you say? ...
+who<br>
+ is this accomplice? Might it not be some one who has a
+grudge<br>
+ against Thorne - some one who is trying to purposely mislead you
+?"</p>
+
+<p>"I am not so easily deceived or misled, sir. Every evidence
+points<br>
+ to Thorne, and the confession I have just heard was made by a
+woman<br>
+ who loves him, who has loved and cared for him from his
+babyhood.<br>
+ There is not the slightest doubt of it, sir."</p>
+
+<p>Muller moved a step nearer the desk, gazing firmly in the eyes
+of<br>
+ the excited commissioner. The sadness on the detective's face
+had<br>
+ given way to a gleam of pride that flushed his sallow cheek
+and<br>
+ brightened his grey eyes. It was one of those rare moments
+when<br>
+ Muller allowed himself a feeling of triumph in his own power,
+in<br>
+ spite of official subordination and years of habit. His
+slight<br>
+ frame seemed to grow taller and broader as he faced the Chief
+with<br>
+ an air of quiet determination that made him at once master of
+the<br>
+ situation. His voice was as low as ever but it took on a
+keen<br>
+ incisive note that compelled attention, as he continued:
+"Herbert<br>
+ Thorne is the murderer of Leopold Winkler. Now that he knows
+an<br>
+ innocent man is under accusation for his deed it is only a
+question<br>
+ of time before he will come himself to confess. He will
+doubtless<br>
+ make this confession to me, if I go to Venice to see him, and
+to<br>
+ bring him back to trial."</p>
+
+<p>The commissioner could doubt no longer. Pedantic though he
+was,<br>
+ Commissioner von Riedau possessed sufficient insight to know
+the<br>
+ truth when it was presented to him with such conviction, and
+also<br>
+ sufficient insight to have recognised the gifts of the man
+before<br>
+ him. "But why ... why?" he murmured, sinking back into his
+chair,<br>
+ and shaking his<br>
+ head in bewilderment.</p>
+
+<p>"Winkler was a miserable scoundrel, sir, a blackmailer. Thorne
+did<br>
+ only what any decent man would have felt like doing in his
+place.<br>
+ But justice must be done."</p>
+
+<p>Muller's elation vanished and a deep sigh welled up from his
+heart.<br>
+ The commissioner nodded slowly, and glanced across the desk
+almost<br>
+ timidly. This case had appeared to be so simple, and suddenly
+the<br>
+ hidden deeps of a dark mystery had opened before him, deeps
+already<br>
+ sounded by the little man here who had gone so quietly about
+his<br>
+ work while the official police, represented in this case by<br>
+ Commissioner von Riedau himself, had sat calmly waiting for
+an<br>
+ innocent man to confess to a crime he had not committed! It
+was<br>
+ humiliating. The commissioner flushed again and his eyes sank
+to<br>
+ the floor.</p>
+
+<p>"Tell me what you know, Muller," he said finally.</p>
+
+<p>Muller told the story of his experiences in the Thorne
+mansion,<br>
+ told of the slight clues which led him to take an interest in
+the<br>
+ house and its inmates, until finally the truth began to glimmer
+up<br>
+ out of the depths. The commissioner listened with eager
+interest.<br>
+ "Then you believed this elaborate yarn told by the tramp?"
+he<br>
+ interrupted once, at the beginning of the narrative.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, yes, sir, just because it was so elaborate. A man like
+Knoll<br>
+ would not have had the mind to invent such a story. It must
+have<br>
+ been true, on the face of it."</p>
+
+<p>The commissioner's eyes sank again, and he did not speak until
+the<br>
+ detective had reached the end of his story. Then he opened a
+drawer<br>
+ in his desk and took out a bundle of official blank-forms.</p>
+
+<p>"It is wonderful! Wonderful! Muller, this case will go on
+record<br>
+ as one of your finest achievements - and we thought it was so
+simple</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, indeed, sir, chance favoured me at every turn," replied
+Muller<br>
+ modestly.</p>
+
+<p>"There is no such thing as chance," said the commissioner.
+"We<br>
+ might as well be honest with ourselves. Any one might have
+seen,<br>
+ doubtless did see, all the things you saw, but no one else had
+the<br>
+ insight to recognise their value, nor the skill to follow them
+up<br>
+ to such a conclusion. But it's a sad case, a sad case. I
+never<br>
+ wrote a warrant with a heavier heart. Thorne is a
+true-hearted<br>
+ gentleman, while the scoundrel he killed..."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir, I feel that way about it myself. I can confess now
+that<br>
+ there was one moment when I was ready to-well, just to say
+nothing.</p>
+
+<p>"And let us blunder on in our official stupidity and
+blindness?"<br>
+ interrupted the commissioner, a faint smile breaking the gravity
+of<br>
+ his face. "We certainly gave you every opportunity."</p>
+
+<p>"But there's an innocent man accused - suffering fear of
+death<br>
+ - justice must be done. But, sir," Muller took the warrant
+the<br>
+ commissioner handed across the table to him. "May I not make
+it<br>
+ as easy as I can for Mr. Thorne - I mean, bring him here with
+as<br>
+ little publicity as possible? His wife is with him in
+Venice."</p>
+
+<p>"Poor little woman, it's terrible! Do whatever you think
+best,<br>
+ Muller. You're a queer mixture. Here you've hounded this man
+down,<br>
+ followed hot on his trail when not a soul but yourself
+connected<br>
+ him in any way with the murder. And now you're sorry for him!
+A<br>
+ soft heart like yours is a dangerous possession for a police<br>
+ detective, Muller. It's no aid to our business."</p>
+
+<p>"No, sir, I know that."</p>
+
+<p>"Well take care it doesn't run away with you this time. Don't
+let<br>
+ Herbert Thorne escape, however much pity you may feel for
+him."</p>
+
+<p>"I doubt if he'll want to sir, as long as another is in prison
+for<br>
+ his crime.</p>
+
+<p>"But he may make his confession and then try to escape the
+disgrace."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir, I've thought of that. That's why I want to go to
+Venice<br>
+ myself. And then, there's the poor young wife, he must think of
+her<br>
+ when the desire comes to end his own life..."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes! Yes! This terrible thing has shaken us both up more than
+a<br>
+ little. I feel exhausted. You look tired yourself, Muller. Go
+home<br>
+ now, and get some rest for your early start. Good-night."</p>
+
+<p>"Good-night, sir."</p>
+
+<h2><br>
+ CHAPTER XII</h2>
+
+<h3>ON THE LIDO</h3>
+
+<p><br>
+ A Wonderfully beautiful night lay over the fair old city of
+Venice<br>
+ when the Northern Express thundered over the long bridge to
+the<br>
+ railway station. A passenger who was alone in a second-class<br>
+ compartment stood up to collect his few belongings. Suddenly
+he<br>
+ looked up as he heard a voice, a voice which he had learned to
+know<br>
+ only very recently, calling to him from the door of the
+compartment.</p>
+
+<p>"Why! you were in the train too? You have come to Venice?"<br>
+ exclaimed Joseph Muller in astonishment as he saw Mrs.
+Bernauer<br>
+ standing there before him.</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ "Yes, I have come to Venice too. I must be with my dear lady -
+when<br>
+ - when Herbert - " She had begun quite calmly, but she did
+not<br>
+ finish her sentence, for loud sobs drowned the words.</p>
+
+<p>"You were in the next compartment? Why didn't you come in
+here<br>
+ with me? It would have made this journey shorter for both of
+us."</p>
+
+<p>"I had to be alone," said the pale woman and then she added:
+"I<br>
+ only came to you now to ask you where I must go."</p>
+
+<p>"I think we two had better go to the Hotel Bauer. Let me
+arrange<br>
+ things for you. Mrs. Thorne must not see you until she has
+been<br>
+ prepared for your coming. I will arrange that with her
+husband."</p>
+
+<p>The two took each other's hands. They had won respect and
+sympathy<br>
+ for each other, this quiet man who went so relentlessly and yet
+so<br>
+ pityingly about his duty in the interest of justice - and the
+devoted<br>
+ woman whose faithfulness had brought about such a tragedy.</p>
+
+<p>The train had now entered the railway station. Muller and
+Mrs.<br>
+ Bernauer stood a few minutes later on the banks of the Grand
+Canal<br>
+ and entered, one of the many gondolas waiting there. The
+moon<br>
+ glanced back from the surface of the water broken into ripples
+under<br>
+ the oars of the gondoliers; it shone with a magic charm on the
+old<br>
+ palaces that stood knee-deep in the lagoons, and threw heavy
+shadows<br>
+ over the narrow water-roads on which the little dark boats
+glided<br>
+ silently forward. In most of the gondolas coming from the
+station<br>
+ excited voices and exclamations of delight broke the calm of
+the<br>
+ moonlit evening as the tourists rejoiced in the beauty that
+is<br>
+ Venice.</p>
+
+<p>But in the gondola in which Muller and Mrs. Bernauer sat there
+was<br>
+ deep silence, silence broken only by a sobbing sigh that now
+and<br>
+ then burst from the heart of the haggard woman. There were
+few<br>
+ travellers entering Venice on one of its world-famous moonlit
+nights<br>
+ who were so sad at heart as were these two.</p>
+
+<p>And there were few travellers in Venice as heavy hearted as
+was the<br>
+ man who next morning took one of the earliest boats out to the
+Lido.</p>
+
+<p>Muller and Mrs. Bernauer were on the same boat watching him
+from a<br>
+ hidden corner. The woman's sad eyes gazed yearningly at the
+haggard<br>
+ face of the tall man who stood looking over the railing of the
+little<br>
+ steamer. Her own tears came as she saw the gloom in the once
+shining<br>
+ grey eyes she loved so well.</p>
+
+<p>Muller stood beside Mrs. Bernauer. His eyes too, keen and
+quick,<br>
+ followed Herbert Thorne as he stood by the rail or paced
+restlessly<br>
+ up and down; his face too showed pity and concern. He also saw
+that<br>
+ Thorne held in his hand a bundle of newspapers which were
+still<br>
+ enclosed in their mailing wrappers. The papers were pressed in
+a<br>
+ convulsive grip of the artist's long slender fingers.</p>
+
+<p>Muller knew then that Thorne had not yet learned of the arrest
+of<br>
+ Johann Knoll. At the very earliest, Thursday's papers, which
+brought<br>
+ the news, could not reach him before Friday morning. But
+these<br>
+ newspapers (Muller saw that they were German papers) were still
+in<br>
+ their wrappings. They were probably Viennese papers for which he
+had<br>
+ telegraphed and which had just arrived. His anxiety had not
+allowed<br>
+ him to read them in the presence of his wife. He had sought
+the<br>
+ solitude of early morning on the Lido, that he might learn,<br>
+ unobserved, what terrors fate had in store for him.</p>
+
+<p>It was doubtless Mrs. Bernauer's telegram which caused his
+present<br>
+ anxiety, a telegram which had reached him only the night
+before<br>
+ when he returned with his wife from an excursion to Torcello.
+It<br>
+ had caused him a sleepless night, for it had brought the
+realisation<br>
+ that his faithful nurse suspected the truth about the murder in
+the<br>
+ quiet lane. The telegram had read as follows: "Have drawn money
+and<br>
+ send it at once. Further journey probably necessary, visitor
+in<br>
+ house to-day. Connected with occurrence in -Street. Please
+read<br>
+ Viennese papers. News and orders for me please send to address
+A.B.<br>
+ General Postoffice."</p>
+
+<p>This telegram told Herbert Thorne the truth. And the papers
+which<br>
+ arrived this morning were to tell him more - what he did not
+yet<br>
+ know. But his heart was drawn with terrors which threw lines in
+his<br>
+ face and made him look ten years older than on that Tuesday
+morning<br>
+ when the detective saw him setting out on his journey with his
+wife.</p>
+
+<p>When the boat landed at the Lido, Thorne walked off down the
+road<br>
+ which led to the ocean side. Muller and Mrs. Bernauer entered
+the<br>
+ waiting tramway that took them in the same direction. They<br>
+ dismounted in front of the bathing establishment, stepped behind
+a<br>
+ group of bushes and waited there for Thorne. In about ten
+minutes<br>
+ they saw his tall figure passing on the other side of the road.
+He<br>
+ was walking down to the beach, holding the still unopened papers
+in<br>
+ his hand.</p>
+
+<p>A narrow strip of park runs along parallel to the beach in
+the<br>
+ direction towards Mala Mocco. Muller and Mrs Bernauer walked
+along<br>
+ through this park on the path which was nearest the water.
+The<br>
+ detective watched the rapidly moving figure ahead of them, while
+the<br>
+ woman's tear-dimmed eyes veiled everything else to her but the
+path<br>
+ along which her weary feet hastened. Thorne halted about half
+way<br>
+ between the bathing establishment and the customs barracks,
+looked<br>
+ around to see if he were alone and threw himself down on the
+sand.</p>
+
+<p>He had chosen a good place. To the right and to the left were
+high<br>
+ sand dunes, before him was the broad surface of the ocean, and
+at<br>
+ his back was rising ground, bare sand with here and there a
+scraggly<br>
+ bush or a group of high thistles. Herbert Thorne believed
+himself<br>
+ to be alone here ... as far as a man can be alone over whom
+hangs<br>
+ the shadow of a crime. He groaned aloud and hid his pale face
+in<br>
+ his hands.</p>
+
+<p>In his own distress he did not hear the deep sigh - which,
+just<br>
+ above him on the edge of the knoll, broke from the breast of a
+woman<br>
+ who was suffering scarcely less than he; he did not know that
+two<br>
+ pair of sad eyes looked down upon him. And now into the eyes of
+the<br>
+ watching woman there shot a gleam of terror. For Herbert Thorne
+had<br>
+ taken a revolver from his pocket and laid it quietly beside
+him.<br>
+ Then he took out a notebook and a pencil and placed them beside
+the<br>
+ weapon. Then slowly, reluctantly, he opened one of the
+papers.</p>
+
+<p>A light breeze from the shining sea before him carried off
+the<br>
+ wrapping. The paper which he opened shook in his trembling
+hands,<br>
+ as his eyes sought the reports of the murder. He gave a
+sudden<br>
+ start and a tremor ran through his frame. He had come to the
+spot<br>
+ which told of the arrest of another man, who was under shadow
+of<br>
+ punishment for the crime which he himself had committed. When
+he<br>
+ had read this report through, he turned to the other papers. He
+was<br>
+ quite calm now, outwardly calm at least.</p>
+
+<p>When he had finished reading the papers he laid them in a
+heap<br>
+ beside him and reached out for his notebook. As he opened it
+the<br>
+ two watchers saw that between its first pages there was a sealed
+and<br>
+ addressed letter. Two other envelopes were contained in the<br>
+ notebook, envelopes which were also addressed although still
+open.<br>
+ Muller's sharp eyes could read the addresses as Thorne took them
+up<br>
+ in turn, looking long at each of them. One envelope was
+addressed<br>
+ in Italian to the Chief of Police of Venice, the other to the
+Chief<br>
+ of Police in Vienna.</p>
+
+<p>The two watchers leaned forward, scarcely three yards above
+the man<br>
+ in whom they were interested. Thorne tore out two leaves of
+his<br>
+ notebook and wrote several lines on each of them. One note,
+he<br>
+ placed in the envelope addressed to the Viennese police and
+sealed<br>
+ it carefully. Then he put the sealed letter with the second note
+in<br>
+ the other envelope, the one addressed to the Italian police. He
+put<br>
+ all the letters back in his notebook, holding it together with
+a<br>
+ rubber strap, and replaced it in his pocket.</p>
+
+<p>Then he stretched out his hand toward the revolver.</p>
+
+<p>The sand came rattling down upon him, the thistles bent
+over<br>
+ creakingly and two figures appeared beside him.</p>
+
+<p>"There's time enough for that yet, Mr. Thorne," said the man
+at whom<br>
+ the painter gazed up in bewilderment. And then this man took
+the<br>
+ revolver quietly from his hand and hid it in his own pocket.</p>
+
+<p>Thorne pressed his teeth down on his lips until the blood
+came. He<br>
+ could not speak; he looked first at the stranger who had
+mastered<br>
+ him so completely, and then, in dazed astonishment, at the woman
+who<br>
+ had sunk down beside him in the sand, clasping his hand in both
+of<br>
+ hers.</p>
+
+<p>"Adele! Adele! 'Why are you here?" he stammered finally.</p>
+
+<p>"I want to be with you - in this hour," she answered, looking
+at<br>
+ him with eyes of worship. "I want to be with my dear lady -
+to<br>
+ comfort her - to protect her when - when - "</p>
+
+<p>"When they arrest me?" Thorne finished the sentence himself.
+Then<br>
+ turning to Muller he continued: "And that is why you are
+here?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, Mr. Thorne. I have a warrant for your arrest in my
+pocket.<br>
+ But I think it will be unnecessary to make use of it in the<br>
+ customary official way through the authorities here. I see
+that<br>
+ you have written to both police stations - confessing your
+deed.<br>
+ This will amount to a voluntary giving up of yourself to the<br>
+ authorities, therefore all that is necessary is that I return
+with<br>
+ you in the same train which takes you to Vienna. But I must
+ask<br>
+ you for those two letters, for until you yourself give them to
+the<br>
+ police authorities in my presence, it is my duty to keep
+them."</p>
+
+<p>Muller had seldom found his official duty as difficult as it
+was<br>
+ now. His words came haltingly and great drops stood out on
+his<br>
+ forehead.</p>
+
+<p>The painter rose from the sand and he too wiped his face,
+which was<br>
+ drawn in agony.</p>
+
+<p>"Herbert, Herbert!" cried Adele Bernauer suddenly. "Oh,
+Herbert,<br>
+ you will live, you will! Promise me, you will not think of
+suicide,<br>
+ it would kill your wife - "</p>
+
+<p>She lay on her knees before him in the sand. He looked down at
+her<br>
+ gently and with a gesture which seemed to be a familiar one of
+days<br>
+ long past, he stroked the face that had grown old and worn in
+these<br>
+ hours of fear for him.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, you dear good soul, I will live on, I will take upon
+myself my<br>
+ punishment for killing a scoundrel. The poor man whom they
+have<br>
+ arrested in my place must not linger in the fear of death. I
+am<br>
+ ready, sir.</p>
+
+<p>"My name is Muller - detective Muller."</p>
+
+<p>"Joseph Muller, the famous detective Muller?" asked Thorne
+with a<br>
+ sad smile. "I have had little to do with the police but by
+chance<br>
+ I have heard of your fame. I might have known; they tell me
+you<br>
+ are one from whom the truth can never remain hidden."</p>
+
+<p>"My duty is not always an easy one," said Muller.</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you. Dispose of me as you will. I do not wish any<br>
+ privileges that others would not have, Mr. Muller. Here is
+my<br>
+ written confession and here am I myself. Shall we go. now?"<br>
+ Herbert Thorne handed the detective his notebook with its
+important<br>
+ contents and then walked slowly back along the road he had
+come.</p>
+
+<p>Muller walked a little behind him, while Mrs. Bernauer was at
+his<br>
+ side. As in days long past, they walked hand in hand.</p>
+
+<p>With eyes full of pity Muller watched them, and he heard
+Thorne<br>
+ give his old nurse orders for the care of his wife. She was to
+take<br>
+ Mrs. Thorne to Graz to her father, then to return herself to
+Vienna<br>
+ and take care of the house as usual, until his attorney could
+settle<br>
+ up his affairs and sell the property. For Thorne said that
+neither<br>
+ he nor his wife would ever want to set foot in the house again.
+He<br>
+ spoke calmly, he thought of everything - he thought even of
+the<br>
+ possibility that he might have to pay the death penalty for his
+deed.</p>
+
+<p>For who could tell how the authorities would judge this
+murder?</p>
+
+<p>It had indeed been a murder by merest chance only. Thorne told
+his<br>
+ old nurse all about it. When she had given him the signal he
+had<br>
+ hurried down into the garden, and walking quietly along the
+path,<br>
+ he had found his wife at the garden gate in conversation with a
+man<br>
+ who was a stranger to him. That part of their talk which he<br>
+ overheard told him that the man was a blackmailer, and that he
+was<br>
+ making money on the fact that he had caught Theobald Leining
+cheating<br>
+ at cards.</p>
+
+<p>This chance had put the officer into Winkler's power. The
+clerk<br>
+ knew that he could get nothing from the guilty man himself, so
+he<br>
+ had turned to the latter's sister, who was rich, and had
+threatened<br>
+ to bring about a disgraceful scandal if she did not pay for
+his<br>
+ silence. For more than a year he had been getting money from
+her<br>
+ by means of these threats. All this was clear from the
+conversation.<br>
+ The man spoke in tones of impertinence, or sneering
+obsequiousness,<br>
+ the woman s voice showed contempt and hatred.</p>
+
+<p>Thorne's blood began to boil. His fingers tightened about
+the<br>
+ revolver which he had brought with him to be ready for any
+emergency,<br>
+ and he stepped designedly upon a twig which broke under his
+feet<br>
+ with a noise. He wanted to frighten his wife and send her back
+to<br>
+ the house. This was what did occur. But the blackmailer was
+alarmed<br>
+ as well and fled hastily from the garden when he realised that
+he was<br>
+ not alone with his victim. Thorne followed the man's
+disappearing<br>
+ figure, calling him to halt. He did not call loudly for he too
+wanted<br>
+ to avoid a scandal. His intention was to force the man to follow
+him<br>
+ into the house, to get his written confession of blackmail -
+then to<br>
+ finish him off with a large sum once for all and kick him out of
+the<br>
+ place.</p>
+
+<p>In this manner Herbert Thorne thought to free himself and his
+wife<br>
+ from the persecutions of the rascal. His heart was filled
+with<br>
+ hatred towards the man. For since Mrs. Bernauer had told him
+what<br>
+ she had discovered, he knew that it was because of this wretch
+that<br>
+ his once so happy wife was losing her strength, her health and
+her<br>
+ peace of mind.</p>
+
+<p>He followed the fleeing man and called to him several times to
+halt.<br>
+ Finally Winkler half turned and called out over his shoulder:
+"You'd<br>
+ better leave me alone! Do you want all Vienna to know that
+your<br>
+ brother-in-law ought to be in jail?"</p>
+
+<p>These words robbed Thorne of all control. He pressed the
+trigger<br>
+ under his finger and the bullet struck the man before him, who
+had<br>
+ turned to continue his flight, full in the back. "And that is
+how<br>
+ I became a murderer." With these words Herbert Thorne concluded
+his<br>
+ narrative. He appeared quite calm now. He was really calmer,
+for<br>
+ the strain of the deed, which was justified in his eyes, was not
+so<br>
+ great upon his conscience as had been the strain of the secret
+of it.</p>
+
+<p>In his own eyes he had only killed a beast who chanced to bear
+the<br>
+ form of a man. But of course in the eyes of the world this was
+a<br>
+ murder like any other, and the man who had committed it knew
+that<br>
+ he was under the ban of the law, that it was only a chance that
+the<br>
+ arm of justice had not yet reached out for him. And now this
+arm<br>
+ had reached out for him, although it was no longer necessary.
+For<br>
+ Herbert Thorne was not the man to allow another to suffer in
+his<br>
+ stead.</p>
+
+<p>As soon as he knew that another had been arrested and was
+under<br>
+ suspicion of the murder, he knew that there was nothing more
+for<br>
+ him but open confession. But he wished to avoid a scandal even
+now.<br>
+ If he died by his own hand, then the first cause of all this
+trouble,<br>
+ his brother-in-law's rascality, could still be hidden.</p>
+
+<p>But now his care was all in vain and Herbert Thorne knew that
+he<br>
+ must submit to the inevitable. Side by side with his old
+friend<br>
+ he sat on the deck of the boat that took them back to the Riva
+dei<br>
+ Schiavoni. Muller sat at some distance from them. The pale<br>
+ sad-faced woman, and the pale sad-faced man had much to say to
+each<br>
+ other that a stranger might not hear.</p>
+
+<p>When the little boat reached the landing stage, there were but
+a<br>
+ few steps more to the door of the Hotel Danieli. From a balcony
+on<br>
+ the first floor a young woman stood looking down onto the
+canal.<br>
+ She too was pale and her eyes were heavy with anxiety. She had
+been<br>
+ pale and anxious even then, the day when she left the beautiful
+old<br>
+ house in the quiet street, to start on this pleasure trip to
+Venice.</p>
+
+<p>It had been no pleasure trip to her. She had seen the change
+in her<br>
+ husband, a change that struck deep into his very being and
+altered<br>
+ him in everything except in his love and tender care for her.
+"Oh,<br>
+ why is it? what is the matter?" she asked her self a thousand
+times<br>
+ a day. Could it be possible that he had discovered the secret
+which<br>
+ tortured her, the only secret she had ever had from him, the
+secret<br>
+ she had longed to confess to him a hundred times but had
+lacked<br>
+ courage to do it.</p>
+
+<p>For she had sinned deeply against her husband, she knew. Her
+fear<br>
+ and her confusion had driven her deeper and deeper into the
+waters<br>
+ of deceit until it was impossible for her to find the words
+that<br>
+ would have brought help and comfort from the man whom she loved
+more<br>
+ than anything else in the world. In the very earliest stages
+of<br>
+ Winkler's persecution she had lost her head completely and
+instead<br>
+ of confessing to her husband and asking for his aid and
+protection,<br>
+ she had pawned the rich jewels which had been his wedding
+present to<br>
+ get the money demanded by the blackmailer. In her ignorance she
+had<br>
+ thought that this one sum would satisfy him.</p>
+
+<p><br>
+ But he came again and again, demanding money which she saved
+from<br>
+ her pin money, from her household allowance, thus taking what
+she<br>
+ had intended to use to redeem her jewels. The pledge was lost,
+and<br>
+ her jewels gone forever. From now on, Mrs. Thorne lived in a
+terror<br>
+ which sapped her strength and drank her life blood drop by drop.
+Any<br>
+ hour might bring discovery, a discovery which she feared would
+shake<br>
+ her husband's love for her. The poor weak little woman grew pale
+and<br>
+ ill. She wrote finally to her step-brother, but he could think
+of no<br>
+ way out; he wrote only that if the matter came to a scandal
+there<br>
+ would be nothing for him to do but to kill himself. This was
+one<br>
+ reason more for her silence, and Mrs. Thome faded to a wan
+shadow of<br>
+ her former sunny self.</p>
+
+<p>As she looked down from the balcony, she was like a woman
+suffering<br>
+ from a deathly illness. A new terror had come to her heart
+because<br>
+ her husband had gone away so early without telling her why or
+whither<br>
+ he had gone. When she saw him coming towards the door of the
+hotel,<br>
+ pale and drooping, and when she saw Mrs. Bernauer beside him,
+her<br>
+ heart seemed to stand still. She crept back from the window
+and<br>
+ stood in the middle of the room as Herbert Thorne and his
+former<br>
+ nurse entered.</p>
+
+<p>"What has happened?" This was all she could say as she looked
+into<br>
+ the distraught face of the housekeeper, into her husband's sad
+eyes.</p>
+
+<p>He led her to a chair, then knelt beside her and told her
+all.</p>
+
+<p>"Outside the door stands the man who will take me back to
+Vienna<br>
+ - and you, my dearest, you must go to your father." He concluded
+his<br>
+ story with these words.</p>
+
+<p>She bent down over him and kissed him. "'No, I am going with
+you,"<br>
+ she said softly, strangely calm; "why should I leave you now?
+Is<br>
+ it not I who am the cause of this dreadful thing?"</p>
+
+<p>And then she made her confession, much too late. And she went
+with<br>
+ him, back to the city of their home. It seemed to them both
+quite<br>
+ natural that she should do so.</p>
+
+<p>When the Northern Express rolled out of Venice that afternoon,
+three<br>
+ people sat together in a compartment, the curtains of which
+were<br>
+ drawn close. They were the unhappy couple and their faithful<br>
+ servant. And outside in the corridor of the railway carriage,
+a<br>
+ small, slight man walked up and down - up and down. He had
+pressed<br>
+ a gold coin into the conductor's hand, with the words: "The
+party<br>
+ in there do not wish to be disturbed; the lady is ill."</p>
+
+<p>Herbert Thorne's trial took place several weeks later.
+Every<br>
+ possible extenuating circumstance was brought to bear upon
+his<br>
+ sentence. Five years only was to be the term of his
+imprisonment,<br>
+ his punishment for the crime of a single moment of anger.</p>
+
+<p>His wife waited for him in patient love. She did not go to
+Graz,<br>
+ but continued to live in the old mansion with the mansard
+roof.<br>
+ Her father was with her. The brother Theobald, the cause of
+all<br>
+ this suffering to those who had shielded him at the expense
+of<br>
+ their own happiness, had at last done the only good deed of
+his<br>
+ life - had put an end to his useless existence with his own
+hand.</p>
+
+<p>Father and daughter waited patiently for the return of the
+man<br>
+ who had sinned and suffered for their sake. They spoke of
+him<br>
+ only in terms of the tenderest affection and respect.</p>
+
+<p>And indeed, seldom has any condemned murderer met with the
+respect<br>
+ of the entire community as Herbert Thorne did. The tone of
+the<br>
+ newspapers, and public opinion, evinced by hundreds of letters
+from<br>
+ friends, acquaintances, and from strangers, was a great boon
+to<br>
+ the solitary man in his cell, and to the three loving hearts in
+the<br>
+ old house. And at the end of two years the clemency of the
+Monarch<br>
+ ended his term of imprisonment, and Herbert Thorne was set free,
+a<br>
+ step which met with the approval of the entire city.</p>
+
+<p>He returned to the home where love and affection awaited him,
+ready<br>
+ to make him forget what he had suffered. But the silver threads
+in<br>
+ his dark hair and a certain quiet seriousness in his manner, and
+in<br>
+ the hearts of all the dwellers in the old mansion, showed that
+the<br>
+ occurrence of that fatal 27th of September had thrown a shadow
+over<br>
+ them all which was not to be shaken off.</p>
+
+<p>Joseph Muller brought many other cases to a successful
+solution.<br>
+ But for years after this particular case had been won, he
+was<br>
+ followed, as by a shadow, by a man who watched over him, and
+who,<br>
+ whenever danger threatened, stood over the frail detective as
+if<br>
+ to take the blow upon himself. He is a clever assistant, too,
+and<br>
+ no one who had seen Johann Knoll the day that he was put into
+the<br>
+ cell on suspicion of murder would have believed that the idle
+tramp<br>
+ could become again such a useful member of society. These are
+the<br>
+ victories that Joseph Muller considers his greatest.</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Grace Isabel Colbron and Augusta Groner
+by The Lamp That Went Out
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+</pre>
+
+</body>
+</html>
+
+