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+*Project Gutenberg Etext Initials Only, by Anna Katharine Green*
+#3 in our series by Anna Katharine Green
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+This Project Gutenberg Etext produced by an anonymous volunteer.
+
+
+
+
+
+Initials Only
+
+by Anna Katharine Green
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+BOOK I
+
+AS SEEN BY TWO STRANGERS
+
+I POINSETTIAS
+II "I KNOW THE MAN"
+III THE MAN
+IV SWEET LITTLE MISS CLARKE
+V THE RED CLOAK
+VI INTEGRITY
+VII THE LETTERS
+VIII STRANGE DOINGS FOR GEORGE
+IX THE INCIDENT OF THE PARTLY LIFTED SHADE
+
+
+BOOK II
+
+AS SEEN BY DETECTIVE SWEETWATER
+
+X A DIFFERENCE OF OPINION
+XI ALIKE IN ESSENTIALS
+XII Mr. GRYCE FINDS AN ANTIDOTE FOR OLD AGE
+XIII TIME, CIRCUMSTANCE, AND A VILLAIN'S HEART
+XIV A CONCESSION
+XV THAT'S THE QUESTION
+XVI OPPOSED
+XVII IN WHICH A BOOK PLAYS LEADING PART
+XVIII WHAT AM I TO DO NOW?
+XIX THE DANGER MOMENT
+XX CONFUSION
+XXI A CHANGE
+XXII O. B. AGAIN
+
+
+BOOK III
+
+THE HEART OF MAN
+
+XXIII DORIS
+XXIV SUSPENSE
+XXV THE OVAL HUT
+XXVI SWEETWATER RETURNS
+XXVII THE IMAGE OF DREAD
+XXVIII I HOPE NEVER TO SEE THAT MAN
+XXIX DO YOU KNOW MY BROTHER?
+XXX CHAOS
+XXXI WHAT IS HE MAKING?
+XXXII TELL ME, TELL IT ALL
+XXXIII ALONE!
+XXXIV THE HUT CHANGES ITS NAME
+XXXV SILENCE - AND A KNOCK
+XXXVI THE MAN WITHIN AND THE MAN WITHOUT
+XXXVII HIS GREAT HOUR
+XXXVIII NIGHT
+XXXIX THE AVENGER
+XL DESOLATE
+XLI FIVE O'CLOCK IN THE MORNING
+XLII AT SIX
+
+
+
+
+
+BOOK I
+
+AS SEEN BY TWO STRANGERS
+
+
+
+I
+
+
+"A remarkable man!"
+
+It was not my husband speaking, but some passerby. However, I
+looked up at George with a smile, and found him looking down at me
+with much the same humour. We had often spoken of the odd phrases
+one hears in the street, and how interesting it would be sometimes
+to hear a little more of the conversation.
+
+"That's a case in point," he laughed, as he guided me through the
+crowd of theatre-goers which invariably block this part of Broadway
+at the hour of eight. "We shall never know whose eulogy we have
+just heard. 'A remarkable man!' There are not many of them."
+
+"No," was my somewhat indifferent reply. It was a keen winter night
+and snow was packed upon the walks in a way to throw into sharp
+relief the figures of such pedestrians as happened to be walking
+alone. "But it seems to me that, so far as general appearance goes,
+the one in front answers your description most admirably."
+
+I pointed to a man hurrying around the corner just ahead of us.
+
+"Yes, he's remarkably well built. I noticed him when he came out
+of the Clermont." This was a hotel we had just passed.
+
+"But it's not only that. It's his height, his very striking
+features, his expression -" I stopped suddenly, gripping George's
+arm convulsively in a surprise he appeared to share. We had turned
+the corner immediately behind the man of whom we were speaking and
+so had him still in full view.
+
+"What's he doing?" I asked, in a low whisper. We were only a few
+feet behind. "Look! look! don't you call that curious?"
+
+My husband stared, then uttered a low, "Rather." The man ahead of
+us, presenting in every respect the appearance of a gentleman, had
+suddenly stooped to the kerb and was washing his hands in the snow,
+furtively, but with a vigour and purpose which could not fail to
+arouse the strangest conjectures in any chance onlooker.
+
+"Pilate!" escaped my lips, in a sort of nervous chuckle. But
+George shook his head at me.
+
+"I don't like it," he muttered, with unusual gravity." Did you
+see his face?" Then as the man rose and hurried away from us down
+the street, "I should like to follow him. I do believe -"
+
+But here we became aware of a quick rush and sudden clamour around
+the corner we had just left, and turning quickly, saw that something
+had occurred on Broadway which was fast causing a tumult.
+
+"What's the matter?" I cried. "What can have happened? Let's go
+see, George. Perhaps it has something to do with our man.
+
+My husband, with a final glance down the street at the fast
+disappearing figure, yielded to my importunity, and possibly to
+some new curiosity of his own.
+
+"I'd like to stop that man first," said he. "But what excuse have
+I? He may be nothing but a crank, with some crack-brained idea in
+his head. We'll soon know; for there's certainly something wrong
+there on Broadway."
+
+"He came out of the Clermont," I suggested.
+
+"I know. If the excitement isn't there, what we've just seen is
+simply a coincidence." Then, as we retraced our steps to the corner
+"Whatever we hear or see, don't say anything about this man. It's
+after eight, remember, and we promised Adela that we would be at the
+house before nine."
+
+"I'll be quiet."
+
+"Remember."
+
+It was the last word he had time to speak before we found ourselves
+in the midst of a crowd of men and women, jostling one another in
+curiosity or in the consternation following a quick alarm. All were
+looking one way, and, as this was towards the entrance of the
+Clermont, it was evident enough to us that the alarm had indeed had
+its origin in the very place we had anticipated. I felt my husband's
+arm press me closer to his side as we worked our way towards the
+entrance, and presently caught a warning sound from his lips as the
+oaths and confused cries everywhere surrounding us were broken here
+and there by articulate words and we heard:
+
+"Is it murder?"
+
+"The beautiful Miss Challoner!"
+
+"A millionairess in her own right!"
+
+"Killed, they say."
+
+"No, no! suddenly dead; that's all."
+
+"George, what shall we do?" I managed to cry into my husband's ear.
+
+"Get out of this. There is no chance of our reaching that door,
+and I can't have you standing round any longer in this icy slush."
+
+"But - but is it right?" I urged, in an importunate whisper.
+"Should we go home while he -"
+
+"Hush! My first duty is to you. We will go make our visit; but
+to-morrow -"
+
+"I can't wait till to-morrow," I pleaded, wild to satisfy my
+curiosity in regard to an event in which I naturally felt a keen
+personal interest.
+
+He drew me as near to the edge of the crowd as he could. There
+were new murmurs all about us.
+
+"If it's a case of heart-failure, why send for the police?" asked
+one.
+
+"It is better to have an officer or two here," grumbled another.
+
+"Here comes a cop."
+
+"Well, I'm going to vamoose."
+
+"I'll tell you what I'll do," whispered George, who, for all his
+bluster was as curious as myself. "We will try the rear door where
+there are fewer persons. Possibly we can make our way in there,
+and if we can, Slater will tell us all we want to know."
+
+Slater was the assistant manager of the Clermont, and one of
+George's oldest friends.
+
+"Then hurry," said I. "I am being crushed here."
+
+George did hurry, and in a few minutes we were before the rear
+entrance of the great hotel. There was a mob gathered here also,
+but it was neither so large nor so rough as the one on Broadway.
+Yet I doubt if we should have been able to work our way through it
+if Slater had not, at that very instant, shown himself in the
+doorway, in company with an officer to whom he was giving some
+final instructions. George caught his eye as soon as he was through
+with the man, and ventured on what I thought a rather uncalled for
+plea.
+
+"Let us in, Slater," he begged." My wife feels a little faint; she
+has been knocked about so by the crowd."
+
+The manager glanced at my face, and shouted to the people around
+us to make room. I felt myself lifted up, and that is all I remember
+of this part of our adventure. For, affected more than I realised
+by the excitement of the event, I no sooner saw the way cleared for
+our entrance than I made good my husband's words by fainting away
+in earnest.
+
+When I came to, it was suddenly and with perfect recognition of my
+surroundings. The small reception room to which I had been taken
+was one I had often visited, and its familiar features did not hold
+my attention for a moment. What I did see and welcome was my
+husband's face bending close over me, and to him I spoke first. My
+words must have sounded oddly to those about. "Have they told you
+anything about it?" I asked. "Did he -"
+
+A quick pressure on my arm silenced me, and then I noticed that we
+were not alone. Two or three ladies stood near, watching me, and
+one had evidently been using some restorative, for she held a
+small vinaigrette in her hand. To this lady, George made haste to
+introduce me, and from her I presently learned the cause of the
+disturbance in the hotel.
+
+It was of a somewhat different nature from what I expected, and
+during the recital, I could not prevent myself from casting furtive
+and inquiring glances at George.
+
+Edith, the well-known daughter of Moses Challoner, had fallen
+suddenly dead on the floor of the mezzanine. She was not known to
+have been in poor health, still less in danger of a fatal attack,
+and the shock was consequently great to her friends, several of
+whom were in the building. Indeed, it was likely to prove a shock
+to the whole community, for she had great claims to general
+admiration, and her death must be regarded as a calamity to persons
+in all stations of life.
+
+I realised this myself, for I had heard much of the young lady's
+private virtues, as well as of her great beauty and distinguished
+manner. A heavy loss, indeed, but -
+
+"Was she alone when she fell?" I asked.
+
+"Virtually alone. Some persons sat on the other side of the room,
+reading at the big round table. They did not even hear her fall.
+They say that the band was playing unusually loud in the musicians'
+gallery."
+
+"Are you feeling quite well, now?"
+
+"Quite myself," I gratefully replied as I rose slowly from the
+sofa. Then, as my kind informer stepped aside, I turned to George
+with the proposal we should go now.
+
+He seemed as anxious as myself to leave and together we moved towards
+the door, while the hum of excited comment which the intrusion of a
+fainting woman had undoubtedly interrupted, recommenced behind us
+till the whole room buzzed.
+
+In the hall we encountered Mr. Slater, whom I have before mentioned.
+He was trying to maintain order while himself in a state of great
+agitation. Seeing us, he could not refrain from whispering a few
+words into my husband's ear.
+
+"The doctor has just gone up - her doctor, I mean. He's simply
+dumbfounded. Says that she was the healthiest woman in New York
+yesterday - I think - don't mention it, that he suspects something
+quite different from heart failure."
+
+"What do you mean?" asked George, following the assistant manager
+down the broad flight of steps leading to the office. Then, as I
+pressed up close to Mr. Slater's other side, "She was by herself,
+wasn't she, in the half floor above?"
+
+"Yes, and had been writing a letter. She fell with it still in her
+hand."
+
+"Have they carried her to her room?" I eagerly inquired, glancing
+fearfully up at the large semi-circular openings overlooking us from
+the place where she had fallen.
+
+"Not yet. Mr. Hammond insists upon waiting for the coroner." (Mr.
+Hammond was the proprietor of the hotel.) "She is lying on one of
+the big couches near which she fell. If you like, I can give you a
+glimpse of her. She looks beautiful. It's terrible to think that
+she is dead."
+
+I don't know why we consented. We were under a spell, I think. At
+all events, we accepted his offer and followed him up a narrow
+staircase open to very few that night. At the top, he turned upon
+us with a warning gesture which I hardly think we needed, and led
+us down a narrow hall flanked by openings corresponding to those we
+had noted from below. At the furthest one he paused and, beckoning
+us to his side, pointed across the lobby into the large writing-room
+which occupied the better part of the mezzanine floor.
+
+We saw people standing in various attitudes of grief and dismay
+about a couch, one end of which only was visible to us at the
+moment. The doctor had just joined them, and every head was turned
+towards him and every body bent forward in anxious expectation. I
+remember the face of one grey haired old man. I shall never forget
+it. He was probably her father. Later, I knew him to be so. Her
+face, even her form, was entirely hidden from us, but as we watched
+(I have often thought with what heartless curiosity) a sudden
+movement took place in the whole group - and for one instant a
+startling picture presented itself to our gaze. Miss Challoner
+was stretched out upon the couch. She was dressed as she came from
+dinner, in a gown of ivory-tinted satin, relieved at the breast by
+a large bouquet of scarlet poinsettias. I mention this adornment,
+because it was what first met and drew our eyes and the eyes of
+every one about her, though the face, now quite revealed, would
+seem to have the greater attraction. But the cause was evident and
+one not to be resisted. The doctor was pointing at these poinsettias
+in horror and with awful meaning, and though we could not hear his
+words, we knew almost instinctively, both from his attitude and the
+cries which burst from the lips of those about him, that something
+more than broken petals and disordered laces had met his eyes; that
+blood was there - slowly oozing drops from the heart - which for
+some reason had escaped all eyes till now.
+
+Miss Challoner was dead, not from unsuspected disease, but from the
+violent attack of some murderous weapon; As the realisation of this
+brought fresh panic and bowed the old father's head with emotions
+even more bitter than those of grief, I turned a questioning look
+up at George's face.
+
+It was fixed with a purpose I had no trouble in understanding.
+
+
+
+II
+
+"I KNOW THE MAN
+
+
+Yet he made no effort to detain Mr. Slater, when that gentleman,
+under this renewed excitement, hastily left us. He was not the man
+to rush into anything impulsively, and not even the presence of
+murder could change his ways.
+
+"I want to feel sure of myself," he explained. "Can you bear the
+strain of waiting around a little longer, Laura? I mustn't forget
+that you fainted just now."
+
+"Yes, I can bear it; much better than I could bear going to Adela's
+in my present state of mind. Don't you think the man we saw had
+something to do with this? Don't you believe -"
+
+"Hush! Let us listen rather than talk. What are they saying over
+there? Can you hear?"
+
+"No. And I cannot bear to look. Yet I don't want to go away. It's
+all so dreadful."
+
+"It's devilish. Such a beautiful girl! Laura, I must leave you
+for a moment. Do you mind?"
+
+"No, no; yet -"
+
+I did mind; but he was gone before I could take back my word. Alone,
+I felt the tragedy much more than when he was with me. Instead of
+watching, as I had hitherto done, every movement in the room opposite,
+I drew back against the wall and hid my eyes, waiting feverishly for
+George's return.
+
+He came, when he did come, in some haste and with certain marks of
+increased agitation.
+
+"Laura," said he, "Slater says that we may possibly be wanted and
+proposes that we stay here all night. I have telephoned Adela and
+have made it all right at home. Will you come to your room? This
+is no place for you.''
+
+Nothing could have pleased me better; to be near and yet not the
+direct observer of proceedings in which we took so secret an
+interest! I showed my gratitude by following George immediately.
+But I could not go without casting another glance at the tragic
+scene I was leaving. A stir was perceptible there, and I was just
+in time to see its cause. A tall, angular gentleman was approaching
+from the direction of the musicians' gallery, and from the manner
+of all present, as well as from the whispered comment of my husband,
+I recognised in him the special official for whom all had been
+waiting.
+
+
+"Are you going to tell him?" was my question to George as we made
+our way down to the lobby.
+
+"That depends. First, I am going to see you settled in a room quite
+remote from this business."
+
+"I shall not like that."
+
+"I know, my dear, but it is best."
+
+I could not gainsay this.
+
+Nevertheless, after the first few minutes of relief, I found it
+very lonesome upstairs. The pictures which crowded upon me of the
+various groups of excited and wildly gesticulating men and women
+through which we had passed on our way up, mingled themselves with
+the solemn horror of the scene in the writing-room, with its
+fleeting vision of youth and beauty lying pulseless in sudden death.
+I could not escape the one without feeling the immediate impress of
+the other, and if by chance they both yielded for an instant to
+that earlier scene of a desolate Street, with its solitary lamp
+shining down on the crouched figure of a man washing his shaking
+hands in a drift of freshly fallen snow, they immediately rushed
+back with a force and clearness all the greater for the momentary
+lapse.
+
+I was still struggling with these fancies when the door opened, and
+George came in. There was news in his face as I rushed to meet him.
+
+"Tell me - tell," I begged.
+
+He tried to smile at my eagerness, but the attempt was ghastly.
+
+"I've been listening and looking," said he, "and this is all I
+have learned. Miss Challoner died, not from a stroke or from
+disease of any kind, but from a wound reaching the heart. No one
+saw the attack, or even the approach or departure of the person
+inflicting this wound. If she was killed by a pistol-shot, it was
+at a distance, and almost over the heads of the persons sitting at
+the table we saw there. But the doctors shake their heads at the
+word pistol-shot, though they refuse to explain themselves or to
+express any opinion till the wound has been probed. This they are
+going to do at once, and when that question is decided, I may feel
+it my duty to speak and may ask you to support my story."
+
+"I will tell what I saw," said I.
+
+"Very good. That is all that will be required. We are strangers
+to the parties concerned, and only speak from a sense of justice.
+It may be that our story will make no impression, and that we shall
+be dismissed with but few thanks. But that is nothing to us. If
+the woman has been murdered, he is the murderer. With such a
+conviction in my mind, there can be no doubt as to my duty."
+
+"We can never make them understand how he looked."
+
+"No. I don't expect to."
+
+"Or his manner as he fled."
+
+"Nor that either."
+
+"We can only describe what we saw him do."
+
+That's all."
+
+"Oh, what an adventure for quiet people like us! George, I don't
+believe he shot her."
+
+"He must have."
+
+"But they would have seen - have heard - the people around, I mean."
+
+"So they say; but I have a theory - but no matter about that now.
+I'm going down again to see how things have progressed. I'll be
+back for you later. Only be ready."
+
+Be ready! I almost laughed,- a hysterical laugh, of course, when I
+recalled the injunction. Be ready! This lonely sitting by myself,
+with nothing to do but think was a fine preparation for a sudden
+appearance before those men - some of them police-officers, no doubt.
+
+But that's enough about myself; I'm not the heroine of this story.
+In a half hour or an hour - I never knew which - George reappeared
+only to tell me that no conclusions had as yet been reached; an
+element of great mystery involved the whole affair, and the most
+astute detectives on the force had been sent for. Her father, who
+had been her constant companion all winter, had not the least
+suggestion to offer in way of its solution. So far as he knew - and
+he believed himself to have been in perfect accord with his daughter
+ - she had injured no one. She had just lived the even, happy and
+useful life of a young woman of means, who sees duties beyond those
+of her own household and immediate surroundings. If, in the
+fulfillment of those duties, she had encountered any obstacle to
+content, he did not know it; nor could he mention a friend of hers
+ - he would even say lovers, since that was what he meant - who to
+his knowledge could be accused of harbouring any such passion of
+revenge as was manifested in this secret and diabolical attack.
+They were all gentlemen and respected her as heartily as they
+appeared to admire her. To no living being, man or woman, could he
+point as possessing any motive for such a deed. She had been the
+victim of some mistake, his lovely and ever kindly disposed
+daughter, and while the loss was irreparable he would never make it
+unendurable by thinking otherwise.
+
+Such was the father's way of looking at the matter, and I own that
+it made our duty a trifle hard. But George's mind, when once made
+up, was persistent to the point of obstinacy, and while he was yet
+talking he led me out of the room and down the hall to the elevator.
+
+"Mr. Slater knows we have something to say, and will manage the
+interview before us in the very best manner," he confided to me
+now with an encouraging air. "We are to go to the blue reception
+room on the parlour floor."
+
+I nodded, and nothing more was said till we entered the place
+mentioned. Here we came upon several gentlemen, standing about, of
+a more or less professional appearance. This was not very agreeable
+to one of my retiring disposition, but a look from George brought
+back my courage, and I found myself waiting rather anxiously for the
+questions I expected to hear put.
+
+Mr. Slater was there according to his promise, and after introducing
+us, briefly stated that we had some evidence to give regarding the
+terrible occurrence which had just taken place in the house.
+
+George bowed, and the chief spokesman - I am sure he was a
+police-officer of some kind - asked him to tell what it was.
+
+George drew himself up - George is not one of your tall men, but he
+makes a very good appearance at times. Then he seemed suddenly to
+collapse. The sight of their expectation made him feel how flat and
+childish his story would sound. I, who had shared his adventure,
+understood his embarrassment, but the others were evidently at a
+loss to do so, for they glanced askance at each other as he
+hesitated, and only looked back when I ventured to say:
+
+"It's the peculiarity of the occurrence which affects my husband.
+The thing we saw may mean nothing."
+
+"Let us hear what it was and we will judge."
+
+Then my husband spoke up, and related our little experience. If it
+did not create a sensation, it was because these men were well
+accustomed to surprises of all kinds.
+
+"Washed his hands - a gentleman - out there in the snow - just
+after the alarm was raised here?" repeated one.
+
+"And you saw him come out of this house?" another put in.
+
+"Yes, sir; we noticed him particularly.
+
+"Can you describe him?"
+
+It was Mr. Slater who put this question; he had less control over
+himself, and considerable eagerness could be heard in his voice.
+
+"He was a very fine-looking man; unusually tall and unusually
+striking both in his dress and appearance. What I could see of
+his face was bare of beard, and very expressive. He walked with
+the swing of an athlete, and only looked mean and small when he
+was stooping and dabbling in the snow."
+
+His clothes. Describe his clothes." There was an odd sound in
+Mr. Slater's voice.
+
+"He wore a silk hat and there was fur on his overcoat. I think
+the fur was black."
+
+Mr. Slater stepped back, then moved forward again with a determined
+air.
+
+"I know the man," said he.
+
+
+
+III
+
+THE MAN
+
+
+"You know the man?"
+
+"I do; or rather, I know a man who answers to this description. He
+comes here once in a while. I do not know whether or not he was in
+the building to-night, but Clausen can tell you; no one escapes
+Clausen's eye."
+
+"His name."
+
+"Brotherson. A very uncommon person in many respects; quite capable
+of such an eccentricity, but incapable, I should say, of crime. He's
+a gifted talker and so well read that he can hold one's attention for
+hours. Of his tastes, I can only say that they appear to be mainly
+scientific. But he is not averse to society, and is always very well
+dressed."
+
+"A taste for science and for fine clothing do not often go together."
+
+"This man is an exception to all rules. The one I'm speaking of, I
+mean. I don't say that he's the fellow seen pottering in the snow."
+
+"Call up Clausen."
+
+The manager stepped to the telephone.
+
+Meanwhile, George had advanced to speak to a man who had beckoned
+to him from the other side of the room, and with whom in another
+moment I saw him step out. Thus deserted, I sank into a chair near
+one of the windows. Never had I felt more uncomfortable. To
+attribute guilt to a totally unknown person - a person who is little
+more to you than a shadowy silhouette against a background of snow
+ - is easy enough and not very disturbing to the conscience. But
+to hear that person named; given positive attributes; lifted from
+the indefinite into a living, breathing actuality, with a man's
+hopes, purposes and responsibilities, is an entirely different
+proposition. This Brotherson might be the most innocent person
+alive; and, if so, what had we done? Nothing to congratulate
+ourselves upon, certainly. And George was not present to comfort
+and encourage me. He was -
+
+Where was he? The man who had carried him off was the youngest in
+the group. What had he wanted of George? Those who remained
+showed no interest in the matter. They had enough to say among
+themselves. But I was interested - naturally so, and, in my
+uneasiness, glanced restlessly from the window, the shade of which
+was up. The outlook was a very peaceful one. This room faced
+a side street, and, as my eyes fell upon the whitened pavements, I
+received an answer to one, and that the most anxious, of my queries.
+This was the street into which we had turned, in the wake of the
+handsome stranger they were trying at this very moment to identify
+with Brotherson. George had evidently been asked to point out the
+exact spot where the man had stopped, for I could see from my
+vantage point two figures bending near the kerb, and even pawing
+at the snow which lay there. It gave me a slight turn when one of
+them - I do not think it was George - began to rub his hands
+together in much the way the unknown gentleman had done, and, in
+my excitement, I probably uttered some sort of an ejaculation, for
+I was suddenly conscious of a silence in the room, and when I
+turned saw all the men about me looking my way.
+
+I attempted to smile, but instead, shuddered painfully, as I
+raised my hand and pointed down at the street.
+
+"They are imitating the man," I cried; "my husband and - and the
+person he went out with. It looked dreadful to me; that is all."
+
+One of the gentlemen immediately said some kind words to me, and
+another smiled in a very encouraging way. But their attention
+was soon diverted, and so was mine by the entrance of a man in
+semi-uniform, who was immediately addressed as Clausen.
+
+I knew his face. He was one of the doorkeepers; the oldest employee
+about the hotel, and the one best liked. I had often exchanged
+words with him myself.
+
+Mr. Slater at once put his question:
+
+"Has Mr. Brotherson passed your door at any time to-night?
+
+"Mr. Brotherson! I don't remember, really I don't," was the
+unexpected reply. "It's not often I forget. But so many people
+came rushing in during those few minutes, and all so excited -"
+
+"Before the excitement, Clausen. A little while before, possibly
+just before."
+
+"Oh, now I recall him! Yes, Mr. Brotherson went out of my door
+not many minutes before the cry upstairs. I forgot because I had
+stepped back from the door to hand a lady the muff she had dropped,
+and it was at that minute he went out. I just got a glimpse of his
+back as he passed into the street."
+
+"But you are sure of that back?"
+
+"I don't know another like it, when he wears that big coat of his.
+But Jim can tell you, sir. He was in the caf‚ up to that minute,
+and that's where Mr. Brotherson usually goes first."
+
+"Very well; send up Jim. Tell him I have some orders to give him."
+
+The old man bowed and went out.
+
+Meanwhile, Mr. Slater had exchanged some words with the two
+officials, and now approached me with an expression of extreme
+consideration. They were about to excuse me from further
+participation in this informal inquiry. This I saw before he
+spoke. Of course they were right. But I should greatly have
+preferred to stay where I was till George came back.
+
+However, I met him for an instant in the hall before I took the
+elevator, and later I heard in a round-about way what Jim and
+some others about the house had to say of Mr. Brotherson.
+
+He was an habitue of the hotel, to the extent of dining once or
+twice a week in the caf‚, and smoking, afterwards, in the public
+lobby. When he was in the mood for talk, he would draw an
+ever-enlarging group about him, but at other times he would be
+seen sitting quite alone and morosely indifferent to all who
+approached him. There was no mystery about his business. He was
+an inventor, with one or two valuable patents already on the market.
+But this was not his only interest. He was an all round sort of
+man, moody but brilliant in many ways - a character which at once
+attracted and repelled, odd in that he seemed to set little store
+by his good looks, yet was most careful to dress himself in a way
+to show them off to advantage. If he had means beyond the ordinary
+no one knew it, nor could any man say that he had not. On all
+personal matters he was very close-mouthed, though he would talk
+about other men's riches in a way to show that he cherished some
+very extreme views.
+
+This was all which could be learned about him off-hand, and at so
+late an hour. I was greatly interested, of course, and had plenty
+to think of till I saw George again and learned the result of the
+latest investigations.
+
+Miss Challoner had been shot, not stabbed. No other deduction was
+possible from such facts as were now known, though the physicians
+had not yet handed in their report, or even intimated what that
+report would be. No assailant could have approached or left her,
+without attracting the notice of some one, if not all of the
+persons seated at a table in the same room. She could only have
+been reached by a bullet sent from a point near the head of a small
+winding staircase connecting the mezzanine floor with a coat-room
+adjacent to the front door. This has already been insisted on, as
+you will remember, and if you will glance at the diagram which
+George hastily scrawled for me, you will see why.
+
+A. B., as well as C. D., are half circular openings into the office
+lobby. E. F. are windows giving upon Broadway, and G. the party
+wall, necessarily unbroken by window, door or any other opening.
+ _____________________G.______
+| ===desk |
+| |
+| Where Miss C Fell-x o
+| A o
+| o
+E o
+| _____ |
+| |_____|table |
+| o
+| o
+| B o
+| o
+| ________ H ________ |
+| *** | |
+| ** ** |elevator |
+| ** staircase
+| ** ** X. |_________|_____C_________D____
+| ***
+F Musician's Gallery
+|____ ______________ ________________ ______
+|
+| Dining Room Level With Lobby
+
+It follows then that the only possible means of approach to this
+room lies through the archway H., or from the elevator door. But
+the elevator made no stop at the mezzanine on or near the time of
+the attack upon Miss Challoner; nor did any one leave the table
+or pass by it in either direction till after the alarm given by
+her fall.
+
+But a bullet calls for no approach. A man at X. might raise and
+fire his pistol without attracting any attention to himself. The
+music, which all acknowledge was at its full climax at this moment,
+would drown the noise of the explosion, and the staircase, out of
+view of all but the victim, afford the same means of immediate
+escape, which it must have given of secret and unseen approach.
+The coat-room into which it descended communicated with the lobby
+very near the main entrance, and if Mr. Brotherson were the man,
+his sudden appearance there would thus be accounted for.
+
+To be sure, this gentleman had not been noticed in the coatroom by
+the man then in charge, but if the latter had been engaged at that
+instant, as he often was, in hanging up or taking down a coat from
+the rack, a person might easily pass by him and disappear into the
+lobby without attracting his attention. So many people passed that
+way from the dining-room beyond, and so many of these were tall,
+fine-looking and well-dressed.
+
+It began to look bad for this man, if indeed he were the one we had
+seen under the street-lamp; and, as George and I reviewed the
+situation, we felt our position to be serious enough for us severally
+to set down our impressions of this man before we lost our first
+vivid idea. I do not know what George wrote, for he sealed his words
+up as soon as he had finished writing, but this is what I put on paper
+while my memory was still fresh and my excitement unabated:
+
+ He had the look of a man of powerful intellect and determined will,
+ who shudders while he triumphs; who outwardly washes his hands of
+ a deed over which he inwardly gloats. This was when he first rose
+ from the snow. Afterwards he had a moment of fear; plain, human,
+ everyday fear. But this was evanescent. Before he had turned to
+ go, he showed the self-possession of one who feels himself so
+ secure, or is so well-satisfied with himself, that he is no longer
+ conscious of other emotions.
+
+"Poor fellow," I commented aloud, as I folded up these words; "he
+reckoned without you, George. By to-morrow he will be in the hands
+of the police."
+
+"Poor fellow?" he repeated. "Better say 'Poor Miss Challoner!'
+They tell me she was one of those perfect women who reconcile even
+the pessimist to humanity and the age we live in. Why any one
+should want to kill her is a mystery; but why this man should
+ - There! no one professes to explain it. They simply go by the
+facts. To-morrow surely must bring strange revelations."
+
+And with this sentence ringing in my mind, I lay down and endeavoured
+to sleep. But it was not till very late that rest came. The noise
+of passing feet, though muffled beyond their wont, roused me in spite
+of myself. These footsteps might be those of some late arrival, or
+they might be those of some wary detective intent on business far
+removed from the usual routine of life in this great hotel.
+
+I recalled the glimpse I had had of the writing-room in the early
+evening, and imagined it as it was with Miss Challoner's body
+removed and the incongruous flitting of strange and busy figures
+across its fatal floors, measuring distances and peering into
+corners, while hundreds slept above and about them in undisturbed
+repose.
+
+Then I thought of him, the suspected and possibly guilty one. In
+visions over which I had little if any control, I saw him in all
+the restlessness of a slowly dying down excitement - the
+surroundings strange and unknown to me, the figure not - seeking
+for quiet; facing the past; facing the future; knowing, perhaps,
+for the first time in his life what it was for crime and remorse to
+murder sleep. I could not think of him as lying still - slumbering
+like the rest of mankind, in the hope and expectation of a busy
+morrow. Crime perpetrated looms so large in the soul, and this man
+had a soul as big as his body; of that I was assured. That its
+instincts were cruel and inherently evil, did not lessen its capacity
+for suffering. And he was suffering now; I could not doubt it,
+remembering the lovely face and fragrant memory of the noble woman
+he had, under some unknown impulse, sent to an unmerited doom.
+
+At last I slept, but it was only to rouse again with the same quick
+realisation of my surroundings, which I had experienced on my
+recovery from my fainting fit of hours before. Someone had stopped
+at our door before hurrying by down the hall. Who was that someone?
+I rose on my elbow, and endeavoured to peer through the dark. Of
+course, I could see nothing. But when I woke a second time, there
+was enough light in the room, early as it undoubtedly was, for me
+to detect a letter lying on the carpet just inside the door.
+
+Instantly I was on my feet. Catching the letter up, I carried it
+to the window. Our two names were on it - Mr. and Mrs. George
+Anderson: the writing, Mr. Slater's.
+
+I glanced over at George. He was sleeping peacefully. It was too
+early to wake him, but I could not lay that letter down unread; was
+not my name on it? Tearing it open, I devoured its contents, - the
+exclamation I made on reading it, waking George.
+
+The writing was in Mr. Slater's hand, and the words were:
+
+ "I must request, at the instance of Coroner Heath and such of
+ the police as listened to your adventure, that you make no
+ further mention of what you saw in the street under our windows
+ last night. The doctors find no bullet in the wound. This
+ clears Mr. Brotherson."
+
+
+
+V
+
+SWEET LITTLE MISS CLARKE
+
+
+When we took our seats at the breakfast-table, it was with the
+feeling of being no longer looked upon as connected in any way with
+this case. Yet our interest in it was, if anything, increased, and
+when I saw George casting furtive glances at a certain table behind
+me, I leaned over and asked him the reason, being sure that the
+people whose faces I saw reflected in the mirror directly before us
+had something to do with the great matter then engrossing us. His
+answer conveyed the somewhat exciting information that the four
+persons seated in my rear were the same four who had been reading
+at the round table in the mezzanine at the time of Miss Challoner's
+death.
+
+Instantly they absorbed all my attention, though I dared not give
+them a direct look, and continued to observe them only in the glass.
+
+"Is it one family?" I asked.
+
+"Yes, and a very respectable one. Transients, of course, but very
+well known in Denver. The lady is not the mother of the boys, but
+their aunt. The boys belong to the gentleman, who is a widower."
+
+"Their word ought to be good."
+
+George nodded.
+
+"The boys look wide-awake enough if the father does not. As for
+the aunt, she is sweetness itself. Do they still insist that Miss
+Challoner was the only person in the room with them at this time?"
+
+"They did last night. I don't know how they will meet this
+statement of the doctor's."
+
+"George?"
+
+He leaned nearer.
+
+"Have you ever thought that she might have been a suicide? That
+she stabbed herself?
+
+"No, for in that case a weapon would have been found."
+
+"And are you sure that none was?"
+
+"Positive. Such a fact could not have been kept quiet. If a weapon
+had been picked up there would be no mystery, and no necessity for
+further police investigation."
+
+"And the detectives are still here?
+
+"I just saw one."
+
+"George?"
+
+Again his head came nearer.
+
+"Have they searched the lobby? I believe she had a weapon."
+
+"Laura!
+
+"I know it sounds foolish, but the alternative is so improbable. A
+family like that cannot be leagued together in a conspiracy to hide
+the truth concerning a matter so serious. To be sure, they may all
+be short-sighted, or so little given to observation that they didn't
+see what passed before their eyes. The boys look wide-awake enough,
+but who can tell? I would sooner believe that -"
+
+I stopped short so suddenly that George looked startled. My
+attention had been caught by something new I saw in the mirror upon
+which my attention was fixed. A man was looking in from the corridor
+behind, at the four persons we were just discussing. He was watching
+them intently, and I thought I knew his face.
+
+"What kind of a looking person was the man who took you outside last
+night?" I inquired of George, with my eyes still on this furtive
+watcher.
+
+"A fellow to make you laugh. A perfect character, Laura; hideously
+homely but agreeable enough. I took quite a fancy to him. Why?"
+
+"I am looking at him now."
+
+"Very likely. He's deep in this affair. Just an everyday detective,
+but ambitious, I suppose, and quite alive to the importance of being
+thorough."
+
+"He is watching those people. No, he isn't. How quickly he
+disappeared!"
+
+"Yes, he's mercurial in all his movements. Laura, we must get out
+of this. There happens to be something else in the world for me to
+do than to sit around and follow up murder clews."
+
+But we began to doubt if others agreed with him, when on passing
+out we were stopped in the lobby by this same detective, who had
+something to say to George, and drew him quickly aside.
+
+"What does he want?" I asked, as soon as George had returned to
+my side.
+
+"He wants me to stand ready to obey any summons the police may
+send me."
+
+"Then they still suspect Brotherson?"
+
+They must."
+
+My head rose a trifle as I glanced up at George.
+
+"Then we are not altogether out of it?" I emphasised, complacently.
+
+He smiled which hardly seemed a propos. Why does George sometimes
+smile when I am in my most serious moods.
+
+As we stepped out of the hotel, George gave my arm a quiet pinch
+which served to direct my attention to an elderly gentleman who,
+was just alighting from a taxicab at the kerb. He moved heavily
+and with some appearance of pain, but from the crowd collected on
+the sidewalk many of whom nudged each other as he passed, he was
+evidently a person of some importance, and as he disappeared within
+the hotel entrance, I asked George who this kind-faced, bright-eyed
+old gentleman could be.
+
+He appeared to know, for he told me at once that he was Detective
+Gryce; a man who had grown old in solving just such baffling
+problems as these.
+
+"He gave up work some time ago, I have been told," my husband went
+on; "but evidently a great case still has its allurement for him.
+The trail here must be a very blind one for them to call him in.
+I wish we had not left so soon. It would have been quite an
+experience to see him at work."
+
+"I doubt if you would have been given the opportunity. I noticed
+that we were slightly de trop towards the last."
+
+"I wouldn't have minded that; not on my own account, that is. It
+might not have been pleasant for you. However, the office is
+waiting. Come, let me put you on the car."
+
+That night I bided his coming with an impatience I could not control.
+He was late, of course, but when he did appear, I almost forgot our
+usual greeting in my hurry to ask him if he had seen the evening
+papers.
+
+"No," he grumbled, as he hung up his overcoat. "Been pushed about
+all day. No time for anything."
+
+"Then let me tell you -"
+
+But he would have dinner first.
+
+However, a little later we had a comfortable chat. Mr. Gryce had
+made a discovery, and the papers were full of it. It was one which
+gave me a small triumph over George. The suggestion he had laughed
+at was not so entirely foolish as he had been pleased to consider
+it. But let me tell the story of that day, without any further
+reference to myself.
+
+The opinion had become quite general with those best acquainted
+with the details of this affair, that the mystery was one of those
+abnormal ones for which no solution would ever be found, when the
+aged detective showed himself in the building and was taken to the
+room, where an Inspector of Police awaited him. Their greeting
+was cordial, and the lines on the latter's face relaxed a little
+as he met the still bright eye of the man upon whose instinct
+and judgment so much reliance had always been placed.
+
+"This is very good of you," he began, glancing down at the aged
+detective's bundled up legs, and gently pushing a chair towards
+him. "I know that it was a great deal to ask, but we're at our
+wits' end, and so I telephoned. It's the most inexplicable - There!
+you have heard that phrase before. But clews - there are absolutely
+none. That is, we have not been able to find any. Perhaps you can.
+At least, that is what we hope. I've known you more than once to
+succeed where others have failed."
+
+The elderly man thus addressed, glanced down at his legs, now
+propped up on a stool which someone had brought him, and smiled,
+with the pathos of the old who sees the interests of a lifetime
+slipping gradually away.
+
+"I am not what I was. I can no longer get down on my hands and
+knees to pick up threads from the nap of a rug, or spy out a spot
+of blood in the crimson woof of a carpet."
+
+"You shall have Sweetwater here to do the active work for you.
+What we want of you is the directing mind - the infallible instinct.
+It's a case in a thousand, Gryce. We've never had anything just
+like it. You've never had anything at all like it. It will make
+you young again."
+
+The old man's eyes shot fire and unconsciously one foot slipped to
+the floor. Then he bethought himself and painfully lifted it back
+again.
+
+"What are the points? What's the difficulty?" he asked. "A
+woman has been shot -"
+
+"No, not shot, stabbed. We thought she had been shot, for that was
+intelligible and involved no impossibilities. But Drs. Heath and
+Webster, under the eye of the Challoners' own physician, have made
+an examination of the wound - an official one, thorough and quite
+final so far as they are concerned, and they declare that no bullet
+is to be found in the body. As the wound extends no further than
+the heart, this settles one great point, at least."
+
+"Dr. Heath is a reliable man and one of our ablest coroners."
+
+"Yes. There can be no question as to the truth of his report. You
+know the victim? Her name, I mean, and the character she bore?"
+
+"Yes; so much was told me on my way down."
+
+"A fine girl unspoiled by riches and seeming independence. Happy,
+too, to all appearance, or we should be more ready to consider the
+possibility of suicide."
+
+"Suicide by stabbing calls for a weapon. Yet none has been found,
+I hear."
+
+"None."
+
+"Yet she was killed that way?
+
+"Undoubtedly, and by a long and very narrow blade, larger than a
+needle but not so large as the ordinary stiletto."
+
+"Stabbed while by herself, or what you may call by herself? She
+had no companion near her?"
+
+"None, if we can believe the four members of the Parrish family who
+were seated at the other end of the room.
+
+"And you do believe them?"
+
+"Would a whole family lie - and needlessly? They never knew the
+woman - father, maiden aunt and two boys, clear-eyed, jolly young
+chaps whom even the horror of this tragedy, perpetrated as it were
+under their very nose, cannot make serious for more than a passing
+moment."
+
+"It wouldn't seem so."
+
+"Yet they swear up and down that nobody crossed the room towards
+Miss Challoner."
+
+"So they tell me."
+
+"She fell just a few feet from the desk where she had been writing.
+No word, no cry, just a collapse and sudden fall. In olden days
+they would have said, struck by a bolt from heaven. But it was a
+bolt which drew blood; not much blood, I hear, but sufficient to
+end life almost instantly. She never looked up or spoke again.
+What do you make of it, Gryce?"
+
+"It's a tough one, and I'm not ready to venture an opinion yet. I
+should like to see the desk you speak of, and the spot where she
+fell."
+
+A young fellow who had been hovering in the background at once
+stepped forward. He was the plain-faced detective who had spoken
+to George.
+
+"Will you take my arm, sir?"
+
+Mr. Gryce's whole face brightened. This Sweetwater, as they called
+him, was, I have since understood, one of his proteges and more or
+less of a favourite.
+
+"Have you had a chance at this thing?" he asked. "Been over the
+ground - studied the affair carefully?"
+
+"Yes, sir; they were good enough to allow it."
+
+"Very well, then, you're in a position to pioneer me. You've seen
+it all and won't be in a hurry."
+
+"No; I'm at the end of my rope. I haven't an idea, sir."
+
+"Well, well, that's honest at all events." Then, as he slowly rose
+with the other's careful assistance, "There's no crime without its
+clew. The thing is to recognise that clew when seen. But I'm in no
+position, to make promises. Old days don't return for the asking."
+
+Nevertheless, he looked ten years younger than when he came in, or
+so thought those who knew him.
+
+The mezzanine was guarded from all visitors save such as had
+official sanction. Consequently, the two remained quite
+uninterrupted while they moved about the place in quiet consultation.
+Others had preceded them; had examined the plain little desk and
+found nothing; had paced off the distances; had looked with longing
+and inquiring eyes at the elevator cage and the open archway leading
+to the little staircase and the musicians' gallery. But this was
+nothing to the old detective. The locale was what he wanted, and
+he got it. Whether he got anything else it would be impossible to
+say from his manner as he finally sank into a chair by one of the
+openings, and looked down on the lobby below. It was full of
+people coming and going on all sorts of business, and presently he
+drew back, and, leaning on Sweetwater's arm, asked him a few
+questions.
+
+"Who were the first to rush in here after the Parrishes gave the
+alarm?"
+
+"One or two of the musicians from the end of the hall. They had
+just finished their programme and were preparing to leave the
+gallery. Naturally they reached her first."
+
+Good! their names?"
+
+"Mark Sowerby and Claus Hennerberg. Honest Germans - men who have
+played here for years."
+
+"And who followed them? Who came next on the scene?
+
+"Some people from the lobby. They heard the disturbance and
+rushed up pell-mell. But not one of these touched her. Later her
+father came."
+
+"Who did touch her? Anybody, before the father came in?"
+
+"Yes; Miss Clarke, the middle-aged lady with the Parrishes. She
+had run towards Miss Challoner as soon as she heard her fall, and
+was sitting there with the dead girl's head in her lap when the
+musicians showed themselves."
+
+"I suppose she has been carefully questioned?"
+
+"Very, I should say."
+
+"And she speaks of no weapon?"
+
+"No. Neither she nor any one else at that moment suspected murder
+or even a violent death. All thought it a natural one - sudden, but
+the result of some secret disease."
+
+"Father and all?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"But the blood? Surely there must have been some show of blood?"
+
+"They say not. No one noticed any. Not till the doctor came - her
+doctor who was happily in his office in this very building. He saw
+the drops, and uttered the first suggestion of murder."
+
+"How long after was this? Is there any one who has ventured to make
+an estimate of the number of minutes which elapsed from the time she
+fell, to the moment when the doctor first raised the cry of murder?"
+
+"Yes. Mr. Slater, the assistant manager, who was in the lobby at
+the time, says that ten minutes at least must have elapsed."
+
+"Ten minutes and no blood! The weapon must still have been there.
+Some weapon with a short and inconspicuous handle. I think they
+said there were flowers over and around the place where it struck?"
+
+"Yes, great big scarlet ones. Nobody noticed - nobody looked. A
+panic like that seems to paralyse people."
+
+"Ten minutes! I must see every one who approached her during those
+ten minutes. Every one, Sweetwater, and I must myself talk with
+Miss Clarke."
+
+"You will like her. You will believe every word she says."
+
+"No doubt. All the more reason why I must see her. Sweetwater,
+someone drew that weapon out. Effects still, have their causes,
+notwithstanding the new cult. The question is who? We must
+leave no stone unturned to find that out."
+
+"The stones have all been turned over once."
+
+"By you?
+
+"Not altogether by me."
+
+"Then they will bear being turned over again. I want to be witness
+of the operation."
+
+"Where will you see Miss Clarke?
+
+"Wherever she pleases - only I can't walk far."
+
+"I think I know the place. You shall have the use of this elevator.
+It has not been running since last night or it would be full of
+curious people all the time, hustling to get a glimpse of this place.
+But they'll put a man on for you."
+
+"Very good; manage it as you will. I'll wait here till you're ready.
+Explain yourself to the lady. Tell her I'm an old and rheumatic
+invalid who has been used to asking his own questions. I'll not
+trouble her much. But there is one point she must make clear to me."
+
+Sweetwater did not presume to ask what point, but he hoped to be
+fully enlightened when the time came.
+
+And he was. Mr. Gryce had undertaken to educate him for this work,
+and never missed the opportunity of giving him a lesson. The three
+met in a private sitting-room on an upper floor, the detectives
+entering first and the lady coming in soon after. As her quiet
+figure appeared in the doorway,
+
+Sweetwater stole a glance at Mr. Gryce. He was not looking her
+way, of course; he never looked directly at anybody; but he formed
+his impressions for all that, and Sweetwater was anxious to make
+sure of these impressions. There was no doubting them in this
+instance. Miss Clarke was not a woman to rouse an unfavourable
+opinion in any man's mind. Of slight, almost frail build, she had
+that peculiar animation which goes with a speaking eye and a widely
+sympathetic nature. Without any substantial claims to beauty, her
+expression was so womanly and so sweet that she was invariably
+called lovely.
+
+Mr. Gryce was engaged at the moment in shifting his cane from the
+right hand to the left, but his manner was never more encouraging
+or his smile more benevolent.
+
+"Pardon me," he apologised, with one of his old-fashioned bows,
+"I'm sorry to trouble you after all the distress you must have been
+under this morning. But there is something I wish especially to
+ask you in regard to the dreadful occurrence in which you played so
+kind a part. You were the first to reach the prostrate woman, I
+believe."
+
+"Yes. The boys jumped up and ran towards her, but they were
+frightened by her looks and left it for me to put my hands under
+her and try to lift her up."
+
+"Did you manage it?"
+
+"I succeeded in getting her head into my lap, nothing more."
+
+"And sat so?"
+
+"For some little time. That is, it seemed long, though I believe
+it was not more than a minute before two men came running from the
+musicians' gallery. One thinks so fast at such a time - and feels
+so much."
+
+"You knew she was dead, then?"
+
+"I felt her to be so."
+
+"How felt?"
+
+"I was sure - I never questioned it."
+
+"You have seen women in a faint?"
+
+"Yes, many times."
+
+"What made the difference? Why should you believe Miss Challoner
+dead simply because she lay still and apparently lifeless?
+
+"I cannot tell you. Possibly, death tells its own story. I only
+know how I felt."
+
+"Perhaps there was another reason? Perhaps, that, consciously or
+unconsciously, you laid your palm upon her heart?"
+
+Miss Clarke started, and her sweet face showed a moment's perplexity.
+
+"Did I?" she queried, musingly. Then with a sudden access of
+feeling, "I may have done so, indeed, I believe I did. My arms
+were around her; it would not have been an unnatural action."
+
+"No; a very natural one, I should say. Cannot you tell me
+positively whether you did this or not?"
+
+"Yes, I did. I had forgotten it, but I remember now." And the
+glance she cast him while not meeting his eye showed that she
+understood the importance of the admission. "I know," she said,
+"what you are going to ask me now. Did I feel anything there but
+the flowers and the tulle? No, Mr. Gryce, I did not. There was
+no poniard in the wound."
+
+Mr. Gryce felt around, found a chair and sank into it.
+
+"You are a truthful woman," said he. "And," he added more slowly,
+"composed enough in character I should judge not to have made any
+mistake on this very vital point."
+
+"I think so, Mr. Gryce. I was in a state of excitement, of course;
+but the woman was a stranger to me, and my feelings were not unduly
+agitated."
+
+"Sweetwater, we can let my suggestion go in regard to those ten
+minutes I spoke of. The time is narrowed down to one, and in that
+one, Miss Clarke was the only person to touch her."
+
+"The only one," echoed the lady, catching perhaps the slight
+rising sound of query in his voice.
+
+"I will trouble you no further." So said the old detective,
+thoughtfully. "Sweetwater, help me out of this." His eye was dull
+and his manner betrayed exhaustion. But vigour returned to him
+before he had well reached the door, and he showed some of his old
+spirit as he thanked Miss Clarke and turned to take the elevator.
+
+"But one possibility remains," he confided to Sweetwater, as they
+stood waiting at the elevator door. "Miss Challoner died from a
+stab. The next minute she was in this lady's arms. No weapon
+protruded from the wound, nor was any found on or near her in the
+mezzanine. What follows? She struck the blow herself, and the
+strength of purpose which led her to do this, gave her the
+additional force to pull the weapon out and fling it from her. It
+did not fall upon the floor around her; therefore, it flew through
+one of those openings into the lobby, and there it either will be,
+or has been found."
+
+It was this statement, otherwise worded, which gave me my triumph
+over George.
+
+
+
+V
+
+THE RED CLOAK
+
+
+"What results? Speak up, Sweetwater."
+
+"None. Every man, woman and boy connected with the hotel has been
+questioned; many of them routed out of their beds for the purpose,
+but not one of them picked up anything from the floor of the lobby,
+or knows of any one who did."
+
+There now remain the guests."
+
+"And after them - (pardon me, Mr. Gryce) the general public which
+rushed in rather promiscuously last night."
+
+"I know it; it's a task, but it must be carried through. Put up
+bulletins, publish your wants in the papers; - do anything, only
+gain your end."
+
+A bulletin was put up.
+
+Some hours later, Sweetwater re-entered the room, and, approaching
+Mr. Gryce with a smile, blurted out:
+
+"The bulletin is a great go. I think - of course, I cannot be sure
+ - that it's going to do the business. I've watched every one who
+stopped to read it. Many showed interest and many, emotion; she
+seems to have had a troop of friends. But embarrassment! only one
+showed that. I thought you would like to know."
+
+"Embarrassment? Humph! a man?"
+
+"No, a woman; a lady, sir; one of the transients. I found out in
+a jiffy all they could tell me about her."
+
+"A woman! We didn't expect that. Where is she? Still in the
+lobby?"
+
+"No, sir. She took the elevator while I was talking with the clerk."
+
+"There's nothing in it. You mistook her expression."
+
+"I don't think so. I had noticed her when she first came into the
+lobby. She was talking to her daughter who was with her, and looked
+natural and happy. But no sooner had she seen and read that
+bulletin, than the blood shot up into her face and her manner became
+furtive and hasty. There was no mistaking the difference, sir.
+Almost before I could point her out, she had seized her daughter by
+the arm and hurried her towards the elevator. I wanted to follow
+her, but you may prefer to make your own inquiries. Her room is on
+the seventh floor, number 712, and her name is Watkins. Mrs. Horace
+Watkins of Nashville."
+
+Mr. Gryce nodded thoughtfully, but made no immediate effort to rise.
+
+"Is that all you know about her?" he asked.
+
+"Yes; this is the first time she has stopped at this hotel. She
+came yesterday. Took a room indefinitely. Seems all right; but she
+did blush, sir. I ever saw its beat in a young girl."
+
+"Call the desk. Say that I'm to be told if Mrs. Watkins of
+Nashville rings up during the next ten minutes. We'll give her
+that long to take some action. If she fails to make any move, I'll
+make my own approaches."
+
+Sweetwater did as he was bid, then went back to his place in the
+lobby.
+
+But he returned almost instantly.
+
+"Mrs. Watkins has just telephoned down that she is going to - to
+leave, sir."
+
+"To leave?"
+
+The old man struggled to his feet. "No. 712, do you say? Seven
+stories," he sighed. But as he turned with a hobble, he stopped.
+"There are difficulties in the way of this interview," he remarked.
+"A blush is not much to go upon. I'm afraid we shall have to resort
+to the shadow business and that is your work, not mine.
+
+But here the door opened and a boy brought in a line which had been
+left at the desk. It related to the very matter then engaging them,
+and ran thus:
+
+ "I see that information is desired as to whether any person was
+ seen to stoop to the lobby floor last night at or shortly after
+ the critical moment of Miss Challoner's fall in the half story
+ above. I can give such information. I was in the lobby at the
+ time, and in the height of the confusion following this alarming
+ incident, I remember seeing a lady,- one of the new arrivals
+ (there were several coming in at the time)- stoop quickly down
+ and pick up something from the floor. I thought nothing of it at
+ the time, and so paid little attention to her appearance. I can
+ only recall the suddenness with which she stooped and the colour
+ of the cloak she wore. It was red, and the whole garment was
+ voluminous. If you wish further particulars, though in truth, I
+ have no more to give, you can find me in 356.
+
+ "HENRY A. MCELROY."
+
+
+"Humph! This should simplify our task," was Mr. Gryce's comment,
+as he handed the note over to Sweetwater. "You can easily find out
+if the lady, now on the point of departure, can be identified with
+the one described by Mr. McElroy. If she can, I am ready to meet
+her anywhere."
+
+"Here goes then! " cried Sweetwater, and quickly left the room.
+
+When he returned, it was not with his most hopeful air.
+
+"The cloak doesn't help," he declared. "No one remembers the cloak.
+But the time of Mrs. Watkins' arrival was all right. She came in
+directly on the heels of this catastrophe."
+
+"She did! Sweetwater, I will see her. Manage it for me at once."
+
+"The clerk says that it had better be upstairs. She is a very
+sensitive woman. There might be a scene, if she were intercepted
+on her way out."
+
+"Very well." But the look which the old detective threw at his
+bandaged legs was not without its pathos.
+
+And so it happened that just as Mrs. Watkins was watching the
+wheeling out of her trunks, there appeared in the doorway before
+her, an elderly gentleman, whose expression, always benevolent,
+save at moments when benevolence would be quite out of keeping with
+the situation, had for some reason, so marked an effect upon her,
+that she coloured under his eye, and, indeed, showed such
+embarrassment, that all doubt of the propriety of his intrusion
+vanished from the old man's mind, and with the ease of one only too
+well accustomed to such scenes, he kindly remarked:
+
+"Am I speaking to Mrs. Watkins of Nashville?"
+
+"You are," she faltered, with another rapid change of colour. "I
+ - I am just leaving. I hope you will excuse me. I -"
+
+"I wish I could," he smiled, hobbling in and confronting her
+quietly in her own room. "But circumstances make it quite imperative
+that I should have a few words with you on a topic which need not
+be disagreeable to you, and probably will not be. My name is Gryce.
+This will probably convey nothing to you, but I am not unknown to the
+management below, and my years must certainly give you confidence in
+the propriety of my errand. A beautiful and charming young woman
+died here last night. May I ask if you knew her?"
+
+"I?" She was trembling violently now, but whether with indignation
+or some other more subtle emotion, it would be difficult to say.
+"No, I'm from the South. I never saw the young lady. Why do you
+ask? I do not recognise your right. I - I -"
+
+Certainly her emotion must be that of simple indignation. Mr. Gryce
+made one of his low bows, and propping himself against the table he
+stood before, remarked civilly: -
+
+"I had rather not force my rights. The matter is so very ordinary.
+I did not suppose you knew Miss Challoner, but one must begin
+somehow, and as you came in at the very moment when the alarm was
+raised in the lobby, I thought perhaps you could tell me something
+which would aid me in my effort to elicit the real facts of the case.
+You were crossing the lobby at the time -"
+
+"Yes." She raised her head. "So were a dozen others -"
+
+"Madam," - the interruption was made in his kindliest tones, but in
+a way which nevertheless suggested authority. "Something was picked
+up from the floor at that moment. If the dozen you mention were
+witnesses to this act we do not know it. But we do know that it
+did not pass unobserved by you. Am I not correct? Didn't you see
+a certain person - I will mention no names - stoop and pick up
+something from the lobby floor?"
+
+"No." The word came out with startling violence. "I was conscious
+of nothing but the confusion." She was facing him with determination
+and her eyes were fixed boldly on his face. But her lips quivered,
+and her cheeks were white, too white now for simple indignation.
+
+"Then I have made a big mistake," apologised the ever-courteous
+detective. "Will you pardon me? It would have settled a very
+serious question if it could be found that the object thus picked
+up was the weapon which killed Miss Challoner. That is my excuse
+for the trouble I have given you."
+
+He was not looking at her; he was looking at her hand which rested
+on the table before which he himself stood. Did the fingers tighten
+a little and dig into the palm they concealed? He thought so, and
+was very slow in turning limpingly about towards the door.
+Meanwhile, would she speak? No. The silence was so marked, he
+felt it an excuse for stealing another glance in her direction. She
+was not looking his way but at a door in the partition wall on her
+right; and the look was one very akin to anxious fear. The next
+moment he understood it. The door burst open, and a young girl
+bounded into the room, with the merry cry:
+
+"All ready, mother. I'm glad we are going to the Clarendon. I
+hate hotels where people die almost before your eyes."
+
+What the mother said at this outburst is immaterial. What the
+detective did is not. Keeping on his way, he reached the door, but
+not to open it wider; rather to close it softly but with unmistakable
+decision. The cloak which enveloped the girl was red, and full
+enough to be called voluminous.
+
+"Who is this?" demanded the girl, her indignant glances flashing
+from one to the other.
+
+"I don't know," faltered the mother in very evident distress. "He
+says he has a right to ask us questions and he has been asking
+questions about - about -"
+
+"Not about me," laughed the girl, with a toss of her head Mr. Gryce
+would have corrected in one of his grandchildren. "He can have
+nothing to say about me." And she began to move about the room
+in an aimless, half-insolent way.
+
+Mr. Gryce stared hard at the few remaining belongings of the two
+women, lying in a heap on the table, and half musingly, half
+deprecatingly, remarked:
+
+"The person who stooped wore a long red cloak. Probably you
+preceded your daughter, Mrs. Watkins."
+
+The lady thus brought to the point made a quick gesture towards the
+girl who suddenly stood still, and, with a rising colour in her
+cheeks, answered, with some show of resolution on her own part:
+
+"You say your name is Gryce and that you have a right to address me
+thus pointedly on a subject which you evidently regard as serious.
+That is not exact enough for me. Who are you, sir? What is your
+business?"
+
+"I think you have guessed it. I am a detective from Headquarters.
+What I want of you I have already stated. Perhaps this young lady
+can tell me what you cannot. I shall be pleased if this is so."
+
+"Caroline" - Then the mother broke down. "Show the gentleman what
+you picked up from the lobby floor last night."
+
+The girl laughed again, loudly and with evident bravado, before
+she threw the cloak back and showed what she had evidently been
+holding in her hand from the first, a sharp-pointed, gold-handled
+paper-cutter.
+
+"It was lying there and I picked it up. I don't see any harm in
+that."
+
+"You probably meant none. You couldn't have known the part it
+had just played in this tragic drama," said the old detective
+looking carefully at the cutter which he had taken in his hand,
+but not so carefully that he failed to note that the look of
+distress was not lifted from the mother's face either by her
+daughter's words or manner.
+
+"You have washed this?" he asked.
+
+"No. Why should I wash it? It was clean enough. I was just going
+down to give it in at the desk. I wasn't going to carry it away."
+And she turned aside to the window and began to hum, as though done
+with the whole matter.
+
+The old detective rubbed his chin, glanced again at the paper-cutter,
+then at the girl in the window, and lastly at the mother, who had
+lifted her head again and was facing him bravely.
+
+"It is very important," he observed to the latter, "that your
+daughter should be correct in her statement as to the condition of
+this article when she picked it up. Are you sure she did not wash
+it?"
+
+"I don't think she did. But I'm sure she will tell you the truth
+about that. Caroline, this is a police matter. Any mistake about
+it may involve us in a world of trouble and keep you from getting
+back home in time for your coming-out party. Did you - did you
+wash this cutter when you got upstairs, or - or -" she added, with
+a propitiatory glance at Mr. Gryce - wipe it off at any time between
+then and now? Don't answer hastily. Be sure. No one can blame you
+for that act. Any girl, as thoughtless as you, might do that."
+
+"Mother, how can I tell what I did?" flashed out the girl, wheeling
+round on her heel till she faced them both. "I don't remember doing
+a thing to it. I just brought it up. A thing found like that
+belongs to the finder. You needn't hold it out towards me like that.
+I don't want it now; I'm sick of it. Such a lot of talk about a
+paltry thing which couldn't have cost ten dollars." And she wheeled
+back.
+
+"It isn't the value." Mr. Gryce could be very patient. "It's the
+fact that we believe it to have been answerable for Miss Challoner's
+death - that is, if there was any blood on it when you picked it
+up."
+
+"Blood!" The girl was facing them again, astonishment struggling
+with disgust on her plain but mobile features. "Blood! is that
+what you mean. No wonder I hate it. Take it away," she cried.
+
+"Oh, mother, I'll never pick up anything again which doesn't belong
+to me! Blood!" she repeated in horror, flinging herself into her
+mother's arms.
+
+Mr. Gryce thought he understood the situation. Here was a little
+kleptomaniac whose weakness the mother was struggling to hide.
+Light was pouring in. He felt his body's weight less on that
+miserable foot of his.
+
+"Does that frighten you? Are you so affected by the thought of
+blood?"
+
+"Don't ask me. And I put the thing under my pillow! I thought
+it was so - so pretty."
+
+"Mrs. Watkins," Mr. Gryce from that moment ignored the daughter,
+"did you see it there?"
+
+"Yes; but I didn't know where it came from. I had not seen my
+daughter stoop. I didn't know where she got it till I read that
+bulletin."
+
+"Never mind that. The question agitating me is whether any stain
+was left under that pillow. We want to be sure of the connection
+between this possible weapon and the death by stabbing which we
+all deplore - if there is a connection."
+
+"I didn't see any stain, but you can look for yourself. The bed
+has been made up, but there was no change of linen. We expected
+to remain here; I see no good to be gained by hiding any of the
+facts now."
+
+"None whatever, Madam."
+
+"Come, then. Caroline, sit down and stop crying. Mr. Gryce
+believes that your only fault was in not taking this object at once
+to the desk."
+
+"Yes, that's all," acquiesced the detective after a short study
+of the shaking figure and distorted features of the girl. "You had
+no idea, I'm sure, where this weapon came from, or for what it had
+been used. That's evident."
+
+Her shudder, as she seated herself, was very convincing. She was
+too young to simulate so successfully emotions of this character.
+
+"I'm glad of that," she responded, half fretfully, half gratefully,
+as Mr. Gryce followed her mother into the adjoining room. "I've
+had a bad enough time of it without being blamed for what I didn't
+know and didn't do."
+
+Mr. Gryce laid little stress upon these words, but much upon the
+lack of curiosity she showed in the minute and careful examination
+he now made of her room. There was no stain on the pillow-cover
+and none on the bureau-spread where she might very naturally have
+laid the cutter down on first coming into her room. The blade was
+so polished that it must have been rubbed off somewhere, either
+purposely or by accident. Where then, since not here? He asked to
+see her gloves - the ones she had worn the previous night.
+
+"They are the same she is wearing now," the anxious mother assured
+him. "Wait, and I will get them for you."
+
+"No need. Let her hold out her hands in token of amity. I shall
+soon see."
+
+They returned to where the girl still sat, wrapped in her cloak,
+sobbing still, but not so violently.
+
+"Caroline, you may take off your things," said the mother, drawing
+the pins from her own hat. "We shall not go to-day."
+
+The child shot her mother one disappointed look, then proceeded to
+follow suit. When her hat was off, she began to take off her gloves.
+As soon as they were on the table, the mother pushed them over to Mr.
+Gryce. As he looked at them, the girl lifted off her cloak.
+
+"Will - will he tell?" she whispered behind its ample folds into her
+mother's ear.
+
+The answer came quickly, but not in the mother's tones. Mr. Gryce's
+ears had lost none of their ancient acuteness.
+
+"I do not see that I should gain much by doing so. The one
+discovery which would link this find of yours indissolubly with
+Miss Challoner's death, I have failed to make. If I am equally
+unsuccessful below - if I can establish no closer connection there
+than here between this cutter and the weapon which killed Miss
+Challoner, I shall have no cause to mention the matter. It will be
+too extraneous to the case. Do you remember the exact spot where
+you stooped, Miss Watkins?"
+
+"No, no. Somewhere near those big chairs; I didn't have to step out
+of my way; I really didn't."
+
+Mr. Gryce's answering smile was a study. It seemed to convey a
+two-fold message, one for the mother and one for the child, and both
+were comforting. But he went away, disappointed. The clew which
+promised so much was, to all appearance, a false one.
+
+He could soon tell.
+
+
+
+VI
+
+INTEGRITY
+
+
+Mr. Gryce's fears were only too well founded. Though Mr. McElroy
+was kind enough to point out the exact spot where he saw Miss Watkins
+stoop, no trace of blood was found upon the rug which had lain there,
+nor had anything of the kind been washed up by the very careful man
+who scrubbed the lobby floor in the early morning. This was
+disappointing, as its presence would have settled the whole question.
+When, these efforts all exhausted, the two detectives faced each
+other again in the small room given up to their use, Mr. Gryce showed
+his discouragement. To be certain of a fact you cannot prove has not
+the same alluring quality for the old that it has for the young.
+Sweetwater watched him in some concern, then with the persistence
+which was one of his strong points, ventured finally to remark:
+
+"I have but one idea left on the subject."
+
+"And what is that?" Old as he was, Mr. Gryce was alert in a moment.
+
+"The girl wore a red cloak. If I mistake not, the lining was also
+red. A spot on it might not show to the casual observer. Yet it
+would mean much to us."
+
+"Sweetwater!"
+
+A faint blush rose to the old man's cheek.
+
+"Shall I request the privilege of looking that garment over?
+
+"Yes."
+
+The young fellow ducked and left the room. When he returned, it
+was with a downcast air.
+
+"Nothing doing," said he.
+
+And then there was silence.
+
+"We only need to find out now that this cutter was not even Miss
+Challoner's property," remarked Mr. Gryce, at last, with a gesture
+towards the object named, lying openly on the table before him.
+
+"That should be easy. Shall I take it to their rooms and show it
+to her maid?"
+
+"If you can do so without disturbing the old gentleman."
+
+But here they were themselves disturbed. A knock at the door was
+followed by the immediate entrance of the very person just mentioned.
+Mr. Challoner had come in search of the inspector, and showed some
+surprise to find his place occupied by an unknown old man.
+
+But Mr. Gryce, who discerned tidings in the bereaved father's face,
+was all alacrity in an instant. Greeting his visitor with a smile
+which few could see without trusting the man, he explained the
+inspector's absence and introduced himself in his own capacity.
+
+Mr. Challoner had heard of him. Nevertheless, he did not seem
+inclined to speak.
+
+Mr. Gryce motioned Sweetwater from the room. With a woeful look the
+young detective withdrew, his last glance cast at the cutter still
+lying in full view on the table.
+
+Mr. Gryce, not unmindful himself of this object, took it up, then
+laid it down again, with an air of seeming abstraction.
+
+The father's attention was caught.
+
+"What is that?" he cried, advancing a step and bestowing more than
+an ordinary glance at the object thus brought casually, as it were,
+to his notice. "I surely recognise this cutter. Does it belong
+here or -"
+
+Mr. Gryce, observing the other's, emotion, motioned him to a chair.
+As his visitor sank into it, he remarked, with all the consideration
+exacted by the situation:
+
+"It is unknown property, Mr. Challoner. But we have some reason to
+think it belonged to your daughter. Are we correct in this surmise?
+
+"I have seen it, or one like it, often in her hand." Here his eyes
+suddenly dilated and the hand stretched forth to grasp it quickly
+drew back. "Where - where was it found?" he hoarsely demanded. "0
+God! am I to be crushed to the very earth by sorrow!"
+
+Mr. Gryce hastened to give him such relief as was consistent with
+the truth.
+
+"It was picked up - last night - from the lobby floor. There is
+seemingly nothing to connect it with her death. Yet -"
+
+The pause was eloquent. Mr. Challoner gave the detective an agonised
+look and turned white to the lips. Then gradually, as the silence
+continued, his head fell forward, and he muttered almost
+unintelligibly:
+
+"I honestly believe her the victim of some heartless stranger. I
+do now; but - but I cannot mislead the police. At any cost I must
+retract a statement I made under false impressions and with no
+desire to deceive. I said that I knew all of the gentlemen who
+admired her and aspired to her hand, and that they were all reputable
+men and above committing a crime of this or any other kind. But it
+seems that I did not know her secret heart as thoroughly as I had
+supposed. Among her effects I have just come upon a batch of letters
+ - love letters I am forced to acknowledge - signed by initials
+totally strange to me. The letters are manly in tone - most of them
+ - but one -"
+
+"What about the one?"
+
+"Shows that the writer was displeased. It may mean nothing, but I
+could not let the matter go without setting myself right with the
+authorities. If it might be allowed to rest here - if those letters
+can remain sacred, it would save me the additional pang of seeing
+her inmost concerns - the secret and holiest recesses of a woman's
+heart, laid open to the public. For, from the tenor of most of these
+letters, she - she was not averse to the writer."
+
+Mr. Gryce moved a little restlessly in his chair and stared hard at
+the cutter so conveniently placed under his eye. Then his manner
+softened and he remarked:
+
+"We will do what we can. But you must understand that the matter is
+not a simple one. That, in fact, it contains mysteries which demand
+police investigation. We do not dare to trifle with any of the facts.
+The inspector, and, if not he, the coroner, will have to be told about
+these letters and will probably ask to see them."
+
+"They are the letters of a gentleman."
+
+"With the one exception."
+
+"Yes, that is understood." Then in a sudden heat and with an almost
+sublime trust in his daughter notwithstanding the duplicity he had
+just discovered:
+
+"Nothing - not the story told by these letters, or the sight of
+that sturdy paper-cutter with its long and very slender blade, will
+make me believe that she willingly took her own life. You do not
+know, cannot know, the rare delicacy of her nature. She was a lady
+through and through. If she had meditated death - if the breach
+suggested by the one letter I have mentioned, should have so preyed
+upon her spirits as to lead her to break her old father's heart
+and outrage the feelings of all who knew her, she could not, being
+the woman she was, choose a public place for such an act - an hotel
+writing-room - in face of a lobby full of hurrying men. It was out
+of nature. Every one who knows her will tell you so. The deed was
+an accident - incredible - but still an accident."
+
+Mr. Gryce had respect for this outburst. Making no attempt to answer
+it, he suggested, with some hesitation, that Miss Challoner had been
+seen writing a letter previous to taking those fatal steps from the
+desk which ended so tragically. Was this letter to one of her lady
+friends, as reported, and was it as far from suggesting the awful
+tragedy which followed, as he had been told?
+
+"It was a cheerful letter. Such a one as she often wrote to her
+little protogees here and there. I judge that this was written to
+some girl like that, for the person addressed was not known to her
+maid, any more than she was to me. It expressed an affectionate
+interest, and it breathed encouragement - encouragement! and she
+meditating her own death at the moment! Impossible! That letter
+should exonerate her if nothing else does."
+
+Mr. Gryce recalled the incongruities, the inconsistencies and even
+the surprising contradictions which had often marked the conduct of
+men and women, in his lengthy experience with the strange, the
+sudden, and the tragic things of life, and slightly shook his head.
+He pitied Mr. Challoner, and admired even more his courage in face
+of the appalling grief which had overwhelmed him, but he dared not
+encourage a false hope. The girl had killed herself and with this
+weapon. They might not be able to prove it absolutely, but it was
+nevertheless true, and this broken old man would some day be obliged
+to acknowledge it. But the detective said nothing of this, and was
+very patient with the further arguments the other advanced to prove
+his point and the lofty character of the girl to whom, misled by
+appearance, the police seemed inclined to attribute the awful sin
+of self-destruction.
+
+But when, this topic exhausted, Mr. Challoner rose to leave the
+room, Mr. Gryce showed where his own thoughts still centred, by
+asking him the date of the correspondence discovered between his
+daughter and her unknown admirer.
+
+"Some of the letters were dated last summer, some this fall. The
+one you are most anxious to hear about only a month back," he
+added, with unconquerable devotion to what he considered his duty.
+
+Mr. Gryce would like to have carried his inquiries further, but
+desisted. His heart was full of compassion for this childless old
+man, doomed to have his choicest memories disturbed by cruel doubts
+which possibly would never be removed to his own complete
+satisfaction.
+
+But when he was gone, and Sweetwater had returned, Mr. Gryce made
+it his first duty to communicate to his superiors the hitherto
+unsuspected fact of a secret romance in Miss Challoner's seemingly
+calm and well-guarded life. She had loved and been loved by one
+of whom her family knew nothing. And the two had quarrelled, as
+certain letters lately found could be made to show.
+
+
+
+VII
+
+THE LETTERS
+
+Before a table strewn with papers, in the room we have already
+mentioned as given over to the use of the police, sat Dr. Heath in
+a mood too thoughtful to notice the entrance of Mr. Gryce and
+Sweetwater from the dining-room where they had been having dinner.
+
+However as the former's tread was somewhat lumbering, the coroner's
+attention was caught before they had quite crossed the room, and
+Sweetwater, with his quick eye, noted how his arm and hand
+immediately fell so as to cover up a portion of the papers lying
+nearest to him.
+
+"Well, Gryce, this is a dark case," he observed, as at his bidding
+the two detectives took their seats.
+
+Mr. Gryce nodded; so did Sweetwater.
+
+"The darkest that has ever come to my knowledge," pursued the
+coroner.
+
+Mr. Gryce again nodded; but not so, Sweetwater. For some reason
+this simple expression of opinion seemed to have given him a mental
+start.
+
+"She was not shot. She was not struck by any other hand; yet she
+lies dead from a mortal wound in the breast. Though there is no
+tangible proof of her having inflicted this wound upon herself, the
+jury will have no alternative, I fear, than to pronounce the case
+one of suicide."
+
+"I'm sorry that I've been able to do so little," remarked Mr. Gryce.
+
+The coroner darted him a quick look.
+
+"You are not satisfied? You have some different idea?" he asked.
+
+The detective frowned at his hands crossed over the top of his cane,
+then shaking his head, replied:
+
+"The verdict you mention is the only natural one, of course. I
+see that you have been talking with Miss Challoner's former maid?"
+
+"Yes, and she has settled an important point for us. There was a
+possibility, of course, that the paper-cutter which you brought to
+my notice had never gone with her into the mezzanine. That she,
+or some other person, had dropped it in passing through the lobby.
+But this girl assures me that her mistress did not enter the lobby
+that night. That she accompanied her down in the elevator, and saw
+her step off at the mezzanine. She can also swear that the cutter
+was in a book she carried - the book we found lying on the desk.
+The girl remembers distinctly seeing its peculiarly chased handle
+projecting from its pages. Could anything be more satisfactory if
+ - I was going to say, if the young lady had been of the impulsive
+type and the provocation greater. But Miss Challoner's nature was
+calm, and were it not for these letters -" here his arm shifted a
+little -" I should not be so sure of my jury's future verdict.
+Love -" he went on, after a moment of silent consideration of a
+letter he had chosen from those before him," disturbs the most
+equable natures. When it enters as a factor, we can expect anything
+ - as you know. And Miss Challoner evidently was much attached to
+her correspondent, and naturally felt the reproach conveyed in
+these lines."
+
+And Dr. Heath read:
+
+ "Dear Miss Challoner:
+
+ "Only a man of small spirit could endure what I endured from you
+ the other day. Love such as mine would be respectable in a
+ clod-hopper, and I think that even you will acknowledge that I
+ stand somewhat higher than that. Though I was silent under your
+ disapprobation, you shall yet have your answer. It will not lack
+ point because of its necessary delay."
+
+A threat!
+
+The words sprang from Sweetwater, and were evidently involuntary.
+Dr. Heath paid no notice, but Mr. Gryce, in shifting his hands on
+his cane top, gave them a sidelong look which was not without a
+hint of fresh interest in a case concerning which he had believed
+himself to have said his last word.
+
+"It is the only letter of them all which conveys anything like a
+reproach," proceeded the coroner. "The rest are ardent enough and,
+I must acknowledge that, so far as I have allowed myself to look
+into them, sufficiently respectful. Her surprise must consequently
+have been great at receiving these lines, and her resentment equally
+so. If the two met afterwards - But I have not shown you the
+signature. To the poor father it conveyed nothing - some facts have
+been kept from him - but to us -" here he whirled the letter about
+so that Sweetwater, at least, could see the name, "it conveys a
+hope that we may yet understand Miss Challoner."
+
+"Brotherson! " exclaimed the young detective in loud surprise.
+"Brotherson! The man who -"
+
+"The man who left this building just before or simultaneously with
+the alarm caused by Miss Challoner's fall. It clears away some of
+the clouds befogging us. She probably caught sight of him in the
+lobby, and in the passion of the moment forgot her usual instincts
+and drove the sharp-pointed weapon into her heart.
+
+"Brotherson!" The word came softly now, and with a thoughtful
+intonation. "He saw her die."
+
+"Why do you say that?"
+
+"Would he have washed his hands in the snow if he had been in
+ignorance of the occurrence? He was the real, if not active, cause
+of her death and he knew it. Either he - Excuse me, Dr. Heath and
+Mr. Gryce, it is not for me to obtrude my opinion."
+
+"Have you settled it beyond dispute that Brotherson is really the
+man who was seen doing this?"
+
+"No, sir. I have not had a minute for that job, but I'm ready for
+the business any time you see fit to spare me."
+
+"Let it be to-morrow, or, if you can manage it, to-night. We want
+the man even if he is not the hero of that romantic episode. He
+wrote these letters, and he must explain the last one. His initials,
+as you see, are not ordinary ones, and you will find them at the
+bottom of all these sheets. He was brave enough or arrogant enough
+to sign the questionable one with his full name. This may speak
+well for him, and it may not. It is for you to decide that. Where
+will you look for him, Sweetwater? No one here knows his address."
+
+"Not Miss Challoner's maid?"
+
+"No; the name is a new one to her. But she made it very evident
+that she was not surprised to hear that her mistress was in secret
+correspondence with a member of the male sex. Much can be hidden
+from servants, but not that."
+
+"I'll find the man; I have a double reason for doing that now; he
+shall not escape me."
+
+Dr. Heath expressed his satisfaction, and gave some orders.
+Meanwhile, Mr. Gryce had not uttered a word.
+
+
+
+VIII
+
+STRANGE DOINGS FOR GEORGE
+
+
+That evening George sat so long over the newspapers that in spite
+of my absorbing interest in the topic engrossing me, I fell asleep
+in my cozy little rocking chair. I was awakened by what seemed
+like a kiss falling very softly on my forehead, though, to be sure,
+it may have been only the flap of George's coat sleeve as he stooped
+over me.
+
+"Wake up, little woman," I heard, "and trot away to bed. I'm going
+out and may not be in till daybreak."
+
+"You! going out! at ten o'clock at night, tired as you are - as we
+both are! What has happened-Oh!"
+
+This broken exclamation escaped me as I perceived in the dim
+background by the sitting-room door, the figure of a man who called
+up recent, but very thrilling experiences.
+
+"Mr. Sweetwater," explained George. "We are going out together. It
+is necessary, or you may be sure I should not leave you.
+
+I was quite wide awake enough by now to understand. "Oh, I know.
+You are going to hunt up the man. How I wish -"
+
+But George did not wait for me to express my wishes. He gave me a
+little good advice as to how I had better employ my time in his
+absence, and was off before I could find words to answer.
+
+This ends all I have to say about myself; but the events of that
+night carefully related to me by George are important enough for me
+to describe them, with all the detail which is their rightful due.
+I shall tell the story as I have already been led to do in other
+portions of this narrative, as though I were present and shared the
+adventure.
+
+As soon as the two were in the street, the detective turned towards
+George and said:
+
+"Mr. Anderson, I have a great deal to ask of you. The business
+before us is not a simple one, and I fear that I shall have to
+subject you to more inconvenience than is customary in matters like
+this. Mr. Brotherson has vanished; that is, in his own proper
+person, but I have an idea that I am on the track of one who will
+lead us very directly to him if we manage the affair carefully.
+What I want of you, of course, is mere identification. You saw the
+face of the man who washed his hands in the snow, and would know it
+again, you say. Do you think you could be quite sure of yourself,
+if the man were differently dressed and differently occupied?
+
+"I think so. There's his height and a certain strong look in his
+face. I cannot describe it."
+
+"You don't need to. Come! we're all right. You don't mind making
+a night of it?"
+
+"Not if it is necessary.
+
+"That we can't tell yet." And with a characteristic shrug and smile,
+the detective led the way to a taxicab which stood in waiting at the
+corner.
+
+A quarter of an hour of rather fast riding brought them into a
+tangle of streets on the East side. As George noticed the swarming
+sidewalks and listened to the noises incident to an over-populated
+quarter, he could not forbear, despite the injunction he had
+received, to express his surprise at the direction of their search.
+
+Surely," said he, "the gentleman I have described can have no
+friends here." Then, bethinking himself, he added: " But if he has
+reasons to fear the law, naturally he would seek to lose himself in
+a place as different as possible from his usual haunts."
+
+"Yes, that would be some men's way," was the curt, almost
+indifferent, answer he received. Sweetwater was looking this way
+and that from the window beside him, and now, leaning out gave some
+directions to the driver which altered their course.
+
+When they stopped, which was in a few minutes, he said to George:
+
+"We shall have to walk now for a block or two. I'm anxious to
+attract no attention, nor is it desirable for you to do so. If you
+can manage to act as if you were accustomed to the place and just
+leave all the talking to me, we ought to get along first-rate.
+Don't be astonished at anything you see, and trust me for the rest;
+that's all."
+
+They alighted, and he dismissed the taxicab. Some clock in the
+neighbourhood struck the hour of ten. "Good! we shall be in time,"
+muttered the detective, and led the way down the street and round
+a corner or so, till they came to a block darker than the rest, and
+much less noisy.
+
+It had a sinister look, and George, who is brave enough under all
+ordinary circumstances, was glad that his companion wore a badge
+and carried a whistle. He was also relieved when he caught sight
+of the burly form of a policeman in the shadow of one of the
+doorways. Yet the houses he saw before him were not so very
+different from those they had already passed. His uneasiness could
+not have sprung from them. They had even an air of positive
+respectability, as though inhabited by industrious workmen. Then,
+what was it which made the close companionship of a member of the
+police so uncommonly welcome? Was it a certain aspect of
+solitariness which clung to the block, or was it the sudden
+appearance here and there of strangely gliding figures, which no
+sooner loomed up against the snowy perspective, than they
+disappeared again in some unseen doorway?
+
+"There's a meeting on to-night, of the Associated Brotherhood of
+the Awl, the Plane and the Trowel (whatever that means), and it is
+the speaker we want to see; the man who is to address them promptly
+at ten o'clock. Do you object to meetings?"
+
+"Is this a secret one?"
+
+"It wasn't advertised."
+
+"Are we carpenters or masons that we can count on admittance?"
+
+"I am a carpenter. Don't you think you can be a mason for the
+occasion?"
+
+"I doubt it, but -"
+
+"Hush! I must speak to this man."
+
+George stood back, and a few words passed between Sweetwater and
+a shadowy figure which seemed to have sprung up out of the sidewalk.
+
+"Balked at the outset," were the encouraging words with which the
+detective rejoined George. "It seems that a pass-word is necessary,
+and my friend has been unable to get it. Will the speaker pass out
+this way?" he inquired of the shadowy figure still lingering in
+their rear.
+
+"He didn't go in by it; yet I believe he's safe enough inside," was
+the muttered answer.
+
+Sweetwater had no relish for disappointments of this character, but
+it was not long before he straightened up and allowed himself to
+exchange a few more words with this mysterious person. These appeared
+to be of a more encouraging nature than the last, for it was not long
+before the detective returned with renewed alacrity to George, and,
+wheeling him about, began to retrace his steps to the corner.
+
+"Are we going back? Are you going to give up the job?" George asked.
+
+"No; we're going to take him from the rear. There's a break in the
+fence - Oh, we'll do very well. Trust me.
+
+George laughed. He was growing excited, but not altogether agreeably
+so. He says that he has seen moments of more pleasant anticipation.
+Evidently, my good husband is not cut out for detective work.
+
+Where they went under this officer's guidance, he cannot tell. The
+tortuous tangle of alleys through which he now felt himself led was
+dark as the nether regions to his unaccustomed eyes. There was snow
+under his feet and now and then he brushed against some obtruding
+object, or stumbled against a low fence; but beyond these slight
+miscalculations on his own part, he was a mere automaton in the hands
+of his eager guide, and only became his own man again when they
+suddenly stepped into an open yard and he could discern plainly
+before him the dark walls of a building pointed out by Sweetwater as
+their probable destination. Yet even here they encountered some
+impediment which prohibited a close approach. A wall or shed cut
+off their view of the building's lower storey; and though somewhat
+startled at being left unceremoniously alone after just a whispered
+word of encouragement from the ever ready detective, George could
+quite understand the necessity which that person must feel for a
+quiet reconnoitering of the surroundings before the two of them
+ventured further forward in their possibly hazardous undertaking.
+Yet the experience was none too pleasing to George, and he was very
+glad to hear Sweetwater's whisper again at his ear, and to feel
+himself rescued from the pool of slush in which he had been left to
+stand.
+
+"The approach is not all that can be desired," remarked the detective
+as they entered what appeared to be a low shed. "The broken board
+has been put back and securely nailed in place, and if I am not
+very much mistaken there is a fellow stationed in the yard who will
+want the pass-word too. Looks shady to me. I'll have something to
+tell the chief when I get back."
+
+"But we! What are we going to do if we cannot get in front or rear?
+
+"We're going to wait right here in the hopes of catching a glimpse
+of our man as he comes out," returned the detective, drawing George
+towards a low window overlooking the yard he had described as
+sentinelled. "He will have to pass directly under this window on
+his way to the alley," Sweetwater went on to explain, "and if I can
+only raise it - but the noise would give us away. I can't do that."
+
+"Perhaps it swings on hinges," suggested George. "It looks like
+that sort of a window."
+
+"If it should - well! it does. We're in great luck, sir. But
+before I pull it open, remember that from the moment I unlatch it,
+everything said or done here can be heard in the adjoining yard.
+So no whispers and no unnecessary movements. When you hear him
+coming, as sooner or later you certainly will, fall carefully to
+your knees and lean out just far enough to catch a glimpse of him
+before he steps down from the porch. If he stops to light his cigar
+or to pass a few words with some of the men he will leave behind,
+you may get a plain enough view of his face or figure to identify
+him. The light is burning low in that rear hall, but it will do.
+If it does not, - if you can't see him or if you do, don't hang out
+of the window more than a second. Duck after your first look. I
+don't want to be caught at this job with no better opportunity for
+escape than we have here. Can you remember all that?"
+
+George pinched his arm encouragingly, and Sweetwater, with an
+amused grunt, softly unlatched the window and pulled it wide open.
+
+A fine sleet flew in, imperceptible save for the sensation of damp
+it gave, and the slight haze it diffused through the air. Enlarged
+by this haze, the building they were set to watch rose in magnified
+proportions at their left. The yard between, piled high in the
+centre with snow-heaps or other heaps covered with snow, could not
+have been more than forty feet square. The window from which they
+peered, was half-way down this yard, so that a comparatively short
+distance separated them from the porch where George had been told
+to look for the man he was expected to identify. All was dark there
+at present, but he could hear from time to time some sounds of
+restless movement, as the guard posted inside shifted in his narrow
+quarters, or struck his benumbed feet softly together.
+
+But what came to them from above was more interesting than anything
+to be heard or seen below. A man's voice, raised to a wonderful
+pitch by the passion of oratory, had burst the barriers of the
+closed hall in that towering third storey and was carrying its tale
+to other ears than those within. Had it been summer and the windows
+open, both George and Sweetwater might have heard every word; for
+the tones were exceptionally rich and penetrating, and the speaker
+intent only on the impression he was endeavouring to make upon his
+audience. That he had not mistaken his power in this direction was
+evinced by the applause which rose from time to time from innumerable
+hands and feet. But this uproar would be speedily silenced, and the
+mellow voice ring out again, clear and commanding. What could the
+subject be to rouse such enthusiasm in the Associated Brotherhood
+of the Awl, the Plane and the Trowel? There was a moment when our
+listening friends expected to be enlightened. A shutter was thrown
+back in one of those upper windows, and the window hurriedly, raised,
+during which words took the place of sounds and they heard enough
+to whet their appetite for more. But only that. The shutter was
+speedily restored to place, and the window again closed. A wise
+precaution, or so thought George if they wished to keep their
+doubtful proceedings secret.
+
+A tirade against the rich and a loud call to battle could be gleaned
+from the few sentences they had heard. But its virulence and pointed
+attack was not that of the second-rate demagogue or business agent,
+but of a man whose intellect and culture rang in every tone, and
+informed each sentence.
+
+Sweetwater, in whom satisfaction was fast taking the place of
+impatience and regret, pushed the window to before asking George
+this question:
+
+"Did you hear the voice of the man whose action attracted, your
+attention outside the Clermont?"
+
+"No."
+
+"Did you note just now the large shadow dancing on the ceiling over
+the speaker's head?"
+
+"Yes, but I could judge nothing from that."
+
+"Well, he's a rum one. I shan't open this window again till he
+gives signs of reaching the end of his speech. It's too cold."
+
+But almost immediately he gave a start and, pressing George's arm,
+appeared to listen, not to the speech which was no longer audible,
+but to something much nearer - a step or movement in the adjoining
+yard. At least, so George interpreted the quick turn which this
+impetuous detective made, and the pains he took to direct George's
+attention to the walk running under the window beneath which they
+crouched. Someone was stealing down upon the house at their left,
+from the alley beyond. A big man, whose shoulder brushed the
+window as he went by. George felt his hand seized again and pressed
+as this happened, and before he had recovered from this excitement,
+experienced another quick pressure and still another as one, two,
+three additional figures went slipping by. Then his hand was
+suddenly dropped, for a cry had shot up from the door where the
+sentinel stood guard, followed by a sudden loud slam, and the noise
+of a shooting bolt, which, proclaiming as it did that the invaders
+were not friends but enemies to the cause which was being vaunted
+above, so excited Sweetwater that he pulled the window wide open
+and took a bold look out. George followed his example and this was
+what they saw:
+
+Three men were standing flat against the fence leading from the
+shed directly to the porch. The fourth was crouching within the
+latter, and in another moment they heard his fist descend upon the
+door inside in a way to rouse the echoes. Meantime, the voice in
+the audience hall above had ceased, and there could be heard
+instead the scramble of hurrying feet and the noise of overturning
+benches. Then a window flew up and a voice called down:
+
+"Who's that? What do you want down there?"
+
+But before an answer could be shouted back, this man was drawn
+fiercely inside, and the scramble was renewed, amid which George
+heard Sweetwater's whisper at his ear:
+
+"It's the police. The chief has got ahead of me. Was that the man
+we're after - the one who shouted down?"
+
+"No. Neither was he the speaker. The voices are very different."
+
+"We want the speaker. If the boys get him, we're all right; but if
+they don't - wait, I must make the matter sure."
+
+And with a bound he vaulted through the window, whistling in a
+peculiar way. George, thus left quite alone, had the pleasure of
+seeing his sole protector mix with the boys, as he called them, and
+ultimately crowd in with them through the door which had finally
+been opened for their admittance. Then came a wait, and then the
+quiet re-appearance of the detective alone and in no very, amiable
+mood.
+
+"Well?" inquired George, somewhat breathlessly. "Do you want me?
+They don't seem to be coming out."
+
+"No; they've gone the other way. It was a red hot anarchist
+meeting, and no mistake. They have arrested one of the speakers,
+but the other escaped. How, we have not yet found out; but I
+think there's a way out somewhere by which he got the start of
+us. He was the man I wanted you to see. Bad luck, Mr. Anderson,
+but I'm not at the end of my resources. If you'll have patience
+with me and accompany me a little further, I promise you that I'll
+only risk one more failure. Will you be so good, sir?"
+
+
+
+IX
+
+THE INCIDENT OF THE PARTLY LIFTED SHADE
+
+The fellow had a way with him, hard to resist. Cold as George was
+and exhausted by an excitement of a kind to which he was wholly
+unaccustomed, he found himself acceding to the detective's request;
+and after a quick lunch and a huge cup of coffee in a restaurant
+which I wish I had time to describe, the two took a car which
+eventually brought them into one of the oldest quarters of the
+Borough of Brooklyn. The sleet which had stung their faces in the
+streets of New York had been left behind them somewhere on the
+bridge, but the chill was not gone from the air, and George felt
+greatly relieved when Sweetwater paused in the middle of a long
+block before a lofty tenement house of mean appearance, and
+signified that here they were to stop, and that from now on, mum
+was to be their watchword.
+
+George was relieved I say, but he was also more astonished than ever.
+What kind of haunts were these for the cultured gentleman who spent
+his evenings at the Clermont? It was easy enough in these days of
+extravagant sympathies, to understand such a man addressing the
+uneasy spirits of lower New York - he had been called an enthusiast,
+and an enthusiast is very often a social agitator - but to trace him
+afterwards to a place like this was certainly a surprise. A tenement
+ - such a tenement as this - meant home - home for himself or for
+those he counted his friends, and such a supposition seemed
+inconceivable to my poor husband, with the memory of the gorgeous
+parlour of the Clermont in his mind. Indeed, he hinted something
+of the kind to his affable but strangely reticent companion, but
+all the answer he got was a peculiar smile whose humorous twist he
+could barely discern in the semi-darkness of the open doorway into
+which they had just plunged.
+
+"An adventure! certainly an adventure!" flashed through poor
+George's mind, as he peered, in great curiosity down the long hall
+before him, into a dismal rear, opening into a still more dismal
+court. It was truly a novel experience for a business man whose
+philanthropy was carried on entirely by proxy - that is, by his
+wife. Should he be expected to penetrate into those dark,
+ill-smelling recesses, or would he be led up the long flights of
+naked stairs, so feebly illuminated that they gave the impression
+of extending indefinitely into dimmer and dimmer heights of decay
+and desolation?
+
+Sweetwater seemed to decide for the rear, for leaving George, he
+stepped down the hall into the court beyond, where George could see
+him casting inquiring glances up at the walls above him. Another
+tenement, similar to the one whose rear end he was contemplating,
+towered behind but he paid no attention to that. He was satisfied
+with the look he had given and came quickly back, joining George
+at the foot of the staircase, up which he silently led the way.
+
+It was a rude, none-too-well-cared-for building, but it seemed
+respectable enough and very quiet, considering the mass of people
+it accommodated. There were marks of poverty everywhere, but no
+squalor. One flight - two flights - three - and then George's
+guide stopped, and, looking back at him, made a gesture. It
+appeared to be one of caution, but when the two came together at
+the top of the staircase, Sweetwater spoke quite naturally as he
+pointed out a door in their rear:
+
+"That's the room. We'll keep a sharp watch and when any man, no
+matter what his dress or appearance comes up these stairs and
+turns that way, give him a sharp look. You understand?"
+
+"Yes; but-"
+
+"Oh, he hasn't come in yet. I took pains to find that out. You
+saw me go into the court and look up. That was to see if his
+window was lighted. Well, it wasn't."
+
+George felt non-plussed.
+
+"But surely," said he, "the gentleman named Brotherson doesn't live
+here."
+
+"The inventor does."
+
+"Oh!"
+
+"And - but I will explain later."
+
+The suppressed excitement contained in these words made George
+stare. Indeed, he had been wondering for some time at the manner
+of the detective which showed a curious mixture of several opposing
+emotions. Now, the fellow was actually in a tremble of hope or
+impatience; - and, not content with listening, he peered every few
+minutes down the well of the staircase, and when he was not doing
+that, tramped from end to end of the narrow passage-way separating
+the head of the stairs from the door he had pointed out, like one
+to whom minutes were hours. All this time he seemed to forget
+George who certainly had as much reason as himself for finding the
+time long. But when, after some half hour of this tedium and
+suspense, there rose from below the faint clatter of ascending
+footsteps, he remembered his meek companion and beckoning him to
+one side, began a studied conversation with him, showing him a
+note-book in which he had written such phrases as these:
+
+Don't look up till he is fairly in range with the light.
+
+There's nothing to fear; he doesn't know either of us.
+
+If it is a face you have seen before; - if it is the one we are
+expecting to see, pull your necktie straight. It's a little on one
+side.
+
+These rather startling injunctions were read by George, with no very
+perceptible diminution of the uneasiness which it was only natural
+for him to feel at the oddity of his position. But only the demand
+last made produced any impression on him. The man they were waiting
+for was no further up than the second floor, but instinctively
+George's hand had flown to his necktie, and he was only stopped from
+its premature re-arrangement by a warning look from Sweetwater.
+
+"Not unless you know him," whispered the detective; and immediately
+launched out into an easy talk about some totally different business
+which George neither understood, nor was expected to, I dare say.
+
+Suddenly the steps below paused, and George heard Sweetwater draw
+in his breath in irrepressible dismay. But they were immediately
+resumed, and presently the head and shoulders of a workingman
+of uncommon proportions appeared in sight on the stairway.
+
+George cast him a keen look, and his hand rose doubtfully to his
+neck and then fell back again. The approaching man was tall, very
+well-proportioned and easy of carriage; but the face - such of it
+as could be seen between his cap and the high collar he had pulled
+up about his ears, conveyed no exact impression to George's mind,
+and he did not dare to give the signal Sweetwater expected from him.
+Yet as the man went by with a dark and sidelong glance at them both,
+he felt his hand rise again, though he did not complete the action,
+much to his own disgust and to the evident disappointment of the
+watchful detective.
+
+"You're not sure?" he now heard, oddly interpolated in the stream
+of half-whispered talk with which the other endeavoured to carry
+off the situation.
+
+George shook his head. He could not rid himself of the old
+impression he had formed of the man in the snow.
+
+"Mr. Dunn, a word with you," suddenly spoke up Sweetwater, to the
+man who had just passed them. "That's your name, isn't it?"
+
+"Yes, that is my name," was the quiet response, in a voice which
+was at once rich and resonant; a voice which George knew - the
+voice of the impassioned speaker he had heard resounding through
+the sleet as he cowered within hearing in the shed behind the
+Avenue A tenement. "Who are you who wish to speak to me at so
+late an hour?"
+
+He was returning to them from the door he had unlocked and left
+slightly ajar.
+
+"Well, we are - You know what," smiled the ready detective,
+advancing half-way to greet him. "We're not members of the
+Associated Brotherhood, but possibly have hopes of being so. At
+all events, we should like to talk the matter over, if, as you
+say, it's not too late."
+
+"I have nothing to do with the club -"
+
+"But you spoke before it."
+
+Yes."
+
+"Then you can give us some sort of an idea how we are to apply for
+membership."
+
+Mr. Dunn met the concentrated gaze of his two evidently unwelcome
+visitors with a frankness which dashed George's confidence in
+himself, but made little visible impression upon his daring
+companion.
+
+"I should rather see you at another time," said he. "But -" his
+hesitation was inappreciable save to the nicest ear -" if you will
+allow me to be brief, I will tell you what I know - which is very
+little."
+
+Sweetwater was greatly taken aback. All he had looked for, as he
+was careful to tell my husband later, was a sufficiently prolonged
+conversation to enable George to mark and study the workings of the
+face he was not yet sure of. Nor did the detective feel quite easy
+at the readiness of his reception; nor any too well pleased to accept
+the invitation which this man now gave them to enter his room.
+
+But he suffered no betrayal of his misgivings to escape him, though
+he was careful to intimate to George, as they waited in the doorway
+for the other to light up, that he should not be displeased at his
+refusal to accompany him further in this adventure, and even advised
+him to remain in the hall till he received his summons to enter.
+
+But George had not come as far as this to back out now, and as soon
+as he saw Sweetwater advance into the now well-lighted interior, he
+advanced too and began to look around him.
+
+The room, like many others in these old-fashioned tenements, had a
+jog just where the door was, so that on entering they had to take
+several steps before they could get a full glimpse of its four walls.
+When they did, both showed surprise. Comfort, if not elegance,
+confronted them, which impression, however, was immediately lost in
+the evidences of work, manual, as well as intellectual, which were
+everywhere scattered about.
+
+The man who lived here was not only a student, as was evinced by a
+long wall full of books, but he was an art-lover, a musician, an
+inventor and an athlete.
+
+So much could be learned from the most cursory glance. A more
+careful one picked up other facts fully as startling and impressive.
+The books were choice; the invention to all appearance a practical
+one; the art of a high order and the music, such as was in view,
+of a character of which the nicest taste need not be ashamed.
+George began to feel quite conscious of the intrusion of which they
+had been guilty, and was amazed at the ease with which the detective
+carried himself in the presence of such manifestations of culture
+and good, hard work. He was trying to recall the exact appearance
+of the figure he had seen stooping in the snowy street two nights
+before, when he found himself staring at the occupant of the room,
+who had taken up his stand before them and was regarding them while
+they were regarding the room.
+
+He had thrown aside his hat and rid himself of his overcoat, and
+the fearlessness of his aspect seemed to daunt the hitherto dauntless
+Sweetwater, who, for the first time in his life, perhaps, hunted in
+vain for words with which to start conversation.
+
+Had he made an awful mistake? Was this Mr. Dunn what he seemed an
+unknown and careful genius, battling with great odds in his honest
+
+struggle to give the world something of value in return for what it
+had given him? The quick, almost deprecatory glance he darted at
+George betrayed his dismay; a dismay which George had begun to share,
+notwithstanding his growing belief that the man's face was not
+wholly unknown to him even if he could not recognise it as the one
+he had seen outside the Clermont.
+
+"You seem to have forgotten your errand," came in quiet, if not
+good-natured, sarcasm from their patiently waiting host.
+
+"It's the room," muttered Sweetwater, with an attempt at his
+old-time ease which was not as fully successful as usual. "What
+an all-fired genius you must be. I never saw the like. And in
+a tenement house too! You ought to be in one of those big new
+studio buildings in New York where artists be and everything you
+see is beautiful. You'd appreciate it, you would."
+
+The detective started, George started, at the gleam which answered
+him from a very uncommon eye. It was a temporary flash, however,
+and quickly veiled, and the tone in which this Dunn now spoke was
+anything but an encouraging one.
+
+"I thought you were desirous of joining a socialistic fraternity,"
+said he; " a true aspirant for such honours don't care for beautiful
+things unless all can have them. I prefer my tenement. How is it
+with you, friends?"
+
+Sweetwater found some sort of a reply, though the thing which this
+man now did must have startled him, as it certainly did George.
+They were so grouped that a table quite full of anomalous objects
+stood at the back of their host, and consequently quite beyond their
+own reach. As Sweetwater began to speak, he whom he had addressed
+by the name of Dunn, drew a pistol from his breast pocket and laid
+it down barrel towards them on this table top. Then he looked up
+courteously enough, and listened till Sweetwater was done. A very
+handsome man, but one not to be trifled with in the slightest degree.
+Both recognised this fact, and George, for one, began to edge
+towards the door.
+
+"Now I feel easier," remarked the giant, swelling out his chest.
+He was unusually tall, as well as unusually muscular. " I never
+like to carry arms; but sometimes it is unavoidable. Damn it, what
+hands!" He was looking at his own, which certainly showed soil.
+"Will you pardon me?" he pleasantly apologised, stepping towards a
+washstand and plunging his hands into the basin. "I cannot think
+with dirt on me like that. Humph, hey! did you speak?"
+
+He turned quickly on George who had certainly uttered an ejaculation,
+but receiving no reply, went on with his task, completing it with a
+care and a disregard of their presence which showed him up in still
+another light.
+
+But even his hardihood showed shock, when, upon turning round with
+a brisk, "Now I'm ready to talk," he encountered again the clear
+eye of Sweetwater. For, in the person of this none too welcome
+intruder, he saw a very different man from the one upon whom he had
+just turned his back with so little ceremony; and there appeared
+to be no good reason for the change. He had not noted in his
+preoccupation, how George, at sight of his stooping figure, had made
+a sudden significant movement, and if he had, the pulling of a
+necktie straight, would have meant nothing to him. But to Sweetwater
+it meant every thing, and it was in the tone of one fully at ease
+with himself that he now dryly remarked: Mr. Brotherson, if you
+feel quite clean; and if you have sufficiently warmed yourself, I
+would suggest that we start out at once, unless you prefer to have
+me share this room with you till the morning."
+
+There was silence. Mr. Dunn thus addressed attempted no answer; not
+for a full minute. The two men were measuring each other - George
+felt that he did not count at all - and they were quite too much
+occupied with this task to heed the passage of time. To George,
+who knew little, if anything, of what this silent struggle meant to
+either, it seemed that the detective stood no show before this Samson
+of physical strength and intellectual power, backed by a pistol just
+within reach of his hand. But as George continued to look and saw
+the figure of the smaller man gradually dilate, while that of the
+larger, the more potent and the better guarded, gave unmistakable
+signs of secret wavering, he slowly changed his mind and, ranging
+himself with the detective, waited for the word or words which should
+explain this situation and render intelligible the triumph gradually
+becoming visible in the young detective's eyes.
+
+But he was not destined to have his curiosity satisfied so far. He
+might witness and hear, but it was long before he understood.
+
+"Brotherson?" repeated their host, after the silence had lasted to
+the breaking-point. "Why do you call me that?"
+
+"Because it is your name."
+
+"You called me Dunn a minute ago."
+
+"That is true."
+
+"Why Dunn if Brotherson is my name?"
+
+"Because you spoke under the name of Dunn at the meeting to-night,
+and if I don't mistake, that is the name by which you are known here."
+
+"And you? By what name are you known?"
+
+"It is late to ask, isn't it? But I'm willing to speak it now, and
+I might not have been so a little earlier in our conversation. I
+am Detective Sweetwater of the New York Department of Police, and
+my errand here is a very simple one. Some letters signed by you have
+been found among the papers of the lady whose mysterious death at
+the hotel Clermont is just now occupying the attention of the New
+York authorities. If you have any information to give which will
+in any way explain that death, your presence will be welcome at
+Coroner Heath's office in New York. If you have not, your presence
+will still be welcome. At all events, I was told to bring you. You
+will be on hand to accompany me in the morning, I am quite sure,
+pardoning the unconventional means I have taken to make sure of
+my man?"
+
+The humour with which this was said seemed to rob it of anything
+like attack, and Mr. Brotherson, as we shall hereafter call him,
+smiled with an odd acceptance of the same, as he responded:
+
+"I will go before the police certainly. I haven't much to tell,
+but what I have is at their service. It will not help you, but I
+have no secrets. What are you doing?"
+
+He bounded towards Sweetwater, who had simply stepped to the window,
+lifted the shade and looked across at the opposing tenement.
+
+"I wanted to see if it was still snowing," explained the detective,
+with a smile, which seemed to strike the other like a blow. "If it
+was a liberty, please pardon it."
+
+Mr. Brotherson drew back. The cold air of self possession which he
+now assumed, presented such a contrast to the unwarranted heat of
+the moment before that George wondered greatly over it, and later,
+when he recapitulated to me the whole story of this night, it was
+this incident of the lifted shade, together with the emotion it had
+caused, which he acknowledged as being for him the most inexplicable
+event of the evening and the one he was most anxious to hear
+explained.
+
+As this ends our connection with this affair, I will bid you my
+personal farewell. I have often wished that circumstances had made
+it possible for me to accompany you through the remaining intricacies
+of this remarkable case.
+
+But you will not lack a suitable guide.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+BOOK II
+
+
+AS SEEN BY DETECTIVE SWEETWATER
+
+
+
+X
+
+A DIFFERENCE OF OPINION
+
+
+At an early hour the next morning, Sweetwater stood before the
+coroner's desk, urging a plea he feared to hear refused. He wished
+to be present at the interview soon to be held with Mr. Brotherson,
+and he had no good reason to advance why such a privilege should be
+allotted him.
+
+It's not curiosity," said he. "There's a question I hope to see
+settled. I can't communicate it - you would laugh at me; but it's
+an important one, a very important one, and I beg that you will let
+me sit in one of the corners and hear what he says. I won't bother
+and I'll be very still, so still that he'll hardly notice me. Do
+grant me this favour, sir.
+
+The coroner, who had had some little experience with this man,
+surveyed him with a smile less forbidding than the poor fellow
+expected.
+
+"You seem to lay great store by it," said he; "if you want to sort
+those papers over there, you may."
+
+"Thank you. I don't understand the job, but I promise you not to
+increase the confusion. If I do; if I rattle the leaves too loudly,
+it will mean, 'Press him further on this exact point,' but I doubt
+if I rattle them, sir. No such luck."
+
+The last three words were uttered sotto voce, but the coroner heard
+him, and followed his ungainly figure with a glance of some
+curiosity, as he settled himself at the desk on the other side of
+the room.
+
+"Is the man -" he began, but at this moment the man entered, and Dr.
+Heath forgot the young detective, in his interest in the new arrival.
+
+Neither dressed with the elegance known to the habitues of the
+Clermont, nor yet in the workman's outfit in which he had thought
+best to appear before the Associated Brotherhood, the newcomer
+advanced, with an aspect of open respect which could not fail to
+make a favourable impression upon the critical eye of the official
+awaiting him. So favourable, indeed, was this impression that that
+gentleman half rose, infusing a little more consideration into his
+greeting than he was accustomed to show to his prospective witnesses.
+Such a fearless eye he had seldom encountered, nor was it often his
+pleasure to confront so conspicuous a specimen of physical and
+intellectual manhood.
+
+"Mr. Brotherson, I believe," said he, as he motioned his visitor to
+sit.
+
+"That is my name, sir."
+
+"Orlando Brotherson?"
+
+"The same, sir."
+
+"I'm glad we have made no mistake," smiled the doctor. "Mr.
+Brotherson, I have sent for you under the supposition that you were
+a friend of the unhappy lady lately dead at the Hotel Clermont."
+
+"Miss Challoner?"
+
+"Certainly; Miss Challoner."
+
+"I knew the lady. But -" here the speaker's eye took on a look as
+questioning as that of his interlocutor -" but in a way so devoid
+of all publicity that I cannot but feel surprised that the fact
+should be known."
+
+At this, the listening Sweetwater hoped that Dr. Heath would ignore
+the suggestion thus conveyed and decline the explanation it
+apparently demanded. But the impression made by the gentleman's
+good looks had been too strong for this coroner's proverbial caution,
+and, handing over the slip of a note which had been found among Miss
+Challoner's effects by her father, he quietly asked:
+
+"Do you recognise the signature?"
+
+"Yes, it is mine."
+
+"Then you acknowledge yourself the author of these lines?"
+
+"Most certainly. Have I not said that this is my signature?"
+
+"Do you remember the words of this note, Mr. Brotherson?"
+
+"Hardly. I recollect its tenor, but not the exact words."
+
+"Read them."
+
+"Excuse me, I had rather not. I am aware that they were bitter and
+should be the cause of great regret. I was angry when I wrote them."
+
+"That is evident. But the cause of your anger is not so clear, Mr.
+Brotherson. Miss Challoner was a woman of lofty character, or such
+was the universal opinion of her friends. What could she have done
+to a gentleman like yourself to draw forth such a tirade?"
+
+"You ask that?"
+
+"I am obliged to. There is mystery surrounding her death; - the
+kind of mystery which demands perfect frankness on the part of all
+who were near her on that evening, or whose relations to her were in
+any way peculiar. You acknowledge that your friendship was of such
+a guarded nature that it surprised you greatly to hear it recognised.
+Yet you could write her a letter of this nature. Why?"
+
+"Because -" the word came glibly; but the next one was long in
+following. " Because," he repeated, letting the fire of some strong
+feeling disturb for a moment his dignified reserve, "I offered myself
+to Miss Challoner, and she dismissed me with great disdain."
+
+"Ah! and so you thought a threat was due her?"
+
+"A threat?"
+
+"These words contain a threat, do they not?"
+
+"They may. I was hardly master of myself at the time. I may have
+expressed myself in an unfortunate manner."
+
+"Read the words, Mr. Brotherson. I really must insist that you do
+so."
+
+There was no hesitancy now. Rising, he leaned over the table and
+read the few words the other had spread out for his perusal. Then
+he slowly rose to his full height, as he answered, with some slight
+display of compunction:
+
+"I remember it perfectly now. It is not a letter to be proud of.
+I hope -"
+
+"Pray finish, Mr. Brotherson."
+
+"That you are not seeking to establish a connection between this
+letter and her violent death?"
+
+"Letters of this sort are often very mischievous, Mr. Brotherson.
+The harshness with which this is written might easily rouse emotions
+of a most unhappy nature in the breast of a woman as sensitive as
+Miss Challoner."
+
+"Pardon me, Dr. Heath; I cannot flatter myself so far. You overrate
+my influence with the lady you name."
+
+"You believe, then, that she was sincere in her rejection of your
+addresses?
+
+A start, too slight to be noted by any one but the watchful
+Sweetwater, showed that this question had gone home. But the
+self-poise and mental control of this man were perfect, and in an
+instant he was facing the coroner again, with a dignity. which gave
+no clew to the disturbance into which his thoughts had just been
+thrown. Nor was this disturbance apparent in his tones when he made
+his reply:
+
+"I have never allowed myself to think otherwise. I have seen no
+reason why I should. The suggestion you would convey by such a
+question is hardly welcome, now. I pray you to be careful in your
+judgment of such a woman's impulses. They often spring from sources
+not to be sounded even by her dearest friends."
+
+Just; but how cold! Dr. Heath, eyeing him with admiration rather
+than sympathy, hesitated how to proceed; while Sweetwater, peering
+up from his papers, sought in vain for some evidence of the bereaved
+lover in the impressive but wholly dispassionate figure of him who
+had just spoken. Had pride got the better of his heart? or had
+that organ always been subordinate to the will in this man of
+instincts so varying, that at one time he impressed you simply as a
+typical gentleman of leisure; at another, as no more than a fiery
+agitator with powers absorbed by, if not limited to the one cause
+he advocated; and again - and this seemed the most contradictory of
+all - just the ardent inventor, living in a tenement, with Science
+for his goddess and work always under his hand? As the young
+detective weighed these possibilities and marvelled over the
+contradictions they offered, he forgot the papers now lying quiet
+under his hand. He was too interested to remember his own part
+ - something which could not often be said of Sweetwater.
+
+Meantime, the coroner had collected his thoughts. With an apology
+for the extremely personal nature of his inquiry, he asked Mr.
+Brotherson if he would object to giving him some further details
+of his acquaintanceship with Miss Challoner; where he first met her
+and under what circumstances their friendship had developed.
+
+"Not at all," was the ready reply. "I have nothing to conceal in
+the matter. I only wish that her father were present that he might
+listen to the recital of my acquaintanceship with his daughter. He
+might possibly understand her better and regard with more leniency
+the presumption into which I was led by my ignorance of the pride
+inherent in great families."
+
+"Your wish can very easily be gratified," returned the official,
+pressing an electric button on his desk;
+
+"Mr. Challoner is in the adjoining room." Then, as the door
+communicating with the room he had mentioned swung ajar and stood
+so, Dr. Heath added, without apparent consciousness of the dramatic
+character of this episode, "You will not need to raise your voice
+beyond its natural pitch. He can hear perfectly from where he sits."
+
+"Thank you. I am glad to speak in his presence," came in undisturbed
+self-possession from this not easily surprised witness. " I shall
+relate the facts exactly as they occurred, adding nothing and
+concealing nothing. If I mistook my position, or Miss Challoner's
+position, it is not for me to apologise. I never hid my business
+from her, nor the moderate extent of my fortune. If she knew me
+at all, she knew me for what I am; a man of the people who glories
+in work and who has risen by it to a position somewhat unique in
+this city. I feel no lack of equality even with such a woman as
+Miss Challoner."
+
+A most unnecessary preamble, no doubt, and of doubtful efficacy in
+smoothing his way to a correct understanding with the deeply bereaved
+father. But he looked so handsome as he thus asserted himself and
+made so much of his inches and the noble poise of his head - though
+cold of eye and always cold of manner - that those who saw, as well
+as heard him, forgave this display of egotism in consideration of
+its honesty and the dignity it imparted to his person.
+
+"I first met Miss Challoner in the Berkshires," he began, after a
+moment of quiet listening for any possible sound from the other room.
+"I had been on the tramp, and had stopped at one of the great hotels
+for a seven days' rest. I will acknowledge that I chose this spot
+at the instigation of a relative who knew my tastes and how perfectly
+they might be gratified there. That I should mingle with the guests
+may not have been in his thought, any more than it was in mine at
+the beginning of my stay. The panorama of beauty spread out before
+me on every side was sufficient in itself for my enjoyment, and might
+have continued so to the end if my attention had not been very
+forcibly drawn on one memorable morning to a young lady - Miss
+Challoner - by the very earnest look she gave me as I was crossing
+the office from one verandah to another. I must insist on this look,
+even if it shock the delicacy of my listeners, for without the
+interest it awakened in me, I might not have noticed the blush with
+which she turned aside to join her friends on the verandah. It was
+an overwhelming blush which could not have sprung from any slight
+embarrassment, and, though I hate the pretensions of those egotists
+who see in a woman's smile more than it by right conveys, I could
+not help being moved by this display of feeling in one so gifted
+with every grace and attribute of the perfect woman. With less
+caution than I usually display, I approached the desk where she had
+been standing and, meeting the eyes of the clerk, asked the young
+lady's name. He gave it, and waited for me to express the surprise
+he expected it to evoke. But I felt none and showed none. Other
+feelings had seized me. I had heard of this gracious woman from
+many sources, in my life among the suffering masses of New York, and
+now that I had seen her and found her to be not only my ideal of
+personal loveliness but seemingly approachable and not uninterested
+in myself, I allowed my fancy to soar and my heart to become touched.
+A fact which the clerk now confided to me naturally deepened the
+impression. Miss Challoner had seen my name in the guest-book and
+asked to have me pointed out to her. Perhaps she had heard my name
+spoken in the same quarter where I had heard hers. We have never
+exchanged confidences on the subject, and I cannot say. I can only
+give you my reason for the interest I felt in Miss Challoner and why
+I forgot, in the glamour of this episode, the aims and purposes of
+a not unambitious life and the distance which the world and the
+so-called aristocratic class put between a woman of her wealth and
+standing and a simple worker like myself.
+
+"I must be pardoned. She had smiled upon me once, and she smiled
+again. Days before we were formally presented, I caught her
+softened look turned my way, as we passed each other in hall or
+corridor. We were friends, or so it appeared to me, before ever
+a word passed between us, and when fortune favoured us and we were
+duly introduced, our minds met in a strange sympathy which made
+this one interview a memorable one to me. Unhappily, as I then
+considered it, this was my last day at the hotel, and our
+conversation, interrupted frequently by passing acquaintances, was
+never resumed. I exchanged a few words with her by way of good-bye
+but nothing more. I came to New York, and she remained in Lenox.
+A month after and she too came to New York."
+
+"This good-bye - do you remember it? The exact language, I mean? "
+
+"I do; it made a great impression on me. 'I shall hope for our
+further acquaintance,' she said. 'We have one very strong interest
+in common. And if ever a human face spoke eloquently, it was hers
+at that moment. The interest, as I understood it, was our mutual
+sympathy for our toiling, half-starved, down-trodden brothers and
+sisters in the lower streets of this city; but the eloquence - that
+I probably mistook. I thought it sprang from personal interest, and
+it gave me courage to pursue the intention which had taken the place
+of every other feeling and ambition by which I had hitherto been
+moved. Here was a woman in a thousand; one who could make a man of
+me indeed. If she could ignore the social gulf between us, I felt
+free to take the leap. Cowardice had never been a fault of mine.
+But I was no fool even then. I realised that I must first let her
+see the manner of man I was and what life meant to me and must mean
+to her if the union I contemplated should become an actual fact. I
+wrote letters to her, but I did not give her my address or even
+request a reply. I was not ready for any word from her. I am not
+like other men and I could wait. And I did, for weeks, then I
+suddenly appeared at her hotel."
+
+The change of voice - the bitterness which he infused into this
+final sentence made every one look up. Hitherto he had spoken
+calmly, almost monotonously, as if no present heart-beat responded
+to this tale of vanished love; but with the words, "Then I suddenly
+appeared at her hotel," he showed himself human again, and betrayed
+a passion which though curbed was of the fiery quality, befitting
+his extraordinary attributes of mind and person.
+
+"This was when?" put in Dr. Heath, anxious to bridge the pause which
+must have been very painful to the listening father.
+
+"The week after Thanksgiving. I did not see her the first day, and
+only casually the second. But she knew I was in the building, and
+when I came upon her one evening seated at the very desk in the
+mezzanine which we all have such bitter cause to remember, I could
+not forbear expressing myself in a way she could not misunderstand.
+The result was of a kind to drive a man like myself to an extremity
+of self-condemnation and rage. She rose up as if insulted, and
+flung me one sentence and one sentence only before she hailed the
+elevator and left my presence. A cur could not have been dismissed
+with less ceremony."
+
+"That is not like my daughter. What was the sentence you allude to?
+Let me hear the very words." Mr. Challoner had come forward and now
+stood awaiting his reply, a dignified but pathetic figure, which all
+must view with respect.
+
+"I hate the memory of them, but since you demand it, I will repeat
+them just as they fell from her lips," was Mr. Brotherson's bitter
+retort. " She said, 'You of all men should recognise the
+unseemliness of these proposals. Had your letters given me any
+hint of the feelings you have just expressed, you would never have
+had this opportunity of approaching me.' That was all; but her
+indignation was scathing. Ladies who have supped exclusively off
+silver, show a fine scorn for the common ware of the cottager."
+
+Mr. Challoner bowed. "There is some mistake," said he. "My daughter
+might be averse to your addresses, but she would never show
+indignation to any aspirant for her hand, simply on account of
+extraneous conditions. She had wide sympathies - wider than I often
+approved. Something in your conduct or the confidence you showed
+shocked her nicer sense; not your lack of the luxuries she often
+misprised. This much I feel obliged to say, out of justice to her
+character, which was uniformly considerate."
+
+"You have seen her with men of her own world and yours," was the
+harsh response. "She had another side to her nature for the man
+of a different sphere. And it killed my love - that you can see
+ - and led to my sending her the injudicious letter with which you
+have confronted me. The hurt bull utters one bellow before he dies.
+I bellowed, and bellowed loudly, but I did not die. I'm my own
+man still and mean to remain so."
+
+The assertive boldness - some would call it bravado - with which he
+thus finished the story of his relations with the dead heiress,
+seemed to be more than Mr. Challoner could stand. With a look of
+extreme pain and perplexity he vanished from the doorway, and it
+fell to Dr. Heath to inquire:
+
+"Is this letter - a letter of threat you will remember - the only
+communication which passed between you and Miss Challoner after this
+unfortunate passage of arms at the Clermont?"
+
+"Yes. I had no wish to address her again. I had exhausted in this
+one outburst whatever humiliation I felt."
+
+"And she? Did she give no sign, make you no answer?"
+
+"None whatever." Then, as if he found it impossible to hide this
+hurt to his pride, "She did not even seem to consider me worthy the
+honour of an added rebuke. Such arrogance is, no doubt, commendable
+in a Challoner."
+
+This time his bitterness did not pass unrebuked by the coroner:
+
+ " Remember the grey hairs of the only Challoner who can hear you,
+and respect his grief."
+
+Mr. Brotherson bowed.
+
+"I have finished," said he. "I shall have nothing more to say on
+the subject." And he drew himself up in expectation of the dismissal
+he evidently thought pending.
+
+But the coroner was not done with him by any means. He had a theory
+in regard to this lamentable suicide which he hoped to establish by
+this man's testimony, and, in pursuit of this plan, he not only
+motioned to Mr. Brotherson to reseat himself, but began at once to
+open a fresh line of examination by saying:
+
+"You will pardon me, if I press this matter. I have been given to
+understand that notwithstanding your break with Miss Challoner, you
+have kept up your visits to the Clermont and were even on the spot
+at the time of her death."
+
+"On the spot?"
+
+"In the hotel, I mean."
+
+"There you are right; I was in the hotel."
+
+"At the time of her death?"
+
+"Very near the time. I remember hearing some disturbance in the
+lobby behind me, just as I was passing out at the Broadway entrance."
+
+"You did, and did not return?"
+
+"Why should I return? I am not a man of much curiosity. There was
+no reason why I should connect a sudden alarm in the lobby of the
+Clermont with any cause of special interest to myself."
+
+This was so true and the look which accompanied the words was so
+frank that the coroner hesitated a moment before he said:
+
+"Certainly not, unless - well, to be direct, unless you had just
+seen Miss Challoner and knew her state of mind and what was likely
+to follow your abrupt departure."
+
+"I had no interview with Miss Challoner."
+
+"But you saw her? Saw her that evening and just before the accident?"
+
+Sweetwater's papers rattled; it was the only sound to be heard in
+that moment of silence. Then - "What do you mean by those words?"
+inquired Mr. Brotherson, with studied composure. "I have said that
+I had no interview with Miss Challoner. Why do you ask me then, if
+I saw her?"
+
+"Because I believe that you did. From a distance possibly, but yet
+directly and with no possibility of mistake."
+
+"Do you put that as a question?"
+
+"I do. Did you see her figure or face that night?"
+
+"I did."
+
+Nothing - not even the rattling of Sweetwater's papers - disturbed
+the silence which followed this admission.
+
+"From where?" Dr. Heath asked at last.
+
+"From a point far enough away to make any communication between us
+impossible. I do not think you will require me to recall the exact
+spot."
+
+"If it were one which made it possible for her to see you as clearly
+as you could see her, I think it would be very advisable for you to
+say so."
+
+It was - such - a spot.''
+
+"Then I think I can locate it for you, or do you prefer to locate
+it yourself?"
+
+"I will locate it myself. I had hoped not to be called upon to
+mention what I cannot but consider a most unfortunate coincidence.
+As a gentleman you will understand my reticence and also why it is
+a matter of regret to me that with an acumen worthy of your position,
+you should have discovered a fact which, while it cannot explain
+Miss Challoner's death, will drag our little affair before the
+public, and possibly give it a prominence in some minds which I am
+sure does not belong to it. I met Miss Challoner's eye for one
+instant from the top of the little staircase running up to the
+mezzanine. I had yielded thus far to an impulse I had frequently
+combated, to seek by another interview to retrieve the bad effect
+which must have been made upon her by my angry note. I knew that
+she frequently wrote letters in the mezzanine at this hour, and
+got as far as the top of the staircase in my effort to join her.
+But got no further. When I saw her on her feet, with her face
+turned my way, I remembered the scorn with which she had received
+my former heart-felt proposals and, without taking another step
+forward, I turned away from her and fled down the steps and so out
+of the building by the main entrance. She saw me, for her hand flew
+up with a startled gesture, but I cannot think that my presence on
+the same floor with her could have caused her to strike the blow
+which terminated her life. Why should I? No woman sacrifices her
+life out of mere regret for the disdain she has shown a man she has
+taken no pains to understand."
+
+His tone and his attitude seemed to invite the concurrence of Dr.
+Heath in this statement. But the richness of the one and the grace
+of the other showed the handsome speaker off to such advantage that
+the coroner was rather inclined to consider how a woman, even of
+Miss Challoner's fine taste and careful breeding, might see in such
+a situation much for regret, if not for active despair and the
+suicidal act. He gave no evidence of his thought, however, but
+followed up the one admission made by Mr. Brotherson which he and
+others must naturally view as of the first importance.
+
+"You saw Miss Challoner lift her hand, you say. Which hand, and
+what was in it? Anything?"
+
+"She lifted her right hand, but it would be impossible for me to
+tell you whether there was anything in it or not. I simply saw
+the movement before I turned away. It looked like one of alarm
+to me. I felt that she had some reason for this. She could not
+know that it was in repentance I came rather than in fulfilment
+of my threat."
+
+A sigh from the adjoining room. Mr. Brotherson rose, as he heard
+it, and in doing so met the clear eye of Sweetwater fixed upon his
+own. Its language was, no doubt, peculiar and it seemed to
+fascinate him for a moment, for he started as if to approach the
+detective, but forsook this intention almost immediately, and
+addressing the coroner, gravely remarked:
+
+"Her death following so quickly upon this abortive attempt of mine
+at an interview startled me by its coincidence as much as it does
+you. If in the weakness of her woman's nature, it was more than
+this - if the scorn she had previously shown me was a cloak she
+instinctively assumed to hide what she was not ready to disclose,
+my remorse will be as great as any one here could wish. But the
+proof of all this will have to be very convincing before my present
+convictions will yield to it. Some other and more poignant source
+will have to be found for that instant's impulsive act than is
+supplied by this story of my unfortunate attachment.
+
+Dr. Heath was convinced, but he was willing to concede something
+to the secret demand made upon him by Sweetwater, who was bundling
+up his papers with much clatter.
+
+Looking up with a smile which had elements in it he was hardly
+conscious of perhaps himself, he asked in an off-hand way:
+
+"Then why did you take such pains to wash your hands of the affair
+the moment you had left the hotel?"
+
+"I do not understand."
+
+"You passed around the corner into - street, did you not?"
+
+"Very likely. I could go that way as well as another."
+
+"And stopped at the first lamp-post?"
+
+"Oh, I see. Someone saw that childish action of mine."
+
+"What did you mean by it?"
+
+"Just what you have suggested. I did go through the pantomime of
+washing my hands of an affair I considered definitely ended. I had
+resisted an irrepressible impulse to see and talk with Miss Challoner
+again, and was pleased with my firmness. Unaware of the tragic blow
+which had just fallen, I was full of self-congratulations at my
+escape from the charm which had lured me back to this hotel again
+and again in spite of my better judgment, and I wished to symbolise
+my relief by an act of which I was, in another moment, ashamed.
+Strange that there should have been a witness to it. (Here he stole
+a look at Sweetwater.) Stranger still, that circumstances by the
+most extraordinary of coincidences, should have given so unforeseen
+a point to it.
+
+"You are right, Mr. Brotherson. The whole occurrence is startling
+and most strange. But life is made up of the unexpected, as none
+know better than we physicians, whether our practice be of a public
+or private character."
+
+As Mr. Brotherson left the room, the curiosity to which he had
+yielded once before, led him to cast a glance of penetrating inquiry
+behind him full at Sweetwater, and if either felt embarrassment, it
+was not the hunted but the hunter.
+
+But the feeling did not last.
+
+"I've simply met the strongest man I've ever encountered," was
+Sweetwater's encouraging comment to himself. "All the more glory
+if I can find a joint in his armour or a hidden passage to his cold,
+secretive heart."
+
+
+
+XI
+
+ALIKE IN ESSENTIALS
+
+
+"Mr. Gryce, I am either a fool or the luckiest fellow going. You
+must decide which."
+
+The aged detective, thus addressed, laid down his evening paper and
+endeavoured to make out the dim form he could just faintly discern
+standing between him and the library door.
+
+"Sweetwater, is that you?"
+
+"No one else. Sweetwater, the fool, or Sweetwater, much too wise
+for his own good. I don't know which. Perhaps you can find out
+and tell me."
+
+A grunt from the region of the library table, then the sarcastic
+remark:
+
+"I'm just in the mood to settle that question. This last failure
+to my account ought to make me an excellent judge of another's folly.
+I've meddled with the old business for the last time, Sweetwater.
+You'll have to go it lone from now on. The Department has no more
+work for Ebenezar Gryce, or rather Ebenezar Gryce will make no more
+fool attempts to please them. Strange that a man don't know when
+his time has come to quit. I remember low I once scored Yeardsley
+for hanging on after he had lost his grip; and here am I doing the
+same thing. But what's the matter with you? Speak out, my boy.
+Something new in the wind?"
+
+"No, Mr. Gryce; nothing new. It's the same old business. But, if
+what I suspect is true, this same old business offers opportunities
+for some very interesting and unusual effort. You're not satisfied
+with the coroner's verdict in the Challoner case?
+
+"No. I'm satisfied with nothing that leaves all ends dangling.
+Suicide was not proved. It seemed the only presumption possible,
+but it was not proved. There was no blood-stain on that
+cutter-point."
+
+"Nor any evidence that it had ever been there."
+
+"No. I'm not proud of the chain which lacks a link where it should
+be strongest."
+
+"We shall never supply that link."
+
+"I quite agree with you."
+
+"That chain we must throw away."
+
+"And forge another?"
+
+Sweetwater approached and sat down.
+
+"Yes; I believe we can do it; yet I have only one indisputable fact
+for a starter. That is why I want you to tell me whether I'm
+growing daft or simply adventurous. Mr. Gryce, I don't trust
+Brotherson. He has pulled the wool over Dr. Heath's eyes and
+almost over those of Mr. Challoner. But he can't pull it over mine.
+Though he should tell a story ten times more plausible than the
+one with which he has satisfied the coroner's jury, I would still
+listen to him with more misgiving than confidence. Yet I have
+caught him in no misstatement, and his eye is steadier than my own.
+Perhaps it is simply a deeply rooted antipathy on my part, or the
+rage one feels at finding he has placed his finger on the wrong man.
+Again it may be - "
+
+"What, Sweetwater?"
+
+"A well-founded distrust. Mr. Gryce, I'm going to ask you a
+question."
+
+"Ask away. Ask fifty if you want to."
+
+"No; the one may involve fifty, but it is big enough in itself to
+hold our attention for a while. Did you ever hear of a case before,
+that in some of its details was similar to this?
+
+"No, it stands alone. That's why it is so puzzling."
+
+"You forget. The wealth, beauty and social consequence of the
+present victim has blinded you to the strong resemblance which her
+case bears to one you know, in which the sufferer had none of the
+worldly advantages of Miss Challoner. I allude to -"
+
+"Wait! the washerwoman in Hicks Street! Sweetwater, what have you
+got up your sleeve? You do mean that Brooklyn washerwoman, don't
+you?"
+
+"The same. The Department may have forgotten it, but I haven't.
+Mr. Gryce, there's a startling similarity in the two cases if you
+study the essential features only. Startling, I assure you."
+
+"Yes, you are right there. But what if there is? We were no more
+successful in solving that case than we have been in solving this.
+Yet you look and act like a hound which has struck a hot scent.
+The young man smoothed his features with an embarrassed laugh.
+
+"I shall never learn," said he, "not to give tongue till the hunt
+is fairly started. If you will excuse me we'll first make sure of
+the similarity I have mentioned. Then I'll explain myself. I have
+some notes here, made at the time it was decided to drop the Hicks
+Street case as a wholly inexplicable one. As you know, I never can
+bear to say 'die,' and I sometimes keep such notes as a possible
+help in case any such unfinished matter should come up again. Shall
+I read them?"
+
+"Do. Twenty years ago it would not have been necessary. I should
+have remembered every detail of an affair so puzzling. But my
+memory is no longer entirely reliable. So fire away, my boy,
+though I hardly see your purpose or what real bearing the affair in
+Hicks Street has upon the Clermont one. A poor washerwoman and the
+wealthy Miss Challoner! True, they were not unlike in their end."
+
+"The connection will come later," smiled the young detective, with
+that strange softening of his features which made one at times
+forget his extreme plainness. "I'm sure you will not consider the
+time lost if I ask you to consider the comparison I am about to
+make, if only as a curiosity in criminal annals."
+
+And he read:
+
+"'On the afternoon of December Fourth, 1910, the strong and persistent
+screaming of a young child in one of the rooms of a rear tenement in
+Hicks Street, Brooklyn, drew the attention of some of the inmates
+and led them, after several ineffectual efforts to gain an entrance,
+to the breaking in of the door which had been fastened on the inside
+by an old-fashioned door-button.
+
+"'The tenant whom all knew for an honest, hard-working woman, had
+not infrequently fastened her door in this manner, in order to
+safeguard her child who was abnormally active and had a way of
+rattling the door open when it was not thus secured. But she had
+never refused to open before, and the child's cries were pitiful.
+
+"'This was no longer a matter of wonder, when, the door having been
+wrenched from its hinges, they all rushed in. Across a tub of
+steaming clothes lifted upon a bench in the open window, they saw
+the body of this good woman, lying inert and seemingly dead; the
+frightened child tugging at her skirts. She was of a robust make,
+fleshy and fair, and had always been considered a model of health
+and energy, but at the sight of her helpless figure, thus stricken
+while at work, the one cry was 'A stroke! till she had been lifted
+off and laid upon the floor. Then some discoloration in the water
+at the bottom of the tub led to a closer examination of her body,
+and the discovery of a bullet-hole in her breast directly over
+the heart.
+
+"'As she had been standing with face towards the window, all crowded
+that way to see where the shot had come from. As they were on the
+fourth storey it could not have come from the court upon which the
+room looked. It could only have come from the front tenement,
+towering up before them some twenty feet away. A single window of
+the innumerable ones confronting them stood open, and this was the
+one directly opposite.
+
+"'Nobody was to be seen there or in the room beyond, but during the
+excitement, one man ran off to call the police and another to hunt
+up the janitor and ask who occupied this room.
+
+"'His reply threw them all into confusion. The tenant of that room
+was the best, the quietest and most respectable man in either
+building.
+
+"'Then he must be simply careless and the shot an accidental one.
+A rush was made for the stairs and soon the whole building was in
+an uproar. But when this especial room was reached, it was found
+locked and on the door a paper pinned up, on which these words were
+written: Gone to New York. Will be back at 6:30! Words that
+recalled a circumstance to the janitor. He had seen the gentleman
+go out an hour before. This terminated all inquiry in this
+direction, though some few of the excited throng were for battering
+down this door just as they had the other one. But they were
+overruled by the janitor, who saw no use in such wholesale
+destruction, and presently the arrival of the police restored order
+and limited the inquiry to the rear building, where it undoubtedly
+belonged.'
+
+Mr. Gryce," (here Sweetwater laid by his notes that he might
+address the old gentleman more directly), "I was with the boys when
+they made their first official investigation. This is why you can
+rely upon the facts as here given. I followed the investigation
+closely and missed nothing which could in any way throw light on
+the case. It was a mysterious one from the first, and lost nothing
+by further inquiry into the details.
+
+"The first fact to startle us as we made our way up through the
+crowd which blocked halls and staircases was this: - A doctor had
+been found and, though he had been forbidden to make more than a
+cursory examination of the body till the coroner came, he had not
+hesitated to declare after his first look, that the wound had not
+been made by a bullet but by some sharp and slender weapon thrust
+home by a powerful hand. (You mark that, Mr. Gryce.) As this
+seemed impossible in face of the fact that the door had been found
+buttoned on the inside, we did not give much credit to his opinion
+and began our work under the obvious theory of an accidental
+discharge of some gun from one of the windows across the court.
+But the doctor was nearer right than we supposed. When the coroner
+came to look into the matter, he discovered that the wound was not
+only too small to have been made by the ordinary bullet, but that
+there was no bullet to be found in the woman's body or anywhere
+else. Her heart had been reached by a thrust and not by a shot
+from a gun. Mr. Gryce, have you not heard a startling repetition
+of this report in a case nearer at hand?
+
+"But to go back. This discovery, so important if true, was as
+yet - that is, at the time of our entering the room,- limited to
+the off-hand declaration of an irresponsible physician, but the
+possibility it involved was of so astonishing a nature that it
+influenced us unconsciously in our investigation and led us almost
+immediately into a consideration of the difficulties attending
+an entrance into, as well as an escape from, a room situated as
+this was.
+
+"Up three flights from the court, with no communication with the
+adjoining rooms save through a door guarded on both sides by heavy
+pieces of furniture no one person could handle, the hall door
+buttoned on the inside, and the fire-escape some fifteen feet to
+the left, this room of death appeared to be as removed from the
+approach of a murderous outsider as the spot in the writing-room
+of the Clermont where Miss Challoner fell.
+
+"Otherwise, the place presented the greatest contrast possible to
+that scene of splendour and comfort. I had not entered the
+Clermont at that time, and no, such comparison could have struck
+my mind. But I have thought of it since, and you, with your
+experience, will not find it difficult to picture the room where
+this poor woman lived and worked. Bare walls, with just a newspaper
+illustration pinned up here and there, a bed - tragically occupied
+at this moment - a kitchen stove on which a boiler, half-filled
+with steaming clothes still bubbled and foamed, - an old bureau,- a
+large pine wardrobe against an inner door which we later found to
+have been locked for months, and the key lost,- some chairs - and
+most pronounced of all, because of its position directly before the
+window, a pine bench supporting a wash-tub of the old sort.
+
+"As it was here the woman fell, this tub naturally received the
+closest examination. A board projected from its further side,
+whither it had evidently been pushed by the weight of her falling
+body; and from its top hung a wet cloth, marking with its lugubrious
+drip on the boards beneath the first heavy moments of silence which
+is the natural accompaniment of so serious a survey. On the floor
+to the right lay a half-used cake of soap just as it had slipped
+from her hand. The window was closed, for the temperature was at
+the freezing-point, but it had been found up, and it was put up
+now to show the height at which it had then stood. As we all took
+our look at the house wall opposite, a sound of shouting came up
+from below. A dozen children were sliding on barrel staves down
+a slope of heaped-up snow. They had been engaged in this sport all
+the afternoon and were our witnesses later that no one had made a
+hazardous escape by means of the ladder of the fire-escape, running,
+as I have said, at an almost unattainable distance towards the left.
+
+"Of her own child, whose cries had roused the neighbours, nothing
+was to be seen. The woman in the extreme rear had carried it off
+to her room; but when we came to see it later, no doubt was felt by
+any of us that this child was too young to talk connectedly, nor
+did I ever hear that it ever said anything which could in any way
+guide investigation.
+
+"And that is as far as we ever got. The coroner's jury brought in
+a verdict of death by means of a stab from some unknown weapon in
+the hand of a person also unknown, but no weapon was ever found,
+nor was it ever settled how the attack could have been made or the
+murderer escape under the conditions described. The woman was poor,
+her friends few, and the case seemingly inexplicable. So after
+creating some excitement by its peculiarities, it fell of its own
+weight. But I remembered it, and in many a spare hour have tried
+to see my way through the no-thoroughfare it presented. But quite
+in vain. To-day, the road is as blind as ever, but -" here
+Sweetwater's face sharpened and his eyes burned as he leaned closer
+and closer to the older detective -" but this second case, so unlike
+the first in non-essentials but so exactly like it in just those
+points which make the mystery, has dropped a thread from its tangled
+skein into my hand, which may yet lead us to the heart of both.
+Can you guess - have you guessed - what this thread is? But how
+could you without the one clew I have not given you? Mr. Gryce,
+the tenement where this occurred is the same I visited the other
+night in search of Mr. Brotherson. And the man characterised at
+that time by the janitor as the best, the quietest and most
+respectable tenant in the whole building, and the one you remember
+whose window opened directly opposite the spot where this woman lay
+dead, was Mr. Dunn himself, or, in other words, our late redoubtable
+witness, Mr. Orlando Brotherson."
+
+
+
+XII
+
+Mr. GRYCE FINDS AN ANTIDOTE FOR OLD AGE
+
+"I Thought I should make you sit up. I really calculated upon
+doing so, sir. Yes, I have established the plain fact that this
+Brotherson was near to, if not in the exact line of the scene of
+crime in each of these extraordinary and baffling cases. A very
+odd coincidence, is it not?" was the dry conclusion of our eager
+young detective.
+
+"Odd enough if you are correct in your statement. But I thought it
+was conceded that the man Brotherson was not personally near, - was
+not even in the building at the time of the woman's death in Hicks
+Street; that he was out and had been out for hours, according to the
+janitor."
+
+"And so the janitor thought, but he didn't quite know his man. I'm
+not sure that I do. But I mean to make his acquaintance and make
+it thoroughly before I let him go. The hero - well, I will say the
+possible hero of two such adventures - deserves some attention from
+one so interested in the abnormal as myself."
+
+"Sweetwater, how came you to discover that Mr. Dunn of this
+ramshackle tenement in Hicks Street was identical with the elegantly
+equipped admirer of Miss Challoner?"
+
+"Just this way. The night before Miss Challoner's death I was
+brooding very deeply over the Hicks Street case. It had so
+possessed me that I had taken this street in on my way from Flatbush;
+as if staring at the house and its swarming courtyard was going to
+settle any such question as that! I walked by the place and I looked
+up at the windows. No inspiration. Then I sauntered back and
+entered the house with the fool intention of crossing the courtyard
+and wandering into the rear building where the crime had occurred.
+But my attention was diverted and my mind changed by seeing a man
+coming down the stairs before me, of so fine a figure that I
+involuntarily stopped to look at him. Had he moved a little less
+carelessly, had he worn his workman's clothes a little less
+naturally, I should have thought him some college bred man out on
+a slumming expedition. But he was entirely too much at home where
+he was, and too unconscious of his jeans for any such conclusion on
+my part, and when he had passed out I had enough curiosity to ask
+who he was.
+
+"My interest, you may believe, was in no wise abated when I learned
+that he was that highly respectable tenant whose window had been
+open at the time when half the inmates of the two buildings had
+rushed up to his door, only to find a paper on it displaying these
+words: Gone to New York; will be back at 6:30. Had he returned at
+that hour? I don't think anybody had ever asked; and what reason
+had I for such interference now? But an idea once planted in my
+brain sticks tight, and I kept thinking of this man all the way to
+the Bridge. Instinctively and quite against my will, I found
+myself connecting him with some previous remembrance in which I
+seemed to see his tall form and strong features under the stress of
+some great excitement. But there my memory stopped, till suddenly
+as I was entering the subway, it all came back to me. I had met
+him the day I went with the boys to investigate the case in Hicks
+Street. He was coming down the staircase of the rear tenement then,
+very much as I had just seen him coming down the one in front. Only
+the Dunn of to-day seemed to have all his wits about him, while the
+huge fellow who brushed so rudely by me on that occasion had the
+peculiar look of a man struggling with horror or some other grave
+agitation. This was not surprising, of course, under the
+circumstances. I had met more than one man and woman in those halls
+who had worn the same look; but none of them had put up a sign on
+his door that he had left for New York and would not be back till
+6 :30, and then changed his mind so suddenly that he was back in
+the tenement at three, sharing the curiosity and the terrors of its
+horrified inmates.
+
+"But the discovery, while possibly suggestive, was not of so
+pressing a nature as to demand instant action; and more immediate
+duties coming up, I let the matter slip from my mind, to be brought
+up again the next day, you may well believe, when all the
+circumstances of the death at the Clermont came to light and I found
+myself confronted by a problem very nearly the counterpart of the
+one then occupying me.
+
+"But I did not see any real connection between the two cases, until,
+in my hunt for Mr. Brotherson, I came upon the following facts: that
+he was not always the gentleman he appeared: that the apartment in
+which he was supposed to live was not his own but a friend's; and
+that he was only there by spells. When he was there, he dressed
+like a prince and it was while so clothed he ate his meals in the
+caf‚ of the Hotel Clermont.
+
+"But there were times when he had been seen to leave this apartment
+in a very different garb, and while there was no one to insinuate
+that he was slack in paying his debts or was given to dissipation
+or any overt vice, it was generally conceded by such as casually
+knew him, that there was a mysterious side to his life which no one
+understood. His friend - a seemingly candid and open-minded
+gentleman - explained these contradictions by saying that Mr.
+Brotherson was a humanitarian and spent much of his time in the
+slums. That while so engaged he naturally dressed to suit the
+occasion, and if he was to be criticised at all, it was for his zeal
+which often led him to extremes and kept him to his task for days,
+during which time none of his up-town friends saw him. Then this
+enthusiastic gentleman called him the great intellectual light of
+the day, and - well, if ever I want a character I shall take pains
+to insinuate myself into the good graces of this Mr. Conway.
+
+"Of Brotherson himself I saw nothing. He had come to Mr. Conway's
+apartment the night before - the night of Miss Challoner's death,
+you understand but had remained only long enough to change his
+clothes. Where he went afterwards is unknown to Mr. Conway, nor
+can he tell us when to look for his return. When he does show up,
+my message will be given him, etc., etc. I have no fault to find
+with Mr. Conway.
+
+"But I had an idea in regard to this elusive Brotherson. I had
+heard enough about him to be mighty sure that together with his
+other accomplishments he possessed the golden tongue and easy
+speech of an orator. Also, that his tendencies were revolutionary
+and that for all his fine clothes and hankering after table luxuries
+and the like, he cherished a spite against wealth which made his
+words under certain moods cut like a knife. But there was another
+man, known to us of the -- Precinct, who had very nearly these same
+gifts, and this man was going to speak at a secret meeting that
+very evening. This we had been told by a disgruntled member of
+the Associated Brotherhood. Suspecting Brotherson, I had this
+prospective speaker described, and thought I recognised my man.
+But I wanted to be positive in my identification, so I took Anderson
+with me, and - but I'll cut that short. We didn't see the orator
+and that 'go' went for nothing; but I had another string to my bow
+in the shape of the workman Dunn who also answered to the description
+which had been given me; so I lugged poor Anderson over into Hicks
+Street.
+
+"It was late for the visit I proposed, but not too late, if Dunn was
+also the orator who, surprised by a raid I had not been let into,
+would be making for his home, if only to establish an alibi. The
+subway was near, and I calculated on his using it, but we took a
+taxicab and so arrived in Hicks Street some few minutes before him.
+The result you know. Anderson recognised the man as the one whom he
+saw washing his hands in the snow outside of the Clermont, and the
+man, seeing himself discovered, owned himself to be Brotherson and
+made no difficulty about accompanying us the next day to the
+coroner's office.
+
+"You have heard how he bore himself; what his explanations were and
+how completely they fitted in with the preconceived notions of the
+Inspector and the District Attorney. In consequence, Miss
+Challoner's death is looked upon as a suicide - the impulsive act of
+a woman who sees the man she may have scouted but whom she secretly
+loves, turn away from her in all probability forever. A weapon was
+in her hand - she impulsively used it, and another deplorable suicide
+was added to the melancholy list. Had I put in my oar at the
+conference held in the coroner's office; had I recalled to Dr. Heath
+the curious case of Mrs. Spotts, and then identified Brotherson as
+the man whose window fronted hers from the opposite tenement, a
+diversion might have been created and the outcome been different.
+But I feared the experiment. I'm not sufficiently in with the
+Chief as yet, nor yet with the Inspector. They might not have
+called me a fool - you may; but that's different - and they might
+have listened, but it would doubtless have been with an air I could
+not have held up against, with that fellow's eyes fixed mockingly on
+mine. For he and I are pitted for a struggle, and I do not want to
+give him the advantage of even a momentary triumph. He's the most
+complete master of himself of any man I ever met, and it will take
+the united brain and resolution of the whole force to bring him to
+book - if he ever is brought to book, which I doubt. What do you
+think about it?"
+
+"That you have given me an antidote against old age," was the
+ringing and unexpected reply, as the thoughtful, half-puzzled aspect
+of the old man yielded impulsively to a burst of his early
+enthusiasm. "If we can get a good grip on the thread you speak of,
+and can work ourselves along by it, though it be by no more than an
+inch at a time, we shall yet make our way through this labyrinth of
+undoubted crime and earn for ourselves a triumph which will make
+some of these raw and inexperienced young fellows about us stare.
+Sweetwater, coincidences are possible. We run upon them every day.
+But coincidence in crime! that should make work for a detective, and
+we are not afraid of work. There's my hand for my end of the
+business."
+
+"And here's mine."
+
+Next minute the two heads were closer than ever together, and the
+business had begun.
+
+
+
+XIII
+
+TIME, CIRCUMSTANCE, AND A VILLAIN' S HEART
+
+
+"Our first difficulty is this. We must prove motive. Now, I do
+not think it will be so very hard to show that this Brotherson
+cherished feelings of revenge towards Miss Challoner. But I have
+to acknowledge right here and now that the most skillful and vigourous
+pumping of the janitor and such other tenants of the Hicks Street
+tenement as I have dared to approach, fails to show that he has ever
+held any communication with Mrs. Spotts, or even knew of her
+existence until her remarkable death attracted his attention. I
+have spent all the afternoon over this, and with no result. A
+complete break in the chain at the very start."
+
+"Humph! we will set that down, then, as so much against us."
+
+"The next, and this is a bitter pill too, is the almost
+insurmountable difficulty already recognised of determining how a
+man, without approaching his victim, could manage to inflict a
+mortal stab in her breast. No cloak of complete invisibility has
+yet been found, even by the cleverest criminals."
+
+"True. The problem is such as a nightmare offers. For years my
+dreams have been haunted by a gnome who proposes just such puzzles."
+
+"But there's an answer to everything, and I'm sure there's an answer
+to this. Remember his business. He's an inventor, with startling
+ideas. So much I've seen for myself. You may stretch probabilities
+a little in his case; and with this conceded, we may add by way of
+off-set to the difficulties you mention, coincidences of time and
+circumstance, and his villainous heart. Oh, I know that I am
+prejudiced; but wait and see! Miss Challoner was well rid of him
+even at the cost of her life."
+
+"She loved him. Even her father believes that now. Some lately
+discovered letters have come to light to prove that she was by no
+means so heart free as he supposed. One of her friends, it seems,
+has also confided to him that once, while she and Miss Challoner
+were sitting together, she caught Miss Challoner in the act of
+scribbling capitals over a sheet of paper. They were all B's with
+the exception of here and there a neatly turned 0, and when her
+friend twitted her with her fondness for these two letters, and
+suggested a pleasing monogram, Miss Challoner answered, '0. B.
+(transferring the letters, as you see) are the initials of the
+finest man in the world.'"
+
+"Gosh! has he heard this story?"
+
+"Who?"
+
+"The gentleman in question."
+
+"Mr. Brotherson?"
+
+Yes."
+
+"I don't think so. It was told me in confidence."
+
+"Told you, Mr. Gryce? Pardon my curiosity."
+
+"By Mr. Challoner."
+
+"Oh! by Mr. Challoner."
+
+"He is greatly distressed at having the disgraceful suggestion of
+suicide attached to his daughter's name. Notwithstanding the
+circumstances, - not - withstanding his full recognition of her
+secret predilection for a man of whom he had never heard till the
+night of her death, he cannot believe that she struck the blow she
+did, intentionally. He sent for me in order to inquire if anything
+could be done to reinstate her in public opinion. He dared not
+insist that another had wielded the weapon which laid her low so
+suddenly, but he asked if, in my experience, it had never been known
+that a woman, hyper-sensitive to some strong man's magnetic influence,
+should so follow his thought as to commit an act which never could
+have arisen in her own mind, uninfluenced. He evidently does not
+like Brotherson either."
+
+"And what - what did you - say?" asked Sweetwater, with a halting
+utterance and his face
+full of thought.
+
+"I simply quoted the latest authority on hypnotism that no person
+even in hypnotic sleep could be influenced by another to do what
+was antagonistic to his natural instincts."
+
+"Latest authority. That doesn't mean a final one. Supposing that
+it was hypnotism! But that wouldn't account for Mrs. Spotts' death.
+Her wound certainly was not a self-inflicted one."
+
+"How can you be sure?"
+
+"There was no weapon found in the room, or in the court. The snow
+was searched and the children too. No weapon, Mr. Gryce, not even
+a paper-cutter. Besides - but how did Mr. Challoner take what you
+said? Was he satisfied with this assurance?"
+
+"He had to be. I didn't dare to hold out any hope based on so
+unsubstantial a theory. But the interview had this effect upon me.
+If the possibility remains of fixing guilt elsewhere than on Miss
+Challoner's inconsiderate impulse, I am ready to devote any amount
+of time and strength to the work. To see this grieving father
+relieved from the worst part of his burden is worth some effort and
+now you know why I have listened so eagerly to you. Sweetwater, I
+will go with you to the Superintendent. We may not gain his
+attention and again we may. If we don t - but we won't cross that
+bridge prematurely. When will you be ready for this business?"
+
+"I must be at Headquarters to-morrow."
+
+"Good, then let it be to-morrow. A taxicab, Sweetwater. The subway
+for the young. I can no longer manage the stairs."
+
+
+
+XIV
+
+A CONCESSION
+
+
+"It is true; there seems to be something extraordinary in the
+coincidence."
+
+Thus Mr. Brotherson, in the presence of the Inspector.
+
+"But that is all there is to it," he easily proceeded. "I knew
+Miss Challoner and I have already said how much and how little I
+had to do with her death. The other woman I did not know at all;
+I did not even know her name. A prosecution based on grounds so
+flimsy as those you advance would savour of persecution, would
+it not?
+
+The Inspector, surprised by this unexpected attack, regarded the
+speaker with an interest rather augmented than diminished by his
+boldness. The smile with which he had uttered these concluding
+words yet lingered on his lips, lighting up features of a mould too
+suggestive of command to be associated readily with guilt. That the
+impression thus produced was favourable, was evident from the tone
+of the Inspector's reply:
+
+"We have said nothing about prosecution, Mr. Brotherson. We hope
+to avoid any such extreme measures, and that we may the more readily
+do so, we have given you this opportunity to make such explanations
+as the situation, which you yourself have characterised as
+remarkable, seems to call for."
+
+"I am ready. But what am I called upon to explain? I really cannot
+see, sir. Knowing nothing more about either case than you do, I
+fear that I shall not add much to your enlightenment."
+
+"You can tell us why with your seeming culture and obvious means,
+you choose to spend so much time in a second-rate tenement like the
+one in Hicks Street."
+
+Again that chill smile preceding the quiet answer:
+
+"Have you seen my room there? It is piled to the ceiling with books.
+When I was a poor man, I chose the abode suited to my purse and my
+passion for first-rate reading. As I grew better off, my time became
+daily more valuable. I have never seen the hour when I felt like
+moving that precious collection. Besides, I am a man of the people.
+I like the working class, and am willing to be thought one of them.
+I can find time to talk to a hard-pushed mechanic as easily as to
+such members of the moneyed class as I encounter on stray evenings
+at the Hotel Clermont I have led - I may say that I am leading - a
+double life; but of neither am I ashamed, nor have I cause to be.
+Love drove me to ape the gentleman in the halls of the Clermont; a
+broad human interest in the work of the world, to live as a fellow
+among the mechanics of Hicks Street."
+
+"But why make use of one name as a gentleman of leisure and quite
+a different one as the honest workman?"
+
+"Ah, there you touch upon my real secret. I have a reason for
+keeping my identity quiet till my invention is completed."
+
+"A reason connected with your anarchistic tendencies?"
+
+"Possibly." But the word was uttered in a way to carry little
+conviction. "I am not much of an anarchist," he now took the
+trouble to declare, with a careless lift of his shoulders. " I like
+fair play, but I shall never give you much trouble by my manner of
+insuring it. I have too much at stake. My invention is dearer to
+me than the overthrow of present institutions. Nothing must stand
+in the way of its success, not even the satisfaction of inspiring
+terror in minds shut to every other species of argument. I have
+uttered my last speech; you can rely on me for that.
+
+"We are glad to hear it, Mr. Dunn. Physical overthrow carries more
+than the immediate sufferer with it."
+
+If this were meant as an irritant, it did not act successfully. The
+social agitator, the political demagogue, the orator whose honeyed
+tones had rung with biting invective in the ears of the United
+Brotherhood of the Awl, the Plane and the Trowel, simply bowed and
+calmly waited for the next attack.
+
+Perhaps it was of a nature to surprise even him.
+
+"We have no wish," continued the Inspector, "to probe too closely
+into concerns seemingly quite removed from the main issue. You say
+that you are ready, nay more, are even eager to answer all questions.
+You will probably be anxious then to explain away a discrepancy
+between your word and your conduct, which has come to our attention.
+You were known to have expressed the intention of spending the
+afternoon of Mrs. Spotts' death in New York and were supposed to
+have done so, yet you were certainly seen in the crowd which invaded
+that rear building at the first alarm. Are you conscious of
+possessing a double, or did you fail to cross the river as you
+expected to?"
+
+"I am glad this has come up." The tone was one of
+self-congratulation which would have shaken Sweetwater sorely had
+he been admitted to this unofficial examination. "I have never
+confided to any one the story of my doings on that unhappy afternoon,
+because I knew of no one who would take any interest in them. But
+this is what occurred. I did mean to go to New York and I even
+started on my walk to the Bridge at the hour mentioned. But I got
+into a small crowd on the corner of Fulton Street, in which a poor
+devil who had robbed a vendor's cart of a few oranges, was being
+hustled about. There was no policeman within sight, and so I
+busied myself there for a minute paying for the oranges and dragging
+the poor wretch away into an alley, where I could have the pleasure
+of seeing him eat them. When I came out of the alley the small
+crowd had vanished, but a big one was collecting up the street very
+near my home. I always think of my books when I see anything
+suggesting fire, and naturally I returned, and equally naturally,
+when I heard what had happened, followed the crowd into the court
+and so up to the poor woman's doorway. But my curiosity satisfied,
+I returned at once to the street and went to New York as I had
+planned."
+
+"Do you mind telling us where you went in New York?"
+
+"Not at all. I went shopping. I wanted a certain very fine wire,
+for an experiment I had on hand, and I found it in a little shop in
+Fourth Avenue. If I remember rightly, the name over the door was
+Grippus. Its oddity struck me."
+
+There was nothing left to the Inspector but to dismiss him. He had
+answered all questions willingly, and with a countenance inexpressive
+of guile. He even indulged in a parting shot on his own account, as
+full of frank acceptance of the situation as it was fearless in its
+attack. As he halted in the doorway before turning his back upon
+the room, he smiled for the third time as he quietly said:
+
+"I have ceased visiting my friend's apartment in upper New York.
+If you ever want me again, you will find me amongst my books. If
+my invention halts and other interests stale, you have furnished
+me this day with a problem which cannot fail to give continual
+occupation to my energies. If I succeed in solving it first, I
+shall be happy to share my knowledge with you. Till then, trust
+the laws of nature. No man when once on the outside of a door can
+button it on the inside, nor could any one without the gift of
+complete invisibility, make a leap of over fifteen feet from the
+sill of a fourth story window on to an adjacent fire escape, without
+attracting the attention of some of the many children playing down
+below."
+
+He was half-way out the door, but his name quickly spoken by the
+Inspector drew him back.
+
+"Anything mote?" he asked.
+
+The Inspector smiled.
+
+"You are a man of considerable analytic power, as I take it, Mr.
+Brotherson. You must have decided long ago how this woman died."
+
+"Is that a question, Inspector?"
+
+"You may take it as such."
+
+"Then I will allow myself to say that there is but one common-sense
+view to take of the matter. Miss Challoner's death was due to
+suicide; so was that of the washerwoman. But there I stop. As for
+the means - the motive - such mysteries may be within your province
+but they are totally outside mine! God help us all! The world is
+full of misery. Again I wish you good-day."
+
+The air seemed to have lost its vitality and the sun its sparkle
+when he was gone.
+
+"Now, what do you think, Gryce?"
+
+The old man rose and came out of his corner.
+
+"This: that I'm up against the hardest proposition of my lifetime.
+Nothing in the man's appearance or manner evinces guilt, yet I
+believe him guilty. I must. Not to, is to strain probability to
+the point of breakage. But how to reach him is a problem and one
+of no ordinary nature. Years ago, when I was but little older than
+Sweetwater, I had just such a conviction concerning a certain man
+against whom I had even less to work on than we have here. A murder
+had been committed by an envenomed spring contained in a toy puzzle.
+I worked upon the conscience of the suspect in that case, by
+bringing constantly before his eyes a facsimile of that spring. It
+met him in the folded napkin which he opened at his restaurant
+dinner. He stumbled upon it in the street, and found it lying
+amongst his papers at home. I gave him no relief and finally he
+succumbed. He had been almost driven mad by remorse. But this man
+has no conscience. If he is not innocent as the day, he's as hard
+as unquarried marble. He might be confronted with reminders of his
+crime at every turn without weakening or showing by loss of appetite
+or interrupted sleep any effect upon his nerves. That's my opinion
+of the gentleman. He is either that, or a man of uncommon force
+and self-restraint."
+
+"I'm inclined to believe him the latter."
+
+"And so give the whole matter the go-by?"
+
+"Possibly."
+
+"It will be a terrible disappointment to Sweetwater."
+
+"That's nothing."
+
+"And to me."
+
+"That's different. I'm disposed to consider you, Gryce - after all
+these years."
+
+"Thank you; I have done the state some service."
+
+"What do you want? You say the mine is unworkable."
+
+"Yes, in a day, or in a week, possibly in a month. But persistence
+and a protean adaptability to meet his moods might accomplish
+something. I don't say will, I only say might. If Sweetwater had
+the job, with unlimited time in which to carry out any plan he may
+have, or even for a change of plans to suit a changed idea, success
+might be his, and both time, effort and outlay justified."
+
+"The outlay? I am thinking of the outlay."
+
+"Mr. Challoner will see to that. I have his word that no reasonable
+amount will daunt him."
+
+"But this Brotherson is suspicious. He has an inventor's secret to
+hide, if none other. We can't saddle him with a guy of Sweetwater's
+appearance and abnormal loquaciousness."
+
+"Not readily, I own. But time will bring counsel. Are you willing
+to help the boy, to help me and possibly yourself by this venture in
+the dark? The Department shan't lose money by it; that's all I can
+promise."
+
+"But it's a big one. Gryce, you shall have your way. You'll be the
+only loser if you fail; and you will fail; take my word for it."
+
+"I wish I could speak as confidently to the contrary, but I can't.
+I can give you my hand though, Inspector, and Sweetwater's thanks.
+I can meet the boy now. An hour ago I didn't know how I was to
+do it."
+
+
+
+XV
+
+THAT'S THE QUESTION
+
+
+"How many times has he seen you?"
+
+"Twice."
+
+"So that he knows your face and figure?"
+
+"I'm afraid so. He cannot help remembering the man who faced him
+in his own room."
+
+"That's unfortunate."
+
+"Damned unfortunate; but one must expect some sort of a handicap
+in a game like this. Before I'm done with him, he'll look me full
+in the face and wonder if he's ever seen me before. I wasn't always
+a detective. I was a carpenter once, as you know, and I'll take to
+the tools again. As soon as I'm handy with them I'll hunt up
+lodgings in Hicks Street. He may suspect me at first, but be won't
+long; I'll be such a confounded good workman. I only wish I hadn't
+such pronounced features. They've stood awfully in my way, Mr. Gryce.
+I don't like to talk about my appearance, but I'm so confounded plain
+that people remember me. Why couldn't I have had one of those putty
+faces which don't mean anything? It would have been a deuced sight
+more convenient."
+
+"You've done very well as it is."
+
+"But I want to do better. I want to deceive him to his face. He's
+clever, this same Brotherson, and there's glory to be got in making
+a fool of him. Do you think it could be done with a beard? I've
+never worn a beard. While I'm settling back into my old trade, I
+can let the hair grow."
+
+"Do. It'll make you look as weak as water. It'll be blonde, of
+course."
+
+"And silky and straggling. Charming addition to my beauty. But
+it'll take half an inch off my nose, and it'll cover my mouth,
+which means a lot in my case. Then my complexion! It must be
+changed naturally. I'll consult a doctor about that. No sort of
+make-believe will go with this man. If my eyes look weak, they
+must really be so. If I walk slowly and speak huskily, it must be
+because I cannot help it. I can bear the slight inconvenience of
+temporary ill-health in a cause like this; and if necessary the
+cough will be real, and the headache positive.
+
+"Sweetwater! We'd better give the task to another man - to someone
+Brotherson has never seen and won't be suspicious of?"
+
+"He'll be suspicious of everybody who tries to make friends with
+him now; only a little more so with me; that's all. But I've got
+to meet that, and I'll do it by being, temporarily, of course,
+exactly the man I seem. My health will not be good for the next
+few weeks, I'm sure of that. But I'll be a model workman, neat and
+conscientious with just a suspicion of dash where dash is needed.
+He knows the real thing when he sees it, and there's not a fellow
+living more alive to shams. I won't be a sham. I'll be it. You'll
+see."
+
+"But the doubt. Can you do all this in doubt of the issue?"
+
+"No; I must have confidence in the end, and I must believe in his
+guilt. Nothing else will carry me through. I must believe in his
+guilt."
+
+"Yes, that's essential."
+
+"And I do. I never was surer of anything than I am of that. But
+I'll have the deuce of a time to get evidence enough for a grand
+jury. That's plainly to be seen, and that's why I'm so dead set
+on the business. It's such an even toss-up."
+
+"I don't call it even. He's got the start of you every way. You
+can't go to his tenement; the janitor there would recognise you
+even if he didn't."
+
+"Now I will give you a piece of good news. They're to have a new
+janitor next week. I learned that yesterday. The present one is
+too easy. He'll be out long before I'm ready to show myself there;
+and so will the woman who took care of the poor washerwoman's little
+child. I'd not have risked her curiosity. Luck isn't all against
+us. How does Mr. Challoner feel about it?"
+
+"Not very confident; but willing to give you any amount of rope.
+Sweetwater, he let me have a batch of letters written by his daughter
+which he found in a secret drawer. They are not to be read, or even
+opened, unless a great necessity arises. They were written for
+Brotherson's eye - or so the father says - but she never sent them;
+too exuberant perhaps. If you ever want them - I cannot give them
+to you to-night, and wouldn't if I could,- don't go to Mr. Challoner
+ - you must never be seen at his hotel - and don't come to me, but
+to the little house in West Twenty-ninth Street, where they will be
+kept for you, tied up in a package with your name on it. By the way,
+what name are you going to work under?"
+
+"My mother's - Zugg."
+
+"Good! I'll remember. You can always write or even telephone to
+Twenty-ninth Street. I'm in constant communication with them there,
+and it's quite safe."
+
+"Thanks. You're sure the Superintendent is with me?"
+
+"Yes, but not the Inspector. He sees nothing but the victim of a
+strange coincidence in Orlando Brotherson."
+
+"Again the scales hang even. But they won't remain so. One side
+is bound to rise. Which? That's the question, Mr. Gryce."
+
+
+
+XVI
+
+OPPOSED
+
+
+There was a new tenant in the Hicks Street tenement. He arrived
+late one afternoon and was shown two rooms, one in the rear building
+and another in the front one. Both were on the fourth floor. He
+demurred at the former, thought it gloomy but finally consented to
+try it. The other, he said, was too expensive. The janitor - new
+to the business - was not much taken with him and showed it, which
+seemed to offend the newcomer, who was evidently an irritable fellow
+owing to ill health.
+
+However, they came to terms as I have said, and the man went away,
+promising to send in his belongings the next day. He smiled as he
+said this and the janitor who had rarely seen such a change take
+place in a human face, looked uncomfortable for a moment and seemed
+disposed to make some remark about the room they were leaving. But,
+thinking better of it, locked the door and led the way downstairs.
+As the prospective tenant followed, he may have noticed, probably
+did, that the door they had just left was a new one - the only new
+thing to be seen in the whole shabby place.
+
+The next night that door was locked on the inside. The young man
+had taken possession. As he put away the remnants of a meal he had
+cooked for himself, he cast a look at his surroundings, and
+imperceptibly sighed. Then he brightened again, and sitting down
+on his solitary chair, he turned his eyes on the window which,
+uncurtained and without shade, stared open-mouthed, as it were, at
+the opposite wall rising high across the court.
+
+In that wall, one window only seemed to interest him and that was
+on a level with his own. The shade of this window was up, but
+there was no light back of it and so nothing of the interior could
+be seen. But his eye remained fixed upon it, while his hand,
+stretched out towards the lamp burning near him, held itself in
+readiness to lower the light at a minute's notice.
+
+Did he see only the opposite wall and that unillumined window? Was
+there no memory of the time when, in a previous contemplation of
+those dismal panes, he beheld stretching between them and himself,
+a long, low bench with a plain wooden tub upon it, from which a
+dripping cloth beat out upon the boards beneath a dismal note,
+monotonous as the ticking of a clock?
+
+One might judge that such memories were indeed his, from the rapid
+glance he cast behind him at the place where the bed had stood in
+those days. It was placed differently now.
+
+But if he saw, and if he heard these suggestions from the past, he
+was not less alive to the exactions of the present, for, as his
+glance flew back across the court, his finger suddenly moved and
+the flame it controlled sputtered and went out. At the same
+instant, the window opposite sprang into view as the lamp was lit
+within, and for several minutes the whole interior remained visible
+ - the books, the work-table, the cluttered furniture, and, most
+interesting of all, its owner and occupant. It was upon the latter
+that the newcomer fixed his attention, and with an absorption equal
+to that he saw expressed in the countenance opposite.
+
+But his was the absorption of watchfulness; that of the other of
+introspection. Mr. Brotherson - (we will no longer call him Dunn
+even here where he is known by no other name) - had entered the room
+clad in his heavy overcoat and, not having taken it off before
+lighting his lamp, still stood with it on, gazing eagerly down at
+the model occupying the place of honour on the large centre table.
+He was not touching it,- not at this moment - but that his thoughts
+were with it, that his whole mind was concentrated on it, was
+evident to the watcher across the court; and, as this watcher took
+in this fact and noticed the loving care with which the enthusiastic
+inventor finally put out his finger to re-arrange a thread or twirl
+a wheel, his disappointment found utterance in a sigh which echoed
+sadly through the dull and cheerless room. Had he expected this
+stern and self-contained man to show an open indifference to work
+and the hopes of a lifetime? If so, this was the first of the many
+surprises awaiting him.
+
+He was gifted, however, with the patience of an automaton and
+continued to watch his fellow tenant as long as the latter's shade
+remained up. When it fell, he rose and took a few steps up and down,
+but not with the celerity and precision which usually accompanied his
+movements. Doubt disturbed his mind and impeded his activity. He
+had caught a fair glimpse of Brotherson's face as he approached the
+window, and though it continued to show abstraction, it equally
+displayed serenity and a complete satisfaction with the present if
+not with the future. Had he mistaken his man after all? Was his
+instinct, for the first time in his active career, wholly at fault?
+
+He had succeeded in getting a glimpse of his quarry in the privacy
+of his own room, at home with his thoughts and unconscious of any
+espionage, and how had he found him? Cheerful, and natural in
+all his movements.
+
+But the evening was young. Retrospect comes with later and more
+lonely hours. There will be opportunities yet for studying this
+impassive countenance under much more telling and productive
+circumstances than these. He would await these opportunities with
+cheerful anticipation. Meanwhile, he would keep up the routine
+watch he had planned for this night. Something might yet occur.
+At all events he would have exhausted the situation from this
+standpoint.
+
+And so it came to pass that at an hour when all the other
+hard-working people in the building were asleep, or at least
+striving to sleep, these two men still sat at their work, one in
+the light, the other in the darkness, facing each other, consciously
+to the one, unconsciously to the other, across the hollow well of
+the now silent court. Eleven o'clock! Twelve! No change on
+Brotherson's part or in Brotherson's room; but a decided one in
+the place where Sweetwater sat. Objects which had been totally
+indistinguishable even to his penetrating eye could now be seen in
+ever brightening outline. The moon had reached the open space
+above the court, and he was getting the full benefit of it. But it
+was a benefit he would have been glad to dispense with. Darkness
+was like a shield to him. He did not feel quite sure that he wanted
+this shield removed. With no curtain to the window and no shade,
+and all this brilliance pouring into the room, he feared the
+disclosure of his presence there, or, if not that, some effect on
+his own mind of those memories he was more anxious to see mirrored
+in another's discomfiture than in his own.
+
+Was it to escape any lack of concentration which these same memories
+might bring, that he rose and stepped to the window? Or was it
+under one of those involuntary impulses which move us in spite of
+ourselves to do the very thing our judgment disapproves?
+
+No sooner had he approached the sill than Mr. Brotherson's shade
+flew way up and he, too, looked out. Their glances met, and for an
+instant the hardy detective experienced that involuntary stagnation
+of the blood which follows an inner shock. He felt that he had been
+recognised. The moonlight lay full upon his face, and the other
+had seen and known him. Else, why the constrained attitude and
+sudden rigidity observable in this confronting figure, with its
+partially lifted hand? A man like Brotherson makes no pause in
+any action however trivial, without a reason. Either he had been
+transfixed by this glimpse of his enemy on watch, or daring thought!
+had seen enough of sepulchral suggestion in the wan face looking
+forth from this fatal window to shake him from his composure and
+let loose the grinning devil of remorse from its iron prison-house?
+If so, the movement was a memorable one, and the hazard quite worth
+while. He had gained - no! he had gained nothing. He had been
+the fool of his own wishes. No one, let alone Brotherson, could
+have mistaken his face for that of a woman. He had forgotten his
+newly-grown beard. Some other cause must be found for the other's
+attitude. It savoured of shock, if not fear. If it were fear,
+then had he roused an emotion which might rebound upon himself in
+sharp reprisal. Death had been known to strike people standing
+where he stood; mysterious death of a species quite unrecognisable.
+What warranty had he that it would not strike him, and now? None.
+
+Yet it was Brotherson who moved first. With a shrug of the shoulder
+plainly visible to the man opposite, he turned away from the window
+and without lowering the shade began gathering up his papers for the
+night, and later banking up his stove with ashes.
+
+Sweetwater, with a breath of decided relief, stepped back and threw
+himself on the bed. It had really been a trial for him to stand
+there under the other's eye, though his mind refused to formulate
+his fear, or to give him any satisfaction when he asked himself what
+there was in the situation suggestive of death to the woman or harm
+to himself.
+
+Nor did morning light bring counsel, as is usual in similar cases.
+He felt the mystery more in the hubbub and restless turmoil of the
+day than in the night's silence and inactivity. He was glad when
+the stroke of six gave him an excuse to leave the room, and gladder
+yet when in doing so, he ran upon an old woman from a neighbouring
+room, who no sooner saw him than she leered at him and eagerly
+remarked:
+
+"Not much sleep, eh? We didn't think you'd like it. Did you see
+anything?"
+
+Now this gave him the one excuse he wanted.
+
+"See anything?" he repeated, apparently with all imaginable innocence.
+"What do you mean by that?"
+
+"Don't you know what happened in that room?"
+
+"Don't tell me! "he shouted out. "I don't want to hear any
+nonsense. I haven't time. I've got to be at the shop at seven and
+I don't feel very well. What did happen?" he mumbled in drawing
+off, just loud enough for the woman to hear. "Something unpleasant
+I'm sure." Then he ran downstairs.
+
+At half past six he found the janitor. He was, to all appearance,
+in a state of great excitement and he spoke very fast.
+
+"I won't stay another night in that room," he loudly declared,
+breaking in where the family were eating breakfast by lamplight. "I
+don't want to make any trouble and I don't want to give my reasons;
+but that room don't suit me. I'd rather take the dark one you
+talked about yesterday. There's the money. Have my things moved
+to-day, will ye?"
+
+"But your moving out after one night's stay will give that room a
+bad name," stammered the janitor, rising awkwardly. "There'll be
+talk and I won't be able to let that room all winter."
+
+"Nonsense! Every man hasn't the nerves I have. You'll let it in
+a week. But let or not let, I'm going front into the little dark
+room. I'll get the boss to let me off at half past four. So that's
+settled."
+
+He waited for no reply and got none; but when he appeared promptly
+at a quarter to five, he found his few belongings moved into a
+middle room on the fourth floor of the front building, which, oddly
+perhaps, chanced to be next door to the one he had held under watch
+the night before.
+
+The first page of his adventure in the Hicks Street tenement had
+been turned, and he was ready to start upon another.
+
+
+
+XVII
+
+IN WHICH A BOOK PLAYS A LEADING PART
+
+
+When Mr. Brotherson came in that night, he noticed that the door
+of the room adjoining his own stood open. He did not hesitate.
+Making immediately for it, he took a glance inside, then spoke up
+with a ringing intonation:
+
+"Halloo! coming to live in this hole?"
+
+The occupant a young man, evidently a workman and somewhat sickly
+if one could judge from his complexion - turned around from some
+tinkering he was engaged in and met the intruder fairly, face to
+face. If his jaw fell, it seemed to be from admiration. No other
+emotion would have so lighted his eye as he took in the others
+proportions and commanding features. No dress - Brotherson was
+never seen in any other than the homeliest garb in these days
+ - could make him look common or akin to his surroundings. Whether
+seen near or far, his presence always caused surprise, and surprise
+was what the young man showed, as he answered briskly:
+
+"Yes, this is to be my castle. Are you the owner of the buildings?
+If so -"
+
+"I am not the owner. I live next door. Haven't I seen you before,
+young man?"
+
+Never was there a more penetrating eye than Orlando Brotherson's.
+As he asked this question it took some effort on the part of the
+other to hold his own and laugh with perfect naturalness as he
+replied:
+
+"If you ever go up Henry Street it's likely enough that you've seen
+me not once, but many times. I'm the fellow who works at the bench
+next the window in Schuper's repairing shop. Everybody knows me."
+
+Audacity often carries the day when subtler means would fail.
+Brotherson stared at the youth, then ventured another question:
+
+"A carpenter, eh?"
+
+"Yes, and I'm an A1 man at my job. Excuse my brag. It's my one
+card of introduction."
+
+"I've seen you. I've seen you somewhere else than in Schuper's shop.
+Do you remember me?"
+
+"No, sir; I'm sorry to be imperlite but I don't remember you at all.
+Won't you sit down? It's not very cheerful, but I'm so glad to get
+out of the room I was in last night that this looks all right to
+me. Back there, other building," he whispered. "I didn't know,
+and took the room which had a window in it; but -" The stop was
+significant; so was his smile which had a touch of sickliness in it,
+as well as humour.
+
+But Brotherson was not to be caught.
+
+"You slept in the building last night? In the other half, I mean?"
+
+"Yes, I - slept."
+
+The strong lip of the other man curled disdainfully.
+
+"I saw you," said he. "You were standing in the window overlooking
+the court. You were not sleeping then. I suppose you know that a
+woman died in that room?"
+
+"Yes; they told me so this morning."
+
+"Was that the first you'd heard of it?"
+
+"Sure!" The word almost jumped at the questioner. "Do you suppose
+I'd have taken the room if -"
+
+But here the intruder, with a disdainful grunt, turned and went out,
+disgust in every feature, - plain, unmistakable, downright disgust,
+and nothing more!
+
+This was what gave Sweetwater his second bad night; this and a
+certain discovery he made. He had counted on hearing what went on
+in the neighbouring room through the partition running back of
+his own closet. But he could hear nothing, unless it was the
+shutting down of a window, a loud sneeze, or the rattling of coals
+as they were put on the fire. And these possessed no significance.
+What he wanted was to catch the secret sigh, the muttered word, the
+involuntary movement. He was too far removed from this man still.
+
+How should he manage to get nearer him - at the door of his mind
+ - of his heart? Sweetwater stared all night from his miserable cot
+into the darkness of that separating closet, and with no result. His
+task looked hopeless; no wonder that he could get no rest.
+
+Next morning he felt ill, but he rose all the same, and tried to get
+his own breakfast. He had but partially succeeded and was sitting
+on the edge of his bed in wretched discomfort, when the very man he
+was thinking of appeared at his door.
+
+"I've come to see how you are," said Brotherson. "I noticed that
+you did not look well last night. Won't you come in and share my
+pot of coffee?"
+
+"I - I can't eat," mumbled Sweetwater, for once in his life thrown
+completely off his balance. "You're very kind, but I'll manage all
+right. I'd rather. I'm not quite dressed, you see, and I must
+get to the shop." Then he thought - "What an opportunity I'm losing.
+Have I any right to turn tail because he plays his game from the
+outset with trumps? No, I've a small trump somewhere about me to
+lay on this trick. It isn't an ace, but it'll show I'm not chicane."
+And smiling, though not with his usual cheerfulness, Sweetwater added,
+"Is the coffee all made? I might take a drop of that. But you
+mustn't ask me to eat - I just couldn't."
+
+"Yes, the coffee is made and it isn't bad either. You'd better put
+on your coat; the hall's draughty." And waiting till Sweetwater did
+so, he led the way back to his own room. Brotherson's manner
+expressed perfect ease, Sweetwater's not. He knew himself changed
+in looks, in bearing, in feeling, even; but was he changed enough to
+deceive this man on the very spot where they had confronted each
+other a few days before in a keen moral struggle? The looking-glass
+he passed on his way to the table where the simple breakfast was
+spread out, showed him a figure so unlike the alert, business-like
+chap he had been that night, that he felt his old assurance revive
+in time to ease a situation which had no counterpart in his
+experience.
+
+"I'm going out myself to-day, so we'll have to hurry a bit," was
+Brotherson's first remark as they seated themselves at table. "Do
+you like your coffee plain or with milk in it?"
+
+"Plain. Gosh! what pictures! Where do you get 'em? You must have
+a lot of coin." Sweetwater was staring at the row of photographs,
+mostly of a very high order, tacked along the wall separating the
+two rooms. They were unframed, but they were mostly copies of great
+pictures, and the effect was rather imposing in contrast to the
+shabby furniture and the otherwise homely fittings.
+
+"Yes, I've enough for that kind of thing," was his host's reply.
+But the tone was reserved, and Sweetwater did not presume again
+along this line. Instead, he looked well at the books piled upon
+the shelves under these photographs, and wondered aloud at their
+number and at the man who could waste such a lot of time in reading
+them. But he made no more direct remarks. Was he cowed by the
+penetrating eye he encountered whenever he yielded to the fascination
+exerted by Mr. Brotherson's personality and looked his way? He
+hated to think so, yet something held him in check and made him
+listen, open-mouthed, when the other chose to speak.
+
+Yet there was one cheerful moment. It was when he noticed the
+careless way in which those books were arranged upon their shelves.
+An idea had come to him. He hid his relief in his cup, as he drained
+the last drops of the coffee which really tasted better than he had
+expected.
+
+When he returned from work that afternoon it was with an auger under
+his coat and a conviction which led him to empty out the contents
+of a small phial which he took down from a shelf. He had told Mr.
+Gryce that he was eager for the business because of its difficulties,
+but that was when he was feeling fine and up to any game which might
+come his way. Now he felt weak and easily discouraged. This would
+not do. He must regain his health at all hazards, so he poured out
+the mixture which had given him such a sickly air. This done and a
+rude supper eaten, he took up his auger. He had heard Mr.
+Brotherson's step go by. But next minute he laid it down again in
+great haste and flung a newspaper over it. Mr. Brotherson was coming
+back, had stopped at his door, had knocked and must be let in.
+
+"You're better this evening," he heard in those kindly tones which
+so confused and irritated him.
+
+"Yes," was the surly admission. "But it's stifling here. If I have
+to live long in this hole I'll dry up from want of air. It's near
+the shop or I wouldn't stay out the week." Twice this day he had
+seen Brotherson's tall figure stop before the window of this shop
+and look in at him at his bench. But he said nothing about that.
+
+"Yes," agreed the other, "it's no way to live. But you're alone.
+Upstairs there's a whole family huddled into a room just like this.
+Two of the kids sleep in the closet. It's things like that which
+have made me the friend of the poor, and the mortal enemy of men
+and women who spread themselves over a dozen big rooms and think
+themselves ill-used if the gas burns poorly or a fireplace smokes.
+I'm off for the evening; anything I can do for you?"
+
+"Show me how I can win my way into such rooms as you've just talked
+about. Nothing less will make me look up. I'd like to sleep in one
+to-night. In the best bedroom, sir. I'm ambitious; I am."
+
+A poor joke, though they both laughed. There Mr. Brotherson passed
+on, and Sweetwater listened till he was sure that his too attentive
+neighbour had really gone down the three flights between him and
+the street. Then he took up his auger again and shut himself up in
+his closet.
+
+There was nothing peculiar about this closet. It was just an
+ordinary one with drawers and shelves on one side, and an open space
+on the other for the hanging up of clothes. Very few clothes hung
+there at present; but it was in this portion of the closet that he
+stopped and began to try the wall of Brotherson's room, with the
+butt end of the tool he carried.
+
+The sound seemed to satisfy him, for very soon he was boring a hole
+at a point exactly level with his ear; but not without frequent
+pauses and much attention given to the possible return of those
+departed foot-steps. He remembered that Mr. Brotherson had a way
+of coming back on unexpected errands after giving out his intention
+of being absent for hours.
+
+Sweetwater did not want to be caught in any such trap as that; so he
+carefully followed every sound that reached him from the noisy halls.
+But he did not forsake his post; he did not have to. Mr. Brotherson
+had been sincere in his good-bye, and the auger finished its job and
+was withdrawn without any interruption from the man whose premises
+had been thus audaciously invaded.
+
+"Neat as well as useful," was the gay comment with which Sweetwater
+surveyed his work, then laid his ear to the hole. Whereas
+previously he could barely hear the rattling of coals from the
+coal-scuttle, he was now able to catch the sound of an ash falling
+into the ash-pit.
+
+His next move was to test the depth of the partition by inserting
+his finger in the hole he had made. He found it stopped by some
+obstacle before it had reached half its length, and anxious to
+satisfy himself of the nature of this obstacle, he gently moved the
+tip of his finger to and fro over what was certainly the edge of a
+book.
+
+This proved that his calculations had been correct and that the
+opening so accessible on his side, was completely veiled on the
+other by the books he had seen packed on the shelves. As these
+shelves had no other backing than the wall, he had feared striking
+a spot not covered by a book. But he had not undertaken so risky
+a piece of work without first noting how nearly the tops of the
+books approached the line of the shelf above them, and the
+consequent unlikelihood of his striking the space between, at the
+height he planned the hole. He had even been careful to assure
+himself that all the volumes at this exact point stood far enough
+forward to afford room behind them for the chips and plaster he must
+necessarily push through with his auger, and also - important
+consideration - for the free passage of the sounds by which he
+hoped to profit.
+
+As he listened for a moment longer, and then stooped to gather up
+the debris which had fallen on his own side of the partition, he
+muttered, in his old self-congratulatory way:
+
+"If the devil don't interfere in some way best known to himself, this
+opportunity I have made for myself of listening to this arrogant
+fellow's very heartbeats should give me some clew to his secret.
+As soon as I can stand it, I'll spend my evenings at this hole."
+
+But it was days before he could trust himself so far. Meanwhile
+their acquaintance ripened, though with no very satisfactory results.
+The detective found himself led into telling stories of his early
+home-life to keep pace with the man who always had something of
+moment and solid interest to impart. This was undesirable, for
+instead of calling out a corresponding confidence from Brotherson,
+it only seemed to make his conversation more coldly impersonal.
+
+In consequence, Sweetwater suddenly found himself quite well and
+one evening, when he was sure that his neighbour was at home, he
+slid softly into his closet and laid his ear to the opening he had
+made there. The result was unexpected. Mr. Brotherson was pacing
+the floor, and talking softly to himself.
+
+At first, the cadence and full music of the tones conveyed nothing
+to our far from literary detective. The victim of his secret
+machinations was expressing himself in words, words; - that was the
+point which counted with him. But as he listened longer and
+gradually took in the sense of these words, his heart went down
+lower and lower till it reached his boots. His inscrutable and ever
+disappointing neighbour was not indulging in self-communings of any
+kind. He was reciting poetry, and what was worse, poetry which he
+only half remembered and was trying to recall; - an incredible
+occupation for a man weighted with a criminal secret.
+
+Sweetwater was disgusted, and was withdrawing in high indignation
+from his vantage-point when something occurred of a startling enough
+nature to hold him where he was in almost breathless expectation.
+
+The hole which in the darkness of the closet was always faintly
+visible, even when the light was not very strong in the adjoining
+room, had suddenly become a bright and shining loop-hole, with a
+suggestion of movement in the space beyond. The book which had
+hid this hole on Brotherson's side had been taken down - the one
+book in all those hundreds whose removal threatened Sweetwater's
+schemes, if not himself.
+
+For an instant the thwarted detective listened for the angry shout
+or the smothered oath which would naturally follow the discovery by
+Brotherson of this attempted interference with his privacy.
+
+But all was still on his side of the wall. A rustling of leaves
+could be heard, as the inventor searched for the poem he wanted, but
+nothing more. In withdrawing the book, he had failed to notice the
+hole in the plaster back of it. But he could hardly fail to see it
+when he came to put the book back. Meantime, suspense for Sweetwater.
+
+It was several minutes before he heard Mr. Brotherson' s voice again,
+then it was in triumphant repetition of the lines which had escaped
+his memory. They were great words surely and Sweetwater never
+forgot them, but the impression which they made upon his mind, an
+impression so forcible that he was able to repeat them, months
+afterward to Mr. Gryce, did not prevent him from noting the tone in
+which they were uttered, nor the thud which followed as the book was
+thrown down upon the floor.
+
+"Fool!" The word rang out in bitter irony from his irate neighbour's
+lips. "What does he know of woman! Woman! Let him court a rich
+one and see - but that's all over and done with. No more harping on
+that string, and no more reading of poetry. I'll never, -" The rest
+was lost in his throat and was quite unintelligible to the anxious
+listener.
+
+Self-revealing words, which an instant before would have aroused
+Sweetwater's deepest interest! But they had suddenly lost all force
+for the unhappy listener. The sight of that hole still shining
+brightly before his eyes had distracted his thoughts and roused his
+liveliest apprehensions. If that book should be allowed to lie where
+it had fallen, then he was in for a period of uncertainty he shrank
+from contemplating. Any moment his neighbour might look up and
+catch sight of this hole bored in the backing of the shelves before
+him. Could the man who had been guilty of submitting him to this
+outrage stand the strain of waiting indefinitely for the moment of
+discovery? He doubted it, if the suspense lasted too long.
+
+Shifting his position, he placed his eye where his ear had been.
+He could see very little. The space before him, limited as it was
+to the width of the one volume withdrawn, precluded his seeing aught
+but what lay directly before him. Happily, it was in this narrow
+line of vision that Mr. Brotherson stood. He had resumed work upon
+his model and was so placed that while his face was not visible, his
+hands were, and as Sweetwater watched these hands and noticed the
+delicacy of their manipulation, he was enough of a workman to realise
+that work so fine called for an undivided attention. He need not
+fear the gaze shifting, while those hands moved as warily as they
+did now.
+
+Relieved for the moment, he left his post and, sitting down on the
+edge of his cot, gave himself up to thought.
+
+He deserved this mischance. Had he profited properly by Mr. Gryce's
+teachings, he would not have been caught like this; he would have
+calculated not upon the nine hundred and ninety-nine chances of that
+book being left alone, but upon the thousandth one of its being the
+very one to be singled out and removed. Had he done this, - had he
+taken pains to so roughen and discolour the opening he had made,
+that it would look like an ancient rat hole instead of showing a
+clean bore, he would have some answer to give Brotherson when he
+came to question him in regard to it. But now the whole thing
+seemed up! He had shown himself a fool and by good rights ought
+to acknowledge his defeat and return to Headquarters. But he had
+too much spirit for that. He would rather - yes, he would rather
+face the pistol he had once seen in his enemy's hand. Yet it
+was hard to sit here waiting, waiting - Suddenly he started upright.
+He would go meet his fate - be present in the room itself when the
+discovery was made which threatened to upset all his plans. He
+was not ashamed of his calling, and Brotherson would think twice
+before attacking him when once convinced that he had the Department
+behind him.
+
+"Excuse me, comrade," were the words with which he endeavoured to
+account for his presence at Brotherson's door. "My lamp smells so,
+and I've made such a mess of my work to-day that I've just stepped
+in for a chat. If I'm not wanted, say so. I don't want to bother
+you, but you do look pleasant here. I hope the thing I'm turning
+over in my head - every man has his schemes for making a fortune,
+you know - will be a success some day. I'd like a big room like
+this, and a lot of books, and - and pictures."
+
+Craning his neck, he took a peep at the shelves, with an air of
+open admiration which effectually concealed his real purpose. What
+he wanted was to catch one glimpse of that empty space from his
+present standpoint, and he was both astonished and relieved to note
+how narrow and inconspicuous it looked. Certainly, he had less to
+fear than he supposed, and when, upon Mr. Brotherson's invitation,
+he stepped into the room, it was with a dash of his former audacity,
+which gave him, unfortunately, perhaps, a quick, strong and
+unexpected likeness to his old self.
+
+But if Brotherson noticed this, nothing in his manner gave proof
+of the fact. Though usually averse to visitors, especially when
+employed as at present on his precious model, he quite warmed
+towards his unexpected guest, and even led the way to where it
+stood uncovered on the table.
+
+"You find me at work," he remarked. "I don't suppose you understand
+any but your own?"
+
+"If you mean to ask if I understand what you're trying to do there,
+I'm free to say that I don't. I couldn't tell now, off-hand, whether
+it's an air-ship you're planning, a hydraulic machine or - or - He
+stopped, with a laugh and turned towards the book-shelves. "Now
+here's what I like. These books just take my eye.
+
+"Look at them, then. I like to see a man interested in books. Only,
+I thought if you knew how to handle wire, I would get you to hold
+this end while I work with the other."
+
+"I guess I know enough for that," was Sweetwater's gay rejoinder.
+But when he felt that communicating wire in his hand and experienced
+for the first time the full influence of the other's eye, it took
+all his hardihood to hide the hypnotic thrill it gave him. Though
+he smiled and chatted, he could not help asking himself between
+whiles, what had killed the poor washerwoman across the court, and
+what had killed Miss Challoner. Something visible or something
+invisible? Something which gave warning of attack, or something
+which struck in silence. He found himself gazing long and earnestly
+at this man's hand, and wondering if death lay under it. It was a
+strong hand, a deft, clean-cut member, formed to respond to the
+slightest hint from the powerful brain controlling it. But was this
+its whole story. Had he said all when he had said this?
+
+Fascinated by the question, Sweetwater died a hundred deaths in his
+awakened fancy, as he followed the sharp short instructions which
+fell with cool precision from the other's lips. A hundred deaths,
+I say, but with no betrayal of his folly. The anxiety he showed was
+that of one eager to please, which may explain why on the conclusion
+of his task, Mr. Brotherson gave him one of his infrequent smiles
+and remarked, as he buried the model under its cover, "You're handy
+and you're quiet at your job. Who knows but that I shall want you
+again. Will you come if I call you?"
+
+"Won't I?" was the gay retort, as the detective thus released,
+stooped for the book still lying on the floor. "Paolo and Francesca,"
+he read, from the back, as he laid it on the table. "Poetry?" he
+queried.
+
+"Rot," scornfully returned the other, as he moved to take down a
+bottle and some glasses from a cupboard let into another portion of
+the wall.
+
+Sweetwater taking advantage of the moment, sidled towards the shelf
+where that empty space still gaped with the tell-tale hole at the
+back. He could easily have replaced the missing book before Mr.
+Brotherson turned. But the issue was too doubtful. He was dealing
+with no absent-minded fool, and it behooved him to avoid above all
+things calling attention to the book or to the place on the shelf
+where it belonged.
+
+But there was one thing he could do and did. Reaching out a finger
+as deft as Brotherson's own, he pushed a second volume into the
+place of the one that was gone. This veiled the auger-hole
+completely; a fact which so entirely relieved his mind that his old
+smile came back like sunshine to his lips, and it was only by a
+distinct effort that he kept the dancing humour from his eyes as he
+prepared to refuse the glass which Brotherson now brought forward:
+
+"None of that!" said he. "You mustn't tempt me. The doctor has
+shut down on all kinds of spirits for two months more, at least.
+But don't let me hinder you. I can bear to smell the stuff. My
+turn will come again some day."
+
+But Brotherson did not drink. Setting down the glass he carried,
+he took up the book lying near, weighed it in his hand and laid it
+down again, with an air of thoughtful inquiry. Then he suddenly
+pushed it towards Sweetwater. "Do you want it?" he asked.
+
+Sweetwater was too taken aback to answer immediately. This was a
+move he did not understand. Want it, he? What he wanted was to
+see it put back in its place on the shelf. Did Brotherson suspect
+this? The supposition was incredible; yet who could read a mind
+so mysterious?
+
+Sweetwater, debating the subject, decided that the risk of adding
+to any such possible suspicion was less to be dreaded than the
+continued threat offered by that unoccupied space so near the hole
+which testified so unmistakably of the means he had taken to spy
+upon this suspected man's privacy. So, after a moment of awkward
+silence, not out of keeping with the character he had assumed, he
+calmly refused the present as he had the glass.
+
+Unhappily he was not rewarded by seeing the despised volume
+restored to its shelf. It still lay where its owner had pushed
+it, when, with some awkwardly muttered thanks, the discomfited
+detective withdrew to his own room.
+
+
+
+XVIII
+
+WHAT AM I TO DO NOW
+
+
+Early morning saw Sweetwater peering into the depths of his closet.
+The hole was hardly visible. This meant that the book he had pushed
+across it from the other side had not been removed.
+
+Greatly re-assured by the sight, he awaited his opportunity, and as
+soon as a suitable one presented itself, prepared the hole for
+inspection by breaking away its edges and begriming it well with
+plaster and old dirt. This done, he left matters to arrange
+themselves; which they did, after this manner.
+
+Mr. Brotherson suddenly developed a great need of him, and it became
+a common thing for him to spend the half and, sometimes, the whole
+of the evening in the neighbouring room. This was just what he had
+worked for, and his constant intercourse with the man whose secret
+he sought to surprise should have borne fruit. But it did not.
+Nothing in the eager but painstaking inventor showed a distracted
+mind or a heavily-burdened soul. Indeed, he was so calm in all his
+ways, so precise and so self-contained, that Sweetwater often
+wondered what had become of the fiery agitator and eloquent
+propagandist of new and startling doctrines.
+
+Then, he thought he understood the riddle. The model was reaching
+its completion, and Brotherson's extreme interest in it and the
+confidence he had in its success swallowed tip all lesser emotions.
+Were the invention to prove a failure - but there was small hope of
+this. The man was of too well-poised a mind to over-estimate his
+work or miscalculate its place among modern improvements. Soon he
+would reach the goal of his desires, be praised, feted, made much
+of by the very people he now professedly scorned. There was no
+
+thoroughfare for Sweetwater here. Another road must be found; some
+secret, strange and unforeseen method of reaching a soul inaccessible
+to all ordinary or even extraordinary impressions.
+
+Would a night of thought reveal such a method? Night! the very
+word brought inspiration. A man is not his full self at night.
+Secrets which, under the ordinary circumstances of everyday life,
+lie too deep for surprise, creep from their hiding-places in the
+dismal hours of universal quiet, and lips which are dumb to the
+most subtle of questioners break into strange and self-revealing
+mutterings when sleep lies heavy on ear and eye and the forces of
+life and death are released to play with the rudderless spirit.
+
+It was in different words from these that Sweetwater reasoned, no
+doubt, but his conclusions were the same, and as he continued to
+brood over them, he saw a chance - a fool's chance, possibly, (but
+fools sometimes win where wise men fail) of reaching those depths
+he still believed in, notwithstanding his failure to sound them.
+
+Addressing a letter to his friend in Twenty-ninth Street, he awaited
+reply in the shape of a small package he had ordered sent to the
+corner drug-store. When it came, he carried it home in a state of
+mingled hope and misgiving. Was he about to cap his fortnight of
+disappointment by another signal failure; end the matter by
+disclosing his hand; lose all, or win all by an experiment as daring
+and possibly as fanciful as were his continued suspicions of this
+seemingly upright and undoubtedly busy man?
+
+He made no attempt to argue the question. The event called for the
+exercise of the most dogged elements in his character and upon these
+he must rely. He would make the effort he contemplated, simply
+because he was minded to do so. That was all there was to it. But
+any one noting him well that night, would have seen that he ate
+little and consulted his watch continually. Sweetwater had not yet
+passed the line where work becomes routine and the feelings remain
+totally under control.
+
+Brotherson was unusually active and alert that evening. He was
+anxious to fit one delicate bit of mechanism into another, and he
+was continually interrupted by visitors. Some big event was on in
+the socialistic world, and his presence was eagerly demanded by one
+brotherhood after another. Sweetwater, posted at his loop-hole,
+heard the arguments advanced by each separate spokesman, followed
+by Brotherson's unvarying reply: that when his work was done and he
+had proved his right to approach them with a message, they might
+look to hear from him again; but not before. His patience was
+inexhaustible, but he showed himself relieved when the hour grew
+too late for further interruption. He began to whistle - a token
+that all was going well with him, and Sweetwater, who had come to
+understand some of his moods, looked forward to an hour or two of
+continuous work on Brotherson's part and of dreary and impatient
+waiting on his own. But, as so many times before, he misread the
+man. Earlier than common - much earlier, in fact, Mr. Brotherson
+laid down his tools and gave himself up to a restless pacing of the
+floor. This was not usual with him. Nor did he often indulge
+himself in playing on the piano as he did to-night, beginning with
+a few heavenly strains and ending with a bang that made the
+key-board jump. Certainly something was amiss in the quarter where
+peace had hitherto reigned undisturbed. Had the depths begun to
+heave, or were physical causes alone responsible for these unwonted
+ebullitions of feeling?
+
+The question was immaterial. Either would form an excellent
+preparation for the coup planned by Sweetwater; and when, after
+another hour of uncertainty, perfect silence greeted him from his
+neighbour's room, hope had soared again on exultant wing, far above
+all former discouragements.
+
+Mr. Brotherson's bed was in a remote corner from the loop-hole made
+by Sweetwater; but in the stillness now pervading the whole building,
+the latter could hear his even breathing very distinctly. He was in
+a deep sleep.
+
+The young detective's moment had come.
+
+Taking from his breast a small box, he placed it on a shelf close
+against the partition. An instant of quiet listening, then he
+touched a spring in the side of the box and laid his ear, in haste,
+to his loop-hole.
+
+
+A strain of well-known music broke softly, from the box and sent its
+vibrations through the wall.
+
+It was answered instantly by a stir within; then, as the noble air
+continued, awakening memories of that fatal instant when it crashed
+through the corridors of the Hotel Clermont, drowning Miss Challoner's
+cry if not the sound of her fall, a word burst from the sleeping man's
+lips which carried its own message to the listening detective.
+
+It was Edith! Miss Challoner's first name, and the tone bespoke a
+shaken soul.
+
+Sweetwater, gasping with excitement, caught the box from the shelf
+and silenced it. It had done its work and it was no part of
+Sweetwater's plan to have this strain located, or even to be thought
+real. But its echo still lingered in Brotherson's otherwise
+unconscious ears; for another "Edith!" escaped his lips, followed
+by a smothered but forceful utterance of these five words, "You know
+I promised you -"
+
+Promised her what? He did not say. Would he have done so had the
+music lasted a trifle longer? Would he yet complete his sentence?
+Sweetwater trembled with eagerness and listened breathlessly for
+the next sound. Brotherson was awake. He was tossing in his bed.
+Now he has leaped to the floor. Sweetwater hears him groan, then
+comes another silence, broken at last by the sound of his body
+falling back upon the bed and the troubled ejaculation of "Good God!"
+wrung from lips no torture could have forced into complaint under
+any daytime conditions.
+
+Sweetwater continued to listen, but he had heard all, and after some
+few minutes longer of fruitless waiting, he withdrew from his post.
+The episode was over. He would hear no more that night.
+
+Was he satisfied? Certainly the event, puerile as it might seem to
+some, had opened up strange vistas to his aroused imagination. The
+words "Edith, you know I promised you -" were in themselves
+provocative of strange and doubtful conjectures. Had the sleeper
+under the influence of a strain of music indissolubly associated
+with the death of Miss Challoner, been so completely forced back
+into the circumstances and environment of that moment that his mind
+had taken up and his lips repeated the thoughts with which that
+moment of horror was charged? Sweetwater imagined the scene - saw
+the figure of Brotherson hesitating at the top of the stairs - saw
+hers advancing from the writing-room, with startled and uplifted
+hand - heard the music - the crash of that great finale - and
+decided, without hesitation, that the words he had just heard were
+indeed the thoughts of that moment. "Edith, you know I promised
+you -" What had he promised? What she received was death! Had
+this been in his mind? Would this have been the termination of the
+sentence had he wakened less soon to consciousness and caution?
+
+Sweetwater dared to believe it. He was no nearer comprehending the
+mystery it involved than he had been before, but he felt sure that
+he had been given one true and positive glimpse into this harassed
+soul which showed its deeply hidden secret to be both deadly and
+fearsome; and happy to have won his way so far into the mystic
+labyrinth he had sworn to pierce, he rested in happy unconsciousness
+till morning when -
+
+Could it be? Was it he who was dreaming now, or was the event of
+the night a mere farce of his own imagining? Mr. Brotherson was
+whistling in his room, gaily and with ever increasing verve, and the
+tune which filled the whole floor with music was the same grand
+finale from William Tell which had seemed to work such magic in the
+night. As Sweetwater caught the mellow but indifferent notes
+sounding from those lips of brass, he dragged forth the music-box
+he held hidden in his coat pocket, and flinging it on the floor
+stamped upon it.
+
+"The man is too strong for me," he cried. "His heart is granite;
+he meets my every move. What am I to do now?"
+
+
+
+XIX
+
+THE DANGER MOMENT
+
+
+For a day Sweetwater acknowledged himself to be mentally crushed,
+disillusioned and defeated. Then his spirits regained their poise.
+It would take a heavy weight indeed to keep them down permanently.
+
+His opinion was not changed in regard to his neighbour's secret
+guilt. A demeanour of this sort suggested bravado rather than
+bravery to the ever suspicious detective. But he saw, very plainly
+by this time, that he would have to employ more subtle methods yet
+ere his hand would touch the goal which so tantalisingly eluded him.
+
+His work at the bench suffered that week; he made two mistakes. But
+by Saturday night he had satisfied himself that he had reached the
+point where he would be justified in making use of Miss Challoner's
+letters. So he telephoned his wishes to New York, and awaited the
+promised developments with an anxiety we can only understand by
+realising how much greater were his chances of failure than of
+success. To ensure the latter, every factor in his scheme must
+work to perfection. The medium of communication (a young, untried
+girl) must do her part with all the skill of artist and author
+combined. Would she disappoint them? He did not think so. Women
+possess a marvellous adaptability for this kind of work and this
+one was French, which made the case still more hopeful.
+
+But Brotherson! In what spirit would he meet the proposed advances?
+Would he even admit the girl, and, if he did, would the interview
+bear any such fruit as Sweetwater hoped for? The man who could
+mock the terrors of the night by a careless repetition of a strain
+instinct with the most sacred memories, was not to be depended upon
+to show much feeling at sight of a departed woman's writing. But
+no other hope remained, and Sweetwater faced the attempt with heroic
+determination.
+
+The day was Sunday, which ensured Brotherson's being at home.
+Nothing would have lured Sweetwater out for a moment, though he had
+no reason to expect that the affair he was anticipating would come
+off till early evening.
+
+But it did. Late in the afternoon he heard the expected steps go
+by his door - a woman's steps. But they were not alone. A man's
+accompanied them. What man? Sweetwater hastened to satisfy
+himself on this point by laying his ear to the partition.
+
+Instantly the whole conversation became audible. "An errand? Oh,
+yes, I have an errand!" explained the evidently unwelcome intruder,
+in her broken English. "This is my brother Pierre. My name is
+Celeste; Celeste Ledru. I understand English ver well. I have
+worked much in families. But he understands nothing. He is all
+French. He accompanies me for -for the - what you call it? les
+convenances. He knows nothing of the beesiness."
+
+Sweetwater in the darkness of his closet laughed in his gleeful
+appreciation.
+
+"Great!" was his comment. "Just great! She has thought of
+everything - or Mr. Gryce has."
+
+Meanwhile, the girl was proceeding with increased volubility.
+
+"What is this beesiness, monsieur? I have something to sell - so
+you Americans speak. Something you will want much - ver sacred,
+ver precious. A souvenir from the tomb, monsieur. Will you give
+ten - no, that is too leetle - fifteen dollars for it? It is worth
+ - Oh, more, much more to the true lover. Pierre, tu es bete.
+Teins-tu droit sur ta chaise. M. Brotherson est un monsieur comme
+il faut."
+
+This adjuration, uttered in sharp reprimand and with but little of
+the French grace, may or may not have been understood by the
+unsympathetic man they were meant to impress. But the name which
+accompanied them - his own name, never heard but once before in
+this house, undoubtedly caused the silence which almost reached the
+point of embarrassment, before he broke it with the harsh remark:
+
+"Your French may be good, but it does not go with me. Yet is it
+more intelligible than your English. What do you want here? What
+have you in that bag you wish to open; and what do you mean by the
+sentimental trash with which you offer it?"
+
+"Ah, monsieur has not memory of me," came in the sweetest tones of
+a really seductive voice. " You astonish me, monsieur. I thought
+you knew - everybody else does - Oh, tout le monde, monsieur,
+that I was Miss Challoner's maid - near her when other people were
+not - near her the very day she died."
+
+A pause; then an angry exclamation from some one. Sweetwater thought
+from the brother, who may have misinterpreted some look or gesture on
+Brotherson's part. Brotherson himself would not be apt to show
+surprise in any such noisy way.
+
+"I saw many things - Oh many things -" the girl proceeded with an
+admirable mixture of suggestion and reserve. "That day and other
+days too. She did not talk - Oh, no, she did not talk, but I saw
+ - Oh, yes, I saw that she - that you - I'll have to say it,
+monsieur, that you were tres bons amis after that week in Lenox."
+
+"Well?" His utterance of this word was vigorous, but not tender.
+"What are you coming to? What can you have to show me in this
+connection that I will believe in for a moment?"
+
+"I have these - is monsieur certaine that no one can hear? I
+wouldn't have anybody hear what I have to tell you, for the world
+ - for all the world."
+
+"No one can overhear."
+
+For the first time that day Sweetwater breathed a full, deep breath.
+This assurance had sounded heartfelt. "Blessings on her cunning
+young head. She thinks of everything."
+
+"You are unhappy. You have thought Miss Challoner cold; - that she
+had no response for your ver ardent passion. But -" these words were
+uttered sotto voce and with telling pauses -" but - I - know - ver
+much better than that. She was ver proud. She had a right; she was
+no poor girl like me - but she spend hours - hours in writing letters
+she - nevaire send. I saw one, just once, for a leetle minute; while
+you could breathe so short as that; and began with Cheri, or your
+English for that, and ended with words - Oh, ver much like these:
+You may nevaire see these lines, which was ver interesting, veree so,
+and made one want to see what she did with letters she wrote and
+nevaire mail; so I watch and look, and one day I see them. She had
+a leetle ivory box - Oh, ver nice, ver pretty. I thought it was
+jewels she kept locked up so tight. But, non, non, non. It was
+letters - these letters. I heard them rattle, rattle, not once but
+many times. You believe me, monsieur?
+
+"I believe you to have taken every advantage posible to spy upon
+your mistress. I believe that, yes."
+
+"From interest, monsieur, from great interest."
+
+"Self-interest."
+
+"As monsieur pleases. But it was strange, ver strange for a grande
+dame like that to write letters - sheets on sheets - and then not
+send them, nevaire. I dreamed of those letters - I could not help
+it, no; and when she died so quick - with no word for any one, no
+word at all, I thought of those writings so secret, so of the heart,
+and when no one noticed - or thought about this box, or - or the key
+she kept shut tight, oh, always tight in her leetle gold purse, I
+ - Monsieur, do you want to see those letters?" asked the girl, with
+a gulp. Evidently his appearance frightened her - or had her acting
+reached this point of extreme finish? "I had nevaire the chance to
+put them back. And - and they belong to monsieur. They are his
+ - all his - and so beautiful! Ah, just like poetry."
+
+"I don't consider them mine. I haven't a particle of confidence in
+you or in your story. You are a thief - self-convicted; or you're
+an agent of the police whose motives I neither understand nor care
+to investigate. Take up your bag and go. I haven't a cent's worth
+of interest in its contents."
+
+She started to her feet. Sweetwater heard her chair grate on the
+painted floor, as she pushed it back in rising. The brother rose
+too, but more calmly. Brotherson did not stir. Sweetwater felt
+his hopes rapidly dying down - down into ashes, when suddenly her
+voice broke forth in pants:
+
+"And Marie said - everybody said - that you loved our great lady;
+that you, of the people, common, common, working with the hands,
+living with men and women working with the hands, that you had soul,
+sentiment - what you will of the good and the great, and that you
+would give your eyes for her words, si fines, si spirituelles, so
+like des vers de poete. False! false! all false! She was an
+angel. You are - read that! " she vehemently broke in, opening
+her bag and whisking a paper down before him. "Read and understand
+my proud and lovely lady. She did right to die. You are hard
+ - hard. You would have killed her if she had not -"
+
+"Silence, woman! I will read nothing!" came hissing from the strong
+man's teeth, set in almost ungovernable anger. "Take back this
+letter, as you call it, and leave my room."
+
+"Nevaire! You will not read? But you shall, you shall. Behold
+another! One, two, three, four!" Madly they flew from her hand.
+Madly she continued her vituperative attack. "Beast! beast! That
+she should pour out her innocent heart to you, you! I do not want
+your money, Monsieur of the common street, of the common house. It
+would be dirt. Pierre, it would be dirt. Ah, bah! je m'oublie tout
+a fait. Pierre, il est bete. Il refuse de les toucher. Mais il
+faut qu'il les touche, si je les laisse sur le plancher. Va-t'en!
+Je me moque de lui. Canaille! L'homme du peuple, tout a fait
+du peuple!"
+
+A loud slam - the skurrying of feet through the hall, accompanied
+by the slower and heavier tread of the so-called brother, then
+silence, and such silence that Sweetwater fancied he could catch
+the sound of Brotherson's heavy breathing. His own was silenced
+to a gasp. What a treasure of a girl! How natural her indignation!
+What an instinct she showed and what comprehension! This high and
+mighty handling of a most difficult situation and a most difficult
+man, had imposed on Brotherson, had almost imposed upon himself.
+Those letters so beautiful, so spirituelle! Yet, the odds were that
+she had never read them, much less abstracted them. The minx! the
+ready, resourceful, wily, daring minx!
+
+But had she imposed on Brotherson? As the silence continued,
+Sweetwater began to doubt. He understood quite well the importance
+of his neighbour's first movement. Were he to tear those letters
+into shreds! He might be thus tempted. All depended on the strength
+of his present mood and the real nature of the secret which lay
+buried in his heart.
+
+Was that heart as flinty as it seemed? Was there no place for doubt
+or even for curiosity, in its impenetrable depths? Seemingly, he
+had not moved foot or hand since his unwelcome visitors had left.
+He was doubtless still staring at the scattered sheets lying before
+him; possibly battling with unaccustomed impulses; possibly weighing
+deeds and consequences in those slow moving scales of his in which
+no man could cast a weight with any certainty how far its even
+balance would be disturbed.
+
+There was a sound as of settling coal. Only at night would one
+expect to hear so slight a sound as that in a tenement full of noisy
+children. But the moment chanced to be propitious, and it not only
+attracted the attention of Sweetwater on his side of the wall, but
+it struck the ear of Brotherson also. With an ejaculation as bitter
+as it was impatient, he roused himself and gathered up the letters.
+Sweetwater could hear the successive rustlings as he bundled them
+up in his hand. Then came another silence - then the lifting of a
+stove lid.
+
+Sweetwater had not been wrong in his secret apprehension. His
+identification with his unimpressionable neighbour's mood had shown
+him what to expect. These letters - these innocent and precious
+outpourings of a rare and womanly soul - the only conceivable open
+sesame to the hard-locked nature he found himself pitted against,
+would soon be resolved into a vanishing puff of smoke.
+
+But the lid was thrust back, and the letters remained in hand.
+Mortal strength has its limits. Even Brotherson could not shut
+down that lid on words which might have been meant for him, harshly
+as he had repelled the idea.
+
+The pause which followed told little; but when Sweetwater heard the
+man within move with characteristic energy to the door, turn the
+key and step back again to his place at the table, he knew that
+the danger moment had passed and that those letters were about to
+be read, not casually, but seriously, as indeed their contents
+merited.
+
+This caused Sweetwater to feel serious himself. Upon what result
+might he calculate? What would happen to this hardy soul, when the
+fact he so scornfully repudiated, was borne in upon him, and he saw
+that the disdain which had antagonised him was a mere device - a
+cloak to hide the secret heart of love and eager womanly devotion?
+Her death - little as Brotherson would believe it up till now - had
+been his personal loss the greatest which can befall a man. When
+he came to see this - when the modest fervour of her unusual nature
+began to dawn upon him in these self-revelations, would the result
+be remorse, or just the deadening and final extinction of whatever
+tenderness he may have retained for her memory?
+
+Impossible to tell. The balance of probability hung even.
+Sweetwater recognised this, and clung, breathless, to his loop-hole.
+Fain would he have seen, as well as heard.
+
+Mr. Brotherson read the first letter, standing. As it soon became
+public property, I will give it here, just as it afterwards appeared
+in the columns of the greedy journals:
+
+ "Beloved:
+
+ "When I sit, as I often do, in perfect quiet under the stars,
+ and dream that you are looking at them too, not for hours as I
+ do, but for one full moment in which your thoughts are with me as
+ wholly as mine are with you, I feel that the bond between us,
+ unseen by the world, and possibly not wholly recognised by
+ ourselves, is instinct with the same power which links together
+ the eternities.
+
+ "It seems to have always been; to have known no beginning, only a
+ budding, an efflorescence, the visible product of a hidden but
+ always present reality. A month ago and I was ignorant, even, of
+ your name. Now, you seem the best known to me, the best understood,
+ of God's creatures. One afternoon of perfect companionship - one
+ flash of strong emotion, with its deep, true insight into each
+ other's soul, and the miracle was wrought. We had met, and
+ henceforth, parting would mean separation only, and not the
+ severing of a mutual bond. One hand, and one only, could do that
+ now. I will not name that hand. For us there is nought ahead but
+ life.
+
+ "Thus do I ease my heart in the silence which conditions impose
+ upon us. Some day I shall hear your voice again, and then-"
+
+The paper dropped from the reader's hand. It was several minutes
+before he took up another.
+
+This one, as it happened, antedated the other, as will appear on
+reading it:
+
+ "My friend:
+
+ "I said that I could not write to you - that we must wait. You
+ were willing; but there is much to be accomplished, and the
+ silence may be long. My father is not an easy man to please, but
+ he desires my happiness and will listen to my plea when the right
+ hour comes. When you have won your place - when you have shown
+ yourself to be the man I feel you to be, then my father will
+ recognise your worth, and the way will be cleared, despite the
+ obstacles which now intervene.
+
+ "But meantime! Ah, you will not know it, but words will rise
+ - the heart must find utterance. What the lip cannot utter, nor
+ the looks reveal, these pages shall hold in sacred trust for you
+ till the day when my father will place my hand in yours, with
+ heart-felt approval.
+
+ "Is it a folly? A woman's weak evasion of the strong silence of
+ man? You may say so some day; but somehow, I doubt it - I doubt
+ it."
+
+The creaking of a chair; - the man within had seated himself. There
+was no other sound; a soul in turmoil wakens no echoes. Sweetwater
+envied the walls surrounding the unsympathetic reader. They could
+see. He could only listen.
+
+A little while; then that slight rustling again of the unfolding
+sheet. The following was read, and then the fourth and last:
+
+ "Dearest:
+
+ "Did you think I had never seen you till that day we met in Lenox?
+ I am going to tell you a secret - a great, great secret - such a
+ one as a woman hardly whispers to her own heart.
+
+ "One day, in early summer, I was sitting in St. Bartholomew's
+ Church on Fifth Avenue, waiting for the services to begin. It
+ was early and the congregation was assembling. While idly
+ watching the people coming in, I saw a gentleman pass by me up
+ the aisle, who made me forget all the others. He had not the
+ air of a New Yorker; he was not even dressed in city style, but
+ as I noted his face and expression, I said way down in my heart,
+ 'That is the kind of man I could love; the only man I have ever
+ seen who could make me forget my own world and my own people.'
+ It was a passing thought, soon~ forgotten. But when in that hour
+ of embarrassment and peril on Greylock Mountain, I looked up into
+ the face of my rescuer and saw again that countenance which so
+ short a time before had called into life impulses till then
+ utterly unknown, I knew that my hour was come. And that was why
+ my confidence was so spontaneous and my belief in the future so
+ absolute.
+
+ "I trust your love which will work wonders; and I trust my own,
+ which sprang at a look but only gathered strength and permanence
+ when I found that the soul of the man I loved bettered his outward
+ attractions, making the ideal of my foolish girlhood seem as
+ unsubstantial and evanescent as a dream in the glowing noontide."
+
+ "My Own:
+
+ "I can say so now; for you have written to me, and I have the
+ dancing words with which to silence any unsought doubt which might
+ subdue the exuberance of these secret outpourings.
+
+ "I did not expect this. I thought that you would remain as silent
+ as myself. But men's ways are not our ways. They cannot exhaust
+ longing in purposeless words on scraps of soulless paper, and I am
+ glad that they cannot. I love you for your impatience; for your
+ purpose, and for the manliness which will win for you yet all that
+ you covet of fame, accomplishment and love. You expect no reply,
+ but there are ways in which one can keep silent and yet speak.
+ Won't you be surprised when your answer comes in a manner you have
+ never thought of?"
+
+
+
+XX
+
+CONFUSION
+
+
+In his interest in what was going on on the other side of the wall,
+Sweetwater had forgotten himself. Daylight had declined, but in the
+darkness of the closet this change had passed unheeded. Night
+itself might come, but that should not force him to leave his post
+so long as his neighbour remained behind his locked door, brooding
+over the words of love and devotion which had come to him, as it
+were from the other world.
+
+But was he brooding? That sound of iron clattering upon iron!
+That smothered exclamation and the laugh which ended it! Anger and
+determination rang in that laugh. It had a hideous sound which
+prepared Sweetwater for the smell which now reached his nostrils.
+The letters were burning; this time the lid had been lifted from
+the stove with unrelenting purpose. Poor Edith Challoner's touching
+words had met, a different fate from any which she, in her ignorance
+of this man's nature, - a nature to which she had ascribed untold
+perfections - could possibly have conceived.
+
+As Sweetwater thought of this, he stirred nervously in the darkness,
+and broke into silent invective against the man who could so insult
+the memory of one who had perished under the blight of his own
+coldness and misunderstanding. Then he suddenly started back
+surprised and apprehensive. Brotherson had unlocked his door, and
+was coming rapidly his way. Sweetwater heard his step in the hall
+and had hardly time to bound from his closet, when he saw his own
+door burst in and found himself face to face with his redoubtable
+neighbour, in a state of such rage as few men could meet without
+quailing, even were they of his own stature, physical vigour and
+prowess; and Sweetwater was a small man.
+
+However, disappointment such as he had just experienced brings with
+it a desperation which often outdoes courage, and the detective,
+smiling with an air of gay surprise, shouted out:
+
+"Well, what's the matter now? Has the machine busted, or tumbled
+into the fire or sailed away to lands unknown out of your open
+window?"
+
+"You were coming out of that closet," was the fierce rejoinder.
+"What have you got there? Something which concerns me, or why
+should your face go pale at my presence and your forehead drip
+with sweat? Don't think that you've deceived me for a moment as
+to your business here. I recognised you immediately. You've
+played the stranger well, but you've a nose and an eye nobody could
+forget. I have known all along that I had a police spy for a
+neighbour; but it didn't faze me. I've nothing to conceal, and
+wouldn't mind a regiment of you fellows if you'd only play a
+straight game. But when it comes to foisting upon me a parcel of
+letters to which I have no right, and then setting a fellow like
+you to count my groans or whatever else they expected to hear, I
+have a right to defend myself, and defend myself I will, by God!
+But first, let me be sure that my accusations will stand. Come
+into this closet with me. It abuts on the wall of my room and has
+its own secret, I know. What is it? I have you at an advantage
+now, and you shall tell."
+
+He did have Sweetwater at an advantage, and the detective knew it
+and disdained a struggle which would have only called up a crowd,
+friendly to the other but inimical to himself. Allowing Brotherson
+to drag him into the closet, he stood quiescent, while the
+determined man who held him with one hand, felt about with the
+other over the shelves and along the partitions till he came to
+the hole which had offered such a happy means of communication
+between the two rooms. Then, with a laugh almost as bitter in tone
+as that which rang from Brotherson's lips, he acknowledged that
+business had its necessities and that apologies from him were in
+order; adding, as they both stepped out into the rapidly darkening
+room:
+
+"We've played a bout, we two; and you've come out ahead. Allow me
+to congratulate you, Mr. Brotherson. You've cleared yourself so
+far as I am concerned. I leave this ranch to-night."
+
+The frown had come back to the forehead of the indignant man who
+confronted him.
+
+"So you listened," he cried; "listened when you weren't sneaking
+under my eye! A fine occupation for a man who can dove-tail a
+corner like an adept. I wish I had let you join the brotherhood
+you were good enough to mention. They would know how to appreciate
+your double gifts and how to reward your excellence in the one, if
+not in the other. What did the police expect to learn about me that
+they should consider it necessary to call into exercise such
+extraordinary talents?
+
+"I'm not good at conundrums. I was given a task to perform, and I
+performed it," was Sweetwater s sturdy reply. Then slowly, with
+his eye fixed directly upon his antagonist, " I guess they
+thought you a man. And so did I until I heard you burn those
+letters. Fortunately we have copies."
+
+"Letters!" Fury thickened the speaker's voice, and lent a savage
+gleam to his eye. "Forgeries! Make believes! Miss Challoner never
+wrote the drivel you dare to designate as letters. It was concocted
+at Police Headquarters. They made me tell my story and then they
+found some one who could wield the poetic pen. I'm obliged to them
+for the confidence they show in my credulity. I credit Miss
+Challoner with such words as have been given me to read here to-day?
+I knew the lady, and I know myself. Nothing that passed between us,
+not an event in which we were both concerned, has been forgotten by
+me, and no feature of our intercourse fits the language you have
+ascribed to her. On the contrary, there is a lamentable
+contradiction between facts as they were and the fancies you have
+made her indulge in. And this, as you must acknowledge, not only
+proves their falsity, but exonerates Miss Challoner from all possible
+charge of sentimentality."
+
+"Yet she certainly wrote those letters. We had them from Mr.
+Challoner. The woman who brought them was really her maid. We
+have not deceived you in this."
+
+"I do not believe you."
+
+It was not offensively said; but the conviction it expressed was
+absolute. Sweetwater recognised the tone, as one of truth, and
+inwardly laid down his arms. He could never like the man; there
+was too much iron in his fibre; but he had to acknowledge that
+as a foe he was invulnerable and therefore admirable to one who
+had the good sense to appreciate him.
+
+"I do not want to believe you." Thus did Brotherson supplement
+his former sentence. "For if I were to attribute those letters to
+her, I should have to acknowledge that they were written to another
+man than myself. And this would be anything but agreeable to me.
+Now I am going to my room and to my work. You may spend the rest
+of the evening or the whole night, if you will, listening at that
+hole. As heretofore, the labour will be all yours, and the
+indifference mine.
+
+With a satirical play of feature which could hardly be called a
+smile, he nodded and left the room.
+
+
+
+XXI
+
+A CHANGE
+
+
+"It's all up. I'm beaten on my own ground." Thus confessed
+Sweetwater, in great dejection, to himself. "But I'm going to
+take advantage of the permission he's just given me and continue
+the listening act. Just because he told me to and just because he
+thinks I won't. I'm sure it's no worse than to spend hours of
+restless tossing in bed, trying to sleep."
+
+But our young detective did neither.
+
+As he was putting his supper dishes away, a messenger boy knocked
+at his door and handed him a note. It was from Mr. Gryce and ran
+thus:
+
+"Steal off, if you can, and as soon as you can, and meet me in
+Twenty-ninth Street. A discovery has been made which alters the
+whole situation."
+
+
+
+XXII
+
+O. B. AGAIN
+
+
+"What's happened? Something very important. I ought to hope so
+after this confounded failure."
+
+"Failure? Didn't he read the letters?"
+
+"Yes, he read them. Had to, but -"
+
+"Didn't weaken? Eh?"
+
+"No, he didn't weaken. You can't get water out of a millstone.
+You may squeeze and squeeze; but it's your fingers which suffer, not
+it. He thinks we manufactured. those letters ourselves on purpose
+draw him."
+
+"Humph! I knew we had a reputation for finesse, but I didn't know
+that it ran that high."
+
+"He denies everything. Said she would never have written such
+letters to him; even goes so far to declare that if she did write
+them - (he must be strangely ignorant of her handwriting) they were
+meant for some other man than himself. All rot, but -" A hitch of
+the shoulder conveyed Sweetwater's disgust. His uniform good nature
+was strangely disturbed.
+
+But Mr. Gryce's was not. The faint smile with which he smoothed
+with an easy, circling movement, the already polished top of his
+ever present cane conveyed a secret complacency which called up a
+flash of discomfiture to his greatly irritated companion.
+
+"He says that, does he? You found him on the whole tolerably
+straightforward, eh? A hard nut; but hard nuts are usually sound
+ones. Come, now! prejudice aside, what's your honest opinion of the
+man you've had under your eye and ear for three solid weeks? Hasn't
+there been the best of reasons for your failure? Speak up, my boy.
+Squarely,
+now."
+
+"I can't. I hate the fellow. I hate any one who makes me look
+ridiculous. He - well, well, if you'll have it, sir, I will say
+this much. If it weren't for that blasted coincidence of the two
+deaths equally mysterious, equally under his eye, I'd stake my life
+on his honesty. But that coincidence stumps me and - and a sort of
+feeling I have here."
+
+It is to be hoped that the slap he gave his breast, at this point,
+carried off some of his superfluous emotion. "You can't account
+for a feeling, Mr. Gryce. The man has no heart. He's as hard as
+rocks."
+
+"A not uncommon lack where the head plays so big a part. We can't
+hang him on any such argument as that. You've found no evidence
+against him?"
+
+"N - no." The hesitating admission was only a proof of Sweetwater's
+obstinacy.
+
+"Then listen to this. The test with the letters failed, because
+what he said about them was true. They were not meant for him.
+Miss Challoner had another lover."
+
+"Only another? I thought there were a half-dozen, at least."
+
+"Another whom she favoured. The letters found in her possession
+ - not the ones she wrote herself, but those which were written to
+her over the signature 0. B. were not all from the same hand.
+Experts have been busy with them for a week, and their reports are
+unanimous. The 0. B. who wrote the threatening lines acknowledged
+to by Orlando Brotherson, was not the 0. B. who penned all of those
+love letters. The similarity in the writing misled us at first,
+but once the doubt was raised by Mr. Challoner's discovery of an
+allusion in one of them which pointed to another writer than Mr.
+Brotherson, and experts had no difficulty in reaching the decision
+I have mentioned."
+
+"Two 0. B.s! Isn't that incredible, Mr. Gryce?"
+
+Yes, it is incredible; but the incredible is not the impossible.
+The man you've been shadowing denies that these expressive effusions
+of Miss Challoner were meant for him. Let us see, then, if we can
+find the man they were meant for."
+
+"The second 0. B.?"
+
+Yes."
+
+Sweetwater's face instantly lit up.
+
+"Do you mean that I - after my egregious failure - am not to be
+kept on the dunce's seat? That you will give me this new job?"
+
+"Yes. We don't know of a better man. It isn't your fault, you said
+it yourself, that water couldn't be squeezed out of a millstone."
+
+"The Superintendent - how does he feel about it?"
+
+"He was the first one to mention you."
+
+"And the Inspector?"
+
+"Is glad to see us on a new tack."
+
+A pause, during which the eager light in the young detective's eye
+clouded over. Presently he remarked:
+
+"How will the finding of another 0. B. alter Mr. Brotherson's
+position? He still will be the one person on the spot, known to
+have cherished a grievance against the victim of this mysterious
+killing. To my mind, this discovery of a more favoured rival,
+brings in an element of motive which may rob our self-reliant
+friend of some of his complacency. We may further, rather than
+destroy, our case against Brotherson by locating a second 0.B."
+
+Mr. Gryce's eyes twinkled.
+
+"That won't make your task any more irksome," he smiled. "The
+loop we thus throw out is as likely to catch Brotherson as his
+rival. It all depends upon the sort of man we find in this second
+0. B.; and whether, in some way unknown to us, he gave her cause
+for the sudden and overwhelming rush of despair which alone supports
+this general theory of suicide."
+
+"The prospect grows pleasing. Where am I to look for my man?"
+
+"Your ticket is bought to Derby, Pennsylvania. If he is not employed
+in the great factories there, we do not know where to find him. We
+have no other clew."
+
+"I see. It's a short journey I have before me."
+
+"It'll bring the colour to your cheeks."
+
+"Oh, I'm not kicking."
+
+"You will start to-morrow."
+
+"Wish it were to-day."
+
+"And you will first inquire, not for 0. B., that's too indefinite;
+but for a young girl by the name of Doris Scott. She holds the
+clew; or rather she is the clew to this second 0. B."
+
+"Another woman!"
+
+"No, a child; - well, I won't say child exactly; she must be sixteen."
+
+"Doris Scott."
+
+"She lives in Derby. Derby is a small place. You will have no
+trouble in finding this child. It was to her Miss Challoner's last
+letter was addressed. The one -"
+
+"I begin to see."
+
+"No, you don't, Sweetwater. The affair is as blind as your hat;
+nobody sees. We're just feeling along a thread. O. B.'s letters
+ - the real O. B., I mean, are the manliest effusions possible.
+He's no more of a milksop than this Brotherson; and unlike your
+indomitable friend he seems to have some heart. I only wish he'd
+given us some facts; they would have been serviceable. But the
+letters reveal nothing except that he knew Doris. He writes in
+one of them: 'Doris is learning to embroider. It's like a fairy
+weaving a cobweb!' Doris isn't a very common name. She must be
+the same little girl to whom Miss Challoner wrote from time to time."
+
+"Was this letter signed O. B.?"
+
+"Yes; they all are. The only difference between his letters and
+Brotherson's is this: Brotherson's retain the date and address;
+the second O. B.'s do not."
+
+"How not? Torn off, do you mean?"
+
+"Yes, or rather, neatly cut away; and as none of the envelopes
+were kept, the only means by which we can locate the writer is
+through this girl Doris."
+
+"If I remember rightly Miss Challoner's letter to this child was
+free from all mystery."
+
+"Quite so. It is as open as the day. That is why it has been
+mentioned as showing the freedom of Miss Challoner's mind five
+minutes before that fatal thrust."
+
+Sweetwater took up the sheet Mr. Gryce pushed towards him and
+re-read these lines:
+
+ "Dear Little Doris:
+
+ "It is a snowy night, but it is all bright inside and I feel no
+ chill in mind or body. I hope it is so in the little cottage in
+ Derby; that my little friend is as happy with harsh winds blowing
+ from the mountains as she was on the summer day she came to see
+ me at this hotel. I like to think of her as cheerful and beaming,
+ rejoicing in tasks which make her so womanly and sweet. She is
+ often, often in my mind.
+
+ "Affectionately your friend,
+ "EDITH A. CHALLONER."
+
+
+"That to a child of sixteen!"
+
+"Just so."
+
+"D-o-r-i-s spells something besides Doris."
+
+"Yet there is a Doris. Remember that O. B. says in one of his
+letters, ' Doris is learning to embroider.'
+
+"Yes, I remember that."
+
+"So you must first find Doris."
+
+"Very good, sir."
+
+"And as Miss Challoner's letter was directed to Derby, Pennsylvania,
+you will go to Derby."
+
+"Yes, sir."
+
+"Anything more?"
+
+"I've been reading this letter again."
+
+"It's worth it."
+
+"The last sentence expresses a hope."
+
+"That has been noted."
+
+Sweetwater's eyes slowly rose till they rested on Mr. Gryce's face:
+"I'll cling to the thread you've given me. I'll work myself through
+the labyrinth before us till I reach HIM."
+
+Mr. Gryce smiled; but there was more age, wisdom and sympathy for
+youthful enthusiasm in that smile than there was confidence or hope.
+
+
+
+BOOK III
+
+
+THE HEART OF MAN
+
+
+
+XXIII
+
+DORIS
+
+
+"A young girl named Doris Scott?"
+
+The station-master looked somewhat sharply at the man he was
+addressing, and decided to give the direction asked.
+
+"There is but one young girl in town of that name," he declared,
+"and she lives in that little house you see just beyond the works.
+But let me tell you, stranger," he went on with some
+precipitation --
+
+But here he was called off, and Sweetwater lost the conclusion of
+his warning, if warning it was meant to be. This did not trouble
+the detective. He stood a moment, taking in the prospect; decided
+that the Works and the Works alone made the town, and started for
+the house which had been pointed out to him. His way lay through
+the chief business street, and greatly preoccupied by his errand,
+he gave but a passing glance to the rows on rows of workmen's
+dwellings stretching away to the left in seemingly endless
+perspective. Yet in that glance he certainly took in the fact
+hat the sidewalks were blocked with people and wondered if it
+were a holiday. If so, it must be an enforced one, for the
+faces showed little joy. Possibly a strike was on. The anxiety
+he everywhere saw pictured on young faces and old, argued some
+trouble; but if the trouble was that, why were all heads turned
+indifferently from the Works, and why were the Works themselves
+in full blast?
+
+These questions he may have asked himself and he may not. His
+attention was entirely centred on the house he saw before him
+and on the possible developments awaiting him there. Nothing else
+mattered. Briskly he stepped out along the sandy road, and after
+a turn or two which led him quite away from the Works and its
+surrounding buildings, he came out upon the highway and this house.
+
+It was a low and unpretentious one, and had but one distinguishing
+feature. The porch which hung well over the doorstep was unique
+in shape and gave an air of picturesqueness to an otherwise simple
+exterior; a picturesqueness which was much enhanced in its effect
+by the background of illimitable forest, which united the foreground
+of this pleasing picture with the great chain of hills which held
+the Works and town in its ample basin.
+
+As he approached the doorstep, his mind involuntarily formed an
+anticipatory image of the child whose first stitches in embroidery
+were like a fairy's weaving to the strong man who worked in ore and
+possibly figured out bridges. That she would prove to be of the
+anemic type, common among working girls gifted with an imagination
+they have but scant opportunity to exercise, he had little doubt.
+
+He was therefore greatly taken aback, when at his first step upon
+the porch, the door before him flew open and he beheld in the dark
+recess beyond a young woman of such bright and blooming beauty that
+he hardly noticed her expression of extreme anxiety, till she lifted
+her hand and laid an admonitory finger softly on her lip:
+
+"Hush! she whispered, with an earnestness which roused him from his
+absorption and restored him to the full meaning of this encounter.
+"There is sickness in the house and we are very anxious. Is your
+errand an important one? If not - "The faltering break in the
+fresh, young voice, the look she cast behind her into the darkened
+interior, were eloquent with the hope that he would recognise her
+impatience and pass on.
+
+And so he might have done, - so he would have done under all
+ordinary circumstances. But if this was Doris - and he did not
+doubt the fact after the first moment of startled surprise - how
+dare he forego this opportunity of settling the question which had
+brought him here.
+
+With a slight stammer but otherwise giving no evidence of the effect
+made upon him by the passionate intensity with which she had urged
+this plea, he assured her that his errand was important, but one so
+quickly told that it would delay her but a moment. "But first, said
+he, with very natural caution, "let me make sure that it is to Miss
+Doris Scott I am speaking. My errand is to her and her only.
+
+Without showing any surprise, perhaps too engrossed in her own
+thoughts to feel any, she answered with simple directness, "Yes, I
+am Doris Scott. Whereupon he became his most persuasive self, and
+pulling out a folded paper from his pocket, opened it and held it
+before her, with these words:
+
+"Then will you be so good as to glance at this letter and tell me
+if the person whose initials you will find at the bottom happens to
+be in town at the present moment?
+
+In some astonishment now, she glanced down at the sheet thus boldly
+thrust before her, and recognising the 0 and the B of a well-known
+signature, she flashed a look back at Sweetwater in which he read a
+confusion of emotions for which he was hardly prepared.
+
+"Ah, thought he, " it's coming. In another moment I shall hear
+what will repay me for the trials and disappointments of all these
+months.
+
+But the moment passed and he had heard nothing. Instead, she
+dropped her hands from the door-jamb and gave such unmistakable
+evidences of intended flight, that but one alternative remained to
+him; he became abrupt.
+
+Thrusting the paper still nearer, he said, with an emphasis which
+could not fail of making an impression, "Read it. Read the whole
+letter. You will find your name there. This communication was
+addressed to Miss Challoner, but -"
+
+Oh, now she found words! With a low cry, she put out her hand in
+quick entreaty, begging him to desist and not speak that name on
+any pretext or for any purpose. "He may rouse and hear, she
+explained, with another quick look behind her. "The doctor says
+that this is the critical day. He may become conscious any minute.
+If he should and were to hear that name, it might kill him."
+
+"He!" Sweetwater perked up his ears. "Who do you mean by he?"
+
+"Mr. Brotherson, my patient, he whose letter -" But here her
+impatience rose above every other consideration. Without attempting
+to finish her sentence, or yielding in the least to her curiosity or
+interest in this man's errand, she cried out with smothered intensity,
+"Go! go! I cannot stay another moment from his bedside."
+
+But a thunderbolt could not have moved Sweetwater after the hearing
+of that name. "Mr. Brotherson! he echoed. "Brotherson! Not
+Orlando?"
+
+"No, no; his name is Oswald. He's the manager of these Works. He's
+sick with typhoid. We are caring for him. If you belonged here you
+would know that much. There! that's his voice you hear. Go, if
+you have any mercy." And she began to push to the door.
+
+But Sweetwater was impervious to all hint. With eager eyes straining
+into the shadowy depths just visible over her shoulder, he listened
+eagerly for the disjointed words now plainly to be heard in some
+near-by but unseen chamber.
+
+"The second 0. B.! he inwardly declared. "And he's a Brotherson
+also, and - sick! Miss Scott," he whisperingly entreated as her
+hand fell in manifest despair from the door, "don't send me away
+yet. I've a question of the greatest importance to put you, and
+one minute more cannot make any difference to him. Listen! those
+cries are the cries of delirium; he cannot miss you; he's not even
+conscious."
+
+"He's calling out in his sleep. He's calling her, just as he has
+called for the last two weeks. But he will wake conscious - or he
+will not wake at all.
+
+The anguish trembling in that latter phrase would have attracted
+Sweetwater's earnest, if not pitiful, attention at any other time,
+but now he had ears only for the cry which at that moment came
+ringing shrilly from within -
+
+"Edith! Edith!"
+
+The living shouting for the dead! A heart still warm sending forth
+its longing to the pierced and pulseless one, hidden in a far-off
+tomb! To Sweetwater, who had seen Miss Challoner buried, this
+summons of distracted love came with weird force.
+
+Then the present regained its sway. He heard her name again, and
+this time it sounded less like a call and more like the welcoming
+cry of meeting spirits. Was death to end this separation? Had he
+found the true 0. B., only to behold another and final seal fall
+upon this closely folded mystery? In his fear of this possibility,
+he caught at Doris' hand as she was about to bound away, and eagerly
+asked:
+
+"When was Mr. Brotherson taken ill? Tell me, I entreat you; the
+exact day and, if you can, the exact hour. More depends upon this
+than you can readily realise.
+
+She wrenched her hand from his, panting with impatience and a vague
+alarm. But she answered him distinctly:
+
+"On the Twenty-fifth of last month, just an hour after he was made
+manager. He fell in a faint at the Works."
+
+The day - the very day of Miss Challoner's death!
+
+"Had he heard - did you tell him then or afterwards what happened
+in New York on that very date?"
+
+"No, no, we have not told him. It would have killed him - and may
+yet."
+
+"Edith! Edith! came again through the hush, a hush so deep that
+Sweetwater received the impression that the house was empty save
+for patient and nurse.
+
+This discovery had its effects upon him. Why should he subject this
+young and loving girl to further pain? He had already learned more
+than he had expected to. The rest would come with time. But at the
+first intimation he gave of leaving, she lost her abstracted air and
+turned with absolute eagerness towards him.
+
+"One moment, said she. "You are a stranger and I do not know your
+name or your purpose here. But I cannot let you go without begging
+you not to mention to any one in this town that Mr. Brotherson has
+any interest in the lady whose name we must not speak. Do not
+repeat that delirious cry you have heard or betray in any way our
+intense and fearful interest in this young lady's strange death.
+You have shown me a letter. Do not speak of that letter, I entreat
+you. Help us to retain our secret a little longer. Only the doctor
+and myself know what awaits Mr. Brotherson if he lives. I had to
+tell the doctor, but a doctor reveals nothing. Promise that you
+will not either, at least till this crisis is passed. It will help
+my father and it will help me; and we need all the help we can get."
+
+Sweetwater allowed himself one minute of thought, then he earnestly
+replied:
+
+"I will keep your secret for to-day, and longer, if possible."
+
+"Thank you, she cried; "thank you. I thought I saw kindness in your
+face." And she again prepared to close the door.
+
+But Sweetwater had one more question to ask. "Pardon me, said he,
+as he stepped down on the walk, "you say that this is a critical day
+with your patient. Is that why every one whom I have seen so far
+wears such a look of anxiety?"
+
+"Yes, yes," she cried, giving him one other glimpse of her lovely,
+agitated face. "There's but one feeling in town to-day, but one
+hope, and, as I believe, but one prayer. That the man whom every
+one loves and every one trusts may live to run these Works."
+
+"Edith! Edith!" rose in ceaseless reiteration from within.
+
+But it rang but faintly now in the ears of our detective. The door
+had fallen to, and Sweetwater's share in the anxieties of that
+household was over.
+
+Slowly he moved away. He was in a confused yet elated condition of
+mind. Here was food for a thousand new thoughts and conjectures.
+An Orlando Brotherson and an Oswald Brotherson - relatives possibly,
+strangers possibly; but whether relatives or strangers, both given
+to signing their letters with their initials simply; and both the
+acknowledged admirers of the deceased Miss Challoner. But she had
+loved only one, and that one, Oswald. It not difficult to recognise
+the object of this high hearted woman's affections in this man whose
+struggle with the master-destroyer had awakened the solicitude of a
+whole town.
+
+
+
+XXIV
+
+SUSPENSE
+
+
+Ten minutes after Sweetwater's arrival in the village streets, he
+was at home with the people he found there. His conversation with
+Doris in the doorway of her home had been observed by the curious
+and far-sighted, and the questions asked and answered had made him
+friends at once. Of course, he could tell them nothing, but that
+did not matter, he had seen and talked with Doris and their idolised
+young manager was no worse and might possibly soon be better.
+
+Of his own affairs - of his business with Doris and the manager,
+they asked nothing. All ordinary interests were lost in the stress
+of their great suspense.
+
+It was the same in the bar-room of the one hotel. Without resorting
+to more than a question or two, he readily learned all that was
+generally known of Oswald Brotherson. Every one was talking about
+him, and each had some story to tell illustrative of his kindness,
+his courage and his quick mind. The Works had never produced a man
+of such varied capabilities and all round sympathies. To have him
+for manager meant the greatest good which could befall this little
+community.
+
+His rise had been rapid. He had come from the east three years
+before, new to the work. Now, he was the one man there. Of his
+relationships east, family or otherwise, nothing was said. For
+them his life began and ended in Derby, and Sweetwater could see,
+though no actual expression was given to the feeling, that there
+was but one expectation in regard to him and Doris, to whose
+uncommon beauty and sweetness they all seemed fully alive. And
+Sweetwater wondered, as many of us have wondered, at the gulf
+frequently existing between fancy and fact.
+
+Later there came a small excitement. The doctor was seen riding by
+on his way to the sick man. From the window where he sat, Sweetwater
+watched him pass up the street and take the road he had himself so
+lately traversed. It was so straight a one and led so directly
+northward that he could follow with his eye the doctor's whole
+course, and even get a glimpse of his figure as he stepped from the
+buggy and proceeded to tie up the horse. There was an energy about
+him pleasing to Sweetwater. He might have much to do with this
+doctor. If Oswald Brotherson died - but he was not willing to
+consider this possibility - yet. His personal sympathies, to
+say nothing of his professional interest in the mystery to which
+this man - and this man only - possibly held the key, alike
+forbade. He would hope, as these others were hoping, and if he did
+not count the minutes, he at least saw every move of the old horse
+waiting with drooping head and the resignation of long custom for
+the re-appearance of his master with his news of life or death.
+
+And so an hour - two hours passed. Others were watching the old
+horse now. The street showed many an eager figure with head turned
+northward. From the open door-ways women stepped, looked in the
+direction of their anxiety and retreated to their work again.
+Suspense was everywhere; the moments dragged like hours; it became
+so keen at last that some impatient hearts could no longer stand it.
+A woman put her baby into another woman's arms and hurried up the
+road; another followed, then another; then an old man, bowed with
+years and of tottering steps, began to go that way, halting a dozen
+times before he reached the group now collected in the dusty highway,
+near but not too near that house. As Sweetwater's own enthusiasm
+swelled at this sight, he thought of the other Brotherson with his
+theories and active advocacy for reform, and wondered if men and
+women would forego their meals and stand for hours in the keen
+spring wind just to be the first to hear if he were to live or die.
+He knew that he himself would not. But he had suffered much both
+in his pride and his purse at the hands of the Brooklyn inventor;
+and such despoliation is not a reliable basis for sympathy. He
+was questioning his own judgment in this matter and losing himself
+in the mazes of past doubts and conjectures when a sudden change
+took place in the aspect of the street; he saw people running, and
+in another moment saw why. The doctor had shown himself on the
+porch which all were watching. Was he coming out? No, he stands
+quite still, runs his eye over the people waiting quietly in the
+road, and beckons to one of the smaller boys. The child, with
+upturned face, stands listening to what he has to say, then starts
+on a run for the village. He is stopped, pulled about, questioned,
+and allowed to run on. Many rush forth to meet him. He is panting,
+but gleeful. Mr. Brotherson has waked up conscious, and the doctor
+says, HE WILL LIVE.
+
+
+
+XXV
+
+THE OVAL HUT
+
+
+That night Dr. Fenton had a visitor. We know that visitor and we
+almost know what his questions were, if not the answers of the good
+doctor. Nevertheless, it may be better to listen to a part at
+least of their conversation. Sweetwater, who knew when to be frank
+and open, as well as when to be reserved and ambiguous, made no
+effort to disguise the nature of his business or his chief cause
+of interest in Oswald Brotherson. The eye which met his was too
+penetrating not to detect the smallest attempt at subterfuge;
+besides, Sweetwater had no need to hide his errand; it was one of
+peace, and it threatened nobody - "the more's the pity, thought he
+in uneasy comment to himself, as he realised the hopelessness of
+the whole situation.
+
+His first word, therefore, was a plain announcement.
+
+"Dr. Fenton, my name is Sweetwater. I am from New York, and
+represent for the nonce, Mr. Challoner, whose name I have simply
+to mention, for you to understand that my business is with Mr.
+Brotherson whom I am sorry to find seriously, if not dangerously,
+ill. Will you tell me how long you think it will be before I can
+have a talk with him on a subject which I will not disguise from
+you may prove a very exciting one?
+
+"Weeks, weeks," returned the doctor. "Mr. Brotherson has been a
+very sick man and the only hope I have of his recovery is the fact
+that he is ignorant of his trouble or that he has any cause for
+doubt or dread. Were this happy condition of things to be disturbed,
+ - were the faintest rumour of sorrow or disaster to reach him in
+his present weakened state, I should fear a relapse, with all its
+attendant dangers. What then, if any intimation should be given
+him of the horrible tragedy suggested by the name you have
+mentioned? The man would die before your eyes. Mr. Challoner's
+business will have to wait.
+
+"That I see; but if I knew when I might speak - "
+
+"I can give you no date. Typhoid is a treacherous complaint; he
+has the best of nurses and the chances are in favour of a quick
+recovery; but we never can be sure. You had better return to New
+York. Later, you can write me if you wish, or Mr. Challoner can.
+You may have confidence in my reply; it will not mislead you.
+
+Sweetwater muttered his thanks and rose. Then he slowly sat down
+again.
+
+"Dr. Fenton, he began, "you are a man to be trusted. I'm in a devil
+of a fix, and there is just a possibility that you may be able to
+help me out. It is the general opinion in New York, as you may know,
+that Miss Challoner committed suicide. But the circumstances do not
+fully bear out this theory, nor can Mr. Challoner be made to accept
+it. Indeed, he is so convinced of its falsehood, that he stands
+ready to do anything, pay anything, suffer anything, to have this
+distressing blight removed from his daughter's good name. Mr.
+Brotherson was her dearest friend, and as such may have the clew to
+this mystery, but Mr. Brotherson may not be in a condition to speak
+for several weeks. Meanwhile, Mr. Challoner must suffer from great
+suspense unless - a pause during which he searched the doctor's face
+with a perfectly frank and inquiring expression - " unless some one
+else can help us out. Dr. Fenton, can you?"
+
+The doctor did not need to speak; his expression conveyed his answer.
+
+"No more than another, said he. "Except for what Doris felt
+compelled to tell me, I know as little as yourself. Mr. Brotherson's
+delirium took the form of calling continually upon one name. I did
+not know this name, but Doris did, also the danger lurking in the
+fact that he had yet to hear of the tragedy which had robbed him of
+this woman to whom he was so deeply attached. So she told me just
+this much. That the Edith whose name rung so continuously in our
+ears was no other than the Miss Challoner of New York of whose death
+and its tragic circumstances the papers have been full; that their
+engagement was a secret one unshared so far as she knew by any one
+but herself. That she begged me to preserve this secret and to give
+her all the help I could when the time came for him to ask questions.
+Especially did she entreat me to be with her at the crisis. I was,
+but his waking was quite natural. He did not ask for Miss Challoner;
+he only inquired how long he had been ill and whether Doris had
+received a letter during that time. She had not received one, a
+fact which seemed to disappoint him; but she carried it off so gaily
+(she is a wonderful girl, Mr. Sweetwater - the darling of all our
+hearts), saying that he must not be so egotistical as to think that
+the news of his illness had gone beyond Derby, that he soon recovered
+his spirits and became a very promising convalescent. That is all I
+know about the matter; little more, I take it, than you know yourself.
+
+Sweetwater nodded; he had expected nothing from the doctor, and was
+not disappointed at his failure. There were two strings to his bow,
+and the one proving valueless, he proceeded to test the other.
+
+"You have mentioned Miss Scott, as the confidante - and only
+confidante of this unhappy pair, said he. "Would it be possible
+ - can you make it possible for me to see her?
+
+It was a daring proposition; he understood this at once from the
+doctor's expression; and, fearing a hasty rebuff, he proceeded to
+supplement his request with a few added arguments, urged with such
+unexpected address and show of reason that Dr. Fenton's aspect
+visibly softened and in the end he found himself ready to promise
+that he would do what he could to secure his visitor the interview
+he desired if he would come to the house the next day at the time
+of his own morning visit.
+
+This was as much as the young detective could expect, and having
+expressed his thanks, he took his leave in anything but a
+discontented frame of mind. With so powerful an advocate as the
+doctor, he felt confident that he should soon be able to conquer
+this young girl's reticence and learn all that was to be learned
+from any one but Mr. Brotherson himself. In the time which must
+elapse between that happy hour and the present, he would circulate
+and learn what he could about the prospective manager. But he
+soon found that he could not enter the Works without a permit, and
+this he was hardly in a position to demand; so he strolled about
+the village instead, and later wandered away into the forest.
+
+Struck by the inviting aspect of a narrow and little used road
+opening from the highway shortly above the house where his interests
+were just then centred, he strolled into the heart of the spring
+woods till he came to a depression where a surprise awaited him, in
+the shape of a peculiar structure rising from its midst where it
+just fitted, or so nearly fitted that one could hardly walk about
+it without brushing the surrounding tree trunks. Of an oval shape,
+with its door facing the approach, it nestled there, a wonder to the
+eye and the occasion of considerable speculation to his inquiring
+mind. It had not been long built, as was shown very plainly by the
+fresh appearance of the unpainted boards of which it was constructed;
+and while it boasted of a door, as I've already said, there were no
+evidences visible of any other break in the smooth, neatly finished
+walls. A wooden ellipse with a roof but no windows; such it
+appeared and such it proved to be. A mystery to Sweetwater's eyes,
+and like all mysteries, interesting. For what purpose had it been
+built and why this isolation? It was too flimsy for a reservoir
+and too expensive for the wild freak of a crank.
+
+A nearer view increased his curiosity, In the projection of the
+roof over the curving sides he found fresh food for inquiry. As he
+examined it in the walk he made around the whole structure, he came
+to a place where something like a hinge became visible and further
+on another. The roof was not simply a roof; it was also a lid
+capable of being raised for the air and light which the lack of
+windows necessitated. This was an odd discovery indeed, giving to
+the uncanny structure the appearance of a huge box, the cover of
+which could be raised or lowered at pleasure. And again he asked
+himself for what it could be intended? What enterprise, even of the
+great Works, could demand a secrecy so absolute that such pains as
+these should be taken to shut out all possibility of a prying eye.
+Nothing in his experience supplied him with an answer.
+
+He was still looking up at these hinges, with glance which took
+in at the same time the nearness and extreme height of the trees by
+which this sylvan mystery was surrounded, when a sound from the road
+on the opposite side of the hollow brought his conjectures to a
+standstill and sent him hurrying on to the nearest point from which
+that road became visible.
+
+A team was approaching. He could hear the heavy tread of horses
+working their laborious way through trees whose obstructing branches
+swished before and behind them. They were bringing in a load for
+this shed, whose uses he would consequently soon understand.
+Grateful for his good luck - for his was a curiosity which could
+not stand defeat - he took a few steps into the wood, and from the
+vantage point of a concealing cluster of bushes, fixed his eyes
+upon the spot where the road opened into the hollow.
+
+Something blue moved there, and in another moment, to his great
+amazement, there stepped into view the spirited form of Doris Scott,
+who if he had given the matter a thought he would have supposed to
+be sitting just then by the bedside of her patient, a half mile
+back on the road.
+
+She was dressed for the woods in a blue skirt and jacket and moved
+like a leader in front of a heavily laden wagon now coming to a
+standstill before the closely shut shed - if such we may call it.
+
+"I have a key," so she called out to the driver who had paused for
+orders. "When I swing the doors wide, drive straight in."
+
+Sweetwater took a look at the wagon. It was piled high with large
+wooden boxes on more than one of which he could see scrawled the
+words: 0. Brotherson, Derby, Pa.
+
+This explained her presence, but the boxes told nothing. They were
+of all sizes and shapes, and some of them so large that the
+assistance of another man was needed to handle them. Sweetwater was
+about to offer his services when a second man appeared from somewhere
+in the rear, and the detective's attention being thus released from
+the load out of which he could make nothing, he allowed it to
+concentrate upon the young girl who had it in charge and who, for
+many reasons, was the one person of supreme importance to him.
+
+She had swung open the two wide doors, and now stood waiting for
+horse and wagon to enter. With locks flying free - she wore no
+bonnet - she presented a picture of ever increasing interest to
+Sweetwater. Truly she was a very beautiful girl, buoyant, healthy
+and sweet; as unlike as possible his preconceived notions of Miss
+Challoner's humble little protegee. Her brown hair of a rich
+chestnut hue, was in itself a wonder. On no head, even in the great
+city he had just left, had he seen such abundance, held in such
+modest restraint. Nature had been partial to this little working
+girl and given her the chevelure of a queen.
+
+But this was nothing. No one saw this aureole when once the eye
+had rested on her features and caught the full nobility of their
+expression and the lurking sweetness underlying her every look.
+She herself made the charm and whether placed high or placed low,
+must ever attract the eye and afterwards lure the heart, by an
+individuality which hardly needed perfect features in which to
+express itself.
+
+Young yet, but gifted, as girls of her class often are, with the
+nicest instincts and purest aspirations, she showed the elevation
+
+of her thoughts both in her glance and the poise with which she
+awaited events. Sweetwater watched her with admiration as she
+superintended the unloading of the wagon and the disposal of the
+various boxes on the floor within; but as nothing she said during
+the process was calculated to afford the least enlightenment in
+regard to their contents, he presently wearied of his inaction and
+turned back towards the highway, comforting himself with the
+reflection that in a few short hours he would have her to himself
+when nothing but a blunder on his part should hinder him from
+sounding her young mind and getting such answers to his questions
+as the affair in which he was so deeply interested, demanded.
+
+
+
+XXVI
+
+SWEETWATER RETURNS
+
+
+"You see me again, Miss Scott. I hope that yesterday's intrusion
+has not prejudiced you against me.
+
+"I have no prejudices, was her simple but firm reply. "I am only
+hurried and very anxious. The doctor is with Mr. Brotherson just
+now; but he has several other equally sick patients to visit and I
+dare not keep him here too long.
+
+"Then you will welcome my abruptness. Miss Scott, here is a letter
+from Mr. Challoner. It will explain my position. As you will see,
+his only desire is to establish the fact that his daughter did not
+commit suicide. She was all he had in the world, and the thought
+that she could, for any reason, take her own life is unbearable to
+him. Indeed, he will not believe she did so, evidence or no
+evidence. May I ask if you agree with him? You have seen Miss
+Challoner, I believe. Do you think she was the woman to plunge a
+dagger in her heart in a place as public as a hotel reception room?
+
+"No, Mr. Sweetwater. I'm a poor working girl, with very little
+education and almost no knowledge of the world and such ladies as
+she. But something tells me for all that, that she was too nice to
+do this. I saw her once and it made me want to be quiet and kind
+and beautiful like her. I never shall think she did anything so
+horrible. Nor will Mr. Brotherson ever believe it. He could not
+and live. You see, I am talking to you as if you knew him, - the
+kind of man he is and just how he feels towards Miss Challoner. He
+is - Her voice trailed off and a look, uncommon and almost elevated,
+illumined her face. "I will not tell you what he is; you will know,
+if you ever see him."
+
+"If the favourable opinion of a whole town makes a good fellow, he
+ought to be of the best," returned Sweetwater, with his most honest
+smile. "I hear but one story of him wherever I turn."
+
+"There is but one story to tell," she smiled, and her head drooped
+softly, but with no air of self-consciousness.
+
+Sweetwater watched her for a moment, and then remarked: "I'm going
+to take one thing for granted; that you are as anxious as we are to
+clear Miss Challoner's memory."
+
+"0 yes, 0 yes."
+
+"More than that, that you are ready and eager to help us. Your
+very looks show that."
+
+"You are right; I would do anything to help you. But who can a
+girl like me do? Nothing; nothing. I know too little. Mr.
+Challoner must see that when you tell him I'm only the daughter
+of a foreman."
+
+"And a friend of Mr. Brotherson," supplemented Sweetwater.
+
+"Yes," she smiled, "he would want me to say so. But that's his
+goodness. I don't deserve the honour."
+
+"His friend and therefore his confidante," Sweetwater continued.
+"He has talked to you about Miss Challoner?"
+
+"He had to. There was nobody else to whom he could talk; and then,
+I had seen her and could understand."
+
+"Where did you see her?"
+
+"In New York. I was there once with father, who took me to see her.
+I think she had asked Mr. Brotherson to send his little friend to
+her hotel if ever we came to New York."
+
+"That was some time ago?"
+
+"We were there in June."
+
+"And you have corresponded ever since with Miss Challoner?"
+
+"She has been good enough to write, and I have ventured at times
+to answer her."
+
+The suspicion which might have come to some men found no harbour in
+Sweetwater's mind. This young girl was beautiful, there was no
+denying that, beautiful in a somewhat startling and quite unusual
+way; but there was nothing in her bearing, nothing in Miss
+Challoner's letters to indicate that she had been a cause for
+jealousy in the New York lady's mind. He, therefore, ignored this
+possibility, pursuing his inquiry along the direct lines he had
+already laid out for himself. Smiling a little, but in a very
+earnest fashion, he pointed to the letter she still held and quietly
+said:
+
+"Remember that I'm not speaking for myself, Miss Scott, when I seem
+a little too persistent and inquiring. You have corresponded with
+Miss Challoner; you have been told the fact of her secret engagement
+to Mr. Brotherson and you have been witness to his conduct and manner
+for the whole time he has been separated from her. Do you, when you
+think of it carefully, recall anything in the whole story of this
+romance which would throw light upon the cruel tragedy which has so
+unexpectedly ended it? Anything, Miss Scott? Straws show which way
+the stream flows."
+
+She was vehement, instantly vehement, in her disclaimer.
+
+"I can answer at once, said she, "because I have thought of nothing
+else for all these weeks. Here all was well. Mr. Brotherson was
+hopeful and happy and believed in her happiness and willingness to
+wait for his success. And this success was coming so fast! Oh,
+how can we ever tell him! How can we ever answer his questions even,
+or keep him satisfied and calm until he is strong enough to hear the
+truth. I've had to acknowledge already that I have had no letter
+from her for weeks. She never wrote to him directly, you know, and
+she never sent him messages, but he knew that a letter to me, was
+also a letter to him and I can see that he is troubled by this long
+silence, though he says I was right not to let her know of his
+illness and that I must continue to keep her in ignorance of it till
+he is quite well again and can write to her himself. It is hard to
+hear him talk like this and not look sad or frightened.
+
+Sweetwater remembered Miss Challoner's last letter, and wished he
+had it here to give her. In default of this, he said:
+
+"Perhaps this not hearing may act in the way of a preparation for
+the shock which must come to him sooner or later. Let us hope so,
+Miss Scott.
+
+Her eyes filled.
+
+"Nothing can prepare him," said she. Then added, with a yearning
+accent, "I wish I were older or had more experience. I should not
+feel so helpless. But the gratitude I owe him will give me strength
+when I need it most. Only I wish the suffering might be mine rather
+than his."
+
+Unconscious of any self-betrayal, she lifted her eyes, startling
+Sweetwater by the beauty of her look. "I don't think I'm so sorry
+for Oswald Brotherson," he murmured to himself as he left her. "He's
+a more fortunate man than he knows, however deeply he may feel the
+loss of his first sweetheart.
+
+That evening the disappointed Sweetwater took the train for New
+York. He had failed to advance the case in hand one whit, yet the
+countenance he showed Mr. Gryce at their first interview was not
+a wholly gloomy one.
+
+"Fifty dollars to the bad!" was his first laconic greeting. "All
+I have learned is comprised in these two statements. The second
+O. B. is a fine fellow; and not intentionally the cause of our
+tragedy. He does not even know about it. He's down with the fever
+at present and they haven't told him. When he's better we may hear
+something; but I doubt even that.
+
+"Tell me about it."
+
+Sweetwater complied; and such is the unconsciousness with which we
+often encounter the pivotal circumstance upon which our future or
+the future of our most cherished undertaking hangs, he omitted
+from his story, the sole discovery which was of any real importance
+in the unravelling of the mystery in which they were so deeply
+concerned. He said nothing of his walk in the woods or of what he
+saw there.
+
+"A meagre haul," he remarked at the close.
+
+"But that's as it should be, if you and I are right in our
+impressions and the clew to this mystery lies here in the character
+and daring of Orlando Brotherson. That's why I'm not down in the
+mouth. Which goes to show what a grip my prejudices have on me."
+
+"As prejudiced as a bulldog."
+
+"Exactly. By the way, what news of the gentleman I've just
+mentioned? Is he as serene in my absence as when under my eye?"
+
+"More so; he looks like a man on the verge of triumph. But I fear
+the triumph he anticipates has nothing to do with our affairs. All
+his time and thought is taken up with his invention."
+
+"You discourage me, sir. And now to see Mr. Challoner. Small
+comfort can I carry him."
+
+
+
+XXVII
+
+THE IMAGE OF DREAD
+
+
+In the comfortable little sitting-room of the Scott cottage Doris
+stood, looking eagerly from the window which gave upon the road.
+Behind her on the other side of the room, could be seen through a
+partly opened door, a neatly spread bed, with a hand lying quietly
+on the patched coverlet. It was a strong looking hand which, even
+when quiescent, conveyed the idea of purpose and vitality. As
+Doris said, the fingers never curled up languidly, but always with
+the hint of a clench. Several weeks had passed since the departure
+of Sweetwater and the invalid was fast gaining strength. To-morrow,
+he would be up.
+
+Was Doris thinking of him? Undoubtedly, for her eyes often flashed
+his way; but her main attention was fixed upon the road, though no
+one was in sight at the moment. Some one had passed for whose
+return she looked; some one whom, if she had been asked to describe,
+she would have called a tall, fine-looking man of middle age, of a
+cultivated appearance seldom seen in this small manufacturing town;
+seldom seen, possibly, in any town. He had glanced up at the window
+as he went by, in a manner too marked not to excite her curiosity.
+Would he look up again when he came back? She was waiting there
+to see. Why, she did not know. She was not used to indulging in
+petty suppositions of this kind; her life was too busy, her
+anxieties too keen. The great dread looming ever before her, - the
+dread of that hour when she must speak, - left her very little heart
+for anything dissociated with this coming event. For a girl of
+seventeen she was unusually thoughtful. Life had been hard in this
+little cottage since her mother died, or rather she had felt its
+responsibilities keenly.
+
+Life itself could not be hard where Oswald Brotherson lived; neither
+to man, nor woman. The cheer of some natures possesses a divine
+faculty. If it can help no other way, it does so by the aid of its
+own light. Such was the character of this man's temperament. The
+cottage was a happy place; only - she never fathomed the depths of
+that only. If in these days she essayed at times to do so, she gave
+full credit to the Dread which rose ever before her - rose like a
+ghost! She, Doris, led by inscrutable Fate, was waiting to hurt him
+who hurt nobody; whose mere presence was a blessing.
+
+But her interest had been caught to-day, caught by this stranger,
+and when during her eager watch the small messenger from the Works
+came to the door with the usual daily supply of books and magazines
+for the patient, she stepped out on the porch to speak to him and
+to point out the gentleman who was now rapidly returning from his
+stroll up the road.
+
+"Who is that, Johnny? she asked. "You know everybody who comes to
+town. What is the name of the gentleman you see coming?"
+
+The boy looked, searched his memory, not without some show of
+misgiving.
+
+"A queer name, he admitted at last. "I never heard the likes of it
+here before. Shally something. Shally - Shally - "
+
+"Challoner?"
+
+"Yes, that's it. How could you guess? He's from New York. Nobody
+knows why he's here. Don't seem to have no business."
+
+"Well, never mind. Run on, Johnny. And don't forget to come
+earlier to-morrow; Mr. Brotherson gets tired waiting."
+
+"Does he? I'll come quick then; quick as I can run." And he sped
+off at a pace which promised well for the morrow.
+
+Challoner! There was but one Challoner in the world for Doris
+Scott, - Edith's father. Was this he? It must be, or why this
+haunting sense of something half remembered as she caught a glimpse
+of his face. Edith's father! and he was approaching, approaching
+rapidly, on his way back to town. Would he stop this time? As the
+possibility struck her, she trembled and drew back, entering the
+house, but pausing in the hall with her ear turned to the road.
+She had not closed the door; something within - a hope or a dread
+ - had prevented that. Would he take it as an invitation to come
+in? No, no; she was not ready for such an encounter yet. He might
+speak Edith's name; Oswald might hear and - with a gasp she
+recognised the closeness of his step; heard it lag, almost halt just
+where the path to the house ran into the roadside. But it passed
+on. He was not going to force an interview yet. She could hear him
+retreating further and further away. The event was not for this day,
+thank God! She would have one night at least in which to prepare
+herself.
+
+With a sense of relief so great that she realised, for one shocked
+moment, the full extent of her fears, she hastened back into the
+sitting-room, with her collection of books and pamphlets. A low
+voice greeted her. It came from the adjoining room.
+
+"Doris, come here, sweet child. I want you."
+
+How she would have bounded joyously at the summons, had not that
+Dread raised its bony finger in every call from that dearly loved
+voice. As it was, her feet moved slowly, lingering at the sound.
+But they carried her to his side at last, and once there, she smiled.
+
+"See what an armful," she cried in joyous greeting, as she held out
+the bundle she had brought. "You will be amused all day. Only, do
+not tire yourself."
+
+"I do not want the papers, Doris; not yet. There's something else
+which must come first. Doris, I have decided to let you write to
+her. I'm so much better now, she will not feel alarmed. I must
+ - must get a word from her. I'm starving for it. I lie here and
+can think of nothing else. A message - one little message of six
+short words would set me on my feet again. So get your paper and
+pen, dear child, and write her one of your prettiest letters."
+
+Had he loved her, he would have perceived the chill which shook
+her whole body, as he spoke. But his first thought, his penetrating
+thought, was not for her and he saw only the answering glance, the
+patient smile. She had not expected him to see more. She knew that
+she was quite safe from the divining look; otherwise, he would have
+known her secret long ago.
+
+"I'm ready," said she. But she did not lay down her bundle. She
+was not ready for her task, poor child. She quailed before it. She
+quailed so much that she feared to stir lest he should see that she
+had no command over her movements.
+
+The man who watched without seeing wondered that she stood so still
+and spoke so briefly. But only for a moment. He thought he
+understood her hesitation, and a look of great earnestness replaced
+his former one of grave decision.
+
+"I know that in doing this I am going beyond my sacred compact with
+Miss Challoner," he said. "I never thought of illness, - at least,
+of illness on my part. I never dreamt that I, always so well, always
+so full of life, could know such feebleness as this, feebleness which
+is all of the body, Doris, leaving the mind free to dream and long.
+Talk of her, child. Tell me all over again just how she looked and
+spoke that day you saw her in New York."
+
+"Would it not be better for me to write my letter first? Papa will
+be coming soon and Truda can never cook your bird as you like it."
+
+Surprised now by something not quite natural in her manner, he caught
+at her hand and held her as she was moving away.
+
+"You are tired," said he. "I've wearied you with my commission and
+complaints. Forgive me, dear child, and -"
+
+"You are mistaken," she interrupted softly. "I am not tired; I only
+wished to do the important thing first. Shall I get my desk? Do
+you really wish me to write?"
+
+"Yes," said he, softly dropping her hand. "I wish you to write. It
+will ensure me good sleep, and sleep will make me strong. A few
+words, Doris; just a few words."
+
+She nodded; turning quickly away to hide her tears. His smile had
+gone to her very soul. It was always a beautiful one, his chief
+personal attraction, but at this moment it seemed to concentrate
+within it the unspoken fervours and the boundless expectations of
+a great love, and she who was the aim and cause of all this
+sweetness lay in unresponsive silence in a distant tomb!
+
+But Doris' own smile was not lacking in encouragement and beauty
+when she came back a few minutes later and sat down by his side to
+write. His melted before it, leaving his eyes very earnest as he
+watched her bending figure and the hard-worked little hand at its
+unaccustomed task.
+
+"I must give her daily exercises," he decided within himself. "That
+look of pain shows how difficult this work is for her. It must be
+made easy at any cost to my time. Such beauty calls for
+accomplishment. I must not neglect so plain a duty."
+
+Meantime, she was struggling to find words in face of that great
+Dread. She had written Dear Miss Challoner and was staring in
+horror at the soulless words. Only her sense of duty upheld her.
+Gladly would she have torn the sheet in two and rushed away. How
+could she add sentences to this hollow phrase, the mere employment
+of which seemed a sacrilege. Dear Miss Challoner. Oh, she was
+dear, but -
+
+Unconsciously the young head drooped, and the pen slid from her hand.
+
+"I cannot," she murmured, "I cannot think what to say."
+
+"Shall I help you?" came softly from the bed. "I'll try and not
+forget that it is Doris writing."
+
+"If you will be so good," she answered, with renewed courage.
+"I can put the words down if you will only find them for me."
+
+"Write then. 'Dear Miss Challoner!"
+
+"I have already written that."
+
+"Why do you shudder?"
+
+"I'm cold. I've been cold all day. But never mind that, Mr.
+Brotherson. Tell me how to begin my letter."
+
+" This way. 'I've not been able to answer your kind letter, because
+I have had to play nurse for some three or four weeks to a very
+fretful and exacting patient.' Have you written that?"
+
+" No," said Doris, bending over her desk till her curls fell in a
+tangle over her white cheeks. " I do not like to," she protested
+at last, with an attempt at naivete which seemed real enough to him.
+
+" Well, leave out the fretful if you must, but keep in the exacting.
+I have been exacting, you know."
+
+Silence, broken only by the scratching of the stubborn,
+illy-directed pen.
+
+"It's down," she whispered. She said, afterward, that it was like
+writing with a ghost looking over one's shoulder.
+
+"Then add, 'Mr. Brotherson has had a slight attack of fever, but he
+is getting well fast, and will soon -, Do I run on too quickly?"
+
+"No, no, I can follow."
+
+"But not without losing breath; eh, Doris?"
+
+As he laughed, she smiled. There was a heroism in that smile,
+Oswald Brotherson, of which you knew nothing.
+
+"You might speak a little more slowly," she admitted.
+
+Quietly he repeated the last phrase. "'But he is getting well fast
+and will soon be ready to take up the management of the Works which
+was given him just before he was taken ill.' That will show her
+that I am working up," he brightly remarked as Doris carefully
+penned the last word. "Of myself you need say nothing more, unless
+ -" he paused and his face took on a wistful look which Doris dared
+not meet; "unless - but no, no, she must think it has been only a
+passing indisposition. If she knew I had been really ill, she would
+suffer, and perhaps act imprudently or suffer and not dare to act
+at all, which might be sadder for her still. Leave it where it is
+and begin about yourself. Write a good deal about yourself, so that
+she will see that you are not worried and that all is well with us
+here. Cannot you do that without assistance? Surely you can tell
+her about that last piece of embroidery you showed me. She will be
+glad to hear - why, Doris!"
+
+" Oh, Mr. Brotherson," the poor child burst out, "you must let me
+cry! I'm so glad to see you better and interested in all sorts of
+things. These are not tears of grief. I - I - but I'm forgetting
+what the doctor told me. You are growing excited, and I was to see
+that you were calm, always calm. I will take my desk away. I will
+write the rest in the other room, while you look at the magazines."
+
+" But bring your letter back for me to seal. I want to see it in
+its envelope. Oh, Doris, you are a good little girl!"
+
+She shook her head, and hastened to hide herself from him in the
+other room; and it was a long time before she came back with the
+letter folded and in its envelope. When she did, her face was
+composed and her manner natural. She had quite made up her mind
+what her duty was and how she was going to perform it.
+
+"Here is the letter," said she, laying it in his outstretched hand.
+Then she turned her back. She knew, with a woman's unerring
+instinct why he wished to handle it before it went. She felt that
+kiss he folded away in it, in every fibre of her aroused and
+sympathetic heart, but the hardest part of the ordeal was over and
+her eyes beamed softly when she turned again to take it from his
+hand and affix the stamp.
+
+"You will mail it yourself?" he asked. "I should like to have you
+put it into the box with your own hand."
+
+"I will put it in to-night, after supper," she promised him.
+
+His smile of contentment assured her that this trial of her courage
+and self-control was not without one blessed result. He would rest
+for several days in the pleasure of what he had done or thought he
+had done. She need not cringe before that image of Dread for two,
+three days at least. Meanwhile, he would grow strong in body, and
+she, perhaps, in spirit. Only one precaution she must take. No
+hint of Mr. Challoner's presence in town must reach him. He must be
+guarded from a knowledge of that fact as certainly as from the more
+serious one which lay behind it.
+
+
+
+XXVIII
+
+I HOPE NEVER TO SEE THAT MAN
+
+
+That this would be a difficult thing to do, Doris was soon to
+realise. Mr. Challoner continued to pass the house twice a day
+and the time finally came when he ventured up the walk.
+
+Doris was in the window and saw him coming. She slipped softly
+out and intercepted him before he had stepped upon the porch. She
+had caught up her hat as she passed through the hall, and was
+fitting it to her head as he looked up and saw her.
+
+"Miss Scott?" he asked.
+
+"Yes, Mr. Challoner."
+
+"You know me?" he went on, one foot on the step and one still on
+the walk.
+
+Before replying she closed the door behind her. Then as she noted
+his surprise she carefully explained:
+
+"Mr. Brotherson, our boarder, is just recovering from typhoid. He
+is still weak and acutely susceptible to the least noise. I was
+afraid that our voices might disturb him. Do you mind walking a
+little way up the road? That is, if your visit was intended for me."
+
+Her flush, the beauty which must have struck ever him, but more than
+all else her youth, seemed to reconcile him to this unconventional
+request. Bowing, he took his foot from the step, saying, as she
+joined him:
+
+" Yes, you are the one I wanted to see; that is, to-day. Later, I
+hope to have the privilege of a conversation with Mr. Brotherson."
+
+She gave him one quick look, trembling so that he offered her his
+arm with a fatherly air.
+
+"I see that you understand my errand here," he proceeded, with a
+grave smile, meant as she knew for her encouragement. "I am glad,
+because we can go at once to the point. Miss Scott," he continued
+in a voice from which he no longer strove to keep back the evidences
+of deep feeling, "I have the strongest interest in your patient that
+one man can have in another, where there is no personal
+acquaintanceship. You who have every reason to understand my
+reasons for this, will accept the statement, I hope, as frankly as
+it is made."
+
+She nodded. Her eyes were full of tears, but she did not hesitate
+to raise them. She had the greatest desire to see the face of the
+man who could speak like this to-day, and yet of whose pride and
+sense of superiority his daughter had stood in such awe, that she
+had laid a seal upon the impulses of her heart, and imposed such
+tasks and weary waiting upon her lover. Doris forgot, in meeting
+his softened glance and tender, almost wistful, expression, the
+changes which can be made by a great grief, and only wondered why
+her sweet benefactress had not taken him into her confidence and
+thus, possibly, averted the doom which Doris felt had in some way
+grown out
+of this secrecy.
+
+" Why should she have feared the disapproval of this man?" she
+inwardly queried, as she cast him a confiding look which pleased
+him greatly, as his tone now showed.
+
+"When I lost my daughter, I lost everything," he declared, as they
+walked slowly up the road. "Nothing excites my interest, save that
+which once excited hers. I am told that the deepest interest of
+her life lay here. I am also told that it was an interest quite
+worthy of her. I expect to find it so. I hope with all my heart
+to find it so, and that is why I have come to this town and expect
+to linger till Mr. Brotherson has recovered sufficiently to see me.
+I hope that this will be agreeable to him. I hope that I am not
+presuming too much in cherishing these expectations.
+
+Doris turned her candid eyes upon him.
+
+"I cannot tell; I do not know," said she. "Nobody knows, not even
+the doctor, what effect the news we so dread to give him will have
+upon Mr. Brotherson. You will have to wait - we all shall have to
+wait the results of that revelation. It cannot be kept from him
+much longer. When I return, I shall shrink from his first look, in
+the fear of seeing it betray this dreadful knowledge. Yet I have
+a faithful woman there to keep every one out of his room."
+
+"You have had much to carry for one so young," was Mr. Challoner's
+sympathetic remark. "You must let me help you when that awful
+moment comes. I am at the hotel and shall stay there till Mr.
+Brotherson is pronounced quite well. I have no other duty now in
+life but to sustain him through his trouble and then, with what
+aid he can give, search out and find the cause of my daughter's
+death which I will never admit without the fullest proof, to have
+been one of suicide."
+
+Doris trembled.
+
+"It was not suicide," she declared, vehemently. "I have always
+felt sure that it was not; but to-day I KNOW."
+
+Her hand fell clenched on her breast and her eyes gleamed strangely.
+Mr. Challoner was himself greatly startled. What had happened
+ - what could have happened since yesterday that she should
+emphasise that now?
+
+"I've not told any one," she went on, as he stopped short in the
+road, in his anxiety to understand her. "But I will tell you.
+Only, not here, not with all these people driving past; most of
+whom know me. Come to the house later - this evening, after Mr.
+Brotherson's room is closed for the night. I have a little
+sitting-room on the other side of the hall where we can talk without
+being heard. Would you object to doing that? Am I asking too much
+of you?"
+
+"No, not at all," he assured her." Expect me at eight. Will that
+be too early?"
+
+"No, no. Oh, how those people stared! Let us hasten back or they
+may connect your name with what we want kept secret."
+
+He smiled at her fears, but gave in to her humour; he would see her
+soon again and possibly learn something which would amply repay him,
+both for his trouble and his patience.
+
+But when evening came and she turned to face him in that little
+sitting-room where he had quietly followed her, he was conscious of
+a change in her manner which forbade these high hopes. The gleam
+was gone from her eyes; the tremulous eagerness from her mobile and
+sensitive mouth. She had been thinking in the hours which had
+passed, and had lost the confidence of that one impetuous moment.
+Her greeting betrayed embarrassment and she hesitated painfully
+before she spoke.
+
+"I don't know what you will think of me," she ventured at last,
+motioning to a chair but not sitting herself. "You have had time
+to think over what I said and probably expect something real,
+- some - thing you could tell people. But it isn't like that.
+It's a feeling - a belief. I'm so sure -"
+
+"Sure of what, Miss Scott?"
+
+She gave a glance at the door before stepping up nearer. He had not
+taken the chair she preferred.
+
+"Sure that I have seen the face of the man who murdered her. It
+was in a dream," she whisperingly completed, her great eyes misty
+with awe.
+
+"A dream, Miss Scott?" He tried to hide his disappointment.
+
+"Yes; I knew that it would sound foolish to you; it sounds foolish
+to me. But listen, sir. Listen to what I have to tell and then
+you can judge. I was very much agitated yesterday. I had to
+write a letter at Mr. Brotherson's dictation - a letter to her.
+You can understand my horror and the effort I made to hide my
+emotion. I was quite unnerved. I could not sleep till morning,
+and then - and then - I saw - I hope I can describe it."
+
+Grasping at a near-by chair, she leaned on it for support, closing
+her eyes to all but that inner vision. A breathless moment
+followed, then she murmured in strained tnonotonous tones:
+
+"I see it again - just as I saw it in the early morning - but even
+more plainly, if that is possible. A hall - (I should call it a
+hall, though I don't remember seeing any place like it before),
+with a little staircase at the side, up which there comes a man,
+who stops just at the top and looks intently my way. There is
+fierceness in his face - a look which means no good to anybody
+ - and as his hand goes to his overcoat pocket, drawing out
+something which I cannot describe, but which he handles as if it
+were a pistol, I feel a horrible fear, and - and -" The child was
+staggering, and the hand which was free had sought her heart where
+it lay clenched, the knuckles showing white in the dim light.
+
+Mr. Challoner watched her with dilated eyes, the spell under which
+she spoke falling in some degree upon him. Had she finished? Was
+this all? No; she is speaking again, but very low, almost in a
+whisper.
+
+"There is music - a crash - but I plainly see his other hand approach
+the object he is holding. He takes something from the end - the
+object is pointed my way - I am looking into - into - what? I do
+not know. I cannot even see him now. The space where he stood is
+empty. Everything fades, and I wake with a loud cry in my ears and
+a sense of death here." She had lifted her hand and struck at her
+heart, opening her eyes as she did so. " Yet it was not I who had
+been shot," she added softly.
+
+Mr. Challoner shuddered. This was like the reopening of his
+daughter's grave. But he had entered upon the scene with a full
+appreciation of the ordeal awaiting him and he did not lose his
+calmness, or the control of his judgment.
+
+"Be seated, Miss Scott," he entreated, taking a chair himself.
+"You have described the spot and some of the circumstances of my
+daughter's death as accurately as if you had been there. But you
+have doubtless read a full account of those details in the papers;
+possibly seen pictures which would make the place quite real to
+you. The mind is a strange storehouse. We do not always know what
+lies hidden within it."
+
+"That's true," she admitted. "But the man! I had never seen the
+man, or any picture of him, and his face was clearest of all. I
+should know it if I saw it anywhere. It is imprinted on my memory
+as plainly as yours. Oh, I hope never to see that man!"
+
+Mr. Challoner sighed; he had really anticipated something from the
+interview. The disappointment was keen. A moment of expectation;
+the thrill which comes to us all under the shadow of the
+supernatural, and then - this! a young and imaginative girl's dream,
+convincing to herself but supplying nothing which had not already
+been supplied both by the facts and his own imagination! A man had
+stood at the staircase, and this man had raised his arm. She said
+that she had seen something like a pistol in his hand, but his
+daughter had not been shot. This he thought it well to point out
+to her.
+
+Leaning toward her that he might get her full attention, he waited
+till her eyes met his, then quietly asked:
+
+"Have you ever named this man to yourself?"
+
+She started and dropped her eyes.
+
+"I do not dare to," said she.
+
+"Why?"
+
+"Because I've read in the papers that the man who stood there had
+the same name as -"
+
+"Tell me, Miss Scott."
+
+"As Mr. Brotherson's brother."
+
+"But you do not think it was his brother?"
+
+"I do not know."
+
+"You've never seen his brother?"
+
+"Never."
+
+"Nor his picture?
+
+"No, Mr. Brotherson has none."
+
+"Aren't they friends? Does he never mention Orlando?"
+
+"Very, very rarely. But I've no reason to think they are not on
+good terms. I know they correspond."
+
+"Miss Scott?"
+
+"Yes, Mr. Challoner."
+
+"You must not rely too much upon your dream."
+
+Her eyes flashed to his and then fell again.
+
+"Dreams are not revelations; they are the reproduction of what
+already lies hidden in the mind. I can prove that your dream is
+such."
+
+"How?" She looked startled.
+
+"You speak of seeing something being leveled at you which made you
+think of a pistol."
+
+"Yes, I was looking directly into it."
+
+"But my daughter was not shot. She died from a stab."
+
+Doris' lovely face, with its tender lines and girlish curves, took
+on a strange look of conviction which deepened, rather than melted
+under his indulgent, but penetrating gaze.
+
+"I know that you think so; - but my dream says no. I saw this
+object. It was pointed directly towards me - above all, I saw his
+face. It was the face of one whose finger is on the trigger and
+who means death; and I believe my dream."
+
+Well, it was useless to reason further. Gentle in all else, she
+was immovable so for as this idea was concerned and, seeing this,
+he let the matter go and prepared to take his leave.
+
+She seemed to be quite ready for this. Anxiety about her patient
+had regained its place in her mind and her glance sped constantly
+toward the door. Taking her hand in his, he said some kind words,
+then crossed to the door and opened it. Instantly her finger flew
+to her lips and, obedient to its silent injunction, he took up his
+hat in silence, and was proceeding down the hall, when the bell
+rang, startling them both and causing him to step quickly back.
+
+"Who is it?" she asked. "Father's in and visitors seldom come so
+late."
+
+"Shall I see?"
+
+She nodded, looking strangely troubled as the door swung open,
+revealing the tall, strong figure of a man facing them from the
+porch.
+
+"A stranger," formed itself upon her lips, and she was moving
+forward, when the man suddenly stepped into the glare of the light,
+and she stopped, with a murmur of dismay which pierced Mr.
+Challoner's heart and prepared him for the words which now fell
+shudderingly from her lips:
+
+"It is he! it is he! I said that I should know him wherever I
+saw him." Then with a quiet turn towards the intruder, "Oh, why,
+why, did you come here!"
+
+
+
+XXIX
+
+DO YOU KNOW MY BROTHER
+
+
+Her hands were thrust out to repel, her features were fixed; her
+beauty something wonderful. Orlando Brotherson, thus met, stared
+for a moment at the vision before him, then slowly and with effort
+withdrawing his gaze, he sought the face of Mr. Challoner with the
+first sign of open disturbance that gentleman had ever seen in him.
+
+"Ah," said he, " my welcome is readily understood. I see you far
+from home, sir." And with an ironical bow he turned again to Doris,
+who had dropped her hands, but in whose cheeks the pallor still
+lingered in a way to check the easy flow of words with which he
+might have sought to carry off the situation. "Am I in Oswald
+Brotherson's house?" he asked. "I was directed here. But possibly
+there may be some mistake."
+
+"It is here he lives," said she; moving back automatically till she
+stood again by the threshold of the small room in which she had
+received Mr. Challoner. " Do you wish to see him to-night? If so,
+I fear it is impossible. He has been very ill and is not allowed
+to receive visits from strangers."
+
+"I am not a stranger," announced the newcomer, with a smile few
+could see unmoved, it offered such a contrast to his stern and
+dominating figure. "I thought I heard some words of recognition
+which would prove your knowledge of that fact."
+
+She did not answer. Her lips had parted, but her thought or at
+least the expression of her thought hung suspended in the terror
+of this meeting for which she was not at all prepared. He seemed
+to note this terror, whether or not he understood its cause, and
+smiled again, as he added:
+
+"Mr. Brotherson must have spoken of his brother Orlando. I am he,
+Miss Scott. Will you let me come in now?"
+
+Her eyes sought those of Mr. Challoner, who quietly nodded.
+Immediately she stepped from before the door which her figure had
+guarded and, motioning him to enter, she begged Mr. Challoner, with
+an imploring look, to sustain her in the interview she saw before
+her. He had no desire for this encounter, especially as Mr.
+Brotherson's glance in his direction had been anything but
+conciliatory. He was quite convinced that nothing was to be gained
+by it, but he could not resist her appeal, and followed them into
+the little room whose limited dimensions made the tall Orlando look
+bigger and stronger and more lordly in his self-confidence than ever.
+
+"I am sorry it is so late," she began, contemplating his intrusive
+figure with forced composure. "We have to be very quiet in the
+evenings so as not to disturb your brother's first sleep which is
+of great importance to him."
+
+"Then I'm not to see him to-night?"
+
+"I pray you to wait. He's - he's been a very sick man."
+
+"Dangerously so?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+Orlando continued to regard her with a peculiar awakening gaze,
+showing, Mr. Challoner thought, more interest in her than in his
+brother, and when he spoke it was mechanically and as if in sole
+obedience to the proprieties of the occasion.
+
+"I did not know he was ill till very lately. His last letter was
+a cheerful one, and I supposed that all was right till chance
+revealed the truth. I came on at once. I was intending to come
+anyway. I have business here, as you probably know, Miss Scott."
+
+She shook her head. "I know very little about business," said she.
+
+"My brother has not told you why he expected me?"
+
+"He has not even told me that he expected you."
+
+"No?" The word was highly expressive; there was surprise in it and
+a touch of wonder, but more than all, satisfaction. " Oswald was
+always close-mouthed," he declared. " It's a good fault; I'm
+obliged to the boy."
+
+These last words were uttered with a lightness which imposed upon
+his two highly agitated hearers, causing Mr. Challoner to frown and
+Doris to shrink back in indignation at the man who could indulge in
+a sportive suggestion in presence of such fears, if not of such
+memories, as the situation evoked. But to one who knew the strong
+and self-contained man - to Sweetwater possibly, had he been present,
+ - there was in this very attempt - in his quiet manner and in the
+strange and fitful flash of his ordinarily quick eye, that which
+showed he was labouring - and had been labouring almost from his
+first entrance, under an excitement of thought and feeling which in
+one of his powerfully organised nature must end and that soon in an
+outburst of mysterious passion which would carry everything before
+it. But he did not mean that it should happen here. He was too
+accustomed to self-command to forget himself in this presence. He
+would hold these rampant dogs in leash till the hour of solitude;
+then - a glittering smile twisted his lips as he continued to gaze,
+first at the girl who had just entered his life, and then at the
+man he had every reason to distrust, and with that firm restraint
+upon himself still in full force, remarked, with a courteous
+inclination:
+
+"The hour is late for further conversation. I have a room at the
+hotel and will return to it at once. In the morning I hope to see
+my brother."
+
+He was going, Doris not knowing what to say, Mr. Challoner not
+desirous of detaining him, when there came the sound of a little
+tinkle from the other side of the hall, blanching the young girl's
+cheeks and causing Orlando Brotherson's brows to rise in peculiar
+satisfaction.
+
+"My brother?" he asked.
+
+"Yes," came in faltering reply. "He has heard our voices; I must
+go to him."
+
+"Say that Orlando wishes him a good night," smiled her heart's
+enemy, with a bow of infinite grace.
+
+She shuddered, and was hastening from the room when her glance fell
+on Mr. Challoner. He was pale and looked greatly disturbed. The
+prospect of being left alone with a man whom she had herself
+denounced to him as his daughter's murderer, might prove a tax to
+his strength to which she had no right to subject him. Pausing
+with an appealing air, she made him a slight gesture which he at
+once understood.
+
+" I will accompany you into the hall," said he. "Then if anything
+is wrong, you have but to speak my name."
+
+But Orlando Brotherson, displeased by this move, took a step which
+brought him between the two.
+
+"You can hear her from here if she chooses to speak. There's a
+point to be settled between us before either of us leaves this
+house, and this opportunity is as good as another. Go to my brother,
+Miss Scott; we will await your return."
+
+A flash from the proud banker's eye; but no demur, rather a gesture
+of consent. Doris, with a look of deep anxiety, sped away, and the
+two men stood face to face.
+
+It was one of those moments which men recognise as memorable. What
+had the one to say or the other to hear, worthy of this preamble
+and the more than doubtful relation in which they stood each to each?
+Mr. Challoner had more time than he expected in which to wonder and
+gird himself for whatever suffering or shock awaited him. For,
+Orlando Brotherson, unlike his usual self, kept him waiting while he
+collected his own wits, which, strange to say, seemed to have
+vanished with the girl.
+
+But the question finally came.
+
+"Mr. Challoner, do you know my brother?"
+
+"I have never seen him."
+
+"Do you know him? Does he know you?"
+
+"Not at all. We are strangers."
+
+It was said honestly. They did not know each other. Mr. Challoner
+was quite correct in his statement.
+
+But the other had his doubts. Why shouldn't he have? The
+coincidence of finding this mourner if not avenger of Edith
+Challoner, in his own direct radius again, at a spot so distant,
+so obscure and so disconnected with any apparent business reason,
+was certainly startling enough unless the tie could be found in
+his brother's name and close relationship to himself.
+
+He, therefore, allowed himself to press the question:
+
+"Men sometimes correspond who do not know each other. You knew
+that a Brotherson lived here?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"And hoped to learn something about me
+
+"No; my interest was solely with your brother."
+
+"With my brother? With Oswald? What interest can you have in him
+apart from me? Oswald is -"
+
+Suddenly a thought name - an unimaginable one; one with power to
+blanch even his hardy cheek and shake a soul unassailable by all
+small emotions.
+
+"Oswald Brotherson!" he repeated; adding in unintelligible tones
+to himself - "O. B. The same initials! They are following up these
+initials. Poor Oswald." Then aloud: "It hardly becomes me, perhaps,
+to question your motives in this attempt at making my brother's
+acquaintance. I think I can guess them; but your labour will be
+wasted. Oswald's interests do not extend beyond this town; they
+hardly extend to me. We are strangers, almost. You will learn
+nothing from him on the subject which naturally engrosses you."
+
+Mr. Challoner simply bowed. "I do not feel called upon," said he,
+"to explain my reasons for wishing to know your brother. I will
+simply satisfy you upon a point which may well rouse your curiosity.
+You remember that - that my daughter's last act was the writing of
+a letter to a little protegee of hers. Miss Scott was that protegee.
+In seeking her, I came upon him. Do you require me to say more on
+this subject? Wait till I have seen Mr. Oswald Brotherson and then
+perhaps I can do so."
+
+Receiving no answer to this, Mr. Challoner turned again to the man
+who was the object of his deepest suspicions, to find him still in
+the daze of that unimaginable thought, battling with it, scoffing
+at it, succumbing to it and all without a word. Mr. Challoner was
+without clew to this struggle, but the might of it and the mystery
+of it, drove him in extreme agitation from the room. Though proof
+was lacking, though proof might never come, nothing could ever alter
+his belief from this moment on that Doris was right in her estimate
+of this man's guilt, however unsubstantial her reasoning might
+appear.
+
+How far he might have been carried by this new conviction; whether
+he would have left the house without seeing Doris again or
+exchanging another word with the man whose very presence stifled
+him, he had no opportunity to show, for before he had taken another
+step, he encountered the hurrying figure of Doris, who was returning
+to her guests with an air of marked relief.
+
+"He does not know that you are here," she whispered to Mr. Challoner,
+as she passed him. Then, as she again confronted Orlando who
+hastened to dismiss his trouble at her approach, she said quite
+gaily, "Mr. Brotherson heard your voice, and is glad to know that
+you're here. He bade me give you this key and say that you would
+have found things in better shape if he had been in condition to
+superintend the removal of the boxes to the place he had prepared
+for you before he became ill. I was the one to do that," she added,
+controlling her aversion with manifest effort. "When Mr. Brotherson
+came to himself he asked if I had heard about any large boxes having
+arrived at the station shipped to his name. I said that several
+notices of such had come to the house. At which he requested me to
+see that they were carried at once to the strange looking shed he
+had had put up for him in the woods. I thought that they were for
+him, and I saw to the thing myself. Two or three others have come
+since and been taken to the same place. I think you will find
+nothing broken or disturbed; Mr. Brotherson's wishes are usually
+respected."
+
+" That is fortunate for me," was the courteous reply.
+
+But Orlando Brotherson was not himself, not at all himself as he
+bowed a formal adieu and past the drawn-up sentinel-like figure
+of Mr. Challoner, without a motion on his part or on the part of
+that gentleman to lighten an exit which had something in it of
+doom and dread presage.
+
+
+
+XXX
+
+CHAOS
+
+
+It is not difficult to understand Mr. Challoner's feelings or even
+those of Doris at the moment of Mr. Brotherson's departure. But why
+this change in Brotherson himself? Why this sense of something new
+and terrible rising between him and the suddenly beclouded future?
+Let us follow him to his lonely hotel-room and see if we can solve
+the puzzle.
+
+But first, does he understand his own trouble? He does not seem to.
+For when, his hat thrown aside, he stops, erect and frowning under
+the flaring gas-jet he had no recollection of lighting, his first
+act was to lift his hand to his head in a gesture of surprising
+helplessness for him, while snatches of broken sentences fell from
+his lips among which could be heard:
+
+"What has come to me? Undone in an hour! Doubly undone! First
+by a face and then by this thought which surely the devils have
+whispered to me. Mr. Challoner and Oswald! What is the link
+between them? Great God! what is the link? Not myself? Who
+then or what?"
+
+Flinging himself into a chair, he buried his face in his hands.
+There were two demons to fight - the first in the guise of an angel.
+Doris! Unknown yesterday, unknown an hour ago; but now! Had there
+ever been a day - an hour - when she had not been as the very throb
+of his heart, the light of his eyes, and the crown or all imaginable
+blisses?
+
+He was startled at his own emotion as he contemplated her image in
+his fancy and listened for the lost echo of the few words she had
+spoken - words so full of music when they referred to his brother,
+so hard and cold when she simply addressed himself.
+
+This was no passing admiration of youth for a captivating woman.
+This was not even the love he had given to Edith Challoner. This
+was something springing full-born out of nothing! a force which,
+for the first time in his life, made him complaisant to the natural
+weaknesses of man! a dream and yet a reality strong enough to blot
+out the past, remake the present, change the aspect of all his hopes,
+and outline a new fate. He did not know himself. There was nothing
+in his whole history to give him an understanding of such feelings
+as these.
+
+Can a man be seized as it were by the hair, and swung up on the
+slopes of paradise or down the steeps of hell - without a
+forewarning, without the chance even to say whether he wished such
+a cataclysm in his life or no?
+
+He, Orlando Brotherson, had never thought much of love. Science
+had been his mistress; ambition his lode-star. Such feeling as he
+had acknowledged to had been for men - struggling men, men who were
+down-trodden and gasping in the narrow bounds of poverty and
+helplessness. Miss Challoner had roused - well, his pride. He
+could see that now. The might of this new emotion made plain many
+things he had passed by as useless, puerile, unworthy of a man of
+mental calibre and might. He had never loved Edith Challoner at
+any moment of their acquaintanceship, though he had been sincere in
+thinking that he did. Doris' beauty, the hour he had just passed
+with her, had undeceived him.
+
+Did he hail the experience? It was not likely to bring him joy.
+This young girl whose image floated in light before his eyes, would
+never love him. She loved his brother. He had heard their names
+mentioned together before he had been in town an hour. Oswald, the
+cleverest man, Doris, the most beautiful girl in Western Pennsylvania.
+
+He had accepted the gossip then; he had not seen her and it all
+seemed very natural; - hardly worth a moment's thought. But now!
+
+And here, the other Demon sprang erect and grappled with him before
+the first one had let go his hold. Oswald and Challoner! The
+secret, unknown something which had softened that hard man's eye
+when his brother's name was mentioned! He had noted it and realised
+the mystery; a mystery before which sleep and rest must fly; a
+mystery to which he must now give his thought, whatever the cost,
+whatever the loss to those heavenly dreams the magic of which was
+so new it seemed to envelope him in the balm of Paradise. Away,
+then, image of light! Let the faculties thou hast dazed, act again.
+There is more than Fate's caprice in Challoner's interest in a man
+he never saw. Ghosts of old memories rise and demand a hearing.
+Facts, trivial and commonplace enough to have been lost in oblivion
+with the day which gave them birth, throng again from the past,
+proving that nought dies without a possibility of resurrection.
+Their power over this brooding man is shown by the force with which
+his fingers crush against his bowed forehead. Oswald and Challoner!
+Had he found the connecting link? Had it been - could it have been
+Edith? The preposterous is sometimes true; could it be true in this
+case?
+
+He recalled the letters read to him as hers in that room of his in
+Brooklyn. He had hardly noted them then, he was so sure of their
+being forgeries, gotten up by the police to mislead him. Could they
+have been real, the effusions of her mind, the breathings of her
+heart, directed to an actual 0. B., and that 0. B., his brother?
+They had not been meant for him. He had read enough of the mawkish
+lines to be sure of that. None of the allusions fitted in with the
+facts of their mutual intercourse. But they might with those of
+another man; they might with the possible acts and affections of
+Oswald whose temperament was wholly different from his and who might
+have loved her, should it ever be shown that they had met and known
+each other. And this was not an impossibility. Oswald had been
+east, Oswald had even been in the Berkshires before himself. Oswald
+ - Why it was Oswald who had suggested that he should go there - go
+where she still was. Why this second coincidence, if there were no
+tie - if the Challoners and Oswald were as far apart as they seemed
+and as conventionalities would naturally place them. Oswald was a
+sentimentalist, but very reserved about his sentimentalities. If
+these suppositions were true, he had had a sentimentalist's motive
+for what he did. As Orlando realised this, he rose from his seat,
+aghast at the possibilities confronting him from this line of
+thought. Should he contemplate them? Risk his reason by dwelling
+on a supposition which might have no foundation in fact? No. His
+brain was too full - his purposes too important for any unnecessary
+strain to be put upon his faculties. No thinking! investigation
+first. Mr. Challoner should be able to settle this question. He
+would see him. Even at this late hour he ought to be able to find
+him in one of the rooms below; and, by they force of an irresistible
+demand, learn in a moment whether he had to do with a mere chimera
+of his own overwrought fancy, or with a fact which would call into
+play all the resources of an hitherto unconquered and undaunted
+nature.
+
+There was a wood-fire burning in the sitting-room that night, and
+around it was grouped a number of men with their papers and pipes.
+Mr. Brotherson, entering, naturally looked that way for the man he
+was in search of, and was disappointed not to find him there; but
+on casting his glances elsewhere, he was relieved to see him
+standing in one of the windows overlooking the street. His back
+was to the room and he seemed to be lost in a fit of abstraction.
+
+As Orlando crossed to him, he had time to observe how much whiter
+was this man's head than in the last interview he had held with him
+in the coroner's office in New York. But this evidence of grief in
+one with whom he had little, if anything, in common, neither touched
+his feelings nor deterred his step. The awakening of his heart to
+new and profound emotions had not softened him towards the
+sufferings of others if those others stood without the pale he had
+previously raised as the legitimate boundary of a just man's
+sympathies.
+
+He was, as I have said, an extraordinary specimen of manly vigour
+in body and in mind, and his presence in any company always
+attracted attention and roused, if it never satisfied, curiosity.
+Conversation accordingly ceased as he strode up to Mr. Challoner's
+side, so that his words were quite audible as he addressed that
+gentleman with a somewhat curt:
+
+"You see me again, Mr. Challoner. May I beg of you a few minutes'
+further conversation? I will not detain you long."
+
+The grey head turned, and the many eyes watching showed surprise at
+the expression of dislike and repulsion with which this New York
+gentleman met the request thus emphatically urged. But his answer
+was courteous enough. If Mr. Brotherson knew a place where they
+would be left undisturbed, he would listen to him if he would be
+very brief.
+
+For reply, the other pointed to a small room quite unoccupied which
+opened out of the one in which they then stood. Mr. Challoner bowed
+and in an other moment the door dosed upon them, to the infinite
+disappointment of the men about the hearth.
+
+"What do you wish to ask?" was Mr. Challoner's immediate inquiry.
+
+"This; I make no apologies and expect in answer nothing more than
+an unequivocal yes or no. You tell me that you have never met my
+brother. Can that be said of the other members of your family
+ - of your deceased daughter, in fact?"
+
+"No."
+
+"She was acquainted with Oswald Brotherson?"
+
+"She was."
+
+"Without your knowledge?"
+
+"Entirely so."
+
+"Corresponded with him?"
+
+"Not exactly."
+
+"How, not exactly?"
+
+"He wrote to her - occasionally. She wrote to him frequently - but
+she never sent her letters."
+
+"Ah!"
+
+The exclamation was sharp, short and conveyed little. Yet with its
+escape, the whole scaffolding of this man's hold upon life and his
+own fate went down in indistinguishable chaos. Mr. Challoner
+realised a sense of havoc, though the eyes bent upon his countenance
+had not wavered, nor the stalwart figure moved.
+
+"I have read some of those letters," the inventor finally
+acknowledged. "The police took great pains to place them under my
+eye, supposing them to have been meant for me because of the
+initials written on the wrapper. But they were meant for Oswald.
+You believe that now?"
+
+"I know it."
+
+"And that is why I found you in the same house with him."
+
+"It is. Providence has robbed me of my daughter; if this brother
+of yours should prove to be the man I am led to expect, I shall ask
+him to take that place in my heart and life which was once hers."
+
+A quick recoil, a smothered exclamation on the part of the man he
+addressed. A barb had been hidden in this simple statement which
+had reached some deeply-hidden but vulnerable spot in Brotherson's
+breast, which had never been pierced before. His eye which alone
+seemed alive, still rested piercingly upon that of Mr. Challoner,
+but its light was fast fading, and speedily became lost in a
+dimness in which the other seemed to see extinguished the last
+upflaring embers of those inner fires which feed the aspiring soul.
+It was a sight no man could see unmoved. Mr. Challoner turned
+sharply away, in dread of the abyss which the next word he uttered
+might open between them.
+
+But Orlando Brotherson possessed resources of strength of which,
+possibly, he was not aware himself. When Mr. Challoner, still more
+affected by the silence than by the dread I have mentioned, turned
+to confront him again, it was to find his features composed and
+his glance clear. He had conquered all outward manifestation of
+the mysterious emotion which for an instant had laid his proud
+spirit low.
+
+"You are considerate of my brother," were the words with which he
+re-opened this painful conversation. " You will not find your
+confidence misplaced. Oswald is a straightforward fellow, of few
+faults."
+
+"I believe it. No man can be so universally beloved without some
+very substantial claims to regard. I am glad to see that your
+opinion, though given somewhat coldly, coincides with that of his
+friends."
+
+"I am not given to exaggeration," was the even reply.
+
+The flush which had come into Mr. Challoner's cheek under the effort
+he had made to sustain with unflinching heroism this interview with
+the man he looked upon as his mortal enemy, slowly faded out till
+he looked the wraith of himself even to the unsympathetic eyes of
+Orlando Brotherson. A duty lay before him which would tax to its
+utmost extent his already greatly weakened self-control. Nothing
+which had yet passed showed that this man realised the fact that
+Oswald had been kept in ignorance of Miss Challoner's death. If
+these brothers were to meet on the morrow, it must be with the full
+understanding that this especial topic was to be completely avoided.
+But in what words could he urge such a request upon this man? None
+suggested themselves, yet he had promised Miss Scott that he would
+ensure his silence in this regard, and it was with this difficulty
+and no other he had been struggling when Mr. Brotherson came upon
+him in the other room.
+
+"You have still something to say," suggested the latter, as an
+oppressive silence swallowed up that icy sentence I have already
+recorded.
+
+"I have," returned Mr. Challoner, regaining his courage under the
+exigencies of the moment. "Miss Scott is very anxious to have your
+promise that you will avoid all disagreeable topics with your brother
+till the doctor pronounces him strong enough to meet the trouble
+which awaits him."
+
+"You mean -"
+
+"He is not as unhappy as we. He knows nothing of the affliction
+which has befallen him. He was taken ill -" The rest was almost
+inaudible.
+
+But Orlando Brotherson had no difficulty in understanding him, and
+for the second time in this extraordinary interview, he gave
+evidences of agitation and of a mind shaken from its equipoise.
+But only for an instant. He did not shun the other's gaze or even
+maintain more than a momentary silence. Indeed, he found strength
+to smile, in a curious, sardonic way, as he said:
+
+"Do you think I should be apt to broach this subject with any one,
+let alone with him, whose connection with it I shall need days to
+realise? I'm not so given to gossip. Besides, he and I have other
+topics of interest. I have an invention ready with which I propose
+to experiment in a place he has already prepared for me. We can
+talk about that."
+
+The irony, the hardy self-possession with which this was said struck
+Mr. Challoner to the heart. Without a word he wheeled about towards
+the door. Without a word, Brotherson stood, watching him go till he
+saw his hand fall on the knob when he quietly prevented his exit by
+saying:
+
+"Unhappy truths cannot be long concealed. How soon does the doctor
+think my brother can bear these inevitable revelations?"
+
+"He said this morning that if his patient were as well to-morrow as
+his present condition gives promise of, he might be told in another
+week."
+
+Orlando bowed his appreciation of this fact, but added quickly:
+
+"Who is to do the telling?"
+
+"Doris. Nobody else could be trusted with so delicate a task."
+
+"I wish to be present."
+
+Mr. Challoner looked up, surprised at the feeling with which this
+request was charged.
+
+"As his brother - his only remaining relative, I have that right.
+Do you think that Dor - that Miss Scott, can be trusted not to
+forestall that moment by any previous hint of what awaits him?"
+
+"If she so promises. But will you exact this from her? It surely
+cannot be necessary for me to say that your presence will add
+infinitely to the difficulty of her task."
+
+"Yet it is a duty I cannot shirk. I will consult the doctor about
+it. I will make him see that I both understand and shall insist
+upon my rights in this matter. But you may tell Miss Doris that I
+will sit out of sight, and that I shall not obtrude myself unless
+my name is brought up in an undesirable way."
+
+The hand on the door-knob made a sudden movement.
+
+"Mr. Brotherson, I can bear no more to-night. With your permission,
+I will leave this question to be settled by others." And with a
+repetition of his former bow, the bereaved father withdrew.
+
+Orlando watched him till the door closed, then he too dropped his
+mask.
+
+But it was on again, when in a little while he passed through the
+sitting-room on his way upstairs.
+
+No other day in his whole life had been like this to the hardy
+inventor; for in it both his heart and his conscience had been
+awakened, and up to this hour he had not really known that he
+possessed either.
+
+
+
+XXXI
+
+WHAT IS HE MAKING
+
+
+Other boxes addressed to 0. Brotherson had been received at the
+station, and carried to the mysterious shed in the woods; and now,
+with locked door and lifted top, the elder brother contemplated
+his stores and prepared himself for work.
+
+He had been allowed a short interview with Oswald, and he had
+indulged himself in a few words with Doris. But he had left those
+memories behind with other and more serious matters. Nothing that
+could unnerve his hand or weaken his insight should enter this spot
+sacred to his great hope. Here genius reigned. Here he was himself
+wholly and without flaw; - a Titan with his grasp on a mechanical
+idea by means of which he would soon rule the world.
+
+Not so happy were the other characters in this drama. Oswald's
+thoughts, disturbed for a short time by the somewhat constrained
+interview he had held with his brother, had flown eastward again,
+in silent love and longing; while Doris, with a double dread now
+in her heart, went about her daily tasks, praying for strength to
+endure the horrors of this week, without betraying the anxieties
+secretly devouring her. And she was only seventeen and quite alone
+in her trouble. She must bear it all unassisted and smile, which
+she did with heavenly sweetness, when the magic threshold was
+passed and she stood in her invalid's presence, overshadowed though
+it ever was by the great Dread.
+
+And Mr. Challoner? Let those endless walks of his through the woods
+and over the hills tell his story if they can; or his rapidly
+whitening hair, and lagging step. He had been a strong man before
+his trouble, and had the stroke which laid him low been limited to
+one quick, sharp blow he might have risen above it after a while
+and been ready to encounter life again. But this long drawn out
+misery was proving too much for him. The sight of Brotherson,
+though they never really met, acted like acid upon a wound, and it
+was not till six days had passed and the dreaded Sunday was at hand,
+that he slept with any sense of rest or went his way about the town
+without that halting at the corners which betrayed his perpetual
+apprehension of a most undesirable encounter.
+
+The reason for this change will be apparent in the short conversation
+he held with a man he had come upon one evening in the small park
+just beyond the workmen's dwellings.
+
+"You see I am here," was the stranger's low greeting.
+
+"Thank God," was Mr. Challoner's reply. "I could not have faced
+to-morrow alone and I doubt if Miss Scott could have found the
+requisite courage. Does she know that you are here?"
+
+"I stopped at her door."
+
+"Was that safe?"
+
+"I think so. Mr. Brotherson - the Brooklyn one,- is up in his shed.
+He sleeps there now, I am told, and soundly too I've no doubt."
+
+"What is he making?"
+
+"What half the inventors on both sides of the water are engaged
+upon just now. A monoplane, or a biplane, or some machine for
+carrying men through the air. I know, for I helped him with it.
+But you'll find that if he succeeds in this undertaking, and I
+believe he will, nothing short of fame awaits him. His invention
+has startling points. But I'm not going to give them away. I'll
+be true enough to him for that. As an inventor he has my sympathy;
+but - Well, we will see what we shall see, to-morrow. You say that
+he is bound to be present when Miss Scott relates her tragic story.
+He won't be the only unseen listener. I've made my own arrangements
+with Miss Scott. If he feels the need of watching her and his
+brother Oswald, I feel the need of watching him."
+
+"You take a burden of intolerable weight from my shoulders. Now I
+shall feel easier about that interview. But I should like to ask
+you this: Do you feel justified in this continued surveillance of a
+man who has so frequently, and with such evident sincerity, declared
+his innocence?"
+
+"I do that. If he's as guiltless as he says he is, my watchfulness
+won't hurt him. If he's not, then, Mr. Challoner, I've but one
+duty; to match his strength with my patience. That man is the one
+great mystery of the day, and mysteries call for solution. At least,
+that's the way a detective looks at it."
+
+" May Heaven help your efforts!"
+
+"I shall need its assistance," was the dry rejoinder. Sweetwater
+was by no means blind to the difficulties awaiting him.
+
+
+
+XXXII
+
+TELL ME, TELL IT ALL
+
+
+The day was a grey one, the first of the kind in weeks. As Doris
+stepped into the room where Oswald sat, she felt how much a ray of
+sunshine would have encouraged her and yet how truly these leaden
+skies and this dismal atmosphere expressed the gloom which soon
+must fall upon this hopeful, smiling man.
+
+He smiled because any man must smile at the entrance of so lovely a
+woman, but it was an abstracted smile, and Doris, seeing it, felt
+her courage falter for a moment, though her steps did not, nor her
+steady compassionate gaze. Advancing slowly, and not answering
+because she did not hear some casual remark of his, she took her
+stand by his side and then slowly and with her eyes on his face,
+sank down upon her knees, still without speaking, almost without
+breathing.
+
+His astonishment was evident, for her air was strange and full of
+presage,- as, indeed, she had meant it to be. But he remained as
+silent as she, only reached out his emaciated hand and, laying it
+on her head, smiled again but this time far from abstractedly.
+Then, as he saw her cheeks pale in terror of the task before her,
+he ventured to ask gently:
+
+"What is the matter, child? So weary, eh? Nothing worse than that,
+I hope."
+
+"Are you quite strong this morning? Strong enough to listen to my
+troubles; strong enough to bear your own if God sees fit to send
+them?" came hesitatingly from her lips as she watched the effect of
+each word, in breathless anxiety.
+
+"Troubles? There can be but one trouble for me," was his unexpected
+reply. "That I do not fear - will not fear in my hour of happy
+recovery. So long as Edith is well - Doris! Doris! You alarm me.
+Edith is not ill; - not ill?"
+
+The poor child could not answer save with her sympathetic look and
+halting, tremulous breath; and these signs, he would not, could not
+read, his own words had made such an echo in his ears.
+
+"Ill! I cannot imagine Edith ill. I always see her in my thoughts,
+as I saw her on that day of our first meeting; a perfect, animated
+woman with the joyous look of a glad, harmonious nature. Nothing
+has ever clouded that vision. If she were ill I would have known
+it. We are so truly one that - Doris, Doris, you do not speak. You
+know the depth of my love, the terror of my thoughts. Is Edith ill?"
+
+The eyes gazing wildly into his, slowly left his face and raised
+themselves aloft, with a sublime look. Would he understand? Yes,
+he understood, and the cry which rang from his lips stopped for a
+moment the beating of more than one heart in that little cottage.
+
+"Dead!" he shrieked out, and fell back fainting in his chair, his
+lips still murmuring in semi-unconsciousness, "Dead! dead!"
+
+Doris sprang to her feet, thinking of nothing but his wavering,
+slipping life till she saw his breath return, his eyes refill with
+light. Then the horror of what was yet to come - the answer which
+must be given to the how she saw trembling on his lips, caused her
+to sink again upon her knees in an unconscious appeal for strength.
+If that one sad revelation had been all!
+
+But the rest must be told; his brother exacted it and so did the
+situation. Further waiting, further hiding of the truth would be
+insupportable after this. But oh, the bitterness of it! No wonder
+that she turned away from those frenzied, wildly-demanding eyes.
+
+"Doris?"
+
+She trembled and looked behind her. She had not recognised his
+voice. Had another entered? Had his brother dared - No, they were
+alone; seemingly so, that is. She knew,- no one better - that they
+were not really alone, that witnesses were within hearing, if not
+within sight.
+
+"Doris," he urged again, and this time she turned in his direction
+and gazed, aghast. If the voice were strange, what of the face
+which now confronted her. The ravages of sickness had been marked,
+but they were nothing to those made in an instant by a blasting
+grief. She was startled, although expecting much, and could only
+press his hands while she waited for the question he was gathering
+strength to utter. It was simple when it came; just two words:
+
+"How long?"
+
+She answered them as simply.
+
+"Just as long as you have been ill," said she; then, with no attempt
+to break the inevitable shock, she went on: Miss Challoner was struck
+dead and you were taken down with typhoid on the self-same day."
+
+"Struck dead! Why do you use that word, struck? Struck dead! she,
+a young woman. Oh, Doris, an accident! My darling has been killed
+in an accident!
+
+"They do not call it accident. They call it what it never was.
+What it never was," she insisted, pressing him back with frightened
+hands, as he strove to rise. " Miss Challoner was -" How nearly
+the word shot had left her lips. How fiercely above all else, in
+that harrowing moment had risen the desire to fling the accusation
+of that word into the ears of him who listened from his secret
+hiding-place. But she refrained out of compassion for the man she
+loved, and declared instead, "Miss Challoner died from a wound; how
+given, why given, no one knows. I had rather have died myself than
+have to tell you this. Oh, Mr. Brotherson, speak, sob, do anything
+but -"
+
+She started back, dropping his hands as she did so. With quick
+intuition she saw that he must be left to himself if he were to
+meet this blow without succumbing. The body must have freedom if
+the spirit would not go mad. Conscious, or perhaps not conscious,
+of his release from her restraining hand, albeit profiting by it,
+he staggered to his feet, murmuring that word of doom: "Wound!
+wound! my darling died of a wound! What kind of a wound?" he
+suddenly thundered out. "I cannot understand what you mean by
+wound. Make it clear to me. Make it clear to me at once. If I
+must bear this grief, let me know its whole depth. Leave nothing
+to my imagination or I cannot answer for myself. Tell it all,
+Doris."
+
+And Doris told him:
+
+"She was on the mezzanine floor of the hotel where she lives. She
+was seemingly happy and had been writing a letter - a letter to me
+which they never forwarded. There was no one else by but some
+strangers - good people whom one must believe. She was crossing
+the floor when suddenly she threw up her hands and fell. A thin,
+narrow paper-cutter was in her grasp; and it flew into the lobby.
+Some say she struck herself with that cutter; for when they picked
+her up they found a wound in her breast which that cutter might
+have made."
+
+"Edith? never!"
+
+The words were chokingly said; he was swaying, almost falling, but
+he steadied himself.
+
+"Who says that?" he asked.
+
+"It was the coroner's verdict."
+
+"And she died that way - died?"
+
+"Immediately."
+
+"After writing to you?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"What was in that letter?"
+
+"Nothing of threat, they say. Only just cheer and expressions of
+hope. Just like the others, Mr. Brotherson."
+
+"And they accuse her of taking her own life? Their verdict is a
+lie. They did not know her."
+
+Then, after some moments of wild and confused feeling, he declared,
+with a desperate effort at self-control: "You said that some believe
+this. Then there must be others who do not. What do they say?"
+
+"Nothing. They simply feel as you do. They see no reason for the
+act and no evidence of her having meditated it. Her father and her
+friend insist besides, that she was incapable of such a horror. The
+mystery of it is killing us all; me above others, for I've had to
+show you a cheerful face, with my brain reeling and my heart like
+lead in my bosom."
+
+She held out her hands. She tried to draw his attention to herself;
+not from any sentiment of egotism, but to break, if she could, the
+strain of these insupportable horrors where so short a time before
+Hope sang and Life revelled in re-awakened joys.
+
+Perhaps some faint realisation of this reached him, for presently
+he caught her by the hands and bowed his head upon her shoulder and
+finally let her seat him again, before he said:
+
+"Do they know of - of my interest in this?"
+
+"Yes; they know about the two 0. B.s."
+
+"The two -" He was on his feet again, but only for a moment; his
+weakness was greater than his will power.
+
+"Orlando and Oswald Brotherson," she explained, in answer to his
+broken appeal. "Your brother wrote letters to her as well as you,
+and signed them just as you did, with his initials only. These
+letters were found in her desk, and he was supposed, for a time, to
+have been the author of all that were so signed. But they found out
+the difference after awhile. Yours were easily recognised after
+they learned there was another O. B. who loved her."
+
+The words were plain enough, but the stricken listener did not take
+them in. They carried no meaning to him. How should they? The
+very idea she sought to impress upon him by this seemingly careless
+allusion was an incredible one. She found it her dreadful task to
+tell him the hard, bare truth.
+
+"Your brother," said she, "was devoted to Miss Challoner, too. He
+even wanted to marry her. I cannot keep back this fact. It is
+known everywhere, and by everybody but you.
+
+"Orlando?" His lips took an ironical curve, as he uttered the word.
+This was a young girl's imaginative fancy to him. "Why Orlando
+never knew her, never saw her, never -"
+
+"He met her at Lenox."
+
+The name produced its effect. He stared, made an effort to think,
+repeated Lenox over to himself; then suddenly lost his hold upon
+the idea which that word suggested, struggled again for it, seized
+it in an instant of madness and shouted out:
+
+"Yes, yes, I remember. I sent him there -" and paused, his mind
+blank again.
+
+Poor Doris, frightened to her very soul, looked blindly about for
+help; but she did not quit his side; she did not dare to, for his
+lips had reopened; the continuity of his thoughts had returned; he
+was going to speak.
+
+"I sent him there." The words came in a sort of shout. "I was so
+hungry to hear of her and I thought he might mention her in his
+letter. Insane! Insane! He saw her and - What's that you said
+about his loving her? He couldn't have loved her; he's not of the
+loving sort. They've deceived you with strange tales. They've
+deceived the whole world with fancies and mad dreams. He may have
+admired her, but loved her, - no! or if he had, he would have
+respected my claims."
+
+"He did not know them."
+
+A laugh; a laugh which paled Doris' cheek; them his tones grew even
+again, memory came back and he muttered faintly:
+
+"That is true. I said nothing to him. He had the right to court
+her - and he did, you say; wrote: to her; imposed himself upon her,
+drove her mad with importunities she was forced to rebuke; and - and
+what else? There is something else. Tell me ; I will know it all."
+
+He was standing now, his feebleness all gone, passion in every
+lineament and his eye alive and feverish, with emotion. "Tell me,"
+he repeated, with unrestrained vehemence. " Tell me all. Kill me
+with sorrow but save me from being unjust."
+
+"He wrote her a letter; it frightened her. He followed it up by a
+visit -"
+
+Doris paused; the sentence hung suspended. She had heard a step
+ - a hand on the door.
+
+Orlando had entered the room.
+
+
+
+XXXIII
+
+ALONE
+
+
+Oswald had heard nothing, seen nothing. But he took note of Doris'
+silence, and turning towards her in frenzy saw what had happened,
+and so was in a measure prepared for the stern, short sentence which
+now rang through the room:
+
+"Wait, Miss Scott! you tell the story badly. Let him listen to me.
+>From my mouth only shall he hear the stern and seemingly unnatural
+part I played in this family tragedy."
+
+The face of Oswald hardened. Those pliant features - beloved for
+their gracious kindliness - set themselves in lines which altered
+them almost beyond recognition; but his voice was not without some
+of its natural sweetness, as, after a long and hollow look at the
+other's composed countenance, he abruptly exclaimed:
+
+"Speak! I am bound to listen; you are my brother."
+
+Orlando turned towards Doris. She was slipping away.
+
+"Don't go," said he.
+
+But she was gone.
+
+Slowly he turned back.
+
+Oswald raised his hand and checked the words with which he would
+have begun his story.
+
+"Never mind the beginnings," said he. "Doris has told all that.
+You saw Miss Challoner in Lenox - admired her - offered yourself to
+her and afterwards wrote her a threatening letter because she
+rejected you."
+
+"It is true. Other men have followed just such unworthy impulses
+ - and been ashamed and sorry afterwards. I was sorry and I was
+ashamed, and as soon as my first anger was over went to tell her so.
+But she mistook my purpose and -"
+
+"And what?"
+
+Orlando hesitated. Even his iron nature trembled before the misery
+he saw - a misery he was destined to augment rather than soothe.
+With pains altogether out of keeping with his character, he sought
+in the recesses of his darkened mind for words less bitter and less
+abrupt than those which sprang involuntarily to his lips. But he
+did not find them. Though he pitied his brother and wished to show
+that he did, nothing but the stern language suitable to the stern
+fact he wished to impart, would leave his lips.
+
+"And ended the pitiful struggle of the moment with one quick,
+unpremeditated blow," was what he said. "There is no other
+explanation possible for this act, Oswald. Bitter as it is for me
+to acknowledge it, I am thus far guilty of this beloved woman's
+death. But, as God hears me, from the moment I first saw her, to
+the moment I saw her last, I did not know, nor did I for a moment
+dream that she was anything to you or to any other man of my stamp
+and station. I thought she despised my country birth, my mechanical
+attempts, my lack of aristocratic pretensions and traditions."
+
+"Edith?"
+
+"Now that I know she had other reasons for her contempt - that the
+words she wrote were in rebuke to the brother rather than to the
+man, I feel my guilt and deplore my anger. I cannot say more. I
+should but insult your grief by any lengthy expressions of regret
+and sorrow."
+
+A groan of intolerable anguish from the sick man's lips, and then
+the quick thrust of his re-awakened intelligence rising superior to
+the overthrow of all his hopes.
+
+"For a woman of Edith's principle to seek death in a moment of
+desperation, the provocation must have been very great. Tell me if
+I'm to hate you through life - yea through all eternity - or if I
+must seek in some unimaginable failure of my own character or
+conduct the cause of her intolerable despair."
+
+"Oswald!" The tone was controlling, and yet that of one strong man
+to another. "Is it for us to read the heart of any woman, least of
+all of a woman of her susceptibilities and keen inner life? The
+wish to end all comes to some natures like a lightning flash from a
+clear sky. It comes, it goes, often without leaving a sign. But
+if a weapon chances to be near -(here it was in hand)- then death
+follows the impulse which, given an instant of thought, would have
+vanished in a back sweep of other emotions. Chance was the real
+accessory to this death by suicide. Oswald, let us realise it as
+such and accept our sorrow as a mutual burden and turn to what
+remains to us of life and labour. Work is grief's only consolation.
+Then let us work."
+
+But of all this Oswald had caught but the one word.
+
+" Chance?" he repeated. "Orlando, I believe in God."
+
+"Then seek your comfort there. I find it in harnessing the winds;
+in forcing the powers of nature to do my bidding."
+
+The other did not speak, and the silence grew heavy. It was broken,
+when it was broken, by a cry from Oswald:
+
+"No more," said he, "no more." Then, in a yearning accent, "Send
+Doris to me,"
+
+Orlando started. This name coming so close upon that word comfort
+produced a strange effect upon him. But another look at Oswald and
+he was ready to do his bidding. The bitter ordeal was over; let
+him have his solace if it was in her power to give it to him.
+
+Orlando, upon leaving his brother's room, did not stop to deliver
+that brother's message directly to Doris; he left this for Truda to
+do, and retired immediately to his hangar in the woods. Locking
+himself in, he slightly raised the roof and then sat down before the
+car which was rapidly taking on shape and assuming that individuality
+and appearance of sentient life which hitherto he had only seen in
+dreams. But his eye, which had never failed to kindle at this sight
+before, shone dully in the semi-gloom. The air-car could wait; he
+would first have his hour in this solitude of his own making. The
+gaze he dreaded, the words from which he shrank could not penetrate
+here. He might even shout her name aloud, and only these windowless
+walls would respond. He was alone with his past, his present and
+his future.
+
+Alone!
+
+He needed to be. The strongest must pause when the precipice yawns
+before him. The gulf can be spanned; he feels himself forceful
+enough for that; but his eyes must take their measurement of it
+first; he must know its depths and possible dangers. Only a fool
+would ignore these steeps of jagged rock; and he was no fool, only
+a man to whom the unexpected had happened, a man who had seen his
+way clear to the horizon and then had come up against this! Love,
+when he thought such folly dead! Remorse, when Glory called for
+the quiet mind and heart!
+
+He recognised its mordant fang, and knew that its ravages, though
+only just begun, would last his lifetime. Nothing could stop them
+now, nothing, nothing. And he laughed, as the thought went home;
+laughed at the irony of fate and its inexorableness; laughed at his
+own defeat and his nearness to a barred Paradise. Oswald loved Edith,
+loved her yet, with a flame time would take long to quench. Doris
+loved Oswald and he Doris; and not one of them would ever attain the
+delights each was so fitted to enjoy. Why shouldn't he laugh? What
+is left to man but mockery when all props fall? Disappointment was
+the universal lot; and it should go merrily with him if he must take
+his turn at it. But here the strong spirit of the man re-asserted
+itself; it should be but a turn. A man's joys are not bounded by
+his loves or even by the satisfaction of a perfectly untrammelled
+mind. Performance makes a world of its own for the capable and the
+strong, and this was still left to him. He, Orlando Brotherson,
+despair while his great work lay unfinished! That would be to lay
+stress on the inevitable pains and fears of commonplace humanity.
+He was not of that ilk. Intellect was his god; ambition his motive
+power. What would this casual blight upon his supreme contentment
+be to him, when with the wings of his air-car spread, he should
+spurn the earth and soar into the heaven of fame simultaneously
+with his flight into the open.
+
+He could wait for that hour. He had measured the gulf before him
+and found it passable. Henceforth no looking back.
+
+Rising, he stood for a moment gazing, with an alert eye now, upon
+such sections of his car as had not yet been fitted into their
+places; then he bent forward to his work, and soon the lips which
+had uttered that sardonic laugh a few minutes before, parted in
+gentler fashion, and song took the place of curses - a ballad of
+love and fondest truth. But Orlando never knew what he sang. He
+had the gift and used it.
+
+Would his tones, however, have rung out with quite so mellow a
+sweetness had he seen the restless figure even then circling his
+retreat with eyes darting accusation and arms lifted towards him
+in wild but impotent threat?
+
+Yes, I think they would; for he knew that the man who thus expressed
+his helplessness along with his convictions, was no nearer the end
+he had set himself to attain than on the day he first betrayed his
+suspicions.
+
+
+
+XXXIV
+
+THE HUT CHANGES ITS NAME
+
+
+That night Oswald was taken very ill. For three days his life hung
+in the balance, then youth and healthy living triumphed over shock
+and bereavement, and he came slowly back to his sad and crippled
+existence.
+
+He had been conscious for a week or more of his surroundings, and
+of his bitter sorrows as well, when one morning he asked Doris
+whose face it was he had seen bending over him so often during the
+last week: "Have you a new doctor? A man with white hair and a
+comforting smile? Or have I dreamed this face? I have had so many
+fancies this might easily be one of them."
+
+"No, it is not a fancy," was the quiet reply. "Nor is it the face
+of a doctor. It is that of friend. One whose heart is bound up
+in your recovery; one for whom you must live, Mr. Brotherson."
+
+"I don't know him, Doris. It's a strange face to me. And yet, it's
+not altogether strange. Who is this man and why should he care for
+me so deeply?"
+
+"Because you share one love and one grief. It is Edith's father
+whom you see at your bedside. He has helped to nurse you ever since
+you came down this second time."
+
+"Edith's father! Doris, it cannot be. Edith's father!"
+
+"Yes, Mr. Challoner has been in Derby for the last two weeks. He
+has only one interest now; to see you well again."
+
+"Why?"
+
+Doris caught the note of pain, if not suspicion, in this query, and
+smiled as she asked in turn:
+
+"Shall he answer that question himself? He is waiting to come in.
+Not to talk. You need not fear his talking. He's as quiet as any
+man I ever saw."
+
+The sick man closed his eyes, and Doris watching, saw the flush
+rise to his emaciated cheek, then slowly fade away again to a pallor
+that frightened her. Had she injured where she would heal? Had
+she pressed too suddenly and too hard on the ever gaping wound in
+her invalid's breast? She gasped in terror at the thought, then
+she faintly smiled, for his eyes had opened again and showed a calm
+determination as he said:
+
+"I should like to see him. I should like him to answer the question
+I have just put you. I should rest easier and get well faster - or
+not get well at all."
+
+This latter he half whispered, and Doris, tripping from the room
+may not have heard it, for her face showed no further shadow as
+she ushered in Mr. Challoner, and closed the door behind him. She
+had looked forward to this moment for days. To Oswald, however, it
+was an unexpected excitement and his voice trembled with something
+more than physical weakness as he greeted his visitor and thanked
+him for his attentions.
+
+"Doris says that you have shown me this kindness from the desire
+you have to see me well again Mr. Challoner. Is this true?"
+
+"Very true. I cannot emphasise the fact too strongly."
+
+Oswald's eyes met his again, this time with great earnestness.
+
+"You must have serious reasons for feeling so - reasons which I do
+not quite understand. May I ask why you place such value upon a
+life which, if ever useful to itself or others, has lost and lost
+forever, the one delight which gave it meaning?"
+
+It was for Mr. Challoner's voice to tremble now, as reaching out
+his hand, he declared, with unmistakable feeling:
+
+"I have no son. I have no interest left in life, outside this room
+and the possibilities it contains for me. Your attachment to my
+daughter has created a bond between us, Mr. Brotherson, which I
+sincerely hope to see recognised by you."
+
+Startled and deeply moved, the young man stretched out a shaking
+hand towards his visitor, with the feeble but exulting cry:
+
+"Then you do not blame me for her wretched and mysterious death.
+You hold me guiltless of the misery which nerved her despairing arm?"
+
+"Quite guiltless."
+
+Oswald's wan and pinched features took on a beautiful expression
+and Mr. Challoner no longer wondered at his daughter's choice.
+
+"Thank God!" fell from the sick man's lips, and then there was a
+silence during which their two hands met.
+
+It was some minutes before either spoke and then it was Oswald
+who said:
+
+"I must confide to you certain facts. I honoured your daughter
+and realised her position fully. Our plight was never made in
+words, nor should I have presumed to advance any claim to her hand
+if I had not made good my expectations, Mr. Challoner. I meant to
+win both her regard and yours by acts, not words. I felt that I
+had a great deal to do and I was prepared to work and wait. I loved
+her -" He turned away his head and the silence which filled up the
+gap, united those two hearts, as the old and young are seldom united.
+
+But when a little later, Mr. Challoner rejoined Doris, in her little
+sitting-room, he nevertheless showed a perplexity she had hoped to
+see removed by this understanding with the younger Brotherson.
+
+The cause became apparent as soon as he spoke.
+
+"These brothers hold by each other," said he. "Oswald will hear
+nothing against Orlando. He says that he has redeemed his fault.
+He does not even protest that his brother's word is to be believed
+in this matter. He does not seem to think that necessary. He
+evidently regards Orlando's personality as speaking as truly and
+satisfactorily for itself, as his own does. And I dared not
+undeceive him."
+
+"He does not know all our reasons for distrust. He has heard
+nothing about the poor washerwoman."
+
+"No, and he must not,- not for weeks. He has borne all that he can."
+
+"His confidence in his older brother is sublime. I do not share it;
+but I cannot help but respect him for it."
+
+It was warmly said, and Mr. Challoner could not forbear casting an
+anxious look at her upturned face. What he saw there made him turn
+away with a sigh.
+
+"This confidence has for me a very unhappy side," he remarked. "It
+shows me Oswald's thought. He who loved her best, accepts the cruel
+verdict of an unreasoning public."
+
+Doris' large eyes burned with a weird light upon his face.
+
+"He has not had my dream," she murmured, with all the quiet of an
+unmoved conviction.
+
+Yet as the days went by, even her manner changed towards the busy
+inventor. It was hardly possible for it not to. The high stand
+he took; the regard accorded him on every side; his talent; his
+conversation, which was an education in itself, and, above all, his
+absorption in a work daily advancing towards completion, removed
+him so insensibly and yet so decidedly, from the hideous past of
+tragedy with which his name, if not his honour, was associated, that,
+unconsciously to herself, she gradually lost her icy air of
+repulsion and lent him a more or less attentive ear, when he chose
+to join their small company of an evening. The result was that he
+turned so bright a side upon her that toleration merged from day to
+day into admiration and memory lost itself in anticipation of the
+event which was to prove him a man of men, if not one of the
+world's greatest mechanical geniuses.
+
+Meantime, Oswald was steadily improving in health, if not in spirits.
+He had taken his first walk without any unfavourable results, and
+Orlando decided from this that the time had come for an explanation
+of his device and his requirements in regard to it. Seated together
+in Oswald's room, he broached the subject thus:
+
+"Oswald, what is your idea about what I'm making up there?"
+
+"That it will be a success."
+
+"I know; but its character, its use? What do you think it is?"
+
+"I've an idea; but my idea don't fit the conditions."
+
+"How's that?"
+
+"The shed is too closely hemmed in. You haven't room -"
+
+"For what?"
+
+"To start an aeroplane."
+
+"Yet it is certainly a device for flying."
+
+"I supposed so; but -"
+
+"It is an air-car with a new and valuable idea - the idea for which
+the whole world has been seeking ever since the first aeroplane
+found its way up from the earth. My car needs no room to start in
+save that which it occupies. If it did, it would be but the
+modification of a hundred others."
+
+"Orlando!"
+
+As Oswald thus gave expression to his surprise, their two faces were
+a study: the fire of genius in the one; the light of sympathetic
+understanding in the other.
+
+"If this car, now within three days of its completion," Orlando
+proceeded, " does not rise from the oval of my hangar like a bird
+from its nest, and after a wide and circling flight descend again
+into the self same spot without any swerving from its direct course,
+then have I failed in my endeavour and must take a back seat with
+the rest. But it will not fail. I'm certain of success, Oswald.
+All I want just now is a sympathetic helper - you, for instance;
+someone who will aid me with the final fittings and hold his peace
+to all eternity if the impossible occurs and the thing proves a
+failure."
+
+"Have you such pride as that?"
+
+"Precisely."
+
+"So much that you cannot face failure?"
+
+"Not when attached to my name. You can see how I feel about that
+by the secrecy I have worked under. No other person living knows
+what I have just communicated to you. Every part shipped here came
+from different manufacturing firms; sometimes a part of a part was
+all I allowed to be made in any one place. My fame, like my ship,
+must rise with one bound into the air, or it must never rise at all.
+It was not made for petty accomplishment, or the slow plodding of
+commonplace minds. I must startle, or remain obscure. That is why
+I chose this place for my venture, and you for my helper and
+associate.
+
+"You want me to ascend with you.?"
+
+"Exactly."
+
+"At the end of three days?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Orlando, I cannot."
+
+"You cannot? Not strong enough yet? I'll wait then, - three days
+more."
+
+"The time's too short. A month is scarcely sufficient. It would
+be folly, such as you never show, to trust a nerve so undermined as
+mine till time has restored its power. For an enterprise like this
+you need a man of ready strength and resources; not one whose
+condition you might be obliged to consider at a very critical
+moment."
+
+Orlando, balked thus at the outset, showed his displeasure.
+
+"You do not do justice to your will. It is strong enough to carry
+you through anything."
+
+"It was."
+
+"You can force it to act for you."
+
+"I fear not, Orlando."
+
+"I counted on you and you thwart me at the most critical moment of
+my life."
+
+Oswald smiled; his whole candid and generous nature bursting into
+view, in one quick flash.
+
+"Perhaps," he assented; "but you will thank me when you realise my
+weakness. Another man must be found - quick, deft, secret, yet
+honourably alive to the importance of the occasion and your rights
+as a great original thinker and mechanician."
+
+"Do you know such a man?"
+
+"I don't; but there must be many such among our workmen."
+
+"There isn't one; and I haven't time to send to Brooklyn. I
+reckoned on you."
+
+"Can you wait a month?"
+
+"No."
+
+"A fortnight, then?"
+
+"No, not ten days."
+
+Oswald looked surprised. He would like to have asked why such
+precipitation was necessary, but their tone in which this ultimatum
+was given was of that decisive character which admits of no argument.
+He, therefore, merely looked his query. But Orlando was not one to
+answer looks; besides, he had no reply for the same importunate
+question urged by his own good sense. He knew that he must make
+the attempt upon which his future rested soon, and without risk of
+the sapping influence of lengthened suspense and weeks of waiting.
+He could hold on to those two demons leagued in attack against him,
+for a definite seven days, but not for an indeterminate time. If he
+were to be saved from folly, - from himself - events must rush.
+
+He, therefore, repeated his no, with increased vehemence, adding,
+as he marked the reproach in his brother's eye, "I cannot wait. The
+test must be made on Saturday evening next, whatever the conditions;
+whatever the weather. An air-car to be serviceable must be ready to
+meet lightning and tempest, and what is worse, perhaps, an
+insufficient crew." Then rising, he exclaimed, with a determination
+which rendered him majestic, "If help is not forthcoming, I'll do it
+all myself. Nothing shall hold me back; nothing shall stop me; and
+when you see me and my car rise above the treetops, you'll feel that
+I have done what I could to make you forget - "
+
+He did not need to continue. Oswald understood and flashed a
+grateful look his way before saying:
+
+"You will make the attempt at night?"
+
+"Certainly."
+
+"And on Saturday?"
+
+"I've said it."
+
+"I will run over in my mind the qualifications of such men as I
+know and acquaint you with the result to-morrow."
+
+"There are adjustments to be made. A man of accuracy is necessary."
+
+"I will remember."
+
+"And he must be likable. I can do nothing with a man with whom I'm
+not perfectly in accord."
+
+"I understand that."
+
+"Good-night then." A moment of hesitancy, then, "I wish not only
+yourself but Miss Scott to be present at this test. Prepare her for
+the spectacle; but not yet, not till within an hour or two of the
+occasion."
+
+And with a proud smile in which flashed a significance which
+startled Oswald, he gave a hurried nod and turned away.
+
+When in an hour afterwards, Doris looked in through the open door,
+she found Oswald sitting with face buried in his hands, thinking so
+deeply that he did not hear her. He had sat like this, immovable
+and absorbed, ever since his brother had left him.
+
+
+
+XXXV
+
+SILENCE - AND A KNOCK
+
+
+Oswald did not succeed in finding a man to please Orlando. He
+suggested one person after another to the exacting inventor, but
+none were satisfactory to him and each in turn was turned down.
+It is not every one we want to have share a world-wide triumph or
+an ignominious defeat. And the days were passing.
+
+He had said in a moment of elation, "I will do it alone;" but he
+knew even then that he could not. Two hands were necessary to start
+the car; afterwards, he might manage it alone. Descent was even
+possible, but to give the contrivance its first lift required a
+second mechanician. Where was he to find one to please him? And
+what was he to do if he did not? Conquer his prejudices against
+such men as he had seen, or delay the attempt, as Oswald had
+suggested, till he could get one of his old cronies on from New
+York. He could do neither. The obstinacy of his nature was such
+as to offer an invincible barrier against either suggestion. One
+alternative remained. He had heard of women aviators. If Doris
+could be induced to accompany him into the air, instead of clinging
+sodden-like to the weight of Oswald's woe, then would the world
+behold a triumph which would dwarf the ecstasy of the bird's flight
+and rob the eagle of his kingly pride. But Doris barely endured
+him as yet, and the thought was not one to be considered for a
+moment. Yet what other course remained? He was brooding deeply
+on the subject, in his hangar one evening - (it was Thursday and
+Saturday was but two days off) when there came a light knock at
+the door.
+
+This had never occurred before. He had given strict orders, backed
+by his brother's authority, that he was never to be intruded upon
+when in this place; and though he had sometimes encountered the
+prying eyes of the curious flashing from behind the trees encircling
+the hangar, his door had never been approached before, or his
+privacy encroached upon. He started then, when this low but
+penetrating sound struck across the turmoil of his thoughts, and
+cast one look in the direction from which it came; but he did not
+rise, or even change his position on his workman's stool.
+
+Then it came again, still low but with an insistence which drew his
+brows together and made his hand fall from the wire he had been
+unconsciously holding through the mental debate which was absorbing
+him. Still he made no response, and the knocking continued. Should
+he ignore it entirely, start up his motor and render himself
+oblivious to all other sounds? At every other point in his career
+he would have done this, but an unknown, and as yet unnamed,
+something had entered his heart during this fatal month, which made
+old ways impossible and oblivion a thing he dared not court too
+recklessly. Should this be a summons from Doris! Should
+(inconceivable idea, yet it seized upon him relentlessly and would
+not yield for the asking) should it be Doris herself!
+
+Taking advantage of a momentary cessation of the ceaseless tap tap,
+he listened. Silence was never profounder than in this forest on
+that windless night. Earth and air seemed, to his strained ear,
+emptied of all sound. The clatter of his own steady, unhastened
+heart-beat was all that broke upon the stillness. He might be
+alone in the Universe for all token of life beyond these walls, or
+so he was saying to himself, when sharp, quick, sinister, the
+knocking recommenced, demanding admission, insisting upon attention,
+drawing him against his own will to his feet, and finally, though
+he made more than one stand against it, to the very door.
+
+"Who's there?" he asked, imperiously and with some show of anger.
+
+No answer, but another quiet knock.
+
+"Speak! or go from my door. No one has the right to intrude here.
+What is your name and business?"
+
+Continued knocking - nothing more.
+
+With an outburst of wrath, which made the hangar ring, Orlando
+lifted his fist to answer this appeal in his own fierce fashion
+from his own side of the door, but the impulse paused at fulfilment,
+and he let his arm fall again in a rush of self-hatred which it
+would have pained his worst enemy, even little Doris, to witness.
+As it reached his side, the knock came again.
+
+It was too much. With an oath, Orlando reached for his key. But
+before fitting it into the lock, he cast a look behind him. The
+car was in plain sight, filling the central space from floor to
+roof. A single glance from a stranger's eye, and its principal
+secret would be a secret no longer. He must not run such a risk.
+Before he answered this call, he must drop the curtain he had
+rigged up against such emergencies as these. He had but to pull
+a cord and a veil would fall before his treasure, concealing it as
+effectually as an Eastern bride is concealed behind her yashmak.
+
+Stepping to the wall, he drew that cord, then with an impatient
+sigh, returned to the door.
+
+Another quiet but insistent knock greeted him. In no fury now, but
+with a vague sense of portent which gave an aspect of farewell to
+the one quick glance he cast about the well-known spot, he fitted
+the key in the lock, and stood ready to turn it.
+
+"I ask again your name and your business," he shouted out in loud
+command. "Tell them or -" He meant to say, "or I do not turn this
+key." But something withheld the threat. He knew that it would
+perish in the utterance; that he could not carry it out. He would
+have to open the door now, response or no response. "Speak!" was
+the word with which he finished his demand.
+
+A final knock.
+
+Pulling a pistol from his pocket, with his left hand, he turned
+the key with his right.
+
+The door remained unopened.
+
+Stepping slowly back, he stared at its unpainted boards for a
+moment, then he spoke up quietly, almost courteously:
+
+"Enter."
+
+But the command passed unheeded; the latch was not raised, and only
+the slightest tap was heard.
+
+With a bound he reached forward and pulled the door open. Then a
+great silence fell upon him and a rigidity as of the grave seized
+and stiffened his powerful frame.
+
+The man confronting him from the darkness was Sweetwater.
+
+
+
+XXXV
+
+THE MAN WITHIN AND THE MAN WITHOUT
+
+
+An instant of silence, during which the two men eyed each other;
+then, Sweetwater, with an ironical smile directed towards the
+pistol lightly remarked:
+
+"Mr. Challoner and other men at the hotel are acquainted with my
+purpose and await my return. I have come -" here he cast a glowing
+look at the huge curtain cutting off the greater portion of the
+illy-lit interior -" to offer you my services, Mr. Brotherson. I
+have no other motive for this intrusion than to be of use. I am
+deeply interested in your invention, to the development of which I
+have already lent some aid, and can bring to the test you propose
+a sympathetic help which you could hardly find in any other person
+living."
+
+The silence which settled down at the completion of these words had
+a weight which made that of the previous moment seem light and all
+athrob with sound. The man within had not yet caught his breath;
+the man without held his, in an anxiety which had little to do with
+the direction of the weapon, into which he looked. Then an owl
+hooted far away in the forest, and Orlando, slowly lowering his arm,
+asked in an oddly constrained tone:
+
+"How long have you been in town?"
+
+The answer cut clean through any lingering hope he may have had.
+
+"Ever since the day your brother was told the story of his great
+misfortune."
+
+"Ah! still at your old tricks! I thought you had quit that
+business as unprofitable."
+
+"I don't know. I never expect quick returns. He who holds on for
+a rise sometimes reaps unlooked-for profits."
+
+The arm and fist of Orlando Brotherson ached to hurl this fellow
+back into the heart of the midnight woods.
+
+But they remained quiescent and he spoke instead I have buried
+the business. You will never resuscitate it through me."
+
+Sweetwater smiled. There was no mirth in his smile though there
+was lightness in his tone as said:
+
+"Then let us go back to the matter in hand. You need a helper;
+where are you going to find one if you don't take me?"
+
+A growl from Brotherson's set lips. Never had he looked more
+dangerous than in the one burning instant following this daring
+repetition of the detective's outrageous request. But as he noted
+how slight was the figure opposing him from the other side of the
+threshold, he was swayed by his natural admiration of pluck in the
+physically weak, and lost his threatening attitude, only to assume
+one which Sweetwater secretly found it even harder to meet.
+
+"You are a fool," was the stinging remark he heard flung at him.
+"Do you want to play the police-officer here and arrest me in mid
+air?"
+
+"Mr. Brotherson, you understand me as little as I am supposed to
+understand you. Humble as my place is in society and, I may add,
+in the Department whose interests I serve, there are in me two men.
+One you know passably well - the detective whose methods, only
+indifferently clever show that he has very much to learn. Of the
+other - the workman acquainted with hammer and saw, but with some
+knowledge too of higher mathematics and the principles upon which
+great mechanical inventions depend, you know little, and must
+imagine much. I was playing the gawky when I helped you in the
+old house in Brooklyn. I was interested in your air-ship - Oh,
+I recognised it for what it was, notwithstanding its oddity and
+lack of ostensible means for flying - but I was not caught in the
+whirl of its idea; the idea by which you doubtless expect, and
+with very good reason too, to revolutionise the science of aviation.
+But since then I've been thinking it over, and am so filled with
+your own hopes that either I must have a hand in the finishing and
+sailing of the one you have yourself constructed, or go to work
+myself on the hints you have unconsciously given me, and make a car
+of my own."
+
+Audacity often succeeds where subtlier means fail. Orlando, with
+a curious twist of his strong lip, took hold of the detective's arm
+and drew him in, shutting and locking the door carefully behind him.
+
+"Now," said he, "you shall tell me what you think you have
+discovered, to make any ideas of your own available in the
+manufacture of a superior self-propelling air-ship."
+
+Sweetwater who had been so violently wheeled about in entering that
+he stood with his back to the curtain concealing the car, answered
+without hesitation.
+
+"You have a device, entirely new so far as I can judge, by which
+this car can leap at once into space, hold its own in any direction,
+and alight again upon any given spot without shock to the machine or
+danger to the people controlling it."
+
+Explain the device."
+
+"I will draw it."
+
+"You can?"
+
+"As I see it."
+
+"As you see it!"
+
+"Yes. It's a brilliant idea; I could never have conceived it."
+
+"You believe -"
+
+"I know."
+
+"Sit here. Let's see what you know."
+
+Sweetwater sat down at the table the other pointed out, and drawing
+forward a piece of paper, took up a pencil with an easy air.
+Brotherson approached and stood at his shoulder. He had taken up
+his pistol again, why he hardly knew, and as Sweetwater began his
+marks, his fingers tightened on its butt till they turned white in
+the murky lamplight.
+
+"You see," came in easy tones from the stooping draughtsman, "I
+have an imagination which only needs a slight fillip from a mind
+like yours to send it in the desired direction. I shall not draw
+an exact reproduction of your idea, but I think you will see that
+I understand it very well. How's that for a start?"
+
+Brotherson looked and hastily drew back. He did not want the other
+to note his surprise.
+
+"But that is a portion you never saw," he loudly declared.
+
+"No, but I saw this," returned Sweetwater, working busily on some
+curves; "and these gave me the fillip I mentioned. The rest came
+easily."
+
+Brotherson, in dread of his own anger, threw his pistol to the other
+end of the shed:
+
+"You knave! You thief!" he furiously cried.
+
+"How so?" asked Sweetwater smilingly, rising and looking him calmly
+in the face. "A thief is one who appropriates another man's goods,
+or, let us say, another man's ideas. I have appropriated nothing
+yet. I've only shown you how easily I could do so. Mr. Brotherson,
+take me in as your assistant. I will be faithful to you, I swear it.
+I want to see that machine go up."
+
+"For how many people have you drawn those lines?" thundered the
+inexorable voice.
+
+"For nobody; not for myself even. This is the first time they have
+left their hiding-place in my brain."
+
+"Can you swear to that?"
+
+"I can and will, if you require it. But you ought to believe my
+word, sir. I am square as a die in all matters not connected
+ - well, not connected with my profession," he smiled in a burst
+of that whimsical humour, which not even the seriousness of the
+moment could quite suppress.
+
+"And what surety have I that you do not consider this very matter
+of mine as coming within the bounds you speak of?"
+
+"None. But you must trust me that far."
+
+Brotherson surveyed him with an irony which conveyed a very
+different message to the detective than any he had intended. Then
+quickly:
+
+"To how many have you spoken, dilating upon this device, and
+publishing abroad my secret?"
+
+"I have spoken to no one, not even to Mr. Gryce. That shows my
+honesty as nothing else can."
+
+"You have kept my secret intact?"
+
+"Entirely so, sir."
+
+"So that no one, here or elsewhere, shares our knowledge of the new
+points in this mechanism?"
+
+"I say so, sir."
+
+"Then if I should kill you," came in ferocious accents, " now
+ - here -"
+
+"You would be the only one to own that knowledge. But you won't
+kill me."
+
+"Why?"
+
+"Need I go into reasons?
+
+"Why? I say."
+
+"Because your conscience is already too heavily laden to bear the
+burden of another unprovoked crime"
+
+Brotherson, starting back, glared with open ferocity upon the man
+who dared to face him with such an accusation.
+
+"God! why didn't I shoot you on entrance!" he cried. "Your courage
+is certainly colossal."
+
+A fine smile, without even the hint of humour now, touched the
+daring detective's lip. Brotherson's anger seemed to grow under it,
+and he loudly repeated:
+
+"It's more than colossal; it's abnormal and -" A moment's pause,
+then with ironic pauses -" and quite unnecessary save as a matter
+of display, unless you think you need it to sustain you through
+the ordeal you are courting. You wish to help me finish and prepare
+for flight?"
+
+I sincerely do."
+
+"You consider yourself competent?"
+
+"I do."
+
+Brotherson's eyes fell and he walked once to the extremity of the
+oval flooring and back.
+
+"Well, we will grant that. But that's not all that is necessary.
+My requirements demand a companion in my first flight. Will you go
+up in the car with me on Saturday night?"
+
+A quick affirmative was on Sweetwater's lips but the glimpse which
+he got of the speaker's face glowering upon him from the shadows
+into which Brotherson had withdrawn, stopped its utterance, and the
+silence grew heavy. Though it may not have lasted long by the clock,
+the instant of breathless contemplation of each other's features
+across the intervening space was of incalculable moment to Sweetwater,
+and, possibly, to Brotherson. As drowning men are said to live over
+their whole history between their first plunge and their final rise
+to light and air, so through the mind of the detective rushed the
+memories of his past and the fast fading glories of his future; and
+rebelling at the subtle peril he saw in that sardonic eye, he
+vociferated an impulsive:
+
+"No! I'll not -" and paused, caught by a new and irresistible
+sensation.
+
+A breath of wind - the first he, had felt that night - had swept
+in through some crevice in the curving wall, flapping the canvas
+enveloping the great car. It acted like a peal to battle. After
+all, a man must take some risks in his life, and his heart was in
+this trial of a redoubtable mechanism in which he had full faith.
+He could not say no to the prospect of being the first to share a
+triumph which would send his name to the ends of the earth; and,
+changing the trend of his sentence, he repeated with a calmness
+which had the force of a great decision
+
+I will not fail you in anything. If she rises - here his trembling
+hand fell on the curtain shutting off his view of the ship, "she
+shall take me with her, so that when she descends I may be the first
+to congratulate the proud inventor of such a marvel."
+
+So be it!" shot from the other's lips, his eyes losing their
+threatening look, and his whole countenance suddenly aglow with the
+enthusiasm of awakened genius.
+
+Coming from the shadows, he laid his hand on the cord regulating
+the rise and fall of the concealing curtain.
+
+"Here she is!" he cried and drew the cord.
+
+The canvas shook, gathered itself into great folds and disappeared
+in the shadows from which he had just stepped.
+
+The air-car stood revealed - a startling, because wholly unique,
+vision.
+
+Long did Sweetwater survey it, then turning with beaming face upon
+the watchful inventor, he uttered a loud Hurrah.
+
+Next moment, with everything forgotten between them save the glories
+of this invention, both dropped simultaneously to the floor and
+began that minute examination of the mechanism necessary to their
+mutual work.
+
+
+XXXVII
+
+HIS GREAT HOUR
+
+Saturday night at eight o'clock.
+
+So the fiat had gone forth, with no concession to be made on account
+of weather.
+
+As Oswald came from his supper and took a look at the heavens from
+the small front porch, he was deeply troubled that Orlando had
+remained so obstinate on this point. For there were ominous clouds
+rolling up from the east, and the storms in this region of high
+mountains and abrupt valleys were not light, nor without danger even
+to those with feet well planted upon mother earth.
+
+If the tempest should come up before eight!
+
+Mr. Challoner, who, from some mysterious impulse of bravado on the
+part of Brotherson, was to be allowed to make the third in this
+small band of spectators, was equally concerned at this sight, but
+not for Brotherson. His fears were for Oswald, whose slowly
+gathering strength could illy bear the strain which this additional
+anxiety for his brother's life must impose upon him. As for Doris,
+she was in a state of excitement more connected with the past than
+with the future. That afternoon she had laid her hand in that of
+Orlando Brotherson, and wished him well. She! in whose breast
+still lingered reminiscences of those old doubts which had beclouded
+his image for her at their first meeting. She had not been able to
+avoid it. His look was a compelling one, and it had demanded thus
+much from her; and - a terrible thought to her gentle spirit - he
+might be going to his death!
+
+It had been settled by the prospective aviator that they were to
+watch for the ascent from the mouth of the grassy road leading in
+to the hangar. The three were to meet there at a quarter to eight
+and await the stroke and the air-cars rise. That time was near,
+and Mr. Challoner, catching a glimpse of Oswald's pallid and
+unnaturally drawn features, as he set down the lantern he carried,
+shuddered with foreboding and wished the hour passed.
+
+Doris' watchful glance never left the face whose lightest change
+was more to her than all Orlando's hopes. But the result upon her
+was not to weaken her resolution, but to strengthen it. Whatever
+the outcome of the next few minutes, she must stand ready to sustain
+her invalid through it. That the darkness of early evening had
+deepened to oppression, was unnoticed for the moment. The fears of
+an hour past had been forgotten. Their attention was too absorbed
+in what was going on before them, for even a glance overhead.
+
+Suddenly Mr. Challoner spoke.
+
+"Who is the man whom Mr. Brotherson has asked to go up with him?"
+
+It was Oswald who answered.
+
+"He has never told me. He has kept his own counsel about that as
+about everything else connected with this matter. He simply advised
+me that I was not to bother about him any more; that he had found
+the assistant he wanted."
+
+"Such reticence seems unpardonable. You have - displayed great
+patience, Oswald."
+
+"Because I understand Orlando. He reads men's natures like a book.
+The man he trusts, we may trust. To-morrow, he will speak openly
+enough. All cause for reticence will be gone.
+
+"You have confidence then in the success of this undertaking?"
+
+"If I hadn't, I should not be here. I could hardly bear to witness
+his failure, even in a secret test like this. I should find it too
+hard to face him afterwards."
+
+"I don't understand."
+
+"Orlando has great pride. If this enterprise fails I cannot answer
+for him. He would be capable of anything. Why, Doris! what is
+the matter, child? I never saw you look like that before."
+
+She had been down on her knees regulating the lantern, and the
+sudden flame, shooting up, had shown him her face turned up towards
+his in an apprehension which verged on horror.
+
+"Do I look frightened?" she asked, remembering herself and lightly
+rising. "I believe that I am a little frightened. If - if anything
+should go wrong! If an accident-" But here she remembered herself
+again and quickly changed her tone. "But your confidence shall be
+mine. I will believe in his good angel or - or in his self-command
+and great resolution. I'll not be frightened any more."
+
+But Oswald did not seem satisfied. He continued to look at her in
+vague concern.
+
+He hardly knew what to make of the intense feeling she had
+manifested. Had Orlando touched her girlish heart? Had this
+cold-blooded nature, with its steel-like brilliancy and honourable
+but stern views of life, moved this warm and sympathetic soul to
+more than admiration? The thought disturbed him so he forgot the
+nearness of the moment they were all awaiting till a quick rasping
+sound from the hangar, followed by the sudden appearance of an
+ever-widening band of light about its upper rim, drew his attention
+and awakened them all to a breathless expectation.
+
+The lid was rising. Now it was half-way up, and now, for the first
+time, it was lifted to its full height and stood a broad oval disc
+against the background of the forest. The effect was strange. The
+hangar had been made brilliant by many lamps, and their united glare
+pouring from its top and illuminating not only the surrounding
+treetops but the broad face of this uplifted disc, roused in the
+awed spectator a thrill such as in mythological times might have
+greeted the sudden sight of Vulcan's smithy blazing on Olympian
+hills. But the clang of iron on iron would have attended the flash
+and gleam of those unexpected fires, and here all was still save
+for that steady throb never heard in Olympus or the halls of
+Valhalla, the pant of the motor eager for flight in the upper air.
+
+As they listened in a trance of burning hope which obliterated all
+else, this noise and all others near and distant, was suddenly lost
+in a loud clatter of writhing and twisting boughs which set the
+forest in a roar and seemed to heave the air about them.
+
+A wind had swooped down from the east, bending everything before
+it and rattling the huge oval on which their eyes were fixed as
+though it would tear it from its hinges.
+
+The three caught at each other's hands in dismay. The storm had
+come just on the verge of the enterprise, and no one might guess
+the result.
+
+"Will he dare? Will he dare?" whispered Doris, and Oswald answered,
+though it seemed next to impossible that he could have heard her:
+
+"He will dare. But will he survive it? Mr. Challoner," he suddenly
+shouted in that gentleman's ear, "what time is it now?"
+
+Mr. Challoner, disengaging himself from their mutual grasp, knelt
+down by the lantern to consult his watch.
+
+"One minute to eight," he shouted back.
+
+The forest was now a pandemonium. Great boughs, split from their
+parent trunks, fell crashing to the ground in all directions. The
+scream of the wind roused echoes which repeated themselves, here,
+there and everywhere. No rain had fallen yet, but the sight of
+the clouds skurrying pell-mell through the glare thrown up from the
+shed, created such havoc in the already overstrained minds of the
+three onlookers, that they hardly heeded, when with a c1atter and
+crash which at another time would have startled them into flight,
+the swaying oval before them was whirled from its hinges and thrown
+back against the trees already bending under the onslaught of the
+tempest. Destruction seemed the natural accompaniment of the moment,
+and the only prayer which sprang to Oswald's lips was that the motor
+whose throb yet lingered in their blood though no longer taken in
+by the ear, would either refuse to work or prove insufficient to
+lift the heavy car into this seething tumult of warring forces.
+His brother's life hung in the balance against his fame, and he
+could not but choose life for him. Yet, as the multitudinous
+sounds about him yielded for a moment to that brother's shout,
+and he knew that the moment had come, which would soon settle all,
+he found himself staring at the elliptical edge of the hangar, with
+an anticipation which held in it as much terror as joy, for the end
+of a great hope or the beginning of a great triumph was compressed
+into this trembling instant and if -
+
+Great God! he sees it! They all see it! Plainly against that
+portion of the disc which still lifted itself above the further
+wall, a curious moving mass appears, lengthens, takes on shape,
+then shoots suddenly aloft, clearing the encircling tops of the
+bending, twisting and tormented trees, straight into the heart of
+the gale, where for one breathless moment it whirls madly about
+like a thing distraught, then in slow but triumphant obedience to
+the master hand that guides it, steadies and mounts majestically
+upward till it is lost to their view in the depths of impenetrable
+darkness.
+
+Orlando Brotherson has accomplished his task. He has invented a
+mechanism which can send an air-car straight up from its mooring
+place. As the three watchers realise this, Oswald utters a cry
+of triumph, and Doris throws herself into Mr. Challoner's arms.
+Then they all stand transfixed again, waiting for a descent which
+may never come.
+
+But hark! a new sound, mingling its clatter with all the others.
+It is the rain. Quick, maddening, drenching, it comes; enveloping
+them in wet in a moment. Can they hold their faces up against it?
+
+And the wind! Surely it must toss that aerial messenger before
+it and fling it back to earth, a broken and despised toy.
+
+"Orlando?" went up in a shriek. "Orlando?" Oh, for a ray of light
+in those far-off heavens For a lull in the tremendous sounds
+shivering the heavens and shaking the earth! But the tempest rages
+on, and they can only wait, five minutes, ten minutes, looking,
+hoping, fearing, without thought of self and almost without thought
+of each other, till suddenly as it had come, the rain ceases and
+the wind, with one final wail of rage and defeat, rushes away into
+the west, leaving behind it a sudden silence which, to their
+terrified hearts, seems almost more dreadful to bear than the
+accumulated noises of the moment just gone.
+
+Orlando was in that shout of natural forces, but he is not in this
+stillness. They look aloft, but the heavens are void. Emptiness
+is where life was. Oswald begins to sway, and Doris, remembering
+him now and him only, has thrown her strong young arm about him,
+when - What is this sound they hear high up, high up, in the rapidly
+clearing vault of the heavens! A throb - a steady pant,- drawing
+near and yet nearer,- entering the circlet of great branches over
+their heads - descending, slowly descending,- till they catch
+another glimpse of those hazy outlines which had no sooner taken
+shape than the car disappeared from their sight within the
+elliptical wall open to receive it.
+
+It had survived the gale! It has re-entered its haven, and that,
+too, without colliding with aught around or any shock to those
+within, just as Orlando had promised; and the world was henceforth
+his! Hail to Orlando Brotherson!
+
+Oswald could hardly restrain his mad joy and enthusiasm. Bounding
+to the door separating him from this conqueror of almost invincible
+forces, he pounded it with impatient fist.
+
+"Let me in!" he cried. "You've done the trick, Orlando, you've
+done the trick."
+
+"Yes, I have satisfied myself," came back in studied self-control
+from the other side of the door; and with a quick turning of the
+lock, Orlando stood before them.
+
+They never forgot him as he looked at that moment. He was drenched,
+battered, palpitating with excitement; but the majesty of success
+was in his eye and in the bearing of his incomparable figure.
+
+As Oswald bounded towards him, he reached out his hand, but his
+glance was for Doris.
+
+Yes," he went on, in tones of suppressed elation, "there's no flaw
+in my triumph. I have done all that I set out to do. Now -"
+
+Why did he stop and look hurriedly back into the hangar? He had
+remembered Sweetwater. Sweetwater, who at that moment was stepping
+carefully from his seat in some remote portion of the car. The
+triumph was not complete. He had meant -
+
+But there his thought stopped. Nothing of evil, nothing even of
+regret should mar his great hour. He was a conqueror, and it was
+for him now to reap the joy of conquest.
+
+
+
+XXXVIII
+
+NIGHT
+
+
+Three days had passed, and Orlando Brotherson sat in his room at
+the hotel before a table laden with telegrams, letters and marked
+newspapers. The news of his achievement had gone abroad, and Derby
+was, for the moment, the centre of interest for two continents.
+
+His success was an established fact. The second trial which he
+had made with his car, this time with the whole town gathered
+together in the streets as witnesses, had proved not only the
+reliability of its mechanism, but the great advantages which it
+possessed for a direct flight to any given point. Already he saw
+Fortune beckoning to him in the shape of an unconditional offer of
+money from a first-class source; and better still,- for he was a
+man of untiring energy and boundless resource - that opportunity
+for new and enlarged effort which comes with the recognition of
+one's exceptional powers.
+
+All this was his and more. A sweeter hope, a more enduring joy
+had followed hard upon gratified ambition. Doris had smiled on him;
+ - Doris! She had caught the contagion of the universal enthusiasm
+and had given him her first ungrudging token of approval. It had
+altered his whole outlook on life in an instant, for there was an
+eagerness in this demonstration which proclaimed the relieved heart.
+She no longer trusted either appearances or her dream. He had
+succeeded in conquering her doubts by the very force of his
+personality, and the shadow which had hitherto darkened their
+intercourse had melted quite away. She was ready to take his
+word now and Oswald's, after which the rest must follow. Love does
+not lag far behind an ardent admiration.
+
+Fame! Fortune! Love! What more could a man desire? What more
+could this man, with his strenuous past and an unlimited capacity
+for an enlarged future, ask from fate than this. Yet, as he bends
+over his letters, fingering some, but reading none beyond a line
+or two, he betrays but a passing elation, and hardly lifts his head
+when a burst of loud acclaim comes ringing up to his window from
+some ardent passer-by: "Hurrah for Brotherson! He has put our town
+on the map!"
+
+Why this despondency? Have those two demons seized him again? It
+would seem so and with new and overmastering fury. After the hour
+of triumph comes the hour of reckoning. Orlando Brotherson in his
+hour of proud attainment stands naked before his own soul's tribunal
+and the pleader is dumb and the judge inexorable. There is but one
+Witness to such struggles; but one eye to note the waste and
+desolation of the devastated soul, when the storm is over past.
+
+Orlando Brotherson has succumbed; the attack was too keen, his
+forces too shaken. But as the heavy minutes pass, he slowly
+re-gathers his strength and rises, in the end, a conqueror.
+Nevertheless, he knows, even in that moment of regained command,
+that the peace he had thus bought with strain and stress is but
+momentary; that the battle is on for life: that the days which to
+other eyes would carry a sense of brilliancy - days teeming with
+work and outward satisfaction - would hold within their hidden
+depths a brooding uncertainty which would rob applause of its music
+and even overshadow the angel face of Love.
+
+He quailed at the prospect, materialist though he was. The days
+ - the interminable days! In his unbroken strength and the glare
+of the noonday sun, he forgot to take account of the nights looming
+in black and endless procession before him. It was from the day
+phantom he shrank, and not from the ghoul which works in the
+darkness and makes a grave of the heart while happier mortals sleep.
+
+And the former terror seemed formidable enough to him in this his
+hour of startling realisation, even if he had freed himself for
+the nonce from its controlling power. To escape all further
+contemplation of it he would work. These letters deserved
+attention. He would carry them to Oswald, and in their
+consideration find distraction for the rest of the day, at least.
+Oswald was a good fellow. If pleasure were to be gotten from these
+tokens of good-will, he should have his share of it. A gleam of
+Oswald's old spirit in Oswald's once bright eye, would go far
+towards throttling one of those demons whose talons he had just
+released from his throat; and if Doris responded too, he would
+deserve his fate, if he did not succeed in gaining that mastery
+of himself which would make such hours as these but episodes in
+a life big with interest and potent with great emotions.
+
+Rising with a resolute air, he made a bundle of his papers and,
+with them in hand, passed out of his room and down the hotel stairs.
+
+A man stood directly in his way, as he made for the front door.
+It was Mr. Challoner.
+
+Courtesy demanded some show of recognition between them, and
+Brotherson was passing with his usual cold bow, when a sudden
+impulse led him to pause and meet the other's eye, with the
+sarcastic remark:
+
+"You have expressed, or so I have been told, some surprise at my
+choice of mechanician. A man of varied accomplishments, Mr.
+Challoner, but one for whom I have no further use. If, therefore,
+you wish to call off your watch-dog, you are at liberty to do so.
+I hardly think he can be serviceable to either of us much longer."
+
+The older gentleman hesitated, seeking possibly for composure,
+and when he answered it was not only without irony but with a
+certain forced respect:
+
+"Mr. Sweetwater has just left for New York, Mr. Brotherson. He
+will carry with him, no doubt, the full particulars of your great
+success."
+
+Orlando bowed, this time with distinguished grace. Not a flicker
+of relief had disturbed the calm serenity of his aspect, yet when
+a moment later, he stepped among his shouting admirers in the
+street, his air and glance betrayed a bounding joy for which
+another source must be found than that of gratified pride. A
+chain had slipped from his spirit, and though the people shrank a
+little, even while they cheered, it was rather from awe of his
+bearing and the recognition of that sense of apartness which
+underlay his smile than from any perception of the man's real
+nature or of the awesome purpose which at that moment exalted
+it. But had they known - could they have seen into this
+tumultuous heart - what a silence would have settled upon these
+noisy streets; and in what terror and soul-confusion would each
+man have slunk away from his fellows into the quiet and solitude
+of his own home.
+
+Brotherson himself was not without a sense of the incongruity
+underlying this ovation; for, as he slowly worked himself along,
+the brightness of his look became dimmed with a tinge of sarcasm
+which in its turn gave way to an expression of extreme melancholy
+ - both quite unbefitting the hero of the hour in the first flush
+of his new-born glory. Had he seen Doris' youthful figure emerge
+for a moment from the vine-hung porch he was approaching, bringing
+with it some doubt of the reception awaiting him? Possibly, for
+he made a stand before he reached the house, and sent his followers
+back; after which he advanced with an unhurrying step, so that
+several minutes elapsed before he finally drew up before Mr. Scott's
+door and entered through the now empty porch into his brother's
+sitting-room.
+
+He had meant to see Doris first, but his mind had changed. If all
+passed off well between himself and Oswald, if he found his brother
+responsive and wide-awake to the interests and necessities of the
+hour, he might forego his interview with her till he felt better
+prepared to meet it. For call it cowardice or simply a reasonable
+precaution, any delay seemed preferable to him in his present mood
+of discouragement, to that final casting of the die upon which hung
+so many and such tremendous issues. It was the first moment of real
+halt in his whole tumultuous life! Never, as daring experimentalist
+or agitator, had he shrunk from danger seen or unseen or from threat
+uttered or unuttered, as he shrank from this young girl's no; and
+something of the dread he had felt lest he should encounter her
+unaware in the hall and so be led on to speak when his own judgment
+bade him be silent, darkened his features as he entered his brother's
+presence.
+
+But Oswald was sunk in a bitter revery of his own, and took no heed
+of these signs of depression. In the re-action following these days
+of great excitement, the past had re-asserted itself, and all was
+gloom in his once generous soul. This, Orlando had time to perceive,
+quick as the change came when his brother really realised who his
+visitor was. The glad "Orlando!" and the forced smile did not
+deceive him, and his voice quavered a trifle as he held out his
+packet with the words:
+
+"I have come to show you what the world says of my invention. We
+will soon be great men," he emphasised, as Oswald opened the letters.
+"Money has been offered me and - Read! read!" he urged, with an
+unconscious dictatorialness, as Oswald paused in his task. "See
+what the fates have prepared for us; for you shall share all my
+honours, as you will from this day share my work and enter into all
+my experiments. Cannot you enthuse a little bit over it? Doesn't
+the prospect contain any allurement for you? Would you rather stay
+locked up in this petty town -"
+
+"Yes; or - die. Don't look like that, Orlando. It was a cowardly
+speech and I ask your pardon. I'm hardly fit to talk to-day.
+Edith -"
+
+Orlando frowned.
+
+"Not that name!" he harshly interrupted. "You must not hamper your
+life with useless memories. That dream of yours may be sacred, but
+it belongs to the past, and a great reality confronts you. When you
+have fully recovered your health, your own manhood will rebel at a
+weakness unworthy one of our name. Rouse yourself, Oswald. Take
+account of our prospects. Give me your hand and say, 'Life holds
+something for me yet. I have a brother who needs me if I do not
+need him. Together, we can prove ourselves invincible and wrench
+fame and fortune from the world.'"
+
+But the hand he reached for did not rise at his command, though
+Oswald started erect and faced him with manly earnestness.
+
+"I should have to think long and deeply," he said, "before I took
+upon myself responsibilities like these. I am broken in mind and
+heart, Orlando, and must remain so till God mercifully delivers me.
+I should be a poor assistant to you - a drag, rather than a help.
+Deeply as I deplore it, hard as it may be for one of your
+temperament to understand so complete an overthrow, I yet must
+acknowledge my condition and pray you not to count upon me in any
+plans you may form. I know how this looks - I know that as your
+brother and truest admirer, I should respond, and respond strongly,
+to such overtures as these, but the motive for achievement is gone.
+She was my all; and while I might work, it would be mechanically.
+The lift, the elevating thought is gone."
+
+Orlando stood a moment studying his brother's face; then he turned
+shortly about and walked the length of the room. When he came back,
+he took up his stand again directly before Oswald, and asked, with
+a new note in his voice:
+
+"Did you love Edith Challoner so much as that?"
+
+A glance from Oswald's eye, sadder than any tear.
+
+"So that you cannot be reconciled?"
+
+A gesture. Oswald's words were always few.
+
+Orlando's frown deepened.
+
+"Such grief I partly understand," said he. "But time will cure it.
+Some day another lovely face -"
+
+"We'll not talk of that, Orlando."
+
+"No, we'll not talk of that," acquiesced the inventor, walking away
+again, this time to the window. "For you there's but one woman;
+ - and she's a memory."
+
+"Killed!" broke from his brother's lips. "Slain by her own hand
+under an impulse of wildness and terror! Can I ever forget that?
+Do not expect it, Orlando."
+
+"Then you do blame me?" Orlando turned and was looking full at
+Oswald.
+
+"I blame your unreasonableness and your overweening pride."
+
+Orlando stood a moment, then moved towards the door. The heaviness
+of his step smote upon Oswald's ear and caused him to exclaim:
+
+"Forgive me, Orlando." But the other cut him short with an
+imperative:
+
+"Thanks for your candour! If her spirit is destined to stand like
+an immovable shadow between you and me, you do right to warn me.
+But this interview must end all allusion to the subject. I will
+seek and find another man to share my fortunes; (as he said this
+he approached suddenly, and took his papers from the other's hand)
+or -" Here he hastily retraced his steps to the door which he
+softly opened. "Or" he repeated - But though Oswald listened for
+the rest, it did not come. While he waited, the other had given
+him one deeply concentrated look and passed out.
+
+No heartfelt understanding was possible between these two men.
+
+Crossing the hall, Orlando knocked at the door of Doris' little
+sitting-room.
+
+No answer, yet she was there. He knew it in every throbbing fibre
+of his body. She was there and quite aware of his presence; of
+this he felt sure; yet she did not bid him enter. Should he knock
+again? Never! but he would not quit the threshold, not if she
+kept him waiting there for hours. Perhaps she realised this.
+Perhaps she had meant to open the door to him from the very first,
+who can tell? What avails is that she did ultimately open it, and
+he, meeting her soft eye, wished from his very heart that his
+impulse had led him another way, even if that way had been to the
+edge of the precipice - and over.
+
+For the face he looked upon was serene, and there was no serenity
+in him; rather a confusion of unloosed passions fearful of barrier
+and yearning tumultuously for freedom. But, whatever his revolt,
+the secret revolt which makes no show in look or movement, he kept
+his ground and forced a smile of greeting. If her face was quiet,
+it was also lovely; - too lovely, he felt, for a man to leave it,
+whatever might come of his lingering.
+
+Nothing in all his life had ever affected him like it. For him
+there was no other woman in the past, the present or the future,
+and, realising this - taking in to the full what her affection and
+her trust might be to him in those fearsome days to come, he so
+dreaded a rebuff - he, who had been the courted of women and the
+admired of men ever since he could remember, - that he failed to
+respond to her welcome and the simple congratulations she felt
+forced to repeat. He could neither speak the commonplace, nor
+listen to it. This was his crucial hour. He must find support
+here, or yield hopelessly to the maelstrom in whose whirl he was
+caught.
+
+She saw his excitement and faltered back a step - a move which she
+regretted the next minute, for he took advantage of it to enter and
+close behind him the door which she would never have shut of her
+own accord. Then he spoke, abruptly, passionately, but in those
+golden tones which no emotion could render other than alluring:
+
+"I am an unhappy man, Miss Scott. I see that my presence here is
+not welcome, yet am sure that it would be so if it were not for a
+prejudice which your generous nature should be the first to cast
+aside, in face of the outspoken confidence of my brother: Oswald.
+Doris, little Doris, I love you. I have loved you from the moment
+of our first meeting. Not to many men is it given to find his
+heart so late, and when he does, it is for his whole life; no
+second passion can follow it. I know that I am premature in saying
+this; that you are not prepared to hear such words from me and that
+it might be wiser for me to withhold them, but I must leave Derby
+soon, and I cannot go until I know whether there is the least hope
+that you will yet lend a light to my career or whether that career
+must burn itself to ashes at your feet. Oswald - nay, hear me out
+ - Oswald lives in his memories; but I must have an active hope
+- a tangible expectation - if I am to be the man I was meant to be.
+Will you, then, coldly dismiss me, or will you let my whole future
+life prove to you the innocence of my past? I will not hasten
+anything; all I ask is some indulgence. Time will do the rest."
+
+"Impossible," she murmured.
+
+But that was a word for which he had no ear. He saw that she was
+moved, unexpectedly so; that while her eyes wandered restlessly at
+times towards the door, they ever came back in girlish wonder, if
+not fascination, to his face, emboldening him so that he ventured
+at last, to add:
+
+"Doris, little Doris, I will teach you a marvellous lesson, if you
+will only turn your dainty ear my way. Love such as mine carries
+infinite treasure with it. Will you have that treasure heaped,
+piled before your feet? Your lips say no, but your eyes - the
+truest eyes I ever saw - whisper a different language. The day will
+come when you will find your joy in the breast of him you are now
+afraid to trust." And not waiting for disclaimer or even a glance
+of reproach from the eyes he had so wilfully misread, he withdrew
+with a movement as abrupt as that with which he had entered.
+
+Why, then, with the memory of this exultant hour to fend off all
+shadows, did the midnight find him in his solitary hangar in the
+moonlit woods, a deeply desponding figure again. Beside him, swung
+the huge machine which represented a life of power and luxury; but
+he no longer saw it. It called to him with many a creak and quiet
+snap, - sounds to start his blood and fire his eye a week - nay, a
+day ago. But he was deaf to this music now; the call went unheeded;
+the future had no further meaning, for him, nor did he know or
+think whether he sat in light or in darkness; whether the woods
+were silent about him, or panting with life and sound. His demon
+had gripped him again and the final battle was on. There would
+never be another. Mighty as he felt himself to be, there were
+limits even to his capacity for endurance. He could sustain no
+further conflict. How then would it end? He never had a doubt
+himself! Yet he sat there.
+
+Around him in the forest, the night owls screeched and innumerable
+small things without a name, skurried from lair to lair.
+
+He heard them not.
+
+Above, the moon rode, flecking the deepest shadows with the silver
+from her half-turned urn, but none of the soft and healing drops
+fell upon him. Nature was no longer a goddess, but an avenger;
+light a revealer, not a solace. Darkness the only boon.
+
+Nor had time a meaning. From early eve to early morn he sat there
+and knew not if it were one hour or twelve. Earth was his no longer.
+He roused, when the sun made everything light about him, but he did
+not think about it. He rose, but was not conscious that he rose.
+He unlocked the door and stepped out into the forest; but he could
+never remember doing this. He only knew later that he had been in
+the woods and now was in his room at the hotel; all the rest was
+phantasmagoria, agony and defeat.
+
+He had crossed the Rubicon of this world's hopes and fears, but he
+had been unconscious of the passage.
+
+
+
+XXXIX
+
+THE AVENGER
+
+
+ "Dear Mr. Challoner:
+
+ "With every apology for the intrusion, may I request
+ a few minutes of private conversation with you this evening
+ at seven o'clock? Let it be in your own room.
+
+ "Yours truly,
+ "ORLANDO BROTHERSON."
+
+Mr. Challoner had been called upon to face many difficult and
+heartrending duties since the blow which had desolated his home
+fell upon him.
+
+But from none of them had he shrunk as he did from the interview
+thus demanded. He had supposed himself rid of this man. He had
+dismissed him from his life when he had dismissed Sweetwater. His
+face, accordingly, wore anything but a propitiatory look, when
+promptly at the hour of seven, Orlando Brotherson entered his
+apartments.
+
+His pleasure or his displeasure was, however, a matter of small
+consequence to his self-invited visitor. He had come there with a
+set purpose, and nothing in heaven or earth could deter him from it
+now. Declining the offer of a seat, with the slightest of
+acknowledgments in the way of a bow, he took a careful survey of
+the room before saying:
+
+"Are we alone, Mr. Challoner, or is that man Sweetwater lurking
+somewhere within hearing?"
+
+"Mr. Sweetwater is gone, as I had the honour of telling you
+yesterday," was the somewhat stiff reply. "There are no witnesses
+to this conference, if that is what you wish to know.
+
+"Thank you, but you will pardon my insistence if I request the
+privilege of closing that door." He pointed to the one communicating
+with the bedroom. "The information I have to give you is not such
+as I am willing to have shared, at least for the present."
+
+"You may close the door," said Mr. Challoner coldly. "But is it
+necessary for you to give me the information you mention, to-night?
+If it is of such a nature that you cannot accord me the privilege of
+sharing it, as yet, with others, why not spare me till you can? I
+have gone through much, Mr. Brotherson."
+
+"You have," came in steady assent as the man thus addressed stepped
+to the door he had indicated and quietly closed it. " But," he
+continued, as he crossed back to his former position, "would it be
+easier for you to go through the night now in anticipation of what
+I have to reveal than to hear it at once from my lips while I am in
+the mood to speak?"
+
+The answer was slow in coming. The courage which had upheld this
+rapidly aging man through so many trying interviews, seemed
+inadequate for the test put so cruelly upon it. He faltered and
+sank heavily into a chair, while the stern man watching him, gave
+no signs of responsive sympathy or even interest, only a patient
+and icy-tempered resolve.
+
+"I cannot live in uncertainty;" such were finally Mr. Challoner's
+words. "What you have to say concerns Edith?" The pause he made
+was infinitesimal in length, but it was long enough for a quick
+disclaimer. But no such disclaimer came. "I will hear it," came
+in reluctant finish.
+
+Mr. Brotherson took a step forward. His manner was as cold as the
+heart which lay like a stone in his bosom.
+
+"Will you pardon me if I ask you to rise?" said he. "I have my
+weaknesses too. (He gave no sign of them.) "I cannot speak down
+from such a height to the man I am bound to hurt."
+
+As if answering to the constraint of a will quite outside his own,
+Mr. Challoner rose. Their heads were now more nearly on a level
+and Mr. Brotherson's voice remained low, as he proceeded, with quiet
+intensity
+
+"There has been a time - and it may exist yet, God knows - when you
+thought me in some unknown and secret way the murderer of your
+daughter. I do not quarrel with the suspicion; it was justified, Mr.
+Challoner. I did kill your daughter, and with this hand! I can no
+longer deny it."
+
+The wretched father swayed, following the gesture of the hand thus
+held out; but he did not fall, nor did a sound leave his lips.
+
+Brotherson went coldly on:
+
+I did it because I regarded her treatment of my suit as insolent.
+I have no mercy for any such display of intolerance on the part of
+the rich and the fortunate. I hated her for it; I hated her class,
+herself and all she stood for. To strike the dealer of such a hurt
+I felt to be my right. Though a man of small beginnings and of a
+stock which such as you call common, I have a pride which few of
+your blood can equal. I could not work, or sleep or eat with such
+a sting in my breast as she had planted there. To rid myself of it,
+I determined to kill her, and I did. How? Oh, that was easy,
+though it has proved a great stumbling-block to the detectives, as I
+knew it would! I shot her - but not with an ordinary bullet. My
+charge was a small icicle made deliberately for the purpose. It
+had strength enough to penetrate, but it left no trace behind it.
+'A bullet of ice for a heart of ice,' I had said in the torment
+of my rage. But the word was without knowledge, Mr. Challoner. I
+see it now; I have seen it for two whole weeks. I did not misjudge
+her condemnation of me, but I misjudged its cause. It was not to
+the comparatively poor, the comparatively obscure man she sought to
+show contempt, but to the brother of Oswald whose claims she saw
+insulted. A woman I should have respected, not killed. A woman of
+no pride of station; a woman who loved a man not only of my own
+class but of my own blood - a woman, to avenge whose unmerited
+death I stand here before you a self-condemned criminal. That is
+but justice, Mr. Challoner. That is the way I look at things.
+Though no sentimentalist; and dead to all beliefs save the eternal
+truths of science, I have that in me which will not let me profit,
+now that I know myself unworthy, by the great success I have earned.
+Hence this confession, Mr. Challoner. It has not come easily, nor
+do I shut my eyes in the least to the results which must follow.
+But I can not do differently. To-morrow, you may telegraph to New
+York. Till then I desire to be left undisturbed. I have many
+things to dispose of in the interim."
+
+Mr. Challoner, very white by now, pointed to the door before he
+sank again into his chair. Brotherson took it for dismissal and
+stepped slowly back. Then their eyes met again and Mr. Challoner
+spoke his first word:
+
+"There was another - a poor woman - she died suddenly - and her
+wound was not unlike that inflicted upon Edith. Did you -"
+
+"I did." The answer came without a tremour. "You may say and so
+may others that I was less justified in this attack than in the
+other; but I do not see it that way. A theory does not always work
+in practice. I wished to test the unusual means I contemplated,
+and the woman I saw before me across the court was hard-working and
+with nothing in life to look forward to, so -"
+
+A cry of bitter execration from Mr. Challoner cut him short.
+Turning with a shrug he was about to lift his hand to the door,
+when he gave a violent start and fell hastily back before a quickly
+entering figure of such passion and fury as neither of these men had
+ever seen before.
+
+It was Oswald! Oswald, the kindly! Oswald, the lover of men and
+the adorer of women! Oswald, with the words of the dastardly
+confession he had partly overheard searing hot within his brain!
+Oswald, raised in a moment from the desponding invalid to a
+terrifying ministrant of retributive justice.
+
+Orlando could scarcely raise his hand before the other's was upon
+his throat.
+
+"Murderer! doubly-dyed murderer of innocent women!" was hissed in
+the strong man's ears. "Not with the law but with me you must
+reckon, and may God and the spirit of my mother nerve my arm!"
+
+
+XL
+
+DESOLATE
+
+
+The struggle was fierce but momentary. Oswald with his weakened
+powers could not long withstand the steady exertion of Orlando's
+giant strength, and ere long sank away from the contest into Mr.
+Challoner's arms.
+
+"You should not have summoned the shade of our mother to your aid,"
+observed the other with a smile, in which the irony was lost in
+terrible presage. " I was always her favourite."
+
+Oswald shuddered. Orlando had spoken truly; she had always been
+blindly, arrogantly trustful of her eldest son. No fault could she
+see in him; and now -
+
+Impetuously Oswald struggled with his weakness, raised himself in
+Mr. Challoner's arms and cried in loud revolt:
+
+But God is just. He will not let you escape. If He does, I will
+not. I will hound you to the ends of this earth and, if necessary,
+into the eternities. Not with the threat of my arm - you are my
+master there, but with the curse of a brother who believed you
+innocent of his darling's blood and would have believed you so in
+face of everything but your own word."
+
+Peace!" adjured Orlando. "There is no account I am not ready to
+settle. I have robbed you of the woman you love, but I have
+despoiled myself. I stand desolate in the world, who but an hour
+ago could have chosen my seat among the best and greatest. What
+can your curses do after that?"
+
+"Nothing." The word came slowly like a drop wrung from a nearly
+spent heart. " Nothing; nothing. Oh, Orlando, I wish we were both
+dead and buried and that there were no further life for either of
+us."
+
+The softened tone, the wistful prayer which would blot out an
+immortality of joy for the one, that it might save the other from
+an immortality of retribution, touched some long unsounded chord
+in Orlando's extraordinary nature.
+
+Advancing a step, he held out his hand - the left one. "We'll
+leave the future to itself, Oswald, and do what we can with the
+present," said he. "I've made a mess of my life and spoiled a
+career which might have made us both kings. Forgive me, Oswald.
+I ask for nothing else from God or man. I should like that. It
+would strengthen me for to-morrow."
+
+But Oswald, ever kindly, generous and more ready to think of others
+than of himself, had yet some of Orlando's tenacity. He gazed at
+that hand and a flush swept up over his cheek which instantly became
+ghastly again.
+
+"I cannot," said he - "not even the left one. May God forgive me!"
+
+Orlando, struck silent for a moment, dropped his hand and slowly
+turned away. Mr. Challoner felt Oswald stiffen in his arms, and
+break suddenly away, only to stop short before he had taken one of
+the half dozen steps between himself and his departing brother.
+
+"Where are you going?" he demanded in tones which made Orlando turn.
+
+"I might say, To the devil," was the sarcastic reply. "But I doubt
+if he would receive me. No," he added, in more ordinary tones as
+the other shivered and again started forward, "you will have no
+trouble in finding me in my own room to-night. I have letters to
+write and - other things. A man like me cannot drop out without a
+ripple. You may go to bed and sleep. I will keep awake for two."
+
+"Orlando!" Visions were passing before Oswald's eyes, soul-crushing
+visions such as in his blame less life he never thought could enter
+into his consciousness or blast his tranquil outlook upon life.
+"Orlando!" he again appealed, covering his eyes in a frenzied
+attempt to shut out these horrors, "I cannot let you go like this.
+To-morrow -"
+
+"To-morrow, in every niche and corner of this world, wherever Edith
+Challoner's name has gone, wherever my name has gone, it will be
+known that the discoverer of a practical air-ship, is a man whom
+they can no longer honour. Do you think that is not hell enough
+for me; or that I do not realise the hell it will be for you? I've
+never wearied you or any man with my affection; but I'm not all
+demon. I would gladly have spared you this additional anguish; but
+that was impossible. You are my brother and must suffer from the
+connection whether we would have it so of not. If it promises too
+much misery - and I know no misery like that of shame - come with
+me where I go to-morrow. There will be room for two."
+
+Oswald, swaying with weakness, but maddened by the sight of an
+overthrow which carried with it the stifled affections and the
+admiration of his whole life, gave a bound forward, opened his
+arms and - fell.
+
+Orlando stopped short. Gazing down on his prostrate brother, he
+stood for a moment with a gleam of something like human tenderness
+showing through the flare of dying passions and perishing hopes;
+then he swung open the door and passed quietly out, and Mr.
+Challoner could hear the laughing remark with which he met and
+dismissed the half-dozen men and women who had been drawn to this
+end of the hall by what had sounded to them like a fracas between
+angry men.
+
+
+
+XLI
+
+FIVE O'CLOCK IN THE MORNING
+
+
+The clock in the hotel office struck three. Orlando Brotherson
+counted the strokes; then went on writing. His transom was partly
+open and he had just heard a step go by his door. This was nothing
+new. He had already heard it several times before that night. It
+was Mr. Challoner's step, and every time it passed, he had rustled
+his papers or scratched vigorously with his pen. "He is keeping
+watch for Oswald," was his thought. "They fear a sudden end to this.
+No one, not the son of my mother knows me. Do I know myself?"
+
+Four o'clock! The light was still burning, the pile of letters he
+was writing increasing.
+
+Five o'clock! A rattling shade betrays an open window. No other
+sound disturbs the quiet of the room. It is empty now; but Mr.
+Challoner, long since satisfied that all was well, goes by no
+more. Silence has settled upon the hotel; - that heavy silence
+which precedes the dawn.
+
+There was silence in the streets also. The few who were abroad,
+crept quietly along. An electric storm was in the air and the
+surcharged clouds hung heavy and low, biding the moment of outbreak.
+A man who had left a place of many shadows for the more open road,
+paused and looked up at these clouds; then went calmly on.
+
+Suddenly the shriek of an approaching train tears through the
+valley. Has it a call for this man? No. Yet he pauses in the
+midst of the street he is crossing and watches, as a child might
+watch, for the flash of its lights at the end of the darkened vista.
+It comes - filling the empty space at which he stares with moving
+life - engine, baggage car and a long string of Pullmans. Then all
+is dark again and only the noise of its slackening wheels comes to
+him through the night. It has stopped at the station. A minute
+longer and it has started again, and the quickly lessening rumble
+of its departure is all that remains of this vision of man's
+activity and ceaseless expectancy. When it is quite gone and all
+is quiet, a sigh falls from the man's lips and he moves on, but
+this time, for some unexplainable reason, in the direction of the
+station. With lowered head he passes along, noting little till he
+arrives within sight of the depot where some freight is being
+handled, and a trunk or two wheeled down the platform. No sight
+could be more ordinary or unsuggestive, but it has its attraction
+for him, for he looks up as he goes by and follows the passage of
+that truck down the platform till it has reached the corner and
+disappeared. Then he sighs again and again moves on.
+
+A cluster of houses, one of them open and lighted, was all which
+lay between him now and the country road. He was hurrying past,
+for his step had unconsciously quickened as he turned his back
+upon the station, when he was seized again by that mood of
+curiosity and stepped up to the door from which a light issued
+and looked in. A common eating-room lay before him, with rudely
+spread tables and one very sleepy waiter taking orders from a new
+arrival who sat with his back to the door. Why did the lonely
+man on the sidewalk start as his eye fell on the latter's
+commonplace figure, a hungry man demanding breakfast in a cheap,
+country restaurant? His own physique was powerful while that of
+the other looked slim and frail. But fear was in the air, and
+the brooding of a tempest affects some temperaments in a totally
+unexpected manner. As the man inside turns slightly and looks up,
+the master figure on the sidewalk vanishes, and his step, if any
+one had been interested enough to listen, rings with a new note as
+it turns into the country road it has at last reached.
+
+But no one heeded. The new arrival munches his roll and waits
+impatiently for his coffee, while without, the clouds pile
+soundlessly in the sky, one of them taking the form of a huge
+hand with clutching fingers reaching down into the hollow void beneath.
+
+
+
+XLI
+
+AT SIX
+
+
+Mr. Challoner had been honest in his statement regarding the
+departure of Sweetwater. He had not only paid and dismissed our
+young detective, but he had seen him take the train for New York.
+And Sweetwater had gone away in good faith, too, possibly with his
+convictions undisturbed, but acknowledging at last that he had
+reached the end of his resources. But the brain does not loose
+its hold upon its work as readily as the hand does. He was halfway
+to New York and had consciously bidden farewell to the whole subject,
+when he suddenly startled those about him by rising impetuously to
+his feet. He sat again immediately, but with a light in his small
+grey eye which Mr. Gryce would have understood and revelled in. The
+idea for which he had searched industriously for months had come at
+last, unbidden; thrown up from some remote recess of the mind which
+had seemingly closed upon the subject forever.
+
+I have it. I have it," he murmured in ceaseless reiteration to
+himself. "I will go back to Mr. Challoner and let him decide if
+the idea is worth pursuing. Perhaps an experiment may be necessary.
+It was bitter cold that night; I wish it were icy weather now. But
+a chemist can help us out. Good God! if this should be the
+explanation of the mystery, alas for Orlando and alas for Oswald!
+
+But his sympathies did not deter him. He returned to Derby at once,
+and as soon as he dared, presented himself at the hotel and asked
+for Mr. Challoner.
+
+He was amazed to find that gentleman already up and in a state of
+agitation that was very disquieting. But he brightened wonderfully
+at sight of his visitor, and drawing him inside the room, observed
+with trembling eagerness:
+
+"I do not know why you have come back, but never was man more
+welcome. Mr. Brotherson has confessed."
+Confessed!"
+
+"Yes, he killed both women; my daughter and his neighbour, the
+washerwoman, with a -"
+
+"Wait," broke in Sweetwater, eagerly, "let me tell you." And
+stooping, he whispered something in the other's ear.
+
+Mr. Challoner stared at him amazed, then slowly nodded his head.
+
+"How came you to think -" he began; but Sweetwater in his great
+anxiety interrupted him with a quick:
+
+"Explanations will keep, Mr. Challoner. What of the man himself?
+Where is he? That's the important thing now."
+
+"He was in his room till early this morning writing letters, but he
+is not there now. The door is unlocked and I went in. From
+appearances I fear the worst. That is why your presence relieves
+me so. Where do you think he is?"
+
+"In his hangar in the woods. Where else would he go to -"
+
+"I have thought of that. Shall we start out alone or take witnesses
+with us?"
+
+"We will go alone. Does Oswald anticipate -"
+
+"He is sure. But he lacks strength to move. He lies on my bed in
+there. Doris and her father are with him."
+
+"We will not wait a minute. How the storm holds off. I hope it
+will hold off for another hour."
+
+Mr. Challoner made no reply. He had spoken because he felt
+compelled to speak, but it had not been easy for him, nor could any
+trifles move him now.
+
+The town was up by this time and, though they chose the least
+frequented streets, they had to suffer from some encounters. It
+was a good half hour before they found themselves in the forest and
+in sight of the hangar. One look that way, and Sweetwater turned
+to see what the effect was upon Mr. Challoner.
+
+A murmur of dismay greeted him. The oval of that great lid stood
+up against the forest background.
+
+"He has escaped," cried Mr. Challoner.
+
+But Sweetwater, laying a finger on his lip, advanced and laid his
+ear against the door. Then he cast a quick look aloft. Nothing
+was to be seen there. The darkness of storm in the heavens but
+nothing more.- Yes! now, a flash of vivid and destructive lightning!
+
+The two men drew back and their glances crossed.
+
+"Let us return to the highroad," whispered Sweetwater; "we can see
+nothing here."
+
+Mr. Challoner, trembling very much, wheeled slowly about.
+
+"Wait," enjoined Sweetwater. "First let me take a look inside."
+
+Running to the nearest tree, he quickly climbed it, worked himself
+along a protruding branch and looked down into the open hangar. It
+was now so dark that details escaped him, but one thing was certain.
+The air-ship was not there.
+
+Descending, he drew Mr. Challoner hastily along. "He's gone," said
+he. "Let us reach the high ground as quickly as we can. I'm glad
+that Mr. Oswald Brotherson is not with us or - or Miss Doris."
+
+But this expression of satisfaction died on his lips. At the point
+where the forest road debouches into the highway, he had already
+caught a glimpse of their two figures. They were waiting for news,
+and the brother spoke up the instant he saw Sweetwater:
+
+"Where is he? You've not found him or you wouldn't be coming alone.
+He cannot have gone up. He cannot manage it without an assistant.
+We must seek him somewhere else; in the forest or in our house at
+home. Ah!" The lightning had forked again.
+
+"He's not in the forest and he's not in your home," returned
+Sweetwater. "He's aloft; the air-ship is not in the shed. And he
+can go up alone now." Then more slowly: "But he cannot come down."
+
+They strained their eyes in a maddening search of the heavens. But
+the darkness had so increased that they could be sure of nothing.
+Doris sank upon her knees.
+
+Suddenly the lightning flashed again, this time so vividly and so
+near that the whole heaven burst into fiery illumination above them
+and the thunder, crashing almost simultaneously, seemed for a moment
+to rock the world and bow the heavens towards them. Then a silence;
+then Sweetwater's whisper in Mr. Challoner's ear:
+
+"Take them away! I saw him; he was falling like a shot."
+
+Mr. Challoner threw out his arms, then steadied himself. Oswald was
+reeling; Oswald had seen too. But Doris was there. When the
+lightning flashed again, she was standing and Oswald was weeping on
+her bosom.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg Etext Initials Only, by Anna Katharine Green
+