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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Million-Dollar Suitcase, by
+Alice MacGowan and Perry Newberry
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Million-Dollar Suitcase
+
+Author: Alice MacGowan
+ Perry Newberry
+
+Release Date: August 31, 2009 [EBook #29877]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MILLION-DOLLAR SUITCASE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Clarke, Woodie4 and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
+produced from images generously made available by The
+Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE MILLION-DOLLAR SUITCASE
+
+ BY
+
+ ALICE MacGOWAN
+ AND
+ PERRY NEWBERRY
+
+ NEW YORK
+ FREDERICK A. STOKES COMPANY
+ PUBLISHERS
+
+
+
+
+ _Copyright, 1922, by_
+ FREDERICK A. STOKES COMPANY
+
+ _Copyright, 1921, by_
+ THE CURTIS PUBLISHING COMPANY
+ _under the title "Two and Two"_
+
+
+ _Printed in the United States of America_
+
+
+
+
+ CONTENTS
+
+
+ CHAPTER PAGE
+
+ I WORTH GILBERT 1
+
+ II SIGHT UNSEEN 16
+
+ III A WEDDING PARTY 27
+
+ IV AN APPARITION 45
+
+ V AT THE ST. DUNSTAN 57
+
+ VI ON THE ROOF 65
+
+ VII THE GOLD NUGGET 75
+
+ VIII A TIN-HORN GAMBLER 87
+
+ IX SANTA YSOBEL 101
+
+ X A SHADOW IN THE FOG 110
+
+ XI THE MISSING DIARY 124
+
+ XII A MURDER 137
+
+ XIII DR. BOWMAN 147
+
+ XIV SEVEN LOST DAYS 155
+
+ XV AT DYKEMAN'S OFFICE 164
+
+ XVI A LUNCHEON 171
+
+ XVII CLEANSING FIRES 181
+
+ XVIII THE TORN PAGE 188
+
+ XIX ON THE HILL-TOP 196
+
+ XX AT THE COUNTRY CLUB 209
+
+ XXI A MATTER OF TASTE 214
+
+ XXII A DINNER INVITATION 225
+
+ XXIII A BIT OF SILK 231
+
+ XXIV THE MAGNET 240
+
+ XXV AN ARREST 250
+
+ XXVI MRS. BOWMAN SPEAKS 261
+
+ XXVII THE BLOSSOM FESTIVAL 273
+
+ XXVIII THE COUNTRY CLUB BALL 293
+
+ XXIX UNMASKED 303
+
+ XXX A CONFESSION 311
+
+ XXXI THE MILLION-DOLLAR SUITCASE 320
+
+
+
+
+THE MILLION-DOLLAR SUITCASE
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+WORTH GILBERT
+
+
+On the blank silence that followed my last words, there in the big,
+dignified room with its Circassian walnut and sound-softening rugs,
+Dykeman, the oldest director, squalled out as though he had been bitten,
+
+"All there is to tell! But it can't be! It isn't possib--" His voice
+cracked, split on the word, and the rest came in an agonized squeak, "A
+man can't just vanish into thin air!"
+
+"A man!" Knapp, the cashier, echoed. "A suitcase full of money--our
+money--can't vanish into thin air in the course of a few hours."
+
+Feverishly they passed the timeworn phrase back and forth; it would have
+been ludicrous if it hadn't been so deadly serious. Well, money when you
+come to think of it, is its very existence to such an institution; it
+was not to be wondered at that the twelve men around the long table in
+the directors' room of the Van Ness Avenue Savings Bank found this a
+life or death matter.
+
+"How much--?" began heavy-set, heavy-voiced old Anson, down at the lower
+end, but stuck and got no further. There was a smitten look on every
+face at the contemplation--a suitcase could hold so unguessably great a
+sum expressed in terms of cash and securities.
+
+"We'll have the exact amount in a few moments--I've just set them to
+verifying," President Whipple indicated with a slight backward nod the
+second and smaller table in the room, where two clerks delved mole-like
+among piles of securities, among greenbacks and yellowbacks bound round
+with paper collars, and stacks of coin.
+
+The blinds were down, only the table lamps on, and a gooseneck over
+where the men counted. It put the place all in shadow, and threw out
+into bolder relief the faces around that board, gray-white, denatured,
+all with the financier's curiously unhuman look. The one fairly cheerful
+countenance in sight was that of A. G. Cummings, the bank's attorney.
+
+For myself, I was only waiting to hear what results those clerks would
+bring us. So far, Whipple had been quite noncommittal: the extraordinary
+state of the market--everything so upset that a bank couldn't afford
+even the suspicion of a loss or irregularity--hinting at something in
+his mind not evident to the rest of us. I was just rising to go round
+and ask him quietly if, having reported, I might not be excused to get
+on the actual work, when the door opened.
+
+I can't say why the young fellow who stood in it should have seemed so
+foreign to the business in hand; perhaps the carriage of his tall
+figure, the military abruptness of his movements, the way he swung the
+door far back against the wall and halted there, looking us over. But I
+do know that no sooner had Worth Gilbert, lately home from France,
+crossed the threshold, meeting Whipple's outstretched hand, nodding
+carelessly to the others, than suddenly every man in the room seemed
+older, less a man. We were dead ones; he the only live wire in the
+place.
+
+"Boyne," the president turned quickly to me, "would you mind going over
+for Captain Gilbert's benefit what you've just said?"
+
+The newcomer had, so far, not made any movement to join the circle at
+the table. He stood there, chin up, looking straight at us all, but
+quite through us. At the back of the gaze was a something between weary
+and fierce that I have noticed in the eyes of so many of our boys home
+from what they'd witnessed and gone through over there, when forced to
+bring their attention to the stale, bloodless affairs of civil life.
+Used to the instant, conclusive fortunes of war, they can hardly handle
+themselves when matters hitch and halt upon customs and legalities; the
+only thing that appeals to them is the big chance, win or lose, and have
+it over. Such a man doesn't speak the language of the group that was
+there gathered. Just looking at him, old Dykeman rasped, without further
+provocation,
+
+"What's Captain Gilbert got to do with the private concerns of this
+bank?"
+
+As though the words--and their tone--had been a cordial invitation,
+rather than an offensive challenge, the young man, who had still shown
+no sign of an intention to come into the meeting at all, walked to the
+table, drew out a chair and sat down.
+
+"Pardon me, Mr. Dykeman," Cummings' voice had a wire edge on it, "the
+Hanford block of stock in this bank has, as I think you very well know,
+passed fully into Gilbert hands to-day."
+
+"Thomas A. Gilbert," Dykeman was sparing of words.
+
+"Captain Worth Gilbert's father," Whipple attempted pacification. "Mr.
+Gilbert senior was with me till nearly noon, closing up the transfer. He
+had hardly left when we discovered the shortage. After consultation,
+Knapp and I got hold of Cummings. We wanted to get you gentlemen
+here--have the capital of the bank represented, as nearly as we
+could--and found that Mr. Gilbert had taken the twelve-forty-five train
+for Santa Ysobel; so, as Captain Gilbert was to be found, we felt that
+if we got him it would be practically--er--quite the same thing--"
+
+Worth Gilbert had sat in the chair he selected, absolutely indifferent.
+It was only when Dykeman, hanging to his point, spoke again, that I saw
+a quick gleam of blue fire come into those hawk eyes under the slant
+brow. He gave a sort of detached attention as Dykeman sputtered
+indecently.
+
+"Not the same thing at all! Sons can't always speak for fathers, any
+more than fathers can always speak for sons. In this case--"
+
+He broke off with his ugly old mouth open. Worth Gilbert, the son of
+divorced parents, with a childhood that had divided time between a
+mother in the East and a California father, surveyed the parchment-like
+countenance leisurely after the crackling old voice was hushed. Finally
+he grunted inarticulately (I'm sorry I can't find a more imposing word
+for a returned hero); and answered all objections with,
+
+"I'm here now--and here I stay. What's the excitement?"
+
+"I was just asking Mr. Boyne to tell you," Whipple came in smoothly.
+
+No one else offered any objections. What I repeated, briefly, amounted
+to this:
+
+Directly after closing time to-day--which was noon, as this was
+Saturday--Knapp, the cashier of the bank, had discovered a heavy
+shortage, and it was decided on a quick investigation that Edward
+Clayte, one of the paying tellers, had walked out with the money in a
+suitcase. I was immediately called in on what appeared a wide-open
+trail, with me so close behind Clayte that you'd have said there was
+nothing to it. I followed him--and the suitcase--to his apartment at the
+St. Dunstan, found he'd got there at twenty-five minutes to one, and I
+barely three quarters of an hour after.
+
+"How do you get the exact minute Clayte arrived?" Anson stopped me at
+this point, "and the positive knowledge that he had the suitcase with
+him?"
+
+"Clayte asked the time--from the clerk at the desk--as he came in. He
+put the suitcase down while he set his watch. The clerk saw him pick it
+up and go into the elevator; Mrs. Griggsby, a woman at work mending
+carpet on the seventh floor--which is his--saw him come out of the
+elevator carrying it, and let himself into his room. There the trail
+ends."
+
+"Ends?" As my voice halted young Gilbert's word came like a bullet. "The
+trail can't end unless the man was there."
+
+"Or the suitcase," little old Sillsbee quavered, and Worth Gilbert gave
+him a swift, half-humorous glance.
+
+"Bath and bedroom," I said, "that suite has three windows, seven
+stories above the ground. I found them all locked--not mere latches--the
+St. Dunstan has burglar-proof locks. No disturbance in the room; all
+neat, in place, the door closed with the usual spring lock; and I had to
+get Mrs. Griggsby to move, since she was tacking the carpet right at the
+threshold. Everything was in that room that should have been
+there--except Clayte and the suitcase."
+
+The babel of complaint and suggestion broke out as I finished, exactly
+as it had done when I got to this point before: "The Griggsby woman
+ought to be kept under surveillance"; "The clerk, the house servants
+ought to be watched,"--and so on, and so on. I curtly reiterated my
+assurance that such routine matters had been promptly and thoroughly
+attended to. My nerves were getting raw. I'm not so young as I was. This
+promised to be one of those grinding cases where the detective agency is
+run through the rollers so many times that it comes out pretty slim in
+the end, whether that end is failure or success.
+
+The only thing in sight that it didn't make me sick to look at was that
+silent young fellow sitting there, never opening his trap, giving things
+a chance to develop, not rushing in on them with the forceps. It was a
+crazy thing for Whipple to call this meeting--have all these old, scared
+men on my back before I could take the measure of what I was up against.
+What, exactly, had the Van Ness Avenue Bank lost? That, and not anything
+else, was the key for my first moves. And at last a clerk crossed to our
+table, touched Whipple's arm and presented a sheet of paper.
+
+"I'll read the total, gentlemen." The president stared at the sheet he
+held, moistened his lips, gulped, gasped, "I--I'd no idea it was so
+much!" and finished in a changed voice, "nine hundred and eighty seven
+thousand, two hundred and thirty four dollars."
+
+A deathlike hush. Dykeman's mere look was a call for the ambulance;
+Anson slumped in his chair; little old Sillsbee sat twisted away so that
+his face was in shadow, but the knuckles showed bone white where his
+hand gripped the table top. None of them seemed able to speak; the young
+voice that broke startlingly on the stillness had the effect of scaring
+the others, with its tone of nonchalance, rather than reassuring them.
+Worth Gilbert leaned forward and looked round in my direction with,
+
+"This is beginning to be interesting. What do the police say of it?"
+
+"We've not thought well to notify them yet." Whipple's eye consulted
+that of his cashier and he broke off. Quietly the clerks got out with
+the last load of securities; Knapp closed the door carefully behind
+them, and as he returned to us, Whipple repeated, "I had no idea it was
+so big," his tone almost pleading as he looked from one to the other.
+"But I felt from the first that we'd better keep this thing to
+ourselves. We don't want a run on the bank, and under present financial
+conditions, almost anything might start one. But--almost a million
+dollars!"
+
+He seemed unable to go on; none of the other men at the table had
+anything to offer. It was the silent youngster, the outsider, who spoke
+again.
+
+"I suppose Clayte was bonded--for what that's worth?"
+
+"Fifteen thousand dollars," Knapp, the cashier, gave the information
+dully. The sum sounded pitiful beside that which, we were to
+understand, had traveled out of the bank as currency and unregistered
+securities in Clayte's suitcase.
+
+"Bonding company will hound him, won't they?" young Gilbert put it
+bluntly. "Will the Clearing House help you out?" in the tone of one
+discussing a lost umbrella.
+
+"Not much chance--now." Whipple's face was sickly. "You know as well as
+I do that we are going to get little help from outside. I want you to
+all stand by me now--keep this quiet--among ourselves--"
+
+"Among ourselves!" rapped out Kirkpatrick. "Then it leaks--we have a
+run--and where are you?"
+
+"No, no. Just long enough to give Boyne here a chance to recover our
+money without publicity--try it out, anyhow."
+
+"Well," said Anson sullenly, "that's what he's paid for. How long is it
+going to take him?"
+
+I made no attempt to answer that fool question; Cummings spoke for me,
+lawyer fashion, straddling the question, bringing up the arguments pro
+and con.
+
+"Your detective asks for publicity to assist his search. You refuse it.
+Then you've got to be indulgent with him in the matter of time.
+Understand me, you may be right; I'm not questioning the wisdom of
+secrecy, though as a lawyer I generally think the sooner you get to the
+police with a crime the better. You all can see how publicity and a
+sizable reward offered would give Mr. Boyne a hundred thousand
+assistants--conscious and unconscious--to help nab Clayte."
+
+"And we'd be a busted bank before you found him," groaned Knapp. "We've
+got to keep this thing to ourselves. I agree with Whipple."
+
+"It's all we can do," the president repeated.
+
+"Suppose a State bank examiner walks in on you Monday?" demanded the
+attorney.
+
+"We take that chance--that serious chance," replied Whipple solemnly.
+
+Silence after that again till Cummings spoke.
+
+"Gentlemen, there are here present twelve of the principal stockholders
+of the bank." He paused a moment to estimate. "The capital is
+practically represented. Speaking as your legal advisor, I am obliged to
+say that you should not let the bank take such a risk as Mr. Whipple
+suggests. You are threatened with a staggering loss, but, after all, a
+high percent of money lost by defalcations is recovered--made
+good--wholly or in part."
+
+"Nearly a million dollars!" croaked old Sillsbee.
+
+"Yes, yes, of course," Cummings agreed hastily; "the larger amount's
+against you. The men who can engineer such a theft are almost as strong
+as you are. You've got to make every edge cut--use every weapon that's
+at hand. And most of all, gentlemen, you've got to stand together. No
+dissensions. As a temporary expedient--to keep the bank sufficiently
+under cover and still allow Boyne the publicity he needs--replace this
+money pro rata among yourselves. That wouldn't clean any of you.
+Announce a small defalcation, such as Clayte's bond would cover, so you
+could collect there; use all the machinery of the police. Then when
+Clayte's found, the money recovered, you reimburse yourselves."
+
+"But if he's never found! If it's never recovered?" Knapp asked huskily;
+he was least able of any man in the room to stand the loss.
+
+"What do you say, Gilbert?" The attorney looked toward the young man,
+who, all through the discussion, had been staring straight ahead of him.
+He came round to the lawyer's question like one roused from other
+thoughts, and agreed shortly.
+
+"Not a bad bet."
+
+"Well--Boyne--" Whipple was giving way an inch at a time.
+
+"It's a peculiar case," I began, then caught myself up with, "All cases
+are peculiar. The big point here is to get our man before he can get rid
+of the money. We were close after Clayte; even that locked room in the
+St. Dunstan needn't have stopped us. If he wasn't in it, he was
+somewhere not far outside it. He'd had no time to make a real getaway.
+All I needed to lay hands on him was a good description."
+
+"Description?" echoed Whipple. "Your agency's got descriptions on
+file--thumb prints--photographs--of every employee of this bank."
+
+"Every one of 'em but Clayte," I said. "When I came to look up the
+files, there wasn't a thing on him. Don't think I ever laid eyes on the
+man myself."
+
+A description of Edward Clayte? Every man at the table--even old
+Sillsbee--sat up and opened his mouth to give one; but Knapp beat them
+to it, with,
+
+"Clayte's worked in this bank eight years. We all know him. You can get
+just as many good descriptions as there are people on our payroll or
+directors in this room--and plenty more at the St. Dunstan, I'll be
+bound."
+
+"You think so?" I said wearily. "I have not been idle, gentlemen; I have
+interviewed his associates. Listen to this; it is a composite of the
+best I've been able to get." I read: "Edward Clayte; height about five
+feet seven or eight; weight between one hundred and forty and one
+hundred and fifty pounds; age somewhere around forty; smooth face;
+medium complexion, fairish; brown hair; light eyes; apparently
+commonplace features; dressed neatly in blue business suit, black shoes,
+black derby hat--"
+
+"Wait a minute," interposed Knapp. "Is that what they gave you at the
+St. Dunstan--what he was wearing when he came in?"
+
+I nodded.
+
+"Well, I'd have said he had on tan shoes and a fedora. He _did_--or was
+that yesterday? But aside from that, it's a perfect description; brings
+the man right up before me."
+
+I heard a chuckle from Worth Gilbert.
+
+"That description," I said, "is gibberish; mere words. Would it bring
+Clayte up before any one who had never seen him? Ask Captain Gilbert,
+who doesn't know the man. I say that's a list of the points at which he
+resembles every third office man you meet on the street. What I want is
+the points at which he'd differ. You have all known Clayte for years;
+forget his regularities, and tell me his peculiarities--looks, manners,
+dress or habits."
+
+There was a long pause, broken finally by Whipple.
+
+"He never smoked," said the bank president.
+
+"Occasionally he did," contradicted Knapp, and the pause continued till
+I asked,
+
+"Any peculiarities of clothing?"
+
+"Oh, yes," said Whipple. "Very neat. Usually blue serge."
+
+"But sometimes gray," added Knapp, heavily, and old Sillsbee piped in,
+
+"I've seen that feller wear pin-check; I know I have."
+
+I was fed up on clothes.
+
+"How did he brush his hair?" I questioned.
+
+"Smoothed down from a part high on the left," Knapp came back promptly.
+
+"On the right," boomed old Anson from the foot of the table.
+
+"Sometimes--yes--I guess he did," Knapp conceded hesitantly.
+
+"Oh, well then, what color was it? Maybe you can agree better on that."
+
+"Sort of mousy color," Knapp thought.
+
+"O Lord! Mousy colored!" groaned Dykeman under his breath. "Listen to
+'em!"
+
+"Well, isn't it?" Knapp was a bit stung.
+
+"House mousy, or field mousy?" Cummings wanted to know.
+
+"Knapp's right enough," Whipple said with dignity. "The man's hair is a
+medium brown--indeterminate brown." He glanced around the table at the
+heads of hair under the electric lights. "Something the color of
+Merrill's," and a director began stroking his hair nervously.
+
+"No, no; darker than Merrill's," broke in Kirkpatrick. "Isn't it,
+Knapp?"
+
+"Why, I was going to say lighter," admitted the cashier, discouragedly.
+
+"Never mind," I sighed. "Forget the hair. Come on--what color are his
+eyes?"
+
+"Blue," said Whipple.
+
+"Gray," said Knapp.
+
+"Brown," said Kirkpatrick.
+
+They all spoke in one breath. And as I despairingly laid down my pencil,
+the last man repeated firmly,
+
+"Brown. But--they might be light brown--or hazel, y'know."
+
+"But, after all, Boyne," Whipple appealed to me, "you've got a fairly
+accurate description of the man, one that fits him all right."
+
+"Does it? Then he's description proof. No moles, scars or visible
+marks?" I suggested desperately.
+
+"None." There was a negative shaking of heads.
+
+"No mannerisms? No little tricks, such as a twist of the mouth, a
+mincing step, or a head carried on one side?"
+
+More shakes of negation from the men who knew Clayte.
+
+"Well, at least you can tell me who are his friends--his intimates?"
+
+Nobody answered.
+
+"He must have friends?" I urged.
+
+"He hasn't," maintained Whipple. "Knapp is as close to him as any man in
+San Francisco."
+
+The cashier squirmed, but said nothing.
+
+"But outside the bank. Who were his associates?"
+
+"Don't think he had any," from Knapp.
+
+"Relatives?"
+
+"None--I know he hadn't."
+
+"Girls? Lord! Didn't he have a girl?"
+
+"Not a girl."
+
+"No associates--no girl? For the love of Mike, what could such a man
+intend to do with all that money?" I gasped. "Where did he spend his
+time when he wasn't in the bank?"
+
+Whipple looked at his cashier for an answer. But Knapp was sitting, head
+down, in a painful brown study, and the president himself began
+haltingly.
+
+"Why, he was perhaps the one man in the bank that I knew least about.
+The truth is he was so unobjectionable in every way, personally
+unobtrusive, quite unimportant and uninteresting; really--er--
+un-everything, such a--a--"
+
+"Shadow," Cummings suggested.
+
+"That's the word--shadow--I never thought to inquire where he went till
+he walked out of here this noon with the bank's money crammed in that
+suitcase."
+
+"Was the Saturday suitcase a regular thing?" I asked, and Whipple looked
+bewildered. But Knapp woke up with,
+
+"Oh, yes. For years. Studious fellow. Books to be exchanged at the
+public library, I think. No--" Knapp spoke heavily. "Come to think of
+it, guess that was special work. He told me once he was taking some sort
+of correspondence course."
+
+"Special work!" chuckled Worth Gilbert. "I'll tell the world!"
+
+"Oh, well, give me a description of the suitcase," I hurried.
+
+"Brown. Sole-leather. That's all I ever noticed," from Whipple, a bit
+stiffly.
+
+"Brass rings and lock, I suppose?"
+
+"Brass or nickel; I don't remember. What'd you say, Knapp?"
+
+"I wouldn't know now, if it was canvas and tin," replied the harried
+cashier.
+
+"Gentlemen," I said, looking across at the clock, "since half-past two
+my men have been watching docks, ferries, railroad stations, every
+garage near the St. Dunstan, the main highways out of town. Seven of
+them on the job, and in the first hour they made ten arrests, on that
+description; and every time, sure they had their man. They thought, just
+as you seem to think, that the bunch of words described something. We're
+getting nowhere, gentlemen, and time means money here."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+SIGHT UNSEEN
+
+
+In the squabble and snatch of argument, given dignity only because it
+concerned the recovery of near a million dollars, we seemed to have lost
+Worth Gilbert entirely. He kept his seat, that chair he had taken
+instantly when old Dykeman seemed to wish to have it denied him; but he
+sat on it as though it were a lone rock by the sea. I didn't suppose he
+was hearing what we said any more than he would have heard the mewing of
+a lot of gulls, when, on a sudden silence, he burst out,
+
+"For heaven's sake, if you men can't decide on anything, sell me the
+suitcase! I'll buy it, as it is, and clean up the job."
+
+"Sell you--the suitcase--Clayte's suitcase?" They sat up on the edge of
+their chairs; bewildered, incredulous, hostile. Such a bunch is very
+like a herd of cattle; anything they don't understand scares them. Even
+the attorney studied young Gilbert with curious interest. I was mortal
+glad I hadn't said what was the fact, that with the naming of the
+enormous sum lost I was certain this was a sizable conspiracy with
+long-laid plans. They were mistrustful enough as Whipple finally
+questioned,
+
+"Is this a bona-fide offer, Captain Gilbert?" and Dykeman came in after
+him.
+
+"A gambler's chance at stolen money--is that what you figure on buying,
+sir? Is that it?" And heavy-faced Anson asked bluntly,
+
+"Who's to set the price on it? You or us? There's practically a million
+dollars in that suitcase. It belongs to the bank. If you've got an idea
+that you can buy up the chance of it for about fifty percent--you're
+mistaken. We have too much faith in Mr. Boyne and his agency for that.
+Why, at this moment, one of his men may have laid hands on Clayte, or
+found the man who planned--"
+
+He stopped with his mouth open. I saw the same suspicion that had taken
+his breath away grip momentarily every man at the table. A hint of it
+was in Whipple's voice as he asked, gravely:
+
+"Do you bind yourself to pursue Clayte and bring him, if possible, to
+justice?"
+
+"Bind myself to nothing. I'll give eight hundred thousand dollars for
+that suitcase."
+
+He fumbled in his pocket with an interrogative look at Whipple, and,
+"May I smoke in here?" and lit a cigarette without waiting a reply.
+
+Banking institutions take some pains to keep in their employ no young
+men who are known to play poker; but a poker face at that board would
+have acquired more than its share of dignity. As it was, you could see,
+almost as though written there, the agonizing doubt running riot in
+their faces as to whether Worth Gilbert was a young hero coming to the
+bank's rescue, or a con man playing them for suckers. It was Knapp who
+said at last, huskily,
+
+"I think we should close with Captain Gilbert's offer." The cashier had
+a considerable family, and I knew his recently bought Pacific Avenue
+home was not all paid for.
+
+"We might consider it," Whipple glanced doubtfully at his associates.
+"If everything else fails, this might be a way out of the difficulty for
+us."
+
+If everything else failed! President Whipple was certainly no poker
+player. Worth Gilbert gave one swift look about the ring of faces,
+pushed a brown, muscular left hand out on the table top, glancing at the
+wrist watch there, and suggested brusquely,
+
+"Think it over. My offer holds for fifteen minutes. Time to get at all
+the angles of the case. Huh! Gentlemen! I seem to have started
+something!"
+
+For the directors and stockholders of the Van Ness Avenue Savings Bank
+were at that moment almost as yappy and snappy as a wolf pack. Dykeman
+wanted to know about the one hundred and eighty seven thousand odd
+dollars not covered by Worth's offer--did they lose that? Knapp was
+urging that Clayte's bond, when they'd collected, would shade the loss;
+Whipple reminding them that they'd have to spend a good deal--maybe a
+great deal--on the recovery of the suitcase; money that Worth Gilbert
+would have to spend instead if they sold to him; and finally an ugly
+mutter from somewhere that maybe young Gilbert wouldn't have to spend so
+very much to recover that suitcase--maybe he wouldn't!
+
+The tall young fellow looked thoughtfully at his watch now and again.
+Cummings and I chipped into the thickest of the row and convinced them
+that he meant what he said, not only by his offer, but by its time
+limit.
+
+"How about publicity, if this goes?" Whipple suddenly interrogated,
+raising his voice to top the pack-yell. "Even with eight hundred
+thousand dollars in our vaults, a run's not a thing that does a bank any
+good. I suppose," stretching up his head to see across his noisy
+associates, "I suppose, Captain Gilbert, you'll be retaining Boyne's
+agency? In that case, do you give him the publicity he wants?"
+
+"Course he does!" Dykeman hissed. "Can't you see? Damn fool wants his
+name in the papers! Rotten story like this--about some lunatic buying a
+suitcase with a million in it--would ruin any bank if it got into
+print." Dykeman's breath gave out. "And--it's--it's--just the kind of
+story the accursed yellow press would eat up. Let it alone, Whipple. Let
+his damned offer alone. There's a joker in it somewhere."
+
+"There won't be any offer in about three minutes," Cummings quietly
+reminded them. "If you'd asked my opinion--and giving you opinions is
+what you pay me a salary for--I'd have said close with him while you
+can."
+
+Whipple gave me an agonized glance. I nodded affirmatively. He put the
+question to vote in a breath; the ayes had it, old Dykeman shouting
+after them in an angry squeak.
+
+"No! No!" and adding as he glared about him, "I'd like to be able to
+look a newspaper in the face; but never again! Never again!"
+
+I made my way over to Gilbert and stood in front of him.
+
+"You've bought something, boy," I said. "If you mean to keep me on as
+your detective, you can assure these people that I'll do my darndest to
+give information to the police and keep it out of the papers. What's
+happened here won't get any further than this room--through me."
+
+"You're hired, Jerry Boyne." Gilbert slapped me on the back
+affectionately. After all, he hadn't changed so much in his four years
+over there; I began to see more than traces of the enthusiastic
+youngster to whom I used to spin detective yarns in the grill at the St.
+Francis or on the rocks by the Cliff House. "Sure, we'll keep it out of
+the papers. Suits me. I'd rather not pose as the fool soon parted from
+his money."
+
+The remark was apropos; Knapp had feverishly beckoned the lawyer over to
+a little side desk; they were down at it, the light snapped on, writing,
+trying to frame up an agreement that would hold water. One by one the
+others went and looked on nervously as they worked; by the time they'd
+finished something, everybody'd seen it but Worth; and when it was
+finally put in his hands, all he seemed to notice was the one point of
+the time they'd set for payment.
+
+"It'll be quite some stunt to get the amount together by ten o'clock
+Monday," he said slowly. "There are securities to be converted--"
+
+He paused, and looked up on a queer hush.
+
+"Securities?" croaked Dykeman. "To be converted--? Oh!"
+
+"Yes," in some surprise. "Or would the bank prefer to have them turned
+over in their present form?"
+
+Again a strained moment, broken by Whipple's nervous,
+
+"Maybe that would be better," and a quickly suppressed chuckle from
+Cummings.
+
+The agreement was in duplicate. It gave Worth Gilbert complete ownership
+of a described sole-leather suitcase and its listed contents, and, as he
+had demanded, it bound him to nothing save the payment. Cummings said
+frankly that the transaction was illegal from end to end, and that any
+assurance as to the bank's ceasing to pursue Clayte would amount to
+compounding a felony. Yet we all signed solemnly, the lawyer and I as
+witnesses. A financier's idea of indecency is something about money
+which hasn't formerly been done. The directors got sorer and sorer as
+Worth Gilbert's cheerfulness increased.
+
+"Acts as though it were a damn' crap game," I heard Dykeman muttering to
+Sillsbee, who came back vacuously.
+
+"Craps?--they say our boys did shoot craps a good deal over there.
+Well--uh--they were risking their lives."
+
+And that's as near as any of them came, I suppose, to understanding how
+a weariness of the little interweaving plans of tamed men had pushed
+Worth Gilbert into carelessly staking his birthright on a chance that
+might lend interest to life, a hazard big enough to breeze the staleness
+out of things for him.
+
+We were leaving the bank, Gilbert and I ahead, Cummings right at my
+boy's shoulder, the others holding back to speak together, (bitterly
+enough, if I am any guesser) when Worth said suddenly,
+
+"You mentioned in there it's being illegal for the bank to give up the
+pursuit of Clayte. Seems funny to me, but I suppose you know what
+you're talking about. Anyhow"--he was lighting another cigarette and he
+glanced sharply at Cummings across it--"anyhow, they won't waste their
+money hunting Clayte now, should you say? That's my job. That's where I
+get my cash back."
+
+"Oh, that's where, is it?" The lawyer's dry tone might have been
+regarded as humorous. We stood in the deep doorway, hunching coat
+collars, looking into the foggy street. Worth's interest in life seemed
+to be freshening moment by moment.
+
+"Yes," he agreed briskly. "I'm going to keep you and Boyne busy for a
+while. You'll have to show me how to hustle the payment for those
+Shylocks, and Jerry's got to find the suitcase, so I can eat. But I'll
+help him."
+
+Cummings stared at the boy.
+
+"Gilbert," he said, "where are you going?--right now, I mean."
+
+"To Boyne's office."
+
+We stepped out to the street where the line of limousines waited for the
+old fellows inside, my own battleship-gray roadster, pretty well
+hammered but still a mighty capable machine, far down at the end. As
+Worth moved with me toward it, the lawyer walked at his elbow.
+
+"Seat for me?" he glanced at the car. "I've a few words of one syllable
+to say to this young man--council that I ought to get in as early as
+possible."
+
+I looked at little Pete dozing behind the wheel, and answered,
+
+"Take you all right, if I could drive. But I sprained my thumb on a
+window lock looking over that room at the St. Dunstan."
+
+"I'll drive." Worth had circled the car with surprising quickness for so
+large a man. I saw him on the other side, waiting for Pete to get out so
+he could get in. Curious the intimate, understanding look he gave the
+monkey as he flipped a coin at him with, "Buy something to burn, kid."
+Pete's idea of Worth Gilbert would be quite different from that of the
+directors in there. After all, human beings are only what we see them
+from our varying angles. Pete slid down, looking back to the last at the
+tall young fellow who was taking his place at the wheel. Cummings and I
+got in and we were off.
+
+There in the machine, my new boss driving, Cummings sitting next him, I
+at the further side, began the keen, cool probe after a truth which to
+me lay very evidently on the surface. Any one, I would have said, might
+see with half an eye that Worth Gilbert had bought Clayte's suitcase so
+that he could get a thrill out of hunting for it. Cummings I knew had in
+charge all the boy's Pacific Coast holdings; and since his mother's
+death during the first year of the war, these were large. Worth
+manifested toward them and the man who spoke to him of them the
+indifference, almost contempt, of an impatient young soul who in the
+years just behind him, had often wagered his chance of his morning's
+coffee against some other fellow's month's pay feeling that he was
+putting up double.
+
+It seemed the sense of ownership was dulled in one who had seen
+magnificent properties masterless, or apparently belonging to some limp,
+bloodstained bundle of flesh that lay in one of the rooms. In vain
+Cummings urged the state of the market, repeating with more
+particularity and force what Whipple had said. The mines were tied up by
+strike; their stock, while perfectly good, was down to twenty cents on
+the dollar; to sell now would be madness. Worth only repeated doggedly.
+
+"I've got to have the money--Monday morning--ten o'clock. I don't care
+what you sell--or hock. Get it."
+
+"See here," the lawyer was puzzled, and therefore unprofessionally out
+of temper. "Even sacrificing your stuff in the most outrageous manner, I
+couldn't realize enough--not by ten o'clock Monday. You'll have to go to
+your father. You can catch the five-five for Santa Ysobel."
+
+I could see Worth choke back a hot-tempered refusal of the suggestion.
+The funds he'd got to have, even if he went through some humiliation to
+get them.
+
+"At that," he said slowly, "father wouldn't have any great amount of
+cash on hand. Say I went to him with the story--and took the cat-hauling
+he'll give me--should I be much better off?"
+
+"Sure you would." Cummings leaned back. I saw he considered his point
+made. "Whipple would rather take their own bank stock than anything
+else. Your father has just acquired a big block of it. Act while there's
+time. Better go out there and see him now--at once."
+
+"I'll think about it," Worth nodded. "You dig for me what you can and
+never quit." And he applied himself to the demands of the down-town
+traffic.
+
+"Well," Cummings said, "drop me at the next corner, please. I've got an
+engagement with a man here."
+
+Worth swung in and stopped. Cummings left us. As we began to worm a slow
+way toward my office, I suggested,
+
+"You'll come upstairs with me, and--er--sort of outline a policy? I
+ought to have any possible information you can give me, so's not to make
+any more wrong moves than we have to."
+
+"Information?" he echoed, and I hastened to amend,
+
+"I mean whatever notion you've got. Your theory, you know--"
+
+"Not a notion. Not a theory." He shook his head, eyes on the traffic
+cop. "That's your part."
+
+I sat there somewhat flabbergasted. After all, I hadn't fully believed
+that the boy had absolutely nothing to go on, that he had bought purely
+at a whim, put up eight hundred thousand dollars on my skill at running
+down a criminal. It sort of crumpled me up. I said so. He laughed a
+little, ran up to the curb at the Phelan building, cut out the engine,
+set the brake and turned to me with,
+
+"Don't worry. I'm getting what I paid for--or what I'm going to pay for.
+And I've got to go right after the money. Suppose I meet you, say, at
+ten o'clock to-night?"
+
+"Suits me."
+
+"At Tait's. Reserve a table, will you, and we'll have supper."
+
+"You're on," I said. "And plenty to do myself meantime." I hopped out on
+my side.
+
+Worth sat in the roadster, not hurrying himself to follow up Cummings'
+suggestion--the big boy, non-communicative, incurious, the question of
+fortune lost or won seeming not to trouble him at all. I skirted the
+machine and came round to him, demanding,
+
+"With whom do you suppose Cummings' engagement was?"
+
+"Don't know, Jerry, and don't care," looking down at me serenely. "Why
+should I?" He swung one long leg free and stopped idly, half in the car,
+half out.
+
+"What if I told you Cummings' engagement was with our friend
+Dykeman--only Dykeman doesn't know it yet?"
+
+Slowly he brought that dangling foot down to the pavement, followed it
+with the other, and faced me. Across the blankness of his features shot
+a joyous gleam; it spread, brightening till he was radiant.
+
+"I get you!" he chortled. "Collusion! They think I'm standing in with
+Clayte--Oh, boy!"
+
+He threw back his head and roared.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+A WEDDING PARTY
+
+
+I looked at my watch; quarter of ten; a little ahead of my appointment.
+I ordered a telephone extension brought to this corner table I had
+reserved at Tait's and got in touch with my office; then with the
+knowledge that any new kink in the case would be reported immediately to
+me, I relaxed to watch the early supper crowd arrive: Women in picture
+hats and bare or half-bare shoulders with rich wraps slipping off them;
+hum of voices; the clatter of silver and china; waiters beginning to
+wake up and dart about settling new arrivals. And I wondered idly what
+sort of party would come to sit around one long table across from me
+specially decorated with pale tinted flowers.
+
+There was a sense of warmth and comfort at my heart. I am a lonely man;
+the people I take to seem to have a way of passing on in the stream of
+life--or death--leaving me with a few well-thumbed volumes on a shelf in
+my rooms for consolation. Walt Whitman, Montaigne, The Bard, two or
+three other lesser poets, and you've the friends that have stayed by me
+for thirty years. And so, having met up with Worth Gilbert when he was a
+youngster, at the time his mother was living in San Francisco to get a
+residence for her divorce proceedings, having loved the boy and got I am
+sure some measure of affection in return, it seemed almost too much to
+ask of fate that he should come back into my days, plunge into such a
+proposition as this bank robbery, right at my elbow as it were, and
+make himself my employer--my boss.
+
+I was a subordinate in the agency in those old times when he and I used
+to chin about the business, and his idea (I always discussed it gravely
+and respectfully with him) was to grow up and go into partnership with
+me. Well, we were partners now.
+
+Past ten, nearly five minutes. Where was he? What up to? Would he miss
+his appointment? No, I caught a glimpse of him at the door getting rid
+of hat and overcoat, pausing a moment with tall bent head to banter
+Rose, the little Chinese girl who usually drifted from table to table
+with cigars and cigarettes. Then he was coming down the room.
+
+A man who takes his own path in life, and will walk it though hell bar
+the way, never explaining, never extenuating, never excusing his
+course--something seems to emanate from such a chap that draws all eyes
+after him in a public place in a look between fear and desire. Sitting
+there in Tait's, my view of Worth cut off now by a waiter with a
+high-carried tray, again by people passing to tables for whom he halted,
+I had a good chance to see the turning of eyeballs that followed him,
+the furtive glances that snatched at him, or fondled him, or would have
+probed him; the admiration of the women, the envy of the men, curiously
+alike in that it was sometimes veiled and half wistful, sometimes very
+open. Drifters--you see so many of the sort in a restaurant--why
+wouldn't they hanker after the strength and ruthlessness of a man like
+Worth? And the poor prunes, how little they knew him! As my friend Walt
+would say, he wasn't out after any of the old, smooth prizes they cared
+for. And win or lose he would still be a victor, for all he and his
+sort demand is freedom, and the joy of the game. So he came on to me.
+
+I noticed, a little startled, as he slumped into his chair with a grunt
+of greeting, that his cheek was somehow gaunt and pale under the tan;
+the blue fire of his eyes only smoldered, and I pulled back his chair
+with,
+
+"You look as if you hadn't had any dinner."
+
+"I haven't." He gave a man-size order for food and turned back from it
+to listen to me. "I'll be nearer human when I get some grub under my
+belt."
+
+My report of what had been done on the case since we separated was
+interrupted by the arrival of our orders, and Worth sailed into a thick,
+juicy steak while I was still explaining details. The orchestra whanged
+and blared and jazzed away; the people at the other tables noticed us or
+busied themselves noisily with affairs of their own; Worth sat and
+enjoyed his meal with the air of a man feeding at a solitary country
+tavern. When he had finished--and he took his time about it--the worn,
+punished look was gone from his face; his eye was bright, his tone
+nonchalant, as he lighted a cigarette, remarking,
+
+"I've had one more good dinner. Food's a thing you can depend on; it
+doesn't rake up your entire past record from the time you squirmed into
+this world, and tell you what a fool you've always been."
+
+I turned that over in my mind. Did it mean that he'd seen his father and
+got a calling down? I wanted to know--and was afraid to ask. The fact is
+I was beginning to wake up to a good many things about my young boss. I
+was intensely interested in his reactions on people. So far, I'd seen
+him with strangers. I wished that I might have a chance to observe him
+among intimates. Old Richardson who founded our agency (and would never
+knowingly have left me at the head of it, though he did take me in as
+partner, finally) used to say that the main trouble with me was I
+studied people instead of cases. Richardson held that all men are equal
+before the detective, and must be regarded only as queer shaped pieces
+to be fitted together so as to make out a case. Richardson would have
+gone as coolly about easing the salt of the earth into the chink labeled
+"murder" or "embezzlement," as though neither had been human. With me
+the personal equation always looms big, and of course he was quite right
+in saying that it's likely to get you all gummed up.
+
+The telephone on the table before me rang. It was Roberts, my secretary,
+with the word that Foster had lifted the watch from Ocean View, the
+little town at the neck of the peninsula, where bay and ocean narrow the
+passageway to one thoroughfare, over which every machine must pass that
+goes by land from San Francisco. With two operatives, he had been on
+guard there since three o'clock of the afternoon, holding up blond men
+in cars, asking questions, taking notes and numbers. Now he reported it
+was a useless waste of time.
+
+"Order him in," I instructed Roberts.
+
+A far-too-fat entertainer out on the floor was writhing in the pangs of
+an Hawaiian dance. It took the attention of the crowd. I watched the
+face of my companion for a moment, then,
+
+"Worth," I said a bit nervously--after all, I nearly had to know--"is
+your father going to come through?"
+
+"Eh?" He looked at me startled, then put it aside negligently. "Oh, the
+money? No. I'll leave that up to Cummings." A brief pause. "We'll get a
+wiggle on us and dig up the suitcase." He lifted his tumbler, stared at
+it, then unseeingly out across the room, and his lip twitched in a half
+smile. "I'm sure glad I bought it."
+
+Looking at him, I had no reason to doubt his word. His enjoyment of the
+situation seemed to grow with every detail I brought up.
+
+It was near eleven when the party came in to take the long,
+flower-trimmed table. Worth's back was to the room; I saw them over his
+shoulder, in the lead a tall blonde, very smartly dressed, but not in
+evening clothes; in severe, exclusive street wear. The man with her,
+good looking, almost her own type, had that possessive air which seems
+somehow unmistakable--and there was a look about the half dozen
+companions after them, as they settled themselves in a great flurry of
+scraping chairs, that made me murmur with a grin,
+
+"Bet that's a wedding party."
+
+Worth gave them one quick glance, then came round to me with a smile.
+
+"You win. Married at Santa Ysobel this afternoon. Local society event.
+Whole place standing on its hind legs, taking notice."
+
+So he had been down to the little town to see his father after all. And
+he wasn't going to talk about it. Oh, well.
+
+"Friends of yours?" I asked perfunctorily, and he gave me a queer look
+out of the corners of those wicked eyes, repeating in an enjoying drawl.
+
+"Friends? Oh, hardly that. The girl I was to have married, and Bronson
+Vandeman--the man she has married."
+
+I had wanted to get a more intimate line on the kid--it seemed that here
+was a chance with a vengeance!
+
+"The rest of the bunch?" I suggested. He took a leisurely survey, and
+gave them three words:
+
+"Family and accomplices."
+
+"Santa Ysobel people, too, then. Folks you know well?"
+
+"Used to."
+
+"The lady changed her mind while you were across?" I risked the query.
+
+"While I was shedding my blood for my country." He nodded. "Gave me the
+butt while the Huns were using the bayonet on me."
+
+In the careless jeer, as much at himself as at her, no hint what his
+present feeling might be toward the fashion plate young female across
+there. With some fellows, in such a situation, I should have looked for
+a disposition to duck the encounter; let his old sweetheart's wedding
+party leave without seeing him; with others I should have discounted a
+dramatic moment when he would court the meeting. It was impossible to
+suppose either thing of Worth Gilbert; plain that he simply sat there
+because he sat there, and would make no move toward the other table
+unless something in that direction interested him--pleasantly or
+unpleasantly--which at present nothing seemed to do.
+
+So we smoked, Worth indifferent, I giving all the attention to the
+people over there: bride and groom; a couple of fair haired girls so
+like the bride that I guessed them to be sisters; a freckled, impudent
+looking little flapper I wasn't so sure of; two older men, and an older
+woman. Then a shifting of figures gave me sight of a face that I hadn't
+seen before, and I drew in my breath with a whistle.
+
+"Whew! Who's the dark girl? She's a beauty!"
+
+"Dark girl?" Worth had interest enough to lean into the place where I
+got my view; after he did so he remained to stare. I sat and grinned
+while he muttered,
+
+"Can't be.... I believe it is!"
+
+Something to make him sit up and take notice now. I didn't wonder at his
+fixed study of the young creature. Not so dressed up as the others--I
+think she wore what ladies call an evening blouse with a street suit; a
+brunette, but of a tinting so delicate that she fairly sparkled, she
+took the shine off those blonde girls. Her small beautifully formed,
+uncovered head had the living jet of the crow's wing; her great eyes,
+long-lashed and sumptuously set, showed ebon irises almost obliterating
+the white. Dark, shining, she was a night with stars, that girl.
+
+"Funny thing," Worth spoke, moving his head to keep in line with that
+face. "How could she grow up to be like this--a child that wasn't
+allowed any childhood? Lord, she never even had a doll!"
+
+"Some doll herself now," I smiled.
+
+"Yeh," he assented absently, "she's good looking--but where did she
+learn to dress like that--and play the game?"
+
+"Where they all learn it." I enjoyed very much seeing him interested.
+"From her mother, and her sisters, or the other girls."
+
+"Not." He was positive. "Her mother died when she was a baby. Her father
+wouldn't let her be with other children--treated her like one of the
+instruments in his laboratory; trained her in her high chair; problems
+in concentration dumped down into its tray, punishment if she made a
+failure; God knows what kind of a reward if she succeeded; maybe no more
+than her bowl of bread and milk. That's the kind of a deal she got when
+she was a kid. And will you look at her now!"
+
+If he kept up his open staring at the girl, it would be only a matter of
+time when the wedding party discovered him. I leaned back in my chair to
+watch, while Worth, full of his subject, spilled over in words.
+
+"Never played with anybody in her life--but me," he said unexpectedly.
+"They lived next house but one to us; the professor had the rest of the
+Santa Ysobel youngsters terrorized, backed off the boards; but I wasn't
+a steady resident of the burg. I came and went, and when I came, it was
+playtime for the little girl."
+
+"What was her father? Crank on education?"
+
+"Psychology," Worth said briefly. "International reputation. But he
+ought to have been hung for the way he brought Bobs up. Listen to this,
+Jerry. I got off the train one time at Santa Ysobel--can't remember just
+when, but the kid over there was all shanks and eyes--'bout ten or
+eleven, I'd say. Her father had her down at the station doing a stunt
+for a bunch of professors. That was his notion of a nice, normal
+development for a small child. There she sat poked up cross-legged on a
+baggage truck. He'd trained her to sit in that self balanced position so
+she could make her mind blank without going to sleep. A freight train
+was hitting a twenty mile clip past the station, and she was adding the
+numbers on the sides of the box cars, in her mind. It kept those
+professors on the jump to get the figures down in their notebooks, but
+she told them the total as the caboose was passing."
+
+"Some stunt," I agreed. "Freight car numbers run up into the
+ten-thousands." Worth didn't hear me, he was still deep in the past.
+
+"Poor little white-faced kid," he muttered. "I dumped my valises, horned
+into that bunch, picked her off the truck and carried her away on my
+shoulder, while the professor yelled at me, and the other ginks were
+tabbing up their additions. And I damned every one of them, to hell and
+through it."
+
+"You must have been a popular youth in your home town," I suggested.
+
+"I was," he grinned. "My reason for telling you that story, though, is
+that I've got an idea about the girl over there--if she hasn't changed
+too much. I think maybe we might--"
+
+He stood up calmly to study her, and his tall figure instantly drew the
+attention of everybody in the room. Over at the long table it was the
+sharp, roving eye of the snub-nosed flapper that spied him first. I saw
+her give the alarm and begin pushing back her chair to bolt right across
+and nab him. The sister sitting next stopped her. Judging from the
+glimpses I had as the party spoke together and leaned to look, it was
+quite a sensation. But apparently by common consent they left whatever
+move was to be made to the bride; and to my surprise this move was most
+unconventional. She got up with an abrupt gesture and started over to
+our table--alone. This, for a girl of her sort, was going some. I
+glanced doubtfully at Worth. He shrugged a little.
+
+"Might as well have it over. Her family lives on one side of us, and
+Brons Vandeman on the other."
+
+And then the bride was with us. She didn't overdo the thing--much; only
+held out her hand with a slightly pleading air as though half afraid it
+would be refused. And it was a curious thing to see that pretty,
+delicate featured, schooled face of hers naïvely drawn in lines of
+emotion--like a bisque doll registering grief.
+
+Gilbert took the hand, shook it, and looked around with the evident
+intention of presenting me. I saw by the way the lady gave me her
+shoulder, pushing in, speaking low, that she didn't want anything of the
+sort, and quietly dropped back. I barely got a side view of Worth's
+face, but plainly his calmness was a disappointment to her.
+
+"After these years!" I caught the fringes of what she was saying. "It
+seems like a dream. To-night--of all times. But you will come over to
+our table--for a minute anyhow? They're just going to--to drink our
+health--Oh, Worth!" That last in a sort of impassioned whisper. And all
+he answered was,
+
+"If I might bring Mr. Boyne with me, Mrs. Vandeman." At her protesting
+expression, he finished, "Or do I call you Ina, still?"
+
+She gave him a second look of reproach, acknowledging my introduction in
+that way some women have which assures you they don't intend to know you
+in the least the next time. We crossed to the table and met the others.
+
+If anybody had asked my opinion, I should have said it was a mistake to
+go. Our advent in that party--or rather Worth Gilbert's advent--was
+bound to throw the affair into a sort of consternation. No mistake about
+that. The bridegroom at the head of the table seemed the only one able
+to keep a grip on the situation. He welcomed Worth as though he wanted
+him, took hold of me with a glad hand, and presented me in such rapid
+succession to everybody there that I was dizzy. And through it all I had
+an eye for Worth as he met and disposed of the effusive welcome of the
+younger Thornhill girls. Either of the twins, as I found them to be,
+would, I judged, have been more than willing to fill out sister Ina's
+unexpired term, and the little snub-nosed one, also a sister it seemed,
+plainly adored him as a hero, sexlessly, as they sometimes can at that
+age.
+
+While yet he shook hands with the girls, and swapped short replies for
+long questions, I became conscious of something odd in the air. Plain
+enough sailing with the young ladies; all the noise with them echoed the
+bride's, "After all these years." They clattered about whether he looked
+like his last photograph, and how perfectly delightful it was going to
+be to have him back in Santa Ysobel again.
+
+But when it came to the chaperone, a Mrs. Dr. Bowman, things were
+different. No longer young, though still beautiful in what I might call
+a sort of wasted fashion, with slim wrists and fragile fingers, and a
+splendid mass of rich, auburn hair, I had been startled, even looking
+across from our table, by the extreme nervous tension of her face. She
+looked a neurasthenic; but that was not all; surely her nerves were
+almost from under control as she sat there, her rich cloak dropped back
+over her chair, the corners caught up again and fumbled in a twisting,
+restless hold.
+
+Now, when Worth stood before her appealing eyes, she reached up and
+clutched his hand in both of hers, staring at him through quick tears,
+saying something in a low, choking tone, something that I couldn't for
+the life of me make into the greeting you give even a beloved youngster
+you haven't seen for several years.
+
+At the moment, I was myself being presented to the lady's husband, a
+typical top-grade, small town medical man, with a fine bedside manner.
+His nice, smooth white hands, with which I had watched him feeling the
+pulse of his supper as though it had been a wealthy patient, released
+mine; those cold eyes of his, that hid a lot of meaning under heavy
+lids, came around on his wife. His,
+
+"Laura, control yourself. Where do you think you are?" was like a lash.
+
+It worked perfectly. Of course she would be his patient as well as his
+wife. Yet I hated the man for it. To me it seemed like the cut of the
+whip that punishes a sensitive, over excited Irish setter for a fault in
+the hunting field. Mrs. Bowman quivered, pulled herself together and sat
+down, but her gaze followed the boy.
+
+She sat there stilled, but not quieted, under her husband's eye, and
+watched Worth's meeting with the other man, whom I heard the boy call
+Jim Edwards, and with whom he shook hands, but who met him, as Mrs.
+Bowman had, as though there had been something recent between them; not
+like people bridging a long gap of absence.
+
+And this man, tall, thin, the power in his features contradicted by a
+pair of soft dark eyes, deep-set, looking out at you with an expression
+of bafflement, defeat--why did he face Worth with the stare of one
+drenched, drowned in woe? It wasn't his wedding. He hadn't done Worth
+any dirt in the matter.
+
+And I was wedged in beside the beautiful dark girl, without having been
+presented to her, without even having had the luck to hear what name
+Worth used when he spoke to her. At last the flurry of our coming
+settled down (though I still felt that we were stuck like a sliver into
+the wedding party, that the whole thing ached from us) and Dr. Bowman
+proposed the health of the happy couple, his bedside manner going over
+pretty well, as he informed Vandeman and the rest of us that the
+bridegroom was a social leader in Santa Ysobel, and that the hope of its
+best people was to place him and his bride at the head of things there,
+leading off with the annual Blossom Festival, due in about a fortnight.
+
+Vandeman responded for himself and his bride, appropriately, with what
+I'd call a sort of acceptable, fabricated geniality. You could see he
+was the kind that takes such things seriously, one who would go to work
+to make a success of any social doings he got into, would give what his
+set called good parties; and he spoke feelingly of the Blossom Festival,
+which was the great annual event of a little town. If by putting his
+shoulder to the wheel he could boost that affair into nation-wide fame
+and place a garland of rich bloom upon the brow of his fair city, he was
+willing to take off his neatly tailored coat, roll up his immaculate
+shirtsleeves and go to it.
+
+There was no time for speech making. The girls wanted to dance; bride
+and groom were taking the one o'clock train for the south and Coronado.
+The orchestra swung into "I'll Say She Does."
+
+"Just time for one." Vandeman guided his bride neatly out between the
+chairs, and they moved away. I turned from watching them to find Worth
+asking Mrs. Bowman to dance.
+
+"Oh, Worth, _dearest_! I ought to let one of the girls have you, but--"
+
+She looked helplessly up at him; he smiled down into her tense,
+suffering face, and paid no attention to her objections. As soon as he
+carried her off, Jim Edwards glumly took out that one of the twins I had
+at first supposed to be the elder, the remaining Thornhill girls moved
+on Dr. Bowman and began nagging him to hunt partners for them.
+
+"Drag something up here," prompted the freckled tomboy, "or I'll make
+you dance with me yourself." She grabbed a coat lapel, and started away
+with him.
+
+I turned and laughed into the laughing face of the dark girl. I had no
+idea of her name, yet a haunting resemblance, a something somehow
+familiar came across to me which I thought for a moment was only the
+sweet approachableness of her young femininity.
+
+Bowman had found and collared a partner for Ernestine Thornhill, but
+that was as far as it went. The little one forebore her threat of making
+him dance with her, came back to her chair and tucked herself in,
+snuggling up to the girl beside me, getting hold of a hand and looking
+at me across it. She rejoiced, it seems, in the nickname of Skeet, for
+by that the other now spoke to her whisperingly, saying it was too bad
+about the dance.
+
+"That's nothing," Skeet answered promptly. "I'd a lot rather sit here
+and talk to you--and your gentleman friend--" with a large wink for
+me--"if you don't mind."
+
+At the humorous, intimate glance which again passed between me and the
+dark girl, sudden remembrance came to me, and I ejaculated,
+
+"I know you now!"
+
+"Only now?" smiling.
+
+"You've changed a good deal in seven years," I defended myself.
+
+"And you so very little," she was still smiling, "that I had almost a
+mind to come and shake hands with you when Ina went to speak to Worth."
+
+I remembered then that it was Worth's recognition of her which had
+brought him to his feet. I told her of it, and the glowing, vivid face
+was suddenly all rosy. Skeet regarded the manifestation askance, asking
+jealously,
+
+"When did you see Worth last, Barbie? You weren't still living in Santa
+Ysobel when he left, were you?"
+
+I sat thinking while the girlish voices talked on. Barbie--the nickname
+for Barbara. Barbara Wallace; the name jumped at me from a poster;
+that's where I first saw it. It linked itself up with what Worth had
+said over there about the forlorn childhood of this beguiling young
+charmer. Why hadn't I remembered then? I, too, had my recollections of
+Barbara Wallace. About seven years before, I had first seen her, a
+slim, dark little thing of twelve or fourteen, very badly dressed in
+slinky, too-long skirts that whipped around preposterously thin ankles,
+blue-black hair dragged away from a forehead almost too fine, made into
+a bundle of some fashion that belonged neither to childhood nor
+womanhood, her little, pointed face redeemed by a pair of big black eyes
+with a wonderful inner light, the eyes of this girl glowing here at my
+left hand.
+
+The father Worth spoke of brusquely as "the professor" was Elman
+Wallace, to whom all students of advanced psychology are heavily
+indebted. The year I heard him, and saw the girl, his course of lectures
+at Stanford University was making quite a stir. I had been one of a
+bunch of criminologists, detectives and police chiefs who, during a
+state convention were given a demonstration of the little girl's powers,
+closing with a sort of rapid pantomime in which I was asked to take
+part. A half dozen of us from the audience planned exactly what we were
+to do. I rushed into the room through one door, holding my straw hat in
+my left hand, and wiping my brow with a handkerchief with the right.
+From an opposite door, came two men; one of them fired at me twice with
+a revolver held in his left hand. I fell, and the second man--the one
+who wasn't armed--ran to me as I staggered, grabbed my hat, and the two
+of them went out the door I had entered, while I stumbled through the
+one by which they had come in. It lasted all told, not half a minute,
+the idea being for those who looked on to write down what had happened.
+
+Those trained criminologists, supposed to have eyes in their heads,
+didn't see half that really took place, and saw a-plenty that did not.
+Most of 'em would have hung the man who snatched my hat. Only one, I
+remember, noticed that I was shot by a left-handed man. Then the little
+girl told us what really had occurred, every detail, just as though she
+had planned it instead of being merely an observer.
+
+"Pardon me," I broke in on the girls. "Miss Wallace, you don't mean to
+say that you really know me again after seeing me once, seven years ago,
+in a group of other men at a public performance?"
+
+"Why shouldn't I? You saw me then. You knew me again."
+
+"But you were doing wonderful things. We remember what strikes us as
+that did me."
+
+She looked at me with a little fading of that glow her face seemed
+always to hold.
+
+"Most memories are like that," she agreed listlessly. "Mine isn't. It
+works like a cinema camera; I've only to turn the crank the other way to
+be looking at any past record."
+
+"But can you--?" I was beginning, when Skeet stopped me, leaning around
+her companion, bristling at me like a snub-nosed terrier.
+
+"If you want to make a hit with Barbie, cut out the reminiscences. She
+does loathe being reminded that she was once an infant phenom."
+
+I glanced at my dark eyed girl; she bent her head affirmatively. She
+wouldn't have been capable of Skeet's rudeness, but plainly Skeet had
+not overstated her real feeling. I had hardly begun an apology when the
+dancers rushed back to the table with the information that there was no
+more than time to make the Los Angeles train; there was an instant
+grasping of wraps, hasty good-bys, and the party began breaking up with
+a bang. Worth went out to the sidewalk with them; I sat tight waiting
+for him to return, and to my surprise, when he finally did appear,
+Barbara Wallace was with him.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+AN APPARITION
+
+
+"Don't look so scared!" she said smilingly to me. "I'm only on your
+hands a few minutes; a package left to be called for."
+
+I had watched them coming back to me at our old table, with its
+telephone extension, the girl with eyes for no one but Worth, who helped
+her out of her wrap now with a preoccupied air and,
+
+"Shed the coat, Bobs," adding as he seated her beside him, "The luck of
+luck that I chanced on you here this evening."
+
+That brought the color into her face; the delicate rose shifted under
+her translucent skin almost with the effect of light, until that
+lustrous midnight beauty of hers was as richly glowing as one of those
+marvellous dark opals of the antipodes.
+
+"Yes," she said softly, with a smile that set two dimples deep in the
+pink of her cheeks, "wasn't it strange our meeting this way?" Worth
+wasn't looking at her. He'd signaled a waiter, ordered a pot of black
+coffee, and was watching its approach. "I didn't go down to the wedding,
+but Ina herself invited me to come here to-night. I had half a mind not
+to; then at the last minute I decided I would--and I met you!"
+
+Worth nodded, sat there humped in a brown study while the waiter poured
+our coffee. The minute the man left us alone, he turned to her with,
+
+"I've got a stunt for you."
+
+"A--a stunt?"
+
+The light failed abruptly in her face; her mouth with its soft, firm
+molding, its vivid, floral red, like the lips of a child, went down a
+bit at the clean-cut corners. A small hand fumbled the trimming of her
+blouse; it was almost as if she laid it over a wounded heart.
+
+"Yes," he nodded. "Jerry's got something in his pocket that'll be pie
+for you."
+
+She turned to me a look between angry and piteous--the resentment she
+would not vent on him.
+
+"Is--is Mr. Boyne interested in stunts--such as I used to do?"
+
+"Sure," Worth agreed. "We both are. We--"
+
+"Oh, that was why you wanted me to come back with you?" She had got hold
+of herself now. She was more poised, but still resentful.
+
+"Bobs," he cut straight across her mood to what he wanted, "Jerry Boyne
+is going to read you something it took about 'steen blind people to
+see--and you'll give us the answer." I didn't share his confidence, but
+I rather admired it as he finished, poising the tongs, "One lump, or
+two?"
+
+Of course I knew what he meant. My hand was already fumbling in my
+pocket for the description of Clayte. The girl looked as though she
+wasn't going to answer him; she moved to shove back her chair. Worth's
+only recognition of her attitude was to put out a hand quietly, touch
+her arm, not once looking at her, and say in a lowered tone,
+
+"Steady, Bobs." And then, "Did you say one lump or two?"
+
+"None." Her voice was scarcely audible, but I saw she was going to stay;
+that Worth was to have his way, to get from her the opinion he
+wanted--whatever that might amount to. And I passed the paper to him,
+suggesting,
+
+"Let her read it. This is too public a place to be declaiming a thing of
+the sort."
+
+She hesitated a minute then gave it such a mere flirt of a glance that I
+hardly thought she'd seen what it was, before she raised inquiring eyes
+to mine and asked coldly,
+
+"Why shouldn't that be read--shouted every ten minutes by the traffic
+officer at Market and Kearny? They'd only think he was paging every
+other man in the Palace Hotel."
+
+I leaned back and chuckled. After a bare glance, this sharp witted girl
+had hit on exactly what I'd thought of the Clayte description.
+
+"Is that all? May I go now, Worth?" she said, still with that dashed,
+disappointed look from one of us to the other. "If you'll just put me on
+a Haight Street car--I won't wait for--" And now she made a definite
+movement to rise; but again Worth held her by the mere touch of his
+fingers on her sleeve.
+
+"Wait, Bobs," he said. "There's more."
+
+"More?" Her eyes on Worth's face talked louder than her tongue, but that
+also gained fluency as he looked back at her and nodded. "Stunts!" she
+repeated his word bitterly. "I didn't expect you to come back asking me
+to do stunts. I hated it all so--working out things like a calculating
+machine!" Her voice sank to a vehement undertone. "Nobody thinking of
+me as human, with human feelings. I have never--done--one stunt--since
+my father died."
+
+She didn't weaken. She sat there and looked Worth squarely in the eye,
+yet there was a kind of big gentleness in her refusal, a freedom from
+petty resentment, that had in it not so much a girl's hurt vanity as the
+outspoken complaint of a really grieved heart.
+
+"But, Bobs," Worth smiled at her trouble, about the same careless,
+good-natured smile he had given little Pete when he flipped him the
+quarter, "suppose you could possibly save me a hundred thousand dollars
+a minute?"
+
+"Then it's not just a stunt?" She settled slowly back in her chair.
+
+"Certainly not," I said. "This is business--with me, anyhow. Miss
+Wallace, why do you think a description like that could be shouted on
+the street without any one being the wiser?"
+
+"Was it supposed to be a description?" she asked, raising her brows a
+bit.
+
+"The best we could get from sixteen or eighteen people, most of whom
+have known the man a long time; some of them for eight years."
+
+"And no one--not one of all these people could differentiate him?"
+
+"I've done my best at questioning them."
+
+She gave me one straight, level look, and I wondered a little at the way
+those velvety black eyes could saw into a fellow. But she put no query,
+and I had the cheap satisfaction of knowing that she was convinced I'd
+overlooked no details in the quiz that went to make up that
+description. Then she turned to Worth.
+
+"You said I might save you a lot of money. Has the man you're trying
+here to describe anything to do with money--in large amounts--financial
+affairs of importance?"
+
+Again the little girl had unconsciously scored with me. To imagine a
+rabbit like Clayte, alone, swinging such an enormous job was ridiculous.
+From the first, my mind had been reaching after the others--the
+big-brained criminals, the planners whose instrument he was. She
+evidently saw this, but Worth answered her.
+
+"He's quite a financier, Bobs. He walked off with nearly a million cash
+to-day."
+
+"From you?" with a quick breath.
+
+"I'm the main loser if he gets away with it."
+
+"Tell me about it."
+
+And Worth gave her a concise account of the theft and his own share in
+the affair. She listened eagerly now, those innocent great eyes growing
+big with the interest of it. With her there was no blind stumbling over
+Worth's motive in buying a suitcase sight unseen. I had guessed, but she
+understood completely and unquestioningly. When he had finished, she
+said solemnly,
+
+"You know, don't you, that, if you've got your facts right--if these
+things you've told me are square, even cubes of fact--they prove Clayte
+among the wonderful men of the world?"
+
+Worth's big brown paw went out and covered her little hand that lay on
+the table's edge.
+
+"Now we're getting somewhere," he encouraged her. As for me, I merely
+snorted.
+
+"Wonderful man, my eye! He's got a wonderful gang behind him."
+
+"Oh, you should have told me that you know there is a gang, Mr. Boyne,"
+she said simply. "Of course, then, the result is different."
+
+"Well," I hedged, "there's a gang all right. But suppose there wasn't,
+how would you find any wonderfulness in a creature as near nothing as
+this Clayte?"
+
+She sat and thought for a moment, drawing imaginary lines on the table
+top, finally looking up at me with a narrowing of the lids, a tightening
+of the lips, which gave an extraordinary look of power to her young
+feminine face.
+
+"In that case, Clayte would inevitably be one of the wonderful men of
+the world," she repeated her characterization with the placid, soft
+obstinacy of falling, snow. "Didn't you stop a minute--one little
+minute, Mr. Boyne--to think it wonderful that a man so devoid of
+personality as that--" she slanted a slim finger across the description
+of Clayte--"Didn't you add up in your mind all that you told me about
+the men disagreeing as to which side he parted his hair on, whether he
+wore tan shoes or black, a fedora or derby, smoked or didn't,--
+absolutely nothing left as to peculiarities of face, figure, movement,
+expression, manner or habit to catch the eye of one single
+observer among the sixteen or eighteen you questioned--surely you added
+that up, Mr. Boyne? What result did you get?"
+
+"Nothing," I admitted. "To hear you repeat it, of course it sounds as if
+the man was a freak. But he wasn't. He was just one of those fellows
+that are born utterly commonplace, and slide through life without
+getting any marks put on 'em."
+
+"And is it nothing that this man became a teller in a bank without
+infringing at all on the circle of his nothingness? Remained so shadowy
+that neither the president nor cashier can, after eight years'
+association, tell the color of his hair and eyes? Then add the fact that
+he is the one clerk in the bank without a filed photograph and
+description on record with your agency--what result now, Mr. Boyne?"
+
+"A coincidence," I said, rather hastily.
+
+"Don't, please, Mr. Boyne!" her eyes glowed softly as she smiled her
+mild sarcasm. "Admit that he has ceased to be a freak and becomes a
+marvel."
+
+"As you put it--" I began, but she cut in on me with,
+
+"I haven't put it yet. Listen." She was smiling still, but it was plain
+she was thoroughly in earnest. "When this cipher--this nought--this
+zero--manages to annex to himself a million dollars that doesn't belong
+to him, his nothingness gains a specific meaning. The zero is an
+important factor in mathematics. I think we have placed a digit before
+the long string of ciphers of Clayte's nothingness."
+
+"Nothing and nothing--make nothing." I spoke more brusquely because I
+was irritated by her logic. "You called the turn when you spoke of him
+as a zero. There are digits to be added, but they're the gang that
+planned and helped--and used zero Clayte as their tool. You're talking
+of those digits, not Clayte."
+
+"I believe Bobs'll find them for you, Jerry--if you'll let her," said
+Worth.
+
+"Oh, I'll let anybody do anything"--a bit nettled. "I'm ready to have
+our friend Clayte take his place, with the pyramids and the hanging
+gardens of Babylon, among the earth's wonders; but you've got to show
+me."
+
+"All right." Worth gave the girl a look that brought something of that
+wonderful rose flush fluttering back into her cheeks. "I'm betting on
+her. Go to it, Bobsie--let him in on your mathematical logic."
+
+"You used the word 'coincidence,' Mr. Boyne." She leaned across toward
+me, eyes bright, little finger tip marking her points. "Allow one
+coincidence--that the only description, the only photograph missing from
+your files are those of the self-effacing Clayte. To-day Clayte has
+proved to be a thief--"
+
+"In seven figures," Worth threw in, and she smiled at him.
+
+"You would call that another coincidence, Mr. Boyne?"
+
+I nodded, rather unable at the moment to think of a better word to use.
+
+"Two coincidences," she went on,--"we are still in mathematics--you
+can't add. They run by geometrical progression into the impossible."
+
+The phone rang. While I turned to answer it, my mind was still hunting a
+comeback to this. The call was from Foster, just in from Ocean View and
+reporting for instructions. Covering the transmitter with my hand, I
+told Worth the situation and asked,
+
+"Any suggestions?"
+
+"Not I," he shook his head. I added, a bit sarcastically,
+
+"Or you, Miss Wallace?"
+
+"Yes," she surprised me. "Have your man Foster find three women who have
+seen Edward Clayte; get from them the color of his hair and eyes; tell
+him to have them be exact about it."
+
+"Fine! But you know they'll not agree, any more than the other people
+agreed."
+
+"Oh, yes they will," she laughed at me a little. "Don't you notice that
+a girl always says a blue-eyed man or a brown-eyed man? That's what she
+sees when she first meets him, and it sticks in her mind. Girls and
+women sort out people by types; small differences in color mean
+something to them."
+
+I didn't keep Foster waiting any longer.
+
+"Hello," I spoke quickly into the transmitter. "Get busy and dig out any
+women clerks of the bank, stenographers, scrub-women there, or whatever,
+and ask them particularly as to the exact shade of Clayte's hair and
+eyes. Get Mrs. Griggsby again at the St. Dunstan. I want at least three
+women who can give these points exactly. Exactly, understand?"
+
+He did, and I thanked Miss Wallace for her suggestion.
+
+"Now that," I said, "is what I want; a good, practical idea--"
+
+"And it won't be a bit of use in the world to you," she laughed across
+the table into my eyes. "Why, Mr. Boyne, you've found out already that
+there are too many Edward Claytes, speaking in physical terms, for you
+to run one down by description. There are three of him here, within
+sight of our table right now--and the place isn't crowded."
+
+I grinned in half grudging agreement, and found nothing to say. It was
+Worth who spoke.
+
+"Like to have you go a step further in this, if you would," and when she
+shook her head, he went on a bit sharply. "See here, Bobs; you and I
+used to be pals, didn't we?" She nodded, her look brightening. "Well
+then, here's the biggest game I've been up against since I crawled out
+of the trenches and shucked my uniform. I come to you and give you the
+high-sign--and you throw me down. You don't want to play with me--is
+that it?"
+
+"Oh, Worth! I do. I do want to play with you," she was almost in tears
+now. "But you see, I didn't quite understand. I felt as though you were
+sort of putting me through my paces."
+
+"Sure not," Worth drove it at her like a turbulent urchin. "I'm having
+the time of my young life with this thing, and I want to take you in on
+it."
+
+"If--if you fail you lose a lot of money; wasn't that what you said?"
+she questioned.
+
+"Oh, yes," he nodded, "Nothing in it if there weren't a gamble."
+
+"And if he wins out, he makes quite a respectable pile," I added.
+
+"What I want of you now," he explained, "is to go with us to Clayte's
+room at the St. Dunstan--the room he disappeared from--look it over and
+tell us how he got out and where he went."
+
+He made his request light-heartedly; she considered it after the same
+fashion; it seemed to me all absurdity.
+
+"To-morrow morning--Sunday," she said. "No office to-morrow," she sipped
+the last of her black coffee slowly. "All the rest of the facts there
+ever will be about Edward Clayte are in that room--aren't they?" Her
+voice was musing; she looked straight ahead of her as she finished
+softly, "What time do we go?"
+
+"Early. Does nine o'clock suit you?" Worth didn't even glance at me as
+he made this arrangement for us both. "We'd scoot up there now if it
+wasn't so late."
+
+"I've no doubt you'll find the place carpeted with zeros and hung with
+noughts and ciphers." I couldn't refrain from joshing her a little. She
+took it with a smile glanced across the room, looked a little surprised,
+and half rose with,
+
+"Why, there they are for me now."
+
+I couldn't see anybody that she might mean, except a man who had walked
+the length of the place talking to the head waiter, and now stood
+arguing at the corner of what had been Bronson Vandeman's supper table.
+This man evidently had his attention directed to us, turned, looked, and
+in the moment of his crossing I saw that it was Cummings. There was not
+even the usual tight-lipped half smile under that cropped mustache of
+his.
+
+"Good evening." He looked at our faces, uttering none of the surprise he
+plainly felt, letting the two words do for greeting to us all, and, as
+it seemed, to me, an expression of disapproval as well. The young lady
+replied first.
+
+"Oh, Mr. Cummings, did they send you for me? Where are the others?"
+
+She had come to her feet, and reached for the coat which Worth was
+holding more as if he meant to keep it than put it on her.
+
+"I left your chaperone waiting in the machine," Cumming's tone and look
+carried a plain hurry-up. Worth took his time about the coat, and spoke
+low to the girl while he helped her into it.
+
+"You'll go with us to-morrow morning?"
+
+She gave me one of those adorable smiles that brought the dimples
+momentarily in her cheeks.
+
+"If Mr. Boyne wants me. He hasn't said yet."
+
+"Do I need to?" I asked. The question seemed reasonable. There she
+stood, such a very pretty girl, between her two cavaliers who looked at
+each other with all the traditional hostility that belonged to the
+situation. She smiled on both, and didn't neglect me. I settled the
+matter with,
+
+"Worth has your address; we'll call for you in my machine." And I got
+the idea that Cummings was asking questions about it as he went away
+holding her arm.
+
+"Do you think the little girl will really be of any use?" I spoke to the
+back of Worth's head as he continued to stare after them.
+
+"Sure. I know she will." He shoved his crumpled napkin in among the
+coffee service, and we moved toward the desk. "Sure she will," he
+repeated. "Wonder where she met Cummings."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+AT THE ST. DUNSTAN
+
+
+At the Palace Hotel Sunday morning where I went to pick up Worth before
+we should call for little Miss Wallace, he met me in high spirits and
+with an enthusiasm that demanded immediate physical action.
+
+"Heh," I said, "you look fine. Must have slept well."
+
+"Make it rested, and I'll go you," he came back cheerfully.
+
+He'd already been out, going down to the Grant Avenue corner for an
+assortment of Bay cities papers not to be had at the hotel news-stands,
+so that he could see whether our canny announcement of Clayte's fifteen
+thousand dollar defalcation had received discreet attention from the
+Associated Press.
+
+For my part, our agency had been able to get hold of three women who had
+seen Clayte and remembered the event; Mrs. Griggsby; a stenographer at
+the bank; and the woman who sold newspapers at the St. Dunstan corner.
+Miss Wallace's suggestion had proven itself, for these three agreed with
+fair exactness, and the description run in the late editions of the city
+papers was less vague than the others. It gave Clayte's eyes as a pale
+gray-blue, and his hair as dull brown, eliminating at least all
+brown-eyed men. Worth asserted warmly,
+
+"That girl's going to be useful to us, Boyne." I couldn't well disagree
+with him, after using her hint. We were getting out of the elevator on
+the office floor when he looked at me, grinned boyishly, and added,
+"What would you say if I told you I was being shadowed?"
+
+"That I thought it very likely," I nodded. "Also I might hazard a guess
+at whose money is paying for it."
+
+He gave me a quick glance, but asked no questions. I could see he was
+enjoying his position, up to the hilt, considered the attentions of a
+trailer as one of its perquisites.
+
+"Keep your eyes open and you'll spot him as we go out," he said as he
+left the key at the desk.
+
+It was hardly necessary to keep my eyes open to see the lurking figure
+over beyond the easy-chairs, which started galvanically as we passed
+through the court, and a moment later came sidling after us. Little Pete
+had left my machine at the Market Street entrance--Worth was to drive
+me--and we wheeled away from a disappointed man racing for the taxi line
+around the corner.
+
+"More power to his legs," Worth said.
+
+"Oh, I don't know," I grunted as we cut into Montgomery, negotiated the
+corner onto Bush Street's clear way, striking a fair clip at once. "That
+end of him already works better than the other. How did you get wise?"
+
+"Barbara Wallace telephoned me to look out for him," he smiled, and let
+my car out another notch once we'd passed the traffic cop at Kearny.
+
+I myself had foreseen the possibility--but only as a possibility--that
+Dykeman would put a man on Worth's coat-tails, since I knew Dykeman and
+had been at that bank meeting; yet I had not regarded it as likely
+enough to warn Worth; and here was this girl phoning him to look out for
+a trailer. Was this some more of her deductive reasoning, or had
+Cummings dropped a hint?
+
+She was waiting for us in front of the Haight Street boarding house that
+served her for a home, and we tucked her between us on the roadster's
+wide seat. At the St. Dunstan we found my man, left there since the hour
+of the alarm the day before, and everybody belonging to the management
+surly and glum. The clerk handed me Clayte's key across the morning
+papers spread out on his desk. Apartment houses dislike notoriety of
+this sort, and the St. Dunstan set up to be as rabidly respectable, as
+chemically pure as any in the city. Well, no use their blaming me;
+Clayte was their misfortune; they couldn't expect me to keep the matter
+out of print entirely.
+
+The three of us crowded into the automatic elevator, and I pressed the
+seventh floor button. The girl's eyes shone under the wisp of veil
+twisted around a knowing little turban. She liked the taste of the
+adventure.
+
+"That man came this way--with that suitcase," she breathed, "--maybe set
+it down right there when he pressed the button--just as Mr. Boyne did
+now!"
+
+It was a fine morning; the shades had been left up, and Clayte's room
+when I opened the door was ablaze with sunlight.
+
+"How delightful!" Barbara Wallace stopped on the threshold and looked
+about her. I expected the scientific investigating to begin; but no--she
+was all taken up with the beauty of sunlight and view.
+
+The seventh was the top floor. The St. Dunstan stood almost at the
+summit where Nob Hill slants obliquely to north and east, and Powell
+Street dizzies down the steep descent to North Beach and the Bay. The
+girl had run to a window, and was looking out toward the marvelous show
+of blue-green water and distant Berkeley hills.
+
+"Will you open this window for me, please?" she asked. I stepped to her
+side, forestalling Worth who was eyeing the room's interior with
+curiosity.
+
+"You'll notice the burglar-proof sash locks," I said as I manipulated
+this one. She gave only casual interest, her attention still on the view
+beyond. The steel latch, fastened to the upper sash, locked into the
+socket on the lower sash by a lever-catch. "See? I must pull out this
+little lever before I can push the hasp back with my thumb--so. Now the
+window may be shoved up," and I illustrated.
+
+"Yes," she nodded; then, "Look at the wisps of fog around Tamalpais's
+top. Worth, come here and see the violet shadows of the clouds on the
+bay."
+
+"North wind coming up," agreed Worth, stepping to the farther window.
+
+"It's bringing in the fog," she said; then abruptly, giving me the first
+hint that little Miss Wallace considered herself on the job, "Will it
+not latch by itself if you jam it shut hard?"
+
+"It will not." I illustrated with a bang. The latch still remained open.
+"I must close it by hand." I pushed the hasp into the keeper, and,
+snap--the lever shot back and it was fast.
+
+"But a window like that couldn't be opened from outside, even without
+the locking lever," she remarked, gazing again toward the Marin shore.
+
+"A man with the know--a burglar--can open the ordinary window latch in
+less than a minute," I told her. "With a jimmy pinched between the sash
+and the sill, a recurring pressure starts the latch back; nothing to
+hold it. This--unless he cuts the glass--is burglar-proof."
+
+Worth, at her shoulder, now looked down the sheer descent which
+exaggerated the seven stories of the St. Dunstan; because of its
+crowning position on the hill and the intersection of streets, we looked
+over the roofs of the houses before us, far above their chimney tops. I
+caught his eye and grinned across the girl's head, suggesting,
+
+"Besides, we weren't trying to find how some one could break into this
+room, but how they could break out. Even if the latches had not been
+locked, there wouldn't be an answer in these windows--unless Clayte
+could fly."
+
+"Might have climbed from one window ledge to the next and so made his
+way to the fire-escape," Worth said, but I shook my head.
+
+"He'd be seen from the windows by the tenants on six floors--and nobody
+saw him. Might as well take the elevator or the stairs--which he
+didn't."
+
+But the girl wasn't listening to any of this. Her expression attentive,
+alert, she was passing her hand around the edge of the glass of either
+sash, as though she still dwelt on my suggestion of cutting the pane;
+and as we watched her, she murmured to herself,
+
+"Yes, flying would be a good way." It made me laugh.
+
+And then she turned away from the windows and had no more interest in
+any of them, going with me all over the rest of the room with rather the
+air of a person who thought of renting it than a high-brow criminal
+investigator hunting clews.
+
+"He lived here--years, you say?" I nodded. She slid her hand over the
+plush cushions of a morris chair, threw back the covers of an iron bed
+in one corner and felt of the mattress, then went and stood before the
+bare little dresser. "Why, the place expresses no more personality than
+a room in a transient hotel!"
+
+"He hadn't any personality," I growled, and got the flicker of a smile
+from her eye.
+
+"What about those library books he carried in the suitcase?" Worth came
+in with an echo from the bank meeting.
+
+"Some more bunk," I said morosely. "So far we've not been able to locate
+him as a patron of any public or private library, and the hotel clerk's
+sure his mail never contained a correspondence course--in fact, neither
+here nor at the bank can any one remember his getting any mail. If he
+ever carried books in that suitcase as Knapp believed, it was several
+years back."
+
+"Several years back," Miss Wallace repeated low.
+
+"Myself, I've given up the idea of his studying. This crime doesn't look
+to me like any sudden temptation of a model bank clerk, spending his
+spare hours over correspondence courses. I rather expect to find him
+just plain crook."
+
+"Oh, no," the girl objected. "It's too big and too well done to have
+been planned by a dull, commonplace crook."
+
+"Right you are," I agreed, with restored good humor. "A keen brain
+planned this, but not Clayte's. There had to be an instrument--and that
+was Clayte--also, likely, one or more to help in the getaway."
+
+The getaway! That brought us back with a thump to the present moment.
+Our pretty girl had been all over the shop now, glanced into bathroom,
+closet and cupboard, noted abandoned hats, clothing and shoes, the
+electric plate where Clayte got his breakfast coffee and toast, asked
+without much interest where he ate his other meals, and nodded
+agreeingly when she found that he'd been only an occasional customer at
+the neighboring restaurants, never regular, apparently eating here and
+there down-town. She seemed to get something out of that; what I didn't
+know.
+
+"You speak of this crime not being committed on impulse," she turned to
+me at length. "How long ahead should you say he planned it?"
+
+"Or had it planned and prepared for him," I reminded her.
+
+"Well, that, then," she conceded with slight impatience. "How long do
+you think it might have been planned or prepared for? Years?"
+
+"Hardly that. Not more than a year probably. A gang like this wouldn't
+hold together on a proposition for many months."
+
+The black brows over those clear, childlike eyes, puckered a bit. I saw
+she wasn't at all satisfied with what I had said.
+
+"Made all the observations you want to, Bobs?" Worth asked.
+
+"All here. I want to see the roof." She gave us rather a mechanical
+smile as she silently ticked her points off on her fingers, appealing
+to me with, "I'm depending upon you for such facts as I have been unable
+to observe for myself, so if you give me wrong facts--make
+mistakes--I'll make mistakes in deduction."
+
+There was such confidence in her deductive abilities that a tinge of
+irony crept into my tones as I replied,
+
+"I'll be very careful what opinions I hold."
+
+"I don't mind the opinions," this astounding young woman took me up
+gaily. "I never have any of my own, so I don't pay attention to anybody
+else's. But _do_ be careful of your facts!"
+
+"I'll try to," was all I said. Worth cut in with,
+
+"Do you consider the roof another fact, Bobs?"
+
+"I hope to find facts there," she answered promptly.
+
+"Remember," I said, "your theory means another man up there, and you
+haven't yet--"
+
+"Please, Mr. Boyne, don't take two and two and make five of them at this
+stage of the game," she checked me hastily, and I left them together
+while I made a hurried survey of the hall ceilings, looking for the
+scuttle. There was no hatchway in view, so I started down to the clerk
+to make inquiry. As I passed Clayte's open door, Miss Wallace seemed to
+be adjusting her turban before the dresser mirror, while Worth waited
+impatiently.
+
+"Just a minute," I called. "I'll be right back," and I ducked into the
+elevator.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+ON THE ROOF
+
+
+When I returned with a key and the information that the way to the roof
+ran through the janitor's tool-room at the far end of the hall, I found
+my young people already out there. Worth was trying the tool-room door.
+
+"Got the key?" he called. "It's locked."
+
+"Yes." I took my time fitting and turning it. "How did you know this was
+the room?"
+
+"I didn't," briefly. "Bobs walked out here, and I followed her. She said
+we'd want into this one."
+
+She'd guessed right again! I wheeled on her, ejaculating,
+
+"For the love of Mike! Tell a mere man how you deduced this stairway.
+Feminine intuition, I suppose."
+
+I hadn't meant to be offensive with that last, but her firm little chin
+was in the air as she countered,
+
+"Is it a stairway? It might be a ladder, you know."
+
+It was a ladder, an iron ladder, as I found when I ushered them in. My
+eyes snapped inquiry at her.
+
+"Very simple," she said. Worth was pushing aside pails and boxes to make
+a better way for her to the ladder's foot. "There wouldn't be a roof
+scuttle in the rented rooms, so I knew when you called in to tell us
+there was none in the halls."
+
+"I didn't. I said nothing of the sort." Where was the girl's fine memory
+that she couldn't recollect a man's words for the little time I'd been
+gone! "All I said was, 'Just a minute and I'll be back.'"
+
+"Yes, that's all you said to Worth." She glanced at the boy serenely as
+he waited for her at the ladder's foot. "He's not a trained observer; he
+doesn't deduce even from what he does observe." There were twinkling
+lights in her black eyes. "But what your hurried trip to the office said
+to me was that you'd gone for the key of the room that led to the
+roof scuttle."
+
+Well, that was reasonable--simple enough, too; but,
+
+"This room? How did you find it?"
+
+She stepped to the open door and placed the tip of a gloved finger on
+the nickeled naught that marked the panels.
+
+"The significant zero again, Mr. Boyne," she laughed. "Here it means the
+room is not a tenanted one, and is therefore the way to the roof. Shall
+we go there?"
+
+"Well, young lady," I said as I led her along the trail Worth had
+cleared, "it must be almost as bad to see everything that way--in minute
+detail--as to be blind."
+
+"Carry on!" Worth called from the top of the ladder, reaching down to
+aid the girl. She laughed back at me as she started the short climb.
+
+"Not at all bad! You others seem to me only half awake to what is about
+you--only half living," and she placed her hand in the strong one held
+down to her. As Worth passed her through the scuttle to the roof, I saw
+her glance carelessly at the hooks and staples, the clumsy but adequate
+arrangement for locking the hatch, and, following her, gave them more
+careful attention, wondering what she had seen--plenty that I did not,
+no doubt. They had no tale to tell my eyes.
+
+Once outside, she stopped a minute with Worth to adjust herself to the
+sharp wind which swept across from the north. Here was a rectangular
+space surrounded by walls which ran around its four sides to form the
+coping, unbroken in any spot; a gravel-and-tar roof, almost flat, with
+the scuttle and a few small, dust covered skylights its only openings,
+four chimney-tops its sole projections. It was bare of any hiding-place,
+almost as clear as a tennis court.
+
+We made a solemn tour of inspection; I wasn't greatly interested--how
+could I be, knowing that between this roof and my fugitive there had
+been locked windows, and a locked door under reliable human eyes? Still,
+the lifelong training of the detective kept me estimating the
+possibilities of a getaway from the roof--if Clayte could have reached
+it. Worth crossed to where the St. Dunstan fire escape came up from the
+ground to end below us at a top floor window. I joined him, explaining
+as we looked down,
+
+"Couldn't have made it that way; not by daylight. In open view all
+around."
+
+"Think he stayed up here till dark?" Worth suggested, quite as though
+the possibility of Clayte's coming here at all was settled.
+
+"My men were all over this building--roof to cellar--within the hour.
+They'd not have overlooked a crack big enough for him to hide in. Put
+yourself in Clayte's place. Time was the most valuable thing in the
+world with him right then. If ever he got up to this roof, he'd not
+waste a minute longer on it than he had to."
+
+"Let's see what's beyond, then," and Worth led the way to the farther
+end.
+
+The girl didn't come with us. Having been once around the roof coping,
+looking, it seemed to me, as much at the view as anything else, she now
+seemed content to settle herself on a little square of planking, a
+disused scuttle top or something of the sort, in against one of the
+chimneys where she was sheltered from the wind. Rather to my surprise, I
+saw her thoughtfully pulling off her gloves, removing her turban, all
+the time with a curiously disinterested air. I was reminded of what
+Worth had said the night before about the way her father trained her.
+Probably she regarded the facts I'd furnished her, or that she'd picked
+up for herself, much as she used to the problems in concentration her
+father spread in the high chair tray of her infancy. I turned and left
+her with them, for Worth was calling me to announce a fact I already
+knew, that the adjoining building had a roof some fifteen feet below
+where we stood, and that the man, admitting good gymnastic ability,
+might have reached it.
+
+"Sure," I said. "But come on. We're wasting time here."
+
+We turned to go, and then stopped, both of us checked instantly by what
+we saw. The girl was sitting in a strange pose, her feet drawn in to
+cross beneath her body, slender hands at the length of the arms meeting
+with interlaced finger-tips before her, the thumbs just touching;
+shoulders back, chin up, eyes--big enough at any time, now dilated to
+look twice their size--velvet circles in a white face. Like a Buddha;
+I'd seen her sit so, years before, an undersized girl doing stunts for
+her father in a public hall; and even then she'd been in a way
+impressive. But now, in the fullness of young beauty, her fine head
+relieved against the empty blue of the sky, the free winds whipping
+loose flying ends of her dark hair, she held the eye like a miracle.
+
+Sitting here so immovably, she looked to me as though life had slid away
+from her for the moment, the mechanical action of lungs and heart
+temporarily suspended, so that mind might work unhindered in that
+beautiful shell. No, I was wrong. She was breathing; her bosom rose and
+fell in slow but deep, placid inhalations and exhalations. And the pale
+face might be from the slower heart-beat, or only because the surface
+blood had receded to give more of strength to the brain.
+
+The position of head of a Bankers' Security Agency carries with it a
+certain amount of dignity--a dignity which, since Richardson's death, I
+have maintained better than I have handled other requirements of the
+business he left with me. I stood now feeling like a fool. I'd grown
+gray in the work, and here in my prosperous middle life, a boy's whim
+and a girl's pretty face had put me in the position of consulting a
+clairvoyant. Worse, for this was a wild-cat affair, without even the
+professional standing of establishments to which I knew some of the weak
+brothers in my line sometimes sneaked for ghostly counsel. If it should
+leak out, I was done for.
+
+I suppose I sort of groaned, for I felt Worth put a restraining hand on
+my arm, and heard his soft,
+
+"Psst!"
+
+The two of us stood, how long I can't say, something besides the beauty
+of the young creature, even the dignity of her in this outré situation
+getting hold of me, so that I was almost reverent when at last the
+rigidity of her image-like figure began to relax, the pretty feet in
+their silk stockings and smart pumps appeared where they belonged, side
+by side on the edge of the planking, and she looked at us with eyes that
+slowly gathered their normal expression, and a smile of rare human
+sweetness.
+
+"It _is_ horrid to see--and I loathe doing it!" She shook her curly dark
+head like a punished child, and stayed a minute longer, eyes downcast,
+groping after gloves and hat. "I thought maybe I'd get the answer before
+you saw me--sitting up like a trained seal!"
+
+"Like a mighty pretty little heathen idol, Bobs," Worth amended.
+
+"Well, it's the only way I can really concentrate--effectively. But this
+is the first time I've done it since--since father died."
+
+"And never again for me, if that's the way you feel about it." Worth
+crossed quickly and stood beside her, looking down. She reached a hand
+to him; her eyes thanked him; but as he helped her to her feet I was
+struck by a something poised and confident that she seemed to have
+brought with her out of that strange state in which she had just been.
+
+"Doesn't either of you want to hear the answer?" she asked. Then,
+without waiting for reply, she started for the scuttle and the ladder,
+bare headed, carrying her hat. We found her once more adjusting turban
+and veil before the mirror of Clayte's dresser. She faced around, and
+announced, smiling steadily across at me,
+
+"Your man Clayte left this room while Mrs. Griggsby was kneeling almost
+on its threshold--left it by that window over there. He got to the roof
+by means of a rope and grappling hook. He tied the suitcase to the lower
+end of the rope, swung it out of the window, went up hand over hand, and
+pulled the suitcase up after him. That's the answer I got."
+
+It was? Well, it was a beaut! Only Worth Gilbert, standing there giving
+the proceeding respectability by careful attention and a grave face,
+brought me down to asking with mild jocularity,
+
+"He did? He did all that? Well, please ma'am, who locked the window
+after him?"
+
+"He locked the window after himself."
+
+"Oh, say!" I began in exasperation--hadn't I just shown the impractical
+little creature that those locks couldn't be manipulated from outside?
+
+"Wait. Examine carefully the wooden part of the upper sash, at the
+lock--again," she urged, but without making any movement to help.
+"You'll find what we overlooked before; the way he locked the sash from
+the outside."
+
+I turned to the window and looked where she had said; nothing. I ran my
+fingers over the painted surface of the wood, outside, opposite the
+latch, and a queer, chilly feeling went down my spine. I jerked out my
+knife, opened it and scraped at a tiny inequality.
+
+"There is--is something--" I was beginning, when Worth crowded in at my
+side and pushed his broad shoulders out the window to get a better view
+of my operations, then commanded,
+
+"Let me have that knife." He took it from my fingers, dug with its
+blade, and suddenly from the inside I saw a tiny hole appear in the
+frame of the sash beside the lock hasp. "Here we are!" He brought his
+upper half back into the room and held up a wooden plug, painted--dipped
+in paint--the exact color of the sash. It had concealed a hole; pierced
+the wood from out to in.
+
+"And she saw that in her trance," I murmured, gaping in amazement at the
+plug.
+
+I heard her catch her breath, and Worth scowled at me,
+
+"Trance? What do you mean, Boyne? She doesn't go into a trance."
+
+"That--that--whatever she does," I corrected rather helplessly.
+
+"Never mind, Mr. Boyne," said the girl. "It isn't clairvoyance or
+anything like that, however it looks."
+
+"But I wouldn't have believed any human eyes could have found that
+thing. I discovered it only by sense of touch--and that after you told
+me to hunt for it. You saw it when I was showing you the latch, did
+you?"
+
+"Oh, I didn't see it." She shook her head. "I found it when I was
+sitting up there on the roof."
+
+"Guessed at it?"
+
+"I never guess." Indignantly. "When I'd cleared my mind of everything
+else--had concentrated on just the facts that bore on what I wanted to
+know--how that man with the suitcase got out of the room and left it
+locked behind him--I deduced the hole in the sash by elimination."
+
+"By elimination?" I echoed. "Show me."
+
+"Simple as two and two," she assented. "Out of the door? No; Mrs.
+Griggsby; so out of the window. Down? No; you told why; he would be
+seen; so, up. Ladder? No; too big for one man to handle or to hide; so a
+rope."
+
+"But the hole in the sash?"
+
+"You showed me the only way to close that lock from the outside. There
+was no hole in the glass, so there must be in the sash. It was not
+visible--you had been all over it, and a man of your profession isn't a
+totally untrained observer--so the hole was plugged. I hadn't seen the
+plug, so it was concealed by paint--"
+
+I was trying to work a toothpick through the plughole. She offered me a
+wire hairpin, straightened out, and with it I pushed the hasp into place
+from outside, saw the lever snap in to hold it fast. I had worked the
+catch as Clayte had worked it--from outside.
+
+"How did you know it was _this_ window?" I asked, forced to agree that
+she had guessed right as to the sash lock. "There are two more here,
+either of which--"
+
+"No, please, Mr. Boyne. Look at the angle of the roof that cuts from
+view any one climbing from this window--not from the others."
+
+We were all leaning in the window now, sticking our heads out, looking
+down, looking up.
+
+"I can't yet see how you get the rope and hook," I said. "Still seems to
+me that an outside man posted on the roof to help in the getaway is more
+likely."
+
+"Maybe. I can't deal with things that are merely likely. It has to be a
+fact--or nothing--for my use. I know that there wasn't any second man
+because of the nicks Clayte's grappling hook has left in the cornice up
+there."
+
+"Nicks!" I said, and stood like a bound boy at a husking, without a word
+to say for myself. Of course, in this impasse of the locked windows, my
+men and I had had some excuse for our superficial examination of the
+roof. Yet that she should have seen what we had passed over--seen it out
+of the corner of her eye, and be laughing at me--was rather a dose to
+swallow. She'd got her hair and her hat and veil to her liking, and she
+prompted us,
+
+"So now you want to get right down stairs--don't you--and go up through
+that other building to its roof?"
+
+I stared. She had my plan almost before I had made it.
+
+At the St. Dunstan desk where I returned the keys, little Miss Wallace
+had a question of her own to put to the clerk.
+
+"How long ago was this building reroofed?" she asked with one of her
+dark, softly glowing smiles.
+
+"Reroofed?" repeated the puzzled clerk, much more civil to her than he
+had been to me. "I don't know that it ever was. Certainly not in my
+time, and I've been here all of four years."
+
+"Not in four years? You're sure?"
+
+"Sure of that, yes, miss. But I can find exactly." The fellow behind the
+desk was rising with an eagerness to be of service to her, when she cut
+him short with,
+
+"Thank you. Four years would be exact enough for my purpose." And she
+followed a puzzled detective and, if I may guess, an equally wondering
+Worth Gilbert out into the street.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+THE GOLD NUGGET
+
+
+The neighbor to the south of the St. Dunstan was the Gold Nugget Hotel,
+a five story brick building and not at all pretentious as a hostelry. I
+knew the place mildly, and my police training, even better than such
+acquaintance as I had with this particular dump, told me what it was.
+Through the windows we could see guests, Sunday papers littered about
+them, half smoked cigars in their faces, and hats which had a general
+tendency to tilt over the right eye. And here suddenly I realized the
+difference between Miss Barbara Wallace, a scientist's daughter, and
+some feminine sleuth we might have had with us.
+
+"Take her back to the St. Dunstan, Worth," I suggested. Then, as I saw
+they were both going to resist, "She can't go in here. I'll wait for you
+if you like."
+
+"Don't know why we shouldn't let Bobs in on the fun, same as you and me,
+Jerry." That was the way Worth put it. I took a side glance at his
+attitude in this affair--that he'd bought and was enjoying an eight
+hundred thousand dollar frolic, offering to share it with a friend; and
+saying no more, I wheeled and swung open the door for them. The man at
+the desk looked at me, calling a quick,
+
+"Hello, Jerry--what's up?"
+
+"Hello, Kite. How'd you come here?"
+
+The Kite as a hotelman was a new one on me. Last I knew of him, he was
+in the business of making book at the Emeryville track; and I
+supposed--if I ever thought of him--that he'd followed the ponies south
+across the border. As I stepped close to the counter, he spoke low, his
+look one of puzzled and somewhat anxious inquiry.
+
+"Running straight, Jerry. You may ask the Chief. What can I do for you?"
+
+Rather glad of the luck that gave me an old acquaintance to deal with, I
+told him, described Clayte, Worth and Miss Wallace standing by
+listening; then asked if Kite had seen him pass through the hotel going
+out the previous day at some time around one o'clock, carrying a brown,
+sole leather suitcase.
+
+The readers of the Sunday papers who had been lured from their known
+standards of good manners into the sending of sundry interested glances
+in the direction of our sparkling girl, took the cue from the Kite's
+scowl to bury themselves for good in the voluminous sheets they held,
+each attending strictly to his own business, as is the etiquette of
+places like the Gold Nugget.
+
+"About one o'clock, you say?" Kite muttered, frowning, twisted his head
+around and called down a back passage, "Louie--Oh, Louie!" and when an
+overalled porter, rather messy, shuffled to the desk, put the low toned
+query, "D'you see any stranger guy gripping a sole leather shirt-box
+snoop by out yestiddy, after one, thereabouts?" And I added the
+information,
+
+"Medium height and weight, blue eyes, light brown hair, smooth face."
+
+Louie looked at me dubiously.
+
+"How big a guy?" he asked.
+
+"Five feet seven or eight; weighs about hundred and forty."
+
+"Blue eyes you say?"
+
+"Light blue--gray blue."
+
+"How was he tucked up?"
+
+"Blue serge suit, black shoes, black derby. Neat, quiet dresser."
+
+Louie's eyes wandered over the guests in the office questioningly. I
+began to feel impatient. If there was any place in the city where my
+description of Clayte would differentiate him, make him noticeable by
+comparison, it was here. Neat, quiet dressers were not dotting this
+lobby.
+
+"Might be Tim Foley?" he appealed to the Kite, who nodded gravely and
+chewed his short mustache. "Would he have a big scar on his left cheek?"
+
+"He would not," I said shortly. "He wasn't a guest here, and you don't
+know him. Get this straight now: a stranger, going through here, out;
+about one o'clock; carried a suitcase."
+
+"Bulls after him?" Louie asked, and I turned away from him wearily.
+
+"Kite," I said, "let me up to your roof."
+
+"Sure, Jerry." Released, the porter went on to gather up a pile of
+discarded papers.
+
+"Could he--the man I've described--come through here--through this
+office and neither you nor Louie see him?" I asked. The Kite brought a
+box of cigars from under the counter with,
+
+"My treat, gentlemen. Naw, Jerry; sure not--not that kind of a guy.
+Louie'd 'a' spotted him. Most observing cuss I ever seen."
+
+Miss Wallace, taking all this in, seemed amused. As I turned to lead to
+the elevator I found that again she wanted a question of her own
+answered.
+
+"Mr. Kite," she began and I grinned; Kite wasn't the Kite's surname or
+any part of his name; "Who is the guest here with the upstairs room--on
+the top floor--has had the same room right along--for five or six
+years--but doesn't--"
+
+"Go easy, ma'am, please!" Kite's little eyes were popping; he dragged
+out a handkerchief and fumbled it around his forehead. "I've not been
+here for any five or six years--no, nor half that time. Since I've been
+here most of our custom is transient. Nobody don't keep no room five or
+six years in the Gold Nugget."
+
+"Back up," I smiled at his excitement. "To my certain knowledge Steve
+Skeels has had a room here longer than that. Hasn't he been with you
+ever since the place was rebuilt after the earthquake?"
+
+"Steve?" the Kite repeated. "I forgot him. Yeah--he keeps a little room
+up under the roof."
+
+"Has he had it for as long as four years?" the young lady asked.
+
+"Search me," the Kite shook his head.
+
+But Louie the overalled, piloting us the first stage of our journey in a
+racketty old elevator that he seemed to pull up by a cable, so slow it
+was, grumbled an assent to the same question when it was put to him, and
+confirmed my belief that Skeels came into the hotel as soon as it was
+rebuilt, and had kept the same room ever since.
+
+Miss Wallace seemed interested in this; but all the time we were making
+the last lap, by an iron stairway, to that roof-house we had seen from
+the top of the St. Dunstan; all the time Louie was unlocking the door
+there to let us out, instructing us to be sure to relock it and bring
+him the key, and to yell for him down the elevator shaft because the
+bell was busted, the quiet smile of Miss Barbara Wallace disturbed me.
+She followed where I led, but I had the irritating impression that she
+looked on at my movements, and Worth's as well, with the indulgent eye
+of a grown-up observing children at play.
+
+On the roof of the Gold Nugget we picked up the possible trail easily;
+Clayte hadn't needed to go through the building, or have a confederate
+staked out in a room here, to make a downward getaway. For here the fire
+escape came all the way up, curving over the coping to anchor into the
+wall, and it was a good iron stairway, with landings at each floor, and
+a handrail the entire length, its lower end in the alley between Powell
+and Mason Streets. Looking at it I didn't doubt that it was used by the
+guests of the Gold Nugget at least half as much as the easier but more
+conspicuous front entrance. Therefore a man seen on it would be no more
+likely to attract attention than he would in the elevator. I explained
+this to the others, but Worth had attacked a rack of old truck piled in
+the corner of the roof-house, and paid little attention to me, while
+Miss Wallace nodded with her provoking smile and said,
+
+"Once--yes; no doubt you are exactly right. I wasn't looking for a way
+that a man might take once, under pressure of great necessity."
+
+"Why not?" I countered. "If Clayte got away by this means
+yesterday--that'll do me."
+
+"It might," she nodded, "if you could see it as a fact, without seeing a
+lot more. Such a man as Clayte was--a really wonderful man, you know--"
+the dimples were deep in the pink of her cheeks as she flashed a
+laughing look at me with this clawful--"a really wonderful man like
+Clayte," she repeated, "wouldn't have trusted to a route he hadn't known
+and proved for a long time."
+
+"That's theory," I smiled. "I take my hat off to you, Miss Wallace, when
+it comes to observing and deducing, but I'm afraid your theorizing is
+weak."
+
+"I never theorize," she reminded me. "All I deal with is facts."
+
+She had perched herself on an overturned box, and was watching Worth
+sort junk. I leaned against the roof-house, pushed Kite's donated cigar
+unlighted into a corner of my mouth and stared at her.
+
+"Miss Wallace," I said sharply, "what's this Steve Skeels stuff? What's
+this reroofing stuff? What's the dope you think you have, and you think
+I haven't? Tell us, and we'll not waste time. Tell us, and we'll get
+ahead on this case. Worth, let that rubbish alone. Nothing there for us.
+Come here and listen."
+
+For all answer he straightened up, looked at us without a word--and went
+to it again. I turned to the girl.
+
+"Worth doesn't need to listen to me, Mr. Boyne," she said serenely. "He
+already has full faith in me and my methods."
+
+"Methods be--be blowed!" I exploded. "It's results that count, and
+you've produced. I'm willing to hand it to you. All we know now, we got
+from you. Beside you I'm a thick-headed blunderer. Let me in on how you
+get things and I won't be so hard to convince."
+
+"Indeed, you aren't a blunderer," she said warmly. "You do a lot better
+than most people at observing." (High praise that, for a detective more
+than twenty years in the business; but she meant to be complimentary.)
+"I'm glad to tell you my processes. How much time do you want to give to
+it?"
+
+"Not a minute longer than will get what you know." And she began with a
+rush.
+
+"Those dents in the coping at the St. Dunstan, above Clayte's window--I
+asked the clerk there how long since the building had been reroofed,
+because there were nicks made by that hook and half filled with tar that
+had been slushed up against the coping and into the lowest dents. You
+see what that means?"
+
+"That Clayte--or some accomplice of his--had been using the route more
+than four years ago. Yes."
+
+"And the other scars were made at varying times, showing me that coming
+over here from there was quite a regular thing."
+
+"At that rate he would have nicked the coping until it would have looked
+like a huck towel," I objected.
+
+"A huck towel," she gravely adopted my word. "But he was a man that did
+everything he did several different ways. That was his habit--a sort of
+disguise. That's why he was shadowy and hard to describe. Sometimes he
+came up to the St. Dunstan roof just as we did; and once, a good while
+ago, there were cleats on that wall there so he could climb down here
+without the rope. They have been taken away some time, and the places
+where they were are weathered over so you would hardly notice them."
+
+"Right you are," I said feelingly. "I'd hardly notice them. If I could
+notice things as you do--fame and fortune for me!" I thought the matter
+over for a minute. "That lodger on the top floor, Steve Skeels," I
+debated. "A poor bet. Yet--after all, he might have been a member of the
+gang, though somehow I don't get the hunch--"
+
+"What sort of looking person was this man Skeels?" she asked.
+
+"Quiet fellow. Dressed like a church deacon. 'Silent Steve' they call
+him. I'll send for him down stairs and let you give him the once-over if
+you like."
+
+"Oh, that's not the kind of man I'm looking for." She shook her head.
+"My man would be more like those down there in the easy chairs--so he
+wasn't noticed in the elevator or when he passed out through the
+office."
+
+"Wasn't it cute of him?" I grinned. "But you see we've just heard that
+he didn't take the elevator and go through the office--Saturday anyhow,
+which is the only time that really counts for us, the time when he
+carried that suitcase with a fortune in it."
+
+"But he did," she persisted. "He went that way. He walked out the front
+door and carried away the suitcase--"
+
+"_He didn't!_" Worth shouted, and began throwing things behind him like
+a terrier in a wood-rat's burrow.
+
+Derelict stuff of all sorts; empty boxes, pasteboard cartons, part of an
+old trunk, he hurtled them into a heap, and dragged out a square
+something in a gunny sack. As he jerked to clear it from the sacking, I
+glanced at little Miss Wallace. She wasn't getting any pleasureable kick
+out of the situation. Her eyes seemed to go wider open with a sort of
+horror, her face paled as she drooped in on herself, sitting there on
+the box. Then Worth held up his find in triumph, assuming a famous
+attitude.
+
+"The world is mine!" he cried.
+
+"Maybe 'tis, maybe 'tisn't," I said as I ran across to look at the thing
+close. Sure enough, he'd dug up a respectable brown, sole leather
+suitcase with brass trimmings such as a bank clerk might have carried,
+suspiciously much too good to have been thrown out here. Could it be
+that the thieves had indeed met in one of the Gold Nugget's rooms or in
+the roof-house up here, made their divvy, split the swag, and thus
+clumsily disposed of the container? At the moment, Worth tore buckles
+and latches free, yanked the thing open, reversed it in air--and out
+fell a coiled rope that curved itself like a snake--a three-headed
+snake; the triple grappling iron at its end standing up as though to
+hiss.
+
+We all stood staring; I was too stunned to be triumphant. What a pat
+confirmation of Miss Wallace's deductions! I turned to congratulate her
+and at the same instant Worth cried,
+
+"What's the matter, Bobs?" for the girl was sitting, staring dejectedly,
+her chin cupped in her palms, her lips quivering. Nonplussed, I stooped
+over the suitcase and rope, coiling up the one, putting it in the
+other--this first bit of tangible, palpable evidence we'd lighted on.
+
+"Let's get out of this," I said quickly. "We've done all we can
+here--and good and plenty it is, too."
+
+Worth took the suitcase out of my hands and carried it, so that I had to
+help Miss Wallace down the ladder. She still looked as though she'd lost
+her last friend. I couldn't make her out. Never a word from her while we
+were getting down, or while they waited and I shouted for Louie. It was
+in the elevator, with the porter looking at everything on earth but this
+suitcase we hadn't brought in and we were taking out, that she said,
+hardly above her breath,
+
+"Shall you ask at the desk if this ever belonged to any one in the
+house?"
+
+"Find out here--right now," and I turned to the man in overalls with,
+"How about it?"
+
+"Not that your answer will make any difference," Worth cut in joyously.
+"Nobody need get the idea that they can take this suitcase away from
+me--'cause they can't. It's mine. I paid eight hundred thousand dollars
+for this box; and I've got a use for it." He chuckled. Louie regarded
+him with uncomprehending toleration--queer doings were the order of the
+day at the Gold Nugget--and allowed negligently.
+
+"You'll get to keep it. It don't belong here." Then, as a coin changed
+hands, "Thank _you_."
+
+"But didn't it ever belong here?" our girl persisted forlornly, and when
+Louie failed her, jingling Worth's tip in his calloused palm, she wanted
+the women asked, and we had a frowsy chambermaid called who denied any
+acquaintance with our sole leather discovery, insisting, upon definite
+inquiry, that she had never seen it in Skeels' room, or any other room
+of her domain. Little Miss Wallace sighed and dropped the subject.
+
+As we stepped out of the elevator, I behind the others, Kite caught my
+attention with a low whistle, and in response to a furtive, beckoning,
+backward jerk of his head, I moved over to the desk. The reading
+gentlemen in the easy chairs, most consciously unconscious of us, sent
+blue smoke circles above their papers. Kite leaned far over to get his
+mustache closer to my ear.
+
+"You ast me about Steve," he whispered.
+
+"Yeah," I agreed, and looked around for Barbara, to tell her here was
+her chance to meet the gentleman she had so cleverly deduced. But she
+and Worth were already getting through the door, he still clinging to
+the suitcase, she trailing along with that expression of defeat. "I'm
+sort of looking up Steve. And you don't want to tip him off--see?"
+
+"Couldn't if I wanted to, Jerry," the Kite came down on his heels, but
+continued to whisper hoarsely. "Steve's bolted."
+
+"What?"
+
+"Bolted," the Kite repeated. "Hopped the twig. Jumped the town."
+
+"You mean he's not in his room?" I reached for a match in the metal
+holder, scratched it, and lit my cigar.
+
+"I mean he's jumped the town," Kite repeated. "You got me nervous asking
+for him that way. While you was on the roof, I took a squint around and
+found he was gone--with his hand baggage. That means he's gone outa
+town."
+
+"Not if the suitcase you squinted for was a brown sole leather--" I was
+beginning, but the Kite cut in on me.
+
+"I seen that one you had. That wasn't it. His was a brand new one, black
+and shiny."
+
+Suddenly I couldn't taste my cigar at all.
+
+"Know what time to-day he left here?" I asked.
+
+"It wasn't to-day. 'Twas yestiddy. About one o'clock."
+
+As I plunged for the door I was conscious of his hoarse whisper
+following me,
+
+"What's Steve done, Jerry? What d'ye want him for?"
+
+I catapulted across the sidewalk and into the machine.
+
+"Get me to my office as fast as you can, Worth," I exclaimed. "Hit Bush
+Street--and rush it."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+A TIN-HORN GAMBLER
+
+
+After we were in the machine, my head was so full of the matter in hand
+that Worth had driven some little distance before I realized that the
+young people were debating across me as to which place we went first,
+Barbara complaining that she was hungry, while Worth ungallantly eager
+to give his own affairs immediate attention, argued,
+
+"You said the dining-room out at your diggings would be closed by this
+time. Why not let me take you down to the Palace, along with Jerry, have
+this suitcase safely locked up, and we can all lunch together and get
+ahead with our talk."
+
+"Drive to the office, Worth," I cut in ahead of Barbara's objections to
+this plan. "I ought to be there this minute. We'll have a tray in from a
+little joint that feeds me when I'm too busy to go out for grub."
+
+I took them straight into my private office at the end of the suite.
+
+"Make yourself comfortable," I said to Miss Wallace. "Better let me lock
+up that suitcase, Worth; stick it in the vault. That's evidence."
+
+"I'll hang on to it." He grinned. "You can keep the rope and hook. This
+has got another use before it can be evidence."
+
+Not even delaying to remove my coat, I laid a heavy finger on the
+buzzer button for Roberts, my secretary; then as nothing resulted, I
+played music on the other signal tips beneath the desk lid. It was
+Sunday, also luncheon hour, but there must be some one about the place.
+It never was left entirely empty.
+
+My fugue work brought little Pete, and Murray, one of the men from the
+operatives' room.
+
+"Where's Roberts?" I asked the latter.
+
+"He went to lunch, Mr. Boyne."
+
+"Where's Foster?" Foster was chief operative.
+
+"He telephoned in from Redwood City half an hour ago. Chasing a Clayte
+clue down the peninsula."
+
+"If he calls up again, tell him to report in at once. Is there a
+stenographer about?"
+
+"Not a one; Sunday, you know."
+
+"Can you take dictation?"
+
+"Me? Why, no, sir."
+
+"Then dig me somebody who can. And rush it. I've--"
+
+"Perhaps I might help." It was little Miss Wallace who spoke; about the
+first cheerful word I'd heard out of her since we found that suitcase on
+the roof of the Gold Nugget. "I can take on the machine fairly."
+
+"Fine!" I tossed my coat on the big center table. "Murray, send Roberts
+to me as soon as he comes in. You take number two trunk line, and find
+two of the staff--quick; any two. Shoot them to the Gold Nugget Hotel."
+I explained the situation in a word. Then, as he was closing the door,
+"Keep off Number One trunk, Murray; I'll be using that line," and I
+turned to little Pete.
+
+"Get lunch for three," I said, handing him a bill. From his first glance
+at Barbara one could have seen that the monkey was hers truly, as they
+say at the end of letters. I knew as he bolted out that he felt
+something very special ought to be dug up for such a visitor.
+
+The girl had shed coat and hat and was already fingering the keys of the
+typewriter, trying their touch. I saw at once she knew her business, and
+I turned to the work at hand with satisfaction.
+
+"You'll find telegram blanks there somewhere," I instructed. "Get as
+many in for manifold copies as you can make readable. The long form.
+Worth--"
+
+I looked around to find that my other amateur assistant was following my
+advice, stowing his precious suitcase in the vault; and it struck me
+that he couldn't have been more tickled with the find if the thing had
+contained all the money and securities instead of that rope and hook. He
+had made the latter into a separate package, and now looked up at me
+with,
+
+"Want this in here, too, Jerry?"
+
+"I do. Lock them both up, and come take the telephone at the table
+there. Press down Number One button. Then call every taxi stand in the
+city (find their numbers at the back of the telephone directory) and ask
+if they picked up Silent Steve at or near the Gold Nugget yesterday
+afternoon about one; Steve Skeels--or any other man. If so, where'd they
+take him? Get me?"
+
+"All hunk, Jerry." He came briskly to the job. I returned to Miss
+Wallace, with,
+
+"Ready, Barbara?"
+
+"Yes, Mr. Boyne."
+
+"Take dictation:
+
+"'We offer five hundred dollars--' You authorize that, Worth?"
+
+"Sure. What's it for?"
+
+"Never mind. You keep at your job. 'Five hundred dollars for the arrest
+of Silent Steve Skeels--' Wait. Make that 'arrest or detention,' Got
+it?"
+
+"All right, Mr. Boyne."
+
+--"'Skeels, gambler, who left San Francisco about one in the afternoon
+yesterday March sixth. Presumed he went by train; maybe by auto. He is
+man thirty-eight to forty; five feet seven or eight; weighs about one
+hundred forty. Hair, light brown; eyes light blue--' Make it gray-blue,
+Barbara."
+
+Worth glanced up from where he was jotting down telephone numbers to
+drawl,
+
+"You know who you're describing there?"
+
+"Yes--Steve Skeels."
+
+I saw Miss Wallace give him a quick look, a little shake of her head, as
+she said to me.
+
+"Go on--please, Mr. Boyne."
+
+"'Hair parted high, smoothed down; appears of slight build but is well
+muscled. Neat dresser, quiet, usually wears blue serge suit, black derby
+hat, black shoes.'"
+
+"By Golly--you see it now yourself, don't you, Jerry?"
+
+"I see that you're holding up work," I said impatiently. And now it was
+the quiet girl who came in with.
+
+"Who gave you this description of Steve Skeels? I mean, how many
+people's observation of the man does this represent?"
+
+"One. My own," I jerked out. "I know Skeels; have known him for years."
+
+"Years? How many?" It was still the girl asking.
+
+"Since 1907--or thereabouts."
+
+"Was he always a gambler?" she wanted to know.
+
+"Always. Ran a joint on Fillmore Street after the big earthquake, and
+before San Francisco came back down-town."
+
+"A gambler," she spoke the word just above her breath, as though trying
+it out with herself. "A man who took big chances--risks."
+
+"Not Steve," I smiled at her earnestness. "Steve was a piker always--a
+tin-horn gambler. Hid away from the police instead of doing business
+with them. Take a chance? Not Steve."
+
+Worth had left the telephone and was leaning over her shoulder to read
+what she had typed.
+
+"Exactly and precisely," he said, "the same words you had in that other
+fool description of him."
+
+"Of whom?"
+
+"Clayte."
+
+Worth let me have the one word straight between the eyes, and I leaned
+back in my chair, the breath almost knocked out of me by it. By an
+effort I pulled myself together and turned to the girl:
+
+"Take dictation, please: Skeel's eyes are wide apart, rather small but
+keen--"
+
+And for the next few minutes I was making words mean something, drawing
+a picture of the Skeels I knew, so that others could visualize him. And
+it brought me a word of commendation from Miss Wallace, and made Worth
+exclaim,
+
+"Sounds more like Clayte than Clayte himself. You've put flesh on those
+bones, Jerry."
+
+"You keep busy at that phone and help land him," I growled. "Finish,
+please: 'Wire information to me. I hold warrant. Jeremiah Boyne,
+Bankers' Security Agency,' That's all."
+
+The girl pulled the sheets from the machine and sorted them while I was
+stabbing the buzzer. Roberts answered, breezing in with an apology which
+I nipped.
+
+"Never mind that. Get this telegram on the wires to each of our
+corresponding agencies as far east as Spokane, Ogden and Denver. Has
+Murray got in touch with Foster?"
+
+"Not yet. Young and Stroud are outside."
+
+"Send them to bring in Steve Skeels," I ordered. "Description on the
+telegram there. Any word, Worth?"
+
+"Nothing yet." Worth was calling one after another of the taxi offices.
+Little Pete came in with a tray.
+
+"All right, Worth," I said. "Turn that job over to Roberts. Here's where
+we eat."
+
+The kid's idea of catering for Barbara was club sandwiches and pie à la
+mode. It wouldn't have been mine; but I was glad to note that he'd
+guessed right. The youngsters fell to with appetite. For myself, I ate,
+the receiver at my ear, talking between bites. San Jose, Stockton, Santa
+Rosa--in all the nearby towns of size, I placed the drag-net out for
+Silent Steve, tin-horn gambler.
+
+They talked as they lunched. I didn't pay any attention to what they
+said now; my mind was racing at the new idea Worth had given me. So far,
+I had been running Skeels down as one of the same gang with Clayte; the
+man on the roof; the go-between for the getaway. My supposition was that
+when the suitcase was emptied for division, Skeels, being left to
+dispose of the container, had stuck it where we found it. But what if
+the thing worked another way? What if all the money--almost a round
+million--which came to the Gold Nugget roof in the brown sole-leather
+case, walked out of its front door in the new black shiny carrier of
+Skeels the gambler?
+
+Could that be worked? A gambler at night, a bank employee by day? Why
+not? Improbable. But not impossible.
+
+"I believe you said a mouthful, Worth," I broke in on the two at their
+lunch. "And tell me, girl, how did you get the idea of walking up to the
+desk at the Gold Nugget and demanding Steve Skeels from the Kite?"
+
+"I didn't demand Steve Skeels," she reminded me rather plaintively. "I
+didn't want--him."
+
+"What did you want?"
+
+"A room that had been lived in."
+
+She didn't need to add a word to that. I got her in the instant. That
+examination of hers in Clayte's room at the St. Dunstan; the crisp,
+new-looking bedding, the unworn velvet of the chair cushions; the faded
+nap of the carpet, quite perfect, while that in the hall had just been
+renewed. Even had the room been done over recently--and I knew it had
+not--there was no getting around the total absence of photographs,
+pictures, books, magazines, newspapers, old letters, the lack of all
+the half worn stuff that collects about an occupied apartment. No
+pinholes or defacements on the walls, none of the litter that
+accumulates. The girl was right; that room hadn't been lived in.
+
+"Beautiful," I said in honest admiration. "It's a pleasure to see a mind
+like yours, and such powers of observation, in action, clicking out
+results like a perfectly adjusted machine. Clayte didn't live in his
+room because he lived with the gang all his glorious outside hours.
+There was where the poor rabbit of a bank clerk got his fling."
+
+"Oh, yes, it works logically. He held himself down to Clayte at the St.
+Dunstan and in the bank, and he let himself go to--what?--outside of it,
+beyond it, where he really lived."
+
+"He let himself go to Steve Skeels--won't that do you?"
+
+"No," she said so positively that it was annoying. "That won't do me at
+all."
+
+"But it's what you got," I reminded her rather unkindly, and then was
+sorry I'd done it. "It's what you got for me--and I thank you for it."
+
+"You needn't," she came back at me--spunky little thing. "It isn't worth
+thanking anybody for. It's only a partial fact."
+
+"And you think half truths are dangerous?" I smiled at her.
+
+"There isn't any such thing," she instructed me. "Even _facts_ can
+hardly be split into fractions; while the truth is always whole and
+complete."
+
+"As far as you see it," I amended. "For instance, you insist on keeping
+the gang all under Clayte's hat--or you did at first. Now you're
+refusing to believe, as both Worth and I believe, that Steve Skeels is
+Clayte himself. I should think you'd jump at the idea. Here's your
+Wonder Man."
+
+She leaned back in her chair and laughed. I was glad to hear the sound
+again, see the dimples flicker in her cheeks, even if she was laughing
+at me.
+
+"A wonderful Wonder Man, Mr. Boyne," she said. "One who does things so
+bunglingly that you can follow him right up and put your hand on him."
+
+"Not so I could," I reminded her gaily. "So you could. Quite a different
+matter." She took my compliment sweetly, but she said with smiling
+reluctance,
+
+"I'm not in this, of course, except that your kindness allowed me to be
+for this day only. But if I were, I shouldn't be following Skeels as you
+are. I'd still be after Clayte."
+
+"It foots up to the same thing," I said rather tartly.
+
+"Oh, does it?" she laughed at me. "Two and two are making about three
+and a half this afternoon, are they?"
+
+"What we've got to-day ought to land something," I maintained. "You've
+been fine help, Barbara--" and I broke off suddenly with the knowledge
+that I'd been calling her that all through the rush of the work.
+
+"Thank you." She smiled inclusively. I knew she meant my use of her name
+as well as my commendation. I began clearing my desk preparatory to
+leaving. Worth was going to take her home and as he brought her coat, he
+spoke again of the suitcase.
+
+"Hey, there!" I remonstrated, "You don't want to be lugging that thing
+with you everywhere, like a three-year-old kid that's found a dead cat.
+Leave it where it is."
+
+"Give me an order for it then," he said. And when I looked surprised,
+"Might need that box, and you not be in the office."
+
+"Need it?" I grumbled. "I'd like to know what for."
+
+But I scribbled the order. Over by the window the young people were
+talking together earnestly; they made a picture against the light,
+standing close, the girl's vivid dark face raised, the lad's tall head
+bent, attentive.
+
+"But, Bobs, you must get some time to play about," I heard Worth say.
+
+"Awfully little," Her look up at him was like that of a wistful child.
+
+"You said you were in the accounting department," he urged impatiently.
+"A lightning calculator like you could put that stuff through in about
+one tenth of the usual time."
+
+"I use an adding machine," she half whispered, and it made me chuckle.
+
+"An adding machine!" Worth exploded in a peal of laughter. "For Barbara
+Wallace! What's their idea?"
+
+"It isn't their idea; it's mine," with dignity. "They don't know that I
+used to be a freak mathematician. I don't want them to. Father used to
+say that all children could be trained to do all that I did--if you took
+them young enough. But till they are, I'd rather not be. It's horrid to
+be different; and I'm keeping it to myself--in the office anyhow--and
+living my past down the best I can."
+
+As though her words had suggested it, Worth spoke again,
+
+"Where did you meet Cummings? Seems you find time to go out with him."
+
+"I've known Mr. Cummings for years," Barbara spoke quietly, but she
+looked self-conscious. "I knew he was with those friends of mine at the
+Orpheum last night, but I didn't expect him to call for me at Tait's--or
+rather I thought they'd all come in after me. There wasn't anything
+special about it--no special appointment with him, I mean."
+
+I had forgotten them for a minute or two, closing my desk, finding my
+coat, when I heard some one come into the outer office, a visitor, for
+little Pete's voice went up to a shrill yap with the information that I
+was busy. Then the knob turned, the door opened, and there stood
+Cummings. At first he saw only me at the desk.
+
+"Your friend calling for you again, Bobs--by appointment?" Worth's
+question drew the lawyer's glance, and he stared at them apparently a
+good deal taken aback, while Worth added, "Seems to keep pretty close
+tab on your movements." The low tone might have been considered joking,
+but there was war in the boy's eye.
+
+It was as though Cummings answered the challenge, rather than opened
+with what he had intended.
+
+"My business is with you, Gilbert." He came in and shut the door behind
+him, leaving his hand on the knob. "And I've been some time finding
+you." He stopped there, and was so long about getting anything else out
+that Worth finally suggested,
+
+"The money?" And when there was no reply but a surprised look, "How do
+you stand now?"
+
+"Still seventy-two thousand to raise." Cummings spoke vaguely. This was
+not what had brought him to the office. He finished with the abrupt
+question, "Were you at Santa Ysobel last night?"
+
+"Hold on, Cummings," I broke in. "What you got? Let us--"
+
+I was shut off there by Worth's,
+
+"It's Sunday afternoon. I want that money to-morrow morning. You've not
+come through? You've not dug up what I sent you after?"
+
+I could see that the lawyer was absolutely nonplussed. Again he gave
+Worth one of those queer, probing looks before he said doggedly,
+
+"The question of that money can wait."
+
+"It can't wait." Worth's eyes began to light up. "What you talking,
+Cummings--an extension?" And when the lawyer made no answer to this,
+"I'll not crawl in with a broken leg asking favors of that bank crowd.
+Are you quitting on me? If so, say it--and I'll find a way to raise the
+sum, myself."
+
+"I've raised all but seventy-two thousand of the necessary amount," said
+Cummings slowly. "What I want to know is--how much have you raised?"
+
+"See here, Cummings," again I mixed in. "I was present when that
+arrangement was made. Nothing was said about Worth raising any money."
+
+Cummings barely glanced around at me as he said, "I made a suggestion to
+him; in your presence, as you say, Boyne. I want to know if he carried
+it out." Then, giving his full attention to Worth, "Did you see your
+father last night?"
+
+On instinct I blurted,
+
+"For heaven's sake, keep your mouth shut, Worth!"
+
+For a detective that certainly was an incautious speech. Cummings' eye
+flared suspicion at me, and his voice was a menace.
+
+"You keep out of this, Boyne."
+
+"You tell what's up your sleeve, Cummings," I countered. "This is no
+witness-stand cross-examination. What you got?"
+
+But Worth answered for him, hotly,
+
+"If Cummings hasn't seventy-two thousand dollars I commissioned him to
+raise for me, I don't care what he's got."
+
+"And you didn't go to your father for it last night?" Cummings returned
+to his question. He had moved close to the boy. Barbara stood just where
+she was when the door opened. Neither paid any attention to her. But she
+looked at the two men, drawn up with glances clinched, and spoke out
+suddenly in her clear young voice, as though there was no row on hand,
+
+"Worth was with me last night, you know, Mr. Cummings."
+
+"I seem to have noticed something of the sort," Cummings said with
+labored sarcasm. "And he'd been with that wedding party earlier in the
+evening, I suppose."
+
+"With me till Miss Wallace came in." Worth's natural disposition to
+disoblige the lawyer could be depended on to keep from Cummings whatever
+information he wanted before giving us his own news. "What you got,
+Cummings?" I prompted again, impatiently. "Come through."
+
+His eyes never shifted an instant from Worth Gilbert's face.
+
+"A telegram--from Santa Ysobel," he said slowly.
+
+Worth shrugged and half turned away.
+
+"I'm not interested in your telegram, Cummings."
+
+Instantly I saw what the boy thought: that the other had taken it on
+himself to apply for the money to Thomas Gilbert, and had been turned
+down.
+
+"Not interested?" Cummings repeated in that dry, lawyer voice that
+speaks from the teeth out; on the mere tone, I braced for something
+nasty. "I think you are. My telegram's from the coroner."
+
+Silence after that; Worth obstinately mute; Barbara and I afraid to ask.
+There was a little tremor of Cummings' nostril, he couldn't keep the
+flicker out of his eye, as he said, staring straight at Worth,
+
+"It states that your father shot himself last night. The body wasn't
+discovered till late this morning, in his study."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+SANTA YSOBEL
+
+
+Of all unexpected things. I went down to Santa Ysobel with Worth
+Gilbert. It happened this way: Cummings, one of those individuals on
+whose tombstone may truthfully be put, "Born a man--and died a lawyer,"
+seemed rather taken aback at the effect of the blow he'd launched. If he
+was after information, I can't think he learned much in the moment while
+Worth stood regarding him with an unreadable eye.
+
+There was only a little grimmer tightening of the jaw muscle, something
+bleak and robbed in the glance of the eye; the face of one, it seemed to
+me, who grieved the more because he was denied real sorrow for his loss,
+and Worth had tramped to the window and stood with his back to us,
+putting the thing over in his silent, fighting fashion, speaking to none
+of us. It was when Barbara followed, took hold of his sleeve and began
+half whispering up into his face that Cummings jerked his hat from the
+table where he had thrown it, and snapped,
+
+"Boyne--can I have a few minutes of your time?"
+
+"Jerry," Worth's voice halted me at the door, "Leave that card--an
+order--for me. For the suitcase."
+
+Cummings was ahead of me, and he turned back to listen, but I crowded
+him along and was pretty hot when I faced him in the outer office to
+demand,
+
+"What kind of a deal do you call this--ripping in here to throw this
+thing at the boy in such a way? What is your idea? What you trying to
+put over?"
+
+"Go easy, Boyne." Cummings chewed his words a little before he let them
+out. "There's something queer in this business. I intend to know what it
+is."
+
+"Queer," I repeated his word. "If the lawyers and the detectives get to
+running down all the queer things--that don't concern them a little
+bit--the world won't have any more peace."
+
+"All right, if you say it doesn't concern you," Cummings threw me
+overboard with relief I thought. "It does concern me. When I couldn't
+get--him"--a jerk of the head indicated that the pronoun stood for
+Worth--"at the Palace, found he'd been out all day and left no word at
+the desk when he expected to be in, I took my telegram to Knapp, and
+then to Whipple. They were flabbergasted."
+
+"The bank crowd," I said. "Now why did you run to them? On account of
+Worth's engagement with them to-morrow morning? Wasn't that exceeding
+your orders? You saw that he intends to meet it, in spite of this."
+
+"Why not because of this?" Cummings demanded sharply. "He's in better
+shape to meet it now his father's dead. He's the only heir. That's the
+first thing Knapp and Whipple spoke of--and I saw them separately."
+
+"Can that stuff. What do you think you're hinting at?"
+
+"Something queer," he repeated his phrase. "Wake up, Boyne. Knapp and
+Whipple both saw Thomas Gilbert a little before noon yesterday. He was
+in the bank for the final transfer of the Hanford interests. They'd as
+soon have thought of my committing suicide that night--or you doing it.
+They swear there was nothing in his manner or bearing to suggest such a
+state of mind, and everything in the business he was engaged on to
+suggest that he expected to live out his days like any man."
+
+I thought very little of this; it is common in cases of suicide for
+family, friends or business associates to talk in exactly this way, to
+believe it, and yet for the deep-seated moving cause to be easily
+discovered by an unprejudiced outsider. I said as much to Cummings. And
+while I spoke, we could hear a murmur of young voices from the inner
+room.
+
+"Damn it all," the lawyer's irritation spurted out suddenly, "With a cub
+like that for a son, I'd say the reason wasn't far to seek. Better keep
+your eye peeled round that young man, Boyne."
+
+"I will," I agreed, and he took his departure. I turned back into the
+private room.
+
+"Worth"--I put it quietly--"what say I go to Santa Ysobel with you? You
+could bring me back Monday morning."
+
+He agreed at once, silently, but thankfully I thought.
+
+Barbara, listening, proposed half timidly to go with us, staying the
+night at the Thornhill place, being brought back before work time
+Monday, and was accepted simply. So it came that when we had a blow-out
+as the crown of a dozen other petty disasters which had delayed our
+progress toward Santa Ysobel, and found our spare tire flat, Barbara
+jumped down beside Worth where he stood dragging out the pump, and
+stopped him, suggesting that we save time by running the last few miles
+on the rim and getting fixed up at Capehart's garage. He climbed in
+without a word, and drove on toward where Santa Ysobel lies at the head
+of its broad valley, surrounded by the apricot, peach and prune orchards
+that are its wealth.
+
+We came into the fringes of the town in the obscurity of approaching
+night; a thick tulle fog had blown down on the north wind. The little
+foot-hill city was all drowned in it; tree-tops, roofs, the gable ends
+of houses, the illuminated dial of the town clock on the city hall,
+sticking up from the blur like things seen in a dream. As we headed for
+a garage with the name Capehart on it, we heard, soft, muffled, seven
+strokes from the tower.
+
+"Getting in late," Worth said absently. "Bill still keeps the old
+place?"
+
+"Yes. Just the same," Barbara said. "He married our Sarah, you know--was
+that before you went away? Of course not," and added for my
+enlightenment, "Sarah Gibbs was father's housekeeper for years. She
+brought me up."
+
+We drove into the big, dimly lighted building; there came to us from its
+corner office what might have been described as a wide man, not
+especially imposing in breadth, but with a sort of loose-jointed
+effectiveness to his movements, and a pair of roving, yellowish-hazel
+eyes in his broad, good-humored face, mighty observing I'd say, in spite
+of the lazy roll of his glance.
+
+"Been stepping on tacks, Mister?" he hailed, having looked at the tires
+before he took stock of the human freight.
+
+"Hello, Bill," Worth was singing out. "Give me another machine--or get
+our spare filled and on--whichever's quickest. I want to make it to the
+house as soon as I can."
+
+"Lord, boy!" The wide man began wiping a big paw before offering it.
+"I'm glad to see you."
+
+They shook hands. Worth repeated his request, but the garage man was
+already unbuckling the spare, going to the work with a brisk efficiency
+that contradicted his appearance.
+
+Barbara sitting quietly beside me, we heard them talking at the back of
+the machine, as the jack quickly lifted us and Worth went to it with
+Capehart to unbolt the rim; a low-toned steady stream from the wide man,
+punctuated now and then by a word from Worth.
+
+"Yeh," Capehart grunted, prying off the tire. "Heard it m'self 'bout
+noon--or a little after. Yeh, Ward's Undertaking Parlors."
+
+"Undertaking parlors!" Worth echoed. Capehart, hammering on the spare,
+agreed.
+
+"Nobody in town that knowed what to do about it; so the coroner took
+a-holt, I guess, and kinda fixed it to suit hisself. Did you phone ahead
+to see how things was out to the house?"
+
+"Tried to," Worth said. "The operator couldn't raise it."
+
+"Course not." Capehart was coupling on the air. "Your chink's off every
+Sunday--has the whole day--and the Devil only could guess where a
+Chinaman'd go when he ain't working. Eddie Hughes ought to be on the job
+out there--but would he?"
+
+"Father still kept Eddie?"
+
+"Yeh." The click of the jack and the car was lowering. "Eddie's lasted
+longer than I looked to see him. Due to be fired any time this past
+year. Been chasing over 'crost the tracks. Got him a girl there, one of
+these cannery girls. Well, she's sort of married, I guess, but that
+don't stop Eddie. 'F I see him, I'll tell him you want him."
+
+They came to the front of the machine; Worth thrust his hand in his
+pocket. Capehart checked him with,
+
+"Let it go on the bill." Then, as Worth swung into his seat, Barbara
+bent forward from behind my shoulder, the careless yellowish eyes that
+saw everything got a fair view of her, and with a sort of subdued crow,
+"Look who's here!" Capehart took hold of the upright to lean his square
+form in and say earnestly, "While you're in Santa Ysobel, don't forget
+that we got a spare room at our house."
+
+"Next time," Barbara raised her voice to top the hum of the engine. "I'm
+only here for over night, now, and I'm going down to Mrs. Thornhill's."
+
+We were out in the street once more, leaving the cannery district on our
+right, tucked away to itself across the railroad tracks, running on Main
+Street to City Hall Square, where we struck into Broad, followed it out
+past the churches and to that length of it that held the fine homes in
+their beautiful grounds, getting close at last to where town melts again
+into orchards. The road between its rows of fernlike pepper trees was a
+wet gleam before us, all black and silver; the arc lights made big misty
+blurs without much illumination as we came to the Thornhill place. Worth
+got down and, though she told him he needn't bother, took her in to the
+gate. For a minute I waited, getting the bulk of the big frame house
+back among the trees, with a single light twinkling from an upper story
+window; then Worth flung into the car and we speeded on, skirting a long
+frontage of lawns, beautifully kept, pearly with the fog, set off with
+artfully grouped shrubbery and winding walks. There was no barrier but a
+low stone coping; the drive to the Gilbert place went in on the side
+farthest from the Thornhill's. We ran in under a carriage porch. The
+house was black.
+
+"See if I can raise anybody," said Worth as he jumped to the ground.
+"Let you in, and then I'll run the roadster around to the garage."
+
+But the house was so tightly locked up that he had finally to break in
+through a pantry window. I was out in front when he made it, and saw the
+lights begin to flash up, the porch lamp flooding me with a sudden glare
+before he threw the door open.
+
+"Cold as a vault in here."
+
+He twisted his broad shoulders in a shudder, and I looked about me. It
+was a big entrance hall, with a wide stairway. There on the hat tree
+hung a man's light overcoat, a gray fedora hat; a stick leaned below.
+When the master of the house went out of it this time, he hadn't needed
+these. Abruptly Worth turned and led the way into what I knew was the
+living room, with a big open fireplace in it.
+
+"Make yourself as comfortable as you can, Jerry. I'll get a blaze here
+in two shakes. I suppose you're hungry as a wolf--I am. This is a hell
+of a place I've brought you into."
+
+"Forget it," I returned. "I can look after myself. I'm used to rustling.
+Let me make that fire."
+
+"All right." He gave up his place on the hearth to me, straightened
+himself and stood a minute, saying, "I'll raid the kitchen. Chung's sure
+to have plenty of food cooked. He may not be back here before midnight."
+
+"Midnight?" I echoed. "Is that usual?"
+
+"Used to be. Chung's been with father a long time. Good chink. Always
+given his whole Sunday, and if he was on hand to get Monday's
+breakfast--no questions."
+
+"Left last night, you think?"
+
+Worth shot me a glance of understanding.
+
+"Sometimes he would--after cleaning up from dinner. But he wouldn't have
+heard the shot, if that's what you're driving at."
+
+He left me, going out through the hall. My fire burned. I thawed out the
+kinks the long, chill ride had put in me. Then Worth hailed; I went out
+and found him with a coffee-pot boiling on the gas range, a loaf and a
+cold roast set out. He had sand, that boy; in this wretched home-coming,
+his manner was neither stricken nor defiant. He seemed only a little
+graver than usual as he waited on me, hunting up stuff in places he knew
+of to put some variety into our supper.
+
+Where I sat I faced a back window, and my eye was caught by the
+appearance of a strange light, quite a little distance from the house,
+apparently in another building, but showing as a vague glow on the fog.
+
+"What's down there?" I asked. Worth answered without taking the trouble
+to lean forward and look,
+
+"The garage--and the study."
+
+"Huh? The study's separate from the house?" I had been thinking of the
+suicide as a thing of this dwelling, an affair in some room within its
+walls. Of course Chung would not hear the shot. "Who's down there?"
+
+"Eddie Hughes has a room off the garage."
+
+"He's in it now."
+
+"How do you know?" he asked quickly.
+
+"There's a light--or there was. It's gone now."
+
+"That wouldn't have been Eddie," Worth said. "His room's on the other
+side, toward the back street. What you saw was the light from these
+windows shining on the fog. Makes queer effects sometimes."
+
+I knew that wasn't it, but I didn't argue with him, only remarked,
+
+"I'd like to have a look at that place, Worth, if you don't mind."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+A SHADOW IN THE FOG
+
+
+Again I saw that glow from the Gilbert garage, hanging on the fog; a
+luminosity of the fog; saw it disappear as the mist deepened and
+shrouded it. But Worth was answering me, and somehow his words seemed
+forced;
+
+"Sit tight a minute, Jerry. Have another cup of coffee while I
+telephone, then I'll put the roadster in and open up down there. I'll
+call you--or you can see my lights."
+
+He left me. I heard him at the instrument in the hall get his number,
+talk to some one in a low voice, and then go out the front door; next
+thing was the sound of the motor, the glare of its lamps as it rounded
+into the driveway and started down back, illuminating everything. In the
+general glare thrown on the fog, the fainter light was invisible, but
+across a plot of kitchen garden I saw where it had been; a square, squat
+building of concrete, flat roofed, vining plants in boxes drooping over
+its cornice; the typical garage of such an establishment, but nearly
+double the usual size. The light had come from there, but how? In the
+short time that the lamps of the machine were showing it up to me, there
+seemed no windows on this side; only the double doors for the car's
+entrance--closed now--and a single door which was crossed by two heavy,
+barricading planks nailed in the form of a great X.
+
+Worth ran the machine close up against the doors, jumped down, and I
+could see his tall form, blurred by the mist, moving about to slide them
+open. The lamps of the roadster made little showing now as he rolled it
+in. Then these were switched off and everything down there was dark as a
+pocket. For a time I sat and waited for him to light up and call me,
+then started down. The fog was making the kind of dimness that has a
+curious, illusory character. I suppose I had gone half the distance of
+the garden walk, when, thrown up startlingly on the obscurity, I saw a
+square of white, and across that shining screen, moved the silhouette of
+a human head. The whole thing danced before my eyes for a bare second,
+then blackness.
+
+With Cummings' queer hints in my mind, I started running across the
+garden toward it. About the first thing I did was step into a cold
+frame, plunging my foot through the glass, all but going to my knees in
+it; and when I got up, swearing, I was turned around, ran into bushes,
+tripped over obstructions, and traveled, I think, in a circle.
+
+Then I began to go more cautiously. No use getting excited. That was
+only Worth I had seen. And still I was unwilling to call, ask him to
+show a light. I groped along until my outstretched fingers came across
+the corner of a building, rough, stonelike--the concrete garage and
+study. I felt along, seeing a bit now, and was soon passing my hands
+over the barricading planks of that door.
+
+I might have lit a match, but I preferred to find out what I could by
+feeling around, and that cautiously. I discovered that the door had been
+broken in, the top panels shattered to kindling wood, the force of the
+assault having burst a hinge, so that the whole thing sagged drunkenly
+behind the heavy planks that propped it, while a strong bolt, quite
+useless, was still clamped into a socket which had been torn, screws and
+all, from the inside casing.
+
+Sliding my hands over the broken top panel I found that it had been
+covered on its inner side by a piece of canvas; the screen on which that
+shadow had been thrown--from within the room. There was no light there
+now; there was no sound of motion within. The drip of the fog from the
+eaves was the only break in the stillness.
+
+"Worth?" I shouted, at last, and he answered me instantly, hallooing
+from behind me, and to one side of the house. I could hear him running
+and when he spoke it was close to my shoulder.
+
+"Where are you, Jerry?"
+
+"Where are you," I countered. "Or rather, where have you been?"
+
+"Getting a bar to pry off these boards."
+
+"A bar?" I echoed stupidly.
+
+"A crowbar from the shed. These planks will have to come off to let us
+in."
+
+"The devil you say!" I was exasperated. "There's some one in here
+now--or was a minute back. Show me the other way in."
+
+I heard the ring of the steel bar as its end hit the hard graveled path.
+
+"Some one in there? Jerry, you're seeing things."
+
+"Sure I am," I agreed drily. "But you get me to that other door quick!"
+
+"The only other door is locked. I tried it from the garage. You're
+dreaming."
+
+For reply, I ran up to the door and thrust my fist through the canvas,
+ripping it away from its clumsy tacking.
+
+"Who's in there?" I cried. "Answer me!"
+
+Dead silence; then a click as Worth snapped on a flood of light from his
+pocket torch, saying tolerantly, tiredly,
+
+"I told you there was no one. There couldn't be."
+
+"I tell you, Worth, there was. I saw the shadow on the square of that
+canvas. Give me the torch."
+
+I pushed the flashlight through the opening and played the light cone
+about the room in a quick survey; then brought the circle of white glow
+to rest upon one of the side walls; and my hand went down and back to
+grip fingers about the butt of my revolver. There was, as Worth had
+said, but one other door to this room; but more, there was apparently no
+other exit; no windows, no breaks in the walls. My circle of light was
+on this second door; and the very heart of that circle was a heavy steel
+bolt on the door, the bar of which was firmly shot into the socket on
+the frame. The only exit from that room, other than the door through
+which I now leaned with pistol raised, was locked--bolted from the
+inside!
+
+Worth was crowding his big frame into the opening beside me.
+
+"Keep back," I growled. "Some one's inside," and I sent the light shaft
+into corners to drive out the shadows, to cut in under the desk and
+chairs. Worth's reply was a laugh, and his arm went by me to reach
+inside the door. Then, as his fingers found the button, a light sprang
+out from a lamp upon the center desk.
+
+"You're letting your nerves play the deuce with you, Jerry," he said
+lightly. "Make way for my crowbar and we'll get in out of the wet."
+
+I made no answer, but for a long moment more I searched that room with
+my eyes; but it was the kind you see all over at a glance. Big, square,
+plain, it hadn't a window in it; the walls, lined with book shelves,
+floor to ceiling; a fireplace; a library table with drawers; a few
+chairs. No chance for a hideout. I glanced at the ceiling and confirmed
+the evidence of my eyes. There was a skylight, and through it had come
+that curious glow that first attracted my attention to the place.
+
+Then I gave Worth room to wield his tools on the barred door, while I
+ran quickly back to the house, into the kitchen, and plumped down in the
+chair where I had sat before. The light showed on the fog, brightened
+and dimmed as the mist drifted past. There was no possibility of a
+mistake: some one had been in the study, had turned on the table lamp,
+had projected his shadow against the patched panel of the door, and had
+somehow left the room, one door bolted, the only other exit barred and
+nailed.
+
+I went back and rejoined Worth who was standing where a brownish stain
+on the rug marked a spot a little nearer the corner of the table than it
+was to the outer door. A curious place for a suicide to fall. Behind the
+table was the library chair in which Thomas Gilbert worked when at his
+desk; beside it a small cabinet with a humidor on its top and the open
+door below revealing several decanters and bottles, whisky and wine
+glasses, a tray; between the desk and the fireplace were two other
+chairs, large and comfortable; but in front of the table--between it and
+the door--was barren floor.
+
+It is a fact that most men who shoot themselves do so while sitting;
+some lying in a bed; few standing. The psychology of this I must leave
+to others, but experience has taught me to question the suicide of one
+who has seemingly placed the muzzle of a revolver against him while on
+his feet. Thomas Gilbert had stood; had chosen to take his life as he
+was walking from door to desk, or from desk to door.
+
+"Worth," I said. "There was somebody in here just now."
+
+"Couldn't have been, Jerry," he answered absently; then added, his eyes
+on that stain, "I never could calculate what my father would do. But
+when I talked to him last night, right here in this room, he didn't seem
+to me a man ready to take his own life."
+
+"You quarreled?"
+
+"We always quarreled, whenever we met."
+
+"But this quarrel was more bitter than usual?"
+
+"The last quarrel would seem the bitterest, wouldn't it, Jerry?" he
+asked. Then, after a moment, "Poor Jim Edwards!"
+
+I caught my tongue to hold back the question. Worth went on,
+
+"When I phoned him just now, he hadn't heard a word about it. Seemed
+terribly upset."
+
+"Hadn't heard?" I echoed. "How was that?"
+
+"You know we saw him at Tait's last night. He took the Pacheco Pass road
+from San Francisco; drove straight to his ranch without hitting Santa
+Ysobel."
+
+I wanted another look at that man Edwards. I was to have it. Worth went
+on absently,
+
+"He'll be along presently to stay here while I'm away Monday. Told me it
+would be the first time he'd put foot in the house for four years. As
+boys up in Sonoma county, he and father always disagreed, but sometime
+these last years there was a big split over something. They were barely
+on speaking terms--and good old Jim took my news harder than as though
+I'd been telling him the death of a near friend."
+
+"Works like that with us humans," I nodded. "Let some one die that
+you've disagreed with, and you remember every row you ever had with
+them; remember it and regret it--which is foolish."
+
+"Which is foolish," Worth repeated, and seemed for the first time able
+to get away from the spot at which he had stopped.
+
+He went over to the empty, fireless hearth and stood there, his back to
+the room, elbows on the mantel propping his head, face bent, oblivious
+to anything that I might do. It oughtn't to be hard to find the way this
+place could be entered and left by a man solid enough to cast a shadow,
+with quick fingers to snap the light on and off. But when I made a
+painstaking examination of a corner grate with a flue too small for
+anything but a chimney swallow to go up and down, a ceiling solidly
+beamed and paneled, the glass that formed the skylight set in firmly as
+part of the roof, when I'd turned up rugs and inspected an unbroken
+floor, even tried the corners of book cases to see if they masked a
+false entrance, I owned myself, for the moment, beaten there.
+
+"Give me your torch--or go with me, Worth," I said. "I'd like to take a
+scoot around outside."
+
+He didn't speak, only indicated the flashlight by a motion, where it lay
+on the shelf beside his hand. I took it, unbolted the door, and stepped
+into the garage.
+
+Everything all right here. My roadster; a much handsomer small machine
+beyond it; a bench, portable forge and drill made a repair shop of one
+corner, and as my light flashed over these, I checked and stared. Why
+had Worth gone to the shed hunting a crowbar to open the door? Here were
+tools that would have served as well. I put from me the hateful thought,
+and damned Cummings and his suspicions. The shadow didn't have to be
+Worth. Certainly he had not first lit that lamp, for I had seen it from
+the kitchen with him beside me. Some one other than Worth had been in
+there when Worth put up the roadster. I'd find the man it really was.
+But even as I crossed to Eddie Hughes's door, something at the back of
+my head was saying to me that Worth could have been in that room--that
+there was time for it to be, if he had taken the crowbar from the garage
+and not from the shed as he said he did.
+
+At this I took myself in hand. The lie would have been so clumsy a one
+that there was no way but to accept this statement for the truth; and
+some one else had made that shadow on the canvas.
+
+I tried the chauffeur's door and found it locked; called, shook it, and
+had set my shoulder against it to burst it in, when the rolling door on
+the street side moved a little, and a voice said,
+
+"H-y-ah! What you doin' there?"
+
+I turned and flashed my light on the six-inch crack of the sliding door.
+It gave me a strip of man, a long drab face at top, solid, meaty
+looking, yet somehow slightly cadaverous, a half shut eye, a crooked
+mouth--if I'd met that mug in San Francisco, I'd have labeled it
+"tough," and located it South of Market Street.
+
+Slowly, it seemed rather reluctantly, Eddie Hughes worked the six-inch
+crack wider by working himself through it.
+
+"What the hell do you want in my room for?" he demanded. The form of the
+words was truculent, but the words themselves slid in a sort of
+spiritless fashion from the corner of that crooked mouth of his, and he
+added in the next breath, "I'll open up for you, when I've lit the
+blinks."
+
+There was a central lamp that made the whole place as bright as day.
+Eddie fumbled a key out of his pocket, threw the door of his room open,
+and stepped back to let me pass him.
+
+"Capehart tells me Worth's here," he said as we went in.
+
+"When?" I gave him a sharp look. He seemed not to notice it.
+
+"Just now. I came straight from there."
+
+He came straight from there? Did he supply an alibi so neatly because of
+that shadowy head on the door panel? For a long minute we each took
+measure of the other, but Eddie's nerves were less reliable than mine;
+he spoke first.
+
+"Well?" he grunted, scarcely above his breath. And when I continued to
+stare silently at him, he writhed a shoulder with, "What's doing? What
+d'yuh want of me?"
+
+Still silently, I pulled out with my thumb through the armhole of my
+vest the police badge pinned to the suspender. His ill-colored face went
+a shade nearer the yellow white of tallow.
+
+"What for?" he asked huskily. "You haven't got nothin' on me. It was
+suicide--cor'ner's jury says so. Lord! It has to be, him layin' there,
+all hunched up on the floor, his gun so tight in his mitt that they had
+to pry the fingers off it!"
+
+"So you found the body?"
+
+He nodded and gulped.
+
+"I told all I knowed at the inquest," he said doggedly.
+
+"Tell it again," I commanded.
+
+Standing there, working his hands together as though he held some small,
+accustomed tool that he was turning, shifting from foot to foot, with
+long breaks in his speech, the chauffeur finally put me into possession
+of what he knew--or what he wished me to know. He had been out all
+night. That was usual with him Saturdays. Where? Over around the
+canneries. Had friends that lived there. He got into this place about
+dawn, and went straight to bed.
+
+"Hold on, Hughes," I stopped him there. "You never went to bed--that
+night, or any other night--until you'd had a jolt from the bottle
+inside."
+
+He gave me a surly, half frightened glance, then said quickly,
+
+"Not a chance. Bolts on the doors, locks everywhere; all tight as a
+jail. Take it from me, he wasn't the kind you want to have a run-in
+with--any time. Always just as cool as ice himself; try to make you
+believe he could tell what you were up to, clear across town. Hold it
+over you as if he was God almighty that stuck folks together and set 'em
+walkin' around and thinkin' things."
+
+He broke off and looked over his shoulder in the direction of the study.
+The walls were thick--concrete; the door heavy. No sound of Worth's
+moving in there could be heard in this room. Apparently it was the old
+terror of his employer, or the new terror of the employer's death, that
+spoke when he said,
+
+"I got up this morning late with a throat like the back of a chimney.
+Lord! I never wanted a drink so bad in my life--had to have one. The
+chink leaves my breakfast for me Sundays; but I knew I couldn't eat till
+I'd had one. So I--so I--"
+
+It was as though some recollection fairly choked off his voice. I
+finished for him.
+
+"So you went in there--" I pointed at the study door, "and found the
+body."
+
+"Naw! How the hell could I? I told you--locked. I crawled up on the
+roof, though; huntin' a way in, and I looked through the skylight. There
+he was. On the floor. His eyes weren't open much, but they was watchin'
+me--sort of sneerin'. I come down off that roof like a bat outa hell,
+and scuttled over to Vandeman's where his chink was on the porch, I
+bellerin' at him. I telephoned from there. For the bulls; and the
+cor'ner; and everybody. Gawd! I was all in."
+
+I caught one point in the tale.
+
+"So the way into the study is through the skylight, Hughes?" and he
+shook his head vaguely, fumbling his lips with a trembling hand as he
+replied,
+
+"Honest to God, Cap'n, I don't know. I never tried. I gave just one look
+through it, and--" He broke off with a shudder.
+
+"Get a ladder," I commanded. "I want to see that skylight."
+
+While he was gone on his errand to the shed, I investigated the outer
+walls of the study with the torch, hunting some break in their solidity.
+They were concrete; a hair-crack would have been visible in the electric
+glow; there was no break. Then, as he placed the ladder against the
+coping, I climbed to the roof and stepped across its firmness to the
+skylight. I looked down.
+
+Worth, kneeling on the hearth, was laying a fire in the corner grate. As
+he did not glance up, I knew he had not heard me. Evidently the study
+had been built to resist the disturbance of sound from without. That
+meant that the report of the revolver inside had not been heard by any
+one outside the walls.
+
+Directly below me was the library table and upon its top a blue desk
+blotter; a silver filagreed inkstand stood open; penholders, pencils,
+paper knife were on a tray beside it, one pen lying separate from the
+others with a ruler, upon the blotting pad; books and a magazine neatly
+in a pile. The walls, as I circled them with my eyes, were book-lined
+everywhere except for the grate and the two doors.
+
+Then I inspected the skylight, frame and glass, feeling it over with my
+hands. There was no entrance here. Even should a pane of glass be
+removable--all seemingly solid and tight--the frame between and the sash
+were of steel, and the panes were too small for the passage of a man. I
+crept back to the ladder as Worth was striking a match to light the
+pitch-pine kindling.
+
+"What about this Vandeman chink?" I asked of Hughes as I rejoined him at
+the foot of the ladder. "Does he hang around here much?"
+
+"Him and Chung visit back and forth a bit. I hear 'em talkin' hy-lee
+hy-lo sometimes when I go by the kitchen."
+
+"Take me over there," I said.
+
+The fog was beginning to blow away in threads; moonlight somewhere back
+of it made a queer, gray, glimmering world around us. We circled the
+garden by the path, passing a sort of gardener's tool shed where Hughes
+left the ladder, and from which I judged Worth had brought the bar he
+pried the door planks off with, to find a gap in a hedge between this
+place and the next.
+
+There was a light in the rear of the house over there, and a
+well-trodden path leading from the hedge gap made what I took to be a
+servants' highway.
+
+Vandeman's house proved to be, as nearly as one could see it in the
+darkness, a sprawling bungalow, with courts, pergolas and terraces
+bursting out on all sides of it. I could fairly see it of a fine
+afternoon, with its showy master sitting on one of the showy porches,
+serving afternoon tea in his best manner to the best people of Santa
+Ysobel. Just the husband for that doll-faced girl, if she only thought
+so. What could she have done with a young outlaw like Worth?
+
+When I looked at the Chinaman in charge there, I gave up my idea of
+questioning him. Civilly enough, with a precise and educated usage of
+the English language, he confirmed what Eddie Hughes had already told
+me about the telephoning from that place this morning; and I went no
+further. I know the Chinese--if anybody not Mongolian can say they know
+the race--and I have also a suitable respect for the value of time. A
+week of steady questioning of Vandeman's yellow man would have brought
+me nowhere. He was that kind of a chink; grave, respectful, placid and
+impervious.
+
+On the way back I asked Eddie about the Thornhill servants at the house
+on the other side of Gilbert's, and found they kept but one, "a sort of
+old lady," Eddie called her, and I guessed easily at the decayed
+gentlewoman kind of person. It seemed that Mrs. Thornhill was a widow,
+and there wasn't much money now to keep up the handsome place.
+
+I left Eddie slipping eel-like through the big doors, and went into the
+study to find Worth sitting before the blazing hearth. He looked up as I
+entered to remark quietly,
+
+"Bobs said she'd be over later, and I told her to come on down here."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+THE MISSING DIARY
+
+
+My experience as a detective has convinced me that the evident is
+usually true; that in a great majority of cases crime leaves a straight
+trail, and ambiguities are more often due to the inability of the
+trailer than to the cunning of the trailed. Such reputation as I have
+established is due to acceptance of and earnest adherence to the
+obvious.
+
+In this affair of Thomas Gilbert's death, everything so far pointed one
+way. The body had been found in a bolted room, revolver in hand; on the
+wall over the mantel hung the empty holster; Worth assured me the gun
+was kept always loaded; and there might be motive enough for suicide in
+the quarrel last night between father and son.
+
+Because of that flitting shadow I had seen, I knew this place was not
+impervious. Some one person, at least, could enter and leave the room
+easily, quickly, while its doors were locked. But that might be
+Hughes--or even Worth--with some reason for doing so not willingly
+explained, and some means not readily seen. It probably had nothing to
+do with Thomas Gilbert's sudden death, could not offset in my mind the
+conviction of Thomas Gilbert's stiffened fingers about the pistol's
+butt. That I made a second thorough investigation of the study interior
+was not because I questioned the manner of the death.
+
+I began taking down books from the shelves at regular intervals,
+sounding the thick dead-wall, in search of a secreted entrance. I came
+on a row of volumes whose red morocco backs carried nothing but dates.
+
+"Account books?" I asked.
+
+Worth turned his head to look, and the bleakest thing that could be
+called a smile twisted his lips a little, as he said,
+
+"My father's diaries."
+
+"Quite a lot of them."
+
+"Yes. He'd kept diaries for thirty years."
+
+"But he seems to have dropped the habit. There is no 1920 book."
+
+"Oh, yes there is," very definitely. "He never gave up setting down the
+sins of his family and neighbors while his eyes had sight to see them,
+and his hand the cunning to write." He spoke with extraordinary
+bitterness, finishing, "He would have had it on the desk there. The
+current book was always kept convenient to his hand."
+
+An idea occurred to me.
+
+"Worth," I asked, "did you see that 1920 volume when you were here last
+night?"
+
+He looked a little startled, and I prompted,
+
+"Were you too excited to have noticed a detail like that?"
+
+"I wasn't excited; not in the sense of being confused," he spoke slowly.
+"The book was there; he'd been writing in it. I remember looking at it
+and thinking that as soon as I was gone, he'd sit down in his chair and
+put every damn' word of our row into it. That was his way. The seamy
+side of Santa Ysobel life's recorded in those books. I always
+understood they amounted to a pack of neighborhood dynamite."
+
+"Got to find that last book," I said.
+
+He nodded listlessly. I went to it, giving that room such a searching as
+would have turned out a bent pin, had one been mislaid in it. I even
+took down from the shelves books of similar size to see if the lost
+volume had been slipped into a camouflaging cover--all to no good. It
+wasn't there. And when I had finished I was positive of two things; the
+study had no other entrance than the apparent ones, and the diary of
+1920 had been removed from the room since Worth saw it there the night
+before. I reached for one of the other volumes. Worth spoke again in a
+sort of dragging voice,
+
+"What do you want to look at them for, Jerry?"
+
+"It's not idle curiosity," I told him, a bit pricked.
+
+"I know it's not that." The old, affectionate tone went right to my
+heart. "But if you're thinking you'll find in them any explanation of my
+father's taking his own life, I'm here to tell you you're mistaken.
+Plenty there, no doubt, to have driven a tender hearted man off the
+earth.... He was different." Eyeing the book in my hand, the boy blurted
+with sudden heat, "Those damn' diaries have been wife and child and meat
+and drink to him. They were his reason for living--not dying!"
+
+"Start me right in regard to your father, Worth," I urged anxiously.
+"It's important."
+
+The boy gave me his shoulder and continued to stare down into the fire,
+as he said at last, slowly,
+
+"I would rather leave him alone, Jerry."
+
+I knew it would be useless to insist. Never then or thereafter did I
+hear him say more of his father's character. At that, he could hardly
+have told more in an hour's talk.
+
+At random, I took the volume that covered the year in which, as I
+remembered, Thomas Gilbert's wife had secured her divorce from him.
+Neatly and carefully written in a script as readable as type, the books,
+if I am a judge, had literary style. They were much more than mere
+diaries. True, each entry began with a note of the day's weather, and
+certain small records of the writer's personal affairs; but these went
+oddly enough with what followed; a biting analysis of the inner life,
+the estimated intentions and emotions, of the beings nearest to him. It
+was inhuman stuff. But Worth was right; there was no soil for suicide in
+this matter written by a hand guided by a harsh, censorious mind; too
+much egotism here to willingly give over the rôle of conscience for his
+friends. Friends?--could a man have friends who regarded humanity
+through such unkindly, wide open, all-seeing eyes?
+
+Worth, seated across from me on the other side of the fire, stared
+straight into the leaping blaze; but I doubted if that was what he saw.
+On his face was the look which I had come to know, of the dignified
+householder who had gone in and shut the door on whatever of dismay and
+confusion might be in his private affairs. I began to read his father's
+version of the separation from his mother, with its ironic references to
+her most intimate friend.
+
+"Marion would like to see Laura Bowman ship Tony and marry Jim Edwards.
+I swear the modern woman has played bridge so long that her idea of the
+most serious obligation in life--the marriage vow--is, 'Never mind. If
+you don't like the hand you have got, shuffle, cut, and deal again!'"
+
+I dropped the book to my knee and looked over at Worth, asking,
+
+"This Mrs. Dr. Bowman that we met last night at Tait's--she was a
+special friend of your mother's?"
+
+"They were like sisters--in more than one way." I knew without his
+telling it that he alluded to their common misfortune of being both
+unhappily married. His mother, a woman of more force than the other, had
+gained her freedom.
+
+"_Femina Priores._" I came on an entry standing oddly alone. "Marion is
+to secure the divorce--at my suggestion. I have demanded that our son
+share his time between us."
+
+Again I let the book down on my knee and looked across at the silent
+fellow there. And I had heard him compassionate Barbara Wallace for
+having painful memories of her childhood! I believe he was at that
+moment more at peace with his father than he had ever been in his
+life--and that he grieved that this was so. I knew, too, that the
+forgiveness and forgetting would not extend to these pitiless records.
+Without disturbing him, I laid the book I held down and scouted forward
+for things more recent.
+
+"Laura Bowman"--through one entry after another Gilbert kicked that poor
+woman's name like a football. Very fine and righteous and high-minded in
+what he said, but writing it out in full and calling her painful
+difficulties--the writhing of a sensitive, high-strung woman, mismated
+with a tyrant--an example notably stupid and unoriginal, of the eternal
+matrimonial triangle. Bowman evidently kept his sympathy, so far as
+such a nature can be said to entertain that gentle emotion.
+
+I ran through other volumes, merciless recitals, now and again, of the
+shortcomings of his associates or servants; a cold blooded
+misrepresentation of his son; a sneer for the affair with Ina Thornhill,
+with the dictum, sound enough no doubt, that the girl herself did the
+courting, and that she had no conscience--"The extreme society type of
+parasite," he put it. And then the account of his break with Edwards.
+
+Dr. Bowman, it seems, had come to Gilbert in confidence for help, saying
+that his wife had left his house in the small hours the previous night,
+nothing but an evening wrap pulled over her night wear, and that he
+guessed where she could be found, since she hadn't gone to her mother's.
+He asked Gilbert to be his ambassador with messages of pardon. Didn't
+want to go himself, because that would mean a row, and he was
+determined, if possible, to keep the thing private, giving a generous
+reason: that he wasn't willing to disgrace the woman. All of which,
+after he'd written it down, the diarist discredited with his brief
+comment to the effect that Tony Bowman shunned publicity because scandal
+of the sort would hurt his practice, and his pride as well, and that he
+didn't go out to Jim Edwards's ranch because, under these circumstances,
+he would be afraid of Jim.
+
+Thomas Gilbert did the doctor's errand for him. The entry concerning it
+occupied the next day. I read between the lines how much he enjoyed his
+position of god from the machine, swooping down on the two he found out
+there, estimating their situation and behavior in his usual
+hair-splitting fashion, sitting as a court of last appeal. It was of no
+use for Edwards to explain to him that Laura Bowman was practically
+crazy when she walked out of her husband's house as the culmination of a
+miserable scene--the sort that had been more and more frequent there of
+late--carrying black-and-blue marks where he had grabbed and shaken her.
+The statement that it was by mere chance she encountered Jim seemed to
+have made Gilbert smile, and Jim's taking of her out to the ranch, the
+assertion that it was the only thing to do, that she was sick and
+delirious, had inspired Gilbert to say to him, quite neatly, "You
+weren't delirious, I take it--not more than usual."
+
+Then he demanded that Laura go with him, at once, back to her husband,
+or out to her mother's. She considered the matter and chose to go back
+to Bowman, saying bitterly that her mother made the match in the first
+place, and stood always against her daughter and with her son-in-law
+whatever he did. Plainly it took all of Laura's persuasions to prevent
+actual blows between Gilbert and Edwards. Also, she would only promise
+to go back and live under Bowman's roof, but not as his wife--and the
+whole situation was much aggravated.
+
+I followed Mr. Thomas Gilbert's observation of this affair: his amused
+understanding of how much Jim Edwards and Laura hated him; his private
+contempt for Bowman, to whom he continued to give countenance and moral
+support; his setting down of the quarrels, intimate, disastrous, between
+Bowman and his wife, as the doctor retailed them to him, the woman
+dragging herself on her knees to beg for her freedom, and his callous
+refusals; backed by threat of the wide publicity of a scandalous
+divorce suit, with Thomas Gilbert as main witness. I turned to Worth and
+asked,
+
+"When will Edwards be here?"
+
+"Any minute now." Worth looked at me queerly, but I went on,
+
+"You said he phoned from the ranch. Did he answer you in person--from
+out there?"
+
+"That's what I told you, Jerry."
+
+My searching gaze made nothing of the boy's impassive face; I plunged
+again into the diaries, running down a page, getting the heading of a
+sentence, not delaying to go further unless I struck something which
+seemed to me important, and each minute thinking of the strangeness of a
+man like this killing himself. It was in the 1916 volume, that I made a
+discovery which surprised an exclamation from me.
+
+"What would you call this, Worth? Your father's way of making
+corrections?"
+
+"Corrections?" Worth spoke without looking around. "My father never made
+corrections--in anything." It was said without animus--a simple
+statement of fact.
+
+"But look here." I held toward him the book. There were three leaves
+gone; that meant six pages, and the entries covered May 31 and June 1. I
+had verified that before I spoke to him, noticing that the statement of
+the weather for May 31 remained at the foot of the last page left, while
+a run-over on the page beyond the missing ones had been marked out. It
+had nothing to do with the weather. As nearly as I could make out with
+the reading glass I held over it, the words were, "take the woman for no
+other than she appears."
+
+"Worth," I urged, "give me your attention for a minute here. You say
+your father did not make corrections, but one of the diaries is cut. The
+records of two days are gone. Were those pages stolen?"
+
+"How should I know?" said Worth, and added, helpfully, "Pity they didn't
+steal the whole lot. That would have been a relief."
+
+There were voices and the sound of steps outside. I shoved the diary
+back into its place on the shelf, and turned to see Barbara at the
+broken door with Jim Edwards. She came in, her clear eyes a little wide,
+but the whole young personality of her quite composed. Edwards halted at
+the door, a haggard eye roving over the room, until it encountered the
+blood-stain on the rug, when it sheered abruptly, and fixed itself on
+Worth, who crossed to shake hands, with a quiet,
+
+"Come in, won't you, Jim? Or would you rather go up to the house?"
+
+Keenly I watched the man as he stood there struggling for words. There
+was color on his thin cheeks, high under the dark eyes; it made him look
+wild. The chill of the drive, or pure nervousness, had him shaking.
+
+"Thank you--the house, I think," he said rather incoherently. Yet he
+lingered. "Barbara's been telling me," he said in that deep voice of his
+with the air of one who utters at random. "Worth,--had you thought that
+it might have been happening down here, right at the time we all sat at
+Tait's together?"
+
+He was in a condition to spill anything. A moment more and we should
+have heard what it was that had him in such a grip of horror. But as I
+glanced at Worth, I saw him reply to the older man's question with a
+very slight but very perceptible shake of the head. It had nothing to do
+with what had been asked him; to any eye it said more plainly than
+words, "Don't talk; pull yourself together." I whirled to see how
+Edwards responded to this, and found our group had a new member. In the
+door stood a decent looking, round faced Chinaman. Edwards had drawn a
+little inside the threshold for him, but very little, and waited, still
+shaken, perturbed, hat in hand, apparently ready to leave as soon as the
+Oriental got out of his way.
+
+"Hello," the yellow man saluted us.
+
+"Hello, Chung," Worth rejoined, and added, "Looks good to see you
+again."
+
+I was relieved to hear that. It showed me that the cook, anyhow, had not
+seen Worth last night in Santa Ysobel.
+
+"Just now I hea' 'bout Boss." Chung's eye went straight to the stain on
+the rug, exactly as Edwards' had done, but it stopped there, and his
+Oriental impassiveness was unmoved. "Too bad," he concluded, thrust the
+fingers of one hand up the sleeve of the other and waited.
+
+"Where you been all day?" I said quickly.
+
+"My cousin' ranch."
+
+"His cousin's got a truck farm over by Medlow--or used to have," Worth
+supplied, and Chung looked to him, instantly.
+
+"You sabbee," he said hopefully. "I go iss mo'ning--all same any
+day--not find out 'bout Boss. Too bad. Too velly much bad." A pause,
+then, looking around at the four of us, "I get dinner?"
+
+"We've all had something to eat, Chung," Worth said. "You go now fix
+room. Make bed. To-night, I stay; Mr. Boyne here stay; Mr. Edwards
+stay. Fix three rooms. Good fire."
+
+"All 'ite," the chink would have ducked out then, Jim Edwards after him,
+but I stopped the proceedings with,
+
+"Hold on a minute--while we're all together--tell us about that visitor
+Mr. Gilbert had last night." I was throwing a rock in the brush-pile in
+the chance of scaring out a rabbit. I was shooting the question at
+Chung, but my eye was on Edwards. He glared back at me for a moment,
+then couldn't stand the strain and looked away. At last the Chinaman
+spoke.
+
+"Not see um. I go fix bed now."
+
+"Hold on," again I stopped him. "Worth, tell him those beds can wait.
+Tell him it's all right to answer my questions."
+
+"'S all 'ite?" Chung studied us in turn. I was keeping an inconspicuous
+eye on Edwards as I reassured him. "'S all 'ite," he repeated with a
+falling inflection this time, and finished placidly, "You want know
+'bout lady?"
+
+"What's all this?" Edwards spoke low.
+
+"About a lady who came to see Mr. Gilbert last night," I explained
+shortly; then, "Who was she, Chung?"
+
+"Not see um good." The Chinaman shook his head gravely.
+
+"Did she come here--to the study?" I asked. He nodded. Worth moved
+impatiently, and the Chinaman caught it. He fixed his eyes on Worth. I
+stepped between them. "Chung," I said sharply. "You knew the lady. Who
+was she?"
+
+"Not see um good," he repeated, plainly reluctant. "She hold hand by
+face--cly, I think."
+
+"Good God!" Edwards broke out startlingly. "If we're going to hear an
+account of all the women that Tom lectured and made cry--leave me out of
+it."
+
+"One woman will do, for this time," I said to him drily, "if it's the
+right one," and he subsided, turning away. But he did not go. With
+burning eyes, he stood and listened while I cross-examined the unwilling
+Chung and got apparently a straight story showing that some woman had
+come to the side door of his master's house shortly after dinner
+Saturday night, walked to the study with that master, weeping, and that
+her voice when he heard it, sounded like that of some one he knew. I
+tried every way in the world to get him to be specific about this voice;
+did it sound like that of a young lady? an old lady? did he think it was
+some one he knew well, or only a little? had he been hearing it much
+lately? All the usual tactics; but Chung's placid obstinacy was proof
+against them. He kept shaking his head and saying over and over,
+
+"No hear um good," until Barbara, standing watchfully by, said,
+
+"Chung, you think that lady talk like this?"
+
+As she spoke, after the first word, a change had come into her voice; it
+was lighter, higher, with a something in its character faintly
+reminiscent to my ear. And Chung bobbed his head quickly, nodding
+assent. In her mimicry he had recognized the tones of the visitor. I
+glanced at Edwards: he looked positively relieved.
+
+"I'll go to the house, Worth," he said with more composure in his tone
+than I would have thought a few moments ago he could in any way summon.
+"You'll find me there." And he followed the Chinaman up the moonlit
+path.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+A MURDER
+
+
+I stood at the door and watched until I saw first Chung's head come into
+the light on the kitchen porch, then Jim Edwards's black poll follow it.
+I waited until both had gone into the house and the door was shut,
+before I went back to Barbara and Worth. They were speaking together in
+low tones over at the hearth. The three of us were alone; and the
+blood-stain on the rug, out of sight there in the shadow beyond the
+table, would seem to cry out as a fourth.
+
+"Barbara," I broke in across their talk, "who was the woman who came
+here to this place last night?"
+
+She didn't answer me. Instead, it was Worth who spoke.
+
+"Better come here and listen to what Bobs has been saying to me, Jerry,
+before you ask any questions."
+
+I crossed and stood between the two young people.
+
+"Well," I grunted; and though Barbara's face was white, her eyes big and
+black, she answered me bravely,
+
+"Mr. Gilbert did not kill himself. Worth doesn't think so, either."
+
+"What!" It was jolted out of me. After a moment's thought, I finished,
+"Then I've got to know who the woman was that visited this room last
+night."
+
+For a long while she made no reply, studying Worth's profile as he
+stared steadily into the fire. No signal passed between them, but
+finally she came to her decision and said,
+
+"Mr. Boyne, ask Worth what he thinks I ought to say to that."
+
+Instead, "Who was it, Worth?" I snapped, speaking to the back of the
+young man's head. The red came up into the girl's face, and her eyes
+flashed; but Worth merely shrugged averted shoulders.
+
+"You can search me," he said, and left it there.
+
+I looked from one to the other of these young people: Worth, whom I
+loved as I might have my own son had I been so fortunate as to possess
+one; this girl who had made a place of warmth for herself in my heart in
+less than a day, whose loyalty to my boy I was certain I might count on.
+How different this affair must look to them from the face it wore to me,
+an old police detective, who had bulled through many inquiries like
+this, the corpse itself, perhaps, lying in the back of the room, instead
+of the blood-stain we had there on the rug; what was practically the
+Third Degree being applied to relatives and friends; with the squalid
+prospect of a court trial ahead of us all. If they'd seen as much of
+this sort of thing as I had, they wouldn't be holding me up now, tying
+my hands that were so willing to help, by this fine-spun, overstrained
+notion of shielding a woman's name.
+
+"Barbara," I began--I knew an appeal to the unaccountable Worth would
+get me nowhere--"the facts we've got to deal with here are a possible
+murder, with this lad the last person known--by us, of course--to have
+seen his father alive. We know, too, that they quarreled bitterly. We
+know all this. Outside people, men who are interested, and more or less
+hostile, were aware that Worth needed money--needs it yet, for that
+matter--a large sum. I suppose it is a question of time when it will be
+known that Worth came here last night; and when it is known, do you
+realize what it will mean?"
+
+Worth had sat through this speech without the quiver of a muscle, and no
+word came from him as I paused for a reply. Little Barbara, big eyes
+boring into me as though to read all that was in the back of my mind,
+nodded gravely but did not speak. I crossed to the shelves and took down
+the diary whose leather back bore the date of 1916. As I opened it,
+finding the place where its pages had been removed, I continued,
+
+"You and I know--we three here know--" I included Worth in my
+statement--"that the crime was neither suicide nor patricide; but it is
+likely we must have proof of that fact. Unless we find the murderer--"
+
+"But the motive--there would have to be motive."
+
+Barbara struck right at the core of the thing. She didn't check at the
+mere material facts of how a murder could have been done, who might have
+had opportunity. The fundamental question of why it should have been was
+her immediate interest.
+
+"I believe I've the motive here," I said and thrust the mutilated volume
+into her hand. "Some one stole these leaves out of Mr. Gilbert's diary.
+The books are filled with intimate details of the affairs of
+people--things which people prefer should not be known--names, details
+and dates written out completely. It's likely murder was done last night
+to get possession of those pages."
+
+She went to the desk and glanced over the book; not the minute
+examination with the reading glass which I had given it; that mere flirt
+of a glance which, when I had first noticed it the night before at
+Tait's, skimming across that description of Clayte, had seemed so
+inadequate. Then she turned to me.
+
+"Mr. Gilbert cut these out himself," she pronounced.
+
+That brought Worth's head up and his face around to stare at her.
+
+"You say my father removed something he had written?" he asked. Barbara
+nodded. "He never changed a decision--and those books were his
+decisions."
+
+"Then this wasn't a correction, but he cut it out. Can't you see, Mr.
+Boyne? Those leaves were removed by a man who respected the book and was
+as careful in his mutilation of it as he was in its making. It is
+precisely written--I'm referring to workmanship, not its literary
+quality--carefully margined, evenly indented on the paragraph
+beginnings. And so, in this removal of three leaves, the cutting was
+done with a sharp knife drawn along the edge of a ruler--" I picked up
+from where they lay on the blotting pad, a small pearl-handled knife,
+its sharp blade open, and the ruler I had seen when looking down from
+the skylight, and placed them before her. She nodded and continued,
+
+"There is a bit of margin left so no other leaves can be loosened by
+this removal. The marking out of the run-over has been neatly ruled,
+done so recently that the ink is not yet black--done with that ink in
+the stand. It was blotted with this." She lifted a hand-blotter to show
+me the print of a line of ink. There were other markings on the face of
+the soft paper, and I took it eagerly. Barbara smiled.
+
+"You will get little from that," she said. I had not even seen her give
+it attention. "Scattered words--and parts of words, blotted frequently
+as they were written. Perhaps, with care, we might learn something, but
+we can turn more easily to the last pages of his diary and--"
+
+"There are no last pages," I interrupted. "The 1920 book is missing."
+
+"Gone--stolen?" she exclaimed. It brought a smile to my face. For the
+first time in my experience of this pretty, little bunch of brains, she
+had hazarded a guess.
+
+"Gone," I admitted coolly--a bit sarcastically. "I've no reason to say
+stolen."
+
+"But--yes, you have--you have, Mr. Boyne! If it is gone, it was stolen.
+Is it gone--are you sure it is gone?" Eagerly her eyes were searching
+desk, cabinet, the shelf where the other diaries made their long row. I
+satisfied her on that score.
+
+"I have searched the study thoroughly; it is not in this room."
+
+"Was here last night," Worth cut in. "I saw it on the desk."
+
+"And was stolen last night," Barbara reaffirmed, quickly. "These books
+are too big to be slipped into a pocket, so we can't believe it was left
+upon Mr. Gilbert's person; and he wouldn't lend it--wouldn't willingly
+let it go from his possession. So it was stolen; and the man who stole
+it--killed him." She shuddered.
+
+That was going too swift for me to follow, but I saw on Worth Gilbert's
+face his acceptance of it. Either conviction of Barbara's infallibility,
+or some knowledge locked up inside his own chest, made him certain the
+diary had been stolen, and the thief was his father's murderer. In a
+flash, I remembered his words, "putting every damn' word of our row into
+it," and I shot straight at him,
+
+"Did you take that book, Worth?"
+
+He only shook his head and answered,
+
+"You heard what Bobs said, Jerry."
+
+If he took the book he killed his father; that was Barbara's inference,
+Worth's acceptance. I threw back my shoulders to cast off the suspicion,
+then reached across to place my fingers under the girl's hand and pull
+from it the only record of that last written page, the blotter.
+
+"Will you read me that?" I asked her. "Every word and part of a
+word--every letter?"
+
+Her eyes smiled into mine with a reassurance that was like balm. Worth
+rose and found her a hand-glass on the mantel, passing it to her, and
+with this to reverse the scrawlings, she read and I wrote down in my
+memorandum book two complete words, two broken words and five single
+letters picked from overlying marks that were too confused to be
+decipherable. Though the three of us struggled with them, they held no
+meaning.
+
+Worth's interest quickly ceased.
+
+"I'll join Jim Edwards in the house," he said, but I stopped him.
+
+"One minute, Worth. There was a woman visitor here last night. It would
+seem she carried away with her the diary of 1920 and three leaves from
+the book of 1916. I want you--you and Barbara--to tell me what you know
+that happened here in Santa Ysobel on the dates of the missing pages,
+May 31 and June 1, 1916."
+
+Barbara accepted the task, turning that wonderful cinematograph memory
+back, and murmured,
+
+"I never tried recollecting on just a bare date this way, but--" then
+glanced around at me and finished--"nothing happened to me in Santa
+Ysobel then, because I wasn't in Santa Ysobel. I was in San Francisco
+and--"
+
+"And I was in Flanders, so that lets me out," Worth broke in brusquely.
+"I'll go into the house."
+
+"Wait, Worth." I placed a hand on his shoulder. "Go on, Barbara; you had
+thought of something."
+
+"Yes. Father died in January of that year, and in March I had to vacate
+the house. It had been sold, and they wanted to fix it over. I left
+Santa Ysobel on the eighteenth of March, but they didn't get into the
+house until June first."
+
+Again Worth interrupted.
+
+"Which jogs my memory for an unexciting detail." He smiled
+enigmatically. "I was jilted June first."
+
+"In Flanders?" How many times had this lad been jilted?
+
+"No. Right here. I wasn't here of course, but the letter which did the
+trick was written here, and bore that date--June one, 1916."
+
+"How do you get the date so pat?"
+
+"It was handed me by the mail orderly--I was on the Verdun sector
+then--on the morning of the Fourth of July. Remember the date the letter
+was written because of the quick time it made. Most of our mail took
+from six weeks to eternity. What are you smiling at, Bobs?"
+
+"Just a little--you don't mind, do you?--at your saying you remember
+Ina's letter by the quick time it made in reaching you."
+
+"Who bought your house, Barbara?" I asked her.
+
+"Dr. Bowman--or rather Mrs. Bowman's uncle bought it and gave it to
+her."
+
+"And they went in on the first of June, 1916?" I was all excitement,
+turning the pages of the diary to get to certain points I remembered.
+"What can either one of you tell me about the state of affairs at that
+time between Dr. Bowman and his wife--and that man who was just in
+here--Jim Edwards?"
+
+Worth turned a hostile back; Barbara seemed to shrink in her chair. I
+hated like a whipping to pull this sort of stuff on them, but I knew
+that Barbara's knowledge of Worth's danger would reconcile her to
+whatever painful thing must be done, and I had to know who was that
+visitor of last night.
+
+"Is that--that stuff in those damnable books?" I saw the hunch of
+Worth's broad shoulders.
+
+"Some of it is--some of it has been cut out," I replied.
+
+"And you connect Jim Edwards with this crime?"
+
+"I don't connect him--he connects himself--by them, and by his manner."
+
+"Burn them!" He faced me, came over and reached for the book. "Dump the
+whole rotten mess into the fire, Jerry, and be done with it."
+
+"Easy said, but that would sure be a short cut to trouble. Tell me, I've
+got to know, if you think this man Edwards--under great
+provocation--capable of--well, of killing a fellow creature."
+
+"Jerry," Worth took the book out of my hand and laid it on the table,
+"what you want to do is to forget this--dirt--that you've been reading,
+and go at this thing without prejudice. If you open any trails and they
+lead in my direction, don't be afraid to follow them. This thing of
+trying to find a criminal in some one that my father has already deeply
+injured--some one that he's made life a hell for--so that suspicion
+needn't be directed to me, makes me sick. If I'd allow you to do it, I'd
+be yellow clear through."
+
+That was about the longest speech I'd heard Worth Gilbert make since his
+return from France. And he meant every word of it, too; but it didn't
+suit me. This "Hew to the line" stuff is all right until the chips begin
+whacking the head of your friend. In this case there wasn't a doubt in
+my mind that when a breath of suspicion got out that Thomas Gilbert had
+not killed himself, that minute would see the first finger point at
+Thomas Gilbert's son as the murderer. So I grumbled,
+
+"Just the same, Edwards has something on his mind about last night."
+
+"He has--and it's pretty nearly tearing him to pieces," Worth admitted,
+but would go no further.
+
+"He was here last night, I'm sure--and Mrs. Bowman was with him," I
+ventured.
+
+Barbara, who had been sitting through this her eyes on Worth, turned
+from him to me and pronounced, gently,
+
+"Yes, he was here, and Laura was with him."
+
+"Bobs!" Worth spoke so sternly that she glanced up startled. "I'll not
+stand for you throwing suspicion on Jim."
+
+"Did I--do that?" her lip trembled. Worth's eyes were on the fire.
+
+"Don't quarrel with the girl," I remonstrated. Barbara had told me the
+visitor; I covered my elation with, "She's only looking out for your
+safety."
+
+"I can look out for myself," curtly. He turned hard eyes on us. It made
+me feel put away from him, chucked out from his friendship. "And I never
+quarreled with anybody in my life. Sometimes--" he turned from one to
+the other of us, speaking slowly, "Sometimes I seem to antagonize
+people, for no reason that I can see; and sometimes I fight; but I never
+quarrel."
+
+"No offense intended--or taken," I assured him hastily. My heart was
+full of his danger, and I told myself that it was his misery spoke, and
+not the true Worth Gilbert. But a very pale and subdued Barbara said
+tremulously,
+
+"I guess I'd better go home now," suggesting, after the very slightest
+pause, "Mr. Boyne can take me."
+
+"Don't, Bobsie." Worth's voice was gentle again, but absent. It sounded
+as though he had already forgotten both of us, and our possible cause of
+offense. "Go to the house with Jerry. I'll bar the door and follow."
+
+"Can't I help with that?" I offered.
+
+"No. Eddie will give me a hand if I need it. Go on. I'll be with you in
+a minute."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+DR. BOWMAN
+
+
+But it was considerably more than a minute before Worth followed us to
+the house. We walked slowly, talking; when I looked back from the
+kitchen porch, Worth had already come outside, and I thought Eddie
+Hughes was with him, though I heard no voices and couldn't be sure on
+account of the shrubbery between.
+
+Getting into the house we found that Chung had the downstairs all opened
+up through, lights going, heat turned on from the basement furnace;
+everywhere that tended, homelike appearance a competent servant gives a
+place. On the hall table as we passed, I noticed a doctorish top coat,
+with a primly folded muffler laid across it.
+
+"Dr. Bowman is here," Barbara said hardly above her breath.
+
+We listened; no sound of voices from the living room; then I got the
+tramp of feet that moved back and forth in there. We opened the door,
+and there were the two men; a queer proposition!
+
+Bowman had taken a chair pretty well in the middle of the room. It was
+Jim Edwards whose feet I had heard as he roamed about. No word was going
+between them; apparently they hadn't spoken to each other at all; the
+looks that met or avoided were those strange looks of persons who live
+in lengthened and what might be termed intimate hostility.
+
+"Ah--Boyne--isn't it?" Bowman greeted me; I thought our coming relieved
+the situation. He shook hands, then turned to Barbara with, "Mrs.
+Thornhill said you were here; I told her I would bring you back with
+me."
+
+I rather wondered not to hear him insist on being taken at once to the
+study, but his next words gave the reason. He'd reached Santa Ysobel too
+late for the inquest itself, but not too late to make what he informed
+us was a thorough investigation of everything it treated of.
+
+Barbara and I found places on the davenport; Edwards prowled up and down
+the other end of the room, openly in torment. Those stormy black eyes of
+his were seldom off Bowman, while the doctor's gray, heavy-lidded gaze
+never got beyond the toes of the restless man's moving boots. He had
+begun a grumbling tale of the coroner's incompetence and neglect to
+reopen the inquest when he, the family physician, arrived, as though
+that were important, when Worth came in.
+
+Instantly the doctor was on his feet, had paced up to the new master of
+the house, and began pumping his arm in a long handshake, while he
+passed out those platitudes of condolence a man of his sort deals in at
+such a time. The stuff I'd been reading in those diaries had told me
+what was the root and branch of his friendship with the dead man; it
+made the hair at the back of my neck lift to hear him boasting of it in
+Jim Edwards' presence, and know what I knew. "And, my dear boy," he
+finished, "they tell me you've not been to view the body--yet. I
+thought perhaps you'd like to go--with me. I can have my machine here in
+a minute. No?" as Worth declined with a wordless shake of the head.
+
+I hoped he'd leave then; but he didn't. Instead, he turned back to his
+chair, explaining,
+
+"If Mrs. Thornhill's cook hadn't phoned me, when Mrs. Thornhill had a
+second collapse last night, I suppose I should be in San Francisco
+still. The coroner seemed to think there was no necessity for having
+competent medical testimony as to the time of death, and the physical
+condition of the deceased. I should have been wired for. The inquest
+should have been delayed until I arrived. The way the thing was managed
+was disgraceful."
+
+"It was merciful." Jim Edwards spoke as though unwillingly, in a
+muttered undertone. Evidently it was the first word he'd addressed to
+Bowman--if he could be said to address him now, as he finished, "I
+hadn't thought of an inquest. Yet of course there'd be one in a case of
+suicide."
+
+Bowman only heard and wholly misconstrued him, snatching at the
+concluding words,
+
+"Of course it was suicide. Done with his own weapon, taken from the
+holster where we know it always hung, fully loaded. The muzzle had been
+pressed so close against the breast when the cartridge exploded that the
+woolen vest had taken fire. I should say it had smouldered for some
+time; there was a considerable hole burned in the cloth. The flesh
+around the wound was powder-scarred."
+
+Worth took it like a red Indian. I could see by the glint of his eye as
+it flickered over the doctor's face, the smooth white hands, the whole
+smooth personality, that the boy disliked, and had always disliked him.
+Yet he listened silently.
+
+I rather hoped by leading questions to get Bowman to express the opinion
+that Thomas Gilbert had been killed in the small hours of the morning.
+Circumstances then would have fitted in with Eddie Hughes. Eddie Hughes
+was to me the most acceptable murderer in sight. But no--nothing would
+do him but to stick to the hour the coroner had accepted.
+
+"Medical science cannot determine closer than that," he was very final.
+"The death took place within an hour preceding midnight."
+
+"You are positive it couldn't be this morning?" I asked.
+
+"Positive."
+
+Well, Dr. Bowman's testimony, if accepted at the value the doctor
+himself placed upon it, would clear Worth of suspicion, for the lad was
+with me at Tait's from a few minutes past ten until after one; and Jim
+Edwards, now pacing the floor so restlessly, had also been there the
+greater part of that time. I had had too much experience with doctor's
+guesses based on _rigor mortis_ to let it affect my views.
+
+In the minute of silence, we could hear Chung moving about at the back
+of the house. The doctor spoke querulously.
+
+"Never expect anything of a Chinaman, but I should think when the
+chauffeur found the body he might have had sense enough to summon
+friends of the family. He could have phoned me--I was only in San
+Francisco."
+
+"He could have phoned me at the ranch," Jim Edwards' deep voice came in.
+
+"You? Why should he phone for you?" Bowman wheeled on him at last. "I
+was the man's physician, as well as his close friend. Everybody knows
+you weren't on good terms with him. Gad! You wouldn't be here in this
+house to-night, if he were alive."
+
+In the sort of silence that comes when some one's been suddenly struck
+in the face, Worth crossed to Edwards and laid an arm along his
+shoulders.
+
+"I've asked Jim to stay in my place, here, in my house, while I'm away
+over Monday--and he can do as he likes about whom he chooses to have
+around."
+
+Bowman gradually got to his feet, his face a study.
+
+"I see," he said. "Then I'll not trespass on your time any longer. I
+felt obliged to offer my services ... patients of mine ... for years ...
+in affliction ..." a gleam of anger came into his fishy eyes. "I've been
+met with damned insolence.... Claiming of the house before your father's
+decently in his grave." He jerked fully erect. "Leave your affairs in
+the hands of that degenerate. If he doesn't do you dirt, you'll be the
+first he's let off! Come, Miss Barbara," to the girl who sat beside me,
+looking on mutely observant.
+
+"Thank you, doctor." She answered him as tranquilly as though no voice
+had been raised in anger in that room. "I think I'll stay a little
+longer. Jim will take me home."
+
+The doctor glared and stalked out. To the last I think he was expecting
+some one to stop him and apologize. I suppose this was what Worth
+described naïvely as "antagonizing people without intending to." Well,
+it might not be judicious; I certainly was glad the doctor was so sure
+of the time at which his friend Gilbert had met death; yet I couldn't
+but enjoy seeing him get his. As soon as the man's back was turned,
+Edwards beckoned Barbara to the window. Worth and I left them talking
+together there in low tones, he to get something he wanted from a case
+in the hall, where he called me to the phone, saying long distance
+wanted me. While I was waiting for my connection (Central, as usual,
+having gotten me, now couldn't get the other party) the two came from
+the living room and Barbara said "Good night" to us in passing.
+
+"Those two seem to have something on hand," I commented as they went
+out. "The little girl gave Bowman one for himself--in the nicest
+possible way. Don't wonder Edwards likes her for it."
+
+"Poor Laura Bowman! Her friends take turns giving that bloodless lizard
+she's tied to, one for himself any time they can," Worth said. "My
+mother used to handle the doctor something like that; and now it's
+Barbara--little Bobsie Wallace--God bless her!"
+
+He went on into the dining room. I looked after his unconscious,
+departing figure and thought he deserved a good licking. Why couldn't he
+have spoken that way to the girl herself? Why hadn't he taken her home,
+instead of leaving it to Edwards? Then I got my call and answered,
+
+"This is Boyne. Put them through."
+
+In a minute came Roberts' voice.
+
+"Hello, Mr. Boyne?"
+
+"Yes. What you got?"
+
+"Telegram--Hicks--Los Angeles. He's located Steve Skeels--"
+
+"Read me the wire," I broke in.
+
+"All right." A pause, then, "'Skeels arrived here from 'Frisco this
+morning shall I arrest?'"
+
+"Good!" I exclaimed. "Wire him to keep Steve under surveillance and
+await instructions. Tell him not to lose him. Get it, Roberts? Hustle
+it. I'll be in by nine. Good-by," and I hung up.
+
+I looked around; Worth had gone into the dining room; I stepped to the
+door and saw him kneeling before an open lower door of the built-in
+sideboard, and noted that the compartment had been steel lined and
+Yale-locked, making a sort of safe. A lamp at the end of an extension
+wire stood on the floor beside him; he looked around at me over his
+shoulder as I put my head in to say,
+
+"Stock in your old suitcase has gone up a notch, Worth. We've caught
+Skeels."
+
+"So soon?" was all he said. But my news seemed to decide something for
+him; with a sharp gesture of finality, he put into his breast pocket the
+package of papers he had been looking at.
+
+When a little later, Edwards came in, Worth was waiting for him in the
+hall.
+
+"Do we go now?" the older man asked, wincing. Worth nodded.
+
+"Take your machine, Jim," he said. "We can park it at Fuller's and walk
+back from there. Boyne's roadster is in our garage."
+
+"Anything wrong with Eddie Hughes?" Edwards asked as he stepped in to
+get his driving gloves. "I passed him out there headed for town lugging
+a lot of freight, and the fellow growled like a dog when I spoke to
+him."
+
+"I fired him. Come on, Jim--let's get out of this."
+
+"Hold on, Worth," I took a hand. "Fired Hughes? When?"
+
+"While I was fixing up that door--after you and Bobs came to the house."
+
+"What in God's name for?" I asked in exasperation.
+
+"For giving me back talk," said the youth who never quarreled with any
+one.
+
+He and Edwards tramped out together. I realized that the hostile son and
+an alienated friend had gone for a last look at the clay that had
+yesterday been Thomas Gilbert. Of course Worth would do that before he
+left Santa Ysobel. But would Edwards go in with him--or was he only
+along to drive the machine? It might be worth my while to know. But I
+could ask to-morrow; it wasn't worth a tired man's waiting up for. We
+must make an early start in the morning. I went upstairs to bed.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+SEVEN LOST DAYS
+
+
+Instead of driving up to San Francisco with Worth and Barbara, the next
+morning, I was headed south at a high rate of speed. Sitting in the
+Pullman smoker, going over what had happened and what I had made of it,
+vainly studying a small, blue blotter with some senseless hieroglyphics
+reversed upon it, I wasn't at all sure that this move of mine was
+anywhere near the right one. But the thing hit me so quick, had to be
+decided in a flash, and my snap judgment never was good.
+
+We were all at breakfast there at the Gilbert house when I got the phone
+that those boobs down in Los Angeles had let Skeels slip through their
+fingers. I could see no way but to go myself. When I went out to
+retrieve my hand bag from the roadster, there was Barbara already in the
+seat. I delayed a minute to explain to her. She was full of eager
+interest; it seemed to her that Skeels ducking the detectives that way
+was more than clever--almost worthy of a wonder man.
+
+"Slickest thing I ever knew," I grumbled. "You can gamble I wouldn't be
+going south after him if Skeels hadn't shown himself too many for the
+Hicks agency--and they're one of the best in the business."
+
+Worth came out and settled himself at the wheel; he and Edwards
+exchanged a last, low-toned word; and they were ready to be off.
+Barbara leaned towards me with shining eyes.
+
+"Perhaps," she said, "Skeels might even be Clayte!" then the roadster
+whisked her away.
+
+The bulk of Worth Gilbert's fortune was practically tied up in this
+affair. Even as the Pullman carried me Los Angeles-ward, that boy was
+getting in to San Francisco, going to the bank, and turning over to them
+capital that represented not only his wealth but his honor. If we failed
+to trace this money, he was a discredited fool. Yes, I had done right to
+come.
+
+So far on that side. Then apprehension began to mutter within me about
+the situation at Santa Ysobel. How long would that coroner's verdict of
+suicide satisfy the public? How soon would some seepage of fact indicate
+that the death was murder and set the whole town to looking for a
+murderer? The minute this happened, the real criminal would take alarm
+and destroy evidence I might have gathered if I had stayed by the case.
+I promised myself that it should be simply "there and back" with me in
+the Skeels matter.
+
+This is the way it looked to me in the Pullman; then--once in Los
+Angeles--I allowed myself to get hot telling the Hicks people what I
+thought of them, explaining how I'd have run the chase, and wound up by
+giving seven days to it--seven precious, irreclaimable days--while
+everything lay wide open there in the north, and I couldn't get any
+satisfactory word from the office, and none of any sort from Worth.
+
+That Skeels trail kept me to it, with my tongue hanging out; again and
+again I seemed to have him; every time I missed him by an hour or so;
+and that convinced me that he was straining every nerve, and that he
+probably had the whole of the loot still with him. At last, I seemed to
+have him in a perfect trap--Ensenada, on the Peninsula. You get into and
+out of Ensenada by steamboat only, except back to the mines on foot or
+donkey. The two days I had to wait over in San Diego for the boat which
+would follow the one Skeels had taken were a mighty uneasy time. If I'd
+imagined for a moment that he wasn't on the dodge--that he was there
+openly--I'd have wired the Mexican authorities, and had him waiting for
+me in jail. But the Mexican officials are a rotten lot; it seemed to me
+best to go it alone.
+
+What I found in Ensenada was that Skeels had been there, quite publicly,
+under his own name; he had come alone and departed with a companion,
+Hinch Dial, a drill operator from the mines, a transient, a pick-up
+laborer, seemingly as close-mouthed as Silent Steve himself. Steve had
+come on one steamer and the two had left on the next. That north-bound
+boat we passed two hours off Point Loma was carrying Skeels and his pal
+back to San Diego!
+
+Again two days lost, waiting for the steamer back. And when I got to San
+Diego, the trail was stone cold. I had sent Worth almost daily reports
+in care of my office, not wanting them to lie around at Santa Ysobel
+during the confusion of the funeral and all; but even before I went to
+Ensenada, telegrams from Roberts had informed me that these reports
+could not be delivered as Worth had not been at the office, and
+telephone messages to Santa Ysobel and the Palace Hotel had failed to
+locate him. When I believed I had Skeels firmly clasped in the jaws of
+the Ensenada trap, I had sent a complete report of my doings up to that
+time, and the optimistic outlook then, to Barbara with instructions for
+her to get it to Worth. She would know where he was.
+
+But she hadn't. Her reply, waiting at San Diego for me, a delicious
+little note that somehow lightened the bitterness of my disappointment
+over Skeels, told me that she had seen Worth at the funeral, almost a
+week ago now, but only for a minute; that she had supposed he had joined
+me on the Skeels chase; and she would now try to hunt him up and deliver
+my report. Roberts, too, had a line in one of his reports that Worth had
+called for the suitcase on the Monday I left and had neither returned it
+nor been in the office since.
+
+I worried not at all over Worth; if he wanted to play hide and seek with
+Dykeman's spotters, he was thoroughly capable of looking after himself;
+but in the Skeels matter, I did then what I should have done in the
+first place, of course; turned the work over to subordinates and headed
+straight home.
+
+I reached San Francisco pretty well used up. It was nearly the middle of
+the forenoon next day when I got to my desk and found it piled high with
+mail that had accumulated in my absence. Roberts had looked after what
+he could, and sorted the rest, ready for me. Everything concerning the
+Clayte case was in one basket. As Roberts handed it to me, he explained.
+
+"The Van Ness bank attorney--Cummings--has been keeping tabs on you
+tight, Mr. Boyne. Here every day--sometimes twice. Wants to know the
+minute you're back."
+
+I grunted and dived into the letters. Nothing interesting. Responses
+acknowledging receipts of my early inquiries. Roberts lingered.
+
+"Well?" I shot at him. He moved uneasily as he asked.
+
+"Did you wire him when you were coming back?"
+
+"Cummings? No. Why?"
+
+"He telephoned in just before you came saying that he'd be right up to
+see you. I told him you hadn't returned. He laughed and hung up."
+
+"All right, Roberts. Send him in when he comes." I dismissed the
+secretary. Cummings was keeping tabs on me with a vengeance. What was on
+his chest?
+
+I didn't need to wait long to find out. In another minute he was at my
+door greeting me in an off-hand, "Hello, Boyne. Ready to jump into your
+car and go around with me to see Dykeman?"
+
+"Just got down to the office, Cummings," I watched him, trying to figure
+out where I stood and where he stood after this week's absence. "Haven't
+seen Worth Gilbert yet. What's the rush with Dykeman?"
+
+"You'll find out when you get there."
+
+Not very friendly, seeing that Cummings had been Worth's lawyer in the
+matter, and aside from that queer scene in my office, there'd been no
+actual break. He stood now, not really grinning at me, but with an
+amused look under that bristly mustache, and suggested,
+
+"So you haven't seen young Gilbert?"
+
+The tone was so significant that I gave him a quick glance of inquiry as
+I said,
+
+"No. What about him?"
+
+"Put on your coat and come along. We can talk on the way," he replied,
+and I went with him to the street, dug little Pete out of the bootblack
+stand and herded him into the roadster to drive us. Cummings gave the
+order for North Beach, and as we squirmed through and around congested
+down-town traffic, headed for the Stockton Street tunnel, I waited for
+the lawyer to begin. When it came, it was another startling question,
+
+"Didn't find Skeels in the south, eh?"
+
+I hadn't thought they'd carry their watching and trailing of us so far.
+I answered that question with another,
+
+"When did you see or hear from Worth Gilbert last?"
+
+"Not since the funeral," he said promptly, "the day before the
+funeral--a week ago to-day, to be exact. I ran down to make my inventory
+then; as administrator, you know."
+
+He looked at me so significantly that I echoed,
+
+"Yes, I know."
+
+"Do you? How much?" His voice was hard and dry; it didn't sound good to
+me.
+
+"See here," I put it to him, as my clever little driver dodged in and
+out through the narrow lanes between Pagoda-like shops of Chinatown,
+avoiding the steep hill streets by a diagonal through the Italian
+quarter on Columbus Avenue. "If there's anything you think I ought to be
+told, put me wise. I suppose you raised that money for Worth--the
+seventy-two thousand that was lacking, I mean?"
+
+"I did not."
+
+I turned the situation over and over in my mind, and at last asked
+cautiously,
+
+"Worth did get the money to make up the full amount, didn't he?"
+
+We had swerved again to the north, where the Powell car-line curves into
+Bay Street, and were headed direct for the wharves. Cummings watched me
+out of the corners of his eyes, a look that bored in most unpleasantly,
+while he cross-examined,
+
+"So you don't know where he raised that money--or how--or when? You
+don't even know that he did raise it? Is that the idea?"
+
+I gave him look for look, but no answer. An indecisive slackening of the
+machine, and Little Pete asked,
+
+"Where now, sir?"
+
+"You can see it," Cummings pointed. "The tall building. Hit the
+Embarcadero, then turn to your right; a block to Mason Street."
+
+So close to the dock that ships lay broadside before its doors, moored
+to the piles by steel cables, the Western Cereal Company plant scattered
+its mills and warehouses over two city blocks. Freight trains ran
+through arcades into the buildings to fetch and carry its products;
+great trucks, some gas driven, some with four- and six-horse teams,
+loaded sacks or containers that shot in endless streams through well
+worn chutes, or emptied raw materials that would shortly be breakfast
+foods into iron conveyors that sucked it up and whined for more. It was
+a place of aggressive activity among placid surroundings, this plant of
+Dykeman's, for its setting was the Italian fisherman's home district;
+little frame shacks, before which they mended their long, brown nets, or
+stretched them on the sidewalks to dry; Fisherman's Wharf and its lateen
+rigged, gayly painted hulls, was under the factory windows.
+
+We pulled up before the door of a building separate from any of the
+mills or warehouses, and I followed Cummings through a corridor, past
+many doors of private offices, to the large general office. Here a young
+man at a desk against the rail lent Cummings respectful attention; the
+lawyer asked something in a low tone, and was answered,
+
+"Yes, sir. Waiting for you. Go right through."
+
+Down the long room with its rattling typewriters, its buzz of clerks and
+salesmen we went. Cummings was a little ahead of me, when he checked a
+moment to bow to some one over at a desk. I followed his glance. The
+girl he had spoken to turned her back almost instantly after she had
+returned his greeting; but I couldn't be mistaken. There might be more
+than one figure with that slim, half girlish grace about it, and other
+hair as lustrously blue-black, but none could be wound around a small
+head quite so shapely, carried with so blossomlike a toss. It was
+Barbara Wallace.
+
+So this was where her job was. Strange I had not known this fact of
+grave importance. I went on past her unconscious back, left her working
+at her loose-leaf ledgers, beside her adding machine, my mind a whirl of
+ugly conjecture. Dykeman's employee; that would instantly and very
+painfully clear up a score of perplexing questions. Dykeman would need
+no detectives on my trail to tell him of my lack of success in the
+Skeels chase. Lord! I had sent her as concise a report as I could
+make--to her, for Worth. I walked on stupidly. In front of the last door
+in the big room, Cummings halted and spoke low.
+
+"Boyne, you and I are both in the employ of the Van Ness Avenue Bank.
+We're somewhat similarly situated in another quarter; I'm representing
+the Gilbert estate, and you've been retained by Worth Gilbert."
+
+I grunted some sort of assent.
+
+"I brought you here to listen to what the bank crowd has to say, but
+when they get done, I've something to tell you about that young employer
+of yours. You listen to them--then you listen to me--and you'll know
+where you stand."
+
+"I'll talk with you as soon as I get through here, Cummings."
+
+"Be sure you do that little thing," significantly, and we went in.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+AT DYKEMAN'S OFFICE
+
+
+We found Whipple with Dykeman. I had always liked the president of the
+Van Ness Avenue Bank well enough; one of the large, smooth, amiable
+sort, not built to withstand stress of weather, apt to be rather
+helpless before it. He seemed now mighty upset and worried. Dykeman
+looked at me with hard eyes that searched me, but on the whole he was
+friendly in his greeting and inquiries as to my health.
+
+While I was getting out of my coat and stowing it, making a great deal
+of the process so as to gain time, I saw Cummings was exchanging low
+spoken words with the two of them. I tried to keep my mind on these men
+before me and why I was with them, but all the while it would be running
+back to the knock-out blow of seeing that girl in Dykeman's place. She
+was double-crossing Worth! I might have grinned at the idea that I'd let
+myself be fooled by a pair of big, expressive, wistful, merry black
+eyes; but I had seen the look in those same eyes when they were turned
+on my boy; to think she'd look at him like that, and sell him out, was
+against nature. It was hurting me beyond all reason.
+
+Whipple asked me about my trip south as though it was the most public
+thing in the world and he knew its every detail, and accepted my reply
+that I couldn't take one man's pay and report to another, with,
+
+"Just so, Mr. Boyne. But your agency is retained--regularly, year by
+year--by our bank. And our bank has given over none of its rights--I
+should say duties--in regard to the Clayte case. We stand ready to
+assist any one whose behavior seems to us that of a law-abiding citizen.
+We don't want to advance any criminality. We can't strike hands with
+outlaws--"
+
+"Tell him about the suitcase, Whipple," Dykeman broke in impatiently,
+rather spoiling the president's oratorical effect. "Tell him about the
+suitcase."
+
+The suitcase! Was this one of the things Barbara Wallace had let out to
+her employer? She could have done so. She knew all about it.
+
+"One moment, please," I snapped. "I've been away for a week, Mr.
+Whipple. I don't know a thing of what you're talking about. Did Captain
+Gilbert fail to meet his engagement with you Monday morning?"
+
+Whipple shook his head.
+
+"Mr. Dykeman wants you told about the suitcase," he said. "I'd like to
+have Knapp here when we go into that."
+
+Dykeman picked up the end of a speaking-tube and barked into it,
+
+"Send those men in." In the moment's delay, we all sat uneasily mute.
+Knapp came in with Anson. As they nodded to us and settled into chairs,
+two or three others joined us. Nothing was said about this filling out
+of the numbers, but to me it meant serious business, with Worth Gilbert
+its motive.
+
+"Get it over, can't you?" I said, looking about from one to the other of
+the men, all directors in the bank. "I understand that Captain Gilbert
+met his engagement with you; was he short of the sum agreed?" Again
+Whipple shook his head.
+
+"Captain Gilbert walked into the bank at exactly ten o'clock Monday
+morning. The uh--uh--unusual arrangement--contract, to call it so--that
+we'd made with him concerning the defalcation would have expired in a
+few seconds, and I think I may say," he looked around at the others,
+"that we should not have been sorry to have it do so. But he brought the
+sum agreed on."
+
+I drew a great sigh of relief. Worth's bargain was complete; he was done
+with these men, anyhow. I was half out of my chair when Whipple said,
+sharply for him,
+
+"Sit down, Mr. Boyne." And Dykeman almost drowned it in his,
+
+"Wait, there, Boyne! We're not through with you."
+
+"There's more to tell," Whipple continued. "Captain Gilbert brought that
+eight hundred thousand cash and securities in a--er--in a very strange
+way."
+
+"What d'you mean, strange way? airplane or submarine?" I growled.
+
+"He brought it," Whipple's words marched out of him like a solemn
+procession, "in a brown, sole-leather suitcase."
+
+"_With_ brass trimmings," Dykeman supplemented, and leaned back in his
+chair with an audible "Ah-h-h!" of satisfaction.
+
+If ever a poor devil was flabbergasted, it was the head of the Boyne
+agency at that moment. I had a fellow feeling for that Mazeppa party who
+was tied in his birthday suit to the back of a wild horse. Locoed
+broncos were more amenable to rein than Worth Gilbert. So that was why
+he wanted that suitcase--"had a use for it," he'd put it; insisted on an
+order to be able to get it if I wasn't at my office; wanted it to shove
+back at these scary bank officials, with his own money for the payment
+inside. No wonder Whipple called him an "outlaw"!
+
+"Get the idea, do you, Boyne?" Anson lunged at me in his ponderous way.
+"The rest of us thought 'twas a poor joke, but Knapp and Whipple had
+both seen that suitcase before--and recognized it."
+
+"Yes," said Knapp quietly. "It chanced I saw it go through the door that
+last day, when it had nearly a million of our money in it. And here it
+was--" his voice broke off.
+
+"Certainly startling," Cummings spoke directly at me, "for them to see
+it come back in Worth Gilbert's hands, with the same kind of filling,
+less one hundred and eighty seven thousand dollars. Of course, I didn't
+know the identity of the suitcase until they'd given Gilbert his receipt
+and he was gone."
+
+"Oh, they accepted his money?" I said, and every man in the room looked
+sheepish, except Cummings who didn't need to, and Dykeman who was too
+mad to. He shouted at me,
+
+"Yes, we took it; and you're going to tell us where he got that
+suitcase."
+
+"What have your own detectives--those you hired on the side--to say
+about it?" I countered on him, and saw instantly that the Whipple end of
+the crowd hadn't known of Dykeman's spotters and trailers.
+
+"Well, why not?" Dykeman shrilled. "Why not? Who wouldn't shadow that
+crook? One hundred and eighty seven thousand dollars! Worked us like
+suckers--come-ons--!" he choked up and began to cough. Cummings came in
+where he left off.
+
+"See here, Boyne; we don't want to antagonize you. You've said from the
+first that this crime was a conspiracy--a big thing--directed by brains
+on the outside. Clayte was the tool. Whose tool was he? That's what we
+want to know." And Anson trundled along,
+
+"These men who have been in the war get a contempt for law, there's no
+doubt about it. Captain Gilbert might--"
+
+"No names!" Whipple's hand went up in protest. "No accusations,
+gentlemen, please; Mr. Boyne--this is a dreadful thing. But, really,
+Captain Gilbert's manner was very strange. I might say he--"
+
+"Swaggered," supplied Cummings coolly as the president's voice lapsed.
+
+"Well," Whipple accepted it, "he swaggered in and put it all over us.
+There he was, a man fresh from the deathbed of a suicide father; that
+father's funeral yet to occur. I, personally, hadn't the heart to
+question him or raise objections. I was dazed."
+
+"Dazed," Dykeman snapped up the word and worried it, as a dog worries a
+bone. "Of course, we were all dazed. It was so open, so
+shameless--that's why he got by with it. Making use of his position as
+heir, less than forty eight hours after his father was shot."
+
+"After his father shot himself," Whipple's lowered tone was a plea.
+"After his father shot himself."
+
+"Huh!" snorted Dykeman. "If a man shoots himself, he's been shot,
+hasn't he? Hell! What's the use of whipping the devil round the stump
+that way? Boyne, you can stand with us, or you can fight us."
+
+"Boyne's with us--of course he's with us," Whipple broke in, his words a
+good deal more confident than his tone or the look of his face.
+
+"Well, then," Dykeman ground out, "when our thief of a teller splits
+that one hundred and eighty seven thousand with his man Gilbert--shut
+up, Whipple--shut up! You can't stop me--we're going to know about it.
+We'll get them both then, and send them across. And we'll recover one
+hundred and eighty seven thousand dollars that belongs to the Van Ness
+Avenue bank."
+
+"_Good_ night!" I got to my feet. "This lets me out. I can't deal with
+men who make a scrap of paper of their contracts as quick as you
+gentlemen do."
+
+"Stop, Boyne--you haven't got it all," Dykeman ordered me.
+
+"Yes, wait, Mr. Boyne," Whipple came in. "You haven't a full
+understanding of the enormity of this young man's action. Mr. Cummings
+has something to tell you which, I think, will--"
+
+"Nothing Mr. Cummings can say," I shut them off, "will alter the fact
+that I am employed by Captain Worth Gilbert at your recommendation--at
+your own recommendation--that I have been away more than a week on his
+business, and have not yet had an opportunity to report to him
+personally. When I've seen him, I'll be ready to talk to you."
+
+"You'll talk now or never--" Dykeman's shrill threat was interrupted by
+the shriller bell of the telephone. He yanked the instrument to him,
+and the "Hello!" he cried into it had the snap of an oath. He looked up
+and shoved the thing in my direction. "Calling for you, Boyne," he
+snarled.
+
+There was deathly stillness in the room, so that the whir of the great
+stones in the mill came to us insistently. I stood there, they all
+watching me, and spoke into the transmitter.
+
+"This is Boyne."
+
+"Hold the receiver close to your ear so it won't leak words." The
+warning wasn't needed; I thought I knew the voice. "Press the
+transmitter close to your chest. Listen--don't talk; don't say a word in
+reply to me. I'm in the telephone booth outside. I must see you just as
+soon as I can. I'll be at the Little Italy restaurant--you know, don't
+you? on Fisherman's Wharf--in ten minutes. If you can come, and alone,
+find me there. I'll wait an hour. If you can't come now, you _must_ see
+me this evening after working hours."
+
+"I'll come now," I raised the transmitter to say, and quickly over the
+wire came the answer,
+
+"I told you not to speak--in there! This is Barbara Wallace."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+A LUNCHEON
+
+
+I went away from there.
+
+Looking about me, I had guessed that pretty much every man in the room
+believed that it was Worth Gilbert with whom I had been talking over the
+phone. Dykeman's trailers would be right behind me. Yet to the last,
+Whipple and his crowd were offering me the return trip end of my ticket
+with them; if I would come back and be good, even now, all would be
+forgiven. I sized up the situation briefly and took my plunge, shutting
+the door after me, glancing across the long room to see that Barbara
+Wallace's desk was deserted. Nobody followed me from the room I had just
+left. I walked quickly to the outer door.
+
+Little Pete switched on his engine as I leaped into the car. My "Let her
+go!" wasn't needed to make him throw in his clutch, and give me a flying
+start straight ahead down the broad plank way of the Embarcadero.
+Looking back as we hit the belt-line tracks, I saw a small car with two
+men in it, shoot out from one of the wide doorways of the plant; but as
+we rounded the cliff-like side of Telegraph Hill, my view of them was
+cut off. Things had come for me thick and fast. I felt pretty well
+balled up. But the girl had used secrecy in appointing this interview;
+till I could see further into the thing, it was anyhow a safe bet to
+drop them.
+
+"Pete," I said, "lose that car behind us. Only ten minutes to slip them
+and land me at Fisherman's Wharf. Show me what-for."
+
+He grinned. Between Montgomery and the bay, north of California Street,
+there are many narrow byways, crowded with the heavy traffic of
+hucksters and vegetable men, a section devoted to the commission
+business. Into its congestion Pete dove with a weasel instinct for
+finding the right holes to slip through, the alleys that might be
+navigated in safety; in less than the ten minutes I'd specified, we were
+free again on Columbus Avenue, pursuit lost, and headed back for the
+restaurant on the wharf.
+
+"Boss," Little Pete was hoarse with the excitement he loved, as he laid
+the roadster alongside the Little Italy, "was it on the level, what you
+fed the lawyer guy? Ain't you wise to where Captain Gilbert is? I've saw
+him frequent since you've been gone."
+
+"How many times is 'frequent,' Pete?" I asked. "And when did the last
+'frequent' happen?"
+
+"Twice," sulkily. I'd wounded his pride by not taking him seriously; but
+he added as I jumped down from the machine. "I druv him up on the hill,
+'round the place where you an' him--an' her--went that day."
+
+Pete didn't need to use Barbara Wallace's name. The way he salaamed to
+the pronoun was enough; the swath that girl cut evidently reached from
+the cradle to the grave, with this monkey grinning at one end, and me
+doddering along at the other.
+
+I gave a moment to questioning Pete, found out all he knew, and went
+into the restaurant, wondering what under heaven Barbara Wallace would
+say to me or ask me.
+
+The Little Italy restaurant is not so bad a place for luncheon. If one
+likes any eatables the western seas produce, I heartily recommend it.
+Where fish are unloaded from the smacks by the ton, fish are sure to be
+in evidence, but they are nice, fresh fish, and look good enough to eat.
+And the Little Italy is clean, with white oil-clothed tables and a view
+from its broad windows that down-town restaurants would double their
+rent to get.
+
+Just now it was full of noisy patrons, foreigners, mostly; people too
+busy eating to notice whether I carried my head on my shoulders or under
+my arm.
+
+In a far corner, Barbara Wallace's eyes were on me from the minute I
+came within her sight. She had ordered clams for two, mostly, I thought,
+to defend the privacy of our talk from the interruptions of a waiter,
+and I was hardly in my chair before she burst out,
+
+"Where's Worth? Why wasn't he in that office to defend himself against
+what they're hinting?"
+
+"I suppose," I said dryly, "because he wasn't given an invitation to
+attend. You ought to know why. You work for Dykeman."
+
+"I work for Dykeman?" she repeated after me in a bewildered tone. "I'm
+bookkeeper in the Western Cereal Company's employ, if that's what you
+mean. You understood so from the first."
+
+"You know I didn't," I reproached her hotly. "Do you think I'd have let
+you on the inside of this case if I'd known it was a pipe line direct to
+Dykeman?"
+
+And on the instant I spoke there came to me a remembrance of her saying
+that Sunday morning as we pulled up before the St. Dunstan that she went
+past the place on the street car every day getting to her work at the
+Western Cereal Company. Sloppy of me not to have paid better attention;
+I knew vaguely that Dykeman was in one of the North Beach mills.
+
+"Fifty-fifty, Barbara," I conceded. "I should have known--made it my
+business to learn. And Dykeman has questioned you--"
+
+"He has not!" indignantly. "I don't suppose he knows Worth and I are
+acquainted." I could have smiled at that. There were detectives' reports
+in Dykeman's desk that recorded date, hour and duration of every meeting
+this girl had had with Worth and with myself. Besides, Cummings knew. It
+must have been through Cummings that she learned what was about to take
+place in Dykeman's private office. What had she told Cummings?
+
+I was ready to blurt out the question, when she fumbled in her bag with
+little, shaking hands, drew out and passed to me unopened the envelope
+addressed to Worth, with my detailed report of the Skeels chase.
+
+"I did my best to deliver it," she steadied her voice as she spoke. "He
+wasn't at the Palace. He wasn't at Santa Ysobel. He didn't communicate
+with me here."
+
+My edifice of suspicion of Barbara Wallace crumbled. Cummings had not
+learned through her that I was unsuccessful in the south; nor had she
+spilled a word to him that she shouldn't, or they'd have had the dope on
+where Worth had found that suitcase, and thrown it at me quick.
+
+"Barbara," I said, "will you accept my apologies?"
+
+"Oh, yes," she smiled vaguely. "I don't know what you're apologizing
+for, but it doesn't matter. I hoped you would bring me news of Worth--of
+where he is."
+
+"When did you see him last?"
+
+"On the day of the funeral. I hardly got to speak to him."
+
+Little Pete's news was slightly later. He'd taken Worth up to the Gold
+Nugget and dropped him there. Thursday, Worth was at the Nugget for more
+than an hour. On both occasions, Pete was told to slip the trailers, and
+did. That meant that Worth was working on the Clayte case--or thought he
+was. I told her of this.
+
+"Yes--Oh, yes," she repeated listlessly. "But where is he now? And awful
+things--things like this meeting--coming up."
+
+"What besides this meeting?"
+
+"At Santa Ysobel."
+
+"What? Things that have happened since the boy's gone? You couldn't get
+much idea of the lay of the land when you were down there Wednesday,
+could you?"
+
+"Oh, but I could--I did," earnestly. "Of course it was a large funeral;
+it seemed to me I saw everybody I'd ever known. At a time like that,
+nothing would be said openly, but the drift was all in one direction.
+They couldn't understand Worth, and so nearly every one who spoke of
+him, picked at him, trying to understand him. Mrs. Thornhill's cook was
+already telling that Worth had quarreled with his father and demanded
+money. I shouldn't wonder if by now Santa Ysobel's set the exact hour of
+the quarrel."
+
+"Me for down there as quick as I can," I muttered, and Barbara, facing
+me sympathetically, offered,
+
+"I've a letter from Skeet Thornhill," she groped in her bag again,
+mumbling as women do when they're hunting for a thing, "It came this
+morning.... Mrs. Thornhill's no better--worse, I judge.... Oh, here it
+is," and she pulled out a couple of closely scribbled sheets. "The child
+writes a wild hand," she apologized, as she passed these over.
+
+The flapper dashed into her letter with a sort of incoherent squeal. The
+carnival ball was only four days off. Everybody was already dead on his,
+her or its feet. The decorations they'd planned were enough to kill a
+horse--let alone getting up costumes. "As usual, everything seems to be
+going to the devil here," she went on; "Got a cannery girl elected
+festival queen this time. Ina's furious, of course. Moms had a letter
+from her that singed the envelope; but I sort of enjoy seeing the
+cannery district break in. They've got the money these days."
+
+Nothing here to my purpose. Barbara reached forward and turned the sheet
+for me, and I saw Worth Gilbert's name half way down it.
+
+"Doctor Bowman is an old hell-cat, and I hate him." Skeet made her
+points with a fine simplicity. "Since mother's sick, he comes here every
+day, though what he does but sit and shoot off his mouth and get her all
+worked up is more than I can see. Yesterday I was in the room when he
+was there, and he got to talking about Worth--the meanest, lowest-down,
+hinting talk you ever heard! Said Worth got a lot of money when his
+father died, and I flared up and said what of it? Did he think Mr.
+Gilbert ought to have left it to him? That hit him, because he and Mr.
+Gilbert used to be good friends, and he and Worth aren't. I sassed him,
+and he got so mad that just as he was leaving, he hollered at me that I
+better ask Worth Gilbert where he was at the hour his father was shot.
+Now, what do you know about that? That man is spreading stories. A
+doctor can set them going. He's making his messy old calls on people all
+day, and they, poor fish-hounds, believe everything he says. Though
+mother didn't. After he was gone, she just lay there in her bed and said
+over and over that it was a lie, a foolish, dangerous lie! Poor mumsie,
+she's so nervous that when the grocer's truck had a blow-out down in the
+drive, she nearly went into hysterics--cried and carried on, something
+about it's being 'the shot.' I suppose she meant the one when Mr.
+Gilbert killed himself. Wasn't that queer? Any loud noise of the sort
+sets her off that way. She lies and listens, and listens and mutters to
+herself. It scares me." She closed with, "Please don't break your
+promise to be here through this infernal Bloss. Fes."
+
+"Good advice, that last," I said slowly, as I laid the letter on the
+table, keeping a hand on it. "You'll do that, won't you, Barbara?"
+
+"I had intended to. I was given leave from this afternoon.
+But--well--I'd thought it over, and almost made up my mind to go back to
+my desk."
+
+Barbara Wallace uncertain, halting between two courses of action! What
+did it mean?
+
+"See here, Barbara; this isn't a time for Worth Gilbert's friends to
+slacken on him."
+
+"I hadn't slackened," she said very low. And left it for me to remember
+that Worth apparently had.
+
+"Then you're needed at Santa Ysobel," I urged.
+
+"But you're going, aren't you, Mr. Boyne?"
+
+"Yes. As soon as I can get off. That doesn't keep you from being needed.
+Worth's one of the most efficiently impossible young men I ever tried to
+handle. Maybe he's not any fuller of shocks than any other live wire,
+but he sure does manage to plant them where they'll do the most harm.
+Cummings, Dykeman--and this Dr. Bowman down there; active enemies."
+
+"They can't hurt Worth Gilbert--all of them together!"
+
+"Wait a minute. I'm going to Santa Ysobel to find the murderer of Thomas
+Gilbert. That means a stirring to the depths of that little town. This
+underneath-the-surface combustion will get poked into a flame--she's
+going to burst out, and somebody's going to get burned. We don't want
+that to be Worth, Barbara."
+
+"No. But what can I do--what influence have I with him--" she was
+beginning, but I broke in on her.
+
+"Barbara, you and I are going to find the real murderer, before the
+Cummings-Dykeman bunch discover a way into and out of that bolted study.
+Those people want to see Worth in jail."
+
+There was a long pause while she faced me, the rich color failing a
+little in her cheeks.
+
+"I see," speaking slowly, studying each word. "And as long as we didn't
+find out how to enter and leave the study, we have no way of knowing how
+hard or how easy it's going to be for them to find it out. We--" her
+voice still lower--"we can't tell if they already know it or not."
+
+"Yes we can," I leaned forward to say. "The minute they know
+that--Worth Gilbert will be charged with murder."
+
+I hit hard enough that time to bring blood, but she bled inwardly,
+sitting there staring at me, quite pale, finally faltering,
+
+"Well--I can't stop to think of his having followed Ina Vandeman
+south--on her wedding trip--if he needs me--and I can help--I must--"
+she broke down completely, and I sat there feeling big-footed and
+blundering at this revelation of what it was that had put that clear,
+logical mind of hers off the track, left her confused, groping, just a
+girl, timid, distrustful of her own judgment where her heart was
+concerned.
+
+"Was that it all the time?" I asked. "Well, take it from me, Worth's
+done nothing of the sort. He's been playing detective, not chasing off
+after some other man's bride."
+
+Up came the color to her cheeks, she reached that mite of a hand across
+to shake on the bargain with,
+
+"I'll go straight down this evening. You'll find me in Santa Ysobel when
+you come, Mr. Boyne."
+
+"At the Thornhills'?" It might be handy to have her there; but she shook
+her head, looking a little self-conscious.
+
+"I'm taking that spare room at Sarah Capehart's. Skeet wanted me, and I
+have an invitation from Laura Bowman; but if--well, seeing that this
+investigation is going to cover all that neighborhood, I thought I'd
+rather be with Sarah."
+
+The level-headed little thing! Pete and I had the pleasure of taking her
+out to her home where she had her packing to attend to. On the way she
+spoke of an engagement with Cummings for the theater Saturday night.
+
+"And instead, I suppose I shall be at the carnival ball. Shall I tell
+him that in my note, Mr. Boyne? Is it all right to let him know?"
+
+"It's all right," I assented. "You can bet Cummings is due down there as
+soon as Worth shows up; and that must be soon, now."
+
+"Yes," Barbara agreed. Her face clouded a little. "You noticed in
+Skeet's letter that they're expecting Ina to-morrow."
+
+Poor child--she couldn't get away from it. I patted the hand I had taken
+to say good-by and assured her again,
+
+"Worth Gilbert hasn't been in the south. I wonder at you, Barbara.
+You're so clear headed about everything else--don't you see that that
+would be impossible?"
+
+Then I drove back to my office, to find lying on my desk a telegram from
+the young man, dated at Los Angeles, requesting me to meet him at Santa
+Ysobel the following evening!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+CLEANSING FIRES
+
+
+Wednesday evening I pulled into a different Santa Ysobel: lanterns
+strung across between the buildings, bunting and branches of bloom
+everywhere, streets alive with people milling around, and cars piled
+high with decorative material, crowded with the decorators. The carnival
+of blossoms was only three days ahead.
+
+At Bill Capehart's garage they told me Barbara was out somewhere with
+the crowd; and a few minutes later on Main Street, I met her in a Ford
+truck. Skeet Thornhill was at the wheel, adding to the general risk of
+life and limb on Santa Ysobel streets, carrying a half a dozen or more
+other young things tucked away behind. Both girls shouted at me; they
+were going somewhere for something and would see me later.
+
+Getting down toward the Gilbert place, just beyond the corner, I flushed
+from the shadows of the pepper trees a bird I knew to be one of
+Dykeman's operatives. Watching his carefully careless progress on past
+the Gilbert lawn, then the Vandeman grounds, my eye was led to a pair
+who approached across the green from the direction of the bungalow. No
+mistaking the woman; even at this distance, height and the clean sweep
+of her walk, told me that this was the bride, Ina Vandeman. And the man
+strolling beside her--had he come with her from the house, or joined
+her on the cross-cut path?--could that be Worth Gilbert?
+
+I sat in the roadster and gaped. The evening light--behind them, and dim
+enough at best--made their countenances fairly indistinguishable. At the
+gap in the hedge, they paused, and Mrs. Vandeman reached out, broke off
+a flower to fasten in his buttonhole, looking up into his face, talking
+quickly. Old stuff--but always good reliable old stuff. Then Worth saw
+me and hailed, "Hello, Jerry!" But he did not come to me, and I swung
+out of the machine to the sidewalk.
+
+I heard the sobbing of the Ford truck; it went by, missing my
+runningboard by an inch, stopped at Vandeman's gate and Skeet discharged
+her cargo of clamor to stream across the sidewalk and up toward the
+bungalow. I saw Barbara, in the midst of the moving figures, suddenly
+stop, knew she had seen the two over there, and crossed to her, with a
+cheerful,
+
+"He's here all right."
+
+"Oh, yes," not looking toward the gap in the hedge, or at me. "He came
+on the same train with--with them."
+
+Then some one from the porch yowled reproachfully for her to fetch those
+banners _pronto_, and with a little catching of breath, she ran on up
+the walk.
+
+I turned back. Worth and Ina had moved on. Bronson Vandeman, well
+groomed, dressed as though he had just come in off the golf links, his
+English shoes and loud patterned stockings differentiating him from the
+crude outdoor man of the Coast, had joined them on the Gilbert lawn; his
+genial greeting to me let his bride get by with a mere bow, turning at
+once back to her house by the front walk. But rather to my annoyance,
+Vandeman came bounding up the steps after us. I judged Worth must have
+invited him.
+
+Chung carried my suitcase upstairs, and lingered a minute in my room.
+I'll swear it wasn't merely to get the tip for which he thanked me, but
+with the idea of showing me in some recondite, Oriental fashion that he
+was glad I'd come. This interested me. The people who were glad to have
+me in Santa Ysobel at this time belonged on the clean side of my ledger.
+Then I went downstairs to find Vandeman still in the living room,
+sprawled at ease beside the window, looking round with a display of his
+fine teeth, reaching a hand to pull in the chair Worth set for me.
+
+"Well, Jerry," that young man prompted, indicating by a careless gesture
+the smokers' tray on the table beside me, "there is time before dinner
+for the tale of your exploits. How's my friend Steve?"
+
+I began to select a cigar, and said shortly,
+
+"It's all in reports waiting for you at my office."
+
+"Yes." Worth ignored my irritation. "Tell it. What'd you do down south?"
+
+"Just back from the south yourself, aren't you?" I countered.
+
+"Sure," airily. "But I wasn't there to butt in on your game. Did you
+find that Skeels was Clayte?"
+
+I merely looked over the flame of my match at that small-town society
+man, smiling back at me with a show of polite interest.
+
+"Go on," Worth interpreted. "Vandeman knows all about it. I tried to
+sell him a few shares of stock in the suitcase, so he'll take an
+interest in the game; but he's too much the tight-wad to buy."
+
+"Oh, no," deprecated Vandeman. "Just no gambler; hate to take a chance."
+He ran his fingers through his hair, tossing it up with a gesture I had
+noticed when he came back from the dance at Tait's.
+
+"All right--apology accepted," Worth nodded. "Anyway, you didn't. Well,
+Jerry?"
+
+Vandeman waited a moment with natural curiosity, then, as I still said
+nothing, giving my attention to my smoke, moved reluctantly to rise,
+saying,
+
+"That means I'd better chase along and let you two talk business."
+
+"No. Sit tight," from Worth.
+
+I was mad clear through, and disturbed and apprehensive, too. I managed
+a brief, dry statement of the outcome in the south. Worth hailed it
+with,
+
+"Skeels lurks in the jungle! Life still holds a grain of interest."
+
+"Why the devil couldn't you keep me advised of your movements?" I
+demanded.
+
+"Dykeman's hounds," he grinned. "Had them guessing. They'd have picked
+me up if I'd gone to your office."
+
+"You could have written or wired. They've picked you up anyway," I
+grunted. "One's on the job now. Saw him as I came in."
+
+"Eh? What's that?" cried Vandeman, a man snooping in the shrubbery
+outside getting more attention from him than one dodging pursuit three
+hundred miles away. "What do you mean, hounds?" and when he had heard
+the explanation of Dykeman's trailers, "I call that intolerable!"
+
+"Oh, I don't know." Worth reached over my shoulder for a cigarette.
+"Lose 'em whenever I like."
+
+I wasn't so certain. There were men in my employ he couldn't shake.
+Perhaps those reports in Dykeman's desk might have offered some
+surprises to this cock-sure lad. My exasperation at Worth mounted as I
+listened to Vandeman talking.
+
+"Those bank people should do one thing or another," he gave his opinion.
+"Just because you got gay with them and handed them their payment in the
+suitcase it left in, they've no right to have you watched like a
+criminal. In a small town like this, such a thing will ruin a man's
+standing."
+
+"If he has any standing," Worth laughed.
+
+"See here," Vandeman's smile was persuasive. "Don't let what I said out
+in front embitter you."
+
+"I'll try not to."
+
+"Mr. Boyne"--Vandeman missed the sarcasm--"when I got back to this town
+to-day, what do you suppose I found? The story going around that a
+quarrel with Worth, over money, drove his father to take his own life."
+
+"That's my business here," I nodded. And when he looked his surprise,
+"To stop such stories."
+
+He stared at me, frankly puzzled for a moment, then said,
+
+"Well, of course you know, and I know, that they're scurrilous lies; but
+just how will you stop them?"
+
+I had intended my remark to stand as it was; but Worth filled in the
+pause after Vandeman's question with,
+
+"Jerry's here to get the truth of my father's murder, Bronse."
+
+"Murder?" The mere naked word seemed to shock Vandeman. His sort clothe
+and pad everything--even their speech. "I didn't know any one
+entertained the idea your father was murdered. He couldn't have
+been--not the way it happened."
+
+"Nevertheless we think he was."
+
+"Oh, but Boyne--start a thing like that, and think of the talk it'll
+make! They'll commence at once saying that there was nobody but Worth to
+profit by his father's death."
+
+"Don't worry, Mr. Vandeman." He made me hot. "We know where to dig up
+the motive for the crime."
+
+"You mean the diaries?" Worth's voice sounded unbelievably from beside
+me. "Nothing doing there, Jerry. I've burned them."
+
+I sat and choked down the swears. Yet, looking back on it, I saw plainly
+that Jerry Boyne was the man who deserved kicking. I ought never to have
+left them with him.
+
+"You read them and burned them?" said Vandeman.
+
+"Burned them without reading," Worth's impatient tones corrected.
+
+"Without reading!" the other echoed, startled. Then, after a long pause,
+"Oh--I say--pardon me, but--but ought that to have been done? Surely
+not. Worth--if you'd read your father's diaries for the past few
+years--I don't believe you'd have a doubt that he committed suicide--not
+a doubt."
+
+Worth sat there mute. Myself, I was rather curious as to what Vandeman
+would say; I had read much in those diaries. But when it came, it was
+the same old line of talk one hears when there's a suicide: Gilbert was
+a lonely man; his life hadn't been happy; he cut himself off from people
+too much. Vandeman said that of late he believed he was pretty nearly
+the only intimate the dead man had. This last gave him an interest in
+my eyes. I broke in on his generalities to ask him bluntly why he was so
+certain the death was suicide.
+
+"Mr. Gilbert was breaking up; had been for two years or more. Worth's
+been away; he's not seen it; but I can tell you, Boyne, his father's
+mind was affected."
+
+Worth let that pass, though I could see he wasn't convinced by
+Vandeman's sentimentalities, any more than I was. After the man had
+gone, I turned on Worth sharply, with,
+
+"Why the devil did you tell that pink-tea proposition about your
+dealings with the Van Ness Avenue bank?"
+
+"Safety valve, I guess. I get up too heavy a load of steam, and it's
+easy to blow it off to Vandeman. Told him most of it in the smoker,
+coming up. You'll talk about anything in a smoker."
+
+"Oh, will you?" I said in exasperation. "And you'll burn anything, I
+suppose, that a match'll set fire to?"
+
+"Go easy, Jerry Boyne." His chin dropped to his chest, he sat glowering
+out through the window. "Cleansing fires for that sort of garbage," he
+said finally. "I burned them on the day of his funeral."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+THE TORN PAGE
+
+
+My coming had thrown dinner late; we were barely through with the meal
+and back once more in the living room when the latch of the French
+window rattled, the window itself was pushed open, and a high imperious
+voice proclaimed,
+
+"The Princess of China, calling on Mr. Worth Gilbert."
+
+There stood Ina Vandeman in the gorgeously embroidered robes of a high
+caste Chinese lady, her fair hair covered by a sleek black wig that
+struck out something odd, almost ominous, in the coloring of her skin,
+the very planes of her features. Outside, along the porch, sounded the
+patter of many feet; Skeet wriggled through the narrow frame under her
+tall sister's arm, came scooting into the room to turn and gaze back at
+her.
+
+"Doesn't she look the vamp?"
+
+"Skeet!" Ina had sailed in by this time, and Ernestine followed more
+soberly. "You've been told not to say that."
+
+"I think," the other twin backed her up virtuously, "with poor mother
+sick and all, you might respect her wishes. You know what she said about
+calling Ina a vamp." And Skeet drawled innocently,
+
+"That it hit too near the truth to be funny--wasn't that it?"
+
+Through the open window had followed a half dozen more of the Blossom
+Festival crowd, Barbara and Bronson Vandeman among them. Ina paid no
+attention to any one, standing there, her height increased by the long,
+straight lines of the costume, her bisque doll features given a strange,
+pallid dignity by the raw magnificence of its crusted purple and crimson
+and green and gold embroidery and the dead black wig.
+
+"Isn't it an exquisite thing, Worth?" displaying herself before him.
+"Bronse has a complete Mandarin costume; we lead the grand march as the
+emperor and empress of Mongolia. Don't you think it's a good idea?"
+
+"First rate." Worth spoke in his usual unexcited fashion, and it was
+difficult to say whether he meant the oriental idea or the appearance of
+the girl who stood before him. She came close and offered the cuff of
+one of her sleeves to show him the embroidery, lifting a delicate chin
+to display the jade buttons at the neck.
+
+Barbara over on the other side of the room refused to meet my eye. Mrs.
+Bowman, a big fur piece pulled up around her throat, shivered. I met
+half a dozen Santa Ysobel people whose names I've forgotten. I could see
+that Bronson Vandeman socially took the lead here, that everybody looked
+to him. The room was a babel of talk, when a few minutes later the
+doorbell rang in orthodox fashion, and Chung ushered Cummings in upon
+the general confusion. Some of the bunch knew and spoke to him; others
+didn't and had to be presented; it took the first of his time and
+attention. He only got a chance for one swipe at me, a low-toned,
+sarcastic,
+
+"Made a mistake to duck me, Boyne."
+
+I didn't think it worth while to answer that. Presently I saw him
+standing with Barbara. He was evidently effecting a switch of his
+theater engagement to the ball, for I heard Skeet's,
+
+"Mr. Cummings wants a ticket! He'll need two! Ten dollars, Mr.
+Cummings--five apiece."
+
+"No, no--Skeet," Barbara laughed embarrassedly. "Mr. Cummings was just
+joking. He'll not be here Saturday night."
+
+"I'll come back for it," hand in pocket.
+
+"It's a masquerade--" Barbara hesitated.
+
+"Bring my costume with me from San Francisco."
+
+"I'm not sure--" again Barbara hesitated; Skeet cut in on her,
+
+"Why, Barbie Wallace! It's what you came to Santa Ysobel for--the Bloss.
+Fes. ball. And to think of your getting a perfectly good man, right at
+the last minute this way, and not having to tag on to Bronse and Ina or
+something like that! I think you're the lucky girl," and she clutched
+Cummings' offered payment to stow it with other funds she had collected.
+
+At last they got themselves out of the room and left us alone with
+Cummings. He had carried through his little deal with Barbara as though
+it meant considerable to him, but I knew that his errand with Worth was
+serious, and put in quickly,
+
+"I intended to write or phone you to-morrow, Cummings."
+
+"Well," the lawyer worked his mouth a bit under that bristly mustache
+and looked at Worth, "it might have saved you some embarrassment if
+you'd been warned of my errand here to-night--earlier, that is. I
+suppose Captain Gilbert has told you that I phoned him, when I failed to
+connect with you, that I was coming here--and what I was coming for?"
+
+"I didn't tell Jerry," Worth picked up a cigarette. "Couldn't very well
+tell him what you were coming for. Don't know myself."
+
+The words were blunt; really I think there was no intention to offend,
+only the simple statement of a fact; but I could see Cummings beginning
+to simmer, as he inquired,
+
+"Does that mean you didn't understand my words on the phone, or that you
+understood them and couldn't make out what I meant by them?"
+
+"Little of both," allowed Worth. Cummings stepped close to him and let
+him have it direct:
+
+"I'm here to-night, Captain Gilbert, as executor of your father's
+estate. I have filed the will to-day. I might have done so earlier, but
+when I inventoried this place (you remember, the day before the
+funeral--you were here at the time) I failed to locate a considerable
+portion of your father's estate."
+
+"You failed to locate? All the estate's here; this house, the down-town
+properties. What do you mean, failed to locate?"
+
+"I was not alluding to realty," said Cummings. "It's my duty to locate
+and report to the court the present whereabouts of seventy-five thousand
+dollars worth of stock in the Van Ness Avenue Savings Bank. Can you
+declare to me as executor, where it is? And, if any other person than
+your father placed it in its present whereabouts, are you ready to
+declare to me how and when it came into that person's possession?"
+
+"Quite a lot of words, Cummings; but it doesn't mean anything," Worth
+said casually. "You know where that bank stock is and who put it there."
+
+"Officially, I do not know. Officially, I demand to be told."
+
+"Unofficially, answer it for yourself." Worth turned his back on the
+lawyer to get a match from the mantel.
+
+"Very well. My answer is that I intend to find out how and when that
+bank stock which formed a part of your payment to the Van Ness Avenue
+bank disappeared from this house."
+
+I admit I was scared. Here was the first gun of the coming battle; and I
+was sure this enemy, who stood now looking through half closed eyes at
+the lad's back, would have poisoned gas among his weapons. He had
+emphasized the "_when_." He believed that the stories of Worth's night
+visit to his father were true; that the implied denial by Barbara and
+myself in my office, was false; that Worth had either received the stock
+from his father that Saturday night or taken it unlawfully. I was sure
+that it was the stock certificates which I had seen Worth take from the
+safe-compartment of the sideboard in the small hours of Monday morning;
+a breach of legal form which it would be possible for a friendly
+executor to pass over.
+
+"Cummings, Worth inherits everything under his father's will; what's the
+difference about a small irregularity in taking possession? He--"
+
+"Never explain, Jerry," Worth shut me up. "Your friends don't need it,
+and your enemies won't believe it."
+
+Cummings had stood where he was since the first of the interview. His
+face went strangely livid. There was more in this than a legal fight.
+
+"Yes, Boyne's a fool to try to help your case with explanations,
+Gilbert," he choked out. "I'll see that both of you get a chance to
+answer questions elsewhere--under oath. Good evening." He turned and
+left.
+
+He had the best of it all around. I endeavored for some time to get
+before Worth the dangers of his high-handed defiance of law, order,
+probate judges, and the court's officers, in the person of Allen G.
+Cummings, attorney and his father's executor. He listened, yawned--and
+suggested that it must be nearly bedtime. I gave it up, and we went--I,
+at least, with a sense of danger ahead upon me--to our rooms.
+
+Along in the middle of the night I waked to the knowledge that a
+casement window was pounding somewhere in the house. For a while I lay
+and listened in that helpless, exaggerated resentment one feels at such
+a time. I'd drop off, get nearly to sleep, only to be jerked broad awake
+again by the thudding. Listening carefully I decided that the bothersome
+window was in Worth's room, and finally I got up sense and spunk enough
+to roll out of bed, stick my feet into slippers, and sneak over with the
+intention of locking it.
+
+The room was dimly lighted from the street lamps, far away as they were;
+I made my way across it. Worth's deep, regular breathing was quite
+undisturbed. I had trouble with the catch, went and felt over the bureau
+and found his flashlight, fixed the window by its help, and returning
+it, remembering how near I came to knocking it off the bureau top,
+thought to put it in a drawer which stood half open.
+
+As I aimed it downward, its circle of illumination showed something
+projecting a corner from beneath the swirl of ties and sheaf of
+collars--a book--a red morocco-bound book. Mechanically I nudged the
+stuff away with the torch itself. What lay there turned me cold. It was
+the 1920 diary!
+
+My fingers relaxed; the flashlight fell with a thump, as I let out an
+exclamation of dismay. A sleepy voice inquired from the bed,
+
+"Hi, you Jerry! What you up to in here?"
+
+For answer, I dragged out the book, went over to the bed, and switched
+on the reading lamp there. Worth scowled in the glare, and flung his
+arms up back of his head for a pillow to raise it a bit.
+
+"Yeah," blinking amiably at the volume. "Meant to tell you. Found it
+to-day when I was down in the repair pit at the garage. It had been
+stuck in the drainpipe there."
+
+"And I suppose," I said savagely, "that if I hadn't come onto it now,
+you'd have burned this, too."
+
+"Don't get sore, Jerry," he said. "I saved it," and he yawned.
+
+I had an uncontrollable impulse to have a look at that last entry, which
+would record the bitter final quarrel between this boy and his father.
+No difficulty about finding the spot; as I raised the book in my hands
+it fell open of itself at the place. I looked and what I saw choked
+me--got cross-wise in my throat for a moment so no words could come out.
+I stuck the book under his nose, and held it there till I could whisper.
+
+"Worth, did you do this?"
+
+The last written page was numbered 49; on it was recorded the date,
+March sixth; the weather, cloudy, clearing late in the afternoon; the
+fact that the sun had set red in a cloudless sky; and it ended abruptly
+in the middle of a phrase. The leaf that carried page 50 had been torn
+out; not cut away carefully as were those leaves in the earlier book,
+but ripped loose, grabbed with clutching fingers that scarred and
+twisted the leaf below!
+
+He shoved my hand away and stared at me. For a moment I thought
+everything was over. Certainly I could not be a very appealing sight,
+standing there sweating with fear, my hair all stuck up on my head where
+I'd clawed it, shivering in my nightclothes more from miserable
+nervousness than from cold; but somehow those eyes of his softened; he
+gave me one of the looks that people who care for Worth will go far to
+get, and said quietly,
+
+"You see what you're doing? I told you I didn't steal the book, so that
+clears me in your mind of being the murderer. Now you're after me about
+this torn-out page. If I'd torn it out and stolen it--you and I would
+know what it would mean."
+
+"But, boy--," I began, when he suffered a change of heart.
+
+"Get out of here! Take that damn book and leave."
+
+He heaved himself over in the bed, hunching the covers about his ears,
+turning his back on me. As I crept away, I heard him finish in a sort of
+mutter--as though to himself--
+
+"I'm sorry for you, Jerry Boyne."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+ON THE HILL-TOP
+
+
+Morning dawned on the good ship Jerry Boyne not so dismasted and
+rudderless as you might have thought. I'd carried that 1920 diary to my
+room and, before I slept, read the whole of it. This was the last word
+we had from the dead man; here if anywhere would be found support for
+the suggestions of a weakening mind and suicide.
+
+Nothing of that sort here; on the contrary, Thomas Gilbert was very much
+his clear-headed, unpleasant, tyrannical self to the last stroke of the
+pen. But I came on something to build up a case against Eddie Hughes,
+the chauffeur.
+
+I didn't get much sleep. As soon as I heard Chung moving around, I went
+down, had him give me a cup of coffee, then stationed him on the back
+porch, and walked to the study, shut myself in, and discharged my heavy
+police revolver into a corner of the fireplace; then with the front door
+open, fired again.
+
+"How many shots?" I called to Chung.
+
+"One time shoot."
+
+Worth's head poked from his upstairs window as he shouted,
+
+"What's the excitement down there?"
+
+"Trying my gun. How many times did I fire?"
+
+"Once, you crazy Indian!" and the question of sound-proof walls was
+settled. Nobody heard the shot that killed Gilbert twenty feet away
+from the study if the door was closed. Mrs. Thornhill's ravings, as
+described in Skeet's letter to Barbara, were merely delirium.
+
+I walked out around the driveway to the early morning streets of Santa
+Ysobel. The little town looked as peaceful and innocent as a pan of
+milk. In an hour or so, its ways would be full of people rushing about
+getting ready for the carnival, a curious contrast to my own business,
+sinister, tragic. It seemed to me that two currents moved almost as one,
+the hidden, dark part under--for there must be those in the town who
+knew the crime was murder; the murderer himself must still be here--and
+the foam of noisy gayety and blossoms riding atop. A Blossom Festival;
+the boyhood of the year; and I was in the midst of it, hunting a
+murderer!
+
+An hour later I talked to Barbara in the stuffy little front room at
+Capehart's, brow-beaten by the noise of Sarah getting breakfast on the
+other side of the thin board partition; more disconcerted by the girl's
+manner of receiving the information of how I had found the 1920 diary
+hidden in Worth's bureau drawer. There was a swift, very personal anger
+at me. I had to clear myself instantly and thoroughly of any suspicion
+of believing for a moment that Worth himself had stolen or mutilated the
+book, protesting,
+
+"I don't--I don't! Listen, Barbara--be reasonable!"
+
+"That means 'Barbara, be scared!' And I won't. When they're scared,
+people make mistakes."
+
+"You might see differently if you'd been there last night when Cummings
+made his charge against Worth. That seventy two thousand dollars Worth
+carried up to the city Monday morning, he had taken from his father's
+safe the night before."
+
+For a minute she just looked at me, and not even Worth Gilbert's
+dare-devil eyes ever held a more inclusively defiant light than those
+big, soft, dark ones of hers.
+
+"Well--wasn't it his?"
+
+"All right," I said shortly. "I'm not here to talk of Worth's financial
+methods; they're scheduled to get him into trouble; but let that pass.
+Look through this book and you'll see who it is I'm after."
+
+She had already opened the volume, and began to glance along the pages.
+She made a motion for me to wait. I leaned back in my chair, and it was
+only a few moments later that she looked up to say,
+
+"Don't make the arrest, Mr. Boyne. You have nothing here against
+Eddie--for murder."
+
+Because I doubted myself, I began to scold, winding up,
+
+"All the same, if that gink hasn't jumped town, I'll arrest him."
+
+"It would be a good deal more logical to arrest him if he had jumped the
+town," Barbara reminded me. "If you really want to see him, Mr. Boyne,
+you'll find him at the garage around on the highway. He's working for
+Bill."
+
+That was a set-back. A fleeing Eddie Hughes might have been hopeful; an
+Eddie Hughes who gave his employer back-talk, got himself fired, and
+then settled down within hand-reach, was not so good a bet. Barbara saw
+how it hit me, and offered a suggestion.
+
+"Mr. Boyne, Worth and I are taking a hike out to San Leandro canyon this
+afternoon to get ferns for the decorating committee. Suppose you come
+along--anyhow, a part of the way--and have a quiet talk, all alone with
+us. Don't do anything until you have consulted Worth."
+
+"All right--I'll go you," I assented, and half past two saw the three of
+us, Worth in corduroys and puttees, Barbara with high boots and short,
+dust-brown skirt, tramping out past the homes of people toward the open
+country. At the Vandeman place Skeet's truck was out in front, piled
+with folding chairs, frames, light lumber, and a lot of decorative
+stuff. The tall Chinaman came from the house with another load.
+
+"You Barbie Wallace!" the flapper howled. "Aren't you ashamed to be
+walking off with Worth and Mr. Boyne both, and good men scarce as hen's
+teeth in Santa Ysobel to-day!"
+
+"I'm not walking off with them--they're walking off with me," Barbara
+laughed at her.
+
+"Shameless one!" Skeet drawled. "I see you let Mr. Cummings have a day
+off--aren't you the kind little boss to 'em!"
+
+I just raised my brows at Barbara, and she explained a bit hastily,
+
+"Skeet thinks she has to be silly over the fact that Mr. Cummings has
+gone up to town, I suppose." She added with fine indifference, "He'll be
+back in the morning."
+
+"You bet he'll be back in the morning," Worth assured the world.
+
+"Now what does he mean by that, Mr. Boyne?"
+
+"He means Cummings is out after him."
+
+"I don't," Worth contradicted me personally. "I mean he's after Bobs.
+She knows it. Look at her."
+
+She glanced up at me from under her hat-brim, all the stars out in those
+shadowy pools that were her eyes. The walk had brought sumptuous color
+to her cheeks, where the two extra deep dimples began to show.
+
+"You both may think," she began with a sobriety that belied the dimples
+and shining eyes, "looking on from the outside, that Mr. Cummings has an
+idea of, as Skeet would say, 'rushing' me; but when we're alone
+together, about all he talks of is Worth."
+
+"Bad sign," Worth flung over a shoulder that he pushed a little in
+advance of us. "Takes the old fellows that way. Their notion of falling
+for a girl is to fight all the other Johnnies in sight. Guess you've got
+him going, Bobs."
+
+I walked along, chewing over the matter. She'd estimated Cummings
+fairly, as she did most things that she turned that clear mind of hers
+on; but her lack of vanity kept her from realizing, as I did, that he
+was in the way to become a dangerous personal enemy to Worth. His
+self-interest, she thought, would eventually swing him to Worth's side.
+She didn't as yet perceive that a motive more powerful than
+self-interest had hold of him now.
+
+"Why, Mr. Boyne," she answered as though I'd been speaking my thoughts
+aloud, "I've known Mr. Cummings for years and years. He never--"
+
+"You said a mouthful there, Bobs." Worth halted, grinning, to interrupt
+her. "He never--none whatever. But he has now."
+
+"He hasn't."
+
+"Leave it to Jerry. Jerry saw him that first night in at Tait's; then
+afterward, in the office."
+
+"Oh, come on!" Barbara started ahead impatiently. "What difference would
+it make."
+
+They went on ahead of me, scrapping briskly, as a boy and girl do who
+have grown up together. I stumped along after and reflected on the folly
+of mankind in general, and that of Allen G. Cummings in particular. That
+careful, mature bachelor had seen this lustrous young creature blossom
+to her present perfection; he'd no doubt offered her safe and sane
+attention, when she came to live in San Francisco where they had friends
+in common. But it had needed Worth Gilbert's appearance on the scene to
+wake him up to his own real feeling. Forty-five on the chase of nimble
+sweet and twenty; Cummings was in for sore feet and humiliating
+tumbles--and we were in for the worst he could do to us. I sighed. Worth
+had more than one way of making enemies, it seemed.
+
+At last we came in sight of the country club upon its rise of ground
+overlooking the golf links. The low, brown clubhouse, built bungalow
+fashion, with a long front gallery and gravel sweep, was swarming with
+people--the decorators. Motors came and went. The grounds were being
+strung with paper lanterns. We skirted these, and the links itself where
+there were two or three players, obstinate, defiant old men who would
+have their game in spite of forty blossom festivals--climbed a fence,
+and crossed the grass up to the crest of a little round hill, halting
+there for the view. It wasn't high, but standing free as it did, it
+commanded pretty nearly the entire Santa Ysobel district. Massed acres
+of pink and white, the great orchards ran one into the other without
+break for miles. The lanes between the trunks, diamonded like a
+harlequin's robe in mathematical primness, were newly turned furrows of
+rich, black soil, against which the gray or, sometimes, whitewashed
+trunks of apricot, peach and plum trees gave contrast. Then the cap of
+glorious blossoms, meeting overhead in the older orchards, with a warm
+blue sky above and puffs of clouds that matched the pure white of the
+plum trees' bloom.
+
+The spot suited me well; we had left the town behind us; here neither
+Dykeman's spotter nor any one he hired to help him could get within
+listening distance, I dropped down on a bank; Worth and Barbara disposed
+themselves, he sprawling his length, she sitting cross-legged, just
+below him.
+
+It wasn't easy to make a beginning. I knew it wouldn't do me any
+particular good with Worth to dwell on his danger. But I finally managed
+to lay fairly before them my case against Eddie Hughes, and I must say
+that, as I told it, it sounded pretty strong.
+
+I didn't want to put too much stress on having found my evidence in the
+diaries; I knew Worth was as obstinate as a mule, and having said that
+he would not stand for any one being prosecuted on their evidence, he'd
+stick to it till the skies fell. I called on my memory of those pages,
+now unfortunately ashes and not get-atable, and explained that Worth's
+father hired Hughes directly after a jail-break at San Jose had roused
+the whole country. Three of the four escapes were rounded up in the
+course of a few days, but the fourth--known to us as Eddie Hughes--was
+safe in Thomas Gilbert's garage, working there as chauffeur, having been
+employed without recommendation on the strength of what he could do.
+
+"And the low wages he was willing to take," Worth put in drily. "Old
+stuff, Jerry. I wasn't sure till you spilled it just now that my father
+was wise to it. But I knew. What you getting at?"
+
+"Just this. When I talked to Hughes that first night I came down here
+with you, while we all supposed the death a suicide, he couldn't keep
+his resentment against your father, his hatred of him, from boiling over
+every time he was mentioned."
+
+"Get on," said Worth wearily. "Father hired a jail-bird that came cheap.
+Probably put it to himself that he was giving the man a chance to go
+straight."
+
+I glanced up. This was just about what I remembered Thomas Gilbert to
+have said in the entry that told of the hiring of Eddie. Worth nodded
+grimly at my startled face.
+
+"Eddie's gone straight since then," he filled in. "That is, he's kept
+out of jail, which is going straight for Eddie. He'd certainly hate the
+man who held him as he's been held for five years. Not motive enough for
+murder though."
+
+"There's more. The 1920 diary you gave me last night tells when and why
+the extra bolts were put on the study doors. Your father had been
+missing liquor and cigars and believed Hughes was taking them."
+
+"Pilfering!" with an expression of distaste. "That doesn't--"
+
+"Hold on!" I stopped him. "On February twelfth your father left money,
+marked coin and paper money, as if by accident, on the top of the liquor
+cabinet; not exposed, but dropped in under the edge of the big ash tray
+so it might look as though it were forgotten--in a sense, lost there."
+
+"How much?" came the quick question.
+
+"Fifty one dollars." He looked around at me.
+
+"Just one dollar above the limit of petty larceny; a hundred cents added
+to put it in the felony class that meant state's prison. So he could
+have sent Eddie to the pen,--eh? I guess you've got a motive there,
+Boyne."
+
+"Well--er--" I squirmed over my statement, blurting out finally. "Hughes
+didn't take the money."
+
+"Knew it was a trap," Worth's laugh was bitter. "And hated the man who
+cold-bloodedly set it to catch him. If he didn't take it, don't you
+think he counted it?"
+
+"Worth," I said sharply. "Your father put those bolts on--and continued
+to find that he was being robbed. He was mad about it. Any man would be.
+Say what you will, no one likes to find that persons in his employ are
+stealing from him. The aggravating thing was that he couldn't bring it
+home to Hughes, though he was sure of the fact."
+
+"So he went back to what he had known of Eddie when he hired him? After
+profiting by it for five years, he was going to rake that up?"
+
+"He was,"--a bit nettled--"and well within his rights to do so. Three
+weeks before he was shot, he wrote that he'd started the inquiry. There
+was no further mention of the matter in the book as it stands, but don't
+you see that the result of the inquiry must have been on that torn-out
+last page? Eddie's Saturday night alibi won't hold water. His cannery
+girl, of course, will swear he was with her; but there's no
+corroborating testimony. No one saw them together from nine till
+twelve."
+
+Dead silence dropped on us, with the white clouds standing like
+witnesses in the blue above, the wind bringing now and again on its
+scented wings little faint echoes of the noise down at the clubhouse.
+
+"What more do you want?" Both young faces were set against me, cold and
+hostile. "Here was motive, opportunity, a suspect capable of the deed.
+My theory is that Mr. Gilbert came in on Hughes, caught him in the act
+of stealing from the cabinet. Hughes jumped for the pistol over the
+fireplace, got it, fired the fatal shot, and placed the dead man's
+fingers about the butt of the gun. Then he picked up the diary lying on
+the table, tore out the leaf about himself, and poked the rest of the
+book down the drain pipe."
+
+"And the shot?" Worth resisted me. "Why didn't the shot bring Chung on
+the run?"
+
+"Because he couldn't hear it. Nobody'd hear it ten paces away. That's
+what I was trying out this morning. You told me I'd fired once. Well, I
+fired twice; once with the door shut, and neither you nor Chung heard
+it; afterward, with the door open--the report you registered."
+
+"The blotter--and it had been used on that last page--showed no words to
+strengthen this theory of yours," said Barbara as confidently as though
+the little blue square had been clear print, instead of broken blurring.
+Perhaps it was clear to her. I was glad I'd given it a thorough
+reëxamination the night before.
+
+"I think it does," I struggled against the tide, manfully, buoying
+myself up with the tracing of the blotter. "Here's the word 'demanded,'
+reasonably connected with the affair. The letters 'ller' may be the last
+end of 'caller,' or possibly 'fuller'; I noticed Gilbert spoke in a
+former entry of the bottle in the cabinet and Hughes snitching from it,
+and used the word 'fuller.' Here's the word 'Avenue,' complete, and
+Lizzie Watkins, Hughes' girl, lives on Myrtle Avenue."
+
+The silence after that was fairly derisive. Worth broke it with an
+impatient,
+
+"And the fact of the bolted doors throws all that stuff out."
+
+"Well," I grunted, "Barbara deduced the slipping of some bolts to please
+you once--why can't she again?"
+
+"Mr. Boyne," the girl spoke quickly, "it wouldn't help you a bit to be
+assured that Eddie Hughes could enter the study and leave it bolted
+behind him when he went out--help you to the truth, I mean. These facts
+you've gathered are all wabbly; they'll never in the world fit in trim
+and true. They're hardly facts at all. They're partial facts."
+
+"Wouldn't help me?" I ejaculated. "It would cinch a case against him.
+We've got to have some one in jail, and that shortly. We're forced to."
+
+"Forced?" Worth had sat up a little and reached far forward for a stone
+that lay among the weeds down there. He spoke to me sidewise with a
+challenging flicker of the eye. Barbara kept her lips tight shut.
+
+"I need a prisoner," trying to correct my error; then burst out, "My
+Lord, children! An arrest isn't going to hurt a man like Hughes,--even
+if he proves to be innocent. It's an old story to him. Barbara, you said
+yourself that the man who stole the 1920 diary was the murderer."
+
+"But I didn't say Eddie Hughes stole it." Her tone was significant, and
+it checked me. I couldn't remember what the deuce she had said that
+night. There recurred to me her mimicry of a woman's voice--Laura
+Bowman's as I believed--to determine through Chung who Thomas Gilbert's
+feminine visitor had been. Should that clue have been followed up before
+I moved on Eddie Hughes? Even as I got to this point, I heard Worth,
+punctuating his remarks with the whang of his rock on the bit of twig he
+was pounding to pieces,
+
+"Boyne, I won't stand for any arrest being made except in all
+sincerity--the person you honestly believe to be the criminal."
+
+"Does that mean you forbid me, in so many words, to proceed against
+Hughes on what I've got?"
+
+"It does," Worth said. "You're not convinced yourself. Leave it alone."
+
+"'Nough said!" I jumped to my feet. If he wouldn't let me lay hands on
+Hughes--there was nothing to do but go after the next one. "You two run
+along. Get your ferns. There's a man at the club here I have to see."
+
+Barbara was afoot instantly; Worth lay looking at her for a moment,
+then heaved himself up, shook his shoulders, and stood beside her.
+
+"Race you to the foot of the hill," she flashed up at him.
+
+"You're on," he chuckled. "I'll give you a running start--to the tree
+down there--and beat you."
+
+They were off. She ran like a deer. Worth got away as though he was in
+earnest. He caught her up just at the finish; I couldn't see which won;
+but they walked a few rods hand in hand.
+
+Something swelled in my throat as I watched them away: life's
+springtime--and the year's; boy and girl running, like kids that had
+never known a fear or a mortal burden, over an earth greener than any
+other, because its time of verdure is brief, dreaming already of the
+golden-tan of California midsummer, under boughs where tree blooms made
+all the air sweet.
+
+For sake of the boy and the girl who didn't know enough to take care of
+their own happiness, I wheeled and galloped in the direction of the
+country club.
+
+There is an institution known--and respected--in police circles as the
+Holy Scare. I was determined to make use of it. I'd throw a holy scare
+into a man I knew, and see what came out.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+AT THE COUNTRY CLUB
+
+
+The country club, when I walked up its lawn, was noisy with the
+hammering and jawing of its decoration committee. Out in the glass
+belvedere, like superior goods on display, taking it easy while every
+one else worked, I saw a group of young matrons of the smart set, Ina
+Vandeman among them, drinking tea. The open play she was making at Worth
+troubled me a little. He was the silent kind that keeps you guessing.
+She'd landed him once; what was to hinder her being successful with the
+same tactics--whatever they'd been--a second time?
+
+Then I saw Edwards' car was still out in the big, crescent driveway,
+showing by the drift of twigs and petals on its running board that it
+had been used to bring in tree blooms from his ranch; the man himself
+crossed the veranda, and I hailed,
+
+"Any place inside where you and I could have a private word together?"
+
+"I--I think so, Boyne," he hesitated. "Come on back here."
+
+He led me straight across the big assembly room which was being trimmed
+for the ball. From the top of a stepladder, Skeet Thornhill yelled to
+us,
+
+"Where you two going? Come back here, and get on the job."
+
+She had a dozen noisy assistants. I waved at her from the further door
+as we ducked. Strange that honest, sound little thing should be own
+sister to the doll-faced vamp out there in the showcase.
+
+Edwards made for a little writing room at the end of a corridor. I
+followed his long, nervous stride. If the man had been goaded to the
+shooting of Thomas Gilbert, it would have been an act of passion, and by
+passion he would betray himself. When I had him alone, the door shut, I
+went to it, told him we knew the death was murder, not suicide, and that
+the crime had been committed early Saturday night. Before I could
+connect him with it, he broke in on me,
+
+"Is Worth suspected?"
+
+"Not by me," I said. "And by God, not by you, Edwards! You know better
+than that."
+
+I held his eye, but read nothing beyond what might have been the flare
+of quick anger for the boy's sake.
+
+"Who then?" he said. "Who's dared to lisp a word like that? That hound
+Cummings--chasing around Santa Ysobel with Bowman--is that where it
+comes from? I told Worth the fellow was knifing him in the back." He
+began to stride up and down the room. "The boy's got other
+friends--that'll go their length for him. I'm with him till hell freezes
+over. You can count on me--"
+
+"Exactly what I wanted to find out," I cut in, so significantly that he
+whirled at the end of his beat and stared.
+
+"Meaning?"
+
+"Meaning you are the one man who could clear Worth Gilbert of all
+suspicion."
+
+"_What do you know?_"
+
+The big voice had come down to a mere whisper. Plenty of passion now--a
+passion of terror. I spoke quickly.
+
+"We know you were in the study that night, with a companion," and I
+piled out the worst of his affair, as I'd read it in the diaries,
+winding up,
+
+"Plain what brought you there. Quarrel? Motive? Don't need to look any
+further."
+
+Before I was done Jim Edwards had groped over to a chair and slumped
+into it. A queer, toneless voice asked,
+
+"Worth sent you to me--a detective--with this?"
+
+"No," I said. "I'm acting on my own."
+
+"And against his will," it came back instantly.
+
+"What of it?" I demanded. "Are you the coward to take advantage of his
+sense of honor?--to let his generosity cost him his life?"
+
+"His life." That landed. Watching, I saw the struggle that tore him. He
+jumped up and started toward me; I hadn't much doubt that I was now
+going to hear a plea for mercy--a confession, of sorts--as he stopped,
+dropped his head, and stood scowling at the floor.
+
+"Talk," I said. "Spill it. Now's your time."
+
+He raised his eyes to mine and spoke suddenly.
+
+"Boyne--I have nothing to say."
+
+"And Worth Gilbert can hang and be damned to him--is that it?" I took
+another step toward him. "No, Edwards, that 'nothing to say' stuff won't
+go in a court of law. It won't get you anywhere."
+
+"They'll never in the world--try Worth for--that killing."
+
+"I'm expecting his arrest any hour."
+
+"A trial! Those cursed diaries of Tom's brought into court--My God! I
+believe if I'd known he'd written things like that, I could have killed
+him for it!"
+
+I stared. He had forgotten me. But at this speech I mentally dropped him
+for the moment, and fastened my suspicions on the woman who went with
+him to the study.
+
+"All right," I said brutally. "You didn't kill Thomas Gilbert. But you
+took Mrs. Bowman to the study that night to have it out with him, and
+get six pages from the 1916 book. She got 'em--and you know what she had
+to do to get 'em."
+
+"Hold on, Boyne!" he said sternly. "Don't you talk like that to me."
+
+"Well," I said, "Mrs. Bowman was there--after those diary leaves. I
+heard Barbara Wallace imitate her voice--and Chung recognized the
+imitation. You know--that night at the study--the first night."
+
+He took a bewildered moment or two for thought, then broke out,
+
+"It wasn't Laura's voice Barbara imitated. Did she say so?"
+
+"No, but she imitated the voice of a woman who came weeping to get those
+pages from the diary; and who else would that be? Who else would want
+them?"
+
+"You're off the track, Boyne," he drew a great, shuddering sigh of
+relief. "Tom was always playing the tyrant to those about him; no doubt
+some woman did come crying for that stuff--but it wasn't Laura."
+
+"By Heaven!" I exclaimed as I looked at him. "You know who it was! You
+recognized the voice that night--but the woman isn't one you're
+interested in."
+
+"I'm interested in all women, so far as their getting a decent show in
+the world is concerned," he maintained sturdily. "I'd go as far as any
+man to defend the good name of a woman--whether I thought much of her or
+not."
+
+"This other woman," I argued, not any too keen on such a job myself,
+"hasn't she got some man to speak for her?"
+
+Edwards looked at me innocently.
+
+"She didn't have, then--" he began, and I finished for him,
+
+"But she has now. I've got it!" As I jumped up and hurried to the door,
+his eyes followed me in wonder. There I turned with, "Stay right where
+you are. I'll be back in a minute," ducked out into the hall and
+signaled a passing messenger, then stepped quickly back into the writing
+room and said, "I've sent for Bronson Vandeman."
+
+He settled deeper in his chair with,
+
+"I'll stay and see it out. If you get anything from Vandeman, I miss my
+guess."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+
+A MATTER OF TASTE
+
+
+Upon our few moments of strained waiting, Vandeman breezed in, full of
+apologies for his shirtsleeves. I remember noticing the monogram worked
+on the left silken arm, the fit and swing of immaculate trousers, as
+smoothly modeled to the hip as a girl's gown; his ever smiling face; the
+slightly exaggerated way he wiped fingers already clean on a
+handkerchief pulled from a rear pocket. He was the only unconstrained
+person in the room; he hardly looked surprised; his glance was merely
+inquiring. Edwards apparently couldn't stand it. He jumped up and began
+his characteristic pacing of one end of the constricted place, jerking
+out as he walked,
+
+"Bronse, it's my fault that Boyne sent for you. He's working on this
+trouble of Worth's, you know. He's had me in here, grilling me, shaking
+me over hell; and something I said--God knows why--sent him after you."
+
+"Trouble of Worth's!" Vandeman had been about to sit; his half bent
+knees straightened out again; he stood beside the chair and spoke
+irritably. "Told you, Boyne, if you meddled with that coroner's verdict
+you'd get your employer in the devil of a tight place. Nobody had any
+reason for wanting Worth's father out of the way--except Worth, himself.
+Frankly, I think you're wrong. But everything that I can do--of
+course--"
+
+"All right," I said, letting it fly at him. "Where was your wife from
+seven to half past nine on the evening of Gilbert's murder?"
+
+Back went his head; out flashed all the fine teeth; the man laughed in
+my face.
+
+"Excuse me, Mr. Boyne. I understand that this is serious--nothing funny
+about it--but really, you know, recalling the date, what you've said is
+amusing. My dear man," he went on as I stared at him, "please remember,
+yourself, where Ina was on that particular evening."
+
+"The wedding and reception were done with by seven o'clock," I objected.
+This ground was familiar with me. I'd been over it in considering what
+opportunity Laura Bowman would have had for a call on Thomas Gilbert at
+the required hour. If she could slip away for it, why not Ina Vandeman?
+As though he read my thoughts and answered them, Vandeman filled in,
+
+"A bride, you know, is dead certain to have at least half a dozen
+persons with her every minute of the time until she leaves the house on
+her wedding trip. Ina did, I'm sure. We'll just call her in, and she'll
+give you their names."
+
+He was up and starting to bring her; I stopped him.
+
+"We'll not bother with those names just now. I'd rather have you--or
+Mrs. Vandeman--tell me what you suppose would be the entry in Thomas
+Gilbert's diary for May 31 and June 1, 1916. I have already identified
+it as the date on which the Bowmans first moved into the Wallace house.
+I think Mr. Edwards knows something more, but he's not so communicative
+as you promise to be."
+
+He looked as if he wished he hadn't been so liberal with his assurances.
+I saw him glance half sulkily at Edwards, as he exclaimed,
+
+"But those diaries are burned--they're burned. Worth told us the other
+night that he burned them without reading."
+
+At the words, Edwards stopped stock-still, something almost humorous at
+the back of the suffering gaze he fastened on my face. I met it
+steadily, then answered Vandeman,
+
+"Doesn't make any difference to anybody that those books are burned. I'd
+read them; I know what was in them; and I know that three leaves--six
+pages--covering the entries of May 31 and June 1, 1916, were cut out."
+
+"But what the deuce, Boyne?" Vandeman wrinkled a smooth brow. "What
+would some leaves gone from Mr. Gilbert's diary four years ago have to
+do with us here to-day--or even with his recent death?"
+
+"Pardon me," I said shortly. "The matter's not as old as that. True, the
+stuff was written four years ago; it recorded happenings on those dates;
+but the ink that was used in marking out a run-over on the next
+following page was fresh. Anyhow, Mr. Vandeman, we know that a woman
+came weeping to Mr. Gilbert on the very night of his death, only a short
+time before his death--as nearly as medical science can determine
+that--and we believe that she came after those leaves out of the diary,
+and got them--whatever she had to do to secure them."
+
+I was struck with the difference in the way these two men took inquiry.
+Edwards had writhed, changed color, started to speak and caught himself
+back, showed all the agony of a clumsy criminal who dreads the probing
+that may give him away: temperament; the rotten spot in his affairs.
+Vandeman, younger, not entangled with an unhappy married woman, sat
+looking me in the eye, still smiling. The blow I had to deal him would
+be harder. It concerned his bride; but he'd take punishment well. I
+proceeded to let him have it.
+
+"I can see that Mr. Edwards has an idea what the entries on those pages
+covered. He has inadvertently shown me that your wife was the woman who
+came and got them from Thomas Gilbert on the night he was murdered."
+
+At that he turned on Edwards, and Edwards answered the look with,
+
+"I didn't. On my honor, Bronse, I never mentioned your name or Ina's.
+The Chinaman told him that--about some woman coming that evening--"
+
+"Mr. Vandeman," I broke in, "there's no use beating about the bush.
+Chung recognized your wife's voice. She was the woman who came weeping
+to get those diary leaves."
+
+He took that with astonishing quietness, and,
+
+"Suppose you were shown that she wasn't out of her mother's house?"
+
+"Wouldn't stop me. Allow that her alibi's perfect. Yet you men have
+something. There's something here I ought to know."
+
+"Something you'll never find out from me," Jim Edwards' deep voice was
+full of defiance. "Bronse, I owe you an apology; but you can depend on
+me to keep my mouth shut."
+
+After a minute's consideration Vandeman said,
+
+"I don't know why we should any of us keep our mouths shut."
+
+Jim Edwards looked utterly bewildered as the man sat there, thinking the
+thing over, glanced up pleasantly at me and suggested,
+
+"Edwards has a little different slant on this from me. I don't know why
+I shouldn't state to you exactly what happened--right there in Gilbert's
+study on the date you mentioned."
+
+"Oh, there did something unusual happen; and you've just remembered it."
+
+"There did something unusual happen, and I've just remembered it, aided
+thereto by your questions and Edwards' queer looks. Cheer up, old man;
+we haven't all got your southern chivalry. From a plain, commonsense
+point of view, what I have to tell is not in the least to my wife's
+discredit. In fact, I'm proud of her all the way through."
+
+Jim Edwards came suddenly and nervously to his feet, strode to the
+further corner of the room and sat down at as great a distance from
+Vandeman as its dimensions would permit. He turned his face to the small
+window there, and through all that Vandeman said, kept up a steady,
+maddening tattoo with his fingernails on the sill.
+
+"This has to do with what I told you the first night I ever talked with
+you, Boyne. You threw doubt on Thomas Gilbert's death being suicide. I
+gave as a reason for my belief that it was, a knowledge and conviction
+that the man's mind was unhinged."
+
+Edwards' tattoo at the window ceased for a minute. He stared, startled,
+at the speaker, then went back to it, and Vandeman proceeded,
+
+"I'm not telling Jim Edwards anything he doesn't know, and what I say to
+you, Boyne, that's discreditable to the dead, I can't avoid. Here it is:
+on the evening of June first, 1916, I had dinner alone at home. You'll
+find, if you look at an old calendar, that it falls on a Sunday. Jim
+Edwards had dined informally at the Thornhills'. As he told it to me
+later, they were all sitting out on the side porch after dinner, and
+nobody noticed that Ina wasn't with them until they heard cries coming
+from somewhere over in the direction of the Gilbert place. At my house,
+I'd heard it, and we both ran for the garage, where the screams were
+repeated again and again. We got there about the same time, found the
+disturbance was in the study, and Edwards who was ahead of me rushed up
+and hammered on its door."
+
+Again Jim Edwards stopped the nervous drumming of his fingers on the
+window-sill while he stared at the younger man as at some prodigy of
+nature. Finally he seemed unable to hold in any longer.
+
+"Hammered on the door!" he repeated. "If you're going to turn out the
+whole damn' thing to Boyne, tell it straight; door was open; we couldn't
+have heard a yip out of Ina if it hadn't been. Tom there in full sight,
+sitting in his desk chair, cool as a cucumber, letting her scream."
+
+"I'm telling this," Vandeman snapped. "Gilbert looked to me like an
+insane man. Jim, you're crazy as he was, to say anything else. Never
+supposed for a minute you thought otherwise--that poor girl there, dazed
+with fright, backed as far away from him as she could get, hair flying,
+eyes wild."
+
+I looked from one to the other. What Edwards had said of the cold,
+contemptuous old man; what Vandeman told of the screaming girl; no
+answer to such a proposition of course but an attempted frame-up. To let
+the bridegroom get by would best serve my purpose.
+
+"All right, gentlemen," I said. "And now could you tell me what action
+you took, on this state of affairs?"
+
+"Action?" Vandeman gave me an uneasy look. "What was there to do? Told
+you I thought the man was crazy."
+
+"And you, Edwards?"
+
+"Let it go as Bronse says. I cut back to Mrs. Thornhill's, scouting to
+see what the chance was for getting Ina in without the family knowing
+anything."
+
+"That's right," Vandeman said. "I stayed to fetch her. She was fine. To
+the last, she let Gilbert save his face--actually send her home as
+though she were the one to blame. Right then I knew I loved her--wanted
+her for my wife. On the way home, I asked her and was accepted."
+
+"In spite of the fact that she was engaged to Worth Gilbert?"
+
+"Boyne," he said impatiently, "what's the matter with you? Haven't I
+made you understand what happened there at the study? She had to break
+off with the son of a man like that. Ina Thornhill couldn't marry into
+such a breed."
+
+"Slow up, Vandeman!" Edwards' tone was soft, but when I looked at him, I
+saw a tawny spark in his black eyes. Vandeman fronted him with the
+flamboyant embroidered monogram on his shirt sleeve, the carefully
+careless tie, the utterly good clothes, and, most of all, at the moment,
+the smug satisfaction in his face of social and human security. I
+thought of what that Frenchman says about there being nothing so
+enjoyable to us as the troubles of our friends. "Needn't think you can
+put it all over the boy when he's not here to defend himself--jump on
+him because he's down! Tell that your wife discarded him--cast him
+off--for disgraceful reasons! Damnitall! You and I both heard Tom giving
+her her orders to break with his son, she sniffling and hunting hairpins
+over the floor and promising that she would."
+
+"Cut it out!" yelled Vandeman, as though some one had pinched him. "I
+saw nothing of the sort. I heard nothing of the sort. Neither did you."
+
+I think they had forgotten me, and that they remembered at about the
+same instant that they were talking before a detective. They both
+turned, mum and startled looking, Edwards to his window, Vandeman to a
+nervous brushing of his trouser edges, from which he looked up,
+inquiring doubtfully,
+
+"What next, Boyne? Jim's excited; but you understand that there's no
+animus; and my wife and I are entirely at your disposal in this matter."
+
+"Thank you," I said.
+
+"Would you like to talk to her?"
+
+"I would."
+
+"When?"
+
+"Now."
+
+"Where?"
+
+"Here--or let the lady say."
+
+Vandeman gave me a queer look and went out. When he was gone, I found
+Jim Edwards scrabbling for his hat where it had dropped over behind the
+desk. I put my back against the door and asked,
+
+"Is Bronson Vandeman a fatuous fool; or does he take me for one?"
+
+"Some men defend their women one way, and some another. Let me out of
+this, Boyne, before that girl gets here."
+
+"She won't come in a hurry," I smiled. "Her husband's pretty free with
+his promises; but more than likely I'll have to go after her if I want
+her."
+
+"Well?" he looked at me uncomfortably.
+
+"Blackmail's a crime, you know, Edwards. A woman capable of it, might be
+capable of murder."
+
+"You've got the wrong word there, Boyne. This wasn't exactly blackmail."
+
+"What, then?"
+
+"The girl--I never liked her--never thought she was good enough for
+Worth--but she was engaged to him, and--in this I think she was fighting
+for her hand."
+
+He searched my face and went on cautiously,
+
+"You read the diaries. They must have had complaints of her."
+
+"They had," I assented.
+
+"Anything about money?"
+
+I shook my head.
+
+"You said there were two entries gone; the first would have told you, I
+suppose--Before we go further, Boyne, let me make a little explanation
+to you--for the girl's sake."
+
+"Shoot," I said.
+
+"It was this way," he sighed. "Thornhill, Ina's father, made fifteen or
+twenty thousand a year I would say, and the family lived it up. He had a
+stroke and died in a week's time. Left Mrs. Thornhill with her
+daughters, her big house, her fine social position--and mighty little to
+keep it up on. Ina is the eldest. She got the worst of it, because at
+the first of her being a young lady she was used to having all the money
+she wanted to spend. The twins were right on her heels; the thing for
+her to do was to make a good marriage, and make it quick. But she got
+engaged to Worth; then he went to France. There you were. He might never
+come back. Tom always hated her; watched her like a hawk; got onto
+something she--about--"
+
+"Out with it," I said. "What? Come down to cases."
+
+"Money." He uttered the one word and stood silent.
+
+I made a long shot, with,
+
+"Mr. Gilbert found she'd been getting money from other men--"
+
+"Borrowing, Boyne--they used the word 'borrowed,'" Edwards put in. "It
+was always Tom's way to summon people as though he had a little private
+judgment bar, haul them up and lecture them; I suppose he thought he had
+a special license in her case."
+
+"And she went prepared to frame him and bluff him to a standoff. Is that
+the way you saw it?"
+
+"My opinion--what I might think," said Mr. James Edwards of Sunnyvale
+ranch, "wouldn't be testimony in a court of law. You don't want it,
+Boyne."
+
+"Maybe not," I grunted. "Perhaps I could make as good a guess as you
+could at what young Mrs. Vandeman's capable of; a dolly face, and behind
+it the courage of hell."
+
+"Boyne," he said, as I left the door free to him, "quit making war on
+women."
+
+"Can't," I grinned and waved him on out. "The detective business would
+be a total loss without 'em."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII
+
+A DINNER INVITATION
+
+
+"Look what's after you, man," Skeet warned me from her lofty perch as I
+went out through the big room in quest of Ina Vandeman. "Better you stay
+here. I gif you a yob. Lots safer--only run the risk of getting your
+neck broken."
+
+I grinned up into her jolly, freckled face, and waited for the woman who
+came toward me with that elastic, swinging movement of hers, the
+well-opened eyes studying me, keeping all their secrets behind them.
+
+"Mr. Boyne," a hand on my arm guided me to a side door; we stepped
+together out on to a small balcony that led to the lawn. "My husband
+brought me your message. Nobody over by the tennis court; let's go and
+walk up and down there."
+
+Her fingers remained on my sleeve as we moved off; she emphasized her
+points from time to time by a slight pressure.
+
+"Such a relief to have a man like you in charge of this investigation."
+She gave me an intimate smile; tall as she was, her face was almost on a
+level with my own, yet I still found her eyes unreadable, none of those
+quick tremors under the skin that register the emotions of excitable
+humanity. She remained a handsome, perfectly groomed, and entirely
+unruffled young woman.
+
+"Thank you," was all I said.
+
+"Mr. Vandeman and I understand how very, very serious this is. Of
+course, now, neighbors and intimates of Mr. Gilbert are under
+inspection. Everybody's private affairs are liable to be turned out.
+We've all got to take our medicine. No use feeling personal resentment."
+
+Fine; but she'd have done better to keep her hands off me. An old police
+detective knows too much of the class of women who use that lever. I
+looked at them now, white, delicate, many-ringed, much more expressive
+than her face, and I thought them capable of anything.
+
+"Here are the names you'll want," she fumbled in the girdle of her gown,
+brought out a paper and passed it over. "These are the ones who stayed
+after the reception, went up to my room with me, and helped me
+change--or rather, hindered me."
+
+"The ones," I didn't open the paper yet, just looked at her across it,
+"who were with you all the time from the reception till you left the
+house for San Francisco?"
+
+"It's like this," again she smiled at me, "the five whose names are on
+that paper might any one of them have been in and out of my room during
+the time. I can't say as to that. But _they_ can swear that _I_ wasn't
+out of the room--because I wasn't dressed. As soon as I changed from my
+wedding gown to my traveling suit, I went down stairs and we were all
+together till we drove to San Francisco and supper at Tait's, where I
+had the pleasure of meeting you, Mr. Boyne."
+
+"I understand," I said. "They could all speak for you--but you couldn't
+speak for them." Then I opened and looked. Some list! The social and
+financial elect of Santa Ysobel: bankers' ladies; prune kings'
+daughters; persons you couldn't doubt, or buy. But at the top of all was
+Laura Bowman's name.
+
+We had halted for the turn at the end of the court. I held the paper
+before her.
+
+"How about this one? Do you think she was in the room all the time? Or
+have you any recollection?"
+
+The bride moved a little closer and spoke low.
+
+"Laura and the doctor were in the middle of one of their grand rows.
+She's a bunch of temperament. Mamma was ill; the girls were having to
+start out with only Laura for chaperone; she said something about going
+somewhere, and it wouldn't take her long--she'd be back in plenty of
+time. But whether she went or not--Mr. Boyne, you don't want us to tell
+you our speculations and guesses? That wouldn't be fair, would it?"
+
+"It wouldn't hurt anything," I countered. "I'll only make use of what
+can be proven. Anything you say is safe with me."
+
+"Well, then, of course you know all about the situation between Laura
+and Jim Edwards. Laura was determined she wouldn't go up to San
+Francisco with her husband--or if she did, he must drive her back the
+same night. She wouldn't even leave our house to get her things from
+home; the doctor, poor man, packed some sort of bag for her and brought
+it over. When he came back with it, she wasn't to be found; and she
+never did appear until we were getting into the machine."
+
+I listened, glancing anxiously toward the skyline of that little hill
+over which Worth and Barbara might be expected to appear almost any
+moment now. Then we made the turn at the end of the court, and my view
+of it was cut off.
+
+"Laura and Jim--they're the ones this is going to be hard on. I do feel
+sorry for them. She's always been a problem to her family and friends. A
+great deal's been overlooked. Everybody likes Jim; but--he's a
+southerner; intrigue comes natural to them."
+
+Five minutes before I had been listening to Edwards' pitiful defense of
+this girl; I recalled his "scouting" for a chance to get her home unseen
+and save her standing with her family. That could be classed as
+intrigue, too, I suppose. We were strolling slowly toward the clubhouse.
+
+"I don't give Dr. Bowman much," I said deliberately. A quick look came
+my way, and,
+
+"Mr. Gilbert was greatly attached to him. Everybody's always believed
+that only Mr. Gilbert's influence held that match together. Now he's
+dead, and Laura's freed from some sort of control he seemed to have over
+her, of course she hopes and expects she'll be able to divorce the
+doctor in peace and marry Jim."
+
+"No movement of the sort yet?"
+
+She stopped and faced round toward me.
+
+"Dr. Bowman--he's our family physician, you know--is trying for a very
+fine position away from here, in an exclusive sanitarium. Divorce
+proceedings coming now would ruin his chances. But I don't know how long
+he can persuade Laura to hold off. She's in a strange mood; I can't make
+her out, myself. She disliked Gilbert; yet his death seems to have upset
+her frightfully."
+
+"You say she didn't like Mr. Gilbert?"
+
+"They hated each other. But--he was so peculiar--of course that wasn't
+strange. Many people detested him. Bron never did. He always forgave him
+everything because he said he was insane. Bron told you my
+experience--the one that made me break with Worth?"
+
+She looked at me, a level look; no shifting of color, no flutter of
+eyelid or throat. We were at the clubhouse steps.
+
+"Here comes the boy himself," I warned as Worth and Barbara, their arms
+full of ferns, rounded the turn from the little dip at the side of the
+grounds where the stream went through. We stood and waited for them.
+
+"You two," Ina spoke quickly to them. "Mr. Boyne's just promised to come
+over to dinner to-morrow night." Her glance asked me to accept the fib
+and the invitation. "I want both of you."
+
+"I'm going to be at your house anyhow, Ina," Barbara said, "working with
+Skeet painting those big banners they've tacked up out in your court.
+You'll have to feed us; but we'll be pretty messy. I don't know about a
+dinner party."
+
+"It isn't," Ina protested, smiling. "It's just what you said--feeding
+you. Nobody there besides yourself and Skeet but Mr. Boyne and Worth--if
+he'll come."
+
+"I have to go up to San Francisco to-morrow," said Worth.
+
+"But you'll be back by dinner time?" Ina added quickly.
+
+"If I make it at all."
+
+"Well, you can come just as you are, if you get in at the last minute,"
+she said, and he and Barbara went on to carry their ferns in. When they
+were out of hearing, she turned and floored me with,
+
+"Mr. Vandeman has forbidden me to say this to you, but I'm going to
+speak. If Worth doesn't have to be told about me--and his father--I'd be
+glad."
+
+"If the missing leaves of the diary are ever found," I came up slowly,
+"he'd probably know then." I watched her as I said it. What a strange
+look of satisfaction in the little curves about her mouth as she spoke
+next:
+
+"Those leaves will never be found, Mr. Boyne. I burned them. Mr. Gilbert
+presented them to me as a wedding gift. He was insane, but, intending to
+take his own life, I think even his strangely warped conscience refused
+to let a lying record stand against an innocent girl who had never done
+him any harm."
+
+We stood silent a moment, then she looked round at me brightly with,
+
+"You're coming to dinner to-morrow night? So glad to have you. At seven
+o'clock. Well--if this is all, then?" and at my nod, she went up the
+steps, turning at the side door to smile and wave at me.
+
+What a woman! I could but admire her nerve. If her alibi proved
+copper-fastened, as something told me it would, I had no more hope of
+bringing home the murder of Thomas Gilbert to Mrs. Bronson Vandeman of
+Santa Ysobel than I had of readjusting the stars in their courses!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII
+
+A BIT OF SILK
+
+
+I must admit that when Worth and Barbara walked up and found me talking
+to Ina Vandeman, I felt caught dead to rights. The girl gave me one
+long, steady look. I was afraid of Barbara Wallace's eyes. Then and
+there I relinquished all idea of having her help in this inquiry. She
+could have done it much better than I, attracted less attention--but no
+matter. The awkward moment went by, however; I heaved a sigh of relief
+as they carried their ferns on into the clubhouse, and Mrs. Vandeman
+left me with gracious good-bys.
+
+I had the luck to cover my first inquiry by getting a lift into town
+from Mrs. Ormsby, young wife of the president of the First National.
+Alone with me in her little electric, she answered every question I
+cared to put, and said she would be careful to speak to no one of the
+matter. Three others I caught on the wing, as it were, busy at blossom
+festival affairs; the fête only one day off now, things were moving
+fast. I glimpsed Dr. Bowman down town and thought he rather carefully
+avoided seeing me. His wife was taking no part; the word went that she
+was not able; but when I called at what had been the Wallace and was now
+the Bowman home, I found the front door open and two ladies in the hall.
+
+One of them, Laura Bowman herself, came flying out to meet me--or
+rather, it seemed, to stop me, with a face of dismay.
+
+"My mother's here, Mr. Boyne!" Her hand was clammy cold; she'd been
+warned of me and my errand. "I don't want to take you through that way."
+
+I stood passive, and let her do the saying.
+
+"Around here," she faltered. "We can go in at the side door."
+
+We skirted the house by a narrow walk; she was leading the way by this
+other entrance, when, spread out over its low step, blocking our
+progress, I saw a small Japanese woman ripping up a satin dress.
+
+"Let us pass, Oomie."
+
+"Wait. We can talk as well here," I checked her. We moved on a few
+paces, out of earshot of the girl; but before I could put my questions,
+she began with a sort of shattered vehemence to protest that Thomas
+Gilbert's death was suicide.
+
+"It was, Mr. Boyne. Anybody who knew the scourge Thomas had been to
+those he must have loved in his queer, distorted way, and any one who
+loved them, could believe he might take his own life."
+
+"You speak freely, Mrs. Bowman," I said. "Then you hated the man?"
+
+"Oh, I did! For years past I've never heard of a death without wondering
+that God took other human beings and let him live. Now that he's killed
+himself, it seems dreadful to me that suspicion should be cast on--"
+
+"Mrs. Bowman," I interrupted. "Thomas Gilbert's death was murder. All
+persons who could have had motive or might have had opportunity to kill
+him will be under suspicion till the investigation clears them of it.
+I'm now ascertaining the whereabouts of Ina Vandeman that evening."
+
+A shudder went through her; she looked at me feelingly, twisting her
+hands together in the way I remembered. Despite her distress, she was
+very simple and accessible. She gave me no resistance, admitted her
+absence from the Thornhill house at about the time the party was ready
+to start for San Francisco--Edwards, of course. I got nothing new here.
+She seemed thankful enough to go into the house when I released her.
+
+I lingered a moment to have a word with the little Japanese woman on the
+step.
+
+"How long you work this place?"
+
+"Two hours af-noon, every day," ducking and giggling like a mechanical
+toy.
+
+Just a piece-worker, not a regular servant.
+
+"Pretty dress," I touched the satin on the step. "Whose?"
+
+"Mine." Grinning, she spread a breadth out over her knees. "Lady no like
+any more. Mine." It was a peculiar shade of peacock blue; unless I was
+mistaken, the one Mrs. Bowman had worn that night at Tait's.
+
+"Hello--what's this?" I bent to examine a small hole in the hem of that
+breadth Oomie was so delightedly smoothing.
+
+"O-o-o-o! I think may-may burn'm. Not like any more."
+
+There was a small round hole. Just so a cigarette might have seared--or
+a bullet.
+
+"Not can use," I said to Oomie, indicating the injured bit. "Cut that
+off. Give me." And I laid a silver dollar on the step.
+
+Giggling, the little brown woman snipped out the bit of hem and handed
+it to me. I glanced up from tucking it into my pocket, and saw Laura
+Bowman's white face staring at me through the glass of that side entry
+door.
+
+A suggestive lead, certainly; but it's my way to follow one lead at a
+time: I went on to the Thornhill place.
+
+Everybody there would know my errand; for though, with taste I could but
+admire, Ina had put no name of any member of the family on her list, she
+of course expected me to call on them, and would never have let her
+sisters leave the country club without a warning.
+
+The three were just taking their hats off in the hall when I arrived. I
+did my questioning there, not troubling to take them separately. Cora
+and Ernestine, a well bred pair of Inas, without her pep, perhaps a
+shade less good looking, made their replies with none of the usual
+flutter of feminine curiosity and excitement, then went on in the living
+room. Skeet of course was as practical and brief as a sensible boy.
+
+"I don't know whether she's fit to see you," she said when I spoke of
+her mother. And on the instant, Ina Vandeman's clear, high voice called
+down the stair,
+
+"Bring Mr. Boyne up--now."
+
+Skeet stepped aside for me to pass. I suppose I looked as startled as I
+felt, for on my way to the house, I had seen Mrs. Vandeman drive past
+toward town. I stood there at a loss, and finally said aimlessly,
+
+"Your sister thinks it's all right?"
+
+"My sister?" Skeet wrinkled her brows at me, and glanced to where the
+twins were in sight in the living room. "That was mother herself who
+called you."
+
+All the way up the stairs, Skeet following, I was trying to swing my
+rather heavy wits around to take advantage of this new development. So
+far, Ina Vandeman's voice, imitated by Barbara Wallace, and recognized
+by Chung and Jim Edwards, possibly by Worth, had been my lead in this
+direction. If more than one woman spoke in that voice--where would it
+take me?
+
+I'd got no adjustment before I was ushered into a large dim room, and
+confronted by a figure in a reclining chair by the window. Here, in
+spite of years and illness, were the same good looks and thoroughbred
+courage that seemed to characterize the women of this family. Mrs.
+Thornhill greeted me in Ina Vandeman's very tones, a little high-pitched
+for real sweetness, full of a dominating quality, and she showed a
+composure I had not expected. To Skeet, standing by, watching to see
+that her mother didn't overdo in talking to me, she said,
+
+"Dear, go down stairs. Jane's left her dinner on the range and gone to
+the grocery. You look after it while she's away."
+
+When we were alone, she lay back in her chair, eyes closed, or seemingly
+so, and made her statement. She'd been in her daughter's room only twice
+between the reception and that daughter's going away.
+
+"But the room was full of other people," a glimmer between lashes. "I
+could give you the names of those others."
+
+"Thank you," I said. "Mrs. Vandeman has already done that. I've seen
+them all."
+
+"You've seen them--all?" a long, furtively drawn breath. Then her eyes
+flashed open and fixed themselves on me. Relief was there, yet something
+stricken, as they traveled over me from my gray thatch to my big feet.
+
+"Now, Mrs. Thornhill," I said, "aside from those two visits to your
+daughter's room, where were you that evening?"
+
+A slow flush crept into her thin cheeks. The unreadable eyes that were
+traveling over Jerry Boyne stopped suddenly and held him with a quiet
+stare.
+
+"I understood it was my daughter's movements on that evening you wished
+to trace, Mr. Boyne," she said slowly. "It would be difficult to trace
+mine. Really, I had so much on my hands with the reception and
+inefficient help--" She broke off, her eyes never leaving my own, even
+as she added smoothly, "It would be very, very difficult."
+
+There is an effect in class almost like the distinction of race. These
+women spoke a baffling language; their psychology was hard for me. If
+there was something hid up amongst them that ought to be uncovered by
+diplomacy and delicate indirection, it would take a smarter man than the
+one who stood in my number tens to do it.
+
+"Mrs. Thornhill," I said, "you did leave the house. You went to Mr.
+Gilbert's study. The shot that killed him left you a nervous wreck, so
+that you can't hear a tire blow-out without reënacting in your mind the
+scene of that murder. You'll talk now."
+
+"You think I will? Talk to you?" very low and quiet, eyes once more
+closed.
+
+"Why not? It's got to come; here in your own home, with me--or I'll have
+to put you where you'll be forced to answer questions."
+
+"Oh, you threaten me, do you?" Her eyes flashed open, and looked at me,
+hard as flint. "Very well. I'll answer no questions as to what happened
+on the evening of Thomas Gilbert's death, except in the presence of
+Worth Gilbert, his son."
+
+My retirement down the Thornhill stairs, made with such dignity as I
+could muster, was in fact, a panic flight. Halfway, Cora Thornhill all
+but finished me by looking out from the living room, and calling in Ina
+Vandeman's voice,
+
+"Erne, show Mr. Boyne out, won't you?"
+
+Ernestine completed the job when she answered--in Ina Vandeman's voice,
+also--
+
+"Yes, dear; I will." It was only the scraps of me that she swept out
+through the front door.
+
+I stood on the porch and mopped my brow. Across, there at the Gilbert
+place was Worth himself, charging around the grounds with Vandeman and a
+lot of other decorators, pruning shears in hand, going for a thicket of
+bamboos that shut off the vegetable garden. At one side Barbara stood
+alone, looking, it seemed to me, rather depressed. I made for her. She
+met me with,
+
+"I know what you've been doing. Skeet came to me about it while Ina was
+phoning home from the country club."
+
+"Well--she should worry! I've just finished with her list. Got an
+unbreakable alibi."
+
+"She would have," Barbara said listlessly. "She wasn't at the study that
+evening."
+
+"Huh! I worked on your tip that she was."
+
+Barbara had pulled off the little stitched hat she wore; yet the deep
+flush on her cheeks was neither from sun nor an afternoon's hard work.
+It, and the quick straightening of her figure, the lift of her chin, had
+to do with me and my activities.
+
+"Mr. Boyne," the black eyes came around to me with a flash, "do you
+suspect me of trying to pay off a spite on Ina Vandeman?"
+
+"Good Lord--no!" I exploded. "And anyhow, I've just found that what you
+imitated and Chung recognized, might as well have been the mother's
+voice as the daughter's."
+
+"Yes," she assented. "Any one of the family--under stress of emotion."
+Then suddenly, "And why do I tell you that? You'll not get from it what
+I do. I ought never to have mixed up my kind of mental work with other
+people's. I'd promised my own soul that I would never make another
+deduction. Then Worth came and asked me--that night at Tait's. I might
+say now that I never will any more...." She broke off, storm in her eyes
+and in her voice as she finished, "But I suppose if he wanted me to
+again--I'd make a little fool of myself for his amusement just as I did
+this time and have done all these other times!"
+
+"I'll not ask anything more of you, Barbara," I said to her hastily,
+confused and abashed before the glimpse she'd given me of her heart.
+"Except that I beg you to stay good friends with Cummings. That man
+hates Worth. If you turned him down now--say, for the ball, or anything
+like that--he'd be twice as hard for us to handle. Keep him a passive
+enemy instead of an active one, as long as he seems to find it necessary
+to hang around Santa Ysobel."
+
+"You know what's holding Mr. Cummings here, don't you?" She glanced
+somberly past the bamboo gatherers to where we saw a gray corner of the
+study with its pink ivy geranium blossoms atop. "Mr. Cummings is held
+here by two steel bolts--the bolts on those study doors. Until he finds
+how they can be moved through an inch of planking--he'll not leave Santa
+Ysobel."
+
+She'd put it in a nutshell. And I couldn't let him beat me to it. I'd
+got to get the jump on him.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV
+
+THE MAGNET
+
+
+I had all set for next morning: my roadster at Capehart's for repair,
+old Bill tipped off that I didn't want any one but Eddie Hughes to work
+on it; and to add to my satisfaction, there arrived in my daily grist
+from the office, the report that they had Skeels in jail at Tiajuana.
+
+"Well, Jerry, old socks," Worth hailed my news as I followed out to his
+car where he was starting for San Francisco, and going to drop me at the
+Capehart garage, "Some luck! If Skeels is in jail at Tiajuana, and what
+I'm after to-day turns out right, we may have both ends of the string."
+
+Pink-and-white were the miles of orchards surrounding Santa Ysobel,
+pink-and-white nearly all the dooryards, every tree its own little
+carnival of bloom with bees for guests. Already the streets were full of
+life, double the usual traffic. As we neared the Capehart cottage, on
+its quiet side street about half a block from the garage, there was
+Barbara under the apple boughs at the gate, talking to some man whose
+back was to us. She bowed; I answered with a wave toward the garage; but
+Worth scooted us past without, I thought, once glancing her way, sent
+the roadster across Main where he should have stopped and let me out,
+went on and into the highway at a clip which rocked us.
+
+"Was that Cummings?" holding my hat on. No answer that I could hear,
+while we made speed toward San Francisco. And still no word was spoken
+until we had outraged the sensibilities of all whose bad luck it was to
+meet us, those whom we passed going at a more reasonable pace, scared a
+team of work horses into the ditch, and settled down to a steady whiz.
+
+We were getting away from Santa Ysobel a good deal further and a good
+deal faster than I felt I could afford. I took a chance and remarked, to
+nobody in particular, and in a loud voice,
+
+"I asked Barbara not to make a break with Cummings; it would be awkward
+for us now if she did."
+
+"Break?" Worth gave me back one of my words.
+
+"Yes. I was afraid she might throw him down for the carnival ball."
+
+Without comment or reply, he slowed gently for the big turn where the
+Medlow road comes in, swept a handsome circle and headed back. Then he
+remarked,
+
+"Thought I'd show you what the little boat could do under my management.
+Eddie had her in fair shape, but I've tuned her up a notch or two
+since."
+
+I responded with proper enthusiasm, and would have been perfectly
+willing to be let out at Main Street. But he turned the corner there,
+ran on to the garage, jumped out and followed me in. Bill, selling some
+used tires to a customer in the office, nodded and let us go past to
+where my machine stood. We heard voices back in the repair shop and a
+hum of swift whirring shafts and pulleys. Worth kept with me. It
+embarrassed me--made me nervous. It was as though he had some notion of
+my purpose there. Hughes, at his lathe, caught sight of us and growled
+over his shoulder,
+
+"Yer machine's ready."
+
+This wouldn't do. I stepped to the door, with,
+
+"Fixed the radiator, did you?"
+
+"Sure. Whaddye think?" Hughes was at work on something for a girl; she
+perched at one end of his bench, swinging her feet. Worth, behind me,
+touched my shoulder, and I saw that the girl over there was Barbara
+Wallace.
+
+She looked up at us and smiled. The sun slanting through dirt covered
+windows, made color effects on her silken black hair. Eddie gave us
+another scowl and went on with his work.
+
+"Hello, Bobs," Worth's greeting was casual. "Thought I'd stop and tell
+you I was on my way--you know." A glance of understanding passed between
+them. "Better come along?"
+
+"I'd like to," she smiled. "You'll be back by dinner time. If it wasn't
+the last day, and I hadn't promised--"
+
+Neither of them in any hurry.
+
+"Hughes," I said, "there's another thing needs doing on that car of
+mine--"
+
+"Can't do nothing at all till I finish her job," he shrugged me off.
+
+"All right," and I stepped through into the grassy back yard, put a
+smoke in my face, and began walking up and down, my glance, each time I
+turned, encountering that queer bunch inside: Worth, hands in pockets;
+the chauffeur he had discharged--and that I was waiting to get for
+murder--bending at his vise; Barbara's shining dark head close to the
+tousled unkemptness of his poll, as she explained to him the pulley
+arrangement needed to raise and anchor the banner she and Skeet were
+painting.
+
+Suddenly, at the far end of my beat, I was brought up by a little outcry
+and stir. As I wheeled toward the door, I saw Bobs and Worth in it,
+apparently wrestling over something. Laughing, crying, she hung to his
+wrist with one hand, the other covering one of her eyes.
+
+"Let me look!" he demanded. "I won't touch it, if you don't want me to.
+You have got something in there, Bobs."
+
+But when she reluctantly gave him his chance, he treacherously went for
+her with a corner of his handkerchief in the traditional way, and she
+backed off, uttering a cry that fetched Hughes around from the lathe,
+roaring at Worth, above the noise of the machinery,
+
+"What's the matter with her?"
+
+"Steel splinter--in her eye," Worth shouted.
+
+With a quick oath, the belt pole was thrown to stop the lathe; down the
+length of the shop to the scrap heap of odds and ends at the rear Hughes
+raced, returning with a bit of metal in his hand. Barbara was backed
+against the bench, her eyes shut, and tears had begun to flow from under
+the lids.
+
+"Now, Miss Barbie," Hughes remonstrated. "You let me at that thing.
+This'll pull it out and never touch you." I saw it was a horse-shoe
+magnet he carried.
+
+"Do you think it will?"
+
+"Sure," and Eddie approached the magnet to her face. "It won't hurt you
+a-tall. She'll begin to pull before she even touches. Now, steady. Want
+to come as near contact as I can. Don't jump.... Hell!"
+
+Barbara had sprung away from him. But for Worth's quick arm, she would
+have been into the machines.
+
+"No!" she said between locked teeth, tears on her cheeks, "I can't let
+him."
+
+"Why, Barbara!" I said, astonished; and poor Eddie almost blubbered as
+he begged,
+
+"Aw, come on, Miss Barbie. It was my fault in the first place--leavin'
+that damned lathe run. Yuh got to let me--"
+
+"But if it doesn't work?"
+
+"Sure it'll work. Would I offer to use it for you if I hadn't tried it
+out lots o' times--to pull splinters and--"
+
+"Give me that magnet," Worth reached the long arm of authority, got what
+he wanted, shouldered Hughes aside, and took hold of the girl with,
+"Quit being a little fool, Barbara. That thing's only caught in your
+lashes now. Let it get in against the eyeball and you'll have trouble.
+Hold still."
+
+The command was not needed. Without a word, Barbara raised her face, put
+her hands behind her and waited.
+
+Delicately, Worth caught the dark fringe of the closed eye, turned back
+the lid so that he could see just what he was at, brought the horse-shoe
+almost in touch, then drew it away--and there was the tiny steel
+splinter that could have cost her sight, clinging to the magnet's edge.
+
+"Here you are," he smiled. "Wasn't that enough to call you names for?"
+
+"You didn't call me names," dabbing away with a small handkerchief. "You
+told me to quit being a little fool. Maybe I will. How would you like
+that?"
+
+Apparently Hughes did not resent Barbara's refusing his help and
+accepting Worth's. He went back to his vise; the two others strolled
+together through the doorway into the garage, talking there for a moment
+in quick, low tones; then Barbara returned to perch on the end of
+Eddie's bench, play with the magnet and watch him at work. I lit up
+again and stepped out.
+
+I could see Barbara gather some nails, screws and loose pieces of iron,
+hold a bit of board over them, and trail the magnet back and forth along
+its top. Though a half inch of wood intervened, the metal trash on the
+bench followed the magnet to and fro. I got nothing out of that except
+that Barbara was still a child, playing like a child, till I looked up
+suddenly to find that she had ceased the play, brought her feet up to
+curl them under her in the familiar Buddha pose, while the busy hands
+were dropped and folded before her. Her rebellion of yesterday
+evening--and now her taking up the concentration unasked--she wouldn't
+want me to notice what she was doing; I ducked out of sight. I had
+walked up and down that yard a half dozen times more, when over me with
+a rush came the significance of those moving bits of iron, trailing a
+magnet on the other side of a board. Three long steps took me to the
+door.
+
+"Hughes," I shouted, "I'm taking my machine now. Be back directly."
+
+The man grunted without turning around. I had forgotten Barbara, but as
+I was climbing into the roadster, I heard her jump to the floor and
+start after me.
+
+"Mr. Boyne! Wait! Mr. Boyne!"
+
+I checked and sat grinning as she came up, the magnet in her hand. I
+reached for it.
+
+"Give me that," I whispered. "Want to go along and see me use it?"
+
+"No--no--" in hushed protest. "You're making a mistake, Mr. Boyne."
+
+"Mistake? I saw what you did in there. Said you never would again--then
+went right to it! You sure got something this time! Girl--girl! You've
+turned the trick!"
+
+"Oh, _no_! You mustn't take it like that, Mr. Boyne. This is nothing--as
+it stands. Just a single unrelated fact that I used with others to
+concentrate on. Wait. Do wait--till Worth comes back, anyhow."
+
+"All right." I felt that our voices were getting loud, that we'd talked
+here too long. No use of flushing the game before I was loaded. "First
+thing to do is to verify this." I felt good all over.
+
+"Yes, of course," she smiled faintly. "You would want to do that." And
+she climbed in beside me.
+
+I drove so fast that Barbara had no chance to question me, though she
+did find openings for remonstrating at my speed. I dashed into the
+driveway of the Gilbert place and came to an abrupt stop at the doors of
+the garage. And right away I bumped up against my first check. I gripped
+the magnet, raced to the study door with it, she following more slowly
+to watch while I passed it along the wooden panel where the bolt ran on
+the other side; and nothing doing!
+
+Again she followed as I ran around to the outside door, opened up and
+tried it on the bare bolt itself; no stir. While she sat in the desk
+chair at that central table, her elbows on its top, her hands lightly
+clasped, the chin dropped in interlaced fingers, following my movements
+with very little interest, I puffed and worked, opened a door and tried
+to move the bolt when it wasn't in the socket, and felt like cursing in
+disappointment.
+
+"A little oil--" I grumbled, more to myself than to her, and hurried to
+the garage workbench for the can that would certainly be there. It was,
+but I didn't touch it. What I did lean over and clutch from where they
+lay tossed in carelessly among rubbish and old spare parts, were three
+more magnets exactly the same as the one we had brought from Capehart's.
+I sprinted back with them.
+
+"Barbara," I called in an undertone. "Come here. Look."
+
+Held side by side, the four, working as one, moved the bolts as well as
+fingers could have done, and through more than an inch of hard wood.
+
+"Yes," she looked at it; "but that doesn't prove Eddie Hughes the
+murderer."
+
+"No?" her opposition began to get on my nerves. "I'm afraid that'll be a
+matter for twelve good men and true to settle." She stood silent, and I
+added, "I know now whose shadow I saw on the broken panel of that door
+there, the first Sunday night."
+
+"Oh, it was Eddie's," she agreed rather unexpectedly.
+
+"And he came to steal the 1920 diary," I supplied.
+
+"He came to get a drink from the cellaret, and a cigar from the case.
+That's the use he made of his power to move these bolts."
+
+"Until the Saturday night when he killed his employer, the man he hated,
+and left things so the crime would pass as suicide. Barbara, are you
+just plain perverse?"
+
+Instead of answering, she went back to the table, got the contraption
+Hughes had made for her, and started as if to leave me. On the
+threshold, she hesitated.
+
+"I don't suppose there's anything I can say or do to change your mind,"
+her tone was inert, drained. "I know that Eddie is innocent of this. But
+you don't want to listen to deductions."
+
+"Later," I said to her, briskly. "It'll keep. I've something to do now."
+
+"What? You promised Worth to make no move against Eddie Hughes until you
+had his permission." She seemed to think that settled it. I let her keep
+the idea.
+
+"Run along, Barbara," I said, "get to your paint daubing. I'll forgive
+you everything for deducing--well, discovering, if you like that
+better--about these bolts and magnets."
+
+Skeet burst from the kitchen door of the Thornhill house, caught sight
+of us, shouted something unintelligible, and came racing through the
+grounds toward Vandeman's.
+
+"Been waiting for me long, angel?" she called, as Barbara moved up with
+a lagging step, then, waving two pairs of overalls, "Got pants for both
+of us, honey. The paints and brushes are over there. We'll make short
+work of that old banner, now."
+
+Promised Worth, had I? But the situation was changed since then. No man
+of sense could object to my moving on what I had now. I locked the study
+door, went back to my roadster, and headed her uptown.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV
+
+AN ARREST
+
+
+It was a thankful if not a joyous Jerry Boyne who crossed the front
+pergola of the Vandeman bungalow that evening in the wake of Worth
+Gilbert, bound for an informal dinner. The tall, unconscious lad who
+stepped ahead of me had been made safe in spite of himself. This weight
+off my mind, I felt kindly to the whole world, to the man under whose
+dining table we were to stretch our legs, whose embarrassing private
+affairs I had uncovered. He'd taken it well--seconding his wife's dinner
+invitation, meeting my eye frankly whenever we encountered. My mood was
+expansive. When Vandeman himself opened the door to us, explaining that
+he was his own butler for the day, I saw him quite other than he had
+ever appeared to me.
+
+For one thing, here in his own house--and this was the first time I had
+ever been in it--you got the man with his proper background, his
+suitable atmosphere. The handsome living room into which he took us,
+showed many old pieces of mahogany, and some of the finest oriental
+stuff I ever saw; books in cases, sets of standard writers, such as
+people of culture bought thirty or forty years ago, some family pictures
+about. This was Vandeman; a lot behind such a fellow, after all, if he
+did seem rather a lightweight.
+
+Ina joined us, very beautifully dressed. She also showed the ability to
+sink unpleasant considerations in the present moment of hospitality. We
+lingered a moment chatting, then,
+
+"Shall we go and look at the artists working?" she suggested, and led
+the way. We followed out onto a flagged terrace at the rear. A dozen
+great muslin strips were tacked over the walls there, and two small
+figures, desperate, smudged, wearing the blue overalls Skeet Thornhill
+had waved at us, toiled manfully smearing the blossom festival colors on
+in lettering and ornamental designs.
+
+"Ina!" Skeet yawped at her sister, "Another dirty, low Irish trick! Get
+yourself all dressed up like a sore thumb, and then show us off in this
+fix!"
+
+Mutely Barbara revolved on the box she occupied. There was fire in her
+soft eyes; her color was high as her glance came to rest on Worth.
+
+"Fong Ling's nearly ready to serve dinner," said Ina calmly. "Stop
+fussing, and go wash up."
+
+"Hello, Mr. Boyne." As Skeet passed me, she wiped a paw on a paint rag
+and offered it to me without another word. I got a grip and a look that
+told me there was no hang-over with her from that scene yesterday in her
+mother's sick-room. Vandeman was commenting on his depleted bamboo
+clumps.
+
+"Mine suffered worse than yours, Worth. Fong Ling kicked like a bay
+steer about our taking so much. He's nursed the stuff for years like a
+fond mother. But we had to have it for that effect up around the
+orchestra stand."
+
+"Then he's been with you a long time?" I caught at the chance for
+information on this chink--information that I'd found it impossible to
+get from the chink himself.
+
+"Ever since I came in here. Chinamen, you know--not like Japs. Some
+loyalty. You can keep a good one for half a lifetime."
+
+We strolled back to the living room; the girls were there before us,
+Skeet picking out bits of plum-blossoms and bunches of cherry bloom from
+a great bowl on the mantel, and sticking them in Barbara's dark hair,
+wreath fashion.
+
+"Best we could do at a splurge," she greeted us, "was to turn in our
+blouses at the neck."
+
+"And what in the world are you doing to Barbara?" Mrs. Vandeman said
+sharply. "Let her alone, Skeet. You'll make her look ridiculous."
+
+Skeet stuck out her tongue at her sister, and went calmly on, mumbling
+as she worked,
+
+"Hold 'till 'ittle Barbie child. Yook up at pretty mans and hold 'till."
+
+Over the mantel, in front of Barbara as she stood, her back to us all,
+hung an oil painting--one of those family groups--same old popper; same
+old mommer, and a fat baby in a white dress and blue sash. At that, it
+was good enough to show that the man had some resemblance to Vandeman as
+he leaned there on the mantel below it, rather encouraging Skeet's
+enterprise. From the other side, I could see Barbara's glance go from
+man to picture.
+
+"Doesn't it look like Van, Barbie?" Skeet kept up the conversation. "Got
+the same ring, and all. But it ain't Van. Him's the tootsie in there
+with the blue ribbon round his tummy."
+
+"I say, Skeeter, lay off!" Vandeman looked self-consciously from the
+painted ring in the picture to the real ring on his own well kept hand
+there on the mantel edge. "People aren't interested in family
+histories."
+
+"I am," said Barbara, unexpectedly. As the gong sounded and we all began
+to move toward the dining room, they were still on the subject and kept
+it up after we were seated.
+
+Fong Ling served us. The bride had Worth on her right, and talked to him
+in lowered tones. Barbara, between Vandeman and myself, continued to
+show an almost feverish attention to Vandeman. It was plain enough from
+where I sat that nothing Ina Vandeman could say gave the lad any less
+interest in his plate. But I suppose with a girl, the mere fact of some
+other girl being allowed to show intentions counts. Did the flapper get
+what was going on, as she looked proudly across at her handiwork, and
+demanded of me,
+
+"Say, Mr. Boyne, you saw how Ina tried to do us dirt? And now, honest to
+goodness, hasn't Barbie with the plum-blossoms got Ina and her
+artificial flowers skun a mile?"
+
+I didn't wonder that young Mrs. Vandeman saved me the necessity of
+answering, by taking her up.
+
+"Skeet, you're too outrageous!"
+
+There she sat, quite a beauty in a very superior fashion; and Worth at
+her side, was having his attention called to this dark young creature
+across the table, whose wonderful still fire, the white blossoms
+crowning her hair, might well have made even a lovelier than Ina
+Vandeman look insipid. And Worth did take his time admiring her; I saw
+that; but all he found to say was,
+
+"Bobs, I suppose Jerry's told you that he's treed Clayte at Tiajuana?"
+
+"No," said Barbara, "he hasn't said a word. But I'm just as much
+surprised at Clayte's being caught as I was at Skeels escaping capture."
+
+"Say that over and say it slow," Vandeman was good natured. "Or rather,
+put it in plain American, so we all can understand."
+
+"Mr. Boyne knows what I mean." Barbara gave me a faint smile. "Mr. Boyne
+and I add up Skeels and Clayte, and get a different result. That's all."
+
+"Bobs doesn't think that Skeels is Clayte, caught or uncaught," Worth
+said briefly and went on eating his dinner. Apparently he didn't give a
+hang which way the fact turned out to be.
+
+"Why don't you?" Vandeman gave passing attention. She shook her head and
+put it.
+
+"Skeels, at liberty, was quite possibly Clayte; Skeels captured cannot
+be Clayte. Mr. Boyne, do you call that a paradox?"
+
+"No--an unkind slam at a poor old man's ability in his profession. I
+started out to find a gang; but Clayte and Skeels are so exactly one,
+mentally, morally and physically, that I don't see why we should seek
+further."
+
+"Back up, Jerry," Worth tossed it over at me. "Let Barbara"--he didn't
+often use the girl's full name that way--"give you a description of
+Clayte before you're so sure."
+
+"How could I?" The girl's tone was defensive. "I never saw him."
+
+"I want you," Worth paid no attention to her objections, "to describe
+the man you thought you were asking for that day at the Gold Nugget,
+when Jerry butted in, and your ideas got lost in the excitement about
+Skeels. Deduce the description, I mean."
+
+"Deduce it?" Barbara spoke stiffly, incredulously, her glance going from
+Worth to the well-gowned, well-groomed woman beside him. I remembered
+her moment of rebellion yesterday evening on the lawn, when she said so
+bitterly that if he asked it again, she'd do it again, as she finished,
+"Deduce--here?"
+
+"Here and now." Worth's laconic answer sent the blood of healthy anger
+into her face, made her eyes shine. And it brought from Ina Vandeman a
+petulant,
+
+"Oh, Worth, please don't turn my dinner table into a side-show."
+
+"Ina, dear." Vandeman raised his eyes at her, then quite the cordial
+host urging a guest to display talent, "They say you're wonderful at
+that sort of thing, and I've never seen it."
+
+Barbara was mad for fair.
+
+"Oh, very well," she spoke pointedly to Vandeman, and left Worth out of
+it. "If you think you'd really enjoy seeing me make a side-show of Ina's
+dinner table--"
+
+She stopped and waited. Vandeman played up to the situation as he saw
+it, with one of his ready smiles. Worth threw no life-line. Ina didn't
+think it worth while to apologize for her rudeness. Skeet was openly in
+a twitter of anticipation. There was nothing for me to do. A little
+commotion of skirts told us that she was drawing up her feet to sit
+cross-legged in her chair.
+
+"She's going to! Oh, golly!" Skeet chortled. "Haven't seen Bobsy do one
+of those stunts since I was a che-ild!"
+
+Arms down, hands clasped, eyes growing bigger, face paling into snow, we
+watched her. To all but Vandeman, this was a more or less familiar
+performance. They took it rather as a matter of course. It was the
+Chinaman, coming in with the coffee tray, who seemed most strangely
+affected by it. He stopped where he was in the doorway, rigid, staring
+at our girl, though with a changeful light in his eye that seemed to me
+to shift between an unreasonable admiration and an unreasonable fear.
+Orientals are superstitious; but what could the fellow be afraid of in
+the beautiful young thing, Buddha posed, blossoms in her hair? The girl
+had gone into her stunt with a sort of angry energy. He seemed to clutch
+himself to stillness for the brief time that it held. Only in the moment
+that she relaxed, and we knew that Barbara had concentrated, Barbara was
+Barbara again, did he move quietly forward, a decent, competent servant,
+stepping around the table, placing our cups.
+
+"Just two facts to go on," she said coldly. "My results will be pretty
+general."
+
+"Nothing to go on in the way of a description of Clayte," I tried to
+help her out. "I'd call that one we had of him as near nothing as it
+well could be."
+
+"Yes, the nothingness of it was one of my facts," she said, and stopped.
+
+"Let's hear what you did get, Bobs," Worth prompted; and Skeet giggled,
+half under her breath,
+
+"Speech! Speech!"
+
+"At the Gold Nugget--whatever he called himself there--Edward Clayte
+was ten years younger than he had seemed at the bank; he appeared to
+weigh a dozen pounds more; threw out his chest, walked with his head up,
+and therefore would have been estimated quite a bit taller. This
+personality was an opposite of the other. Bank clerk Clayte was demure,
+unobtrusive; this man wore loud patterns. The bank clerk was silent;
+this man talked to every one around him, tilted his hat over one eye,
+smoked cigars just as those men were doing that day in the lobby; acted
+like them, was one of them. In the Gold Nugget, Clayte was a very
+average Gold Nugget guest--don't you see? Commonplace there, just as the
+other Clayte had been commonplace in a bank or an office."
+
+Her voice ceased. On the silence it left, Worth spoke up quietly.
+
+"Bull's eye as usual, Bobs. Every word you say is true. And at the Gold
+Nugget, his name was Henry J. Brundage. He had room thirty on the top
+floor."
+
+Skeet clapped her hands, jumped up and came around the table to kiss
+Barbara on the ear, and tell her she was the most wonderfullest girl in
+the world.
+
+"Heh!" I flared at Worth. "Find that all out to-day in San Francisco?"
+
+"No."
+
+"Oh, it was the Brundage clew that took you south?"
+
+"Yep. Left Louie on the job at the hotel while I was away. To-day, I
+went after Brundage's automobile. Found he'd kept one in a garage on
+Jackson Street."
+
+"It's gone, of course--and no trace," Barbara murmured.
+
+"Gone since the day of the bank theft," Worth nodded. "He and the money
+went in it."
+
+"Say," I leaned over toward him, "wouldn't it have saved wear and tear
+if you'd told me at the first that you knew Skeels couldn't be Clayte?"
+
+"Oh, but, Jerry, you were so sure! And Skeels wasn't possible for a
+minute--never in his little, piking, tin-horn life!"
+
+I don't believe I had seen Worth so happy since he was a boy, playing
+detective. I glanced around and pulled myself up; we certainly weren't
+making ourselves very entertaining for the Vandemans. There they sat, at
+their own table, like handsome figureheads, smiling politely, pretending
+a decent interest.
+
+"All this must be a bore to you people," I apologized.
+
+"Not at all--not at all," Vandeman assured us.
+
+"Well then if you don't mind--Worth, I'll go and use Vandeman's
+phone--put my office wise to these Brundage clews of yours."
+
+Worth nodded. No social scruples were his. I had by no means given up
+the belief that Skeels in jail at Tiajuana, would still turn out to be
+one of the gang.
+
+I had just got back to the table from my phoning when the doorbell rang;
+we saw the big Chinese slip noiselessly through the rear into the hall
+to answer it, coming back a moment later, announcing in his weighty,
+correct English,
+
+"Two gentlemen calling--to see Captain Gilbert."
+
+"Ask for me?" Worth came to his feet in surprise. "Who told them I was
+here?"
+
+"I do not know," the Chinaman spoke unnecessarily as Worth was crossing
+to the door. "I did not ask them that."
+
+"Use the living room, Worth," Vandeman called after him. "We'll wait
+here."
+
+With the closing of the door, conversation languished. Even Skeet was
+quiet and seemed depressed. My ears were straining for any sound from in
+there. As I sat, hand dropped at my side, I suddenly felt under shelter
+of the screening tablecloth, cold, nervous fingers slipped into mine.
+Barbara wasn't looking at me, but I gave her a quick glance as I pressed
+her gripping small hand encouragingly.
+
+She was turned toward Vandeman. Pale to the lips, her great eyes fixed
+on the eyes of our host, I saw with wonder how he slowly stirred a spoon
+about in his emptied coffee cup, and stared back at her with a face
+almost as colorless as her own. The bride glanced from one to the other
+of them, and spoke sharply,
+
+"What's the matter with you two? You're not uneasy about Worth's
+callers, are you?"
+
+"No-no-no--" Vandeman was the first to come out of it, responding to her
+voice a good deal as if she dashed cold water in his face, his eyes
+breaking away from Barbara's, his lips parted in a nervous smile. He ran
+a hand through his hair--an inelegant gesture for him at table--and
+laughed a little.
+
+"We ought to be in there," Barbara said to me, a curious stress in her
+voice.
+
+"How funny you talk, Barbie," Skeet quavered. "What do you think's
+wrong?" And Ina spoke decidedly,
+
+"Worth is one person in the world who can certainly take care of
+himself, and would rather be let alone."
+
+"If you think there is anything we should do--?" Vandeman began
+anxiously, and Skeet took a look around at our faces and fairly wailed,
+
+"What is it? What's the matter? What do you think they're doing to Worth
+in there, Barbie?"
+
+"I'd think they were arresting him," Barbara said in a low, choked tone,
+"Only they don't know--"
+
+"Arresting him!" I broke in on her, startled, getting halfway to my
+feet; then as remembrance came to me, sinking back with, "Certainly not.
+The murderer of Thomas Gilbert is already in the county jail. I arrested
+Eddie Hughes this morning."
+
+"You arrested--Eddie Hughes!" It was a cry from Barbara. The cold little
+hand was jerked from mine. Twisting around in her chair, she stared at
+me with a look that made me cold. "Then you've moved those two steel
+bolts for Cummings."
+
+I jumped to my feet. On the instant the door opened, and in it stood
+Worth, steady enough, but his brown tanned face was strangely bleached.
+
+"Jerry," he spoke briefly. "I want you. The sheriff's come for me."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI
+
+MRS. BOWMAN SPEAKS
+
+
+Midnight in the sheriff's office at San Jose. And I had to telephone
+Barbara. She'd be waiting up for my message. The minute I heard her
+voice on the wire, I plunged in:
+
+"Yes, yes, yes; done all I could. A horse can do no more. They've got
+Worth. I--" The words stuck in my throat; but they had to come out--"I
+left him in a cell."
+
+A sound came over the wire; whether speech or not, it was something I
+couldn't get.
+
+"He's taking it like a man and a soldier, girl," I hurried. "Not a word
+out of him about my having gone counter to his express orders, arrested
+Hughes, and pulled this thing over on us."
+
+"Oh, Mr. Boyne! Of course he wouldn't blame you. Neither would I. You
+acted for what you thought was his good. The others--"
+
+"Vandeman's already gone home. Tell you he stood by well, Barbara--that
+tailor's dummy! Surprised me. No, no. Didn't let Jim Edwards come with
+us; so broken up I didn't want him along--only hurt our case over here,
+the way he is now."
+
+"Your case?" she spoke out clearly. "What is the situation?"
+
+"A murder charge against Worth on the secret files. Hughes is
+out--Cummings got him--took him, don't know where. Can't locate him."
+
+"Do you need to?"
+
+"Perhaps not, Barbara. What I do need is some one who saw Thomas Gilbert
+alive that night after Worth left to go back to San Francisco."
+
+"And if you had that--some one?"
+
+"If we could produce before Cummings one credible witness to that, it
+would mean an alibi. I'd have Worth out before morning."
+
+"Then, Mr. Boyne, get to the Fremont House here as quickly as you can.
+Mr. Cummings is there. Get him out of bed if you have to. I'll bring the
+proof you need."
+
+"But, child!" I began.
+
+"Don't--waste--time--talking! How long will it take you to get here?"
+
+"Half an hour."
+
+"Oh! You may have to wait for me a little. But I'll surely come. Wait in
+Mr. Cummings' room."
+
+Half past twelve when I reached the Fremont House, to find it all
+alight, its lobby and corridors surging with the crowd of blossom
+festival guests. Nobody much in the bar; soft drinks held little
+interest; but in the upper halls, getting to Cummings' room, I passed
+more than one open door where the hip-pocket cargoes were unloading, and
+was even hailed by name, with invitations to come in and partake.
+Cummings was still up. The first word he gave me was,
+
+"Dykeman's here."
+
+"Glad of it," I said. "Bring him in. I want you both."
+
+It took a good deal of argument before he brought the Western Cereal
+man from the adjoining room where he had evidently been just getting
+ready for bed. He came to the conference resentful as a soreheaded old
+bear.
+
+"Maybe you think Worth Gilbert will sleep well to-night--in jail?" I
+stopped him, and instantly differentiated the two men before me.
+Cummings took it, with an ugly little half smile; Dykeman rumpled his
+hair, and bolstered his anger by shouting at me,
+
+"This country'll go to the dogs if we make an exempt class of our
+returned soldiers. Break the laws--they'll have to take the
+consequences, just as a man that was too old or too sickly to fight
+would have to take 'em. If I'd done what Captain Gilbert's done--I
+wouldn't expect mercy."
+
+"You mean, if you'd done what you say he's done," I countered. "Nothing
+proved yet."
+
+"Nothing proved?" Dykeman huddled in his chair and shivered. Cummings
+shook out an overcoat and helped him into it. He settled back with a
+protesting air of being about to leave us, and finished squeakily,
+"Didn't need to prove that he had Clayte's suitcase."
+
+"Good Lord, Mr. Dykeman! You're not lending yourself to accuse a man
+like Worth Gilbert of so grave a crime as murder, just because you found
+his ideas irregular--maybe reckless--in a matter of money?"
+
+"Don't answer, Dykeman!" Cummings jumped in. "Boyne's trying to get you
+to talk."
+
+The old chap stared at me doubtfully, then broke loose with a snort,
+
+"See here, Boyne, you can't get away from it; your man Gilbert has
+embarked on a criminal career: mixed up in the robbery of our bank,
+with Clayte to rob us; had our own attorney go through the form of
+raising money to buy us off from the pursuit of Clayte--"
+
+"How about me?" I stuck in the question as he paused for breath. "Do you
+think Worth Gilbert would put me on the track of a man he didn't want
+found?"
+
+Cummings cut in ahead to answer for him,
+
+"Just the point. You've not done any good at the inquiry; never will, so
+long as you stand with Worth Gilbert. He needed a detective who would
+believe in him through thick and thin. And he found such a man in you."
+
+I could not deny it when Dykeman yipped at me,
+
+"Ain't that true? If it was anybody else, wouldn't you see the
+connection? Captain Gilbert came here to Santa Ysobel that Saturday
+night--as we've got witnesses to testify--had a row with his
+father--we've got witnesses for that, too--the word money passed between
+them again and again in that quarrel--and then the young man had the
+nerve to walk into our bank next morning with his father's entire
+holdings of our stock in Clayte's suitcase--Boyne, you're crazy!"
+
+"Maybe not," I said, reckoning on something human in Dykeman to appeal
+to. "You see I know where Worth got that suitcase. It came out of my
+office vault--evidence we'd gathered in the Clayte hunt. Getting it and
+using it that way was his idea of humor, I suppose."
+
+"Sounds fishy." Dykeman made an uncomfortable shift in his chair. But
+Cummings came close, and standing, hands rammed down in the pockets of
+his coat, let me have it savagely.
+
+"Evidence, Boyne, is the only thing that would give you a license to
+rout men out at this time of night--new evidence. Have you got it? If
+not--"
+
+"Wait." I preferred to stop him before he told me to get out. "Wait." I
+looked at my watch. In the silence we could hear the words of a yawp
+from one of the noisy rooms when a passerby was hailed:
+
+"There she goes! There--look at the chickens!"
+
+A minute later, a tap sounded on the door. Cummings stood by while I
+opened it to Barbara, and a slender, veiled woman, taller by half a head
+in spite of bent shoulders and the droop of weakness which made the
+girl's supporting arm apparently necessary.
+
+At sight of them, Dykeman had come to his feet, biting off an
+exclamation, looking vainly around the bare room for chairs, then
+suggesting,
+
+"Get some from my room, Boyne."
+
+I went through the connecting door to fetch a couple. When I came back,
+Barbara was still standing, but her companion had sunk into the seat the
+shivering, uncomfortable old man offered, and Cummings was bringing a
+glass of water for her. She sipped it, still under the shield of her
+veil. This was never Ina Vandeman. Could it be that Barbara had dragged
+Mrs. Thornhill from her bed? I saw Barbara bend and whisper
+reassuringly. Then the veil was swept back, it caught and carried the
+hat with it from Laura Bowman's shining, copper colored hair, and the
+doctor's wife sat there ghastly pale, evidently very weak, but more
+composed than I had ever seen her.
+
+"I'm all right now," she spoke very low.
+
+"Miss Wallace," Dykeman demanded harshly. "Who is this--lady?"
+
+"Mrs. Bowman," Barbara looked her employer very straight in the eye.
+
+"Heh?" he barked. "Any relation to Dr. Bowman--any connection with him?"
+
+"His wife." Cummings bent and mumbled to the older man for a moment.
+
+"Laura," Barbara said gently, "this is Mr. Dykeman. You're to tell him
+and Mr. Cummings."
+
+"Yes," breathed Mrs. Bowman. "I'll tell them. I'm ready to tell anybody.
+There's nothing in dodging, and hiding, and being afraid. I'm done with
+it. Now--what is it you want to know?"
+
+Cummings' expression said plainer than words that they didn't want to
+know anything. They had their case fixed up and their man arrested, and
+they didn't wish to be disturbed. She went on quickly, of herself,
+
+"I believe I was the last person who saw Mr. Gilbert alive. I must have
+been. I'd rushed over there, just as Ina told you, Mr. Boyne, between
+the reception and our getting off for San Francisco."
+
+"All this concerns the early part of the evening," put in Cummings.
+
+"Yes--but it concerns Worth, too. He was there when I came in.... It was
+very painful."
+
+"The quarrel between Captain Gilbert and his father d'ye mean?" Dykeman
+asked his first question. Mrs. Bowman nodded assent.
+
+"Thomas went right on, before me, just as though I hadn't been there.
+Then, when it came my turn, he would have spoken out before Worth of--of
+my private affairs. That was his way. But I couldn't stand it. I went
+with Worth out to his machine. He had it in the back road. We talked
+there a little while, and Worth drove away, going fast, headed for San
+Francisco."
+
+"And that was the last time you saw Thomas Gilbert alive?" Cummings
+summed up for her.
+
+"I hadn't finished," she objected mildly. "After Worth was gone, I went
+back into the study and pleaded with Thomas for a long time. I pointed
+out to him that if I'd sinned, I'd certainly suffered, and what I asked
+was no more than the right any human being has, even if they may be so
+unfortunate as to be born a woman."
+
+Dykeman looked exquisitely miserable; but Cummings was only the lawyer
+getting rid of an unwanted witness, as he warned her,
+
+"Not the slightest need to go into your personal matters, Mrs. Bowman.
+We know them already. We knew also of your visit to Mr. Gilbert's study
+that night, and that you didn't go there alone. Had the testimony been
+of any importance to us, we'd have called in both you and James
+Edwards."
+
+I could see that her deep concern for another steadied Laura Bowman.
+
+"How do you know all this?" she demanded. "Who told you?"
+
+"Your husband, Doctor Bowman."
+
+Up came the red in her face, her eyes shone with anger.
+
+"He did follow me, then? I thought I saw him creeping through the
+shrubbery on the lawn."
+
+"He did follow you. He has told us of your being at the study--the two
+of you--when young Gilbert was there."
+
+"See here, Cummings," I put in, "if Bowman was around the place, then he
+knows that Worth left before the crime was committed. Why hasn't he told
+you so?"
+
+"He has," Cummings said neatly; and I felt as though something had
+slipped. Barbara kept a brave front, but Mrs. Bowman moaned audibly.
+
+"And still you've charged Worth Gilbert? Why not Bowman himself? He was
+there. As much reason to suspect him as any of the others. Do you mean
+to tell me that you won't accept Mrs. Bowman's testimony--and Dr.
+Bowman's--as proving an alibi for Worth Gilbert? I'm ready to swear that
+he was at Tait's at five minutes past ten, was there continuously from
+that time until a little after midnight, when you yourself saw him
+there."
+
+"A little past midnight!" Cummings repeated my words half derisively.
+"Not good enough, Boyne. We base our charge on the medical statement
+that Mr. Gilbert met his death in the small hours of Sunday morning."
+
+I looked away from Barbara; I couldn't bear her eye. After a stunned
+silence, I asked,
+
+"Whose? Who makes that statement?"
+
+"His own physician. Doctor Bowman swears--"
+
+"He?" Mrs. Bowman half rose from her chair. "He'd swear to anything.
+I--"
+
+"Don't say any more," Cummings cut her off. And Dykeman mumbled,
+
+"Had the whole history of your marital infelicities all over the shop.
+Too bad such things had to be dragged in. Man seems to be a worthy
+person--"
+
+"Doctor Bowman told me positively," I broke in, "on the Sunday night
+the body was found, that death must have occurred before midnight."
+
+"Gave that as his opinion--his opinion--then," Cummings corrected me.
+
+"Yes," I accepted the correction. "That was his opinion before he
+quarreled with Worth. Now he--"
+
+"Slandering Bowman won't get you anywhere, Boyne," Cummings said. "He
+wasn't here to testify at the inquest. Man alive, you know that nothing
+but sworn testimony counts."
+
+"I wouldn't believe that man's oath," I said shortly.
+
+"Think you'll find a jury will," smirked Cummings, and Dykeman croaked
+in,
+
+"A mighty credible witness--a mighty credible witness!"
+
+While these pleasant remarks flew back and forth, a thumping and bumping
+had made itself heard in the hall. Now something came against our door,
+as though a large bundle had been thrown at the panels. The knob
+rattled, jerked, was turned, and a man appeared on the threshold,
+swaying unsteadily. Two others, who seemed to have been holding him
+back, let go all at once, and he lurched a step into the room. Doctor
+Anthony Bowman.
+
+A minute he stood blinking, staring, then he caught sight of his wife
+and bawled out,
+
+"She's here all right. Tol' you she was here. Can't fool me. Saw her go
+past in the hall."
+
+I looked triumphantly at Dykeman and Cummings. Their star witness--drunk
+as a lord! So far he seemed to have sensed nothing in the room but his
+wife. Without turning, he reached behind him and slammed the door in the
+faces of those who had brought him, then advanced weavingly on the
+woman, with,
+
+"Get up from there. Get your hat. I'll show you. You come 'long home
+with me! Ain't I your husband?"
+
+"Doctor Bowman," peppery little old Dykeman spoke up from the depths of
+his chair. "Your wife was brought here to a--to a--"
+
+"Meeting," Cummings supplied hastily.
+
+"Huh?" Bowman wheeled and saw us. "Why-ee! Di'n' know so many gen'lemen
+here."
+
+"Yes," the lawyer put a hand on his shoulder. "Conference--over the
+evidence in the Gilbert case. No time like the present for you to say--"
+
+"Hol' on a minute," Bowman raised a hand with dignity.
+
+"Cummings," said Dykeman disgustedly, "the man's drunk!"
+
+"No, no," owlishly. "'m not 'ntoxicated. Overcome with 'motion." He took
+a brace. "That woman there--'f I sh'd tell you--walk into hotel room,
+find her with three men! Three of 'em!"
+
+"How much of this are these ladies to stand for?" I demanded.
+
+"Ladies?" Bowman roared suddenly. "She's m' wife. Where's th' other man?
+Nothing 'gainst you gen'lmen. Where's he? I'll settle with him. Let that
+thing go long 'nough. Too long. Bring him out. I'll settle him now!"
+
+He dropped heavily into the chair Cummings shoved up behind him, stared
+around, drooped a bit, pulled himself together, and looked at us; then
+his head went forward on his neck, a long breath sounded--
+
+"And you'll keep Worth Gilbert in jail, run the risk of a suit for false
+imprisonment--on that!" I wanted to know.
+
+"And plenty more," the lawyer held steady, but I saw his uneasiness with
+every snore Bowman drew.
+
+Barbara crossed to speak low and earnestly to Dykeman. I heard most of
+his answer--shaken, but disposed to hang on,
+
+"Girl like you is too much influenced by the man in the case. Hero
+worship--all that sort of thing. An outlaw is an outlaw. This isn't a
+personal matter. Mr. Cummings and I are merely doing our duty as good
+citizens."
+
+At that, I think it possible that Dykeman would have listened to reason;
+it was Cummings who broke in uncontrollably,
+
+"Barbara Wallace, I was your father's friend. I'm yours--if you'll let
+me be. I can't stand by while you entangle yourself with a criminal like
+Worth Gilbert. For your sake, if for no other reason, I would be
+determined to show him up as what he is: a thief--and his father's
+murderer."
+
+Silence in the room, except the irregular snoring of Bowman, a rustle
+and a deeply taken breath now and again where Mrs. Bowman sat, her head
+bent, quietly weeping. On this, Barbara who spoke out clearly,
+
+"Those were the last words you will ever say to me, Mr. Cummings, unless
+you should some time be man enough to take back your aspersions and
+apologize for them."
+
+He gave ground instantly. I had not thought that dry voice of his could
+contain what now came into it.
+
+"Barbara, I didn't mean--you don't understand--"
+
+But without turning her head, she spoke to me: "Mr. Boyne, will you take
+Laura and me home?" gathering up Mrs. Bowman's hat and veil, shaking the
+latter out, getting her charge ready as a mother might a child. "She's
+not going back to him--ever again." Her glance passed over the sleeping
+lump of a man in his chair. "Sarah'll make a place for her at our house
+to-night."
+
+"See here," Cummings got between us and the door. "I can't let you go
+like this. I feel--"
+
+"Mr. Dykeman," Barbara turned quietly to her employer, "could we pass
+out through your room?"
+
+"Certainly," the little man was brisk to make a way for us. "I want you
+to know, Miss Wallace, that I, too, feel--I, too, feel--"
+
+I don't know what it was that Dykeman felt, but Cummings felt my rude
+elbow in his chest as I pushed him unceremoniously aside, and opened the
+door he had blocked, remarking,
+
+"We go out as we came in. This way, Barbara."
+
+It was as I parted with the two of them at the Capehart gate that I drew
+out and handed Mrs. Bowman a small piece of dull blue silk, a round hole
+in it, such as a bullet or a cigarette might have made, with,
+
+"I guess you'll just have to forgive me that."
+
+"I don't need to forgive it," her gaze swam. "I saw your mistake. But it
+was for Worth you were fighting even then; he's been so dear to me
+always--I'd have to love any one for anything they did for his sake."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII
+
+THE BLOSSOM FESTIVAL
+
+
+Two hours sleep, bath, breakfast, and I started on my early morning run
+for the county seat. Nobody else was going my way; but even at that
+hour, the road was full of autos, buggies, farm wagons, pretty much
+everything that could run on wheels, headed for the festival, all
+trimmed and streaming with the blossoming branches of their orchards.
+These were the country folks, coming in early to make a big day of it;
+orchardists; ranchers from the cattle lands in the south end of the
+county; truck and vegetable farmers; flower-seed gardeners; the Japs and
+Chinese from their little, closely cultivated patches; this tide
+streamed past me on my left hand, as I made my way to Worth and the
+jailer's office, trying with every mile I put behind me, to bolster my
+courage. Why wasn't this shift of the enemy a blessing in disguise? Let
+their setting of the hour for the murder stick, and wouldn't Worth's
+alibi be better than any we should have been able to dig up for him
+before midnight?
+
+From time to time I was troubled by recollection of Barbara's crushed
+look from the moment they sprung it on us, but brushed that aside with
+the obvious explanation that her efforts in bringing Mrs. Bowman to
+speak out had just been of no use; surely enough to depress her.
+
+Worth met me, fit, quiet, not over eager about anything. They let us
+talk with a guard outside the door. Once alone, he listened
+appreciatively while I told him of our interview with Cummings and
+Dykeman as fast as I could pile the words out.
+
+"Nobody on earth like Bobs," was his sole comment. "Never was, never
+will be."
+
+"And now," I reminded him nervously, "there's the question of this
+alibi. You went straight from the restaurant to your room at the Palace
+and to bed there?"
+
+"No-o," he said slowly. "No, I didn't."
+
+"Well--well," I broke in. "If you stopped on the way, you can remember
+where. The people you spoke to will be as good as the clerks and
+bell-hops at the Palace for your alibi." He sat silent, thoughtful, and
+I added, "Where did you go from Tait's, Worth?"
+
+"To a garage--in the Tenderloin--where they keep good cars. I'd hired
+machines from them before."
+
+"Oh, they knew you there? Then their testimony will--"
+
+"I don't believe you want it, Jerry. It only accounts for the half
+hour--or less--right after I left you; all I did was to hire a car."
+
+"A car," I echoed vaguely. "What kind of a car? Hired it for when?"
+
+"I asked them for the fastest thing they had in the shop. Told 'em to
+fill it all round, and see that it was tuned up to the last notch. I
+wanted speed."
+
+"My God, Worth! Do you know what you're telling me?"
+
+"The truth, Jerry." His eye met mine unflinchingly. "That's what you
+want, isn't it?"
+
+"Where did you go?" I groaned. "You must have seen somebody who could
+identify or remember you?"
+
+"Not a solitary human being to identify me. Those I passed--there were
+people out of course, late as it was--saw my headlights as I went by.
+But I was moving fast, Jerry. I was working off a grouch; I needed
+speed."
+
+"Where did you go?"
+
+"Straight down the peninsula on the main highway to Palo Alto, made the
+sweep across to the sea, and then up the coast road. I ran into the
+garage about dawn."
+
+"No stops anywhere?"
+
+He shook his head.
+
+"And that's your alibi?"
+
+"That's my alibi." Worth looked at me a long while before he said
+finally,
+
+"Don't you see, Jerry, that the other side had all this before they
+encouraged Bowman to change his mind about when father was shot?"
+
+I did see it--ought to have known from the first. This was what they had
+back of them last night in Cummings' room; this explained the lawyer's
+smug self-confidence, Dykeman's violent certainty that Worth was a
+criminal. A realization of this had whitened Barbara's face, set her
+lips in that pitiful, straight line. As to their momentary chagrin over
+Bowman; no trouble to them to get other physicians to bolster any
+opinion he'd given. Medical testimony on such a point is notoriously
+uncertain. All the jury would want to know was that there could be such
+a possibility. I sat there with bent head, and felt myself going to
+pieces. Cummings was right--I was no fit man to handle this job. My
+personal feelings were too deeply involved. It was Worth's voice that
+recalled me.
+
+"Cheer up, Jerry, old man. Take it to Bobs."
+
+Take it to Bobs--the idea of a big, husky old police detective running
+to cast his burden on such shoulders! I couldn't quite do it then. I
+went and telephoned the little girl that I was doing the best I
+could--and then ran circles for the rest of the day, chasing one vain
+hope after another, and finally, in the late afternoon, sneaked home to
+Santa Ysobel.
+
+Now I had the road more to myself; only an occasional handsome car,
+where the wealthy were getting in to the part of the festival they'd
+care for. In the orchards near town where the big picnic places had been
+laid out with rough board tables and benches, seats for thousands, there
+were occasional loud basket lunch parties scattered. All at once I was
+hungry enough to have gone and asked for a handout.
+
+I went by back streets down to the house to get my mail. There seemed no
+human reason that I should feel it a treachery to have Worth in jail at
+San Jose, and be able to walk into his house at Santa Ysobel a free man.
+The place was empty; Chung had the day off, of course. It was possible
+Worth's cook, even, didn't know what had happened to his employer. Santa
+Ysobel had no morning paper. In the confusion of the blossom festival, I
+ventured to guess that not more than a score of people did as yet know
+of the arrest. Our end of town was drained, quiet; nobody over at the
+Vandeman bungalow; looking down at the Square as I made my sneak
+through, I had caught a glimpse of Bronson Vandeman, a great rosette of
+apricot blossoms on his coat lapel, making his speech of presentation to
+the cannery girl queen, while his wife, Ina, her fair face shaded doubly
+by a big flower hat and a blossom covered parasol, listened and looked
+on.
+
+One of my pieces of mail concerned the Skeels chase. If my men down
+there had Skeels, and Skeels was Clayte, it would mean everything in
+handling Cummings and Dykeman. I took out the report and ran hastily
+through it; a formal statement; day by day stuff:
+
+ "_Found Skeels and Dial at Tiajuana. Negotiating to buy saloon and
+ gambling house. Arranged with Jefico for arrest of S. (Expense
+ $20.) Rurales took S. to jail. (Expense, $4.50) I interviewed S.,
+ and he said he came here to open a business where he could sell
+ booze. D. was his partner in proposition. S. knew nothing of bank
+ affair. Would waive extradition and come back to stand trial at our
+ expense. Interviewed D. He says combined capital of two is $4500.,
+ saved from S's business and D's miner's wages. D. said--_"
+
+Not much to show up with; but there were three photographs enclosed that
+I wanted to try on Cummings and Dykeman. No telling where I'd find
+either, but the Fremont House was my best bet. Getting back there
+through the crowd, I saw Skeet Thornhill in a corner drugstore, waiting
+at its counter. I was afoot, having been obliged to park my roadster in
+one of the spaces set apart for this purpose. I noticed Vandeman's car
+already there.
+
+I lingered a minute on that corner looking down the slope that led to
+City Hall Square. Tent restaurants along the way; sandwiches; hot dogs;
+coffee; milk; pies; doughnuts. Part way down a hurdy-gurdy in a tent
+began to get patronage again; the school children in white dresses with
+pink bows in their hair had just finished a stunt in the Square. They
+and their elders were streaming our way, headed for the snake charmers,
+performing dogs and Nigger-in-the-tank. In the midst of them Vandeman
+and his wife came afoot. He caught sight of me, hailed, and when I
+joined them, asked quickly, glancing toward the drugstore entrance,
+
+"Worth come with you?"
+
+I shook my head. He made that little clucking sound with his tongue that
+people do when they want to offer sympathy, and find the matter hard to
+put into words.
+
+A seller of toy balloons on the corner with a lot of noisy youngsters
+around him; the ka-lash, ka-lam of a mechanical piano further down the
+block; and young Mrs. Vandeman's staccato tones saying,
+
+"I tell Bron that the only thing Worth's friends can do is to go on
+exactly as if nothing had happened. Don't you think so, Mr. Boyne?"
+
+I agreed mutely.
+
+"Well, I wish you'd say so to Barbie Wallace," her voice sharpened.
+"She's certainly acting as though she believed the worst."
+
+"Now, Ina," Vandeman remonstrated. And I asked uncomfortably,
+
+"What's Barbie done? Where is she?"
+
+"Up at Mrs. Capehart's. In her room. Doesn't come out at all. Isn't
+going to the ball to-night. Skeet said she refused to speak to Mr.
+Cummings."
+
+"Is that all Skeet said? Vandeman, you've told your wife that Cummings
+swore to the complaint?"
+
+"Yes, but--er--there's no animus. The executor of Gilbert's estate--With
+all the talk going around--If Worth's proved innocent, he might in the
+end be glad of Cummings' action."
+
+"Oh, might he?" Skeet Thornhill had hurried out from the drugstore, a
+package of medicine in her hand. Her eyes looked as though she'd been
+crying; they flashed a hostile glance over the new brother-in-law,
+excellently groomed, the big flower favor on his coat, the tall,
+beautiful sister, all frilly white and flower festival fashion.
+
+"_If_ Worth's proved innocent!" she flung at them. "Bronse Vandeman,
+you've got a word too many in when you say that."
+
+"Just a tongue-slip, Skeeter," Vandeman apologized. "I hope the boy'll
+come through all right--same as you do."
+
+"You don't do anything about it the same as I do!" Skeet came back. "I'd
+be ashamed to 'hope' for a friend to be cleared of a charge like that.
+If I couldn't _know_ he was clear--clear all the time--I'd try to forget
+about it."
+
+"See here, Skeet," Ina obviously restrained herself, "that's what we're
+all trying to do for Worth: forget about it--make nothing of it--act
+exactly as if it'd never happened. You ought to come on out to the ball
+with the other girls. You're just staying away because Barbara Wallace
+is."
+
+"I'm not. Some damn fool went and told mother about Worth being
+arrested, and made her a lot worse. She's almost crazy. I'd be afraid to
+leave her alone with old Jane. You get me and this medicine up home--or
+shall I go around to Capehart's and have Barbie drive me?"
+
+"I'll take you, Skeeter," Vandeman said. "We're through here. We're for
+home to dress, then to the country club--and not leave it again till
+morning. That ball out there has got to be made the biggest thing Santa
+Ysobel ever saw--regardless. Come on." The crowd swallowed them up.
+
+Making for the Fremont House, I passed Dr. Bowman's stairway, and on
+impulse turned, ran up. I found the doctor packing, very snappish, very
+sorry for himself. He was leaving next day for a position in the state
+hospital for the insane at Sefton. His kind have to blow off to
+somebody; I was it, though he must have known I had no sympathy to
+offer. The hang-over of last night's drunk made emotional the tone in
+which he said,
+
+"After all, a man's wife makes or breaks him. Mine's broken me. I could
+have had a fine position at the Mountain View Sanitarium, well paid,
+among cultured people, if she'd held up her damned divorce suit a little
+longer."
+
+"And as it is, you have to put up with what Cummings can land you with
+such pull as he has."
+
+"I'm not complaining of Cummings," sullenly. "He did the best he could
+for me, I suppose, on such short notice. But a man of my class is
+practically wasted in a place of the sort."
+
+I had learned what I wanted; I carried more ammunition to the interview
+before me. I found Dykeman in his room, propped up in bed, wheezing with
+an attack of asthma. A sick man is either more merciful than usual, or
+more unmerciful. Apparently it took Dykeman the former way; he accepted
+me eagerly, and had me call Cummings from the adjoining room. The lawyer
+was half into that costume he had brought from San Francisco. He came
+quite modern as to the legs and feet, but thoroughly ancient in a shirt
+of mail around the arms and chest, and carrying a Roman helmet in his
+hand as though it had been an opera hat.
+
+"Trying 'em on?" Dykeman whispered at him.
+
+Cummings nodded with that self-conscious, half-tickled, half-sheepish
+air that men display when it comes to costume. His greeting to me was
+cool but not surly. What had happened might go as all in the day's work
+between detective and lawyer.
+
+"Just seen Bowman," was my first pass at them. "I gather he's not very
+well pleased with the position you got him; seems to think it small pay
+for a dirty job."
+
+"What's this? What's this?" croaked Dykeman. "You been getting a place
+for Bowman, Cummings?"
+
+"Certainly," the lawyer dodged with swift, practical neatness. "I'd
+promised him my influence in the matter some little time ago."
+
+"Yes," I said, "mighty little time ago--the day he promised the
+testimony you wanted in the Gilbert case."
+
+"Anything in what Boyne says, Cummings?" Dykeman asked anxiously. "You
+know I wouldn't stand for that sort of stuff."
+
+The lawyer shook his head, but I didn't believe it was ended between
+them; Dykeman was the devil to hang on to a point. This would come up
+again after I was gone. Meantime I made haste to shove the photographs
+before them. Cummings passed them back with an indifferent, "What's the
+idea?"
+
+"You don't recognize him?"
+
+"Never saw the man in my life," and again he asked, "What's the idea?"
+
+"You'd recognize a picture of Clayte?" I countered with a question of my
+own.
+
+"Yes--I think so," rather dubiously. "But Dykeman would. Show them to
+him."
+
+Dykeman reached for the photographs, spread them out before him, then
+looked up from them peevishly to say,
+
+"For the good Lord's sake! Don't look any more like Clayte than it does
+like a horned toad. Is that what you've been wasting your time over,
+Boyne? If you ask me--"
+
+"I don't ask you anything," retrieving the pictures, planting them deep
+in an inner pocket. Then I got myself out of the room.
+
+Standing on the sidewalk in front of the Fremont House, I felt sort of
+bewildered. This last crack had taken all the pep I had left. I suddenly
+realized it was long after dinner time, and I'd had no dinner, no lunch,
+nothing to eat since an early breakfast. Worth had sent me to the
+girl--and I hadn't gone. I dragged myself around to Capehart's cottage
+as nearly whipped as I ever was in my life.
+
+I found Barbara with Laura Bowman, every one else off the place, out at
+the shows. Those girls sure were good to me; they fed me and didn't ask
+questions till I was ready to talk. Nothing to be said really, except
+that I'd failed. I told them of meeting the Vandemans, and gave them
+Ina Vandeman's opinion as to how Worth's friends should conduct
+themselves just now.
+
+"So they'll all be out there," I concluded, "Vandeman and his wife
+leading the grand march, her sisters as maids of honor--except Skeet,
+staying at home with her mother. Cummings goes as a Roman soldier;
+Doctor Bowman as a Spanish cavalier. Edwards didn't see it as the
+Vandemans do, but after I'd talked to him awhile, he agreed to be
+there."
+
+And suddenly I noticed for the first time how the relative position of
+these two women had shifted. Laura Bowman wasn't red-headed for nothing;
+out from under the blight of Bowman and that hateful marriage, she had
+already thrown off some of her physical frailness; the nervous tension
+showed itself now in energy. She was moving swiftly about putting to
+rights after my meal while she listened. But Barbara sat looking
+straight ahead of her; I knew she was seeing streets full of carnival,
+every friend and acquaintance out at a ball--and Worth in a murderer's
+cell. It wouldn't do. I jumped to my feet with a brisk,
+
+"Girl, where's your hat? We'll go to the study and look over all our
+points once more. Get busy--get busy. That's the medicine for you."
+
+She gave me a miserable look and a negative shake of the head; but I
+still urged, "Worth sent me to you. The last thing he said was, 'Take it
+to Bobs.'"
+
+Dumbly she submitted. Mrs. Bowman came running with the girl's hat, and,
+"What about me, Mr. Boyne? Isn't there something I can do?"
+
+"I wish you'd go to the country club--to the ball--the same as all the
+others. Got a costume here, haven't you?"
+
+"Yes, I can wear Barbara's," she glanced to where a pile of soft black
+stuff, a red scarf, a scarlet poppy wreath, lay on a chair, "She was to
+have gone as 'The Lady of Dreams.'"
+
+Barbara went with me out into the flare of carnival illumination that
+paled the afterglow of a gorgeous sunset. No cars allowed on these
+down-town streets; even walking, we found it best to take the long way
+round. To our left the town roared and racketed as though it was afire.
+Nothing said between us till I grumbled out,
+
+"I wish I knew where Cummings was keeping Eddie Hughes."
+
+Barbara's voice beside me answered unexpectedly,
+
+"Here. In Santa Ysobel. Eddie was at Capehart's fifteen minutes before
+you got there; he came for Bill. A gasoline engine at the city hall had
+broken down."
+
+I pulled up short for a moment, and looked back at the town.
+
+"Where'd he go?"
+
+"With Bill, to the city hall. Eddie's one of the queen's guards. They're
+all to be at the country club at ten o'clock to review the grand march
+that opens the ball."
+
+I mustn't let her dwell on that. I hurried on once more, and neither of
+us spoke again till I unlocked the study door, snapped on the lights,
+brought out and put on the table the 1920 diary and the little blue
+blotter--the last bits of evidence that I felt hadn't been thoroughly
+analysed. Barbara just dropped into a chair and looked from them to me
+helplessly.
+
+"You've read this all--carefully?" she sighed.
+
+It shook me. To have Barbara, the girl I'd seen get meanings and facts
+from a written page with a mere flirt of a glance, ask me that. What I
+really wanted from her was an inspection of the book and blotter, and a
+deduction from it. As though she guessed, she answered with a sort of
+wail,
+
+"I can't, I can't even remember what I did see when I looked at these
+before. I--can't--remember!"
+
+I went and knelt on the hearth with a pretext of laying a fire there,
+since the shut-up room was chill. And when I glanced stealthily over my
+shoulder, she had gone to work; not as I had ever seen her before, but
+fumbling at the leaves, hesitating, turning to finger the blotter;
+setting her lips desperately, like an over-driven school-child, but
+keeping right on. I spun out my fire building to leave her to herself.
+Little noises of her moving there at the table; rustle and flutter of
+the leaves; now and again, a long, sobbing breath. At last something
+like a groan caused me to turn my head and see her, with face pale as
+death, eyes staring across into mine.
+
+"It was Clayte--Edward Clayte--who killed Mr. Gilbert here--in this
+room."
+
+The hair on the back of my neck stirred; I thought the girl had gone
+mad. As I ran over to the table and looked at what was under her hand,
+it came again.
+
+"He did. He did. It was Clayte--the wonder man!"
+
+"Do--do you deduce that, Barbara?"
+
+"Did I?" she raised to mine the face of a sick child. "I must have.
+See--it's here on the blotter: 'y-t-e,' that's Clayte. Double l-e-r;
+that's 'teller,' 'Avenue' is part of 'Van Ness Avenue Bank.' Oh, yes; I
+deduced it, I suppose. Both crimes end in a locked room and a perfect
+alibi. But--but--don't you see, if it is true--and it is--it is--we're
+worse off than we were before. We've the wonder man against us."
+
+"Barbara," I cried. "Barbara, come out of it!"
+
+"See? You don't believe in me any more," and her head went down on the
+table.
+
+I let her cry, while I sat and thought. The broken sentences she'd
+sobbed out to me began to fit up like a puzzle-game. By all theories of
+good detective work, I should have seen from the first the similarity of
+these crimes. But Clayte, slipping in here to do this murder--and why?
+What mixed him up with affairs here? And then the icy pang--Dykeman had
+seen a connection--Cummings had found one. With them, it was Clayte and
+his gang--and his gang was Worth Gilbert. I went and touched Barbara on
+the shoulder.
+
+"I'm going to take you home now."
+
+"Yes," tears running down her face as she stumbled to her feet. "I'm a
+failure. I can't do anything for Worth."
+
+I wiped her cheeks with my own handkerchief and led her out. As I turned
+from locking the door, it seemed to me I saw something move in the
+shrubbery. I asked Barbara Wallace about it. She hadn't noticed
+anything. Barbara Wallace hadn't noticed anything!
+
+I began to be scared for her. Solemn in the sky above boomed out the
+town clock--two strokes. Half past nine. I must get this poor child
+home. We were getting in toward the noise and the light when I felt her
+shiver, and stopped to say,
+
+"Did I forget your coat? Why, where's your hat?"
+
+"The hat's back there. I had no coat. It doesn't make any difference.
+Come on. I can't--can't--I must get home."
+
+I looked at her, saw she was about at the end of her strength, and
+decided quickly,
+
+"We'll go straight through the Square. Save time and steps."
+
+She offered no objection, and we started in where the bands played for
+the street dances, amid the raucous tooting of a thousand fish-horns,
+the clangor of cow-bells, and the occasional snap of the forbidden
+fire-cracker. As we turned from Broad Street into Main, I found that the
+congestion was greater even than I had supposed. Here, several blocks
+away from the city hall, progress was so difficult that I took Barbara
+back a block to get the street that paralleled Main. This we could
+navigate slowly. Here, also, everybody was masked. Confetti flew,
+serpentines unreeled themselves out through the air, dusters spluttered
+in faces, and among the Pierrettes, Pierrots, Columbines, sombrero-ed
+cowboys, bandana-ed cow-girls, Indians, Sambos, Topsies and Poppy
+Maidens, Barbara's little white linen slip and soft white sweater, and
+my grey business suit, were more conspicuous than would have been the
+Ahkoond of Swat and his Captive Slave. Even after the confetti had
+sprinkled her black hair until it reminded me of Skeet's blossom wreath,
+infinitely multiplied, I still saw the glances through the eye-holes of
+masks follow us wonderingly.
+
+Opposite the city hall, where we must cross to get to the Capehart
+street, we were again almost stopped by the dense crowd. The Square was
+a green-turfed dancing floor; from its stand, an orchestra jazzed out
+the latest and dizziest of dances; and countless couples one-stepped on
+the grass, on the asphalt of the streets, even over the lawns of
+adjacent houses, tree trunks and flower beds adding more things to be
+dodged. At one corner, where the crowd was thick, we saw a big man being
+wound to a pole by paper serpentines. Yelling and capering, the masked
+dancers milled around and around him, winding the gay ribbons, while
+others with confetti and the Spanish cascarones, tried to snow him
+under. As we came up, a big fist wagged and Bill Capehart's voice
+roared,
+
+"Hold on! Too much is a-plenty!"
+
+He tore himself loose, streaming with paper strips, bent and filled his
+fists from the confetti at his feet. His tormentors howled and dropped
+back as much as they could for the hemming crowd; he rushed them,
+heaving paper ammunition in a hail-storm, and reached us in two or three
+jumps.
+
+"Golly!" he roared, "Me for a cyclone cellar! This is a riot. You ain't
+in costume, either. Wonder they wouldn't pick on you."
+
+With the words they did. I put Barbara behind me, and was conscious only
+of a blinding snow of paper flakes, the punch and slap of dusters, in an
+uproar of horns and bells.
+
+"Good deal like fighting a swarm of bees in your shirt-tail with a
+willow switch," old Bill panted at my shoulder. "Gosh!" as the snapping
+of firecrackers let loose beneath our feet. "Some o' these mosquito-net
+skirts'll get afire next--then there'll be hell a-popping!"
+
+Close at hand there was a louder report, as of a giant cracker, and at
+that Barbara sagged against me. I whirled and put an arm about her.
+Bill grabbed her from me, and lifted her above the pressure of the
+crowd. I charged ahead, shouting,
+
+"Gangway! Let us through!"
+
+Willing enough, the mob could not make room for passage until my
+shoulder, lowered to strike at the breast, forced a way, that closed in
+the instant Bill gained through. It was football tactics, with me
+bucking the line, Bill carrying the ball. Fortunately, the bunch was a
+good-natured festival gathering, or my rough work might have brought us
+trouble. As it was, a short, stiff struggle took us to the outer fringe
+of the mob.
+
+"How is she? What happened?" I grunted, coming to a stop.
+
+"Search me." Bill twisted around to look at the white face that lay back
+on his shoulder, with closed lids. Three strokes chimed from the city
+hall tower. Barbara's eyes flashed open; as the last stroke trembled in
+the air, Barbara's voice came, sharp with breathless urgence,
+
+"A quarter of ten! Quick--get me to the country club!"
+
+"Take _you_ there? Now, d'ye mean?" I ejaculated; and holding her like a
+baby, Bill's eyes flared into mine. "Did something happen to you back
+there, girl? Or did you just faint?"
+
+"Never mind about me! There," that glance of hers that saw everything
+indicated a parking place packed with machines half a block away up a
+side street. "Carry me there. Take one of those cars. Get me to the
+country club. Don't--" as I opened my mouth, "don't ask questions."
+
+I turned and ran. Bill galloped behind. Barbara had lifted her head to
+cry after me,
+
+"The best one! Pick the fastest!"
+
+I plunged down the line of cars, looking for a good machine and one with
+whose drive I was familiar. The guard rushed up to stop me; I showed him
+my badge, leaped into the front seat of a speed-built Tarpon, and had it
+out by the time Bill came up with the girl in his arms. I turned and
+swung open the tonneau door. Almost with one movement, he lifted her in
+and climbed after. I started off with braying horn, and at that I had to
+use caution. Making my way toward the corner of the street that led to
+Bill's house, I felt a small hand clutch the slack of my coat between
+the shoulders, and Barbara's voice, faint, but with a fury of
+determination in it, demanded,
+
+"Where are you going? I said the country club."
+
+"All right; I'll go. I'll look after whatever you want out there when
+I've got you home."
+
+"Oh, oh," she moaned. "Won't you--this one time--take orders?"
+
+I went on past the corner. She had a right to put it just that way. I
+gave the Tarpon all I dared in town streets.
+
+"What time is it?" I heard her whispering to Bill. "Eight minutes to
+ten? I have to be there by ten, or it's no use. Can he make it? Do you
+think he can make it?"
+
+"Yes," I growled, crouching behind the wheel. "I'll make it. May have to
+kill a few--but I'll get you there."
+
+By this, we'd come out on the open highway, better, but not too clear,
+either. There followed seven minutes of ripping through the night, of
+people who ran yelling to get out of our way and hurled curses behind
+us, only a few cars meeting us like the whirling of comets in terrifying
+glimpses as we shot past; and, at last, the country club; strings of gay
+lanterns, winking ruby tail-lights of machines parked in front of it,
+the glare from its windows, and the strains of the orchestra in its
+ballroom, playing "On the Beach at Waikiki." When she heard it, Barbara
+thanked God with,
+
+"We're in time!"
+
+I took that machine up to the front steps over space never intended for
+automobiles, at a pace not proper for lawns or even roads, and only
+halted when I was half across the walk. Bill rolled from the tonneau
+door and stood by it. I jumped down and came around.
+
+"Lift me out, and put me on my feet," Barbara ordered. "Help me--one on
+each side. I can walk. I must!"
+
+We crossed a deserted porch; the evening's opening event--the grand
+march--had drawn every one, servants and all, inside. So far, without
+challenge, meeting no one. We had the place to ourselves till we stood,
+the three of us alone, before the upper entrance of the assembly room.
+In there, the last strains of Waikiki died away. I looked to Barbara.
+She was in command. Her words back there in town had settled that for
+me.
+
+"What do we do now?" I asked.
+
+White as the linen she wore, the girl's face shone with some inner fire
+of passionate resolution. I saw this, too, in the determined, almost
+desperate energy with which she held herself erect, one clenched hand
+pressed hard against her side.
+
+"Take me in there, Mr. Boyne. And you," to Capehart, "find a man you can
+trust to guard each door of the ballroom."
+
+"What you say goes." Big Bill wheeled like a well trained cart-horse and
+had taken a step or two, when she called after him,
+
+"Arrest any one who attempts to enter."
+
+"Arrest 'em if they try to git in," Capehart repeated stoically. "Sure.
+That goes." But I interrupted,
+
+"You mean if they try to get out."
+
+At that she gave me a look. No time or breath to waste. Bill,
+unquestioning, had hurried to his part of the work. I took up mine with,
+"Forgive me, Barbara. I'll not make that mistake again"; slipped my arm
+under hers to support her; dragged open the big doors; shoved past the
+hallman there; and we stepped into the many-colored, moving brilliance
+of the ballroom.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII
+
+THE COUNTRY CLUB BALL
+
+
+The ballroom of the country club at Santa Ysobel is big and finely
+proportioned. I don't know if anything of the sort could have registered
+with me at the moment, but I remembered afterward my impression of the
+great hall fairly walled and roofed with fruit blossoms, and the
+gorgeousness of hundreds of costumes. The mere presence of potential
+funds raises the importance of an event. The prune kings and apricot
+barons down there, with their wives and daughters in real brocades,
+satins and velvets, with genuine jewels flashing over them, represented
+so much in the way of substantial wealth that it seemed to steady the
+whole fantastic scene.
+
+Barbara and I entered on the level of the slightly raised orchestra
+stand and only half a dozen paces from it. Nobody noticed us much; we
+came in right on the turn of things--floor managers darting around,
+orchestra with bows poised and horns at lips, the whole glittering
+company of maskers being made ready to weave their "Figure of Eight"
+across the dancing floor. My poor girl dragged on my arm; her small feet
+scuffed; I lifted her along, wishing I might pick her up and carry her
+as Bill had done. I made for an unoccupied musicians' bench; but once
+there, she only leaned against it, not letting go her hold on me, and
+stood to take in every detail of the confused, moving scene.
+
+The double doors had swung closed behind us; the hallman there who held
+the knob, now reinforced by a uniformed policeman. The servants' way, at
+the further end was shut; men in plain clothes set their backs against
+it. And last, Big Bill himself in overalls, a touch of blunt blue
+realism, came fogging along the side-wall to swing into place the great
+wooden bar that secured the entire group of glass doors which gave on
+the porch. Barbara would have seen all these arrangements while I was
+getting ready for my first glance, but I prompted her nervously with a
+low-toned, "All set, girl," and then as she still didn't speak, "Bill's
+got every door guarded."
+
+She nodded. The length of the room away, in the end gallery, was the
+cannery girl queen and her guard. Even at that distance, I recognized
+Eddie Hughes, in his pink-and-white Beef Eater togs, a gilded wooden
+spear in his hand, a flower tassel bobbing beside that long, drab,
+knobby countenance of his. There he was, the man I'd jailed for Thomas
+Gilbert's murder. Below on the dancing floor, were the two, Cummings and
+Bowman, who had put Worth behind the bars for the same crime. At my side
+was the pale, silent girl who declared that Clayte was the murderer.
+
+Whispered tuning and trying of instruments up here; flutter and rush
+about down on the dancing floor; and Barbara, that clenched left hand of
+hers still pressed in hard against her side, facing what problem?
+
+Crash! Boom! We were so close the music fairly deafened us, as, with a
+multiplied undernote of moving feet, the march began. On came those
+people toward us, wave behind wave of color and magnificence, dotted
+with little black ovals of masks pierced by gleaming eye-holes. I could
+sense Barbara reading the room as it bore down on her, and reading it
+clearly, getting whatever it was she had come there for. Myself, I was
+overwhelmed, drowned in the size and sweep of everything, struggling
+along, whispering to her when I spotted Jim Edwards in his friar's robe,
+noticed that the Roman soldier who must be Cummings, and Bowman, the
+Spaniard, squired the Thornhill twins in their geisha girl dresses; the
+crimson poppies of a Lady of Dreams looked odd against Laura Bowman's
+coppery hair.
+
+At the head of the procession as they swung around, leading it with
+splendid dignity, came a pair who might have been Emperor and Empress of
+China--the Vandemans. To go on with affairs as if nothing had
+happened--though Worth Gilbert was in jail--had been the laid-down
+policy of both Vandeman and his wife. I'd thought it reasonable then;
+foolish to get hot at it now. The great, shining, rhythmically moving
+line deployed, interwove, and opened out again until at last the floor
+was almost evenly occupied with the many-colored mass. I looked at
+Barbara; the awful intensity with which she read her room hurt me. It
+had nothing to do with that flirt of a glance she always gave a printed
+page, that mere toss of attention she was apt to offer a problem. The
+child was in anguish, whether merely the ache of sorrow, or actual
+bodily pain; I saw how rigidly that small fist still pressed against the
+knitted wool of her sweater, how her lip was drawn in and bitten. Her
+physical weakness contrasted strangely with the clean cut decision, the
+absolute certainty of her mental power. She raised her face and looked
+straight up into mine.
+
+"Have the music stopped."
+
+I leaned over and down toward the orchestra leader to catch his eye,
+holding toward him the badge. His glance caught it, and I told him what
+we wanted. He nodded. For an instant the music flooded on, then at a
+sharp rap of the baton, broke off in mid-motion, as though some great
+singing thing had caught its breath. And all the swaying life and color
+on the floor stopped as suddenly. Barbara had picked the moment that
+brought Ina Vandeman and her husband squarely facing us. After the first
+instant's bewilderment, Vandeman and his floor managers couldn't fail to
+realize that they were being held up by an outsider; with Barbara in
+full sight up here by the orchestra, they must know who was doing it. I
+wondered not to have Vandeman in my hair already; but he and his consort
+stood in dignified silence; it was his committee who came after me, a
+Mephistopheles, a troubadour, an Indian brave, a Hercules with his club,
+swarming up the step, wanting to know if I was the man responsible, why
+the devil I had done it, who the devil I thought I was, anyhow. Others
+were close behind.
+
+"Edwards," I called to the brown friar, "can you keep these fellows off
+me for a minute?"
+
+Still not a word from Barbara. Nothing from Vandeman. Less than nothing:
+I watched in astonishment how the gorgeous leader stopped dumb, while
+those next him backed into the couple behind, side stepping, so that the
+whole line yawed, swayed, and began to fall into disorder.
+
+"Cummings," as I glimpsed the lawyer's chain mail and purple feather,
+"Keep them all in place if you can. All."
+
+In the instant, from behind my shoulder Barbara spoke.
+
+"Have that man--take off his mask."
+
+A little, shaking white hand pointed at the leader.
+
+"Mr. Vandeman," I said. "That's an order. It'll have to be done."
+
+The words froze everything. Hardly a sound or movement in the great
+crowded room, except the little rustle as some one tried to see better.
+And there, all eyes on him, Bronson Vandeman stood with his arms at his
+sides, mute as a fish. Ina fumbled nervously at the cord of her own
+mask, calling to me in a fierce undertone,
+
+"What do you mean, Mr. Boyne, bringing that girl here to spoil things.
+This is spite-work."
+
+"Off--take his mask off! Do it yourself!" Barbara's voice was clear and
+steady.
+
+I made three big jumps of the space between us and the leading couple.
+Vandeman's committee-men obstructed me, the excited yip going amongst
+them.
+
+"Vandeman--Bronse--Vannie--Who let this fool in here?--Do we throw him
+out?"
+
+Then they took the words from Edwards; the tune changed to grumblings
+of, "What's the matter with Van? Why doesn't he settle it one way or
+another, and be done?"
+
+Why didn't he? I had but a breath of time to wonder at that, as I shoved
+a way through. Darn him, like a graven image there, the only mute,
+immovable thing in that turmoil! I began to feel sore.
+
+"You heard what she said?" I took no trouble now to be civil. "She wants
+your mask off."
+
+No flicker of response from the man, but the Empress of China dragged
+down her mask, crying,
+
+"Heard what she said? What she wants?" Over the shoulders of the crowd
+she gave Barbara Wallace a venomous look, then came at me.
+
+A little too late. My hand had shot out and snatched the mask from the
+face of China's monarch. A moment I glared, the bit of black stuff in my
+grasp, at the alien countenance I had uncovered. Crowding and craning of
+the others to see. Jabbering, exclaiming all around us.
+
+"Corking make-up; looks like a sure-enough Chinaman."
+
+"No make-up at all. The real thing."
+
+"What's the big idea?"
+
+"Why did he unmask, then?"
+
+"Didn't want to. They made him."
+
+And last, but loudest, repeated time and again, with wonder, with
+distaste, with rising anger,
+
+"The Vandeman's Chinese cook!"
+
+For with the ripping away of that black oval, I had looked into the
+slant, inscrutable eyes of Fong Ling. Hemmed in by the crowd, he could
+but face me; he did so with a kind of unhuman passivity.
+
+And the committee went wild. Their own masks came off on the run. I saw
+Cummings' face, Bowman's; Eddie Hughes slid from the balcony stair and
+bucked the crowd, pushing through to the seat of war. The grand march
+had become a jostling, gabbling chaos.
+
+Barbara, up there, above it all, knew what she was about. I had utter
+confidence in her. But she was plainly holding back for a further
+development, her eyes on the entrances; and what the devil was my next
+move?
+
+Ina Vandeman wheeled where she stood and faced the room, both hands
+thrown up, laughing.
+
+"It was meant to be a joke--a great, big foolish joke!" her high treble
+rang out. "Bron's here somewhere. Wait. He'll tell you better than I
+could. At a masquerade--people do--they do foolish things.... They--"
+
+"Is Bronse Vandeman here?" I questioned Fong Ling. The Chinaman's stiff
+lips moved for the first time, in his formal, precise English.
+
+"Yes, sir. Mr. Vandeman will explain." He crossed his hands and resigned
+the matter to his employer. And I demanded of Ina Vandeman, "You tell us
+your husband's present--in this room? Now?" and when her answer was
+drowned in the noise, I roared,
+
+"Vandeman! Bronson Vandeman! You're wanted here!"
+
+No answer. Edwards took up the call after me; the committee yelled the
+name in all keys and variations. In the middle of our squawking, a minor
+disturbance broke out across by the porch entrance, where Big Bill
+Capehart stood. As I looked, he turned over his post to Eddie Hughes,
+who came abreast of him at the moment, and started, scuffling and
+struggling toward us, with a captive.
+
+"I had my orders!" his big voice boomed out. "Pinch any one that tried
+to get in. Y'don't pass me--not if you was own cousin to God A'mighty!"
+
+On they came through the crowd, all mixed up; blue overalls, and a
+flapping costume whose rich, many-colored silk embroideries, flashed
+like jewels. A space widened about us for them. The big garage man spun
+his catch to the center of it, so that he faced the room, his back to
+the orchestra.
+
+"Wanted in, did ya? Now yer in, what about it?"
+
+What about it, indeed? In Bill's prisoner, as he stood there twitching
+ineffectually against that obstinate hold, breathing loud, shakily
+settling his clothes, we had, robe for robe, cap for cap, a duplicate
+Emperor of China!
+
+And the next moment, this figure took off its mask and showed the face
+of Bronson Vandeman.
+
+Dead silence all about us; Capehart loosened his grip, abashed but still
+truculent.
+
+"Dang it all, Mr. Vandeman, if you didn't want to get mussed up, what
+made you fight like that?"
+
+"Fight?" Vandeman found his voice. "Who wouldn't? I was late, and you--"
+
+"Bron!" After one desperate glance toward the girl up on the platform,
+Ina ran to him and put a hand on his arm. "They stopped the march....
+Your--the--they spoiled our joke. But have them start the music again.
+You're here now. Let's go on with the march ... explain afterward."
+
+"Good business!" Vandeman filled his chest, glanced across at Fong Ling,
+and gave his social circle a rather poor version of the usual
+white-toothed smile. "Jokes can wait--especially busted ones. On with
+the dance; let joy be unrefined!"
+
+Sidelong, I saw the orchestra leader's baton go up. But no music
+followed. It was at Barbara the baton had pointed, at Barbara that all
+the crowded company stared. Her little white dress clung to her slender
+figure. I saw that now she was in the strange Buddha pose. A few flecks
+of silver paper, still in her black hair, made it sparkle. But it was
+Barbara's eyes that held us all spellbound. In her colorless face those
+wonderful openings of black light seemed to look through and beyond us.
+For an instant there was no stir. Hundreds of faces set toward her, held
+by the wonder of her. Fong Ling's yellow visage moved for the first time
+from its immobility with a sort of awe, a dread. And when my gaze came
+back to her, I noticed that, with the dropping of her hands to join the
+finger-tips, she had left, where that little, pressing fist had been, a
+blur of red on the white sweater. Over me it rushed with the force of
+calamity, she had been wounded when she sank down back there in the
+crowd. It was a shot--not a giant cracker--we had heard.
+
+"Vandeman," I whirled on him, "You shot this girl. You tried to kill
+her."
+
+Sensation enough among the others; but I doubt if he even heard me. His
+gaze had found Barbara; all the bounce, all the jauntiness was out of
+the man, as he stared with the same haunted fear his eyes had held when
+she concentrated last night at his own dinner table.
+
+She was concentrating now; could she stand the strain of it, with its
+weakening of the heart action, its pumping all the blood to the brain? I
+shouldered my way to her, and knelt beside her, begging,
+
+"Don't, Barbara. Give it up, girl. You can't stand this."
+
+Her hands unclasped. Her eyes grew normal. She relaxed, sighingly. I
+leaned closer while she whispered to me the last addition in that
+problem of two and two--the full solution. Armed, I faced Vandeman once
+more.
+
+Something seemed to be giving way in the man; his lips were almost as
+pale as his face, and that had been, from the moment he uncovered it,
+like tallow. He looked withered, smaller; his hair where it had been
+pressed down by mask and cap, crossed his forehead, flat, smooth, dull
+brown. I saw, half consciously, that Fong Ling was gone. An accomplice?
+No matter; the criminal himself was here--Barbara's wonder man. It was
+to him I spoke.
+
+"Edward Clayte," at the name, Cummings clanked around front to stare. "I
+hold a warrant for your arrest for the theft of nine hundred and eighty
+seven thousand dollars from the Van Ness Avenue Savings Bank of San
+Francisco."
+
+He made a sick effort to square his shoulders; fumbled with his hair to
+toss it back from its straight-down sleekness, as Clayte, to the
+pompadoured crest of Vandeman. How often I had seen that gesture, not
+understanding its significance. Cummings, at my side, drew in a breath,
+with,
+
+"Why--damn it!--he is Clayte!"
+
+"All right," I let the words go from the corner of my mouth at the
+lawyer, in the same hushed tones he'd used. "See how you like this next
+one," and finished, loud enough so all might hear,
+
+"And I charge you, Edward Clayte--Bronson Vandeman--with the murder of
+Thomas Gilbert."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIX
+
+UNMASKED
+
+
+Disgrace was in the air; the country club had seen its vice president in
+handcuffs. There was a great gathering up of petticoats and raising of
+moral umbrellas to keep clear of the dirty splashings. It made me think
+of a certain social occasion in Israel some thousands of years ago, when
+Absalom, at his own party, put a raw one over on his brother Amnon, and
+all the rest of King David's sons looked at each other with jaws
+sagging, and "every man gat himself up upon his mule and fled." Here, it
+was limousines; more than one noble chariot--filled with members of the
+faction who'd helped to rush Vandeman into office over the claims of
+older members--rolled discredited down the drive.
+
+Yet a ball is the hardest thing in the world to kill; like a lizard, if
+you break it in two, the head and tail go right on wriggling
+independently. Also, behind this masked affair at the country club was
+the business proposition of a lot of blossom festival visitors from all
+over the state who mustn't be disappointed. By the time I'd finished out
+in front, getting my prisoner off to the lock-up, sending Eddie Hughes,
+with Capehart and the other helpers he'd picked up to guard the Vandeman
+bungalow, handed over to the Santa Ysobel police the matter of finding
+Fong Ling, and turned back to see how Barbara was getting on, the music
+sounded once more, the rhythmic movement of many feet.
+
+"The boys have got it started again," Jim Edwards joined me in the hall,
+his tone still lowered and odd from the amazement of the thing.
+"Curious, that business in there yesterday," a nod indicated the little
+writing room toward which we moved. "Bronse stepping in, brisk and cool,
+for you to question him; pleasant, ordinary looking chap. Would you say
+he had it in his head right then to murder you--or Barbara--if you came
+too hot on his trail?"
+
+"Me?" I echoed sheepishly. "He never paid me that compliment. He wasn't
+afraid of me. I think Barbara sealed her own fate, so far as he was
+concerned, when she let Worth pique her into doing a concentrating stunt
+at Vandeman's dinner table last night. The man saw that nothing she
+turned that light on could long stay hidden. He must have decided, then,
+to put her out of the way. As for his wife--well, however much or little
+she knew, she'd not defend Barbara Wallace."
+
+At that, Edwards gave me a look, but all he said was,
+
+"Cummings has suffered a complete change of heart, it seems. I left him
+in the telephone booth, just now, calling up Dykeman. He'll certainly
+keep the wires hot for Worth."
+
+"He'd better," I agreed; and only Edwards's slight, dark smile answered
+me.
+
+"There's a side entrance here," he explained mildly, as we came to the
+turn of the hall. "I'll unlock it; and when Barbara's ready to be taken
+home, we can get her out without every one gaping at her."
+
+He was still at the lock, his back to me, when a door up front slammed,
+and a Spanish Cavalier came bustling down the corridor, pulling off a
+mask to show me Bowman's face, announcing,
+
+"I think you want me in there. That girl should have competent medical
+attention."
+
+"She has that already," I spoke over my shoulder. "And if she hadn't, do
+you think she'd let you touch her, Bowman? Man, you've got no human
+feeling. If you had a shred, you'd know that to her it is as true you
+tried to take Worth's life with your lying testimony as it is that
+Vandeman murdered Worth's father with a gun."
+
+"Hah!" the doctor panted at me; he was fairly sober, but still a bit
+thick in the wits. "You people ain't classing me with this crook
+Vandeman, are you? You can't do that. No--of course--Laura's set you all
+against me."
+
+Edwards straightened up from the door. With his first look at that
+fierce, dark face, the doctor began to back off, finally scuttling
+around the turn into the main hall at what was little less than a run.
+
+They had Barbara sitting in the big Morris chair while they finished
+adjusting bandages and garments. Our young cub of a doctor, silver
+buttoned velveteen coat off, sleeves rolled up, hailed us cheerily,
+
+"That bullet went where it could get the most blood for the least harm,
+I'd say. Have her all right in a jiffy. At that, if it had been a little
+further to one side--"
+
+And I knew that Edward Clayte's bullet--Bronson Vandeman's--had narrowly
+missed Barbara's heart.
+
+"This wonderful girl!" the doctor went on with young enthusiasm, as he
+bandaged and pinned. "Sitting up there, wounded as she was, and
+forgetting it, she looked to me more than human. Sort of effect as
+though light came from her."
+
+"I was ashamed of myself back there in the Square, Mr. Boyne," Barbara's
+voice, good and strong, cut across his panegyric. "Never in my life did
+I feel like that before. My brain wasn't functioning normally at all. I
+was confused, full of indecision." She mentioned that state, so
+painfully familiar to ordinary humanity, as most people would speak of
+being raving crazy. "It was agonizing," she smiled a little at the
+others. "Poor Mr. Boyne helping me along--we'd got somehow into a crowd.
+And I was just a lump of flesh. I hardly knew where we were. Then
+suddenly came the sound of the shot, the stinging, burning feeling in my
+side. It knocked my body down; but my mind came clear; I could use it."
+
+"I'll say you could," I smiled. "From then on, Bill Capehart and I were
+the lumps of flesh that you heaved around without explanation."
+
+"There wasn't time; and I was afraid you'd find out what had happened to
+me, and wouldn't bring me here," she said simply. "I knew that the one
+motive for silencing me was the work I'd been doing for Mr. Boyne."
+
+"Sure," I said, light breaking on me. "And every possible suspect in the
+Gilbert murder case was under this roof--or supposed to be--the grand
+march would be the show-down as to that. And just then the clock struck!
+Poor girl!"
+
+"It was a race against time," Barbara agreed. "If we could get here
+first, hold the door against whoever came flying to get in, we'd have
+the one who shot me."
+
+"But, Barbara child," Laura Bowman was working at a sweater sleeve on
+the bandaged side. "You did get here and caught Bronson Vandeman; it had
+worked out all right. Why did you risk sitting up in that strained pose,
+wounded as you were, to concentrate?"
+
+"For Worth. I had to relate this crime to the one for which he'd been
+arrested. Within the hour, I'd gathered facts that showed me Edward
+Clayte killed Worth's father. When I brought that man and his crime to
+stand before me, and Bronson Vandeman and his crime to stand beside
+it--as I can bring things when I concentrate on them--I found they
+dove-tailed--the impossible was true--these two were one man." She
+looked around at the four of us, wondering at her, and finished, "Can't
+they take me home now, doctor?"
+
+"Sit and rest a few minutes. Have the door open," the young fellow said.
+And on the instant there came a call for me from the side entrance.
+
+"Mr. Boyne--are you in there? May I speak to you, please?"
+
+It was Skeet Thornhill's voice. I went out into the entry. There,
+climbing down from the old Ford truck, leaving its engine running, was
+Skeet herself. Her glance went first to the door I closed behind me.
+
+"Yes," I answered its question. "She's in there." Then, moved by the
+frank misery of her eyes, "She'll be all right. Very little hurt."
+
+She said something under her breath; I thought it was "Thank God!"
+looked about the deserted side entrance, seemed to listen to the
+flooding of music and movement from the ballroom, then lifting to mine
+a face so pale that its freckles stood out on it, faltered a step
+closer and studied me.
+
+"They phoned us," scarcely above a whisper. "Mother sent me for the
+girls and--Ina. Mr. Boyne," a break in her voice, "am I going to be able
+to take Ina back with me? Or is she--do they--?"
+
+"Wait," I said. "Here she comes now," as Cummings brought young Mrs.
+Vandeman toward us. She moved haughtily, head up, a magnificent evening
+wrap thrown over her costume, and saw her sister without surprise.
+
+"Skeet," she crossed and stood with her back to me, "there's been some
+trouble here. Keep it from mother if you can. I'm leaving--but we'll get
+it all fixed up. How did you get here? Can I take you back in the
+limousine?"
+
+The big, closed car, one of Vandeman's wedding gifts to her, purred
+slowly up the side drive, circling Skeet's old truck, and stopped a
+little beyond. Skeet gave it one glance, then reached a twitching hand
+to catch on the big silken sleeve.
+
+"You can't go to the bungalow, Ina. As I came past, they were placing
+men around it to--to watch it."
+
+"_What!_" Ina wheeled on us, looking from one to the other. "Mr.
+Boyne--Mr. Cummings--who had that done?"
+
+"Does it matter?" I countered. She made me tired.
+
+"Does it matter?" she snapped up my words, "Am I to be treated as if--as
+though--"
+
+Even Ina Vandeman's effrontery wouldn't carry her to a finish on that. I
+completed it for her, explicitly,
+
+"Mrs. Vandeman, whether you are detained as an accomplice or merely a
+material witness, I'm responsible for you. I would have the authority
+to allow you to go with your sister; but you'll not be permitted to even
+enter the bungalow."
+
+"It's nearly midnight," she protested. "I have no clothes but this
+costume. I must go home."
+
+"Oh, come on!" Skeet pleaded. "Don't you see that doesn't do any good,
+Ina? You can get something at our house to wear."
+
+She gave me a long look, her chin still high, her eyes hard and
+unreadable. Then, "For the present, I shall go to a hotel." She laid a
+hand on Skeet's shoulder, but it was only to push her away. "Tell
+mother," evenly, "that I'll not bring my trouble into her house. Oh--you
+want Ernestine and Cora? Well, get them and go." And with firm step she
+walked to her car.
+
+I nodded to Cummings.
+
+"Have one of Dykeman's men pick her up and hang tight," I said, and he
+smiled back understandingly, with,
+
+"Already done, Boyne. I want to speak to Miss Wallace--if I may. Will
+you please see for me?"
+
+A moment later, he marched shining and jingling, in through a door that
+he left open behind him, pulled off his Roman helmet as though it had
+been a hat, and stood unconsciously fumbling that shoe-brush thing they
+trim those ancient lids with.
+
+"Barbara," he met the eyes of the girl in the chair unflinchingly, "you
+told me last night that the only words I ever could speak to you would
+be in the way of an apology. Will you hear one now? I'm ready to make
+it. Talk doesn't count much; but I'm going the limit to put Worth
+Gilbert's release through."
+
+There was a long silence, Barbara looking at him quite unmoved. Behind
+that steady gaze lay the facts that Worth Gilbert's life and honor had
+been threatened by this man's course; that she herself was only alive
+because the bullet of that criminal whom his action unconsciously
+shielded missed its aim by an inch: Worth's life, her life, their love
+and all that might mean--and Barbara had eyes you could read--I didn't
+envy Cummings as he faced her. Finally she said quietly,
+
+"I'll accept your apology, Mr. Cummings, when Worth is free."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXX
+
+A CONFESSION
+
+
+In the dingy office of the city prison, with its sand boxes and barrel
+stove, its hacked old desks, dusty books and papers, I watched Bronson
+Vandeman, and wondered to see how the man I had known played in and out
+across his face with the man Edward Clayte, whom I had tried to imagine,
+whom nobody could describe.
+
+Helping to recover Clayte's loot for Worth Gilbert looked to the
+opposition their best bet for squaring themselves. Dykeman from his sick
+bed, had dug us up a stenographer; Cummings had climbed out of his tin
+clothes and come along with us to the jail. They wanted the screws put
+on; but I intended to handle Vandeman in my own way. I had halted the
+lawyer on the lock-up threshold, with,
+
+"Cummings, I want you to keep still in here. When I'm done with the man,
+you can question him all you want--if he's left anything to be told." I
+answered a doubtful look, "Did you see his face there in the ball room
+as he looked up at Barbara Wallace? He thinks that girl knows
+everything, like a supreme being. He's still so shaken that he'd spill
+out anything--everything. He'll hardly suppose he's telling us anything
+we don't know."
+
+And Vandeman bore out expectations. Now, provided with a raincoat to
+take the place of his Mandarin robe, his trousers still the lilac satin
+ones of that costume, he surveyed us and our preparations with a half
+smile as we settled our stenographer and took chairs ourselves.
+
+"I look like hell--what?" He spoke fast as a man might with a drink
+ahead. But it was not alcohol that was loosening his tongue. "Why can't
+some one go up to my place and get me a decent suit of clothes? God
+knows I've plenty there--closets full of them."
+
+"Time enough when th' Shurff gets here," Roll Winchell, the town
+marshall grunted at him. "I'm not taking any chances on you, Mr.
+Vandeman. You'll do me as you are."
+
+"Stick a smoke in my face, Cummings," came next in a voice that twanged
+like a stretched string. "Damn these bracelets! Light it, can't you?
+Light it." He puffed eagerly, got to his feet and began walking up and
+down the room, glancing at us from time to time, raising the manacled
+hands grotesquely to his cigar, drawing in a breath as though to speak,
+then shaking his head, grinning a little and walking on. I knew the
+mood; the moment was coming when he must talk. The necessity to reel out
+the whole thing to whomever would listen was on him like a sneeze. It's
+always so at this stage of the game.
+
+For all the hullabaloo in the streets, we were quiet enough here, since
+the lock-up at Santa Ysobel lurks demurely, as such places are apt to
+do, in the rear of the building whose garbage can it is. Our pacing
+captive could keep silent no longer. Shooting a sidelong glance at me,
+he broke out,
+
+"I'm not a common crook, Boyne, even if I do come of a family of them,
+and my father's in Sing Sing. I put him there. They'd not have caught
+him without. He was an educated man--never worked anything but big
+stuff. At that, what was the best he could do--or any of them? Make a
+haul, and all they got out of it was a spell of easy money that they
+only had the chance to spend while they were dodging arrest. Sooner or
+later every one of them I knew got put away for a longer or shorter
+term. Growing up like that, getting my education in the public schools
+daytimes, and having a finish put on it nights with the gang, I decided
+that I was going to be, not honest, but the hundredth man--the
+thousandth--who can pull off a big thing and neither have to hide nor go
+to prison."
+
+This was promising; a little different from the ordinary brag; I
+signaled inconspicuously to our stenographer to keep right on the job.
+
+"When I was twenty-four years old, I saw my chance to shake the gang and
+try out my own idea," Clayte rattled it off feelinglessly. "It was a
+lone hand for me. My father had made a stake by a forgery; checks on the
+City bank. I knew where the money was hid, eight thousand and seventy
+nine dollars. It would just about do me. I framed the old man--I told
+you he was in Sing Sing now--took my working capital and came out here
+to the Coast. That money had to make me rich for life, respected,
+comfortable. I figured that my game was as safe as dummy whist."
+
+"Yeh," said Roll Winchell, the marshal, gloomily, "them high-toned
+Eastern crooks always comin' out here thinkin' they'll find the Coast a
+soft snap."
+
+"Two years I worked as a messenger for the San Francisco Trust Company,"
+Clayte's voice ran right on past Winchell's interruption, "a model
+employee, straight as they come; then decided they were too big for me
+to tackle, and used their recommendation to get a clerk's job with the
+Van Ness Avenue concern. I was after the theft of at least a half
+million dollars, with a perfect alibi; and the smaller institution
+suited my plan. It took me four years to work up to paying teller, but I
+wasn't hurrying things. I was using my capital now to build that perfect
+alibi."
+
+He glanced around nervously as the stenographer turned a leaf, then went
+on,
+
+"I'd picked out this town for the home of the man I was going to be. It
+suited me, because it was on a branch line of the railway, hardly used
+at all by men whose business was in the city, and off the main highway
+of automobile travel; besides, I liked the place--I've always liked it."
+
+"Sure flattered," came the growl as Winchell stirred in his chair.
+
+"My bungalow and grounds cost me four thousand; at that it was a
+run-down place and I got it cheap. The mahogany--old family pieces that
+I was supposed to bring in from the East--came high. Yet maybe you'd be
+surprised how the idea took with me. I used to scrimp and save off my
+salary at the bank to buy things for the place, to keep up the right
+scale of living for Bronson Vandeman, traveling agent for eastern
+manufacturers, not at home much in Santa Ysobel yet, but a man of fine
+family, rich prospects, and all sorts of a good fellow, settled in the
+place for the rest of his days."
+
+He turned suddenly and grinned at me.
+
+"You swallowed it whole, Boyne, when you walked into my house last
+night--the old family furniture I bought in Los Angeles, the second-hand
+library, that family portrait, with a ring on my finger, and the same
+painted in on what was supposed to be my father's hand."
+
+"Sure," I nodded amiably, "You had me fooled."
+
+"And without a bit of crude make-up or disguise," he rubbed it in. "It
+was a change of manner and psychology for mine. As Edward Clayte--and
+that's not my name, either, any more than Vandeman--I was
+description-proof. I meant to be--and I was. It took--her--the girl,"
+his face darkened and he jerked at his cigar, "to deduce that a
+nonentity who could get away with nearly a million dollars and leave no
+trail was some man!"
+
+I raised my head with a start and stared at the man in his raincoat and
+lilac silk pantaloons.
+
+"That's so," I fed it to him, "She had a name for you. She called you
+the wonder man."
+
+"Did she!" a pleased smile. "Well, I'll give her right on that. I was
+some little wonder man. Listen," his insistent over-stimulated voice
+went eagerly on, "The beauty of my scheme was that up to the very last
+move, there was nothing criminal in my leading this double life. You
+see--as I got stronger and stronger here in Santa Ysobel, I bought a
+good machine, a speedster that could burn up the road. Many's the stag
+supper I've had with the boys there in my bungalow, and been back behind
+the wicket as Edward Clayte in the Van Ness Avenue bank on time next
+morning. I was in that room at the St. Dunstan about as much as a
+fellow's in his front hall. I walked through it to Henry J. Brundage's
+room at the Nugget; I stayed there more often than I did at the St.
+Dunstan, unless I came on here.
+
+"I'd left marriage out. Then that night four years ago when Ina had her
+little run-in with old Tom Gilbert and got her engagement to Worth
+smashed, I saw there might be girls right in the class I was trying to
+break into that would be possible for a man like me. The date for our
+wedding was set, when Thomas Gilbert remarked to me one afternoon as we
+were coming off the golf links together, that he was buying a block of
+Van Ness Savings Bank stock. For a minute I felt like caving in his
+head, then and there, with the golf club I carried. What a hell of a
+thing to happen, right at the last this way! Ten chances to one I'd have
+this man to silence; but it must be done right. Not much room for murder
+in so full a career as mine--holding down a teller's job, running for
+the vice presidency of the country club, getting married in style--but
+every time I'd look up from behind my teller's grille, and see any one
+near the size of old Gilbert walk in the front door, it gave me the
+shivers. I'd put more than eight years of planning and hard work into
+this scheme, and you'll admit, Boyne, that what I had was some alibi. A
+wedding like that in a town of this size makes a big noise. I managed to
+be back and forth so much that people got the idea I was hardly out of
+Santa Ysobel. The Friday night before, I had a stag supper at my house,
+and Saturday morning if any one had called, Fong Ling would have told
+them I was sleeping late and couldn't be disturbed. On the forenoon of
+my wedding day, then, I sat as Edward Clayte in my teller's cage, the
+suitcase I had carried back and forth empty for so many Saturdays now
+loaded with currency and securities, not one of which was traceable, and
+whose amount I believed would run close to a million. It was within
+three minutes of closing time, when some one rapped on the counter at my
+wicket, and I looked straight up into the face of old Tom Gilbert.
+
+"I saw a flash of doubtful recognition in his eyes, but didn't dare to
+avoid them while counting bills and silver to pay his check. If I had
+done so, he would certainly have known me. As it was, I saw that I
+convinced him--almost. I watched him as he went out, saw him hesitate a
+little at the door of Knapp's office--he wasn't quite sure enough. I
+knew the man. The instant he made certain, he would act.
+
+"The old devil wasn't on terms to attend the reception at the Thornhill
+place, but I located him in an aisle seat, when I first came from the
+vestry with my best man. All through the ceremony I felt his eyes boring
+into my back. When I finally faced him, as Ina and I walked out, man and
+wife, I knew he recognized me, and almost expected him to step out and
+denounce me. But no--a fellow leading a double life was all he saw in
+it; bigamy was the worst he'd suspect me of at the moment. He didn't
+give Ina much, wouldn't lift a finger to defend her.
+
+"Meantime, the manner of his taking off lay easy to my hand. I'd studied
+the situation through that skylight, seen Ed Hughes juggle the bolts
+with his magnets, and mapped the thing out. Gilbert killed there, the
+room found bolted, was a cinch for suicide. When the reception at the
+Thornhill house was over, I made an excuse of something needed for the
+journey, and started across to my bungalow. It was common for all of us
+to cross through the lawns; I hid in the shrubbery.
+
+"There were people with Gilbert, no chance for me to do anything. I
+stood there and nearly went out of my hide with impatience over the
+delays, while he had his row with Worth, when Laura Bowman and Jim
+Edwards came and braced him to let up on his persecution of them. Mrs.
+Bowman finally left; he went with her toward the front. Now was my
+chance; I dodged into the study, jerked his own pistol from its holster,
+squeezed myself in behind the open door and waited. He came back; I let
+him get into the room, past me a little, and when at some sound I made,
+he turned, the muzzle of the gun was shoved against his chest and fired.
+
+"I'd barely finished pressing Gilbert's fingers around the pistol butt
+when I heard a cry outside, jumped to the door, shut and bolted it just
+as my mother-in-law ran in across the lawns. I gathered that she'd been
+there earlier to get those three leaves out of the diary that you were
+so interested in, Boyne; had just read them and come back to have it out
+with old Tom. She hung around for five minutes, I should say, beating on
+the door, calling, asking if anything was wrong.
+
+"My one big mistake in the study was that diary of 1920. It lay open on
+the desk where he'd been writing. It did tell of his having identified
+me as Clayte. I'd not expected it, and so I didn't handle it well. Time
+pressed. I couldn't carry it with me; I tore out the leaf, stuck the
+book into the drainpipe, and ran.
+
+"And after all," he summed up, "my plans would have gone through on
+schedule; you never could have touched me with your clumsy,
+police-detective methods, if it hadn't been for the girl."
+
+He dropped his head and stood brooding a moment, demanded another smoke,
+got it, shrugged off some thought with a gesture, and finished,
+
+"I was in too deep to turn. It was her life--or mine. Things went
+contrary. We couldn't get her to come out to the masquerade, where it
+would have been easy. With those two Mandarin costumes, Fong Ling in my
+place, I had my time from the hour we put on the masks till midnight.
+Another perfect alibi. Well--it didn't work. They say you have to shoot
+a witch with a silver bullet. And she's more than human."
+
+A siren's dry shriek as the Sheriff's gasoline buggy made its way
+through the crowded street outside. Cummings raised his brows at me, got
+my nod of permission, and shot his first question at the prisoner.
+
+"Vandeman, where's the money?"
+
+"Not within a hundred miles of here," instantly.
+
+"You took it south with you--on your wedding trip?" Cummings would
+persist. But our man, so expansive a moment ago, had, as I knew he would
+at direct mention of his loot, turned sullen, and he started for the San
+Jose jail, mum as an oyster.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXI
+
+THE MILLION-DOLLAR SUITCASE
+
+
+The Sheriff had gone with his prisoner; Cummings left; and then there
+came to me, in the street there before the lock-up, riding with Jim
+Edwards in his roadster, a Worth Gilbert I had never known. Quiet he had
+been before; but never considerate like this. When I rushed up to him
+with my triumph and congratulations, and he put them aside, it was with
+a curious gentleness.
+
+"Yes, yes, Jerry; I know. Vandeman turned out to be Clayte." Then,
+noticing my bewilderment, "You see, Jim let it slip that Barbara's hurt.
+Where is she?" And Edwards leaned around to explain.
+
+"When we came past Capehart's, and she wasn't there, I--"
+
+"Oh, that's only a scratch," I hurried to assure the boy. "Barbara'll be
+all right."
+
+"So Jim said," he agreed soberly. "I'm afraid you're both lying to me."
+
+"All right," I climbed in beside him. "We'll go and see. She's up at
+your house--waiting for you."
+
+As we headed away for the other end of town, he spoke again, half
+interrogatively,
+
+"Vandeman shot her?" and when I nodded. "He's on his way to jail. I'm
+out. But I'm the man that's responsible for what's happened to her.
+Dragged her into this thing, in the first place. She hated those
+concentrating stunts; and I set her to do one at that woman's table. To
+help play my game--I risked her life."
+
+I listened in wonder; sidelong, in the dimness, I studied the carriage
+of head and shoulders: no diminution of power; but a new use of it. This
+was not the crude boy who would knock everybody's plans to bits for a
+whim; Worth had found himself; and what a man!
+
+"How does it look for recovering the money, Boyne?" Edwards questioned
+as we drove along.
+
+I plunged into the hottest of that stuff Clayte-Vandeman had spilled,
+talked fascinatingly, as I thought, for three minutes, and paused to
+hear Worth say,
+
+"Who's with Barbara at my house?"
+
+"Mrs. Bowman," I said in despair, and quit right there.
+
+We came into Broad Street a little above the Vandeman bungalow which lay
+black and silent, the lights of Worth's house showing beyond. As we
+turned the corner, a man jumped up from the shadow of the hedge where
+the Vandeman lawn joined the Gilbert place; there was a flash; the
+report of a gun; our watchers had flushed some one. I'd barely had time
+to say so to the others when there was a second sharp crack, then the
+whine of a ricochetting chunk of lead as it zipped from the asphalt to
+sing over our heads.
+
+"Beat it!" I yelled. "Stop the car and get to cover!"
+
+Edwards slowed. A moment Worth hung on the running board, peering in the
+direction of the sounds. I started to climb out after him. There came
+another shot from up ahead, and then a shout. As I tumbled to my feet in
+the dark road, Worth had started away on the jump. And I saw then, what
+I'd missed before, that the man who had burst from the hedge, was
+running zig-zag down the open roadway toward us. He was making his legs
+spin, and dodging from side to side as if to duck bullets. Worth headed
+straight for him, as though it wasn't plain that some one out of sight
+somewhere was making a target of the runner.
+
+Not the kind of a scrap I care for; in a half light you can't tell
+friend from foe; but Worth went to it--and what was there to do but
+follow? I shouted and blew my whistle, hoping our men would hear, heed,
+and let up shooting. At the moment of my doing so, Worth closed with the
+man, who dropped something he was carrying, and tackled low, lunging at
+the boy's knees, aiming I could see to let Worth dive over and scrape up
+the pavement with his face.
+
+No dodging that tackle; it caught Worth square; he even seemed to spring
+up for the dive; and somehow he carried his opponent with him to soften
+the fall. They came down together in the middle of the hard road with
+the shock of a railway collision; rolled over and over like dogs in a
+scrap, only there wasn't any growling or yelping. It was deadly quiet;
+not for an instant could you tell which was which, or whether the
+whirling, pelting tangle of arms and legs was man, beast or devil.
+That's why, even when I got near enough, I didn't dare plant a large,
+thick-soled boot in the mess.
+
+The fight was up to Worth; nothing else for it. Capehart came rolling
+from the hedge where I had seen the pistols flash; Eddie Hughes,
+inconceivable in pink puffings, bounded after; Jim Edwards chased up
+from his car; but all any of us could do was to run up and down as the
+struggle whirled about, and grunt when the blows landed. These sounded
+like a pile-driver hitting a redwood butt. Out of the mêlée an arm would
+jerk, the fist at the end of it come back to land with a thud--on
+somebody's meat.
+
+"Who the devil is it?" I bellowed at Capehart, as the two grappled,
+afoot, then down, no knowing who was on top, spinning around in a
+struggle where neither boots nor knees were barred.
+
+"He sneaked out of the bungalow just now," Capehart snorted. "We'd
+searched the place. Didn't think there was room for a louse to be hid in
+it. Got by the boys. I stopped him at the hedge and drove him into the
+open. Now Worth's got him. That is Worth, ain't it? Fights like him."
+
+"Yes," I said, "It's Worth." But in my own mind I wasn't sure whether
+Worth had the fugitive, or the fugitive had Worth. And Jim Edwards
+muttered anxiously, as we skipped and side-stepped along with the fight,
+
+"That fellow may have a knife or a gun."
+
+"Not where he can draw," I said, "or he'd have used it before now." And
+Capehart sung out,
+
+"Sure. Leave 'em go. Worth'll fix him."
+
+Edging in too close, I got a kick on the shin from a flying heel, and
+was dancing around on one foot nursing the other when I heard sounds of
+distress issue from the tangle in the road; somebody was getting breath
+in long, gaspy sighs that broke off in grunts when the thud of blows
+fell, and merged in the harsh nasal of blood violently dislodged from
+nose and throat. For a while they had been up, and swapping punches
+face to face, lightning swift. Sounds like boxing, perhaps, but there
+wasn't any science about it. Feint? Parry? Footwork? Not on your life!
+Each of these two was trying to slug the other into insensibility,
+working for any old kind of a knock-out.
+
+I began to be a little nervous for fear the boy I was bringing home from
+jail as a peace offering to Barbara might arrive so defaced that she
+wouldn't recognize him, when I saw one dark form pull away, leap back,
+an arm shoot out like a piston-rod, and with a jar that set my own teeth
+on edge, connect with the other man's chin. He went down clawing the
+air, crumpled into a bunch of clothes at the side of the road.
+
+"You wanted the Chink, didn't you, Bill?" This was Worth, facing Jim
+Edwards's torch, fumbling for his handkerchief. "I heard you, and I
+thought you wanted him."
+
+"It's Fong Ling!" bawled Capehart. "Sure we wanted him--and whatever
+that was he was carrying. Where is it? Did he drop it?"
+
+"Sort of think he did," Worth was dabbing off his own face with a
+gingerly, respectful touch. "I know he dropped some teeth back there in
+the road. Saw him spit 'em out. Maybe he left it with them. You might go
+and look."
+
+The four of us drifted along the field of battle, Capehart's assistant
+having taken charge of the unconscious Chinaman, whom he was frisking
+for weapons. Halfway back to the hedge Bill stumbled on something,
+picked it up, and dropped it again with a disgusted grunt.
+
+"Nothing but a Chinaboy's keister," he said contemptuously. "Not much
+to that. Why in blazes did he run so?"
+
+"Because you were shooting him up, I'd say," Jim Edwards suggested.
+
+"Naw. Commenced to run before we turned loose on him," Bill protested.
+
+"Hello!" I had pounced on the unbelievable thing, and called to Edwards
+for his light. "Worth, here's your eight-hundred-thousand-dollar
+suitcase!"
+
+"That!" he followed along, dusting himself off, trying out his joints.
+"Oh, yes. I left it in my closet, and it disappeared. Told you of it at
+the time, didn't I, Jerry?"
+
+"You did not," I sputtered, down on my knees, working away at the
+catches. "You never told me anything that would be of any use to us. If
+this thing disappeared, I suppose Vandeman stole it to get a piece of
+evidence in the Clayte case out of the way."
+
+"Likely." Worth turned, with no further interest, and started toward his
+own gate.
+
+"Hi! Come back here," I yelled after him. For the lock gave at that
+moment; there, under the pale circle of the electric torch, lay
+Clayte-Vandeman's loot!
+
+"My gosh!" mumbled Capehart. "I didn't suppose there was so much money
+in the known world."
+
+Eddie Hughes, breathing hard; Jim Edwards, bending to hold the torch;
+Capehart, stooping, blunt hands spread on knees, goggle-eyed; my own
+fingers shaking as I dragged out my list and attempted to sort through
+the stuff--not one of us but felt the thrill of that great fortune
+tumbled down there in the open road in the empty night.
+
+But Worth delayed reluctantly at the edge of the shadows, looking with
+impatience across his shoulder, eager to be on--to get to Barbara. Yet I
+wanted that suitcase to go into the house in his hand; wanted him to be
+able to tell his girl that she'd made him a winner in the gamble and the
+long chase. Roughly assured that only a few thousands had been used by
+Vandeman, I stuck the handles into his fist and trailed along after his
+quick strides. Edwards followed me. Laura Bowman opened the door to us;
+she stopped Edwards on the porch.
+
+And then I saw my children meet. I hadn't meant to; but after all, what
+matter? They didn't know I was on earth. Creation had resolved itself,
+for them, into the one man, the one woman.
+
+The suitcase thumped unregarded on the floor. She came to him with her
+hands out. He took them slowly, raised them to his shoulders, and her
+arms went round his neck.
+
+
+ THE END
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | Transcriber's notes |
+ | |
+ | Page 26, word "sowly" changed to "slowly" (Slowly he brought that) |
+ | |
+ | Page 26, duplicate "the" deleted (followed it with the other) |
+ | |
+ | Page 134, word "inconspicious" changed to "inconspicuous" |
+ |(inconspicuous eye on Edwards) |
+ | |
+ | Page 156, word "expaining" changed to "explaining" (explaining |
+ | how I'd have run) |
+ | |
+ | Page 172, word "Warf" changed to "Wharf" (land me at Fisherman's |
+ | Wharf) |
+ | |
+ | Page 315, word "Los Angles" changed to "Los Angeles" (I bought |
+ | in Los Angeles) |
+ | |
+ | Page 315, word "nonenity" changed to "nonentity" (to deduce that a |
+ | nonentity) |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------------+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Million-Dollar Suitcase, by
+Alice MacGowan and Perry Newberry
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Million-Dollar Suitcase, by
+Alice MacGowan and Perry Newberry
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Million-Dollar Suitcase
+
+Author: Alice MacGowan
+ Perry Newberry
+
+Release Date: August 31, 2009 [EBook #29877]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MILLION-DOLLAR SUITCASE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Clarke, Woodie4 and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
+produced from images generously made available by The
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+</pre>
+
+
+<h1>THE MILLION-DOLLAR<br />
+SUITCASE<br /></h1>
+
+<h3>BY</h3>
+
+<h2>ALICE MacGOWAN<br />
+AND<br />
+PERRY NEWBERRY<br /><br /></h2>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 118px;">
+<img src="images/002.png" width="118" height="150" alt="Publishers Emblem" title="" />
+</div>
+
+<p><br /></p>
+
+<h5>NEW YORK</h5>
+<h4>FREDERICK A. STOKES COMPANY</h4>
+<h5>PUBLISHERS<br /><br /><br /><br /></h5>
+
+<h5><i>Copyright, 1922, by</i></h5>
+
+<h4><span class="smcap">Frederick A. Stokes Company</span><br /><br /><br /></h4>
+
+<h5><i>Copyright, 1921, by</i><br />
+<span class="smcap">The Curtis Publishing Company</span><br />
+<i>under the title "Two and Two"</i><br /></h5>
+
+<p><br /></p>
+
+<h5><i>Printed in the United States of America</i><br /></h5>
+
+<p><br /></p>
+
+
+<h2>CONTENTS</h2>
+
+<div class="center">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="Contents">
+<tr><td align="right">CHAPTER</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td align="right">PAGE</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">I</td><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Worth Gilbert</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_1">1</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">II</td><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Sight Unseen</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_16">16</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">III</td><td align="left"><span class="smcap">A Wedding Party</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_27">27</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">IV</td><td align="left"><span class="smcap">An Apparition</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_45">45</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">V</td><td align="left"><span class="smcap">At the St. Dunstan</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_57">57</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">VI</td><td align="left"><span class="smcap">On the Roof</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_65">65</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">VII</td><td align="left"><span class="smcap">The Gold Nugget</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_75">75</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">VIII</td><td align="left"><span class="smcap">A Tin-horn Gambler</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_87">87</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">IX</td><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Santa Ysobel</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_101">101</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">X</td><td align="left"><span class="smcap">A Shadow in the Fog</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_110">110</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">XI</td><td align="left"><span class="smcap">The Missing Diary</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_124">124</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">XII</td><td align="left"><span class="smcap">A Murder</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_137">137</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">XIII</td><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Dr. Bowman</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_147">147</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">XIV</td><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Seven Lost Days</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_155">155</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">XV</td><td align="left"><span class="smcap">At Dykeman's Office</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_164">164</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">XVI</td><td align="left"><span class="smcap">A Luncheon</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_171">171</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">XVII</td><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Cleansing Fires</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_181">181</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">XVIII</td><td align="left"><span class="smcap">The Torn Page</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_188">188</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">XIX</td><td align="left"><span class="smcap">On the Hill-top</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_196">196</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">XX</td><td align="left"><span class="smcap">At the Country Club</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_209">209</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">XXI</td><td align="left"><span class="smcap">A Matter of Taste</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_214">214</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">XXII</td><td align="left"><span class="smcap">A Dinner Invitation</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_225">225</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">XXIII</td><td align="left"><span class="smcap">A Bit of Silk</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_231">231</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">XXIV</td><td align="left"><span class="smcap">The Magnet</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_240">240</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">XXV</td><td align="left"><span class="smcap">An Arrest</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_250">250</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">XXVI</td><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Mrs. Bowman Speaks</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_261">261</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">XXVII</td><td align="left"><span class="smcap">The Blossom Festival</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_273">273</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">XXVIII</td><td align="left"><span class="smcap">The Country Club Ball</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_293">293</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">XXIX</td><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Unmasked</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_303">303</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">XXX</td><td align="left"><span class="smcap">A Confession</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_311">311</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">XXXI</td><td align="left"><span class="smcap">The Million-Dollar Suitcase</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_320">320</a></td></tr>
+</table><br /><br /></div>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[Pg 1]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2>The Million-Dollar Suitcase</h2>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_I" id="CHAPTER_I"></a>CHAPTER I</h2>
+
+<h3>WORTH GILBERT</h3>
+
+<p>On the blank silence that followed my last words,
+there in the big, dignified room with its Circassian
+walnut and sound-softening rugs, Dykeman,
+the oldest director, squalled out as though he had been
+bitten,</p>
+
+<p>"All there is to tell! But it can't be! It isn't
+possib&mdash;" His voice cracked, split on the word, and
+the rest came in an agonized squeak, "A man can't
+just vanish into thin air!"</p>
+
+<p>"A man!" Knapp, the cashier, echoed. "A suitcase
+full of money&mdash;our money&mdash;can't vanish into thin air
+in the course of a few hours."</p>
+
+<p>Feverishly they passed the timeworn phrase back
+and forth; it would have been ludicrous if it hadn't
+been so deadly serious. Well, money when you come
+to think of it, is its very existence to such an institution;
+it was not to be wondered at that the twelve men
+around the long table in the directors' room of the
+Van Ness Avenue Savings Bank found this a life or
+death matter.</p>
+
+<p>"How much&mdash;?" began heavy-set, heavy-voiced old
+Anson, down at the lower end, but stuck and got no
+further. There was a smitten look on every face at
+the contemplation&mdash;a suitcase could hold so unguessably<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[Pg 2]</a></span>
+great a sum expressed in terms of cash and
+securities.</p>
+
+<p>"We'll have the exact amount in a few moments&mdash;I've
+just set them to verifying," President Whipple
+indicated with a slight backward nod the second and
+smaller table in the room, where two clerks delved
+mole-like among piles of securities, among greenbacks
+and yellowbacks bound round with paper collars, and
+stacks of coin.</p>
+
+<p>The blinds were down, only the table lamps on, and
+a gooseneck over where the men counted. It put the
+place all in shadow, and threw out into bolder relief the
+faces around that board, gray-white, denatured, all with
+the financier's curiously unhuman look. The one
+fairly cheerful countenance in sight was that of A. G.
+Cummings, the bank's attorney.</p>
+
+<p>For myself, I was only waiting to hear what results
+those clerks would bring us. So far, Whipple had
+been quite noncommittal: the extraordinary state of
+the market&mdash;everything so upset that a bank couldn't
+afford even the suspicion of a loss or irregularity&mdash;hinting
+at something in his mind not evident to the
+rest of us. I was just rising to go round and ask him
+quietly if, having reported, I might not be excused to
+get on the actual work, when the door opened.</p>
+
+<p>I can't say why the young fellow who stood in it
+should have seemed so foreign to the business in hand;
+perhaps the carriage of his tall figure, the military
+abruptness of his movements, the way he swung the
+door far back against the wall and halted there, looking
+us over. But I do know that no sooner had
+Worth Gilbert, lately home from France, crossed the
+threshold, meeting Whipple's outstretched hand, nodding<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[Pg 3]</a></span>
+carelessly to the others, than suddenly every man
+in the room seemed older, less a man. We were dead
+ones; he the only live wire in the place.</p>
+
+<p>"Boyne," the president turned quickly to me, "would
+you mind going over for Captain Gilbert's benefit what
+you've just said?"</p>
+
+<p>The newcomer had, so far, not made any movement
+to join the circle at the table. He stood there, chin up,
+looking straight at us all, but quite through us. At
+the back of the gaze was a something between weary
+and fierce that I have noticed in the eyes of so many
+of our boys home from what they'd witnessed and gone
+through over there, when forced to bring their attention
+to the stale, bloodless affairs of civil life. Used
+to the instant, conclusive fortunes of war, they can
+hardly handle themselves when matters hitch and halt
+upon customs and legalities; the only thing that appeals
+to them is the big chance, win or lose, and have it over.
+Such a man doesn't speak the language of the group
+that was there gathered. Just looking at him, old
+Dykeman rasped, without further provocation,</p>
+
+<p>"What's Captain Gilbert got to do with the private
+concerns of this bank?"</p>
+
+<p>As though the words&mdash;and their tone&mdash;had been a
+cordial invitation, rather than an offensive challenge,
+the young man, who had still shown no sign of
+an intention to come into the meeting at all, walked
+to the table, drew out a chair and sat down.</p>
+
+<p>"Pardon me, Mr. Dykeman," Cummings' voice
+had a wire edge on it, "the Hanford block of stock in
+this bank has, as I think you very well know, passed
+fully into Gilbert hands to-day."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[Pg 4]</a></span>"Thomas A. Gilbert," Dykeman was sparing of
+words.</p>
+
+<p>"Captain Worth Gilbert's father," Whipple attempted
+pacification. "Mr. Gilbert senior was with
+me till nearly noon, closing up the transfer. He had
+hardly left when we discovered the shortage. After
+consultation, Knapp and I got hold of Cummings.
+We wanted to get you gentlemen here&mdash;have the capital
+of the bank represented, as nearly as we could&mdash;and
+found that Mr. Gilbert had taken the twelve-forty-five
+train for Santa Ysobel; so, as Captain Gilbert was
+to be found, we felt that if we got him it would be
+practically&mdash;er&mdash;quite the same thing&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Worth Gilbert had sat in the chair he selected, absolutely
+indifferent. It was only when Dykeman, hanging
+to his point, spoke again, that I saw a quick gleam
+of blue fire come into those hawk eyes under the slant
+brow. He gave a sort of detached attention as
+Dykeman sputtered indecently.</p>
+
+<p>"Not the same thing at all! Sons can't always
+speak for fathers, any more than fathers can always
+speak for sons. In this case&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>He broke off with his ugly old mouth open. Worth
+Gilbert, the son of divorced parents, with a childhood
+that had divided time between a mother in the East
+and a California father, surveyed the parchment-like
+countenance leisurely after the crackling old voice was
+hushed. Finally he grunted inarticulately (I'm sorry
+I can't find a more imposing word for a returned
+hero); and answered all objections with,</p>
+
+<p>"I'm here now&mdash;and here I stay. What's the
+excitement?"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</a></span>"I was just asking Mr. Boyne to tell you," Whipple
+came in smoothly.</p>
+
+<p>No one else offered any objections. What I repeated,
+briefly, amounted to this:</p>
+
+<p>Directly after closing time to-day&mdash;which was noon,
+as this was Saturday&mdash;Knapp, the cashier of the bank,
+had discovered a heavy shortage, and it was decided
+on a quick investigation that Edward Clayte, one of
+the paying tellers, had walked out with the money in
+a suitcase. I was immediately called in on what
+appeared a wide-open trail, with me so close behind
+Clayte that you'd have said there was nothing to it.
+I followed him&mdash;and the suitcase&mdash;to his apartment
+at the St. Dunstan, found he'd got there at twenty-five
+minutes to one, and I barely three quarters of an
+hour after.</p>
+
+<p>"How do you get the exact minute Clayte arrived?"
+Anson stopped me at this point, "and the positive
+knowledge that he had the suitcase with him?"</p>
+
+<p>"Clayte asked the time&mdash;from the clerk at the desk&mdash;as
+he came in. He put the suitcase down while he
+set his watch. The clerk saw him pick it up and go
+into the elevator; Mrs. Griggsby, a woman at work
+mending carpet on the seventh floor&mdash;which is his&mdash;saw
+him come out of the elevator carrying it, and let
+himself into his room. There the trail ends."</p>
+
+<p>"Ends?" As my voice halted young Gilbert's word
+came like a bullet. "The trail can't end unless the
+man was there."</p>
+
+<p>"Or the suitcase," little old Sillsbee quavered, and
+Worth Gilbert gave him a swift, half-humorous glance.</p>
+
+<p>"Bath and bedroom," I said, "that suite has three<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</a></span>
+windows, seven stories above the ground. I found
+them all locked&mdash;not mere latches&mdash;the St. Dunstan
+has burglar-proof locks. No disturbance in the room;
+all neat, in place, the door closed with the usual spring
+lock; and I had to get Mrs. Griggsby to move, since
+she was tacking the carpet right at the threshold.
+Everything was in that room that should have been
+there&mdash;except Clayte and the suitcase."</p>
+
+<p>The babel of complaint and suggestion broke out as
+I finished, exactly as it had done when I got to this
+point before: "The Griggsby woman ought to be kept
+under surveillance"; "The clerk, the house servants
+ought to be watched,"&mdash;and so on, and so on. I
+curtly reiterated my assurance that such routine
+matters had been promptly and thoroughly attended to.
+My nerves were getting raw. I'm not so young as I
+was. This promised to be one of those grinding cases
+where the detective agency is run through the rollers
+so many times that it comes out pretty slim in the end,
+whether that end is failure or success.</p>
+
+<p>The only thing in sight that it didn't make me sick
+to look at was that silent young fellow sitting there,
+never opening his trap, giving things a chance to
+develop, not rushing in on them with the forceps. It
+was a crazy thing for Whipple to call this meeting&mdash;have
+all these old, scared men on my back before I
+could take the measure of what I was up against.
+What, exactly, had the Van Ness Avenue Bank lost?
+That, and not anything else, was the key for my first
+moves. And at last a clerk crossed to our table,
+touched Whipple's arm and presented a sheet of paper.</p>
+
+<p>"I'll read the total, gentlemen." The president
+stared at the sheet he held, moistened his lips, gulped,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</a></span>
+gasped, "I&mdash;I'd no idea it was so much!" and finished
+in a changed voice, "nine hundred and eighty seven
+thousand, two hundred and thirty four dollars."</p>
+
+<p>A deathlike hush. Dykeman's mere look was a call
+for the ambulance; Anson slumped in his chair; little
+old Sillsbee sat twisted away so that his face was in
+shadow, but the knuckles showed bone white where his
+hand gripped the table top. None of them seemed
+able to speak; the young voice that broke startlingly
+on the stillness had the effect of scaring the others,
+with its tone of nonchalance, rather than reassuring
+them. Worth Gilbert leaned forward and looked
+round in my direction with,</p>
+
+<p>"This is beginning to be interesting. What do the
+police say of it?"</p>
+
+<p>"We've not thought well to notify them yet."
+Whipple's eye consulted that of his cashier and he
+broke off. Quietly the clerks got out with the last
+load of securities; Knapp closed the door carefully
+behind them, and as he returned to us, Whipple repeated,
+"I had no idea it was so big," his tone almost
+pleading as he looked from one to the other. "But I
+felt from the first that we'd better keep this thing to
+ourselves. We don't want a run on the bank, and
+under present financial conditions, almost anything
+might start one. But&mdash;almost a million dollars!"</p>
+
+<p>He seemed unable to go on; none of the other men
+at the table had anything to offer. It was the silent
+youngster, the outsider, who spoke again.</p>
+
+<p>"I suppose Clayte was bonded&mdash;for what that's
+worth?"</p>
+
+<p>"Fifteen thousand dollars," Knapp, the cashier, gave
+the information dully. The sum sounded pitiful be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</a></span>side
+that which, we were to understand, had traveled
+out of the bank as currency and unregistered securities
+in Clayte's suitcase.</p>
+
+<p>"Bonding company will hound him, won't they?"
+young Gilbert put it bluntly. "Will the Clearing
+House help you out?" in the tone of one discussing a
+lost umbrella.</p>
+
+<p>"Not much chance&mdash;now." Whipple's face was
+sickly. "You know as well as I do that we are going
+to get little help from outside. I want you to all stand
+by me now&mdash;keep this quiet&mdash;among ourselves&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Among ourselves!" rapped out Kirkpatrick. "Then
+it leaks&mdash;we have a run&mdash;and where are you?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, no. Just long enough to give Boyne here a
+chance to recover our money without publicity&mdash;try it
+out, anyhow."</p>
+
+<p>"Well," said Anson sullenly, "that's what he's paid
+for. How long is it going to take him?"</p>
+
+<p>I made no attempt to answer that fool question;
+Cummings spoke for me, lawyer fashion, straddling
+the question, bringing up the arguments pro and con.</p>
+
+<p>"Your detective asks for publicity to assist his
+search. You refuse it. Then you've got to be indulgent
+with him in the matter of time. Understand
+me, you may be right; I'm not questioning the wisdom
+of secrecy, though as a lawyer I generally think the
+sooner you get to the police with a crime the better.
+You all can see how publicity and a sizable reward
+offered would give Mr. Boyne a hundred thousand
+assistants&mdash;conscious and unconscious&mdash;to help nab
+Clayte."</p>
+
+<p>"And we'd be a busted bank before you found him,"<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</a></span>
+groaned Knapp. "We've got to keep this thing to
+ourselves. I agree with Whipple."</p>
+
+<p>"It's all we can do," the president repeated.</p>
+
+<p>"Suppose a State bank examiner walks in on you
+Monday?" demanded the attorney.</p>
+
+<p>"We take that chance&mdash;that serious chance," replied
+Whipple solemnly.</p>
+
+<p>Silence after that again till Cummings spoke.</p>
+
+<p>"Gentlemen, there are here present twelve of the
+principal stockholders of the bank." He paused a
+moment to estimate. "The capital is practically represented.
+Speaking as your legal advisor, I am obliged
+to say that you should not let the bank take such a
+risk as Mr. Whipple suggests. You are threatened
+with a staggering loss, but, after all, a high percent of
+money lost by defalcations is recovered&mdash;made good&mdash;wholly
+or in part."</p>
+
+<p>"Nearly a million dollars!" croaked old Sillsbee.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, yes, of course," Cummings agreed hastily;
+"the larger amount's against you. The men who can
+engineer such a theft are almost as strong as you are.
+You've got to make every edge cut&mdash;use every weapon
+that's at hand. And most of all, gentlemen, you've
+got to stand together. No dissensions. As a temporary
+expedient&mdash;to keep the bank sufficiently under
+cover and still allow Boyne the publicity he needs&mdash;replace
+this money pro rata among yourselves. That
+wouldn't clean any of you. Announce a small defalcation,
+such as Clayte's bond would cover, so you
+could collect there; use all the machinery of the police.
+Then when Clayte's found, the money recovered, you
+reimburse yourselves."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</a></span>"But if he's never found! If it's never recovered?"
+Knapp asked huskily; he was least able of any man
+in the room to stand the loss.</p>
+
+<p>"What do you say, Gilbert?" The attorney looked
+toward the young man, who, all through the discussion,
+had been staring straight ahead of him. He
+came round to the lawyer's question like one roused
+from other thoughts, and agreed shortly.</p>
+
+<p>"Not a bad bet."</p>
+
+<p>"Well&mdash;Boyne&mdash;" Whipple was giving way an
+inch at a time.</p>
+
+<p>"It's a peculiar case," I began, then caught myself
+up with, "All cases are peculiar. The big point here
+is to get our man before he can get rid of the money.
+We were close after Clayte; even that locked room
+in the St. Dunstan needn't have stopped us. If he
+wasn't in it, he was somewhere not far outside it.
+He'd had no time to make a real getaway. All I
+needed to lay hands on him was a good description."</p>
+
+<p>"Description?" echoed Whipple. "Your agency's
+got descriptions on file&mdash;thumb prints&mdash;photographs&mdash;of
+every employee of this bank."</p>
+
+<p>"Every one of 'em but Clayte," I said. "When I
+came to look up the files, there wasn't a thing on him.
+Don't think I ever laid eyes on the man myself."</p>
+
+<p>A description of Edward Clayte? Every man at
+the table&mdash;even old Sillsbee&mdash;sat up and opened his
+mouth to give one; but Knapp beat them to it, with,</p>
+
+<p>"Clayte's worked in this bank eight years. We all
+know him. You can get just as many good descriptions
+as there are people on our payroll or directors
+in this room&mdash;and plenty more at the St. Dunstan,
+I'll be bound."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</a></span>"You think so?" I said wearily. "I have not been
+idle, gentlemen; I have interviewed his associates.
+Listen to this; it is a composite of the best I've been
+able to get." I read: "Edward Clayte; height about
+five feet seven or eight; weight between one hundred
+and forty and one hundred and fifty pounds; age somewhere
+around forty; smooth face; medium complexion,
+fairish; brown hair; light eyes; apparently commonplace
+features; dressed neatly in blue business
+suit, black shoes, black derby hat&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Wait a minute," interposed Knapp. "Is that what
+they gave you at the St. Dunstan&mdash;what he was wearing
+when he came in?"</p>
+
+<p>I nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I'd have said he had on tan shoes and a fedora.
+He <i>did</i>&mdash;or was that yesterday? But aside
+from that, it's a perfect description; brings the man
+right up before me."</p>
+
+<p>I heard a chuckle from Worth Gilbert.</p>
+
+<p>"That description," I said, "is gibberish; mere
+words. Would it bring Clayte up before any one
+who had never seen him? Ask Captain Gilbert, who
+doesn't know the man. I say that's a list of the points
+at which he resembles every third office man you meet
+on the street. What I want is the points at which
+he'd differ. You have all known Clayte for years;
+forget his regularities, and tell me his peculiarities&mdash;looks,
+manners, dress or habits."</p>
+
+<p>There was a long pause, broken finally by Whipple.</p>
+
+<p>"He never smoked," said the bank president.</p>
+
+<p>"Occasionally he did," contradicted Knapp, and the
+pause continued till I asked,</p>
+
+<p>"Any peculiarities of clothing?"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</a></span>"Oh, yes," said Whipple. "Very neat. Usually
+blue serge."</p>
+
+<p>"But sometimes gray," added Knapp, heavily, and
+old Sillsbee piped in,</p>
+
+<p>"I've seen that feller wear pin-check; I know I
+have."</p>
+
+<p>I was fed up on clothes.</p>
+
+<p>"How did he brush his hair?" I questioned.</p>
+
+<p>"Smoothed down from a part high on the left,"
+Knapp came back promptly.</p>
+
+<p>"On the right," boomed old Anson from the foot
+of the table.</p>
+
+<p>"Sometimes&mdash;yes&mdash;I guess he did," Knapp conceded
+hesitantly.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, well then, what color was it? Maybe you can
+agree better on that."</p>
+
+<p>"Sort of mousy color," Knapp thought.</p>
+
+<p>"O Lord! Mousy colored!" groaned Dykeman
+under his breath. "Listen to 'em!"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, isn't it?" Knapp was a bit stung.</p>
+
+<p>"House mousy, or field mousy?" Cummings wanted
+to know.</p>
+
+<p>"Knapp's right enough," Whipple said with dignity.
+"The man's hair is a medium brown&mdash;indeterminate
+brown." He glanced around the table at the heads of
+hair under the electric lights. "Something the color
+of Merrill's," and a director began stroking his hair
+nervously.</p>
+
+<p>"No, no; darker than Merrill's," broke in Kirkpatrick.
+"Isn't it, Knapp?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why, I was going to say lighter," admitted the
+cashier, discouragedly.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</a></span>"Never mind," I sighed. "Forget the hair. Come
+on&mdash;what color are his eyes?"</p>
+
+<p>"Blue," said Whipple.</p>
+
+<p>"Gray," said Knapp.</p>
+
+<p>"Brown," said Kirkpatrick.</p>
+
+<p>They all spoke in one breath. And as I despairingly
+laid down my pencil, the last man repeated
+firmly,</p>
+
+<p>"Brown. But&mdash;they might be light brown&mdash;or
+hazel, y'know."</p>
+
+<p>"But, after all, Boyne," Whipple appealed to me,
+"you've got a fairly accurate description of the man,
+one that fits him all right."</p>
+
+<p>"Does it? Then he's description proof. No moles,
+scars or visible marks?" I suggested desperately.</p>
+
+<p>"None." There was a negative shaking of heads.</p>
+
+<p>"No mannerisms? No little tricks, such as a twist
+of the mouth, a mincing step, or a head carried on
+one side?"</p>
+
+<p>More shakes of negation from the men who knew
+Clayte.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, at least you can tell me who are his friends&mdash;his
+intimates?"</p>
+
+<p>Nobody answered.</p>
+
+<p>"He must have friends?" I urged.</p>
+
+<p>"He hasn't," maintained Whipple. "Knapp is as
+close to him as any man in San Francisco."</p>
+
+<p>The cashier squirmed, but said nothing.</p>
+
+<p>"But outside the bank. Who were his associates?"</p>
+
+<p>"Don't think he had any," from Knapp.</p>
+
+<p>"Relatives?"</p>
+
+<p>"None&mdash;I know he hadn't."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</a></span>"Girls? Lord! Didn't he have a girl?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not a girl."</p>
+
+<p>"No associates&mdash;no girl? For the love of Mike,
+what could such a man intend to do with all that
+money?" I gasped. "Where did he spend his time
+when he wasn't in the bank?"</p>
+
+<p>Whipple looked at his cashier for an answer. But
+Knapp was sitting, head down, in a painful brown
+study, and the president himself began haltingly.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, he was perhaps the one man in the bank that
+I knew least about. The truth is he was so unobjectionable
+in every way, personally unobtrusive, quite
+unimportant and uninteresting; really&mdash;er&mdash;un-everything,
+such a&mdash;a&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Shadow," Cummings suggested.</p>
+
+<p>"That's the word&mdash;shadow&mdash;I never thought to
+inquire where he went till he walked out of here this
+noon with the bank's money crammed in that suitcase."</p>
+
+<p>"Was the Saturday suitcase a regular thing?" I
+asked, and Whipple looked bewildered. But Knapp
+woke up with,</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes. For years. Studious fellow. Books to
+be exchanged at the public library, I think. No&mdash;"
+Knapp spoke heavily. "Come to think of it, guess
+that was special work. He told me once he was
+taking some sort of correspondence course."</p>
+
+<p>"Special work!" chuckled Worth Gilbert. "I'll tell
+the world!"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, well, give me a description of the suitcase,"
+I hurried.</p>
+
+<p>"Brown. Sole-leather. That's all I ever noticed,"
+from Whipple, a bit stiffly.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</a></span>"Brass rings and lock, I suppose?"</p>
+
+<p>"Brass or nickel; I don't remember. What'd you
+say, Knapp?"</p>
+
+<p>"I wouldn't know now, if it was canvas and tin,"
+replied the harried cashier.</p>
+
+<p>"Gentlemen," I said, looking across at the clock,
+"since half-past two my men have been watching docks,
+ferries, railroad stations, every garage near the St.
+Dunstan, the main highways out of town. Seven of
+them on the job, and in the first hour they made ten
+arrests, on that description; and every time, sure they
+had their man. They thought, just as you seem to
+think, that the bunch of words described something.
+We're getting nowhere, gentlemen, and time means
+money here."</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_II" id="CHAPTER_II"></a>CHAPTER II</h2>
+
+<h3>SIGHT UNSEEN</h3>
+
+
+<p>In the squabble and snatch of argument, given dignity
+only because it concerned the recovery of near a
+million dollars, we seemed to have lost Worth Gilbert
+entirely. He kept his seat, that chair he had taken
+instantly when old Dykeman seemed to wish to have
+it denied him; but he sat on it as though it were a lone
+rock by the sea. I didn't suppose he was hearing
+what we said any more than he would have heard the
+mewing of a lot of gulls, when, on a sudden silence,
+he burst out,</p>
+
+<p>"For heaven's sake, if you men can't decide on anything,
+sell me the suitcase! I'll buy it, as it is, and
+clean up the job."</p>
+
+<p>"Sell you&mdash;the suitcase&mdash;Clayte's suitcase?" They
+sat up on the edge of their chairs; bewildered, incredulous,
+hostile. Such a bunch is very like a herd of
+cattle; anything they don't understand scares them.
+Even the attorney studied young Gilbert with curious
+interest. I was mortal glad I hadn't said what was
+the fact, that with the naming of the enormous sum
+lost I was certain this was a sizable conspiracy with
+long-laid plans. They were mistrustful enough as
+Whipple finally questioned,</p>
+
+<p>"Is this a bona-fide offer, Captain Gilbert?" and
+Dykeman came in after him.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</a></span>"A gambler's chance at stolen money&mdash;is that what
+you figure on buying, sir? Is that it?" And heavy-faced
+Anson asked bluntly,</p>
+
+<p>"Who's to set the price on it? You or us? There's
+practically a million dollars in that suitcase. It belongs
+to the bank. If you've got an idea that you can
+buy up the chance of it for about fifty percent&mdash;you're
+mistaken. We have too much faith in Mr. Boyne
+and his agency for that. Why, at this moment, one
+of his men may have laid hands on Clayte, or found
+the man who planned&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>He stopped with his mouth open. I saw the same
+suspicion that had taken his breath away grip momentarily
+every man at the table. A hint of it was
+in Whipple's voice as he asked, gravely:</p>
+
+<p>"Do you bind yourself to pursue Clayte and bring
+him, if possible, to justice?"</p>
+
+<p>"Bind myself to nothing. I'll give eight hundred
+thousand dollars for that suitcase."</p>
+
+<p>He fumbled in his pocket with an interrogative look
+at Whipple, and, "May I smoke in here?" and lit a
+cigarette without waiting a reply.</p>
+
+<p>Banking institutions take some pains to keep in
+their employ no young men who are known to play
+poker; but a poker face at that board would have acquired
+more than its share of dignity. As it was, you
+could see, almost as though written there, the agonizing
+doubt running riot in their faces as to whether
+Worth Gilbert was a young hero coming to the bank's
+rescue, or a con man playing them for suckers. It
+was Knapp who said at last, huskily,</p>
+
+<p>"I think we should close with Captain Gilbert's
+offer." The cashier had a considerable family, and I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</a></span>
+knew his recently bought Pacific Avenue home was not
+all paid for.</p>
+
+<p>"We might consider it," Whipple glanced doubtfully
+at his associates. "If everything else fails, this
+might be a way out of the difficulty for us."</p>
+
+<p>If everything else failed! President Whipple was
+certainly no poker player. Worth Gilbert gave one
+swift look about the ring of faces, pushed a brown,
+muscular left hand out on the table top, glancing at
+the wrist watch there, and suggested brusquely,</p>
+
+<p>"Think it over. My offer holds for fifteen minutes.
+Time to get at all the angles of the case. Huh!
+Gentlemen! I seem to have started something!"</p>
+
+<p>For the directors and stockholders of the Van Ness
+Avenue Savings Bank were at that moment almost as
+yappy and snappy as a wolf pack. Dykeman wanted
+to know about the one hundred and eighty seven thousand
+odd dollars not covered by Worth's offer&mdash;did
+they lose that? Knapp was urging that Clayte's bond,
+when they'd collected, would shade the loss; Whipple
+reminding them that they'd have to spend a good deal&mdash;maybe
+a great deal&mdash;on the recovery of the suitcase;
+money that Worth Gilbert would have to spend
+instead if they sold to him; and finally an ugly mutter
+from somewhere that maybe young Gilbert wouldn't
+have to spend so very much to recover that suitcase&mdash;maybe
+he wouldn't!</p>
+
+<p>The tall young fellow looked thoughtfully at his
+watch now and again. Cummings and I chipped into
+the thickest of the row and convinced them that he
+meant what he said, not only by his offer, but by its
+time limit.</p>
+
+<p>"How about publicity, if this goes?" Whipple sud<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</a></span>denly
+interrogated, raising his voice to top the pack-yell.
+"Even with eight hundred thousand dollars in
+our vaults, a run's not a thing that does a bank any
+good. I suppose," stretching up his head to see across
+his noisy associates, "I suppose, Captain Gilbert, you'll
+be retaining Boyne's agency? In that case, do you
+give him the publicity he wants?"</p>
+
+<p>"Course he does!" Dykeman hissed. "Can't you
+see? Damn fool wants his name in the papers!
+Rotten story like this&mdash;about some lunatic buying a
+suitcase with a million in it&mdash;would ruin any bank
+if it got into print." Dykeman's breath gave out.
+"And&mdash;it's&mdash;it's&mdash;just the kind of story the accursed
+yellow press would eat up. Let it alone, Whipple.
+Let his damned offer alone. There's a joker in it
+somewhere."</p>
+
+<p>"There won't be any offer in about three minutes,"
+Cummings quietly reminded them. "If you'd asked
+my opinion&mdash;and giving you opinions is what you pay
+me a salary for&mdash;I'd have said close with him while
+you can."</p>
+
+<p>Whipple gave me an agonized glance. I nodded
+affirmatively. He put the question to vote in a breath;
+the ayes had it, old Dykeman shouting after them in
+an angry squeak.</p>
+
+<p>"No! No!" and adding as he glared about him,
+"I'd like to be able to look a newspaper in the face;
+but never again! Never again!"</p>
+
+<p>I made my way over to Gilbert and stood in front
+of him.</p>
+
+<p>"You've bought something, boy," I said. "If you
+mean to keep me on as your detective, you can assure
+these people that I'll do my darndest to give informa<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</a></span>tion
+to the police and keep it out of the papers. What's
+happened here won't get any further than this room&mdash;through
+me."</p>
+
+<p>"You're hired, Jerry Boyne." Gilbert slapped me
+on the back affectionately. After all, he hadn't
+changed so much in his four years over there; I began
+to see more than traces of the enthusiastic youngster
+to whom I used to spin detective yarns in the
+grill at the St. Francis or on the rocks by the Cliff
+House. "Sure, we'll keep it out of the papers. Suits
+me. I'd rather not pose as the fool soon parted from
+his money."</p>
+
+<p>The remark was apropos; Knapp had feverishly
+beckoned the lawyer over to a little side desk; they
+were down at it, the light snapped on, writing, trying
+to frame up an agreement that would hold water.
+One by one the others went and looked on nervously
+as they worked; by the time they'd finished something,
+everybody'd seen it but Worth; and when it
+was finally put in his hands, all he seemed to notice
+was the one point of the time they'd set for payment.</p>
+
+<p>"It'll be quite some stunt to get the amount together
+by ten o'clock Monday," he said slowly.
+"There are securities to be converted&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>He paused, and looked up on a queer hush.</p>
+
+<p>"Securities?" croaked Dykeman. "To be converted&mdash;?
+Oh!"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," in some surprise. "Or would the bank
+prefer to have them turned over in their present
+form?"</p>
+
+<p>Again a strained moment, broken by Whipple's
+nervous,</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</a></span>"Maybe that would be better," and a quickly suppressed
+chuckle from Cummings.</p>
+
+<p>The agreement was in duplicate. It gave Worth
+Gilbert complete ownership of a described sole-leather
+suitcase and its listed contents, and, as he had demanded,
+it bound him to nothing save the payment.
+Cummings said frankly that the transaction was
+illegal from end to end, and that any assurance as to
+the bank's ceasing to pursue Clayte would amount to
+compounding a felony. Yet we all signed solemnly,
+the lawyer and I as witnesses. A financier's idea of
+indecency is something about money which hasn't
+formerly been done. The directors got sorer and
+sorer as Worth Gilbert's cheerfulness increased.</p>
+
+<p>"Acts as though it were a damn' crap game," I
+heard Dykeman muttering to Sillsbee, who came back
+vacuously.</p>
+
+<p>"Craps?&mdash;they say our boys did shoot craps a good
+deal over there. Well&mdash;uh&mdash;they were risking their
+lives."</p>
+
+<p>And that's as near as any of them came, I suppose,
+to understanding how a weariness of the little interweaving
+plans of tamed men had pushed Worth Gilbert
+into carelessly staking his birthright on a chance
+that might lend interest to life, a hazard big enough
+to breeze the staleness out of things for him.</p>
+
+<p>We were leaving the bank, Gilbert and I ahead,
+Cummings right at my boy's shoulder, the others holding
+back to speak together, (bitterly enough, if I am
+any guesser) when Worth said suddenly,</p>
+
+<p>"You mentioned in there it's being illegal for the
+bank to give up the pursuit of Clayte. Seems funny<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</a></span>
+to me, but I suppose you know what you're talking
+about. Anyhow"&mdash;he was lighting another cigarette
+and he glanced sharply at Cummings across it&mdash;"anyhow,
+they won't waste their money hunting Clayte
+now, should you say? That's my job. That's where
+I get my cash back."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, that's where, is it?" The lawyer's dry tone
+might have been regarded as humorous. We stood in
+the deep doorway, hunching coat collars, looking into
+the foggy street. Worth's interest in life seemed to
+be freshening moment by moment.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," he agreed briskly. "I'm going to keep you
+and Boyne busy for a while. You'll have to show me
+how to hustle the payment for those Shylocks, and
+Jerry's got to find the suitcase, so I can eat. But I'll
+help him."</p>
+
+<p>Cummings stared at the boy.</p>
+
+<p>"Gilbert," he said, "where are you going?&mdash;right
+now, I mean."</p>
+
+<p>"To Boyne's office."</p>
+
+<p>We stepped out to the street where the line of
+limousines waited for the old fellows inside, my own
+battleship-gray roadster, pretty well hammered but still
+a mighty capable machine, far down at the end. As
+Worth moved with me toward it, the lawyer walked
+at his elbow.</p>
+
+<p>"Seat for me?" he glanced at the car. "I've a few
+words of one syllable to say to this young man&mdash;council
+that I ought to get in as early as possible."</p>
+
+<p>I looked at little Pete dozing behind the wheel, and
+answered,</p>
+
+<p>"Take you all right, if I could drive. But I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</a></span>
+sprained my thumb on a window lock looking over that
+room at the St. Dunstan."</p>
+
+<p>"I'll drive." Worth had circled the car with surprising
+quickness for so large a man. I saw him on the
+other side, waiting for Pete to get out so he could get
+in. Curious the intimate, understanding look he gave
+the monkey as he flipped a coin at him with, "Buy
+something to burn, kid." Pete's idea of Worth Gilbert
+would be quite different from that of the directors
+in there. After all, human beings are only what we
+see them from our varying angles. Pete slid down,
+looking back to the last at the tall young fellow who
+was taking his place at the wheel. Cummings and I
+got in and we were off.</p>
+
+<p>There in the machine, my new boss driving, Cummings
+sitting next him, I at the further side, began the
+keen, cool probe after a truth which to me lay very
+evidently on the surface. Any one, I would have said,
+might see with half an eye that Worth Gilbert had
+bought Clayte's suitcase so that he could get a thrill
+out of hunting for it. Cummings I knew had in
+charge all the boy's Pacific Coast holdings; and since
+his mother's death during the first year of the war,
+these were large. Worth manifested toward them
+and the man who spoke to him of them the indifference,
+almost contempt, of an impatient young soul who in
+the years just behind him, had often wagered his chance
+of his morning's coffee against some other fellow's
+month's pay feeling that he was putting up double.</p>
+
+<p>It seemed the sense of ownership was dulled in one
+who had seen magnificent properties masterless, or
+apparently belonging to some limp, bloodstained bundle<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</a></span>
+of flesh that lay in one of the rooms. In vain Cummings
+urged the state of the market, repeating with
+more particularity and force what Whipple had said.
+The mines were tied up by strike; their stock, while
+perfectly good, was down to twenty cents on the dollar;
+to sell now would be madness. Worth only repeated
+doggedly.</p>
+
+<p>"I've got to have the money&mdash;Monday morning&mdash;ten
+o'clock. I don't care what you sell&mdash;or hock.
+Get it."</p>
+
+<p>"See here," the lawyer was puzzled, and therefore
+unprofessionally out of temper. "Even sacrificing
+your stuff in the most outrageous manner, I couldn't
+realize enough&mdash;not by ten o'clock Monday. You'll
+have to go to your father. You can catch the five-five
+for Santa Ysobel."</p>
+
+<p>I could see Worth choke back a hot-tempered refusal
+of the suggestion. The funds he'd got to have,
+even if he went through some humiliation to get them.</p>
+
+<p>"At that," he said slowly, "father wouldn't have any
+great amount of cash on hand. Say I went to him
+with the story&mdash;and took the cat-hauling he'll give
+me&mdash;should I be much better off?"</p>
+
+<p>"Sure you would." Cummings leaned back. I saw
+he considered his point made. "Whipple would rather
+take their own bank stock than anything else. Your
+father has just acquired a big block of it. Act while
+there's time. Better go out there and see him now&mdash;at
+once."</p>
+
+<p>"I'll think about it," Worth nodded. "You dig for
+me what you can and never quit." And he applied
+himself to the demands of the down-town traffic.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</a></span>"Well," Cummings said, "drop me at the next corner,
+please. I've got an engagement with a man
+here."</p>
+
+<p>Worth swung in and stopped. Cummings left us.
+As we began to worm a slow way toward my office,
+I suggested,</p>
+
+<p>"You'll come upstairs with me, and&mdash;er&mdash;sort of
+outline a policy? I ought to have any possible information
+you can give me, so's not to make any more
+wrong moves than we have to."</p>
+
+<p>"Information?" he echoed, and I hastened to amend,</p>
+
+<p>"I mean whatever notion you've got. Your theory,
+you know&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Not a notion. Not a theory." He shook his
+head, eyes on the traffic cop. "That's your part."</p>
+
+<p>I sat there somewhat flabbergasted. After all, I
+hadn't fully believed that the boy had absolutely
+nothing to go on, that he had bought purely at a whim,
+put up eight hundred thousand dollars on my skill at
+running down a criminal. It sort of crumpled me up.
+I said so. He laughed a little, ran up to the curb at
+the Phelan building, cut out the engine, set the brake
+and turned to me with,</p>
+
+<p>"Don't worry. I'm getting what I paid for&mdash;or
+what I'm going to pay for. And I've got to go right
+after the money. Suppose I meet you, say, at ten
+o'clock to-night?"</p>
+
+<p>"Suits me."</p>
+
+<p>"At Tait's. Reserve a table, will you, and we'll
+have supper."</p>
+
+<p>"You're on," I said. "And plenty to do myself
+meantime." I hopped out on my side.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</a></span>Worth sat in the roadster, not hurrying himself to
+follow up Cummings' suggestion&mdash;the big boy, non-communicative,
+incurious, the question of fortune lost
+or won seeming not to trouble him at all. I skirted
+the machine and came round to him, demanding,</p>
+
+<p>"With whom do you suppose Cummings' engagement
+was?"</p>
+
+<p>"Don't know, Jerry, and don't care," looking down
+at me serenely. "Why should I?" He swung one
+long leg free and stopped idly, half in the car, half out.</p>
+
+<p>"What if I told you Cummings' engagement was
+with our friend Dykeman&mdash;only Dykeman doesn't
+know it yet?"</p>
+
+<p>Slowly he brought that dangling foot down to the
+pavement, followed it with the other, and faced me.
+Across the blankness of his features shot a joyous
+gleam; it spread, brightening till he was radiant.</p>
+
+<p>"I get you!" he chortled. "Collusion! They think
+I'm standing in with Clayte&mdash;Oh, boy!"</p>
+
+<p>He threw back his head and roared.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_III" id="CHAPTER_III"></a>CHAPTER III</h2>
+
+<h3>A WEDDING PARTY</h3>
+
+
+<p>I looked at my watch; quarter of ten; a little
+ahead of my appointment. I ordered a telephone
+extension brought to this corner table I had reserved
+at Tait's and got in touch with my office; then with
+the knowledge that any new kink in the case would be
+reported immediately to me, I relaxed to watch the
+early supper crowd arrive: Women in picture hats
+and bare or half-bare shoulders with rich wraps slipping
+off them; hum of voices; the clatter of silver and
+china; waiters beginning to wake up and dart about
+settling new arrivals. And I wondered idly what sort
+of party would come to sit around one long table across
+from me specially decorated with pale tinted flowers.</p>
+
+<p>There was a sense of warmth and comfort at my
+heart. I am a lonely man; the people I take to seem
+to have a way of passing on in the stream of life&mdash;or
+death&mdash;leaving me with a few well-thumbed volumes
+on a shelf in my rooms for consolation. Walt Whitman,
+Montaigne, The Bard, two or three other lesser
+poets, and you've the friends that have stayed by me
+for thirty years. And so, having met up with Worth
+Gilbert when he was a youngster, at the time his
+mother was living in San Francisco to get a residence
+for her divorce proceedings, having loved the boy and
+got I am sure some measure of affection in return, it
+seemed almost too much to ask of fate that he should
+come back into my days, plunge into such a proposition<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</a></span>
+as this bank robbery, right at my elbow as it were,
+and make himself my employer&mdash;my boss.</p>
+
+<p>I was a subordinate in the agency in those old times
+when he and I used to chin about the business, and his
+idea (I always discussed it gravely and respectfully
+with him) was to grow up and go into partnership
+with me. Well, we were partners now.</p>
+
+<p>Past ten, nearly five minutes. Where was he?
+What up to? Would he miss his appointment? No,
+I caught a glimpse of him at the door getting rid of
+hat and overcoat, pausing a moment with tall bent head
+to banter Rose, the little Chinese girl who usually
+drifted from table to table with cigars and cigarettes.
+Then he was coming down the room.</p>
+
+<p>A man who takes his own path in life, and will walk
+it though hell bar the way, never explaining, never
+extenuating, never excusing his course&mdash;something
+seems to emanate from such a chap that draws all eyes
+after him in a public place in a look between fear and
+desire. Sitting there in Tait's, my view of Worth cut
+off now by a waiter with a high-carried tray, again by
+people passing to tables for whom he halted, I had a
+good chance to see the turning of eyeballs that followed
+him, the furtive glances that snatched at him, or fondled
+him, or would have probed him; the admiration of
+the women, the envy of the men, curiously alike in
+that it was sometimes veiled and half wistful, sometimes
+very open. Drifters&mdash;you see so many of the
+sort in a restaurant&mdash;why wouldn't they hanker after
+the strength and ruthlessness of a man like Worth?
+And the poor prunes, how little they knew him! As
+my friend Walt would say, he wasn't out after any of
+the old, smooth prizes they cared for. And win or lose<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</a></span>
+he would still be a victor, for all he and his sort demand
+is freedom, and the joy of the game. So he came on to
+me.</p>
+
+<p>I noticed, a little startled, as he slumped into his
+chair with a grunt of greeting, that his cheek was
+somehow gaunt and pale under the tan; the blue fire of
+his eyes only smoldered, and I pulled back his chair
+with,</p>
+
+<p>"You look as if you hadn't had any dinner."</p>
+
+<p>"I haven't." He gave a man-size order for food
+and turned back from it to listen to me. "I'll be
+nearer human when I get some grub under my belt."</p>
+
+<p>My report of what had been done on the case since
+we separated was interrupted by the arrival of our
+orders, and Worth sailed into a thick, juicy steak while
+I was still explaining details. The orchestra whanged
+and blared and jazzed away; the people at the other
+tables noticed us or busied themselves noisily with
+affairs of their own; Worth sat and enjoyed his meal
+with the air of a man feeding at a solitary country
+tavern. When he had finished&mdash;and he took his time
+about it&mdash;the worn, punished look was gone from his
+face; his eye was bright, his tone nonchalant, as he
+lighted a cigarette, remarking,</p>
+
+<p>"I've had one more good dinner. Food's a thing
+you can depend on; it doesn't rake up your
+entire past record from the time you squirmed into
+this world, and tell you what a fool you've always
+been."</p>
+
+<p>I turned that over in my mind. Did it mean that
+he'd seen his father and got a calling down? I wanted
+to know&mdash;and was afraid to ask. The fact is I was
+beginning to wake up to a good many things about<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</a></span>
+my young boss. I was intensely interested in his
+reactions on people. So far, I'd seen him with
+strangers. I wished that I might have a chance to observe
+him among intimates. Old Richardson who
+founded our agency (and would never knowingly have
+left me at the head of it, though he did take me in as
+partner, finally) used to say that the main trouble with
+me was I studied people instead of cases. Richardson
+held that all men are equal before the detective, and
+must be regarded only as queer shaped pieces to be
+fitted together so as to make out a case. Richardson
+would have gone as coolly about easing the salt of the
+earth into the chink labeled "murder" or "embezzlement,"
+as though neither had been human. With me
+the personal equation always looms big, and of course
+he was quite right in saying that it's likely to get you
+all gummed up.</p>
+
+<p>The telephone on the table before me rang. It was
+Roberts, my secretary, with the word that Foster had
+lifted the watch from Ocean View, the little town at
+the neck of the peninsula, where bay and ocean narrow
+the passageway to one thoroughfare, over which every
+machine must pass that goes by land from San Francisco.
+With two operatives, he had been on guard
+there since three o'clock of the afternoon, holding up
+blond men in cars, asking questions, taking notes and
+numbers. Now he reported it was a useless waste of
+time.</p>
+
+<p>"Order him in," I instructed Roberts.</p>
+
+<p>A far-too-fat entertainer out on the floor was writhing
+in the pangs of an Hawaiian dance. It took the
+attention of the crowd. I watched the face of my
+companion for a moment, then,</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</a></span>"Worth," I said a bit nervously&mdash;after all, I nearly
+had to know&mdash;"is your father going to come through?"</p>
+
+<p>"Eh?" He looked at me startled, then put it aside
+negligently. "Oh, the money? No. I'll leave that
+up to Cummings." A brief pause. "We'll get a
+wiggle on us and dig up the suitcase." He lifted his
+tumbler, stared at it, then unseeingly out across the
+room, and his lip twitched in a half smile. "I'm sure
+glad I bought it."</p>
+
+<p>Looking at him, I had no reason to doubt his word.
+His enjoyment of the situation seemed to grow with
+every detail I brought up.</p>
+
+<p>It was near eleven when the party came in to take
+the long, flower-trimmed table. Worth's back was to
+the room; I saw them over his shoulder, in the lead a
+tall blonde, very smartly dressed, but not in evening
+clothes; in severe, exclusive street wear. The man
+with her, good looking, almost her own type, had that
+possessive air which seems somehow unmistakable&mdash;and
+there was a look about the half dozen companions
+after them, as they settled themselves in a great
+flurry of scraping chairs, that made me murmur with
+a grin,</p>
+
+<p>"Bet that's a wedding party."</p>
+
+<p>Worth gave them one quick glance, then came round
+to me with a smile.</p>
+
+<p>"You win. Married at Santa Ysobel this afternoon.
+Local society event. Whole place standing on its hind
+legs, taking notice."</p>
+
+<p>So he had been down to the little town to see his
+father after all. And he wasn't going to talk about it.
+Oh, well.</p>
+
+<p>"Friends of yours?" I asked perfunctorily, and he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</a></span>
+gave me a queer look out of the corners of those wicked
+eyes, repeating in an enjoying drawl.</p>
+
+<p>"Friends? Oh, hardly that. The girl I was to
+have married, and Bronson Vandeman&mdash;the man she
+has married."</p>
+
+<p>I had wanted to get a more intimate line on the kid&mdash;it
+seemed that here was a chance with a vengeance!</p>
+
+<p>"The rest of the bunch?" I suggested. He took a
+leisurely survey, and gave them three words:</p>
+
+<p>"Family and accomplices."</p>
+
+<p>"Santa Ysobel people, too, then. Folks you know
+well?"</p>
+
+<p>"Used to."</p>
+
+<p>"The lady changed her mind while you were
+across?" I risked the query.</p>
+
+<p>"While I was shedding my blood for my country."
+He nodded. "Gave me the butt while the Huns were
+using the bayonet on me."</p>
+
+<p>In the careless jeer, as much at himself as at her,
+no hint what his present feeling might be toward the
+fashion plate young female across there. With some
+fellows, in such a situation, I should have looked for a
+disposition to duck the encounter; let his old sweetheart's
+wedding party leave without seeing him; with
+others I should have discounted a dramatic moment
+when he would court the meeting. It was impossible
+to suppose either thing of Worth Gilbert; plain that
+he simply sat there because he sat there, and would
+make no move toward the other table unless something
+in that direction interested him&mdash;pleasantly or unpleasantly&mdash;which
+at present nothing seemed to do.</p>
+
+<p>So we smoked, Worth indifferent, I giving all the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</a></span>
+attention to the people over there: bride and groom;
+a couple of fair haired girls so like the bride that I
+guessed them to be sisters; a freckled, impudent looking
+little flapper I wasn't so sure of; two older men,
+and an older woman. Then a shifting of figures gave
+me sight of a face that I hadn't seen before, and I
+drew in my breath with a whistle.</p>
+
+<p>"Whew! Who's the dark girl? She's a beauty!"</p>
+
+<p>"Dark girl?" Worth had interest enough to lean
+into the place where I got my view; after he did so he
+remained to stare. I sat and grinned while he muttered,</p>
+
+<p>"Can't be.... I believe it is!"</p>
+
+<p>Something to make him sit up and take notice now.
+I didn't wonder at his fixed study of the young
+creature. Not so dressed up as the others&mdash;I think
+she wore what ladies call an evening blouse with a
+street suit; a brunette, but of a tinting so delicate that
+she fairly sparkled, she took the shine off those blonde
+girls. Her small beautifully formed, uncovered head
+had the living jet of the crow's wing; her great eyes,
+long-lashed and sumptuously set, showed ebon irises
+almost obliterating the white. Dark, shining, she was
+a night with stars, that girl.</p>
+
+<p>"Funny thing," Worth spoke, moving his head to
+keep in line with that face. "How could she grow up
+to be like this&mdash;a child that wasn't allowed any childhood?
+Lord, she never even had a doll!"</p>
+
+<p>"Some doll herself now," I smiled.</p>
+
+<p>"Yeh," he assented absently, "she's good looking&mdash;but
+where did she learn to dress like that&mdash;and play
+the game?"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</a></span>"Where they all learn it." I enjoyed very much
+seeing him interested. "From her mother, and her
+sisters, or the other girls."</p>
+
+<p>"Not." He was positive. "Her mother died when
+she was a baby. Her father wouldn't let her be with
+other children&mdash;treated her like one of the instruments
+in his laboratory; trained her in her high chair; problems
+in concentration dumped down into its tray, punishment
+if she made a failure; God knows what kind
+of a reward if she succeeded; maybe no more than her
+bowl of bread and milk. That's the kind of a deal
+she got when she was a kid. And will you look at
+her now!"</p>
+
+<p>If he kept up his open staring at the girl, it would
+be only a matter of time when the wedding party discovered
+him. I leaned back in my chair to watch,
+while Worth, full of his subject, spilled over in words.</p>
+
+<p>"Never played with anybody in her life&mdash;but me,"
+he said unexpectedly. "They lived next house but one
+to us; the professor had the rest of the Santa Ysobel
+youngsters terrorized, backed off the boards; but I
+wasn't a steady resident of the burg. I came and went,
+and when I came, it was playtime for the little girl."</p>
+
+<p>"What was her father? Crank on education?"</p>
+
+<p>"Psychology," Worth said briefly. "International
+reputation. But he ought to have been hung for the
+way he brought Bobs up. Listen to this, Jerry. I
+got off the train one time at Santa Ysobel&mdash;can't
+remember just when, but the kid over there was all
+shanks and eyes&mdash;'bout ten or eleven, I'd say. Her
+father had her down at the station doing a stunt for
+a bunch of professors. That was his notion of a nice,
+normal development for a small child. There she sat<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</a></span>
+poked up cross-legged on a baggage truck. He'd
+trained her to sit in that self balanced position so she
+could make her mind blank without going to sleep. A
+freight train was hitting a twenty mile clip past the
+station, and she was adding the numbers on the sides
+of the box cars, in her mind. It kept those professors
+on the jump to get the figures down in their notebooks,
+but she told them the total as the caboose was passing."</p>
+
+<p>"Some stunt," I agreed. "Freight car numbers run
+up into the ten-thousands." Worth didn't hear me,
+he was still deep in the past.</p>
+
+<p>"Poor little white-faced kid," he muttered. "I
+dumped my valises, horned into that bunch, picked her
+off the truck and carried her away on my shoulder,
+while the professor yelled at me, and the other ginks
+were tabbing up their additions. And I damned every
+one of them, to hell and through it."</p>
+
+<p>"You must have been a popular youth in your home
+town," I suggested.</p>
+
+<p>"I was," he grinned. "My reason for telling you
+that story, though, is that I've got an idea about the
+girl over there&mdash;if she hasn't changed too much. I
+think maybe we might&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>He stood up calmly to study her, and his tall figure
+instantly drew the attention of everybody in the room.
+Over at the long table it was the sharp, roving eye of
+the snub-nosed flapper that spied him first. I saw her
+give the alarm and begin pushing back her chair to
+bolt right across and nab him. The sister sitting next
+stopped her. Judging from the glimpses I had as the
+party spoke together and leaned to look, it was quite
+a sensation. But apparently by common consent they
+left whatever move was to be made to the bride; and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</a></span>
+to my surprise this move was most unconventional.
+She got up with an abrupt gesture and started over to
+our table&mdash;alone. This, for a girl of her sort, was
+going some. I glanced doubtfully at Worth. He
+shrugged a little.</p>
+
+<p>"Might as well have it over. Her family lives on
+one side of us, and Brons Vandeman on the other."</p>
+
+<p>And then the bride was with us. She didn't overdo
+the thing&mdash;much; only held out her hand with a
+slightly pleading air as though half afraid it would be
+refused. And it was a curious thing to see that pretty,
+delicate featured, schooled face of hers naïvely drawn
+in lines of emotion&mdash;like a bisque doll registering
+grief.</p>
+
+<p>Gilbert took the hand, shook it, and looked around
+with the evident intention of presenting me. I saw by
+the way the lady gave me her shoulder, pushing in,
+speaking low, that she didn't want anything of the sort,
+and quietly dropped back. I barely got a side view of
+Worth's face, but plainly his calmness was a disappointment
+to her.</p>
+
+<p>"After these years!" I caught the fringes of what
+she was saying. "It seems like a dream. To-night&mdash;of
+all times. But you will come over to our table&mdash;for
+a minute anyhow? They're just going to&mdash;to
+drink our health&mdash;Oh, Worth!" That last in a sort
+of impassioned whisper. And all he answered was,</p>
+
+<p>"If I might bring Mr. Boyne with me, Mrs. Vandeman."
+At her protesting expression, he finished,
+"Or do I call you Ina, still?"</p>
+
+<p>She gave him a second look of reproach, acknowledging
+my introduction in that way some women have
+which assures you they don't intend to know you in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</a></span>
+the least the next time. We crossed to the table and
+met the others.</p>
+
+<p>If anybody had asked my opinion, I should have
+said it was a mistake to go. Our advent in that
+party&mdash;or rather Worth Gilbert's advent&mdash;was bound
+to throw the affair into a sort of consternation. No
+mistake about that. The bridegroom at the head of
+the table seemed the only one able to keep a grip on
+the situation. He welcomed Worth as though he
+wanted him, took hold of me with a glad hand, and
+presented me in such rapid succession to everybody
+there that I was dizzy. And through it all I had an
+eye for Worth as he met and disposed of the effusive
+welcome of the younger Thornhill girls. Either of
+the twins, as I found them to be, would, I judged,
+have been more than willing to fill out sister Ina's unexpired
+term, and the little snub-nosed one, also a sister
+it seemed, plainly adored him as a hero, sexlessly, as
+they sometimes can at that age.</p>
+
+<p>While yet he shook hands with the girls, and
+swapped short replies for long questions, I became
+conscious of something odd in the air. Plain enough
+sailing with the young ladies; all the noise with them
+echoed the bride's, "After all these years." They
+clattered about whether he looked like his last photograph,
+and how perfectly delightful it was going to be
+to have him back in Santa Ysobel again.</p>
+
+<p>But when it came to the chaperone, a Mrs. Dr. Bowman,
+things were different. No longer young, though
+still beautiful in what I might call a sort of wasted
+fashion, with slim wrists and fragile fingers, and a
+splendid mass of rich, auburn hair, I had been startled,
+even looking across from our table, by the extreme<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</a></span>
+nervous tension of her face. She looked a neurasthenic;
+but that was not all; surely her nerves were
+almost from under control as she sat there, her rich
+cloak dropped back over her chair, the corners caught
+up again and fumbled in a twisting, restless hold.</p>
+
+<p>Now, when Worth stood before her appealing eyes,
+she reached up and clutched his hand in both of hers,
+staring at him through quick tears, saying something
+in a low, choking tone, something that I couldn't for
+the life of me make into the greeting you give even a
+beloved youngster you haven't seen for several years.</p>
+
+<p>At the moment, I was myself being presented to the
+lady's husband, a typical top-grade, small town medical
+man, with a fine bedside manner. His nice, smooth
+white hands, with which I had watched him feeling the
+pulse of his supper as though it had been a wealthy
+patient, released mine; those cold eyes of his, that hid
+a lot of meaning under heavy lids, came around on his
+wife. His,</p>
+
+<p>"Laura, control yourself. Where do you think you
+are?" was like a lash.</p>
+
+<p>It worked perfectly. Of course she would be his
+patient as well as his wife. Yet I hated the man for
+it. To me it seemed like the cut of the whip that punishes
+a sensitive, over excited Irish setter for a fault in
+the hunting field. Mrs. Bowman quivered, pulled herself
+together and sat down, but her gaze followed the
+boy.</p>
+
+<p>She sat there stilled, but not quieted, under her
+husband's eye, and watched Worth's meeting with the
+other man, whom I heard the boy call Jim Edwards,
+and with whom he shook hands, but who met him, as
+Mrs. Bowman had, as though there had been some<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</a></span>thing
+recent between them; not like people bridging a
+long gap of absence.</p>
+
+<p>And this man, tall, thin, the power in his features
+contradicted by a pair of soft dark eyes, deep-set, looking
+out at you with an expression of bafflement, defeat&mdash;why
+did he face Worth with the stare of one
+drenched, drowned in woe? It wasn't his wedding.
+He hadn't done Worth any dirt in the matter.</p>
+
+<p>And I was wedged in beside the beautiful dark girl,
+without having been presented to her, without even
+having had the luck to hear what name Worth used
+when he spoke to her. At last the flurry of our coming
+settled down (though I still felt that we were stuck
+like a sliver into the wedding party, that the whole
+thing ached from us) and Dr. Bowman proposed the
+health of the happy couple, his bedside manner going
+over pretty well, as he informed Vandeman and the
+rest of us that the bridegroom was a social leader in
+Santa Ysobel, and that the hope of its best people was
+to place him and his bride at the head of things there,
+leading off with the annual Blossom Festival, due in
+about a fortnight.</p>
+
+<p>Vandeman responded for himself and his bride,
+appropriately, with what I'd call a sort of acceptable,
+fabricated geniality. You could see he was the kind
+that takes such things seriously, one who would go to
+work to make a success of any social doings he got
+into, would give what his set called good parties; and
+he spoke feelingly of the Blossom Festival, which was
+the great annual event of a little town. If by putting
+his shoulder to the wheel he could boost that affair
+into nation-wide fame and place a garland of rich
+bloom upon the brow of his fair city, he was willing to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</a></span>
+take off his neatly tailored coat, roll up his immaculate
+shirtsleeves and go to it.</p>
+
+<p>There was no time for speech making. The girls
+wanted to dance; bride and groom were taking the one
+o'clock train for the south and Coronado. The
+orchestra swung into "I'll Say She Does."</p>
+
+<p>"Just time for one." Vandeman guided his bride
+neatly out between the chairs, and they moved away.
+I turned from watching them to find Worth asking
+Mrs. Bowman to dance.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Worth, <i>dearest</i>! I ought to let one of the
+girls have you, but&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>She looked helplessly up at him; he smiled down
+into her tense, suffering face, and paid no attention to
+her objections. As soon as he carried her off, Jim
+Edwards glumly took out that one of the twins I had
+at first supposed to be the elder, the remaining Thornhill
+girls moved on Dr. Bowman and began nagging
+him to hunt partners for them.</p>
+
+<p>"Drag something up here," prompted the freckled
+tomboy, "or I'll make you dance with me yourself."
+She grabbed a coat lapel, and started away with him.</p>
+
+<p>I turned and laughed into the laughing face of the
+dark girl. I had no idea of her name, yet a haunting
+resemblance, a something somehow familiar came
+across to me which I thought for a moment was only
+the sweet approachableness of her young femininity.</p>
+
+<p>Bowman had found and collared a partner for
+Ernestine Thornhill, but that was as far as it went.
+The little one forebore her threat of making him dance
+with her, came back to her chair and tucked herself
+in, snuggling up to the girl beside me, getting hold of
+a hand and looking at me across it. She rejoiced, it<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</a></span>
+seems, in the nickname of Skeet, for by that the other
+now spoke to her whisperingly, saying it was too bad
+about the dance.</p>
+
+<p>"That's nothing," Skeet answered promptly. "I'd
+a lot rather sit here and talk to you&mdash;and your
+gentleman friend&mdash;" with a large wink for me&mdash;"if
+you don't mind."</p>
+
+<p>At the humorous, intimate glance which again passed
+between me and the dark girl, sudden remembrance
+came to me, and I ejaculated,</p>
+
+<p>"I know you now!"</p>
+
+<p>"Only now?" smiling.</p>
+
+<p>"You've changed a good deal in seven years," I
+defended myself.</p>
+
+<p>"And you so very little," she was still smiling, "that
+I had almost a mind to come and shake hands with
+you when Ina went to speak to Worth."</p>
+
+<p>I remembered then that it was Worth's recognition
+of her which had brought him to his feet. I told her
+of it, and the glowing, vivid face was suddenly all
+rosy. Skeet regarded the manifestation askance, asking
+jealously,</p>
+
+<p>"When did you see Worth last, Barbie? You
+weren't still living in Santa Ysobel when he left, were
+you?"</p>
+
+<p>I sat thinking while the girlish voices talked on.
+Barbie&mdash;the nickname for Barbara. Barbara Wallace;
+the name jumped at me from a poster; that's
+where I first saw it. It linked itself up with what
+Worth had said over there about the forlorn childhood
+of this beguiling young charmer. Why hadn't I
+remembered then? I, too, had my recollections of
+Barbara Wallace. About seven years before, I had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</a></span>
+first seen her, a slim, dark little thing of twelve or
+fourteen, very badly dressed in slinky, too-long skirts
+that whipped around preposterously thin ankles, blue-black
+hair dragged away from a forehead almost too
+fine, made into a bundle of some fashion that belonged
+neither to childhood nor womanhood, her little, pointed
+face redeemed by a pair of big black eyes with a wonderful
+inner light, the eyes of this girl glowing here
+at my left hand.</p>
+
+<p>The father Worth spoke of brusquely as "the
+professor" was Elman Wallace, to whom all students
+of advanced psychology are heavily indebted. The
+year I heard him, and saw the girl, his course of lectures
+at Stanford University was making quite a stir.
+I had been one of a bunch of criminologists, detectives
+and police chiefs who, during a state convention were
+given a demonstration of the little girl's powers, closing
+with a sort of rapid pantomime in which I was
+asked to take part. A half dozen of us from the
+audience planned exactly what we were to do. I
+rushed into the room through one door, holding my
+straw hat in my left hand, and wiping my brow with
+a handkerchief with the right. From an opposite
+door, came two men; one of them fired at me twice
+with a revolver held in his left hand. I fell, and the
+second man&mdash;the one who wasn't armed&mdash;ran to me
+as I staggered, grabbed my hat, and the two of them
+went out the door I had entered, while I stumbled
+through the one by which they had come in. It lasted
+all told, not half a minute, the idea being for those
+who looked on to write down what had happened.</p>
+
+<p>Those trained criminologists, supposed to have eyes
+in their heads, didn't see half that really took place,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</a></span>
+and saw a-plenty that did not. Most of 'em would
+have hung the man who snatched my hat. Only one,
+I remember, noticed that I was shot by a left-handed
+man. Then the little girl told us what really had
+occurred, every detail, just as though she had planned
+it instead of being merely an observer.</p>
+
+<p>"Pardon me," I broke in on the girls. "Miss
+Wallace, you don't mean to say that you really know
+me again after seeing me once, seven years ago, in a
+group of other men at a public performance?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why shouldn't I? You saw me then. You knew
+me again."</p>
+
+<p>"But you were doing wonderful things. We remember
+what strikes us as that did me."</p>
+
+<p>She looked at me with a little fading of that glow
+her face seemed always to hold.</p>
+
+<p>"Most memories are like that," she agreed listlessly.
+"Mine isn't. It works like a cinema camera; I've only
+to turn the crank the other way to be looking at any
+past record."</p>
+
+<p>"But can you&mdash;?" I was beginning, when Skeet
+stopped me, leaning around her companion, bristling at
+me like a snub-nosed terrier.</p>
+
+<p>"If you want to make a hit with Barbie, cut out the
+reminiscences. She does loathe being reminded that
+she was once an infant phenom."</p>
+
+<p>I glanced at my dark eyed girl; she bent her head
+affirmatively. She wouldn't have been capable of
+Skeet's rudeness, but plainly Skeet had not overstated
+her real feeling. I had hardly begun an apology when
+the dancers rushed back to the table with the information
+that there was no more than time to make the Los
+Angeles train; there was an instant grasping of wraps,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</a></span>
+hasty good-bys, and the party began breaking up with
+a bang. Worth went out to the sidewalk with them;
+I sat tight waiting for him to return, and to my surprise,
+when he finally did appear, Barbara Wallace was
+with him.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_IV" id="CHAPTER_IV"></a>CHAPTER IV</h2>
+
+<h3>AN APPARITION</h3>
+
+<p>"Don't look so scared!" she said smilingly to
+me. "I'm only on your hands a few minutes;
+a package left to be called for."</p>
+
+<p>I had watched them coming back to me at our old
+table, with its telephone extension, the girl with eyes
+for no one but Worth, who helped her out of her wrap
+now with a preoccupied air and,</p>
+
+<p>"Shed the coat, Bobs," adding as he seated her beside
+him, "The luck of luck that I chanced on you here
+this evening."</p>
+
+<p>That brought the color into her face; the delicate
+rose shifted under her translucent skin almost with the
+effect of light, until that lustrous midnight beauty of
+hers was as richly glowing as one of those marvellous
+dark opals of the antipodes.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," she said softly, with a smile that set two
+dimples deep in the pink of her cheeks, "wasn't
+it strange our meeting this way?" Worth wasn't
+looking at her. He'd signaled a waiter, ordered a pot
+of black coffee, and was watching its approach. "I
+didn't go down to the wedding, but Ina herself invited
+me to come here to-night. I had half a mind not to;
+then at the last minute I decided I would&mdash;and I met
+you!"</p>
+
+<p>Worth nodded, sat there humped in a brown study
+while the waiter poured our coffee. The minute the
+man left us alone, he turned to her with,</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</a></span>"I've got a stunt for you."</p>
+
+<p>"A&mdash;a stunt?"</p>
+
+<p>The light failed abruptly in her face; her mouth with
+its soft, firm molding, its vivid, floral red, like the
+lips of a child, went down a bit at the clean-cut corners.
+A small hand fumbled the trimming of her
+blouse; it was almost as if she laid it over a wounded
+heart.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," he nodded. "Jerry's got something in his
+pocket that'll be pie for you."</p>
+
+<p>She turned to me a look between angry and piteous&mdash;the
+resentment she would not vent on him.</p>
+
+<p>"Is&mdash;is Mr. Boyne interested in stunts&mdash;such as I
+used to do?"</p>
+
+<p>"Sure," Worth agreed. "We both are. We&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, that was why you wanted me to come back
+with you?" She had got hold of herself now. She
+was more poised, but still resentful.</p>
+
+<p>"Bobs," he cut straight across her mood to what he
+wanted, "Jerry Boyne is going to read you something
+it took about 'steen blind people to see&mdash;and you'll give
+us the answer." I didn't share his confidence, but I
+rather admired it as he finished, poising the tongs,
+"One lump, or two?"</p>
+
+<p>Of course I knew what he meant. My hand was
+already fumbling in my pocket for the description of
+Clayte. The girl looked as though she wasn't going
+to answer him; she moved to shove back her chair.
+Worth's only recognition of her attitude was to put
+out a hand quietly, touch her arm, not once looking at
+her, and say in a lowered tone,</p>
+
+<p>"Steady, Bobs." And then, "Did you say one lump
+or two?"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</a></span>"None." Her voice was scarcely audible, but I saw
+she was going to stay; that Worth was to have his
+way, to get from her the opinion he wanted&mdash;whatever
+that might amount to. And I passed the paper to him,
+suggesting,</p>
+
+<p>"Let her read it. This is too public a place to be
+declaiming a thing of the sort."</p>
+
+<p>She hesitated a minute then gave it such a mere
+flirt of a glance that I hardly thought she'd seen what
+it was, before she raised inquiring eyes to mine and
+asked coldly,</p>
+
+<p>"Why shouldn't that be read&mdash;shouted every ten
+minutes by the traffic officer at Market and Kearny?
+They'd only think he was paging every other man in
+the Palace Hotel."</p>
+
+<p>I leaned back and chuckled. After a bare glance,
+this sharp witted girl had hit on exactly what I'd
+thought of the Clayte description.</p>
+
+<p>"Is that all? May I go now, Worth?" she said,
+still with that dashed, disappointed look from one of
+us to the other. "If you'll just put me on a Haight
+Street car&mdash;I won't wait for&mdash;" And now she
+made a definite movement to rise; but again Worth
+held her by the mere touch of his fingers on her
+sleeve.</p>
+
+<p>"Wait, Bobs," he said. "There's more."</p>
+
+<p>"More?" Her eyes on Worth's face talked louder
+than her tongue, but that also gained fluency as he
+looked back at her and nodded. "Stunts!" she repeated
+his word bitterly. "I didn't expect you to come
+back asking me to do stunts. I hated it all so&mdash;working
+out things like a calculating machine!" Her voice
+sank to a vehement undertone. "Nobody thinking of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</a></span>
+me as human, with human feelings. I have never&mdash;done&mdash;one
+stunt&mdash;since my father died."</p>
+
+<p>She didn't weaken. She sat there and looked
+Worth squarely in the eye, yet there was a kind of big
+gentleness in her refusal, a freedom from petty resentment,
+that had in it not so much a girl's hurt
+vanity as the outspoken complaint of a really grieved
+heart.</p>
+
+<p>"But, Bobs," Worth smiled at her trouble, about the
+same careless, good-natured smile he had given little
+Pete when he flipped him the quarter, "suppose you
+could possibly save me a hundred thousand dollars a
+minute?"</p>
+
+<p>"Then it's not just a stunt?" She settled slowly
+back in her chair.</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly not," I said. "This is business&mdash;with
+me, anyhow. Miss Wallace, why do you think a description
+like that could be shouted on the street without
+any one being the wiser?"</p>
+
+<p>"Was it supposed to be a description?" she asked,
+raising her brows a bit.</p>
+
+<p>"The best we could get from sixteen or eighteen
+people, most of whom have known the man a long
+time; some of them for eight years."</p>
+
+<p>"And no one&mdash;not one of all these people could
+differentiate him?"</p>
+
+<p>"I've done my best at questioning them."</p>
+
+<p>She gave me one straight, level look, and I wondered
+a little at the way those velvety black eyes could
+saw into a fellow. But she put no query, and I had
+the cheap satisfaction of knowing that she was convinced
+I'd overlooked no details in the quiz that went<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</a></span>
+to make up that description. Then she turned to
+Worth.</p>
+
+<p>"You said I might save you a lot of money. Has
+the man you're trying here to describe anything to
+do with money&mdash;in large amounts&mdash;financial affairs
+of importance?"</p>
+
+<p>Again the little girl had unconsciously scored with
+me. To imagine a rabbit like Clayte, alone, swinging
+such an enormous job was ridiculous. From the
+first, my mind had been reaching after the others&mdash;the
+big-brained criminals, the planners whose instrument
+he was. She evidently saw this, but Worth
+answered her.</p>
+
+<p>"He's quite a financier, Bobs. He walked off with
+nearly a million cash to-day."</p>
+
+<p>"From you?" with a quick breath.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm the main loser if he gets away with it."</p>
+
+<p>"Tell me about it."</p>
+
+<p>And Worth gave her a concise account of the theft
+and his own share in the affair. She listened eagerly
+now, those innocent great eyes growing big with the
+interest of it. With her there was no blind stumbling
+over Worth's motive in buying a suitcase sight unseen.
+I had guessed, but she understood completely
+and unquestioningly. When he had finished, she said
+solemnly,</p>
+
+<p>"You know, don't you, that, if you've got your
+facts right&mdash;if these things you've told me are square,
+even cubes of fact&mdash;they prove Clayte among the wonderful
+men of the world?"</p>
+
+<p>Worth's big brown paw went out and covered her
+little hand that lay on the table's edge.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</a></span>"Now we're getting somewhere," he encouraged
+her. As for me, I merely snorted.</p>
+
+<p>"Wonderful man, my eye! He's got a wonderful
+gang behind him."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, you should have told me that you know there
+is a gang, Mr. Boyne," she said simply. "Of course,
+then, the result is different."</p>
+
+<p>"Well," I hedged, "there's a gang all right. But
+suppose there wasn't, how would you find any wonderfulness
+in a creature as near nothing as this Clayte?"</p>
+
+<p>She sat and thought for a moment, drawing imaginary
+lines on the table top, finally looking up at me
+with a narrowing of the lids, a tightening of the lips,
+which gave an extraordinary look of power to her
+young feminine face.</p>
+
+<p>"In that case, Clayte would inevitably be one of the
+wonderful men of the world," she repeated her characterization
+with the placid, soft obstinacy of falling,
+snow. "Didn't you stop a minute&mdash;one little minute,
+Mr. Boyne&mdash;to think it wonderful that a man so
+devoid of personality as that&mdash;" she slanted a slim
+finger across the description of Clayte&mdash;"Didn't you
+add up in your mind all that you told me about the
+men disagreeing as to which side he parted his hair
+on, whether he wore tan shoes or black, a fedora or
+derby, smoked or didn't,&mdash;absolutely nothing left as
+to peculiarities of face, figure, movement, expression,
+manner or habit to catch the eye of one single observer
+among the sixteen or eighteen you questioned&mdash;surely
+you added that up, Mr. Boyne? What result did you
+get?"</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing," I admitted. "To hear you repeat it, of
+course it sounds as if the man was a freak. But he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</a></span>
+wasn't. He was just one of those fellows that are
+born utterly commonplace, and slide through life without
+getting any marks put on 'em."</p>
+
+<p>"And is it nothing that this man became a teller in
+a bank without infringing at all on the circle of his
+nothingness? Remained so shadowy that neither the
+president nor cashier can, after eight years' association,
+tell the color of his hair and eyes? Then add the
+fact that he is the one clerk in the bank without a
+filed photograph and description on record with your
+agency&mdash;what result now, Mr. Boyne?"</p>
+
+<p>"A coincidence," I said, rather hastily.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't, please, Mr. Boyne!" her eyes glowed softly
+as she smiled her mild sarcasm. "Admit that he has
+ceased to be a freak and becomes a marvel."</p>
+
+<p>"As you put it&mdash;" I began, but she cut in on me
+with,</p>
+
+<p>"I haven't put it yet. Listen." She was smiling
+still, but it was plain she was thoroughly in earnest.
+"When this cipher&mdash;this nought&mdash;this zero&mdash;manages
+to annex to himself a million dollars that doesn't belong
+to him, his nothingness gains a specific meaning.
+The zero is an important factor in mathematics. I
+think we have placed a digit before the long string of
+ciphers of Clayte's nothingness."</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing and nothing&mdash;make nothing." I spoke
+more brusquely because I was irritated by her logic.
+"You called the turn when you spoke of him as a zero.
+There are digits to be added, but they're the gang
+that planned and helped&mdash;and used zero Clayte as
+their tool. You're talking of those digits, not Clayte."</p>
+
+<p>"I believe Bobs'll find them for you, Jerry&mdash;if you'll
+let her," said Worth.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</a></span>"Oh, I'll let anybody do anything"&mdash;a bit nettled.
+"I'm ready to have our friend Clayte take his place,
+with the pyramids and the hanging gardens of Babylon,
+among the earth's wonders; but you've got to
+show me."</p>
+
+<p>"All right." Worth gave the girl a look that
+brought something of that wonderful rose flush fluttering
+back into her cheeks. "I'm betting on her.
+Go to it, Bobsie&mdash;let him in on your mathematical
+logic."</p>
+
+<p>"You used the word 'coincidence,' Mr. Boyne."
+She leaned across toward me, eyes bright, little finger
+tip marking her points. "Allow one coincidence&mdash;that
+the only description, the only photograph missing
+from your files are those of the self-effacing Clayte.
+To-day Clayte has proved to be a thief&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"In seven figures," Worth threw in, and she smiled
+at him.</p>
+
+<p>"You would call that another coincidence, Mr.
+Boyne?"</p>
+
+<p>I nodded, rather unable at the moment to think of
+a better word to use.</p>
+
+<p>"Two coincidences," she went on,&mdash;"we are still
+in mathematics&mdash;you can't add. They run by geometrical
+progression into the impossible."</p>
+
+<p>The phone rang. While I turned to answer it, my
+mind was still hunting a comeback to this. The call
+was from Foster, just in from Ocean View and reporting
+for instructions. Covering the transmitter
+with my hand, I told Worth the situation and asked,</p>
+
+<p>"Any suggestions?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not I," he shook his head. I added, a bit sarcastically,</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</a></span>"Or you, Miss Wallace?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," she surprised me. "Have your man Foster
+find three women who have seen Edward Clayte; get
+from them the color of his hair and eyes; tell him
+to have them be exact about it."</p>
+
+<p>"Fine! But you know they'll not agree, any more
+than the other people agreed."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes they will," she laughed at me a little.
+"Don't you notice that a girl always says a blue-eyed
+man or a brown-eyed man? That's what she sees
+when she first meets him, and it sticks in her mind.
+Girls and women sort out people by types; small
+differences in color mean something to them."</p>
+
+<p>I didn't keep Foster waiting any longer.</p>
+
+<p>"Hello," I spoke quickly into the transmitter. "Get
+busy and dig out any women clerks of the bank,
+stenographers, scrub-women there, or whatever, and
+ask them particularly as to the exact shade of Clayte's
+hair and eyes. Get Mrs. Griggsby again at the
+St. Dunstan. I want at least three women who
+can give these points exactly. Exactly, understand?"</p>
+
+<p>He did, and I thanked Miss Wallace for her suggestion.</p>
+
+<p>"Now that," I said, "is what I want; a good, practical
+idea&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"And it won't be a bit of use in the world to you,"
+she laughed across the table into my eyes. "Why,
+Mr. Boyne, you've found out already that there are
+too many Edward Claytes, speaking in physical terms,
+for you to run one down by description. There are
+three of him here, within sight of our table right now&mdash;and
+the place isn't crowded."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</a></span>I grinned in half grudging agreement, and found
+nothing to say. It was Worth who spoke.</p>
+
+<p>"Like to have you go a step further in this, if you
+would," and when she shook her head, he went on a
+bit sharply. "See here, Bobs; you and I used to be
+pals, didn't we?" She nodded, her look brightening.
+"Well then, here's the biggest game I've been up
+against since I crawled out of the trenches and shucked
+my uniform. I come to you and give you the high-sign&mdash;and
+you throw me down. You don't want to
+play with me&mdash;is that it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Worth! I do. I do want to play with you,"
+she was almost in tears now. "But you see, I didn't
+quite understand. I felt as though you were sort of
+putting me through my paces."</p>
+
+<p>"Sure not," Worth drove it at her like a turbulent
+urchin. "I'm having the time of my young life with
+this thing, and I want to take you in on it."</p>
+
+<p>"If&mdash;if you fail you lose a lot of money; wasn't
+that what you said?" she questioned.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes," he nodded, "Nothing in it if there
+weren't a gamble."</p>
+
+<p>"And if he wins out, he makes quite a respectable
+pile," I added.</p>
+
+<p>"What I want of you now," he explained, "is to
+go with us to Clayte's room at the St. Dunstan&mdash;the
+room he disappeared from&mdash;look it over and tell us
+how he got out and where he went."</p>
+
+<p>He made his request light-heartedly; she considered
+it after the same fashion; it seemed to me all absurdity.</p>
+
+<p>"To-morrow morning&mdash;Sunday," she said. "No
+office to-morrow," she sipped the last of her black<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</a></span>
+coffee slowly. "All the rest of the facts there ever
+will be about Edward Clayte are in that room&mdash;aren't
+they?" Her voice was musing; she looked straight
+ahead of her as she finished softly, "What time do
+we go?"</p>
+
+<p>"Early. Does nine o'clock suit you?" Worth
+didn't even glance at me as he made this arrangement
+for us both. "We'd scoot up there now if it wasn't
+so late."</p>
+
+<p>"I've no doubt you'll find the place carpeted with
+zeros and hung with noughts and ciphers." I couldn't
+refrain from joshing her a little. She took it with a
+smile glanced across the room, looked a little surprised,
+and half rose with,</p>
+
+<p>"Why, there they are for me now."</p>
+
+<p>I couldn't see anybody that she might mean, except
+a man who had walked the length of the place talking
+to the head waiter, and now stood arguing at the
+corner of what had been Bronson Vandeman's supper
+table. This man evidently had his attention directed
+to us, turned, looked, and in the moment of his crossing
+I saw that it was Cummings. There was not even
+the usual tight-lipped half smile under that cropped
+mustache of his.</p>
+
+<p>"Good evening." He looked at our faces, uttering
+none of the surprise he plainly felt, letting the two
+words do for greeting to us all, and, as it seemed, to
+me, an expression of disapproval as well. The young
+lady replied first.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Mr. Cummings, did they send you for me?
+Where are the others?"</p>
+
+<p>She had come to her feet, and reached for the coat<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</a></span>
+which Worth was holding more as if he meant to
+keep it than put it on her.</p>
+
+<p>"I left your chaperone waiting in the machine,"
+Cumming's tone and look carried a plain hurry-up.
+Worth took his time about the coat, and spoke low to
+the girl while he helped her into it.</p>
+
+<p>"You'll go with us to-morrow morning?"</p>
+
+<p>She gave me one of those adorable smiles that
+brought the dimples momentarily in her cheeks.</p>
+
+<p>"If Mr. Boyne wants me. He hasn't said yet."</p>
+
+<p>"Do I need to?" I asked. The question seemed
+reasonable. There she stood, such a very pretty girl,
+between her two cavaliers who looked at each other
+with all the traditional hostility that belonged to the
+situation. She smiled on both, and didn't neglect me.
+I settled the matter with,</p>
+
+<p>"Worth has your address; we'll call for you in my
+machine." And I got the idea that Cummings was
+asking questions about it as he went away holding her
+arm.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you think the little girl will really be of any
+use?" I spoke to the back of Worth's head as he
+continued to stare after them.</p>
+
+<p>"Sure. I know she will." He shoved his crumpled
+napkin in among the coffee service, and we moved
+toward the desk. "Sure she will," he repeated.
+"Wonder where she met Cummings."</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_V" id="CHAPTER_V"></a>CHAPTER V</h2>
+
+<h3>AT THE ST. DUNSTAN</h3>
+
+
+<p>At the Palace Hotel Sunday morning where I
+went to pick up Worth before we should call
+for little Miss Wallace, he met me in high spirits
+and with an enthusiasm that demanded immediate
+physical action.</p>
+
+<p>"Heh," I said, "you look fine. Must have slept
+well."</p>
+
+<p>"Make it rested, and I'll go you," he came back
+cheerfully.</p>
+
+<p>He'd already been out, going down to the Grant
+Avenue corner for an assortment of Bay cities papers
+not to be had at the hotel news-stands, so that he could
+see whether our canny announcement of Clayte's
+fifteen thousand dollar defalcation had received discreet
+attention from the Associated Press.</p>
+
+<p>For my part, our agency had been able to get hold
+of three women who had seen Clayte and remembered
+the event; Mrs. Griggsby; a stenographer at the bank;
+and the woman who sold newspapers at the St. Dunstan
+corner. Miss Wallace's suggestion had proven
+itself, for these three agreed with fair exactness, and
+the description run in the late editions of the city
+papers was less vague than the others. It gave Clayte's
+eyes as a pale gray-blue, and his hair as dull brown,
+eliminating at least all brown-eyed men. Worth
+asserted warmly,</p>
+
+<p>"That girl's going to be useful to us, Boyne." I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</a></span>
+couldn't well disagree with him, after using her hint.
+We were getting out of the elevator on the office
+floor when he looked at me, grinned boyishly, and
+added, "What would you say if I told you I was
+being shadowed?"</p>
+
+<p>"That I thought it very likely," I nodded. "Also I
+might hazard a guess at whose money is paying for it."</p>
+
+<p>He gave me a quick glance, but asked no questions.
+I could see he was enjoying his position, up to the
+hilt, considered the attentions of a trailer as one of
+its perquisites.</p>
+
+<p>"Keep your eyes open and you'll spot him as we
+go out," he said as he left the key at the desk.</p>
+
+<p>It was hardly necessary to keep my eyes open to
+see the lurking figure over beyond the easy-chairs,
+which started galvanically as we passed through the
+court, and a moment later came sidling after us.
+Little Pete had left my machine at the Market Street
+entrance&mdash;Worth was to drive me&mdash;and we wheeled
+away from a disappointed man racing for the taxi
+line around the corner.</p>
+
+<p>"More power to his legs," Worth said.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I don't know," I grunted as we cut into Montgomery,
+negotiated the corner onto Bush Street's clear
+way, striking a fair clip at once. "That end of him
+already works better than the other. How did you
+get wise?"</p>
+
+<p>"Barbara Wallace telephoned me to look out for
+him," he smiled, and let my car out another notch
+once we'd passed the traffic cop at Kearny.</p>
+
+<p>I myself had foreseen the possibility&mdash;but only as a
+possibility&mdash;that Dykeman would put a man on
+Worth's coat-tails, since I knew Dykeman and had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</a></span>
+been at that bank meeting; yet I had not regarded it
+as likely enough to warn Worth; and here was this
+girl phoning him to look out for a trailer. Was this
+some more of her deductive reasoning, or had Cummings
+dropped a hint?</p>
+
+<p>She was waiting for us in front of the Haight
+Street boarding house that served her for a home,
+and we tucked her between us on the roadster's wide
+seat. At the St. Dunstan we found my man, left
+there since the hour of the alarm the day before, and
+everybody belonging to the management surly and
+glum. The clerk handed me Clayte's key across the
+morning papers spread out on his desk. Apartment
+houses dislike notoriety of this sort, and the St. Dunstan
+set up to be as rabidly respectable, as chemically
+pure as any in the city. Well, no use their blaming
+me; Clayte was their misfortune; they couldn't expect
+me to keep the matter out of print entirely.</p>
+
+<p>The three of us crowded into the automatic elevator,
+and I pressed the seventh floor button. The girl's
+eyes shone under the wisp of veil twisted around a
+knowing little turban. She liked the taste of the adventure.</p>
+
+<p>"That man came this way&mdash;with that suitcase," she
+breathed, "&mdash;maybe set it down right there when he
+pressed the button&mdash;just as Mr. Boyne did now!"</p>
+
+<p>It was a fine morning; the shades had been left up,
+and Clayte's room when I opened the door was ablaze
+with sunlight.</p>
+
+<p>"How delightful!" Barbara Wallace stopped on
+the threshold and looked about her. I expected the
+scientific investigating to begin; but no&mdash;she was all
+taken up with the beauty of sunlight and view.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</a></span>The seventh was the top floor. The St. Dunstan
+stood almost at the summit where Nob Hill slants
+obliquely to north and east, and Powell Street dizzies
+down the steep descent to North Beach and the Bay.
+The girl had run to a window, and was looking out
+toward the marvelous show of blue-green water and
+distant Berkeley hills.</p>
+
+<p>"Will you open this window for me, please?" she
+asked. I stepped to her side, forestalling Worth who
+was eyeing the room's interior with curiosity.</p>
+
+<p>"You'll notice the burglar-proof sash locks," I said
+as I manipulated this one. She gave only casual interest,
+her attention still on the view beyond. The
+steel latch, fastened to the upper sash, locked into the
+socket on the lower sash by a lever-catch. "See?
+I must pull out this little lever before I can push the
+hasp back with my thumb&mdash;so. Now the window
+may be shoved up," and I illustrated.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," she nodded; then, "Look at the wisps of fog
+around Tamalpais's top. Worth, come here and see
+the violet shadows of the clouds on the bay."</p>
+
+<p>"North wind coming up," agreed Worth, stepping
+to the farther window.</p>
+
+<p>"It's bringing in the fog," she said; then abruptly,
+giving me the first hint that little Miss Wallace considered
+herself on the job, "Will it not latch by itself
+if you jam it shut hard?"</p>
+
+<p>"It will not." I illustrated with a bang. The
+latch still remained open. "I must close it by hand."
+I pushed the hasp into the keeper, and, snap&mdash;the
+lever shot back and it was fast.</p>
+
+<p>"But a window like that couldn't be opened from<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</a></span>
+outside, even without the locking lever," she remarked,
+gazing again toward the Marin shore.</p>
+
+<p>"A man with the know&mdash;a burglar&mdash;can open the
+ordinary window latch in less than a minute," I told
+her. "With a jimmy pinched between the sash and
+the sill, a recurring pressure starts the latch back;
+nothing to hold it. This&mdash;unless he cuts the glass&mdash;is
+burglar-proof."</p>
+
+<p>Worth, at her shoulder, now looked down the sheer
+descent which exaggerated the seven stories of the
+St. Dunstan; because of its crowning position on the
+hill and the intersection of streets, we looked over the
+roofs of the houses before us, far above their chimney
+tops. I caught his eye and grinned across the
+girl's head, suggesting,</p>
+
+<p>"Besides, we weren't trying to find how some one
+could break into this room, but how they could break
+out. Even if the latches had not been locked, there
+wouldn't be an answer in these windows&mdash;unless
+Clayte could fly."</p>
+
+<p>"Might have climbed from one window ledge to
+the next and so made his way to the fire-escape,"
+Worth said, but I shook my head.</p>
+
+<p>"He'd be seen from the windows by the tenants on
+six floors&mdash;and nobody saw him. Might as well take
+the elevator or the stairs&mdash;which he didn't."</p>
+
+<p>But the girl wasn't listening to any of this. Her
+expression attentive, alert, she was passing her hand
+around the edge of the glass of either sash, as though
+she still dwelt on my suggestion of cutting the pane;
+and as we watched her, she murmured to herself,</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, flying would be a good way." It made me
+laugh.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</a></span>And then she turned away from the windows and
+had no more interest in any of them, going with me
+all over the rest of the room with rather the air of
+a person who thought of renting it than a high-brow
+criminal investigator hunting clews.</p>
+
+<p>"He lived here&mdash;years, you say?" I nodded. She
+slid her hand over the plush cushions of a morris
+chair, threw back the covers of an iron bed in one
+corner and felt of the mattress, then went and stood
+before the bare little dresser. "Why, the place expresses
+no more personality than a room in a transient
+hotel!"</p>
+
+<p>"He hadn't any personality," I growled, and got
+the flicker of a smile from her eye.</p>
+
+<p>"What about those library books he carried in the
+suitcase?" Worth came in with an echo from the
+bank meeting.</p>
+
+<p>"Some more bunk," I said morosely. "So far
+we've not been able to locate him as a patron of any
+public or private library, and the hotel clerk's sure his
+mail never contained a correspondence course&mdash;in fact,
+neither here nor at the bank can any one remember
+his getting any mail. If he ever carried books in that
+suitcase as Knapp believed, it was several years back."</p>
+
+<p>"Several years back," Miss Wallace repeated low.</p>
+
+<p>"Myself, I've given up the idea of his studying.
+This crime doesn't look to me like any sudden temptation
+of a model bank clerk, spending his spare hours
+over correspondence courses. I rather expect to find
+him just plain crook."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, no," the girl objected. "It's too big and too
+well done to have been planned by a dull, commonplace
+crook."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</a></span>"Right you are," I agreed, with restored good
+humor. "A keen brain planned this, but not Clayte's.
+There had to be an instrument&mdash;and that was Clayte&mdash;also,
+likely, one or more to help in the getaway."</p>
+
+<p>The getaway! That brought us back with a thump
+to the present moment. Our pretty girl had been all
+over the shop now, glanced into bathroom, closet and
+cupboard, noted abandoned hats, clothing and shoes,
+the electric plate where Clayte got his breakfast coffee
+and toast, asked without much interest where he ate
+his other meals, and nodded agreeingly when she found
+that he'd been only an occasional customer at the
+neighboring restaurants, never regular, apparently eating
+here and there down-town. She seemed to get
+something out of that; what I didn't know.</p>
+
+<p>"You speak of this crime not being committed on
+impulse," she turned to me at length. "How long
+ahead should you say he planned it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Or had it planned and prepared for him," I reminded
+her.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, that, then," she conceded with slight impatience.
+"How long do you think it might have been
+planned or prepared for? Years?"</p>
+
+<p>"Hardly that. Not more than a year probably. A
+gang like this wouldn't hold together on a proposition
+for many months."</p>
+
+<p>The black brows over those clear, childlike eyes,
+puckered a bit. I saw she wasn't at all satisfied with
+what I had said.</p>
+
+<p>"Made all the observations you want to, Bobs?"
+Worth asked.</p>
+
+<p>"All here. I want to see the roof." She gave us
+rather a mechanical smile as she silently ticked her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</a></span>
+points off on her fingers, appealing to me with, "I'm
+depending upon you for such facts as I have been
+unable to observe for myself, so if you give me wrong
+facts&mdash;make mistakes&mdash;I'll make mistakes in deduction."</p>
+
+<p>There was such confidence in her deductive abilities
+that a tinge of irony crept into my tones as I replied,</p>
+
+<p>"I'll be very careful what opinions I hold."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't mind the opinions," this astounding young
+woman took me up gaily. "I never have any of my
+own, so I don't pay attention to anybody else's. But
+<i>do</i> be careful of your facts!"</p>
+
+<p>"I'll try to," was all I said. Worth cut in with,</p>
+
+<p>"Do you consider the roof another fact, Bobs?"</p>
+
+<p>"I hope to find facts there," she answered promptly.</p>
+
+<p>"Remember," I said, "your theory means another
+man up there, and you haven't yet&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Please, Mr. Boyne, don't take two and two and
+make five of them at this stage of the game," she
+checked me hastily, and I left them together while
+I made a hurried survey of the hall ceilings, looking
+for the scuttle. There was no hatchway in view, so
+I started down to the clerk to make inquiry. As I
+passed Clayte's open door, Miss Wallace seemed to be
+adjusting her turban before the dresser mirror, while
+Worth waited impatiently.</p>
+
+<p>"Just a minute," I called. "I'll be right back," and
+I ducked into the elevator.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VI" id="CHAPTER_VI"></a>CHAPTER VI</h2>
+
+<h3>ON THE ROOF</h3>
+
+<p>When I returned with a key and the information
+that the way to the roof ran through the
+janitor's tool-room at the far end of the hall, I found
+my young people already out there. Worth was trying
+the tool-room door.</p>
+
+<p>"Got the key?" he called. "It's locked."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes." I took my time fitting and turning it.
+"How did you know this was the room?"</p>
+
+<p>"I didn't," briefly. "Bobs walked out here, and I
+followed her. She said we'd want into this one."</p>
+
+<p>She'd guessed right again! I wheeled on her,
+ejaculating,</p>
+
+<p>"For the love of Mike! Tell a mere man how you
+deduced this stairway. Feminine intuition, I suppose."</p>
+
+<p>I hadn't meant to be offensive with that last, but
+her firm little chin was in the air as she countered,</p>
+
+<p>"Is it a stairway? It might be a ladder, you know."</p>
+
+<p>It was a ladder, an iron ladder, as I found when I
+ushered them in. My eyes snapped inquiry at her.</p>
+
+<p>"Very simple," she said. Worth was pushing aside
+pails and boxes to make a better way for her to the
+ladder's foot. "There wouldn't be a roof scuttle in
+the rented rooms, so I knew when you called in to
+tell us there was none in the halls."</p>
+
+<p>"I didn't. I said nothing of the sort." Where was
+the girl's fine memory that she couldn't recollect a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</a></span>
+man's words for the little time I'd been gone! "All
+I said was, 'Just a minute and I'll be back.'"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, that's all you said to Worth." She glanced
+at the boy serenely as he waited for her at the ladder's
+foot. "He's not a trained observer; he doesn't deduce
+even from what he does observe." There were twinkling
+lights in her black eyes. "But what your hurried
+trip to the office said to me was that you'd gone for
+the key of the room that led to the roof scuttle."</p>
+
+<p>Well, that was reasonable&mdash;simple enough, too; but,</p>
+
+<p>"This room? How did you find it?"</p>
+
+<p>She stepped to the open door and placed the tip of
+a gloved finger on the nickeled naught that marked
+the panels.</p>
+
+<p>"The significant zero again, Mr. Boyne," she
+laughed. "Here it means the room is not a tenanted
+one, and is therefore the way to the roof. Shall we go
+there?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, young lady," I said as I led her along the
+trail Worth had cleared, "it must be almost as bad to
+see everything that way&mdash;in minute detail&mdash;as to be
+blind."</p>
+
+<p>"Carry on!" Worth called from the top of the ladder,
+reaching down to aid the girl. She laughed back
+at me as she started the short climb.</p>
+
+<p>"Not at all bad! You others seem to me only half
+awake to what is about you&mdash;only half living," and
+she placed her hand in the strong one held down to her.
+As Worth passed her through the scuttle to the roof, I
+saw her glance carelessly at the hooks and staples, the
+clumsy but adequate arrangement for locking the
+hatch, and, following her, gave them more careful
+attention, wondering what she had seen&mdash;plenty that I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</a></span>
+did not, no doubt. They had no tale to tell my eyes.</p>
+
+<p>Once outside, she stopped a minute with Worth to
+adjust herself to the sharp wind which swept across
+from the north. Here was a rectangular space surrounded
+by walls which ran around its four sides to
+form the coping, unbroken in any spot; a gravel-and-tar
+roof, almost flat, with the scuttle and a few small,
+dust covered skylights its only openings, four chimney-tops
+its sole projections. It was bare of any hiding-place,
+almost as clear as a tennis court.</p>
+
+<p>We made a solemn tour of inspection; I wasn't
+greatly interested&mdash;how could I be, knowing that
+between this roof and my fugitive there had been
+locked windows, and a locked door under reliable
+human eyes? Still, the lifelong training of the detective
+kept me estimating the possibilities of a getaway
+from the roof&mdash;if Clayte could have reached it.
+Worth crossed to where the St. Dunstan fire escape
+came up from the ground to end below us at a top
+floor window. I joined him, explaining as we looked
+down,</p>
+
+<p>"Couldn't have made it that way; not by daylight.
+In open view all around."</p>
+
+<p>"Think he stayed up here till dark?" Worth
+suggested, quite as though the possibility of Clayte's
+coming here at all was settled.</p>
+
+<p>"My men were all over this building&mdash;roof to cellar&mdash;within
+the hour. They'd not have overlooked a
+crack big enough for him to hide in. Put yourself in
+Clayte's place. Time was the most valuable thing in
+the world with him right then. If ever he got up to
+this roof, he'd not waste a minute longer on it than he
+had to."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</a></span>"Let's see what's beyond, then," and Worth led the
+way to the farther end.</p>
+
+<p>The girl didn't come with us. Having been once
+around the roof coping, looking, it seemed to me, as
+much at the view as anything else, she now seemed
+content to settle herself on a little square of planking,
+a disused scuttle top or something of the sort, in
+against one of the chimneys where she was sheltered
+from the wind. Rather to my surprise, I saw her
+thoughtfully pulling off her gloves, removing her
+turban, all the time with a curiously disinterested air.
+I was reminded of what Worth had said the night
+before about the way her father trained her. Probably
+she regarded the facts I'd furnished her, or that she'd
+picked up for herself, much as she used to the problems
+in concentration her father spread in the high chair
+tray of her infancy. I turned and left her with them,
+for Worth was calling me to announce a fact I already
+knew, that the adjoining building had a roof some
+fifteen feet below where we stood, and that the man,
+admitting good gymnastic ability, might have reached
+it.</p>
+
+<p>"Sure," I said. "But come on. We're wasting
+time here."</p>
+
+<p>We turned to go, and then stopped, both of us
+checked instantly by what we saw. The girl was sitting
+in a strange pose, her feet drawn in to cross
+beneath her body, slender hands at the length of the
+arms meeting with interlaced finger-tips before her,
+the thumbs just touching; shoulders back, chin up,
+eyes&mdash;big enough at any time, now dilated to look
+twice their size&mdash;velvet circles in a white face. Like
+a Buddha; I'd seen her sit so, years before, an under<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</a></span>sized
+girl doing stunts for her father in a public hall;
+and even then she'd been in a way impressive. But
+now, in the fullness of young beauty, her fine head
+relieved against the empty blue of the sky, the free
+winds whipping loose flying ends of her dark hair, she
+held the eye like a miracle.</p>
+
+<p>Sitting here so immovably, she looked to me as
+though life had slid away from her for the moment,
+the mechanical action of lungs and heart temporarily
+suspended, so that mind might work unhindered in that
+beautiful shell. No, I was wrong. She was breathing;
+her bosom rose and fell in slow but deep, placid
+inhalations and exhalations. And the pale face might
+be from the slower heart-beat, or only because the surface
+blood had receded to give more of strength to the
+brain.</p>
+
+<p>The position of head of a Bankers' Security Agency
+carries with it a certain amount of dignity&mdash;a dignity
+which, since Richardson's death, I have maintained
+better than I have handled other requirements of the
+business he left with me. I stood now feeling like a
+fool. I'd grown gray in the work, and here in my
+prosperous middle life, a boy's whim and a girl's pretty
+face had put me in the position of consulting a clairvoyant.
+Worse, for this was a wild-cat affair, without
+even the professional standing of establishments to
+which I knew some of the weak brothers in my line
+sometimes sneaked for ghostly counsel. If it should
+leak out, I was done for.</p>
+
+<p>I suppose I sort of groaned, for I felt Worth put a
+restraining hand on my arm, and heard his soft,</p>
+
+<p>"Psst!"</p>
+
+<p>The two of us stood, how long I can't say, something<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</a></span>
+besides the beauty of the young creature, even the
+dignity of her in this outré situation getting hold of
+me, so that I was almost reverent when at last the
+rigidity of her image-like figure began to relax, the
+pretty feet in their silk stockings and smart pumps
+appeared where they belonged, side by side on the edge
+of the planking, and she looked at us with eyes that
+slowly gathered their normal expression, and a smile
+of rare human sweetness.</p>
+
+<p>"It <i>is</i> horrid to see&mdash;and I loathe doing it!" She
+shook her curly dark head like a punished child, and
+stayed a minute longer, eyes downcast, groping after
+gloves and hat. "I thought maybe I'd get the answer
+before you saw me&mdash;sitting up like a trained seal!"</p>
+
+<p>"Like a mighty pretty little heathen idol, Bobs,"
+Worth amended.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, it's the only way I can really concentrate&mdash;effectively.
+But this is the first time I've done it since&mdash;since
+father died."</p>
+
+<p>"And never again for me, if that's the way you feel
+about it." Worth crossed quickly and stood beside
+her, looking down. She reached a hand to him; her
+eyes thanked him; but as he helped her to her feet I
+was struck by a something poised and confident that
+she seemed to have brought with her out of that
+strange state in which she had just been.</p>
+
+<p>"Doesn't either of you want to hear the answer?"
+she asked. Then, without waiting for reply, she
+started for the scuttle and the ladder, bare headed,
+carrying her hat. We found her once more adjusting
+turban and veil before the mirror of Clayte's dresser.
+She faced around, and announced, smiling steadily
+across at me,</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</a></span>"Your man Clayte left this room while Mrs.
+Griggsby was kneeling almost on its threshold&mdash;left
+it by that window over there. He got to the roof by
+means of a rope and grappling hook. He tied the
+suitcase to the lower end of the rope, swung it out
+of the window, went up hand over hand, and pulled
+the suitcase up after him. That's the answer I got."</p>
+
+<p>It was? Well, it was a beaut! Only Worth Gilbert,
+standing there giving the proceeding respectability
+by careful attention and a grave face, brought
+me down to asking with mild jocularity,</p>
+
+<p>"He did? He did all that? Well, please ma'am,
+who locked the window after him?"</p>
+
+<p>"He locked the window after himself."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, say!" I began in exasperation&mdash;hadn't I just
+shown the impractical little creature that those locks
+couldn't be manipulated from outside?</p>
+
+<p>"Wait. Examine carefully the wooden part of the
+upper sash, at the lock&mdash;again," she urged, but without
+making any movement to help. "You'll find what we
+overlooked before; the way he locked the sash from
+the outside."</p>
+
+<p>I turned to the window and looked where she had
+said; nothing. I ran my fingers over the painted
+surface of the wood, outside, opposite the latch, and a
+queer, chilly feeling went down my spine. I jerked
+out my knife, opened it and scraped at a tiny
+inequality.</p>
+
+<p>"There is&mdash;is something&mdash;" I was beginning, when
+Worth crowded in at my side and pushed his broad
+shoulders out the window to get a better view of my
+operations, then commanded,</p>
+
+<p>"Let me have that knife." He took it from my<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</a></span>
+fingers, dug with its blade, and suddenly from the inside
+I saw a tiny hole appear in the frame of the sash
+beside the lock hasp. "Here we are!" He brought
+his upper half back into the room and held up a wooden
+plug, painted&mdash;dipped in paint&mdash;the exact color of the
+sash. It had concealed a hole; pierced the wood from
+out to in.</p>
+
+<p>"And she saw that in her trance," I murmured,
+gaping in amazement at the plug.</p>
+
+<p>I heard her catch her breath, and Worth scowled at
+me,</p>
+
+<p>"Trance? What do you mean, Boyne? She
+doesn't go into a trance."</p>
+
+<p>"That&mdash;that&mdash;whatever she does," I corrected rather
+helplessly.</p>
+
+<p>"Never mind, Mr. Boyne," said the girl. "It isn't
+clairvoyance or anything like that, however it looks."</p>
+
+<p>"But I wouldn't have believed any human eyes could
+have found that thing. I discovered it only by sense
+of touch&mdash;and that after you told me to hunt for it.
+You saw it when I was showing you the latch, did
+you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I didn't see it." She shook her head. "I
+found it when I was sitting up there on the roof."</p>
+
+<p>"Guessed at it?"</p>
+
+<p>"I never guess." Indignantly. "When I'd cleared
+my mind of everything else&mdash;had concentrated on just
+the facts that bore on what I wanted to know&mdash;how
+that man with the suitcase got out of the room and left
+it locked behind him&mdash;I deduced the hole in the sash
+by elimination."</p>
+
+<p>"By elimination?" I echoed. "Show me."</p>
+
+<p>"Simple as two and two," she assented. "Out of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</a></span>
+the door? No; Mrs. Griggsby; so out of the window.
+Down? No; you told why; he would be seen; so, up.
+Ladder? No; too big for one man to handle or to
+hide; so a rope."</p>
+
+<p>"But the hole in the sash?"</p>
+
+<p>"You showed me the only way to close that lock
+from the outside. There was no hole in the glass, so
+there must be in the sash. It was not visible&mdash;you had
+been all over it, and a man of your profession isn't a
+totally untrained observer&mdash;so the hole was plugged.
+I hadn't seen the plug, so it was concealed by paint&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>I was trying to work a toothpick through the plughole.
+She offered me a wire hairpin, straightened out,
+and with it I pushed the hasp into place from outside,
+saw the lever snap in to hold it fast. I had worked
+the catch as Clayte had worked it&mdash;from outside.</p>
+
+<p>"How did you know it was <i>this</i> window?" I asked,
+forced to agree that she had guessed right as to the
+sash lock. "There are two more here, either of
+which&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"No, please, Mr. Boyne. Look at the angle of the
+roof that cuts from view any one climbing from this
+window&mdash;not from the others."</p>
+
+<p>We were all leaning in the window now, sticking
+our heads out, looking down, looking up.</p>
+
+<p>"I can't yet see how you get the rope and hook," I
+said. "Still seems to me that an outside man posted
+on the roof to help in the getaway is more likely."</p>
+
+<p>"Maybe. I can't deal with things that are merely
+likely. It has to be a fact&mdash;or nothing&mdash;for my use.
+I know that there wasn't any second man because of the
+nicks Clayte's grappling hook has left in the cornice
+up there."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</a></span>"Nicks!" I said, and stood like a bound boy at a
+husking, without a word to say for myself. Of
+course, in this impasse of the locked windows, my men
+and I had had some excuse for our superficial examination
+of the roof. Yet that she should have seen what
+we had passed over&mdash;seen it out of the corner of her
+eye, and be laughing at me&mdash;was rather a dose to
+swallow. She'd got her hair and her hat and veil to
+her liking, and she prompted us,</p>
+
+<p>"So now you want to get right down stairs&mdash;don't
+you&mdash;and go up through that other building to its
+roof?"</p>
+
+<p>I stared. She had my plan almost before I had
+made it.</p>
+
+<p>At the St. Dunstan desk where I returned the keys,
+little Miss Wallace had a question of her own to put
+to the clerk.</p>
+
+<p>"How long ago was this building reroofed?" she
+asked with one of her dark, softly glowing smiles.</p>
+
+<p>"Reroofed?" repeated the puzzled clerk, much more
+civil to her than he had been to me. "I don't know
+that it ever was. Certainly not in my time, and I've
+been here all of four years."</p>
+
+<p>"Not in four years? You're sure?"</p>
+
+<p>"Sure of that, yes, miss. But I can find exactly."
+The fellow behind the desk was rising with an eagerness
+to be of service to her, when she cut him short
+with,</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you. Four years would be exact enough
+for my purpose." And she followed a puzzled detective
+and, if I may guess, an equally wondering Worth
+Gilbert out into the street.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VII" id="CHAPTER_VII"></a>CHAPTER VII</h2>
+
+<h3>THE GOLD NUGGET</h3>
+
+
+<p>The neighbor to the south of the St. Dunstan
+was the Gold Nugget Hotel, a five story brick
+building and not at all pretentious as a hostelry. I
+knew the place mildly, and my police training, even
+better than such acquaintance as I had with this
+particular dump, told me what it was. Through the
+windows we could see guests, Sunday papers littered
+about them, half smoked cigars in their faces,
+and hats which had a general tendency to tilt over the
+right eye. And here suddenly I realized the difference
+between Miss Barbara Wallace, a scientist's daughter,
+and some feminine sleuth we might have had with us.</p>
+
+<p>"Take her back to the St. Dunstan, Worth," I
+suggested. Then, as I saw they were both going to
+resist, "She can't go in here. I'll wait for you if you
+like."</p>
+
+<p>"Don't know why we shouldn't let Bobs in on the
+fun, same as you and me, Jerry." That was the way
+Worth put it. I took a side glance at his attitude in
+this affair&mdash;that he'd bought and was enjoying an eight
+hundred thousand dollar frolic, offering to share it with
+a friend; and saying no more, I wheeled and swung
+open the door for them. The man at the desk looked
+at me, calling a quick,</p>
+
+<p>"Hello, Jerry&mdash;what's up?"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</a></span>"Hello, Kite. How'd you come here?"</p>
+
+<p>The Kite as a hotelman was a new one on me. Last
+I knew of him, he was in the business of making book
+at the Emeryville track; and I supposed&mdash;if I ever
+thought of him&mdash;that he'd followed the ponies south
+across the border. As I stepped close to the counter,
+he spoke low, his look one of puzzled and somewhat
+anxious inquiry.</p>
+
+<p>"Running straight, Jerry. You may ask the Chief.
+What can I do for you?"</p>
+
+<p>Rather glad of the luck that gave me an old
+acquaintance to deal with, I told him, described Clayte,
+Worth and Miss Wallace standing by listening; then
+asked if Kite had seen him pass through the hotel going
+out the previous day at some time around one o'clock,
+carrying a brown, sole leather suitcase.</p>
+
+<p>The readers of the Sunday papers who had been
+lured from their known standards of good manners
+into the sending of sundry interested glances in the
+direction of our sparkling girl, took the cue from the
+Kite's scowl to bury themselves for good in the voluminous
+sheets they held, each attending strictly to his
+own business, as is the etiquette of places like the Gold
+Nugget.</p>
+
+<p>"About one o'clock, you say?" Kite muttered,
+frowning, twisted his head around and called down a
+back passage, "Louie&mdash;Oh, Louie!" and when an
+overalled porter, rather messy, shuffled to the desk, put
+the low toned query, "D'you see any stranger guy
+gripping a sole leather shirt-box snoop by out yestiddy,
+after one, thereabouts?" And I added the information,</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</a></span>"Medium height and weight, blue eyes, light brown
+hair, smooth face."</p>
+
+<p>Louie looked at me dubiously.</p>
+
+<p>"How big a guy?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Five feet seven or eight; weighs about hundred
+and forty."</p>
+
+<p>"Blue eyes you say?"</p>
+
+<p>"Light blue&mdash;gray blue."</p>
+
+<p>"How was he tucked up?"</p>
+
+<p>"Blue serge suit, black shoes, black derby. Neat,
+quiet dresser."</p>
+
+<p>Louie's eyes wandered over the guests in the office
+questioningly. I began to feel impatient. If there
+was any place in the city where my description of Clayte
+would differentiate him, make him noticeable by comparison,
+it was here. Neat, quiet dressers were not
+dotting this lobby.</p>
+
+<p>"Might be Tim Foley?" he appealed to the Kite, who
+nodded gravely and chewed his short mustache.
+"Would he have a big scar on his left cheek?"</p>
+
+<p>"He would not," I said shortly. "He wasn't a
+guest here, and you don't know him. Get this straight
+now: a stranger, going through here, out; about one
+o'clock; carried a suitcase."</p>
+
+<p>"Bulls after him?" Louie asked, and I turned away
+from him wearily.</p>
+
+<p>"Kite," I said, "let me up to your roof."</p>
+
+<p>"Sure, Jerry." Released, the porter went on to
+gather up a pile of discarded papers.</p>
+
+<p>"Could he&mdash;the man I've described&mdash;come through
+here&mdash;through this office and neither you nor Louie
+see him?" I asked. The Kite brought a box of cigars
+from under the counter with,</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</a></span>"My treat, gentlemen. Naw, Jerry; sure not&mdash;not
+that kind of a guy. Louie'd 'a' spotted him. Most
+observing cuss I ever seen."</p>
+
+<p>Miss Wallace, taking all this in, seemed amused.
+As I turned to lead to the elevator I found that again
+she wanted a question of her own answered.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Kite," she began and I grinned; Kite wasn't
+the Kite's surname or any part of his name; "Who is
+the guest here with the upstairs room&mdash;on the top
+floor&mdash;has had the same room right along&mdash;for five
+or six years&mdash;but doesn't&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Go easy, ma'am, please!" Kite's little eyes were
+popping; he dragged out a handkerchief and fumbled it
+around his forehead. "I've not been here for any five
+or six years&mdash;no, nor half that time. Since I've been
+here most of our custom is transient. Nobody don't
+keep no room five or six years in the Gold Nugget."</p>
+
+<p>"Back up," I smiled at his excitement. "To my
+certain knowledge Steve Skeels has had a room here
+longer than that. Hasn't he been with you ever since
+the place was rebuilt after the earthquake?"</p>
+
+<p>"Steve?" the Kite repeated. "I forgot him. Yeah&mdash;he
+keeps a little room up under the roof."</p>
+
+<p>"Has he had it for as long as four years?" the young
+lady asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Search me," the Kite shook his head.</p>
+
+<p>But Louie the overalled, piloting us the first stage
+of our journey in a racketty old elevator that he seemed
+to pull up by a cable, so slow it was, grumbled an
+assent to the same question when it was put to him,
+and confirmed my belief that Skeels came into the
+hotel as soon as it was rebuilt, and had kept the same
+room ever since.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</a></span>Miss Wallace seemed interested in this; but all the
+time we were making the last lap, by an iron stairway,
+to that roof-house we had seen from the top of the St.
+Dunstan; all the time Louie was unlocking the door
+there to let us out, instructing us to be sure to relock
+it and bring him the key, and to yell for him down the
+elevator shaft because the bell was busted, the quiet
+smile of Miss Barbara Wallace disturbed me. She
+followed where I led, but I had the irritating impression
+that she looked on at my movements, and Worth's as
+well, with the indulgent eye of a grown-up observing
+children at play.</p>
+
+<p>On the roof of the Gold Nugget we picked up the
+possible trail easily; Clayte hadn't needed to go through
+the building, or have a confederate staked out in a room
+here, to make a downward getaway. For here the
+fire escape came all the way up, curving over the coping
+to anchor into the wall, and it was a good iron
+stairway, with landings at each floor, and a handrail
+the entire length, its lower end in the alley between
+Powell and Mason Streets. Looking at it I didn't
+doubt that it was used by the guests of the Gold
+Nugget at least half as much as the easier but more
+conspicuous front entrance. Therefore a man seen on
+it would be no more likely to attract attention than he
+would in the elevator. I explained this to the others,
+but Worth had attacked a rack of old truck piled in
+the corner of the roof-house, and paid little attention
+to me, while Miss Wallace nodded with her provoking
+smile and said,</p>
+
+<p>"Once&mdash;yes; no doubt you are exactly right. I
+wasn't looking for a way that a man might take once,
+under pressure of great necessity."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</a></span>"Why not?" I countered. "If Clayte got away by
+this means yesterday&mdash;that'll do me."</p>
+
+<p>"It might," she nodded, "if you could see it as a
+fact, without seeing a lot more. Such a man as Clayte
+was&mdash;a really wonderful man, you know&mdash;" the dimples
+were deep in the pink of her cheeks as she flashed
+a laughing look at me with this clawful&mdash;"a really
+wonderful man like Clayte," she repeated, "wouldn't
+have trusted to a route he hadn't known and proved
+for a long time."</p>
+
+<p>"That's theory," I smiled. "I take my hat off to
+you, Miss Wallace, when it comes to observing and
+deducing, but I'm afraid your theorizing is weak."</p>
+
+<p>"I never theorize," she reminded me. "All I deal
+with is facts."</p>
+
+<p>She had perched herself on an overturned box, and
+was watching Worth sort junk. I leaned against the
+roof-house, pushed Kite's donated cigar unlighted into
+a corner of my mouth and stared at her.</p>
+
+<p>"Miss Wallace," I said sharply, "what's this Steve
+Skeels stuff? What's this reroofing stuff? What's
+the dope you think you have, and you think I haven't?
+Tell us, and we'll not waste time. Tell us, and we'll
+get ahead on this case. Worth, let that rubbish alone.
+Nothing there for us. Come here and listen."</p>
+
+<p>For all answer he straightened up, looked at us without
+a word&mdash;and went to it again. I turned to the
+girl.</p>
+
+<p>"Worth doesn't need to listen to me, Mr. Boyne,"
+she said serenely. "He already has full faith in me
+and my methods."</p>
+
+<p>"Methods be&mdash;be blowed!" I exploded. "It's results
+that count, and you've produced. I'm willing to hand<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</a></span>
+it to you. All we know now, we got from you. Beside
+you I'm a thick-headed blunderer. Let me in on
+how you get things and I won't be so hard to convince."</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed, you aren't a blunderer," she said warmly.
+"You do a lot better than most people at observing."
+(High praise that, for a detective more than twenty
+years in the business; but she meant to be complimentary.)
+"I'm glad to tell you my processes. How
+much time do you want to give to it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not a minute longer than will get what you know."
+And she began with a rush.</p>
+
+<p>"Those dents in the coping at the St. Dunstan, above
+Clayte's window&mdash;I asked the clerk there how long
+since the building had been reroofed, because there
+were nicks made by that hook and half filled with tar
+that had been slushed up against the coping and into
+the lowest dents. You see what that means?"</p>
+
+<p>"That Clayte&mdash;or some accomplice of his&mdash;had been
+using the route more than four years ago. Yes."</p>
+
+<p>"And the other scars were made at varying times,
+showing me that coming over here from there was
+quite a regular thing."</p>
+
+<p>"At that rate he would have nicked the coping
+until it would have looked like a huck towel," I
+objected.</p>
+
+<p>"A huck towel," she gravely adopted my word.
+"But he was a man that did everything he did several
+different ways. That was his habit&mdash;a sort of disguise.
+That's why he was shadowy and hard to describe.
+Sometimes he came up to the St. Dunstan roof just
+as we did; and once, a good while ago, there were
+cleats on that wall there so he could climb down here<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</a></span>
+without the rope. They have been taken away some
+time, and the places where they were are weathered
+over so you would hardly notice them."</p>
+
+<p>"Right you are," I said feelingly. "I'd hardly
+notice them. If I could notice things as you do&mdash;fame
+and fortune for me!" I thought the matter over
+for a minute. "That lodger on the top floor, Steve
+Skeels," I debated. "A poor bet. Yet&mdash;after all, he
+might have been a member of the gang, though somehow
+I don't get the hunch&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"What sort of looking person was this man Skeels?"
+she asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Quiet fellow. Dressed like a church deacon.
+'Silent Steve' they call him. I'll send for him down
+stairs and let you give him the once-over if you like."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, that's not the kind of man I'm looking for."
+She shook her head. "My man would be more like
+those down there in the easy chairs&mdash;so he wasn't
+noticed in the elevator or when he passed out through
+the office."</p>
+
+<p>"Wasn't it cute of him?" I grinned. "But you see
+we've just heard that he didn't take the elevator and go
+through the office&mdash;Saturday anyhow, which is the
+only time that really counts for us, the time when he
+carried that suitcase with a fortune in it."</p>
+
+<p>"But he did," she persisted. "He went that way.
+He walked out the front door and carried away the
+suitcase&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"<i>He didn't!</i>" Worth shouted, and began throwing
+things behind him like a terrier in a wood-rat's
+burrow.</p>
+
+<p>Derelict stuff of all sorts; empty boxes, pasteboard
+cartons, part of an old trunk, he hurtled them into a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</a></span>
+heap, and dragged out a square something in a gunny
+sack. As he jerked to clear it from the sacking, I
+glanced at little Miss Wallace. She wasn't getting
+any pleasureable kick out of the situation. Her eyes
+seemed to go wider open with a sort of horror, her
+face paled as she drooped in on herself, sitting there
+on the box. Then Worth held up his find in triumph,
+assuming a famous attitude.</p>
+
+<p>"The world is mine!" he cried.</p>
+
+<p>"Maybe 'tis, maybe 'tisn't," I said as I ran across to
+look at the thing close. Sure enough, he'd dug up a
+respectable brown, sole leather suitcase with brass
+trimmings such as a bank clerk might have carried,
+suspiciously much too good to have been thrown out
+here. Could it be that the thieves had indeed met in
+one of the Gold Nugget's rooms or in the roof-house
+up here, made their divvy, split the swag, and thus
+clumsily disposed of the container? At the moment,
+Worth tore buckles and latches free, yanked the thing
+open, reversed it in air&mdash;and out fell a coiled rope
+that curved itself like a snake&mdash;a three-headed snake;
+the triple grappling iron at its end standing up as
+though to hiss.</p>
+
+<p>We all stood staring; I was too stunned to be triumphant.
+What a pat confirmation of Miss Wallace's
+deductions! I turned to congratulate her and at the
+same instant Worth cried,</p>
+
+<p>"What's the matter, Bobs?" for the girl was sitting,
+staring dejectedly, her chin cupped in her palms, her
+lips quivering. Nonplussed, I stooped over the suitcase
+and rope, coiling up the one, putting it in the other&mdash;this
+first bit of tangible, palpable evidence we'd
+lighted on.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</a></span>"Let's get out of this," I said quickly. "We've
+done all we can here&mdash;and good and plenty it is, too."</p>
+
+<p>Worth took the suitcase out of my hands and carried
+it, so that I had to help Miss Wallace down the ladder.
+She still looked as though she'd lost her last friend.
+I couldn't make her out. Never a word from her
+while we were getting down, or while they waited and
+I shouted for Louie. It was in the elevator, with the
+porter looking at everything on earth but this suitcase
+we hadn't brought in and we were taking out, that she
+said, hardly above her breath,</p>
+
+<p>"Shall you ask at the desk if this ever belonged to
+any one in the house?"</p>
+
+<p>"Find out here&mdash;right now," and I turned to the
+man in overalls with, "How about it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not that your answer will make any difference,"
+Worth cut in joyously. "Nobody need get the idea
+that they can take this suitcase away from me&mdash;'cause
+they can't. It's mine. I paid eight hundred thousand
+dollars for this box; and I've got a use for it." He
+chuckled. Louie regarded him with uncomprehending
+toleration&mdash;queer doings were the order of the day at
+the Gold Nugget&mdash;and allowed negligently.</p>
+
+<p>"You'll get to keep it. It don't belong here."
+Then, as a coin changed hands, "Thank <i>you</i>."</p>
+
+<p>"But didn't it ever belong here?" our girl persisted
+forlornly, and when Louie failed her, jingling Worth's
+tip in his calloused palm, she wanted the women asked,
+and we had a frowsy chambermaid called who denied
+any acquaintance with our sole leather discovery, insisting,
+upon definite inquiry, that she had never seen
+it in Skeels' room, or any other room of her domain.
+Little Miss Wallace sighed and dropped the subject.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</a></span>As we stepped out of the elevator, I behind the
+others, Kite caught my attention with a low whistle,
+and in response to a furtive, beckoning, backward jerk
+of his head, I moved over to the desk. The reading
+gentlemen in the easy chairs, most consciously unconscious
+of us, sent blue smoke circles above their papers.
+Kite leaned far over to get his mustache closer to my
+ear.</p>
+
+<p>"You ast me about Steve," he whispered.</p>
+
+<p>"Yeah," I agreed, and looked around for Barbara,
+to tell her here was her chance to meet the gentleman
+she had so cleverly deduced. But she and Worth were
+already getting through the door, he still clinging to
+the suitcase, she trailing along with that expression of
+defeat. "I'm sort of looking up Steve. And you
+don't want to tip him off&mdash;see?"</p>
+
+<p>"Couldn't if I wanted to, Jerry," the Kite came down
+on his heels, but continued to whisper hoarsely.
+"Steve's bolted."</p>
+
+<p>"What?"</p>
+
+<p>"Bolted," the Kite repeated. "Hopped the twig.
+Jumped the town."</p>
+
+<p>"You mean he's not in his room?" I reached for
+a match in the metal holder, scratched it, and lit my
+cigar.</p>
+
+<p>"I mean he's jumped the town," Kite repeated.
+"You got me nervous asking for him that way. While
+you was on the roof, I took a squint around and found
+he was gone&mdash;with his hand baggage. That means
+he's gone outa town."</p>
+
+<p>"Not if the suitcase you squinted for was a brown
+sole leather&mdash;" I was beginning, but the Kite cut in on
+me.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</a></span>"I seen that one you had. That wasn't it. His was
+a brand new one, black and shiny."</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly I couldn't taste my cigar at all.</p>
+
+<p>"Know what time to-day he left here?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>"It wasn't to-day. 'Twas yestiddy. About one
+o'clock."</p>
+
+<p>As I plunged for the door I was conscious of his
+hoarse whisper following me,</p>
+
+<p>"What's Steve done, Jerry? What d'ye want him
+for?"</p>
+
+<p>I catapulted across the sidewalk and into the
+machine.</p>
+
+<p>"Get me to my office as fast as you can, Worth," I
+exclaimed. "Hit Bush Street&mdash;and rush it."</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VIII" id="CHAPTER_VIII"></a>CHAPTER VIII</h2>
+
+<h3>A TIN-HORN GAMBLER</h3>
+
+
+<p>After we were in the machine, my head was so
+full of the matter in hand that Worth had
+driven some little distance before I realized that the
+young people were debating across me as to which
+place we went first, Barbara complaining that she was
+hungry, while Worth ungallantly eager to give his own
+affairs immediate attention, argued,</p>
+
+<p>"You said the dining-room out at your diggings
+would be closed by this time. Why not let me take
+you down to the Palace, along with Jerry, have this
+suitcase safely locked up, and we can all lunch together
+and get ahead with our talk."</p>
+
+<p>"Drive to the office, Worth," I cut in ahead of
+Barbara's objections to this plan. "I ought to be
+there this minute. We'll have a tray in from a little
+joint that feeds me when I'm too busy to go out for
+grub."</p>
+
+<p>I took them straight into my private office at the
+end of the suite.</p>
+
+<p>"Make yourself comfortable," I said to Miss
+Wallace. "Better let me lock up that suitcase, Worth;
+stick it in the vault. That's evidence."</p>
+
+<p>"I'll hang on to it." He grinned. "You can keep
+the rope and hook. This has got another use before
+it can be evidence."</p>
+
+<p>Not even delaying to remove my coat, I laid a heavy<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</a></span>
+finger on the buzzer button for Roberts, my secretary;
+then as nothing resulted, I played music on the other
+signal tips beneath the desk lid. It was Sunday, also
+luncheon hour, but there must be some one about the
+place. It never was left entirely empty.</p>
+
+<p>My fugue work brought little Pete, and Murray,
+one of the men from the operatives' room.</p>
+
+<p>"Where's Roberts?" I asked the latter.</p>
+
+<p>"He went to lunch, Mr. Boyne."</p>
+
+<p>"Where's Foster?" Foster was chief operative.</p>
+
+<p>"He telephoned in from Redwood City half an hour
+ago. Chasing a Clayte clue down the peninsula."</p>
+
+<p>"If he calls up again, tell him to report in at once.
+Is there a stenographer about?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not a one; Sunday, you know."</p>
+
+<p>"Can you take dictation?"</p>
+
+<p>"Me? Why, no, sir."</p>
+
+<p>"Then dig me somebody who can. And rush it.
+I've&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps I might help." It was little Miss Wallace
+who spoke; about the first cheerful word I'd heard
+out of her since we found that suitcase on the roof
+of the Gold Nugget. "I can take on the machine
+fairly."</p>
+
+<p>"Fine!" I tossed my coat on the big center table.
+"Murray, send Roberts to me as soon as he comes in.
+You take number two trunk line, and find two of the
+staff&mdash;quick; any two. Shoot them to the Gold
+Nugget Hotel." I explained the situation in a word.
+Then, as he was closing the door, "Keep off Number
+One trunk, Murray; I'll be using that line," and I
+turned to little Pete.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</a></span>"Get lunch for three," I said, handing him a bill.
+From his first glance at Barbara one could have seen
+that the monkey was hers truly, as they say at the end
+of letters. I knew as he bolted out that he felt something
+very special ought to be dug up for such a
+visitor.</p>
+
+<p>The girl had shed coat and hat and was already
+fingering the keys of the typewriter, trying their touch.
+I saw at once she knew her business, and I turned to
+the work at hand with satisfaction.</p>
+
+<p>"You'll find telegram blanks there somewhere," I
+instructed. "Get as many in for manifold copies as
+you can make readable. The long form. Worth&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>I looked around to find that my other amateur
+assistant was following my advice, stowing his
+precious suitcase in the vault; and it struck me that he
+couldn't have been more tickled with the find if the
+thing had contained all the money and securities instead
+of that rope and hook. He had made the latter
+into a separate package, and now looked up at me with,</p>
+
+<p>"Want this in here, too, Jerry?"</p>
+
+<p>"I do. Lock them both up, and come take the telephone
+at the table there. Press down Number One
+button. Then call every taxi stand in the city (find
+their numbers at the back of the telephone directory)
+and ask if they picked up Silent Steve at or near the
+Gold Nugget yesterday afternoon about one; Steve
+Skeels&mdash;or any other man. If so, where'd they take
+him? Get me?"</p>
+
+<p>"All hunk, Jerry." He came briskly to the job.
+I returned to Miss Wallace, with,</p>
+
+<p>"Ready, Barbara?"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</a></span>"Yes, Mr. Boyne."</p>
+
+<p>"Take dictation:</p>
+
+<p>"'We offer five hundred dollars&mdash;' You authorize
+that, Worth?"</p>
+
+<p>"Sure. What's it for?"</p>
+
+<p>"Never mind. You keep at your job. 'Five hundred
+dollars for the arrest of Silent Steve Skeels&mdash;'
+Wait. Make that 'arrest or detention,' Got it?"</p>
+
+<p>"All right, Mr. Boyne."</p>
+
+<p>&mdash;"'Skeels, gambler, who left San Francisco about
+one in the afternoon yesterday March sixth. Presumed
+he went by train; maybe by auto. He is
+man thirty-eight to forty; five feet seven or eight;
+weighs about one hundred forty. Hair, light brown;
+eyes light blue&mdash;' Make it gray-blue, Barbara."</p>
+
+<p>Worth glanced up from where he was jotting down
+telephone numbers to drawl,</p>
+
+<p>"You know who you're describing there?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes&mdash;Steve Skeels."</p>
+
+<p>I saw Miss Wallace give him a quick look, a little
+shake of her head, as she said to me.</p>
+
+<p>"Go on&mdash;please, Mr. Boyne."</p>
+
+<p>"'Hair parted high, smoothed down; appears of
+slight build but is well muscled. Neat dresser, quiet,
+usually wears blue serge suit, black derby hat, black
+shoes.'"</p>
+
+<p>"By Golly&mdash;you see it now yourself, don't you,
+Jerry?"</p>
+
+<p>"I see that you're holding up work," I said impatiently.
+And now it was the quiet girl who came in
+with.</p>
+
+<p>"Who gave you this description of Steve Skeels?<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</a></span>
+I mean, how many people's observation of the man
+does this represent?"</p>
+
+<p>"One. My own," I jerked out. "I know Skeels;
+have known him for years."</p>
+
+<p>"Years? How many?" It was still the girl asking.</p>
+
+<p>"Since 1907&mdash;or thereabouts."</p>
+
+<p>"Was he always a gambler?" she wanted to know.</p>
+
+<p>"Always. Ran a joint on Fillmore Street after the
+big earthquake, and before San Francisco came back
+down-town."</p>
+
+<p>"A gambler," she spoke the word just above her
+breath, as though trying it out with herself. "A man
+who took big chances&mdash;risks."</p>
+
+<p>"Not Steve," I smiled at her earnestness. "Steve
+was a piker always&mdash;a tin-horn gambler. Hid away
+from the police instead of doing business with them.
+Take a chance? Not Steve."</p>
+
+<p>Worth had left the telephone and was leaning over
+her shoulder to read what she had typed.</p>
+
+<p>"Exactly and precisely," he said, "the same words
+you had in that other fool description of him."</p>
+
+<p>"Of whom?"</p>
+
+<p>"Clayte."</p>
+
+<p>Worth let me have the one word straight between
+the eyes, and I leaned back in my chair, the breath
+almost knocked out of me by it. By an effort I
+pulled myself together and turned to the girl:</p>
+
+<p>"Take dictation, please: Skeel's eyes are wide
+apart, rather small but keen&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>And for the next few minutes I was making words
+mean something, drawing a picture of the Skeels I
+knew, so that others could visualize him. And it<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</a></span>
+brought me a word of commendation from Miss Wallace,
+and made Worth exclaim,</p>
+
+<p>"Sounds more like Clayte than Clayte himself.
+You've put flesh on those bones, Jerry."</p>
+
+<p>"You keep busy at that phone and help land him,"
+I growled. "Finish, please: 'Wire information to
+me. I hold warrant. Jeremiah Boyne, Bankers' Security
+Agency,' That's all."</p>
+
+<p>The girl pulled the sheets from the machine and
+sorted them while I was stabbing the buzzer. Roberts
+answered, breezing in with an apology which I nipped.</p>
+
+<p>"Never mind that. Get this telegram on the wires
+to each of our corresponding agencies as far east as
+Spokane, Ogden and Denver. Has Murray got in
+touch with Foster?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not yet. Young and Stroud are outside."</p>
+
+<p>"Send them to bring in Steve Skeels," I ordered.
+"Description on the telegram there. Any word,
+Worth?"</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing yet." Worth was calling one after another
+of the taxi offices. Little Pete came in with a
+tray.</p>
+
+<p>"All right, Worth," I said. "Turn that job over
+to Roberts. Here's where we eat."</p>
+
+<p>The kid's idea of catering for Barbara was club
+sandwiches and pie à la mode. It wouldn't have been
+mine; but I was glad to note that he'd guessed right.
+The youngsters fell to with appetite. For myself, I
+ate, the receiver at my ear, talking between bites.
+San Jose, Stockton, Santa Rosa&mdash;in all the nearby
+towns of size, I placed the drag-net out for Silent
+Steve, tin-horn gambler.</p>
+
+<p>They talked as they lunched. I didn't pay any<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</a></span>
+attention to what they said now; my mind was racing
+at the new idea Worth had given me. So far, I had
+been running Skeels down as one of the same gang
+with Clayte; the man on the roof; the go-between for
+the getaway. My supposition was that when the suitcase
+was emptied for division, Skeels, being left to
+dispose of the container, had stuck it where we found
+it. But what if the thing worked another way?
+What if all the money&mdash;almost a round million&mdash;which
+came to the Gold Nugget roof in the brown sole-leather
+case, walked out of its front door in the new
+black shiny carrier of Skeels the gambler?</p>
+
+<p>Could that be worked? A gambler at night, a bank
+employee by day? Why not? Improbable. But not
+impossible.</p>
+
+<p>"I believe you said a mouthful, Worth," I broke in
+on the two at their lunch. "And tell me, girl, how
+did you get the idea of walking up to the desk at the
+Gold Nugget and demanding Steve Skeels from the
+Kite?"</p>
+
+<p>"I didn't demand Steve Skeels," she reminded me
+rather plaintively. "I didn't want&mdash;him."</p>
+
+<p>"What did you want?"</p>
+
+<p>"A room that had been lived in."</p>
+
+<p>She didn't need to add a word to that. I got her
+in the instant. That examination of hers in Clayte's
+room at the St. Dunstan; the crisp, new-looking bedding,
+the unworn velvet of the chair cushions; the
+faded nap of the carpet, quite perfect, while that in the
+hall had just been renewed. Even had the room been
+done over recently&mdash;and I knew it had not&mdash;there was
+no getting around the total absence of photographs,
+pictures, books, magazines, newspapers, old letters, the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</a></span>
+lack of all the half worn stuff that collects about an
+occupied apartment. No pinholes or defacements on
+the walls, none of the litter that accumulates. The
+girl was right; that room hadn't been lived in.</p>
+
+<p>"Beautiful," I said in honest admiration. "It's a
+pleasure to see a mind like yours, and such powers of
+observation, in action, clicking out results like a perfectly
+adjusted machine. Clayte didn't live in his
+room because he lived with the gang all his glorious
+outside hours. There was where the poor rabbit of
+a bank clerk got his fling."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes, it works logically. He held himself down
+to Clayte at the St. Dunstan and in the bank, and he
+let himself go to&mdash;what?&mdash;outside of it, beyond it,
+where he really lived."</p>
+
+<p>"He let himself go to Steve Skeels&mdash;won't that do
+you?"</p>
+
+<p>"No," she said so positively that it was annoying.
+"That won't do me at all."</p>
+
+<p>"But it's what you got," I reminded her rather unkindly,
+and then was sorry I'd done it. "It's what
+you got for me&mdash;and I thank you for it."</p>
+
+<p>"You needn't," she came back at me&mdash;spunky little
+thing. "It isn't worth thanking anybody for. It's
+only a partial fact."</p>
+
+<p>"And you think half truths are dangerous?" I
+smiled at her.</p>
+
+<p>"There isn't any such thing," she instructed me.
+"Even <i>facts</i> can hardly be split into fractions; while
+the truth is always whole and complete."</p>
+
+<p>"As far as you see it," I amended. "For instance,
+you insist on keeping the gang all under Clayte's hat&mdash;or
+you did at first. Now you're refusing to believe,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</a></span>
+as both Worth and I believe, that Steve Skeels is
+Clayte himself. I should think you'd jump at the
+idea. Here's your Wonder Man."</p>
+
+<p>She leaned back in her chair and laughed. I was
+glad to hear the sound again, see the dimples flicker
+in her cheeks, even if she was laughing at me.</p>
+
+<p>"A wonderful Wonder Man, Mr. Boyne," she said.
+"One who does things so bunglingly that you can
+follow him right up and put your hand on him."</p>
+
+<p>"Not so I could," I reminded her gaily. "So you
+could. Quite a different matter." She took my compliment
+sweetly, but she said with smiling reluctance,</p>
+
+<p>"I'm not in this, of course, except that your kindness
+allowed me to be for this day only. But if I
+were, I shouldn't be following Skeels as you are. I'd
+still be after Clayte."</p>
+
+<p>"It foots up to the same thing," I said rather tartly.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, does it?" she laughed at me. "Two and two
+are making about three and a half this afternoon, are
+they?"</p>
+
+<p>"What we've got to-day ought to land something,"
+I maintained. "You've been fine help, Barbara&mdash;"
+and I broke off suddenly with the knowledge that I'd
+been calling her that all through the rush of the work.</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you." She smiled inclusively. I knew she
+meant my use of her name as well as my commendation.
+I began clearing my desk preparatory to leaving.
+Worth was going to take her home and as he brought
+her coat, he spoke again of the suitcase.</p>
+
+<p>"Hey, there!" I remonstrated, "You don't want to
+be lugging that thing with you everywhere, like a
+three-year-old kid that's found a dead cat. Leave it
+where it is."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</a></span>"Give me an order for it then," he said. And when
+I looked surprised, "Might need that box, and you not
+be in the office."</p>
+
+<p>"Need it?" I grumbled. "I'd like to know what
+for."</p>
+
+<p>But I scribbled the order. Over by the window the
+young people were talking together earnestly; they
+made a picture against the light, standing close, the
+girl's vivid dark face raised, the lad's tall head bent,
+attentive.</p>
+
+<p>"But, Bobs, you must get some time to play about,"
+I heard Worth say.</p>
+
+<p>"Awfully little," Her look up at him was like that
+of a wistful child.</p>
+
+<p>"You said you were in the accounting department,"
+he urged impatiently. "A lightning calculator like
+you could put that stuff through in about one tenth
+of the usual time."</p>
+
+<p>"I use an adding machine," she half whispered, and
+it made me chuckle.</p>
+
+<p>"An adding machine!" Worth exploded in a peal
+of laughter. "For Barbara Wallace! What's their
+idea?"</p>
+
+<p>"It isn't their idea; it's mine," with dignity. "They
+don't know that I used to be a freak mathematician.
+I don't want them to. Father used to say that all
+children could be trained to do all that I did&mdash;if you
+took them young enough. But till they are, I'd rather
+not be. It's horrid to be different; and I'm keeping
+it to myself&mdash;in the office anyhow&mdash;and living my
+past down the best I can."</p>
+
+<p>As though her words had suggested it, Worth spoke
+again,</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</a></span>"Where did you meet Cummings? Seems you find
+time to go out with him."</p>
+
+<p>"I've known Mr. Cummings for years," Barbara
+spoke quietly, but she looked self-conscious. "I knew
+he was with those friends of mine at the Orpheum
+last night, but I didn't expect him to call for me at
+Tait's&mdash;or rather I thought they'd all come in after
+me. There wasn't anything special about it&mdash;no
+special appointment with him, I mean."</p>
+
+<p>I had forgotten them for a minute or two, closing
+my desk, finding my coat, when I heard some one
+come into the outer office, a visitor, for little Pete's
+voice went up to a shrill yap with the information
+that I was busy. Then the knob turned, the door
+opened, and there stood Cummings. At first he saw
+only me at the desk.</p>
+
+<p>"Your friend calling for you again, Bobs&mdash;by appointment?"
+Worth's question drew the lawyer's
+glance, and he stared at them apparently a good deal
+taken aback, while Worth added, "Seems to keep pretty
+close tab on your movements." The low tone might
+have been considered joking, but there was war in
+the boy's eye.</p>
+
+<p>It was as though Cummings answered the challenge,
+rather than opened with what he had intended.</p>
+
+<p>"My business is with you, Gilbert." He came in
+and shut the door behind him, leaving his hand on the
+knob. "And I've been some time finding you." He
+stopped there, and was so long about getting anything
+else out that Worth finally suggested,</p>
+
+<p>"The money?" And when there was no reply but
+a surprised look, "How do you stand now?"</p>
+
+<p>"Still seventy-two thousand to raise." Cummings<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</a></span>
+spoke vaguely. This was not what had brought him
+to the office. He finished with the abrupt question,
+"Were you at Santa Ysobel last night?"</p>
+
+<p>"Hold on, Cummings," I broke in. "What you got?
+Let us&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>I was shut off there by Worth's,</p>
+
+<p>"It's Sunday afternoon. I want that money to-morrow
+morning. You've not come through? You've
+not dug up what I sent you after?"</p>
+
+<p>I could see that the lawyer was absolutely nonplussed.
+Again he gave Worth one of those queer, probing
+looks before he said doggedly,</p>
+
+<p>"The question of that money can wait."</p>
+
+<p>"It can't wait." Worth's eyes began to light up.
+"What you talking, Cummings&mdash;an extension?" And
+when the lawyer made no answer to this, "I'll not
+crawl in with a broken leg asking favors of that bank
+crowd. Are you quitting on me? If so, say it&mdash;and
+I'll find a way to raise the sum, myself."</p>
+
+<p>"I've raised all but seventy-two thousand of the
+necessary amount," said Cummings slowly. "What
+I want to know is&mdash;how much have you raised?"</p>
+
+<p>"See here, Cummings," again I mixed in. "I was
+present when that arrangement was made. Nothing
+was said about Worth raising any money."</p>
+
+<p>Cummings barely glanced around at me as he said,
+"I made a suggestion to him; in your presence, as
+you say, Boyne. I want to know if he carried it out."
+Then, giving his full attention to Worth, "Did you see
+your father last night?"</p>
+
+<p>On instinct I blurted,</p>
+
+<p>"For heaven's sake, keep your mouth shut, Worth!"</p>
+
+<p>For a detective that certainly was an incautious<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</a></span>
+speech. Cummings' eye flared suspicion at me, and
+his voice was a menace.</p>
+
+<p>"You keep out of this, Boyne."</p>
+
+<p>"You tell what's up your sleeve, Cummings," I countered.
+"This is no witness-stand cross-examination.
+What you got?"</p>
+
+<p>But Worth answered for him, hotly,</p>
+
+<p>"If Cummings hasn't seventy-two thousand dollars
+I commissioned him to raise for me, I don't care what
+he's got."</p>
+
+<p>"And you didn't go to your father for it last
+night?" Cummings returned to his question. He had
+moved close to the boy. Barbara stood just where
+she was when the door opened. Neither paid any
+attention to her. But she looked at the two men,
+drawn up with glances clinched, and spoke out suddenly
+in her clear young voice, as though there was no
+row on hand,</p>
+
+<p>"Worth was with me last night, you know, Mr.
+Cummings."</p>
+
+<p>"I seem to have noticed something of the sort,"
+Cummings said with labored sarcasm. "And he'd
+been with that wedding party earlier in the evening,
+I suppose."</p>
+
+<p>"With me till Miss Wallace came in." Worth's
+natural disposition to disoblige the lawyer could be
+depended on to keep from Cummings whatever information
+he wanted before giving us his own news.
+"What you got, Cummings?" I prompted again, impatiently.
+"Come through."</p>
+
+<p>His eyes never shifted an instant from Worth Gilbert's
+face.</p>
+
+<p>"A telegram&mdash;from Santa Ysobel," he said slowly.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</a></span>Worth shrugged and half turned away.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm not interested in your telegram, Cummings."</p>
+
+<p>Instantly I saw what the boy thought: that the other
+had taken it on himself to apply for the money to
+Thomas Gilbert, and had been turned down.</p>
+
+<p>"Not interested?" Cummings repeated in that dry,
+lawyer voice that speaks from the teeth out; on the
+mere tone, I braced for something nasty. "I think
+you are. My telegram's from the coroner."</p>
+
+<p>Silence after that; Worth obstinately mute; Barbara
+and I afraid to ask. There was a little tremor of
+Cummings' nostril, he couldn't keep the flicker out
+of his eye, as he said, staring straight at Worth,</p>
+
+<p>"It states that your father shot himself last night.
+The body wasn't discovered till late this morning, in
+his study."</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_IX" id="CHAPTER_IX"></a>CHAPTER IX</h2>
+
+<h3>SANTA YSOBEL</h3>
+
+<p>Of all unexpected things. I went down to Santa
+Ysobel with Worth Gilbert. It happened this
+way: Cummings, one of those individuals on whose
+tombstone may truthfully be put, "Born a man&mdash;and
+died a lawyer," seemed rather taken aback at the effect
+of the blow he'd launched. If he was after information,
+I can't think he learned much in the moment
+while Worth stood regarding him with an unreadable
+eye.</p>
+
+<p>There was only a little grimmer tightening of the
+jaw muscle, something bleak and robbed in the glance
+of the eye; the face of one, it seemed to me, who
+grieved the more because he was denied real sorrow
+for his loss, and Worth had tramped to the window
+and stood with his back to us, putting the thing over
+in his silent, fighting fashion, speaking to none of us.
+It was when Barbara followed, took hold of his
+sleeve and began half whispering up into his face that
+Cummings jerked his hat from the table where he
+had thrown it, and snapped,</p>
+
+<p>"Boyne&mdash;can I have a few minutes of your time?"</p>
+
+<p>"Jerry," Worth's voice halted me at the door,
+"Leave that card&mdash;an order&mdash;for me. For the suitcase."</p>
+
+<p>Cummings was ahead of me, and he turned back to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</a></span>
+listen, but I crowded him along and was pretty hot
+when I faced him in the outer office to demand,</p>
+
+<p>"What kind of a deal do you call this&mdash;ripping in
+here to throw this thing at the boy in such a way?
+What is your idea? What you trying to put over?"</p>
+
+<p>"Go easy, Boyne." Cummings chewed his words
+a little before he let them out. "There's something
+queer in this business. I intend to know what it is."</p>
+
+<p>"Queer," I repeated his word. "If the lawyers and
+the detectives get to running down all the queer things&mdash;that
+don't concern them a little bit&mdash;the world won't
+have any more peace."</p>
+
+<p>"All right, if you say it doesn't concern you," Cummings
+threw me overboard with relief I thought. "It
+does concern me. When I couldn't get&mdash;him"&mdash;a jerk
+of the head indicated that the pronoun stood for Worth&mdash;"at
+the Palace, found he'd been out all day and left
+no word at the desk when he expected to be in, I
+took my telegram to Knapp, and then to Whipple.
+They were flabbergasted."</p>
+
+<p>"The bank crowd," I said. "Now why did you
+run to them? On account of Worth's engagement
+with them to-morrow morning? Wasn't that exceeding
+your orders? You saw that he intends to meet
+it, in spite of this."</p>
+
+<p>"Why not because of this?" Cummings demanded
+sharply. "He's in better shape to meet it now his
+father's dead. He's the only heir. That's the first
+thing Knapp and Whipple spoke of&mdash;and I saw them
+separately."</p>
+
+<p>"Can that stuff. What do you think you're hinting
+at?"</p>
+
+<p>"Something queer," he repeated his phrase. "Wake<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</a></span>
+up, Boyne. Knapp and Whipple both saw Thomas
+Gilbert a little before noon yesterday. He was in the
+bank for the final transfer of the Hanford interests.
+They'd as soon have thought of my committing suicide
+that night&mdash;or you doing it. They swear there
+was nothing in his manner or bearing to suggest such
+a state of mind, and everything in the business he was
+engaged on to suggest that he expected to live out his
+days like any man."</p>
+
+<p>I thought very little of this; it is common in cases
+of suicide for family, friends or business associates
+to talk in exactly this way, to believe it, and yet for
+the deep-seated moving cause to be easily discovered
+by an unprejudiced outsider. I said as much to Cummings.
+And while I spoke, we could hear a murmur
+of young voices from the inner room.</p>
+
+<p>"Damn it all," the lawyer's irritation spurted out
+suddenly, "With a cub like that for a son, I'd say
+the reason wasn't far to seek. Better keep your eye
+peeled round that young man, Boyne."</p>
+
+<p>"I will," I agreed, and he took his departure. I
+turned back into the private room.</p>
+
+<p>"Worth"&mdash;I put it quietly&mdash;"what say I go to Santa
+Ysobel with you? You could bring me back Monday
+morning."</p>
+
+<p>He agreed at once, silently, but thankfully I thought.</p>
+
+<p>Barbara, listening, proposed half timidly to go
+with us, staying the night at the Thornhill place, being
+brought back before work time Monday, and was accepted
+simply. So it came that when we had a blow-out
+as the crown of a dozen other petty disasters
+which had delayed our progress toward Santa Ysobel,
+and found our spare tire flat, Barbara jumped down<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</a></span>
+beside Worth where he stood dragging out the pump,
+and stopped him, suggesting that we save time by
+running the last few miles on the rim and getting
+fixed up at Capehart's garage. He climbed in without
+a word, and drove on toward where Santa Ysobel
+lies at the head of its broad valley, surrounded by the
+apricot, peach and prune orchards that are its wealth.</p>
+
+<p>We came into the fringes of the town in the obscurity
+of approaching night; a thick tulle fog had
+blown down on the north wind. The little foot-hill
+city was all drowned in it; tree-tops, roofs, the gable
+ends of houses, the illuminated dial of the town clock
+on the city hall, sticking up from the blur like things
+seen in a dream. As we headed for a garage with
+the name Capehart on it, we heard, soft, muffled, seven
+strokes from the tower.</p>
+
+<p>"Getting in late," Worth said absently. "Bill still
+keeps the old place?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. Just the same," Barbara said. "He married
+our Sarah, you know&mdash;was that before you went away?
+Of course not," and added for my enlightenment,
+"Sarah Gibbs was father's housekeeper for years. She
+brought me up."</p>
+
+<p>We drove into the big, dimly lighted building; there
+came to us from its corner office what might have been
+described as a wide man, not especially imposing in
+breadth, but with a sort of loose-jointed effectiveness
+to his movements, and a pair of roving, yellowish-hazel
+eyes in his broad, good-humored face, mighty
+observing I'd say, in spite of the lazy roll of his glance.</p>
+
+<p>"Been stepping on tacks, Mister?" he hailed, having
+looked at the tires before he took stock of the human
+freight.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</a></span>"Hello, Bill," Worth was singing out. "Give me
+another machine&mdash;or get our spare filled and on&mdash;whichever's
+quickest. I want to make it to the house
+as soon as I can."</p>
+
+<p>"Lord, boy!" The wide man began wiping a big
+paw before offering it. "I'm glad to see you."</p>
+
+<p>They shook hands. Worth repeated his request,
+but the garage man was already unbuckling the spare,
+going to the work with a brisk efficiency that contradicted
+his appearance.</p>
+
+<p>Barbara sitting quietly beside me, we heard them
+talking at the back of the machine, as the jack quickly
+lifted us and Worth went to it with Capehart to unbolt
+the rim; a low-toned steady stream from the wide
+man, punctuated now and then by a word from Worth.</p>
+
+<p>"Yeh," Capehart grunted, prying off the tire.
+"Heard it m'self 'bout noon&mdash;or a little after. Yeh,
+Ward's Undertaking Parlors."</p>
+
+<p>"Undertaking parlors!" Worth echoed. Capehart,
+hammering on the spare, agreed.</p>
+
+<p>"Nobody in town that knowed what to do about
+it; so the coroner took a-holt, I guess, and kinda fixed
+it to suit hisself. Did you phone ahead to see how
+things was out to the house?"</p>
+
+<p>"Tried to," Worth said. "The operator couldn't
+raise it."</p>
+
+<p>"Course not." Capehart was coupling on the air.
+"Your chink's off every Sunday&mdash;has the whole day&mdash;and
+the Devil only could guess where a Chinaman'd
+go when he ain't working. Eddie Hughes ought to
+be on the job out there&mdash;but would he?"</p>
+
+<p>"Father still kept Eddie?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yeh." The click of the jack and the car was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</a></span>
+lowering. "Eddie's lasted longer than I looked to see
+him. Due to be fired any time this past year. Been
+chasing over 'crost the tracks. Got him a girl there,
+one of these cannery girls. Well, she's sort of married,
+I guess, but that don't stop Eddie. 'F I see
+him, I'll tell him you want him."</p>
+
+<p>They came to the front of the machine; Worth
+thrust his hand in his pocket. Capehart checked him
+with,</p>
+
+<p>"Let it go on the bill." Then, as Worth swung
+into his seat, Barbara bent forward from behind my
+shoulder, the careless yellowish eyes that saw everything
+got a fair view of her, and with a sort of subdued
+crow, "Look who's here!" Capehart took hold
+of the upright to lean his square form in and say
+earnestly, "While you're in Santa Ysobel, don't forget
+that we got a spare room at our house."</p>
+
+<p>"Next time," Barbara raised her voice to top the
+hum of the engine. "I'm only here for over night,
+now, and I'm going down to Mrs. Thornhill's."</p>
+
+<p>We were out in the street once more, leaving the
+cannery district on our right, tucked away to itself
+across the railroad tracks, running on Main Street to
+City Hall Square, where we struck into Broad, followed
+it out past the churches and to that length of
+it that held the fine homes in their beautiful grounds,
+getting close at last to where town melts again into
+orchards. The road between its rows of fernlike pepper
+trees was a wet gleam before us, all black and
+silver; the arc lights made big misty blurs without
+much illumination as we came to the Thornhill place.
+Worth got down and, though she told him he needn't
+bother, took her in to the gate. For a minute I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</a></span>
+waited, getting the bulk of the big frame house back
+among the trees, with a single light twinkling from an
+upper story window; then Worth flung into the car
+and we speeded on, skirting a long frontage of lawns,
+beautifully kept, pearly with the fog, set off with
+artfully grouped shrubbery and winding walks. There
+was no barrier but a low stone coping; the drive to
+the Gilbert place went in on the side farthest from the
+Thornhill's. We ran in under a carriage porch. The
+house was black.</p>
+
+<p>"See if I can raise anybody," said Worth as he
+jumped to the ground. "Let you in, and then I'll run
+the roadster around to the garage."</p>
+
+<p>But the house was so tightly locked up that he had
+finally to break in through a pantry window. I was
+out in front when he made it, and saw the lights begin
+to flash up, the porch lamp flooding me with a sudden
+glare before he threw the door open.</p>
+
+<p>"Cold as a vault in here."</p>
+
+<p>He twisted his broad shoulders in a shudder, and
+I looked about me. It was a big entrance hall, with
+a wide stairway. There on the hat tree hung a man's
+light overcoat, a gray fedora hat; a stick leaned below.
+When the master of the house went out of it this time,
+he hadn't needed these. Abruptly Worth turned and
+led the way into what I knew was the living room,
+with a big open fireplace in it.</p>
+
+<p>"Make yourself as comfortable as you can, Jerry.
+I'll get a blaze here in two shakes. I suppose you're
+hungry as a wolf&mdash;I am. This is a hell of a place I've
+brought you into."</p>
+
+<p>"Forget it," I returned. "I can look after myself.
+I'm used to rustling. Let me make that fire."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</a></span>"All right." He gave up his place on the hearth
+to me, straightened himself and stood a minute, saying,
+"I'll raid the kitchen. Chung's sure to have plenty
+of food cooked. He may not be back here before
+midnight."</p>
+
+<p>"Midnight?" I echoed. "Is that usual?"</p>
+
+<p>"Used to be. Chung's been with father a long time.
+Good chink. Always given his whole Sunday, and if
+he was on hand to get Monday's breakfast&mdash;no questions."</p>
+
+<p>"Left last night, you think?"</p>
+
+<p>Worth shot me a glance of understanding.</p>
+
+<p>"Sometimes he would&mdash;after cleaning up from dinner.
+But he wouldn't have heard the shot, if that's
+what you're driving at."</p>
+
+<p>He left me, going out through the hall. My fire
+burned. I thawed out the kinks the long, chill ride
+had put in me. Then Worth hailed; I went out and
+found him with a coffee-pot boiling on the gas range,
+a loaf and a cold roast set out. He had sand, that
+boy; in this wretched home-coming, his manner was
+neither stricken nor defiant. He seemed only a little
+graver than usual as he waited on me, hunting up
+stuff in places he knew of to put some variety into
+our supper.</p>
+
+<p>Where I sat I faced a back window, and my eye
+was caught by the appearance of a strange light, quite
+a little distance from the house, apparently in another
+building, but showing as a vague glow on the fog.</p>
+
+<p>"What's down there?" I asked. Worth answered
+without taking the trouble to lean forward and look,</p>
+
+<p>"The garage&mdash;and the study."</p>
+
+<p>"Huh? The study's separate from the house?"<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</a></span>
+I had been thinking of the suicide as a thing of this
+dwelling, an affair in some room within its walls.
+Of course Chung would not hear the shot. "Who's
+down there?"</p>
+
+<p>"Eddie Hughes has a room off the garage."</p>
+
+<p>"He's in it now."</p>
+
+<p>"How do you know?" he asked quickly.</p>
+
+<p>"There's a light&mdash;or there was. It's gone now."</p>
+
+<p>"That wouldn't have been Eddie," Worth said.
+"His room's on the other side, toward the back street.
+What you saw was the light from these windows shining
+on the fog. Makes queer effects sometimes."</p>
+
+<p>I knew that wasn't it, but I didn't argue with him,
+only remarked,</p>
+
+<p>"I'd like to have a look at that place, Worth, if
+you don't mind."</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_X" id="CHAPTER_X"></a>CHAPTER X</h2>
+
+<h3>A SHADOW IN THE FOG</h3>
+
+<p>Again I saw that glow from the Gilbert garage,
+hanging on the fog; a luminosity of the fog;
+saw it disappear as the mist deepened and shrouded
+it. But Worth was answering me, and somehow his
+words seemed forced;</p>
+
+<p>"Sit tight a minute, Jerry. Have another cup of
+coffee while I telephone, then I'll put the roadster in
+and open up down there. I'll call you&mdash;or you can
+see my lights."</p>
+
+<p>He left me. I heard him at the instrument in the
+hall get his number, talk to some one in a low voice,
+and then go out the front door; next thing was the
+sound of the motor, the glare of its lamps as it
+rounded into the driveway and started down back,
+illuminating everything. In the general glare thrown
+on the fog, the fainter light was invisible, but across
+a plot of kitchen garden I saw where it had been; a
+square, squat building of concrete, flat roofed, vining
+plants in boxes drooping over its cornice; the typical
+garage of such an establishment, but nearly double
+the usual size. The light had come from there, but
+how? In the short time that the lamps of the machine
+were showing it up to me, there seemed no windows
+on this side; only the double doors for the car's entrance&mdash;closed
+now&mdash;and a single door which was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</a></span>
+crossed by two heavy, barricading planks nailed in the
+form of a great X.</p>
+
+<p>Worth ran the machine close up against the doors,
+jumped down, and I could see his tall form, blurred
+by the mist, moving about to slide them open. The
+lamps of the roadster made little showing now as he
+rolled it in. Then these were switched off and everything
+down there was dark as a pocket. For a time
+I sat and waited for him to light up and call me, then
+started down. The fog was making the kind of
+dimness that has a curious, illusory character. I
+suppose I had gone half the distance of the garden
+walk, when, thrown up startlingly on the obscurity,
+I saw a square of white, and across that shining
+screen, moved the silhouette of a human head. The
+whole thing danced before my eyes for a bare second,
+then blackness.</p>
+
+<p>With Cummings' queer hints in my mind, I started
+running across the garden toward it. About the first
+thing I did was step into a cold frame, plunging
+my foot through the glass, all but going to my knees
+in it; and when I got up, swearing, I was turned
+around, ran into bushes, tripped over obstructions,
+and traveled, I think, in a circle.</p>
+
+<p>Then I began to go more cautiously. No use getting
+excited. That was only Worth I had seen. And
+still I was unwilling to call, ask him to show a light.
+I groped along until my outstretched fingers came
+across the corner of a building, rough, stonelike&mdash;the
+concrete garage and study. I felt along, seeing a bit
+now, and was soon passing my hands over the barricading
+planks of that door.</p>
+
+<p>I might have lit a match, but I preferred to find<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</a></span>
+out what I could by feeling around, and that cautiously.
+I discovered that the door had been broken
+in, the top panels shattered to kindling wood, the
+force of the assault having burst a hinge, so that the
+whole thing sagged drunkenly behind the heavy planks
+that propped it, while a strong bolt, quite useless, was
+still clamped into a socket which had been torn, screws
+and all, from the inside casing.</p>
+
+<p>Sliding my hands over the broken top panel I
+found that it had been covered on its inner side by a
+piece of canvas; the screen on which that shadow had
+been thrown&mdash;from within the room. There was no
+light there now; there was no sound of motion within.
+The drip of the fog from the eaves was the only
+break in the stillness.</p>
+
+<p>"Worth?" I shouted, at last, and he answered me
+instantly, hallooing from behind me, and to one side
+of the house. I could hear him running and when he
+spoke it was close to my shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>"Where are you, Jerry?"</p>
+
+<p>"Where are you," I countered. "Or rather, where
+have you been?"</p>
+
+<p>"Getting a bar to pry off these boards."</p>
+
+<p>"A bar?" I echoed stupidly.</p>
+
+<p>"A crowbar from the shed. These planks will have
+to come off to let us in."</p>
+
+<p>"The devil you say!" I was exasperated. "There's
+some one in here now&mdash;or was a minute back. Show
+me the other way in."</p>
+
+<p>I heard the ring of the steel bar as its end hit the
+hard graveled path.</p>
+
+<p>"Some one in there? Jerry, you're seeing things."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[Pg 113]</a></span>"Sure I am," I agreed drily. "But you get me to
+that other door quick!"</p>
+
+<p>"The only other door is locked. I tried it from the
+garage. You're dreaming."</p>
+
+<p>For reply, I ran up to the door and thrust my fist
+through the canvas, ripping it away from its clumsy
+tacking.</p>
+
+<p>"Who's in there?" I cried. "Answer me!"</p>
+
+<p>Dead silence; then a click as Worth snapped on a
+flood of light from his pocket torch, saying tolerantly,
+tiredly,</p>
+
+<p>"I told you there was no one. There couldn't be."</p>
+
+<p>"I tell you, Worth, there was. I saw the shadow
+on the square of that canvas. Give me the torch."</p>
+
+<p>I pushed the flashlight through the opening and
+played the light cone about the room in a quick survey;
+then brought the circle of white glow to rest upon one
+of the side walls; and my hand went down and back
+to grip fingers about the butt of my revolver. There
+was, as Worth had said, but one other door to this
+room; but more, there was apparently no other exit;
+no windows, no breaks in the walls. My circle of light
+was on this second door; and the very heart of that
+circle was a heavy steel bolt on the door, the bar of
+which was firmly shot into the socket on the frame.
+The only exit from that room, other than the door
+through which I now leaned with pistol raised, was
+locked&mdash;bolted from the inside!</p>
+
+<p>Worth was crowding his big frame into the opening
+beside me.</p>
+
+<p>"Keep back," I growled. "Some one's inside," and
+I sent the light shaft into corners to drive out the
+shadows, to cut in under the desk and chairs. Worth's<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[Pg 114]</a></span>
+reply was a laugh, and his arm went by me to reach
+inside the door. Then, as his fingers found the button,
+a light sprang out from a lamp upon the center desk.</p>
+
+<p>"You're letting your nerves play the deuce with you,
+Jerry," he said lightly. "Make way for my crowbar
+and we'll get in out of the wet."</p>
+
+<p>I made no answer, but for a long moment more I
+searched that room with my eyes; but it was the kind
+you see all over at a glance. Big, square, plain, it
+hadn't a window in it; the walls, lined with book
+shelves, floor to ceiling; a fireplace; a library table
+with drawers; a few chairs. No chance for a hideout.
+I glanced at the ceiling and confirmed the evidence
+of my eyes. There was a skylight, and through
+it had come that curious glow that first attracted my
+attention to the place.</p>
+
+<p>Then I gave Worth room to wield his tools on the
+barred door, while I ran quickly back to the house,
+into the kitchen, and plumped down in the chair where
+I had sat before. The light showed on the fog,
+brightened and dimmed as the mist drifted past.
+There was no possibility of a mistake: some one had
+been in the study, had turned on the table lamp, had
+projected his shadow against the patched panel of the
+door, and had somehow left the room, one door bolted,
+the only other exit barred and nailed.</p>
+
+<p>I went back and rejoined Worth who was standing
+where a brownish stain on the rug marked a spot a
+little nearer the corner of the table than it was to the
+outer door. A curious place for a suicide to fall.
+Behind the table was the library chair in which Thomas
+Gilbert worked when at his desk; beside it a small
+cabinet with a humidor on its top and the open door<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</a></span>
+below revealing several decanters and bottles, whisky
+and wine glasses, a tray; between the desk and the
+fireplace were two other chairs, large and comfortable;
+but in front of the table&mdash;between it and the door&mdash;was
+barren floor.</p>
+
+<p>It is a fact that most men who shoot themselves do
+so while sitting; some lying in a bed; few standing.
+The psychology of this I must leave to others, but
+experience has taught me to question the suicide of
+one who has seemingly placed the muzzle of a revolver
+against him while on his feet. Thomas Gilbert had
+stood; had chosen to take his life as he was walking
+from door to desk, or from desk to door.</p>
+
+<p>"Worth," I said. "There was somebody in here
+just now."</p>
+
+<p>"Couldn't have been, Jerry," he answered absently;
+then added, his eyes on that stain, "I never could
+calculate what my father would do. But when I
+talked to him last night, right here in this room, he
+didn't seem to me a man ready to take his own life."</p>
+
+<p>"You quarreled?"</p>
+
+<p>"We always quarreled, whenever we met."</p>
+
+<p>"But this quarrel was more bitter than usual?"</p>
+
+<p>"The last quarrel would seem the bitterest, wouldn't
+it, Jerry?" he asked. Then, after a moment, "Poor
+Jim Edwards!"</p>
+
+<p>I caught my tongue to hold back the question.
+Worth went on,</p>
+
+<p>"When I phoned him just now, he hadn't heard a
+word about it. Seemed terribly upset."</p>
+
+<p>"Hadn't heard?" I echoed. "How was that?"</p>
+
+<p>"You know we saw him at Tait's last night. He
+took the Pacheco Pass road from San Francisco;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</a></span>
+drove straight to his ranch without hitting Santa
+Ysobel."</p>
+
+<p>I wanted another look at that man Edwards. I
+was to have it. Worth went on absently,</p>
+
+<p>"He'll be along presently to stay here while I'm
+away Monday. Told me it would be the first time
+he'd put foot in the house for four years. As boys
+up in Sonoma county, he and father always disagreed,
+but sometime these last years there was a big split
+over something. They were barely on speaking terms&mdash;and
+good old Jim took my news harder than
+as though I'd been telling him the death of a near
+friend."</p>
+
+<p>"Works like that with us humans," I nodded. "Let
+some one die that you've disagreed with, and you
+remember every row you ever had with them; remember
+it and regret it&mdash;which is foolish."</p>
+
+<p>"Which is foolish," Worth repeated, and seemed
+for the first time able to get away from the spot at
+which he had stopped.</p>
+
+<p>He went over to the empty, fireless hearth and stood
+there, his back to the room, elbows on the mantel
+propping his head, face bent, oblivious to anything that
+I might do. It oughtn't to be hard to find the way
+this place could be entered and left by a man solid
+enough to cast a shadow, with quick fingers to snap
+the light on and off. But when I made a painstaking
+examination of a corner grate with a flue too small
+for anything but a chimney swallow to go up and
+down, a ceiling solidly beamed and paneled, the glass
+that formed the skylight set in firmly as part of the
+roof, when I'd turned up rugs and inspected an unbroken
+floor, even tried the corners of book cases to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</a></span>
+see if they masked a false entrance, I owned myself,
+for the moment, beaten there.</p>
+
+<p>"Give me your torch&mdash;or go with me, Worth," I
+said. "I'd like to take a scoot around outside."</p>
+
+<p>He didn't speak, only indicated the flashlight by a
+motion, where it lay on the shelf beside his hand. I
+took it, unbolted the door, and stepped into the garage.</p>
+
+<p>Everything all right here. My roadster; a much
+handsomer small machine beyond it; a bench, portable
+forge and drill made a repair shop of one corner, and
+as my light flashed over these, I checked and stared.
+Why had Worth gone to the shed hunting a crowbar
+to open the door? Here were tools that would have
+served as well. I put from me the hateful thought,
+and damned Cummings and his suspicions. The
+shadow didn't have to be Worth. Certainly he had
+not first lit that lamp, for I had seen it from the kitchen
+with him beside me. Some one other than Worth
+had been in there when Worth put up the roadster.
+I'd find the man it really was. But even as I crossed
+to Eddie Hughes's door, something at the back of my
+head was saying to me that Worth could have been in
+that room&mdash;that there was time for it to be, if he had
+taken the crowbar from the garage and not from the
+shed as he said he did.</p>
+
+<p>At this I took myself in hand. The lie would have
+been so clumsy a one that there was no way but to
+accept this statement for the truth; and some one else
+had made that shadow on the canvas.</p>
+
+<p>I tried the chauffeur's door and found it locked;
+called, shook it, and had set my shoulder against it to
+burst it in, when the rolling door on the street side
+moved a little, and a voice said,</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</a></span>
+"H-y-ah! What you doin' there?"</p>
+
+<p>I turned and flashed my light on the six-inch crack
+of the sliding door. It gave me a strip of man, a
+long drab face at top, solid, meaty looking, yet somehow
+slightly cadaverous, a half shut eye, a crooked
+mouth&mdash;if I'd met that mug in San Francisco, I'd have
+labeled it "tough," and located it South of Market
+Street.</p>
+
+<p>Slowly, it seemed rather reluctantly, Eddie Hughes
+worked the six-inch crack wider by working himself
+through it.</p>
+
+<p>"What the hell do you want in my room for?" he
+demanded. The form of the words was truculent, but
+the words themselves slid in a sort of spiritless fashion
+from the corner of that crooked mouth of his, and he
+added in the next breath, "I'll open up for you, when
+I've lit the blinks."</p>
+
+<p>There was a central lamp that made the whole place
+as bright as day. Eddie fumbled a key out of his
+pocket, threw the door of his room open, and stepped
+back to let me pass him.</p>
+
+<p>"Capehart tells me Worth's here," he said as we
+went in.</p>
+
+<p>"When?" I gave him a sharp look. He seemed
+not to notice it.</p>
+
+<p>"Just now. I came straight from there."</p>
+
+<p>He came straight from there? Did he supply an
+alibi so neatly because of that shadowy head on the
+door panel? For a long minute we each took measure
+of the other, but Eddie's nerves were less reliable than
+mine; he spoke first.</p>
+
+<p>"Well?" he grunted, scarcely above his breath.
+And when I continued to stare silently at him, he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</a></span>
+writhed a shoulder with, "What's doing? What
+d'yuh want of me?"</p>
+
+<p>Still silently, I pulled out with my thumb through
+the armhole of my vest the police badge pinned to the
+suspender. His ill-colored face went a shade nearer
+the yellow white of tallow.</p>
+
+<p>"What for?" he asked huskily. "You haven't got
+nothin' on me. It was suicide&mdash;cor'ner's jury says
+so. Lord! It has to be, him layin' there, all hunched
+up on the floor, his gun so tight in his mitt that they
+had to pry the fingers off it!"</p>
+
+<p>"So you found the body?"</p>
+
+<p>He nodded and gulped.</p>
+
+<p>"I told all I knowed at the inquest," he said doggedly.</p>
+
+<p>"Tell it again," I commanded.</p>
+
+<p>Standing there, working his hands together as
+though he held some small, accustomed tool that he
+was turning, shifting from foot to foot, with long
+breaks in his speech, the chauffeur finally put me into
+possession of what he knew&mdash;or what he wished me
+to know. He had been out all night. That was usual
+with him Saturdays. Where? Over around the canneries.
+Had friends that lived there. He got into
+this place about dawn, and went straight to bed.</p>
+
+<p>"Hold on, Hughes," I stopped him there. "You
+never went to bed&mdash;that night, or any other night&mdash;until
+you'd had a jolt from the bottle inside."</p>
+
+<p>He gave me a surly, half frightened glance, then
+said quickly,</p>
+
+<p>"Not a chance. Bolts on the doors, locks everywhere;
+all tight as a jail. Take it from me, he wasn't
+the kind you want to have a run-in with&mdash;any time.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</a></span>
+Always just as cool as ice himself; try to make you
+believe he could tell what you were up to, clear across
+town. Hold it over you as if he was God almighty
+that stuck folks together and set 'em walkin' around
+and thinkin' things."</p>
+
+<p>He broke off and looked over his shoulder in the
+direction of the study. The walls were thick&mdash;concrete;
+the door heavy. No sound of Worth's moving
+in there could be heard in this room. Apparently it
+was the old terror of his employer, or the new terror
+of the employer's death, that spoke when he said,</p>
+
+<p>"I got up this morning late with a throat like the
+back of a chimney. Lord! I never wanted a drink
+so bad in my life&mdash;had to have one. The chink leaves
+my breakfast for me Sundays; but I knew I couldn't
+eat till I'd had one. So I&mdash;so I&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>It was as though some recollection fairly choked off
+his voice. I finished for him.</p>
+
+<p>"So you went in there&mdash;" I pointed at the study
+door, "and found the body."</p>
+
+<p>"Naw! How the hell could I? I told you&mdash;locked.
+I crawled up on the roof, though; huntin' a way in,
+and I looked through the skylight. There he was.
+On the floor. His eyes weren't open much, but they
+was watchin' me&mdash;sort of sneerin'. I come down off
+that roof like a bat outa hell, and scuttled over to Vandeman's
+where his chink was on the porch, I bellerin'
+at him. I telephoned from there. For the bulls; and
+the cor'ner; and everybody. Gawd! I was all in."</p>
+
+<p>I caught one point in the tale.</p>
+
+<p>"So the way into the study is through the skylight,
+Hughes?" and he shook his head vaguely, fumbling
+his lips with a trembling hand as he replied,</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</a></span>"Honest to God, Cap'n, I don't know. I never
+tried. I gave just one look through it, and&mdash;" He
+broke off with a shudder.</p>
+
+<p>"Get a ladder," I commanded. "I want to see that
+skylight."</p>
+
+<p>While he was gone on his errand to the shed, I investigated
+the outer walls of the study with the torch,
+hunting some break in their solidity. They were concrete;
+a hair-crack would have been visible in the
+electric glow; there was no break. Then, as he placed
+the ladder against the coping, I climbed to the roof
+and stepped across its firmness to the skylight. I
+looked down.</p>
+
+<p>Worth, kneeling on the hearth, was laying a fire in
+the corner grate. As he did not glance up, I knew he
+had not heard me. Evidently the study had been built
+to resist the disturbance of sound from without.
+That meant that the report of the revolver inside had
+not been heard by any one outside the walls.</p>
+
+<p>Directly below me was the library table and upon
+its top a blue desk blotter; a silver filagreed inkstand
+stood open; penholders, pencils, paper knife were on a
+tray beside it, one pen lying separate from the others
+with a ruler, upon the blotting pad; books and a magazine
+neatly in a pile. The walls, as I circled them with
+my eyes, were book-lined everywhere except for the
+grate and the two doors.</p>
+
+<p>Then I inspected the skylight, frame and glass, feeling
+it over with my hands. There was no entrance
+here. Even should a pane of glass be removable&mdash;all
+seemingly solid and tight&mdash;the frame between and
+the sash were of steel, and the panes were too small
+for the passage of a man. I crept back to the ladder<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</a></span>
+as Worth was striking a match to light the pitch-pine
+kindling.</p>
+
+<p>"What about this Vandeman chink?" I asked of
+Hughes as I rejoined him at the foot of the ladder.
+"Does he hang around here much?"</p>
+
+<p>"Him and Chung visit back and forth a bit. I hear
+'em talkin' hy-lee hy-lo sometimes when I go by the
+kitchen."</p>
+
+<p>"Take me over there," I said.</p>
+
+<p>The fog was beginning to blow away in threads;
+moonlight somewhere back of it made a queer, gray,
+glimmering world around us. We circled the garden
+by the path, passing a sort of gardener's tool shed
+where Hughes left the ladder, and from which I judged
+Worth had brought the bar he pried the door planks
+off with, to find a gap in a hedge between this place
+and the next.</p>
+
+<p>There was a light in the rear of the house over
+there, and a well-trodden path leading from the hedge
+gap made what I took to be a servants' highway.</p>
+
+<p>Vandeman's house proved to be, as nearly as one
+could see it in the darkness, a sprawling bungalow,
+with courts, pergolas and terraces bursting out on all
+sides of it. I could fairly see it of a fine afternoon,
+with its showy master sitting on one of the showy
+porches, serving afternoon tea in his best manner to
+the best people of Santa Ysobel. Just the husband
+for that doll-faced girl, if she only thought so. What
+could she have done with a young outlaw like Worth?</p>
+
+<p>When I looked at the Chinaman in charge there, I
+gave up my idea of questioning him. Civilly enough,
+with a precise and educated usage of the English language,
+he confirmed what Eddie Hughes had already<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</a></span>
+told me about the telephoning from that place this
+morning; and I went no further. I know the Chinese&mdash;if
+anybody not Mongolian can say they know the
+race&mdash;and I have also a suitable respect for the value
+of time. A week of steady questioning of Vandeman's
+yellow man would have brought me nowhere.
+He was that kind of a chink; grave, respectful, placid
+and impervious.</p>
+
+<p>On the way back I asked Eddie about the Thornhill
+servants at the house on the other side of Gilbert's,
+and found they kept but one, "a sort of old lady,"
+Eddie called her, and I guessed easily at the decayed
+gentlewoman kind of person. It seemed that Mrs.
+Thornhill was a widow, and there wasn't much money
+now to keep up the handsome place.</p>
+
+<p>I left Eddie slipping eel-like through the big doors,
+and went into the study to find Worth sitting before
+the blazing hearth. He looked up as I entered to
+remark quietly,</p>
+
+<p>"Bobs said she'd be over later, and I told her to
+come on down here."</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XI" id="CHAPTER_XI"></a>CHAPTER XI</h2>
+
+<h3>THE MISSING DIARY</h3>
+
+
+<p>My experience as a detective has convinced me
+that the evident is usually true; that in a great
+majority of cases crime leaves a straight trail, and ambiguities
+are more often due to the inability of the
+trailer than to the cunning of the trailed. Such
+reputation as I have established is due to acceptance of
+and earnest adherence to the obvious.</p>
+
+<p>In this affair of Thomas Gilbert's death, everything
+so far pointed one way. The body had been found
+in a bolted room, revolver in hand; on the wall over
+the mantel hung the empty holster; Worth assured me
+the gun was kept always loaded; and there might be
+motive enough for suicide in the quarrel last night
+between father and son.</p>
+
+<p>Because of that flitting shadow I had seen, I knew
+this place was not impervious. Some one person, at
+least, could enter and leave the room easily, quickly,
+while its doors were locked. But that might be
+Hughes&mdash;or even Worth&mdash;with some reason for doing
+so not willingly explained, and some means not readily
+seen. It probably had nothing to do with Thomas
+Gilbert's sudden death, could not offset in my mind the
+conviction of Thomas Gilbert's stiffened fingers about
+the pistol's butt. That I made a second thorough investigation
+of the study interior was not because I
+questioned the manner of the death.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</a></span>I began taking down books from the shelves at
+regular intervals, sounding the thick dead-wall, in
+search of a secreted entrance. I came on a row of
+volumes whose red morocco backs carried nothing but
+dates.</p>
+
+<p>"Account books?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>Worth turned his head to look, and the bleakest
+thing that could be called a smile twisted his lips a
+little, as he said,</p>
+
+<p>"My father's diaries."</p>
+
+<p>"Quite a lot of them."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. He'd kept diaries for thirty years."</p>
+
+<p>"But he seems to have dropped the habit. There is
+no 1920 book."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes there is," very definitely. "He never gave
+up setting down the sins of his family and neighbors
+while his eyes had sight to see them, and his hand the
+cunning to write." He spoke with extraordinary
+bitterness, finishing, "He would have had it on the
+desk there. The current book was always kept convenient
+to his hand."</p>
+
+<p>An idea occurred to me.</p>
+
+<p>"Worth," I asked, "did you see that 1920 volume
+when you were here last night?"</p>
+
+<p>He looked a little startled, and I prompted,</p>
+
+<p>"Were you too excited to have noticed a detail like
+that?"</p>
+
+<p>"I wasn't excited; not in the sense of being confused,"
+he spoke slowly. "The book was there; he'd
+been writing in it. I remember looking at it and thinking
+that as soon as I was gone, he'd sit down in his
+chair and put every damn' word of our row into it.
+That was his way. The seamy side of Santa Ysobel<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</a></span>
+life's recorded in those books. I always understood
+they amounted to a pack of neighborhood dynamite."</p>
+
+<p>"Got to find that last book," I said.</p>
+
+<p>He nodded listlessly. I went to it, giving that room
+such a searching as would have turned out a bent pin,
+had one been mislaid in it. I even took down from the
+shelves books of similar size to see if the lost volume
+had been slipped into a camouflaging cover&mdash;all to no
+good. It wasn't there. And when I had finished I
+was positive of two things; the study had no other
+entrance than the apparent ones, and the diary of 1920
+had been removed from the room since Worth saw it
+there the night before. I reached for one of the other
+volumes. Worth spoke again in a sort of dragging
+voice,</p>
+
+<p>"What do you want to look at them for, Jerry?"</p>
+
+<p>"It's not idle curiosity," I told him, a bit pricked.</p>
+
+<p>"I know it's not that." The old, affectionate tone
+went right to my heart. "But if you're thinking you'll
+find in them any explanation of my father's taking his
+own life, I'm here to tell you you're mistaken. Plenty
+there, no doubt, to have driven a tender hearted man
+off the earth.... He was different." Eyeing the
+book in my hand, the boy blurted with sudden heat,
+"Those damn' diaries have been wife and child and
+meat and drink to him. They were his reason for
+living&mdash;not dying!"</p>
+
+<p>"Start me right in regard to your father, Worth,"
+I urged anxiously. "It's important."</p>
+
+<p>The boy gave me his shoulder and continued to
+stare down into the fire, as he said at last, slowly,</p>
+
+<p>"I would rather leave him alone, Jerry."</p>
+
+<p>I knew it would be useless to insist. Never then or<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</a></span>
+thereafter did I hear him say more of his father's
+character. At that, he could hardly have told more
+in an hour's talk.</p>
+
+<p>At random, I took the volume that covered the year
+in which, as I remembered, Thomas Gilbert's wife had
+secured her divorce from him. Neatly and carefully
+written in a script as readable as type, the books, if I
+am a judge, had literary style. They were much more
+than mere diaries. True, each entry began with a note
+of the day's weather, and certain small records of the
+writer's personal affairs; but these went oddly enough
+with what followed; a biting analysis of the inner life,
+the estimated intentions and emotions, of the beings
+nearest to him. It was inhuman stuff. But Worth
+was right; there was no soil for suicide in this matter
+written by a hand guided by a harsh, censorious mind;
+too much egotism here to willingly give over the rôle
+of conscience for his friends. Friends?&mdash;could a man
+have friends who regarded humanity through such unkindly,
+wide open, all-seeing eyes?</p>
+
+<p>Worth, seated across from me on the other side of
+the fire, stared straight into the leaping blaze; but I
+doubted if that was what he saw. On his face was
+the look which I had come to know, of the dignified
+householder who had gone in and shut the door on
+whatever of dismay and confusion might be in his
+private affairs. I began to read his father's version
+of the separation from his mother, with its ironic references
+to her most intimate friend.</p>
+
+<p>"Marion would like to see Laura Bowman ship Tony
+and marry Jim Edwards. I swear the modern woman
+has played bridge so long that her idea of the most
+serious obligation in life&mdash;the marriage vow&mdash;is,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</a></span>
+'Never mind. If you don't like the hand you have got,
+shuffle, cut, and deal again!'"</p>
+
+<p>I dropped the book to my knee and looked over at
+Worth, asking,</p>
+
+<p>"This Mrs. Dr. Bowman that we met last night at
+Tait's&mdash;she was a special friend of your mother's?"</p>
+
+<p>"They were like sisters&mdash;in more than one way." I
+knew without his telling it that he alluded to their
+common misfortune of being both unhappily married.
+His mother, a woman of more force than the other,
+had gained her freedom.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Femina Priores.</i>" I came on an entry standing
+oddly alone. "Marion is to secure the divorce&mdash;at my
+suggestion. I have demanded that our son share his
+time between us."</p>
+
+<p>Again I let the book down on my knee and looked
+across at the silent fellow there. And I had heard him
+compassionate Barbara Wallace for having painful
+memories of her childhood! I believe he was at that
+moment more at peace with his father than he had ever
+been in his life&mdash;and that he grieved that this was so.
+I knew, too, that the forgiveness and forgetting would
+not extend to these pitiless records. Without disturbing
+him, I laid the book I held down and scouted
+forward for things more recent.</p>
+
+<p>"Laura Bowman"&mdash;through one entry after another
+Gilbert kicked that poor woman's name like a football.
+Very fine and righteous and high-minded in what he
+said, but writing it out in full and calling her painful
+difficulties&mdash;the writhing of a sensitive, high-strung
+woman, mismated with a tyrant&mdash;an example notably
+stupid and unoriginal, of the eternal matrimonial triangle.
+Bowman evidently kept his sympathy, so far<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</a></span>
+as such a nature can be said to entertain that gentle
+emotion.</p>
+
+<p>I ran through other volumes, merciless recitals, now
+and again, of the shortcomings of his associates or
+servants; a cold blooded misrepresentation of his son;
+a sneer for the affair with Ina Thornhill, with the dictum,
+sound enough no doubt, that the girl herself did
+the courting, and that she had no conscience&mdash;"The
+extreme society type of parasite," he put it. And then
+the account of his break with Edwards.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Bowman, it seems, had come to Gilbert in confidence
+for help, saying that his wife had left his house
+in the small hours the previous night, nothing but an
+evening wrap pulled over her night wear, and that he
+guessed where she could be found, since she hadn't
+gone to her mother's. He asked Gilbert to be his
+ambassador with messages of pardon. Didn't want
+to go himself, because that would mean a row, and he
+was determined, if possible, to keep the thing private,
+giving a generous reason: that he wasn't willing to
+disgrace the woman. All of which, after he'd written
+it down, the diarist discredited with his brief comment
+to the effect that Tony Bowman shunned publicity
+because scandal of the sort would hurt his practice,
+and his pride as well, and that he didn't go out to
+Jim Edwards's ranch because, under these circumstances,
+he would be afraid of Jim.</p>
+
+<p>Thomas Gilbert did the doctor's errand for him.
+The entry concerning it occupied the next day. I read
+between the lines how much he enjoyed his position
+of god from the machine, swooping down on the two
+he found out there, estimating their situation and
+behavior in his usual hair-splitting fashion, sitting as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</a></span>
+a court of last appeal. It was of no use for Edwards
+to explain to him that Laura Bowman was practically
+crazy when she walked out of her husband's house as
+the culmination of a miserable scene&mdash;the sort that
+had been more and more frequent there of late&mdash;carrying
+black-and-blue marks where he had grabbed
+and shaken her. The statement that it was by mere
+chance she encountered Jim seemed to have made Gilbert
+smile, and Jim's taking of her out to the ranch,
+the assertion that it was the only thing to do, that she
+was sick and delirious, had inspired Gilbert to say to
+him, quite neatly, "You weren't delirious, I take it&mdash;not
+more than usual."</p>
+
+<p>Then he demanded that Laura go with him, at once,
+back to her husband, or out to her mother's. She
+considered the matter and chose to go back to Bowman,
+saying bitterly that her mother made the match
+in the first place, and stood always against her daughter
+and with her son-in-law whatever he did. Plainly
+it took all of Laura's persuasions to prevent actual
+blows between Gilbert and Edwards. Also, she would
+only promise to go back and live under Bowman's
+roof, but not as his wife&mdash;and the whole situation was
+much aggravated.</p>
+
+<p>I followed Mr. Thomas Gilbert's observation of this
+affair: his amused understanding of how much Jim
+Edwards and Laura hated him; his private contempt
+for Bowman, to whom he continued to give countenance
+and moral support; his setting down of the quarrels,
+intimate, disastrous, between Bowman and his
+wife, as the doctor retailed them to him, the woman
+dragging herself on her knees to beg for her freedom,
+and his callous refusals; backed by threat of the wide<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</a></span>
+publicity of a scandalous divorce suit, with Thomas
+Gilbert as main witness. I turned to Worth and asked,</p>
+
+<p>"When will Edwards be here?"</p>
+
+<p>"Any minute now." Worth looked at me queerly,
+but I went on,</p>
+
+<p>"You said he phoned from the ranch. Did he answer
+you in person&mdash;from out there?"</p>
+
+<p>"That's what I told you, Jerry."</p>
+
+<p>My searching gaze made nothing of the boy's impassive
+face; I plunged again into the diaries, running
+down a page, getting the heading of a sentence, not
+delaying to go further unless I struck something which
+seemed to me important, and each minute thinking of
+the strangeness of a man like this killing himself.
+It was in the 1916 volume, that I made a discovery
+which surprised an exclamation from me.</p>
+
+<p>"What would you call this, Worth? Your father's
+way of making corrections?"</p>
+
+<p>"Corrections?" Worth spoke without looking
+around. "My father never made corrections&mdash;in anything."
+It was said without animus&mdash;a simple statement
+of fact.</p>
+
+<p>"But look here." I held toward him the book.
+There were three leaves gone; that meant six pages,
+and the entries covered May 31 and June 1. I had
+verified that before I spoke to him, noticing that the
+statement of the weather for May 31 remained at the
+foot of the last page left, while a run-over on the
+page beyond the missing ones had been marked out.
+It had nothing to do with the weather. As nearly
+as I could make out with the reading glass I held over
+it, the words were, "take the woman for no other than
+she appears."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</a></span>"Worth," I urged, "give me your attention for a
+minute here. You say your father did not make corrections,
+but one of the diaries is cut. The records
+of two days are gone. Were those pages stolen?"</p>
+
+<p>"How should I know?" said Worth, and added,
+helpfully, "Pity they didn't steal the whole lot. That
+would have been a relief."</p>
+
+<p>There were voices and the sound of steps outside.
+I shoved the diary back into its place on the shelf, and
+turned to see Barbara at the broken door with Jim
+Edwards. She came in, her clear eyes a little wide,
+but the whole young personality of her quite composed.
+Edwards halted at the door, a haggard eye roving
+over the room, until it encountered the blood-stain on
+the rug, when it sheered abruptly, and fixed itself on
+Worth, who crossed to shake hands, with a quiet,</p>
+
+<p>"Come in, won't you, Jim? Or would you rather
+go up to the house?"</p>
+
+<p>Keenly I watched the man as he stood there struggling
+for words. There was color on his thin cheeks,
+high under the dark eyes; it made him look wild. The
+chill of the drive, or pure nervousness, had him shaking.</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you&mdash;the house, I think," he said rather
+incoherently. Yet he lingered. "Barbara's been telling
+me," he said in that deep voice of his with the air
+of one who utters at random. "Worth,&mdash;had you
+thought that it might have been happening down here,
+right at the time we all sat at Tait's together?"</p>
+
+<p>He was in a condition to spill anything. A moment
+more and we should have heard what it was that
+had him in such a grip of horror. But as I glanced at
+Worth, I saw him reply to the older man's question<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</a></span>
+with a very slight but very perceptible shake of the head.
+It had nothing to do with what had been asked him;
+to any eye it said more plainly than words, "Don't
+talk; pull yourself together." I whirled to see how
+Edwards responded to this, and found our group had
+a new member. In the door stood a decent looking,
+round faced Chinaman. Edwards had drawn a little
+inside the threshold for him, but very little, and waited,
+still shaken, perturbed, hat in hand, apparently ready
+to leave as soon as the Oriental got out of his way.</p>
+
+<p>"Hello," the yellow man saluted us.</p>
+
+<p>"Hello, Chung," Worth rejoined, and added, "Looks
+good to see you again."</p>
+
+<p>I was relieved to hear that. It showed me that the
+cook, anyhow, had not seen Worth last night in Santa
+Ysobel.</p>
+
+<p>"Just now I hea' 'bout Boss." Chung's eye went
+straight to the stain on the rug, exactly as Edwards'
+had done, but it stopped there, and his Oriental impassiveness
+was unmoved. "Too bad," he concluded,
+thrust the fingers of one hand up the sleeve of the
+other and waited.</p>
+
+<p>"Where you been all day?" I said quickly.</p>
+
+<p>"My cousin' ranch."</p>
+
+<p>"His cousin's got a truck farm over by Medlow&mdash;or
+used to have," Worth supplied, and Chung looked
+to him, instantly.</p>
+
+<p>"You sabbee," he said hopefully. "I go iss mo'ning&mdash;all
+same any day&mdash;not find out 'bout Boss. Too
+bad. Too velly much bad." A pause, then, looking
+around at the four of us, "I get dinner?"</p>
+
+<p>"We've all had something to eat, Chung," Worth
+said. "You go now fix room. Make bed. To-night,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</a></span>
+I stay; Mr. Boyne here stay; Mr. Edwards stay. Fix
+three rooms. Good fire."</p>
+
+<p>"All 'ite," the chink would have ducked out then,
+Jim Edwards after him, but I stopped the proceedings
+with,</p>
+
+<p>"Hold on a minute&mdash;while we're all together&mdash;tell
+us about that visitor Mr. Gilbert had last night." I
+was throwing a rock in the brush-pile in the chance of
+scaring out a rabbit. I was shooting the question at
+Chung, but my eye was on Edwards. He glared back
+at me for a moment, then couldn't stand the strain
+and looked away. At last the Chinaman spoke.</p>
+
+<p>"Not see um. I go fix bed now."</p>
+
+<p>"Hold on," again I stopped him. "Worth, tell him
+those beds can wait. Tell him it's all right to answer
+my questions."</p>
+
+<p>"'S all 'ite?" Chung studied us in turn. I was
+keeping an inconspicuous eye on Edwards as I reassured
+him. "'S all 'ite," he repeated with a falling
+inflection this time, and finished placidly, "You want
+know 'bout lady?"</p>
+
+<p>"What's all this?" Edwards spoke low.</p>
+
+<p>"About a lady who came to see Mr. Gilbert last
+night," I explained shortly; then, "Who was she,
+Chung?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not see um good." The Chinaman shook his
+head gravely.</p>
+
+<p>"Did she come here&mdash;to the study?" I asked. He
+nodded. Worth moved impatiently, and the Chinaman
+caught it. He fixed his eyes on Worth. I
+stepped between them. "Chung," I said sharply.
+"You knew the lady. Who was she?"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</a></span>"Not see um good," he repeated, plainly reluctant.
+"She hold hand by face&mdash;cly, I think."</p>
+
+<p>"Good God!" Edwards broke out startlingly. "If
+we're going to hear an account of all the women that
+Tom lectured and made cry&mdash;leave me out of it."</p>
+
+<p>"One woman will do, for this time," I said to him
+drily, "if it's the right one," and he subsided, turning
+away. But he did not go. With burning eyes, he
+stood and listened while I cross-examined the unwilling
+Chung and got apparently a straight story showing
+that some woman had come to the side door of his
+master's house shortly after dinner Saturday night,
+walked to the study with that master, weeping, and
+that her voice when he heard it, sounded like that of
+some one he knew. I tried every way in the world to
+get him to be specific about this voice; did it sound
+like that of a young lady? an old lady? did he think
+it was some one he knew well, or only a little? had he
+been hearing it much lately? All the usual tactics;
+but Chung's placid obstinacy was proof against them.
+He kept shaking his head and saying over and over,</p>
+
+<p>"No hear um good," until Barbara, standing watchfully
+by, said,</p>
+
+<p>"Chung, you think that lady talk like this?"</p>
+
+<p>As she spoke, after the first word, a change had
+come into her voice; it was lighter, higher, with a
+something in its character faintly reminiscent to my
+ear. And Chung bobbed his head quickly, nodding
+assent. In her mimicry he had recognized the tones
+of the visitor. I glanced at Edwards: he looked
+positively relieved.</p>
+
+<p>"I'll go to the house, Worth," he said with more<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[Pg 136]</a></span>
+composure in his tone than I would have thought a
+few moments ago he could in any way summon.
+"You'll find me there." And he followed the Chinaman
+up the moonlit path.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XII" id="CHAPTER_XII"></a>CHAPTER XII</h2>
+
+<h3>A MURDER</h3>
+
+<p>I stood at the door and watched until I saw first
+Chung's head come into the light on the kitchen
+porch, then Jim Edwards's black poll follow it. I
+waited until both had gone into the house and the
+door was shut, before I went back to Barbara and
+Worth. They were speaking together in low tones
+over at the hearth. The three of us were alone; and
+the blood-stain on the rug, out of sight there in the
+shadow beyond the table, would seem to cry out as a
+fourth.</p>
+
+<p>"Barbara," I broke in across their talk, "who was
+the woman who came here to this place last night?"</p>
+
+<p>She didn't answer me. Instead, it was Worth who
+spoke.</p>
+
+<p>"Better come here and listen to what Bobs has been
+saying to me, Jerry, before you ask any questions."</p>
+
+<p>I crossed and stood between the two young people.</p>
+
+<p>"Well," I grunted; and though Barbara's face was
+white, her eyes big and black, she answered me bravely,</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Gilbert did not kill himself. Worth doesn't
+think so, either."</p>
+
+<p>"What!" It was jolted out of me. After a moment's
+thought, I finished, "Then I've got to know
+who the woman was that visited this room last night."</p>
+
+<p>For a long while she made no reply, studying
+Worth's profile as he stared steadily into the fire.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</a></span>
+No signal passed between them, but finally she came
+to her decision and said,</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Boyne, ask Worth what he thinks I ought to
+say to that."</p>
+
+<p>Instead, "Who was it, Worth?" I snapped, speaking
+to the back of the young man's head. The red came
+up into the girl's face, and her eyes flashed; but Worth
+merely shrugged averted shoulders.</p>
+
+<p>"You can search me," he said, and left it there.</p>
+
+<p>I looked from one to the other of these young
+people: Worth, whom I loved as I might have my own
+son had I been so fortunate as to possess one; this
+girl who had made a place of warmth for herself in
+my heart in less than a day, whose loyalty to my boy
+I was certain I might count on. How different this
+affair must look to them from the face it wore to me,
+an old police detective, who had bulled through many
+inquiries like this, the corpse itself, perhaps, lying in
+the back of the room, instead of the blood-stain we
+had there on the rug; what was practically the Third
+Degree being applied to relatives and friends; with
+the squalid prospect of a court trial ahead of us all.
+If they'd seen as much of this sort of thing as I had,
+they wouldn't be holding me up now, tying my hands
+that were so willing to help, by this fine-spun, overstrained
+notion of shielding a woman's name.</p>
+
+<p>"Barbara," I began&mdash;I knew an appeal to the unaccountable
+Worth would get me nowhere&mdash;"the facts
+we've got to deal with here are a possible murder,
+with this lad the last person known&mdash;by us, of course&mdash;to
+have seen his father alive. We know, too, that
+they quarreled bitterly. We know all this. Outside
+people, men who are interested, and more or less<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</a></span>
+hostile, were aware that Worth needed money&mdash;needs
+it yet, for that matter&mdash;a large sum. I suppose it
+is a question of time when it will be known that Worth
+came here last night; and when it is known, do you
+realize what it will mean?"</p>
+
+<p>Worth had sat through this speech without the
+quiver of a muscle, and no word came from him as I
+paused for a reply. Little Barbara, big eyes boring
+into me as though to read all that was in the back of
+my mind, nodded gravely but did not speak. I crossed
+to the shelves and took down the diary whose leather
+back bore the date of 1916. As I opened it, finding
+the place where its pages had been removed, I continued,</p>
+
+<p>"You and I know&mdash;we three here know&mdash;" I included
+Worth in my statement&mdash;"that the crime was
+neither suicide nor patricide; but it is likely we must
+have proof of that fact. Unless we find the murderer&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"But the motive&mdash;there would have to be motive."</p>
+
+<p>Barbara struck right at the core of the thing. She
+didn't check at the mere material facts of how a
+murder could have been done, who might have had
+opportunity. The fundamental question of why it
+should have been was her immediate interest.</p>
+
+<p>"I believe I've the motive here," I said and thrust
+the mutilated volume into her hand. "Some one stole
+these leaves out of Mr. Gilbert's diary. The books
+are filled with intimate details of the affairs of people&mdash;things
+which people prefer should not be known&mdash;names,
+details and dates written out completely. It's
+likely murder was done last night to get possession
+of those pages."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[Pg 140]</a></span>She went to the desk and glanced over the book;
+not the minute examination with the reading glass
+which I had given it; that mere flirt of a glance which,
+when I had first noticed it the night before at Tait's,
+skimming across that description of Clayte, had seemed
+so inadequate. Then she turned to me.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Gilbert cut these out himself," she pronounced.</p>
+
+<p>That brought Worth's head up and his face around
+to stare at her.</p>
+
+<p>"You say my father removed something he had
+written?" he asked. Barbara nodded. "He never
+changed a decision&mdash;and those books were his decisions."</p>
+
+<p>"Then this wasn't a correction, but he cut it out.
+Can't you see, Mr. Boyne? Those leaves were removed
+by a man who respected the book and was as
+careful in his mutilation of it as he was in its making.
+It is precisely written&mdash;I'm referring to workmanship,
+not its literary quality&mdash;carefully margined,
+evenly indented on the paragraph beginnings. And
+so, in this removal of three leaves, the cutting was
+done with a sharp knife drawn along the edge of a
+ruler&mdash;" I picked up from where they lay on the
+blotting pad, a small pearl-handled knife, its sharp
+blade open, and the ruler I had seen when looking
+down from the skylight, and placed them before her.
+She nodded and continued,</p>
+
+<p>"There is a bit of margin left so no other leaves can
+be loosened by this removal. The marking out of the
+run-over has been neatly ruled, done so recently that
+the ink is not yet black&mdash;done with that ink in the
+stand. It was blotted with this." She lifted a hand-blotter
+to show me the print of a line of ink. There<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[Pg 141]</a></span>
+were other markings on the face of the soft paper,
+and I took it eagerly. Barbara smiled.</p>
+
+<p>"You will get little from that," she said. I had
+not even seen her give it attention. "Scattered words&mdash;and
+parts of words, blotted frequently as they were
+written. Perhaps, with care, we might learn something,
+but we can turn more easily to the last pages
+of his diary and&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"There are no last pages," I interrupted. "The
+1920 book is missing."</p>
+
+<p>"Gone&mdash;stolen?" she exclaimed. It brought a smile
+to my face. For the first time in my experience of
+this pretty, little bunch of brains, she had hazarded
+a guess.</p>
+
+<p>"Gone," I admitted coolly&mdash;a bit sarcastically.
+"I've no reason to say stolen."</p>
+
+<p>"But&mdash;yes, you have&mdash;you have, Mr. Boyne! If it
+is gone, it was stolen. Is it gone&mdash;are you sure it is
+gone?" Eagerly her eyes were searching desk, cabinet,
+the shelf where the other diaries made their long
+row. I satisfied her on that score.</p>
+
+<p>"I have searched the study thoroughly; it is not in
+this room."</p>
+
+<p>"Was here last night," Worth cut in. "I saw it on
+the desk."</p>
+
+<p>"And was stolen last night," Barbara reaffirmed,
+quickly. "These books are too big to be slipped into
+a pocket, so we can't believe it was left upon Mr.
+Gilbert's person; and he wouldn't lend it&mdash;wouldn't
+willingly let it go from his possession. So it was
+stolen; and the man who stole it&mdash;killed him." She
+shuddered.</p>
+
+<p>That was going too swift for me to follow, but I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[Pg 142]</a></span>
+saw on Worth Gilbert's face his acceptance of it.
+Either conviction of Barbara's infallibility, or some
+knowledge locked up inside his own chest, made him
+certain the diary had been stolen, and the thief was
+his father's murderer. In a flash, I remembered his
+words, "putting every damn' word of our row into
+it," and I shot straight at him,</p>
+
+<p>"Did you take that book, Worth?"</p>
+
+<p>He only shook his head and answered,</p>
+
+<p>"You heard what Bobs said, Jerry."</p>
+
+<p>If he took the book he killed his father; that was
+Barbara's inference, Worth's acceptance. I threw
+back my shoulders to cast off the suspicion, then
+reached across to place my fingers under the girl's
+hand and pull from it the only record of that last
+written page, the blotter.</p>
+
+<p>"Will you read me that?" I asked her. "Every
+word and part of a word&mdash;every letter?"</p>
+
+<p>Her eyes smiled into mine with a reassurance that
+was like balm. Worth rose and found her a hand-glass
+on the mantel, passing it to her, and with this
+to reverse the scrawlings, she read and I wrote down
+in my memorandum book two complete words, two
+broken words and five single letters picked from overlying
+marks that were too confused to be decipherable.
+Though the three of us struggled with them, they held
+no meaning.</p>
+
+<p>Worth's interest quickly ceased.</p>
+
+<p>"I'll join Jim Edwards in the house," he said, but
+I stopped him.</p>
+
+<p>"One minute, Worth. There was a woman visitor
+here last night. It would seem she carried away with
+her the diary of 1920 and three leaves from the book<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[Pg 143]</a></span>
+of 1916. I want you&mdash;you and Barbara&mdash;to tell me
+what you know that happened here in Santa Ysobel
+on the dates of the missing pages, May 31 and June
+1, 1916."</p>
+
+<p>Barbara accepted the task, turning that wonderful
+cinematograph memory back, and murmured,</p>
+
+<p>"I never tried recollecting on just a bare date this
+way, but&mdash;" then glanced around at me and finished&mdash;"nothing
+happened to me in Santa Ysobel then,
+because I wasn't in Santa Ysobel. I was in San
+Francisco and&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"And I was in Flanders, so that lets me out," Worth
+broke in brusquely. "I'll go into the house."</p>
+
+<p>"Wait, Worth." I placed a hand on his shoulder.
+"Go on, Barbara; you had thought of something."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. Father died in January of that year, and in
+March I had to vacate the house. It had been sold,
+and they wanted to fix it over. I left Santa Ysobel
+on the eighteenth of March, but they didn't get into
+the house until June first."</p>
+
+<p>Again Worth interrupted.</p>
+
+<p>"Which jogs my memory for an unexciting detail."
+He smiled enigmatically. "I was jilted June first."</p>
+
+<p>"In Flanders?" How many times had this lad been
+jilted?</p>
+
+<p>"No. Right here. I wasn't here of course, but the
+letter which did the trick was written here, and bore
+that date&mdash;June one, 1916."</p>
+
+<p>"How do you get the date so pat?"</p>
+
+<p>"It was handed me by the mail orderly&mdash;I was on
+the Verdun sector then&mdash;on the morning of the Fourth
+of July. Remember the date the letter was written
+because of the quick time it made. Most of our mail<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[Pg 144]</a></span>
+took from six weeks to eternity. What are you smiling
+at, Bobs?"</p>
+
+<p>"Just a little&mdash;you don't mind, do you?&mdash;at your
+saying you remember Ina's letter by the quick time it
+made in reaching you."</p>
+
+<p>"Who bought your house, Barbara?" I asked her.</p>
+
+<p>"Dr. Bowman&mdash;or rather Mrs. Bowman's uncle
+bought it and gave it to her."</p>
+
+<p>"And they went in on the first of June, 1916?"
+I was all excitement, turning the pages of the diary
+to get to certain points I remembered. "What can
+either one of you tell me about the state of affairs
+at that time between Dr. Bowman and his wife&mdash;and
+that man who was just in here&mdash;Jim Edwards?"</p>
+
+<p>Worth turned a hostile back; Barbara seemed to
+shrink in her chair. I hated like a whipping to pull
+this sort of stuff on them, but I knew that Barbara's
+knowledge of Worth's danger would reconcile her to
+whatever painful thing must be done, and I had to
+know who was that visitor of last night.</p>
+
+<p>"Is that&mdash;that stuff in those damnable books?" I
+saw the hunch of Worth's broad shoulders.</p>
+
+<p>"Some of it is&mdash;some of it has been cut out," I
+replied.</p>
+
+<p>"And you connect Jim Edwards with this crime?"</p>
+
+<p>"I don't connect him&mdash;he connects himself&mdash;by
+them, and by his manner."</p>
+
+<p>"Burn them!" He faced me, came over and reached
+for the book. "Dump the whole rotten mess into the
+fire, Jerry, and be done with it."</p>
+
+<p>"Easy said, but that would sure be a short cut to
+trouble. Tell me, I've got to know, if you think this<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[Pg 145]</a></span>
+man Edwards&mdash;under great provocation&mdash;capable of&mdash;well,
+of killing a fellow creature."</p>
+
+<p>"Jerry," Worth took the book out of my hand and
+laid it on the table, "what you want to do is to forget
+this&mdash;dirt&mdash;that you've been reading, and go at this
+thing without prejudice. If you open any trails and
+they lead in my direction, don't be afraid to follow
+them. This thing of trying to find a criminal in some
+one that my father has already deeply injured&mdash;some
+one that he's made life a hell for&mdash;so that suspicion
+needn't be directed to me, makes me sick. If I'd
+allow you to do it, I'd be yellow clear through."</p>
+
+<p>That was about the longest speech I'd heard Worth
+Gilbert make since his return from France. And he
+meant every word of it, too; but it didn't suit me.
+This "Hew to the line" stuff is all right until the
+chips begin whacking the head of your friend. In
+this case there wasn't a doubt in my mind that when
+a breath of suspicion got out that Thomas Gilbert had
+not killed himself, that minute would see the first
+finger point at Thomas Gilbert's son as the murderer.
+So I grumbled,</p>
+
+<p>"Just the same, Edwards has something on his mind
+about last night."</p>
+
+<p>"He has&mdash;and it's pretty nearly tearing him to
+pieces," Worth admitted, but would go no further.</p>
+
+<p>"He was here last night, I'm sure&mdash;and Mrs. Bowman
+was with him," I ventured.</p>
+
+<p>Barbara, who had been sitting through this her
+eyes on Worth, turned from him to me and pronounced,
+gently,</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, he was here, and Laura was with him."<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[Pg 146]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Bobs!" Worth spoke so sternly that she glanced
+up startled. "I'll not stand for you throwing suspicion
+on Jim."</p>
+
+<p>"Did I&mdash;do that?" her lip trembled. Worth's eyes
+were on the fire.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't quarrel with the girl," I remonstrated. Barbara
+had told me the visitor; I covered my elation
+with, "She's only looking out for your safety."</p>
+
+<p>"I can look out for myself," curtly. He turned
+hard eyes on us. It made me feel put away from
+him, chucked out from his friendship. "And I never
+quarreled with anybody in my life. Sometimes&mdash;"
+he turned from one to the other of us, speaking slowly,
+"Sometimes I seem to antagonize people, for no
+reason that I can see; and sometimes I fight; but I
+never quarrel."</p>
+
+<p>"No offense intended&mdash;or taken," I assured him
+hastily. My heart was full of his danger, and I told
+myself that it was his misery spoke, and not the true
+Worth Gilbert. But a very pale and subdued Barbara
+said tremulously,</p>
+
+<p>"I guess I'd better go home now," suggesting, after
+the very slightest pause, "Mr. Boyne can take me."</p>
+
+<p>"Don't, Bobsie." Worth's voice was gentle again,
+but absent. It sounded as though he had already forgotten
+both of us, and our possible cause of offense.
+"Go to the house with Jerry. I'll bar the door and
+follow."</p>
+
+<p>"Can't I help with that?" I offered.</p>
+
+<p>"No. Eddie will give me a hand if I need it. Go
+on. I'll be with you in a minute."</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[Pg 147]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XIII" id="CHAPTER_XIII"></a>CHAPTER XIII</h2>
+
+<h3>DR. BOWMAN</h3>
+
+
+<p>But it was considerably more than a minute before
+Worth followed us to the house. We
+walked slowly, talking; when I looked back from the
+kitchen porch, Worth had already come outside, and I
+thought Eddie Hughes was with him, though I heard
+no voices and couldn't be sure on account of the
+shrubbery between.</p>
+
+<p>Getting into the house we found that Chung had
+the downstairs all opened up through, lights going,
+heat turned on from the basement furnace; everywhere
+that tended, homelike appearance a competent servant
+gives a place. On the hall table as we passed, I noticed
+a doctorish top coat, with a primly folded muffler laid
+across it.</p>
+
+<p>"Dr. Bowman is here," Barbara said hardly above
+her breath.</p>
+
+<p>We listened; no sound of voices from the living
+room; then I got the tramp of feet that moved back
+and forth in there. We opened the door, and there
+were the two men; a queer proposition!</p>
+
+<p>Bowman had taken a chair pretty well in the middle
+of the room. It was Jim Edwards whose feet I had
+heard as he roamed about. No word was going between
+them; apparently they hadn't spoken to each
+other at all; the looks that met or avoided were those<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[Pg 148]</a></span>
+strange looks of persons who live in lengthened and
+what might be termed intimate hostility.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah&mdash;Boyne&mdash;isn't it?" Bowman greeted me; I
+thought our coming relieved the situation. He shook
+hands, then turned to Barbara with, "Mrs. Thornhill
+said you were here; I told her I would bring you back
+with me."</p>
+
+<p>I rather wondered not to hear him insist on being
+taken at once to the study, but his next words gave the
+reason. He'd reached Santa Ysobel too late for the
+inquest itself, but not too late to make what he informed
+us was a thorough investigation of everything
+it treated of.</p>
+
+<p>Barbara and I found places on the davenport; Edwards
+prowled up and down the other end of the room,
+openly in torment. Those stormy black eyes of his
+were seldom off Bowman, while the doctor's gray,
+heavy-lidded gaze never got beyond the toes of the restless
+man's moving boots. He had begun a grumbling
+tale of the coroner's incompetence and neglect to reopen
+the inquest when he, the family physician,
+arrived, as though that were important, when Worth
+came in.</p>
+
+<p>Instantly the doctor was on his feet, had paced up
+to the new master of the house, and began pumping
+his arm in a long handshake, while he passed out those
+platitudes of condolence a man of his sort deals in at
+such a time. The stuff I'd been reading in those
+diaries had told me what was the root and branch of
+his friendship with the dead man; it made the hair at
+the back of my neck lift to hear him boasting of it in
+Jim Edwards' presence, and know what I knew.
+"And, my dear boy," he finished, "they tell me you've<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[Pg 149]</a></span>
+not been to view the body&mdash;yet. I thought perhaps
+you'd like to go&mdash;with me. I can have my machine
+here in a minute. No?" as Worth declined with a
+wordless shake of the head.</p>
+
+<p>I hoped he'd leave then; but he didn't. Instead, he
+turned back to his chair, explaining,</p>
+
+<p>"If Mrs. Thornhill's cook hadn't phoned me, when
+Mrs. Thornhill had a second collapse last night, I
+suppose I should be in San Francisco still. The
+coroner seemed to think there was no necessity for
+having competent medical testimony as to the time of
+death, and the physical condition of the deceased. I
+should have been wired for. The inquest should have
+been delayed until I arrived. The way the thing was
+managed was disgraceful."</p>
+
+<p>"It was merciful." Jim Edwards spoke as though
+unwillingly, in a muttered undertone. Evidently it
+was the first word he'd addressed to Bowman&mdash;if he
+could be said to address him now, as he finished, "I
+hadn't thought of an inquest. Yet of course there'd
+be one in a case of suicide."</p>
+
+<p>Bowman only heard and wholly misconstrued him,
+snatching at the concluding words,</p>
+
+<p>"Of course it was suicide. Done with his own
+weapon, taken from the holster where we know it always
+hung, fully loaded. The muzzle had been pressed
+so close against the breast when the cartridge exploded
+that the woolen vest had taken fire. I should say it
+had smouldered for some time; there was a considerable
+hole burned in the cloth. The flesh around the
+wound was powder-scarred."</p>
+
+<p>Worth took it like a red Indian. I could see by the
+glint of his eye as it flickered over the doctor's face,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[Pg 150]</a></span>
+the smooth white hands, the whole smooth personality,
+that the boy disliked, and had always disliked him.
+Yet he listened silently.</p>
+
+<p>I rather hoped by leading questions to get Bowman
+to express the opinion that Thomas Gilbert had been
+killed in the small hours of the morning. Circumstances
+then would have fitted in with Eddie Hughes.
+Eddie Hughes was to me the most acceptable murderer
+in sight. But no&mdash;nothing would do him but to stick
+to the hour the coroner had accepted.</p>
+
+<p>"Medical science cannot determine closer than that,"
+he was very final. "The death took place within an
+hour preceding midnight."</p>
+
+<p>"You are positive it couldn't be this morning?" I
+asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Positive."</p>
+
+<p>Well, Dr. Bowman's testimony, if accepted at the
+value the doctor himself placed upon it, would clear
+Worth of suspicion, for the lad was with me at Tait's
+from a few minutes past ten until after one; and Jim
+Edwards, now pacing the floor so restlessly, had also
+been there the greater part of that time. I had had
+too much experience with doctor's guesses based on
+<i>rigor mortis</i> to let it affect my views.</p>
+
+<p>In the minute of silence, we could hear Chung moving
+about at the back of the house. The doctor spoke
+querulously.</p>
+
+<p>"Never expect anything of a Chinaman, but I
+should think when the chauffeur found the body he
+might have had sense enough to summon friends of
+the family. He could have phoned me&mdash;I was only
+in San Francisco."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[Pg 151]</a></span>"He could have phoned me at the ranch," Jim Edwards'
+deep voice came in.</p>
+
+<p>"You? Why should he phone for you?" Bowman
+wheeled on him at last. "I was the man's physician,
+as well as his close friend. Everybody knows
+you weren't on good terms with him. Gad! You
+wouldn't be here in this house to-night, if he were
+alive."</p>
+
+<p>In the sort of silence that comes when some one's
+been suddenly struck in the face, Worth crossed to
+Edwards and laid an arm along his shoulders.</p>
+
+<p>"I've asked Jim to stay in my place, here, in my
+house, while I'm away over Monday&mdash;and he can do
+as he likes about whom he chooses to have around."</p>
+
+<p>Bowman gradually got to his feet, his face a study.</p>
+
+<p>"I see," he said. "Then I'll not trespass on your
+time any longer. I felt obliged to offer my services
+... patients of mine ... for years ... in affliction
+..." a gleam of anger came into his fishy eyes.
+"I've been met with damned insolence.... Claiming
+of the house before your father's decently in his
+grave." He jerked fully erect. "Leave your affairs
+in the hands of that degenerate. If he doesn't do you
+dirt, you'll be the first he's let off! Come, Miss Barbara,"
+to the girl who sat beside me, looking on mutely
+observant.</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you, doctor." She answered him as tranquilly
+as though no voice had been raised in anger in
+that room. "I think I'll stay a little longer. Jim
+will take me home."</p>
+
+<p>The doctor glared and stalked out. To the last I
+think he was expecting some one to stop him and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[Pg 152]</a></span>
+apologize. I suppose this was what Worth described
+naïvely as "antagonizing people without intending to."
+Well, it might not be judicious; I certainly was glad
+the doctor was so sure of the time at which his friend
+Gilbert had met death; yet I couldn't but enjoy seeing
+him get his. As soon as the man's back was turned,
+Edwards beckoned Barbara to the window. Worth
+and I left them talking together there in low tones, he
+to get something he wanted from a case in the hall,
+where he called me to the phone, saying long distance
+wanted me. While I was waiting for my connection
+(Central, as usual, having gotten me, now couldn't get
+the other party) the two came from the living room
+and Barbara said "Good night" to us in passing.</p>
+
+<p>"Those two seem to have something on hand," I
+commented as they went out. "The little girl gave
+Bowman one for himself&mdash;in the nicest possible way.
+Don't wonder Edwards likes her for it."</p>
+
+<p>"Poor Laura Bowman! Her friends take turns
+giving that bloodless lizard she's tied to, one for himself
+any time they can," Worth said. "My mother
+used to handle the doctor something like that; and
+now it's Barbara&mdash;little Bobsie Wallace&mdash;God bless
+her!"</p>
+
+<p>He went on into the dining room. I looked after
+his unconscious, departing figure and thought he deserved
+a good licking. Why couldn't he have spoken
+that way to the girl herself? Why hadn't he taken
+her home, instead of leaving it to Edwards? Then
+I got my call and answered,</p>
+
+<p>"This is Boyne. Put them through."</p>
+
+<p>In a minute came Roberts' voice.</p>
+
+<p>"Hello, Mr. Boyne?"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[Pg 153]</a></span>"Yes. What you got?"</p>
+
+<p>"Telegram&mdash;Hicks&mdash;Los Angeles. He's located
+Steve Skeels&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Read me the wire," I broke in.</p>
+
+<p>"All right." A pause, then, "'Skeels arrived here
+from 'Frisco this morning shall I arrest?'"</p>
+
+<p>"Good!" I exclaimed. "Wire him to keep Steve
+under surveillance and await instructions. Tell him
+not to lose him. Get it, Roberts? Hustle it. I'll be
+in by nine. Good-by," and I hung up.</p>
+
+<p>I looked around; Worth had gone into the dining
+room; I stepped to the door and saw him kneeling before
+an open lower door of the built-in sideboard, and
+noted that the compartment had been steel lined and
+Yale-locked, making a sort of safe. A lamp at the
+end of an extension wire stood on the floor beside
+him; he looked around at me over his shoulder as I
+put my head in to say,</p>
+
+<p>"Stock in your old suitcase has gone up a notch,
+Worth. We've caught Skeels."</p>
+
+<p>"So soon?" was all he said. But my news seemed
+to decide something for him; with a sharp gesture of
+finality, he put into his breast pocket the package of
+papers he had been looking at.</p>
+
+<p>When a little later, Edwards came in, Worth was
+waiting for him in the hall.</p>
+
+<p>"Do we go now?" the older man asked, wincing.
+Worth nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"Take your machine, Jim," he said. "We can park
+it at Fuller's and walk back from there. Boyne's
+roadster is in our garage."</p>
+
+<p>"Anything wrong with Eddie Hughes?" Edwards
+asked as he stepped in to get his driving gloves. "I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[Pg 154]</a></span>
+passed him out there headed for town lugging a lot of
+freight, and the fellow growled like a dog when I
+spoke to him."</p>
+
+<p>"I fired him. Come on, Jim&mdash;let's get out of this."</p>
+
+<p>"Hold on, Worth," I took a hand. "Fired
+Hughes? When?"</p>
+
+<p>"While I was fixing up that door&mdash;after you and
+Bobs came to the house."</p>
+
+<p>"What in God's name for?" I asked in exasperation.</p>
+
+<p>"For giving me back talk," said the youth who
+never quarreled with any one.</p>
+
+<p>He and Edwards tramped out together. I realized
+that the hostile son and an alienated friend had gone
+for a last look at the clay that had yesterday been
+Thomas Gilbert. Of course Worth would do that
+before he left Santa Ysobel. But would Edwards go
+in with him&mdash;or was he only along to drive the machine?
+It might be worth my while to know. But I
+could ask to-morrow; it wasn't worth a tired man's
+waiting up for. We must make an early start in the
+morning. I went upstairs to bed.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[Pg 155]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XIV" id="CHAPTER_XIV"></a>CHAPTER XIV</h2>
+
+<h3>SEVEN LOST DAYS</h3>
+
+<p>Instead of driving up to San Francisco with
+Worth and Barbara, the next morning, I was
+headed south at a high rate of speed. Sitting in the
+Pullman smoker, going over what had happened and
+what I had made of it, vainly studying a small, blue
+blotter with some senseless hieroglyphics reversed upon
+it, I wasn't at all sure that this move of mine was
+anywhere near the right one. But the thing hit me
+so quick, had to be decided in a flash, and my snap
+judgment never was good.</p>
+
+<p>We were all at breakfast there at the Gilbert house
+when I got the phone that those boobs down in Los
+Angeles had let Skeels slip through their fingers. I
+could see no way but to go myself. When I went
+out to retrieve my hand bag from the roadster, there
+was Barbara already in the seat. I delayed a minute
+to explain to her. She was full of eager interest; it
+seemed to her that Skeels ducking the detectives that
+way was more than clever&mdash;almost worthy of a
+wonder man.</p>
+
+<p>"Slickest thing I ever knew," I grumbled. "You
+can gamble I wouldn't be going south after him if
+Skeels hadn't shown himself too many for the Hicks
+agency&mdash;and they're one of the best in the business."</p>
+
+<p>Worth came out and settled himself at the wheel; he
+and Edwards exchanged a last, low-toned word; and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[Pg 156]</a></span>
+they were ready to be off. Barbara leaned towards
+me with shining eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps," she said, "Skeels might even be Clayte!"
+then the roadster whisked her away.</p>
+
+<p>The bulk of Worth Gilbert's fortune was practically
+tied up in this affair. Even as the Pullman carried
+me Los Angeles-ward, that boy was getting in to
+San Francisco, going to the bank, and turning over to
+them capital that represented not only his wealth but
+his honor. If we failed to trace this money, he was
+a discredited fool. Yes, I had done right to come.</p>
+
+<p>So far on that side. Then apprehension began to
+mutter within me about the situation at Santa Ysobel.
+How long would that coroner's verdict of suicide satisfy
+the public? How soon would some seepage of
+fact indicate that the death was murder and set the
+whole town to looking for a murderer? The minute
+this happened, the real criminal would take alarm and
+destroy evidence I might have gathered if I had stayed
+by the case. I promised myself that it should be
+simply "there and back" with me in the Skeels matter.</p>
+
+<p>This is the way it looked to me in the Pullman; then&mdash;once
+in Los Angeles&mdash;I allowed myself to get hot
+telling the Hicks people what I thought of them, explaining
+how I'd have run the chase, and wound up by
+giving seven days to it&mdash;seven precious, irreclaimable
+days&mdash;while everything lay wide open there in the
+north, and I couldn't get any satisfactory word from
+the office, and none of any sort from Worth.</p>
+
+<p>That Skeels trail kept me to it, with my tongue
+hanging out; again and again I seemed to have him;
+every time I missed him by an hour or so; and that
+convinced me that he was straining every nerve, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[Pg 157]</a></span>
+that he probably had the whole of the loot still with
+him. At last, I seemed to have him in a perfect trap&mdash;Ensenada,
+on the Peninsula. You get into and out
+of Ensenada by steamboat only, except back to the
+mines on foot or donkey. The two days I had to wait
+over in San Diego for the boat which would follow
+the one Skeels had taken were a mighty uneasy time.
+If I'd imagined for a moment that he wasn't on the
+dodge&mdash;that he was there openly&mdash;I'd have wired the
+Mexican authorities, and had him waiting for me in
+jail. But the Mexican officials are a rotten lot; it
+seemed to me best to go it alone.</p>
+
+<p>What I found in Ensenada was that Skeels had been
+there, quite publicly, under his own name; he had
+come alone and departed with a companion, Hinch
+Dial, a drill operator from the mines, a transient, a
+pick-up laborer, seemingly as close-mouthed as Silent
+Steve himself. Steve had come on one steamer and
+the two had left on the next. That north-bound boat
+we passed two hours off Point Loma was carrying
+Skeels and his pal back to San Diego!</p>
+
+<p>Again two days lost, waiting for the steamer back.
+And when I got to San Diego, the trail was stone cold.
+I had sent Worth almost daily reports in care of my
+office, not wanting them to lie around at Santa Ysobel
+during the confusion of the funeral and all; but even
+before I went to Ensenada, telegrams from Roberts
+had informed me that these reports could not be delivered
+as Worth had not been at the office, and telephone
+messages to Santa Ysobel and the Palace Hotel
+had failed to locate him. When I believed I had
+Skeels firmly clasped in the jaws of the Ensenada trap,
+I had sent a complete report of my doings up to that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[Pg 158]</a></span>
+time, and the optimistic outlook then, to Barbara with
+instructions for her to get it to Worth. She would
+know where he was.</p>
+
+<p>But she hadn't. Her reply, waiting at San Diego
+for me, a delicious little note that somehow lightened
+the bitterness of my disappointment over Skeels, told
+me that she had seen Worth at the funeral, almost
+a week ago now, but only for a minute; that she had
+supposed he had joined me on the Skeels chase; and
+she would now try to hunt him up and deliver my report.
+Roberts, too, had a line in one of his reports
+that Worth had called for the suitcase on the Monday
+I left and had neither returned it nor been in the office
+since.</p>
+
+<p>I worried not at all over Worth; if he wanted to
+play hide and seek with Dykeman's spotters, he was
+thoroughly capable of looking after himself; but in
+the Skeels matter, I did then what I should have done
+in the first place, of course; turned the work over to
+subordinates and headed straight home.</p>
+
+<p>I reached San Francisco pretty well used up. It
+was nearly the middle of the forenoon next day when
+I got to my desk and found it piled high with mail
+that had accumulated in my absence. Roberts had
+looked after what he could, and sorted the rest, ready
+for me. Everything concerning the Clayte case was
+in one basket. As Roberts handed it to me, he explained.</p>
+
+<p>"The Van Ness bank attorney&mdash;Cummings&mdash;has
+been keeping tabs on you tight, Mr. Boyne. Here
+every day&mdash;sometimes twice. Wants to know the
+minute you're back."</p>
+
+<p>I grunted and dived into the letters. Nothing in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[Pg 159]</a></span>teresting.
+Responses acknowledging receipts of my
+early inquiries. Roberts lingered.</p>
+
+<p>"Well?" I shot at him. He moved uneasily as he
+asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Did you wire him when you were coming back?"</p>
+
+<p>"Cummings? No. Why?"</p>
+
+<p>"He telephoned in just before you came saying that
+he'd be right up to see you. I told him you hadn't
+returned. He laughed and hung up."</p>
+
+<p>"All right, Roberts. Send him in when he comes."
+I dismissed the secretary. Cummings was keeping
+tabs on me with a vengeance. What was on his chest?</p>
+
+<p>I didn't need to wait long to find out. In another
+minute he was at my door greeting me in an off-hand,
+"Hello, Boyne. Ready to jump into your car and
+go around with me to see Dykeman?"</p>
+
+<p>"Just got down to the office, Cummings," I
+watched him, trying to figure out where I stood and
+where he stood after this week's absence. "Haven't
+seen Worth Gilbert yet. What's the rush with Dykeman?"</p>
+
+<p>"You'll find out when you get there."</p>
+
+<p>Not very friendly, seeing that Cummings had been
+Worth's lawyer in the matter, and aside from that
+queer scene in my office, there'd been no actual break.
+He stood now, not really grinning at me, but with an
+amused look under that bristly mustache, and suggested,</p>
+
+<p>"So you haven't seen young Gilbert?"</p>
+
+<p>The tone was so significant that I gave him a quick
+glance of inquiry as I said,</p>
+
+<p>"No. What about him?"</p>
+
+<p>"Put on your coat and come along. We can talk<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[Pg 160]</a></span>
+on the way," he replied, and I went with him to the
+street, dug little Pete out of the bootblack stand and
+herded him into the roadster to drive us. Cummings
+gave the order for North Beach, and as we squirmed
+through and around congested down-town traffic, headed
+for the Stockton Street tunnel, I waited for the lawyer
+to begin. When it came, it was another startling question,</p>
+
+<p>"Didn't find Skeels in the south, eh?"</p>
+
+<p>I hadn't thought they'd carry their watching and
+trailing of us so far. I answered that question with
+another,</p>
+
+<p>"When did you see or hear from Worth Gilbert
+last?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not since the funeral," he said promptly, "the
+day before the funeral&mdash;a week ago to-day, to be exact.
+I ran down to make my inventory then; as administrator,
+you know."</p>
+
+<p>He looked at me so significantly that I echoed,</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I know."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you? How much?" His voice was hard and
+dry; it didn't sound good to me.</p>
+
+<p>"See here," I put it to him, as my clever little driver
+dodged in and out through the narrow lanes between
+Pagoda-like shops of Chinatown, avoiding the steep
+hill streets by a diagonal through the Italian quarter on
+Columbus Avenue. "If there's anything you think
+I ought to be told, put me wise. I suppose you raised
+that money for Worth&mdash;the seventy-two thousand that
+was lacking, I mean?"</p>
+
+<p>"I did not."</p>
+
+<p>I turned the situation over and over in my mind,
+and at last asked cautiously,</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[Pg 161]</a></span>"Worth did get the money to make up the full
+amount, didn't he?"</p>
+
+<p>We had swerved again to the north, where the
+Powell car-line curves into Bay Street, and were headed
+direct for the wharves. Cummings watched me out
+of the corners of his eyes, a look that bored in most
+unpleasantly, while he cross-examined,</p>
+
+<p>"So you don't know where he raised that money&mdash;or
+how&mdash;or when? You don't even know that he did
+raise it? Is that the idea?"</p>
+
+<p>I gave him look for look, but no answer. An indecisive
+slackening of the machine, and Little Pete
+asked,</p>
+
+<p>"Where now, sir?"</p>
+
+<p>"You can see it," Cummings pointed. "The tall
+building. Hit the Embarcadero, then turn to your
+right; a block to Mason Street."</p>
+
+<p>So close to the dock that ships lay broadside before
+its doors, moored to the piles by steel cables, the Western
+Cereal Company plant scattered its mills and warehouses
+over two city blocks. Freight trains ran
+through arcades into the buildings to fetch and carry
+its products; great trucks, some gas driven, some with
+four- and six-horse teams, loaded sacks or containers
+that shot in endless streams through well worn chutes,
+or emptied raw materials that would shortly be breakfast
+foods into iron conveyors that sucked it up and
+whined for more. It was a place of aggressive activity
+among placid surroundings, this plant of Dykeman's,
+for its setting was the Italian fisherman's home district;
+little frame shacks, before which they mended
+their long, brown nets, or stretched them on the sidewalks
+to dry; Fisherman's Wharf and its lateen rigged,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[Pg 162]</a></span>
+gayly painted hulls, was under the factory windows.</p>
+
+<p>We pulled up before the door of a building separate
+from any of the mills or warehouses, and I followed
+Cummings through a corridor, past many doors of
+private offices, to the large general office. Here a
+young man at a desk against the rail lent Cummings
+respectful attention; the lawyer asked something in a
+low tone, and was answered,</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir. Waiting for you. Go right through."</p>
+
+<p>Down the long room with its rattling typewriters,
+its buzz of clerks and salesmen we went. Cummings
+was a little ahead of me, when he checked a moment to
+bow to some one over at a desk. I followed his glance.
+The girl he had spoken to turned her back almost
+instantly after she had returned his greeting; but I
+couldn't be mistaken. There might be more than one
+figure with that slim, half girlish grace about it, and
+other hair as lustrously blue-black, but none could be
+wound around a small head quite so shapely, carried
+with so blossomlike a toss. It was Barbara Wallace.</p>
+
+<p>So this was where her job was. Strange I had not
+known this fact of grave importance. I went on past
+her unconscious back, left her working at her loose-leaf
+ledgers, beside her adding machine, my mind a
+whirl of ugly conjecture. Dykeman's employee; that
+would instantly and very painfully clear up a score of
+perplexing questions. Dykeman would need no detectives
+on my trail to tell him of my lack of success
+in the Skeels chase. Lord! I had sent her as concise
+a report as I could make&mdash;to her, for Worth. I
+walked on stupidly. In front of the last door in the
+big room, Cummings halted and spoke low.</p>
+
+<p>"Boyne, you and I are both in the employ of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[Pg 163]</a></span>
+Van Ness Avenue Bank. We're somewhat similarly
+situated in another quarter; I'm representing the Gilbert
+estate, and you've been retained by Worth Gilbert."</p>
+
+<p>I grunted some sort of assent.</p>
+
+<p>"I brought you here to listen to what the bank
+crowd has to say, but when they get done, I've
+something to tell you about that young employer of
+yours. You listen to them&mdash;then you listen to me&mdash;and
+you'll know where you stand."</p>
+
+<p>"I'll talk with you as soon as I get through here,
+Cummings."</p>
+
+<p>"Be sure you do that little thing," significantly, and
+we went in.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[Pg 164]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XV" id="CHAPTER_XV"></a>CHAPTER XV</h2>
+
+<h3>AT DYKEMAN'S OFFICE</h3>
+
+<p>We found Whipple with Dykeman. I had always
+liked the president of the Van Ness
+Avenue Bank well enough; one of the large, smooth,
+amiable sort, not built to withstand stress of weather,
+apt to be rather helpless before it. He seemed now
+mighty upset and worried. Dykeman looked at me
+with hard eyes that searched me, but on the whole he
+was friendly in his greeting and inquiries as to my
+health.</p>
+
+<p>While I was getting out of my coat and stowing it,
+making a great deal of the process so as to gain time,
+I saw Cummings was exchanging low spoken words
+with the two of them. I tried to keep my mind on
+these men before me and why I was with them, but
+all the while it would be running back to the knock-out
+blow of seeing that girl in Dykeman's place. She
+was double-crossing Worth! I might have grinned at
+the idea that I'd let myself be fooled by a pair of big,
+expressive, wistful, merry black eyes; but I had seen
+the look in those same eyes when they were turned
+on my boy; to think she'd look at him like that, and
+sell him out, was against nature. It was hurting me
+beyond all reason.</p>
+
+<p>Whipple asked me about my trip south as though
+it was the most public thing in the world and he knew<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[Pg 165]</a></span>
+its every detail, and accepted my reply that I couldn't
+take one man's pay and report to another, with,</p>
+
+<p>"Just so, Mr. Boyne. But your agency is retained&mdash;regularly,
+year by year&mdash;by our bank. And our
+bank has given over none of its rights&mdash;I should say
+duties&mdash;in regard to the Clayte case. We stand ready
+to assist any one whose behavior seems to us that of
+a law-abiding citizen. We don't want to advance any
+criminality. We can't strike hands with outlaws&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Tell him about the suitcase, Whipple," Dykeman
+broke in impatiently, rather spoiling the president's
+oratorical effect. "Tell him about the suitcase."</p>
+
+<p>The suitcase! Was this one of the things Barbara
+Wallace had let out to her employer? She could have
+done so. She knew all about it.</p>
+
+<p>"One moment, please," I snapped. "I've been away
+for a week, Mr. Whipple. I don't know a thing of
+what you're talking about. Did Captain Gilbert fail
+to meet his engagement with you Monday morning?"</p>
+
+<p>Whipple shook his head.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Dykeman wants you told about the suitcase,"
+he said. "I'd like to have Knapp here when we go
+into that."</p>
+
+<p>Dykeman picked up the end of a speaking-tube and
+barked into it,</p>
+
+<p>"Send those men in." In the moment's delay, we
+all sat uneasily mute. Knapp came in with Anson.
+As they nodded to us and settled into chairs, two or
+three others joined us. Nothing was said about this
+filling out of the numbers, but to me it meant serious
+business, with Worth Gilbert its motive.</p>
+
+<p>"Get it over, can't you?" I said, looking about from
+one to the other of the men, all directors in the bank.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[Pg 166]</a></span>
+"I understand that Captain Gilbert met his engagement
+with you; was he short of the sum agreed?"
+Again Whipple shook his head.</p>
+
+<p>"Captain Gilbert walked into the bank at exactly
+ten o'clock Monday morning. The uh&mdash;uh&mdash;unusual
+arrangement&mdash;contract, to call it so&mdash;that we'd made
+with him concerning the defalcation would have expired
+in a few seconds, and I think I may say," he
+looked around at the others, "that we should not have
+been sorry to have it do so. But he brought the sum
+agreed on."</p>
+
+<p>I drew a great sigh of relief. Worth's bargain
+was complete; he was done with these men, anyhow.
+I was half out of my chair when Whipple said, sharply
+for him,</p>
+
+<p>"Sit down, Mr. Boyne." And Dykeman almost
+drowned it in his,</p>
+
+<p>"Wait, there, Boyne! We're not through with
+you."</p>
+
+<p>"There's more to tell," Whipple continued. "Captain
+Gilbert brought that eight hundred thousand cash
+and securities in a&mdash;er&mdash;in a very strange way."</p>
+
+<p>"What d'you mean, strange way? airplane or submarine?"
+I growled.</p>
+
+<p>"He brought it," Whipple's words marched out of
+him like a solemn procession, "in a brown, sole-leather
+suitcase."</p>
+
+<p>"<i>With</i> brass trimmings," Dykeman supplemented,
+and leaned back in his chair with an audible "Ah-h-h!"
+of satisfaction.</p>
+
+<p>If ever a poor devil was flabbergasted, it was the
+head of the Boyne agency at that moment. I had a
+fellow feeling for that Mazeppa party who was tied<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[Pg 167]</a></span>
+in his birthday suit to the back of a wild horse.
+Locoed broncos were more amenable to rein than
+Worth Gilbert. So that was why he wanted that
+suitcase&mdash;"had a use for it," he'd put it; insisted on
+an order to be able to get it if I wasn't at my office;
+wanted it to shove back at these scary bank officials,
+with his own money for the payment inside. No
+wonder Whipple called him an "outlaw"!</p>
+
+<p>"Get the idea, do you, Boyne?" Anson lunged at
+me in his ponderous way. "The rest of us thought
+'twas a poor joke, but Knapp and Whipple had both
+seen that suitcase before&mdash;and recognized it."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said Knapp quietly. "It chanced I saw it
+go through the door that last day, when it had nearly
+a million of our money in it. And here it was&mdash;"
+his voice broke off.</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly startling," Cummings spoke directly at
+me, "for them to see it come back in Worth Gilbert's
+hands, with the same kind of filling, less one hundred
+and eighty seven thousand dollars. Of course, I didn't
+know the identity of the suitcase until they'd given
+Gilbert his receipt and he was gone."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, they accepted his money?" I said, and every
+man in the room looked sheepish, except Cummings
+who didn't need to, and Dykeman who was too mad
+to. He shouted at me,</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, we took it; and you're going to tell us where
+he got that suitcase."</p>
+
+<p>"What have your own detectives&mdash;those you hired
+on the side&mdash;to say about it?" I countered on him,
+and saw instantly that the Whipple end of the crowd
+hadn't known of Dykeman's spotters and trailers.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, why not?" Dykeman shrilled. "Why not?<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[Pg 168]</a></span>
+Who wouldn't shadow that crook? One hundred and
+eighty seven thousand dollars! Worked us like
+suckers&mdash;come-ons&mdash;!" he choked up and began to
+cough. Cummings came in where he left off.</p>
+
+<p>"See here, Boyne; we don't want to antagonize you.
+You've said from the first that this crime was a conspiracy&mdash;a
+big thing&mdash;directed by brains on the outside.
+Clayte was the tool. Whose tool was he?
+That's what we want to know." And Anson trundled
+along,</p>
+
+<p>"These men who have been in the war get a contempt
+for law, there's no doubt about it. Captain
+Gilbert might&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"No names!" Whipple's hand went up in protest.
+"No accusations, gentlemen, please; Mr. Boyne&mdash;this
+is a dreadful thing. But, really, Captain Gilbert's
+manner was very strange. I might say he&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Swaggered," supplied Cummings coolly as the
+president's voice lapsed.</p>
+
+<p>"Well," Whipple accepted it, "he swaggered in and
+put it all over us. There he was, a man fresh from
+the deathbed of a suicide father; that father's funeral
+yet to occur. I, personally, hadn't the heart to question
+him or raise objections. I was dazed."</p>
+
+<p>"Dazed," Dykeman snapped up the word and worried
+it, as a dog worries a bone. "Of course, we
+were all dazed. It was so open, so shameless&mdash;that's
+why he got by with it. Making use of his position
+as heir, less than forty eight hours after his father
+was shot."</p>
+
+<p>"After his father shot himself," Whipple's lowered
+tone was a plea. "After his father shot himself."</p>
+
+<p>"Huh!" snorted Dykeman. "If a man shoots him<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[Pg 169]</a></span>self,
+he's been shot, hasn't he? Hell! What's the
+use of whipping the devil round the stump that way?
+Boyne, you can stand with us, or you can fight us."</p>
+
+<p>"Boyne's with us&mdash;of course he's with us," Whipple
+broke in, his words a good deal more confident than
+his tone or the look of his face.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, then," Dykeman ground out, "when our
+thief of a teller splits that one hundred and eighty
+seven thousand with his man Gilbert&mdash;shut up, Whipple&mdash;shut
+up! You can't stop me&mdash;we're going to
+know about it. We'll get them both then, and send
+them across. And we'll recover one hundred and
+eighty seven thousand dollars that belongs to the Van
+Ness Avenue bank."</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Good</i> night!" I got to my feet. "This lets me
+out. I can't deal with men who make a scrap of
+paper of their contracts as quick as you gentlemen
+do."</p>
+
+<p>"Stop, Boyne&mdash;you haven't got it all," Dykeman
+ordered me.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, wait, Mr. Boyne," Whipple came in. "You
+haven't a full understanding of the enormity of this
+young man's action. Mr. Cummings has something
+to tell you which, I think, will&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing Mr. Cummings can say," I shut them off,
+"will alter the fact that I am employed by Captain
+Worth Gilbert at your recommendation&mdash;at your own
+recommendation&mdash;that I have been away more than a
+week on his business, and have not yet had an opportunity
+to report to him personally. When I've seen him,
+I'll be ready to talk to you."</p>
+
+<p>"You'll talk now or never&mdash;" Dykeman's shrill
+threat was interrupted by the shriller bell of the tele<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[Pg 170]</a></span>phone.
+He yanked the instrument to him, and the
+"Hello!" he cried into it had the snap of an oath. He
+looked up and shoved the thing in my direction. "Calling
+for you, Boyne," he snarled.</p>
+
+<p>There was deathly stillness in the room, so that the
+whir of the great stones in the mill came to us insistently.
+I stood there, they all watching me, and spoke
+into the transmitter.</p>
+
+<p>"This is Boyne."</p>
+
+<p>"Hold the receiver close to your ear so it won't
+leak words." The warning wasn't needed; I thought
+I knew the voice. "Press the transmitter close to
+your chest. Listen&mdash;don't talk; don't say a word in
+reply to me. I'm in the telephone booth outside. I
+must see you just as soon as I can. I'll be at the
+Little Italy restaurant&mdash;you know, don't you? on Fisherman's
+Wharf&mdash;in ten minutes. If you can come, and
+alone, find me there. I'll wait an hour. If you can't
+come now, you <i>must</i> see me this evening after working
+hours."</p>
+
+<p>"I'll come now," I raised the transmitter to say,
+and quickly over the wire came the answer,</p>
+
+<p>"I told you not to speak&mdash;in there! This is Barbara
+Wallace."</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[Pg 171]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XVI" id="CHAPTER_XVI"></a>CHAPTER XVI</h2>
+
+<h3>A LUNCHEON</h3>
+
+<p>I went away from there.</p>
+
+<p>Looking about me, I had guessed that pretty
+much every man in the room believed that it was
+Worth Gilbert with whom I had been talking over the
+phone. Dykeman's trailers would be right behind me.
+Yet to the last, Whipple and his crowd were offering
+me the return trip end of my ticket with them; if I
+would come back and be good, even now, all would be
+forgiven. I sized up the situation briefly and took my
+plunge, shutting the door after me, glancing across
+the long room to see that Barbara Wallace's desk was
+deserted. Nobody followed me from the room I had
+just left. I walked quickly to the outer door.</p>
+
+<p>Little Pete switched on his engine as I leaped into
+the car. My "Let her go!" wasn't needed to make
+him throw in his clutch, and give me a flying start
+straight ahead down the broad plank way of the Embarcadero.
+Looking back as we hit the belt-line
+tracks, I saw a small car with two men in it, shoot
+out from one of the wide doorways of the plant; but
+as we rounded the cliff-like side of Telegraph Hill,
+my view of them was cut off. Things had come for
+me thick and fast. I felt pretty well balled up. But
+the girl had used secrecy in appointing this interview;
+till I could see further into the thing, it was anyhow
+a safe bet to drop them.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[Pg 172]</a></span>"Pete," I said, "lose that car behind us. Only ten
+minutes to slip them and land me at Fisherman's
+Wharf. Show me what-for."</p>
+
+<p>He grinned. Between Montgomery and the bay,
+north of California Street, there are many narrow
+byways, crowded with the heavy traffic of hucksters
+and vegetable men, a section devoted to the commission
+business. Into its congestion Pete dove with a
+weasel instinct for finding the right holes to slip
+through, the alleys that might be navigated in safety;
+in less than the ten minutes I'd specified, we were free
+again on Columbus Avenue, pursuit lost, and headed
+back for the restaurant on the wharf.</p>
+
+<p>"Boss," Little Pete was hoarse with the excitement
+he loved, as he laid the roadster alongside the Little
+Italy, "was it on the level, what you fed the lawyer
+guy? Ain't you wise to where Captain Gilbert
+is? I've saw him frequent since you've been
+gone."</p>
+
+<p>"How many times is 'frequent,' Pete?" I asked.
+"And when did the last 'frequent' happen?"</p>
+
+<p>"Twice," sulkily. I'd wounded his pride by not
+taking him seriously; but he added as I jumped down
+from the machine. "I druv him up on the hill, 'round
+the place where you an' him&mdash;an' her&mdash;went that
+day."</p>
+
+<p>Pete didn't need to use Barbara Wallace's name.
+The way he salaamed to the pronoun was enough; the
+swath that girl cut evidently reached from the cradle
+to the grave, with this monkey grinning at one end,
+and me doddering along at the other.</p>
+
+<p>I gave a moment to questioning Pete, found out all
+he knew, and went into the restaurant, wondering what<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[Pg 173]</a></span>
+under heaven Barbara Wallace would say to me or ask
+me.</p>
+
+<p>The Little Italy restaurant is not so bad a place
+for luncheon. If one likes any eatables the western
+seas produce, I heartily recommend it. Where fish
+are unloaded from the smacks by the ton, fish are sure
+to be in evidence, but they are nice, fresh fish, and
+look good enough to eat. And the Little Italy is
+clean, with white oil-clothed tables and a view from its
+broad windows that down-town restaurants would
+double their rent to get.</p>
+
+<p>Just now it was full of noisy patrons, foreigners,
+mostly; people too busy eating to notice whether I
+carried my head on my shoulders or under my arm.</p>
+
+<p>In a far corner, Barbara Wallace's eyes were on me
+from the minute I came within her sight. She had
+ordered clams for two, mostly, I thought, to defend
+the privacy of our talk from the interruptions of a
+waiter, and I was hardly in my chair before she burst
+out,</p>
+
+<p>"Where's Worth? Why wasn't he in that office to
+defend himself against what they're hinting?"</p>
+
+<p>"I suppose," I said dryly, "because he wasn't given
+an invitation to attend. You ought to know why.
+You work for Dykeman."</p>
+
+<p>"I work for Dykeman?" she repeated after me in
+a bewildered tone. "I'm bookkeeper in the Western
+Cereal Company's employ, if that's what you mean.
+You understood so from the first."</p>
+
+<p>"You know I didn't," I reproached her hotly. "Do
+you think I'd have let you on the inside of this case
+if I'd known it was a pipe line direct to Dykeman?"</p>
+
+<p>And on the instant I spoke there came to me a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[Pg 174]</a></span>
+remembrance of her saying that Sunday morning as
+we pulled up before the St. Dunstan that she went past
+the place on the street car every day getting to her
+work at the Western Cereal Company. Sloppy of me
+not to have paid better attention; I knew vaguely that
+Dykeman was in one of the North Beach mills.</p>
+
+<p>"Fifty-fifty, Barbara," I conceded. "I should have
+known&mdash;made it my business to learn. And Dykeman
+has questioned you&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"He has not!" indignantly. "I don't suppose he
+knows Worth and I are acquainted." I could have
+smiled at that. There were detectives' reports in Dykeman's
+desk that recorded date, hour and duration of
+every meeting this girl had had with Worth and with
+myself. Besides, Cummings knew. It must have
+been through Cummings that she learned what was
+about to take place in Dykeman's private office. What
+had she told Cummings?</p>
+
+<p>I was ready to blurt out the question, when she
+fumbled in her bag with little, shaking hands, drew
+out and passed to me unopened the envelope addressed
+to Worth, with my detailed report of the Skeels chase.</p>
+
+<p>"I did my best to deliver it," she steadied her voice
+as she spoke. "He wasn't at the Palace. He wasn't
+at Santa Ysobel. He didn't communicate with me
+here."</p>
+
+<p>My edifice of suspicion of Barbara Wallace crumbled.
+Cummings had not learned through her that I
+was unsuccessful in the south; nor had she spilled a
+word to him that she shouldn't, or they'd have had
+the dope on where Worth had found that suitcase,
+and thrown it at me quick.</p>
+
+<p>"Barbara," I said, "will you accept my apologies?"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[Pg 175]</a></span>"Oh, yes," she smiled vaguely. "I don't know what
+you're apologizing for, but it doesn't matter. I hoped
+you would bring me news of Worth&mdash;of where he is."</p>
+
+<p>"When did you see him last?"</p>
+
+<p>"On the day of the funeral. I hardly got to speak
+to him."</p>
+
+<p>Little Pete's news was slightly later. He'd taken
+Worth up to the Gold Nugget and dropped him there.
+Thursday, Worth was at the Nugget for more than
+an hour. On both occasions, Pete was told to slip
+the trailers, and did. That meant that Worth was
+working on the Clayte case&mdash;or thought he was. I
+told her of this.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes&mdash;Oh, yes," she repeated listlessly. "But
+where is he now? And awful things&mdash;things like
+this meeting&mdash;coming up."</p>
+
+<p>"What besides this meeting?"</p>
+
+<p>"At Santa Ysobel."</p>
+
+<p>"What? Things that have happened since the boy's
+gone? You couldn't get much idea of the lay of the
+land when you were down there Wednesday, could
+you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, but I could&mdash;I did," earnestly. "Of course
+it was a large funeral; it seemed to me I saw everybody
+I'd ever known. At a time like that, nothing
+would be said openly, but the drift was all in one
+direction. They couldn't understand Worth, and so
+nearly every one who spoke of him, picked at him,
+trying to understand him. Mrs. Thornhill's cook was
+already telling that Worth had quarreled with his
+father and demanded money. I shouldn't wonder if
+by now Santa Ysobel's set the exact hour of the quarrel."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[Pg 176]</a></span>"Me for down there as quick as I can," I muttered,
+and Barbara, facing me sympathetically, offered,</p>
+
+<p>"I've a letter from Skeet Thornhill," she groped in
+her bag again, mumbling as women do when they're
+hunting for a thing, "It came this morning.... Mrs.
+Thornhill's no better&mdash;worse, I judge.... Oh, here it
+is," and she pulled out a couple of closely scribbled
+sheets. "The child writes a wild hand," she apologized,
+as she passed these over.</p>
+
+<p>The flapper dashed into her letter with a sort of
+incoherent squeal. The carnival ball was only four
+days off. Everybody was already dead on his, her or
+its feet. The decorations they'd planned were enough
+to kill a horse&mdash;let alone getting up costumes. "As
+usual, everything seems to be going to the devil here,"
+she went on; "Got a cannery girl elected festival
+queen this time. Ina's furious, of course. Moms had
+a letter from her that singed the envelope; but I sort
+of enjoy seeing the cannery district break in.
+They've got the money these days."</p>
+
+<p>Nothing here to my purpose. Barbara reached forward
+and turned the sheet for me, and I saw Worth
+Gilbert's name half way down it.</p>
+
+<p>"Doctor Bowman is an old hell-cat, and I hate him."
+Skeet made her points with a fine simplicity. "Since
+mother's sick, he comes here every day, though what
+he does but sit and shoot off his mouth and get her all
+worked up is more than I can see. Yesterday I was
+in the room when he was there, and he got to talking
+about Worth&mdash;the meanest, lowest-down, hinting talk
+you ever heard! Said Worth got a lot of money
+when his father died, and I flared up and said what of
+it? Did he think Mr. Gilbert ought to have left it to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[Pg 177]</a></span>
+him? That hit him, because he and Mr. Gilbert used
+to be good friends, and he and Worth aren't. I sassed
+him, and he got so mad that just as he was leaving,
+he hollered at me that I better ask Worth Gilbert
+where he was at the hour his father was shot. Now,
+what do you know about that? That man is spreading
+stories. A doctor can set them going. He's
+making his messy old calls on people all day, and they,
+poor fish-hounds, believe everything he says. Though
+mother didn't. After he was gone, she just lay there in
+her bed and said over and over that it was a lie, a
+foolish, dangerous lie! Poor mumsie, she's so nervous
+that when the grocer's truck had a blow-out down
+in the drive, she nearly went into hysterics&mdash;cried and
+carried on, something about it's being 'the shot.' I
+suppose she meant the one when Mr. Gilbert killed
+himself. Wasn't that queer? Any loud noise of the
+sort sets her off that way. She lies and listens, and
+listens and mutters to herself. It scares me." She
+closed with, "Please don't break your promise to be
+here through this infernal Bloss. Fes."</p>
+
+<p>"Good advice, that last," I said slowly, as I laid the
+letter on the table, keeping a hand on it. "You'll do
+that, won't you, Barbara?"</p>
+
+<p>"I had intended to. I was given leave from this
+afternoon. But&mdash;well&mdash;I'd thought it over, and almost
+made up my mind to go back to my desk."</p>
+
+<p>Barbara Wallace uncertain, halting between two
+courses of action! What did it mean?</p>
+
+<p>"See here, Barbara; this isn't a time for Worth Gilbert's
+friends to slacken on him."</p>
+
+<p>"I hadn't slackened," she said very low. And left it
+for me to remember that Worth apparently had.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[Pg 178]</a></span>"Then you're needed at Santa Ysobel," I urged.</p>
+
+<p>"But you're going, aren't you, Mr. Boyne?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. As soon as I can get off. That doesn't keep
+you from being needed. Worth's one of the most
+efficiently impossible young men I ever tried to handle.
+Maybe he's not any fuller of shocks than any other
+live wire, but he sure does manage to plant them where
+they'll do the most harm. Cummings, Dykeman&mdash;and
+this Dr. Bowman down there; active enemies."</p>
+
+<p>"They can't hurt Worth Gilbert&mdash;all of them together!"</p>
+
+<p>"Wait a minute. I'm going to Santa Ysobel to find
+the murderer of Thomas Gilbert. That means a stirring
+to the depths of that little town. This underneath-the-surface
+combustion will get poked into a flame&mdash;she's
+going to burst out, and somebody's going to get
+burned. We don't want that to be Worth, Barbara."</p>
+
+<p>"No. But what can I do&mdash;what influence have I
+with him&mdash;" she was beginning, but I broke in on her.</p>
+
+<p>"Barbara, you and I are going to find the real murderer,
+before the Cummings-Dykeman bunch discover
+a way into and out of that bolted study. Those people
+want to see Worth in jail."</p>
+
+<p>There was a long pause while she faced me, the rich
+color failing a little in her cheeks.</p>
+
+<p>"I see," speaking slowly, studying each word. "And
+as long as we didn't find out how to enter and leave the
+study, we have no way of knowing how hard or how
+easy it's going to be for them to find it out. We&mdash;"
+her voice still lower&mdash;"we can't tell if they already
+know it or not."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes we can," I leaned forward to say. "The minute<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[Pg 179]</a></span>
+they know that&mdash;Worth Gilbert will be charged
+with murder."</p>
+
+<p>I hit hard enough that time to bring blood, but she
+bled inwardly, sitting there staring at me, quite pale,
+finally faltering,</p>
+
+<p>"Well&mdash;I can't stop to think of his having followed
+Ina Vandeman south&mdash;on her wedding trip&mdash;if he
+needs me&mdash;and I can help&mdash;I must&mdash;" she broke down
+completely, and I sat there feeling big-footed and blundering
+at this revelation of what it was that had put
+that clear, logical mind of hers off the track, left her
+confused, groping, just a girl, timid, distrustful of her
+own judgment where her heart was concerned.</p>
+
+<p>"Was that it all the time?" I asked. "Well, take it
+from me, Worth's done nothing of the sort. He's
+been playing detective, not chasing off after some other
+man's bride."</p>
+
+<p>Up came the color to her cheeks, she reached that
+mite of a hand across to shake on the bargain with,</p>
+
+<p>"I'll go straight down this evening. You'll find me
+in Santa Ysobel when you come, Mr. Boyne."</p>
+
+<p>"At the Thornhills'?" It might be handy to have
+her there; but she shook her head, looking a little self-conscious.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm taking that spare room at Sarah Capehart's.
+Skeet wanted me, and I have an invitation from Laura
+Bowman; but if&mdash;well, seeing that this investigation is
+going to cover all that neighborhood, I thought I'd
+rather be with Sarah."</p>
+
+<p>The level-headed little thing! Pete and I had the
+pleasure of taking her out to her home where she had
+her packing to attend to. On the way she spoke of an<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[Pg 180]</a></span>
+engagement with Cummings for the theater Saturday
+night.</p>
+
+<p>"And instead, I suppose I shall be at the carnival
+ball. Shall I tell him that in my note, Mr. Boyne?
+Is it all right to let him know?"</p>
+
+<p>"It's all right," I assented. "You can bet Cummings
+is due down there as soon as Worth shows up; and
+that must be soon, now."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," Barbara agreed. Her face clouded a little.
+"You noticed in Skeet's letter that they're expecting
+Ina to-morrow."</p>
+
+<p>Poor child&mdash;she couldn't get away from it. I patted
+the hand I had taken to say good-by and assured her
+again,</p>
+
+<p>"Worth Gilbert hasn't been in the south. I wonder
+at you, Barbara. You're so clear headed about
+everything else&mdash;don't you see that that would be impossible?"</p>
+
+<p>Then I drove back to my office, to find lying on my
+desk a telegram from the young man, dated at Los
+Angeles, requesting me to meet him at Santa Ysobel
+the following evening!</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[Pg 181]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XVII" id="CHAPTER_XVII"></a>CHAPTER XVII</h2>
+
+<h3>CLEANSING FIRES</h3>
+
+<p>Wednesday evening I pulled into a different
+Santa Ysobel: lanterns strung across between
+the buildings, bunting and branches of bloom everywhere,
+streets alive with people milling around, and
+cars piled high with decorative material, crowded with
+the decorators. The carnival of blossoms was only
+three days ahead.</p>
+
+<p>At Bill Capehart's garage they told me Barbara was
+out somewhere with the crowd; and a few minutes
+later on Main Street, I met her in a Ford truck. Skeet
+Thornhill was at the wheel, adding to the general risk
+of life and limb on Santa Ysobel streets, carrying a
+half a dozen or more other young things tucked away
+behind. Both girls shouted at me; they were going
+somewhere for something and would see me later.</p>
+
+<p>Getting down toward the Gilbert place, just beyond
+the corner, I flushed from the shadows of the pepper
+trees a bird I knew to be one of Dykeman's operatives.
+Watching his carefully careless progress on past the
+Gilbert lawn, then the Vandeman grounds, my eye was
+led to a pair who approached across the green from
+the direction of the bungalow. No mistaking the
+woman; even at this distance, height and the clean
+sweep of her walk, told me that this was the bride, Ina
+Vandeman. And the man strolling beside her&mdash;had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[Pg 182]</a></span>
+he come with her from the house, or joined her on the
+cross-cut path?&mdash;could that be Worth Gilbert?</p>
+
+<p>I sat in the roadster and gaped. The evening light&mdash;behind
+them, and dim enough at best&mdash;made their
+countenances fairly indistinguishable. At the gap in
+the hedge, they paused, and Mrs. Vandeman reached
+out, broke off a flower to fasten in his buttonhole,
+looking up into his face, talking quickly. Old stuff&mdash;but
+always good reliable old stuff. Then Worth saw
+me and hailed, "Hello, Jerry!" But he did not come
+to me, and I swung out of the machine to the sidewalk.</p>
+
+<p>I heard the sobbing of the Ford truck; it went by,
+missing my runningboard by an inch, stopped at Vandeman's
+gate and Skeet discharged her cargo of clamor
+to stream across the sidewalk and up toward the bungalow.
+I saw Barbara, in the midst of the moving
+figures, suddenly stop, knew she had seen the two over
+there, and crossed to her, with a cheerful,</p>
+
+<p>"He's here all right."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes," not looking toward the gap in the hedge,
+or at me. "He came on the same train with&mdash;with
+them."</p>
+
+<p>Then some one from the porch yowled reproachfully
+for her to fetch those banners <i>pronto</i>, and with a little
+catching of breath, she ran on up the walk.</p>
+
+<p>I turned back. Worth and Ina had moved on.
+Bronson Vandeman, well groomed, dressed as though
+he had just come in off the golf links, his English
+shoes and loud patterned stockings differentiating him
+from the crude outdoor man of the Coast, had joined
+them on the Gilbert lawn; his genial greeting to me
+let his bride get by with a mere bow, turning at once<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[Pg 183]</a></span>
+back to her house by the front walk. But rather to my
+annoyance, Vandeman came bounding up the steps
+after us. I judged Worth must have invited him.</p>
+
+<p>Chung carried my suitcase upstairs, and lingered a
+minute in my room. I'll swear it wasn't merely to get
+the tip for which he thanked me, but with the idea of
+showing me in some recondite, Oriental fashion that he
+was glad I'd come. This interested me. The people
+who were glad to have me in Santa Ysobel at this time
+belonged on the clean side of my ledger. Then I went
+downstairs to find Vandeman still in the living room,
+sprawled at ease beside the window, looking round with
+a display of his fine teeth, reaching a hand to pull in
+the chair Worth set for me.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, Jerry," that young man prompted, indicating
+by a careless gesture the smokers' tray on the table beside
+me, "there is time before dinner for the tale of
+your exploits. How's my friend Steve?"</p>
+
+<p>I began to select a cigar, and said shortly,</p>
+
+<p>"It's all in reports waiting for you at my office."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes." Worth ignored my irritation. "Tell it.
+What'd you do down south?"</p>
+
+<p>"Just back from the south yourself, aren't you?" I
+countered.</p>
+
+<p>"Sure," airily. "But I wasn't there to butt in on
+your game. Did you find that Skeels was Clayte?"</p>
+
+<p>I merely looked over the flame of my match at that
+small-town society man, smiling back at me with a
+show of polite interest.</p>
+
+<p>"Go on," Worth interpreted. "Vandeman knows all
+about it. I tried to sell him a few shares of stock in
+the suitcase, so he'll take an interest in the game; but
+he's too much the tight-wad to buy."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[Pg 184]</a></span>"Oh, no," deprecated Vandeman. "Just no gambler;
+hate to take a chance." He ran his fingers through
+his hair, tossing it up with a gesture I had noticed
+when he came back from the dance at Tait's.</p>
+
+<p>"All right&mdash;apology accepted," Worth nodded.
+"Anyway, you didn't. Well, Jerry?"</p>
+
+<p>Vandeman waited a moment with natural curiosity,
+then, as I still said nothing, giving my attention to
+my smoke, moved reluctantly to rise, saying,</p>
+
+<p>"That means I'd better chase along and let you two
+talk business."</p>
+
+<p>"No. Sit tight," from Worth.</p>
+
+<p>I was mad clear through, and disturbed and apprehensive,
+too. I managed a brief, dry statement of the
+outcome in the south. Worth hailed it with,</p>
+
+<p>"Skeels lurks in the jungle! Life still holds a grain
+of interest."</p>
+
+<p>"Why the devil couldn't you keep me advised of
+your movements?" I demanded.</p>
+
+<p>"Dykeman's hounds," he grinned. "Had them
+guessing. They'd have picked me up if I'd gone to
+your office."</p>
+
+<p>"You could have written or wired. They've picked
+you up anyway," I grunted. "One's on the job now.
+Saw him as I came in."</p>
+
+<p>"Eh? What's that?" cried Vandeman, a man snooping
+in the shrubbery outside getting more attention
+from him than one dodging pursuit three hundred
+miles away. "What do you mean, hounds?" and when
+he had heard the explanation of Dykeman's trailers,
+"I call that intolerable!"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I don't know." Worth reached over my
+shoulder for a cigarette. "Lose 'em whenever I like."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[Pg 185]</a></span>I wasn't so certain. There were men in my employ
+he couldn't shake. Perhaps those reports in Dykeman's
+desk might have offered some surprises to this
+cock-sure lad. My exasperation at Worth mounted as
+I listened to Vandeman talking.</p>
+
+<p>"Those bank people should do one thing or another,"
+he gave his opinion. "Just because you got gay with
+them and handed them their payment in the suitcase
+it left in, they've no right to have you watched like
+a criminal. In a small town like this, such a thing
+will ruin a man's standing."</p>
+
+<p>"If he has any standing," Worth laughed.</p>
+
+<p>"See here," Vandeman's smile was persuasive.
+"Don't let what I said out in front embitter you."</p>
+
+<p>"I'll try not to."</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Boyne"&mdash;Vandeman missed the sarcasm&mdash;"when
+I got back to this town to-day, what do you
+suppose I found? The story going around that a
+quarrel with Worth, over money, drove his father to
+take his own life."</p>
+
+<p>"That's my business here," I nodded. And when
+he looked his surprise, "To stop such stories."</p>
+
+<p>He stared at me, frankly puzzled for a moment, then
+said,</p>
+
+<p>"Well, of course you know, and I know, that they're
+scurrilous lies; but just how will you stop them?"</p>
+
+<p>I had intended my remark to stand as it was; but
+Worth filled in the pause after Vandeman's question
+with,</p>
+
+<p>"Jerry's here to get the truth of my father's murder,
+Bronse."</p>
+
+<p>"Murder?" The mere naked word seemed to shock
+Vandeman. His sort clothe and pad everything&mdash;even<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[Pg 186]</a></span>
+their speech. "I didn't know any one entertained the
+idea your father was murdered. He couldn't have
+been&mdash;not the way it happened."</p>
+
+<p>"Nevertheless we think he was."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, but Boyne&mdash;start a thing like that, and think
+of the talk it'll make! They'll commence at once saying
+that there was nobody but Worth to profit by his
+father's death."</p>
+
+<p>"Don't worry, Mr. Vandeman." He made me hot.
+"We know where to dig up the motive for the crime."</p>
+
+<p>"You mean the diaries?" Worth's voice sounded
+unbelievably from beside me. "Nothing doing there,
+Jerry. I've burned them."</p>
+
+<p>I sat and choked down the swears. Yet, looking
+back on it, I saw plainly that Jerry Boyne was the man
+who deserved kicking. I ought never to have left
+them with him.</p>
+
+<p>"You read them and burned them?" said Vandeman.</p>
+
+<p>"Burned them without reading," Worth's impatient
+tones corrected.</p>
+
+<p>"Without reading!" the other echoed, startled.
+Then, after a long pause, "Oh&mdash;I say&mdash;pardon me, but&mdash;but
+ought that to have been done? Surely not.
+Worth&mdash;if you'd read your father's diaries for the past
+few years&mdash;I don't believe you'd have a doubt that he
+committed suicide&mdash;not a doubt."</p>
+
+<p>Worth sat there mute. Myself, I was rather curious
+as to what Vandeman would say; I had read much in
+those diaries. But when it came, it was the same old
+line of talk one hears when there's a suicide: Gilbert
+was a lonely man; his life hadn't been happy; he cut
+himself off from people too much. Vandeman said
+that of late he believed he was pretty nearly the only<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[Pg 187]</a></span>
+intimate the dead man had. This last gave him an
+interest in my eyes. I broke in on his generalities to
+ask him bluntly why he was so certain the death was
+suicide.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Gilbert was breaking up; had been for two
+years or more. Worth's been away; he's not seen it;
+but I can tell you, Boyne, his father's mind was
+affected."</p>
+
+<p>Worth let that pass, though I could see he wasn't
+convinced by Vandeman's sentimentalities, any more
+than I was. After the man had gone, I turned on
+Worth sharply, with,</p>
+
+<p>"Why the devil did you tell that pink-tea proposition
+about your dealings with the Van Ness Avenue bank?"</p>
+
+<p>"Safety valve, I guess. I get up too heavy a load
+of steam, and it's easy to blow it off to Vandeman.
+Told him most of it in the smoker, coming up. You'll
+talk about anything in a smoker."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, will you?" I said in exasperation. "And you'll
+burn anything, I suppose, that a match'll set fire to?"</p>
+
+<p>"Go easy, Jerry Boyne." His chin dropped to his
+chest, he sat glowering out through the window.
+"Cleansing fires for that sort of garbage," he said
+finally. "I burned them on the day of his funeral."</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[Pg 188]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XVIII" id="CHAPTER_XVIII"></a>CHAPTER XVIII</h2>
+
+<h3>THE TORN PAGE</h3>
+
+<p>My coming had thrown dinner late; we were
+barely through with the meal and back once
+more in the living room when the latch of the French
+window rattled, the window itself was pushed open,
+and a high imperious voice proclaimed,</p>
+
+<p>"The Princess of China, calling on Mr. Worth
+Gilbert."</p>
+
+<p>There stood Ina Vandeman in the gorgeously embroidered
+robes of a high caste Chinese lady, her fair
+hair covered by a sleek black wig that struck out something
+odd, almost ominous, in the coloring of her skin,
+the very planes of her features. Outside, along the
+porch, sounded the patter of many feet; Skeet wriggled
+through the narrow frame under her tall sister's arm,
+came scooting into the room to turn and gaze back
+at her.</p>
+
+<p>"Doesn't she look the vamp?"</p>
+
+<p>"Skeet!" Ina had sailed in by this time, and Ernestine
+followed more soberly. "You've been told not to
+say that."</p>
+
+<p>"I think," the other twin backed her up virtuously,
+"with poor mother sick and all, you might respect her
+wishes. You know what she said about calling Ina
+a vamp." And Skeet drawled innocently,</p>
+
+<p>"That it hit too near the truth to be funny&mdash;wasn't
+that it?"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[Pg 189]</a></span>Through the open window had followed a half dozen
+more of the Blossom Festival crowd, Barbara and
+Bronson Vandeman among them. Ina paid no attention
+to any one, standing there, her height increased
+by the long, straight lines of the costume, her bisque
+doll features given a strange, pallid dignity by the raw
+magnificence of its crusted purple and crimson and
+green and gold embroidery and the dead black wig.</p>
+
+<p>"Isn't it an exquisite thing, Worth?" displaying herself
+before him. "Bronse has a complete Mandarin
+costume; we lead the grand march as the emperor and
+empress of Mongolia. Don't you think it's a good
+idea?"</p>
+
+<p>"First rate." Worth spoke in his usual unexcited
+fashion, and it was difficult to say whether he meant
+the oriental idea or the appearance of the girl who
+stood before him. She came close and offered the
+cuff of one of her sleeves to show him the embroidery,
+lifting a delicate chin to display the jade buttons at
+the neck.</p>
+
+<p>Barbara over on the other side of the room refused
+to meet my eye. Mrs. Bowman, a big fur piece pulled
+up around her throat, shivered. I met half a dozen
+Santa Ysobel people whose names I've forgotten. I
+could see that Bronson Vandeman socially took the
+lead here, that everybody looked to him. The room
+was a babel of talk, when a few minutes later the doorbell
+rang in orthodox fashion, and Chung ushered
+Cummings in upon the general confusion. Some of
+the bunch knew and spoke to him; others didn't and
+had to be presented; it took the first of his time and
+attention. He only got a chance for one swipe at me,
+a low-toned, sarcastic,</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[Pg 190]</a></span>"Made a mistake to duck me, Boyne."</p>
+
+<p>I didn't think it worth while to answer that.
+Presently I saw him standing with Barbara. He
+was evidently effecting a switch of his theater engagement
+to the ball, for I heard Skeet's,</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Cummings wants a ticket! He'll need two!
+Ten dollars, Mr. Cummings&mdash;five apiece."</p>
+
+<p>"No, no&mdash;Skeet," Barbara laughed embarrassedly.
+"Mr. Cummings was just joking. He'll not be here
+Saturday night."</p>
+
+<p>"I'll come back for it," hand in pocket.</p>
+
+<p>"It's a masquerade&mdash;" Barbara hesitated.</p>
+
+<p>"Bring my costume with me from San Francisco."</p>
+
+<p>"I'm not sure&mdash;" again Barbara hesitated; Skeet
+cut in on her,</p>
+
+<p>"Why, Barbie Wallace! It's what you came to
+Santa Ysobel for&mdash;the Bloss. Fes. ball. And to think
+of your getting a perfectly good man, right at the last
+minute this way, and not having to tag on to Bronse
+and Ina or something like that! I think you're the
+lucky girl," and she clutched Cummings' offered payment
+to stow it with other funds she had collected.</p>
+
+<p>At last they got themselves out of the room and left
+us alone with Cummings. He had carried through
+his little deal with Barbara as though it meant considerable
+to him, but I knew that his errand with
+Worth was serious, and put in quickly,</p>
+
+<p>"I intended to write or phone you to-morrow, Cummings."</p>
+
+<p>"Well," the lawyer worked his mouth a bit under
+that bristly mustache and looked at Worth, "it might
+have saved you some embarrassment if you'd been
+warned of my errand here to-night&mdash;earlier, that is.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[Pg 191]</a></span>
+I suppose Captain Gilbert has told you that I phoned
+him, when I failed to connect with you, that I was
+coming here&mdash;and what I was coming for?"</p>
+
+<p>"I didn't tell Jerry," Worth picked up a cigarette.
+"Couldn't very well tell him what you were coming
+for. Don't know myself."</p>
+
+<p>The words were blunt; really I think there was no
+intention to offend, only the simple statement of a
+fact; but I could see Cummings beginning to simmer,
+as he inquired,</p>
+
+<p>"Does that mean you didn't understand my words on
+the phone, or that you understood them and couldn't
+make out what I meant by them?"</p>
+
+<p>"Little of both," allowed Worth. Cummings
+stepped close to him and let him have it direct:</p>
+
+<p>"I'm here to-night, Captain Gilbert, as executor of
+your father's estate. I have filed the will to-day. I
+might have done so earlier, but when I inventoried this
+place (you remember, the day before the funeral&mdash;you
+were here at the time) I failed to locate a considerable
+portion of your father's estate."</p>
+
+<p>"You failed to locate? All the estate's here; this
+house, the down-town properties. What do you mean,
+failed to locate?"</p>
+
+<p>"I was not alluding to realty," said Cummings.
+"It's my duty to locate and report to the court the
+present whereabouts of seventy-five thousand dollars
+worth of stock in the Van Ness Avenue Savings Bank.
+Can you declare to me as executor, where it is? And,
+if any other person than your father placed it in its
+present whereabouts, are you ready to declare to me
+how and when it came into that person's possession?"</p>
+
+<p>"Quite a lot of words, Cummings; but it doesn't<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[Pg 192]</a></span>
+mean anything," Worth said casually. "You know
+where that bank stock is and who put it there."</p>
+
+<p>"Officially, I do not know. Officially, I demand to
+be told."</p>
+
+<p>"Unofficially, answer it for yourself." Worth
+turned his back on the lawyer to get a match from the
+mantel.</p>
+
+<p>"Very well. My answer is that I intend to find out
+how and when that bank stock which formed a part
+of your payment to the Van Ness Avenue bank disappeared
+from this house."</p>
+
+<p>I admit I was scared. Here was the first gun of the
+coming battle; and I was sure this enemy, who stood
+now looking through half closed eyes at the lad's back,
+would have poisoned gas among his weapons. He
+had emphasized the "<i>when</i>." He believed that the
+stories of Worth's night visit to his father were true;
+that the implied denial by Barbara and myself in my
+office, was false; that Worth had either received the
+stock from his father that Saturday night or taken
+it unlawfully. I was sure that it was the stock certificates
+which I had seen Worth take from the safe-compartment
+of the sideboard in the small hours of
+Monday morning; a breach of legal form which it
+would be possible for a friendly executor to pass
+over.</p>
+
+<p>"Cummings, Worth inherits everything under his
+father's will; what's the difference about a small irregularity
+in taking possession? He&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Never explain, Jerry," Worth shut me up. "Your
+friends don't need it, and your enemies won't believe
+it."</p>
+
+<p>Cummings had stood where he was since the first<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[Pg 193]</a></span>
+of the interview. His face went strangely livid.
+There was more in this than a legal fight.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, Boyne's a fool to try to help your case with
+explanations, Gilbert," he choked out. "I'll see that
+both of you get a chance to answer questions elsewhere&mdash;under
+oath. Good evening." He turned and left.</p>
+
+<p>He had the best of it all around. I endeavored for
+some time to get before Worth the dangers of his
+high-handed defiance of law, order, probate judges,
+and the court's officers, in the person of Allen G.
+Cummings, attorney and his father's executor. He
+listened, yawned&mdash;and suggested that it must be nearly
+bedtime. I gave it up, and we went&mdash;I, at least, with
+a sense of danger ahead upon me&mdash;to our rooms.</p>
+
+<p>Along in the middle of the night I waked to the
+knowledge that a casement window was pounding
+somewhere in the house. For a while I lay and listened
+in that helpless, exaggerated resentment one feels at
+such a time. I'd drop off, get nearly to sleep, only to
+be jerked broad awake again by the thudding. Listening
+carefully I decided that the bothersome window
+was in Worth's room, and finally I got up sense and
+spunk enough to roll out of bed, stick my feet into
+slippers, and sneak over with the intention of locking
+it.</p>
+
+<p>The room was dimly lighted from the street lamps,
+far away as they were; I made my way across it.
+Worth's deep, regular breathing was quite undisturbed.
+I had trouble with the catch, went and felt over the
+bureau and found his flashlight, fixed the window by
+its help, and returning it, remembering how near I
+came to knocking it off the bureau top, thought to put
+it in a drawer which stood half open.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[Pg 194]</a></span>As I aimed it downward, its circle of illumination
+showed something projecting a corner from beneath
+the swirl of ties and sheaf of collars&mdash;a book&mdash;a red
+morocco-bound book. Mechanically I nudged the stuff
+away with the torch itself. What lay there turned me
+cold. It was the 1920 diary!</p>
+
+<p>My fingers relaxed; the flashlight fell with a thump,
+as I let out an exclamation of dismay. A sleepy voice
+inquired from the bed,</p>
+
+<p>"Hi, you Jerry! What you up to in here?"</p>
+
+<p>For answer, I dragged out the book, went over to the
+bed, and switched on the reading lamp there. Worth
+scowled in the glare, and flung his arms up back of his
+head for a pillow to raise it a bit.</p>
+
+<p>"Yeah," blinking amiably at the volume. "Meant
+to tell you. Found it to-day when I was down in the
+repair pit at the garage. It had been stuck in the
+drainpipe there."</p>
+
+<p>"And I suppose," I said savagely, "that if I hadn't
+come onto it now, you'd have burned this, too."</p>
+
+<p>"Don't get sore, Jerry," he said. "I saved it," and
+he yawned.</p>
+
+<p>I had an uncontrollable impulse to have a look at
+that last entry, which would record the bitter final
+quarrel between this boy and his father. No difficulty
+about finding the spot; as I raised the book in my
+hands it fell open of itself at the place. I looked and
+what I saw choked me&mdash;got cross-wise in my throat
+for a moment so no words could come out. I stuck
+the book under his nose, and held it there till I could
+whisper.</p>
+
+<p>"Worth, did you do this?"</p>
+
+<p>The last written page was numbered 49; on it was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[Pg 195]</a></span>
+recorded the date, March sixth; the weather, cloudy,
+clearing late in the afternoon; the fact that the sun had
+set red in a cloudless sky; and it ended abruptly in the
+middle of a phrase. The leaf that carried page 50 had
+been torn out; not cut away carefully as were those
+leaves in the earlier book, but ripped loose, grabbed
+with clutching fingers that scarred and twisted the leaf
+below!</p>
+
+<p>He shoved my hand away and stared at me. For a
+moment I thought everything was over. Certainly I
+could not be a very appealing sight, standing there
+sweating with fear, my hair all stuck up on my head
+where I'd clawed it, shivering in my nightclothes more
+from miserable nervousness than from cold; but somehow
+those eyes of his softened; he gave me one of the
+looks that people who care for Worth will go far to
+get, and said quietly,</p>
+
+<p>"You see what you're doing? I told you I didn't
+steal the book, so that clears me in your mind of being
+the murderer. Now you're after me about this torn-out
+page. If I'd torn it out and stolen it&mdash;you and I
+would know what it would mean."</p>
+
+<p>"But, boy&mdash;," I began, when he suffered a change of
+heart.</p>
+
+<p>"Get out of here! Take that damn book and leave."</p>
+
+<p>He heaved himself over in the bed, hunching the
+covers about his ears, turning his back on me. As I
+crept away, I heard him finish in a sort of mutter&mdash;as
+though to himself&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I'm sorry for you, Jerry Boyne."</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[Pg 196]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XIX" id="CHAPTER_XIX"></a>CHAPTER XIX</h2>
+
+<h3>ON THE HILL-TOP</h3>
+
+<p>Morning dawned on the good ship Jerry Boyne
+not so dismasted and rudderless as you might
+have thought. I'd carried that 1920 diary to my room
+and, before I slept, read the whole of it. This was
+the last word we had from the dead man; here if anywhere
+would be found support for the suggestions of
+a weakening mind and suicide.</p>
+
+<p>Nothing of that sort here; on the contrary, Thomas
+Gilbert was very much his clear-headed, unpleasant,
+tyrannical self to the last stroke of the pen. But I
+came on something to build up a case against Eddie
+Hughes, the chauffeur.</p>
+
+<p>I didn't get much sleep. As soon as I heard Chung
+moving around, I went down, had him give me a cup
+of coffee, then stationed him on the back porch, and
+walked to the study, shut myself in, and discharged my
+heavy police revolver into a corner of the fireplace;
+then with the front door open, fired again.</p>
+
+<p>"How many shots?" I called to Chung.</p>
+
+<p>"One time shoot."</p>
+
+<p>Worth's head poked from his upstairs window as he
+shouted,</p>
+
+<p>"What's the excitement down there?"</p>
+
+<p>"Trying my gun. How many times did I fire?"</p>
+
+<p>"Once, you crazy Indian!" and the question of
+sound-proof walls was settled. Nobody heard the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[Pg 197]</a></span>
+shot that killed Gilbert twenty feet away from the
+study if the door was closed. Mrs. Thornhill's ravings,
+as described in Skeet's letter to Barbara, were
+merely delirium.</p>
+
+<p>I walked out around the driveway to the early
+morning streets of Santa Ysobel. The little town
+looked as peaceful and innocent as a pan of milk. In
+an hour or so, its ways would be full of people rushing
+about getting ready for the carnival, a curious
+contrast to my own business, sinister, tragic. It seemed
+to me that two currents moved almost as one, the
+hidden, dark part under&mdash;for there must be those in
+the town who knew the crime was murder; the murderer
+himself must still be here&mdash;and the foam of
+noisy gayety and blossoms riding atop. A Blossom
+Festival; the boyhood of the year; and I was in the
+midst of it, hunting a murderer!</p>
+
+<p>An hour later I talked to Barbara in the stuffy
+little front room at Capehart's, brow-beaten by the
+noise of Sarah getting breakfast on the other side of
+the thin board partition; more disconcerted by the girl's
+manner of receiving the information of how I had
+found the 1920 diary hidden in Worth's bureau
+drawer. There was a swift, very personal anger at
+me. I had to clear myself instantly and thoroughly
+of any suspicion of believing for a moment that Worth
+himself had stolen or mutilated the book, protesting,</p>
+
+<p>"I don't&mdash;I don't! Listen, Barbara&mdash;be reasonable!"</p>
+
+<p>"That means 'Barbara, be scared!' And I won't.
+When they're scared, people make mistakes."</p>
+
+<p>"You might see differently if you'd been there last
+night when Cummings made his charge against Worth.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[Pg 198]</a></span>
+That seventy two thousand dollars Worth carried up
+to the city Monday morning, he had taken from his
+father's safe the night before."</p>
+
+<p>For a minute she just looked at me, and not even
+Worth Gilbert's dare-devil eyes ever held a more inclusively
+defiant light than those big, soft, dark ones
+of hers.</p>
+
+<p>"Well&mdash;wasn't it his?"</p>
+
+<p>"All right," I said shortly. "I'm not here to talk
+of Worth's financial methods; they're scheduled to get
+him into trouble; but let that pass. Look through
+this book and you'll see who it is I'm after."</p>
+
+<p>She had already opened the volume, and began to
+glance along the pages. She made a motion for me
+to wait. I leaned back in my chair, and it was only
+a few moments later that she looked up to say,</p>
+
+<p>"Don't make the arrest, Mr. Boyne. You have
+nothing here against Eddie&mdash;for murder."</p>
+
+<p>Because I doubted myself, I began to scold, winding
+up,</p>
+
+<p>"All the same, if that gink hasn't jumped town,
+I'll arrest him."</p>
+
+<p>"It would be a good deal more logical to arrest
+him if he had jumped the town," Barbara reminded
+me. "If you really want to see him, Mr. Boyne,
+you'll find him at the garage around on the highway.
+He's working for Bill."</p>
+
+<p>That was a set-back. A fleeing Eddie Hughes
+might have been hopeful; an Eddie Hughes who gave
+his employer back-talk, got himself fired, and then
+settled down within hand-reach, was not so good a
+bet. Barbara saw how it hit me, and offered a suggestion.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[Pg 199]</a></span>"Mr. Boyne, Worth and I are taking a hike out to
+San Leandro canyon this afternoon to get ferns for
+the decorating committee. Suppose you come along&mdash;anyhow,
+a part of the way&mdash;and have a quiet talk,
+all alone with us. Don't do anything until you have
+consulted Worth."</p>
+
+<p>"All right&mdash;I'll go you," I assented, and half past
+two saw the three of us, Worth in corduroys and
+puttees, Barbara with high boots and short, dust-brown
+skirt, tramping out past the homes of people
+toward the open country. At the Vandeman place
+Skeet's truck was out in front, piled with folding
+chairs, frames, light lumber, and a lot of decorative
+stuff. The tall Chinaman came from the house with
+another load.</p>
+
+<p>"You Barbie Wallace!" the flapper howled. "Aren't
+you ashamed to be walking off with Worth and Mr.
+Boyne both, and good men scarce as hen's teeth in
+Santa Ysobel to-day!"</p>
+
+<p>"I'm not walking off with them&mdash;they're walking
+off with me," Barbara laughed at her.</p>
+
+<p>"Shameless one!" Skeet drawled. "I see you let
+Mr. Cummings have a day off&mdash;aren't you the kind
+little boss to 'em!"</p>
+
+<p>I just raised my brows at Barbara, and she explained
+a bit hastily,</p>
+
+<p>"Skeet thinks she has to be silly over the fact that
+Mr. Cummings has gone up to town, I suppose."
+She added with fine indifference, "He'll be back in
+the morning."</p>
+
+<p>"You bet he'll be back in the morning," Worth
+assured the world.</p>
+
+<p>"Now what does he mean by that, Mr. Boyne?"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[Pg 200]</a></span>"He means Cummings is out after him."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't," Worth contradicted me personally. "I
+mean he's after Bobs. She knows it. Look at her."</p>
+
+<p>She glanced up at me from under her hat-brim, all
+the stars out in those shadowy pools that were her
+eyes. The walk had brought sumptuous color to her
+cheeks, where the two extra deep dimples began to
+show.</p>
+
+<p>"You both may think," she began with a sobriety
+that belied the dimples and shining eyes, "looking on
+from the outside, that Mr. Cummings has an idea
+of, as Skeet would say, 'rushing' me; but when we're
+alone together, about all he talks of is Worth."</p>
+
+<p>"Bad sign," Worth flung over a shoulder that he
+pushed a little in advance of us. "Takes the old
+fellows that way. Their notion of falling for a girl
+is to fight all the other Johnnies in sight. Guess
+you've got him going, Bobs."</p>
+
+<p>I walked along, chewing over the matter. She'd
+estimated Cummings fairly, as she did most things
+that she turned that clear mind of hers on; but her
+lack of vanity kept her from realizing, as I did, that
+he was in the way to become a dangerous personal
+enemy to Worth. His self-interest, she thought, would
+eventually swing him to Worth's side. She didn't as
+yet perceive that a motive more powerful than self-interest
+had hold of him now.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, Mr. Boyne," she answered as though I'd
+been speaking my thoughts aloud, "I've known Mr.
+Cummings for years and years. He never&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"You said a mouthful there, Bobs." Worth halted,
+grinning, to interrupt her. "He never&mdash;none whatever.
+But he has now."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[Pg 201]</a></span>"He hasn't."</p>
+
+<p>"Leave it to Jerry. Jerry saw him that first night
+in at Tait's; then afterward, in the office."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, come on!" Barbara started ahead impatiently.
+"What difference would it make."</p>
+
+<p>They went on ahead of me, scrapping briskly, as
+a boy and girl do who have grown up together. I
+stumped along after and reflected on the folly of mankind
+in general, and that of Allen G. Cummings in
+particular. That careful, mature bachelor had seen
+this lustrous young creature blossom to her present
+perfection; he'd no doubt offered her safe and sane
+attention, when she came to live in San Francisco
+where they had friends in common. But it had needed
+Worth Gilbert's appearance on the scene to wake him
+up to his own real feeling. Forty-five on the chase
+of nimble sweet and twenty; Cummings was in for
+sore feet and humiliating tumbles&mdash;and we were in
+for the worst he could do to us. I sighed. Worth
+had more than one way of making enemies, it seemed.</p>
+
+<p>At last we came in sight of the country club upon
+its rise of ground overlooking the golf links. The
+low, brown clubhouse, built bungalow fashion, with a
+long front gallery and gravel sweep, was swarming
+with people&mdash;the decorators. Motors came and went.
+The grounds were being strung with paper lanterns.
+We skirted these, and the links itself where there were
+two or three players, obstinate, defiant old men who
+would have their game in spite of forty blossom festivals&mdash;climbed
+a fence, and crossed the grass up to
+the crest of a little round hill, halting there for the
+view. It wasn't high, but standing free as it did,
+it commanded pretty nearly the entire Santa Ysobel<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[Pg 202]</a></span>
+district. Massed acres of pink and white, the great
+orchards ran one into the other without break for
+miles. The lanes between the trunks, diamonded like
+a harlequin's robe in mathematical primness, were
+newly turned furrows of rich, black soil, against which
+the gray or, sometimes, whitewashed trunks of apricot,
+peach and plum trees gave contrast. Then the cap of
+glorious blossoms, meeting overhead in the older orchards,
+with a warm blue sky above and puffs of
+clouds that matched the pure white of the plum trees'
+bloom.</p>
+
+<p>The spot suited me well; we had left the town behind
+us; here neither Dykeman's spotter nor any one
+he hired to help him could get within listening distance,
+I dropped down on a bank; Worth and Barbara disposed
+themselves, he sprawling his length, she sitting
+cross-legged, just below him.</p>
+
+<p>It wasn't easy to make a beginning. I knew it
+wouldn't do me any particular good with Worth to
+dwell on his danger. But I finally managed to lay
+fairly before them my case against Eddie Hughes, and
+I must say that, as I told it, it sounded pretty strong.</p>
+
+<p>I didn't want to put too much stress on having
+found my evidence in the diaries; I knew Worth was
+as obstinate as a mule, and having said that he would
+not stand for any one being prosecuted on their evidence,
+he'd stick to it till the skies fell. I called on
+my memory of those pages, now unfortunately ashes
+and not get-atable, and explained that Worth's father
+hired Hughes directly after a jail-break at San Jose
+had roused the whole country. Three of the four
+escapes were rounded up in the course of a few days,
+but the fourth&mdash;known to us as Eddie Hughes&mdash;was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[Pg 203]</a></span>
+safe in Thomas Gilbert's garage, working there as
+chauffeur, having been employed without recommendation
+on the strength of what he could do.</p>
+
+<p>"And the low wages he was willing to take," Worth
+put in drily. "Old stuff, Jerry. I wasn't sure till
+you spilled it just now that my father was wise to
+it. But I knew. What you getting at?"</p>
+
+<p>"Just this. When I talked to Hughes that first
+night I came down here with you, while we all supposed
+the death a suicide, he couldn't keep his resentment
+against your father, his hatred of him, from
+boiling over every time he was mentioned."</p>
+
+<p>"Get on," said Worth wearily. "Father hired a
+jail-bird that came cheap. Probably put it to himself
+that he was giving the man a chance to go
+straight."</p>
+
+<p>I glanced up. This was just about what I remembered
+Thomas Gilbert to have said in the entry that
+told of the hiring of Eddie. Worth nodded grimly
+at my startled face.</p>
+
+<p>"Eddie's gone straight since then," he filled in.
+"That is, he's kept out of jail, which is going straight
+for Eddie. He'd certainly hate the man who held him
+as he's been held for five years. Not motive enough
+for murder though."</p>
+
+<p>"There's more. The 1920 diary you gave me last
+night tells when and why the extra bolts were put on
+the study doors. Your father had been missing
+liquor and cigars and believed Hughes was taking
+them."</p>
+
+<p>"Pilfering!" with an expression of distaste. "That
+doesn't&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Hold on!" I stopped him. "On February twelfth<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[Pg 204]</a></span>
+your father left money, marked coin and paper money,
+as if by accident, on the top of the liquor cabinet;
+not exposed, but dropped in under the edge of the
+big ash tray so it might look as though it were forgotten&mdash;in
+a sense, lost there."</p>
+
+<p>"How much?" came the quick question.</p>
+
+<p>"Fifty one dollars." He looked around at me.</p>
+
+<p>"Just one dollar above the limit of petty larceny;
+a hundred cents added to put it in the felony class
+that meant state's prison. So he could have sent
+Eddie to the pen,&mdash;eh? I guess you've got a motive
+there, Boyne."</p>
+
+<p>"Well&mdash;er&mdash;" I squirmed over my statement,
+blurting out finally. "Hughes didn't take the money."</p>
+
+<p>"Knew it was a trap," Worth's laugh was bitter.
+"And hated the man who cold-bloodedly set it to catch
+him. If he didn't take it, don't you think he counted
+it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Worth," I said sharply. "Your father put those
+bolts on&mdash;and continued to find that he was being
+robbed. He was mad about it. Any man would be.
+Say what you will, no one likes to find that persons
+in his employ are stealing from him. The aggravating
+thing was that he couldn't bring it home to
+Hughes, though he was sure of the fact."</p>
+
+<p>"So he went back to what he had known of Eddie
+when he hired him? After profiting by it for five
+years, he was going to rake that up?"</p>
+
+<p>"He was,"&mdash;a bit nettled&mdash;"and well within his
+rights to do so. Three weeks before he was shot, he
+wrote that he'd started the inquiry. There was no
+further mention of the matter in the book as it stands,
+but don't you see that the result of the inquiry must<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[Pg 205]</a></span>
+have been on that torn-out last page? Eddie's Saturday
+night alibi won't hold water. His cannery girl,
+of course, will swear he was with her; but there's no
+corroborating testimony. No one saw them together
+from nine till twelve."</p>
+
+<p>Dead silence dropped on us, with the white clouds
+standing like witnesses in the blue above, the wind
+bringing now and again on its scented wings little
+faint echoes of the noise down at the clubhouse.</p>
+
+<p>"What more do you want?" Both young faces
+were set against me, cold and hostile. "Here was
+motive, opportunity, a suspect capable of the deed.
+My theory is that Mr. Gilbert came in on Hughes,
+caught him in the act of stealing from the cabinet.
+Hughes jumped for the pistol over the fireplace, got
+it, fired the fatal shot, and placed the dead man's
+fingers about the butt of the gun. Then he picked
+up the diary lying on the table, tore out the leaf about
+himself, and poked the rest of the book down the
+drain pipe."</p>
+
+<p>"And the shot?" Worth resisted me. "Why didn't
+the shot bring Chung on the run?"</p>
+
+<p>"Because he couldn't hear it. Nobody'd hear it ten
+paces away. That's what I was trying out this morning.
+You told me I'd fired once. Well, I fired twice;
+once with the door shut, and neither you nor Chung
+heard it; afterward, with the door open&mdash;the report
+you registered."</p>
+
+<p>"The blotter&mdash;and it had been used on that last
+page&mdash;showed no words to strengthen this theory of
+yours," said Barbara as confidently as though the
+little blue square had been clear print, instead of
+broken blurring. Perhaps it was clear to her. I was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[Pg 206]</a></span>
+glad I'd given it a thorough reëxamination the night
+before.</p>
+
+<p>"I think it does," I struggled against the tide, manfully,
+buoying myself up with the tracing of the blotter.
+"Here's the word 'demanded,' reasonably connected
+with the affair. The letters 'ller' may be the
+last end of 'caller,' or possibly 'fuller'; I noticed Gilbert
+spoke in a former entry of the bottle in the cabinet
+and Hughes snitching from it, and used the word
+'fuller.' Here's the word 'Avenue,' complete, and
+Lizzie Watkins, Hughes' girl, lives on Myrtle Avenue."</p>
+
+<p>The silence after that was fairly derisive. Worth
+broke it with an impatient,</p>
+
+<p>"And the fact of the bolted doors throws all that
+stuff out."</p>
+
+<p>"Well," I grunted, "Barbara deduced the slipping
+of some bolts to please you once&mdash;why can't she
+again?"</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Boyne," the girl spoke quickly, "it wouldn't
+help you a bit to be assured that Eddie Hughes could
+enter the study and leave it bolted behind him when
+he went out&mdash;help you to the truth, I mean. These
+facts you've gathered are all wabbly; they'll never
+in the world fit in trim and true. They're hardly
+facts at all. They're partial facts."</p>
+
+<p>"Wouldn't help me?" I ejaculated. "It would
+cinch a case against him. We've got to have some
+one in jail, and that shortly. We're forced to."</p>
+
+<p>"Forced?" Worth had sat up a little and reached
+far forward for a stone that lay among the weeds
+down there. He spoke to me sidewise with a challeng<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[Pg 207]</a></span>ing
+flicker of the eye. Barbara kept her lips tight
+shut.</p>
+
+<p>"I need a prisoner," trying to correct my error;
+then burst out, "My Lord, children! An arrest isn't
+going to hurt a man like Hughes,&mdash;even if he proves
+to be innocent. It's an old story to him. Barbara,
+you said yourself that the man who stole the 1920
+diary was the murderer."</p>
+
+<p>"But I didn't say Eddie Hughes stole it." Her
+tone was significant, and it checked me. I couldn't
+remember what the deuce she had said that night.
+There recurred to me her mimicry of a woman's voice&mdash;Laura
+Bowman's as I believed&mdash;to determine through
+Chung who Thomas Gilbert's feminine visitor had
+been. Should that clue have been followed up before
+I moved on Eddie Hughes? Even as I got to this
+point, I heard Worth, punctuating his remarks with
+the whang of his rock on the bit of twig he was
+pounding to pieces,</p>
+
+<p>"Boyne, I won't stand for any arrest being made
+except in all sincerity&mdash;the person you honestly believe
+to be the criminal."</p>
+
+<p>"Does that mean you forbid me, in so many words,
+to proceed against Hughes on what I've got?"</p>
+
+<p>"It does," Worth said. "You're not convinced
+yourself. Leave it alone."</p>
+
+<p>"'Nough said!" I jumped to my feet. If he
+wouldn't let me lay hands on Hughes&mdash;there was
+nothing to do but go after the next one. "You two
+run along. Get your ferns. There's a man at the
+club here I have to see."</p>
+
+<p>Barbara was afoot instantly; Worth lay looking at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[Pg 208]</a></span>
+her for a moment, then heaved himself up, shook his
+shoulders, and stood beside her.</p>
+
+<p>"Race you to the foot of the hill," she flashed up
+at him.</p>
+
+<p>"You're on," he chuckled. "I'll give you a running
+start&mdash;to the tree down there&mdash;and beat you."</p>
+
+<p>They were off. She ran like a deer. Worth got
+away as though he was in earnest. He caught her up
+just at the finish; I couldn't see which won; but they
+walked a few rods hand in hand.</p>
+
+<p>Something swelled in my throat as I watched them
+away: life's springtime&mdash;and the year's; boy and girl
+running, like kids that had never known a fear or a
+mortal burden, over an earth greener than any other,
+because its time of verdure is brief, dreaming already
+of the golden-tan of California midsummer, under
+boughs where tree blooms made all the air sweet.</p>
+
+<p>For sake of the boy and the girl who didn't know
+enough to take care of their own happiness, I wheeled
+and galloped in the direction of the country club.</p>
+
+<p>There is an institution known&mdash;and respected&mdash;in
+police circles as the Holy Scare. I was determined to
+make use of it. I'd throw a holy scare into a man I
+knew, and see what came out.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[Pg 209]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XX" id="CHAPTER_XX"></a>CHAPTER XX</h2>
+
+<h3>AT THE COUNTRY CLUB</h3>
+
+<p>The country club, when I walked up its lawn,
+was noisy with the hammering and jawing of
+its decoration committee. Out in the glass belvedere,
+like superior goods on display, taking it easy while
+every one else worked, I saw a group of young matrons
+of the smart set, Ina Vandeman among them, drinking
+tea. The open play she was making at Worth
+troubled me a little. He was the silent kind that keeps
+you guessing. She'd landed him once; what was to
+hinder her being successful with the same tactics&mdash;whatever
+they'd been&mdash;a second time?</p>
+
+<p>Then I saw Edwards' car was still out in the big,
+crescent driveway, showing by the drift of twigs and
+petals on its running board that it had been used to
+bring in tree blooms from his ranch; the man himself
+crossed the veranda, and I hailed,</p>
+
+<p>"Any place inside where you and I could have a
+private word together?"</p>
+
+<p>"I&mdash;I think so, Boyne," he hesitated. "Come on
+back here."</p>
+
+<p>He led me straight across the big assembly room
+which was being trimmed for the ball. From the top
+of a stepladder, Skeet Thornhill yelled to us,</p>
+
+<p>"Where you two going? Come back here, and get
+on the job."</p>
+
+<p>She had a dozen noisy assistants. I waved at her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[Pg 210]</a></span>
+from the further door as we ducked. Strange that
+honest, sound little thing should be own sister to the
+doll-faced vamp out there in the showcase.</p>
+
+<p>Edwards made for a little writing room at the end
+of a corridor. I followed his long, nervous stride.
+If the man had been goaded to the shooting of
+Thomas Gilbert, it would have been an act of passion,
+and by passion he would betray himself. When I
+had him alone, the door shut, I went to it, told him we
+knew the death was murder, not suicide, and that the
+crime had been committed early Saturday night. Before
+I could connect him with it, he broke in on me,</p>
+
+<p>"Is Worth suspected?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not by me," I said. "And by God, not by you,
+Edwards! You know better than that."</p>
+
+<p>I held his eye, but read nothing beyond what might
+have been the flare of quick anger for the boy's sake.</p>
+
+<p>"Who then?" he said. "Who's dared to lisp a
+word like that? That hound Cummings&mdash;chasing
+around Santa Ysobel with Bowman&mdash;is that where it
+comes from? I told Worth the fellow was knifing
+him in the back." He began to stride up and down
+the room. "The boy's got other friends&mdash;that'll go
+their length for him. I'm with him till hell freezes
+over. You can count on me&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Exactly what I wanted to find out," I cut in, so
+significantly that he whirled at the end of his beat and
+stared.</p>
+
+<p>"Meaning?"</p>
+
+<p>"Meaning you are the one man who could clear
+Worth Gilbert of all suspicion."</p>
+
+<p>"<i>What do you know?</i>"</p>
+
+<p>The big voice had come down to a mere whisper.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[Pg 211]</a></span>
+Plenty of passion now&mdash;a passion of terror. I spoke
+quickly.</p>
+
+<p>"We know you were in the study that night, with a
+companion," and I piled out the worst of his affair, as
+I'd read it in the diaries, winding up,</p>
+
+<p>"Plain what brought you there. Quarrel? Motive?
+Don't need to look any further."</p>
+
+<p>Before I was done Jim Edwards had groped over
+to a chair and slumped into it. A queer, toneless
+voice asked,</p>
+
+<p>"Worth sent you to me&mdash;a detective&mdash;with this?"</p>
+
+<p>"No," I said. "I'm acting on my own."</p>
+
+<p>"And against his will," it came back instantly.</p>
+
+<p>"What of it?" I demanded. "Are you the coward
+to take advantage of his sense of honor?&mdash;to let
+his generosity cost him his life?"</p>
+
+<p>"His life." That landed. Watching, I saw the
+struggle that tore him. He jumped up and started
+toward me; I hadn't much doubt that I was now going
+to hear a plea for mercy&mdash;a confession, of sorts&mdash;as
+he stopped, dropped his head, and stood scowling
+at the floor.</p>
+
+<p>"Talk," I said. "Spill it. Now's your time."</p>
+
+<p>He raised his eyes to mine and spoke suddenly.</p>
+
+<p>"Boyne&mdash;I have nothing to say."</p>
+
+<p>"And Worth Gilbert can hang and be damned to
+him&mdash;is that it?" I took another step toward him.
+"No, Edwards, that 'nothing to say' stuff won't go in
+a court of law. It won't get you anywhere."</p>
+
+<p>"They'll never in the world&mdash;try Worth for&mdash;that
+killing."</p>
+
+<p>"I'm expecting his arrest any hour."</p>
+
+<p>"A trial! Those cursed diaries of Tom's brought<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[Pg 212]</a></span>
+into court&mdash;My God! I believe if I'd known he'd
+written things like that, I could have killed him for it!"</p>
+
+<p>I stared. He had forgotten me. But at this speech
+I mentally dropped him for the moment, and fastened
+my suspicions on the woman who went with him to the
+study.</p>
+
+<p>"All right," I said brutally. "You didn't kill
+Thomas Gilbert. But you took Mrs. Bowman to the
+study that night to have it out with him, and get six
+pages from the 1916 book. She got 'em&mdash;and you
+know what she had to do to get 'em."</p>
+
+<p>"Hold on, Boyne!" he said sternly. "Don't you
+talk like that to me."</p>
+
+<p>"Well," I said, "Mrs. Bowman was there&mdash;after
+those diary leaves. I heard Barbara Wallace imitate
+her voice&mdash;and Chung recognized the imitation. You
+know&mdash;that night at the study&mdash;the first night."</p>
+
+<p>He took a bewildered moment or two for thought,
+then broke out,</p>
+
+<p>"It wasn't Laura's voice Barbara imitated. Did
+she say so?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, but she imitated the voice of a woman who
+came weeping to get those pages from the diary; and
+who else would that be? Who else would want
+them?"</p>
+
+<p>"You're off the track, Boyne," he drew a great,
+shuddering sigh of relief. "Tom was always playing
+the tyrant to those about him; no doubt some woman
+did come crying for that stuff&mdash;but it wasn't Laura."</p>
+
+<p>"By Heaven!" I exclaimed as I looked at him. "You
+know who it was! You recognized the voice that
+night&mdash;but the woman isn't one you're interested in."</p>
+
+<p>"I'm interested in all women, so far as their getting<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[Pg 213]</a></span>
+a decent show in the world is concerned," he maintained
+sturdily. "I'd go as far as any man to defend
+the good name of a woman&mdash;whether I thought much
+of her or not."</p>
+
+<p>"This other woman," I argued, not any too keen
+on such a job myself, "hasn't she got some man to
+speak for her?"</p>
+
+<p>Edwards looked at me innocently.</p>
+
+<p>"She didn't have, then&mdash;" he began, and I finished
+for him,</p>
+
+<p>"But she has now. I've got it!" As I jumped up
+and hurried to the door, his eyes followed me in
+wonder. There I turned with, "Stay right where you
+are. I'll be back in a minute," ducked out into the
+hall and signaled a passing messenger, then stepped
+quickly back into the writing room and said, "I've
+sent for Bronson Vandeman."</p>
+
+<p>He settled deeper in his chair with,</p>
+
+<p>"I'll stay and see it out. If you get anything from
+Vandeman, I miss my guess."</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[Pg 214]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXI" id="CHAPTER_XXI"></a>CHAPTER XXI</h2>
+
+<h3>A MATTER OF TASTE</h3>
+
+<p>Upon our few moments of strained waiting, Vandeman
+breezed in, full of apologies for his shirtsleeves.
+I remember noticing the monogram worked
+on the left silken arm, the fit and swing of immaculate
+trousers, as smoothly modeled to the hip as a girl's
+gown; his ever smiling face; the slightly exaggerated
+way he wiped fingers already clean on a handkerchief
+pulled from a rear pocket. He was the only unconstrained
+person in the room; he hardly looked surprised;
+his glance was merely inquiring. Edwards
+apparently couldn't stand it. He jumped up and
+began his characteristic pacing of one end of the
+constricted place, jerking out as he walked,</p>
+
+<p>"Bronse, it's my fault that Boyne sent for you.
+He's working on this trouble of Worth's, you know.
+He's had me in here, grilling me, shaking me over
+hell; and something I said&mdash;God knows why&mdash;sent
+him after you."</p>
+
+<p>"Trouble of Worth's!" Vandeman had been about
+to sit; his half bent knees straightened out again; he
+stood beside the chair and spoke irritably. "Told you,
+Boyne, if you meddled with that coroner's verdict
+you'd get your employer in the devil of a tight place.
+Nobody had any reason for wanting Worth's father
+out of the way&mdash;except Worth, himself. Frankly,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[Pg 215]</a></span>
+I think you're wrong. But everything that I can do&mdash;of
+course&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"All right," I said, letting it fly at him. "Where
+was your wife from seven to half past nine on the
+evening of Gilbert's murder?"</p>
+
+<p>Back went his head; out flashed all the fine teeth;
+the man laughed in my face.</p>
+
+<p>"Excuse me, Mr. Boyne. I understand that this
+is serious&mdash;nothing funny about it&mdash;but really, you
+know, recalling the date, what you've said is amusing.
+My dear man," he went on as I stared at him, "please
+remember, yourself, where Ina was on that particular
+evening."</p>
+
+<p>"The wedding and reception were done with by
+seven o'clock," I objected. This ground was familiar
+with me. I'd been over it in considering what opportunity
+Laura Bowman would have had for a call
+on Thomas Gilbert at the required hour. If she could
+slip away for it, why not Ina Vandeman? As though
+he read my thoughts and answered them, Vandeman
+filled in,</p>
+
+<p>"A bride, you know, is dead certain to have at least
+half a dozen persons with her every minute of the
+time until she leaves the house on her wedding trip.
+Ina did, I'm sure. We'll just call her in, and she'll
+give you their names."</p>
+
+<p>He was up and starting to bring her; I stopped him.</p>
+
+<p>"We'll not bother with those names just now. I'd
+rather have you&mdash;or Mrs. Vandeman&mdash;tell me what
+you suppose would be the entry in Thomas Gilbert's
+diary for May 31 and June 1, 1916. I have already
+identified it as the date on which the Bowmans first
+moved into the Wallace house. I think Mr. Edwards<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[Pg 216]</a></span>
+knows something more, but he's not so communicative
+as you promise to be."</p>
+
+<p>He looked as if he wished he hadn't been so liberal
+with his assurances. I saw him glance half sulkily
+at Edwards, as he exclaimed,</p>
+
+<p>"But those diaries are burned&mdash;they're burned.
+Worth told us the other night that he burned them
+without reading."</p>
+
+<p>At the words, Edwards stopped stock-still, something
+almost humorous at the back of the suffering
+gaze he fastened on my face. I met it steadily, then
+answered Vandeman,</p>
+
+<p>"Doesn't make any difference to anybody that those
+books are burned. I'd read them; I know what was
+in them; and I know that three leaves&mdash;six pages&mdash;covering
+the entries of May 31 and June 1, 1916,
+were cut out."</p>
+
+<p>"But what the deuce, Boyne?" Vandeman wrinkled
+a smooth brow. "What would some leaves gone from
+Mr. Gilbert's diary four years ago have to do with
+us here to-day&mdash;or even with his recent death?"</p>
+
+<p>"Pardon me," I said shortly. "The matter's not as
+old as that. True, the stuff was written four years
+ago; it recorded happenings on those dates; but the
+ink that was used in marking out a run-over on the
+next following page was fresh. Anyhow, Mr. Vandeman,
+we know that a woman came weeping to Mr.
+Gilbert on the very night of his death, only a short
+time before his death&mdash;as nearly as medical science
+can determine that&mdash;and we believe that she came after
+those leaves out of the diary, and got them&mdash;whatever
+she had to do to secure them."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[Pg 217]</a></span>I was struck with the difference in the way these
+two men took inquiry. Edwards had writhed, changed
+color, started to speak and caught himself back,
+showed all the agony of a clumsy criminal who dreads
+the probing that may give him away: temperament;
+the rotten spot in his affairs. Vandeman, younger,
+not entangled with an unhappy married woman, sat
+looking me in the eye, still smiling. The blow I had
+to deal him would be harder. It concerned his bride;
+but he'd take punishment well. I proceeded to let him
+have it.</p>
+
+<p>"I can see that Mr. Edwards has an idea what the
+entries on those pages covered. He has inadvertently
+shown me that your wife was the woman who came
+and got them from Thomas Gilbert on the night he
+was murdered."</p>
+
+<p>At that he turned on Edwards, and Edwards answered
+the look with,</p>
+
+<p>"I didn't. On my honor, Bronse, I never mentioned
+your name or Ina's. The Chinaman told him
+that&mdash;about some woman coming that evening&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Vandeman," I broke in, "there's no use beating
+about the bush. Chung recognized your wife's
+voice. She was the woman who came weeping to get
+those diary leaves."</p>
+
+<p>He took that with astonishing quietness, and,</p>
+
+<p>"Suppose you were shown that she wasn't out of
+her mother's house?"</p>
+
+<p>"Wouldn't stop me. Allow that her alibi's perfect.
+Yet you men have something. There's something
+here I ought to know."</p>
+
+<p>"Something you'll never find out from me," Jim<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[Pg 218]</a></span>
+Edwards' deep voice was full of defiance. "Bronse,
+I owe you an apology; but you can depend on me to
+keep my mouth shut."</p>
+
+<p>After a minute's consideration Vandeman said,</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know why we should any of us keep our
+mouths shut."</p>
+
+<p>Jim Edwards looked utterly bewildered as the man
+sat there, thinking the thing over, glanced up pleasantly
+at me and suggested,</p>
+
+<p>"Edwards has a little different slant on this from
+me. I don't know why I shouldn't state to you exactly
+what happened&mdash;right there in Gilbert's study
+on the date you mentioned."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, there did something unusual happen; and
+you've just remembered it."</p>
+
+<p>"There did something unusual happen, and I've
+just remembered it, aided thereto by your questions
+and Edwards' queer looks. Cheer up, old man; we
+haven't all got your southern chivalry. From a plain,
+commonsense point of view, what I have to tell is not
+in the least to my wife's discredit. In fact, I'm proud
+of her all the way through."</p>
+
+<p>Jim Edwards came suddenly and nervously to his
+feet, strode to the further corner of the room and sat
+down at as great a distance from Vandeman as its
+dimensions would permit. He turned his face to the
+small window there, and through all that Vandeman
+said, kept up a steady, maddening tattoo with his
+fingernails on the sill.</p>
+
+<p>"This has to do with what I told you the first night
+I ever talked with you, Boyne. You threw doubt on
+Thomas Gilbert's death being suicide. I gave as a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[Pg 219]</a></span>
+reason for my belief that it was, a knowledge and
+conviction that the man's mind was unhinged."</p>
+
+<p>Edwards' tattoo at the window ceased for a minute.
+He stared, startled, at the speaker, then went back to
+it, and Vandeman proceeded,</p>
+
+<p>"I'm not telling Jim Edwards anything he doesn't
+know, and what I say to you, Boyne, that's discreditable
+to the dead, I can't avoid. Here it is: on the
+evening of June first, 1916, I had dinner alone at
+home. You'll find, if you look at an old calendar,
+that it falls on a Sunday. Jim Edwards had dined
+informally at the Thornhills'. As he told it to me
+later, they were all sitting out on the side porch after
+dinner, and nobody noticed that Ina wasn't with them
+until they heard cries coming from somewhere over
+in the direction of the Gilbert place. At my house,
+I'd heard it, and we both ran for the garage, where
+the screams were repeated again and again. We got
+there about the same time, found the disturbance was
+in the study, and Edwards who was ahead of me
+rushed up and hammered on its door."</p>
+
+<p>Again Jim Edwards stopped the nervous drumming
+of his fingers on the window-sill while he stared at the
+younger man as at some prodigy of nature. Finally
+he seemed unable to hold in any longer.</p>
+
+<p>"Hammered on the door!" he repeated. "If you're
+going to turn out the whole damn' thing to Boyne,
+tell it straight; door was open; we couldn't have heard
+a yip out of Ina if it hadn't been. Tom there in full
+sight, sitting in his desk chair, cool as a cucumber,
+letting her scream."</p>
+
+<p>"I'm telling this," Vandeman snapped. "Gilbert<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[Pg 220]</a></span>
+looked to me like an insane man. Jim, you're crazy
+as he was, to say anything else. Never supposed for
+a minute you thought otherwise&mdash;that poor girl there,
+dazed with fright, backed as far away from him as she
+could get, hair flying, eyes wild."</p>
+
+<p>I looked from one to the other. What Edwards had
+said of the cold, contemptuous old man; what Vandeman
+told of the screaming girl; no answer to such
+a proposition of course but an attempted frame-up.
+To let the bridegroom get by would best serve my
+purpose.</p>
+
+<p>"All right, gentlemen," I said. "And now could
+you tell me what action you took, on this state of
+affairs?"</p>
+
+<p>"Action?" Vandeman gave me an uneasy look.
+"What was there to do? Told you I thought the
+man was crazy."</p>
+
+<p>"And you, Edwards?"</p>
+
+<p>"Let it go as Bronse says. I cut back to Mrs.
+Thornhill's, scouting to see what the chance was for
+getting Ina in without the family knowing anything."</p>
+
+<p>"That's right," Vandeman said. "I stayed to fetch
+her. She was fine. To the last, she let Gilbert save
+his face&mdash;actually send her home as though she were
+the one to blame. Right then I knew I loved her&mdash;wanted
+her for my wife. On the way home, I asked
+her and was accepted."</p>
+
+<p>"In spite of the fact that she was engaged to Worth
+Gilbert?"</p>
+
+<p>"Boyne," he said impatiently, "what's the matter
+with you? Haven't I made you understand what
+happened there at the study? She had to break off<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[Pg 221]</a></span>
+with the son of a man like that. Ina Thornhill
+couldn't marry into such a breed."</p>
+
+<p>"Slow up, Vandeman!" Edwards' tone was soft,
+but when I looked at him, I saw a tawny spark in his
+black eyes. Vandeman fronted him with the flamboyant
+embroidered monogram on his shirt sleeve,
+the carefully careless tie, the utterly good clothes, and,
+most of all, at the moment, the smug satisfaction in
+his face of social and human security. I thought of
+what that Frenchman says about there being nothing
+so enjoyable to us as the troubles of our friends.
+"Needn't think you can put it all over the boy when
+he's not here to defend himself&mdash;jump on him because
+he's down! Tell that your wife discarded him&mdash;cast
+him off&mdash;for disgraceful reasons! Damnitall! You
+and I both heard Tom giving her her orders to break
+with his son, she sniffling and hunting hairpins over
+the floor and promising that she would."</p>
+
+<p>"Cut it out!" yelled Vandeman, as though some
+one had pinched him. "I saw nothing of the sort.
+I heard nothing of the sort. Neither did you."</p>
+
+<p>I think they had forgotten me, and that they remembered
+at about the same instant that they were talking
+before a detective. They both turned, mum and startled
+looking, Edwards to his window, Vandeman to
+a nervous brushing of his trouser edges, from which
+he looked up, inquiring doubtfully,</p>
+
+<p>"What next, Boyne? Jim's excited; but you understand
+that there's no animus; and my wife and I
+are entirely at your disposal in this matter."</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you," I said.</p>
+
+<p>"Would you like to talk to her?"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[Pg 222]</a></span>"I would."</p>
+
+<p>"When?"</p>
+
+<p>"Now."</p>
+
+<p>"Where?"</p>
+
+<p>"Here&mdash;or let the lady say."</p>
+
+<p>Vandeman gave me a queer look and went out.
+When he was gone, I found Jim Edwards scrabbling
+for his hat where it had dropped over behind the desk.
+I put my back against the door and asked,</p>
+
+<p>"Is Bronson Vandeman a fatuous fool; or does he
+take me for one?"</p>
+
+<p>"Some men defend their women one way, and some
+another. Let me out of this, Boyne, before that girl
+gets here."</p>
+
+<p>"She won't come in a hurry," I smiled. "Her husband's
+pretty free with his promises; but more than
+likely I'll have to go after her if I want her."</p>
+
+<p>"Well?" he looked at me uncomfortably.</p>
+
+<p>"Blackmail's a crime, you know, Edwards. A
+woman capable of it, might be capable of murder."</p>
+
+<p>"You've got the wrong word there, Boyne. This
+wasn't exactly blackmail."</p>
+
+<p>"What, then?"</p>
+
+<p>"The girl&mdash;I never liked her&mdash;never thought she
+was good enough for Worth&mdash;but she was engaged to
+him, and&mdash;in this I think she was fighting for her
+hand."</p>
+
+<p>He searched my face and went on cautiously,</p>
+
+<p>"You read the diaries. They must have had complaints
+of her."</p>
+
+<p>"They had," I assented.</p>
+
+<p>"Anything about money?"</p>
+
+<p>I shook my head.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[Pg 223]</a></span>"You said there were two entries gone; the first
+would have told you, I suppose&mdash;Before we go further,
+Boyne, let me make a little explanation to you&mdash;for the
+girl's sake."</p>
+
+<p>"Shoot," I said.</p>
+
+<p>"It was this way," he sighed. "Thornhill, Ina's
+father, made fifteen or twenty thousand a year I would
+say, and the family lived it up. He had a stroke and
+died in a week's time. Left Mrs. Thornhill with her
+daughters, her big house, her fine social position&mdash;and
+mighty little to keep it up on. Ina is the eldest. She
+got the worst of it, because at the first of her being a
+young lady she was used to having all the money she
+wanted to spend. The twins were right on her heels;
+the thing for her to do was to make a good marriage,
+and make it quick. But she got engaged to Worth;
+then he went to France. There you were. He
+might never come back. Tom always hated her;
+watched her like a hawk; got onto something she&mdash;about&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Out with it," I said. "What? Come down to
+cases."</p>
+
+<p>"Money." He uttered the one word and stood
+silent.</p>
+
+<p>I made a long shot, with,</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Gilbert found she'd been getting money from
+other men&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Borrowing, Boyne&mdash;they used the word 'borrowed,'"
+Edwards put in. "It was always Tom's way
+to summon people as though he had a little private
+judgment bar, haul them up and lecture them; I
+suppose he thought he had a special license in her
+case."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[Pg 224]</a></span>"And she went prepared to frame him and bluff
+him to a standoff. Is that the way you saw it?"</p>
+
+<p>"My opinion&mdash;what I might think," said Mr. James
+Edwards of Sunnyvale ranch, "wouldn't be testimony
+in a court of law. You don't want it, Boyne."</p>
+
+<p>"Maybe not," I grunted. "Perhaps I could make
+as good a guess as you could at what young Mrs. Vandeman's
+capable of; a dolly face, and behind it the
+courage of hell."</p>
+
+<p>"Boyne," he said, as I left the door free to him,
+"quit making war on women."</p>
+
+<p>"Can't," I grinned and waved him on out. "The
+detective business would be a total loss without 'em."</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[Pg 225]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXII" id="CHAPTER_XXII"></a>CHAPTER XXII</h2>
+
+<h3>A DINNER INVITATION</h3>
+
+<p>"Look what's after you, man," Skeet warned me
+from her lofty perch as I went out through the
+big room in quest of Ina Vandeman. "Better you
+stay here. I gif you a yob. Lots safer&mdash;only run
+the risk of getting your neck broken."</p>
+
+<p>I grinned up into her jolly, freckled face, and waited
+for the woman who came toward me with that elastic,
+swinging movement of hers, the well-opened eyes
+studying me, keeping all their secrets behind them.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Boyne," a hand on my arm guided me to a
+side door; we stepped together out on to a small balcony
+that led to the lawn. "My husband brought me
+your message. Nobody over by the tennis court;
+let's go and walk up and down there."</p>
+
+<p>Her fingers remained on my sleeve as we moved off;
+she emphasized her points from time to time by a slight
+pressure.</p>
+
+<p>"Such a relief to have a man like you in charge of
+this investigation." She gave me an intimate smile;
+tall as she was, her face was almost on a level with
+my own, yet I still found her eyes unreadable, none of
+those quick tremors under the skin that register the
+emotions of excitable humanity. She remained a
+handsome, perfectly groomed, and entirely unruffled
+young woman.</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you," was all I said.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[Pg 226]</a></span>"Mr. Vandeman and I understand how very, very
+serious this is. Of course, now, neighbors and intimates
+of Mr. Gilbert are under inspection. Everybody's
+private affairs are liable to be turned out.
+We've all got to take our medicine. No use feeling
+personal resentment."</p>
+
+<p>Fine; but she'd have done better to keep her hands
+off me. An old police detective knows too much of
+the class of women who use that lever. I looked at
+them now, white, delicate, many-ringed, much more
+expressive than her face, and I thought them capable
+of anything.</p>
+
+<p>"Here are the names you'll want," she fumbled in
+the girdle of her gown, brought out a paper and passed
+it over. "These are the ones who stayed after the
+reception, went up to my room with me, and helped
+me change&mdash;or rather, hindered me."</p>
+
+<p>"The ones," I didn't open the paper yet, just looked
+at her across it, "who were with you all the time from
+the reception till you left the house for San Francisco?"</p>
+
+<p>"It's like this," again she smiled at me, "the five
+whose names are on that paper might any one of them
+have been in and out of my room during the time. I
+can't say as to that. But <i>they</i> can swear that <i>I</i> wasn't
+out of the room&mdash;because I wasn't dressed. As soon
+as I changed from my wedding gown to my traveling
+suit, I went down stairs and we were all together till
+we drove to San Francisco and supper at Tait's, where
+I had the pleasure of meeting you, Mr. Boyne."</p>
+
+<p>"I understand," I said. "They could all speak for
+you&mdash;but you couldn't speak for them." Then I
+opened and looked. Some list! The social and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[Pg 227]</a></span>
+financial elect of Santa Ysobel: bankers' ladies; prune
+kings' daughters; persons you couldn't doubt, or buy.
+But at the top of all was Laura Bowman's name.</p>
+
+<p>We had halted for the turn at the end of the court.
+I held the paper before her.</p>
+
+<p>"How about this one? Do you think she was in
+the room all the time? Or have you any recollection?"</p>
+
+<p>The bride moved a little closer and spoke low.</p>
+
+<p>"Laura and the doctor were in the middle of one of
+their grand rows. She's a bunch of temperament.
+Mamma was ill; the girls were having to start out with
+only Laura for chaperone; she said something about
+going somewhere, and it wouldn't take her long&mdash;she'd
+be back in plenty of time. But whether she went or
+not&mdash;Mr. Boyne, you don't want us to tell you our
+speculations and guesses? That wouldn't be fair,
+would it?"</p>
+
+<p>"It wouldn't hurt anything," I countered. "I'll
+only make use of what can be proven. Anything you
+say is safe with me."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, then, of course you know all about the situation
+between Laura and Jim Edwards. Laura was
+determined she wouldn't go up to San Francisco with
+her husband&mdash;or if she did, he must drive her back
+the same night. She wouldn't even leave our house to
+get her things from home; the doctor, poor man,
+packed some sort of bag for her and brought it over.
+When he came back with it, she wasn't to be found;
+and she never did appear until we were getting into the
+machine."</p>
+
+<p>I listened, glancing anxiously toward the skyline of
+that little hill over which Worth and Barbara might
+be expected to appear almost any moment now. Then<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[Pg 228]</a></span>
+we made the turn at the end of the court, and my view
+of it was cut off.</p>
+
+<p>"Laura and Jim&mdash;they're the ones this is going to
+be hard on. I do feel sorry for them. She's always
+been a problem to her family and friends. A great
+deal's been overlooked. Everybody likes Jim; but&mdash;he's
+a southerner; intrigue comes natural to them."</p>
+
+<p>Five minutes before I had been listening to Edwards'
+pitiful defense of this girl; I recalled his
+"scouting" for a chance to get her home unseen and
+save her standing with her family. That could be
+classed as intrigue, too, I suppose. We were strolling
+slowly toward the clubhouse.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't give Dr. Bowman much," I said deliberately.
+A quick look came my way, and,</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Gilbert was greatly attached to him. Everybody's
+always believed that only Mr. Gilbert's influence
+held that match together. Now he's dead, and Laura's
+freed from some sort of control he seemed to have
+over her, of course she hopes and expects she'll be
+able to divorce the doctor in peace and marry Jim."</p>
+
+<p>"No movement of the sort yet?"</p>
+
+<p>She stopped and faced round toward me.</p>
+
+<p>"Dr. Bowman&mdash;he's our family physician, you
+know&mdash;is trying for a very fine position away from
+here, in an exclusive sanitarium. Divorce proceedings
+coming now would ruin his chances. But I don't know
+how long he can persuade Laura to hold off. She's in
+a strange mood; I can't make her out, myself. She
+disliked Gilbert; yet his death seems to have upset her
+frightfully."</p>
+
+<p>"You say she didn't like Mr. Gilbert?"</p>
+
+<p>"They hated each other. But&mdash;he was so peculiar<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[Pg 229]</a></span>&mdash;of
+course that wasn't strange. Many people detested
+him. Bron never did. He always forgave him
+everything because he said he was insane. Bron told
+you my experience&mdash;the one that made me break with
+Worth?"</p>
+
+<p>She looked at me, a level look; no shifting of color,
+no flutter of eyelid or throat. We were at the clubhouse
+steps.</p>
+
+<p>"Here comes the boy himself," I warned as Worth
+and Barbara, their arms full of ferns, rounded the turn
+from the little dip at the side of the grounds where
+the stream went through. We stood and waited for
+them.</p>
+
+<p>"You two," Ina spoke quickly to them. "Mr.
+Boyne's just promised to come over to dinner to-morrow
+night." Her glance asked me to accept the fib and
+the invitation. "I want both of you."</p>
+
+<p>"I'm going to be at your house anyhow, Ina,"
+Barbara said, "working with Skeet painting those big
+banners they've tacked up out in your court. You'll
+have to feed us; but we'll be pretty messy. I don't
+know about a dinner party."</p>
+
+<p>"It isn't," Ina protested, smiling. "It's just what
+you said&mdash;feeding you. Nobody there besides yourself
+and Skeet but Mr. Boyne and Worth&mdash;if he'll
+come."</p>
+
+<p>"I have to go up to San Francisco to-morrow," said
+Worth.</p>
+
+<p>"But you'll be back by dinner time?" Ina added
+quickly.</p>
+
+<p>"If I make it at all."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, you can come just as you are, if you get in
+at the last minute," she said, and he and Barbara went<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[Pg 230]</a></span>
+on to carry their ferns in. When they were out of
+hearing, she turned and floored me with,</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Vandeman has forbidden me to say this to
+you, but I'm going to speak. If Worth doesn't have
+to be told about me&mdash;and his father&mdash;I'd be glad."</p>
+
+<p>"If the missing leaves of the diary are ever found,"
+I came up slowly, "he'd probably know then." I
+watched her as I said it. What a strange look of
+satisfaction in the little curves about her mouth as she
+spoke next:</p>
+
+<p>"Those leaves will never be found, Mr. Boyne. I
+burned them. Mr. Gilbert presented them to me as a
+wedding gift. He was insane, but, intending to take
+his own life, I think even his strangely warped conscience
+refused to let a lying record stand against an
+innocent girl who had never done him any harm."</p>
+
+<p>We stood silent a moment, then she looked round at
+me brightly with,</p>
+
+<p>"You're coming to dinner to-morrow night? So
+glad to have you. At seven o'clock. Well&mdash;if this is
+all, then?" and at my nod, she went up the steps, turning
+at the side door to smile and wave at me.</p>
+
+<p>What a woman! I could but admire her nerve. If
+her alibi proved copper-fastened, as something told me
+it would, I had no more hope of bringing home the
+murder of Thomas Gilbert to Mrs. Bronson Vandeman
+of Santa Ysobel than I had of readjusting the stars in
+their courses!</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[Pg 231]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXIII" id="CHAPTER_XXIII"></a>CHAPTER XXIII</h2>
+
+<h3>A BIT OF SILK</h3>
+
+<p>I must admit that when Worth and Barbara
+walked up and found me talking to Ina Vandeman,
+I felt caught dead to rights. The girl gave me one
+long, steady look. I was afraid of Barbara Wallace's
+eyes. Then and there I relinquished all idea of having
+her help in this inquiry. She could have done it much
+better than I, attracted less attention&mdash;but no matter.
+The awkward moment went by, however; I heaved a
+sigh of relief as they carried their ferns on into the
+clubhouse, and Mrs. Vandeman left me with gracious
+good-bys.</p>
+
+<p>I had the luck to cover my first inquiry by getting
+a lift into town from Mrs. Ormsby, young wife of the
+president of the First National. Alone with me in her
+little electric, she answered every question I cared to
+put, and said she would be careful to speak to no one
+of the matter. Three others I caught on the wing,
+as it were, busy at blossom festival affairs; the fête
+only one day off now, things were moving fast. I
+glimpsed Dr. Bowman down town and thought he
+rather carefully avoided seeing me. His wife was
+taking no part; the word went that she was not able;
+but when I called at what had been the Wallace and
+was now the Bowman home, I found the front door
+open and two ladies in the hall.</p>
+
+<p>One of them, Laura Bowman herself, came flying<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[Pg 232]</a></span>
+out to meet me&mdash;or rather, it seemed, to stop me, with
+a face of dismay.</p>
+
+<p>"My mother's here, Mr. Boyne!" Her hand was
+clammy cold; she'd been warned of me and my errand.
+"I don't want to take you through that way."</p>
+
+<p>I stood passive, and let her do the saying.</p>
+
+<p>"Around here," she faltered. "We can go in at the
+side door."</p>
+
+<p>We skirted the house by a narrow walk; she was
+leading the way by this other entrance, when, spread
+out over its low step, blocking our progress, I saw a
+small Japanese woman ripping up a satin dress.</p>
+
+<p>"Let us pass, Oomie."</p>
+
+<p>"Wait. We can talk as well here," I checked her.
+We moved on a few paces, out of earshot of the girl;
+but before I could put my questions, she began with a
+sort of shattered vehemence to protest that Thomas
+Gilbert's death was suicide.</p>
+
+<p>"It was, Mr. Boyne. Anybody who knew the
+scourge Thomas had been to those he must have loved
+in his queer, distorted way, and any one who loved
+them, could believe he might take his own life."</p>
+
+<p>"You speak freely, Mrs. Bowman," I said. "Then
+you hated the man?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I did! For years past I've never heard of a
+death without wondering that God took other human
+beings and let him live. Now that he's killed himself,
+it seems dreadful to me that suspicion should be cast
+on&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Mrs. Bowman," I interrupted. "Thomas Gilbert's
+death was murder. All persons who could have had
+motive or might have had opportunity to kill him will<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[Pg 233]</a></span>
+be under suspicion till the investigation clears them of
+it. I'm now ascertaining the whereabouts of Ina Vandeman
+that evening."</p>
+
+<p>A shudder went through her; she looked at me
+feelingly, twisting her hands together in the way I
+remembered. Despite her distress, she was very simple
+and accessible. She gave me no resistance, admitted
+her absence from the Thornhill house at about the time
+the party was ready to start for San Francisco&mdash;Edwards,
+of course. I got nothing new here. She
+seemed thankful enough to go into the house when I
+released her.</p>
+
+<p>I lingered a moment to have a word with the little
+Japanese woman on the step.</p>
+
+<p>"How long you work this place?"</p>
+
+<p>"Two hours af-noon, every day," ducking and
+giggling like a mechanical toy.</p>
+
+<p>Just a piece-worker, not a regular servant.</p>
+
+<p>"Pretty dress," I touched the satin on the step.
+"Whose?"</p>
+
+<p>"Mine." Grinning, she spread a breadth out over
+her knees. "Lady no like any more. Mine." It was
+a peculiar shade of peacock blue; unless I was mistaken,
+the one Mrs. Bowman had worn that night at
+Tait's.</p>
+
+<p>"Hello&mdash;what's this?" I bent to examine a small
+hole in the hem of that breadth Oomie was so delightedly
+smoothing.</p>
+
+<p>"O-o-o-o! I think may-may burn'm. Not like
+any more."</p>
+
+<p>There was a small round hole. Just so a cigarette
+might have seared&mdash;or a bullet.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[Pg 234]</a></span>"Not can use," I said to Oomie, indicating the
+injured bit. "Cut that off. Give me." And I laid
+a silver dollar on the step.</p>
+
+<p>Giggling, the little brown woman snipped out the bit
+of hem and handed it to me. I glanced up from tucking
+it into my pocket, and saw Laura Bowman's white
+face staring at me through the glass of that side entry
+door.</p>
+
+<p>A suggestive lead, certainly; but it's my way to
+follow one lead at a time: I went on to the Thornhill
+place.</p>
+
+<p>Everybody there would know my errand; for
+though, with taste I could but admire, Ina had put no
+name of any member of the family on her list, she of
+course expected me to call on them, and would never
+have let her sisters leave the country club without a
+warning.</p>
+
+<p>The three were just taking their hats off in the hall
+when I arrived. I did my questioning there, not
+troubling to take them separately. Cora and Ernestine,
+a well bred pair of Inas, without her pep, perhaps
+a shade less good looking, made their replies with none
+of the usual flutter of feminine curiosity and excitement,
+then went on in the living room. Skeet of
+course was as practical and brief as a sensible boy.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know whether she's fit to see you," she
+said when I spoke of her mother. And on the instant,
+Ina Vandeman's clear, high voice called down the stair,</p>
+
+<p>"Bring Mr. Boyne up&mdash;now."</p>
+
+<p>Skeet stepped aside for me to pass. I suppose I
+looked as startled as I felt, for on my way to the
+house, I had seen Mrs. Vandeman drive past toward<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[Pg 235]</a></span>
+town. I stood there at a loss, and finally said aimlessly,</p>
+
+<p>"Your sister thinks it's all right?"</p>
+
+<p>"My sister?" Skeet wrinkled her brows at me, and
+glanced to where the twins were in sight in the living
+room. "That was mother herself who called you."</p>
+
+<p>All the way up the stairs, Skeet following, I was
+trying to swing my rather heavy wits around to take
+advantage of this new development. So far, Ina Vandeman's
+voice, imitated by Barbara Wallace, and recognized
+by Chung and Jim Edwards, possibly by
+Worth, had been my lead in this direction. If more
+than one woman spoke in that voice&mdash;where would it
+take me?</p>
+
+<p>I'd got no adjustment before I was ushered into a
+large dim room, and confronted by a figure in a reclining
+chair by the window. Here, in spite of years
+and illness, were the same good looks and thoroughbred
+courage that seemed to characterize the women
+of this family. Mrs. Thornhill greeted me in Ina
+Vandeman's very tones, a little high-pitched for real
+sweetness, full of a dominating quality, and she
+showed a composure I had not expected. To Skeet,
+standing by, watching to see that her mother didn't
+overdo in talking to me, she said,</p>
+
+<p>"Dear, go down stairs. Jane's left her dinner on
+the range and gone to the grocery. You look after it
+while she's away."</p>
+
+<p>When we were alone, she lay back in her chair,
+eyes closed, or seemingly so, and made her statement.
+She'd been in her daughter's room only twice between
+the reception and that daughter's going away.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[Pg 236]</a></span>"But the room was full of other people," a glimmer
+between lashes. "I could give you the names of those
+others."</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you," I said. "Mrs. Vandeman has already
+done that. I've seen them all."</p>
+
+<p>"You've seen them&mdash;all?" a long, furtively drawn
+breath. Then her eyes flashed open and fixed themselves
+on me. Relief was there, yet something
+stricken, as they traveled over me from my gray
+thatch to my big feet.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, Mrs. Thornhill," I said, "aside from those
+two visits to your daughter's room, where were you
+that evening?"</p>
+
+<p>A slow flush crept into her thin cheeks. The unreadable
+eyes that were traveling over Jerry Boyne
+stopped suddenly and held him with a quiet stare.</p>
+
+<p>"I understood it was my daughter's movements on
+that evening you wished to trace, Mr. Boyne," she
+said slowly. "It would be difficult to trace mine.
+Really, I had so much on my hands with the reception
+and inefficient help&mdash;" She broke off, her eyes never
+leaving my own, even as she added smoothly, "It
+would be very, very difficult."</p>
+
+<p>There is an effect in class almost like the distinction
+of race. These women spoke a baffling language;
+their psychology was hard for me. If there was something
+hid up amongst them that ought to be uncovered
+by diplomacy and delicate indirection, it would take a
+smarter man than the one who stood in my number
+tens to do it.</p>
+
+<p>"Mrs. Thornhill," I said, "you did leave the house.
+You went to Mr. Gilbert's study. The shot that killed
+him left you a nervous wreck, so that you can't hear<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[Pg 237]</a></span>
+a tire blow-out without reënacting in your mind the
+scene of that murder. You'll talk now."</p>
+
+<p>"You think I will? Talk to you?" very low and
+quiet, eyes once more closed.</p>
+
+<p>"Why not? It's got to come; here in your own
+home, with me&mdash;or I'll have to put you where you'll
+be forced to answer questions."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, you threaten me, do you?" Her eyes flashed
+open, and looked at me, hard as flint. "Very well.
+I'll answer no questions as to what happened on the
+evening of Thomas Gilbert's death, except in the
+presence of Worth Gilbert, his son."</p>
+
+<p>My retirement down the Thornhill stairs, made with
+such dignity as I could muster, was in fact, a panic
+flight. Halfway, Cora Thornhill all but finished me
+by looking out from the living room, and calling in
+Ina Vandeman's voice,</p>
+
+<p>"Erne, show Mr. Boyne out, won't you?"</p>
+
+<p>Ernestine completed the job when she answered&mdash;in
+Ina Vandeman's voice, also&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, dear; I will." It was only the scraps of me
+that she swept out through the front door.</p>
+
+<p>I stood on the porch and mopped my brow. Across,
+there at the Gilbert place was Worth himself, charging
+around the grounds with Vandeman and a lot of
+other decorators, pruning shears in hand, going for a
+thicket of bamboos that shut off the vegetable garden.
+At one side Barbara stood alone, looking, it seemed
+to me, rather depressed. I made for her. She met
+me with,</p>
+
+<p>"I know what you've been doing. Skeet came to
+me about it while Ina was phoning home from the
+country club."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[Pg 238]</a></span>"Well&mdash;she should worry! I've just finished with
+her list. Got an unbreakable alibi."</p>
+
+<p>"She would have," Barbara said listlessly. "She
+wasn't at the study that evening."</p>
+
+<p>"Huh! I worked on your tip that she was."</p>
+
+<p>Barbara had pulled off the little stitched hat she
+wore; yet the deep flush on her cheeks was neither
+from sun nor an afternoon's hard work. It, and the
+quick straightening of her figure, the lift of her chin,
+had to do with me and my activities.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Boyne," the black eyes came around to me with
+a flash, "do you suspect me of trying to pay off a
+spite on Ina Vandeman?"</p>
+
+<p>"Good Lord&mdash;no!" I exploded. "And anyhow,
+I've just found that what you imitated and Chung
+recognized, might as well have been the mother's voice
+as the daughter's."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," she assented. "Any one of the family&mdash;under
+stress of emotion." Then suddenly, "And why
+do I tell you that? You'll not get from it what I
+do. I ought never to have mixed up my kind of
+mental work with other people's. I'd promised my
+own soul that I would never make another deduction.
+Then Worth came and asked me&mdash;that night at Tait's.
+I might say now that I never will any more...."
+She broke off, storm in her eyes and in her voice as
+she finished, "But I suppose if he wanted me to again&mdash;I'd
+make a little fool of myself for his amusement
+just as I did this time and have done all these other
+times!"</p>
+
+<p>"I'll not ask anything more of you, Barbara," I
+said to her hastily, confused and abashed before the
+glimpse she'd given me of her heart. "Except that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[Pg 239]</a></span>
+I beg you to stay good friends with Cummings. That
+man hates Worth. If you turned him down now&mdash;say,
+for the ball, or anything like that&mdash;he'd be twice
+as hard for us to handle. Keep him a passive enemy
+instead of an active one, as long as he seems to find
+it necessary to hang around Santa Ysobel."</p>
+
+<p>"You know what's holding Mr. Cummings here,
+don't you?" She glanced somberly past the bamboo
+gatherers to where we saw a gray corner of the study
+with its pink ivy geranium blossoms atop. "Mr. Cummings
+is held here by two steel bolts&mdash;the bolts on
+those study doors. Until he finds how they can be
+moved through an inch of planking&mdash;he'll not leave
+Santa Ysobel."</p>
+
+<p>She'd put it in a nutshell. And I couldn't let him
+beat me to it. I'd got to get the jump on him.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[Pg 240]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXIV" id="CHAPTER_XXIV"></a>CHAPTER XXIV</h2>
+
+<h3>THE MAGNET</h3>
+
+<p>I had all set for next morning: my roadster at
+Capehart's for repair, old Bill tipped off that I
+didn't want any one but Eddie Hughes to work on it;
+and to add to my satisfaction, there arrived in my
+daily grist from the office, the report that they had
+Skeels in jail at Tiajuana.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, Jerry, old socks," Worth hailed my news as
+I followed out to his car where he was starting for
+San Francisco, and going to drop me at the Capehart
+garage, "Some luck! If Skeels is in jail at Tiajuana,
+and what I'm after to-day turns out right, we may
+have both ends of the string."</p>
+
+<p>Pink-and-white were the miles of orchards surrounding
+Santa Ysobel, pink-and-white nearly all the
+dooryards, every tree its own little carnival of bloom
+with bees for guests. Already the streets were full
+of life, double the usual traffic. As we neared the
+Capehart cottage, on its quiet side street about half
+a block from the garage, there was Barbara under the
+apple boughs at the gate, talking to some man whose
+back was to us. She bowed; I answered with a wave
+toward the garage; but Worth scooted us past without,
+I thought, once glancing her way, sent the roadster
+across Main where he should have stopped and
+let me out, went on and into the highway at a clip
+which rocked us.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[Pg 241]</a></span>"Was that Cummings?" holding my hat on. No
+answer that I could hear, while we made speed toward
+San Francisco. And still no word was spoken until
+we had outraged the sensibilities of all whose bad
+luck it was to meet us, those whom we passed going
+at a more reasonable pace, scared a team of work
+horses into the ditch, and settled down to a steady
+whiz.</p>
+
+<p>We were getting away from Santa Ysobel a good
+deal further and a good deal faster than I felt I could
+afford. I took a chance and remarked, to nobody in
+particular, and in a loud voice,</p>
+
+<p>"I asked Barbara not to make a break with Cummings;
+it would be awkward for us now if she did."</p>
+
+<p>"Break?" Worth gave me back one of my words.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. I was afraid she might throw him down
+for the carnival ball."</p>
+
+<p>Without comment or reply, he slowed gently for
+the big turn where the Medlow road comes in, swept
+a handsome circle and headed back. Then he remarked,</p>
+
+<p>"Thought I'd show you what the little boat could
+do under my management. Eddie had her in fair
+shape, but I've tuned her up a notch or two since."</p>
+
+<p>I responded with proper enthusiasm, and would
+have been perfectly willing to be let out at Main Street.
+But he turned the corner there, ran on to the garage,
+jumped out and followed me in. Bill, selling some
+used tires to a customer in the office, nodded and let
+us go past to where my machine stood. We heard
+voices back in the repair shop and a hum of swift whirring
+shafts and pulleys. Worth kept with me. It embarrassed
+me&mdash;made me nervous. It was as though he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[Pg 242]</a></span>
+had some notion of my purpose there. Hughes, at
+his lathe, caught sight of us and growled over his
+shoulder,</p>
+
+<p>"Yer machine's ready."</p>
+
+<p>This wouldn't do. I stepped to the door, with,</p>
+
+<p>"Fixed the radiator, did you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Sure. Whaddye think?" Hughes was at work
+on something for a girl; she perched at one end of his
+bench, swinging her feet. Worth, behind me, touched
+my shoulder, and I saw that the girl over there was
+Barbara Wallace.</p>
+
+<p>She looked up at us and smiled. The sun slanting
+through dirt covered windows, made color effects on
+her silken black hair. Eddie gave us another scowl
+and went on with his work.</p>
+
+<p>"Hello, Bobs," Worth's greeting was casual.
+"Thought I'd stop and tell you I was on my way&mdash;you
+know." A glance of understanding passed between
+them. "Better come along?"</p>
+
+<p>"I'd like to," she smiled. "You'll be back by dinner
+time. If it wasn't the last day, and I hadn't
+promised&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Neither of them in any hurry.</p>
+
+<p>"Hughes," I said, "there's another thing needs doing
+on that car of mine&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Can't do nothing at all till I finish her job," he
+shrugged me off.</p>
+
+<p>"All right," and I stepped through into the grassy
+back yard, put a smoke in my face, and began walking
+up and down, my glance, each time I turned, encountering
+that queer bunch inside: Worth, hands
+in pockets; the chauffeur he had discharged&mdash;and that
+I was waiting to get for murder&mdash;bending at his vise;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[Pg 243]</a></span>
+Barbara's shining dark head close to the tousled unkemptness
+of his poll, as she explained to him the
+pulley arrangement needed to raise and anchor the
+banner she and Skeet were painting.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly, at the far end of my beat, I was brought
+up by a little outcry and stir. As I wheeled toward
+the door, I saw Bobs and Worth in it, apparently
+wrestling over something. Laughing, crying, she hung
+to his wrist with one hand, the other covering one of
+her eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Let me look!" he demanded. "I won't touch it,
+if you don't want me to. You have got something in
+there, Bobs."</p>
+
+<p>But when she reluctantly gave him his chance, he
+treacherously went for her with a corner of his handkerchief
+in the traditional way, and she backed off,
+uttering a cry that fetched Hughes around from the
+lathe, roaring at Worth, above the noise of the machinery,</p>
+
+<p>"What's the matter with her?"</p>
+
+<p>"Steel splinter&mdash;in her eye," Worth shouted.</p>
+
+<p>With a quick oath, the belt pole was thrown to stop
+the lathe; down the length of the shop to the scrap
+heap of odds and ends at the rear Hughes raced, returning
+with a bit of metal in his hand. Barbara
+was backed against the bench, her eyes shut, and tears
+had begun to flow from under the lids.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, Miss Barbie," Hughes remonstrated. "You
+let me at that thing. This'll pull it out and never
+touch you." I saw it was a horse-shoe magnet he
+carried.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you think it will?"</p>
+
+<p>"Sure," and Eddie approached the magnet to her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[Pg 244]</a></span>
+face. "It won't hurt you a-tall. She'll begin to pull
+before she even touches. Now, steady. Want to
+come as near contact as I can. Don't jump....
+Hell!"</p>
+
+<p>Barbara had sprung away from him. But for
+Worth's quick arm, she would have been into the
+machines.</p>
+
+<p>"No!" she said between locked teeth, tears on her
+cheeks, "I can't let him."</p>
+
+<p>"Why, Barbara!" I said, astonished; and poor
+Eddie almost blubbered as he begged,</p>
+
+<p>"Aw, come on, Miss Barbie. It was my fault in the
+first place&mdash;leavin' that damned lathe run. Yuh got
+to let me&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"But if it doesn't work?"</p>
+
+<p>"Sure it'll work. Would I offer to use it for you
+if I hadn't tried it out lots o' times&mdash;to pull splinters
+and&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Give me that magnet," Worth reached the long
+arm of authority, got what he wanted, shouldered
+Hughes aside, and took hold of the girl with, "Quit
+being a little fool, Barbara. That thing's only caught
+in your lashes now. Let it get in against the eyeball
+and you'll have trouble. Hold still."</p>
+
+<p>The command was not needed. Without a word,
+Barbara raised her face, put her hands behind her
+and waited.</p>
+
+<p>Delicately, Worth caught the dark fringe of the
+closed eye, turned back the lid so that he could see
+just what he was at, brought the horse-shoe almost
+in touch, then drew it away&mdash;and there was the tiny
+steel splinter that could have cost her sight, clinging
+to the magnet's edge.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[Pg 245]</a></span>"Here you are," he smiled. "Wasn't that enough
+to call you names for?"</p>
+
+<p>"You didn't call me names," dabbing away with a
+small handkerchief. "You told me to quit being a
+little fool. Maybe I will. How would you like that?"</p>
+
+<p>Apparently Hughes did not resent Barbara's refusing
+his help and accepting Worth's. He went back
+to his vise; the two others strolled together through
+the doorway into the garage, talking there for a
+moment in quick, low tones; then Barbara returned
+to perch on the end of Eddie's bench, play with the
+magnet and watch him at work. I lit up again and
+stepped out.</p>
+
+<p>I could see Barbara gather some nails, screws and
+loose pieces of iron, hold a bit of board over them,
+and trail the magnet back and forth along its top.
+Though a half inch of wood intervened, the metal
+trash on the bench followed the magnet to and fro.
+I got nothing out of that except that Barbara was still
+a child, playing like a child, till I looked up suddenly
+to find that she had ceased the play, brought her feet
+up to curl them under her in the familiar Buddha
+pose, while the busy hands were dropped and folded
+before her. Her rebellion of yesterday evening&mdash;and
+now her taking up the concentration unasked&mdash;she
+wouldn't want me to notice what she was doing;
+I ducked out of sight. I had walked up and down
+that yard a half dozen times more, when over me
+with a rush came the significance of those moving
+bits of iron, trailing a magnet on the other side of a
+board. Three long steps took me to the door.</p>
+
+<p>"Hughes," I shouted, "I'm taking my machine now.
+Be back directly."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[Pg 246]</a></span>The man grunted without turning around. I had
+forgotten Barbara, but as I was climbing into the
+roadster, I heard her jump to the floor and start after
+me.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Boyne! Wait! Mr. Boyne!"</p>
+
+<p>I checked and sat grinning as she came up, the
+magnet in her hand. I reached for it.</p>
+
+<p>"Give me that," I whispered. "Want to go along
+and see me use it?"</p>
+
+<p>"No&mdash;no&mdash;" in hushed protest. "You're making a
+mistake, Mr. Boyne."</p>
+
+<p>"Mistake? I saw what you did in there. Said you
+never would again&mdash;then went right to it! You sure
+got something this time! Girl&mdash;girl! You've turned
+the trick!"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, <i>no</i>! You mustn't take it like that, Mr. Boyne.
+This is nothing&mdash;as it stands. Just a single unrelated
+fact that I used with others to concentrate on. Wait.
+Do wait&mdash;till Worth comes back, anyhow."</p>
+
+<p>"All right." I felt that our voices were getting
+loud, that we'd talked here too long. No use of
+flushing the game before I was loaded. "First thing
+to do is to verify this." I felt good all over.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, of course," she smiled faintly. "You would
+want to do that." And she climbed in beside me.</p>
+
+<p>I drove so fast that Barbara had no chance to question
+me, though she did find openings for remonstrating
+at my speed. I dashed into the driveway of the
+Gilbert place and came to an abrupt stop at the doors
+of the garage. And right away I bumped up against
+my first check. I gripped the magnet, raced to the
+study door with it, she following more slowly to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[Pg 247]</a></span>
+watch while I passed it along the wooden panel where
+the bolt ran on the other side; and nothing doing!</p>
+
+<p>Again she followed as I ran around to the outside
+door, opened up and tried it on the bare bolt itself;
+no stir. While she sat in the desk chair at that central
+table, her elbows on its top, her hands lightly clasped,
+the chin dropped in interlaced fingers, following my
+movements with very little interest, I puffed and
+worked, opened a door and tried to move the bolt
+when it wasn't in the socket, and felt like cursing in
+disappointment.</p>
+
+<p>"A little oil&mdash;" I grumbled, more to myself than
+to her, and hurried to the garage workbench for the
+can that would certainly be there. It was, but I
+didn't touch it. What I did lean over and clutch from
+where they lay tossed in carelessly among rubbish and
+old spare parts, were three more magnets exactly the
+same as the one we had brought from Capehart's. I
+sprinted back with them.</p>
+
+<p>"Barbara," I called in an undertone. "Come here.
+Look."</p>
+
+<p>Held side by side, the four, working as one, moved
+the bolts as well as fingers could have done, and
+through more than an inch of hard wood.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," she looked at it; "but that doesn't prove
+Eddie Hughes the murderer."</p>
+
+<p>"No?" her opposition began to get on my nerves.
+"I'm afraid that'll be a matter for twelve good men
+and true to settle." She stood silent, and I added,
+"I know now whose shadow I saw on the broken
+panel of that door there, the first Sunday night."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, it was Eddie's," she agreed rather unexpectedly.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[Pg 248]</a></span>"And he came to steal the 1920 diary," I supplied.</p>
+
+<p>"He came to get a drink from the cellaret, and a
+cigar from the case. That's the use he made of his
+power to move these bolts."</p>
+
+<p>"Until the Saturday night when he killed his
+employer, the man he hated, and left things so the
+crime would pass as suicide. Barbara, are you just
+plain perverse?"</p>
+
+<p>Instead of answering, she went back to the table,
+got the contraption Hughes had made for her, and
+started as if to leave me. On the threshold, she
+hesitated.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't suppose there's anything I can say or do
+to change your mind," her tone was inert, drained.
+"I know that Eddie is innocent of this. But you don't
+want to listen to deductions."</p>
+
+<p>"Later," I said to her, briskly. "It'll keep. I've
+something to do now."</p>
+
+<p>"What? You promised Worth to make no move
+against Eddie Hughes until you had his permission."
+She seemed to think that settled it. I let her keep
+the idea.</p>
+
+<p>"Run along, Barbara," I said, "get to your paint
+daubing. I'll forgive you everything for deducing&mdash;well,
+discovering, if you like that better&mdash;about these
+bolts and magnets."</p>
+
+<p>Skeet burst from the kitchen door of the Thornhill
+house, caught sight of us, shouted something unintelligible,
+and came racing through the grounds
+toward Vandeman's.</p>
+
+<p>"Been waiting for me long, angel?" she called, as
+Barbara moved up with a lagging step, then, waving
+two pairs of overalls, "Got pants for both of us, honey.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[Pg 249]</a></span>
+The paints and brushes are over there. We'll make
+short work of that old banner, now."</p>
+
+<p>Promised Worth, had I? But the situation was
+changed since then. No man of sense could object to
+my moving on what I had now. I locked the study
+door, went back to my roadster, and headed her uptown.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[Pg 250]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXV" id="CHAPTER_XXV"></a>CHAPTER XXV</h2>
+
+<h3>AN ARREST</h3>
+
+<p>It was a thankful if not a joyous Jerry Boyne who
+crossed the front pergola of the Vandeman bungalow
+that evening in the wake of Worth Gilbert,
+bound for an informal dinner. The tall, unconscious
+lad who stepped ahead of me had been made safe in
+spite of himself. This weight off my mind, I felt
+kindly to the whole world, to the man under whose
+dining table we were to stretch our legs, whose embarrassing
+private affairs I had uncovered. He'd taken
+it well&mdash;seconding his wife's dinner invitation, meeting
+my eye frankly whenever we encountered. My
+mood was expansive. When Vandeman himself
+opened the door to us, explaining that he was his own
+butler for the day, I saw him quite other than he had
+ever appeared to me.</p>
+
+<p>For one thing, here in his own house&mdash;and this was
+the first time I had ever been in it&mdash;you got the man
+with his proper background, his suitable atmosphere.
+The handsome living room into which he took us,
+showed many old pieces of mahogany, and some of
+the finest oriental stuff I ever saw; books in cases, sets
+of standard writers, such as people of culture bought
+thirty or forty years ago, some family pictures about.
+This was Vandeman; a lot behind such a fellow, after
+all, if he did seem rather a lightweight.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[Pg 251]</a></span>Ina joined us, very beautifully dressed. She also
+showed the ability to sink unpleasant considerations in
+the present moment of hospitality. We lingered a
+moment chatting, then,</p>
+
+<p>"Shall we go and look at the artists working?" she
+suggested, and led the way. We followed out onto
+a flagged terrace at the rear. A dozen great muslin
+strips were tacked over the walls there, and two small
+figures, desperate, smudged, wearing the blue overalls
+Skeet Thornhill had waved at us, toiled manfully
+smearing the blossom festival colors on in lettering
+and ornamental designs.</p>
+
+<p>"Ina!" Skeet yawped at her sister, "Another dirty,
+low Irish trick! Get yourself all dressed up like a
+sore thumb, and then show us off in this fix!"</p>
+
+<p>Mutely Barbara revolved on the box she occupied.
+There was fire in her soft eyes; her color was high as
+her glance came to rest on Worth.</p>
+
+<p>"Fong Ling's nearly ready to serve dinner," said
+Ina calmly. "Stop fussing, and go wash up."</p>
+
+<p>"Hello, Mr. Boyne." As Skeet passed me, she
+wiped a paw on a paint rag and offered it to me without
+another word. I got a grip and a look that told
+me there was no hang-over with her from that scene
+yesterday in her mother's sick-room. Vandeman was
+commenting on his depleted bamboo clumps.</p>
+
+<p>"Mine suffered worse than yours, Worth. Fong
+Ling kicked like a bay steer about our taking so much.
+He's nursed the stuff for years like a fond mother.
+But we had to have it for that effect up around the
+orchestra stand."</p>
+
+<p>"Then he's been with you a long time?" I caught
+at the chance for information on this chink&mdash;information<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[Pg 252]</a></span>
+that I'd found it impossible to get from the chink
+himself.</p>
+
+<p>"Ever since I came in here. Chinamen, you know&mdash;not
+like Japs. Some loyalty. You can keep a good
+one for half a lifetime."</p>
+
+<p>We strolled back to the living room; the girls were
+there before us, Skeet picking out bits of plum-blossoms
+and bunches of cherry bloom from a great
+bowl on the mantel, and sticking them in Barbara's
+dark hair, wreath fashion.</p>
+
+<p>"Best we could do at a splurge," she greeted us,
+"was to turn in our blouses at the neck."</p>
+
+<p>"And what in the world are you doing to Barbara?"
+Mrs. Vandeman said sharply. "Let her alone, Skeet.
+You'll make her look ridiculous."</p>
+
+<p>Skeet stuck out her tongue at her sister, and went
+calmly on, mumbling as she worked,</p>
+
+<p>"Hold 'till 'ittle Barbie child. Yook up at pretty
+mans and hold 'till."</p>
+
+<p>Over the mantel, in front of Barbara as she stood,
+her back to us all, hung an oil painting&mdash;one of those
+family groups&mdash;same old popper; same old mommer,
+and a fat baby in a white dress and blue sash. At
+that, it was good enough to show that the man had
+some resemblance to Vandeman as he leaned there on
+the mantel below it, rather encouraging Skeet's enterprise.
+From the other side, I could see Barbara's
+glance go from man to picture.</p>
+
+<p>"Doesn't it look like Van, Barbie?" Skeet kept up
+the conversation. "Got the same ring, and all. But
+it ain't Van. Him's the tootsie in there with the blue
+ribbon round his tummy."</p>
+
+<p>"I say, Skeeter, lay off!" Vandeman looked self-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[Pg 253]</a></span>consciously
+from the painted ring in the picture to the
+real ring on his own well kept hand there on the
+mantel edge. "People aren't interested in family
+histories."</p>
+
+<p>"I am," said Barbara, unexpectedly. As the gong
+sounded and we all began to move toward the dining
+room, they were still on the subject and kept it up
+after we were seated.</p>
+
+<p>Fong Ling served us. The bride had Worth on her
+right, and talked to him in lowered tones. Barbara,
+between Vandeman and myself, continued to show an
+almost feverish attention to Vandeman. It was plain
+enough from where I sat that nothing Ina Vandeman
+could say gave the lad any less interest in his plate.
+But I suppose with a girl, the mere fact of some other
+girl being allowed to show intentions counts. Did the
+flapper get what was going on, as she looked proudly
+across at her handiwork, and demanded of me,</p>
+
+<p>"Say, Mr. Boyne, you saw how Ina tried to do us
+dirt? And now, honest to goodness, hasn't Barbie
+with the plum-blossoms got Ina and her artificial
+flowers skun a mile?"</p>
+
+<p>I didn't wonder that young Mrs. Vandeman saved
+me the necessity of answering, by taking her up.</p>
+
+<p>"Skeet, you're too outrageous!"</p>
+
+<p>There she sat, quite a beauty in a very superior
+fashion; and Worth at her side, was having his attention
+called to this dark young creature across the table,
+whose wonderful still fire, the white blossoms crowning
+her hair, might well have made even a lovelier than
+Ina Vandeman look insipid. And Worth did take his
+time admiring her; I saw that; but all he found to say
+was,</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[Pg 254]</a></span>"Bobs, I suppose Jerry's told you that he's treed
+Clayte at Tiajuana?"</p>
+
+<p>"No," said Barbara, "he hasn't said a word. But
+I'm just as much surprised at Clayte's being caught
+as I was at Skeels escaping capture."</p>
+
+<p>"Say that over and say it slow," Vandeman was
+good natured. "Or rather, put it in plain American,
+so we all can understand."</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Boyne knows what I mean." Barbara gave
+me a faint smile. "Mr. Boyne and I add up Skeels
+and Clayte, and get a different result. That's all."</p>
+
+<p>"Bobs doesn't think that Skeels is Clayte, caught or
+uncaught," Worth said briefly and went on eating his
+dinner. Apparently he didn't give a hang which way
+the fact turned out to be.</p>
+
+<p>"Why don't you?" Vandeman gave passing attention.
+She shook her head and put it.</p>
+
+<p>"Skeels, at liberty, was quite possibly Clayte; Skeels
+captured cannot be Clayte. Mr. Boyne, do you call
+that a paradox?"</p>
+
+<p>"No&mdash;an unkind slam at a poor old man's ability in
+his profession. I started out to find a gang; but Clayte
+and Skeels are so exactly one, mentally, morally and
+physically, that I don't see why we should seek further."</p>
+
+<p>"Back up, Jerry," Worth tossed it over at me. "Let
+Barbara"&mdash;he didn't often use the girl's full name that
+way&mdash;"give you a description of Clayte before you're
+so sure."</p>
+
+<p>"How could I?" The girl's tone was defensive.
+"I never saw him."</p>
+
+<p>"I want you," Worth paid no attention to her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[Pg 255]</a></span>
+objections, "to describe the man you thought you were
+asking for that day at the Gold Nugget, when Jerry
+butted in, and your ideas got lost in the excitement
+about Skeels. Deduce the description, I mean."</p>
+
+<p>"Deduce it?" Barbara spoke stiffly, incredulously,
+her glance going from Worth to the well-gowned, well-groomed
+woman beside him. I remembered her moment
+of rebellion yesterday evening on the lawn, when
+she said so bitterly that if he asked it again, she'd do it
+again, as she finished, "Deduce&mdash;here?"</p>
+
+<p>"Here and now." Worth's laconic answer sent the
+blood of healthy anger into her face, made her eyes
+shine. And it brought from Ina Vandeman a petulant,</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Worth, please don't turn my dinner table into
+a side-show."</p>
+
+<p>"Ina, dear." Vandeman raised his eyes at her, then
+quite the cordial host urging a guest to display
+talent, "They say you're wonderful at that sort of
+thing, and I've never seen it."</p>
+
+<p>Barbara was mad for fair.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, very well," she spoke pointedly to Vandeman,
+and left Worth out of it. "If you think you'd really
+enjoy seeing me make a side-show of Ina's dinner
+table&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>She stopped and waited. Vandeman played up to
+the situation as he saw it, with one of his ready smiles.
+Worth threw no life-line. Ina didn't think it worth
+while to apologize for her rudeness. Skeet was openly
+in a twitter of anticipation. There was nothing for
+me to do. A little commotion of skirts told us that
+she was drawing up her feet to sit cross-legged in her
+chair.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[Pg 256]</a></span>"She's going to! Oh, golly!" Skeet chortled.
+"Haven't seen Bobsy do one of those stunts since I
+was a che-ild!"</p>
+
+<p>Arms down, hands clasped, eyes growing bigger,
+face paling into snow, we watched her. To all but
+Vandeman, this was a more or less familiar performance.
+They took it rather as a matter of course. It
+was the Chinaman, coming in with the coffee tray, who
+seemed most strangely affected by it. He stopped
+where he was in the doorway, rigid, staring at our
+girl, though with a changeful light in his eye that
+seemed to me to shift between an unreasonable admiration
+and an unreasonable fear. Orientals are superstitious;
+but what could the fellow be afraid of in the
+beautiful young thing, Buddha posed, blossoms in her
+hair? The girl had gone into her stunt with a sort of
+angry energy. He seemed to clutch himself to stillness
+for the brief time that it held. Only in the
+moment that she relaxed, and we knew that Barbara
+had concentrated, Barbara was Barbara again, did he
+move quietly forward, a decent, competent servant,
+stepping around the table, placing our cups.</p>
+
+<p>"Just two facts to go on," she said coldly. "My
+results will be pretty general."</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing to go on in the way of a description of
+Clayte," I tried to help her out. "I'd call that one
+we had of him as near nothing as it well could be."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, the nothingness of it was one of my facts,"
+she said, and stopped.</p>
+
+<p>"Let's hear what you did get, Bobs," Worth
+prompted; and Skeet giggled, half under her breath,</p>
+
+<p>"Speech! Speech!"</p>
+
+<p>"At the Gold Nugget&mdash;whatever he called himself<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[Pg 257]</a></span>
+there&mdash;Edward Clayte was ten years younger than he
+had seemed at the bank; he appeared to weigh a dozen
+pounds more; threw out his chest, walked with his
+head up, and therefore would have been estimated quite
+a bit taller. This personality was an opposite of the
+other. Bank clerk Clayte was demure, unobtrusive;
+this man wore loud patterns. The bank clerk was
+silent; this man talked to every one around him, tilted
+his hat over one eye, smoked cigars just as those men
+were doing that day in the lobby; acted like them, was
+one of them. In the Gold Nugget, Clayte was a very
+average Gold Nugget guest&mdash;don't you see? Commonplace
+there, just as the other Clayte had been
+commonplace in a bank or an office."</p>
+
+<p>Her voice ceased. On the silence it left, Worth
+spoke up quietly.</p>
+
+<p>"Bull's eye as usual, Bobs. Every word you say is
+true. And at the Gold Nugget, his name was Henry
+J. Brundage. He had room thirty on the top floor."</p>
+
+<p>Skeet clapped her hands, jumped up and came
+around the table to kiss Barbara on the ear, and tell her
+she was the most wonderfullest girl in the world.</p>
+
+<p>"Heh!" I flared at Worth. "Find that all out to-day
+in San Francisco?"</p>
+
+<p>"No."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, it was the Brundage clew that took you
+south?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yep. Left Louie on the job at the hotel while I
+was away. To-day, I went after Brundage's automobile.
+Found he'd kept one in a garage on Jackson
+Street."</p>
+
+<p>"It's gone, of course&mdash;and no trace," Barbara murmured.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[Pg 258]</a></span>"Gone since the day of the bank theft," Worth
+nodded. "He and the money went in it."</p>
+
+<p>"Say," I leaned over toward him, "wouldn't it have
+saved wear and tear if you'd told me at the first that
+you knew Skeels couldn't be Clayte?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, but, Jerry, you were so sure! And Skeels
+wasn't possible for a minute&mdash;never in his little, piking,
+tin-horn life!"</p>
+
+<p>I don't believe I had seen Worth so happy since he
+was a boy, playing detective. I glanced around and
+pulled myself up; we certainly weren't making ourselves
+very entertaining for the Vandemans. There
+they sat, at their own table, like handsome figureheads,
+smiling politely, pretending a decent interest.</p>
+
+<p>"All this must be a bore to you people," I apologized.</p>
+
+<p>"Not at all&mdash;not at all," Vandeman assured us.</p>
+
+<p>"Well then if you don't mind&mdash;Worth, I'll go and
+use Vandeman's phone&mdash;put my office wise to these
+Brundage clews of yours."</p>
+
+<p>Worth nodded. No social scruples were his. I had
+by no means given up the belief that Skeels in jail at
+Tiajuana, would still turn out to be one of the gang.</p>
+
+<p>I had just got back to the table from my phoning
+when the doorbell rang; we saw the big Chinese slip
+noiselessly through the rear into the hall to answer it,
+coming back a moment later, announcing in his
+weighty, correct English,</p>
+
+<p>"Two gentlemen calling&mdash;to see Captain Gilbert."</p>
+
+<p>"Ask for me?" Worth came to his feet in surprise.
+"Who told them I was here?"</p>
+
+<p>"I do not know," the Chinaman spoke unnecessarily<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[Pg 259]</a></span>
+as Worth was crossing to the door. "I did not ask
+them that."</p>
+
+<p>"Use the living room, Worth," Vandeman called
+after him. "We'll wait here."</p>
+
+<p>With the closing of the door, conversation languished.
+Even Skeet was quiet and seemed depressed.
+My ears were straining for any sound from in there.
+As I sat, hand dropped at my side, I suddenly felt
+under shelter of the screening tablecloth, cold, nervous
+fingers slipped into mine. Barbara wasn't looking at
+me, but I gave her a quick glance as I pressed her
+gripping small hand encouragingly.</p>
+
+<p>She was turned toward Vandeman. Pale to the
+lips, her great eyes fixed on the eyes of our host, I
+saw with wonder how he slowly stirred a spoon about
+in his emptied coffee cup, and stared back at her with
+a face almost as colorless as her own. The bride
+glanced from one to the other of them, and spoke
+sharply,</p>
+
+<p>"What's the matter with you two? You're not uneasy
+about Worth's callers, are you?"</p>
+
+<p>"No-no-no&mdash;" Vandeman was the first to come
+out of it, responding to her voice a good deal as if
+she dashed cold water in his face, his eyes breaking
+away from Barbara's, his lips parted in a nervous
+smile. He ran a hand through his hair&mdash;an inelegant
+gesture for him at table&mdash;and laughed a little.</p>
+
+<p>"We ought to be in there," Barbara said to me, a
+curious stress in her voice.</p>
+
+<p>"How funny you talk, Barbie," Skeet quavered.
+"What do you think's wrong?" And Ina spoke decidedly,</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[Pg 260]</a></span>"Worth is one person in the world who can certainly
+take care of himself, and would rather be let
+alone."</p>
+
+<p>"If you think there is anything we should do&mdash;?"
+Vandeman began anxiously, and Skeet took a look
+around at our faces and fairly wailed,</p>
+
+<p>"What is it? What's the matter? What do you
+think they're doing to Worth in there, Barbie?"</p>
+
+<p>"I'd think they were arresting him," Barbara said
+in a low, choked tone, "Only they don't know&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Arresting him!" I broke in on her, startled, getting
+halfway to my feet; then as remembrance came to me,
+sinking back with, "Certainly not. The murderer of
+Thomas Gilbert is already in the county jail. I
+arrested Eddie Hughes this morning."</p>
+
+<p>"You arrested&mdash;Eddie Hughes!" It was a cry
+from Barbara. The cold little hand was jerked from
+mine. Twisting around in her chair, she stared at me
+with a look that made me cold. "Then you've moved
+those two steel bolts for Cummings."</p>
+
+<p>I jumped to my feet. On the instant the door
+opened, and in it stood Worth, steady enough, but his
+brown tanned face was strangely bleached.</p>
+
+<p>"Jerry," he spoke briefly. "I want you. The
+sheriff's come for me."</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[Pg 261]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXVI" id="CHAPTER_XXVI"></a>CHAPTER XXVI</h2>
+
+<h3>MRS. BOWMAN SPEAKS</h3>
+
+<p>Midnight in the sheriff's office at San Jose.
+And I had to telephone Barbara. She'd be
+waiting up for my message. The minute I heard her
+voice on the wire, I plunged in:</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, yes, yes; done all I could. A horse can do
+no more. They've got Worth. I&mdash;" The words
+stuck in my throat; but they had to come out&mdash;"I left
+him in a cell."</p>
+
+<p>A sound came over the wire; whether speech or not,
+it was something I couldn't get.</p>
+
+<p>"He's taking it like a man and a soldier, girl," I
+hurried. "Not a word out of him about my having
+gone counter to his express orders, arrested Hughes,
+and pulled this thing over on us."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Mr. Boyne! Of course he wouldn't blame
+you. Neither would I. You acted for what you
+thought was his good. The others&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Vandeman's already gone home. Tell you he
+stood by well, Barbara&mdash;that tailor's dummy! Surprised
+me. No, no. Didn't let Jim Edwards come
+with us; so broken up I didn't want him along&mdash;only
+hurt our case over here, the way he is now."</p>
+
+<p>"Your case?" she spoke out clearly. "What is the
+situation?"</p>
+
+<p>"A murder charge against Worth on the secret files.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[Pg 262]</a></span>
+Hughes is out&mdash;Cummings got him&mdash;took him, don't
+know where. Can't locate him."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you need to?"</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps not, Barbara. What I do need is some
+one who saw Thomas Gilbert alive that night after
+Worth left to go back to San Francisco."</p>
+
+<p>"And if you had that&mdash;some one?"</p>
+
+<p>"If we could produce before Cummings one credible
+witness to that, it would mean an alibi. I'd have
+Worth out before morning."</p>
+
+<p>"Then, Mr. Boyne, get to the Fremont House here as
+quickly as you can. Mr. Cummings is there. Get
+him out of bed if you have to. I'll bring the proof
+you need."</p>
+
+<p>"But, child!" I began.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't&mdash;waste&mdash;time&mdash;talking! How long will it
+take you to get here?"</p>
+
+<p>"Half an hour."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! You may have to wait for me a little. But
+I'll surely come. Wait in Mr. Cummings' room."</p>
+
+<p>Half past twelve when I reached the Fremont
+House, to find it all alight, its lobby and corridors surging
+with the crowd of blossom festival guests. Nobody
+much in the bar; soft drinks held little interest;
+but in the upper halls, getting to Cummings' room, I
+passed more than one open door where the hip-pocket
+cargoes were unloading, and was even hailed by name,
+with invitations to come in and partake. Cummings
+was still up. The first word he gave me was,</p>
+
+<p>"Dykeman's here."</p>
+
+<p>"Glad of it," I said. "Bring him in. I want you
+both."</p>
+
+<p>It took a good deal of argument before he brought<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[Pg 263]</a></span>
+the Western Cereal man from the adjoining room
+where he had evidently been just getting ready for bed.
+He came to the conference resentful as a soreheaded
+old bear.</p>
+
+<p>"Maybe you think Worth Gilbert will sleep well to-night&mdash;in
+jail?" I stopped him, and instantly differentiated
+the two men before me. Cummings took it,
+with an ugly little half smile; Dykeman rumpled his
+hair, and bolstered his anger by shouting at me,</p>
+
+<p>"This country'll go to the dogs if we make an exempt
+class of our returned soldiers. Break the laws&mdash;they'll
+have to take the consequences, just as a man
+that was too old or too sickly to fight would have to
+take 'em. If I'd done what Captain Gilbert's done&mdash;I
+wouldn't expect mercy."</p>
+
+<p>"You mean, if you'd done what you say he's done,"
+I countered. "Nothing proved yet."</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing proved?" Dykeman huddled in his chair
+and shivered. Cummings shook out an overcoat and
+helped him into it. He settled back with a protesting
+air of being about to leave us, and finished squeakily,
+"Didn't need to prove that he had Clayte's suitcase."</p>
+
+<p>"Good Lord, Mr. Dykeman! You're not lending
+yourself to accuse a man like Worth Gilbert of so
+grave a crime as murder, just because you found his
+ideas irregular&mdash;maybe reckless&mdash;in a matter of
+money?"</p>
+
+<p>"Don't answer, Dykeman!" Cummings jumped in.
+"Boyne's trying to get you to talk."</p>
+
+<p>The old chap stared at me doubtfully, then broke
+loose with a snort,</p>
+
+<p>"See here, Boyne, you can't get away from it; your
+man Gilbert has embarked on a criminal career: mixed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[Pg 264]</a></span>
+up in the robbery of our bank, with Clayte to rob us;
+had our own attorney go through the form of raising
+money to buy us off from the pursuit of Clayte&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"How about me?" I stuck in the question as he
+paused for breath. "Do you think Worth Gilbert
+would put me on the track of a man he didn't want
+found?"</p>
+
+<p>Cummings cut in ahead to answer for him,</p>
+
+<p>"Just the point. You've not done any good at the
+inquiry; never will, so long as you stand with Worth
+Gilbert. He needed a detective who would believe in
+him through thick and thin. And he found such a
+man in you."</p>
+
+<p>I could not deny it when Dykeman yipped at me,</p>
+
+<p>"Ain't that true? If it was anybody else, wouldn't
+you see the connection? Captain Gilbert came here to
+Santa Ysobel that Saturday night&mdash;as we've got witnesses
+to testify&mdash;had a row with his father&mdash;we've
+got witnesses for that, too&mdash;the word money passed
+between them again and again in that quarrel&mdash;and
+then the young man had the nerve to walk into our
+bank next morning with his father's entire holdings of
+our stock in Clayte's suitcase&mdash;Boyne, you're crazy!"</p>
+
+<p>"Maybe not," I said, reckoning on something human
+in Dykeman to appeal to. "You see I know where
+Worth got that suitcase. It came out of my office
+vault&mdash;evidence we'd gathered in the Clayte hunt.
+Getting it and using it that way was his idea of humor,
+I suppose."</p>
+
+<p>"Sounds fishy." Dykeman made an uncomfortable
+shift in his chair. But Cummings came close, and
+standing, hands rammed down in the pockets of his
+coat, let me have it savagely.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[Pg 265]</a></span>"Evidence, Boyne, is the only thing that would give
+you a license to rout men out at this time of night&mdash;new
+evidence. Have you got it? If not&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Wait." I preferred to stop him before he told me
+to get out. "Wait." I looked at my watch. In the
+silence we could hear the words of a yawp from one
+of the noisy rooms when a passerby was hailed:</p>
+
+<p>"There she goes! There&mdash;look at the chickens!"</p>
+
+<p>A minute later, a tap sounded on the door. Cummings
+stood by while I opened it to Barbara, and a
+slender, veiled woman, taller by half a head in spite of
+bent shoulders and the droop of weakness which made
+the girl's supporting arm apparently necessary.</p>
+
+<p>At sight of them, Dykeman had come to his feet,
+biting off an exclamation, looking vainly around the
+bare room for chairs, then suggesting,</p>
+
+<p>"Get some from my room, Boyne."</p>
+
+<p>I went through the connecting door to fetch a couple.
+When I came back, Barbara was still standing, but her
+companion had sunk into the seat the shivering, uncomfortable
+old man offered, and Cummings was
+bringing a glass of water for her. She sipped it, still
+under the shield of her veil. This was never Ina Vandeman.
+Could it be that Barbara had dragged Mrs.
+Thornhill from her bed? I saw Barbara bend and
+whisper reassuringly. Then the veil was swept back,
+it caught and carried the hat with it from Laura Bowman's
+shining, copper colored hair, and the doctor's
+wife sat there ghastly pale, evidently very weak, but
+more composed than I had ever seen her.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm all right now," she spoke very low.</p>
+
+<p>"Miss Wallace," Dykeman demanded harshly.
+"Who is this&mdash;lady?"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[Pg 266]</a></span>"Mrs. Bowman," Barbara looked her employer very
+straight in the eye.</p>
+
+<p>"Heh?" he barked. "Any relation to Dr. Bowman&mdash;any
+connection with him?"</p>
+
+<p>"His wife." Cummings bent and mumbled to the
+older man for a moment.</p>
+
+<p>"Laura," Barbara said gently, "this is Mr. Dykeman.
+You're to tell him and Mr. Cummings."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," breathed Mrs. Bowman. "I'll tell them.
+I'm ready to tell anybody. There's nothing in dodging,
+and hiding, and being afraid. I'm done with it.
+Now&mdash;what is it you want to know?"</p>
+
+<p>Cummings' expression said plainer than words that
+they didn't want to know anything. They had their
+case fixed up and their man arrested, and they didn't
+wish to be disturbed. She went on quickly, of herself,</p>
+
+<p>"I believe I was the last person who saw Mr. Gilbert
+alive. I must have been. I'd rushed over there, just
+as Ina told you, Mr. Boyne, between the reception and
+our getting off for San Francisco."</p>
+
+<p>"All this concerns the early part of the evening,"
+put in Cummings.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes&mdash;but it concerns Worth, too. He was there
+when I came in.... It was very painful."</p>
+
+<p>"The quarrel between Captain Gilbert and his father
+d'ye mean?" Dykeman asked his first question.
+Mrs. Bowman nodded assent.</p>
+
+<p>"Thomas went right on, before me, just as though
+I hadn't been there. Then, when it came my turn, he
+would have spoken out before Worth of&mdash;of my private
+affairs. That was his way. But I couldn't stand
+it. I went with Worth out to his machine. He had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[Pg 267]</a></span>
+it in the back road. We talked there a little while,
+and Worth drove away, going fast, headed for San
+Francisco."</p>
+
+<p>"And that was the last time you saw Thomas Gilbert
+alive?" Cummings summed up for her.</p>
+
+<p>"I hadn't finished," she objected mildly. "After
+Worth was gone, I went back into the study and
+pleaded with Thomas for a long time. I pointed out
+to him that if I'd sinned, I'd certainly suffered, and
+what I asked was no more than the right any human
+being has, even if they may be so unfortunate as to be
+born a woman."</p>
+
+<p>Dykeman looked exquisitely miserable; but Cummings
+was only the lawyer getting rid of an unwanted
+witness, as he warned her,</p>
+
+<p>"Not the slightest need to go into your personal
+matters, Mrs. Bowman. We know them already.
+We knew also of your visit to Mr. Gilbert's study that
+night, and that you didn't go there alone. Had the
+testimony been of any importance to us, we'd have
+called in both you and James Edwards."</p>
+
+<p>I could see that her deep concern for another steadied
+Laura Bowman.</p>
+
+<p>"How do you know all this?" she demanded.
+"Who told you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Your husband, Doctor Bowman."</p>
+
+<p>Up came the red in her face, her eyes shone with
+anger.</p>
+
+<p>"He did follow me, then? I thought I saw him
+creeping through the shrubbery on the lawn."</p>
+
+<p>"He did follow you. He has told us of your being
+at the study&mdash;the two of you&mdash;when young Gilbert
+was there."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[Pg 268]</a></span>"See here, Cummings," I put in, "if Bowman was
+around the place, then he knows that Worth left before
+the crime was committed. Why hasn't he told you
+so?"</p>
+
+<p>"He has," Cummings said neatly; and I felt as
+though something had slipped. Barbara kept a brave
+front, but Mrs. Bowman moaned audibly.</p>
+
+<p>"And still you've charged Worth Gilbert? Why not
+Bowman himself? He was there. As much reason
+to suspect him as any of the others. Do you mean to
+tell me that you won't accept Mrs. Bowman's testimony&mdash;and
+Dr. Bowman's&mdash;as proving an alibi for Worth
+Gilbert? I'm ready to swear that he was at Tait's
+at five minutes past ten, was there continuously from
+that time until a little after midnight, when you yourself
+saw him there."</p>
+
+<p>"A little past midnight!" Cummings repeated my
+words half derisively. "Not good enough, Boyne.
+We base our charge on the medical statement that Mr.
+Gilbert met his death in the small hours of Sunday
+morning."</p>
+
+<p>I looked away from Barbara; I couldn't bear her
+eye. After a stunned silence, I asked,</p>
+
+<p>"Whose? Who makes that statement?"</p>
+
+<p>"His own physician. Doctor Bowman swears&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"He?" Mrs. Bowman half rose from her chair.
+"He'd swear to anything. I&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Don't say any more," Cummings cut her off. And
+Dykeman mumbled,</p>
+
+<p>"Had the whole history of your marital infelicities
+all over the shop. Too bad such things had to be
+dragged in. Man seems to be a worthy person&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Doctor Bowman told me positively," I broke in,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[Pg 269]</a></span>
+"on the Sunday night the body was found, that death
+must have occurred before midnight."</p>
+
+<p>"Gave that as his opinion&mdash;his opinion&mdash;then,"
+Cummings corrected me.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," I accepted the correction. "That was his
+opinion before he quarreled with Worth. Now he&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Slandering Bowman won't get you anywhere,
+Boyne," Cummings said. "He wasn't here to testify
+at the inquest. Man alive, you know that nothing but
+sworn testimony counts."</p>
+
+<p>"I wouldn't believe that man's oath," I said shortly.</p>
+
+<p>"Think you'll find a jury will," smirked Cummings,
+and Dykeman croaked in,</p>
+
+<p>"A mighty credible witness&mdash;a mighty credible witness!"</p>
+
+<p>While these pleasant remarks flew back and forth, a
+thumping and bumping had made itself heard in the
+hall. Now something came against our door, as
+though a large bundle had been thrown at the panels.
+The knob rattled, jerked, was turned, and a man
+appeared on the threshold, swaying unsteadily. Two
+others, who seemed to have been holding him back,
+let go all at once, and he lurched a step into the room.
+Doctor Anthony Bowman.</p>
+
+<p>A minute he stood blinking, staring, then he caught
+sight of his wife and bawled out,</p>
+
+<p>"She's here all right. Tol' you she was here. Can't
+fool me. Saw her go past in the hall."</p>
+
+<p>I looked triumphantly at Dykeman and Cummings.
+Their star witness&mdash;drunk as a lord! So far he
+seemed to have sensed nothing in the room but his
+wife. Without turning, he reached behind him and
+slammed the door in the faces of those who had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[Pg 270]</a></span>
+brought him, then advanced weavingly on the woman,
+with,</p>
+
+<p>"Get up from there. Get your hat. I'll show you.
+You come 'long home with me! Ain't I your husband?"</p>
+
+<p>"Doctor Bowman," peppery little old Dykeman
+spoke up from the depths of his chair. "Your wife
+was brought here to a&mdash;to a&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Meeting," Cummings supplied hastily.</p>
+
+<p>"Huh?" Bowman wheeled and saw us. "Why-ee!
+Di'n' know so many gen'lemen here."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," the lawyer put a hand on his shoulder.
+"Conference&mdash;over the evidence in the Gilbert case.
+No time like the present for you to say&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Hol' on a minute," Bowman raised a hand with
+dignity.</p>
+
+<p>"Cummings," said Dykeman disgustedly, "the man's
+drunk!"</p>
+
+<p>"No, no," owlishly. "'m not 'ntoxicated. Overcome
+with 'motion." He took a brace. "That woman
+there&mdash;'f I sh'd tell you&mdash;walk into hotel room, find her
+with three men! Three of 'em!"</p>
+
+<p>"How much of this are these ladies to stand for?"
+I demanded.</p>
+
+<p>"Ladies?" Bowman roared suddenly. "She's m'
+wife. Where's th' other man? Nothing 'gainst you
+gen'lmen. Where's he? I'll settle with him. Let
+that thing go long 'nough. Too long. Bring him
+out. I'll settle him now!"</p>
+
+<p>He dropped heavily into the chair Cummings shoved
+up behind him, stared around, drooped a bit, pulled
+himself together, and looked at us; then his head went
+forward on his neck, a long breath sounded&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[Pg 271]</a></span>"And you'll keep Worth Gilbert in jail, run the
+risk of a suit for false imprisonment&mdash;on that!" I
+wanted to know.</p>
+
+<p>"And plenty more," the lawyer held steady, but I
+saw his uneasiness with every snore Bowman drew.</p>
+
+<p>Barbara crossed to speak low and earnestly to Dykeman.
+I heard most of his answer&mdash;shaken, but disposed
+to hang on,</p>
+
+<p>"Girl like you is too much influenced by the man in
+the case. Hero worship&mdash;all that sort of thing. An
+outlaw is an outlaw. This isn't a personal matter.
+Mr. Cummings and I are merely doing our duty as
+good citizens."</p>
+
+<p>At that, I think it possible that Dykeman would have
+listened to reason; it was Cummings who broke in
+uncontrollably,</p>
+
+<p>"Barbara Wallace, I was your father's friend. I'm
+yours&mdash;if you'll let me be. I can't stand by while
+you entangle yourself with a criminal like Worth Gilbert.
+For your sake, if for no other reason, I would
+be determined to show him up as what he is: a thief&mdash;and
+his father's murderer."</p>
+
+<p>Silence in the room, except the irregular snoring of
+Bowman, a rustle and a deeply taken breath now and
+again where Mrs. Bowman sat, her head bent, quietly
+weeping. On this, Barbara who spoke out clearly,</p>
+
+<p>"Those were the last words you will ever say to me,
+Mr. Cummings, unless you should some time be man
+enough to take back your aspersions and apologize for
+them."</p>
+
+<p>He gave ground instantly. I had not thought that
+dry voice of his could contain what now came into it.</p>
+
+<p>"Barbara, I didn't mean&mdash;you don't understand&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[Pg 272]</a></span>But without turning her head, she spoke to me:
+"Mr. Boyne, will you take Laura and me home?"
+gathering up Mrs. Bowman's hat and veil, shaking the
+latter out, getting her charge ready as a mother might
+a child. "She's not going back to him&mdash;ever again."
+Her glance passed over the sleeping lump of a man in
+his chair. "Sarah'll make a place for her at our house
+to-night."</p>
+
+<p>"See here," Cummings got between us and the door.
+"I can't let you go like this. I feel&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Dykeman," Barbara turned quietly to her employer,
+"could we pass out through your room?"</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly," the little man was brisk to make a way
+for us. "I want you to know, Miss Wallace, that I,
+too, feel&mdash;I, too, feel&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>I don't know what it was that Dykeman felt, but
+Cummings felt my rude elbow in his chest as I pushed
+him unceremoniously aside, and opened the door he
+had blocked, remarking,</p>
+
+<p>"We go out as we came in. This way, Barbara."</p>
+
+<p>It was as I parted with the two of them at the Capehart
+gate that I drew out and handed Mrs. Bowman
+a small piece of dull blue silk, a round hole in it,
+such as a bullet or a cigarette might have made, with,</p>
+
+<p>"I guess you'll just have to forgive me that."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't need to forgive it," her gaze swam. "I
+saw your mistake. But it was for Worth you were
+fighting even then; he's been so dear to me always&mdash;I'd
+have to love any one for anything they did for
+his sake."</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[Pg 273]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXVII" id="CHAPTER_XXVII"></a>CHAPTER XXVII</h2>
+
+<h3>THE BLOSSOM FESTIVAL</h3>
+
+<p>Two hours sleep, bath, breakfast, and I started
+on my early morning run for the county seat.
+Nobody else was going my way; but even at that hour,
+the road was full of autos, buggies, farm wagons,
+pretty much everything that could run on wheels,
+headed for the festival, all trimmed and streaming with
+the blossoming branches of their orchards. These
+were the country folks, coming in early to make a
+big day of it; orchardists; ranchers from the cattle
+lands in the south end of the county; truck and vegetable
+farmers; flower-seed gardeners; the Japs and
+Chinese from their little, closely cultivated patches;
+this tide streamed past me on my left hand, as I made
+my way to Worth and the jailer's office, trying with
+every mile I put behind me, to bolster my courage.
+Why wasn't this shift of the enemy a blessing in disguise?
+Let their setting of the hour for the murder
+stick, and wouldn't Worth's alibi be better than any we
+should have been able to dig up for him before midnight?</p>
+
+<p>From time to time I was troubled by recollection of
+Barbara's crushed look from the moment they sprung
+it on us, but brushed that aside with the obvious explanation
+that her efforts in bringing Mrs. Bowman
+to speak out had just been of no use; surely enough
+to depress her.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[Pg 274]</a></span>Worth met me, fit, quiet, not over eager about anything.
+They let us talk with a guard outside the door.
+Once alone, he listened appreciatively while I told him
+of our interview with Cummings and Dykeman as fast
+as I could pile the words out.</p>
+
+<p>"Nobody on earth like Bobs," was his sole comment.
+"Never was, never will be."</p>
+
+<p>"And now," I reminded him nervously, "there's the
+question of this alibi. You went straight from the
+restaurant to your room at the Palace and to bed
+there?"</p>
+
+<p>"No-o," he said slowly. "No, I didn't."</p>
+
+<p>"Well&mdash;well," I broke in. "If you stopped on the
+way, you can remember where. The people you spoke
+to will be as good as the clerks and bell-hops at the
+Palace for your alibi." He sat silent, thoughtful, and
+I added, "Where did you go from Tait's, Worth?"</p>
+
+<p>"To a garage&mdash;in the Tenderloin&mdash;where they keep
+good cars. I'd hired machines from them before."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, they knew you there? Then their testimony
+will&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I don't believe you want it, Jerry. It only accounts
+for the half hour&mdash;or less&mdash;right after I left you; all
+I did was to hire a car."</p>
+
+<p>"A car," I echoed vaguely. "What kind of a car?
+Hired it for when?"</p>
+
+<p>"I asked them for the fastest thing they had in the
+shop. Told 'em to fill it all round, and see that it
+was tuned up to the last notch. I wanted speed."</p>
+
+<p>"My God, Worth! Do you know what you're telling
+me?"</p>
+
+<p>"The truth, Jerry." His eye met mine unflinchingly.
+"That's what you want, isn't it?"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[Pg 275]</a></span>"Where did you go?" I groaned. "You must have
+seen somebody who could identify or remember you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not a solitary human being to identify me. Those
+I passed&mdash;there were people out of course, late as it
+was&mdash;saw my headlights as I went by. But I was
+moving fast, Jerry. I was working off a grouch; I
+needed speed."</p>
+
+<p>"Where did you go?"</p>
+
+<p>"Straight down the peninsula on the main highway
+to Palo Alto, made the sweep across to the sea,
+and then up the coast road. I ran into the garage
+about dawn."</p>
+
+<p>"No stops anywhere?"</p>
+
+<p>He shook his head.</p>
+
+<p>"And that's your alibi?"</p>
+
+<p>"That's my alibi." Worth looked at me a long
+while before he said finally,</p>
+
+<p>"Don't you see, Jerry, that the other side had all
+this before they encouraged Bowman to change his
+mind about when father was shot?"</p>
+
+<p>I did see it&mdash;ought to have known from the first.
+This was what they had back of them last night in
+Cummings' room; this explained the lawyer's smug
+self-confidence, Dykeman's violent certainty that
+Worth was a criminal. A realization of this had
+whitened Barbara's face, set her lips in that pitiful,
+straight line. As to their momentary chagrin over
+Bowman; no trouble to them to get other physicians
+to bolster any opinion he'd given. Medical testimony
+on such a point is notoriously uncertain. All the
+jury would want to know was that there could be such
+a possibility. I sat there with bent head, and felt myself
+going to pieces. Cummings was right&mdash;I was no<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[Pg 276]</a></span>
+fit man to handle this job. My personal feelings
+were too deeply involved. It was Worth's voice that
+recalled me.</p>
+
+<p>"Cheer up, Jerry, old man. Take it to Bobs."</p>
+
+<p>Take it to Bobs&mdash;the idea of a big, husky old police
+detective running to cast his burden on such shoulders!
+I couldn't quite do it then. I went and telephoned the
+little girl that I was doing the best I could&mdash;and then
+ran circles for the rest of the day, chasing one vain
+hope after another, and finally, in the late afternoon,
+sneaked home to Santa Ysobel.</p>
+
+<p>Now I had the road more to myself; only an occasional
+handsome car, where the wealthy were getting
+in to the part of the festival they'd care for. In the
+orchards near town where the big picnic places had
+been laid out with rough board tables and benches,
+seats for thousands, there were occasional loud basket
+lunch parties scattered. All at once I was hungry
+enough to have gone and asked for a handout.</p>
+
+<p>I went by back streets down to the house to get my
+mail. There seemed no human reason that I should
+feel it a treachery to have Worth in jail at San Jose,
+and be able to walk into his house at Santa Ysobel a
+free man. The place was empty; Chung had the day
+off, of course. It was possible Worth's cook, even,
+didn't know what had happened to his employer.
+Santa Ysobel had no morning paper. In the confusion
+of the blossom festival, I ventured to guess that
+not more than a score of people did as yet know of
+the arrest. Our end of town was drained, quiet; nobody
+over at the Vandeman bungalow; looking down
+at the Square as I made my sneak through, I had
+caught a glimpse of Bronson Vandeman, a great ro<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[Pg 277]</a></span>sette
+of apricot blossoms on his coat lapel, making his
+speech of presentation to the cannery girl queen, while
+his wife, Ina, her fair face shaded doubly by a big
+flower hat and a blossom covered parasol, listened and
+looked on.</p>
+
+<p>One of my pieces of mail concerned the Skeels
+chase. If my men down there had Skeels, and Skeels
+was Clayte, it would mean everything in handling
+Cummings and Dykeman. I took out the report and
+ran hastily through it; a formal statement; day by
+day stuff:</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>"<i>Found Skeels and Dial at Tiajuana. Negotiating
+to buy saloon and gambling house. Arranged with
+Jefico for arrest of S. (Expense $20.) Rurales took
+S. to jail. (Expense, $4.50) I interviewed S., and
+he said he came here to open a business where he could
+sell booze. D. was his partner in proposition. S.
+knew nothing of bank affair. Would waive extradition
+and come back to stand trial at our expense.
+Interviewed D. He says combined capital of two is
+$4500., saved from S's business and D's miner's
+wages. D. said&mdash;</i>"</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Not much to show up with; but there were three
+photographs enclosed that I wanted to try on Cummings
+and Dykeman. No telling where I'd find either,
+but the Fremont House was my best bet. Getting
+back there through the crowd, I saw Skeet Thornhill
+in a corner drugstore, waiting at its counter. I was
+afoot, having been obliged to park my roadster in one
+of the spaces set apart for this purpose. I noticed
+Vandeman's car already there.</p>
+
+<p>I lingered a minute on that corner looking down the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[Pg 278]</a></span>
+slope that led to City Hall Square. Tent restaurants
+along the way; sandwiches; hot dogs; coffee; milk;
+pies; doughnuts. Part way down a hurdy-gurdy in
+a tent began to get patronage again; the school children
+in white dresses with pink bows in their hair had just
+finished a stunt in the Square. They and their elders
+were streaming our way, headed for the snake charmers,
+performing dogs and Nigger-in-the-tank. In the
+midst of them Vandeman and his wife came afoot.
+He caught sight of me, hailed, and when I joined them,
+asked quickly, glancing toward the drugstore entrance,</p>
+
+<p>"Worth come with you?"</p>
+
+<p>I shook my head. He made that little clucking
+sound with his tongue that people do when they want
+to offer sympathy, and find the matter hard to put into
+words.</p>
+
+<p>A seller of toy balloons on the corner with a lot of
+noisy youngsters around him; the ka-lash, ka-lam of
+a mechanical piano further down the block; and young
+Mrs. Vandeman's staccato tones saying,</p>
+
+<p>"I tell Bron that the only thing Worth's friends
+can do is to go on exactly as if nothing had happened.
+Don't you think so, Mr. Boyne?"</p>
+
+<p>I agreed mutely.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I wish you'd say so to Barbie Wallace," her
+voice sharpened. "She's certainly acting as though
+she believed the worst."</p>
+
+<p>"Now, Ina," Vandeman remonstrated. And I asked
+uncomfortably,</p>
+
+<p>"What's Barbie done? Where is she?"</p>
+
+<p>"Up at Mrs. Capehart's. In her room. Doesn't
+come out at all. Isn't going to the ball to-night.
+Skeet said she refused to speak to Mr. Cummings."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[Pg 279]</a></span>"Is that all Skeet said? Vandeman, you've told
+your wife that Cummings swore to the complaint?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, but&mdash;er&mdash;there's no animus. The executor of
+Gilbert's estate&mdash;With all the talk going around&mdash;If
+Worth's proved innocent, he might in the end be
+glad of Cummings' action."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, might he?" Skeet Thornhill had hurried out
+from the drugstore, a package of medicine in her hand.
+Her eyes looked as though she'd been crying; they
+flashed a hostile glance over the new brother-in-law,
+excellently groomed, the big flower favor on his coat,
+the tall, beautiful sister, all frilly white and flower
+festival fashion.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>If</i> Worth's proved innocent!" she flung at them.
+"Bronse Vandeman, you've got a word too many in
+when you say that."</p>
+
+<p>"Just a tongue-slip, Skeeter," Vandeman apologized.
+"I hope the boy'll come through all right&mdash;same as
+you do."</p>
+
+<p>"You don't do anything about it the same as I do!"
+Skeet came back. "I'd be ashamed to 'hope' for a
+friend to be cleared of a charge like that. If I couldn't
+<i>know</i> he was clear&mdash;clear all the time&mdash;I'd try to forget
+about it."</p>
+
+<p>"See here, Skeet," Ina obviously restrained herself,
+"that's what we're all trying to do for Worth: forget
+about it&mdash;make nothing of it&mdash;act exactly as if it'd
+never happened. You ought to come on out to the
+ball with the other girls. You're just staying away
+because Barbara Wallace is."</p>
+
+<p>"I'm not. Some damn fool went and told mother
+about Worth being arrested, and made her a lot worse.
+She's almost crazy. I'd be afraid to leave her alone<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[Pg 280]</a></span>
+with old Jane. You get me and this medicine up
+home&mdash;or shall I go around to Capehart's and have
+Barbie drive me?"</p>
+
+<p>"I'll take you, Skeeter," Vandeman said. "We're
+through here. We're for home to dress, then to the
+country club&mdash;and not leave it again till morning.
+That ball out there has got to be made the biggest
+thing Santa Ysobel ever saw&mdash;regardless. Come on."
+The crowd swallowed them up.</p>
+
+<p>Making for the Fremont House, I passed Dr. Bowman's
+stairway, and on impulse turned, ran up. I
+found the doctor packing, very snappish, very sorry
+for himself. He was leaving next day for a position
+in the state hospital for the insane at Sefton. His
+kind have to blow off to somebody; I was it, though
+he must have known I had no sympathy to offer. The
+hang-over of last night's drunk made emotional the
+tone in which he said,</p>
+
+<p>"After all, a man's wife makes or breaks him.
+Mine's broken me. I could have had a fine position
+at the Mountain View Sanitarium, well paid, among
+cultured people, if she'd held up her damned divorce
+suit a little longer."</p>
+
+<p>"And as it is, you have to put up with what Cummings
+can land you with such pull as he has."</p>
+
+<p>"I'm not complaining of Cummings," sullenly. "He
+did the best he could for me, I suppose, on such short
+notice. But a man of my class is practically wasted
+in a place of the sort."</p>
+
+<p>I had learned what I wanted; I carried more
+ammunition to the interview before me. I found
+Dykeman in his room, propped up in bed, wheezing
+with an attack of asthma. A sick man is either more<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[Pg 281]</a></span>
+merciful than usual, or more unmerciful. Apparently
+it took Dykeman the former way; he accepted me
+eagerly, and had me call Cummings from the adjoining
+room. The lawyer was half into that costume he had
+brought from San Francisco. He came quite modern
+as to the legs and feet, but thoroughly ancient in a shirt
+of mail around the arms and chest, and carrying a
+Roman helmet in his hand as though it had been an
+opera hat.</p>
+
+<p>"Trying 'em on?" Dykeman whispered at him.</p>
+
+<p>Cummings nodded with that self-conscious, half-tickled,
+half-sheepish air that men display when it
+comes to costume. His greeting to me was cool but
+not surly. What had happened might go as all in the
+day's work between detective and lawyer.</p>
+
+<p>"Just seen Bowman," was my first pass at them.
+"I gather he's not very well pleased with the position
+you got him; seems to think it small pay for a dirty
+job."</p>
+
+<p>"What's this? What's this?" croaked Dykeman.
+"You been getting a place for Bowman, Cummings?"</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly," the lawyer dodged with swift, practical
+neatness. "I'd promised him my influence in the
+matter some little time ago."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," I said, "mighty little time ago&mdash;the day he
+promised the testimony you wanted in the Gilbert
+case."</p>
+
+<p>"Anything in what Boyne says, Cummings?" Dykeman
+asked anxiously. "You know I wouldn't stand
+for that sort of stuff."</p>
+
+<p>The lawyer shook his head, but I didn't believe it
+was ended between them; Dykeman was the devil to
+hang on to a point. This would come up again after<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[Pg 282]</a></span>
+I was gone. Meantime I made haste to shove the
+photographs before them. Cummings passed them
+back with an indifferent, "What's the idea?"</p>
+
+<p>"You don't recognize him?"</p>
+
+<p>"Never saw the man in my life," and again he asked,
+"What's the idea?"</p>
+
+<p>"You'd recognize a picture of Clayte?" I countered
+with a question of my own.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes&mdash;I think so," rather dubiously. "But Dykeman
+would. Show them to him."</p>
+
+<p>Dykeman reached for the photographs, spread them
+out before him, then looked up from them peevishly to
+say,</p>
+
+<p>"For the good Lord's sake! Don't look any more
+like Clayte than it does like a horned toad. Is that
+what you've been wasting your time over, Boyne? If
+you ask me&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I don't ask you anything," retrieving the pictures,
+planting them deep in an inner pocket. Then I got
+myself out of the room.</p>
+
+<p>Standing on the sidewalk in front of the Fremont
+House, I felt sort of bewildered. This last crack had
+taken all the pep I had left. I suddenly realized it
+was long after dinner time, and I'd had no dinner, no
+lunch, nothing to eat since an early breakfast. Worth
+had sent me to the girl&mdash;and I hadn't gone. I dragged
+myself around to Capehart's cottage as nearly whipped
+as I ever was in my life.</p>
+
+<p>I found Barbara with Laura Bowman, every one
+else off the place, out at the shows. Those girls sure
+were good to me; they fed me and didn't ask questions
+till I was ready to talk. Nothing to be said really,
+except that I'd failed. I told them of meeting the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[Pg 283]</a></span>
+Vandemans, and gave them Ina Vandeman's opinion
+as to how Worth's friends should conduct themselves
+just now.</p>
+
+<p>"So they'll all be out there," I concluded, "Vandeman
+and his wife leading the grand march, her sisters
+as maids of honor&mdash;except Skeet, staying at home
+with her mother. Cummings goes as a Roman soldier;
+Doctor Bowman as a Spanish cavalier. Edwards
+didn't see it as the Vandemans do, but after I'd talked
+to him awhile, he agreed to be there."</p>
+
+<p>And suddenly I noticed for the first time how the
+relative position of these two women had shifted.
+Laura Bowman wasn't red-headed for nothing; out
+from under the blight of Bowman and that hateful
+marriage, she had already thrown off some of her
+physical frailness; the nervous tension showed itself
+now in energy. She was moving swiftly about putting
+to rights after my meal while she listened. But Barbara
+sat looking straight ahead of her; I knew she was
+seeing streets full of carnival, every friend and
+acquaintance out at a ball&mdash;and Worth in a murderer's
+cell. It wouldn't do. I jumped to my feet with a
+brisk,</p>
+
+<p>"Girl, where's your hat? We'll go to the study and
+look over all our points once more. Get busy&mdash;get
+busy. That's the medicine for you."</p>
+
+<p>She gave me a miserable look and a negative shake
+of the head; but I still urged, "Worth sent me to you.
+The last thing he said was, 'Take it to Bobs.'"</p>
+
+<p>Dumbly she submitted. Mrs. Bowman came running
+with the girl's hat, and, "What about me, Mr.
+Boyne? Isn't there something I can do?"</p>
+
+<p>"I wish you'd go to the country club&mdash;to the ball<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[Pg 284]</a></span>&mdash;the
+same as all the others. Got a costume here, haven't
+you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I can wear Barbara's," she glanced to where
+a pile of soft black stuff, a red scarf, a scarlet poppy
+wreath, lay on a chair, "She was to have gone as 'The
+Lady of Dreams.'"</p>
+
+<p>Barbara went with me out into the flare of carnival
+illumination that paled the afterglow of a gorgeous
+sunset. No cars allowed on these down-town streets;
+even walking, we found it best to take the long way
+round. To our left the town roared and racketed as
+though it was afire. Nothing said between us till I
+grumbled out,</p>
+
+<p>"I wish I knew where Cummings was keeping Eddie
+Hughes."</p>
+
+<p>Barbara's voice beside me answered unexpectedly,</p>
+
+<p>"Here. In Santa Ysobel. Eddie was at Capehart's
+fifteen minutes before you got there; he came for Bill.
+A gasoline engine at the city hall had broken down."</p>
+
+<p>I pulled up short for a moment, and looked back at
+the town.</p>
+
+<p>"Where'd he go?"</p>
+
+<p>"With Bill, to the city hall. Eddie's one of the
+queen's guards. They're all to be at the country club
+at ten o'clock to review the grand march that opens
+the ball."</p>
+
+<p>I mustn't let her dwell on that. I hurried on once
+more, and neither of us spoke again till I unlocked the
+study door, snapped on the lights, brought out and put
+on the table the 1920 diary and the little blue blotter&mdash;the
+last bits of evidence that I felt hadn't been thoroughly
+analysed. Barbara just dropped into a chair
+and looked from them to me helplessly.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[Pg 285]</a></span>"You've read this all&mdash;carefully?" she sighed.</p>
+
+<p>It shook me. To have Barbara, the girl I'd seen
+get meanings and facts from a written page with a
+mere flirt of a glance, ask me that. What I really
+wanted from her was an inspection of the book and
+blotter, and a deduction from it. As though she
+guessed, she answered with a sort of wail,</p>
+
+<p>"I can't, I can't even remember what I did see when
+I looked at these before. I&mdash;can't&mdash;remember!"</p>
+
+<p>I went and knelt on the hearth with a pretext of laying
+a fire there, since the shut-up room was chill. And
+when I glanced stealthily over my shoulder, she had
+gone to work; not as I had ever seen her before, but
+fumbling at the leaves, hesitating, turning to finger the
+blotter; setting her lips desperately, like an over-driven
+school-child, but keeping right on. I spun out my fire
+building to leave her to herself. Little noises of her
+moving there at the table; rustle and flutter of the
+leaves; now and again, a long, sobbing breath. At last
+something like a groan caused me to turn my head and
+see her, with face pale as death, eyes staring across
+into mine.</p>
+
+<p>"It was Clayte&mdash;Edward Clayte&mdash;who killed Mr.
+Gilbert here&mdash;in this room."</p>
+
+<p>The hair on the back of my neck stirred; I thought
+the girl had gone mad. As I ran over to the table
+and looked at what was under her hand, it came again.</p>
+
+<p>"He did. He did. It was Clayte&mdash;the wonder
+man!"</p>
+
+<p>"Do&mdash;do you deduce that, Barbara?"</p>
+
+<p>"Did I?" she raised to mine the face of a sick child.
+"I must have. See&mdash;it's here on the blotter: 'y-t-e,'
+that's Clayte. Double l-e-r; that's 'teller,' 'Avenue'<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[Pg 286]</a></span>
+is part of 'Van Ness Avenue Bank.' Oh, yes; I deduced
+it, I suppose. Both crimes end in a locked room
+and a perfect alibi. But&mdash;but&mdash;don't you see, if it is
+true&mdash;and it is&mdash;it is&mdash;we're worse off than we were
+before. We've the wonder man against us."</p>
+
+<p>"Barbara," I cried. "Barbara, come out of it!"</p>
+
+<p>"See? You don't believe in me any more," and her
+head went down on the table.</p>
+
+<p>I let her cry, while I sat and thought. The broken
+sentences she'd sobbed out to me began to fit up like a
+puzzle-game. By all theories of good detective work, I
+should have seen from the first the similarity of these
+crimes. But Clayte, slipping in here to do this murder&mdash;and
+why? What mixed him up with affairs here?
+And then the icy pang&mdash;Dykeman had seen a connection&mdash;Cummings
+had found one. With them, it was
+Clayte and his gang&mdash;and his gang was Worth Gilbert.
+I went and touched Barbara on the shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm going to take you home now."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," tears running down her face as she stumbled
+to her feet. "I'm a failure. I can't do anything for
+Worth."</p>
+
+<p>I wiped her cheeks with my own handkerchief and
+led her out. As I turned from locking the door, it
+seemed to me I saw something move in the shrubbery.
+I asked Barbara Wallace about it. She hadn't noticed
+anything. Barbara Wallace hadn't noticed anything!</p>
+
+<p>I began to be scared for her. Solemn in the sky
+above boomed out the town clock&mdash;two strokes. Half
+past nine. I must get this poor child home. We were
+getting in toward the noise and the light when I felt
+her shiver, and stopped to say,</p>
+
+<p>"Did I forget your coat? Why, where's your hat?"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_287" id="Page_287">[Pg 287]</a></span>"The hat's back there. I had no coat. It doesn't
+make any difference. Come on. I can't&mdash;can't&mdash;I
+must get home."</p>
+
+<p>I looked at her, saw she was about at the end of her
+strength, and decided quickly,</p>
+
+<p>"We'll go straight through the Square. Save time
+and steps."</p>
+
+<p>She offered no objection, and we started in where
+the bands played for the street dances, amid the
+raucous tooting of a thousand fish-horns, the clangor
+of cow-bells, and the occasional snap of the forbidden
+fire-cracker. As we turned from Broad Street into
+Main, I found that the congestion was greater even
+than I had supposed. Here, several blocks away from
+the city hall, progress was so difficult that I took Barbara
+back a block to get the street that paralleled Main.
+This we could navigate slowly. Here, also, everybody
+was masked. Confetti flew, serpentines unreeled
+themselves out through the air, dusters spluttered in
+faces, and among the Pierrettes, Pierrots, Columbines,
+sombrero-ed cowboys, bandana-ed cow-girls, Indians,
+Sambos, Topsies and Poppy Maidens, Barbara's little
+white linen slip and soft white sweater, and my grey
+business suit, were more conspicuous than would have
+been the Ahkoond of Swat and his Captive Slave.
+Even after the confetti had sprinkled her black hair
+until it reminded me of Skeet's blossom wreath, infinitely
+multiplied, I still saw the glances through the
+eye-holes of masks follow us wonderingly.</p>
+
+<p>Opposite the city hall, where we must cross to get to
+the Capehart street, we were again almost stopped by
+the dense crowd. The Square was a green-turfed
+dancing floor; from its stand, an orchestra jazzed out<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_288" id="Page_288">[Pg 288]</a></span>
+the latest and dizziest of dances; and countless couples
+one-stepped on the grass, on the asphalt of the streets,
+even over the lawns of adjacent houses, tree trunks
+and flower beds adding more things to be dodged. At
+one corner, where the crowd was thick, we saw a big
+man being wound to a pole by paper serpentines.
+Yelling and capering, the masked dancers milled
+around and around him, winding the gay ribbons, while
+others with confetti and the Spanish cascarones, tried
+to snow him under. As we came up, a big fist wagged
+and Bill Capehart's voice roared,</p>
+
+<p>"Hold on! Too much is a-plenty!"</p>
+
+<p>He tore himself loose, streaming with paper strips,
+bent and filled his fists from the confetti at his feet.
+His tormentors howled and dropped back as much as
+they could for the hemming crowd; he rushed them,
+heaving paper ammunition in a hail-storm, and reached
+us in two or three jumps.</p>
+
+<p>"Golly!" he roared, "Me for a cyclone cellar! This
+is a riot. You ain't in costume, either. Wonder they
+wouldn't pick on you."</p>
+
+<p>With the words they did. I put Barbara behind me,
+and was conscious only of a blinding snow of paper
+flakes, the punch and slap of dusters, in an uproar of
+horns and bells.</p>
+
+<p>"Good deal like fighting a swarm of bees in your
+shirt-tail with a willow switch," old Bill panted at my
+shoulder. "Gosh!" as the snapping of firecrackers let
+loose beneath our feet. "Some o' these mosquito-net
+skirts'll get afire next&mdash;then there'll be hell a-popping!"</p>
+
+<p>Close at hand there was a louder report, as of a
+giant cracker, and at that Barbara sagged against me.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_289" id="Page_289">[Pg 289]</a></span>
+I whirled and put an arm about her. Bill grabbed
+her from me, and lifted her above the pressure of the
+crowd. I charged ahead, shouting,</p>
+
+<p>"Gangway! Let us through!"</p>
+
+<p>Willing enough, the mob could not make room for
+passage until my shoulder, lowered to strike at the
+breast, forced a way, that closed in the instant Bill
+gained through. It was football tactics, with me
+bucking the line, Bill carrying the ball. Fortunately,
+the bunch was a good-natured festival gathering, or
+my rough work might have brought us trouble. As
+it was, a short, stiff struggle took us to the outer fringe
+of the mob.</p>
+
+<p>"How is she? What happened?" I grunted, coming
+to a stop.</p>
+
+<p>"Search me." Bill twisted around to look at
+the white face that lay back on his shoulder, with closed
+lids. Three strokes chimed from the city hall tower.
+Barbara's eyes flashed open; as the last stroke trembled
+in the air, Barbara's voice came, sharp with breathless
+urgence,</p>
+
+<p>"A quarter of ten! Quick&mdash;get me to the country
+club!"</p>
+
+<p>"Take <i>you</i> there? Now, d'ye mean?" I ejaculated;
+and holding her like a baby, Bill's eyes flared into mine.
+"Did something happen to you back there, girl? Or
+did you just faint?"</p>
+
+<p>"Never mind about me! There," that glance of hers
+that saw everything indicated a parking place packed
+with machines half a block away up a side street.
+"Carry me there. Take one of those cars. Get me to
+the country club. Don't&mdash;" as I opened my mouth,
+"don't ask questions."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_290" id="Page_290">[Pg 290]</a></span>I turned and ran. Bill galloped behind. Barbara
+had lifted her head to cry after me,</p>
+
+<p>"The best one! Pick the fastest!"</p>
+
+<p>I plunged down the line of cars, looking for a good
+machine and one with whose drive I was familiar.
+The guard rushed up to stop me; I showed him my
+badge, leaped into the front seat of a speed-built
+Tarpon, and had it out by the time Bill came up with
+the girl in his arms. I turned and swung open the
+tonneau door. Almost with one movement, he lifted
+her in and climbed after. I started off with braying
+horn, and at that I had to use caution. Making
+my way toward the corner of the street that led to
+Bill's house, I felt a small hand clutch the slack of my
+coat between the shoulders, and Barbara's voice, faint,
+but with a fury of determination in it, demanded,</p>
+
+<p>"Where are you going? I said the country club."</p>
+
+<p>"All right; I'll go. I'll look after whatever you
+want out there when I've got you home."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, oh," she moaned. "Won't you&mdash;this one time&mdash;take
+orders?"</p>
+
+<p>I went on past the corner. She had a right to put
+it just that way. I gave the Tarpon all I dared in town
+streets.</p>
+
+<p>"What time is it?" I heard her whispering to Bill.
+"Eight minutes to ten? I have to be there by ten, or
+it's no use. Can he make it? Do you think he can
+make it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," I growled, crouching behind the wheel. "I'll
+make it. May have to kill a few&mdash;but I'll get you
+there."</p>
+
+<p>By this, we'd come out on the open highway, better,
+but not too clear, either. There followed seven min<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_291" id="Page_291">[Pg 291]</a></span>utes
+of ripping through the night, of people who ran
+yelling to get out of our way and hurled curses behind
+us, only a few cars meeting us like the whirling of
+comets in terrifying glimpses as we shot past; and, at
+last, the country club; strings of gay lanterns, winking
+ruby tail-lights of machines parked in front of it, the
+glare from its windows, and the strains of the
+orchestra in its ballroom, playing "On the Beach at
+Waikiki." When she heard it, Barbara thanked God
+with,</p>
+
+<p>"We're in time!"</p>
+
+<p>I took that machine up to the front steps over space
+never intended for automobiles, at a pace not proper
+for lawns or even roads, and only halted when I was
+half across the walk. Bill rolled from the tonneau
+door and stood by it. I jumped down and came
+around.</p>
+
+<p>"Lift me out, and put me on my feet," Barbara
+ordered. "Help me&mdash;one on each side. I can walk.
+I must!"</p>
+
+<p>We crossed a deserted porch; the evening's opening
+event&mdash;the grand march&mdash;had drawn every one, servants
+and all, inside. So far, without challenge, meeting
+no one. We had the place to ourselves till we
+stood, the three of us alone, before the upper entrance
+of the assembly room. In there, the last strains of
+Waikiki died away. I looked to Barbara. She was
+in command. Her words back there in town had
+settled that for me.</p>
+
+<p>"What do we do now?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>White as the linen she wore, the girl's face shone
+with some inner fire of passionate resolution. I saw
+this, too, in the determined, almost desperate energy<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_292" id="Page_292">[Pg 292]</a></span>
+with which she held herself erect, one clenched hand
+pressed hard against her side.</p>
+
+<p>"Take me in there, Mr. Boyne. And you," to Capehart,
+"find a man you can trust to guard each door of
+the ballroom."</p>
+
+<p>"What you say goes." Big Bill wheeled like a well
+trained cart-horse and had taken a step or two, when
+she called after him,</p>
+
+<p>"Arrest any one who attempts to enter."</p>
+
+<p>"Arrest 'em if they try to git in," Capehart repeated
+stoically. "Sure. That goes." But I interrupted,</p>
+
+<p>"You mean if they try to get out."</p>
+
+<p>At that she gave me a look. No time or breath to
+waste. Bill, unquestioning, had hurried to his part of
+the work. I took up mine with, "Forgive me, Barbara.
+I'll not make that mistake again"; slipped my arm under
+hers to support her; dragged open the big doors;
+shoved past the hallman there; and we stepped into the
+many-colored, moving brilliance of the ballroom.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_293" id="Page_293">[Pg 293]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXVIII" id="CHAPTER_XXVIII"></a>CHAPTER XXVIII</h2>
+
+<h3>THE COUNTRY CLUB BALL</h3>
+
+<p>The ballroom of the country club at Santa Ysobel
+is big and finely proportioned. I don't know if
+anything of the sort could have registered with me at
+the moment, but I remembered afterward my impression
+of the great hall fairly walled and roofed with
+fruit blossoms, and the gorgeousness of hundreds of
+costumes. The mere presence of potential funds
+raises the importance of an event. The prune kings
+and apricot barons down there, with their wives and
+daughters in real brocades, satins and velvets, with
+genuine jewels flashing over them, represented so much
+in the way of substantial wealth that it seemed to
+steady the whole fantastic scene.</p>
+
+<p>Barbara and I entered on the level of the slightly
+raised orchestra stand and only half a dozen paces
+from it. Nobody noticed us much; we came in right
+on the turn of things&mdash;floor managers darting around,
+orchestra with bows poised and horns at lips, the whole
+glittering company of maskers being made ready to
+weave their "Figure of Eight" across the dancing
+floor. My poor girl dragged on my arm; her small
+feet scuffed; I lifted her along, wishing I might pick
+her up and carry her as Bill had done. I made for
+an unoccupied musicians' bench; but once there, she
+only leaned against it, not letting go her hold on me,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_294" id="Page_294">[Pg 294]</a></span>
+and stood to take in every detail of the confused, moving
+scene.</p>
+
+<p>The double doors had swung closed behind us; the
+hallman there who held the knob, now reinforced by a
+uniformed policeman. The servants' way, at the further
+end was shut; men in plain clothes set their backs
+against it. And last, Big Bill himself in overalls, a
+touch of blunt blue realism, came fogging along the
+side-wall to swing into place the great wooden bar that
+secured the entire group of glass doors which gave on
+the porch. Barbara would have seen all these arrangements
+while I was getting ready for my first glance,
+but I prompted her nervously with a low-toned, "All
+set, girl," and then as she still didn't speak, "Bill's got
+every door guarded."</p>
+
+<p>She nodded. The length of the room away, in the
+end gallery, was the cannery girl queen and her guard.
+Even at that distance, I recognized Eddie Hughes, in
+his pink-and-white Beef Eater togs, a gilded wooden
+spear in his hand, a flower tassel bobbing beside that
+long, drab, knobby countenance of his. There he was,
+the man I'd jailed for Thomas Gilbert's murder. Below
+on the dancing floor, were the two, Cummings and
+Bowman, who had put Worth behind the bars for the
+same crime. At my side was the pale, silent girl who
+declared that Clayte was the murderer.</p>
+
+<p>Whispered tuning and trying of instruments up here;
+flutter and rush about down on the dancing floor; and
+Barbara, that clenched left hand of hers still pressed
+in hard against her side, facing what problem?</p>
+
+<p>Crash! Boom! We were so close the music fairly
+deafened us, as, with a multiplied undernote of
+moving feet, the march began. On came those people<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_295" id="Page_295">[Pg 295]</a></span>
+toward us, wave behind wave of color and magnificence,
+dotted with little black ovals of masks pierced
+by gleaming eye-holes. I could sense Barbara reading
+the room as it bore down on her, and reading it clearly,
+getting whatever it was she had come there for. Myself,
+I was overwhelmed, drowned in the size and sweep
+of everything, struggling along, whispering to her
+when I spotted Jim Edwards in his friar's robe,
+noticed that the Roman soldier who must be Cummings,
+and Bowman, the Spaniard, squired the Thornhill
+twins in their geisha girl dresses; the crimson poppies
+of a Lady of Dreams looked odd against Laura Bowman's
+coppery hair.</p>
+
+<p>At the head of the procession as they swung around,
+leading it with splendid dignity, came a pair who might
+have been Emperor and Empress of China&mdash;the Vandemans.
+To go on with affairs as if nothing had
+happened&mdash;though Worth Gilbert was in jail&mdash;had
+been the laid-down policy of both Vandeman and his
+wife. I'd thought it reasonable then; foolish to get
+hot at it now. The great, shining, rhythmically moving
+line deployed, interwove, and opened out again
+until at last the floor was almost evenly occupied with
+the many-colored mass. I looked at Barbara; the
+awful intensity with which she read her room hurt me.
+It had nothing to do with that flirt of a glance she
+always gave a printed page, that mere toss of attention
+she was apt to offer a problem. The child was in
+anguish, whether merely the ache of sorrow, or actual
+bodily pain; I saw how rigidly that small fist still
+pressed against the knitted wool of her sweater, how
+her lip was drawn in and bitten. Her physical weakness
+contrasted strangely with the clean cut decision,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_296" id="Page_296">[Pg 296]</a></span>
+the absolute certainty of her mental power. She
+raised her face and looked straight up into mine.</p>
+
+<p>"Have the music stopped."</p>
+
+<p>I leaned over and down toward the orchestra leader
+to catch his eye, holding toward him the badge. His
+glance caught it, and I told him what we wanted. He
+nodded. For an instant the music flooded on, then at
+a sharp rap of the baton, broke off in mid-motion, as
+though some great singing thing had caught its breath.
+And all the swaying life and color on the floor stopped
+as suddenly. Barbara had picked the moment that
+brought Ina Vandeman and her husband squarely facing
+us. After the first instant's bewilderment, Vandeman
+and his floor managers couldn't fail to realize
+that they were being held up by an outsider; with Barbara
+in full sight up here by the orchestra, they must
+know who was doing it. I wondered not to have
+Vandeman in my hair already; but he and his consort
+stood in dignified silence; it was his committee who
+came after me, a Mephistopheles, a troubadour, an
+Indian brave, a Hercules with his club, swarming up
+the step, wanting to know if I was the man responsible,
+why the devil I had done it, who the devil I thought I
+was, anyhow. Others were close behind.</p>
+
+<p>"Edwards," I called to the brown friar, "can you
+keep these fellows off me for a minute?"</p>
+
+<p>Still not a word from Barbara. Nothing from
+Vandeman. Less than nothing: I watched in astonishment
+how the gorgeous leader stopped dumb, while
+those next him backed into the couple behind, side stepping,
+so that the whole line yawed, swayed, and began
+to fall into disorder.</p>
+
+<p>"Cummings," as I glimpsed the lawyer's chain mail<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_297" id="Page_297">[Pg 297]</a></span>
+and purple feather, "Keep them all in place if you can.
+All."</p>
+
+<p>In the instant, from behind my shoulder Barbara
+spoke.</p>
+
+<p>"Have that man&mdash;take off his mask."</p>
+
+<p>A little, shaking white hand pointed at the leader.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Vandeman," I said. "That's an order. It'll
+have to be done."</p>
+
+<p>The words froze everything. Hardly a sound or
+movement in the great crowded room, except the little
+rustle as some one tried to see better. And there, all
+eyes on him, Bronson Vandeman stood with his arms
+at his sides, mute as a fish. Ina fumbled nervously
+at the cord of her own mask, calling to me in a fierce
+undertone,</p>
+
+<p>"What do you mean, Mr. Boyne, bringing that girl
+here to spoil things. This is spite-work."</p>
+
+<p>"Off&mdash;take his mask off! Do it yourself!" Barbara's
+voice was clear and steady.</p>
+
+<p>I made three big jumps of the space between us
+and the leading couple. Vandeman's committee-men
+obstructed me, the excited yip going amongst
+them.</p>
+
+<p>"Vandeman&mdash;Bronse&mdash;Vannie&mdash;Who let this fool
+in here?&mdash;Do we throw him out?"</p>
+
+<p>Then they took the words from Edwards; the tune
+changed to grumblings of, "What's the matter with
+Van? Why doesn't he settle it one way or another,
+and be done?"</p>
+
+<p>Why didn't he? I had but a breath of time to wonder
+at that, as I shoved a way through. Darn him,
+like a graven image there, the only mute, immovable
+thing in that turmoil! I began to feel sore.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_298" id="Page_298">[Pg 298]</a></span>"You heard what she said?" I took no trouble now
+to be civil. "She wants your mask off."</p>
+
+<p>No flicker of response from the man, but the Empress
+of China dragged down her mask, crying,</p>
+
+<p>"Heard what she said? What she wants?" Over
+the shoulders of the crowd she gave Barbara Wallace
+a venomous look, then came at me.</p>
+
+<p>A little too late. My hand had shot out and snatched
+the mask from the face of China's monarch. A moment
+I glared, the bit of black stuff in my grasp, at
+the alien countenance I had uncovered. Crowding and
+craning of the others to see. Jabbering, exclaiming
+all around us.</p>
+
+<p>"Corking make-up; looks like a sure-enough Chinaman."</p>
+
+<p>"No make-up at all. The real thing."</p>
+
+<p>"What's the big idea?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why did he unmask, then?"</p>
+
+<p>"Didn't want to. They made him."</p>
+
+<p>And last, but loudest, repeated time and again, with
+wonder, with distaste, with rising anger,</p>
+
+<p>"The Vandeman's Chinese cook!"</p>
+
+<p>For with the ripping away of that black oval, I
+had looked into the slant, inscrutable eyes of Fong
+Ling. Hemmed in by the crowd, he could but face
+me; he did so with a kind of unhuman passivity.</p>
+
+<p>And the committee went wild. Their own masks
+came off on the run. I saw Cummings' face, Bowman's;
+Eddie Hughes slid from the balcony stair and
+bucked the crowd, pushing through to the seat of war.
+The grand march had become a jostling, gabbling
+chaos.</p>
+
+<p>Barbara, up there, above it all, knew what she was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_299" id="Page_299">[Pg 299]</a></span>
+about. I had utter confidence in her. But she was
+plainly holding back for a further development, her
+eyes on the entrances; and what the devil was my
+next move?</p>
+
+<p>Ina Vandeman wheeled where she stood and faced
+the room, both hands thrown up, laughing.</p>
+
+<p>"It was meant to be a joke&mdash;a great, big foolish
+joke!" her high treble rang out. "Bron's here somewhere.
+Wait. He'll tell you better than I could. At
+a masquerade&mdash;people do&mdash;they do foolish things....
+They&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Is Bronse Vandeman here?" I questioned Fong
+Ling. The Chinaman's stiff lips moved for the first
+time, in his formal, precise English.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir. Mr. Vandeman will explain." He
+crossed his hands and resigned the matter to his employer.
+And I demanded of Ina Vandeman, "You
+tell us your husband's present&mdash;in this room? Now?"
+and when her answer was drowned in the noise, I
+roared,</p>
+
+<p>"Vandeman! Bronson Vandeman! You're wanted
+here!"</p>
+
+<p>No answer. Edwards took up the call after me;
+the committee yelled the name in all keys and variations.
+In the middle of our squawking, a minor disturbance
+broke out across by the porch entrance, where
+Big Bill Capehart stood. As I looked, he turned over
+his post to Eddie Hughes, who came abreast of him
+at the moment, and started, scuffling and struggling
+toward us, with a captive.</p>
+
+<p>"I had my orders!" his big voice boomed out.
+"Pinch any one that tried to get in. Y'don't pass me&mdash;not
+if you was own cousin to God A'mighty!"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_300" id="Page_300">[Pg 300]</a></span>On they came through the crowd, all mixed up; blue
+overalls, and a flapping costume whose rich, many-colored
+silk embroideries, flashed like jewels. A space
+widened about us for them. The big garage man spun
+his catch to the center of it, so that he faced the
+room, his back to the orchestra.</p>
+
+<p>"Wanted in, did ya? Now yer in, what about it?"</p>
+
+<p>What about it, indeed? In Bill's prisoner, as he
+stood there twitching ineffectually against that obstinate
+hold, breathing loud, shakily settling his clothes,
+we had, robe for robe, cap for cap, a duplicate Emperor
+of China!</p>
+
+<p>And the next moment, this figure took off its mask
+and showed the face of Bronson Vandeman.</p>
+
+<p>Dead silence all about us; Capehart loosened his
+grip, abashed but still truculent.</p>
+
+<p>"Dang it all, Mr. Vandeman, if you didn't want to
+get mussed up, what made you fight like that?"</p>
+
+<p>"Fight?" Vandeman found his voice. "Who
+wouldn't? I was late, and you&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Bron!" After one desperate glance toward the
+girl up on the platform, Ina ran to him and put a
+hand on his arm. "They stopped the march....
+Your&mdash;the&mdash;they spoiled our joke. But have them
+start the music again. You're here now. Let's go
+on with the march ... explain afterward."</p>
+
+<p>"Good business!" Vandeman filled his chest,
+glanced across at Fong Ling, and gave his social circle
+a rather poor version of the usual white-toothed smile.
+"Jokes can wait&mdash;especially busted ones. On with
+the dance; let joy be unrefined!"</p>
+
+<p>Sidelong, I saw the orchestra leader's baton go up.
+But no music followed. It was at Barbara the baton<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_301" id="Page_301">[Pg 301]</a></span>
+had pointed, at Barbara that all the crowded company
+stared. Her little white dress clung to her slender
+figure. I saw that now she was in the strange Buddha
+pose. A few flecks of silver paper, still in her black
+hair, made it sparkle. But it was Barbara's eyes that
+held us all spellbound. In her colorless face those
+wonderful openings of black light seemed to look
+through and beyond us. For an instant there was no
+stir. Hundreds of faces set toward her, held by the
+wonder of her. Fong Ling's yellow visage moved for
+the first time from its immobility with a sort of awe,
+a dread. And when my gaze came back to her, I
+noticed that, with the dropping of her hands to join
+the finger-tips, she had left, where that little, pressing
+fist had been, a blur of red on the white sweater.
+Over me it rushed with the force of calamity, she had
+been wounded when she sank down back there in the
+crowd. It was a shot&mdash;not a giant cracker&mdash;we had
+heard.</p>
+
+<p>"Vandeman," I whirled on him, "You shot this
+girl. You tried to kill her."</p>
+
+<p>Sensation enough among the others; but I doubt if
+he even heard me. His gaze had found Barbara; all
+the bounce, all the jauntiness was out of the man, as he
+stared with the same haunted fear his eyes had held
+when she concentrated last night at his own dinner
+table.</p>
+
+<p>She was concentrating now; could she stand the
+strain of it, with its weakening of the heart action,
+its pumping all the blood to the brain? I shouldered
+my way to her, and knelt beside her, begging,</p>
+
+<p>"Don't, Barbara. Give it up, girl. You can't stand
+this."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_302" id="Page_302">[Pg 302]</a></span>Her hands unclasped. Her eyes grew normal. She
+relaxed, sighingly. I leaned closer while she whispered
+to me the last addition in that problem of two
+and two&mdash;the full solution. Armed, I faced Vandeman
+once more.</p>
+
+<p>Something seemed to be giving way in the man;
+his lips were almost as pale as his face, and that had
+been, from the moment he uncovered it, like tallow.
+He looked withered, smaller; his hair where it had
+been pressed down by mask and cap, crossed his forehead,
+flat, smooth, dull brown. I saw, half consciously,
+that Fong Ling was gone. An accomplice?
+No matter; the criminal himself was here&mdash;Barbara's
+wonder man. It was to him I spoke.</p>
+
+<p>"Edward Clayte," at the name, Cummings clanked
+around front to stare. "I hold a warrant for your
+arrest for the theft of nine hundred and eighty seven
+thousand dollars from the Van Ness Avenue Savings
+Bank of San Francisco."</p>
+
+<p>He made a sick effort to square his shoulders;
+fumbled with his hair to toss it back from its straight-down
+sleekness, as Clayte, to the pompadoured crest of
+Vandeman. How often I had seen that gesture, not
+understanding its significance. Cummings, at my side,
+drew in a breath, with,</p>
+
+<p>"Why&mdash;damn it!&mdash;he is Clayte!"</p>
+
+<p>"All right," I let the words go from the corner of
+my mouth at the lawyer, in the same hushed tones he'd
+used. "See how you like this next one," and finished,
+loud enough so all might hear,</p>
+
+<p>"And I charge you, Edward Clayte&mdash;Bronson Vandeman&mdash;with
+the murder of Thomas Gilbert."</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_303" id="Page_303">[Pg 303]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXIX" id="CHAPTER_XXIX"></a>CHAPTER XXIX</h2>
+
+<h3>UNMASKED</h3>
+
+<p>Disgrace was in the air; the country club had
+seen its vice president in handcuffs. There was
+a great gathering up of petticoats and raising of moral
+umbrellas to keep clear of the dirty splashings. It
+made me think of a certain social occasion in Israel
+some thousands of years ago, when Absalom, at his
+own party, put a raw one over on his brother Amnon,
+and all the rest of King David's sons looked at each
+other with jaws sagging, and "every man gat himself
+up upon his mule and fled." Here, it was limousines;
+more than one noble chariot&mdash;filled with members of
+the faction who'd helped to rush Vandeman into office
+over the claims of older members&mdash;rolled discredited
+down the drive.</p>
+
+<p>Yet a ball is the hardest thing in the world to kill;
+like a lizard, if you break it in two, the head and tail
+go right on wriggling independently. Also, behind
+this masked affair at the country club was the business
+proposition of a lot of blossom festival visitors from
+all over the state who mustn't be disappointed. By
+the time I'd finished out in front, getting my prisoner
+off to the lock-up, sending Eddie Hughes, with Capehart
+and the other helpers he'd picked up to guard the
+Vandeman bungalow, handed over to the Santa Ysobel
+police the matter of finding Fong Ling, and turned
+back to see how Barbara was getting on, the music<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_304" id="Page_304">[Pg 304]</a></span>
+sounded once more, the rhythmic movement of many
+feet.</p>
+
+<p>"The boys have got it started again," Jim Edwards
+joined me in the hall, his tone still lowered and odd
+from the amazement of the thing. "Curious, that
+business in there yesterday," a nod indicated the little
+writing room toward which we moved. "Bronse stepping
+in, brisk and cool, for you to question him;
+pleasant, ordinary looking chap. Would you say he
+had it in his head right then to murder you&mdash;or Barbara&mdash;if
+you came too hot on his trail?"</p>
+
+<p>"Me?" I echoed sheepishly. "He never paid me
+that compliment. He wasn't afraid of me. I think
+Barbara sealed her own fate, so far as he was concerned,
+when she let Worth pique her into doing a
+concentrating stunt at Vandeman's dinner table last
+night. The man saw that nothing she turned that
+light on could long stay hidden. He must have decided,
+then, to put her out of the way. As for his
+wife&mdash;well, however much or little she knew, she'd
+not defend Barbara Wallace."</p>
+
+<p>At that, Edwards gave me a look, but all he said
+was,</p>
+
+<p>"Cummings has suffered a complete change of
+heart, it seems. I left him in the telephone booth,
+just now, calling up Dykeman. He'll certainly keep
+the wires hot for Worth."</p>
+
+<p>"He'd better," I agreed; and only Edwards's slight,
+dark smile answered me.</p>
+
+<p>"There's a side entrance here," he explained mildly,
+as we came to the turn of the hall. "I'll unlock it;
+and when Barbara's ready to be taken home, we can
+get her out without every one gaping at her."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_305" id="Page_305">[Pg 305]</a></span>He was still at the lock, his back to me, when a
+door up front slammed, and a Spanish Cavalier came
+bustling down the corridor, pulling off a mask to show
+me Bowman's face, announcing,</p>
+
+<p>"I think you want me in there. That girl should
+have competent medical attention."</p>
+
+<p>"She has that already," I spoke over my shoulder.
+"And if she hadn't, do you think she'd let you touch
+her, Bowman? Man, you've got no human feeling.
+If you had a shred, you'd know that to her it is as
+true you tried to take Worth's life with your lying
+testimony as it is that Vandeman murdered Worth's
+father with a gun."</p>
+
+<p>"Hah!" the doctor panted at me; he was fairly
+sober, but still a bit thick in the wits. "You people
+ain't classing me with this crook Vandeman, are you?
+You can't do that. No&mdash;of course&mdash;Laura's set you
+all against me."</p>
+
+<p>Edwards straightened up from the door. With his
+first look at that fierce, dark face, the doctor began to
+back off, finally scuttling around the turn into the
+main hall at what was little less than a run.</p>
+
+<p>They had Barbara sitting in the big Morris chair
+while they finished adjusting bandages and garments.
+Our young cub of a doctor, silver buttoned velveteen
+coat off, sleeves rolled up, hailed us cheerily,</p>
+
+<p>"That bullet went where it could get the most blood
+for the least harm, I'd say. Have her all right in a
+jiffy. At that, if it had been a little further to one
+side&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>And I knew that Edward Clayte's bullet&mdash;Bronson
+Vandeman's&mdash;had narrowly missed Barbara's heart.</p>
+
+<p>"This wonderful girl!" the doctor went on with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_306" id="Page_306">[Pg 306]</a></span>
+young enthusiasm, as he bandaged and pinned. "Sitting
+up there, wounded as she was, and forgetting it,
+she looked to me more than human. Sort of effect as
+though light came from her."</p>
+
+<p>"I was ashamed of myself back there in the Square,
+Mr. Boyne," Barbara's voice, good and strong, cut
+across his panegyric. "Never in my life did I feel
+like that before. My brain wasn't functioning normally
+at all. I was confused, full of indecision." She
+mentioned that state, so painfully familiar to ordinary
+humanity, as most people would speak of being raving
+crazy. "It was agonizing," she smiled a little at the
+others. "Poor Mr. Boyne helping me along&mdash;we'd got
+somehow into a crowd. And I was just a lump of
+flesh. I hardly knew where we were. Then suddenly
+came the sound of the shot, the stinging, burning feeling
+in my side. It knocked my body down; but my
+mind came clear; I could use it."</p>
+
+<p>"I'll say you could," I smiled. "From then on,
+Bill Capehart and I were the lumps of flesh that you
+heaved around without explanation."</p>
+
+<p>"There wasn't time; and I was afraid you'd find
+out what had happened to me, and wouldn't bring me
+here," she said simply. "I knew that the one motive
+for silencing me was the work I'd been doing for Mr.
+Boyne."</p>
+
+<p>"Sure," I said, light breaking on me. "And every
+possible suspect in the Gilbert murder case was under
+this roof&mdash;or supposed to be&mdash;the grand march would
+be the show-down as to that. And just then the clock
+struck! Poor girl!"</p>
+
+<p>"It was a race against time," Barbara agreed. "If
+we could get here first, hold the door against who<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_307" id="Page_307">[Pg 307]</a></span>ever
+came flying to get in, we'd have the one who
+shot me."</p>
+
+<p>"But, Barbara child," Laura Bowman was working
+at a sweater sleeve on the bandaged side. "You did
+get here and caught Bronson Vandeman; it had worked
+out all right. Why did you risk sitting up in that
+strained pose, wounded as you were, to concentrate?"</p>
+
+<p>"For Worth. I had to relate this crime to the one
+for which he'd been arrested. Within the hour, I'd
+gathered facts that showed me Edward Clayte killed
+Worth's father. When I brought that man and his
+crime to stand before me, and Bronson Vandeman and
+his crime to stand beside it&mdash;as I can bring things
+when I concentrate on them&mdash;I found they dove-tailed&mdash;the
+impossible was true&mdash;these two were one man."
+She looked around at the four of us, wondering at her,
+and finished, "Can't they take me home now, doctor?"</p>
+
+<p>"Sit and rest a few minutes. Have the door open,"
+the young fellow said. And on the instant there came
+a call for me from the side entrance.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Boyne&mdash;are you in there? May I speak to
+you, please?"</p>
+
+<p>It was Skeet Thornhill's voice. I went out into the
+entry. There, climbing down from the old Ford truck,
+leaving its engine running, was Skeet herself. Her
+glance went first to the door I closed behind me.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," I answered its question. "She's in there."
+Then, moved by the frank misery of her eyes, "She'll
+be all right. Very little hurt."</p>
+
+<p>She said something under her breath; I thought it
+was "Thank God!" looked about the deserted side entrance,
+seemed to listen to the flooding of music and
+movement from the ballroom, then lifting to mine a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_308" id="Page_308">[Pg 308]</a></span>
+face so pale that its freckles stood out on it, faltered
+a step closer and studied me.</p>
+
+<p>"They phoned us," scarcely above a whisper.
+"Mother sent me for the girls and&mdash;Ina. Mr. Boyne,"
+a break in her voice, "am I going to be able to take
+Ina back with me? Or is she&mdash;do they&mdash;?"</p>
+
+<p>"Wait," I said. "Here she comes now," as Cummings
+brought young Mrs. Vandeman toward us. She
+moved haughtily, head up, a magnificent evening wrap
+thrown over her costume, and saw her sister without
+surprise.</p>
+
+<p>"Skeet," she crossed and stood with her back to
+me, "there's been some trouble here. Keep it from
+mother if you can. I'm leaving&mdash;but we'll get it all
+fixed up. How did you get here? Can I take you
+back in the limousine?"</p>
+
+<p>The big, closed car, one of Vandeman's wedding
+gifts to her, purred slowly up the side drive, circling
+Skeet's old truck, and stopped a little beyond. Skeet
+gave it one glance, then reached a twitching hand to
+catch on the big silken sleeve.</p>
+
+<p>"You can't go to the bungalow, Ina. As I came
+past, they were placing men around it to&mdash;to watch it."</p>
+
+<p>"<i>What!</i>" Ina wheeled on us, looking from one to
+the other. "Mr. Boyne&mdash;Mr. Cummings&mdash;who had
+that done?"</p>
+
+<p>"Does it matter?" I countered. She made me tired.</p>
+
+<p>"Does it matter?" she snapped up my words, "Am
+I to be treated as if&mdash;as though&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Even Ina Vandeman's effrontery wouldn't carry her
+to a finish on that. I completed it for her, explicitly,</p>
+
+<p>"Mrs. Vandeman, whether you are detained as an
+accomplice or merely a material witness, I'm responsible<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_309" id="Page_309">[Pg 309]</a></span>
+for you. I would have the authority to allow you
+to go with your sister; but you'll not be permitted to
+even enter the bungalow."</p>
+
+<p>"It's nearly midnight," she protested. "I have no
+clothes but this costume. I must go home."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, come on!" Skeet pleaded. "Don't you see that
+doesn't do any good, Ina? You can get something at
+our house to wear."</p>
+
+<p>She gave me a long look, her chin still high, her
+eyes hard and unreadable. Then, "For the present, I
+shall go to a hotel." She laid a hand on Skeet's shoulder,
+but it was only to push her away. "Tell mother,"
+evenly, "that I'll not bring my trouble into her house.
+Oh&mdash;you want Ernestine and Cora? Well, get them
+and go." And with firm step she walked to her car.</p>
+
+<p>I nodded to Cummings.</p>
+
+<p>"Have one of Dykeman's men pick her up and hang
+tight," I said, and he smiled back understandingly,
+with,</p>
+
+<p>"Already done, Boyne. I want to speak to Miss
+Wallace&mdash;if I may. Will you please see for me?"</p>
+
+<p>A moment later, he marched shining and jingling,
+in through a door that he left open behind him, pulled
+off his Roman helmet as though it had been a hat, and
+stood unconsciously fumbling that shoe-brush thing
+they trim those ancient lids with.</p>
+
+<p>"Barbara," he met the eyes of the girl in the chair
+unflinchingly, "you told me last night that the only
+words I ever could speak to you would be in the way
+of an apology. Will you hear one now? I'm ready
+to make it. Talk doesn't count much; but I'm going
+the limit to put Worth Gilbert's release through."</p>
+
+<p>There was a long silence, Barbara looking at him<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_310" id="Page_310">[Pg 310]</a></span>
+quite unmoved. Behind that steady gaze lay the facts
+that Worth Gilbert's life and honor had been threatened
+by this man's course; that she herself was only
+alive because the bullet of that criminal whom his
+action unconsciously shielded missed its aim by an
+inch: Worth's life, her life, their love and all that
+might mean&mdash;and Barbara had eyes you could read&mdash;I
+didn't envy Cummings as he faced her. Finally
+she said quietly,</p>
+
+<p>"I'll accept your apology, Mr. Cummings, when
+Worth is free."</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_311" id="Page_311">[Pg 311]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXX" id="CHAPTER_XXX"></a>CHAPTER XXX</h2>
+
+<h3>A CONFESSION</h3>
+
+<p>In the dingy office of the city prison, with its sand
+boxes and barrel stove, its hacked old desks, dusty
+books and papers, I watched Bronson Vandeman, and
+wondered to see how the man I had known played in
+and out across his face with the man Edward Clayte,
+whom I had tried to imagine, whom nobody could
+describe.</p>
+
+<p>Helping to recover Clayte's loot for Worth Gilbert
+looked to the opposition their best bet for squaring
+themselves. Dykeman from his sick bed, had dug us
+up a stenographer; Cummings had climbed out of his
+tin clothes and come along with us to the jail. They
+wanted the screws put on; but I intended to handle
+Vandeman in my own way. I had halted the lawyer
+on the lock-up threshold, with,</p>
+
+<p>"Cummings, I want you to keep still in here. When
+I'm done with the man, you can question him all you
+want&mdash;if he's left anything to be told." I answered
+a doubtful look, "Did you see his face there in the
+ball room as he looked up at Barbara Wallace? He
+thinks that girl knows everything, like a supreme being.
+He's still so shaken that he'd spill out anything&mdash;everything.
+He'll hardly suppose he's telling us anything
+we don't know."</p>
+
+<p>And Vandeman bore out expectations. Now, provided
+with a raincoat to take the place of his Man<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_312" id="Page_312">[Pg 312]</a></span>darin
+robe, his trousers still the lilac satin ones of that
+costume, he surveyed us and our preparations with a
+half smile as we settled our stenographer and took
+chairs ourselves.</p>
+
+<p>"I look like hell&mdash;what?" He spoke fast as a man
+might with a drink ahead. But it was not alcohol
+that was loosening his tongue. "Why can't some one
+go up to my place and get me a decent suit of clothes?
+God knows I've plenty there&mdash;closets full of them."</p>
+
+<p>"Time enough when th' Shurff gets here," Roll Winchell,
+the town marshall grunted at him. "I'm not
+taking any chances on you, Mr. Vandeman. You'll
+do me as you are."</p>
+
+<p>"Stick a smoke in my face, Cummings," came next
+in a voice that twanged like a stretched string. "Damn
+these bracelets! Light it, can't you? Light it." He
+puffed eagerly, got to his feet and began walking up
+and down the room, glancing at us from time to time,
+raising the manacled hands grotesquely to his cigar,
+drawing in a breath as though to speak, then shaking
+his head, grinning a little and walking on. I knew the
+mood; the moment was coming when he must talk.
+The necessity to reel out the whole thing to whomever
+would listen was on him like a sneeze. It's always
+so at this stage of the game.</p>
+
+<p>For all the hullabaloo in the streets, we were quiet
+enough here, since the lock-up at Santa Ysobel lurks
+demurely, as such places are apt to do, in the rear of
+the building whose garbage can it is. Our pacing
+captive could keep silent no longer. Shooting a sidelong
+glance at me, he broke out,</p>
+
+<p>"I'm not a common crook, Boyne, even if I do come
+of a family of them, and my father's in Sing Sing. I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_313" id="Page_313">[Pg 313]</a></span>
+put him there. They'd not have caught him without.
+He was an educated man&mdash;never worked anything but
+big stuff. At that, what was the best he could do&mdash;or
+any of them? Make a haul, and all they got out
+of it was a spell of easy money that they only had the
+chance to spend while they were dodging arrest.
+Sooner or later every one of them I knew got put away
+for a longer or shorter term. Growing up like that,
+getting my education in the public schools daytimes,
+and having a finish put on it nights with the gang, I
+decided that I was going to be, not honest, but the
+hundredth man&mdash;the thousandth&mdash;who can pull off a
+big thing and neither have to hide nor go to prison."</p>
+
+<p>This was promising; a little different from the ordinary
+brag; I signaled inconspicuously to our stenographer
+to keep right on the job.</p>
+
+<p>"When I was twenty-four years old, I saw my
+chance to shake the gang and try out my own idea,"
+Clayte rattled it off feelinglessly. "It was a lone hand
+for me. My father had made a stake by a forgery;
+checks on the City bank. I knew where the money
+was hid, eight thousand and seventy nine dollars. It
+would just about do me. I framed the old man&mdash;I
+told you he was in Sing Sing now&mdash;took my working
+capital and came out here to the Coast. That money
+had to make me rich for life, respected, comfortable.
+I figured that my game was as safe as dummy whist."</p>
+
+<p>"Yeh," said Roll Winchell, the marshal, gloomily,
+"them high-toned Eastern crooks always comin' out
+here thinkin' they'll find the Coast a soft snap."</p>
+
+<p>"Two years I worked as a messenger for the San
+Francisco Trust Company," Clayte's voice ran right
+on past Winchell's interruption, "a model employee,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_314" id="Page_314">[Pg 314]</a></span>
+straight as they come; then decided they were too big
+for me to tackle, and used their recommendation to
+get a clerk's job with the Van Ness Avenue concern.
+I was after the theft of at least a half million dollars,
+with a perfect alibi; and the smaller institution suited
+my plan. It took me four years to work up to paying
+teller, but I wasn't hurrying things. I was using my
+capital now to build that perfect alibi."</p>
+
+<p>He glanced around nervously as the stenographer
+turned a leaf, then went on,</p>
+
+<p>"I'd picked out this town for the home of the man
+I was going to be. It suited me, because it was on a
+branch line of the railway, hardly used at all by men
+whose business was in the city, and off the main highway
+of automobile travel; besides, I liked the place&mdash;I've
+always liked it."</p>
+
+<p>"Sure flattered," came the growl as Winchell stirred
+in his chair.</p>
+
+<p>"My bungalow and grounds cost me four thousand;
+at that it was a run-down place and I got it cheap.
+The mahogany&mdash;old family pieces that I was supposed
+to bring in from the East&mdash;came high. Yet maybe
+you'd be surprised how the idea took with me. I used
+to scrimp and save off my salary at the bank to buy
+things for the place, to keep up the right scale of
+living for Bronson Vandeman, traveling agent for
+eastern manufacturers, not at home much in Santa
+Ysobel yet, but a man of fine family, rich prospects,
+and all sorts of a good fellow, settled in the place for
+the rest of his days."</p>
+
+<p>He turned suddenly and grinned at me.</p>
+
+<p>"You swallowed it whole, Boyne, when you walked<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_315" id="Page_315">[Pg 315]</a></span>
+into my house last night&mdash;the old family furniture I
+bought in Los Angeles, the second-hand library, that
+family portrait, with a ring on my finger, and the
+same painted in on what was supposed to be my
+father's hand."</p>
+
+<p>"Sure," I nodded amiably, "You had me fooled."</p>
+
+<p>"And without a bit of crude make-up or disguise,"
+he rubbed it in. "It was a change of manner and
+psychology for mine. As Edward Clayte&mdash;and that's
+not my name, either, any more than Vandeman&mdash;I
+was description-proof. I meant to be&mdash;and I was.
+It took&mdash;her&mdash;the girl," his face darkened and he
+jerked at his cigar, "to deduce that a nonentity who
+could get away with nearly a million dollars and leave
+no trail was some man!"</p>
+
+<p>I raised my head with a start and stared at the man
+in his raincoat and lilac silk pantaloons.</p>
+
+<p>"That's so," I fed it to him, "She had a name for
+you. She called you the wonder man."</p>
+
+<p>"Did she!" a pleased smile. "Well, I'll give her
+right on that. I was some little wonder man. Listen,"
+his insistent over-stimulated voice went eagerly on,
+"The beauty of my scheme was that up to the very
+last move, there was nothing criminal in my leading
+this double life. You see&mdash;as I got stronger and
+stronger here in Santa Ysobel, I bought a good machine,
+a speedster that could burn up the road. Many's
+the stag supper I've had with the boys there in my
+bungalow, and been back behind the wicket as Edward
+Clayte in the Van Ness Avenue bank on time next
+morning. I was in that room at the St. Dunstan about
+as much as a fellow's in his front hall. I walked<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_316" id="Page_316">[Pg 316]</a></span>
+through it to Henry J. Brundage's room at the Nugget;
+I stayed there more often than I did at the St.
+Dunstan, unless I came on here.</p>
+
+<p>"I'd left marriage out. Then that night four years
+ago when Ina had her little run-in with old Tom
+Gilbert and got her engagement to Worth smashed,
+I saw there might be girls right in the class I was
+trying to break into that would be possible for a man
+like me. The date for our wedding was set, when
+Thomas Gilbert remarked to me one afternoon as we
+were coming off the golf links together, that he was
+buying a block of Van Ness Savings Bank stock.
+For a minute I felt like caving in his head, then and
+there, with the golf club I carried. What a hell of
+a thing to happen, right at the last this way! Ten
+chances to one I'd have this man to silence; but it
+must be done right. Not much room for murder in
+so full a career as mine&mdash;holding down a teller's job,
+running for the vice presidency of the country club,
+getting married in style&mdash;but every time I'd look up
+from behind my teller's grille, and see any one near
+the size of old Gilbert walk in the front door, it
+gave me the shivers. I'd put more than eight years
+of planning and hard work into this scheme, and you'll
+admit, Boyne, that what I had was some alibi. A
+wedding like that in a town of this size makes a big
+noise. I managed to be back and forth so much that
+people got the idea I was hardly out of Santa Ysobel.
+The Friday night before, I had a stag supper at my
+house, and Saturday morning if any one had called,
+Fong Ling would have told them I was sleeping late
+and couldn't be disturbed. On the forenoon of my
+wedding day, then, I sat as Edward Clayte in my<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_317" id="Page_317">[Pg 317]</a></span>
+teller's cage, the suitcase I had carried back and forth
+empty for so many Saturdays now loaded with currency
+and securities, not one of which was traceable,
+and whose amount I believed would run close
+to a million. It was within three minutes of closing
+time, when some one rapped on the counter at my
+wicket, and I looked straight up into the face of old
+Tom Gilbert.</p>
+
+<p>"I saw a flash of doubtful recognition in his eyes,
+but didn't dare to avoid them while counting bills and
+silver to pay his check. If I had done so, he would
+certainly have known me. As it was, I saw that I
+convinced him&mdash;almost. I watched him as he went
+out, saw him hesitate a little at the door of Knapp's
+office&mdash;he wasn't quite sure enough. I knew the man.
+The instant he made certain, he would act.</p>
+
+<p>"The old devil wasn't on terms to attend the reception
+at the Thornhill place, but I located him in an
+aisle seat, when I first came from the vestry with
+my best man. All through the ceremony I felt his
+eyes boring into my back. When I finally faced him,
+as Ina and I walked out, man and wife, I knew he
+recognized me, and almost expected him to step out
+and denounce me. But no&mdash;a fellow leading a double
+life was all he saw in it; bigamy was the worst he'd
+suspect me of at the moment. He didn't give Ina
+much, wouldn't lift a finger to defend her.</p>
+
+<p>"Meantime, the manner of his taking off lay easy
+to my hand. I'd studied the situation through that
+skylight, seen Ed Hughes juggle the bolts with his
+magnets, and mapped the thing out. Gilbert killed
+there, the room found bolted, was a cinch for suicide.
+When the reception at the Thornhill house was over,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_318" id="Page_318">[Pg 318]</a></span>
+I made an excuse of something needed for the journey,
+and started across to my bungalow. It was common
+for all of us to cross through the lawns; I hid in the
+shrubbery.</p>
+
+<p>"There were people with Gilbert, no chance for me
+to do anything. I stood there and nearly went out of
+my hide with impatience over the delays, while he
+had his row with Worth, when Laura Bowman and
+Jim Edwards came and braced him to let up on his
+persecution of them. Mrs. Bowman finally left; he
+went with her toward the front. Now was my chance;
+I dodged into the study, jerked his own pistol from its
+holster, squeezed myself in behind the open door and
+waited. He came back; I let him get into the room,
+past me a little, and when at some sound I made, he
+turned, the muzzle of the gun was shoved against
+his chest and fired.</p>
+
+<p>"I'd barely finished pressing Gilbert's fingers around
+the pistol butt when I heard a cry outside, jumped to
+the door, shut and bolted it just as my mother-in-law
+ran in across the lawns. I gathered that she'd been
+there earlier to get those three leaves out of the diary
+that you were so interested in, Boyne; had just read
+them and come back to have it out with old Tom.
+She hung around for five minutes, I should say, beating
+on the door, calling, asking if anything was wrong.</p>
+
+<p>"My one big mistake in the study was that diary
+of 1920. It lay open on the desk where he'd been
+writing. It did tell of his having identified me as
+Clayte. I'd not expected it, and so I didn't handle
+it well. Time pressed. I couldn't carry it with me;
+I tore out the leaf, stuck the book into the drainpipe,
+and ran.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_319" id="Page_319">[Pg 319]</a></span>"And after all," he summed up, "my plans would
+have gone through on schedule; you never could have
+touched me with your clumsy, police-detective methods,
+if it hadn't been for the girl."</p>
+
+<p>He dropped his head and stood brooding a moment,
+demanded another smoke, got it, shrugged off some
+thought with a gesture, and finished,</p>
+
+<p>"I was in too deep to turn. It was her life&mdash;or
+mine. Things went contrary. We couldn't get her
+to come out to the masquerade, where it would have
+been easy. With those two Mandarin costumes, Fong
+Ling in my place, I had my time from the hour we
+put on the masks till midnight. Another perfect alibi.
+Well&mdash;it didn't work. They say you have to shoot
+a witch with a silver bullet. And she's more than
+human."</p>
+
+<p>A siren's dry shriek as the Sheriff's gasoline buggy
+made its way through the crowded street outside.
+Cummings raised his brows at me, got my nod of
+permission, and shot his first question at the prisoner.</p>
+
+<p>"Vandeman, where's the money?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not within a hundred miles of here," instantly.</p>
+
+<p>"You took it south with you&mdash;on your wedding
+trip?" Cummings would persist. But our man, so expansive
+a moment ago, had, as I knew he would at
+direct mention of his loot, turned sullen, and he started
+for the San Jose jail, mum as an oyster.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_320" id="Page_320">[Pg 320]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXXI" id="CHAPTER_XXXI"></a>CHAPTER XXXI</h2>
+
+<h3>THE MILLION-DOLLAR SUITCASE</h3>
+
+<p>The Sheriff had gone with his prisoner; Cummings
+left; and then there came to me, in the
+street there before the lock-up, riding with Jim
+Edwards in his roadster, a Worth Gilbert I had never
+known. Quiet he had been before; but never considerate
+like this. When I rushed up to him with my
+triumph and congratulations, and he put them aside,
+it was with a curious gentleness.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, yes, Jerry; I know. Vandeman turned out
+to be Clayte." Then, noticing my bewilderment, "You
+see, Jim let it slip that Barbara's hurt. Where is
+she?" And Edwards leaned around to explain.</p>
+
+<p>"When we came past Capehart's, and she wasn't
+there, I&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, that's only a scratch," I hurried to assure the
+boy. "Barbara'll be all right."</p>
+
+<p>"So Jim said," he agreed soberly. "I'm afraid
+you're both lying to me."</p>
+
+<p>"All right," I climbed in beside him. "We'll go
+and see. She's up at your house&mdash;waiting for you."</p>
+
+<p>As we headed away for the other end of town, he
+spoke again, half interrogatively,</p>
+
+<p>"Vandeman shot her?" and when I nodded. "He's
+on his way to jail. I'm out. But I'm the man that's
+responsible for what's happened to her. Dragged her
+into this thing, in the first place. She hated those<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_321" id="Page_321">[Pg 321]</a></span>
+concentrating stunts; and I set her to do one at that
+woman's table. To help play my game&mdash;I risked her
+life."</p>
+
+<p>I listened in wonder; sidelong, in the dimness, I
+studied the carriage of head and shoulders: no diminution
+of power; but a new use of it. This was not the
+crude boy who would knock everybody's plans to bits
+for a whim; Worth had found himself; and what a
+man!</p>
+
+<p>"How does it look for recovering the money,
+Boyne?" Edwards questioned as we drove along.</p>
+
+<p>I plunged into the hottest of that stuff Clayte-Vandeman
+had spilled, talked fascinatingly, as I thought, for
+three minutes, and paused to hear Worth say,</p>
+
+<p>"Who's with Barbara at my house?"</p>
+
+<p>"Mrs. Bowman," I said in despair, and quit right
+there.</p>
+
+<p>We came into Broad Street a little above the Vandeman
+bungalow which lay black and silent, the lights
+of Worth's house showing beyond. As we turned the
+corner, a man jumped up from the shadow of the
+hedge where the Vandeman lawn joined the Gilbert
+place; there was a flash; the report of a gun; our
+watchers had flushed some one. I'd barely had time
+to say so to the others when there was a second sharp
+crack, then the whine of a ricochetting chunk of lead
+as it zipped from the asphalt to sing over our heads.</p>
+
+<p>"Beat it!" I yelled. "Stop the car and get to cover!"</p>
+
+<p>Edwards slowed. A moment Worth hung on the
+running board, peering in the direction of the sounds.
+I started to climb out after him. There came another
+shot from up ahead, and then a shout. As I
+tumbled to my feet in the dark road, Worth had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_322" id="Page_322">[Pg 322]</a></span>
+started away on the jump. And I saw then, what I'd
+missed before, that the man who had burst from the
+hedge, was running zig-zag down the open roadway toward
+us. He was making his legs spin, and dodging
+from side to side as if to duck bullets. Worth headed
+straight for him, as though it wasn't plain that some
+one out of sight somewhere was making a target of
+the runner.</p>
+
+<p>Not the kind of a scrap I care for; in a half light
+you can't tell friend from foe; but Worth went to it&mdash;and
+what was there to do but follow? I shouted and
+blew my whistle, hoping our men would hear, heed,
+and let up shooting. At the moment of my doing so,
+Worth closed with the man, who dropped something
+he was carrying, and tackled low, lunging at the boy's
+knees, aiming I could see to let Worth dive over and
+scrape up the pavement with his face.</p>
+
+<p>No dodging that tackle; it caught Worth square; he
+even seemed to spring up for the dive; and somehow
+he carried his opponent with him to soften the fall.
+They came down together in the middle of the hard
+road with the shock of a railway collision; rolled over
+and over like dogs in a scrap, only there wasn't any
+growling or yelping. It was deadly quiet; not for an
+instant could you tell which was which, or whether the
+whirling, pelting tangle of arms and legs was man,
+beast or devil. That's why, even when I got near
+enough, I didn't dare plant a large, thick-soled boot in
+the mess.</p>
+
+<p>The fight was up to Worth; nothing else for it.
+Capehart came rolling from the hedge where I had seen
+the pistols flash; Eddie Hughes, inconceivable in pink
+puffings, bounded after; Jim Edwards chased up from<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_323" id="Page_323">[Pg 323]</a></span>
+his car; but all any of us could do was to run up and
+down as the struggle whirled about, and grunt when
+the blows landed. These sounded like a pile-driver
+hitting a redwood butt. Out of the mêlée an arm
+would jerk, the fist at the end of it come back to land
+with a thud&mdash;on somebody's meat.</p>
+
+<p>"Who the devil is it?" I bellowed at Capehart, as
+the two grappled, afoot, then down, no knowing who
+was on top, spinning around in a struggle where neither
+boots nor knees were barred.</p>
+
+<p>"He sneaked out of the bungalow just now," Capehart
+snorted. "We'd searched the place. Didn't think
+there was room for a louse to be hid in it. Got by the
+boys. I stopped him at the hedge and drove him into
+the open. Now Worth's got him. That is Worth,
+ain't it? Fights like him."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," I said, "It's Worth." But in my own mind
+I wasn't sure whether Worth had the fugitive, or the
+fugitive had Worth. And Jim Edwards muttered
+anxiously, as we skipped and side-stepped along with
+the fight,</p>
+
+<p>"That fellow may have a knife or a gun."</p>
+
+<p>"Not where he can draw," I said, "or he'd have used
+it before now." And Capehart sung out,</p>
+
+<p>"Sure. Leave 'em go. Worth'll fix him."</p>
+
+<p>Edging in too close, I got a kick on the shin from a
+flying heel, and was dancing around on one foot nursing
+the other when I heard sounds of distress issue
+from the tangle in the road; somebody was getting
+breath in long, gaspy sighs that broke off in grunts
+when the thud of blows fell, and merged in the harsh
+nasal of blood violently dislodged from nose and
+throat. For a while they had been up, and swapping<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_324" id="Page_324">[Pg 324]</a></span>
+punches face to face, lightning swift. Sounds like
+boxing, perhaps, but there wasn't any science about it.
+Feint? Parry? Footwork? Not on your life!
+Each of these two was trying to slug the other into
+insensibility, working for any old kind of a knock-out.</p>
+
+<p>I began to be a little nervous for fear the boy I was
+bringing home from jail as a peace offering to Barbara
+might arrive so defaced that she wouldn't recognize
+him, when I saw one dark form pull away, leap back,
+an arm shoot out like a piston-rod, and with a jar that
+set my own teeth on edge, connect with the other man's
+chin. He went down clawing the air, crumpled into a
+bunch of clothes at the side of the road.</p>
+
+<p>"You wanted the Chink, didn't you, Bill?" This
+was Worth, facing Jim Edwards's torch, fumbling for
+his handkerchief. "I heard you, and I thought you
+wanted him."</p>
+
+<p>"It's Fong Ling!" bawled Capehart. "Sure we
+wanted him&mdash;and whatever that was he was carrying.
+Where is it? Did he drop it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Sort of think he did," Worth was dabbing off his
+own face with a gingerly, respectful touch. "I know
+he dropped some teeth back there in the road. Saw
+him spit 'em out. Maybe he left it with them. You
+might go and look."</p>
+
+<p>The four of us drifted along the field of battle, Capehart's
+assistant having taken charge of the unconscious
+Chinaman, whom he was frisking for weapons. Halfway
+back to the hedge Bill stumbled on something,
+picked it up, and dropped it again with a disgusted
+grunt.</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing but a Chinaboy's keister," he said contemptuously.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_325" id="Page_325">[Pg 325]</a></span>
+"Not much to that. Why in blazes did
+he run so?"</p>
+
+<p>"Because you were shooting him up, I'd say," Jim
+Edwards suggested.</p>
+
+<p>"Naw. Commenced to run before we turned loose
+on him," Bill protested.</p>
+
+<p>"Hello!" I had pounced on the unbelievable thing,
+and called to Edwards for his light. "Worth, here's
+your eight-hundred-thousand-dollar suitcase!"</p>
+
+<p>"That!" he followed along, dusting himself off, trying
+out his joints. "Oh, yes. I left it in my closet,
+and it disappeared. Told you of it at the time, didn't
+I, Jerry?"</p>
+
+<p>"You did not," I sputtered, down on my knees,
+working away at the catches. "You never told me
+anything that would be of any use to us. If this thing
+disappeared, I suppose Vandeman stole it to get a piece
+of evidence in the Clayte case out of the way."</p>
+
+<p>"Likely." Worth turned, with no further interest,
+and started toward his own gate.</p>
+
+<p>"Hi! Come back here," I yelled after him. For
+the lock gave at that moment; there, under the pale
+circle of the electric torch, lay Clayte-Vandeman's loot!</p>
+
+<p>"My gosh!" mumbled Capehart. "I didn't suppose
+there was so much money in the known world."</p>
+
+<p>Eddie Hughes, breathing hard; Jim Edwards, bending
+to hold the torch; Capehart, stooping, blunt hands
+spread on knees, goggle-eyed; my own fingers shaking
+as I dragged out my list and attempted to sort through
+the stuff&mdash;not one of us but felt the thrill of that great
+fortune tumbled down there in the open road in the
+empty night.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_326" id="Page_326">[Pg 326]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>But Worth delayed reluctantly at the edge of the
+shadows, looking with impatience across his shoulder,
+eager to be on&mdash;to get to Barbara. Yet I wanted that
+suitcase to go into the house in his hand; wanted him
+to be able to tell his girl that she'd made him a winner
+in the gamble and the long chase. Roughly assured
+that only a few thousands had been used by Vandeman,
+I stuck the handles into his fist and trailed
+along after his quick strides. Edwards followed me.
+Laura Bowman opened the door to us; she stopped
+Edwards on the porch.</p>
+
+<p>And then I saw my children meet. I hadn't meant
+to; but after all, what matter? They didn't know I
+was on earth. Creation had resolved itself, for them,
+into the one man, the one woman.</p>
+
+<p>The suitcase thumped unregarded on the floor. She
+came to him with her hands out. He took them
+slowly, raised them to his shoulders, and her arms went
+round his neck.</p>
+
+
+<h3>THE END</h3>
+
+
+<div class="tnote">
+
+<h3>Transcriber's Notes</h3>
+
+<p>Page 26, word "sowly" changed to "slowly" (Slowly he brought that)<br />
+
+Page 26, duplicate "the" deleted (followed it with the other)<br />
+
+Page 134, word "inconspicious" changed to "inconspicuous" (inconspicuous
+eye on Edwards)<br />
+
+Page 156, word "expaining" changed to "explaining" (explaining how I'd
+have run)<br />
+
+Page 172, word "Warf" changed to "Wharf" (land me at Fisherman's Wharf)<br />
+
+Page 315, word "Los Angles" changed to "Los Angeles" (I bought in Los
+Angeles)<br />
+
+Page 315, word "nonenity" changed to "nonentity" (to deduce that a
+nonentity)</p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Million-Dollar Suitcase, by
+Alice MacGowan and Perry Newberry
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+</pre>
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+</body>
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Million-Dollar Suitcase, by
+Alice MacGowan and Perry Newberry
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Million-Dollar Suitcase
+
+Author: Alice MacGowan
+ Perry Newberry
+
+Release Date: August 31, 2009 [EBook #29877]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MILLION-DOLLAR SUITCASE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Clarke, Woodie4 and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
+produced from images generously made available by The
+Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE MILLION-DOLLAR SUITCASE
+
+ BY
+
+ ALICE MacGOWAN
+ AND
+ PERRY NEWBERRY
+
+ NEW YORK
+ FREDERICK A. STOKES COMPANY
+ PUBLISHERS
+
+
+
+
+ _Copyright, 1922, by_
+ FREDERICK A. STOKES COMPANY
+
+ _Copyright, 1921, by_
+ THE CURTIS PUBLISHING COMPANY
+ _under the title "Two and Two"_
+
+
+ _Printed in the United States of America_
+
+
+
+
+ CONTENTS
+
+
+ CHAPTER PAGE
+
+ I WORTH GILBERT 1
+
+ II SIGHT UNSEEN 16
+
+ III A WEDDING PARTY 27
+
+ IV AN APPARITION 45
+
+ V AT THE ST. DUNSTAN 57
+
+ VI ON THE ROOF 65
+
+ VII THE GOLD NUGGET 75
+
+ VIII A TIN-HORN GAMBLER 87
+
+ IX SANTA YSOBEL 101
+
+ X A SHADOW IN THE FOG 110
+
+ XI THE MISSING DIARY 124
+
+ XII A MURDER 137
+
+ XIII DR. BOWMAN 147
+
+ XIV SEVEN LOST DAYS 155
+
+ XV AT DYKEMAN'S OFFICE 164
+
+ XVI A LUNCHEON 171
+
+ XVII CLEANSING FIRES 181
+
+ XVIII THE TORN PAGE 188
+
+ XIX ON THE HILL-TOP 196
+
+ XX AT THE COUNTRY CLUB 209
+
+ XXI A MATTER OF TASTE 214
+
+ XXII A DINNER INVITATION 225
+
+ XXIII A BIT OF SILK 231
+
+ XXIV THE MAGNET 240
+
+ XXV AN ARREST 250
+
+ XXVI MRS. BOWMAN SPEAKS 261
+
+ XXVII THE BLOSSOM FESTIVAL 273
+
+ XXVIII THE COUNTRY CLUB BALL 293
+
+ XXIX UNMASKED 303
+
+ XXX A CONFESSION 311
+
+ XXXI THE MILLION-DOLLAR SUITCASE 320
+
+
+
+
+THE MILLION-DOLLAR SUITCASE
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+WORTH GILBERT
+
+
+On the blank silence that followed my last words, there in the big,
+dignified room with its Circassian walnut and sound-softening rugs,
+Dykeman, the oldest director, squalled out as though he had been bitten,
+
+"All there is to tell! But it can't be! It isn't possib--" His voice
+cracked, split on the word, and the rest came in an agonized squeak, "A
+man can't just vanish into thin air!"
+
+"A man!" Knapp, the cashier, echoed. "A suitcase full of money--our
+money--can't vanish into thin air in the course of a few hours."
+
+Feverishly they passed the timeworn phrase back and forth; it would have
+been ludicrous if it hadn't been so deadly serious. Well, money when you
+come to think of it, is its very existence to such an institution; it
+was not to be wondered at that the twelve men around the long table in
+the directors' room of the Van Ness Avenue Savings Bank found this a
+life or death matter.
+
+"How much--?" began heavy-set, heavy-voiced old Anson, down at the lower
+end, but stuck and got no further. There was a smitten look on every
+face at the contemplation--a suitcase could hold so unguessably great a
+sum expressed in terms of cash and securities.
+
+"We'll have the exact amount in a few moments--I've just set them to
+verifying," President Whipple indicated with a slight backward nod the
+second and smaller table in the room, where two clerks delved mole-like
+among piles of securities, among greenbacks and yellowbacks bound round
+with paper collars, and stacks of coin.
+
+The blinds were down, only the table lamps on, and a gooseneck over
+where the men counted. It put the place all in shadow, and threw out
+into bolder relief the faces around that board, gray-white, denatured,
+all with the financier's curiously unhuman look. The one fairly cheerful
+countenance in sight was that of A. G. Cummings, the bank's attorney.
+
+For myself, I was only waiting to hear what results those clerks would
+bring us. So far, Whipple had been quite noncommittal: the extraordinary
+state of the market--everything so upset that a bank couldn't afford
+even the suspicion of a loss or irregularity--hinting at something in
+his mind not evident to the rest of us. I was just rising to go round
+and ask him quietly if, having reported, I might not be excused to get
+on the actual work, when the door opened.
+
+I can't say why the young fellow who stood in it should have seemed so
+foreign to the business in hand; perhaps the carriage of his tall
+figure, the military abruptness of his movements, the way he swung the
+door far back against the wall and halted there, looking us over. But I
+do know that no sooner had Worth Gilbert, lately home from France,
+crossed the threshold, meeting Whipple's outstretched hand, nodding
+carelessly to the others, than suddenly every man in the room seemed
+older, less a man. We were dead ones; he the only live wire in the
+place.
+
+"Boyne," the president turned quickly to me, "would you mind going over
+for Captain Gilbert's benefit what you've just said?"
+
+The newcomer had, so far, not made any movement to join the circle at
+the table. He stood there, chin up, looking straight at us all, but
+quite through us. At the back of the gaze was a something between weary
+and fierce that I have noticed in the eyes of so many of our boys home
+from what they'd witnessed and gone through over there, when forced to
+bring their attention to the stale, bloodless affairs of civil life.
+Used to the instant, conclusive fortunes of war, they can hardly handle
+themselves when matters hitch and halt upon customs and legalities; the
+only thing that appeals to them is the big chance, win or lose, and have
+it over. Such a man doesn't speak the language of the group that was
+there gathered. Just looking at him, old Dykeman rasped, without further
+provocation,
+
+"What's Captain Gilbert got to do with the private concerns of this
+bank?"
+
+As though the words--and their tone--had been a cordial invitation,
+rather than an offensive challenge, the young man, who had still shown
+no sign of an intention to come into the meeting at all, walked to the
+table, drew out a chair and sat down.
+
+"Pardon me, Mr. Dykeman," Cummings' voice had a wire edge on it, "the
+Hanford block of stock in this bank has, as I think you very well know,
+passed fully into Gilbert hands to-day."
+
+"Thomas A. Gilbert," Dykeman was sparing of words.
+
+"Captain Worth Gilbert's father," Whipple attempted pacification. "Mr.
+Gilbert senior was with me till nearly noon, closing up the transfer. He
+had hardly left when we discovered the shortage. After consultation,
+Knapp and I got hold of Cummings. We wanted to get you gentlemen
+here--have the capital of the bank represented, as nearly as we
+could--and found that Mr. Gilbert had taken the twelve-forty-five train
+for Santa Ysobel; so, as Captain Gilbert was to be found, we felt that
+if we got him it would be practically--er--quite the same thing--"
+
+Worth Gilbert had sat in the chair he selected, absolutely indifferent.
+It was only when Dykeman, hanging to his point, spoke again, that I saw
+a quick gleam of blue fire come into those hawk eyes under the slant
+brow. He gave a sort of detached attention as Dykeman sputtered
+indecently.
+
+"Not the same thing at all! Sons can't always speak for fathers, any
+more than fathers can always speak for sons. In this case--"
+
+He broke off with his ugly old mouth open. Worth Gilbert, the son of
+divorced parents, with a childhood that had divided time between a
+mother in the East and a California father, surveyed the parchment-like
+countenance leisurely after the crackling old voice was hushed. Finally
+he grunted inarticulately (I'm sorry I can't find a more imposing word
+for a returned hero); and answered all objections with,
+
+"I'm here now--and here I stay. What's the excitement?"
+
+"I was just asking Mr. Boyne to tell you," Whipple came in smoothly.
+
+No one else offered any objections. What I repeated, briefly, amounted
+to this:
+
+Directly after closing time to-day--which was noon, as this was
+Saturday--Knapp, the cashier of the bank, had discovered a heavy
+shortage, and it was decided on a quick investigation that Edward
+Clayte, one of the paying tellers, had walked out with the money in a
+suitcase. I was immediately called in on what appeared a wide-open
+trail, with me so close behind Clayte that you'd have said there was
+nothing to it. I followed him--and the suitcase--to his apartment at the
+St. Dunstan, found he'd got there at twenty-five minutes to one, and I
+barely three quarters of an hour after.
+
+"How do you get the exact minute Clayte arrived?" Anson stopped me at
+this point, "and the positive knowledge that he had the suitcase with
+him?"
+
+"Clayte asked the time--from the clerk at the desk--as he came in. He
+put the suitcase down while he set his watch. The clerk saw him pick it
+up and go into the elevator; Mrs. Griggsby, a woman at work mending
+carpet on the seventh floor--which is his--saw him come out of the
+elevator carrying it, and let himself into his room. There the trail
+ends."
+
+"Ends?" As my voice halted young Gilbert's word came like a bullet. "The
+trail can't end unless the man was there."
+
+"Or the suitcase," little old Sillsbee quavered, and Worth Gilbert gave
+him a swift, half-humorous glance.
+
+"Bath and bedroom," I said, "that suite has three windows, seven
+stories above the ground. I found them all locked--not mere latches--the
+St. Dunstan has burglar-proof locks. No disturbance in the room; all
+neat, in place, the door closed with the usual spring lock; and I had to
+get Mrs. Griggsby to move, since she was tacking the carpet right at the
+threshold. Everything was in that room that should have been
+there--except Clayte and the suitcase."
+
+The babel of complaint and suggestion broke out as I finished, exactly
+as it had done when I got to this point before: "The Griggsby woman
+ought to be kept under surveillance"; "The clerk, the house servants
+ought to be watched,"--and so on, and so on. I curtly reiterated my
+assurance that such routine matters had been promptly and thoroughly
+attended to. My nerves were getting raw. I'm not so young as I was. This
+promised to be one of those grinding cases where the detective agency is
+run through the rollers so many times that it comes out pretty slim in
+the end, whether that end is failure or success.
+
+The only thing in sight that it didn't make me sick to look at was that
+silent young fellow sitting there, never opening his trap, giving things
+a chance to develop, not rushing in on them with the forceps. It was a
+crazy thing for Whipple to call this meeting--have all these old, scared
+men on my back before I could take the measure of what I was up against.
+What, exactly, had the Van Ness Avenue Bank lost? That, and not anything
+else, was the key for my first moves. And at last a clerk crossed to our
+table, touched Whipple's arm and presented a sheet of paper.
+
+"I'll read the total, gentlemen." The president stared at the sheet he
+held, moistened his lips, gulped, gasped, "I--I'd no idea it was so
+much!" and finished in a changed voice, "nine hundred and eighty seven
+thousand, two hundred and thirty four dollars."
+
+A deathlike hush. Dykeman's mere look was a call for the ambulance;
+Anson slumped in his chair; little old Sillsbee sat twisted away so that
+his face was in shadow, but the knuckles showed bone white where his
+hand gripped the table top. None of them seemed able to speak; the young
+voice that broke startlingly on the stillness had the effect of scaring
+the others, with its tone of nonchalance, rather than reassuring them.
+Worth Gilbert leaned forward and looked round in my direction with,
+
+"This is beginning to be interesting. What do the police say of it?"
+
+"We've not thought well to notify them yet." Whipple's eye consulted
+that of his cashier and he broke off. Quietly the clerks got out with
+the last load of securities; Knapp closed the door carefully behind
+them, and as he returned to us, Whipple repeated, "I had no idea it was
+so big," his tone almost pleading as he looked from one to the other.
+"But I felt from the first that we'd better keep this thing to
+ourselves. We don't want a run on the bank, and under present financial
+conditions, almost anything might start one. But--almost a million
+dollars!"
+
+He seemed unable to go on; none of the other men at the table had
+anything to offer. It was the silent youngster, the outsider, who spoke
+again.
+
+"I suppose Clayte was bonded--for what that's worth?"
+
+"Fifteen thousand dollars," Knapp, the cashier, gave the information
+dully. The sum sounded pitiful beside that which, we were to
+understand, had traveled out of the bank as currency and unregistered
+securities in Clayte's suitcase.
+
+"Bonding company will hound him, won't they?" young Gilbert put it
+bluntly. "Will the Clearing House help you out?" in the tone of one
+discussing a lost umbrella.
+
+"Not much chance--now." Whipple's face was sickly. "You know as well as
+I do that we are going to get little help from outside. I want you to
+all stand by me now--keep this quiet--among ourselves--"
+
+"Among ourselves!" rapped out Kirkpatrick. "Then it leaks--we have a
+run--and where are you?"
+
+"No, no. Just long enough to give Boyne here a chance to recover our
+money without publicity--try it out, anyhow."
+
+"Well," said Anson sullenly, "that's what he's paid for. How long is it
+going to take him?"
+
+I made no attempt to answer that fool question; Cummings spoke for me,
+lawyer fashion, straddling the question, bringing up the arguments pro
+and con.
+
+"Your detective asks for publicity to assist his search. You refuse it.
+Then you've got to be indulgent with him in the matter of time.
+Understand me, you may be right; I'm not questioning the wisdom of
+secrecy, though as a lawyer I generally think the sooner you get to the
+police with a crime the better. You all can see how publicity and a
+sizable reward offered would give Mr. Boyne a hundred thousand
+assistants--conscious and unconscious--to help nab Clayte."
+
+"And we'd be a busted bank before you found him," groaned Knapp. "We've
+got to keep this thing to ourselves. I agree with Whipple."
+
+"It's all we can do," the president repeated.
+
+"Suppose a State bank examiner walks in on you Monday?" demanded the
+attorney.
+
+"We take that chance--that serious chance," replied Whipple solemnly.
+
+Silence after that again till Cummings spoke.
+
+"Gentlemen, there are here present twelve of the principal stockholders
+of the bank." He paused a moment to estimate. "The capital is
+practically represented. Speaking as your legal advisor, I am obliged to
+say that you should not let the bank take such a risk as Mr. Whipple
+suggests. You are threatened with a staggering loss, but, after all, a
+high percent of money lost by defalcations is recovered--made
+good--wholly or in part."
+
+"Nearly a million dollars!" croaked old Sillsbee.
+
+"Yes, yes, of course," Cummings agreed hastily; "the larger amount's
+against you. The men who can engineer such a theft are almost as strong
+as you are. You've got to make every edge cut--use every weapon that's
+at hand. And most of all, gentlemen, you've got to stand together. No
+dissensions. As a temporary expedient--to keep the bank sufficiently
+under cover and still allow Boyne the publicity he needs--replace this
+money pro rata among yourselves. That wouldn't clean any of you.
+Announce a small defalcation, such as Clayte's bond would cover, so you
+could collect there; use all the machinery of the police. Then when
+Clayte's found, the money recovered, you reimburse yourselves."
+
+"But if he's never found! If it's never recovered?" Knapp asked huskily;
+he was least able of any man in the room to stand the loss.
+
+"What do you say, Gilbert?" The attorney looked toward the young man,
+who, all through the discussion, had been staring straight ahead of him.
+He came round to the lawyer's question like one roused from other
+thoughts, and agreed shortly.
+
+"Not a bad bet."
+
+"Well--Boyne--" Whipple was giving way an inch at a time.
+
+"It's a peculiar case," I began, then caught myself up with, "All cases
+are peculiar. The big point here is to get our man before he can get rid
+of the money. We were close after Clayte; even that locked room in the
+St. Dunstan needn't have stopped us. If he wasn't in it, he was
+somewhere not far outside it. He'd had no time to make a real getaway.
+All I needed to lay hands on him was a good description."
+
+"Description?" echoed Whipple. "Your agency's got descriptions on
+file--thumb prints--photographs--of every employee of this bank."
+
+"Every one of 'em but Clayte," I said. "When I came to look up the
+files, there wasn't a thing on him. Don't think I ever laid eyes on the
+man myself."
+
+A description of Edward Clayte? Every man at the table--even old
+Sillsbee--sat up and opened his mouth to give one; but Knapp beat them
+to it, with,
+
+"Clayte's worked in this bank eight years. We all know him. You can get
+just as many good descriptions as there are people on our payroll or
+directors in this room--and plenty more at the St. Dunstan, I'll be
+bound."
+
+"You think so?" I said wearily. "I have not been idle, gentlemen; I have
+interviewed his associates. Listen to this; it is a composite of the
+best I've been able to get." I read: "Edward Clayte; height about five
+feet seven or eight; weight between one hundred and forty and one
+hundred and fifty pounds; age somewhere around forty; smooth face;
+medium complexion, fairish; brown hair; light eyes; apparently
+commonplace features; dressed neatly in blue business suit, black shoes,
+black derby hat--"
+
+"Wait a minute," interposed Knapp. "Is that what they gave you at the
+St. Dunstan--what he was wearing when he came in?"
+
+I nodded.
+
+"Well, I'd have said he had on tan shoes and a fedora. He _did_--or was
+that yesterday? But aside from that, it's a perfect description; brings
+the man right up before me."
+
+I heard a chuckle from Worth Gilbert.
+
+"That description," I said, "is gibberish; mere words. Would it bring
+Clayte up before any one who had never seen him? Ask Captain Gilbert,
+who doesn't know the man. I say that's a list of the points at which he
+resembles every third office man you meet on the street. What I want is
+the points at which he'd differ. You have all known Clayte for years;
+forget his regularities, and tell me his peculiarities--looks, manners,
+dress or habits."
+
+There was a long pause, broken finally by Whipple.
+
+"He never smoked," said the bank president.
+
+"Occasionally he did," contradicted Knapp, and the pause continued till
+I asked,
+
+"Any peculiarities of clothing?"
+
+"Oh, yes," said Whipple. "Very neat. Usually blue serge."
+
+"But sometimes gray," added Knapp, heavily, and old Sillsbee piped in,
+
+"I've seen that feller wear pin-check; I know I have."
+
+I was fed up on clothes.
+
+"How did he brush his hair?" I questioned.
+
+"Smoothed down from a part high on the left," Knapp came back promptly.
+
+"On the right," boomed old Anson from the foot of the table.
+
+"Sometimes--yes--I guess he did," Knapp conceded hesitantly.
+
+"Oh, well then, what color was it? Maybe you can agree better on that."
+
+"Sort of mousy color," Knapp thought.
+
+"O Lord! Mousy colored!" groaned Dykeman under his breath. "Listen to
+'em!"
+
+"Well, isn't it?" Knapp was a bit stung.
+
+"House mousy, or field mousy?" Cummings wanted to know.
+
+"Knapp's right enough," Whipple said with dignity. "The man's hair is a
+medium brown--indeterminate brown." He glanced around the table at the
+heads of hair under the electric lights. "Something the color of
+Merrill's," and a director began stroking his hair nervously.
+
+"No, no; darker than Merrill's," broke in Kirkpatrick. "Isn't it,
+Knapp?"
+
+"Why, I was going to say lighter," admitted the cashier, discouragedly.
+
+"Never mind," I sighed. "Forget the hair. Come on--what color are his
+eyes?"
+
+"Blue," said Whipple.
+
+"Gray," said Knapp.
+
+"Brown," said Kirkpatrick.
+
+They all spoke in one breath. And as I despairingly laid down my pencil,
+the last man repeated firmly,
+
+"Brown. But--they might be light brown--or hazel, y'know."
+
+"But, after all, Boyne," Whipple appealed to me, "you've got a fairly
+accurate description of the man, one that fits him all right."
+
+"Does it? Then he's description proof. No moles, scars or visible
+marks?" I suggested desperately.
+
+"None." There was a negative shaking of heads.
+
+"No mannerisms? No little tricks, such as a twist of the mouth, a
+mincing step, or a head carried on one side?"
+
+More shakes of negation from the men who knew Clayte.
+
+"Well, at least you can tell me who are his friends--his intimates?"
+
+Nobody answered.
+
+"He must have friends?" I urged.
+
+"He hasn't," maintained Whipple. "Knapp is as close to him as any man in
+San Francisco."
+
+The cashier squirmed, but said nothing.
+
+"But outside the bank. Who were his associates?"
+
+"Don't think he had any," from Knapp.
+
+"Relatives?"
+
+"None--I know he hadn't."
+
+"Girls? Lord! Didn't he have a girl?"
+
+"Not a girl."
+
+"No associates--no girl? For the love of Mike, what could such a man
+intend to do with all that money?" I gasped. "Where did he spend his
+time when he wasn't in the bank?"
+
+Whipple looked at his cashier for an answer. But Knapp was sitting, head
+down, in a painful brown study, and the president himself began
+haltingly.
+
+"Why, he was perhaps the one man in the bank that I knew least about.
+The truth is he was so unobjectionable in every way, personally
+unobtrusive, quite unimportant and uninteresting; really--er--
+un-everything, such a--a--"
+
+"Shadow," Cummings suggested.
+
+"That's the word--shadow--I never thought to inquire where he went till
+he walked out of here this noon with the bank's money crammed in that
+suitcase."
+
+"Was the Saturday suitcase a regular thing?" I asked, and Whipple looked
+bewildered. But Knapp woke up with,
+
+"Oh, yes. For years. Studious fellow. Books to be exchanged at the
+public library, I think. No--" Knapp spoke heavily. "Come to think of
+it, guess that was special work. He told me once he was taking some sort
+of correspondence course."
+
+"Special work!" chuckled Worth Gilbert. "I'll tell the world!"
+
+"Oh, well, give me a description of the suitcase," I hurried.
+
+"Brown. Sole-leather. That's all I ever noticed," from Whipple, a bit
+stiffly.
+
+"Brass rings and lock, I suppose?"
+
+"Brass or nickel; I don't remember. What'd you say, Knapp?"
+
+"I wouldn't know now, if it was canvas and tin," replied the harried
+cashier.
+
+"Gentlemen," I said, looking across at the clock, "since half-past two
+my men have been watching docks, ferries, railroad stations, every
+garage near the St. Dunstan, the main highways out of town. Seven of
+them on the job, and in the first hour they made ten arrests, on that
+description; and every time, sure they had their man. They thought, just
+as you seem to think, that the bunch of words described something. We're
+getting nowhere, gentlemen, and time means money here."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+SIGHT UNSEEN
+
+
+In the squabble and snatch of argument, given dignity only because it
+concerned the recovery of near a million dollars, we seemed to have lost
+Worth Gilbert entirely. He kept his seat, that chair he had taken
+instantly when old Dykeman seemed to wish to have it denied him; but he
+sat on it as though it were a lone rock by the sea. I didn't suppose he
+was hearing what we said any more than he would have heard the mewing of
+a lot of gulls, when, on a sudden silence, he burst out,
+
+"For heaven's sake, if you men can't decide on anything, sell me the
+suitcase! I'll buy it, as it is, and clean up the job."
+
+"Sell you--the suitcase--Clayte's suitcase?" They sat up on the edge of
+their chairs; bewildered, incredulous, hostile. Such a bunch is very
+like a herd of cattle; anything they don't understand scares them. Even
+the attorney studied young Gilbert with curious interest. I was mortal
+glad I hadn't said what was the fact, that with the naming of the
+enormous sum lost I was certain this was a sizable conspiracy with
+long-laid plans. They were mistrustful enough as Whipple finally
+questioned,
+
+"Is this a bona-fide offer, Captain Gilbert?" and Dykeman came in after
+him.
+
+"A gambler's chance at stolen money--is that what you figure on buying,
+sir? Is that it?" And heavy-faced Anson asked bluntly,
+
+"Who's to set the price on it? You or us? There's practically a million
+dollars in that suitcase. It belongs to the bank. If you've got an idea
+that you can buy up the chance of it for about fifty percent--you're
+mistaken. We have too much faith in Mr. Boyne and his agency for that.
+Why, at this moment, one of his men may have laid hands on Clayte, or
+found the man who planned--"
+
+He stopped with his mouth open. I saw the same suspicion that had taken
+his breath away grip momentarily every man at the table. A hint of it
+was in Whipple's voice as he asked, gravely:
+
+"Do you bind yourself to pursue Clayte and bring him, if possible, to
+justice?"
+
+"Bind myself to nothing. I'll give eight hundred thousand dollars for
+that suitcase."
+
+He fumbled in his pocket with an interrogative look at Whipple, and,
+"May I smoke in here?" and lit a cigarette without waiting a reply.
+
+Banking institutions take some pains to keep in their employ no young
+men who are known to play poker; but a poker face at that board would
+have acquired more than its share of dignity. As it was, you could see,
+almost as though written there, the agonizing doubt running riot in
+their faces as to whether Worth Gilbert was a young hero coming to the
+bank's rescue, or a con man playing them for suckers. It was Knapp who
+said at last, huskily,
+
+"I think we should close with Captain Gilbert's offer." The cashier had
+a considerable family, and I knew his recently bought Pacific Avenue
+home was not all paid for.
+
+"We might consider it," Whipple glanced doubtfully at his associates.
+"If everything else fails, this might be a way out of the difficulty for
+us."
+
+If everything else failed! President Whipple was certainly no poker
+player. Worth Gilbert gave one swift look about the ring of faces,
+pushed a brown, muscular left hand out on the table top, glancing at the
+wrist watch there, and suggested brusquely,
+
+"Think it over. My offer holds for fifteen minutes. Time to get at all
+the angles of the case. Huh! Gentlemen! I seem to have started
+something!"
+
+For the directors and stockholders of the Van Ness Avenue Savings Bank
+were at that moment almost as yappy and snappy as a wolf pack. Dykeman
+wanted to know about the one hundred and eighty seven thousand odd
+dollars not covered by Worth's offer--did they lose that? Knapp was
+urging that Clayte's bond, when they'd collected, would shade the loss;
+Whipple reminding them that they'd have to spend a good deal--maybe a
+great deal--on the recovery of the suitcase; money that Worth Gilbert
+would have to spend instead if they sold to him; and finally an ugly
+mutter from somewhere that maybe young Gilbert wouldn't have to spend so
+very much to recover that suitcase--maybe he wouldn't!
+
+The tall young fellow looked thoughtfully at his watch now and again.
+Cummings and I chipped into the thickest of the row and convinced them
+that he meant what he said, not only by his offer, but by its time
+limit.
+
+"How about publicity, if this goes?" Whipple suddenly interrogated,
+raising his voice to top the pack-yell. "Even with eight hundred
+thousand dollars in our vaults, a run's not a thing that does a bank any
+good. I suppose," stretching up his head to see across his noisy
+associates, "I suppose, Captain Gilbert, you'll be retaining Boyne's
+agency? In that case, do you give him the publicity he wants?"
+
+"Course he does!" Dykeman hissed. "Can't you see? Damn fool wants his
+name in the papers! Rotten story like this--about some lunatic buying a
+suitcase with a million in it--would ruin any bank if it got into
+print." Dykeman's breath gave out. "And--it's--it's--just the kind of
+story the accursed yellow press would eat up. Let it alone, Whipple. Let
+his damned offer alone. There's a joker in it somewhere."
+
+"There won't be any offer in about three minutes," Cummings quietly
+reminded them. "If you'd asked my opinion--and giving you opinions is
+what you pay me a salary for--I'd have said close with him while you
+can."
+
+Whipple gave me an agonized glance. I nodded affirmatively. He put the
+question to vote in a breath; the ayes had it, old Dykeman shouting
+after them in an angry squeak.
+
+"No! No!" and adding as he glared about him, "I'd like to be able to
+look a newspaper in the face; but never again! Never again!"
+
+I made my way over to Gilbert and stood in front of him.
+
+"You've bought something, boy," I said. "If you mean to keep me on as
+your detective, you can assure these people that I'll do my darndest to
+give information to the police and keep it out of the papers. What's
+happened here won't get any further than this room--through me."
+
+"You're hired, Jerry Boyne." Gilbert slapped me on the back
+affectionately. After all, he hadn't changed so much in his four years
+over there; I began to see more than traces of the enthusiastic
+youngster to whom I used to spin detective yarns in the grill at the St.
+Francis or on the rocks by the Cliff House. "Sure, we'll keep it out of
+the papers. Suits me. I'd rather not pose as the fool soon parted from
+his money."
+
+The remark was apropos; Knapp had feverishly beckoned the lawyer over to
+a little side desk; they were down at it, the light snapped on, writing,
+trying to frame up an agreement that would hold water. One by one the
+others went and looked on nervously as they worked; by the time they'd
+finished something, everybody'd seen it but Worth; and when it was
+finally put in his hands, all he seemed to notice was the one point of
+the time they'd set for payment.
+
+"It'll be quite some stunt to get the amount together by ten o'clock
+Monday," he said slowly. "There are securities to be converted--"
+
+He paused, and looked up on a queer hush.
+
+"Securities?" croaked Dykeman. "To be converted--? Oh!"
+
+"Yes," in some surprise. "Or would the bank prefer to have them turned
+over in their present form?"
+
+Again a strained moment, broken by Whipple's nervous,
+
+"Maybe that would be better," and a quickly suppressed chuckle from
+Cummings.
+
+The agreement was in duplicate. It gave Worth Gilbert complete ownership
+of a described sole-leather suitcase and its listed contents, and, as he
+had demanded, it bound him to nothing save the payment. Cummings said
+frankly that the transaction was illegal from end to end, and that any
+assurance as to the bank's ceasing to pursue Clayte would amount to
+compounding a felony. Yet we all signed solemnly, the lawyer and I as
+witnesses. A financier's idea of indecency is something about money
+which hasn't formerly been done. The directors got sorer and sorer as
+Worth Gilbert's cheerfulness increased.
+
+"Acts as though it were a damn' crap game," I heard Dykeman muttering to
+Sillsbee, who came back vacuously.
+
+"Craps?--they say our boys did shoot craps a good deal over there.
+Well--uh--they were risking their lives."
+
+And that's as near as any of them came, I suppose, to understanding how
+a weariness of the little interweaving plans of tamed men had pushed
+Worth Gilbert into carelessly staking his birthright on a chance that
+might lend interest to life, a hazard big enough to breeze the staleness
+out of things for him.
+
+We were leaving the bank, Gilbert and I ahead, Cummings right at my
+boy's shoulder, the others holding back to speak together, (bitterly
+enough, if I am any guesser) when Worth said suddenly,
+
+"You mentioned in there it's being illegal for the bank to give up the
+pursuit of Clayte. Seems funny to me, but I suppose you know what
+you're talking about. Anyhow"--he was lighting another cigarette and he
+glanced sharply at Cummings across it--"anyhow, they won't waste their
+money hunting Clayte now, should you say? That's my job. That's where I
+get my cash back."
+
+"Oh, that's where, is it?" The lawyer's dry tone might have been
+regarded as humorous. We stood in the deep doorway, hunching coat
+collars, looking into the foggy street. Worth's interest in life seemed
+to be freshening moment by moment.
+
+"Yes," he agreed briskly. "I'm going to keep you and Boyne busy for a
+while. You'll have to show me how to hustle the payment for those
+Shylocks, and Jerry's got to find the suitcase, so I can eat. But I'll
+help him."
+
+Cummings stared at the boy.
+
+"Gilbert," he said, "where are you going?--right now, I mean."
+
+"To Boyne's office."
+
+We stepped out to the street where the line of limousines waited for the
+old fellows inside, my own battleship-gray roadster, pretty well
+hammered but still a mighty capable machine, far down at the end. As
+Worth moved with me toward it, the lawyer walked at his elbow.
+
+"Seat for me?" he glanced at the car. "I've a few words of one syllable
+to say to this young man--council that I ought to get in as early as
+possible."
+
+I looked at little Pete dozing behind the wheel, and answered,
+
+"Take you all right, if I could drive. But I sprained my thumb on a
+window lock looking over that room at the St. Dunstan."
+
+"I'll drive." Worth had circled the car with surprising quickness for so
+large a man. I saw him on the other side, waiting for Pete to get out so
+he could get in. Curious the intimate, understanding look he gave the
+monkey as he flipped a coin at him with, "Buy something to burn, kid."
+Pete's idea of Worth Gilbert would be quite different from that of the
+directors in there. After all, human beings are only what we see them
+from our varying angles. Pete slid down, looking back to the last at the
+tall young fellow who was taking his place at the wheel. Cummings and I
+got in and we were off.
+
+There in the machine, my new boss driving, Cummings sitting next him, I
+at the further side, began the keen, cool probe after a truth which to
+me lay very evidently on the surface. Any one, I would have said, might
+see with half an eye that Worth Gilbert had bought Clayte's suitcase so
+that he could get a thrill out of hunting for it. Cummings I knew had in
+charge all the boy's Pacific Coast holdings; and since his mother's
+death during the first year of the war, these were large. Worth
+manifested toward them and the man who spoke to him of them the
+indifference, almost contempt, of an impatient young soul who in the
+years just behind him, had often wagered his chance of his morning's
+coffee against some other fellow's month's pay feeling that he was
+putting up double.
+
+It seemed the sense of ownership was dulled in one who had seen
+magnificent properties masterless, or apparently belonging to some limp,
+bloodstained bundle of flesh that lay in one of the rooms. In vain
+Cummings urged the state of the market, repeating with more
+particularity and force what Whipple had said. The mines were tied up by
+strike; their stock, while perfectly good, was down to twenty cents on
+the dollar; to sell now would be madness. Worth only repeated doggedly.
+
+"I've got to have the money--Monday morning--ten o'clock. I don't care
+what you sell--or hock. Get it."
+
+"See here," the lawyer was puzzled, and therefore unprofessionally out
+of temper. "Even sacrificing your stuff in the most outrageous manner, I
+couldn't realize enough--not by ten o'clock Monday. You'll have to go to
+your father. You can catch the five-five for Santa Ysobel."
+
+I could see Worth choke back a hot-tempered refusal of the suggestion.
+The funds he'd got to have, even if he went through some humiliation to
+get them.
+
+"At that," he said slowly, "father wouldn't have any great amount of
+cash on hand. Say I went to him with the story--and took the cat-hauling
+he'll give me--should I be much better off?"
+
+"Sure you would." Cummings leaned back. I saw he considered his point
+made. "Whipple would rather take their own bank stock than anything
+else. Your father has just acquired a big block of it. Act while there's
+time. Better go out there and see him now--at once."
+
+"I'll think about it," Worth nodded. "You dig for me what you can and
+never quit." And he applied himself to the demands of the down-town
+traffic.
+
+"Well," Cummings said, "drop me at the next corner, please. I've got an
+engagement with a man here."
+
+Worth swung in and stopped. Cummings left us. As we began to worm a slow
+way toward my office, I suggested,
+
+"You'll come upstairs with me, and--er--sort of outline a policy? I
+ought to have any possible information you can give me, so's not to make
+any more wrong moves than we have to."
+
+"Information?" he echoed, and I hastened to amend,
+
+"I mean whatever notion you've got. Your theory, you know--"
+
+"Not a notion. Not a theory." He shook his head, eyes on the traffic
+cop. "That's your part."
+
+I sat there somewhat flabbergasted. After all, I hadn't fully believed
+that the boy had absolutely nothing to go on, that he had bought purely
+at a whim, put up eight hundred thousand dollars on my skill at running
+down a criminal. It sort of crumpled me up. I said so. He laughed a
+little, ran up to the curb at the Phelan building, cut out the engine,
+set the brake and turned to me with,
+
+"Don't worry. I'm getting what I paid for--or what I'm going to pay for.
+And I've got to go right after the money. Suppose I meet you, say, at
+ten o'clock to-night?"
+
+"Suits me."
+
+"At Tait's. Reserve a table, will you, and we'll have supper."
+
+"You're on," I said. "And plenty to do myself meantime." I hopped out on
+my side.
+
+Worth sat in the roadster, not hurrying himself to follow up Cummings'
+suggestion--the big boy, non-communicative, incurious, the question of
+fortune lost or won seeming not to trouble him at all. I skirted the
+machine and came round to him, demanding,
+
+"With whom do you suppose Cummings' engagement was?"
+
+"Don't know, Jerry, and don't care," looking down at me serenely. "Why
+should I?" He swung one long leg free and stopped idly, half in the car,
+half out.
+
+"What if I told you Cummings' engagement was with our friend
+Dykeman--only Dykeman doesn't know it yet?"
+
+Slowly he brought that dangling foot down to the pavement, followed it
+with the other, and faced me. Across the blankness of his features shot
+a joyous gleam; it spread, brightening till he was radiant.
+
+"I get you!" he chortled. "Collusion! They think I'm standing in with
+Clayte--Oh, boy!"
+
+He threw back his head and roared.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+A WEDDING PARTY
+
+
+I looked at my watch; quarter of ten; a little ahead of my appointment.
+I ordered a telephone extension brought to this corner table I had
+reserved at Tait's and got in touch with my office; then with the
+knowledge that any new kink in the case would be reported immediately to
+me, I relaxed to watch the early supper crowd arrive: Women in picture
+hats and bare or half-bare shoulders with rich wraps slipping off them;
+hum of voices; the clatter of silver and china; waiters beginning to
+wake up and dart about settling new arrivals. And I wondered idly what
+sort of party would come to sit around one long table across from me
+specially decorated with pale tinted flowers.
+
+There was a sense of warmth and comfort at my heart. I am a lonely man;
+the people I take to seem to have a way of passing on in the stream of
+life--or death--leaving me with a few well-thumbed volumes on a shelf in
+my rooms for consolation. Walt Whitman, Montaigne, The Bard, two or
+three other lesser poets, and you've the friends that have stayed by me
+for thirty years. And so, having met up with Worth Gilbert when he was a
+youngster, at the time his mother was living in San Francisco to get a
+residence for her divorce proceedings, having loved the boy and got I am
+sure some measure of affection in return, it seemed almost too much to
+ask of fate that he should come back into my days, plunge into such a
+proposition as this bank robbery, right at my elbow as it were, and
+make himself my employer--my boss.
+
+I was a subordinate in the agency in those old times when he and I used
+to chin about the business, and his idea (I always discussed it gravely
+and respectfully with him) was to grow up and go into partnership with
+me. Well, we were partners now.
+
+Past ten, nearly five minutes. Where was he? What up to? Would he miss
+his appointment? No, I caught a glimpse of him at the door getting rid
+of hat and overcoat, pausing a moment with tall bent head to banter
+Rose, the little Chinese girl who usually drifted from table to table
+with cigars and cigarettes. Then he was coming down the room.
+
+A man who takes his own path in life, and will walk it though hell bar
+the way, never explaining, never extenuating, never excusing his
+course--something seems to emanate from such a chap that draws all eyes
+after him in a public place in a look between fear and desire. Sitting
+there in Tait's, my view of Worth cut off now by a waiter with a
+high-carried tray, again by people passing to tables for whom he halted,
+I had a good chance to see the turning of eyeballs that followed him,
+the furtive glances that snatched at him, or fondled him, or would have
+probed him; the admiration of the women, the envy of the men, curiously
+alike in that it was sometimes veiled and half wistful, sometimes very
+open. Drifters--you see so many of the sort in a restaurant--why
+wouldn't they hanker after the strength and ruthlessness of a man like
+Worth? And the poor prunes, how little they knew him! As my friend Walt
+would say, he wasn't out after any of the old, smooth prizes they cared
+for. And win or lose he would still be a victor, for all he and his
+sort demand is freedom, and the joy of the game. So he came on to me.
+
+I noticed, a little startled, as he slumped into his chair with a grunt
+of greeting, that his cheek was somehow gaunt and pale under the tan;
+the blue fire of his eyes only smoldered, and I pulled back his chair
+with,
+
+"You look as if you hadn't had any dinner."
+
+"I haven't." He gave a man-size order for food and turned back from it
+to listen to me. "I'll be nearer human when I get some grub under my
+belt."
+
+My report of what had been done on the case since we separated was
+interrupted by the arrival of our orders, and Worth sailed into a thick,
+juicy steak while I was still explaining details. The orchestra whanged
+and blared and jazzed away; the people at the other tables noticed us or
+busied themselves noisily with affairs of their own; Worth sat and
+enjoyed his meal with the air of a man feeding at a solitary country
+tavern. When he had finished--and he took his time about it--the worn,
+punished look was gone from his face; his eye was bright, his tone
+nonchalant, as he lighted a cigarette, remarking,
+
+"I've had one more good dinner. Food's a thing you can depend on; it
+doesn't rake up your entire past record from the time you squirmed into
+this world, and tell you what a fool you've always been."
+
+I turned that over in my mind. Did it mean that he'd seen his father and
+got a calling down? I wanted to know--and was afraid to ask. The fact is
+I was beginning to wake up to a good many things about my young boss. I
+was intensely interested in his reactions on people. So far, I'd seen
+him with strangers. I wished that I might have a chance to observe him
+among intimates. Old Richardson who founded our agency (and would never
+knowingly have left me at the head of it, though he did take me in as
+partner, finally) used to say that the main trouble with me was I
+studied people instead of cases. Richardson held that all men are equal
+before the detective, and must be regarded only as queer shaped pieces
+to be fitted together so as to make out a case. Richardson would have
+gone as coolly about easing the salt of the earth into the chink labeled
+"murder" or "embezzlement," as though neither had been human. With me
+the personal equation always looms big, and of course he was quite right
+in saying that it's likely to get you all gummed up.
+
+The telephone on the table before me rang. It was Roberts, my secretary,
+with the word that Foster had lifted the watch from Ocean View, the
+little town at the neck of the peninsula, where bay and ocean narrow the
+passageway to one thoroughfare, over which every machine must pass that
+goes by land from San Francisco. With two operatives, he had been on
+guard there since three o'clock of the afternoon, holding up blond men
+in cars, asking questions, taking notes and numbers. Now he reported it
+was a useless waste of time.
+
+"Order him in," I instructed Roberts.
+
+A far-too-fat entertainer out on the floor was writhing in the pangs of
+an Hawaiian dance. It took the attention of the crowd. I watched the
+face of my companion for a moment, then,
+
+"Worth," I said a bit nervously--after all, I nearly had to know--"is
+your father going to come through?"
+
+"Eh?" He looked at me startled, then put it aside negligently. "Oh, the
+money? No. I'll leave that up to Cummings." A brief pause. "We'll get a
+wiggle on us and dig up the suitcase." He lifted his tumbler, stared at
+it, then unseeingly out across the room, and his lip twitched in a half
+smile. "I'm sure glad I bought it."
+
+Looking at him, I had no reason to doubt his word. His enjoyment of the
+situation seemed to grow with every detail I brought up.
+
+It was near eleven when the party came in to take the long,
+flower-trimmed table. Worth's back was to the room; I saw them over his
+shoulder, in the lead a tall blonde, very smartly dressed, but not in
+evening clothes; in severe, exclusive street wear. The man with her,
+good looking, almost her own type, had that possessive air which seems
+somehow unmistakable--and there was a look about the half dozen
+companions after them, as they settled themselves in a great flurry of
+scraping chairs, that made me murmur with a grin,
+
+"Bet that's a wedding party."
+
+Worth gave them one quick glance, then came round to me with a smile.
+
+"You win. Married at Santa Ysobel this afternoon. Local society event.
+Whole place standing on its hind legs, taking notice."
+
+So he had been down to the little town to see his father after all. And
+he wasn't going to talk about it. Oh, well.
+
+"Friends of yours?" I asked perfunctorily, and he gave me a queer look
+out of the corners of those wicked eyes, repeating in an enjoying drawl.
+
+"Friends? Oh, hardly that. The girl I was to have married, and Bronson
+Vandeman--the man she has married."
+
+I had wanted to get a more intimate line on the kid--it seemed that here
+was a chance with a vengeance!
+
+"The rest of the bunch?" I suggested. He took a leisurely survey, and
+gave them three words:
+
+"Family and accomplices."
+
+"Santa Ysobel people, too, then. Folks you know well?"
+
+"Used to."
+
+"The lady changed her mind while you were across?" I risked the query.
+
+"While I was shedding my blood for my country." He nodded. "Gave me the
+butt while the Huns were using the bayonet on me."
+
+In the careless jeer, as much at himself as at her, no hint what his
+present feeling might be toward the fashion plate young female across
+there. With some fellows, in such a situation, I should have looked for
+a disposition to duck the encounter; let his old sweetheart's wedding
+party leave without seeing him; with others I should have discounted a
+dramatic moment when he would court the meeting. It was impossible to
+suppose either thing of Worth Gilbert; plain that he simply sat there
+because he sat there, and would make no move toward the other table
+unless something in that direction interested him--pleasantly or
+unpleasantly--which at present nothing seemed to do.
+
+So we smoked, Worth indifferent, I giving all the attention to the
+people over there: bride and groom; a couple of fair haired girls so
+like the bride that I guessed them to be sisters; a freckled, impudent
+looking little flapper I wasn't so sure of; two older men, and an older
+woman. Then a shifting of figures gave me sight of a face that I hadn't
+seen before, and I drew in my breath with a whistle.
+
+"Whew! Who's the dark girl? She's a beauty!"
+
+"Dark girl?" Worth had interest enough to lean into the place where I
+got my view; after he did so he remained to stare. I sat and grinned
+while he muttered,
+
+"Can't be.... I believe it is!"
+
+Something to make him sit up and take notice now. I didn't wonder at his
+fixed study of the young creature. Not so dressed up as the others--I
+think she wore what ladies call an evening blouse with a street suit; a
+brunette, but of a tinting so delicate that she fairly sparkled, she
+took the shine off those blonde girls. Her small beautifully formed,
+uncovered head had the living jet of the crow's wing; her great eyes,
+long-lashed and sumptuously set, showed ebon irises almost obliterating
+the white. Dark, shining, she was a night with stars, that girl.
+
+"Funny thing," Worth spoke, moving his head to keep in line with that
+face. "How could she grow up to be like this--a child that wasn't
+allowed any childhood? Lord, she never even had a doll!"
+
+"Some doll herself now," I smiled.
+
+"Yeh," he assented absently, "she's good looking--but where did she
+learn to dress like that--and play the game?"
+
+"Where they all learn it." I enjoyed very much seeing him interested.
+"From her mother, and her sisters, or the other girls."
+
+"Not." He was positive. "Her mother died when she was a baby. Her father
+wouldn't let her be with other children--treated her like one of the
+instruments in his laboratory; trained her in her high chair; problems
+in concentration dumped down into its tray, punishment if she made a
+failure; God knows what kind of a reward if she succeeded; maybe no more
+than her bowl of bread and milk. That's the kind of a deal she got when
+she was a kid. And will you look at her now!"
+
+If he kept up his open staring at the girl, it would be only a matter of
+time when the wedding party discovered him. I leaned back in my chair to
+watch, while Worth, full of his subject, spilled over in words.
+
+"Never played with anybody in her life--but me," he said unexpectedly.
+"They lived next house but one to us; the professor had the rest of the
+Santa Ysobel youngsters terrorized, backed off the boards; but I wasn't
+a steady resident of the burg. I came and went, and when I came, it was
+playtime for the little girl."
+
+"What was her father? Crank on education?"
+
+"Psychology," Worth said briefly. "International reputation. But he
+ought to have been hung for the way he brought Bobs up. Listen to this,
+Jerry. I got off the train one time at Santa Ysobel--can't remember just
+when, but the kid over there was all shanks and eyes--'bout ten or
+eleven, I'd say. Her father had her down at the station doing a stunt
+for a bunch of professors. That was his notion of a nice, normal
+development for a small child. There she sat poked up cross-legged on a
+baggage truck. He'd trained her to sit in that self balanced position so
+she could make her mind blank without going to sleep. A freight train
+was hitting a twenty mile clip past the station, and she was adding the
+numbers on the sides of the box cars, in her mind. It kept those
+professors on the jump to get the figures down in their notebooks, but
+she told them the total as the caboose was passing."
+
+"Some stunt," I agreed. "Freight car numbers run up into the
+ten-thousands." Worth didn't hear me, he was still deep in the past.
+
+"Poor little white-faced kid," he muttered. "I dumped my valises, horned
+into that bunch, picked her off the truck and carried her away on my
+shoulder, while the professor yelled at me, and the other ginks were
+tabbing up their additions. And I damned every one of them, to hell and
+through it."
+
+"You must have been a popular youth in your home town," I suggested.
+
+"I was," he grinned. "My reason for telling you that story, though, is
+that I've got an idea about the girl over there--if she hasn't changed
+too much. I think maybe we might--"
+
+He stood up calmly to study her, and his tall figure instantly drew the
+attention of everybody in the room. Over at the long table it was the
+sharp, roving eye of the snub-nosed flapper that spied him first. I saw
+her give the alarm and begin pushing back her chair to bolt right across
+and nab him. The sister sitting next stopped her. Judging from the
+glimpses I had as the party spoke together and leaned to look, it was
+quite a sensation. But apparently by common consent they left whatever
+move was to be made to the bride; and to my surprise this move was most
+unconventional. She got up with an abrupt gesture and started over to
+our table--alone. This, for a girl of her sort, was going some. I
+glanced doubtfully at Worth. He shrugged a little.
+
+"Might as well have it over. Her family lives on one side of us, and
+Brons Vandeman on the other."
+
+And then the bride was with us. She didn't overdo the thing--much; only
+held out her hand with a slightly pleading air as though half afraid it
+would be refused. And it was a curious thing to see that pretty,
+delicate featured, schooled face of hers naively drawn in lines of
+emotion--like a bisque doll registering grief.
+
+Gilbert took the hand, shook it, and looked around with the evident
+intention of presenting me. I saw by the way the lady gave me her
+shoulder, pushing in, speaking low, that she didn't want anything of the
+sort, and quietly dropped back. I barely got a side view of Worth's
+face, but plainly his calmness was a disappointment to her.
+
+"After these years!" I caught the fringes of what she was saying. "It
+seems like a dream. To-night--of all times. But you will come over to
+our table--for a minute anyhow? They're just going to--to drink our
+health--Oh, Worth!" That last in a sort of impassioned whisper. And all
+he answered was,
+
+"If I might bring Mr. Boyne with me, Mrs. Vandeman." At her protesting
+expression, he finished, "Or do I call you Ina, still?"
+
+She gave him a second look of reproach, acknowledging my introduction in
+that way some women have which assures you they don't intend to know you
+in the least the next time. We crossed to the table and met the others.
+
+If anybody had asked my opinion, I should have said it was a mistake to
+go. Our advent in that party--or rather Worth Gilbert's advent--was
+bound to throw the affair into a sort of consternation. No mistake about
+that. The bridegroom at the head of the table seemed the only one able
+to keep a grip on the situation. He welcomed Worth as though he wanted
+him, took hold of me with a glad hand, and presented me in such rapid
+succession to everybody there that I was dizzy. And through it all I had
+an eye for Worth as he met and disposed of the effusive welcome of the
+younger Thornhill girls. Either of the twins, as I found them to be,
+would, I judged, have been more than willing to fill out sister Ina's
+unexpired term, and the little snub-nosed one, also a sister it seemed,
+plainly adored him as a hero, sexlessly, as they sometimes can at that
+age.
+
+While yet he shook hands with the girls, and swapped short replies for
+long questions, I became conscious of something odd in the air. Plain
+enough sailing with the young ladies; all the noise with them echoed the
+bride's, "After all these years." They clattered about whether he looked
+like his last photograph, and how perfectly delightful it was going to
+be to have him back in Santa Ysobel again.
+
+But when it came to the chaperone, a Mrs. Dr. Bowman, things were
+different. No longer young, though still beautiful in what I might call
+a sort of wasted fashion, with slim wrists and fragile fingers, and a
+splendid mass of rich, auburn hair, I had been startled, even looking
+across from our table, by the extreme nervous tension of her face. She
+looked a neurasthenic; but that was not all; surely her nerves were
+almost from under control as she sat there, her rich cloak dropped back
+over her chair, the corners caught up again and fumbled in a twisting,
+restless hold.
+
+Now, when Worth stood before her appealing eyes, she reached up and
+clutched his hand in both of hers, staring at him through quick tears,
+saying something in a low, choking tone, something that I couldn't for
+the life of me make into the greeting you give even a beloved youngster
+you haven't seen for several years.
+
+At the moment, I was myself being presented to the lady's husband, a
+typical top-grade, small town medical man, with a fine bedside manner.
+His nice, smooth white hands, with which I had watched him feeling the
+pulse of his supper as though it had been a wealthy patient, released
+mine; those cold eyes of his, that hid a lot of meaning under heavy
+lids, came around on his wife. His,
+
+"Laura, control yourself. Where do you think you are?" was like a lash.
+
+It worked perfectly. Of course she would be his patient as well as his
+wife. Yet I hated the man for it. To me it seemed like the cut of the
+whip that punishes a sensitive, over excited Irish setter for a fault in
+the hunting field. Mrs. Bowman quivered, pulled herself together and sat
+down, but her gaze followed the boy.
+
+She sat there stilled, but not quieted, under her husband's eye, and
+watched Worth's meeting with the other man, whom I heard the boy call
+Jim Edwards, and with whom he shook hands, but who met him, as Mrs.
+Bowman had, as though there had been something recent between them; not
+like people bridging a long gap of absence.
+
+And this man, tall, thin, the power in his features contradicted by a
+pair of soft dark eyes, deep-set, looking out at you with an expression
+of bafflement, defeat--why did he face Worth with the stare of one
+drenched, drowned in woe? It wasn't his wedding. He hadn't done Worth
+any dirt in the matter.
+
+And I was wedged in beside the beautiful dark girl, without having been
+presented to her, without even having had the luck to hear what name
+Worth used when he spoke to her. At last the flurry of our coming
+settled down (though I still felt that we were stuck like a sliver into
+the wedding party, that the whole thing ached from us) and Dr. Bowman
+proposed the health of the happy couple, his bedside manner going over
+pretty well, as he informed Vandeman and the rest of us that the
+bridegroom was a social leader in Santa Ysobel, and that the hope of its
+best people was to place him and his bride at the head of things there,
+leading off with the annual Blossom Festival, due in about a fortnight.
+
+Vandeman responded for himself and his bride, appropriately, with what
+I'd call a sort of acceptable, fabricated geniality. You could see he
+was the kind that takes such things seriously, one who would go to work
+to make a success of any social doings he got into, would give what his
+set called good parties; and he spoke feelingly of the Blossom Festival,
+which was the great annual event of a little town. If by putting his
+shoulder to the wheel he could boost that affair into nation-wide fame
+and place a garland of rich bloom upon the brow of his fair city, he was
+willing to take off his neatly tailored coat, roll up his immaculate
+shirtsleeves and go to it.
+
+There was no time for speech making. The girls wanted to dance; bride
+and groom were taking the one o'clock train for the south and Coronado.
+The orchestra swung into "I'll Say She Does."
+
+"Just time for one." Vandeman guided his bride neatly out between the
+chairs, and they moved away. I turned from watching them to find Worth
+asking Mrs. Bowman to dance.
+
+"Oh, Worth, _dearest_! I ought to let one of the girls have you, but--"
+
+She looked helplessly up at him; he smiled down into her tense,
+suffering face, and paid no attention to her objections. As soon as he
+carried her off, Jim Edwards glumly took out that one of the twins I had
+at first supposed to be the elder, the remaining Thornhill girls moved
+on Dr. Bowman and began nagging him to hunt partners for them.
+
+"Drag something up here," prompted the freckled tomboy, "or I'll make
+you dance with me yourself." She grabbed a coat lapel, and started away
+with him.
+
+I turned and laughed into the laughing face of the dark girl. I had no
+idea of her name, yet a haunting resemblance, a something somehow
+familiar came across to me which I thought for a moment was only the
+sweet approachableness of her young femininity.
+
+Bowman had found and collared a partner for Ernestine Thornhill, but
+that was as far as it went. The little one forebore her threat of making
+him dance with her, came back to her chair and tucked herself in,
+snuggling up to the girl beside me, getting hold of a hand and looking
+at me across it. She rejoiced, it seems, in the nickname of Skeet, for
+by that the other now spoke to her whisperingly, saying it was too bad
+about the dance.
+
+"That's nothing," Skeet answered promptly. "I'd a lot rather sit here
+and talk to you--and your gentleman friend--" with a large wink for
+me--"if you don't mind."
+
+At the humorous, intimate glance which again passed between me and the
+dark girl, sudden remembrance came to me, and I ejaculated,
+
+"I know you now!"
+
+"Only now?" smiling.
+
+"You've changed a good deal in seven years," I defended myself.
+
+"And you so very little," she was still smiling, "that I had almost a
+mind to come and shake hands with you when Ina went to speak to Worth."
+
+I remembered then that it was Worth's recognition of her which had
+brought him to his feet. I told her of it, and the glowing, vivid face
+was suddenly all rosy. Skeet regarded the manifestation askance, asking
+jealously,
+
+"When did you see Worth last, Barbie? You weren't still living in Santa
+Ysobel when he left, were you?"
+
+I sat thinking while the girlish voices talked on. Barbie--the nickname
+for Barbara. Barbara Wallace; the name jumped at me from a poster;
+that's where I first saw it. It linked itself up with what Worth had
+said over there about the forlorn childhood of this beguiling young
+charmer. Why hadn't I remembered then? I, too, had my recollections of
+Barbara Wallace. About seven years before, I had first seen her, a
+slim, dark little thing of twelve or fourteen, very badly dressed in
+slinky, too-long skirts that whipped around preposterously thin ankles,
+blue-black hair dragged away from a forehead almost too fine, made into
+a bundle of some fashion that belonged neither to childhood nor
+womanhood, her little, pointed face redeemed by a pair of big black eyes
+with a wonderful inner light, the eyes of this girl glowing here at my
+left hand.
+
+The father Worth spoke of brusquely as "the professor" was Elman
+Wallace, to whom all students of advanced psychology are heavily
+indebted. The year I heard him, and saw the girl, his course of lectures
+at Stanford University was making quite a stir. I had been one of a
+bunch of criminologists, detectives and police chiefs who, during a
+state convention were given a demonstration of the little girl's powers,
+closing with a sort of rapid pantomime in which I was asked to take
+part. A half dozen of us from the audience planned exactly what we were
+to do. I rushed into the room through one door, holding my straw hat in
+my left hand, and wiping my brow with a handkerchief with the right.
+From an opposite door, came two men; one of them fired at me twice with
+a revolver held in his left hand. I fell, and the second man--the one
+who wasn't armed--ran to me as I staggered, grabbed my hat, and the two
+of them went out the door I had entered, while I stumbled through the
+one by which they had come in. It lasted all told, not half a minute,
+the idea being for those who looked on to write down what had happened.
+
+Those trained criminologists, supposed to have eyes in their heads,
+didn't see half that really took place, and saw a-plenty that did not.
+Most of 'em would have hung the man who snatched my hat. Only one, I
+remember, noticed that I was shot by a left-handed man. Then the little
+girl told us what really had occurred, every detail, just as though she
+had planned it instead of being merely an observer.
+
+"Pardon me," I broke in on the girls. "Miss Wallace, you don't mean to
+say that you really know me again after seeing me once, seven years ago,
+in a group of other men at a public performance?"
+
+"Why shouldn't I? You saw me then. You knew me again."
+
+"But you were doing wonderful things. We remember what strikes us as
+that did me."
+
+She looked at me with a little fading of that glow her face seemed
+always to hold.
+
+"Most memories are like that," she agreed listlessly. "Mine isn't. It
+works like a cinema camera; I've only to turn the crank the other way to
+be looking at any past record."
+
+"But can you--?" I was beginning, when Skeet stopped me, leaning around
+her companion, bristling at me like a snub-nosed terrier.
+
+"If you want to make a hit with Barbie, cut out the reminiscences. She
+does loathe being reminded that she was once an infant phenom."
+
+I glanced at my dark eyed girl; she bent her head affirmatively. She
+wouldn't have been capable of Skeet's rudeness, but plainly Skeet had
+not overstated her real feeling. I had hardly begun an apology when the
+dancers rushed back to the table with the information that there was no
+more than time to make the Los Angeles train; there was an instant
+grasping of wraps, hasty good-bys, and the party began breaking up with
+a bang. Worth went out to the sidewalk with them; I sat tight waiting
+for him to return, and to my surprise, when he finally did appear,
+Barbara Wallace was with him.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+AN APPARITION
+
+
+"Don't look so scared!" she said smilingly to me. "I'm only on your
+hands a few minutes; a package left to be called for."
+
+I had watched them coming back to me at our old table, with its
+telephone extension, the girl with eyes for no one but Worth, who helped
+her out of her wrap now with a preoccupied air and,
+
+"Shed the coat, Bobs," adding as he seated her beside him, "The luck of
+luck that I chanced on you here this evening."
+
+That brought the color into her face; the delicate rose shifted under
+her translucent skin almost with the effect of light, until that
+lustrous midnight beauty of hers was as richly glowing as one of those
+marvellous dark opals of the antipodes.
+
+"Yes," she said softly, with a smile that set two dimples deep in the
+pink of her cheeks, "wasn't it strange our meeting this way?" Worth
+wasn't looking at her. He'd signaled a waiter, ordered a pot of black
+coffee, and was watching its approach. "I didn't go down to the wedding,
+but Ina herself invited me to come here to-night. I had half a mind not
+to; then at the last minute I decided I would--and I met you!"
+
+Worth nodded, sat there humped in a brown study while the waiter poured
+our coffee. The minute the man left us alone, he turned to her with,
+
+"I've got a stunt for you."
+
+"A--a stunt?"
+
+The light failed abruptly in her face; her mouth with its soft, firm
+molding, its vivid, floral red, like the lips of a child, went down a
+bit at the clean-cut corners. A small hand fumbled the trimming of her
+blouse; it was almost as if she laid it over a wounded heart.
+
+"Yes," he nodded. "Jerry's got something in his pocket that'll be pie
+for you."
+
+She turned to me a look between angry and piteous--the resentment she
+would not vent on him.
+
+"Is--is Mr. Boyne interested in stunts--such as I used to do?"
+
+"Sure," Worth agreed. "We both are. We--"
+
+"Oh, that was why you wanted me to come back with you?" She had got hold
+of herself now. She was more poised, but still resentful.
+
+"Bobs," he cut straight across her mood to what he wanted, "Jerry Boyne
+is going to read you something it took about 'steen blind people to
+see--and you'll give us the answer." I didn't share his confidence, but
+I rather admired it as he finished, poising the tongs, "One lump, or
+two?"
+
+Of course I knew what he meant. My hand was already fumbling in my
+pocket for the description of Clayte. The girl looked as though she
+wasn't going to answer him; she moved to shove back her chair. Worth's
+only recognition of her attitude was to put out a hand quietly, touch
+her arm, not once looking at her, and say in a lowered tone,
+
+"Steady, Bobs." And then, "Did you say one lump or two?"
+
+"None." Her voice was scarcely audible, but I saw she was going to stay;
+that Worth was to have his way, to get from her the opinion he
+wanted--whatever that might amount to. And I passed the paper to him,
+suggesting,
+
+"Let her read it. This is too public a place to be declaiming a thing of
+the sort."
+
+She hesitated a minute then gave it such a mere flirt of a glance that I
+hardly thought she'd seen what it was, before she raised inquiring eyes
+to mine and asked coldly,
+
+"Why shouldn't that be read--shouted every ten minutes by the traffic
+officer at Market and Kearny? They'd only think he was paging every
+other man in the Palace Hotel."
+
+I leaned back and chuckled. After a bare glance, this sharp witted girl
+had hit on exactly what I'd thought of the Clayte description.
+
+"Is that all? May I go now, Worth?" she said, still with that dashed,
+disappointed look from one of us to the other. "If you'll just put me on
+a Haight Street car--I won't wait for--" And now she made a definite
+movement to rise; but again Worth held her by the mere touch of his
+fingers on her sleeve.
+
+"Wait, Bobs," he said. "There's more."
+
+"More?" Her eyes on Worth's face talked louder than her tongue, but that
+also gained fluency as he looked back at her and nodded. "Stunts!" she
+repeated his word bitterly. "I didn't expect you to come back asking me
+to do stunts. I hated it all so--working out things like a calculating
+machine!" Her voice sank to a vehement undertone. "Nobody thinking of
+me as human, with human feelings. I have never--done--one stunt--since
+my father died."
+
+She didn't weaken. She sat there and looked Worth squarely in the eye,
+yet there was a kind of big gentleness in her refusal, a freedom from
+petty resentment, that had in it not so much a girl's hurt vanity as the
+outspoken complaint of a really grieved heart.
+
+"But, Bobs," Worth smiled at her trouble, about the same careless,
+good-natured smile he had given little Pete when he flipped him the
+quarter, "suppose you could possibly save me a hundred thousand dollars
+a minute?"
+
+"Then it's not just a stunt?" She settled slowly back in her chair.
+
+"Certainly not," I said. "This is business--with me, anyhow. Miss
+Wallace, why do you think a description like that could be shouted on
+the street without any one being the wiser?"
+
+"Was it supposed to be a description?" she asked, raising her brows a
+bit.
+
+"The best we could get from sixteen or eighteen people, most of whom
+have known the man a long time; some of them for eight years."
+
+"And no one--not one of all these people could differentiate him?"
+
+"I've done my best at questioning them."
+
+She gave me one straight, level look, and I wondered a little at the way
+those velvety black eyes could saw into a fellow. But she put no query,
+and I had the cheap satisfaction of knowing that she was convinced I'd
+overlooked no details in the quiz that went to make up that
+description. Then she turned to Worth.
+
+"You said I might save you a lot of money. Has the man you're trying
+here to describe anything to do with money--in large amounts--financial
+affairs of importance?"
+
+Again the little girl had unconsciously scored with me. To imagine a
+rabbit like Clayte, alone, swinging such an enormous job was ridiculous.
+From the first, my mind had been reaching after the others--the
+big-brained criminals, the planners whose instrument he was. She
+evidently saw this, but Worth answered her.
+
+"He's quite a financier, Bobs. He walked off with nearly a million cash
+to-day."
+
+"From you?" with a quick breath.
+
+"I'm the main loser if he gets away with it."
+
+"Tell me about it."
+
+And Worth gave her a concise account of the theft and his own share in
+the affair. She listened eagerly now, those innocent great eyes growing
+big with the interest of it. With her there was no blind stumbling over
+Worth's motive in buying a suitcase sight unseen. I had guessed, but she
+understood completely and unquestioningly. When he had finished, she
+said solemnly,
+
+"You know, don't you, that, if you've got your facts right--if these
+things you've told me are square, even cubes of fact--they prove Clayte
+among the wonderful men of the world?"
+
+Worth's big brown paw went out and covered her little hand that lay on
+the table's edge.
+
+"Now we're getting somewhere," he encouraged her. As for me, I merely
+snorted.
+
+"Wonderful man, my eye! He's got a wonderful gang behind him."
+
+"Oh, you should have told me that you know there is a gang, Mr. Boyne,"
+she said simply. "Of course, then, the result is different."
+
+"Well," I hedged, "there's a gang all right. But suppose there wasn't,
+how would you find any wonderfulness in a creature as near nothing as
+this Clayte?"
+
+She sat and thought for a moment, drawing imaginary lines on the table
+top, finally looking up at me with a narrowing of the lids, a tightening
+of the lips, which gave an extraordinary look of power to her young
+feminine face.
+
+"In that case, Clayte would inevitably be one of the wonderful men of
+the world," she repeated her characterization with the placid, soft
+obstinacy of falling, snow. "Didn't you stop a minute--one little
+minute, Mr. Boyne--to think it wonderful that a man so devoid of
+personality as that--" she slanted a slim finger across the description
+of Clayte--"Didn't you add up in your mind all that you told me about
+the men disagreeing as to which side he parted his hair on, whether he
+wore tan shoes or black, a fedora or derby, smoked or didn't,--
+absolutely nothing left as to peculiarities of face, figure, movement,
+expression, manner or habit to catch the eye of one single
+observer among the sixteen or eighteen you questioned--surely you added
+that up, Mr. Boyne? What result did you get?"
+
+"Nothing," I admitted. "To hear you repeat it, of course it sounds as if
+the man was a freak. But he wasn't. He was just one of those fellows
+that are born utterly commonplace, and slide through life without
+getting any marks put on 'em."
+
+"And is it nothing that this man became a teller in a bank without
+infringing at all on the circle of his nothingness? Remained so shadowy
+that neither the president nor cashier can, after eight years'
+association, tell the color of his hair and eyes? Then add the fact that
+he is the one clerk in the bank without a filed photograph and
+description on record with your agency--what result now, Mr. Boyne?"
+
+"A coincidence," I said, rather hastily.
+
+"Don't, please, Mr. Boyne!" her eyes glowed softly as she smiled her
+mild sarcasm. "Admit that he has ceased to be a freak and becomes a
+marvel."
+
+"As you put it--" I began, but she cut in on me with,
+
+"I haven't put it yet. Listen." She was smiling still, but it was plain
+she was thoroughly in earnest. "When this cipher--this nought--this
+zero--manages to annex to himself a million dollars that doesn't belong
+to him, his nothingness gains a specific meaning. The zero is an
+important factor in mathematics. I think we have placed a digit before
+the long string of ciphers of Clayte's nothingness."
+
+"Nothing and nothing--make nothing." I spoke more brusquely because I
+was irritated by her logic. "You called the turn when you spoke of him
+as a zero. There are digits to be added, but they're the gang that
+planned and helped--and used zero Clayte as their tool. You're talking
+of those digits, not Clayte."
+
+"I believe Bobs'll find them for you, Jerry--if you'll let her," said
+Worth.
+
+"Oh, I'll let anybody do anything"--a bit nettled. "I'm ready to have
+our friend Clayte take his place, with the pyramids and the hanging
+gardens of Babylon, among the earth's wonders; but you've got to show
+me."
+
+"All right." Worth gave the girl a look that brought something of that
+wonderful rose flush fluttering back into her cheeks. "I'm betting on
+her. Go to it, Bobsie--let him in on your mathematical logic."
+
+"You used the word 'coincidence,' Mr. Boyne." She leaned across toward
+me, eyes bright, little finger tip marking her points. "Allow one
+coincidence--that the only description, the only photograph missing from
+your files are those of the self-effacing Clayte. To-day Clayte has
+proved to be a thief--"
+
+"In seven figures," Worth threw in, and she smiled at him.
+
+"You would call that another coincidence, Mr. Boyne?"
+
+I nodded, rather unable at the moment to think of a better word to use.
+
+"Two coincidences," she went on,--"we are still in mathematics--you
+can't add. They run by geometrical progression into the impossible."
+
+The phone rang. While I turned to answer it, my mind was still hunting a
+comeback to this. The call was from Foster, just in from Ocean View and
+reporting for instructions. Covering the transmitter with my hand, I
+told Worth the situation and asked,
+
+"Any suggestions?"
+
+"Not I," he shook his head. I added, a bit sarcastically,
+
+"Or you, Miss Wallace?"
+
+"Yes," she surprised me. "Have your man Foster find three women who have
+seen Edward Clayte; get from them the color of his hair and eyes; tell
+him to have them be exact about it."
+
+"Fine! But you know they'll not agree, any more than the other people
+agreed."
+
+"Oh, yes they will," she laughed at me a little. "Don't you notice that
+a girl always says a blue-eyed man or a brown-eyed man? That's what she
+sees when she first meets him, and it sticks in her mind. Girls and
+women sort out people by types; small differences in color mean
+something to them."
+
+I didn't keep Foster waiting any longer.
+
+"Hello," I spoke quickly into the transmitter. "Get busy and dig out any
+women clerks of the bank, stenographers, scrub-women there, or whatever,
+and ask them particularly as to the exact shade of Clayte's hair and
+eyes. Get Mrs. Griggsby again at the St. Dunstan. I want at least three
+women who can give these points exactly. Exactly, understand?"
+
+He did, and I thanked Miss Wallace for her suggestion.
+
+"Now that," I said, "is what I want; a good, practical idea--"
+
+"And it won't be a bit of use in the world to you," she laughed across
+the table into my eyes. "Why, Mr. Boyne, you've found out already that
+there are too many Edward Claytes, speaking in physical terms, for you
+to run one down by description. There are three of him here, within
+sight of our table right now--and the place isn't crowded."
+
+I grinned in half grudging agreement, and found nothing to say. It was
+Worth who spoke.
+
+"Like to have you go a step further in this, if you would," and when she
+shook her head, he went on a bit sharply. "See here, Bobs; you and I
+used to be pals, didn't we?" She nodded, her look brightening. "Well
+then, here's the biggest game I've been up against since I crawled out
+of the trenches and shucked my uniform. I come to you and give you the
+high-sign--and you throw me down. You don't want to play with me--is
+that it?"
+
+"Oh, Worth! I do. I do want to play with you," she was almost in tears
+now. "But you see, I didn't quite understand. I felt as though you were
+sort of putting me through my paces."
+
+"Sure not," Worth drove it at her like a turbulent urchin. "I'm having
+the time of my young life with this thing, and I want to take you in on
+it."
+
+"If--if you fail you lose a lot of money; wasn't that what you said?"
+she questioned.
+
+"Oh, yes," he nodded, "Nothing in it if there weren't a gamble."
+
+"And if he wins out, he makes quite a respectable pile," I added.
+
+"What I want of you now," he explained, "is to go with us to Clayte's
+room at the St. Dunstan--the room he disappeared from--look it over and
+tell us how he got out and where he went."
+
+He made his request light-heartedly; she considered it after the same
+fashion; it seemed to me all absurdity.
+
+"To-morrow morning--Sunday," she said. "No office to-morrow," she sipped
+the last of her black coffee slowly. "All the rest of the facts there
+ever will be about Edward Clayte are in that room--aren't they?" Her
+voice was musing; she looked straight ahead of her as she finished
+softly, "What time do we go?"
+
+"Early. Does nine o'clock suit you?" Worth didn't even glance at me as
+he made this arrangement for us both. "We'd scoot up there now if it
+wasn't so late."
+
+"I've no doubt you'll find the place carpeted with zeros and hung with
+noughts and ciphers." I couldn't refrain from joshing her a little. She
+took it with a smile glanced across the room, looked a little surprised,
+and half rose with,
+
+"Why, there they are for me now."
+
+I couldn't see anybody that she might mean, except a man who had walked
+the length of the place talking to the head waiter, and now stood
+arguing at the corner of what had been Bronson Vandeman's supper table.
+This man evidently had his attention directed to us, turned, looked, and
+in the moment of his crossing I saw that it was Cummings. There was not
+even the usual tight-lipped half smile under that cropped mustache of
+his.
+
+"Good evening." He looked at our faces, uttering none of the surprise he
+plainly felt, letting the two words do for greeting to us all, and, as
+it seemed, to me, an expression of disapproval as well. The young lady
+replied first.
+
+"Oh, Mr. Cummings, did they send you for me? Where are the others?"
+
+She had come to her feet, and reached for the coat which Worth was
+holding more as if he meant to keep it than put it on her.
+
+"I left your chaperone waiting in the machine," Cumming's tone and look
+carried a plain hurry-up. Worth took his time about the coat, and spoke
+low to the girl while he helped her into it.
+
+"You'll go with us to-morrow morning?"
+
+She gave me one of those adorable smiles that brought the dimples
+momentarily in her cheeks.
+
+"If Mr. Boyne wants me. He hasn't said yet."
+
+"Do I need to?" I asked. The question seemed reasonable. There she
+stood, such a very pretty girl, between her two cavaliers who looked at
+each other with all the traditional hostility that belonged to the
+situation. She smiled on both, and didn't neglect me. I settled the
+matter with,
+
+"Worth has your address; we'll call for you in my machine." And I got
+the idea that Cummings was asking questions about it as he went away
+holding her arm.
+
+"Do you think the little girl will really be of any use?" I spoke to the
+back of Worth's head as he continued to stare after them.
+
+"Sure. I know she will." He shoved his crumpled napkin in among the
+coffee service, and we moved toward the desk. "Sure she will," he
+repeated. "Wonder where she met Cummings."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+AT THE ST. DUNSTAN
+
+
+At the Palace Hotel Sunday morning where I went to pick up Worth before
+we should call for little Miss Wallace, he met me in high spirits and
+with an enthusiasm that demanded immediate physical action.
+
+"Heh," I said, "you look fine. Must have slept well."
+
+"Make it rested, and I'll go you," he came back cheerfully.
+
+He'd already been out, going down to the Grant Avenue corner for an
+assortment of Bay cities papers not to be had at the hotel news-stands,
+so that he could see whether our canny announcement of Clayte's fifteen
+thousand dollar defalcation had received discreet attention from the
+Associated Press.
+
+For my part, our agency had been able to get hold of three women who had
+seen Clayte and remembered the event; Mrs. Griggsby; a stenographer at
+the bank; and the woman who sold newspapers at the St. Dunstan corner.
+Miss Wallace's suggestion had proven itself, for these three agreed with
+fair exactness, and the description run in the late editions of the city
+papers was less vague than the others. It gave Clayte's eyes as a pale
+gray-blue, and his hair as dull brown, eliminating at least all
+brown-eyed men. Worth asserted warmly,
+
+"That girl's going to be useful to us, Boyne." I couldn't well disagree
+with him, after using her hint. We were getting out of the elevator on
+the office floor when he looked at me, grinned boyishly, and added,
+"What would you say if I told you I was being shadowed?"
+
+"That I thought it very likely," I nodded. "Also I might hazard a guess
+at whose money is paying for it."
+
+He gave me a quick glance, but asked no questions. I could see he was
+enjoying his position, up to the hilt, considered the attentions of a
+trailer as one of its perquisites.
+
+"Keep your eyes open and you'll spot him as we go out," he said as he
+left the key at the desk.
+
+It was hardly necessary to keep my eyes open to see the lurking figure
+over beyond the easy-chairs, which started galvanically as we passed
+through the court, and a moment later came sidling after us. Little Pete
+had left my machine at the Market Street entrance--Worth was to drive
+me--and we wheeled away from a disappointed man racing for the taxi line
+around the corner.
+
+"More power to his legs," Worth said.
+
+"Oh, I don't know," I grunted as we cut into Montgomery, negotiated the
+corner onto Bush Street's clear way, striking a fair clip at once. "That
+end of him already works better than the other. How did you get wise?"
+
+"Barbara Wallace telephoned me to look out for him," he smiled, and let
+my car out another notch once we'd passed the traffic cop at Kearny.
+
+I myself had foreseen the possibility--but only as a possibility--that
+Dykeman would put a man on Worth's coat-tails, since I knew Dykeman and
+had been at that bank meeting; yet I had not regarded it as likely
+enough to warn Worth; and here was this girl phoning him to look out for
+a trailer. Was this some more of her deductive reasoning, or had
+Cummings dropped a hint?
+
+She was waiting for us in front of the Haight Street boarding house that
+served her for a home, and we tucked her between us on the roadster's
+wide seat. At the St. Dunstan we found my man, left there since the hour
+of the alarm the day before, and everybody belonging to the management
+surly and glum. The clerk handed me Clayte's key across the morning
+papers spread out on his desk. Apartment houses dislike notoriety of
+this sort, and the St. Dunstan set up to be as rabidly respectable, as
+chemically pure as any in the city. Well, no use their blaming me;
+Clayte was their misfortune; they couldn't expect me to keep the matter
+out of print entirely.
+
+The three of us crowded into the automatic elevator, and I pressed the
+seventh floor button. The girl's eyes shone under the wisp of veil
+twisted around a knowing little turban. She liked the taste of the
+adventure.
+
+"That man came this way--with that suitcase," she breathed, "--maybe set
+it down right there when he pressed the button--just as Mr. Boyne did
+now!"
+
+It was a fine morning; the shades had been left up, and Clayte's room
+when I opened the door was ablaze with sunlight.
+
+"How delightful!" Barbara Wallace stopped on the threshold and looked
+about her. I expected the scientific investigating to begin; but no--she
+was all taken up with the beauty of sunlight and view.
+
+The seventh was the top floor. The St. Dunstan stood almost at the
+summit where Nob Hill slants obliquely to north and east, and Powell
+Street dizzies down the steep descent to North Beach and the Bay. The
+girl had run to a window, and was looking out toward the marvelous show
+of blue-green water and distant Berkeley hills.
+
+"Will you open this window for me, please?" she asked. I stepped to her
+side, forestalling Worth who was eyeing the room's interior with
+curiosity.
+
+"You'll notice the burglar-proof sash locks," I said as I manipulated
+this one. She gave only casual interest, her attention still on the view
+beyond. The steel latch, fastened to the upper sash, locked into the
+socket on the lower sash by a lever-catch. "See? I must pull out this
+little lever before I can push the hasp back with my thumb--so. Now the
+window may be shoved up," and I illustrated.
+
+"Yes," she nodded; then, "Look at the wisps of fog around Tamalpais's
+top. Worth, come here and see the violet shadows of the clouds on the
+bay."
+
+"North wind coming up," agreed Worth, stepping to the farther window.
+
+"It's bringing in the fog," she said; then abruptly, giving me the first
+hint that little Miss Wallace considered herself on the job, "Will it
+not latch by itself if you jam it shut hard?"
+
+"It will not." I illustrated with a bang. The latch still remained open.
+"I must close it by hand." I pushed the hasp into the keeper, and,
+snap--the lever shot back and it was fast.
+
+"But a window like that couldn't be opened from outside, even without
+the locking lever," she remarked, gazing again toward the Marin shore.
+
+"A man with the know--a burglar--can open the ordinary window latch in
+less than a minute," I told her. "With a jimmy pinched between the sash
+and the sill, a recurring pressure starts the latch back; nothing to
+hold it. This--unless he cuts the glass--is burglar-proof."
+
+Worth, at her shoulder, now looked down the sheer descent which
+exaggerated the seven stories of the St. Dunstan; because of its
+crowning position on the hill and the intersection of streets, we looked
+over the roofs of the houses before us, far above their chimney tops. I
+caught his eye and grinned across the girl's head, suggesting,
+
+"Besides, we weren't trying to find how some one could break into this
+room, but how they could break out. Even if the latches had not been
+locked, there wouldn't be an answer in these windows--unless Clayte
+could fly."
+
+"Might have climbed from one window ledge to the next and so made his
+way to the fire-escape," Worth said, but I shook my head.
+
+"He'd be seen from the windows by the tenants on six floors--and nobody
+saw him. Might as well take the elevator or the stairs--which he
+didn't."
+
+But the girl wasn't listening to any of this. Her expression attentive,
+alert, she was passing her hand around the edge of the glass of either
+sash, as though she still dwelt on my suggestion of cutting the pane;
+and as we watched her, she murmured to herself,
+
+"Yes, flying would be a good way." It made me laugh.
+
+And then she turned away from the windows and had no more interest in
+any of them, going with me all over the rest of the room with rather the
+air of a person who thought of renting it than a high-brow criminal
+investigator hunting clews.
+
+"He lived here--years, you say?" I nodded. She slid her hand over the
+plush cushions of a morris chair, threw back the covers of an iron bed
+in one corner and felt of the mattress, then went and stood before the
+bare little dresser. "Why, the place expresses no more personality than
+a room in a transient hotel!"
+
+"He hadn't any personality," I growled, and got the flicker of a smile
+from her eye.
+
+"What about those library books he carried in the suitcase?" Worth came
+in with an echo from the bank meeting.
+
+"Some more bunk," I said morosely. "So far we've not been able to locate
+him as a patron of any public or private library, and the hotel clerk's
+sure his mail never contained a correspondence course--in fact, neither
+here nor at the bank can any one remember his getting any mail. If he
+ever carried books in that suitcase as Knapp believed, it was several
+years back."
+
+"Several years back," Miss Wallace repeated low.
+
+"Myself, I've given up the idea of his studying. This crime doesn't look
+to me like any sudden temptation of a model bank clerk, spending his
+spare hours over correspondence courses. I rather expect to find him
+just plain crook."
+
+"Oh, no," the girl objected. "It's too big and too well done to have
+been planned by a dull, commonplace crook."
+
+"Right you are," I agreed, with restored good humor. "A keen brain
+planned this, but not Clayte's. There had to be an instrument--and that
+was Clayte--also, likely, one or more to help in the getaway."
+
+The getaway! That brought us back with a thump to the present moment.
+Our pretty girl had been all over the shop now, glanced into bathroom,
+closet and cupboard, noted abandoned hats, clothing and shoes, the
+electric plate where Clayte got his breakfast coffee and toast, asked
+without much interest where he ate his other meals, and nodded
+agreeingly when she found that he'd been only an occasional customer at
+the neighboring restaurants, never regular, apparently eating here and
+there down-town. She seemed to get something out of that; what I didn't
+know.
+
+"You speak of this crime not being committed on impulse," she turned to
+me at length. "How long ahead should you say he planned it?"
+
+"Or had it planned and prepared for him," I reminded her.
+
+"Well, that, then," she conceded with slight impatience. "How long do
+you think it might have been planned or prepared for? Years?"
+
+"Hardly that. Not more than a year probably. A gang like this wouldn't
+hold together on a proposition for many months."
+
+The black brows over those clear, childlike eyes, puckered a bit. I saw
+she wasn't at all satisfied with what I had said.
+
+"Made all the observations you want to, Bobs?" Worth asked.
+
+"All here. I want to see the roof." She gave us rather a mechanical
+smile as she silently ticked her points off on her fingers, appealing
+to me with, "I'm depending upon you for such facts as I have been unable
+to observe for myself, so if you give me wrong facts--make
+mistakes--I'll make mistakes in deduction."
+
+There was such confidence in her deductive abilities that a tinge of
+irony crept into my tones as I replied,
+
+"I'll be very careful what opinions I hold."
+
+"I don't mind the opinions," this astounding young woman took me up
+gaily. "I never have any of my own, so I don't pay attention to anybody
+else's. But _do_ be careful of your facts!"
+
+"I'll try to," was all I said. Worth cut in with,
+
+"Do you consider the roof another fact, Bobs?"
+
+"I hope to find facts there," she answered promptly.
+
+"Remember," I said, "your theory means another man up there, and you
+haven't yet--"
+
+"Please, Mr. Boyne, don't take two and two and make five of them at this
+stage of the game," she checked me hastily, and I left them together
+while I made a hurried survey of the hall ceilings, looking for the
+scuttle. There was no hatchway in view, so I started down to the clerk
+to make inquiry. As I passed Clayte's open door, Miss Wallace seemed to
+be adjusting her turban before the dresser mirror, while Worth waited
+impatiently.
+
+"Just a minute," I called. "I'll be right back," and I ducked into the
+elevator.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+ON THE ROOF
+
+
+When I returned with a key and the information that the way to the roof
+ran through the janitor's tool-room at the far end of the hall, I found
+my young people already out there. Worth was trying the tool-room door.
+
+"Got the key?" he called. "It's locked."
+
+"Yes." I took my time fitting and turning it. "How did you know this was
+the room?"
+
+"I didn't," briefly. "Bobs walked out here, and I followed her. She said
+we'd want into this one."
+
+She'd guessed right again! I wheeled on her, ejaculating,
+
+"For the love of Mike! Tell a mere man how you deduced this stairway.
+Feminine intuition, I suppose."
+
+I hadn't meant to be offensive with that last, but her firm little chin
+was in the air as she countered,
+
+"Is it a stairway? It might be a ladder, you know."
+
+It was a ladder, an iron ladder, as I found when I ushered them in. My
+eyes snapped inquiry at her.
+
+"Very simple," she said. Worth was pushing aside pails and boxes to make
+a better way for her to the ladder's foot. "There wouldn't be a roof
+scuttle in the rented rooms, so I knew when you called in to tell us
+there was none in the halls."
+
+"I didn't. I said nothing of the sort." Where was the girl's fine memory
+that she couldn't recollect a man's words for the little time I'd been
+gone! "All I said was, 'Just a minute and I'll be back.'"
+
+"Yes, that's all you said to Worth." She glanced at the boy serenely as
+he waited for her at the ladder's foot. "He's not a trained observer; he
+doesn't deduce even from what he does observe." There were twinkling
+lights in her black eyes. "But what your hurried trip to the office said
+to me was that you'd gone for the key of the room that led to the
+roof scuttle."
+
+Well, that was reasonable--simple enough, too; but,
+
+"This room? How did you find it?"
+
+She stepped to the open door and placed the tip of a gloved finger on
+the nickeled naught that marked the panels.
+
+"The significant zero again, Mr. Boyne," she laughed. "Here it means the
+room is not a tenanted one, and is therefore the way to the roof. Shall
+we go there?"
+
+"Well, young lady," I said as I led her along the trail Worth had
+cleared, "it must be almost as bad to see everything that way--in minute
+detail--as to be blind."
+
+"Carry on!" Worth called from the top of the ladder, reaching down to
+aid the girl. She laughed back at me as she started the short climb.
+
+"Not at all bad! You others seem to me only half awake to what is about
+you--only half living," and she placed her hand in the strong one held
+down to her. As Worth passed her through the scuttle to the roof, I saw
+her glance carelessly at the hooks and staples, the clumsy but adequate
+arrangement for locking the hatch, and, following her, gave them more
+careful attention, wondering what she had seen--plenty that I did not,
+no doubt. They had no tale to tell my eyes.
+
+Once outside, she stopped a minute with Worth to adjust herself to the
+sharp wind which swept across from the north. Here was a rectangular
+space surrounded by walls which ran around its four sides to form the
+coping, unbroken in any spot; a gravel-and-tar roof, almost flat, with
+the scuttle and a few small, dust covered skylights its only openings,
+four chimney-tops its sole projections. It was bare of any hiding-place,
+almost as clear as a tennis court.
+
+We made a solemn tour of inspection; I wasn't greatly interested--how
+could I be, knowing that between this roof and my fugitive there had
+been locked windows, and a locked door under reliable human eyes? Still,
+the lifelong training of the detective kept me estimating the
+possibilities of a getaway from the roof--if Clayte could have reached
+it. Worth crossed to where the St. Dunstan fire escape came up from the
+ground to end below us at a top floor window. I joined him, explaining
+as we looked down,
+
+"Couldn't have made it that way; not by daylight. In open view all
+around."
+
+"Think he stayed up here till dark?" Worth suggested, quite as though
+the possibility of Clayte's coming here at all was settled.
+
+"My men were all over this building--roof to cellar--within the hour.
+They'd not have overlooked a crack big enough for him to hide in. Put
+yourself in Clayte's place. Time was the most valuable thing in the
+world with him right then. If ever he got up to this roof, he'd not
+waste a minute longer on it than he had to."
+
+"Let's see what's beyond, then," and Worth led the way to the farther
+end.
+
+The girl didn't come with us. Having been once around the roof coping,
+looking, it seemed to me, as much at the view as anything else, she now
+seemed content to settle herself on a little square of planking, a
+disused scuttle top or something of the sort, in against one of the
+chimneys where she was sheltered from the wind. Rather to my surprise, I
+saw her thoughtfully pulling off her gloves, removing her turban, all
+the time with a curiously disinterested air. I was reminded of what
+Worth had said the night before about the way her father trained her.
+Probably she regarded the facts I'd furnished her, or that she'd picked
+up for herself, much as she used to the problems in concentration her
+father spread in the high chair tray of her infancy. I turned and left
+her with them, for Worth was calling me to announce a fact I already
+knew, that the adjoining building had a roof some fifteen feet below
+where we stood, and that the man, admitting good gymnastic ability,
+might have reached it.
+
+"Sure," I said. "But come on. We're wasting time here."
+
+We turned to go, and then stopped, both of us checked instantly by what
+we saw. The girl was sitting in a strange pose, her feet drawn in to
+cross beneath her body, slender hands at the length of the arms meeting
+with interlaced finger-tips before her, the thumbs just touching;
+shoulders back, chin up, eyes--big enough at any time, now dilated to
+look twice their size--velvet circles in a white face. Like a Buddha;
+I'd seen her sit so, years before, an undersized girl doing stunts for
+her father in a public hall; and even then she'd been in a way
+impressive. But now, in the fullness of young beauty, her fine head
+relieved against the empty blue of the sky, the free winds whipping
+loose flying ends of her dark hair, she held the eye like a miracle.
+
+Sitting here so immovably, she looked to me as though life had slid away
+from her for the moment, the mechanical action of lungs and heart
+temporarily suspended, so that mind might work unhindered in that
+beautiful shell. No, I was wrong. She was breathing; her bosom rose and
+fell in slow but deep, placid inhalations and exhalations. And the pale
+face might be from the slower heart-beat, or only because the surface
+blood had receded to give more of strength to the brain.
+
+The position of head of a Bankers' Security Agency carries with it a
+certain amount of dignity--a dignity which, since Richardson's death, I
+have maintained better than I have handled other requirements of the
+business he left with me. I stood now feeling like a fool. I'd grown
+gray in the work, and here in my prosperous middle life, a boy's whim
+and a girl's pretty face had put me in the position of consulting a
+clairvoyant. Worse, for this was a wild-cat affair, without even the
+professional standing of establishments to which I knew some of the weak
+brothers in my line sometimes sneaked for ghostly counsel. If it should
+leak out, I was done for.
+
+I suppose I sort of groaned, for I felt Worth put a restraining hand on
+my arm, and heard his soft,
+
+"Psst!"
+
+The two of us stood, how long I can't say, something besides the beauty
+of the young creature, even the dignity of her in this outre situation
+getting hold of me, so that I was almost reverent when at last the
+rigidity of her image-like figure began to relax, the pretty feet in
+their silk stockings and smart pumps appeared where they belonged, side
+by side on the edge of the planking, and she looked at us with eyes that
+slowly gathered their normal expression, and a smile of rare human
+sweetness.
+
+"It _is_ horrid to see--and I loathe doing it!" She shook her curly dark
+head like a punished child, and stayed a minute longer, eyes downcast,
+groping after gloves and hat. "I thought maybe I'd get the answer before
+you saw me--sitting up like a trained seal!"
+
+"Like a mighty pretty little heathen idol, Bobs," Worth amended.
+
+"Well, it's the only way I can really concentrate--effectively. But this
+is the first time I've done it since--since father died."
+
+"And never again for me, if that's the way you feel about it." Worth
+crossed quickly and stood beside her, looking down. She reached a hand
+to him; her eyes thanked him; but as he helped her to her feet I was
+struck by a something poised and confident that she seemed to have
+brought with her out of that strange state in which she had just been.
+
+"Doesn't either of you want to hear the answer?" she asked. Then,
+without waiting for reply, she started for the scuttle and the ladder,
+bare headed, carrying her hat. We found her once more adjusting turban
+and veil before the mirror of Clayte's dresser. She faced around, and
+announced, smiling steadily across at me,
+
+"Your man Clayte left this room while Mrs. Griggsby was kneeling almost
+on its threshold--left it by that window over there. He got to the roof
+by means of a rope and grappling hook. He tied the suitcase to the lower
+end of the rope, swung it out of the window, went up hand over hand, and
+pulled the suitcase up after him. That's the answer I got."
+
+It was? Well, it was a beaut! Only Worth Gilbert, standing there giving
+the proceeding respectability by careful attention and a grave face,
+brought me down to asking with mild jocularity,
+
+"He did? He did all that? Well, please ma'am, who locked the window
+after him?"
+
+"He locked the window after himself."
+
+"Oh, say!" I began in exasperation--hadn't I just shown the impractical
+little creature that those locks couldn't be manipulated from outside?
+
+"Wait. Examine carefully the wooden part of the upper sash, at the
+lock--again," she urged, but without making any movement to help.
+"You'll find what we overlooked before; the way he locked the sash from
+the outside."
+
+I turned to the window and looked where she had said; nothing. I ran my
+fingers over the painted surface of the wood, outside, opposite the
+latch, and a queer, chilly feeling went down my spine. I jerked out my
+knife, opened it and scraped at a tiny inequality.
+
+"There is--is something--" I was beginning, when Worth crowded in at my
+side and pushed his broad shoulders out the window to get a better view
+of my operations, then commanded,
+
+"Let me have that knife." He took it from my fingers, dug with its
+blade, and suddenly from the inside I saw a tiny hole appear in the
+frame of the sash beside the lock hasp. "Here we are!" He brought his
+upper half back into the room and held up a wooden plug, painted--dipped
+in paint--the exact color of the sash. It had concealed a hole; pierced
+the wood from out to in.
+
+"And she saw that in her trance," I murmured, gaping in amazement at the
+plug.
+
+I heard her catch her breath, and Worth scowled at me,
+
+"Trance? What do you mean, Boyne? She doesn't go into a trance."
+
+"That--that--whatever she does," I corrected rather helplessly.
+
+"Never mind, Mr. Boyne," said the girl. "It isn't clairvoyance or
+anything like that, however it looks."
+
+"But I wouldn't have believed any human eyes could have found that
+thing. I discovered it only by sense of touch--and that after you told
+me to hunt for it. You saw it when I was showing you the latch, did
+you?"
+
+"Oh, I didn't see it." She shook her head. "I found it when I was
+sitting up there on the roof."
+
+"Guessed at it?"
+
+"I never guess." Indignantly. "When I'd cleared my mind of everything
+else--had concentrated on just the facts that bore on what I wanted to
+know--how that man with the suitcase got out of the room and left it
+locked behind him--I deduced the hole in the sash by elimination."
+
+"By elimination?" I echoed. "Show me."
+
+"Simple as two and two," she assented. "Out of the door? No; Mrs.
+Griggsby; so out of the window. Down? No; you told why; he would be
+seen; so, up. Ladder? No; too big for one man to handle or to hide; so a
+rope."
+
+"But the hole in the sash?"
+
+"You showed me the only way to close that lock from the outside. There
+was no hole in the glass, so there must be in the sash. It was not
+visible--you had been all over it, and a man of your profession isn't a
+totally untrained observer--so the hole was plugged. I hadn't seen the
+plug, so it was concealed by paint--"
+
+I was trying to work a toothpick through the plughole. She offered me a
+wire hairpin, straightened out, and with it I pushed the hasp into place
+from outside, saw the lever snap in to hold it fast. I had worked the
+catch as Clayte had worked it--from outside.
+
+"How did you know it was _this_ window?" I asked, forced to agree that
+she had guessed right as to the sash lock. "There are two more here,
+either of which--"
+
+"No, please, Mr. Boyne. Look at the angle of the roof that cuts from
+view any one climbing from this window--not from the others."
+
+We were all leaning in the window now, sticking our heads out, looking
+down, looking up.
+
+"I can't yet see how you get the rope and hook," I said. "Still seems to
+me that an outside man posted on the roof to help in the getaway is more
+likely."
+
+"Maybe. I can't deal with things that are merely likely. It has to be a
+fact--or nothing--for my use. I know that there wasn't any second man
+because of the nicks Clayte's grappling hook has left in the cornice up
+there."
+
+"Nicks!" I said, and stood like a bound boy at a husking, without a word
+to say for myself. Of course, in this impasse of the locked windows, my
+men and I had had some excuse for our superficial examination of the
+roof. Yet that she should have seen what we had passed over--seen it out
+of the corner of her eye, and be laughing at me--was rather a dose to
+swallow. She'd got her hair and her hat and veil to her liking, and she
+prompted us,
+
+"So now you want to get right down stairs--don't you--and go up through
+that other building to its roof?"
+
+I stared. She had my plan almost before I had made it.
+
+At the St. Dunstan desk where I returned the keys, little Miss Wallace
+had a question of her own to put to the clerk.
+
+"How long ago was this building reroofed?" she asked with one of her
+dark, softly glowing smiles.
+
+"Reroofed?" repeated the puzzled clerk, much more civil to her than he
+had been to me. "I don't know that it ever was. Certainly not in my
+time, and I've been here all of four years."
+
+"Not in four years? You're sure?"
+
+"Sure of that, yes, miss. But I can find exactly." The fellow behind the
+desk was rising with an eagerness to be of service to her, when she cut
+him short with,
+
+"Thank you. Four years would be exact enough for my purpose." And she
+followed a puzzled detective and, if I may guess, an equally wondering
+Worth Gilbert out into the street.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+THE GOLD NUGGET
+
+
+The neighbor to the south of the St. Dunstan was the Gold Nugget Hotel,
+a five story brick building and not at all pretentious as a hostelry. I
+knew the place mildly, and my police training, even better than such
+acquaintance as I had with this particular dump, told me what it was.
+Through the windows we could see guests, Sunday papers littered about
+them, half smoked cigars in their faces, and hats which had a general
+tendency to tilt over the right eye. And here suddenly I realized the
+difference between Miss Barbara Wallace, a scientist's daughter, and
+some feminine sleuth we might have had with us.
+
+"Take her back to the St. Dunstan, Worth," I suggested. Then, as I saw
+they were both going to resist, "She can't go in here. I'll wait for you
+if you like."
+
+"Don't know why we shouldn't let Bobs in on the fun, same as you and me,
+Jerry." That was the way Worth put it. I took a side glance at his
+attitude in this affair--that he'd bought and was enjoying an eight
+hundred thousand dollar frolic, offering to share it with a friend; and
+saying no more, I wheeled and swung open the door for them. The man at
+the desk looked at me, calling a quick,
+
+"Hello, Jerry--what's up?"
+
+"Hello, Kite. How'd you come here?"
+
+The Kite as a hotelman was a new one on me. Last I knew of him, he was
+in the business of making book at the Emeryville track; and I
+supposed--if I ever thought of him--that he'd followed the ponies south
+across the border. As I stepped close to the counter, he spoke low, his
+look one of puzzled and somewhat anxious inquiry.
+
+"Running straight, Jerry. You may ask the Chief. What can I do for you?"
+
+Rather glad of the luck that gave me an old acquaintance to deal with, I
+told him, described Clayte, Worth and Miss Wallace standing by
+listening; then asked if Kite had seen him pass through the hotel going
+out the previous day at some time around one o'clock, carrying a brown,
+sole leather suitcase.
+
+The readers of the Sunday papers who had been lured from their known
+standards of good manners into the sending of sundry interested glances
+in the direction of our sparkling girl, took the cue from the Kite's
+scowl to bury themselves for good in the voluminous sheets they held,
+each attending strictly to his own business, as is the etiquette of
+places like the Gold Nugget.
+
+"About one o'clock, you say?" Kite muttered, frowning, twisted his head
+around and called down a back passage, "Louie--Oh, Louie!" and when an
+overalled porter, rather messy, shuffled to the desk, put the low toned
+query, "D'you see any stranger guy gripping a sole leather shirt-box
+snoop by out yestiddy, after one, thereabouts?" And I added the
+information,
+
+"Medium height and weight, blue eyes, light brown hair, smooth face."
+
+Louie looked at me dubiously.
+
+"How big a guy?" he asked.
+
+"Five feet seven or eight; weighs about hundred and forty."
+
+"Blue eyes you say?"
+
+"Light blue--gray blue."
+
+"How was he tucked up?"
+
+"Blue serge suit, black shoes, black derby. Neat, quiet dresser."
+
+Louie's eyes wandered over the guests in the office questioningly. I
+began to feel impatient. If there was any place in the city where my
+description of Clayte would differentiate him, make him noticeable by
+comparison, it was here. Neat, quiet dressers were not dotting this
+lobby.
+
+"Might be Tim Foley?" he appealed to the Kite, who nodded gravely and
+chewed his short mustache. "Would he have a big scar on his left cheek?"
+
+"He would not," I said shortly. "He wasn't a guest here, and you don't
+know him. Get this straight now: a stranger, going through here, out;
+about one o'clock; carried a suitcase."
+
+"Bulls after him?" Louie asked, and I turned away from him wearily.
+
+"Kite," I said, "let me up to your roof."
+
+"Sure, Jerry." Released, the porter went on to gather up a pile of
+discarded papers.
+
+"Could he--the man I've described--come through here--through this
+office and neither you nor Louie see him?" I asked. The Kite brought a
+box of cigars from under the counter with,
+
+"My treat, gentlemen. Naw, Jerry; sure not--not that kind of a guy.
+Louie'd 'a' spotted him. Most observing cuss I ever seen."
+
+Miss Wallace, taking all this in, seemed amused. As I turned to lead to
+the elevator I found that again she wanted a question of her own
+answered.
+
+"Mr. Kite," she began and I grinned; Kite wasn't the Kite's surname or
+any part of his name; "Who is the guest here with the upstairs room--on
+the top floor--has had the same room right along--for five or six
+years--but doesn't--"
+
+"Go easy, ma'am, please!" Kite's little eyes were popping; he dragged
+out a handkerchief and fumbled it around his forehead. "I've not been
+here for any five or six years--no, nor half that time. Since I've been
+here most of our custom is transient. Nobody don't keep no room five or
+six years in the Gold Nugget."
+
+"Back up," I smiled at his excitement. "To my certain knowledge Steve
+Skeels has had a room here longer than that. Hasn't he been with you
+ever since the place was rebuilt after the earthquake?"
+
+"Steve?" the Kite repeated. "I forgot him. Yeah--he keeps a little room
+up under the roof."
+
+"Has he had it for as long as four years?" the young lady asked.
+
+"Search me," the Kite shook his head.
+
+But Louie the overalled, piloting us the first stage of our journey in a
+racketty old elevator that he seemed to pull up by a cable, so slow it
+was, grumbled an assent to the same question when it was put to him, and
+confirmed my belief that Skeels came into the hotel as soon as it was
+rebuilt, and had kept the same room ever since.
+
+Miss Wallace seemed interested in this; but all the time we were making
+the last lap, by an iron stairway, to that roof-house we had seen from
+the top of the St. Dunstan; all the time Louie was unlocking the door
+there to let us out, instructing us to be sure to relock it and bring
+him the key, and to yell for him down the elevator shaft because the
+bell was busted, the quiet smile of Miss Barbara Wallace disturbed me.
+She followed where I led, but I had the irritating impression that she
+looked on at my movements, and Worth's as well, with the indulgent eye
+of a grown-up observing children at play.
+
+On the roof of the Gold Nugget we picked up the possible trail easily;
+Clayte hadn't needed to go through the building, or have a confederate
+staked out in a room here, to make a downward getaway. For here the fire
+escape came all the way up, curving over the coping to anchor into the
+wall, and it was a good iron stairway, with landings at each floor, and
+a handrail the entire length, its lower end in the alley between Powell
+and Mason Streets. Looking at it I didn't doubt that it was used by the
+guests of the Gold Nugget at least half as much as the easier but more
+conspicuous front entrance. Therefore a man seen on it would be no more
+likely to attract attention than he would in the elevator. I explained
+this to the others, but Worth had attacked a rack of old truck piled in
+the corner of the roof-house, and paid little attention to me, while
+Miss Wallace nodded with her provoking smile and said,
+
+"Once--yes; no doubt you are exactly right. I wasn't looking for a way
+that a man might take once, under pressure of great necessity."
+
+"Why not?" I countered. "If Clayte got away by this means
+yesterday--that'll do me."
+
+"It might," she nodded, "if you could see it as a fact, without seeing a
+lot more. Such a man as Clayte was--a really wonderful man, you know--"
+the dimples were deep in the pink of her cheeks as she flashed a
+laughing look at me with this clawful--"a really wonderful man like
+Clayte," she repeated, "wouldn't have trusted to a route he hadn't known
+and proved for a long time."
+
+"That's theory," I smiled. "I take my hat off to you, Miss Wallace, when
+it comes to observing and deducing, but I'm afraid your theorizing is
+weak."
+
+"I never theorize," she reminded me. "All I deal with is facts."
+
+She had perched herself on an overturned box, and was watching Worth
+sort junk. I leaned against the roof-house, pushed Kite's donated cigar
+unlighted into a corner of my mouth and stared at her.
+
+"Miss Wallace," I said sharply, "what's this Steve Skeels stuff? What's
+this reroofing stuff? What's the dope you think you have, and you think
+I haven't? Tell us, and we'll not waste time. Tell us, and we'll get
+ahead on this case. Worth, let that rubbish alone. Nothing there for us.
+Come here and listen."
+
+For all answer he straightened up, looked at us without a word--and went
+to it again. I turned to the girl.
+
+"Worth doesn't need to listen to me, Mr. Boyne," she said serenely. "He
+already has full faith in me and my methods."
+
+"Methods be--be blowed!" I exploded. "It's results that count, and
+you've produced. I'm willing to hand it to you. All we know now, we got
+from you. Beside you I'm a thick-headed blunderer. Let me in on how you
+get things and I won't be so hard to convince."
+
+"Indeed, you aren't a blunderer," she said warmly. "You do a lot better
+than most people at observing." (High praise that, for a detective more
+than twenty years in the business; but she meant to be complimentary.)
+"I'm glad to tell you my processes. How much time do you want to give to
+it?"
+
+"Not a minute longer than will get what you know." And she began with a
+rush.
+
+"Those dents in the coping at the St. Dunstan, above Clayte's window--I
+asked the clerk there how long since the building had been reroofed,
+because there were nicks made by that hook and half filled with tar that
+had been slushed up against the coping and into the lowest dents. You
+see what that means?"
+
+"That Clayte--or some accomplice of his--had been using the route more
+than four years ago. Yes."
+
+"And the other scars were made at varying times, showing me that coming
+over here from there was quite a regular thing."
+
+"At that rate he would have nicked the coping until it would have looked
+like a huck towel," I objected.
+
+"A huck towel," she gravely adopted my word. "But he was a man that did
+everything he did several different ways. That was his habit--a sort of
+disguise. That's why he was shadowy and hard to describe. Sometimes he
+came up to the St. Dunstan roof just as we did; and once, a good while
+ago, there were cleats on that wall there so he could climb down here
+without the rope. They have been taken away some time, and the places
+where they were are weathered over so you would hardly notice them."
+
+"Right you are," I said feelingly. "I'd hardly notice them. If I could
+notice things as you do--fame and fortune for me!" I thought the matter
+over for a minute. "That lodger on the top floor, Steve Skeels," I
+debated. "A poor bet. Yet--after all, he might have been a member of the
+gang, though somehow I don't get the hunch--"
+
+"What sort of looking person was this man Skeels?" she asked.
+
+"Quiet fellow. Dressed like a church deacon. 'Silent Steve' they call
+him. I'll send for him down stairs and let you give him the once-over if
+you like."
+
+"Oh, that's not the kind of man I'm looking for." She shook her head.
+"My man would be more like those down there in the easy chairs--so he
+wasn't noticed in the elevator or when he passed out through the
+office."
+
+"Wasn't it cute of him?" I grinned. "But you see we've just heard that
+he didn't take the elevator and go through the office--Saturday anyhow,
+which is the only time that really counts for us, the time when he
+carried that suitcase with a fortune in it."
+
+"But he did," she persisted. "He went that way. He walked out the front
+door and carried away the suitcase--"
+
+"_He didn't!_" Worth shouted, and began throwing things behind him like
+a terrier in a wood-rat's burrow.
+
+Derelict stuff of all sorts; empty boxes, pasteboard cartons, part of an
+old trunk, he hurtled them into a heap, and dragged out a square
+something in a gunny sack. As he jerked to clear it from the sacking, I
+glanced at little Miss Wallace. She wasn't getting any pleasureable kick
+out of the situation. Her eyes seemed to go wider open with a sort of
+horror, her face paled as she drooped in on herself, sitting there on
+the box. Then Worth held up his find in triumph, assuming a famous
+attitude.
+
+"The world is mine!" he cried.
+
+"Maybe 'tis, maybe 'tisn't," I said as I ran across to look at the thing
+close. Sure enough, he'd dug up a respectable brown, sole leather
+suitcase with brass trimmings such as a bank clerk might have carried,
+suspiciously much too good to have been thrown out here. Could it be
+that the thieves had indeed met in one of the Gold Nugget's rooms or in
+the roof-house up here, made their divvy, split the swag, and thus
+clumsily disposed of the container? At the moment, Worth tore buckles
+and latches free, yanked the thing open, reversed it in air--and out
+fell a coiled rope that curved itself like a snake--a three-headed
+snake; the triple grappling iron at its end standing up as though to
+hiss.
+
+We all stood staring; I was too stunned to be triumphant. What a pat
+confirmation of Miss Wallace's deductions! I turned to congratulate her
+and at the same instant Worth cried,
+
+"What's the matter, Bobs?" for the girl was sitting, staring dejectedly,
+her chin cupped in her palms, her lips quivering. Nonplussed, I stooped
+over the suitcase and rope, coiling up the one, putting it in the
+other--this first bit of tangible, palpable evidence we'd lighted on.
+
+"Let's get out of this," I said quickly. "We've done all we can
+here--and good and plenty it is, too."
+
+Worth took the suitcase out of my hands and carried it, so that I had to
+help Miss Wallace down the ladder. She still looked as though she'd lost
+her last friend. I couldn't make her out. Never a word from her while we
+were getting down, or while they waited and I shouted for Louie. It was
+in the elevator, with the porter looking at everything on earth but this
+suitcase we hadn't brought in and we were taking out, that she said,
+hardly above her breath,
+
+"Shall you ask at the desk if this ever belonged to any one in the
+house?"
+
+"Find out here--right now," and I turned to the man in overalls with,
+"How about it?"
+
+"Not that your answer will make any difference," Worth cut in joyously.
+"Nobody need get the idea that they can take this suitcase away from
+me--'cause they can't. It's mine. I paid eight hundred thousand dollars
+for this box; and I've got a use for it." He chuckled. Louie regarded
+him with uncomprehending toleration--queer doings were the order of the
+day at the Gold Nugget--and allowed negligently.
+
+"You'll get to keep it. It don't belong here." Then, as a coin changed
+hands, "Thank _you_."
+
+"But didn't it ever belong here?" our girl persisted forlornly, and when
+Louie failed her, jingling Worth's tip in his calloused palm, she wanted
+the women asked, and we had a frowsy chambermaid called who denied any
+acquaintance with our sole leather discovery, insisting, upon definite
+inquiry, that she had never seen it in Skeels' room, or any other room
+of her domain. Little Miss Wallace sighed and dropped the subject.
+
+As we stepped out of the elevator, I behind the others, Kite caught my
+attention with a low whistle, and in response to a furtive, beckoning,
+backward jerk of his head, I moved over to the desk. The reading
+gentlemen in the easy chairs, most consciously unconscious of us, sent
+blue smoke circles above their papers. Kite leaned far over to get his
+mustache closer to my ear.
+
+"You ast me about Steve," he whispered.
+
+"Yeah," I agreed, and looked around for Barbara, to tell her here was
+her chance to meet the gentleman she had so cleverly deduced. But she
+and Worth were already getting through the door, he still clinging to
+the suitcase, she trailing along with that expression of defeat. "I'm
+sort of looking up Steve. And you don't want to tip him off--see?"
+
+"Couldn't if I wanted to, Jerry," the Kite came down on his heels, but
+continued to whisper hoarsely. "Steve's bolted."
+
+"What?"
+
+"Bolted," the Kite repeated. "Hopped the twig. Jumped the town."
+
+"You mean he's not in his room?" I reached for a match in the metal
+holder, scratched it, and lit my cigar.
+
+"I mean he's jumped the town," Kite repeated. "You got me nervous asking
+for him that way. While you was on the roof, I took a squint around and
+found he was gone--with his hand baggage. That means he's gone outa
+town."
+
+"Not if the suitcase you squinted for was a brown sole leather--" I was
+beginning, but the Kite cut in on me.
+
+"I seen that one you had. That wasn't it. His was a brand new one, black
+and shiny."
+
+Suddenly I couldn't taste my cigar at all.
+
+"Know what time to-day he left here?" I asked.
+
+"It wasn't to-day. 'Twas yestiddy. About one o'clock."
+
+As I plunged for the door I was conscious of his hoarse whisper
+following me,
+
+"What's Steve done, Jerry? What d'ye want him for?"
+
+I catapulted across the sidewalk and into the machine.
+
+"Get me to my office as fast as you can, Worth," I exclaimed. "Hit Bush
+Street--and rush it."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+A TIN-HORN GAMBLER
+
+
+After we were in the machine, my head was so full of the matter in hand
+that Worth had driven some little distance before I realized that the
+young people were debating across me as to which place we went first,
+Barbara complaining that she was hungry, while Worth ungallantly eager
+to give his own affairs immediate attention, argued,
+
+"You said the dining-room out at your diggings would be closed by this
+time. Why not let me take you down to the Palace, along with Jerry, have
+this suitcase safely locked up, and we can all lunch together and get
+ahead with our talk."
+
+"Drive to the office, Worth," I cut in ahead of Barbara's objections to
+this plan. "I ought to be there this minute. We'll have a tray in from a
+little joint that feeds me when I'm too busy to go out for grub."
+
+I took them straight into my private office at the end of the suite.
+
+"Make yourself comfortable," I said to Miss Wallace. "Better let me lock
+up that suitcase, Worth; stick it in the vault. That's evidence."
+
+"I'll hang on to it." He grinned. "You can keep the rope and hook. This
+has got another use before it can be evidence."
+
+Not even delaying to remove my coat, I laid a heavy finger on the
+buzzer button for Roberts, my secretary; then as nothing resulted, I
+played music on the other signal tips beneath the desk lid. It was
+Sunday, also luncheon hour, but there must be some one about the place.
+It never was left entirely empty.
+
+My fugue work brought little Pete, and Murray, one of the men from the
+operatives' room.
+
+"Where's Roberts?" I asked the latter.
+
+"He went to lunch, Mr. Boyne."
+
+"Where's Foster?" Foster was chief operative.
+
+"He telephoned in from Redwood City half an hour ago. Chasing a Clayte
+clue down the peninsula."
+
+"If he calls up again, tell him to report in at once. Is there a
+stenographer about?"
+
+"Not a one; Sunday, you know."
+
+"Can you take dictation?"
+
+"Me? Why, no, sir."
+
+"Then dig me somebody who can. And rush it. I've--"
+
+"Perhaps I might help." It was little Miss Wallace who spoke; about the
+first cheerful word I'd heard out of her since we found that suitcase on
+the roof of the Gold Nugget. "I can take on the machine fairly."
+
+"Fine!" I tossed my coat on the big center table. "Murray, send Roberts
+to me as soon as he comes in. You take number two trunk line, and find
+two of the staff--quick; any two. Shoot them to the Gold Nugget Hotel."
+I explained the situation in a word. Then, as he was closing the door,
+"Keep off Number One trunk, Murray; I'll be using that line," and I
+turned to little Pete.
+
+"Get lunch for three," I said, handing him a bill. From his first glance
+at Barbara one could have seen that the monkey was hers truly, as they
+say at the end of letters. I knew as he bolted out that he felt
+something very special ought to be dug up for such a visitor.
+
+The girl had shed coat and hat and was already fingering the keys of the
+typewriter, trying their touch. I saw at once she knew her business, and
+I turned to the work at hand with satisfaction.
+
+"You'll find telegram blanks there somewhere," I instructed. "Get as
+many in for manifold copies as you can make readable. The long form.
+Worth--"
+
+I looked around to find that my other amateur assistant was following my
+advice, stowing his precious suitcase in the vault; and it struck me
+that he couldn't have been more tickled with the find if the thing had
+contained all the money and securities instead of that rope and hook. He
+had made the latter into a separate package, and now looked up at me
+with,
+
+"Want this in here, too, Jerry?"
+
+"I do. Lock them both up, and come take the telephone at the table
+there. Press down Number One button. Then call every taxi stand in the
+city (find their numbers at the back of the telephone directory) and ask
+if they picked up Silent Steve at or near the Gold Nugget yesterday
+afternoon about one; Steve Skeels--or any other man. If so, where'd they
+take him? Get me?"
+
+"All hunk, Jerry." He came briskly to the job. I returned to Miss
+Wallace, with,
+
+"Ready, Barbara?"
+
+"Yes, Mr. Boyne."
+
+"Take dictation:
+
+"'We offer five hundred dollars--' You authorize that, Worth?"
+
+"Sure. What's it for?"
+
+"Never mind. You keep at your job. 'Five hundred dollars for the arrest
+of Silent Steve Skeels--' Wait. Make that 'arrest or detention,' Got
+it?"
+
+"All right, Mr. Boyne."
+
+--"'Skeels, gambler, who left San Francisco about one in the afternoon
+yesterday March sixth. Presumed he went by train; maybe by auto. He is
+man thirty-eight to forty; five feet seven or eight; weighs about one
+hundred forty. Hair, light brown; eyes light blue--' Make it gray-blue,
+Barbara."
+
+Worth glanced up from where he was jotting down telephone numbers to
+drawl,
+
+"You know who you're describing there?"
+
+"Yes--Steve Skeels."
+
+I saw Miss Wallace give him a quick look, a little shake of her head, as
+she said to me.
+
+"Go on--please, Mr. Boyne."
+
+"'Hair parted high, smoothed down; appears of slight build but is well
+muscled. Neat dresser, quiet, usually wears blue serge suit, black derby
+hat, black shoes.'"
+
+"By Golly--you see it now yourself, don't you, Jerry?"
+
+"I see that you're holding up work," I said impatiently. And now it was
+the quiet girl who came in with.
+
+"Who gave you this description of Steve Skeels? I mean, how many
+people's observation of the man does this represent?"
+
+"One. My own," I jerked out. "I know Skeels; have known him for years."
+
+"Years? How many?" It was still the girl asking.
+
+"Since 1907--or thereabouts."
+
+"Was he always a gambler?" she wanted to know.
+
+"Always. Ran a joint on Fillmore Street after the big earthquake, and
+before San Francisco came back down-town."
+
+"A gambler," she spoke the word just above her breath, as though trying
+it out with herself. "A man who took big chances--risks."
+
+"Not Steve," I smiled at her earnestness. "Steve was a piker always--a
+tin-horn gambler. Hid away from the police instead of doing business
+with them. Take a chance? Not Steve."
+
+Worth had left the telephone and was leaning over her shoulder to read
+what she had typed.
+
+"Exactly and precisely," he said, "the same words you had in that other
+fool description of him."
+
+"Of whom?"
+
+"Clayte."
+
+Worth let me have the one word straight between the eyes, and I leaned
+back in my chair, the breath almost knocked out of me by it. By an
+effort I pulled myself together and turned to the girl:
+
+"Take dictation, please: Skeel's eyes are wide apart, rather small but
+keen--"
+
+And for the next few minutes I was making words mean something, drawing
+a picture of the Skeels I knew, so that others could visualize him. And
+it brought me a word of commendation from Miss Wallace, and made Worth
+exclaim,
+
+"Sounds more like Clayte than Clayte himself. You've put flesh on those
+bones, Jerry."
+
+"You keep busy at that phone and help land him," I growled. "Finish,
+please: 'Wire information to me. I hold warrant. Jeremiah Boyne,
+Bankers' Security Agency,' That's all."
+
+The girl pulled the sheets from the machine and sorted them while I was
+stabbing the buzzer. Roberts answered, breezing in with an apology which
+I nipped.
+
+"Never mind that. Get this telegram on the wires to each of our
+corresponding agencies as far east as Spokane, Ogden and Denver. Has
+Murray got in touch with Foster?"
+
+"Not yet. Young and Stroud are outside."
+
+"Send them to bring in Steve Skeels," I ordered. "Description on the
+telegram there. Any word, Worth?"
+
+"Nothing yet." Worth was calling one after another of the taxi offices.
+Little Pete came in with a tray.
+
+"All right, Worth," I said. "Turn that job over to Roberts. Here's where
+we eat."
+
+The kid's idea of catering for Barbara was club sandwiches and pie a la
+mode. It wouldn't have been mine; but I was glad to note that he'd
+guessed right. The youngsters fell to with appetite. For myself, I ate,
+the receiver at my ear, talking between bites. San Jose, Stockton, Santa
+Rosa--in all the nearby towns of size, I placed the drag-net out for
+Silent Steve, tin-horn gambler.
+
+They talked as they lunched. I didn't pay any attention to what they
+said now; my mind was racing at the new idea Worth had given me. So far,
+I had been running Skeels down as one of the same gang with Clayte; the
+man on the roof; the go-between for the getaway. My supposition was that
+when the suitcase was emptied for division, Skeels, being left to
+dispose of the container, had stuck it where we found it. But what if
+the thing worked another way? What if all the money--almost a round
+million--which came to the Gold Nugget roof in the brown sole-leather
+case, walked out of its front door in the new black shiny carrier of
+Skeels the gambler?
+
+Could that be worked? A gambler at night, a bank employee by day? Why
+not? Improbable. But not impossible.
+
+"I believe you said a mouthful, Worth," I broke in on the two at their
+lunch. "And tell me, girl, how did you get the idea of walking up to the
+desk at the Gold Nugget and demanding Steve Skeels from the Kite?"
+
+"I didn't demand Steve Skeels," she reminded me rather plaintively. "I
+didn't want--him."
+
+"What did you want?"
+
+"A room that had been lived in."
+
+She didn't need to add a word to that. I got her in the instant. That
+examination of hers in Clayte's room at the St. Dunstan; the crisp,
+new-looking bedding, the unworn velvet of the chair cushions; the faded
+nap of the carpet, quite perfect, while that in the hall had just been
+renewed. Even had the room been done over recently--and I knew it had
+not--there was no getting around the total absence of photographs,
+pictures, books, magazines, newspapers, old letters, the lack of all
+the half worn stuff that collects about an occupied apartment. No
+pinholes or defacements on the walls, none of the litter that
+accumulates. The girl was right; that room hadn't been lived in.
+
+"Beautiful," I said in honest admiration. "It's a pleasure to see a mind
+like yours, and such powers of observation, in action, clicking out
+results like a perfectly adjusted machine. Clayte didn't live in his
+room because he lived with the gang all his glorious outside hours.
+There was where the poor rabbit of a bank clerk got his fling."
+
+"Oh, yes, it works logically. He held himself down to Clayte at the St.
+Dunstan and in the bank, and he let himself go to--what?--outside of it,
+beyond it, where he really lived."
+
+"He let himself go to Steve Skeels--won't that do you?"
+
+"No," she said so positively that it was annoying. "That won't do me at
+all."
+
+"But it's what you got," I reminded her rather unkindly, and then was
+sorry I'd done it. "It's what you got for me--and I thank you for it."
+
+"You needn't," she came back at me--spunky little thing. "It isn't worth
+thanking anybody for. It's only a partial fact."
+
+"And you think half truths are dangerous?" I smiled at her.
+
+"There isn't any such thing," she instructed me. "Even _facts_ can
+hardly be split into fractions; while the truth is always whole and
+complete."
+
+"As far as you see it," I amended. "For instance, you insist on keeping
+the gang all under Clayte's hat--or you did at first. Now you're
+refusing to believe, as both Worth and I believe, that Steve Skeels is
+Clayte himself. I should think you'd jump at the idea. Here's your
+Wonder Man."
+
+She leaned back in her chair and laughed. I was glad to hear the sound
+again, see the dimples flicker in her cheeks, even if she was laughing
+at me.
+
+"A wonderful Wonder Man, Mr. Boyne," she said. "One who does things so
+bunglingly that you can follow him right up and put your hand on him."
+
+"Not so I could," I reminded her gaily. "So you could. Quite a different
+matter." She took my compliment sweetly, but she said with smiling
+reluctance,
+
+"I'm not in this, of course, except that your kindness allowed me to be
+for this day only. But if I were, I shouldn't be following Skeels as you
+are. I'd still be after Clayte."
+
+"It foots up to the same thing," I said rather tartly.
+
+"Oh, does it?" she laughed at me. "Two and two are making about three
+and a half this afternoon, are they?"
+
+"What we've got to-day ought to land something," I maintained. "You've
+been fine help, Barbara--" and I broke off suddenly with the knowledge
+that I'd been calling her that all through the rush of the work.
+
+"Thank you." She smiled inclusively. I knew she meant my use of her name
+as well as my commendation. I began clearing my desk preparatory to
+leaving. Worth was going to take her home and as he brought her coat, he
+spoke again of the suitcase.
+
+"Hey, there!" I remonstrated, "You don't want to be lugging that thing
+with you everywhere, like a three-year-old kid that's found a dead cat.
+Leave it where it is."
+
+"Give me an order for it then," he said. And when I looked surprised,
+"Might need that box, and you not be in the office."
+
+"Need it?" I grumbled. "I'd like to know what for."
+
+But I scribbled the order. Over by the window the young people were
+talking together earnestly; they made a picture against the light,
+standing close, the girl's vivid dark face raised, the lad's tall head
+bent, attentive.
+
+"But, Bobs, you must get some time to play about," I heard Worth say.
+
+"Awfully little," Her look up at him was like that of a wistful child.
+
+"You said you were in the accounting department," he urged impatiently.
+"A lightning calculator like you could put that stuff through in about
+one tenth of the usual time."
+
+"I use an adding machine," she half whispered, and it made me chuckle.
+
+"An adding machine!" Worth exploded in a peal of laughter. "For Barbara
+Wallace! What's their idea?"
+
+"It isn't their idea; it's mine," with dignity. "They don't know that I
+used to be a freak mathematician. I don't want them to. Father used to
+say that all children could be trained to do all that I did--if you took
+them young enough. But till they are, I'd rather not be. It's horrid to
+be different; and I'm keeping it to myself--in the office anyhow--and
+living my past down the best I can."
+
+As though her words had suggested it, Worth spoke again,
+
+"Where did you meet Cummings? Seems you find time to go out with him."
+
+"I've known Mr. Cummings for years," Barbara spoke quietly, but she
+looked self-conscious. "I knew he was with those friends of mine at the
+Orpheum last night, but I didn't expect him to call for me at Tait's--or
+rather I thought they'd all come in after me. There wasn't anything
+special about it--no special appointment with him, I mean."
+
+I had forgotten them for a minute or two, closing my desk, finding my
+coat, when I heard some one come into the outer office, a visitor, for
+little Pete's voice went up to a shrill yap with the information that I
+was busy. Then the knob turned, the door opened, and there stood
+Cummings. At first he saw only me at the desk.
+
+"Your friend calling for you again, Bobs--by appointment?" Worth's
+question drew the lawyer's glance, and he stared at them apparently a
+good deal taken aback, while Worth added, "Seems to keep pretty close
+tab on your movements." The low tone might have been considered joking,
+but there was war in the boy's eye.
+
+It was as though Cummings answered the challenge, rather than opened
+with what he had intended.
+
+"My business is with you, Gilbert." He came in and shut the door behind
+him, leaving his hand on the knob. "And I've been some time finding
+you." He stopped there, and was so long about getting anything else out
+that Worth finally suggested,
+
+"The money?" And when there was no reply but a surprised look, "How do
+you stand now?"
+
+"Still seventy-two thousand to raise." Cummings spoke vaguely. This was
+not what had brought him to the office. He finished with the abrupt
+question, "Were you at Santa Ysobel last night?"
+
+"Hold on, Cummings," I broke in. "What you got? Let us--"
+
+I was shut off there by Worth's,
+
+"It's Sunday afternoon. I want that money to-morrow morning. You've not
+come through? You've not dug up what I sent you after?"
+
+I could see that the lawyer was absolutely nonplussed. Again he gave
+Worth one of those queer, probing looks before he said doggedly,
+
+"The question of that money can wait."
+
+"It can't wait." Worth's eyes began to light up. "What you talking,
+Cummings--an extension?" And when the lawyer made no answer to this,
+"I'll not crawl in with a broken leg asking favors of that bank crowd.
+Are you quitting on me? If so, say it--and I'll find a way to raise the
+sum, myself."
+
+"I've raised all but seventy-two thousand of the necessary amount," said
+Cummings slowly. "What I want to know is--how much have you raised?"
+
+"See here, Cummings," again I mixed in. "I was present when that
+arrangement was made. Nothing was said about Worth raising any money."
+
+Cummings barely glanced around at me as he said, "I made a suggestion to
+him; in your presence, as you say, Boyne. I want to know if he carried
+it out." Then, giving his full attention to Worth, "Did you see your
+father last night?"
+
+On instinct I blurted,
+
+"For heaven's sake, keep your mouth shut, Worth!"
+
+For a detective that certainly was an incautious speech. Cummings' eye
+flared suspicion at me, and his voice was a menace.
+
+"You keep out of this, Boyne."
+
+"You tell what's up your sleeve, Cummings," I countered. "This is no
+witness-stand cross-examination. What you got?"
+
+But Worth answered for him, hotly,
+
+"If Cummings hasn't seventy-two thousand dollars I commissioned him to
+raise for me, I don't care what he's got."
+
+"And you didn't go to your father for it last night?" Cummings returned
+to his question. He had moved close to the boy. Barbara stood just where
+she was when the door opened. Neither paid any attention to her. But she
+looked at the two men, drawn up with glances clinched, and spoke out
+suddenly in her clear young voice, as though there was no row on hand,
+
+"Worth was with me last night, you know, Mr. Cummings."
+
+"I seem to have noticed something of the sort," Cummings said with
+labored sarcasm. "And he'd been with that wedding party earlier in the
+evening, I suppose."
+
+"With me till Miss Wallace came in." Worth's natural disposition to
+disoblige the lawyer could be depended on to keep from Cummings whatever
+information he wanted before giving us his own news. "What you got,
+Cummings?" I prompted again, impatiently. "Come through."
+
+His eyes never shifted an instant from Worth Gilbert's face.
+
+"A telegram--from Santa Ysobel," he said slowly.
+
+Worth shrugged and half turned away.
+
+"I'm not interested in your telegram, Cummings."
+
+Instantly I saw what the boy thought: that the other had taken it on
+himself to apply for the money to Thomas Gilbert, and had been turned
+down.
+
+"Not interested?" Cummings repeated in that dry, lawyer voice that
+speaks from the teeth out; on the mere tone, I braced for something
+nasty. "I think you are. My telegram's from the coroner."
+
+Silence after that; Worth obstinately mute; Barbara and I afraid to ask.
+There was a little tremor of Cummings' nostril, he couldn't keep the
+flicker out of his eye, as he said, staring straight at Worth,
+
+"It states that your father shot himself last night. The body wasn't
+discovered till late this morning, in his study."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+SANTA YSOBEL
+
+
+Of all unexpected things. I went down to Santa Ysobel with Worth
+Gilbert. It happened this way: Cummings, one of those individuals on
+whose tombstone may truthfully be put, "Born a man--and died a lawyer,"
+seemed rather taken aback at the effect of the blow he'd launched. If he
+was after information, I can't think he learned much in the moment while
+Worth stood regarding him with an unreadable eye.
+
+There was only a little grimmer tightening of the jaw muscle, something
+bleak and robbed in the glance of the eye; the face of one, it seemed to
+me, who grieved the more because he was denied real sorrow for his loss,
+and Worth had tramped to the window and stood with his back to us,
+putting the thing over in his silent, fighting fashion, speaking to none
+of us. It was when Barbara followed, took hold of his sleeve and began
+half whispering up into his face that Cummings jerked his hat from the
+table where he had thrown it, and snapped,
+
+"Boyne--can I have a few minutes of your time?"
+
+"Jerry," Worth's voice halted me at the door, "Leave that card--an
+order--for me. For the suitcase."
+
+Cummings was ahead of me, and he turned back to listen, but I crowded
+him along and was pretty hot when I faced him in the outer office to
+demand,
+
+"What kind of a deal do you call this--ripping in here to throw this
+thing at the boy in such a way? What is your idea? What you trying to
+put over?"
+
+"Go easy, Boyne." Cummings chewed his words a little before he let them
+out. "There's something queer in this business. I intend to know what it
+is."
+
+"Queer," I repeated his word. "If the lawyers and the detectives get to
+running down all the queer things--that don't concern them a little
+bit--the world won't have any more peace."
+
+"All right, if you say it doesn't concern you," Cummings threw me
+overboard with relief I thought. "It does concern me. When I couldn't
+get--him"--a jerk of the head indicated that the pronoun stood for
+Worth--"at the Palace, found he'd been out all day and left no word at
+the desk when he expected to be in, I took my telegram to Knapp, and
+then to Whipple. They were flabbergasted."
+
+"The bank crowd," I said. "Now why did you run to them? On account of
+Worth's engagement with them to-morrow morning? Wasn't that exceeding
+your orders? You saw that he intends to meet it, in spite of this."
+
+"Why not because of this?" Cummings demanded sharply. "He's in better
+shape to meet it now his father's dead. He's the only heir. That's the
+first thing Knapp and Whipple spoke of--and I saw them separately."
+
+"Can that stuff. What do you think you're hinting at?"
+
+"Something queer," he repeated his phrase. "Wake up, Boyne. Knapp and
+Whipple both saw Thomas Gilbert a little before noon yesterday. He was
+in the bank for the final transfer of the Hanford interests. They'd as
+soon have thought of my committing suicide that night--or you doing it.
+They swear there was nothing in his manner or bearing to suggest such a
+state of mind, and everything in the business he was engaged on to
+suggest that he expected to live out his days like any man."
+
+I thought very little of this; it is common in cases of suicide for
+family, friends or business associates to talk in exactly this way, to
+believe it, and yet for the deep-seated moving cause to be easily
+discovered by an unprejudiced outsider. I said as much to Cummings. And
+while I spoke, we could hear a murmur of young voices from the inner
+room.
+
+"Damn it all," the lawyer's irritation spurted out suddenly, "With a cub
+like that for a son, I'd say the reason wasn't far to seek. Better keep
+your eye peeled round that young man, Boyne."
+
+"I will," I agreed, and he took his departure. I turned back into the
+private room.
+
+"Worth"--I put it quietly--"what say I go to Santa Ysobel with you? You
+could bring me back Monday morning."
+
+He agreed at once, silently, but thankfully I thought.
+
+Barbara, listening, proposed half timidly to go with us, staying the
+night at the Thornhill place, being brought back before work time
+Monday, and was accepted simply. So it came that when we had a blow-out
+as the crown of a dozen other petty disasters which had delayed our
+progress toward Santa Ysobel, and found our spare tire flat, Barbara
+jumped down beside Worth where he stood dragging out the pump, and
+stopped him, suggesting that we save time by running the last few miles
+on the rim and getting fixed up at Capehart's garage. He climbed in
+without a word, and drove on toward where Santa Ysobel lies at the head
+of its broad valley, surrounded by the apricot, peach and prune orchards
+that are its wealth.
+
+We came into the fringes of the town in the obscurity of approaching
+night; a thick tulle fog had blown down on the north wind. The little
+foot-hill city was all drowned in it; tree-tops, roofs, the gable ends
+of houses, the illuminated dial of the town clock on the city hall,
+sticking up from the blur like things seen in a dream. As we headed for
+a garage with the name Capehart on it, we heard, soft, muffled, seven
+strokes from the tower.
+
+"Getting in late," Worth said absently. "Bill still keeps the old
+place?"
+
+"Yes. Just the same," Barbara said. "He married our Sarah, you know--was
+that before you went away? Of course not," and added for my
+enlightenment, "Sarah Gibbs was father's housekeeper for years. She
+brought me up."
+
+We drove into the big, dimly lighted building; there came to us from its
+corner office what might have been described as a wide man, not
+especially imposing in breadth, but with a sort of loose-jointed
+effectiveness to his movements, and a pair of roving, yellowish-hazel
+eyes in his broad, good-humored face, mighty observing I'd say, in spite
+of the lazy roll of his glance.
+
+"Been stepping on tacks, Mister?" he hailed, having looked at the tires
+before he took stock of the human freight.
+
+"Hello, Bill," Worth was singing out. "Give me another machine--or get
+our spare filled and on--whichever's quickest. I want to make it to the
+house as soon as I can."
+
+"Lord, boy!" The wide man began wiping a big paw before offering it.
+"I'm glad to see you."
+
+They shook hands. Worth repeated his request, but the garage man was
+already unbuckling the spare, going to the work with a brisk efficiency
+that contradicted his appearance.
+
+Barbara sitting quietly beside me, we heard them talking at the back of
+the machine, as the jack quickly lifted us and Worth went to it with
+Capehart to unbolt the rim; a low-toned steady stream from the wide man,
+punctuated now and then by a word from Worth.
+
+"Yeh," Capehart grunted, prying off the tire. "Heard it m'self 'bout
+noon--or a little after. Yeh, Ward's Undertaking Parlors."
+
+"Undertaking parlors!" Worth echoed. Capehart, hammering on the spare,
+agreed.
+
+"Nobody in town that knowed what to do about it; so the coroner took
+a-holt, I guess, and kinda fixed it to suit hisself. Did you phone ahead
+to see how things was out to the house?"
+
+"Tried to," Worth said. "The operator couldn't raise it."
+
+"Course not." Capehart was coupling on the air. "Your chink's off every
+Sunday--has the whole day--and the Devil only could guess where a
+Chinaman'd go when he ain't working. Eddie Hughes ought to be on the job
+out there--but would he?"
+
+"Father still kept Eddie?"
+
+"Yeh." The click of the jack and the car was lowering. "Eddie's lasted
+longer than I looked to see him. Due to be fired any time this past
+year. Been chasing over 'crost the tracks. Got him a girl there, one of
+these cannery girls. Well, she's sort of married, I guess, but that
+don't stop Eddie. 'F I see him, I'll tell him you want him."
+
+They came to the front of the machine; Worth thrust his hand in his
+pocket. Capehart checked him with,
+
+"Let it go on the bill." Then, as Worth swung into his seat, Barbara
+bent forward from behind my shoulder, the careless yellowish eyes that
+saw everything got a fair view of her, and with a sort of subdued crow,
+"Look who's here!" Capehart took hold of the upright to lean his square
+form in and say earnestly, "While you're in Santa Ysobel, don't forget
+that we got a spare room at our house."
+
+"Next time," Barbara raised her voice to top the hum of the engine. "I'm
+only here for over night, now, and I'm going down to Mrs. Thornhill's."
+
+We were out in the street once more, leaving the cannery district on our
+right, tucked away to itself across the railroad tracks, running on Main
+Street to City Hall Square, where we struck into Broad, followed it out
+past the churches and to that length of it that held the fine homes in
+their beautiful grounds, getting close at last to where town melts again
+into orchards. The road between its rows of fernlike pepper trees was a
+wet gleam before us, all black and silver; the arc lights made big misty
+blurs without much illumination as we came to the Thornhill place. Worth
+got down and, though she told him he needn't bother, took her in to the
+gate. For a minute I waited, getting the bulk of the big frame house
+back among the trees, with a single light twinkling from an upper story
+window; then Worth flung into the car and we speeded on, skirting a long
+frontage of lawns, beautifully kept, pearly with the fog, set off with
+artfully grouped shrubbery and winding walks. There was no barrier but a
+low stone coping; the drive to the Gilbert place went in on the side
+farthest from the Thornhill's. We ran in under a carriage porch. The
+house was black.
+
+"See if I can raise anybody," said Worth as he jumped to the ground.
+"Let you in, and then I'll run the roadster around to the garage."
+
+But the house was so tightly locked up that he had finally to break in
+through a pantry window. I was out in front when he made it, and saw the
+lights begin to flash up, the porch lamp flooding me with a sudden glare
+before he threw the door open.
+
+"Cold as a vault in here."
+
+He twisted his broad shoulders in a shudder, and I looked about me. It
+was a big entrance hall, with a wide stairway. There on the hat tree
+hung a man's light overcoat, a gray fedora hat; a stick leaned below.
+When the master of the house went out of it this time, he hadn't needed
+these. Abruptly Worth turned and led the way into what I knew was the
+living room, with a big open fireplace in it.
+
+"Make yourself as comfortable as you can, Jerry. I'll get a blaze here
+in two shakes. I suppose you're hungry as a wolf--I am. This is a hell
+of a place I've brought you into."
+
+"Forget it," I returned. "I can look after myself. I'm used to rustling.
+Let me make that fire."
+
+"All right." He gave up his place on the hearth to me, straightened
+himself and stood a minute, saying, "I'll raid the kitchen. Chung's sure
+to have plenty of food cooked. He may not be back here before midnight."
+
+"Midnight?" I echoed. "Is that usual?"
+
+"Used to be. Chung's been with father a long time. Good chink. Always
+given his whole Sunday, and if he was on hand to get Monday's
+breakfast--no questions."
+
+"Left last night, you think?"
+
+Worth shot me a glance of understanding.
+
+"Sometimes he would--after cleaning up from dinner. But he wouldn't have
+heard the shot, if that's what you're driving at."
+
+He left me, going out through the hall. My fire burned. I thawed out the
+kinks the long, chill ride had put in me. Then Worth hailed; I went out
+and found him with a coffee-pot boiling on the gas range, a loaf and a
+cold roast set out. He had sand, that boy; in this wretched home-coming,
+his manner was neither stricken nor defiant. He seemed only a little
+graver than usual as he waited on me, hunting up stuff in places he knew
+of to put some variety into our supper.
+
+Where I sat I faced a back window, and my eye was caught by the
+appearance of a strange light, quite a little distance from the house,
+apparently in another building, but showing as a vague glow on the fog.
+
+"What's down there?" I asked. Worth answered without taking the trouble
+to lean forward and look,
+
+"The garage--and the study."
+
+"Huh? The study's separate from the house?" I had been thinking of the
+suicide as a thing of this dwelling, an affair in some room within its
+walls. Of course Chung would not hear the shot. "Who's down there?"
+
+"Eddie Hughes has a room off the garage."
+
+"He's in it now."
+
+"How do you know?" he asked quickly.
+
+"There's a light--or there was. It's gone now."
+
+"That wouldn't have been Eddie," Worth said. "His room's on the other
+side, toward the back street. What you saw was the light from these
+windows shining on the fog. Makes queer effects sometimes."
+
+I knew that wasn't it, but I didn't argue with him, only remarked,
+
+"I'd like to have a look at that place, Worth, if you don't mind."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+A SHADOW IN THE FOG
+
+
+Again I saw that glow from the Gilbert garage, hanging on the fog; a
+luminosity of the fog; saw it disappear as the mist deepened and
+shrouded it. But Worth was answering me, and somehow his words seemed
+forced;
+
+"Sit tight a minute, Jerry. Have another cup of coffee while I
+telephone, then I'll put the roadster in and open up down there. I'll
+call you--or you can see my lights."
+
+He left me. I heard him at the instrument in the hall get his number,
+talk to some one in a low voice, and then go out the front door; next
+thing was the sound of the motor, the glare of its lamps as it rounded
+into the driveway and started down back, illuminating everything. In the
+general glare thrown on the fog, the fainter light was invisible, but
+across a plot of kitchen garden I saw where it had been; a square, squat
+building of concrete, flat roofed, vining plants in boxes drooping over
+its cornice; the typical garage of such an establishment, but nearly
+double the usual size. The light had come from there, but how? In the
+short time that the lamps of the machine were showing it up to me, there
+seemed no windows on this side; only the double doors for the car's
+entrance--closed now--and a single door which was crossed by two heavy,
+barricading planks nailed in the form of a great X.
+
+Worth ran the machine close up against the doors, jumped down, and I
+could see his tall form, blurred by the mist, moving about to slide them
+open. The lamps of the roadster made little showing now as he rolled it
+in. Then these were switched off and everything down there was dark as a
+pocket. For a time I sat and waited for him to light up and call me,
+then started down. The fog was making the kind of dimness that has a
+curious, illusory character. I suppose I had gone half the distance of
+the garden walk, when, thrown up startlingly on the obscurity, I saw a
+square of white, and across that shining screen, moved the silhouette of
+a human head. The whole thing danced before my eyes for a bare second,
+then blackness.
+
+With Cummings' queer hints in my mind, I started running across the
+garden toward it. About the first thing I did was step into a cold
+frame, plunging my foot through the glass, all but going to my knees in
+it; and when I got up, swearing, I was turned around, ran into bushes,
+tripped over obstructions, and traveled, I think, in a circle.
+
+Then I began to go more cautiously. No use getting excited. That was
+only Worth I had seen. And still I was unwilling to call, ask him to
+show a light. I groped along until my outstretched fingers came across
+the corner of a building, rough, stonelike--the concrete garage and
+study. I felt along, seeing a bit now, and was soon passing my hands
+over the barricading planks of that door.
+
+I might have lit a match, but I preferred to find out what I could by
+feeling around, and that cautiously. I discovered that the door had been
+broken in, the top panels shattered to kindling wood, the force of the
+assault having burst a hinge, so that the whole thing sagged drunkenly
+behind the heavy planks that propped it, while a strong bolt, quite
+useless, was still clamped into a socket which had been torn, screws and
+all, from the inside casing.
+
+Sliding my hands over the broken top panel I found that it had been
+covered on its inner side by a piece of canvas; the screen on which that
+shadow had been thrown--from within the room. There was no light there
+now; there was no sound of motion within. The drip of the fog from the
+eaves was the only break in the stillness.
+
+"Worth?" I shouted, at last, and he answered me instantly, hallooing
+from behind me, and to one side of the house. I could hear him running
+and when he spoke it was close to my shoulder.
+
+"Where are you, Jerry?"
+
+"Where are you," I countered. "Or rather, where have you been?"
+
+"Getting a bar to pry off these boards."
+
+"A bar?" I echoed stupidly.
+
+"A crowbar from the shed. These planks will have to come off to let us
+in."
+
+"The devil you say!" I was exasperated. "There's some one in here
+now--or was a minute back. Show me the other way in."
+
+I heard the ring of the steel bar as its end hit the hard graveled path.
+
+"Some one in there? Jerry, you're seeing things."
+
+"Sure I am," I agreed drily. "But you get me to that other door quick!"
+
+"The only other door is locked. I tried it from the garage. You're
+dreaming."
+
+For reply, I ran up to the door and thrust my fist through the canvas,
+ripping it away from its clumsy tacking.
+
+"Who's in there?" I cried. "Answer me!"
+
+Dead silence; then a click as Worth snapped on a flood of light from his
+pocket torch, saying tolerantly, tiredly,
+
+"I told you there was no one. There couldn't be."
+
+"I tell you, Worth, there was. I saw the shadow on the square of that
+canvas. Give me the torch."
+
+I pushed the flashlight through the opening and played the light cone
+about the room in a quick survey; then brought the circle of white glow
+to rest upon one of the side walls; and my hand went down and back to
+grip fingers about the butt of my revolver. There was, as Worth had
+said, but one other door to this room; but more, there was apparently no
+other exit; no windows, no breaks in the walls. My circle of light was
+on this second door; and the very heart of that circle was a heavy steel
+bolt on the door, the bar of which was firmly shot into the socket on
+the frame. The only exit from that room, other than the door through
+which I now leaned with pistol raised, was locked--bolted from the
+inside!
+
+Worth was crowding his big frame into the opening beside me.
+
+"Keep back," I growled. "Some one's inside," and I sent the light shaft
+into corners to drive out the shadows, to cut in under the desk and
+chairs. Worth's reply was a laugh, and his arm went by me to reach
+inside the door. Then, as his fingers found the button, a light sprang
+out from a lamp upon the center desk.
+
+"You're letting your nerves play the deuce with you, Jerry," he said
+lightly. "Make way for my crowbar and we'll get in out of the wet."
+
+I made no answer, but for a long moment more I searched that room with
+my eyes; but it was the kind you see all over at a glance. Big, square,
+plain, it hadn't a window in it; the walls, lined with book shelves,
+floor to ceiling; a fireplace; a library table with drawers; a few
+chairs. No chance for a hideout. I glanced at the ceiling and confirmed
+the evidence of my eyes. There was a skylight, and through it had come
+that curious glow that first attracted my attention to the place.
+
+Then I gave Worth room to wield his tools on the barred door, while I
+ran quickly back to the house, into the kitchen, and plumped down in the
+chair where I had sat before. The light showed on the fog, brightened
+and dimmed as the mist drifted past. There was no possibility of a
+mistake: some one had been in the study, had turned on the table lamp,
+had projected his shadow against the patched panel of the door, and had
+somehow left the room, one door bolted, the only other exit barred and
+nailed.
+
+I went back and rejoined Worth who was standing where a brownish stain
+on the rug marked a spot a little nearer the corner of the table than it
+was to the outer door. A curious place for a suicide to fall. Behind the
+table was the library chair in which Thomas Gilbert worked when at his
+desk; beside it a small cabinet with a humidor on its top and the open
+door below revealing several decanters and bottles, whisky and wine
+glasses, a tray; between the desk and the fireplace were two other
+chairs, large and comfortable; but in front of the table--between it and
+the door--was barren floor.
+
+It is a fact that most men who shoot themselves do so while sitting;
+some lying in a bed; few standing. The psychology of this I must leave
+to others, but experience has taught me to question the suicide of one
+who has seemingly placed the muzzle of a revolver against him while on
+his feet. Thomas Gilbert had stood; had chosen to take his life as he
+was walking from door to desk, or from desk to door.
+
+"Worth," I said. "There was somebody in here just now."
+
+"Couldn't have been, Jerry," he answered absently; then added, his eyes
+on that stain, "I never could calculate what my father would do. But
+when I talked to him last night, right here in this room, he didn't seem
+to me a man ready to take his own life."
+
+"You quarreled?"
+
+"We always quarreled, whenever we met."
+
+"But this quarrel was more bitter than usual?"
+
+"The last quarrel would seem the bitterest, wouldn't it, Jerry?" he
+asked. Then, after a moment, "Poor Jim Edwards!"
+
+I caught my tongue to hold back the question. Worth went on,
+
+"When I phoned him just now, he hadn't heard a word about it. Seemed
+terribly upset."
+
+"Hadn't heard?" I echoed. "How was that?"
+
+"You know we saw him at Tait's last night. He took the Pacheco Pass road
+from San Francisco; drove straight to his ranch without hitting Santa
+Ysobel."
+
+I wanted another look at that man Edwards. I was to have it. Worth went
+on absently,
+
+"He'll be along presently to stay here while I'm away Monday. Told me it
+would be the first time he'd put foot in the house for four years. As
+boys up in Sonoma county, he and father always disagreed, but sometime
+these last years there was a big split over something. They were barely
+on speaking terms--and good old Jim took my news harder than as though
+I'd been telling him the death of a near friend."
+
+"Works like that with us humans," I nodded. "Let some one die that
+you've disagreed with, and you remember every row you ever had with
+them; remember it and regret it--which is foolish."
+
+"Which is foolish," Worth repeated, and seemed for the first time able
+to get away from the spot at which he had stopped.
+
+He went over to the empty, fireless hearth and stood there, his back to
+the room, elbows on the mantel propping his head, face bent, oblivious
+to anything that I might do. It oughtn't to be hard to find the way this
+place could be entered and left by a man solid enough to cast a shadow,
+with quick fingers to snap the light on and off. But when I made a
+painstaking examination of a corner grate with a flue too small for
+anything but a chimney swallow to go up and down, a ceiling solidly
+beamed and paneled, the glass that formed the skylight set in firmly as
+part of the roof, when I'd turned up rugs and inspected an unbroken
+floor, even tried the corners of book cases to see if they masked a
+false entrance, I owned myself, for the moment, beaten there.
+
+"Give me your torch--or go with me, Worth," I said. "I'd like to take a
+scoot around outside."
+
+He didn't speak, only indicated the flashlight by a motion, where it lay
+on the shelf beside his hand. I took it, unbolted the door, and stepped
+into the garage.
+
+Everything all right here. My roadster; a much handsomer small machine
+beyond it; a bench, portable forge and drill made a repair shop of one
+corner, and as my light flashed over these, I checked and stared. Why
+had Worth gone to the shed hunting a crowbar to open the door? Here were
+tools that would have served as well. I put from me the hateful thought,
+and damned Cummings and his suspicions. The shadow didn't have to be
+Worth. Certainly he had not first lit that lamp, for I had seen it from
+the kitchen with him beside me. Some one other than Worth had been in
+there when Worth put up the roadster. I'd find the man it really was.
+But even as I crossed to Eddie Hughes's door, something at the back of
+my head was saying to me that Worth could have been in that room--that
+there was time for it to be, if he had taken the crowbar from the garage
+and not from the shed as he said he did.
+
+At this I took myself in hand. The lie would have been so clumsy a one
+that there was no way but to accept this statement for the truth; and
+some one else had made that shadow on the canvas.
+
+I tried the chauffeur's door and found it locked; called, shook it, and
+had set my shoulder against it to burst it in, when the rolling door on
+the street side moved a little, and a voice said,
+
+"H-y-ah! What you doin' there?"
+
+I turned and flashed my light on the six-inch crack of the sliding door.
+It gave me a strip of man, a long drab face at top, solid, meaty
+looking, yet somehow slightly cadaverous, a half shut eye, a crooked
+mouth--if I'd met that mug in San Francisco, I'd have labeled it
+"tough," and located it South of Market Street.
+
+Slowly, it seemed rather reluctantly, Eddie Hughes worked the six-inch
+crack wider by working himself through it.
+
+"What the hell do you want in my room for?" he demanded. The form of the
+words was truculent, but the words themselves slid in a sort of
+spiritless fashion from the corner of that crooked mouth of his, and he
+added in the next breath, "I'll open up for you, when I've lit the
+blinks."
+
+There was a central lamp that made the whole place as bright as day.
+Eddie fumbled a key out of his pocket, threw the door of his room open,
+and stepped back to let me pass him.
+
+"Capehart tells me Worth's here," he said as we went in.
+
+"When?" I gave him a sharp look. He seemed not to notice it.
+
+"Just now. I came straight from there."
+
+He came straight from there? Did he supply an alibi so neatly because of
+that shadowy head on the door panel? For a long minute we each took
+measure of the other, but Eddie's nerves were less reliable than mine;
+he spoke first.
+
+"Well?" he grunted, scarcely above his breath. And when I continued to
+stare silently at him, he writhed a shoulder with, "What's doing? What
+d'yuh want of me?"
+
+Still silently, I pulled out with my thumb through the armhole of my
+vest the police badge pinned to the suspender. His ill-colored face went
+a shade nearer the yellow white of tallow.
+
+"What for?" he asked huskily. "You haven't got nothin' on me. It was
+suicide--cor'ner's jury says so. Lord! It has to be, him layin' there,
+all hunched up on the floor, his gun so tight in his mitt that they had
+to pry the fingers off it!"
+
+"So you found the body?"
+
+He nodded and gulped.
+
+"I told all I knowed at the inquest," he said doggedly.
+
+"Tell it again," I commanded.
+
+Standing there, working his hands together as though he held some small,
+accustomed tool that he was turning, shifting from foot to foot, with
+long breaks in his speech, the chauffeur finally put me into possession
+of what he knew--or what he wished me to know. He had been out all
+night. That was usual with him Saturdays. Where? Over around the
+canneries. Had friends that lived there. He got into this place about
+dawn, and went straight to bed.
+
+"Hold on, Hughes," I stopped him there. "You never went to bed--that
+night, or any other night--until you'd had a jolt from the bottle
+inside."
+
+He gave me a surly, half frightened glance, then said quickly,
+
+"Not a chance. Bolts on the doors, locks everywhere; all tight as a
+jail. Take it from me, he wasn't the kind you want to have a run-in
+with--any time. Always just as cool as ice himself; try to make you
+believe he could tell what you were up to, clear across town. Hold it
+over you as if he was God almighty that stuck folks together and set 'em
+walkin' around and thinkin' things."
+
+He broke off and looked over his shoulder in the direction of the study.
+The walls were thick--concrete; the door heavy. No sound of Worth's
+moving in there could be heard in this room. Apparently it was the old
+terror of his employer, or the new terror of the employer's death, that
+spoke when he said,
+
+"I got up this morning late with a throat like the back of a chimney.
+Lord! I never wanted a drink so bad in my life--had to have one. The
+chink leaves my breakfast for me Sundays; but I knew I couldn't eat till
+I'd had one. So I--so I--"
+
+It was as though some recollection fairly choked off his voice. I
+finished for him.
+
+"So you went in there--" I pointed at the study door, "and found the
+body."
+
+"Naw! How the hell could I? I told you--locked. I crawled up on the
+roof, though; huntin' a way in, and I looked through the skylight. There
+he was. On the floor. His eyes weren't open much, but they was watchin'
+me--sort of sneerin'. I come down off that roof like a bat outa hell,
+and scuttled over to Vandeman's where his chink was on the porch, I
+bellerin' at him. I telephoned from there. For the bulls; and the
+cor'ner; and everybody. Gawd! I was all in."
+
+I caught one point in the tale.
+
+"So the way into the study is through the skylight, Hughes?" and he
+shook his head vaguely, fumbling his lips with a trembling hand as he
+replied,
+
+"Honest to God, Cap'n, I don't know. I never tried. I gave just one look
+through it, and--" He broke off with a shudder.
+
+"Get a ladder," I commanded. "I want to see that skylight."
+
+While he was gone on his errand to the shed, I investigated the outer
+walls of the study with the torch, hunting some break in their solidity.
+They were concrete; a hair-crack would have been visible in the electric
+glow; there was no break. Then, as he placed the ladder against the
+coping, I climbed to the roof and stepped across its firmness to the
+skylight. I looked down.
+
+Worth, kneeling on the hearth, was laying a fire in the corner grate. As
+he did not glance up, I knew he had not heard me. Evidently the study
+had been built to resist the disturbance of sound from without. That
+meant that the report of the revolver inside had not been heard by any
+one outside the walls.
+
+Directly below me was the library table and upon its top a blue desk
+blotter; a silver filagreed inkstand stood open; penholders, pencils,
+paper knife were on a tray beside it, one pen lying separate from the
+others with a ruler, upon the blotting pad; books and a magazine neatly
+in a pile. The walls, as I circled them with my eyes, were book-lined
+everywhere except for the grate and the two doors.
+
+Then I inspected the skylight, frame and glass, feeling it over with my
+hands. There was no entrance here. Even should a pane of glass be
+removable--all seemingly solid and tight--the frame between and the sash
+were of steel, and the panes were too small for the passage of a man. I
+crept back to the ladder as Worth was striking a match to light the
+pitch-pine kindling.
+
+"What about this Vandeman chink?" I asked of Hughes as I rejoined him at
+the foot of the ladder. "Does he hang around here much?"
+
+"Him and Chung visit back and forth a bit. I hear 'em talkin' hy-lee
+hy-lo sometimes when I go by the kitchen."
+
+"Take me over there," I said.
+
+The fog was beginning to blow away in threads; moonlight somewhere back
+of it made a queer, gray, glimmering world around us. We circled the
+garden by the path, passing a sort of gardener's tool shed where Hughes
+left the ladder, and from which I judged Worth had brought the bar he
+pried the door planks off with, to find a gap in a hedge between this
+place and the next.
+
+There was a light in the rear of the house over there, and a
+well-trodden path leading from the hedge gap made what I took to be a
+servants' highway.
+
+Vandeman's house proved to be, as nearly as one could see it in the
+darkness, a sprawling bungalow, with courts, pergolas and terraces
+bursting out on all sides of it. I could fairly see it of a fine
+afternoon, with its showy master sitting on one of the showy porches,
+serving afternoon tea in his best manner to the best people of Santa
+Ysobel. Just the husband for that doll-faced girl, if she only thought
+so. What could she have done with a young outlaw like Worth?
+
+When I looked at the Chinaman in charge there, I gave up my idea of
+questioning him. Civilly enough, with a precise and educated usage of
+the English language, he confirmed what Eddie Hughes had already told
+me about the telephoning from that place this morning; and I went no
+further. I know the Chinese--if anybody not Mongolian can say they know
+the race--and I have also a suitable respect for the value of time. A
+week of steady questioning of Vandeman's yellow man would have brought
+me nowhere. He was that kind of a chink; grave, respectful, placid and
+impervious.
+
+On the way back I asked Eddie about the Thornhill servants at the house
+on the other side of Gilbert's, and found they kept but one, "a sort of
+old lady," Eddie called her, and I guessed easily at the decayed
+gentlewoman kind of person. It seemed that Mrs. Thornhill was a widow,
+and there wasn't much money now to keep up the handsome place.
+
+I left Eddie slipping eel-like through the big doors, and went into the
+study to find Worth sitting before the blazing hearth. He looked up as I
+entered to remark quietly,
+
+"Bobs said she'd be over later, and I told her to come on down here."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+THE MISSING DIARY
+
+
+My experience as a detective has convinced me that the evident is
+usually true; that in a great majority of cases crime leaves a straight
+trail, and ambiguities are more often due to the inability of the
+trailer than to the cunning of the trailed. Such reputation as I have
+established is due to acceptance of and earnest adherence to the
+obvious.
+
+In this affair of Thomas Gilbert's death, everything so far pointed one
+way. The body had been found in a bolted room, revolver in hand; on the
+wall over the mantel hung the empty holster; Worth assured me the gun
+was kept always loaded; and there might be motive enough for suicide in
+the quarrel last night between father and son.
+
+Because of that flitting shadow I had seen, I knew this place was not
+impervious. Some one person, at least, could enter and leave the room
+easily, quickly, while its doors were locked. But that might be
+Hughes--or even Worth--with some reason for doing so not willingly
+explained, and some means not readily seen. It probably had nothing to
+do with Thomas Gilbert's sudden death, could not offset in my mind the
+conviction of Thomas Gilbert's stiffened fingers about the pistol's
+butt. That I made a second thorough investigation of the study interior
+was not because I questioned the manner of the death.
+
+I began taking down books from the shelves at regular intervals,
+sounding the thick dead-wall, in search of a secreted entrance. I came
+on a row of volumes whose red morocco backs carried nothing but dates.
+
+"Account books?" I asked.
+
+Worth turned his head to look, and the bleakest thing that could be
+called a smile twisted his lips a little, as he said,
+
+"My father's diaries."
+
+"Quite a lot of them."
+
+"Yes. He'd kept diaries for thirty years."
+
+"But he seems to have dropped the habit. There is no 1920 book."
+
+"Oh, yes there is," very definitely. "He never gave up setting down the
+sins of his family and neighbors while his eyes had sight to see them,
+and his hand the cunning to write." He spoke with extraordinary
+bitterness, finishing, "He would have had it on the desk there. The
+current book was always kept convenient to his hand."
+
+An idea occurred to me.
+
+"Worth," I asked, "did you see that 1920 volume when you were here last
+night?"
+
+He looked a little startled, and I prompted,
+
+"Were you too excited to have noticed a detail like that?"
+
+"I wasn't excited; not in the sense of being confused," he spoke slowly.
+"The book was there; he'd been writing in it. I remember looking at it
+and thinking that as soon as I was gone, he'd sit down in his chair and
+put every damn' word of our row into it. That was his way. The seamy
+side of Santa Ysobel life's recorded in those books. I always
+understood they amounted to a pack of neighborhood dynamite."
+
+"Got to find that last book," I said.
+
+He nodded listlessly. I went to it, giving that room such a searching as
+would have turned out a bent pin, had one been mislaid in it. I even
+took down from the shelves books of similar size to see if the lost
+volume had been slipped into a camouflaging cover--all to no good. It
+wasn't there. And when I had finished I was positive of two things; the
+study had no other entrance than the apparent ones, and the diary of
+1920 had been removed from the room since Worth saw it there the night
+before. I reached for one of the other volumes. Worth spoke again in a
+sort of dragging voice,
+
+"What do you want to look at them for, Jerry?"
+
+"It's not idle curiosity," I told him, a bit pricked.
+
+"I know it's not that." The old, affectionate tone went right to my
+heart. "But if you're thinking you'll find in them any explanation of my
+father's taking his own life, I'm here to tell you you're mistaken.
+Plenty there, no doubt, to have driven a tender hearted man off the
+earth.... He was different." Eyeing the book in my hand, the boy blurted
+with sudden heat, "Those damn' diaries have been wife and child and meat
+and drink to him. They were his reason for living--not dying!"
+
+"Start me right in regard to your father, Worth," I urged anxiously.
+"It's important."
+
+The boy gave me his shoulder and continued to stare down into the fire,
+as he said at last, slowly,
+
+"I would rather leave him alone, Jerry."
+
+I knew it would be useless to insist. Never then or thereafter did I
+hear him say more of his father's character. At that, he could hardly
+have told more in an hour's talk.
+
+At random, I took the volume that covered the year in which, as I
+remembered, Thomas Gilbert's wife had secured her divorce from him.
+Neatly and carefully written in a script as readable as type, the books,
+if I am a judge, had literary style. They were much more than mere
+diaries. True, each entry began with a note of the day's weather, and
+certain small records of the writer's personal affairs; but these went
+oddly enough with what followed; a biting analysis of the inner life,
+the estimated intentions and emotions, of the beings nearest to him. It
+was inhuman stuff. But Worth was right; there was no soil for suicide in
+this matter written by a hand guided by a harsh, censorious mind; too
+much egotism here to willingly give over the role of conscience for his
+friends. Friends?--could a man have friends who regarded humanity
+through such unkindly, wide open, all-seeing eyes?
+
+Worth, seated across from me on the other side of the fire, stared
+straight into the leaping blaze; but I doubted if that was what he saw.
+On his face was the look which I had come to know, of the dignified
+householder who had gone in and shut the door on whatever of dismay and
+confusion might be in his private affairs. I began to read his father's
+version of the separation from his mother, with its ironic references to
+her most intimate friend.
+
+"Marion would like to see Laura Bowman ship Tony and marry Jim Edwards.
+I swear the modern woman has played bridge so long that her idea of the
+most serious obligation in life--the marriage vow--is, 'Never mind. If
+you don't like the hand you have got, shuffle, cut, and deal again!'"
+
+I dropped the book to my knee and looked over at Worth, asking,
+
+"This Mrs. Dr. Bowman that we met last night at Tait's--she was a
+special friend of your mother's?"
+
+"They were like sisters--in more than one way." I knew without his
+telling it that he alluded to their common misfortune of being both
+unhappily married. His mother, a woman of more force than the other, had
+gained her freedom.
+
+"_Femina Priores._" I came on an entry standing oddly alone. "Marion is
+to secure the divorce--at my suggestion. I have demanded that our son
+share his time between us."
+
+Again I let the book down on my knee and looked across at the silent
+fellow there. And I had heard him compassionate Barbara Wallace for
+having painful memories of her childhood! I believe he was at that
+moment more at peace with his father than he had ever been in his
+life--and that he grieved that this was so. I knew, too, that the
+forgiveness and forgetting would not extend to these pitiless records.
+Without disturbing him, I laid the book I held down and scouted forward
+for things more recent.
+
+"Laura Bowman"--through one entry after another Gilbert kicked that poor
+woman's name like a football. Very fine and righteous and high-minded in
+what he said, but writing it out in full and calling her painful
+difficulties--the writhing of a sensitive, high-strung woman, mismated
+with a tyrant--an example notably stupid and unoriginal, of the eternal
+matrimonial triangle. Bowman evidently kept his sympathy, so far as
+such a nature can be said to entertain that gentle emotion.
+
+I ran through other volumes, merciless recitals, now and again, of the
+shortcomings of his associates or servants; a cold blooded
+misrepresentation of his son; a sneer for the affair with Ina Thornhill,
+with the dictum, sound enough no doubt, that the girl herself did the
+courting, and that she had no conscience--"The extreme society type of
+parasite," he put it. And then the account of his break with Edwards.
+
+Dr. Bowman, it seems, had come to Gilbert in confidence for help, saying
+that his wife had left his house in the small hours the previous night,
+nothing but an evening wrap pulled over her night wear, and that he
+guessed where she could be found, since she hadn't gone to her mother's.
+He asked Gilbert to be his ambassador with messages of pardon. Didn't
+want to go himself, because that would mean a row, and he was
+determined, if possible, to keep the thing private, giving a generous
+reason: that he wasn't willing to disgrace the woman. All of which,
+after he'd written it down, the diarist discredited with his brief
+comment to the effect that Tony Bowman shunned publicity because scandal
+of the sort would hurt his practice, and his pride as well, and that he
+didn't go out to Jim Edwards's ranch because, under these circumstances,
+he would be afraid of Jim.
+
+Thomas Gilbert did the doctor's errand for him. The entry concerning it
+occupied the next day. I read between the lines how much he enjoyed his
+position of god from the machine, swooping down on the two he found out
+there, estimating their situation and behavior in his usual
+hair-splitting fashion, sitting as a court of last appeal. It was of no
+use for Edwards to explain to him that Laura Bowman was practically
+crazy when she walked out of her husband's house as the culmination of a
+miserable scene--the sort that had been more and more frequent there of
+late--carrying black-and-blue marks where he had grabbed and shaken her.
+The statement that it was by mere chance she encountered Jim seemed to
+have made Gilbert smile, and Jim's taking of her out to the ranch, the
+assertion that it was the only thing to do, that she was sick and
+delirious, had inspired Gilbert to say to him, quite neatly, "You
+weren't delirious, I take it--not more than usual."
+
+Then he demanded that Laura go with him, at once, back to her husband,
+or out to her mother's. She considered the matter and chose to go back
+to Bowman, saying bitterly that her mother made the match in the first
+place, and stood always against her daughter and with her son-in-law
+whatever he did. Plainly it took all of Laura's persuasions to prevent
+actual blows between Gilbert and Edwards. Also, she would only promise
+to go back and live under Bowman's roof, but not as his wife--and the
+whole situation was much aggravated.
+
+I followed Mr. Thomas Gilbert's observation of this affair: his amused
+understanding of how much Jim Edwards and Laura hated him; his private
+contempt for Bowman, to whom he continued to give countenance and moral
+support; his setting down of the quarrels, intimate, disastrous, between
+Bowman and his wife, as the doctor retailed them to him, the woman
+dragging herself on her knees to beg for her freedom, and his callous
+refusals; backed by threat of the wide publicity of a scandalous
+divorce suit, with Thomas Gilbert as main witness. I turned to Worth and
+asked,
+
+"When will Edwards be here?"
+
+"Any minute now." Worth looked at me queerly, but I went on,
+
+"You said he phoned from the ranch. Did he answer you in person--from
+out there?"
+
+"That's what I told you, Jerry."
+
+My searching gaze made nothing of the boy's impassive face; I plunged
+again into the diaries, running down a page, getting the heading of a
+sentence, not delaying to go further unless I struck something which
+seemed to me important, and each minute thinking of the strangeness of a
+man like this killing himself. It was in the 1916 volume, that I made a
+discovery which surprised an exclamation from me.
+
+"What would you call this, Worth? Your father's way of making
+corrections?"
+
+"Corrections?" Worth spoke without looking around. "My father never made
+corrections--in anything." It was said without animus--a simple
+statement of fact.
+
+"But look here." I held toward him the book. There were three leaves
+gone; that meant six pages, and the entries covered May 31 and June 1. I
+had verified that before I spoke to him, noticing that the statement of
+the weather for May 31 remained at the foot of the last page left, while
+a run-over on the page beyond the missing ones had been marked out. It
+had nothing to do with the weather. As nearly as I could make out with
+the reading glass I held over it, the words were, "take the woman for no
+other than she appears."
+
+"Worth," I urged, "give me your attention for a minute here. You say
+your father did not make corrections, but one of the diaries is cut. The
+records of two days are gone. Were those pages stolen?"
+
+"How should I know?" said Worth, and added, helpfully, "Pity they didn't
+steal the whole lot. That would have been a relief."
+
+There were voices and the sound of steps outside. I shoved the diary
+back into its place on the shelf, and turned to see Barbara at the
+broken door with Jim Edwards. She came in, her clear eyes a little wide,
+but the whole young personality of her quite composed. Edwards halted at
+the door, a haggard eye roving over the room, until it encountered the
+blood-stain on the rug, when it sheered abruptly, and fixed itself on
+Worth, who crossed to shake hands, with a quiet,
+
+"Come in, won't you, Jim? Or would you rather go up to the house?"
+
+Keenly I watched the man as he stood there struggling for words. There
+was color on his thin cheeks, high under the dark eyes; it made him look
+wild. The chill of the drive, or pure nervousness, had him shaking.
+
+"Thank you--the house, I think," he said rather incoherently. Yet he
+lingered. "Barbara's been telling me," he said in that deep voice of his
+with the air of one who utters at random. "Worth,--had you thought that
+it might have been happening down here, right at the time we all sat at
+Tait's together?"
+
+He was in a condition to spill anything. A moment more and we should
+have heard what it was that had him in such a grip of horror. But as I
+glanced at Worth, I saw him reply to the older man's question with a
+very slight but very perceptible shake of the head. It had nothing to do
+with what had been asked him; to any eye it said more plainly than
+words, "Don't talk; pull yourself together." I whirled to see how
+Edwards responded to this, and found our group had a new member. In the
+door stood a decent looking, round faced Chinaman. Edwards had drawn a
+little inside the threshold for him, but very little, and waited, still
+shaken, perturbed, hat in hand, apparently ready to leave as soon as the
+Oriental got out of his way.
+
+"Hello," the yellow man saluted us.
+
+"Hello, Chung," Worth rejoined, and added, "Looks good to see you
+again."
+
+I was relieved to hear that. It showed me that the cook, anyhow, had not
+seen Worth last night in Santa Ysobel.
+
+"Just now I hea' 'bout Boss." Chung's eye went straight to the stain on
+the rug, exactly as Edwards' had done, but it stopped there, and his
+Oriental impassiveness was unmoved. "Too bad," he concluded, thrust the
+fingers of one hand up the sleeve of the other and waited.
+
+"Where you been all day?" I said quickly.
+
+"My cousin' ranch."
+
+"His cousin's got a truck farm over by Medlow--or used to have," Worth
+supplied, and Chung looked to him, instantly.
+
+"You sabbee," he said hopefully. "I go iss mo'ning--all same any
+day--not find out 'bout Boss. Too bad. Too velly much bad." A pause,
+then, looking around at the four of us, "I get dinner?"
+
+"We've all had something to eat, Chung," Worth said. "You go now fix
+room. Make bed. To-night, I stay; Mr. Boyne here stay; Mr. Edwards
+stay. Fix three rooms. Good fire."
+
+"All 'ite," the chink would have ducked out then, Jim Edwards after him,
+but I stopped the proceedings with,
+
+"Hold on a minute--while we're all together--tell us about that visitor
+Mr. Gilbert had last night." I was throwing a rock in the brush-pile in
+the chance of scaring out a rabbit. I was shooting the question at
+Chung, but my eye was on Edwards. He glared back at me for a moment,
+then couldn't stand the strain and looked away. At last the Chinaman
+spoke.
+
+"Not see um. I go fix bed now."
+
+"Hold on," again I stopped him. "Worth, tell him those beds can wait.
+Tell him it's all right to answer my questions."
+
+"'S all 'ite?" Chung studied us in turn. I was keeping an inconspicuous
+eye on Edwards as I reassured him. "'S all 'ite," he repeated with a
+falling inflection this time, and finished placidly, "You want know
+'bout lady?"
+
+"What's all this?" Edwards spoke low.
+
+"About a lady who came to see Mr. Gilbert last night," I explained
+shortly; then, "Who was she, Chung?"
+
+"Not see um good." The Chinaman shook his head gravely.
+
+"Did she come here--to the study?" I asked. He nodded. Worth moved
+impatiently, and the Chinaman caught it. He fixed his eyes on Worth. I
+stepped between them. "Chung," I said sharply. "You knew the lady. Who
+was she?"
+
+"Not see um good," he repeated, plainly reluctant. "She hold hand by
+face--cly, I think."
+
+"Good God!" Edwards broke out startlingly. "If we're going to hear an
+account of all the women that Tom lectured and made cry--leave me out of
+it."
+
+"One woman will do, for this time," I said to him drily, "if it's the
+right one," and he subsided, turning away. But he did not go. With
+burning eyes, he stood and listened while I cross-examined the unwilling
+Chung and got apparently a straight story showing that some woman had
+come to the side door of his master's house shortly after dinner
+Saturday night, walked to the study with that master, weeping, and that
+her voice when he heard it, sounded like that of some one he knew. I
+tried every way in the world to get him to be specific about this voice;
+did it sound like that of a young lady? an old lady? did he think it was
+some one he knew well, or only a little? had he been hearing it much
+lately? All the usual tactics; but Chung's placid obstinacy was proof
+against them. He kept shaking his head and saying over and over,
+
+"No hear um good," until Barbara, standing watchfully by, said,
+
+"Chung, you think that lady talk like this?"
+
+As she spoke, after the first word, a change had come into her voice; it
+was lighter, higher, with a something in its character faintly
+reminiscent to my ear. And Chung bobbed his head quickly, nodding
+assent. In her mimicry he had recognized the tones of the visitor. I
+glanced at Edwards: he looked positively relieved.
+
+"I'll go to the house, Worth," he said with more composure in his tone
+than I would have thought a few moments ago he could in any way summon.
+"You'll find me there." And he followed the Chinaman up the moonlit
+path.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+A MURDER
+
+
+I stood at the door and watched until I saw first Chung's head come into
+the light on the kitchen porch, then Jim Edwards's black poll follow it.
+I waited until both had gone into the house and the door was shut,
+before I went back to Barbara and Worth. They were speaking together in
+low tones over at the hearth. The three of us were alone; and the
+blood-stain on the rug, out of sight there in the shadow beyond the
+table, would seem to cry out as a fourth.
+
+"Barbara," I broke in across their talk, "who was the woman who came
+here to this place last night?"
+
+She didn't answer me. Instead, it was Worth who spoke.
+
+"Better come here and listen to what Bobs has been saying to me, Jerry,
+before you ask any questions."
+
+I crossed and stood between the two young people.
+
+"Well," I grunted; and though Barbara's face was white, her eyes big and
+black, she answered me bravely,
+
+"Mr. Gilbert did not kill himself. Worth doesn't think so, either."
+
+"What!" It was jolted out of me. After a moment's thought, I finished,
+"Then I've got to know who the woman was that visited this room last
+night."
+
+For a long while she made no reply, studying Worth's profile as he
+stared steadily into the fire. No signal passed between them, but
+finally she came to her decision and said,
+
+"Mr. Boyne, ask Worth what he thinks I ought to say to that."
+
+Instead, "Who was it, Worth?" I snapped, speaking to the back of the
+young man's head. The red came up into the girl's face, and her eyes
+flashed; but Worth merely shrugged averted shoulders.
+
+"You can search me," he said, and left it there.
+
+I looked from one to the other of these young people: Worth, whom I
+loved as I might have my own son had I been so fortunate as to possess
+one; this girl who had made a place of warmth for herself in my heart in
+less than a day, whose loyalty to my boy I was certain I might count on.
+How different this affair must look to them from the face it wore to me,
+an old police detective, who had bulled through many inquiries like
+this, the corpse itself, perhaps, lying in the back of the room, instead
+of the blood-stain we had there on the rug; what was practically the
+Third Degree being applied to relatives and friends; with the squalid
+prospect of a court trial ahead of us all. If they'd seen as much of
+this sort of thing as I had, they wouldn't be holding me up now, tying
+my hands that were so willing to help, by this fine-spun, overstrained
+notion of shielding a woman's name.
+
+"Barbara," I began--I knew an appeal to the unaccountable Worth would
+get me nowhere--"the facts we've got to deal with here are a possible
+murder, with this lad the last person known--by us, of course--to have
+seen his father alive. We know, too, that they quarreled bitterly. We
+know all this. Outside people, men who are interested, and more or less
+hostile, were aware that Worth needed money--needs it yet, for that
+matter--a large sum. I suppose it is a question of time when it will be
+known that Worth came here last night; and when it is known, do you
+realize what it will mean?"
+
+Worth had sat through this speech without the quiver of a muscle, and no
+word came from him as I paused for a reply. Little Barbara, big eyes
+boring into me as though to read all that was in the back of my mind,
+nodded gravely but did not speak. I crossed to the shelves and took down
+the diary whose leather back bore the date of 1916. As I opened it,
+finding the place where its pages had been removed, I continued,
+
+"You and I know--we three here know--" I included Worth in my
+statement--"that the crime was neither suicide nor patricide; but it is
+likely we must have proof of that fact. Unless we find the murderer--"
+
+"But the motive--there would have to be motive."
+
+Barbara struck right at the core of the thing. She didn't check at the
+mere material facts of how a murder could have been done, who might have
+had opportunity. The fundamental question of why it should have been was
+her immediate interest.
+
+"I believe I've the motive here," I said and thrust the mutilated volume
+into her hand. "Some one stole these leaves out of Mr. Gilbert's diary.
+The books are filled with intimate details of the affairs of
+people--things which people prefer should not be known--names, details
+and dates written out completely. It's likely murder was done last night
+to get possession of those pages."
+
+She went to the desk and glanced over the book; not the minute
+examination with the reading glass which I had given it; that mere flirt
+of a glance which, when I had first noticed it the night before at
+Tait's, skimming across that description of Clayte, had seemed so
+inadequate. Then she turned to me.
+
+"Mr. Gilbert cut these out himself," she pronounced.
+
+That brought Worth's head up and his face around to stare at her.
+
+"You say my father removed something he had written?" he asked. Barbara
+nodded. "He never changed a decision--and those books were his
+decisions."
+
+"Then this wasn't a correction, but he cut it out. Can't you see, Mr.
+Boyne? Those leaves were removed by a man who respected the book and was
+as careful in his mutilation of it as he was in its making. It is
+precisely written--I'm referring to workmanship, not its literary
+quality--carefully margined, evenly indented on the paragraph
+beginnings. And so, in this removal of three leaves, the cutting was
+done with a sharp knife drawn along the edge of a ruler--" I picked up
+from where they lay on the blotting pad, a small pearl-handled knife,
+its sharp blade open, and the ruler I had seen when looking down from
+the skylight, and placed them before her. She nodded and continued,
+
+"There is a bit of margin left so no other leaves can be loosened by
+this removal. The marking out of the run-over has been neatly ruled,
+done so recently that the ink is not yet black--done with that ink in
+the stand. It was blotted with this." She lifted a hand-blotter to show
+me the print of a line of ink. There were other markings on the face of
+the soft paper, and I took it eagerly. Barbara smiled.
+
+"You will get little from that," she said. I had not even seen her give
+it attention. "Scattered words--and parts of words, blotted frequently
+as they were written. Perhaps, with care, we might learn something, but
+we can turn more easily to the last pages of his diary and--"
+
+"There are no last pages," I interrupted. "The 1920 book is missing."
+
+"Gone--stolen?" she exclaimed. It brought a smile to my face. For the
+first time in my experience of this pretty, little bunch of brains, she
+had hazarded a guess.
+
+"Gone," I admitted coolly--a bit sarcastically. "I've no reason to say
+stolen."
+
+"But--yes, you have--you have, Mr. Boyne! If it is gone, it was stolen.
+Is it gone--are you sure it is gone?" Eagerly her eyes were searching
+desk, cabinet, the shelf where the other diaries made their long row. I
+satisfied her on that score.
+
+"I have searched the study thoroughly; it is not in this room."
+
+"Was here last night," Worth cut in. "I saw it on the desk."
+
+"And was stolen last night," Barbara reaffirmed, quickly. "These books
+are too big to be slipped into a pocket, so we can't believe it was left
+upon Mr. Gilbert's person; and he wouldn't lend it--wouldn't willingly
+let it go from his possession. So it was stolen; and the man who stole
+it--killed him." She shuddered.
+
+That was going too swift for me to follow, but I saw on Worth Gilbert's
+face his acceptance of it. Either conviction of Barbara's infallibility,
+or some knowledge locked up inside his own chest, made him certain the
+diary had been stolen, and the thief was his father's murderer. In a
+flash, I remembered his words, "putting every damn' word of our row into
+it," and I shot straight at him,
+
+"Did you take that book, Worth?"
+
+He only shook his head and answered,
+
+"You heard what Bobs said, Jerry."
+
+If he took the book he killed his father; that was Barbara's inference,
+Worth's acceptance. I threw back my shoulders to cast off the suspicion,
+then reached across to place my fingers under the girl's hand and pull
+from it the only record of that last written page, the blotter.
+
+"Will you read me that?" I asked her. "Every word and part of a
+word--every letter?"
+
+Her eyes smiled into mine with a reassurance that was like balm. Worth
+rose and found her a hand-glass on the mantel, passing it to her, and
+with this to reverse the scrawlings, she read and I wrote down in my
+memorandum book two complete words, two broken words and five single
+letters picked from overlying marks that were too confused to be
+decipherable. Though the three of us struggled with them, they held no
+meaning.
+
+Worth's interest quickly ceased.
+
+"I'll join Jim Edwards in the house," he said, but I stopped him.
+
+"One minute, Worth. There was a woman visitor here last night. It would
+seem she carried away with her the diary of 1920 and three leaves from
+the book of 1916. I want you--you and Barbara--to tell me what you know
+that happened here in Santa Ysobel on the dates of the missing pages,
+May 31 and June 1, 1916."
+
+Barbara accepted the task, turning that wonderful cinematograph memory
+back, and murmured,
+
+"I never tried recollecting on just a bare date this way, but--" then
+glanced around at me and finished--"nothing happened to me in Santa
+Ysobel then, because I wasn't in Santa Ysobel. I was in San Francisco
+and--"
+
+"And I was in Flanders, so that lets me out," Worth broke in brusquely.
+"I'll go into the house."
+
+"Wait, Worth." I placed a hand on his shoulder. "Go on, Barbara; you had
+thought of something."
+
+"Yes. Father died in January of that year, and in March I had to vacate
+the house. It had been sold, and they wanted to fix it over. I left
+Santa Ysobel on the eighteenth of March, but they didn't get into the
+house until June first."
+
+Again Worth interrupted.
+
+"Which jogs my memory for an unexciting detail." He smiled
+enigmatically. "I was jilted June first."
+
+"In Flanders?" How many times had this lad been jilted?
+
+"No. Right here. I wasn't here of course, but the letter which did the
+trick was written here, and bore that date--June one, 1916."
+
+"How do you get the date so pat?"
+
+"It was handed me by the mail orderly--I was on the Verdun sector
+then--on the morning of the Fourth of July. Remember the date the letter
+was written because of the quick time it made. Most of our mail took
+from six weeks to eternity. What are you smiling at, Bobs?"
+
+"Just a little--you don't mind, do you?--at your saying you remember
+Ina's letter by the quick time it made in reaching you."
+
+"Who bought your house, Barbara?" I asked her.
+
+"Dr. Bowman--or rather Mrs. Bowman's uncle bought it and gave it to
+her."
+
+"And they went in on the first of June, 1916?" I was all excitement,
+turning the pages of the diary to get to certain points I remembered.
+"What can either one of you tell me about the state of affairs at that
+time between Dr. Bowman and his wife--and that man who was just in
+here--Jim Edwards?"
+
+Worth turned a hostile back; Barbara seemed to shrink in her chair. I
+hated like a whipping to pull this sort of stuff on them, but I knew
+that Barbara's knowledge of Worth's danger would reconcile her to
+whatever painful thing must be done, and I had to know who was that
+visitor of last night.
+
+"Is that--that stuff in those damnable books?" I saw the hunch of
+Worth's broad shoulders.
+
+"Some of it is--some of it has been cut out," I replied.
+
+"And you connect Jim Edwards with this crime?"
+
+"I don't connect him--he connects himself--by them, and by his manner."
+
+"Burn them!" He faced me, came over and reached for the book. "Dump the
+whole rotten mess into the fire, Jerry, and be done with it."
+
+"Easy said, but that would sure be a short cut to trouble. Tell me, I've
+got to know, if you think this man Edwards--under great
+provocation--capable of--well, of killing a fellow creature."
+
+"Jerry," Worth took the book out of my hand and laid it on the table,
+"what you want to do is to forget this--dirt--that you've been reading,
+and go at this thing without prejudice. If you open any trails and they
+lead in my direction, don't be afraid to follow them. This thing of
+trying to find a criminal in some one that my father has already deeply
+injured--some one that he's made life a hell for--so that suspicion
+needn't be directed to me, makes me sick. If I'd allow you to do it, I'd
+be yellow clear through."
+
+That was about the longest speech I'd heard Worth Gilbert make since his
+return from France. And he meant every word of it, too; but it didn't
+suit me. This "Hew to the line" stuff is all right until the chips begin
+whacking the head of your friend. In this case there wasn't a doubt in
+my mind that when a breath of suspicion got out that Thomas Gilbert had
+not killed himself, that minute would see the first finger point at
+Thomas Gilbert's son as the murderer. So I grumbled,
+
+"Just the same, Edwards has something on his mind about last night."
+
+"He has--and it's pretty nearly tearing him to pieces," Worth admitted,
+but would go no further.
+
+"He was here last night, I'm sure--and Mrs. Bowman was with him," I
+ventured.
+
+Barbara, who had been sitting through this her eyes on Worth, turned
+from him to me and pronounced, gently,
+
+"Yes, he was here, and Laura was with him."
+
+"Bobs!" Worth spoke so sternly that she glanced up startled. "I'll not
+stand for you throwing suspicion on Jim."
+
+"Did I--do that?" her lip trembled. Worth's eyes were on the fire.
+
+"Don't quarrel with the girl," I remonstrated. Barbara had told me the
+visitor; I covered my elation with, "She's only looking out for your
+safety."
+
+"I can look out for myself," curtly. He turned hard eyes on us. It made
+me feel put away from him, chucked out from his friendship. "And I never
+quarreled with anybody in my life. Sometimes--" he turned from one to
+the other of us, speaking slowly, "Sometimes I seem to antagonize
+people, for no reason that I can see; and sometimes I fight; but I never
+quarrel."
+
+"No offense intended--or taken," I assured him hastily. My heart was
+full of his danger, and I told myself that it was his misery spoke, and
+not the true Worth Gilbert. But a very pale and subdued Barbara said
+tremulously,
+
+"I guess I'd better go home now," suggesting, after the very slightest
+pause, "Mr. Boyne can take me."
+
+"Don't, Bobsie." Worth's voice was gentle again, but absent. It sounded
+as though he had already forgotten both of us, and our possible cause of
+offense. "Go to the house with Jerry. I'll bar the door and follow."
+
+"Can't I help with that?" I offered.
+
+"No. Eddie will give me a hand if I need it. Go on. I'll be with you in
+a minute."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+DR. BOWMAN
+
+
+But it was considerably more than a minute before Worth followed us to
+the house. We walked slowly, talking; when I looked back from the
+kitchen porch, Worth had already come outside, and I thought Eddie
+Hughes was with him, though I heard no voices and couldn't be sure on
+account of the shrubbery between.
+
+Getting into the house we found that Chung had the downstairs all opened
+up through, lights going, heat turned on from the basement furnace;
+everywhere that tended, homelike appearance a competent servant gives a
+place. On the hall table as we passed, I noticed a doctorish top coat,
+with a primly folded muffler laid across it.
+
+"Dr. Bowman is here," Barbara said hardly above her breath.
+
+We listened; no sound of voices from the living room; then I got the
+tramp of feet that moved back and forth in there. We opened the door,
+and there were the two men; a queer proposition!
+
+Bowman had taken a chair pretty well in the middle of the room. It was
+Jim Edwards whose feet I had heard as he roamed about. No word was going
+between them; apparently they hadn't spoken to each other at all; the
+looks that met or avoided were those strange looks of persons who live
+in lengthened and what might be termed intimate hostility.
+
+"Ah--Boyne--isn't it?" Bowman greeted me; I thought our coming relieved
+the situation. He shook hands, then turned to Barbara with, "Mrs.
+Thornhill said you were here; I told her I would bring you back with
+me."
+
+I rather wondered not to hear him insist on being taken at once to the
+study, but his next words gave the reason. He'd reached Santa Ysobel too
+late for the inquest itself, but not too late to make what he informed
+us was a thorough investigation of everything it treated of.
+
+Barbara and I found places on the davenport; Edwards prowled up and down
+the other end of the room, openly in torment. Those stormy black eyes of
+his were seldom off Bowman, while the doctor's gray, heavy-lidded gaze
+never got beyond the toes of the restless man's moving boots. He had
+begun a grumbling tale of the coroner's incompetence and neglect to
+reopen the inquest when he, the family physician, arrived, as though
+that were important, when Worth came in.
+
+Instantly the doctor was on his feet, had paced up to the new master of
+the house, and began pumping his arm in a long handshake, while he
+passed out those platitudes of condolence a man of his sort deals in at
+such a time. The stuff I'd been reading in those diaries had told me
+what was the root and branch of his friendship with the dead man; it
+made the hair at the back of my neck lift to hear him boasting of it in
+Jim Edwards' presence, and know what I knew. "And, my dear boy," he
+finished, "they tell me you've not been to view the body--yet. I
+thought perhaps you'd like to go--with me. I can have my machine here in
+a minute. No?" as Worth declined with a wordless shake of the head.
+
+I hoped he'd leave then; but he didn't. Instead, he turned back to his
+chair, explaining,
+
+"If Mrs. Thornhill's cook hadn't phoned me, when Mrs. Thornhill had a
+second collapse last night, I suppose I should be in San Francisco
+still. The coroner seemed to think there was no necessity for having
+competent medical testimony as to the time of death, and the physical
+condition of the deceased. I should have been wired for. The inquest
+should have been delayed until I arrived. The way the thing was managed
+was disgraceful."
+
+"It was merciful." Jim Edwards spoke as though unwillingly, in a
+muttered undertone. Evidently it was the first word he'd addressed to
+Bowman--if he could be said to address him now, as he finished, "I
+hadn't thought of an inquest. Yet of course there'd be one in a case of
+suicide."
+
+Bowman only heard and wholly misconstrued him, snatching at the
+concluding words,
+
+"Of course it was suicide. Done with his own weapon, taken from the
+holster where we know it always hung, fully loaded. The muzzle had been
+pressed so close against the breast when the cartridge exploded that the
+woolen vest had taken fire. I should say it had smouldered for some
+time; there was a considerable hole burned in the cloth. The flesh
+around the wound was powder-scarred."
+
+Worth took it like a red Indian. I could see by the glint of his eye as
+it flickered over the doctor's face, the smooth white hands, the whole
+smooth personality, that the boy disliked, and had always disliked him.
+Yet he listened silently.
+
+I rather hoped by leading questions to get Bowman to express the opinion
+that Thomas Gilbert had been killed in the small hours of the morning.
+Circumstances then would have fitted in with Eddie Hughes. Eddie Hughes
+was to me the most acceptable murderer in sight. But no--nothing would
+do him but to stick to the hour the coroner had accepted.
+
+"Medical science cannot determine closer than that," he was very final.
+"The death took place within an hour preceding midnight."
+
+"You are positive it couldn't be this morning?" I asked.
+
+"Positive."
+
+Well, Dr. Bowman's testimony, if accepted at the value the doctor
+himself placed upon it, would clear Worth of suspicion, for the lad was
+with me at Tait's from a few minutes past ten until after one; and Jim
+Edwards, now pacing the floor so restlessly, had also been there the
+greater part of that time. I had had too much experience with doctor's
+guesses based on _rigor mortis_ to let it affect my views.
+
+In the minute of silence, we could hear Chung moving about at the back
+of the house. The doctor spoke querulously.
+
+"Never expect anything of a Chinaman, but I should think when the
+chauffeur found the body he might have had sense enough to summon
+friends of the family. He could have phoned me--I was only in San
+Francisco."
+
+"He could have phoned me at the ranch," Jim Edwards' deep voice came in.
+
+"You? Why should he phone for you?" Bowman wheeled on him at last. "I
+was the man's physician, as well as his close friend. Everybody knows
+you weren't on good terms with him. Gad! You wouldn't be here in this
+house to-night, if he were alive."
+
+In the sort of silence that comes when some one's been suddenly struck
+in the face, Worth crossed to Edwards and laid an arm along his
+shoulders.
+
+"I've asked Jim to stay in my place, here, in my house, while I'm away
+over Monday--and he can do as he likes about whom he chooses to have
+around."
+
+Bowman gradually got to his feet, his face a study.
+
+"I see," he said. "Then I'll not trespass on your time any longer. I
+felt obliged to offer my services ... patients of mine ... for years ...
+in affliction ..." a gleam of anger came into his fishy eyes. "I've been
+met with damned insolence.... Claiming of the house before your father's
+decently in his grave." He jerked fully erect. "Leave your affairs in
+the hands of that degenerate. If he doesn't do you dirt, you'll be the
+first he's let off! Come, Miss Barbara," to the girl who sat beside me,
+looking on mutely observant.
+
+"Thank you, doctor." She answered him as tranquilly as though no voice
+had been raised in anger in that room. "I think I'll stay a little
+longer. Jim will take me home."
+
+The doctor glared and stalked out. To the last I think he was expecting
+some one to stop him and apologize. I suppose this was what Worth
+described naively as "antagonizing people without intending to." Well,
+it might not be judicious; I certainly was glad the doctor was so sure
+of the time at which his friend Gilbert had met death; yet I couldn't
+but enjoy seeing him get his. As soon as the man's back was turned,
+Edwards beckoned Barbara to the window. Worth and I left them talking
+together there in low tones, he to get something he wanted from a case
+in the hall, where he called me to the phone, saying long distance
+wanted me. While I was waiting for my connection (Central, as usual,
+having gotten me, now couldn't get the other party) the two came from
+the living room and Barbara said "Good night" to us in passing.
+
+"Those two seem to have something on hand," I commented as they went
+out. "The little girl gave Bowman one for himself--in the nicest
+possible way. Don't wonder Edwards likes her for it."
+
+"Poor Laura Bowman! Her friends take turns giving that bloodless lizard
+she's tied to, one for himself any time they can," Worth said. "My
+mother used to handle the doctor something like that; and now it's
+Barbara--little Bobsie Wallace--God bless her!"
+
+He went on into the dining room. I looked after his unconscious,
+departing figure and thought he deserved a good licking. Why couldn't he
+have spoken that way to the girl herself? Why hadn't he taken her home,
+instead of leaving it to Edwards? Then I got my call and answered,
+
+"This is Boyne. Put them through."
+
+In a minute came Roberts' voice.
+
+"Hello, Mr. Boyne?"
+
+"Yes. What you got?"
+
+"Telegram--Hicks--Los Angeles. He's located Steve Skeels--"
+
+"Read me the wire," I broke in.
+
+"All right." A pause, then, "'Skeels arrived here from 'Frisco this
+morning shall I arrest?'"
+
+"Good!" I exclaimed. "Wire him to keep Steve under surveillance and
+await instructions. Tell him not to lose him. Get it, Roberts? Hustle
+it. I'll be in by nine. Good-by," and I hung up.
+
+I looked around; Worth had gone into the dining room; I stepped to the
+door and saw him kneeling before an open lower door of the built-in
+sideboard, and noted that the compartment had been steel lined and
+Yale-locked, making a sort of safe. A lamp at the end of an extension
+wire stood on the floor beside him; he looked around at me over his
+shoulder as I put my head in to say,
+
+"Stock in your old suitcase has gone up a notch, Worth. We've caught
+Skeels."
+
+"So soon?" was all he said. But my news seemed to decide something for
+him; with a sharp gesture of finality, he put into his breast pocket the
+package of papers he had been looking at.
+
+When a little later, Edwards came in, Worth was waiting for him in the
+hall.
+
+"Do we go now?" the older man asked, wincing. Worth nodded.
+
+"Take your machine, Jim," he said. "We can park it at Fuller's and walk
+back from there. Boyne's roadster is in our garage."
+
+"Anything wrong with Eddie Hughes?" Edwards asked as he stepped in to
+get his driving gloves. "I passed him out there headed for town lugging
+a lot of freight, and the fellow growled like a dog when I spoke to
+him."
+
+"I fired him. Come on, Jim--let's get out of this."
+
+"Hold on, Worth," I took a hand. "Fired Hughes? When?"
+
+"While I was fixing up that door--after you and Bobs came to the house."
+
+"What in God's name for?" I asked in exasperation.
+
+"For giving me back talk," said the youth who never quarreled with any
+one.
+
+He and Edwards tramped out together. I realized that the hostile son and
+an alienated friend had gone for a last look at the clay that had
+yesterday been Thomas Gilbert. Of course Worth would do that before he
+left Santa Ysobel. But would Edwards go in with him--or was he only
+along to drive the machine? It might be worth my while to know. But I
+could ask to-morrow; it wasn't worth a tired man's waiting up for. We
+must make an early start in the morning. I went upstairs to bed.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+SEVEN LOST DAYS
+
+
+Instead of driving up to San Francisco with Worth and Barbara, the next
+morning, I was headed south at a high rate of speed. Sitting in the
+Pullman smoker, going over what had happened and what I had made of it,
+vainly studying a small, blue blotter with some senseless hieroglyphics
+reversed upon it, I wasn't at all sure that this move of mine was
+anywhere near the right one. But the thing hit me so quick, had to be
+decided in a flash, and my snap judgment never was good.
+
+We were all at breakfast there at the Gilbert house when I got the phone
+that those boobs down in Los Angeles had let Skeels slip through their
+fingers. I could see no way but to go myself. When I went out to
+retrieve my hand bag from the roadster, there was Barbara already in the
+seat. I delayed a minute to explain to her. She was full of eager
+interest; it seemed to her that Skeels ducking the detectives that way
+was more than clever--almost worthy of a wonder man.
+
+"Slickest thing I ever knew," I grumbled. "You can gamble I wouldn't be
+going south after him if Skeels hadn't shown himself too many for the
+Hicks agency--and they're one of the best in the business."
+
+Worth came out and settled himself at the wheel; he and Edwards
+exchanged a last, low-toned word; and they were ready to be off.
+Barbara leaned towards me with shining eyes.
+
+"Perhaps," she said, "Skeels might even be Clayte!" then the roadster
+whisked her away.
+
+The bulk of Worth Gilbert's fortune was practically tied up in this
+affair. Even as the Pullman carried me Los Angeles-ward, that boy was
+getting in to San Francisco, going to the bank, and turning over to them
+capital that represented not only his wealth but his honor. If we failed
+to trace this money, he was a discredited fool. Yes, I had done right to
+come.
+
+So far on that side. Then apprehension began to mutter within me about
+the situation at Santa Ysobel. How long would that coroner's verdict of
+suicide satisfy the public? How soon would some seepage of fact indicate
+that the death was murder and set the whole town to looking for a
+murderer? The minute this happened, the real criminal would take alarm
+and destroy evidence I might have gathered if I had stayed by the case.
+I promised myself that it should be simply "there and back" with me in
+the Skeels matter.
+
+This is the way it looked to me in the Pullman; then--once in Los
+Angeles--I allowed myself to get hot telling the Hicks people what I
+thought of them, explaining how I'd have run the chase, and wound up by
+giving seven days to it--seven precious, irreclaimable days--while
+everything lay wide open there in the north, and I couldn't get any
+satisfactory word from the office, and none of any sort from Worth.
+
+That Skeels trail kept me to it, with my tongue hanging out; again and
+again I seemed to have him; every time I missed him by an hour or so;
+and that convinced me that he was straining every nerve, and that he
+probably had the whole of the loot still with him. At last, I seemed to
+have him in a perfect trap--Ensenada, on the Peninsula. You get into and
+out of Ensenada by steamboat only, except back to the mines on foot or
+donkey. The two days I had to wait over in San Diego for the boat which
+would follow the one Skeels had taken were a mighty uneasy time. If I'd
+imagined for a moment that he wasn't on the dodge--that he was there
+openly--I'd have wired the Mexican authorities, and had him waiting for
+me in jail. But the Mexican officials are a rotten lot; it seemed to me
+best to go it alone.
+
+What I found in Ensenada was that Skeels had been there, quite publicly,
+under his own name; he had come alone and departed with a companion,
+Hinch Dial, a drill operator from the mines, a transient, a pick-up
+laborer, seemingly as close-mouthed as Silent Steve himself. Steve had
+come on one steamer and the two had left on the next. That north-bound
+boat we passed two hours off Point Loma was carrying Skeels and his pal
+back to San Diego!
+
+Again two days lost, waiting for the steamer back. And when I got to San
+Diego, the trail was stone cold. I had sent Worth almost daily reports
+in care of my office, not wanting them to lie around at Santa Ysobel
+during the confusion of the funeral and all; but even before I went to
+Ensenada, telegrams from Roberts had informed me that these reports
+could not be delivered as Worth had not been at the office, and
+telephone messages to Santa Ysobel and the Palace Hotel had failed to
+locate him. When I believed I had Skeels firmly clasped in the jaws of
+the Ensenada trap, I had sent a complete report of my doings up to that
+time, and the optimistic outlook then, to Barbara with instructions for
+her to get it to Worth. She would know where he was.
+
+But she hadn't. Her reply, waiting at San Diego for me, a delicious
+little note that somehow lightened the bitterness of my disappointment
+over Skeels, told me that she had seen Worth at the funeral, almost a
+week ago now, but only for a minute; that she had supposed he had joined
+me on the Skeels chase; and she would now try to hunt him up and deliver
+my report. Roberts, too, had a line in one of his reports that Worth had
+called for the suitcase on the Monday I left and had neither returned it
+nor been in the office since.
+
+I worried not at all over Worth; if he wanted to play hide and seek with
+Dykeman's spotters, he was thoroughly capable of looking after himself;
+but in the Skeels matter, I did then what I should have done in the
+first place, of course; turned the work over to subordinates and headed
+straight home.
+
+I reached San Francisco pretty well used up. It was nearly the middle of
+the forenoon next day when I got to my desk and found it piled high with
+mail that had accumulated in my absence. Roberts had looked after what
+he could, and sorted the rest, ready for me. Everything concerning the
+Clayte case was in one basket. As Roberts handed it to me, he explained.
+
+"The Van Ness bank attorney--Cummings--has been keeping tabs on you
+tight, Mr. Boyne. Here every day--sometimes twice. Wants to know the
+minute you're back."
+
+I grunted and dived into the letters. Nothing interesting. Responses
+acknowledging receipts of my early inquiries. Roberts lingered.
+
+"Well?" I shot at him. He moved uneasily as he asked.
+
+"Did you wire him when you were coming back?"
+
+"Cummings? No. Why?"
+
+"He telephoned in just before you came saying that he'd be right up to
+see you. I told him you hadn't returned. He laughed and hung up."
+
+"All right, Roberts. Send him in when he comes." I dismissed the
+secretary. Cummings was keeping tabs on me with a vengeance. What was on
+his chest?
+
+I didn't need to wait long to find out. In another minute he was at my
+door greeting me in an off-hand, "Hello, Boyne. Ready to jump into your
+car and go around with me to see Dykeman?"
+
+"Just got down to the office, Cummings," I watched him, trying to figure
+out where I stood and where he stood after this week's absence. "Haven't
+seen Worth Gilbert yet. What's the rush with Dykeman?"
+
+"You'll find out when you get there."
+
+Not very friendly, seeing that Cummings had been Worth's lawyer in the
+matter, and aside from that queer scene in my office, there'd been no
+actual break. He stood now, not really grinning at me, but with an
+amused look under that bristly mustache, and suggested,
+
+"So you haven't seen young Gilbert?"
+
+The tone was so significant that I gave him a quick glance of inquiry as
+I said,
+
+"No. What about him?"
+
+"Put on your coat and come along. We can talk on the way," he replied,
+and I went with him to the street, dug little Pete out of the bootblack
+stand and herded him into the roadster to drive us. Cummings gave the
+order for North Beach, and as we squirmed through and around congested
+down-town traffic, headed for the Stockton Street tunnel, I waited for
+the lawyer to begin. When it came, it was another startling question,
+
+"Didn't find Skeels in the south, eh?"
+
+I hadn't thought they'd carry their watching and trailing of us so far.
+I answered that question with another,
+
+"When did you see or hear from Worth Gilbert last?"
+
+"Not since the funeral," he said promptly, "the day before the
+funeral--a week ago to-day, to be exact. I ran down to make my inventory
+then; as administrator, you know."
+
+He looked at me so significantly that I echoed,
+
+"Yes, I know."
+
+"Do you? How much?" His voice was hard and dry; it didn't sound good to
+me.
+
+"See here," I put it to him, as my clever little driver dodged in and
+out through the narrow lanes between Pagoda-like shops of Chinatown,
+avoiding the steep hill streets by a diagonal through the Italian
+quarter on Columbus Avenue. "If there's anything you think I ought to be
+told, put me wise. I suppose you raised that money for Worth--the
+seventy-two thousand that was lacking, I mean?"
+
+"I did not."
+
+I turned the situation over and over in my mind, and at last asked
+cautiously,
+
+"Worth did get the money to make up the full amount, didn't he?"
+
+We had swerved again to the north, where the Powell car-line curves into
+Bay Street, and were headed direct for the wharves. Cummings watched me
+out of the corners of his eyes, a look that bored in most unpleasantly,
+while he cross-examined,
+
+"So you don't know where he raised that money--or how--or when? You
+don't even know that he did raise it? Is that the idea?"
+
+I gave him look for look, but no answer. An indecisive slackening of the
+machine, and Little Pete asked,
+
+"Where now, sir?"
+
+"You can see it," Cummings pointed. "The tall building. Hit the
+Embarcadero, then turn to your right; a block to Mason Street."
+
+So close to the dock that ships lay broadside before its doors, moored
+to the piles by steel cables, the Western Cereal Company plant scattered
+its mills and warehouses over two city blocks. Freight trains ran
+through arcades into the buildings to fetch and carry its products;
+great trucks, some gas driven, some with four- and six-horse teams,
+loaded sacks or containers that shot in endless streams through well
+worn chutes, or emptied raw materials that would shortly be breakfast
+foods into iron conveyors that sucked it up and whined for more. It was
+a place of aggressive activity among placid surroundings, this plant of
+Dykeman's, for its setting was the Italian fisherman's home district;
+little frame shacks, before which they mended their long, brown nets, or
+stretched them on the sidewalks to dry; Fisherman's Wharf and its lateen
+rigged, gayly painted hulls, was under the factory windows.
+
+We pulled up before the door of a building separate from any of the
+mills or warehouses, and I followed Cummings through a corridor, past
+many doors of private offices, to the large general office. Here a young
+man at a desk against the rail lent Cummings respectful attention; the
+lawyer asked something in a low tone, and was answered,
+
+"Yes, sir. Waiting for you. Go right through."
+
+Down the long room with its rattling typewriters, its buzz of clerks and
+salesmen we went. Cummings was a little ahead of me, when he checked a
+moment to bow to some one over at a desk. I followed his glance. The
+girl he had spoken to turned her back almost instantly after she had
+returned his greeting; but I couldn't be mistaken. There might be more
+than one figure with that slim, half girlish grace about it, and other
+hair as lustrously blue-black, but none could be wound around a small
+head quite so shapely, carried with so blossomlike a toss. It was
+Barbara Wallace.
+
+So this was where her job was. Strange I had not known this fact of
+grave importance. I went on past her unconscious back, left her working
+at her loose-leaf ledgers, beside her adding machine, my mind a whirl of
+ugly conjecture. Dykeman's employee; that would instantly and very
+painfully clear up a score of perplexing questions. Dykeman would need
+no detectives on my trail to tell him of my lack of success in the
+Skeels chase. Lord! I had sent her as concise a report as I could
+make--to her, for Worth. I walked on stupidly. In front of the last door
+in the big room, Cummings halted and spoke low.
+
+"Boyne, you and I are both in the employ of the Van Ness Avenue Bank.
+We're somewhat similarly situated in another quarter; I'm representing
+the Gilbert estate, and you've been retained by Worth Gilbert."
+
+I grunted some sort of assent.
+
+"I brought you here to listen to what the bank crowd has to say, but
+when they get done, I've something to tell you about that young employer
+of yours. You listen to them--then you listen to me--and you'll know
+where you stand."
+
+"I'll talk with you as soon as I get through here, Cummings."
+
+"Be sure you do that little thing," significantly, and we went in.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+AT DYKEMAN'S OFFICE
+
+
+We found Whipple with Dykeman. I had always liked the president of the
+Van Ness Avenue Bank well enough; one of the large, smooth, amiable
+sort, not built to withstand stress of weather, apt to be rather
+helpless before it. He seemed now mighty upset and worried. Dykeman
+looked at me with hard eyes that searched me, but on the whole he was
+friendly in his greeting and inquiries as to my health.
+
+While I was getting out of my coat and stowing it, making a great deal
+of the process so as to gain time, I saw Cummings was exchanging low
+spoken words with the two of them. I tried to keep my mind on these men
+before me and why I was with them, but all the while it would be running
+back to the knock-out blow of seeing that girl in Dykeman's place. She
+was double-crossing Worth! I might have grinned at the idea that I'd let
+myself be fooled by a pair of big, expressive, wistful, merry black
+eyes; but I had seen the look in those same eyes when they were turned
+on my boy; to think she'd look at him like that, and sell him out, was
+against nature. It was hurting me beyond all reason.
+
+Whipple asked me about my trip south as though it was the most public
+thing in the world and he knew its every detail, and accepted my reply
+that I couldn't take one man's pay and report to another, with,
+
+"Just so, Mr. Boyne. But your agency is retained--regularly, year by
+year--by our bank. And our bank has given over none of its rights--I
+should say duties--in regard to the Clayte case. We stand ready to
+assist any one whose behavior seems to us that of a law-abiding citizen.
+We don't want to advance any criminality. We can't strike hands with
+outlaws--"
+
+"Tell him about the suitcase, Whipple," Dykeman broke in impatiently,
+rather spoiling the president's oratorical effect. "Tell him about the
+suitcase."
+
+The suitcase! Was this one of the things Barbara Wallace had let out to
+her employer? She could have done so. She knew all about it.
+
+"One moment, please," I snapped. "I've been away for a week, Mr.
+Whipple. I don't know a thing of what you're talking about. Did Captain
+Gilbert fail to meet his engagement with you Monday morning?"
+
+Whipple shook his head.
+
+"Mr. Dykeman wants you told about the suitcase," he said. "I'd like to
+have Knapp here when we go into that."
+
+Dykeman picked up the end of a speaking-tube and barked into it,
+
+"Send those men in." In the moment's delay, we all sat uneasily mute.
+Knapp came in with Anson. As they nodded to us and settled into chairs,
+two or three others joined us. Nothing was said about this filling out
+of the numbers, but to me it meant serious business, with Worth Gilbert
+its motive.
+
+"Get it over, can't you?" I said, looking about from one to the other of
+the men, all directors in the bank. "I understand that Captain Gilbert
+met his engagement with you; was he short of the sum agreed?" Again
+Whipple shook his head.
+
+"Captain Gilbert walked into the bank at exactly ten o'clock Monday
+morning. The uh--uh--unusual arrangement--contract, to call it so--that
+we'd made with him concerning the defalcation would have expired in a
+few seconds, and I think I may say," he looked around at the others,
+"that we should not have been sorry to have it do so. But he brought the
+sum agreed on."
+
+I drew a great sigh of relief. Worth's bargain was complete; he was done
+with these men, anyhow. I was half out of my chair when Whipple said,
+sharply for him,
+
+"Sit down, Mr. Boyne." And Dykeman almost drowned it in his,
+
+"Wait, there, Boyne! We're not through with you."
+
+"There's more to tell," Whipple continued. "Captain Gilbert brought that
+eight hundred thousand cash and securities in a--er--in a very strange
+way."
+
+"What d'you mean, strange way? airplane or submarine?" I growled.
+
+"He brought it," Whipple's words marched out of him like a solemn
+procession, "in a brown, sole-leather suitcase."
+
+"_With_ brass trimmings," Dykeman supplemented, and leaned back in his
+chair with an audible "Ah-h-h!" of satisfaction.
+
+If ever a poor devil was flabbergasted, it was the head of the Boyne
+agency at that moment. I had a fellow feeling for that Mazeppa party who
+was tied in his birthday suit to the back of a wild horse. Locoed
+broncos were more amenable to rein than Worth Gilbert. So that was why
+he wanted that suitcase--"had a use for it," he'd put it; insisted on an
+order to be able to get it if I wasn't at my office; wanted it to shove
+back at these scary bank officials, with his own money for the payment
+inside. No wonder Whipple called him an "outlaw"!
+
+"Get the idea, do you, Boyne?" Anson lunged at me in his ponderous way.
+"The rest of us thought 'twas a poor joke, but Knapp and Whipple had
+both seen that suitcase before--and recognized it."
+
+"Yes," said Knapp quietly. "It chanced I saw it go through the door that
+last day, when it had nearly a million of our money in it. And here it
+was--" his voice broke off.
+
+"Certainly startling," Cummings spoke directly at me, "for them to see
+it come back in Worth Gilbert's hands, with the same kind of filling,
+less one hundred and eighty seven thousand dollars. Of course, I didn't
+know the identity of the suitcase until they'd given Gilbert his receipt
+and he was gone."
+
+"Oh, they accepted his money?" I said, and every man in the room looked
+sheepish, except Cummings who didn't need to, and Dykeman who was too
+mad to. He shouted at me,
+
+"Yes, we took it; and you're going to tell us where he got that
+suitcase."
+
+"What have your own detectives--those you hired on the side--to say
+about it?" I countered on him, and saw instantly that the Whipple end of
+the crowd hadn't known of Dykeman's spotters and trailers.
+
+"Well, why not?" Dykeman shrilled. "Why not? Who wouldn't shadow that
+crook? One hundred and eighty seven thousand dollars! Worked us like
+suckers--come-ons--!" he choked up and began to cough. Cummings came in
+where he left off.
+
+"See here, Boyne; we don't want to antagonize you. You've said from the
+first that this crime was a conspiracy--a big thing--directed by brains
+on the outside. Clayte was the tool. Whose tool was he? That's what we
+want to know." And Anson trundled along,
+
+"These men who have been in the war get a contempt for law, there's no
+doubt about it. Captain Gilbert might--"
+
+"No names!" Whipple's hand went up in protest. "No accusations,
+gentlemen, please; Mr. Boyne--this is a dreadful thing. But, really,
+Captain Gilbert's manner was very strange. I might say he--"
+
+"Swaggered," supplied Cummings coolly as the president's voice lapsed.
+
+"Well," Whipple accepted it, "he swaggered in and put it all over us.
+There he was, a man fresh from the deathbed of a suicide father; that
+father's funeral yet to occur. I, personally, hadn't the heart to
+question him or raise objections. I was dazed."
+
+"Dazed," Dykeman snapped up the word and worried it, as a dog worries a
+bone. "Of course, we were all dazed. It was so open, so
+shameless--that's why he got by with it. Making use of his position as
+heir, less than forty eight hours after his father was shot."
+
+"After his father shot himself," Whipple's lowered tone was a plea.
+"After his father shot himself."
+
+"Huh!" snorted Dykeman. "If a man shoots himself, he's been shot,
+hasn't he? Hell! What's the use of whipping the devil round the stump
+that way? Boyne, you can stand with us, or you can fight us."
+
+"Boyne's with us--of course he's with us," Whipple broke in, his words a
+good deal more confident than his tone or the look of his face.
+
+"Well, then," Dykeman ground out, "when our thief of a teller splits
+that one hundred and eighty seven thousand with his man Gilbert--shut
+up, Whipple--shut up! You can't stop me--we're going to know about it.
+We'll get them both then, and send them across. And we'll recover one
+hundred and eighty seven thousand dollars that belongs to the Van Ness
+Avenue bank."
+
+"_Good_ night!" I got to my feet. "This lets me out. I can't deal with
+men who make a scrap of paper of their contracts as quick as you
+gentlemen do."
+
+"Stop, Boyne--you haven't got it all," Dykeman ordered me.
+
+"Yes, wait, Mr. Boyne," Whipple came in. "You haven't a full
+understanding of the enormity of this young man's action. Mr. Cummings
+has something to tell you which, I think, will--"
+
+"Nothing Mr. Cummings can say," I shut them off, "will alter the fact
+that I am employed by Captain Worth Gilbert at your recommendation--at
+your own recommendation--that I have been away more than a week on his
+business, and have not yet had an opportunity to report to him
+personally. When I've seen him, I'll be ready to talk to you."
+
+"You'll talk now or never--" Dykeman's shrill threat was interrupted by
+the shriller bell of the telephone. He yanked the instrument to him,
+and the "Hello!" he cried into it had the snap of an oath. He looked up
+and shoved the thing in my direction. "Calling for you, Boyne," he
+snarled.
+
+There was deathly stillness in the room, so that the whir of the great
+stones in the mill came to us insistently. I stood there, they all
+watching me, and spoke into the transmitter.
+
+"This is Boyne."
+
+"Hold the receiver close to your ear so it won't leak words." The
+warning wasn't needed; I thought I knew the voice. "Press the
+transmitter close to your chest. Listen--don't talk; don't say a word in
+reply to me. I'm in the telephone booth outside. I must see you just as
+soon as I can. I'll be at the Little Italy restaurant--you know, don't
+you? on Fisherman's Wharf--in ten minutes. If you can come, and alone,
+find me there. I'll wait an hour. If you can't come now, you _must_ see
+me this evening after working hours."
+
+"I'll come now," I raised the transmitter to say, and quickly over the
+wire came the answer,
+
+"I told you not to speak--in there! This is Barbara Wallace."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+A LUNCHEON
+
+
+I went away from there.
+
+Looking about me, I had guessed that pretty much every man in the room
+believed that it was Worth Gilbert with whom I had been talking over the
+phone. Dykeman's trailers would be right behind me. Yet to the last,
+Whipple and his crowd were offering me the return trip end of my ticket
+with them; if I would come back and be good, even now, all would be
+forgiven. I sized up the situation briefly and took my plunge, shutting
+the door after me, glancing across the long room to see that Barbara
+Wallace's desk was deserted. Nobody followed me from the room I had just
+left. I walked quickly to the outer door.
+
+Little Pete switched on his engine as I leaped into the car. My "Let her
+go!" wasn't needed to make him throw in his clutch, and give me a flying
+start straight ahead down the broad plank way of the Embarcadero.
+Looking back as we hit the belt-line tracks, I saw a small car with two
+men in it, shoot out from one of the wide doorways of the plant; but as
+we rounded the cliff-like side of Telegraph Hill, my view of them was
+cut off. Things had come for me thick and fast. I felt pretty well
+balled up. But the girl had used secrecy in appointing this interview;
+till I could see further into the thing, it was anyhow a safe bet to
+drop them.
+
+"Pete," I said, "lose that car behind us. Only ten minutes to slip them
+and land me at Fisherman's Wharf. Show me what-for."
+
+He grinned. Between Montgomery and the bay, north of California Street,
+there are many narrow byways, crowded with the heavy traffic of
+hucksters and vegetable men, a section devoted to the commission
+business. Into its congestion Pete dove with a weasel instinct for
+finding the right holes to slip through, the alleys that might be
+navigated in safety; in less than the ten minutes I'd specified, we were
+free again on Columbus Avenue, pursuit lost, and headed back for the
+restaurant on the wharf.
+
+"Boss," Little Pete was hoarse with the excitement he loved, as he laid
+the roadster alongside the Little Italy, "was it on the level, what you
+fed the lawyer guy? Ain't you wise to where Captain Gilbert is? I've saw
+him frequent since you've been gone."
+
+"How many times is 'frequent,' Pete?" I asked. "And when did the last
+'frequent' happen?"
+
+"Twice," sulkily. I'd wounded his pride by not taking him seriously; but
+he added as I jumped down from the machine. "I druv him up on the hill,
+'round the place where you an' him--an' her--went that day."
+
+Pete didn't need to use Barbara Wallace's name. The way he salaamed to
+the pronoun was enough; the swath that girl cut evidently reached from
+the cradle to the grave, with this monkey grinning at one end, and me
+doddering along at the other.
+
+I gave a moment to questioning Pete, found out all he knew, and went
+into the restaurant, wondering what under heaven Barbara Wallace would
+say to me or ask me.
+
+The Little Italy restaurant is not so bad a place for luncheon. If one
+likes any eatables the western seas produce, I heartily recommend it.
+Where fish are unloaded from the smacks by the ton, fish are sure to be
+in evidence, but they are nice, fresh fish, and look good enough to eat.
+And the Little Italy is clean, with white oil-clothed tables and a view
+from its broad windows that down-town restaurants would double their
+rent to get.
+
+Just now it was full of noisy patrons, foreigners, mostly; people too
+busy eating to notice whether I carried my head on my shoulders or under
+my arm.
+
+In a far corner, Barbara Wallace's eyes were on me from the minute I
+came within her sight. She had ordered clams for two, mostly, I thought,
+to defend the privacy of our talk from the interruptions of a waiter,
+and I was hardly in my chair before she burst out,
+
+"Where's Worth? Why wasn't he in that office to defend himself against
+what they're hinting?"
+
+"I suppose," I said dryly, "because he wasn't given an invitation to
+attend. You ought to know why. You work for Dykeman."
+
+"I work for Dykeman?" she repeated after me in a bewildered tone. "I'm
+bookkeeper in the Western Cereal Company's employ, if that's what you
+mean. You understood so from the first."
+
+"You know I didn't," I reproached her hotly. "Do you think I'd have let
+you on the inside of this case if I'd known it was a pipe line direct to
+Dykeman?"
+
+And on the instant I spoke there came to me a remembrance of her saying
+that Sunday morning as we pulled up before the St. Dunstan that she went
+past the place on the street car every day getting to her work at the
+Western Cereal Company. Sloppy of me not to have paid better attention;
+I knew vaguely that Dykeman was in one of the North Beach mills.
+
+"Fifty-fifty, Barbara," I conceded. "I should have known--made it my
+business to learn. And Dykeman has questioned you--"
+
+"He has not!" indignantly. "I don't suppose he knows Worth and I are
+acquainted." I could have smiled at that. There were detectives' reports
+in Dykeman's desk that recorded date, hour and duration of every meeting
+this girl had had with Worth and with myself. Besides, Cummings knew. It
+must have been through Cummings that she learned what was about to take
+place in Dykeman's private office. What had she told Cummings?
+
+I was ready to blurt out the question, when she fumbled in her bag with
+little, shaking hands, drew out and passed to me unopened the envelope
+addressed to Worth, with my detailed report of the Skeels chase.
+
+"I did my best to deliver it," she steadied her voice as she spoke. "He
+wasn't at the Palace. He wasn't at Santa Ysobel. He didn't communicate
+with me here."
+
+My edifice of suspicion of Barbara Wallace crumbled. Cummings had not
+learned through her that I was unsuccessful in the south; nor had she
+spilled a word to him that she shouldn't, or they'd have had the dope on
+where Worth had found that suitcase, and thrown it at me quick.
+
+"Barbara," I said, "will you accept my apologies?"
+
+"Oh, yes," she smiled vaguely. "I don't know what you're apologizing
+for, but it doesn't matter. I hoped you would bring me news of Worth--of
+where he is."
+
+"When did you see him last?"
+
+"On the day of the funeral. I hardly got to speak to him."
+
+Little Pete's news was slightly later. He'd taken Worth up to the Gold
+Nugget and dropped him there. Thursday, Worth was at the Nugget for more
+than an hour. On both occasions, Pete was told to slip the trailers, and
+did. That meant that Worth was working on the Clayte case--or thought he
+was. I told her of this.
+
+"Yes--Oh, yes," she repeated listlessly. "But where is he now? And awful
+things--things like this meeting--coming up."
+
+"What besides this meeting?"
+
+"At Santa Ysobel."
+
+"What? Things that have happened since the boy's gone? You couldn't get
+much idea of the lay of the land when you were down there Wednesday,
+could you?"
+
+"Oh, but I could--I did," earnestly. "Of course it was a large funeral;
+it seemed to me I saw everybody I'd ever known. At a time like that,
+nothing would be said openly, but the drift was all in one direction.
+They couldn't understand Worth, and so nearly every one who spoke of
+him, picked at him, trying to understand him. Mrs. Thornhill's cook was
+already telling that Worth had quarreled with his father and demanded
+money. I shouldn't wonder if by now Santa Ysobel's set the exact hour of
+the quarrel."
+
+"Me for down there as quick as I can," I muttered, and Barbara, facing
+me sympathetically, offered,
+
+"I've a letter from Skeet Thornhill," she groped in her bag again,
+mumbling as women do when they're hunting for a thing, "It came this
+morning.... Mrs. Thornhill's no better--worse, I judge.... Oh, here it
+is," and she pulled out a couple of closely scribbled sheets. "The child
+writes a wild hand," she apologized, as she passed these over.
+
+The flapper dashed into her letter with a sort of incoherent squeal. The
+carnival ball was only four days off. Everybody was already dead on his,
+her or its feet. The decorations they'd planned were enough to kill a
+horse--let alone getting up costumes. "As usual, everything seems to be
+going to the devil here," she went on; "Got a cannery girl elected
+festival queen this time. Ina's furious, of course. Moms had a letter
+from her that singed the envelope; but I sort of enjoy seeing the
+cannery district break in. They've got the money these days."
+
+Nothing here to my purpose. Barbara reached forward and turned the sheet
+for me, and I saw Worth Gilbert's name half way down it.
+
+"Doctor Bowman is an old hell-cat, and I hate him." Skeet made her
+points with a fine simplicity. "Since mother's sick, he comes here every
+day, though what he does but sit and shoot off his mouth and get her all
+worked up is more than I can see. Yesterday I was in the room when he
+was there, and he got to talking about Worth--the meanest, lowest-down,
+hinting talk you ever heard! Said Worth got a lot of money when his
+father died, and I flared up and said what of it? Did he think Mr.
+Gilbert ought to have left it to him? That hit him, because he and Mr.
+Gilbert used to be good friends, and he and Worth aren't. I sassed him,
+and he got so mad that just as he was leaving, he hollered at me that I
+better ask Worth Gilbert where he was at the hour his father was shot.
+Now, what do you know about that? That man is spreading stories. A
+doctor can set them going. He's making his messy old calls on people all
+day, and they, poor fish-hounds, believe everything he says. Though
+mother didn't. After he was gone, she just lay there in her bed and said
+over and over that it was a lie, a foolish, dangerous lie! Poor mumsie,
+she's so nervous that when the grocer's truck had a blow-out down in the
+drive, she nearly went into hysterics--cried and carried on, something
+about it's being 'the shot.' I suppose she meant the one when Mr.
+Gilbert killed himself. Wasn't that queer? Any loud noise of the sort
+sets her off that way. She lies and listens, and listens and mutters to
+herself. It scares me." She closed with, "Please don't break your
+promise to be here through this infernal Bloss. Fes."
+
+"Good advice, that last," I said slowly, as I laid the letter on the
+table, keeping a hand on it. "You'll do that, won't you, Barbara?"
+
+"I had intended to. I was given leave from this afternoon.
+But--well--I'd thought it over, and almost made up my mind to go back to
+my desk."
+
+Barbara Wallace uncertain, halting between two courses of action! What
+did it mean?
+
+"See here, Barbara; this isn't a time for Worth Gilbert's friends to
+slacken on him."
+
+"I hadn't slackened," she said very low. And left it for me to remember
+that Worth apparently had.
+
+"Then you're needed at Santa Ysobel," I urged.
+
+"But you're going, aren't you, Mr. Boyne?"
+
+"Yes. As soon as I can get off. That doesn't keep you from being needed.
+Worth's one of the most efficiently impossible young men I ever tried to
+handle. Maybe he's not any fuller of shocks than any other live wire,
+but he sure does manage to plant them where they'll do the most harm.
+Cummings, Dykeman--and this Dr. Bowman down there; active enemies."
+
+"They can't hurt Worth Gilbert--all of them together!"
+
+"Wait a minute. I'm going to Santa Ysobel to find the murderer of Thomas
+Gilbert. That means a stirring to the depths of that little town. This
+underneath-the-surface combustion will get poked into a flame--she's
+going to burst out, and somebody's going to get burned. We don't want
+that to be Worth, Barbara."
+
+"No. But what can I do--what influence have I with him--" she was
+beginning, but I broke in on her.
+
+"Barbara, you and I are going to find the real murderer, before the
+Cummings-Dykeman bunch discover a way into and out of that bolted study.
+Those people want to see Worth in jail."
+
+There was a long pause while she faced me, the rich color failing a
+little in her cheeks.
+
+"I see," speaking slowly, studying each word. "And as long as we didn't
+find out how to enter and leave the study, we have no way of knowing how
+hard or how easy it's going to be for them to find it out. We--" her
+voice still lower--"we can't tell if they already know it or not."
+
+"Yes we can," I leaned forward to say. "The minute they know
+that--Worth Gilbert will be charged with murder."
+
+I hit hard enough that time to bring blood, but she bled inwardly,
+sitting there staring at me, quite pale, finally faltering,
+
+"Well--I can't stop to think of his having followed Ina Vandeman
+south--on her wedding trip--if he needs me--and I can help--I must--"
+she broke down completely, and I sat there feeling big-footed and
+blundering at this revelation of what it was that had put that clear,
+logical mind of hers off the track, left her confused, groping, just a
+girl, timid, distrustful of her own judgment where her heart was
+concerned.
+
+"Was that it all the time?" I asked. "Well, take it from me, Worth's
+done nothing of the sort. He's been playing detective, not chasing off
+after some other man's bride."
+
+Up came the color to her cheeks, she reached that mite of a hand across
+to shake on the bargain with,
+
+"I'll go straight down this evening. You'll find me in Santa Ysobel when
+you come, Mr. Boyne."
+
+"At the Thornhills'?" It might be handy to have her there; but she shook
+her head, looking a little self-conscious.
+
+"I'm taking that spare room at Sarah Capehart's. Skeet wanted me, and I
+have an invitation from Laura Bowman; but if--well, seeing that this
+investigation is going to cover all that neighborhood, I thought I'd
+rather be with Sarah."
+
+The level-headed little thing! Pete and I had the pleasure of taking her
+out to her home where she had her packing to attend to. On the way she
+spoke of an engagement with Cummings for the theater Saturday night.
+
+"And instead, I suppose I shall be at the carnival ball. Shall I tell
+him that in my note, Mr. Boyne? Is it all right to let him know?"
+
+"It's all right," I assented. "You can bet Cummings is due down there as
+soon as Worth shows up; and that must be soon, now."
+
+"Yes," Barbara agreed. Her face clouded a little. "You noticed in
+Skeet's letter that they're expecting Ina to-morrow."
+
+Poor child--she couldn't get away from it. I patted the hand I had taken
+to say good-by and assured her again,
+
+"Worth Gilbert hasn't been in the south. I wonder at you, Barbara.
+You're so clear headed about everything else--don't you see that that
+would be impossible?"
+
+Then I drove back to my office, to find lying on my desk a telegram from
+the young man, dated at Los Angeles, requesting me to meet him at Santa
+Ysobel the following evening!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+CLEANSING FIRES
+
+
+Wednesday evening I pulled into a different Santa Ysobel: lanterns
+strung across between the buildings, bunting and branches of bloom
+everywhere, streets alive with people milling around, and cars piled
+high with decorative material, crowded with the decorators. The carnival
+of blossoms was only three days ahead.
+
+At Bill Capehart's garage they told me Barbara was out somewhere with
+the crowd; and a few minutes later on Main Street, I met her in a Ford
+truck. Skeet Thornhill was at the wheel, adding to the general risk of
+life and limb on Santa Ysobel streets, carrying a half a dozen or more
+other young things tucked away behind. Both girls shouted at me; they
+were going somewhere for something and would see me later.
+
+Getting down toward the Gilbert place, just beyond the corner, I flushed
+from the shadows of the pepper trees a bird I knew to be one of
+Dykeman's operatives. Watching his carefully careless progress on past
+the Gilbert lawn, then the Vandeman grounds, my eye was led to a pair
+who approached across the green from the direction of the bungalow. No
+mistaking the woman; even at this distance, height and the clean sweep
+of her walk, told me that this was the bride, Ina Vandeman. And the man
+strolling beside her--had he come with her from the house, or joined
+her on the cross-cut path?--could that be Worth Gilbert?
+
+I sat in the roadster and gaped. The evening light--behind them, and dim
+enough at best--made their countenances fairly indistinguishable. At the
+gap in the hedge, they paused, and Mrs. Vandeman reached out, broke off
+a flower to fasten in his buttonhole, looking up into his face, talking
+quickly. Old stuff--but always good reliable old stuff. Then Worth saw
+me and hailed, "Hello, Jerry!" But he did not come to me, and I swung
+out of the machine to the sidewalk.
+
+I heard the sobbing of the Ford truck; it went by, missing my
+runningboard by an inch, stopped at Vandeman's gate and Skeet discharged
+her cargo of clamor to stream across the sidewalk and up toward the
+bungalow. I saw Barbara, in the midst of the moving figures, suddenly
+stop, knew she had seen the two over there, and crossed to her, with a
+cheerful,
+
+"He's here all right."
+
+"Oh, yes," not looking toward the gap in the hedge, or at me. "He came
+on the same train with--with them."
+
+Then some one from the porch yowled reproachfully for her to fetch those
+banners _pronto_, and with a little catching of breath, she ran on up
+the walk.
+
+I turned back. Worth and Ina had moved on. Bronson Vandeman, well
+groomed, dressed as though he had just come in off the golf links, his
+English shoes and loud patterned stockings differentiating him from the
+crude outdoor man of the Coast, had joined them on the Gilbert lawn; his
+genial greeting to me let his bride get by with a mere bow, turning at
+once back to her house by the front walk. But rather to my annoyance,
+Vandeman came bounding up the steps after us. I judged Worth must have
+invited him.
+
+Chung carried my suitcase upstairs, and lingered a minute in my room.
+I'll swear it wasn't merely to get the tip for which he thanked me, but
+with the idea of showing me in some recondite, Oriental fashion that he
+was glad I'd come. This interested me. The people who were glad to have
+me in Santa Ysobel at this time belonged on the clean side of my ledger.
+Then I went downstairs to find Vandeman still in the living room,
+sprawled at ease beside the window, looking round with a display of his
+fine teeth, reaching a hand to pull in the chair Worth set for me.
+
+"Well, Jerry," that young man prompted, indicating by a careless gesture
+the smokers' tray on the table beside me, "there is time before dinner
+for the tale of your exploits. How's my friend Steve?"
+
+I began to select a cigar, and said shortly,
+
+"It's all in reports waiting for you at my office."
+
+"Yes." Worth ignored my irritation. "Tell it. What'd you do down south?"
+
+"Just back from the south yourself, aren't you?" I countered.
+
+"Sure," airily. "But I wasn't there to butt in on your game. Did you
+find that Skeels was Clayte?"
+
+I merely looked over the flame of my match at that small-town society
+man, smiling back at me with a show of polite interest.
+
+"Go on," Worth interpreted. "Vandeman knows all about it. I tried to
+sell him a few shares of stock in the suitcase, so he'll take an
+interest in the game; but he's too much the tight-wad to buy."
+
+"Oh, no," deprecated Vandeman. "Just no gambler; hate to take a chance."
+He ran his fingers through his hair, tossing it up with a gesture I had
+noticed when he came back from the dance at Tait's.
+
+"All right--apology accepted," Worth nodded. "Anyway, you didn't. Well,
+Jerry?"
+
+Vandeman waited a moment with natural curiosity, then, as I still said
+nothing, giving my attention to my smoke, moved reluctantly to rise,
+saying,
+
+"That means I'd better chase along and let you two talk business."
+
+"No. Sit tight," from Worth.
+
+I was mad clear through, and disturbed and apprehensive, too. I managed
+a brief, dry statement of the outcome in the south. Worth hailed it
+with,
+
+"Skeels lurks in the jungle! Life still holds a grain of interest."
+
+"Why the devil couldn't you keep me advised of your movements?" I
+demanded.
+
+"Dykeman's hounds," he grinned. "Had them guessing. They'd have picked
+me up if I'd gone to your office."
+
+"You could have written or wired. They've picked you up anyway," I
+grunted. "One's on the job now. Saw him as I came in."
+
+"Eh? What's that?" cried Vandeman, a man snooping in the shrubbery
+outside getting more attention from him than one dodging pursuit three
+hundred miles away. "What do you mean, hounds?" and when he had heard
+the explanation of Dykeman's trailers, "I call that intolerable!"
+
+"Oh, I don't know." Worth reached over my shoulder for a cigarette.
+"Lose 'em whenever I like."
+
+I wasn't so certain. There were men in my employ he couldn't shake.
+Perhaps those reports in Dykeman's desk might have offered some
+surprises to this cock-sure lad. My exasperation at Worth mounted as I
+listened to Vandeman talking.
+
+"Those bank people should do one thing or another," he gave his opinion.
+"Just because you got gay with them and handed them their payment in the
+suitcase it left in, they've no right to have you watched like a
+criminal. In a small town like this, such a thing will ruin a man's
+standing."
+
+"If he has any standing," Worth laughed.
+
+"See here," Vandeman's smile was persuasive. "Don't let what I said out
+in front embitter you."
+
+"I'll try not to."
+
+"Mr. Boyne"--Vandeman missed the sarcasm--"when I got back to this town
+to-day, what do you suppose I found? The story going around that a
+quarrel with Worth, over money, drove his father to take his own life."
+
+"That's my business here," I nodded. And when he looked his surprise,
+"To stop such stories."
+
+He stared at me, frankly puzzled for a moment, then said,
+
+"Well, of course you know, and I know, that they're scurrilous lies; but
+just how will you stop them?"
+
+I had intended my remark to stand as it was; but Worth filled in the
+pause after Vandeman's question with,
+
+"Jerry's here to get the truth of my father's murder, Bronse."
+
+"Murder?" The mere naked word seemed to shock Vandeman. His sort clothe
+and pad everything--even their speech. "I didn't know any one
+entertained the idea your father was murdered. He couldn't have
+been--not the way it happened."
+
+"Nevertheless we think he was."
+
+"Oh, but Boyne--start a thing like that, and think of the talk it'll
+make! They'll commence at once saying that there was nobody but Worth to
+profit by his father's death."
+
+"Don't worry, Mr. Vandeman." He made me hot. "We know where to dig up
+the motive for the crime."
+
+"You mean the diaries?" Worth's voice sounded unbelievably from beside
+me. "Nothing doing there, Jerry. I've burned them."
+
+I sat and choked down the swears. Yet, looking back on it, I saw plainly
+that Jerry Boyne was the man who deserved kicking. I ought never to have
+left them with him.
+
+"You read them and burned them?" said Vandeman.
+
+"Burned them without reading," Worth's impatient tones corrected.
+
+"Without reading!" the other echoed, startled. Then, after a long pause,
+"Oh--I say--pardon me, but--but ought that to have been done? Surely
+not. Worth--if you'd read your father's diaries for the past few
+years--I don't believe you'd have a doubt that he committed suicide--not
+a doubt."
+
+Worth sat there mute. Myself, I was rather curious as to what Vandeman
+would say; I had read much in those diaries. But when it came, it was
+the same old line of talk one hears when there's a suicide: Gilbert was
+a lonely man; his life hadn't been happy; he cut himself off from people
+too much. Vandeman said that of late he believed he was pretty nearly
+the only intimate the dead man had. This last gave him an interest in
+my eyes. I broke in on his generalities to ask him bluntly why he was so
+certain the death was suicide.
+
+"Mr. Gilbert was breaking up; had been for two years or more. Worth's
+been away; he's not seen it; but I can tell you, Boyne, his father's
+mind was affected."
+
+Worth let that pass, though I could see he wasn't convinced by
+Vandeman's sentimentalities, any more than I was. After the man had
+gone, I turned on Worth sharply, with,
+
+"Why the devil did you tell that pink-tea proposition about your
+dealings with the Van Ness Avenue bank?"
+
+"Safety valve, I guess. I get up too heavy a load of steam, and it's
+easy to blow it off to Vandeman. Told him most of it in the smoker,
+coming up. You'll talk about anything in a smoker."
+
+"Oh, will you?" I said in exasperation. "And you'll burn anything, I
+suppose, that a match'll set fire to?"
+
+"Go easy, Jerry Boyne." His chin dropped to his chest, he sat glowering
+out through the window. "Cleansing fires for that sort of garbage," he
+said finally. "I burned them on the day of his funeral."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+THE TORN PAGE
+
+
+My coming had thrown dinner late; we were barely through with the meal
+and back once more in the living room when the latch of the French
+window rattled, the window itself was pushed open, and a high imperious
+voice proclaimed,
+
+"The Princess of China, calling on Mr. Worth Gilbert."
+
+There stood Ina Vandeman in the gorgeously embroidered robes of a high
+caste Chinese lady, her fair hair covered by a sleek black wig that
+struck out something odd, almost ominous, in the coloring of her skin,
+the very planes of her features. Outside, along the porch, sounded the
+patter of many feet; Skeet wriggled through the narrow frame under her
+tall sister's arm, came scooting into the room to turn and gaze back at
+her.
+
+"Doesn't she look the vamp?"
+
+"Skeet!" Ina had sailed in by this time, and Ernestine followed more
+soberly. "You've been told not to say that."
+
+"I think," the other twin backed her up virtuously, "with poor mother
+sick and all, you might respect her wishes. You know what she said about
+calling Ina a vamp." And Skeet drawled innocently,
+
+"That it hit too near the truth to be funny--wasn't that it?"
+
+Through the open window had followed a half dozen more of the Blossom
+Festival crowd, Barbara and Bronson Vandeman among them. Ina paid no
+attention to any one, standing there, her height increased by the long,
+straight lines of the costume, her bisque doll features given a strange,
+pallid dignity by the raw magnificence of its crusted purple and crimson
+and green and gold embroidery and the dead black wig.
+
+"Isn't it an exquisite thing, Worth?" displaying herself before him.
+"Bronse has a complete Mandarin costume; we lead the grand march as the
+emperor and empress of Mongolia. Don't you think it's a good idea?"
+
+"First rate." Worth spoke in his usual unexcited fashion, and it was
+difficult to say whether he meant the oriental idea or the appearance of
+the girl who stood before him. She came close and offered the cuff of
+one of her sleeves to show him the embroidery, lifting a delicate chin
+to display the jade buttons at the neck.
+
+Barbara over on the other side of the room refused to meet my eye. Mrs.
+Bowman, a big fur piece pulled up around her throat, shivered. I met
+half a dozen Santa Ysobel people whose names I've forgotten. I could see
+that Bronson Vandeman socially took the lead here, that everybody looked
+to him. The room was a babel of talk, when a few minutes later the
+doorbell rang in orthodox fashion, and Chung ushered Cummings in upon
+the general confusion. Some of the bunch knew and spoke to him; others
+didn't and had to be presented; it took the first of his time and
+attention. He only got a chance for one swipe at me, a low-toned,
+sarcastic,
+
+"Made a mistake to duck me, Boyne."
+
+I didn't think it worth while to answer that. Presently I saw him
+standing with Barbara. He was evidently effecting a switch of his
+theater engagement to the ball, for I heard Skeet's,
+
+"Mr. Cummings wants a ticket! He'll need two! Ten dollars, Mr.
+Cummings--five apiece."
+
+"No, no--Skeet," Barbara laughed embarrassedly. "Mr. Cummings was just
+joking. He'll not be here Saturday night."
+
+"I'll come back for it," hand in pocket.
+
+"It's a masquerade--" Barbara hesitated.
+
+"Bring my costume with me from San Francisco."
+
+"I'm not sure--" again Barbara hesitated; Skeet cut in on her,
+
+"Why, Barbie Wallace! It's what you came to Santa Ysobel for--the Bloss.
+Fes. ball. And to think of your getting a perfectly good man, right at
+the last minute this way, and not having to tag on to Bronse and Ina or
+something like that! I think you're the lucky girl," and she clutched
+Cummings' offered payment to stow it with other funds she had collected.
+
+At last they got themselves out of the room and left us alone with
+Cummings. He had carried through his little deal with Barbara as though
+it meant considerable to him, but I knew that his errand with Worth was
+serious, and put in quickly,
+
+"I intended to write or phone you to-morrow, Cummings."
+
+"Well," the lawyer worked his mouth a bit under that bristly mustache
+and looked at Worth, "it might have saved you some embarrassment if
+you'd been warned of my errand here to-night--earlier, that is. I
+suppose Captain Gilbert has told you that I phoned him, when I failed to
+connect with you, that I was coming here--and what I was coming for?"
+
+"I didn't tell Jerry," Worth picked up a cigarette. "Couldn't very well
+tell him what you were coming for. Don't know myself."
+
+The words were blunt; really I think there was no intention to offend,
+only the simple statement of a fact; but I could see Cummings beginning
+to simmer, as he inquired,
+
+"Does that mean you didn't understand my words on the phone, or that you
+understood them and couldn't make out what I meant by them?"
+
+"Little of both," allowed Worth. Cummings stepped close to him and let
+him have it direct:
+
+"I'm here to-night, Captain Gilbert, as executor of your father's
+estate. I have filed the will to-day. I might have done so earlier, but
+when I inventoried this place (you remember, the day before the
+funeral--you were here at the time) I failed to locate a considerable
+portion of your father's estate."
+
+"You failed to locate? All the estate's here; this house, the down-town
+properties. What do you mean, failed to locate?"
+
+"I was not alluding to realty," said Cummings. "It's my duty to locate
+and report to the court the present whereabouts of seventy-five thousand
+dollars worth of stock in the Van Ness Avenue Savings Bank. Can you
+declare to me as executor, where it is? And, if any other person than
+your father placed it in its present whereabouts, are you ready to
+declare to me how and when it came into that person's possession?"
+
+"Quite a lot of words, Cummings; but it doesn't mean anything," Worth
+said casually. "You know where that bank stock is and who put it there."
+
+"Officially, I do not know. Officially, I demand to be told."
+
+"Unofficially, answer it for yourself." Worth turned his back on the
+lawyer to get a match from the mantel.
+
+"Very well. My answer is that I intend to find out how and when that
+bank stock which formed a part of your payment to the Van Ness Avenue
+bank disappeared from this house."
+
+I admit I was scared. Here was the first gun of the coming battle; and I
+was sure this enemy, who stood now looking through half closed eyes at
+the lad's back, would have poisoned gas among his weapons. He had
+emphasized the "_when_." He believed that the stories of Worth's night
+visit to his father were true; that the implied denial by Barbara and
+myself in my office, was false; that Worth had either received the stock
+from his father that Saturday night or taken it unlawfully. I was sure
+that it was the stock certificates which I had seen Worth take from the
+safe-compartment of the sideboard in the small hours of Monday morning;
+a breach of legal form which it would be possible for a friendly
+executor to pass over.
+
+"Cummings, Worth inherits everything under his father's will; what's the
+difference about a small irregularity in taking possession? He--"
+
+"Never explain, Jerry," Worth shut me up. "Your friends don't need it,
+and your enemies won't believe it."
+
+Cummings had stood where he was since the first of the interview. His
+face went strangely livid. There was more in this than a legal fight.
+
+"Yes, Boyne's a fool to try to help your case with explanations,
+Gilbert," he choked out. "I'll see that both of you get a chance to
+answer questions elsewhere--under oath. Good evening." He turned and
+left.
+
+He had the best of it all around. I endeavored for some time to get
+before Worth the dangers of his high-handed defiance of law, order,
+probate judges, and the court's officers, in the person of Allen G.
+Cummings, attorney and his father's executor. He listened, yawned--and
+suggested that it must be nearly bedtime. I gave it up, and we went--I,
+at least, with a sense of danger ahead upon me--to our rooms.
+
+Along in the middle of the night I waked to the knowledge that a
+casement window was pounding somewhere in the house. For a while I lay
+and listened in that helpless, exaggerated resentment one feels at such
+a time. I'd drop off, get nearly to sleep, only to be jerked broad awake
+again by the thudding. Listening carefully I decided that the bothersome
+window was in Worth's room, and finally I got up sense and spunk enough
+to roll out of bed, stick my feet into slippers, and sneak over with the
+intention of locking it.
+
+The room was dimly lighted from the street lamps, far away as they were;
+I made my way across it. Worth's deep, regular breathing was quite
+undisturbed. I had trouble with the catch, went and felt over the bureau
+and found his flashlight, fixed the window by its help, and returning
+it, remembering how near I came to knocking it off the bureau top,
+thought to put it in a drawer which stood half open.
+
+As I aimed it downward, its circle of illumination showed something
+projecting a corner from beneath the swirl of ties and sheaf of
+collars--a book--a red morocco-bound book. Mechanically I nudged the
+stuff away with the torch itself. What lay there turned me cold. It was
+the 1920 diary!
+
+My fingers relaxed; the flashlight fell with a thump, as I let out an
+exclamation of dismay. A sleepy voice inquired from the bed,
+
+"Hi, you Jerry! What you up to in here?"
+
+For answer, I dragged out the book, went over to the bed, and switched
+on the reading lamp there. Worth scowled in the glare, and flung his
+arms up back of his head for a pillow to raise it a bit.
+
+"Yeah," blinking amiably at the volume. "Meant to tell you. Found it
+to-day when I was down in the repair pit at the garage. It had been
+stuck in the drainpipe there."
+
+"And I suppose," I said savagely, "that if I hadn't come onto it now,
+you'd have burned this, too."
+
+"Don't get sore, Jerry," he said. "I saved it," and he yawned.
+
+I had an uncontrollable impulse to have a look at that last entry, which
+would record the bitter final quarrel between this boy and his father.
+No difficulty about finding the spot; as I raised the book in my hands
+it fell open of itself at the place. I looked and what I saw choked
+me--got cross-wise in my throat for a moment so no words could come out.
+I stuck the book under his nose, and held it there till I could whisper.
+
+"Worth, did you do this?"
+
+The last written page was numbered 49; on it was recorded the date,
+March sixth; the weather, cloudy, clearing late in the afternoon; the
+fact that the sun had set red in a cloudless sky; and it ended abruptly
+in the middle of a phrase. The leaf that carried page 50 had been torn
+out; not cut away carefully as were those leaves in the earlier book,
+but ripped loose, grabbed with clutching fingers that scarred and
+twisted the leaf below!
+
+He shoved my hand away and stared at me. For a moment I thought
+everything was over. Certainly I could not be a very appealing sight,
+standing there sweating with fear, my hair all stuck up on my head where
+I'd clawed it, shivering in my nightclothes more from miserable
+nervousness than from cold; but somehow those eyes of his softened; he
+gave me one of the looks that people who care for Worth will go far to
+get, and said quietly,
+
+"You see what you're doing? I told you I didn't steal the book, so that
+clears me in your mind of being the murderer. Now you're after me about
+this torn-out page. If I'd torn it out and stolen it--you and I would
+know what it would mean."
+
+"But, boy--," I began, when he suffered a change of heart.
+
+"Get out of here! Take that damn book and leave."
+
+He heaved himself over in the bed, hunching the covers about his ears,
+turning his back on me. As I crept away, I heard him finish in a sort of
+mutter--as though to himself--
+
+"I'm sorry for you, Jerry Boyne."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+ON THE HILL-TOP
+
+
+Morning dawned on the good ship Jerry Boyne not so dismasted and
+rudderless as you might have thought. I'd carried that 1920 diary to my
+room and, before I slept, read the whole of it. This was the last word
+we had from the dead man; here if anywhere would be found support for
+the suggestions of a weakening mind and suicide.
+
+Nothing of that sort here; on the contrary, Thomas Gilbert was very much
+his clear-headed, unpleasant, tyrannical self to the last stroke of the
+pen. But I came on something to build up a case against Eddie Hughes,
+the chauffeur.
+
+I didn't get much sleep. As soon as I heard Chung moving around, I went
+down, had him give me a cup of coffee, then stationed him on the back
+porch, and walked to the study, shut myself in, and discharged my heavy
+police revolver into a corner of the fireplace; then with the front door
+open, fired again.
+
+"How many shots?" I called to Chung.
+
+"One time shoot."
+
+Worth's head poked from his upstairs window as he shouted,
+
+"What's the excitement down there?"
+
+"Trying my gun. How many times did I fire?"
+
+"Once, you crazy Indian!" and the question of sound-proof walls was
+settled. Nobody heard the shot that killed Gilbert twenty feet away
+from the study if the door was closed. Mrs. Thornhill's ravings, as
+described in Skeet's letter to Barbara, were merely delirium.
+
+I walked out around the driveway to the early morning streets of Santa
+Ysobel. The little town looked as peaceful and innocent as a pan of
+milk. In an hour or so, its ways would be full of people rushing about
+getting ready for the carnival, a curious contrast to my own business,
+sinister, tragic. It seemed to me that two currents moved almost as one,
+the hidden, dark part under--for there must be those in the town who
+knew the crime was murder; the murderer himself must still be here--and
+the foam of noisy gayety and blossoms riding atop. A Blossom Festival;
+the boyhood of the year; and I was in the midst of it, hunting a
+murderer!
+
+An hour later I talked to Barbara in the stuffy little front room at
+Capehart's, brow-beaten by the noise of Sarah getting breakfast on the
+other side of the thin board partition; more disconcerted by the girl's
+manner of receiving the information of how I had found the 1920 diary
+hidden in Worth's bureau drawer. There was a swift, very personal anger
+at me. I had to clear myself instantly and thoroughly of any suspicion
+of believing for a moment that Worth himself had stolen or mutilated the
+book, protesting,
+
+"I don't--I don't! Listen, Barbara--be reasonable!"
+
+"That means 'Barbara, be scared!' And I won't. When they're scared,
+people make mistakes."
+
+"You might see differently if you'd been there last night when Cummings
+made his charge against Worth. That seventy two thousand dollars Worth
+carried up to the city Monday morning, he had taken from his father's
+safe the night before."
+
+For a minute she just looked at me, and not even Worth Gilbert's
+dare-devil eyes ever held a more inclusively defiant light than those
+big, soft, dark ones of hers.
+
+"Well--wasn't it his?"
+
+"All right," I said shortly. "I'm not here to talk of Worth's financial
+methods; they're scheduled to get him into trouble; but let that pass.
+Look through this book and you'll see who it is I'm after."
+
+She had already opened the volume, and began to glance along the pages.
+She made a motion for me to wait. I leaned back in my chair, and it was
+only a few moments later that she looked up to say,
+
+"Don't make the arrest, Mr. Boyne. You have nothing here against
+Eddie--for murder."
+
+Because I doubted myself, I began to scold, winding up,
+
+"All the same, if that gink hasn't jumped town, I'll arrest him."
+
+"It would be a good deal more logical to arrest him if he had jumped the
+town," Barbara reminded me. "If you really want to see him, Mr. Boyne,
+you'll find him at the garage around on the highway. He's working for
+Bill."
+
+That was a set-back. A fleeing Eddie Hughes might have been hopeful; an
+Eddie Hughes who gave his employer back-talk, got himself fired, and
+then settled down within hand-reach, was not so good a bet. Barbara saw
+how it hit me, and offered a suggestion.
+
+"Mr. Boyne, Worth and I are taking a hike out to San Leandro canyon this
+afternoon to get ferns for the decorating committee. Suppose you come
+along--anyhow, a part of the way--and have a quiet talk, all alone with
+us. Don't do anything until you have consulted Worth."
+
+"All right--I'll go you," I assented, and half past two saw the three of
+us, Worth in corduroys and puttees, Barbara with high boots and short,
+dust-brown skirt, tramping out past the homes of people toward the open
+country. At the Vandeman place Skeet's truck was out in front, piled
+with folding chairs, frames, light lumber, and a lot of decorative
+stuff. The tall Chinaman came from the house with another load.
+
+"You Barbie Wallace!" the flapper howled. "Aren't you ashamed to be
+walking off with Worth and Mr. Boyne both, and good men scarce as hen's
+teeth in Santa Ysobel to-day!"
+
+"I'm not walking off with them--they're walking off with me," Barbara
+laughed at her.
+
+"Shameless one!" Skeet drawled. "I see you let Mr. Cummings have a day
+off--aren't you the kind little boss to 'em!"
+
+I just raised my brows at Barbara, and she explained a bit hastily,
+
+"Skeet thinks she has to be silly over the fact that Mr. Cummings has
+gone up to town, I suppose." She added with fine indifference, "He'll be
+back in the morning."
+
+"You bet he'll be back in the morning," Worth assured the world.
+
+"Now what does he mean by that, Mr. Boyne?"
+
+"He means Cummings is out after him."
+
+"I don't," Worth contradicted me personally. "I mean he's after Bobs.
+She knows it. Look at her."
+
+She glanced up at me from under her hat-brim, all the stars out in those
+shadowy pools that were her eyes. The walk had brought sumptuous color
+to her cheeks, where the two extra deep dimples began to show.
+
+"You both may think," she began with a sobriety that belied the dimples
+and shining eyes, "looking on from the outside, that Mr. Cummings has an
+idea of, as Skeet would say, 'rushing' me; but when we're alone
+together, about all he talks of is Worth."
+
+"Bad sign," Worth flung over a shoulder that he pushed a little in
+advance of us. "Takes the old fellows that way. Their notion of falling
+for a girl is to fight all the other Johnnies in sight. Guess you've got
+him going, Bobs."
+
+I walked along, chewing over the matter. She'd estimated Cummings
+fairly, as she did most things that she turned that clear mind of hers
+on; but her lack of vanity kept her from realizing, as I did, that he
+was in the way to become a dangerous personal enemy to Worth. His
+self-interest, she thought, would eventually swing him to Worth's side.
+She didn't as yet perceive that a motive more powerful than
+self-interest had hold of him now.
+
+"Why, Mr. Boyne," she answered as though I'd been speaking my thoughts
+aloud, "I've known Mr. Cummings for years and years. He never--"
+
+"You said a mouthful there, Bobs." Worth halted, grinning, to interrupt
+her. "He never--none whatever. But he has now."
+
+"He hasn't."
+
+"Leave it to Jerry. Jerry saw him that first night in at Tait's; then
+afterward, in the office."
+
+"Oh, come on!" Barbara started ahead impatiently. "What difference would
+it make."
+
+They went on ahead of me, scrapping briskly, as a boy and girl do who
+have grown up together. I stumped along after and reflected on the folly
+of mankind in general, and that of Allen G. Cummings in particular. That
+careful, mature bachelor had seen this lustrous young creature blossom
+to her present perfection; he'd no doubt offered her safe and sane
+attention, when she came to live in San Francisco where they had friends
+in common. But it had needed Worth Gilbert's appearance on the scene to
+wake him up to his own real feeling. Forty-five on the chase of nimble
+sweet and twenty; Cummings was in for sore feet and humiliating
+tumbles--and we were in for the worst he could do to us. I sighed. Worth
+had more than one way of making enemies, it seemed.
+
+At last we came in sight of the country club upon its rise of ground
+overlooking the golf links. The low, brown clubhouse, built bungalow
+fashion, with a long front gallery and gravel sweep, was swarming with
+people--the decorators. Motors came and went. The grounds were being
+strung with paper lanterns. We skirted these, and the links itself where
+there were two or three players, obstinate, defiant old men who would
+have their game in spite of forty blossom festivals--climbed a fence,
+and crossed the grass up to the crest of a little round hill, halting
+there for the view. It wasn't high, but standing free as it did, it
+commanded pretty nearly the entire Santa Ysobel district. Massed acres
+of pink and white, the great orchards ran one into the other without
+break for miles. The lanes between the trunks, diamonded like a
+harlequin's robe in mathematical primness, were newly turned furrows of
+rich, black soil, against which the gray or, sometimes, whitewashed
+trunks of apricot, peach and plum trees gave contrast. Then the cap of
+glorious blossoms, meeting overhead in the older orchards, with a warm
+blue sky above and puffs of clouds that matched the pure white of the
+plum trees' bloom.
+
+The spot suited me well; we had left the town behind us; here neither
+Dykeman's spotter nor any one he hired to help him could get within
+listening distance, I dropped down on a bank; Worth and Barbara disposed
+themselves, he sprawling his length, she sitting cross-legged, just
+below him.
+
+It wasn't easy to make a beginning. I knew it wouldn't do me any
+particular good with Worth to dwell on his danger. But I finally managed
+to lay fairly before them my case against Eddie Hughes, and I must say
+that, as I told it, it sounded pretty strong.
+
+I didn't want to put too much stress on having found my evidence in the
+diaries; I knew Worth was as obstinate as a mule, and having said that
+he would not stand for any one being prosecuted on their evidence, he'd
+stick to it till the skies fell. I called on my memory of those pages,
+now unfortunately ashes and not get-atable, and explained that Worth's
+father hired Hughes directly after a jail-break at San Jose had roused
+the whole country. Three of the four escapes were rounded up in the
+course of a few days, but the fourth--known to us as Eddie Hughes--was
+safe in Thomas Gilbert's garage, working there as chauffeur, having been
+employed without recommendation on the strength of what he could do.
+
+"And the low wages he was willing to take," Worth put in drily. "Old
+stuff, Jerry. I wasn't sure till you spilled it just now that my father
+was wise to it. But I knew. What you getting at?"
+
+"Just this. When I talked to Hughes that first night I came down here
+with you, while we all supposed the death a suicide, he couldn't keep
+his resentment against your father, his hatred of him, from boiling over
+every time he was mentioned."
+
+"Get on," said Worth wearily. "Father hired a jail-bird that came cheap.
+Probably put it to himself that he was giving the man a chance to go
+straight."
+
+I glanced up. This was just about what I remembered Thomas Gilbert to
+have said in the entry that told of the hiring of Eddie. Worth nodded
+grimly at my startled face.
+
+"Eddie's gone straight since then," he filled in. "That is, he's kept
+out of jail, which is going straight for Eddie. He'd certainly hate the
+man who held him as he's been held for five years. Not motive enough for
+murder though."
+
+"There's more. The 1920 diary you gave me last night tells when and why
+the extra bolts were put on the study doors. Your father had been
+missing liquor and cigars and believed Hughes was taking them."
+
+"Pilfering!" with an expression of distaste. "That doesn't--"
+
+"Hold on!" I stopped him. "On February twelfth your father left money,
+marked coin and paper money, as if by accident, on the top of the liquor
+cabinet; not exposed, but dropped in under the edge of the big ash tray
+so it might look as though it were forgotten--in a sense, lost there."
+
+"How much?" came the quick question.
+
+"Fifty one dollars." He looked around at me.
+
+"Just one dollar above the limit of petty larceny; a hundred cents added
+to put it in the felony class that meant state's prison. So he could
+have sent Eddie to the pen,--eh? I guess you've got a motive there,
+Boyne."
+
+"Well--er--" I squirmed over my statement, blurting out finally. "Hughes
+didn't take the money."
+
+"Knew it was a trap," Worth's laugh was bitter. "And hated the man who
+cold-bloodedly set it to catch him. If he didn't take it, don't you
+think he counted it?"
+
+"Worth," I said sharply. "Your father put those bolts on--and continued
+to find that he was being robbed. He was mad about it. Any man would be.
+Say what you will, no one likes to find that persons in his employ are
+stealing from him. The aggravating thing was that he couldn't bring it
+home to Hughes, though he was sure of the fact."
+
+"So he went back to what he had known of Eddie when he hired him? After
+profiting by it for five years, he was going to rake that up?"
+
+"He was,"--a bit nettled--"and well within his rights to do so. Three
+weeks before he was shot, he wrote that he'd started the inquiry. There
+was no further mention of the matter in the book as it stands, but don't
+you see that the result of the inquiry must have been on that torn-out
+last page? Eddie's Saturday night alibi won't hold water. His cannery
+girl, of course, will swear he was with her; but there's no
+corroborating testimony. No one saw them together from nine till
+twelve."
+
+Dead silence dropped on us, with the white clouds standing like
+witnesses in the blue above, the wind bringing now and again on its
+scented wings little faint echoes of the noise down at the clubhouse.
+
+"What more do you want?" Both young faces were set against me, cold and
+hostile. "Here was motive, opportunity, a suspect capable of the deed.
+My theory is that Mr. Gilbert came in on Hughes, caught him in the act
+of stealing from the cabinet. Hughes jumped for the pistol over the
+fireplace, got it, fired the fatal shot, and placed the dead man's
+fingers about the butt of the gun. Then he picked up the diary lying on
+the table, tore out the leaf about himself, and poked the rest of the
+book down the drain pipe."
+
+"And the shot?" Worth resisted me. "Why didn't the shot bring Chung on
+the run?"
+
+"Because he couldn't hear it. Nobody'd hear it ten paces away. That's
+what I was trying out this morning. You told me I'd fired once. Well, I
+fired twice; once with the door shut, and neither you nor Chung heard
+it; afterward, with the door open--the report you registered."
+
+"The blotter--and it had been used on that last page--showed no words to
+strengthen this theory of yours," said Barbara as confidently as though
+the little blue square had been clear print, instead of broken blurring.
+Perhaps it was clear to her. I was glad I'd given it a thorough
+reexamination the night before.
+
+"I think it does," I struggled against the tide, manfully, buoying
+myself up with the tracing of the blotter. "Here's the word 'demanded,'
+reasonably connected with the affair. The letters 'ller' may be the last
+end of 'caller,' or possibly 'fuller'; I noticed Gilbert spoke in a
+former entry of the bottle in the cabinet and Hughes snitching from it,
+and used the word 'fuller.' Here's the word 'Avenue,' complete, and
+Lizzie Watkins, Hughes' girl, lives on Myrtle Avenue."
+
+The silence after that was fairly derisive. Worth broke it with an
+impatient,
+
+"And the fact of the bolted doors throws all that stuff out."
+
+"Well," I grunted, "Barbara deduced the slipping of some bolts to please
+you once--why can't she again?"
+
+"Mr. Boyne," the girl spoke quickly, "it wouldn't help you a bit to be
+assured that Eddie Hughes could enter the study and leave it bolted
+behind him when he went out--help you to the truth, I mean. These facts
+you've gathered are all wabbly; they'll never in the world fit in trim
+and true. They're hardly facts at all. They're partial facts."
+
+"Wouldn't help me?" I ejaculated. "It would cinch a case against him.
+We've got to have some one in jail, and that shortly. We're forced to."
+
+"Forced?" Worth had sat up a little and reached far forward for a stone
+that lay among the weeds down there. He spoke to me sidewise with a
+challenging flicker of the eye. Barbara kept her lips tight shut.
+
+"I need a prisoner," trying to correct my error; then burst out, "My
+Lord, children! An arrest isn't going to hurt a man like Hughes,--even
+if he proves to be innocent. It's an old story to him. Barbara, you said
+yourself that the man who stole the 1920 diary was the murderer."
+
+"But I didn't say Eddie Hughes stole it." Her tone was significant, and
+it checked me. I couldn't remember what the deuce she had said that
+night. There recurred to me her mimicry of a woman's voice--Laura
+Bowman's as I believed--to determine through Chung who Thomas Gilbert's
+feminine visitor had been. Should that clue have been followed up before
+I moved on Eddie Hughes? Even as I got to this point, I heard Worth,
+punctuating his remarks with the whang of his rock on the bit of twig he
+was pounding to pieces,
+
+"Boyne, I won't stand for any arrest being made except in all
+sincerity--the person you honestly believe to be the criminal."
+
+"Does that mean you forbid me, in so many words, to proceed against
+Hughes on what I've got?"
+
+"It does," Worth said. "You're not convinced yourself. Leave it alone."
+
+"'Nough said!" I jumped to my feet. If he wouldn't let me lay hands on
+Hughes--there was nothing to do but go after the next one. "You two run
+along. Get your ferns. There's a man at the club here I have to see."
+
+Barbara was afoot instantly; Worth lay looking at her for a moment,
+then heaved himself up, shook his shoulders, and stood beside her.
+
+"Race you to the foot of the hill," she flashed up at him.
+
+"You're on," he chuckled. "I'll give you a running start--to the tree
+down there--and beat you."
+
+They were off. She ran like a deer. Worth got away as though he was in
+earnest. He caught her up just at the finish; I couldn't see which won;
+but they walked a few rods hand in hand.
+
+Something swelled in my throat as I watched them away: life's
+springtime--and the year's; boy and girl running, like kids that had
+never known a fear or a mortal burden, over an earth greener than any
+other, because its time of verdure is brief, dreaming already of the
+golden-tan of California midsummer, under boughs where tree blooms made
+all the air sweet.
+
+For sake of the boy and the girl who didn't know enough to take care of
+their own happiness, I wheeled and galloped in the direction of the
+country club.
+
+There is an institution known--and respected--in police circles as the
+Holy Scare. I was determined to make use of it. I'd throw a holy scare
+into a man I knew, and see what came out.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+AT THE COUNTRY CLUB
+
+
+The country club, when I walked up its lawn, was noisy with the
+hammering and jawing of its decoration committee. Out in the glass
+belvedere, like superior goods on display, taking it easy while every
+one else worked, I saw a group of young matrons of the smart set, Ina
+Vandeman among them, drinking tea. The open play she was making at Worth
+troubled me a little. He was the silent kind that keeps you guessing.
+She'd landed him once; what was to hinder her being successful with the
+same tactics--whatever they'd been--a second time?
+
+Then I saw Edwards' car was still out in the big, crescent driveway,
+showing by the drift of twigs and petals on its running board that it
+had been used to bring in tree blooms from his ranch; the man himself
+crossed the veranda, and I hailed,
+
+"Any place inside where you and I could have a private word together?"
+
+"I--I think so, Boyne," he hesitated. "Come on back here."
+
+He led me straight across the big assembly room which was being trimmed
+for the ball. From the top of a stepladder, Skeet Thornhill yelled to
+us,
+
+"Where you two going? Come back here, and get on the job."
+
+She had a dozen noisy assistants. I waved at her from the further door
+as we ducked. Strange that honest, sound little thing should be own
+sister to the doll-faced vamp out there in the showcase.
+
+Edwards made for a little writing room at the end of a corridor. I
+followed his long, nervous stride. If the man had been goaded to the
+shooting of Thomas Gilbert, it would have been an act of passion, and by
+passion he would betray himself. When I had him alone, the door shut, I
+went to it, told him we knew the death was murder, not suicide, and that
+the crime had been committed early Saturday night. Before I could
+connect him with it, he broke in on me,
+
+"Is Worth suspected?"
+
+"Not by me," I said. "And by God, not by you, Edwards! You know better
+than that."
+
+I held his eye, but read nothing beyond what might have been the flare
+of quick anger for the boy's sake.
+
+"Who then?" he said. "Who's dared to lisp a word like that? That hound
+Cummings--chasing around Santa Ysobel with Bowman--is that where it
+comes from? I told Worth the fellow was knifing him in the back." He
+began to stride up and down the room. "The boy's got other
+friends--that'll go their length for him. I'm with him till hell freezes
+over. You can count on me--"
+
+"Exactly what I wanted to find out," I cut in, so significantly that he
+whirled at the end of his beat and stared.
+
+"Meaning?"
+
+"Meaning you are the one man who could clear Worth Gilbert of all
+suspicion."
+
+"_What do you know?_"
+
+The big voice had come down to a mere whisper. Plenty of passion now--a
+passion of terror. I spoke quickly.
+
+"We know you were in the study that night, with a companion," and I
+piled out the worst of his affair, as I'd read it in the diaries,
+winding up,
+
+"Plain what brought you there. Quarrel? Motive? Don't need to look any
+further."
+
+Before I was done Jim Edwards had groped over to a chair and slumped
+into it. A queer, toneless voice asked,
+
+"Worth sent you to me--a detective--with this?"
+
+"No," I said. "I'm acting on my own."
+
+"And against his will," it came back instantly.
+
+"What of it?" I demanded. "Are you the coward to take advantage of his
+sense of honor?--to let his generosity cost him his life?"
+
+"His life." That landed. Watching, I saw the struggle that tore him. He
+jumped up and started toward me; I hadn't much doubt that I was now
+going to hear a plea for mercy--a confession, of sorts--as he stopped,
+dropped his head, and stood scowling at the floor.
+
+"Talk," I said. "Spill it. Now's your time."
+
+He raised his eyes to mine and spoke suddenly.
+
+"Boyne--I have nothing to say."
+
+"And Worth Gilbert can hang and be damned to him--is that it?" I took
+another step toward him. "No, Edwards, that 'nothing to say' stuff won't
+go in a court of law. It won't get you anywhere."
+
+"They'll never in the world--try Worth for--that killing."
+
+"I'm expecting his arrest any hour."
+
+"A trial! Those cursed diaries of Tom's brought into court--My God! I
+believe if I'd known he'd written things like that, I could have killed
+him for it!"
+
+I stared. He had forgotten me. But at this speech I mentally dropped him
+for the moment, and fastened my suspicions on the woman who went with
+him to the study.
+
+"All right," I said brutally. "You didn't kill Thomas Gilbert. But you
+took Mrs. Bowman to the study that night to have it out with him, and
+get six pages from the 1916 book. She got 'em--and you know what she had
+to do to get 'em."
+
+"Hold on, Boyne!" he said sternly. "Don't you talk like that to me."
+
+"Well," I said, "Mrs. Bowman was there--after those diary leaves. I
+heard Barbara Wallace imitate her voice--and Chung recognized the
+imitation. You know--that night at the study--the first night."
+
+He took a bewildered moment or two for thought, then broke out,
+
+"It wasn't Laura's voice Barbara imitated. Did she say so?"
+
+"No, but she imitated the voice of a woman who came weeping to get those
+pages from the diary; and who else would that be? Who else would want
+them?"
+
+"You're off the track, Boyne," he drew a great, shuddering sigh of
+relief. "Tom was always playing the tyrant to those about him; no doubt
+some woman did come crying for that stuff--but it wasn't Laura."
+
+"By Heaven!" I exclaimed as I looked at him. "You know who it was! You
+recognized the voice that night--but the woman isn't one you're
+interested in."
+
+"I'm interested in all women, so far as their getting a decent show in
+the world is concerned," he maintained sturdily. "I'd go as far as any
+man to defend the good name of a woman--whether I thought much of her or
+not."
+
+"This other woman," I argued, not any too keen on such a job myself,
+"hasn't she got some man to speak for her?"
+
+Edwards looked at me innocently.
+
+"She didn't have, then--" he began, and I finished for him,
+
+"But she has now. I've got it!" As I jumped up and hurried to the door,
+his eyes followed me in wonder. There I turned with, "Stay right where
+you are. I'll be back in a minute," ducked out into the hall and
+signaled a passing messenger, then stepped quickly back into the writing
+room and said, "I've sent for Bronson Vandeman."
+
+He settled deeper in his chair with,
+
+"I'll stay and see it out. If you get anything from Vandeman, I miss my
+guess."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+
+A MATTER OF TASTE
+
+
+Upon our few moments of strained waiting, Vandeman breezed in, full of
+apologies for his shirtsleeves. I remember noticing the monogram worked
+on the left silken arm, the fit and swing of immaculate trousers, as
+smoothly modeled to the hip as a girl's gown; his ever smiling face; the
+slightly exaggerated way he wiped fingers already clean on a
+handkerchief pulled from a rear pocket. He was the only unconstrained
+person in the room; he hardly looked surprised; his glance was merely
+inquiring. Edwards apparently couldn't stand it. He jumped up and began
+his characteristic pacing of one end of the constricted place, jerking
+out as he walked,
+
+"Bronse, it's my fault that Boyne sent for you. He's working on this
+trouble of Worth's, you know. He's had me in here, grilling me, shaking
+me over hell; and something I said--God knows why--sent him after you."
+
+"Trouble of Worth's!" Vandeman had been about to sit; his half bent
+knees straightened out again; he stood beside the chair and spoke
+irritably. "Told you, Boyne, if you meddled with that coroner's verdict
+you'd get your employer in the devil of a tight place. Nobody had any
+reason for wanting Worth's father out of the way--except Worth, himself.
+Frankly, I think you're wrong. But everything that I can do--of
+course--"
+
+"All right," I said, letting it fly at him. "Where was your wife from
+seven to half past nine on the evening of Gilbert's murder?"
+
+Back went his head; out flashed all the fine teeth; the man laughed in
+my face.
+
+"Excuse me, Mr. Boyne. I understand that this is serious--nothing funny
+about it--but really, you know, recalling the date, what you've said is
+amusing. My dear man," he went on as I stared at him, "please remember,
+yourself, where Ina was on that particular evening."
+
+"The wedding and reception were done with by seven o'clock," I objected.
+This ground was familiar with me. I'd been over it in considering what
+opportunity Laura Bowman would have had for a call on Thomas Gilbert at
+the required hour. If she could slip away for it, why not Ina Vandeman?
+As though he read my thoughts and answered them, Vandeman filled in,
+
+"A bride, you know, is dead certain to have at least half a dozen
+persons with her every minute of the time until she leaves the house on
+her wedding trip. Ina did, I'm sure. We'll just call her in, and she'll
+give you their names."
+
+He was up and starting to bring her; I stopped him.
+
+"We'll not bother with those names just now. I'd rather have you--or
+Mrs. Vandeman--tell me what you suppose would be the entry in Thomas
+Gilbert's diary for May 31 and June 1, 1916. I have already identified
+it as the date on which the Bowmans first moved into the Wallace house.
+I think Mr. Edwards knows something more, but he's not so communicative
+as you promise to be."
+
+He looked as if he wished he hadn't been so liberal with his assurances.
+I saw him glance half sulkily at Edwards, as he exclaimed,
+
+"But those diaries are burned--they're burned. Worth told us the other
+night that he burned them without reading."
+
+At the words, Edwards stopped stock-still, something almost humorous at
+the back of the suffering gaze he fastened on my face. I met it
+steadily, then answered Vandeman,
+
+"Doesn't make any difference to anybody that those books are burned. I'd
+read them; I know what was in them; and I know that three leaves--six
+pages--covering the entries of May 31 and June 1, 1916, were cut out."
+
+"But what the deuce, Boyne?" Vandeman wrinkled a smooth brow. "What
+would some leaves gone from Mr. Gilbert's diary four years ago have to
+do with us here to-day--or even with his recent death?"
+
+"Pardon me," I said shortly. "The matter's not as old as that. True, the
+stuff was written four years ago; it recorded happenings on those dates;
+but the ink that was used in marking out a run-over on the next
+following page was fresh. Anyhow, Mr. Vandeman, we know that a woman
+came weeping to Mr. Gilbert on the very night of his death, only a short
+time before his death--as nearly as medical science can determine
+that--and we believe that she came after those leaves out of the diary,
+and got them--whatever she had to do to secure them."
+
+I was struck with the difference in the way these two men took inquiry.
+Edwards had writhed, changed color, started to speak and caught himself
+back, showed all the agony of a clumsy criminal who dreads the probing
+that may give him away: temperament; the rotten spot in his affairs.
+Vandeman, younger, not entangled with an unhappy married woman, sat
+looking me in the eye, still smiling. The blow I had to deal him would
+be harder. It concerned his bride; but he'd take punishment well. I
+proceeded to let him have it.
+
+"I can see that Mr. Edwards has an idea what the entries on those pages
+covered. He has inadvertently shown me that your wife was the woman who
+came and got them from Thomas Gilbert on the night he was murdered."
+
+At that he turned on Edwards, and Edwards answered the look with,
+
+"I didn't. On my honor, Bronse, I never mentioned your name or Ina's.
+The Chinaman told him that--about some woman coming that evening--"
+
+"Mr. Vandeman," I broke in, "there's no use beating about the bush.
+Chung recognized your wife's voice. She was the woman who came weeping
+to get those diary leaves."
+
+He took that with astonishing quietness, and,
+
+"Suppose you were shown that she wasn't out of her mother's house?"
+
+"Wouldn't stop me. Allow that her alibi's perfect. Yet you men have
+something. There's something here I ought to know."
+
+"Something you'll never find out from me," Jim Edwards' deep voice was
+full of defiance. "Bronse, I owe you an apology; but you can depend on
+me to keep my mouth shut."
+
+After a minute's consideration Vandeman said,
+
+"I don't know why we should any of us keep our mouths shut."
+
+Jim Edwards looked utterly bewildered as the man sat there, thinking the
+thing over, glanced up pleasantly at me and suggested,
+
+"Edwards has a little different slant on this from me. I don't know why
+I shouldn't state to you exactly what happened--right there in Gilbert's
+study on the date you mentioned."
+
+"Oh, there did something unusual happen; and you've just remembered it."
+
+"There did something unusual happen, and I've just remembered it, aided
+thereto by your questions and Edwards' queer looks. Cheer up, old man;
+we haven't all got your southern chivalry. From a plain, commonsense
+point of view, what I have to tell is not in the least to my wife's
+discredit. In fact, I'm proud of her all the way through."
+
+Jim Edwards came suddenly and nervously to his feet, strode to the
+further corner of the room and sat down at as great a distance from
+Vandeman as its dimensions would permit. He turned his face to the small
+window there, and through all that Vandeman said, kept up a steady,
+maddening tattoo with his fingernails on the sill.
+
+"This has to do with what I told you the first night I ever talked with
+you, Boyne. You threw doubt on Thomas Gilbert's death being suicide. I
+gave as a reason for my belief that it was, a knowledge and conviction
+that the man's mind was unhinged."
+
+Edwards' tattoo at the window ceased for a minute. He stared, startled,
+at the speaker, then went back to it, and Vandeman proceeded,
+
+"I'm not telling Jim Edwards anything he doesn't know, and what I say to
+you, Boyne, that's discreditable to the dead, I can't avoid. Here it is:
+on the evening of June first, 1916, I had dinner alone at home. You'll
+find, if you look at an old calendar, that it falls on a Sunday. Jim
+Edwards had dined informally at the Thornhills'. As he told it to me
+later, they were all sitting out on the side porch after dinner, and
+nobody noticed that Ina wasn't with them until they heard cries coming
+from somewhere over in the direction of the Gilbert place. At my house,
+I'd heard it, and we both ran for the garage, where the screams were
+repeated again and again. We got there about the same time, found the
+disturbance was in the study, and Edwards who was ahead of me rushed up
+and hammered on its door."
+
+Again Jim Edwards stopped the nervous drumming of his fingers on the
+window-sill while he stared at the younger man as at some prodigy of
+nature. Finally he seemed unable to hold in any longer.
+
+"Hammered on the door!" he repeated. "If you're going to turn out the
+whole damn' thing to Boyne, tell it straight; door was open; we couldn't
+have heard a yip out of Ina if it hadn't been. Tom there in full sight,
+sitting in his desk chair, cool as a cucumber, letting her scream."
+
+"I'm telling this," Vandeman snapped. "Gilbert looked to me like an
+insane man. Jim, you're crazy as he was, to say anything else. Never
+supposed for a minute you thought otherwise--that poor girl there, dazed
+with fright, backed as far away from him as she could get, hair flying,
+eyes wild."
+
+I looked from one to the other. What Edwards had said of the cold,
+contemptuous old man; what Vandeman told of the screaming girl; no
+answer to such a proposition of course but an attempted frame-up. To let
+the bridegroom get by would best serve my purpose.
+
+"All right, gentlemen," I said. "And now could you tell me what action
+you took, on this state of affairs?"
+
+"Action?" Vandeman gave me an uneasy look. "What was there to do? Told
+you I thought the man was crazy."
+
+"And you, Edwards?"
+
+"Let it go as Bronse says. I cut back to Mrs. Thornhill's, scouting to
+see what the chance was for getting Ina in without the family knowing
+anything."
+
+"That's right," Vandeman said. "I stayed to fetch her. She was fine. To
+the last, she let Gilbert save his face--actually send her home as
+though she were the one to blame. Right then I knew I loved her--wanted
+her for my wife. On the way home, I asked her and was accepted."
+
+"In spite of the fact that she was engaged to Worth Gilbert?"
+
+"Boyne," he said impatiently, "what's the matter with you? Haven't I
+made you understand what happened there at the study? She had to break
+off with the son of a man like that. Ina Thornhill couldn't marry into
+such a breed."
+
+"Slow up, Vandeman!" Edwards' tone was soft, but when I looked at him, I
+saw a tawny spark in his black eyes. Vandeman fronted him with the
+flamboyant embroidered monogram on his shirt sleeve, the carefully
+careless tie, the utterly good clothes, and, most of all, at the moment,
+the smug satisfaction in his face of social and human security. I
+thought of what that Frenchman says about there being nothing so
+enjoyable to us as the troubles of our friends. "Needn't think you can
+put it all over the boy when he's not here to defend himself--jump on
+him because he's down! Tell that your wife discarded him--cast him
+off--for disgraceful reasons! Damnitall! You and I both heard Tom giving
+her her orders to break with his son, she sniffling and hunting hairpins
+over the floor and promising that she would."
+
+"Cut it out!" yelled Vandeman, as though some one had pinched him. "I
+saw nothing of the sort. I heard nothing of the sort. Neither did you."
+
+I think they had forgotten me, and that they remembered at about the
+same instant that they were talking before a detective. They both
+turned, mum and startled looking, Edwards to his window, Vandeman to a
+nervous brushing of his trouser edges, from which he looked up,
+inquiring doubtfully,
+
+"What next, Boyne? Jim's excited; but you understand that there's no
+animus; and my wife and I are entirely at your disposal in this matter."
+
+"Thank you," I said.
+
+"Would you like to talk to her?"
+
+"I would."
+
+"When?"
+
+"Now."
+
+"Where?"
+
+"Here--or let the lady say."
+
+Vandeman gave me a queer look and went out. When he was gone, I found
+Jim Edwards scrabbling for his hat where it had dropped over behind the
+desk. I put my back against the door and asked,
+
+"Is Bronson Vandeman a fatuous fool; or does he take me for one?"
+
+"Some men defend their women one way, and some another. Let me out of
+this, Boyne, before that girl gets here."
+
+"She won't come in a hurry," I smiled. "Her husband's pretty free with
+his promises; but more than likely I'll have to go after her if I want
+her."
+
+"Well?" he looked at me uncomfortably.
+
+"Blackmail's a crime, you know, Edwards. A woman capable of it, might be
+capable of murder."
+
+"You've got the wrong word there, Boyne. This wasn't exactly blackmail."
+
+"What, then?"
+
+"The girl--I never liked her--never thought she was good enough for
+Worth--but she was engaged to him, and--in this I think she was fighting
+for her hand."
+
+He searched my face and went on cautiously,
+
+"You read the diaries. They must have had complaints of her."
+
+"They had," I assented.
+
+"Anything about money?"
+
+I shook my head.
+
+"You said there were two entries gone; the first would have told you, I
+suppose--Before we go further, Boyne, let me make a little explanation
+to you--for the girl's sake."
+
+"Shoot," I said.
+
+"It was this way," he sighed. "Thornhill, Ina's father, made fifteen or
+twenty thousand a year I would say, and the family lived it up. He had a
+stroke and died in a week's time. Left Mrs. Thornhill with her
+daughters, her big house, her fine social position--and mighty little to
+keep it up on. Ina is the eldest. She got the worst of it, because at
+the first of her being a young lady she was used to having all the money
+she wanted to spend. The twins were right on her heels; the thing for
+her to do was to make a good marriage, and make it quick. But she got
+engaged to Worth; then he went to France. There you were. He might never
+come back. Tom always hated her; watched her like a hawk; got onto
+something she--about--"
+
+"Out with it," I said. "What? Come down to cases."
+
+"Money." He uttered the one word and stood silent.
+
+I made a long shot, with,
+
+"Mr. Gilbert found she'd been getting money from other men--"
+
+"Borrowing, Boyne--they used the word 'borrowed,'" Edwards put in. "It
+was always Tom's way to summon people as though he had a little private
+judgment bar, haul them up and lecture them; I suppose he thought he had
+a special license in her case."
+
+"And she went prepared to frame him and bluff him to a standoff. Is that
+the way you saw it?"
+
+"My opinion--what I might think," said Mr. James Edwards of Sunnyvale
+ranch, "wouldn't be testimony in a court of law. You don't want it,
+Boyne."
+
+"Maybe not," I grunted. "Perhaps I could make as good a guess as you
+could at what young Mrs. Vandeman's capable of; a dolly face, and behind
+it the courage of hell."
+
+"Boyne," he said, as I left the door free to him, "quit making war on
+women."
+
+"Can't," I grinned and waved him on out. "The detective business would
+be a total loss without 'em."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII
+
+A DINNER INVITATION
+
+
+"Look what's after you, man," Skeet warned me from her lofty perch as I
+went out through the big room in quest of Ina Vandeman. "Better you stay
+here. I gif you a yob. Lots safer--only run the risk of getting your
+neck broken."
+
+I grinned up into her jolly, freckled face, and waited for the woman who
+came toward me with that elastic, swinging movement of hers, the
+well-opened eyes studying me, keeping all their secrets behind them.
+
+"Mr. Boyne," a hand on my arm guided me to a side door; we stepped
+together out on to a small balcony that led to the lawn. "My husband
+brought me your message. Nobody over by the tennis court; let's go and
+walk up and down there."
+
+Her fingers remained on my sleeve as we moved off; she emphasized her
+points from time to time by a slight pressure.
+
+"Such a relief to have a man like you in charge of this investigation."
+She gave me an intimate smile; tall as she was, her face was almost on a
+level with my own, yet I still found her eyes unreadable, none of those
+quick tremors under the skin that register the emotions of excitable
+humanity. She remained a handsome, perfectly groomed, and entirely
+unruffled young woman.
+
+"Thank you," was all I said.
+
+"Mr. Vandeman and I understand how very, very serious this is. Of
+course, now, neighbors and intimates of Mr. Gilbert are under
+inspection. Everybody's private affairs are liable to be turned out.
+We've all got to take our medicine. No use feeling personal resentment."
+
+Fine; but she'd have done better to keep her hands off me. An old police
+detective knows too much of the class of women who use that lever. I
+looked at them now, white, delicate, many-ringed, much more expressive
+than her face, and I thought them capable of anything.
+
+"Here are the names you'll want," she fumbled in the girdle of her gown,
+brought out a paper and passed it over. "These are the ones who stayed
+after the reception, went up to my room with me, and helped me
+change--or rather, hindered me."
+
+"The ones," I didn't open the paper yet, just looked at her across it,
+"who were with you all the time from the reception till you left the
+house for San Francisco?"
+
+"It's like this," again she smiled at me, "the five whose names are on
+that paper might any one of them have been in and out of my room during
+the time. I can't say as to that. But _they_ can swear that _I_ wasn't
+out of the room--because I wasn't dressed. As soon as I changed from my
+wedding gown to my traveling suit, I went down stairs and we were all
+together till we drove to San Francisco and supper at Tait's, where I
+had the pleasure of meeting you, Mr. Boyne."
+
+"I understand," I said. "They could all speak for you--but you couldn't
+speak for them." Then I opened and looked. Some list! The social and
+financial elect of Santa Ysobel: bankers' ladies; prune kings'
+daughters; persons you couldn't doubt, or buy. But at the top of all was
+Laura Bowman's name.
+
+We had halted for the turn at the end of the court. I held the paper
+before her.
+
+"How about this one? Do you think she was in the room all the time? Or
+have you any recollection?"
+
+The bride moved a little closer and spoke low.
+
+"Laura and the doctor were in the middle of one of their grand rows.
+She's a bunch of temperament. Mamma was ill; the girls were having to
+start out with only Laura for chaperone; she said something about going
+somewhere, and it wouldn't take her long--she'd be back in plenty of
+time. But whether she went or not--Mr. Boyne, you don't want us to tell
+you our speculations and guesses? That wouldn't be fair, would it?"
+
+"It wouldn't hurt anything," I countered. "I'll only make use of what
+can be proven. Anything you say is safe with me."
+
+"Well, then, of course you know all about the situation between Laura
+and Jim Edwards. Laura was determined she wouldn't go up to San
+Francisco with her husband--or if she did, he must drive her back the
+same night. She wouldn't even leave our house to get her things from
+home; the doctor, poor man, packed some sort of bag for her and brought
+it over. When he came back with it, she wasn't to be found; and she
+never did appear until we were getting into the machine."
+
+I listened, glancing anxiously toward the skyline of that little hill
+over which Worth and Barbara might be expected to appear almost any
+moment now. Then we made the turn at the end of the court, and my view
+of it was cut off.
+
+"Laura and Jim--they're the ones this is going to be hard on. I do feel
+sorry for them. She's always been a problem to her family and friends. A
+great deal's been overlooked. Everybody likes Jim; but--he's a
+southerner; intrigue comes natural to them."
+
+Five minutes before I had been listening to Edwards' pitiful defense of
+this girl; I recalled his "scouting" for a chance to get her home unseen
+and save her standing with her family. That could be classed as
+intrigue, too, I suppose. We were strolling slowly toward the clubhouse.
+
+"I don't give Dr. Bowman much," I said deliberately. A quick look came
+my way, and,
+
+"Mr. Gilbert was greatly attached to him. Everybody's always believed
+that only Mr. Gilbert's influence held that match together. Now he's
+dead, and Laura's freed from some sort of control he seemed to have over
+her, of course she hopes and expects she'll be able to divorce the
+doctor in peace and marry Jim."
+
+"No movement of the sort yet?"
+
+She stopped and faced round toward me.
+
+"Dr. Bowman--he's our family physician, you know--is trying for a very
+fine position away from here, in an exclusive sanitarium. Divorce
+proceedings coming now would ruin his chances. But I don't know how long
+he can persuade Laura to hold off. She's in a strange mood; I can't make
+her out, myself. She disliked Gilbert; yet his death seems to have upset
+her frightfully."
+
+"You say she didn't like Mr. Gilbert?"
+
+"They hated each other. But--he was so peculiar--of course that wasn't
+strange. Many people detested him. Bron never did. He always forgave him
+everything because he said he was insane. Bron told you my
+experience--the one that made me break with Worth?"
+
+She looked at me, a level look; no shifting of color, no flutter of
+eyelid or throat. We were at the clubhouse steps.
+
+"Here comes the boy himself," I warned as Worth and Barbara, their arms
+full of ferns, rounded the turn from the little dip at the side of the
+grounds where the stream went through. We stood and waited for them.
+
+"You two," Ina spoke quickly to them. "Mr. Boyne's just promised to come
+over to dinner to-morrow night." Her glance asked me to accept the fib
+and the invitation. "I want both of you."
+
+"I'm going to be at your house anyhow, Ina," Barbara said, "working with
+Skeet painting those big banners they've tacked up out in your court.
+You'll have to feed us; but we'll be pretty messy. I don't know about a
+dinner party."
+
+"It isn't," Ina protested, smiling. "It's just what you said--feeding
+you. Nobody there besides yourself and Skeet but Mr. Boyne and Worth--if
+he'll come."
+
+"I have to go up to San Francisco to-morrow," said Worth.
+
+"But you'll be back by dinner time?" Ina added quickly.
+
+"If I make it at all."
+
+"Well, you can come just as you are, if you get in at the last minute,"
+she said, and he and Barbara went on to carry their ferns in. When they
+were out of hearing, she turned and floored me with,
+
+"Mr. Vandeman has forbidden me to say this to you, but I'm going to
+speak. If Worth doesn't have to be told about me--and his father--I'd be
+glad."
+
+"If the missing leaves of the diary are ever found," I came up slowly,
+"he'd probably know then." I watched her as I said it. What a strange
+look of satisfaction in the little curves about her mouth as she spoke
+next:
+
+"Those leaves will never be found, Mr. Boyne. I burned them. Mr. Gilbert
+presented them to me as a wedding gift. He was insane, but, intending to
+take his own life, I think even his strangely warped conscience refused
+to let a lying record stand against an innocent girl who had never done
+him any harm."
+
+We stood silent a moment, then she looked round at me brightly with,
+
+"You're coming to dinner to-morrow night? So glad to have you. At seven
+o'clock. Well--if this is all, then?" and at my nod, she went up the
+steps, turning at the side door to smile and wave at me.
+
+What a woman! I could but admire her nerve. If her alibi proved
+copper-fastened, as something told me it would, I had no more hope of
+bringing home the murder of Thomas Gilbert to Mrs. Bronson Vandeman of
+Santa Ysobel than I had of readjusting the stars in their courses!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII
+
+A BIT OF SILK
+
+
+I must admit that when Worth and Barbara walked up and found me talking
+to Ina Vandeman, I felt caught dead to rights. The girl gave me one
+long, steady look. I was afraid of Barbara Wallace's eyes. Then and
+there I relinquished all idea of having her help in this inquiry. She
+could have done it much better than I, attracted less attention--but no
+matter. The awkward moment went by, however; I heaved a sigh of relief
+as they carried their ferns on into the clubhouse, and Mrs. Vandeman
+left me with gracious good-bys.
+
+I had the luck to cover my first inquiry by getting a lift into town
+from Mrs. Ormsby, young wife of the president of the First National.
+Alone with me in her little electric, she answered every question I
+cared to put, and said she would be careful to speak to no one of the
+matter. Three others I caught on the wing, as it were, busy at blossom
+festival affairs; the fete only one day off now, things were moving
+fast. I glimpsed Dr. Bowman down town and thought he rather carefully
+avoided seeing me. His wife was taking no part; the word went that she
+was not able; but when I called at what had been the Wallace and was now
+the Bowman home, I found the front door open and two ladies in the hall.
+
+One of them, Laura Bowman herself, came flying out to meet me--or
+rather, it seemed, to stop me, with a face of dismay.
+
+"My mother's here, Mr. Boyne!" Her hand was clammy cold; she'd been
+warned of me and my errand. "I don't want to take you through that way."
+
+I stood passive, and let her do the saying.
+
+"Around here," she faltered. "We can go in at the side door."
+
+We skirted the house by a narrow walk; she was leading the way by this
+other entrance, when, spread out over its low step, blocking our
+progress, I saw a small Japanese woman ripping up a satin dress.
+
+"Let us pass, Oomie."
+
+"Wait. We can talk as well here," I checked her. We moved on a few
+paces, out of earshot of the girl; but before I could put my questions,
+she began with a sort of shattered vehemence to protest that Thomas
+Gilbert's death was suicide.
+
+"It was, Mr. Boyne. Anybody who knew the scourge Thomas had been to
+those he must have loved in his queer, distorted way, and any one who
+loved them, could believe he might take his own life."
+
+"You speak freely, Mrs. Bowman," I said. "Then you hated the man?"
+
+"Oh, I did! For years past I've never heard of a death without wondering
+that God took other human beings and let him live. Now that he's killed
+himself, it seems dreadful to me that suspicion should be cast on--"
+
+"Mrs. Bowman," I interrupted. "Thomas Gilbert's death was murder. All
+persons who could have had motive or might have had opportunity to kill
+him will be under suspicion till the investigation clears them of it.
+I'm now ascertaining the whereabouts of Ina Vandeman that evening."
+
+A shudder went through her; she looked at me feelingly, twisting her
+hands together in the way I remembered. Despite her distress, she was
+very simple and accessible. She gave me no resistance, admitted her
+absence from the Thornhill house at about the time the party was ready
+to start for San Francisco--Edwards, of course. I got nothing new here.
+She seemed thankful enough to go into the house when I released her.
+
+I lingered a moment to have a word with the little Japanese woman on the
+step.
+
+"How long you work this place?"
+
+"Two hours af-noon, every day," ducking and giggling like a mechanical
+toy.
+
+Just a piece-worker, not a regular servant.
+
+"Pretty dress," I touched the satin on the step. "Whose?"
+
+"Mine." Grinning, she spread a breadth out over her knees. "Lady no like
+any more. Mine." It was a peculiar shade of peacock blue; unless I was
+mistaken, the one Mrs. Bowman had worn that night at Tait's.
+
+"Hello--what's this?" I bent to examine a small hole in the hem of that
+breadth Oomie was so delightedly smoothing.
+
+"O-o-o-o! I think may-may burn'm. Not like any more."
+
+There was a small round hole. Just so a cigarette might have seared--or
+a bullet.
+
+"Not can use," I said to Oomie, indicating the injured bit. "Cut that
+off. Give me." And I laid a silver dollar on the step.
+
+Giggling, the little brown woman snipped out the bit of hem and handed
+it to me. I glanced up from tucking it into my pocket, and saw Laura
+Bowman's white face staring at me through the glass of that side entry
+door.
+
+A suggestive lead, certainly; but it's my way to follow one lead at a
+time: I went on to the Thornhill place.
+
+Everybody there would know my errand; for though, with taste I could but
+admire, Ina had put no name of any member of the family on her list, she
+of course expected me to call on them, and would never have let her
+sisters leave the country club without a warning.
+
+The three were just taking their hats off in the hall when I arrived. I
+did my questioning there, not troubling to take them separately. Cora
+and Ernestine, a well bred pair of Inas, without her pep, perhaps a
+shade less good looking, made their replies with none of the usual
+flutter of feminine curiosity and excitement, then went on in the living
+room. Skeet of course was as practical and brief as a sensible boy.
+
+"I don't know whether she's fit to see you," she said when I spoke of
+her mother. And on the instant, Ina Vandeman's clear, high voice called
+down the stair,
+
+"Bring Mr. Boyne up--now."
+
+Skeet stepped aside for me to pass. I suppose I looked as startled as I
+felt, for on my way to the house, I had seen Mrs. Vandeman drive past
+toward town. I stood there at a loss, and finally said aimlessly,
+
+"Your sister thinks it's all right?"
+
+"My sister?" Skeet wrinkled her brows at me, and glanced to where the
+twins were in sight in the living room. "That was mother herself who
+called you."
+
+All the way up the stairs, Skeet following, I was trying to swing my
+rather heavy wits around to take advantage of this new development. So
+far, Ina Vandeman's voice, imitated by Barbara Wallace, and recognized
+by Chung and Jim Edwards, possibly by Worth, had been my lead in this
+direction. If more than one woman spoke in that voice--where would it
+take me?
+
+I'd got no adjustment before I was ushered into a large dim room, and
+confronted by a figure in a reclining chair by the window. Here, in
+spite of years and illness, were the same good looks and thoroughbred
+courage that seemed to characterize the women of this family. Mrs.
+Thornhill greeted me in Ina Vandeman's very tones, a little high-pitched
+for real sweetness, full of a dominating quality, and she showed a
+composure I had not expected. To Skeet, standing by, watching to see
+that her mother didn't overdo in talking to me, she said,
+
+"Dear, go down stairs. Jane's left her dinner on the range and gone to
+the grocery. You look after it while she's away."
+
+When we were alone, she lay back in her chair, eyes closed, or seemingly
+so, and made her statement. She'd been in her daughter's room only twice
+between the reception and that daughter's going away.
+
+"But the room was full of other people," a glimmer between lashes. "I
+could give you the names of those others."
+
+"Thank you," I said. "Mrs. Vandeman has already done that. I've seen
+them all."
+
+"You've seen them--all?" a long, furtively drawn breath. Then her eyes
+flashed open and fixed themselves on me. Relief was there, yet something
+stricken, as they traveled over me from my gray thatch to my big feet.
+
+"Now, Mrs. Thornhill," I said, "aside from those two visits to your
+daughter's room, where were you that evening?"
+
+A slow flush crept into her thin cheeks. The unreadable eyes that were
+traveling over Jerry Boyne stopped suddenly and held him with a quiet
+stare.
+
+"I understood it was my daughter's movements on that evening you wished
+to trace, Mr. Boyne," she said slowly. "It would be difficult to trace
+mine. Really, I had so much on my hands with the reception and
+inefficient help--" She broke off, her eyes never leaving my own, even
+as she added smoothly, "It would be very, very difficult."
+
+There is an effect in class almost like the distinction of race. These
+women spoke a baffling language; their psychology was hard for me. If
+there was something hid up amongst them that ought to be uncovered by
+diplomacy and delicate indirection, it would take a smarter man than the
+one who stood in my number tens to do it.
+
+"Mrs. Thornhill," I said, "you did leave the house. You went to Mr.
+Gilbert's study. The shot that killed him left you a nervous wreck, so
+that you can't hear a tire blow-out without reenacting in your mind the
+scene of that murder. You'll talk now."
+
+"You think I will? Talk to you?" very low and quiet, eyes once more
+closed.
+
+"Why not? It's got to come; here in your own home, with me--or I'll have
+to put you where you'll be forced to answer questions."
+
+"Oh, you threaten me, do you?" Her eyes flashed open, and looked at me,
+hard as flint. "Very well. I'll answer no questions as to what happened
+on the evening of Thomas Gilbert's death, except in the presence of
+Worth Gilbert, his son."
+
+My retirement down the Thornhill stairs, made with such dignity as I
+could muster, was in fact, a panic flight. Halfway, Cora Thornhill all
+but finished me by looking out from the living room, and calling in Ina
+Vandeman's voice,
+
+"Erne, show Mr. Boyne out, won't you?"
+
+Ernestine completed the job when she answered--in Ina Vandeman's voice,
+also--
+
+"Yes, dear; I will." It was only the scraps of me that she swept out
+through the front door.
+
+I stood on the porch and mopped my brow. Across, there at the Gilbert
+place was Worth himself, charging around the grounds with Vandeman and a
+lot of other decorators, pruning shears in hand, going for a thicket of
+bamboos that shut off the vegetable garden. At one side Barbara stood
+alone, looking, it seemed to me, rather depressed. I made for her. She
+met me with,
+
+"I know what you've been doing. Skeet came to me about it while Ina was
+phoning home from the country club."
+
+"Well--she should worry! I've just finished with her list. Got an
+unbreakable alibi."
+
+"She would have," Barbara said listlessly. "She wasn't at the study that
+evening."
+
+"Huh! I worked on your tip that she was."
+
+Barbara had pulled off the little stitched hat she wore; yet the deep
+flush on her cheeks was neither from sun nor an afternoon's hard work.
+It, and the quick straightening of her figure, the lift of her chin, had
+to do with me and my activities.
+
+"Mr. Boyne," the black eyes came around to me with a flash, "do you
+suspect me of trying to pay off a spite on Ina Vandeman?"
+
+"Good Lord--no!" I exploded. "And anyhow, I've just found that what you
+imitated and Chung recognized, might as well have been the mother's
+voice as the daughter's."
+
+"Yes," she assented. "Any one of the family--under stress of emotion."
+Then suddenly, "And why do I tell you that? You'll not get from it what
+I do. I ought never to have mixed up my kind of mental work with other
+people's. I'd promised my own soul that I would never make another
+deduction. Then Worth came and asked me--that night at Tait's. I might
+say now that I never will any more...." She broke off, storm in her eyes
+and in her voice as she finished, "But I suppose if he wanted me to
+again--I'd make a little fool of myself for his amusement just as I did
+this time and have done all these other times!"
+
+"I'll not ask anything more of you, Barbara," I said to her hastily,
+confused and abashed before the glimpse she'd given me of her heart.
+"Except that I beg you to stay good friends with Cummings. That man
+hates Worth. If you turned him down now--say, for the ball, or anything
+like that--he'd be twice as hard for us to handle. Keep him a passive
+enemy instead of an active one, as long as he seems to find it necessary
+to hang around Santa Ysobel."
+
+"You know what's holding Mr. Cummings here, don't you?" She glanced
+somberly past the bamboo gatherers to where we saw a gray corner of the
+study with its pink ivy geranium blossoms atop. "Mr. Cummings is held
+here by two steel bolts--the bolts on those study doors. Until he finds
+how they can be moved through an inch of planking--he'll not leave Santa
+Ysobel."
+
+She'd put it in a nutshell. And I couldn't let him beat me to it. I'd
+got to get the jump on him.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV
+
+THE MAGNET
+
+
+I had all set for next morning: my roadster at Capehart's for repair,
+old Bill tipped off that I didn't want any one but Eddie Hughes to work
+on it; and to add to my satisfaction, there arrived in my daily grist
+from the office, the report that they had Skeels in jail at Tiajuana.
+
+"Well, Jerry, old socks," Worth hailed my news as I followed out to his
+car where he was starting for San Francisco, and going to drop me at the
+Capehart garage, "Some luck! If Skeels is in jail at Tiajuana, and what
+I'm after to-day turns out right, we may have both ends of the string."
+
+Pink-and-white were the miles of orchards surrounding Santa Ysobel,
+pink-and-white nearly all the dooryards, every tree its own little
+carnival of bloom with bees for guests. Already the streets were full of
+life, double the usual traffic. As we neared the Capehart cottage, on
+its quiet side street about half a block from the garage, there was
+Barbara under the apple boughs at the gate, talking to some man whose
+back was to us. She bowed; I answered with a wave toward the garage; but
+Worth scooted us past without, I thought, once glancing her way, sent
+the roadster across Main where he should have stopped and let me out,
+went on and into the highway at a clip which rocked us.
+
+"Was that Cummings?" holding my hat on. No answer that I could hear,
+while we made speed toward San Francisco. And still no word was spoken
+until we had outraged the sensibilities of all whose bad luck it was to
+meet us, those whom we passed going at a more reasonable pace, scared a
+team of work horses into the ditch, and settled down to a steady whiz.
+
+We were getting away from Santa Ysobel a good deal further and a good
+deal faster than I felt I could afford. I took a chance and remarked, to
+nobody in particular, and in a loud voice,
+
+"I asked Barbara not to make a break with Cummings; it would be awkward
+for us now if she did."
+
+"Break?" Worth gave me back one of my words.
+
+"Yes. I was afraid she might throw him down for the carnival ball."
+
+Without comment or reply, he slowed gently for the big turn where the
+Medlow road comes in, swept a handsome circle and headed back. Then he
+remarked,
+
+"Thought I'd show you what the little boat could do under my management.
+Eddie had her in fair shape, but I've tuned her up a notch or two
+since."
+
+I responded with proper enthusiasm, and would have been perfectly
+willing to be let out at Main Street. But he turned the corner there,
+ran on to the garage, jumped out and followed me in. Bill, selling some
+used tires to a customer in the office, nodded and let us go past to
+where my machine stood. We heard voices back in the repair shop and a
+hum of swift whirring shafts and pulleys. Worth kept with me. It
+embarrassed me--made me nervous. It was as though he had some notion of
+my purpose there. Hughes, at his lathe, caught sight of us and growled
+over his shoulder,
+
+"Yer machine's ready."
+
+This wouldn't do. I stepped to the door, with,
+
+"Fixed the radiator, did you?"
+
+"Sure. Whaddye think?" Hughes was at work on something for a girl; she
+perched at one end of his bench, swinging her feet. Worth, behind me,
+touched my shoulder, and I saw that the girl over there was Barbara
+Wallace.
+
+She looked up at us and smiled. The sun slanting through dirt covered
+windows, made color effects on her silken black hair. Eddie gave us
+another scowl and went on with his work.
+
+"Hello, Bobs," Worth's greeting was casual. "Thought I'd stop and tell
+you I was on my way--you know." A glance of understanding passed between
+them. "Better come along?"
+
+"I'd like to," she smiled. "You'll be back by dinner time. If it wasn't
+the last day, and I hadn't promised--"
+
+Neither of them in any hurry.
+
+"Hughes," I said, "there's another thing needs doing on that car of
+mine--"
+
+"Can't do nothing at all till I finish her job," he shrugged me off.
+
+"All right," and I stepped through into the grassy back yard, put a
+smoke in my face, and began walking up and down, my glance, each time I
+turned, encountering that queer bunch inside: Worth, hands in pockets;
+the chauffeur he had discharged--and that I was waiting to get for
+murder--bending at his vise; Barbara's shining dark head close to the
+tousled unkemptness of his poll, as she explained to him the pulley
+arrangement needed to raise and anchor the banner she and Skeet were
+painting.
+
+Suddenly, at the far end of my beat, I was brought up by a little outcry
+and stir. As I wheeled toward the door, I saw Bobs and Worth in it,
+apparently wrestling over something. Laughing, crying, she hung to his
+wrist with one hand, the other covering one of her eyes.
+
+"Let me look!" he demanded. "I won't touch it, if you don't want me to.
+You have got something in there, Bobs."
+
+But when she reluctantly gave him his chance, he treacherously went for
+her with a corner of his handkerchief in the traditional way, and she
+backed off, uttering a cry that fetched Hughes around from the lathe,
+roaring at Worth, above the noise of the machinery,
+
+"What's the matter with her?"
+
+"Steel splinter--in her eye," Worth shouted.
+
+With a quick oath, the belt pole was thrown to stop the lathe; down the
+length of the shop to the scrap heap of odds and ends at the rear Hughes
+raced, returning with a bit of metal in his hand. Barbara was backed
+against the bench, her eyes shut, and tears had begun to flow from under
+the lids.
+
+"Now, Miss Barbie," Hughes remonstrated. "You let me at that thing.
+This'll pull it out and never touch you." I saw it was a horse-shoe
+magnet he carried.
+
+"Do you think it will?"
+
+"Sure," and Eddie approached the magnet to her face. "It won't hurt you
+a-tall. She'll begin to pull before she even touches. Now, steady. Want
+to come as near contact as I can. Don't jump.... Hell!"
+
+Barbara had sprung away from him. But for Worth's quick arm, she would
+have been into the machines.
+
+"No!" she said between locked teeth, tears on her cheeks, "I can't let
+him."
+
+"Why, Barbara!" I said, astonished; and poor Eddie almost blubbered as
+he begged,
+
+"Aw, come on, Miss Barbie. It was my fault in the first place--leavin'
+that damned lathe run. Yuh got to let me--"
+
+"But if it doesn't work?"
+
+"Sure it'll work. Would I offer to use it for you if I hadn't tried it
+out lots o' times--to pull splinters and--"
+
+"Give me that magnet," Worth reached the long arm of authority, got what
+he wanted, shouldered Hughes aside, and took hold of the girl with,
+"Quit being a little fool, Barbara. That thing's only caught in your
+lashes now. Let it get in against the eyeball and you'll have trouble.
+Hold still."
+
+The command was not needed. Without a word, Barbara raised her face, put
+her hands behind her and waited.
+
+Delicately, Worth caught the dark fringe of the closed eye, turned back
+the lid so that he could see just what he was at, brought the horse-shoe
+almost in touch, then drew it away--and there was the tiny steel
+splinter that could have cost her sight, clinging to the magnet's edge.
+
+"Here you are," he smiled. "Wasn't that enough to call you names for?"
+
+"You didn't call me names," dabbing away with a small handkerchief. "You
+told me to quit being a little fool. Maybe I will. How would you like
+that?"
+
+Apparently Hughes did not resent Barbara's refusing his help and
+accepting Worth's. He went back to his vise; the two others strolled
+together through the doorway into the garage, talking there for a moment
+in quick, low tones; then Barbara returned to perch on the end of
+Eddie's bench, play with the magnet and watch him at work. I lit up
+again and stepped out.
+
+I could see Barbara gather some nails, screws and loose pieces of iron,
+hold a bit of board over them, and trail the magnet back and forth along
+its top. Though a half inch of wood intervened, the metal trash on the
+bench followed the magnet to and fro. I got nothing out of that except
+that Barbara was still a child, playing like a child, till I looked up
+suddenly to find that she had ceased the play, brought her feet up to
+curl them under her in the familiar Buddha pose, while the busy hands
+were dropped and folded before her. Her rebellion of yesterday
+evening--and now her taking up the concentration unasked--she wouldn't
+want me to notice what she was doing; I ducked out of sight. I had
+walked up and down that yard a half dozen times more, when over me with
+a rush came the significance of those moving bits of iron, trailing a
+magnet on the other side of a board. Three long steps took me to the
+door.
+
+"Hughes," I shouted, "I'm taking my machine now. Be back directly."
+
+The man grunted without turning around. I had forgotten Barbara, but as
+I was climbing into the roadster, I heard her jump to the floor and
+start after me.
+
+"Mr. Boyne! Wait! Mr. Boyne!"
+
+I checked and sat grinning as she came up, the magnet in her hand. I
+reached for it.
+
+"Give me that," I whispered. "Want to go along and see me use it?"
+
+"No--no--" in hushed protest. "You're making a mistake, Mr. Boyne."
+
+"Mistake? I saw what you did in there. Said you never would again--then
+went right to it! You sure got something this time! Girl--girl! You've
+turned the trick!"
+
+"Oh, _no_! You mustn't take it like that, Mr. Boyne. This is nothing--as
+it stands. Just a single unrelated fact that I used with others to
+concentrate on. Wait. Do wait--till Worth comes back, anyhow."
+
+"All right." I felt that our voices were getting loud, that we'd talked
+here too long. No use of flushing the game before I was loaded. "First
+thing to do is to verify this." I felt good all over.
+
+"Yes, of course," she smiled faintly. "You would want to do that." And
+she climbed in beside me.
+
+I drove so fast that Barbara had no chance to question me, though she
+did find openings for remonstrating at my speed. I dashed into the
+driveway of the Gilbert place and came to an abrupt stop at the doors of
+the garage. And right away I bumped up against my first check. I gripped
+the magnet, raced to the study door with it, she following more slowly
+to watch while I passed it along the wooden panel where the bolt ran on
+the other side; and nothing doing!
+
+Again she followed as I ran around to the outside door, opened up and
+tried it on the bare bolt itself; no stir. While she sat in the desk
+chair at that central table, her elbows on its top, her hands lightly
+clasped, the chin dropped in interlaced fingers, following my movements
+with very little interest, I puffed and worked, opened a door and tried
+to move the bolt when it wasn't in the socket, and felt like cursing in
+disappointment.
+
+"A little oil--" I grumbled, more to myself than to her, and hurried to
+the garage workbench for the can that would certainly be there. It was,
+but I didn't touch it. What I did lean over and clutch from where they
+lay tossed in carelessly among rubbish and old spare parts, were three
+more magnets exactly the same as the one we had brought from Capehart's.
+I sprinted back with them.
+
+"Barbara," I called in an undertone. "Come here. Look."
+
+Held side by side, the four, working as one, moved the bolts as well as
+fingers could have done, and through more than an inch of hard wood.
+
+"Yes," she looked at it; "but that doesn't prove Eddie Hughes the
+murderer."
+
+"No?" her opposition began to get on my nerves. "I'm afraid that'll be a
+matter for twelve good men and true to settle." She stood silent, and I
+added, "I know now whose shadow I saw on the broken panel of that door
+there, the first Sunday night."
+
+"Oh, it was Eddie's," she agreed rather unexpectedly.
+
+"And he came to steal the 1920 diary," I supplied.
+
+"He came to get a drink from the cellaret, and a cigar from the case.
+That's the use he made of his power to move these bolts."
+
+"Until the Saturday night when he killed his employer, the man he hated,
+and left things so the crime would pass as suicide. Barbara, are you
+just plain perverse?"
+
+Instead of answering, she went back to the table, got the contraption
+Hughes had made for her, and started as if to leave me. On the
+threshold, she hesitated.
+
+"I don't suppose there's anything I can say or do to change your mind,"
+her tone was inert, drained. "I know that Eddie is innocent of this. But
+you don't want to listen to deductions."
+
+"Later," I said to her, briskly. "It'll keep. I've something to do now."
+
+"What? You promised Worth to make no move against Eddie Hughes until you
+had his permission." She seemed to think that settled it. I let her keep
+the idea.
+
+"Run along, Barbara," I said, "get to your paint daubing. I'll forgive
+you everything for deducing--well, discovering, if you like that
+better--about these bolts and magnets."
+
+Skeet burst from the kitchen door of the Thornhill house, caught sight
+of us, shouted something unintelligible, and came racing through the
+grounds toward Vandeman's.
+
+"Been waiting for me long, angel?" she called, as Barbara moved up with
+a lagging step, then, waving two pairs of overalls, "Got pants for both
+of us, honey. The paints and brushes are over there. We'll make short
+work of that old banner, now."
+
+Promised Worth, had I? But the situation was changed since then. No man
+of sense could object to my moving on what I had now. I locked the study
+door, went back to my roadster, and headed her uptown.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV
+
+AN ARREST
+
+
+It was a thankful if not a joyous Jerry Boyne who crossed the front
+pergola of the Vandeman bungalow that evening in the wake of Worth
+Gilbert, bound for an informal dinner. The tall, unconscious lad who
+stepped ahead of me had been made safe in spite of himself. This weight
+off my mind, I felt kindly to the whole world, to the man under whose
+dining table we were to stretch our legs, whose embarrassing private
+affairs I had uncovered. He'd taken it well--seconding his wife's dinner
+invitation, meeting my eye frankly whenever we encountered. My mood was
+expansive. When Vandeman himself opened the door to us, explaining that
+he was his own butler for the day, I saw him quite other than he had
+ever appeared to me.
+
+For one thing, here in his own house--and this was the first time I had
+ever been in it--you got the man with his proper background, his
+suitable atmosphere. The handsome living room into which he took us,
+showed many old pieces of mahogany, and some of the finest oriental
+stuff I ever saw; books in cases, sets of standard writers, such as
+people of culture bought thirty or forty years ago, some family pictures
+about. This was Vandeman; a lot behind such a fellow, after all, if he
+did seem rather a lightweight.
+
+Ina joined us, very beautifully dressed. She also showed the ability to
+sink unpleasant considerations in the present moment of hospitality. We
+lingered a moment chatting, then,
+
+"Shall we go and look at the artists working?" she suggested, and led
+the way. We followed out onto a flagged terrace at the rear. A dozen
+great muslin strips were tacked over the walls there, and two small
+figures, desperate, smudged, wearing the blue overalls Skeet Thornhill
+had waved at us, toiled manfully smearing the blossom festival colors on
+in lettering and ornamental designs.
+
+"Ina!" Skeet yawped at her sister, "Another dirty, low Irish trick! Get
+yourself all dressed up like a sore thumb, and then show us off in this
+fix!"
+
+Mutely Barbara revolved on the box she occupied. There was fire in her
+soft eyes; her color was high as her glance came to rest on Worth.
+
+"Fong Ling's nearly ready to serve dinner," said Ina calmly. "Stop
+fussing, and go wash up."
+
+"Hello, Mr. Boyne." As Skeet passed me, she wiped a paw on a paint rag
+and offered it to me without another word. I got a grip and a look that
+told me there was no hang-over with her from that scene yesterday in her
+mother's sick-room. Vandeman was commenting on his depleted bamboo
+clumps.
+
+"Mine suffered worse than yours, Worth. Fong Ling kicked like a bay
+steer about our taking so much. He's nursed the stuff for years like a
+fond mother. But we had to have it for that effect up around the
+orchestra stand."
+
+"Then he's been with you a long time?" I caught at the chance for
+information on this chink--information that I'd found it impossible to
+get from the chink himself.
+
+"Ever since I came in here. Chinamen, you know--not like Japs. Some
+loyalty. You can keep a good one for half a lifetime."
+
+We strolled back to the living room; the girls were there before us,
+Skeet picking out bits of plum-blossoms and bunches of cherry bloom from
+a great bowl on the mantel, and sticking them in Barbara's dark hair,
+wreath fashion.
+
+"Best we could do at a splurge," she greeted us, "was to turn in our
+blouses at the neck."
+
+"And what in the world are you doing to Barbara?" Mrs. Vandeman said
+sharply. "Let her alone, Skeet. You'll make her look ridiculous."
+
+Skeet stuck out her tongue at her sister, and went calmly on, mumbling
+as she worked,
+
+"Hold 'till 'ittle Barbie child. Yook up at pretty mans and hold 'till."
+
+Over the mantel, in front of Barbara as she stood, her back to us all,
+hung an oil painting--one of those family groups--same old popper; same
+old mommer, and a fat baby in a white dress and blue sash. At that, it
+was good enough to show that the man had some resemblance to Vandeman as
+he leaned there on the mantel below it, rather encouraging Skeet's
+enterprise. From the other side, I could see Barbara's glance go from
+man to picture.
+
+"Doesn't it look like Van, Barbie?" Skeet kept up the conversation. "Got
+the same ring, and all. But it ain't Van. Him's the tootsie in there
+with the blue ribbon round his tummy."
+
+"I say, Skeeter, lay off!" Vandeman looked self-consciously from the
+painted ring in the picture to the real ring on his own well kept hand
+there on the mantel edge. "People aren't interested in family
+histories."
+
+"I am," said Barbara, unexpectedly. As the gong sounded and we all began
+to move toward the dining room, they were still on the subject and kept
+it up after we were seated.
+
+Fong Ling served us. The bride had Worth on her right, and talked to him
+in lowered tones. Barbara, between Vandeman and myself, continued to
+show an almost feverish attention to Vandeman. It was plain enough from
+where I sat that nothing Ina Vandeman could say gave the lad any less
+interest in his plate. But I suppose with a girl, the mere fact of some
+other girl being allowed to show intentions counts. Did the flapper get
+what was going on, as she looked proudly across at her handiwork, and
+demanded of me,
+
+"Say, Mr. Boyne, you saw how Ina tried to do us dirt? And now, honest to
+goodness, hasn't Barbie with the plum-blossoms got Ina and her
+artificial flowers skun a mile?"
+
+I didn't wonder that young Mrs. Vandeman saved me the necessity of
+answering, by taking her up.
+
+"Skeet, you're too outrageous!"
+
+There she sat, quite a beauty in a very superior fashion; and Worth at
+her side, was having his attention called to this dark young creature
+across the table, whose wonderful still fire, the white blossoms
+crowning her hair, might well have made even a lovelier than Ina
+Vandeman look insipid. And Worth did take his time admiring her; I saw
+that; but all he found to say was,
+
+"Bobs, I suppose Jerry's told you that he's treed Clayte at Tiajuana?"
+
+"No," said Barbara, "he hasn't said a word. But I'm just as much
+surprised at Clayte's being caught as I was at Skeels escaping capture."
+
+"Say that over and say it slow," Vandeman was good natured. "Or rather,
+put it in plain American, so we all can understand."
+
+"Mr. Boyne knows what I mean." Barbara gave me a faint smile. "Mr. Boyne
+and I add up Skeels and Clayte, and get a different result. That's all."
+
+"Bobs doesn't think that Skeels is Clayte, caught or uncaught," Worth
+said briefly and went on eating his dinner. Apparently he didn't give a
+hang which way the fact turned out to be.
+
+"Why don't you?" Vandeman gave passing attention. She shook her head and
+put it.
+
+"Skeels, at liberty, was quite possibly Clayte; Skeels captured cannot
+be Clayte. Mr. Boyne, do you call that a paradox?"
+
+"No--an unkind slam at a poor old man's ability in his profession. I
+started out to find a gang; but Clayte and Skeels are so exactly one,
+mentally, morally and physically, that I don't see why we should seek
+further."
+
+"Back up, Jerry," Worth tossed it over at me. "Let Barbara"--he didn't
+often use the girl's full name that way--"give you a description of
+Clayte before you're so sure."
+
+"How could I?" The girl's tone was defensive. "I never saw him."
+
+"I want you," Worth paid no attention to her objections, "to describe
+the man you thought you were asking for that day at the Gold Nugget,
+when Jerry butted in, and your ideas got lost in the excitement about
+Skeels. Deduce the description, I mean."
+
+"Deduce it?" Barbara spoke stiffly, incredulously, her glance going from
+Worth to the well-gowned, well-groomed woman beside him. I remembered
+her moment of rebellion yesterday evening on the lawn, when she said so
+bitterly that if he asked it again, she'd do it again, as she finished,
+"Deduce--here?"
+
+"Here and now." Worth's laconic answer sent the blood of healthy anger
+into her face, made her eyes shine. And it brought from Ina Vandeman a
+petulant,
+
+"Oh, Worth, please don't turn my dinner table into a side-show."
+
+"Ina, dear." Vandeman raised his eyes at her, then quite the cordial
+host urging a guest to display talent, "They say you're wonderful at
+that sort of thing, and I've never seen it."
+
+Barbara was mad for fair.
+
+"Oh, very well," she spoke pointedly to Vandeman, and left Worth out of
+it. "If you think you'd really enjoy seeing me make a side-show of Ina's
+dinner table--"
+
+She stopped and waited. Vandeman played up to the situation as he saw
+it, with one of his ready smiles. Worth threw no life-line. Ina didn't
+think it worth while to apologize for her rudeness. Skeet was openly in
+a twitter of anticipation. There was nothing for me to do. A little
+commotion of skirts told us that she was drawing up her feet to sit
+cross-legged in her chair.
+
+"She's going to! Oh, golly!" Skeet chortled. "Haven't seen Bobsy do one
+of those stunts since I was a che-ild!"
+
+Arms down, hands clasped, eyes growing bigger, face paling into snow, we
+watched her. To all but Vandeman, this was a more or less familiar
+performance. They took it rather as a matter of course. It was the
+Chinaman, coming in with the coffee tray, who seemed most strangely
+affected by it. He stopped where he was in the doorway, rigid, staring
+at our girl, though with a changeful light in his eye that seemed to me
+to shift between an unreasonable admiration and an unreasonable fear.
+Orientals are superstitious; but what could the fellow be afraid of in
+the beautiful young thing, Buddha posed, blossoms in her hair? The girl
+had gone into her stunt with a sort of angry energy. He seemed to clutch
+himself to stillness for the brief time that it held. Only in the moment
+that she relaxed, and we knew that Barbara had concentrated, Barbara was
+Barbara again, did he move quietly forward, a decent, competent servant,
+stepping around the table, placing our cups.
+
+"Just two facts to go on," she said coldly. "My results will be pretty
+general."
+
+"Nothing to go on in the way of a description of Clayte," I tried to
+help her out. "I'd call that one we had of him as near nothing as it
+well could be."
+
+"Yes, the nothingness of it was one of my facts," she said, and stopped.
+
+"Let's hear what you did get, Bobs," Worth prompted; and Skeet giggled,
+half under her breath,
+
+"Speech! Speech!"
+
+"At the Gold Nugget--whatever he called himself there--Edward Clayte
+was ten years younger than he had seemed at the bank; he appeared to
+weigh a dozen pounds more; threw out his chest, walked with his head up,
+and therefore would have been estimated quite a bit taller. This
+personality was an opposite of the other. Bank clerk Clayte was demure,
+unobtrusive; this man wore loud patterns. The bank clerk was silent;
+this man talked to every one around him, tilted his hat over one eye,
+smoked cigars just as those men were doing that day in the lobby; acted
+like them, was one of them. In the Gold Nugget, Clayte was a very
+average Gold Nugget guest--don't you see? Commonplace there, just as the
+other Clayte had been commonplace in a bank or an office."
+
+Her voice ceased. On the silence it left, Worth spoke up quietly.
+
+"Bull's eye as usual, Bobs. Every word you say is true. And at the Gold
+Nugget, his name was Henry J. Brundage. He had room thirty on the top
+floor."
+
+Skeet clapped her hands, jumped up and came around the table to kiss
+Barbara on the ear, and tell her she was the most wonderfullest girl in
+the world.
+
+"Heh!" I flared at Worth. "Find that all out to-day in San Francisco?"
+
+"No."
+
+"Oh, it was the Brundage clew that took you south?"
+
+"Yep. Left Louie on the job at the hotel while I was away. To-day, I
+went after Brundage's automobile. Found he'd kept one in a garage on
+Jackson Street."
+
+"It's gone, of course--and no trace," Barbara murmured.
+
+"Gone since the day of the bank theft," Worth nodded. "He and the money
+went in it."
+
+"Say," I leaned over toward him, "wouldn't it have saved wear and tear
+if you'd told me at the first that you knew Skeels couldn't be Clayte?"
+
+"Oh, but, Jerry, you were so sure! And Skeels wasn't possible for a
+minute--never in his little, piking, tin-horn life!"
+
+I don't believe I had seen Worth so happy since he was a boy, playing
+detective. I glanced around and pulled myself up; we certainly weren't
+making ourselves very entertaining for the Vandemans. There they sat, at
+their own table, like handsome figureheads, smiling politely, pretending
+a decent interest.
+
+"All this must be a bore to you people," I apologized.
+
+"Not at all--not at all," Vandeman assured us.
+
+"Well then if you don't mind--Worth, I'll go and use Vandeman's
+phone--put my office wise to these Brundage clews of yours."
+
+Worth nodded. No social scruples were his. I had by no means given up
+the belief that Skeels in jail at Tiajuana, would still turn out to be
+one of the gang.
+
+I had just got back to the table from my phoning when the doorbell rang;
+we saw the big Chinese slip noiselessly through the rear into the hall
+to answer it, coming back a moment later, announcing in his weighty,
+correct English,
+
+"Two gentlemen calling--to see Captain Gilbert."
+
+"Ask for me?" Worth came to his feet in surprise. "Who told them I was
+here?"
+
+"I do not know," the Chinaman spoke unnecessarily as Worth was crossing
+to the door. "I did not ask them that."
+
+"Use the living room, Worth," Vandeman called after him. "We'll wait
+here."
+
+With the closing of the door, conversation languished. Even Skeet was
+quiet and seemed depressed. My ears were straining for any sound from in
+there. As I sat, hand dropped at my side, I suddenly felt under shelter
+of the screening tablecloth, cold, nervous fingers slipped into mine.
+Barbara wasn't looking at me, but I gave her a quick glance as I pressed
+her gripping small hand encouragingly.
+
+She was turned toward Vandeman. Pale to the lips, her great eyes fixed
+on the eyes of our host, I saw with wonder how he slowly stirred a spoon
+about in his emptied coffee cup, and stared back at her with a face
+almost as colorless as her own. The bride glanced from one to the other
+of them, and spoke sharply,
+
+"What's the matter with you two? You're not uneasy about Worth's
+callers, are you?"
+
+"No-no-no--" Vandeman was the first to come out of it, responding to her
+voice a good deal as if she dashed cold water in his face, his eyes
+breaking away from Barbara's, his lips parted in a nervous smile. He ran
+a hand through his hair--an inelegant gesture for him at table--and
+laughed a little.
+
+"We ought to be in there," Barbara said to me, a curious stress in her
+voice.
+
+"How funny you talk, Barbie," Skeet quavered. "What do you think's
+wrong?" And Ina spoke decidedly,
+
+"Worth is one person in the world who can certainly take care of
+himself, and would rather be let alone."
+
+"If you think there is anything we should do--?" Vandeman began
+anxiously, and Skeet took a look around at our faces and fairly wailed,
+
+"What is it? What's the matter? What do you think they're doing to Worth
+in there, Barbie?"
+
+"I'd think they were arresting him," Barbara said in a low, choked tone,
+"Only they don't know--"
+
+"Arresting him!" I broke in on her, startled, getting halfway to my
+feet; then as remembrance came to me, sinking back with, "Certainly not.
+The murderer of Thomas Gilbert is already in the county jail. I arrested
+Eddie Hughes this morning."
+
+"You arrested--Eddie Hughes!" It was a cry from Barbara. The cold little
+hand was jerked from mine. Twisting around in her chair, she stared at
+me with a look that made me cold. "Then you've moved those two steel
+bolts for Cummings."
+
+I jumped to my feet. On the instant the door opened, and in it stood
+Worth, steady enough, but his brown tanned face was strangely bleached.
+
+"Jerry," he spoke briefly. "I want you. The sheriff's come for me."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI
+
+MRS. BOWMAN SPEAKS
+
+
+Midnight in the sheriff's office at San Jose. And I had to telephone
+Barbara. She'd be waiting up for my message. The minute I heard her
+voice on the wire, I plunged in:
+
+"Yes, yes, yes; done all I could. A horse can do no more. They've got
+Worth. I--" The words stuck in my throat; but they had to come out--"I
+left him in a cell."
+
+A sound came over the wire; whether speech or not, it was something I
+couldn't get.
+
+"He's taking it like a man and a soldier, girl," I hurried. "Not a word
+out of him about my having gone counter to his express orders, arrested
+Hughes, and pulled this thing over on us."
+
+"Oh, Mr. Boyne! Of course he wouldn't blame you. Neither would I. You
+acted for what you thought was his good. The others--"
+
+"Vandeman's already gone home. Tell you he stood by well, Barbara--that
+tailor's dummy! Surprised me. No, no. Didn't let Jim Edwards come with
+us; so broken up I didn't want him along--only hurt our case over here,
+the way he is now."
+
+"Your case?" she spoke out clearly. "What is the situation?"
+
+"A murder charge against Worth on the secret files. Hughes is
+out--Cummings got him--took him, don't know where. Can't locate him."
+
+"Do you need to?"
+
+"Perhaps not, Barbara. What I do need is some one who saw Thomas Gilbert
+alive that night after Worth left to go back to San Francisco."
+
+"And if you had that--some one?"
+
+"If we could produce before Cummings one credible witness to that, it
+would mean an alibi. I'd have Worth out before morning."
+
+"Then, Mr. Boyne, get to the Fremont House here as quickly as you can.
+Mr. Cummings is there. Get him out of bed if you have to. I'll bring the
+proof you need."
+
+"But, child!" I began.
+
+"Don't--waste--time--talking! How long will it take you to get here?"
+
+"Half an hour."
+
+"Oh! You may have to wait for me a little. But I'll surely come. Wait in
+Mr. Cummings' room."
+
+Half past twelve when I reached the Fremont House, to find it all
+alight, its lobby and corridors surging with the crowd of blossom
+festival guests. Nobody much in the bar; soft drinks held little
+interest; but in the upper halls, getting to Cummings' room, I passed
+more than one open door where the hip-pocket cargoes were unloading, and
+was even hailed by name, with invitations to come in and partake.
+Cummings was still up. The first word he gave me was,
+
+"Dykeman's here."
+
+"Glad of it," I said. "Bring him in. I want you both."
+
+It took a good deal of argument before he brought the Western Cereal
+man from the adjoining room where he had evidently been just getting
+ready for bed. He came to the conference resentful as a soreheaded old
+bear.
+
+"Maybe you think Worth Gilbert will sleep well to-night--in jail?" I
+stopped him, and instantly differentiated the two men before me.
+Cummings took it, with an ugly little half smile; Dykeman rumpled his
+hair, and bolstered his anger by shouting at me,
+
+"This country'll go to the dogs if we make an exempt class of our
+returned soldiers. Break the laws--they'll have to take the
+consequences, just as a man that was too old or too sickly to fight
+would have to take 'em. If I'd done what Captain Gilbert's done--I
+wouldn't expect mercy."
+
+"You mean, if you'd done what you say he's done," I countered. "Nothing
+proved yet."
+
+"Nothing proved?" Dykeman huddled in his chair and shivered. Cummings
+shook out an overcoat and helped him into it. He settled back with a
+protesting air of being about to leave us, and finished squeakily,
+"Didn't need to prove that he had Clayte's suitcase."
+
+"Good Lord, Mr. Dykeman! You're not lending yourself to accuse a man
+like Worth Gilbert of so grave a crime as murder, just because you found
+his ideas irregular--maybe reckless--in a matter of money?"
+
+"Don't answer, Dykeman!" Cummings jumped in. "Boyne's trying to get you
+to talk."
+
+The old chap stared at me doubtfully, then broke loose with a snort,
+
+"See here, Boyne, you can't get away from it; your man Gilbert has
+embarked on a criminal career: mixed up in the robbery of our bank,
+with Clayte to rob us; had our own attorney go through the form of
+raising money to buy us off from the pursuit of Clayte--"
+
+"How about me?" I stuck in the question as he paused for breath. "Do you
+think Worth Gilbert would put me on the track of a man he didn't want
+found?"
+
+Cummings cut in ahead to answer for him,
+
+"Just the point. You've not done any good at the inquiry; never will, so
+long as you stand with Worth Gilbert. He needed a detective who would
+believe in him through thick and thin. And he found such a man in you."
+
+I could not deny it when Dykeman yipped at me,
+
+"Ain't that true? If it was anybody else, wouldn't you see the
+connection? Captain Gilbert came here to Santa Ysobel that Saturday
+night--as we've got witnesses to testify--had a row with his
+father--we've got witnesses for that, too--the word money passed between
+them again and again in that quarrel--and then the young man had the
+nerve to walk into our bank next morning with his father's entire
+holdings of our stock in Clayte's suitcase--Boyne, you're crazy!"
+
+"Maybe not," I said, reckoning on something human in Dykeman to appeal
+to. "You see I know where Worth got that suitcase. It came out of my
+office vault--evidence we'd gathered in the Clayte hunt. Getting it and
+using it that way was his idea of humor, I suppose."
+
+"Sounds fishy." Dykeman made an uncomfortable shift in his chair. But
+Cummings came close, and standing, hands rammed down in the pockets of
+his coat, let me have it savagely.
+
+"Evidence, Boyne, is the only thing that would give you a license to
+rout men out at this time of night--new evidence. Have you got it? If
+not--"
+
+"Wait." I preferred to stop him before he told me to get out. "Wait." I
+looked at my watch. In the silence we could hear the words of a yawp
+from one of the noisy rooms when a passerby was hailed:
+
+"There she goes! There--look at the chickens!"
+
+A minute later, a tap sounded on the door. Cummings stood by while I
+opened it to Barbara, and a slender, veiled woman, taller by half a head
+in spite of bent shoulders and the droop of weakness which made the
+girl's supporting arm apparently necessary.
+
+At sight of them, Dykeman had come to his feet, biting off an
+exclamation, looking vainly around the bare room for chairs, then
+suggesting,
+
+"Get some from my room, Boyne."
+
+I went through the connecting door to fetch a couple. When I came back,
+Barbara was still standing, but her companion had sunk into the seat the
+shivering, uncomfortable old man offered, and Cummings was bringing a
+glass of water for her. She sipped it, still under the shield of her
+veil. This was never Ina Vandeman. Could it be that Barbara had dragged
+Mrs. Thornhill from her bed? I saw Barbara bend and whisper
+reassuringly. Then the veil was swept back, it caught and carried the
+hat with it from Laura Bowman's shining, copper colored hair, and the
+doctor's wife sat there ghastly pale, evidently very weak, but more
+composed than I had ever seen her.
+
+"I'm all right now," she spoke very low.
+
+"Miss Wallace," Dykeman demanded harshly. "Who is this--lady?"
+
+"Mrs. Bowman," Barbara looked her employer very straight in the eye.
+
+"Heh?" he barked. "Any relation to Dr. Bowman--any connection with him?"
+
+"His wife." Cummings bent and mumbled to the older man for a moment.
+
+"Laura," Barbara said gently, "this is Mr. Dykeman. You're to tell him
+and Mr. Cummings."
+
+"Yes," breathed Mrs. Bowman. "I'll tell them. I'm ready to tell anybody.
+There's nothing in dodging, and hiding, and being afraid. I'm done with
+it. Now--what is it you want to know?"
+
+Cummings' expression said plainer than words that they didn't want to
+know anything. They had their case fixed up and their man arrested, and
+they didn't wish to be disturbed. She went on quickly, of herself,
+
+"I believe I was the last person who saw Mr. Gilbert alive. I must have
+been. I'd rushed over there, just as Ina told you, Mr. Boyne, between
+the reception and our getting off for San Francisco."
+
+"All this concerns the early part of the evening," put in Cummings.
+
+"Yes--but it concerns Worth, too. He was there when I came in.... It was
+very painful."
+
+"The quarrel between Captain Gilbert and his father d'ye mean?" Dykeman
+asked his first question. Mrs. Bowman nodded assent.
+
+"Thomas went right on, before me, just as though I hadn't been there.
+Then, when it came my turn, he would have spoken out before Worth of--of
+my private affairs. That was his way. But I couldn't stand it. I went
+with Worth out to his machine. He had it in the back road. We talked
+there a little while, and Worth drove away, going fast, headed for San
+Francisco."
+
+"And that was the last time you saw Thomas Gilbert alive?" Cummings
+summed up for her.
+
+"I hadn't finished," she objected mildly. "After Worth was gone, I went
+back into the study and pleaded with Thomas for a long time. I pointed
+out to him that if I'd sinned, I'd certainly suffered, and what I asked
+was no more than the right any human being has, even if they may be so
+unfortunate as to be born a woman."
+
+Dykeman looked exquisitely miserable; but Cummings was only the lawyer
+getting rid of an unwanted witness, as he warned her,
+
+"Not the slightest need to go into your personal matters, Mrs. Bowman.
+We know them already. We knew also of your visit to Mr. Gilbert's study
+that night, and that you didn't go there alone. Had the testimony been
+of any importance to us, we'd have called in both you and James
+Edwards."
+
+I could see that her deep concern for another steadied Laura Bowman.
+
+"How do you know all this?" she demanded. "Who told you?"
+
+"Your husband, Doctor Bowman."
+
+Up came the red in her face, her eyes shone with anger.
+
+"He did follow me, then? I thought I saw him creeping through the
+shrubbery on the lawn."
+
+"He did follow you. He has told us of your being at the study--the two
+of you--when young Gilbert was there."
+
+"See here, Cummings," I put in, "if Bowman was around the place, then he
+knows that Worth left before the crime was committed. Why hasn't he told
+you so?"
+
+"He has," Cummings said neatly; and I felt as though something had
+slipped. Barbara kept a brave front, but Mrs. Bowman moaned audibly.
+
+"And still you've charged Worth Gilbert? Why not Bowman himself? He was
+there. As much reason to suspect him as any of the others. Do you mean
+to tell me that you won't accept Mrs. Bowman's testimony--and Dr.
+Bowman's--as proving an alibi for Worth Gilbert? I'm ready to swear that
+he was at Tait's at five minutes past ten, was there continuously from
+that time until a little after midnight, when you yourself saw him
+there."
+
+"A little past midnight!" Cummings repeated my words half derisively.
+"Not good enough, Boyne. We base our charge on the medical statement
+that Mr. Gilbert met his death in the small hours of Sunday morning."
+
+I looked away from Barbara; I couldn't bear her eye. After a stunned
+silence, I asked,
+
+"Whose? Who makes that statement?"
+
+"His own physician. Doctor Bowman swears--"
+
+"He?" Mrs. Bowman half rose from her chair. "He'd swear to anything.
+I--"
+
+"Don't say any more," Cummings cut her off. And Dykeman mumbled,
+
+"Had the whole history of your marital infelicities all over the shop.
+Too bad such things had to be dragged in. Man seems to be a worthy
+person--"
+
+"Doctor Bowman told me positively," I broke in, "on the Sunday night
+the body was found, that death must have occurred before midnight."
+
+"Gave that as his opinion--his opinion--then," Cummings corrected me.
+
+"Yes," I accepted the correction. "That was his opinion before he
+quarreled with Worth. Now he--"
+
+"Slandering Bowman won't get you anywhere, Boyne," Cummings said. "He
+wasn't here to testify at the inquest. Man alive, you know that nothing
+but sworn testimony counts."
+
+"I wouldn't believe that man's oath," I said shortly.
+
+"Think you'll find a jury will," smirked Cummings, and Dykeman croaked
+in,
+
+"A mighty credible witness--a mighty credible witness!"
+
+While these pleasant remarks flew back and forth, a thumping and bumping
+had made itself heard in the hall. Now something came against our door,
+as though a large bundle had been thrown at the panels. The knob
+rattled, jerked, was turned, and a man appeared on the threshold,
+swaying unsteadily. Two others, who seemed to have been holding him
+back, let go all at once, and he lurched a step into the room. Doctor
+Anthony Bowman.
+
+A minute he stood blinking, staring, then he caught sight of his wife
+and bawled out,
+
+"She's here all right. Tol' you she was here. Can't fool me. Saw her go
+past in the hall."
+
+I looked triumphantly at Dykeman and Cummings. Their star witness--drunk
+as a lord! So far he seemed to have sensed nothing in the room but his
+wife. Without turning, he reached behind him and slammed the door in the
+faces of those who had brought him, then advanced weavingly on the
+woman, with,
+
+"Get up from there. Get your hat. I'll show you. You come 'long home
+with me! Ain't I your husband?"
+
+"Doctor Bowman," peppery little old Dykeman spoke up from the depths of
+his chair. "Your wife was brought here to a--to a--"
+
+"Meeting," Cummings supplied hastily.
+
+"Huh?" Bowman wheeled and saw us. "Why-ee! Di'n' know so many gen'lemen
+here."
+
+"Yes," the lawyer put a hand on his shoulder. "Conference--over the
+evidence in the Gilbert case. No time like the present for you to say--"
+
+"Hol' on a minute," Bowman raised a hand with dignity.
+
+"Cummings," said Dykeman disgustedly, "the man's drunk!"
+
+"No, no," owlishly. "'m not 'ntoxicated. Overcome with 'motion." He took
+a brace. "That woman there--'f I sh'd tell you--walk into hotel room,
+find her with three men! Three of 'em!"
+
+"How much of this are these ladies to stand for?" I demanded.
+
+"Ladies?" Bowman roared suddenly. "She's m' wife. Where's th' other man?
+Nothing 'gainst you gen'lmen. Where's he? I'll settle with him. Let that
+thing go long 'nough. Too long. Bring him out. I'll settle him now!"
+
+He dropped heavily into the chair Cummings shoved up behind him, stared
+around, drooped a bit, pulled himself together, and looked at us; then
+his head went forward on his neck, a long breath sounded--
+
+"And you'll keep Worth Gilbert in jail, run the risk of a suit for false
+imprisonment--on that!" I wanted to know.
+
+"And plenty more," the lawyer held steady, but I saw his uneasiness with
+every snore Bowman drew.
+
+Barbara crossed to speak low and earnestly to Dykeman. I heard most of
+his answer--shaken, but disposed to hang on,
+
+"Girl like you is too much influenced by the man in the case. Hero
+worship--all that sort of thing. An outlaw is an outlaw. This isn't a
+personal matter. Mr. Cummings and I are merely doing our duty as good
+citizens."
+
+At that, I think it possible that Dykeman would have listened to reason;
+it was Cummings who broke in uncontrollably,
+
+"Barbara Wallace, I was your father's friend. I'm yours--if you'll let
+me be. I can't stand by while you entangle yourself with a criminal like
+Worth Gilbert. For your sake, if for no other reason, I would be
+determined to show him up as what he is: a thief--and his father's
+murderer."
+
+Silence in the room, except the irregular snoring of Bowman, a rustle
+and a deeply taken breath now and again where Mrs. Bowman sat, her head
+bent, quietly weeping. On this, Barbara who spoke out clearly,
+
+"Those were the last words you will ever say to me, Mr. Cummings, unless
+you should some time be man enough to take back your aspersions and
+apologize for them."
+
+He gave ground instantly. I had not thought that dry voice of his could
+contain what now came into it.
+
+"Barbara, I didn't mean--you don't understand--"
+
+But without turning her head, she spoke to me: "Mr. Boyne, will you take
+Laura and me home?" gathering up Mrs. Bowman's hat and veil, shaking the
+latter out, getting her charge ready as a mother might a child. "She's
+not going back to him--ever again." Her glance passed over the sleeping
+lump of a man in his chair. "Sarah'll make a place for her at our house
+to-night."
+
+"See here," Cummings got between us and the door. "I can't let you go
+like this. I feel--"
+
+"Mr. Dykeman," Barbara turned quietly to her employer, "could we pass
+out through your room?"
+
+"Certainly," the little man was brisk to make a way for us. "I want you
+to know, Miss Wallace, that I, too, feel--I, too, feel--"
+
+I don't know what it was that Dykeman felt, but Cummings felt my rude
+elbow in his chest as I pushed him unceremoniously aside, and opened the
+door he had blocked, remarking,
+
+"We go out as we came in. This way, Barbara."
+
+It was as I parted with the two of them at the Capehart gate that I drew
+out and handed Mrs. Bowman a small piece of dull blue silk, a round hole
+in it, such as a bullet or a cigarette might have made, with,
+
+"I guess you'll just have to forgive me that."
+
+"I don't need to forgive it," her gaze swam. "I saw your mistake. But it
+was for Worth you were fighting even then; he's been so dear to me
+always--I'd have to love any one for anything they did for his sake."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII
+
+THE BLOSSOM FESTIVAL
+
+
+Two hours sleep, bath, breakfast, and I started on my early morning run
+for the county seat. Nobody else was going my way; but even at that
+hour, the road was full of autos, buggies, farm wagons, pretty much
+everything that could run on wheels, headed for the festival, all
+trimmed and streaming with the blossoming branches of their orchards.
+These were the country folks, coming in early to make a big day of it;
+orchardists; ranchers from the cattle lands in the south end of the
+county; truck and vegetable farmers; flower-seed gardeners; the Japs and
+Chinese from their little, closely cultivated patches; this tide
+streamed past me on my left hand, as I made my way to Worth and the
+jailer's office, trying with every mile I put behind me, to bolster my
+courage. Why wasn't this shift of the enemy a blessing in disguise? Let
+their setting of the hour for the murder stick, and wouldn't Worth's
+alibi be better than any we should have been able to dig up for him
+before midnight?
+
+From time to time I was troubled by recollection of Barbara's crushed
+look from the moment they sprung it on us, but brushed that aside with
+the obvious explanation that her efforts in bringing Mrs. Bowman to
+speak out had just been of no use; surely enough to depress her.
+
+Worth met me, fit, quiet, not over eager about anything. They let us
+talk with a guard outside the door. Once alone, he listened
+appreciatively while I told him of our interview with Cummings and
+Dykeman as fast as I could pile the words out.
+
+"Nobody on earth like Bobs," was his sole comment. "Never was, never
+will be."
+
+"And now," I reminded him nervously, "there's the question of this
+alibi. You went straight from the restaurant to your room at the Palace
+and to bed there?"
+
+"No-o," he said slowly. "No, I didn't."
+
+"Well--well," I broke in. "If you stopped on the way, you can remember
+where. The people you spoke to will be as good as the clerks and
+bell-hops at the Palace for your alibi." He sat silent, thoughtful, and
+I added, "Where did you go from Tait's, Worth?"
+
+"To a garage--in the Tenderloin--where they keep good cars. I'd hired
+machines from them before."
+
+"Oh, they knew you there? Then their testimony will--"
+
+"I don't believe you want it, Jerry. It only accounts for the half
+hour--or less--right after I left you; all I did was to hire a car."
+
+"A car," I echoed vaguely. "What kind of a car? Hired it for when?"
+
+"I asked them for the fastest thing they had in the shop. Told 'em to
+fill it all round, and see that it was tuned up to the last notch. I
+wanted speed."
+
+"My God, Worth! Do you know what you're telling me?"
+
+"The truth, Jerry." His eye met mine unflinchingly. "That's what you
+want, isn't it?"
+
+"Where did you go?" I groaned. "You must have seen somebody who could
+identify or remember you?"
+
+"Not a solitary human being to identify me. Those I passed--there were
+people out of course, late as it was--saw my headlights as I went by.
+But I was moving fast, Jerry. I was working off a grouch; I needed
+speed."
+
+"Where did you go?"
+
+"Straight down the peninsula on the main highway to Palo Alto, made the
+sweep across to the sea, and then up the coast road. I ran into the
+garage about dawn."
+
+"No stops anywhere?"
+
+He shook his head.
+
+"And that's your alibi?"
+
+"That's my alibi." Worth looked at me a long while before he said
+finally,
+
+"Don't you see, Jerry, that the other side had all this before they
+encouraged Bowman to change his mind about when father was shot?"
+
+I did see it--ought to have known from the first. This was what they had
+back of them last night in Cummings' room; this explained the lawyer's
+smug self-confidence, Dykeman's violent certainty that Worth was a
+criminal. A realization of this had whitened Barbara's face, set her
+lips in that pitiful, straight line. As to their momentary chagrin over
+Bowman; no trouble to them to get other physicians to bolster any
+opinion he'd given. Medical testimony on such a point is notoriously
+uncertain. All the jury would want to know was that there could be such
+a possibility. I sat there with bent head, and felt myself going to
+pieces. Cummings was right--I was no fit man to handle this job. My
+personal feelings were too deeply involved. It was Worth's voice that
+recalled me.
+
+"Cheer up, Jerry, old man. Take it to Bobs."
+
+Take it to Bobs--the idea of a big, husky old police detective running
+to cast his burden on such shoulders! I couldn't quite do it then. I
+went and telephoned the little girl that I was doing the best I
+could--and then ran circles for the rest of the day, chasing one vain
+hope after another, and finally, in the late afternoon, sneaked home to
+Santa Ysobel.
+
+Now I had the road more to myself; only an occasional handsome car,
+where the wealthy were getting in to the part of the festival they'd
+care for. In the orchards near town where the big picnic places had been
+laid out with rough board tables and benches, seats for thousands, there
+were occasional loud basket lunch parties scattered. All at once I was
+hungry enough to have gone and asked for a handout.
+
+I went by back streets down to the house to get my mail. There seemed no
+human reason that I should feel it a treachery to have Worth in jail at
+San Jose, and be able to walk into his house at Santa Ysobel a free man.
+The place was empty; Chung had the day off, of course. It was possible
+Worth's cook, even, didn't know what had happened to his employer. Santa
+Ysobel had no morning paper. In the confusion of the blossom festival, I
+ventured to guess that not more than a score of people did as yet know
+of the arrest. Our end of town was drained, quiet; nobody over at the
+Vandeman bungalow; looking down at the Square as I made my sneak
+through, I had caught a glimpse of Bronson Vandeman, a great rosette of
+apricot blossoms on his coat lapel, making his speech of presentation to
+the cannery girl queen, while his wife, Ina, her fair face shaded doubly
+by a big flower hat and a blossom covered parasol, listened and looked
+on.
+
+One of my pieces of mail concerned the Skeels chase. If my men down
+there had Skeels, and Skeels was Clayte, it would mean everything in
+handling Cummings and Dykeman. I took out the report and ran hastily
+through it; a formal statement; day by day stuff:
+
+ "_Found Skeels and Dial at Tiajuana. Negotiating to buy saloon and
+ gambling house. Arranged with Jefico for arrest of S. (Expense
+ $20.) Rurales took S. to jail. (Expense, $4.50) I interviewed S.,
+ and he said he came here to open a business where he could sell
+ booze. D. was his partner in proposition. S. knew nothing of bank
+ affair. Would waive extradition and come back to stand trial at our
+ expense. Interviewed D. He says combined capital of two is $4500.,
+ saved from S's business and D's miner's wages. D. said--_"
+
+Not much to show up with; but there were three photographs enclosed that
+I wanted to try on Cummings and Dykeman. No telling where I'd find
+either, but the Fremont House was my best bet. Getting back there
+through the crowd, I saw Skeet Thornhill in a corner drugstore, waiting
+at its counter. I was afoot, having been obliged to park my roadster in
+one of the spaces set apart for this purpose. I noticed Vandeman's car
+already there.
+
+I lingered a minute on that corner looking down the slope that led to
+City Hall Square. Tent restaurants along the way; sandwiches; hot dogs;
+coffee; milk; pies; doughnuts. Part way down a hurdy-gurdy in a tent
+began to get patronage again; the school children in white dresses with
+pink bows in their hair had just finished a stunt in the Square. They
+and their elders were streaming our way, headed for the snake charmers,
+performing dogs and Nigger-in-the-tank. In the midst of them Vandeman
+and his wife came afoot. He caught sight of me, hailed, and when I
+joined them, asked quickly, glancing toward the drugstore entrance,
+
+"Worth come with you?"
+
+I shook my head. He made that little clucking sound with his tongue that
+people do when they want to offer sympathy, and find the matter hard to
+put into words.
+
+A seller of toy balloons on the corner with a lot of noisy youngsters
+around him; the ka-lash, ka-lam of a mechanical piano further down the
+block; and young Mrs. Vandeman's staccato tones saying,
+
+"I tell Bron that the only thing Worth's friends can do is to go on
+exactly as if nothing had happened. Don't you think so, Mr. Boyne?"
+
+I agreed mutely.
+
+"Well, I wish you'd say so to Barbie Wallace," her voice sharpened.
+"She's certainly acting as though she believed the worst."
+
+"Now, Ina," Vandeman remonstrated. And I asked uncomfortably,
+
+"What's Barbie done? Where is she?"
+
+"Up at Mrs. Capehart's. In her room. Doesn't come out at all. Isn't
+going to the ball to-night. Skeet said she refused to speak to Mr.
+Cummings."
+
+"Is that all Skeet said? Vandeman, you've told your wife that Cummings
+swore to the complaint?"
+
+"Yes, but--er--there's no animus. The executor of Gilbert's estate--With
+all the talk going around--If Worth's proved innocent, he might in the
+end be glad of Cummings' action."
+
+"Oh, might he?" Skeet Thornhill had hurried out from the drugstore, a
+package of medicine in her hand. Her eyes looked as though she'd been
+crying; they flashed a hostile glance over the new brother-in-law,
+excellently groomed, the big flower favor on his coat, the tall,
+beautiful sister, all frilly white and flower festival fashion.
+
+"_If_ Worth's proved innocent!" she flung at them. "Bronse Vandeman,
+you've got a word too many in when you say that."
+
+"Just a tongue-slip, Skeeter," Vandeman apologized. "I hope the boy'll
+come through all right--same as you do."
+
+"You don't do anything about it the same as I do!" Skeet came back. "I'd
+be ashamed to 'hope' for a friend to be cleared of a charge like that.
+If I couldn't _know_ he was clear--clear all the time--I'd try to forget
+about it."
+
+"See here, Skeet," Ina obviously restrained herself, "that's what we're
+all trying to do for Worth: forget about it--make nothing of it--act
+exactly as if it'd never happened. You ought to come on out to the ball
+with the other girls. You're just staying away because Barbara Wallace
+is."
+
+"I'm not. Some damn fool went and told mother about Worth being
+arrested, and made her a lot worse. She's almost crazy. I'd be afraid to
+leave her alone with old Jane. You get me and this medicine up home--or
+shall I go around to Capehart's and have Barbie drive me?"
+
+"I'll take you, Skeeter," Vandeman said. "We're through here. We're for
+home to dress, then to the country club--and not leave it again till
+morning. That ball out there has got to be made the biggest thing Santa
+Ysobel ever saw--regardless. Come on." The crowd swallowed them up.
+
+Making for the Fremont House, I passed Dr. Bowman's stairway, and on
+impulse turned, ran up. I found the doctor packing, very snappish, very
+sorry for himself. He was leaving next day for a position in the state
+hospital for the insane at Sefton. His kind have to blow off to
+somebody; I was it, though he must have known I had no sympathy to
+offer. The hang-over of last night's drunk made emotional the tone in
+which he said,
+
+"After all, a man's wife makes or breaks him. Mine's broken me. I could
+have had a fine position at the Mountain View Sanitarium, well paid,
+among cultured people, if she'd held up her damned divorce suit a little
+longer."
+
+"And as it is, you have to put up with what Cummings can land you with
+such pull as he has."
+
+"I'm not complaining of Cummings," sullenly. "He did the best he could
+for me, I suppose, on such short notice. But a man of my class is
+practically wasted in a place of the sort."
+
+I had learned what I wanted; I carried more ammunition to the interview
+before me. I found Dykeman in his room, propped up in bed, wheezing with
+an attack of asthma. A sick man is either more merciful than usual, or
+more unmerciful. Apparently it took Dykeman the former way; he accepted
+me eagerly, and had me call Cummings from the adjoining room. The lawyer
+was half into that costume he had brought from San Francisco. He came
+quite modern as to the legs and feet, but thoroughly ancient in a shirt
+of mail around the arms and chest, and carrying a Roman helmet in his
+hand as though it had been an opera hat.
+
+"Trying 'em on?" Dykeman whispered at him.
+
+Cummings nodded with that self-conscious, half-tickled, half-sheepish
+air that men display when it comes to costume. His greeting to me was
+cool but not surly. What had happened might go as all in the day's work
+between detective and lawyer.
+
+"Just seen Bowman," was my first pass at them. "I gather he's not very
+well pleased with the position you got him; seems to think it small pay
+for a dirty job."
+
+"What's this? What's this?" croaked Dykeman. "You been getting a place
+for Bowman, Cummings?"
+
+"Certainly," the lawyer dodged with swift, practical neatness. "I'd
+promised him my influence in the matter some little time ago."
+
+"Yes," I said, "mighty little time ago--the day he promised the
+testimony you wanted in the Gilbert case."
+
+"Anything in what Boyne says, Cummings?" Dykeman asked anxiously. "You
+know I wouldn't stand for that sort of stuff."
+
+The lawyer shook his head, but I didn't believe it was ended between
+them; Dykeman was the devil to hang on to a point. This would come up
+again after I was gone. Meantime I made haste to shove the photographs
+before them. Cummings passed them back with an indifferent, "What's the
+idea?"
+
+"You don't recognize him?"
+
+"Never saw the man in my life," and again he asked, "What's the idea?"
+
+"You'd recognize a picture of Clayte?" I countered with a question of my
+own.
+
+"Yes--I think so," rather dubiously. "But Dykeman would. Show them to
+him."
+
+Dykeman reached for the photographs, spread them out before him, then
+looked up from them peevishly to say,
+
+"For the good Lord's sake! Don't look any more like Clayte than it does
+like a horned toad. Is that what you've been wasting your time over,
+Boyne? If you ask me--"
+
+"I don't ask you anything," retrieving the pictures, planting them deep
+in an inner pocket. Then I got myself out of the room.
+
+Standing on the sidewalk in front of the Fremont House, I felt sort of
+bewildered. This last crack had taken all the pep I had left. I suddenly
+realized it was long after dinner time, and I'd had no dinner, no lunch,
+nothing to eat since an early breakfast. Worth had sent me to the
+girl--and I hadn't gone. I dragged myself around to Capehart's cottage
+as nearly whipped as I ever was in my life.
+
+I found Barbara with Laura Bowman, every one else off the place, out at
+the shows. Those girls sure were good to me; they fed me and didn't ask
+questions till I was ready to talk. Nothing to be said really, except
+that I'd failed. I told them of meeting the Vandemans, and gave them
+Ina Vandeman's opinion as to how Worth's friends should conduct
+themselves just now.
+
+"So they'll all be out there," I concluded, "Vandeman and his wife
+leading the grand march, her sisters as maids of honor--except Skeet,
+staying at home with her mother. Cummings goes as a Roman soldier;
+Doctor Bowman as a Spanish cavalier. Edwards didn't see it as the
+Vandemans do, but after I'd talked to him awhile, he agreed to be
+there."
+
+And suddenly I noticed for the first time how the relative position of
+these two women had shifted. Laura Bowman wasn't red-headed for nothing;
+out from under the blight of Bowman and that hateful marriage, she had
+already thrown off some of her physical frailness; the nervous tension
+showed itself now in energy. She was moving swiftly about putting to
+rights after my meal while she listened. But Barbara sat looking
+straight ahead of her; I knew she was seeing streets full of carnival,
+every friend and acquaintance out at a ball--and Worth in a murderer's
+cell. It wouldn't do. I jumped to my feet with a brisk,
+
+"Girl, where's your hat? We'll go to the study and look over all our
+points once more. Get busy--get busy. That's the medicine for you."
+
+She gave me a miserable look and a negative shake of the head; but I
+still urged, "Worth sent me to you. The last thing he said was, 'Take it
+to Bobs.'"
+
+Dumbly she submitted. Mrs. Bowman came running with the girl's hat, and,
+"What about me, Mr. Boyne? Isn't there something I can do?"
+
+"I wish you'd go to the country club--to the ball--the same as all the
+others. Got a costume here, haven't you?"
+
+"Yes, I can wear Barbara's," she glanced to where a pile of soft black
+stuff, a red scarf, a scarlet poppy wreath, lay on a chair, "She was to
+have gone as 'The Lady of Dreams.'"
+
+Barbara went with me out into the flare of carnival illumination that
+paled the afterglow of a gorgeous sunset. No cars allowed on these
+down-town streets; even walking, we found it best to take the long way
+round. To our left the town roared and racketed as though it was afire.
+Nothing said between us till I grumbled out,
+
+"I wish I knew where Cummings was keeping Eddie Hughes."
+
+Barbara's voice beside me answered unexpectedly,
+
+"Here. In Santa Ysobel. Eddie was at Capehart's fifteen minutes before
+you got there; he came for Bill. A gasoline engine at the city hall had
+broken down."
+
+I pulled up short for a moment, and looked back at the town.
+
+"Where'd he go?"
+
+"With Bill, to the city hall. Eddie's one of the queen's guards. They're
+all to be at the country club at ten o'clock to review the grand march
+that opens the ball."
+
+I mustn't let her dwell on that. I hurried on once more, and neither of
+us spoke again till I unlocked the study door, snapped on the lights,
+brought out and put on the table the 1920 diary and the little blue
+blotter--the last bits of evidence that I felt hadn't been thoroughly
+analysed. Barbara just dropped into a chair and looked from them to me
+helplessly.
+
+"You've read this all--carefully?" she sighed.
+
+It shook me. To have Barbara, the girl I'd seen get meanings and facts
+from a written page with a mere flirt of a glance, ask me that. What I
+really wanted from her was an inspection of the book and blotter, and a
+deduction from it. As though she guessed, she answered with a sort of
+wail,
+
+"I can't, I can't even remember what I did see when I looked at these
+before. I--can't--remember!"
+
+I went and knelt on the hearth with a pretext of laying a fire there,
+since the shut-up room was chill. And when I glanced stealthily over my
+shoulder, she had gone to work; not as I had ever seen her before, but
+fumbling at the leaves, hesitating, turning to finger the blotter;
+setting her lips desperately, like an over-driven school-child, but
+keeping right on. I spun out my fire building to leave her to herself.
+Little noises of her moving there at the table; rustle and flutter of
+the leaves; now and again, a long, sobbing breath. At last something
+like a groan caused me to turn my head and see her, with face pale as
+death, eyes staring across into mine.
+
+"It was Clayte--Edward Clayte--who killed Mr. Gilbert here--in this
+room."
+
+The hair on the back of my neck stirred; I thought the girl had gone
+mad. As I ran over to the table and looked at what was under her hand,
+it came again.
+
+"He did. He did. It was Clayte--the wonder man!"
+
+"Do--do you deduce that, Barbara?"
+
+"Did I?" she raised to mine the face of a sick child. "I must have.
+See--it's here on the blotter: 'y-t-e,' that's Clayte. Double l-e-r;
+that's 'teller,' 'Avenue' is part of 'Van Ness Avenue Bank.' Oh, yes; I
+deduced it, I suppose. Both crimes end in a locked room and a perfect
+alibi. But--but--don't you see, if it is true--and it is--it is--we're
+worse off than we were before. We've the wonder man against us."
+
+"Barbara," I cried. "Barbara, come out of it!"
+
+"See? You don't believe in me any more," and her head went down on the
+table.
+
+I let her cry, while I sat and thought. The broken sentences she'd
+sobbed out to me began to fit up like a puzzle-game. By all theories of
+good detective work, I should have seen from the first the similarity of
+these crimes. But Clayte, slipping in here to do this murder--and why?
+What mixed him up with affairs here? And then the icy pang--Dykeman had
+seen a connection--Cummings had found one. With them, it was Clayte and
+his gang--and his gang was Worth Gilbert. I went and touched Barbara on
+the shoulder.
+
+"I'm going to take you home now."
+
+"Yes," tears running down her face as she stumbled to her feet. "I'm a
+failure. I can't do anything for Worth."
+
+I wiped her cheeks with my own handkerchief and led her out. As I turned
+from locking the door, it seemed to me I saw something move in the
+shrubbery. I asked Barbara Wallace about it. She hadn't noticed
+anything. Barbara Wallace hadn't noticed anything!
+
+I began to be scared for her. Solemn in the sky above boomed out the
+town clock--two strokes. Half past nine. I must get this poor child
+home. We were getting in toward the noise and the light when I felt her
+shiver, and stopped to say,
+
+"Did I forget your coat? Why, where's your hat?"
+
+"The hat's back there. I had no coat. It doesn't make any difference.
+Come on. I can't--can't--I must get home."
+
+I looked at her, saw she was about at the end of her strength, and
+decided quickly,
+
+"We'll go straight through the Square. Save time and steps."
+
+She offered no objection, and we started in where the bands played for
+the street dances, amid the raucous tooting of a thousand fish-horns,
+the clangor of cow-bells, and the occasional snap of the forbidden
+fire-cracker. As we turned from Broad Street into Main, I found that the
+congestion was greater even than I had supposed. Here, several blocks
+away from the city hall, progress was so difficult that I took Barbara
+back a block to get the street that paralleled Main. This we could
+navigate slowly. Here, also, everybody was masked. Confetti flew,
+serpentines unreeled themselves out through the air, dusters spluttered
+in faces, and among the Pierrettes, Pierrots, Columbines, sombrero-ed
+cowboys, bandana-ed cow-girls, Indians, Sambos, Topsies and Poppy
+Maidens, Barbara's little white linen slip and soft white sweater, and
+my grey business suit, were more conspicuous than would have been the
+Ahkoond of Swat and his Captive Slave. Even after the confetti had
+sprinkled her black hair until it reminded me of Skeet's blossom wreath,
+infinitely multiplied, I still saw the glances through the eye-holes of
+masks follow us wonderingly.
+
+Opposite the city hall, where we must cross to get to the Capehart
+street, we were again almost stopped by the dense crowd. The Square was
+a green-turfed dancing floor; from its stand, an orchestra jazzed out
+the latest and dizziest of dances; and countless couples one-stepped on
+the grass, on the asphalt of the streets, even over the lawns of
+adjacent houses, tree trunks and flower beds adding more things to be
+dodged. At one corner, where the crowd was thick, we saw a big man being
+wound to a pole by paper serpentines. Yelling and capering, the masked
+dancers milled around and around him, winding the gay ribbons, while
+others with confetti and the Spanish cascarones, tried to snow him
+under. As we came up, a big fist wagged and Bill Capehart's voice
+roared,
+
+"Hold on! Too much is a-plenty!"
+
+He tore himself loose, streaming with paper strips, bent and filled his
+fists from the confetti at his feet. His tormentors howled and dropped
+back as much as they could for the hemming crowd; he rushed them,
+heaving paper ammunition in a hail-storm, and reached us in two or three
+jumps.
+
+"Golly!" he roared, "Me for a cyclone cellar! This is a riot. You ain't
+in costume, either. Wonder they wouldn't pick on you."
+
+With the words they did. I put Barbara behind me, and was conscious only
+of a blinding snow of paper flakes, the punch and slap of dusters, in an
+uproar of horns and bells.
+
+"Good deal like fighting a swarm of bees in your shirt-tail with a
+willow switch," old Bill panted at my shoulder. "Gosh!" as the snapping
+of firecrackers let loose beneath our feet. "Some o' these mosquito-net
+skirts'll get afire next--then there'll be hell a-popping!"
+
+Close at hand there was a louder report, as of a giant cracker, and at
+that Barbara sagged against me. I whirled and put an arm about her.
+Bill grabbed her from me, and lifted her above the pressure of the
+crowd. I charged ahead, shouting,
+
+"Gangway! Let us through!"
+
+Willing enough, the mob could not make room for passage until my
+shoulder, lowered to strike at the breast, forced a way, that closed in
+the instant Bill gained through. It was football tactics, with me
+bucking the line, Bill carrying the ball. Fortunately, the bunch was a
+good-natured festival gathering, or my rough work might have brought us
+trouble. As it was, a short, stiff struggle took us to the outer fringe
+of the mob.
+
+"How is she? What happened?" I grunted, coming to a stop.
+
+"Search me." Bill twisted around to look at the white face that lay back
+on his shoulder, with closed lids. Three strokes chimed from the city
+hall tower. Barbara's eyes flashed open; as the last stroke trembled in
+the air, Barbara's voice came, sharp with breathless urgence,
+
+"A quarter of ten! Quick--get me to the country club!"
+
+"Take _you_ there? Now, d'ye mean?" I ejaculated; and holding her like a
+baby, Bill's eyes flared into mine. "Did something happen to you back
+there, girl? Or did you just faint?"
+
+"Never mind about me! There," that glance of hers that saw everything
+indicated a parking place packed with machines half a block away up a
+side street. "Carry me there. Take one of those cars. Get me to the
+country club. Don't--" as I opened my mouth, "don't ask questions."
+
+I turned and ran. Bill galloped behind. Barbara had lifted her head to
+cry after me,
+
+"The best one! Pick the fastest!"
+
+I plunged down the line of cars, looking for a good machine and one with
+whose drive I was familiar. The guard rushed up to stop me; I showed him
+my badge, leaped into the front seat of a speed-built Tarpon, and had it
+out by the time Bill came up with the girl in his arms. I turned and
+swung open the tonneau door. Almost with one movement, he lifted her in
+and climbed after. I started off with braying horn, and at that I had to
+use caution. Making my way toward the corner of the street that led to
+Bill's house, I felt a small hand clutch the slack of my coat between
+the shoulders, and Barbara's voice, faint, but with a fury of
+determination in it, demanded,
+
+"Where are you going? I said the country club."
+
+"All right; I'll go. I'll look after whatever you want out there when
+I've got you home."
+
+"Oh, oh," she moaned. "Won't you--this one time--take orders?"
+
+I went on past the corner. She had a right to put it just that way. I
+gave the Tarpon all I dared in town streets.
+
+"What time is it?" I heard her whispering to Bill. "Eight minutes to
+ten? I have to be there by ten, or it's no use. Can he make it? Do you
+think he can make it?"
+
+"Yes," I growled, crouching behind the wheel. "I'll make it. May have to
+kill a few--but I'll get you there."
+
+By this, we'd come out on the open highway, better, but not too clear,
+either. There followed seven minutes of ripping through the night, of
+people who ran yelling to get out of our way and hurled curses behind
+us, only a few cars meeting us like the whirling of comets in terrifying
+glimpses as we shot past; and, at last, the country club; strings of gay
+lanterns, winking ruby tail-lights of machines parked in front of it,
+the glare from its windows, and the strains of the orchestra in its
+ballroom, playing "On the Beach at Waikiki." When she heard it, Barbara
+thanked God with,
+
+"We're in time!"
+
+I took that machine up to the front steps over space never intended for
+automobiles, at a pace not proper for lawns or even roads, and only
+halted when I was half across the walk. Bill rolled from the tonneau
+door and stood by it. I jumped down and came around.
+
+"Lift me out, and put me on my feet," Barbara ordered. "Help me--one on
+each side. I can walk. I must!"
+
+We crossed a deserted porch; the evening's opening event--the grand
+march--had drawn every one, servants and all, inside. So far, without
+challenge, meeting no one. We had the place to ourselves till we stood,
+the three of us alone, before the upper entrance of the assembly room.
+In there, the last strains of Waikiki died away. I looked to Barbara.
+She was in command. Her words back there in town had settled that for
+me.
+
+"What do we do now?" I asked.
+
+White as the linen she wore, the girl's face shone with some inner fire
+of passionate resolution. I saw this, too, in the determined, almost
+desperate energy with which she held herself erect, one clenched hand
+pressed hard against her side.
+
+"Take me in there, Mr. Boyne. And you," to Capehart, "find a man you can
+trust to guard each door of the ballroom."
+
+"What you say goes." Big Bill wheeled like a well trained cart-horse and
+had taken a step or two, when she called after him,
+
+"Arrest any one who attempts to enter."
+
+"Arrest 'em if they try to git in," Capehart repeated stoically. "Sure.
+That goes." But I interrupted,
+
+"You mean if they try to get out."
+
+At that she gave me a look. No time or breath to waste. Bill,
+unquestioning, had hurried to his part of the work. I took up mine with,
+"Forgive me, Barbara. I'll not make that mistake again"; slipped my arm
+under hers to support her; dragged open the big doors; shoved past the
+hallman there; and we stepped into the many-colored, moving brilliance
+of the ballroom.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII
+
+THE COUNTRY CLUB BALL
+
+
+The ballroom of the country club at Santa Ysobel is big and finely
+proportioned. I don't know if anything of the sort could have registered
+with me at the moment, but I remembered afterward my impression of the
+great hall fairly walled and roofed with fruit blossoms, and the
+gorgeousness of hundreds of costumes. The mere presence of potential
+funds raises the importance of an event. The prune kings and apricot
+barons down there, with their wives and daughters in real brocades,
+satins and velvets, with genuine jewels flashing over them, represented
+so much in the way of substantial wealth that it seemed to steady the
+whole fantastic scene.
+
+Barbara and I entered on the level of the slightly raised orchestra
+stand and only half a dozen paces from it. Nobody noticed us much; we
+came in right on the turn of things--floor managers darting around,
+orchestra with bows poised and horns at lips, the whole glittering
+company of maskers being made ready to weave their "Figure of Eight"
+across the dancing floor. My poor girl dragged on my arm; her small feet
+scuffed; I lifted her along, wishing I might pick her up and carry her
+as Bill had done. I made for an unoccupied musicians' bench; but once
+there, she only leaned against it, not letting go her hold on me, and
+stood to take in every detail of the confused, moving scene.
+
+The double doors had swung closed behind us; the hallman there who held
+the knob, now reinforced by a uniformed policeman. The servants' way, at
+the further end was shut; men in plain clothes set their backs against
+it. And last, Big Bill himself in overalls, a touch of blunt blue
+realism, came fogging along the side-wall to swing into place the great
+wooden bar that secured the entire group of glass doors which gave on
+the porch. Barbara would have seen all these arrangements while I was
+getting ready for my first glance, but I prompted her nervously with a
+low-toned, "All set, girl," and then as she still didn't speak, "Bill's
+got every door guarded."
+
+She nodded. The length of the room away, in the end gallery, was the
+cannery girl queen and her guard. Even at that distance, I recognized
+Eddie Hughes, in his pink-and-white Beef Eater togs, a gilded wooden
+spear in his hand, a flower tassel bobbing beside that long, drab,
+knobby countenance of his. There he was, the man I'd jailed for Thomas
+Gilbert's murder. Below on the dancing floor, were the two, Cummings and
+Bowman, who had put Worth behind the bars for the same crime. At my side
+was the pale, silent girl who declared that Clayte was the murderer.
+
+Whispered tuning and trying of instruments up here; flutter and rush
+about down on the dancing floor; and Barbara, that clenched left hand of
+hers still pressed in hard against her side, facing what problem?
+
+Crash! Boom! We were so close the music fairly deafened us, as, with a
+multiplied undernote of moving feet, the march began. On came those
+people toward us, wave behind wave of color and magnificence, dotted
+with little black ovals of masks pierced by gleaming eye-holes. I could
+sense Barbara reading the room as it bore down on her, and reading it
+clearly, getting whatever it was she had come there for. Myself, I was
+overwhelmed, drowned in the size and sweep of everything, struggling
+along, whispering to her when I spotted Jim Edwards in his friar's robe,
+noticed that the Roman soldier who must be Cummings, and Bowman, the
+Spaniard, squired the Thornhill twins in their geisha girl dresses; the
+crimson poppies of a Lady of Dreams looked odd against Laura Bowman's
+coppery hair.
+
+At the head of the procession as they swung around, leading it with
+splendid dignity, came a pair who might have been Emperor and Empress of
+China--the Vandemans. To go on with affairs as if nothing had
+happened--though Worth Gilbert was in jail--had been the laid-down
+policy of both Vandeman and his wife. I'd thought it reasonable then;
+foolish to get hot at it now. The great, shining, rhythmically moving
+line deployed, interwove, and opened out again until at last the floor
+was almost evenly occupied with the many-colored mass. I looked at
+Barbara; the awful intensity with which she read her room hurt me. It
+had nothing to do with that flirt of a glance she always gave a printed
+page, that mere toss of attention she was apt to offer a problem. The
+child was in anguish, whether merely the ache of sorrow, or actual
+bodily pain; I saw how rigidly that small fist still pressed against the
+knitted wool of her sweater, how her lip was drawn in and bitten. Her
+physical weakness contrasted strangely with the clean cut decision, the
+absolute certainty of her mental power. She raised her face and looked
+straight up into mine.
+
+"Have the music stopped."
+
+I leaned over and down toward the orchestra leader to catch his eye,
+holding toward him the badge. His glance caught it, and I told him what
+we wanted. He nodded. For an instant the music flooded on, then at a
+sharp rap of the baton, broke off in mid-motion, as though some great
+singing thing had caught its breath. And all the swaying life and color
+on the floor stopped as suddenly. Barbara had picked the moment that
+brought Ina Vandeman and her husband squarely facing us. After the first
+instant's bewilderment, Vandeman and his floor managers couldn't fail to
+realize that they were being held up by an outsider; with Barbara in
+full sight up here by the orchestra, they must know who was doing it. I
+wondered not to have Vandeman in my hair already; but he and his consort
+stood in dignified silence; it was his committee who came after me, a
+Mephistopheles, a troubadour, an Indian brave, a Hercules with his club,
+swarming up the step, wanting to know if I was the man responsible, why
+the devil I had done it, who the devil I thought I was, anyhow. Others
+were close behind.
+
+"Edwards," I called to the brown friar, "can you keep these fellows off
+me for a minute?"
+
+Still not a word from Barbara. Nothing from Vandeman. Less than nothing:
+I watched in astonishment how the gorgeous leader stopped dumb, while
+those next him backed into the couple behind, side stepping, so that the
+whole line yawed, swayed, and began to fall into disorder.
+
+"Cummings," as I glimpsed the lawyer's chain mail and purple feather,
+"Keep them all in place if you can. All."
+
+In the instant, from behind my shoulder Barbara spoke.
+
+"Have that man--take off his mask."
+
+A little, shaking white hand pointed at the leader.
+
+"Mr. Vandeman," I said. "That's an order. It'll have to be done."
+
+The words froze everything. Hardly a sound or movement in the great
+crowded room, except the little rustle as some one tried to see better.
+And there, all eyes on him, Bronson Vandeman stood with his arms at his
+sides, mute as a fish. Ina fumbled nervously at the cord of her own
+mask, calling to me in a fierce undertone,
+
+"What do you mean, Mr. Boyne, bringing that girl here to spoil things.
+This is spite-work."
+
+"Off--take his mask off! Do it yourself!" Barbara's voice was clear and
+steady.
+
+I made three big jumps of the space between us and the leading couple.
+Vandeman's committee-men obstructed me, the excited yip going amongst
+them.
+
+"Vandeman--Bronse--Vannie--Who let this fool in here?--Do we throw him
+out?"
+
+Then they took the words from Edwards; the tune changed to grumblings
+of, "What's the matter with Van? Why doesn't he settle it one way or
+another, and be done?"
+
+Why didn't he? I had but a breath of time to wonder at that, as I shoved
+a way through. Darn him, like a graven image there, the only mute,
+immovable thing in that turmoil! I began to feel sore.
+
+"You heard what she said?" I took no trouble now to be civil. "She wants
+your mask off."
+
+No flicker of response from the man, but the Empress of China dragged
+down her mask, crying,
+
+"Heard what she said? What she wants?" Over the shoulders of the crowd
+she gave Barbara Wallace a venomous look, then came at me.
+
+A little too late. My hand had shot out and snatched the mask from the
+face of China's monarch. A moment I glared, the bit of black stuff in my
+grasp, at the alien countenance I had uncovered. Crowding and craning of
+the others to see. Jabbering, exclaiming all around us.
+
+"Corking make-up; looks like a sure-enough Chinaman."
+
+"No make-up at all. The real thing."
+
+"What's the big idea?"
+
+"Why did he unmask, then?"
+
+"Didn't want to. They made him."
+
+And last, but loudest, repeated time and again, with wonder, with
+distaste, with rising anger,
+
+"The Vandeman's Chinese cook!"
+
+For with the ripping away of that black oval, I had looked into the
+slant, inscrutable eyes of Fong Ling. Hemmed in by the crowd, he could
+but face me; he did so with a kind of unhuman passivity.
+
+And the committee went wild. Their own masks came off on the run. I saw
+Cummings' face, Bowman's; Eddie Hughes slid from the balcony stair and
+bucked the crowd, pushing through to the seat of war. The grand march
+had become a jostling, gabbling chaos.
+
+Barbara, up there, above it all, knew what she was about. I had utter
+confidence in her. But she was plainly holding back for a further
+development, her eyes on the entrances; and what the devil was my next
+move?
+
+Ina Vandeman wheeled where she stood and faced the room, both hands
+thrown up, laughing.
+
+"It was meant to be a joke--a great, big foolish joke!" her high treble
+rang out. "Bron's here somewhere. Wait. He'll tell you better than I
+could. At a masquerade--people do--they do foolish things.... They--"
+
+"Is Bronse Vandeman here?" I questioned Fong Ling. The Chinaman's stiff
+lips moved for the first time, in his formal, precise English.
+
+"Yes, sir. Mr. Vandeman will explain." He crossed his hands and resigned
+the matter to his employer. And I demanded of Ina Vandeman, "You tell us
+your husband's present--in this room? Now?" and when her answer was
+drowned in the noise, I roared,
+
+"Vandeman! Bronson Vandeman! You're wanted here!"
+
+No answer. Edwards took up the call after me; the committee yelled the
+name in all keys and variations. In the middle of our squawking, a minor
+disturbance broke out across by the porch entrance, where Big Bill
+Capehart stood. As I looked, he turned over his post to Eddie Hughes,
+who came abreast of him at the moment, and started, scuffling and
+struggling toward us, with a captive.
+
+"I had my orders!" his big voice boomed out. "Pinch any one that tried
+to get in. Y'don't pass me--not if you was own cousin to God A'mighty!"
+
+On they came through the crowd, all mixed up; blue overalls, and a
+flapping costume whose rich, many-colored silk embroideries, flashed
+like jewels. A space widened about us for them. The big garage man spun
+his catch to the center of it, so that he faced the room, his back to
+the orchestra.
+
+"Wanted in, did ya? Now yer in, what about it?"
+
+What about it, indeed? In Bill's prisoner, as he stood there twitching
+ineffectually against that obstinate hold, breathing loud, shakily
+settling his clothes, we had, robe for robe, cap for cap, a duplicate
+Emperor of China!
+
+And the next moment, this figure took off its mask and showed the face
+of Bronson Vandeman.
+
+Dead silence all about us; Capehart loosened his grip, abashed but still
+truculent.
+
+"Dang it all, Mr. Vandeman, if you didn't want to get mussed up, what
+made you fight like that?"
+
+"Fight?" Vandeman found his voice. "Who wouldn't? I was late, and you--"
+
+"Bron!" After one desperate glance toward the girl up on the platform,
+Ina ran to him and put a hand on his arm. "They stopped the march....
+Your--the--they spoiled our joke. But have them start the music again.
+You're here now. Let's go on with the march ... explain afterward."
+
+"Good business!" Vandeman filled his chest, glanced across at Fong Ling,
+and gave his social circle a rather poor version of the usual
+white-toothed smile. "Jokes can wait--especially busted ones. On with
+the dance; let joy be unrefined!"
+
+Sidelong, I saw the orchestra leader's baton go up. But no music
+followed. It was at Barbara the baton had pointed, at Barbara that all
+the crowded company stared. Her little white dress clung to her slender
+figure. I saw that now she was in the strange Buddha pose. A few flecks
+of silver paper, still in her black hair, made it sparkle. But it was
+Barbara's eyes that held us all spellbound. In her colorless face those
+wonderful openings of black light seemed to look through and beyond us.
+For an instant there was no stir. Hundreds of faces set toward her, held
+by the wonder of her. Fong Ling's yellow visage moved for the first time
+from its immobility with a sort of awe, a dread. And when my gaze came
+back to her, I noticed that, with the dropping of her hands to join the
+finger-tips, she had left, where that little, pressing fist had been, a
+blur of red on the white sweater. Over me it rushed with the force of
+calamity, she had been wounded when she sank down back there in the
+crowd. It was a shot--not a giant cracker--we had heard.
+
+"Vandeman," I whirled on him, "You shot this girl. You tried to kill
+her."
+
+Sensation enough among the others; but I doubt if he even heard me. His
+gaze had found Barbara; all the bounce, all the jauntiness was out of
+the man, as he stared with the same haunted fear his eyes had held when
+she concentrated last night at his own dinner table.
+
+She was concentrating now; could she stand the strain of it, with its
+weakening of the heart action, its pumping all the blood to the brain? I
+shouldered my way to her, and knelt beside her, begging,
+
+"Don't, Barbara. Give it up, girl. You can't stand this."
+
+Her hands unclasped. Her eyes grew normal. She relaxed, sighingly. I
+leaned closer while she whispered to me the last addition in that
+problem of two and two--the full solution. Armed, I faced Vandeman once
+more.
+
+Something seemed to be giving way in the man; his lips were almost as
+pale as his face, and that had been, from the moment he uncovered it,
+like tallow. He looked withered, smaller; his hair where it had been
+pressed down by mask and cap, crossed his forehead, flat, smooth, dull
+brown. I saw, half consciously, that Fong Ling was gone. An accomplice?
+No matter; the criminal himself was here--Barbara's wonder man. It was
+to him I spoke.
+
+"Edward Clayte," at the name, Cummings clanked around front to stare. "I
+hold a warrant for your arrest for the theft of nine hundred and eighty
+seven thousand dollars from the Van Ness Avenue Savings Bank of San
+Francisco."
+
+He made a sick effort to square his shoulders; fumbled with his hair to
+toss it back from its straight-down sleekness, as Clayte, to the
+pompadoured crest of Vandeman. How often I had seen that gesture, not
+understanding its significance. Cummings, at my side, drew in a breath,
+with,
+
+"Why--damn it!--he is Clayte!"
+
+"All right," I let the words go from the corner of my mouth at the
+lawyer, in the same hushed tones he'd used. "See how you like this next
+one," and finished, loud enough so all might hear,
+
+"And I charge you, Edward Clayte--Bronson Vandeman--with the murder of
+Thomas Gilbert."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIX
+
+UNMASKED
+
+
+Disgrace was in the air; the country club had seen its vice president in
+handcuffs. There was a great gathering up of petticoats and raising of
+moral umbrellas to keep clear of the dirty splashings. It made me think
+of a certain social occasion in Israel some thousands of years ago, when
+Absalom, at his own party, put a raw one over on his brother Amnon, and
+all the rest of King David's sons looked at each other with jaws
+sagging, and "every man gat himself up upon his mule and fled." Here, it
+was limousines; more than one noble chariot--filled with members of the
+faction who'd helped to rush Vandeman into office over the claims of
+older members--rolled discredited down the drive.
+
+Yet a ball is the hardest thing in the world to kill; like a lizard, if
+you break it in two, the head and tail go right on wriggling
+independently. Also, behind this masked affair at the country club was
+the business proposition of a lot of blossom festival visitors from all
+over the state who mustn't be disappointed. By the time I'd finished out
+in front, getting my prisoner off to the lock-up, sending Eddie Hughes,
+with Capehart and the other helpers he'd picked up to guard the Vandeman
+bungalow, handed over to the Santa Ysobel police the matter of finding
+Fong Ling, and turned back to see how Barbara was getting on, the music
+sounded once more, the rhythmic movement of many feet.
+
+"The boys have got it started again," Jim Edwards joined me in the hall,
+his tone still lowered and odd from the amazement of the thing.
+"Curious, that business in there yesterday," a nod indicated the little
+writing room toward which we moved. "Bronse stepping in, brisk and cool,
+for you to question him; pleasant, ordinary looking chap. Would you say
+he had it in his head right then to murder you--or Barbara--if you came
+too hot on his trail?"
+
+"Me?" I echoed sheepishly. "He never paid me that compliment. He wasn't
+afraid of me. I think Barbara sealed her own fate, so far as he was
+concerned, when she let Worth pique her into doing a concentrating stunt
+at Vandeman's dinner table last night. The man saw that nothing she
+turned that light on could long stay hidden. He must have decided, then,
+to put her out of the way. As for his wife--well, however much or little
+she knew, she'd not defend Barbara Wallace."
+
+At that, Edwards gave me a look, but all he said was,
+
+"Cummings has suffered a complete change of heart, it seems. I left him
+in the telephone booth, just now, calling up Dykeman. He'll certainly
+keep the wires hot for Worth."
+
+"He'd better," I agreed; and only Edwards's slight, dark smile answered
+me.
+
+"There's a side entrance here," he explained mildly, as we came to the
+turn of the hall. "I'll unlock it; and when Barbara's ready to be taken
+home, we can get her out without every one gaping at her."
+
+He was still at the lock, his back to me, when a door up front slammed,
+and a Spanish Cavalier came bustling down the corridor, pulling off a
+mask to show me Bowman's face, announcing,
+
+"I think you want me in there. That girl should have competent medical
+attention."
+
+"She has that already," I spoke over my shoulder. "And if she hadn't, do
+you think she'd let you touch her, Bowman? Man, you've got no human
+feeling. If you had a shred, you'd know that to her it is as true you
+tried to take Worth's life with your lying testimony as it is that
+Vandeman murdered Worth's father with a gun."
+
+"Hah!" the doctor panted at me; he was fairly sober, but still a bit
+thick in the wits. "You people ain't classing me with this crook
+Vandeman, are you? You can't do that. No--of course--Laura's set you all
+against me."
+
+Edwards straightened up from the door. With his first look at that
+fierce, dark face, the doctor began to back off, finally scuttling
+around the turn into the main hall at what was little less than a run.
+
+They had Barbara sitting in the big Morris chair while they finished
+adjusting bandages and garments. Our young cub of a doctor, silver
+buttoned velveteen coat off, sleeves rolled up, hailed us cheerily,
+
+"That bullet went where it could get the most blood for the least harm,
+I'd say. Have her all right in a jiffy. At that, if it had been a little
+further to one side--"
+
+And I knew that Edward Clayte's bullet--Bronson Vandeman's--had narrowly
+missed Barbara's heart.
+
+"This wonderful girl!" the doctor went on with young enthusiasm, as he
+bandaged and pinned. "Sitting up there, wounded as she was, and
+forgetting it, she looked to me more than human. Sort of effect as
+though light came from her."
+
+"I was ashamed of myself back there in the Square, Mr. Boyne," Barbara's
+voice, good and strong, cut across his panegyric. "Never in my life did
+I feel like that before. My brain wasn't functioning normally at all. I
+was confused, full of indecision." She mentioned that state, so
+painfully familiar to ordinary humanity, as most people would speak of
+being raving crazy. "It was agonizing," she smiled a little at the
+others. "Poor Mr. Boyne helping me along--we'd got somehow into a crowd.
+And I was just a lump of flesh. I hardly knew where we were. Then
+suddenly came the sound of the shot, the stinging, burning feeling in my
+side. It knocked my body down; but my mind came clear; I could use it."
+
+"I'll say you could," I smiled. "From then on, Bill Capehart and I were
+the lumps of flesh that you heaved around without explanation."
+
+"There wasn't time; and I was afraid you'd find out what had happened to
+me, and wouldn't bring me here," she said simply. "I knew that the one
+motive for silencing me was the work I'd been doing for Mr. Boyne."
+
+"Sure," I said, light breaking on me. "And every possible suspect in the
+Gilbert murder case was under this roof--or supposed to be--the grand
+march would be the show-down as to that. And just then the clock struck!
+Poor girl!"
+
+"It was a race against time," Barbara agreed. "If we could get here
+first, hold the door against whoever came flying to get in, we'd have
+the one who shot me."
+
+"But, Barbara child," Laura Bowman was working at a sweater sleeve on
+the bandaged side. "You did get here and caught Bronson Vandeman; it had
+worked out all right. Why did you risk sitting up in that strained pose,
+wounded as you were, to concentrate?"
+
+"For Worth. I had to relate this crime to the one for which he'd been
+arrested. Within the hour, I'd gathered facts that showed me Edward
+Clayte killed Worth's father. When I brought that man and his crime to
+stand before me, and Bronson Vandeman and his crime to stand beside
+it--as I can bring things when I concentrate on them--I found they
+dove-tailed--the impossible was true--these two were one man." She
+looked around at the four of us, wondering at her, and finished, "Can't
+they take me home now, doctor?"
+
+"Sit and rest a few minutes. Have the door open," the young fellow said.
+And on the instant there came a call for me from the side entrance.
+
+"Mr. Boyne--are you in there? May I speak to you, please?"
+
+It was Skeet Thornhill's voice. I went out into the entry. There,
+climbing down from the old Ford truck, leaving its engine running, was
+Skeet herself. Her glance went first to the door I closed behind me.
+
+"Yes," I answered its question. "She's in there." Then, moved by the
+frank misery of her eyes, "She'll be all right. Very little hurt."
+
+She said something under her breath; I thought it was "Thank God!"
+looked about the deserted side entrance, seemed to listen to the
+flooding of music and movement from the ballroom, then lifting to mine
+a face so pale that its freckles stood out on it, faltered a step
+closer and studied me.
+
+"They phoned us," scarcely above a whisper. "Mother sent me for the
+girls and--Ina. Mr. Boyne," a break in her voice, "am I going to be able
+to take Ina back with me? Or is she--do they--?"
+
+"Wait," I said. "Here she comes now," as Cummings brought young Mrs.
+Vandeman toward us. She moved haughtily, head up, a magnificent evening
+wrap thrown over her costume, and saw her sister without surprise.
+
+"Skeet," she crossed and stood with her back to me, "there's been some
+trouble here. Keep it from mother if you can. I'm leaving--but we'll get
+it all fixed up. How did you get here? Can I take you back in the
+limousine?"
+
+The big, closed car, one of Vandeman's wedding gifts to her, purred
+slowly up the side drive, circling Skeet's old truck, and stopped a
+little beyond. Skeet gave it one glance, then reached a twitching hand
+to catch on the big silken sleeve.
+
+"You can't go to the bungalow, Ina. As I came past, they were placing
+men around it to--to watch it."
+
+"_What!_" Ina wheeled on us, looking from one to the other. "Mr.
+Boyne--Mr. Cummings--who had that done?"
+
+"Does it matter?" I countered. She made me tired.
+
+"Does it matter?" she snapped up my words, "Am I to be treated as if--as
+though--"
+
+Even Ina Vandeman's effrontery wouldn't carry her to a finish on that. I
+completed it for her, explicitly,
+
+"Mrs. Vandeman, whether you are detained as an accomplice or merely a
+material witness, I'm responsible for you. I would have the authority
+to allow you to go with your sister; but you'll not be permitted to even
+enter the bungalow."
+
+"It's nearly midnight," she protested. "I have no clothes but this
+costume. I must go home."
+
+"Oh, come on!" Skeet pleaded. "Don't you see that doesn't do any good,
+Ina? You can get something at our house to wear."
+
+She gave me a long look, her chin still high, her eyes hard and
+unreadable. Then, "For the present, I shall go to a hotel." She laid a
+hand on Skeet's shoulder, but it was only to push her away. "Tell
+mother," evenly, "that I'll not bring my trouble into her house. Oh--you
+want Ernestine and Cora? Well, get them and go." And with firm step she
+walked to her car.
+
+I nodded to Cummings.
+
+"Have one of Dykeman's men pick her up and hang tight," I said, and he
+smiled back understandingly, with,
+
+"Already done, Boyne. I want to speak to Miss Wallace--if I may. Will
+you please see for me?"
+
+A moment later, he marched shining and jingling, in through a door that
+he left open behind him, pulled off his Roman helmet as though it had
+been a hat, and stood unconsciously fumbling that shoe-brush thing they
+trim those ancient lids with.
+
+"Barbara," he met the eyes of the girl in the chair unflinchingly, "you
+told me last night that the only words I ever could speak to you would
+be in the way of an apology. Will you hear one now? I'm ready to make
+it. Talk doesn't count much; but I'm going the limit to put Worth
+Gilbert's release through."
+
+There was a long silence, Barbara looking at him quite unmoved. Behind
+that steady gaze lay the facts that Worth Gilbert's life and honor had
+been threatened by this man's course; that she herself was only alive
+because the bullet of that criminal whom his action unconsciously
+shielded missed its aim by an inch: Worth's life, her life, their love
+and all that might mean--and Barbara had eyes you could read--I didn't
+envy Cummings as he faced her. Finally she said quietly,
+
+"I'll accept your apology, Mr. Cummings, when Worth is free."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXX
+
+A CONFESSION
+
+
+In the dingy office of the city prison, with its sand boxes and barrel
+stove, its hacked old desks, dusty books and papers, I watched Bronson
+Vandeman, and wondered to see how the man I had known played in and out
+across his face with the man Edward Clayte, whom I had tried to imagine,
+whom nobody could describe.
+
+Helping to recover Clayte's loot for Worth Gilbert looked to the
+opposition their best bet for squaring themselves. Dykeman from his sick
+bed, had dug us up a stenographer; Cummings had climbed out of his tin
+clothes and come along with us to the jail. They wanted the screws put
+on; but I intended to handle Vandeman in my own way. I had halted the
+lawyer on the lock-up threshold, with,
+
+"Cummings, I want you to keep still in here. When I'm done with the man,
+you can question him all you want--if he's left anything to be told." I
+answered a doubtful look, "Did you see his face there in the ball room
+as he looked up at Barbara Wallace? He thinks that girl knows
+everything, like a supreme being. He's still so shaken that he'd spill
+out anything--everything. He'll hardly suppose he's telling us anything
+we don't know."
+
+And Vandeman bore out expectations. Now, provided with a raincoat to
+take the place of his Mandarin robe, his trousers still the lilac satin
+ones of that costume, he surveyed us and our preparations with a half
+smile as we settled our stenographer and took chairs ourselves.
+
+"I look like hell--what?" He spoke fast as a man might with a drink
+ahead. But it was not alcohol that was loosening his tongue. "Why can't
+some one go up to my place and get me a decent suit of clothes? God
+knows I've plenty there--closets full of them."
+
+"Time enough when th' Shurff gets here," Roll Winchell, the town
+marshall grunted at him. "I'm not taking any chances on you, Mr.
+Vandeman. You'll do me as you are."
+
+"Stick a smoke in my face, Cummings," came next in a voice that twanged
+like a stretched string. "Damn these bracelets! Light it, can't you?
+Light it." He puffed eagerly, got to his feet and began walking up and
+down the room, glancing at us from time to time, raising the manacled
+hands grotesquely to his cigar, drawing in a breath as though to speak,
+then shaking his head, grinning a little and walking on. I knew the
+mood; the moment was coming when he must talk. The necessity to reel out
+the whole thing to whomever would listen was on him like a sneeze. It's
+always so at this stage of the game.
+
+For all the hullabaloo in the streets, we were quiet enough here, since
+the lock-up at Santa Ysobel lurks demurely, as such places are apt to
+do, in the rear of the building whose garbage can it is. Our pacing
+captive could keep silent no longer. Shooting a sidelong glance at me,
+he broke out,
+
+"I'm not a common crook, Boyne, even if I do come of a family of them,
+and my father's in Sing Sing. I put him there. They'd not have caught
+him without. He was an educated man--never worked anything but big
+stuff. At that, what was the best he could do--or any of them? Make a
+haul, and all they got out of it was a spell of easy money that they
+only had the chance to spend while they were dodging arrest. Sooner or
+later every one of them I knew got put away for a longer or shorter
+term. Growing up like that, getting my education in the public schools
+daytimes, and having a finish put on it nights with the gang, I decided
+that I was going to be, not honest, but the hundredth man--the
+thousandth--who can pull off a big thing and neither have to hide nor go
+to prison."
+
+This was promising; a little different from the ordinary brag; I
+signaled inconspicuously to our stenographer to keep right on the job.
+
+"When I was twenty-four years old, I saw my chance to shake the gang and
+try out my own idea," Clayte rattled it off feelinglessly. "It was a
+lone hand for me. My father had made a stake by a forgery; checks on the
+City bank. I knew where the money was hid, eight thousand and seventy
+nine dollars. It would just about do me. I framed the old man--I told
+you he was in Sing Sing now--took my working capital and came out here
+to the Coast. That money had to make me rich for life, respected,
+comfortable. I figured that my game was as safe as dummy whist."
+
+"Yeh," said Roll Winchell, the marshal, gloomily, "them high-toned
+Eastern crooks always comin' out here thinkin' they'll find the Coast a
+soft snap."
+
+"Two years I worked as a messenger for the San Francisco Trust Company,"
+Clayte's voice ran right on past Winchell's interruption, "a model
+employee, straight as they come; then decided they were too big for me
+to tackle, and used their recommendation to get a clerk's job with the
+Van Ness Avenue concern. I was after the theft of at least a half
+million dollars, with a perfect alibi; and the smaller institution
+suited my plan. It took me four years to work up to paying teller, but I
+wasn't hurrying things. I was using my capital now to build that perfect
+alibi."
+
+He glanced around nervously as the stenographer turned a leaf, then went
+on,
+
+"I'd picked out this town for the home of the man I was going to be. It
+suited me, because it was on a branch line of the railway, hardly used
+at all by men whose business was in the city, and off the main highway
+of automobile travel; besides, I liked the place--I've always liked it."
+
+"Sure flattered," came the growl as Winchell stirred in his chair.
+
+"My bungalow and grounds cost me four thousand; at that it was a
+run-down place and I got it cheap. The mahogany--old family pieces that
+I was supposed to bring in from the East--came high. Yet maybe you'd be
+surprised how the idea took with me. I used to scrimp and save off my
+salary at the bank to buy things for the place, to keep up the right
+scale of living for Bronson Vandeman, traveling agent for eastern
+manufacturers, not at home much in Santa Ysobel yet, but a man of fine
+family, rich prospects, and all sorts of a good fellow, settled in the
+place for the rest of his days."
+
+He turned suddenly and grinned at me.
+
+"You swallowed it whole, Boyne, when you walked into my house last
+night--the old family furniture I bought in Los Angeles, the second-hand
+library, that family portrait, with a ring on my finger, and the same
+painted in on what was supposed to be my father's hand."
+
+"Sure," I nodded amiably, "You had me fooled."
+
+"And without a bit of crude make-up or disguise," he rubbed it in. "It
+was a change of manner and psychology for mine. As Edward Clayte--and
+that's not my name, either, any more than Vandeman--I was
+description-proof. I meant to be--and I was. It took--her--the girl,"
+his face darkened and he jerked at his cigar, "to deduce that a
+nonentity who could get away with nearly a million dollars and leave no
+trail was some man!"
+
+I raised my head with a start and stared at the man in his raincoat and
+lilac silk pantaloons.
+
+"That's so," I fed it to him, "She had a name for you. She called you
+the wonder man."
+
+"Did she!" a pleased smile. "Well, I'll give her right on that. I was
+some little wonder man. Listen," his insistent over-stimulated voice
+went eagerly on, "The beauty of my scheme was that up to the very last
+move, there was nothing criminal in my leading this double life. You
+see--as I got stronger and stronger here in Santa Ysobel, I bought a
+good machine, a speedster that could burn up the road. Many's the stag
+supper I've had with the boys there in my bungalow, and been back behind
+the wicket as Edward Clayte in the Van Ness Avenue bank on time next
+morning. I was in that room at the St. Dunstan about as much as a
+fellow's in his front hall. I walked through it to Henry J. Brundage's
+room at the Nugget; I stayed there more often than I did at the St.
+Dunstan, unless I came on here.
+
+"I'd left marriage out. Then that night four years ago when Ina had her
+little run-in with old Tom Gilbert and got her engagement to Worth
+smashed, I saw there might be girls right in the class I was trying to
+break into that would be possible for a man like me. The date for our
+wedding was set, when Thomas Gilbert remarked to me one afternoon as we
+were coming off the golf links together, that he was buying a block of
+Van Ness Savings Bank stock. For a minute I felt like caving in his
+head, then and there, with the golf club I carried. What a hell of a
+thing to happen, right at the last this way! Ten chances to one I'd have
+this man to silence; but it must be done right. Not much room for murder
+in so full a career as mine--holding down a teller's job, running for
+the vice presidency of the country club, getting married in style--but
+every time I'd look up from behind my teller's grille, and see any one
+near the size of old Gilbert walk in the front door, it gave me the
+shivers. I'd put more than eight years of planning and hard work into
+this scheme, and you'll admit, Boyne, that what I had was some alibi. A
+wedding like that in a town of this size makes a big noise. I managed to
+be back and forth so much that people got the idea I was hardly out of
+Santa Ysobel. The Friday night before, I had a stag supper at my house,
+and Saturday morning if any one had called, Fong Ling would have told
+them I was sleeping late and couldn't be disturbed. On the forenoon of
+my wedding day, then, I sat as Edward Clayte in my teller's cage, the
+suitcase I had carried back and forth empty for so many Saturdays now
+loaded with currency and securities, not one of which was traceable, and
+whose amount I believed would run close to a million. It was within
+three minutes of closing time, when some one rapped on the counter at my
+wicket, and I looked straight up into the face of old Tom Gilbert.
+
+"I saw a flash of doubtful recognition in his eyes, but didn't dare to
+avoid them while counting bills and silver to pay his check. If I had
+done so, he would certainly have known me. As it was, I saw that I
+convinced him--almost. I watched him as he went out, saw him hesitate a
+little at the door of Knapp's office--he wasn't quite sure enough. I
+knew the man. The instant he made certain, he would act.
+
+"The old devil wasn't on terms to attend the reception at the Thornhill
+place, but I located him in an aisle seat, when I first came from the
+vestry with my best man. All through the ceremony I felt his eyes boring
+into my back. When I finally faced him, as Ina and I walked out, man and
+wife, I knew he recognized me, and almost expected him to step out and
+denounce me. But no--a fellow leading a double life was all he saw in
+it; bigamy was the worst he'd suspect me of at the moment. He didn't
+give Ina much, wouldn't lift a finger to defend her.
+
+"Meantime, the manner of his taking off lay easy to my hand. I'd studied
+the situation through that skylight, seen Ed Hughes juggle the bolts
+with his magnets, and mapped the thing out. Gilbert killed there, the
+room found bolted, was a cinch for suicide. When the reception at the
+Thornhill house was over, I made an excuse of something needed for the
+journey, and started across to my bungalow. It was common for all of us
+to cross through the lawns; I hid in the shrubbery.
+
+"There were people with Gilbert, no chance for me to do anything. I
+stood there and nearly went out of my hide with impatience over the
+delays, while he had his row with Worth, when Laura Bowman and Jim
+Edwards came and braced him to let up on his persecution of them. Mrs.
+Bowman finally left; he went with her toward the front. Now was my
+chance; I dodged into the study, jerked his own pistol from its holster,
+squeezed myself in behind the open door and waited. He came back; I let
+him get into the room, past me a little, and when at some sound I made,
+he turned, the muzzle of the gun was shoved against his chest and fired.
+
+"I'd barely finished pressing Gilbert's fingers around the pistol butt
+when I heard a cry outside, jumped to the door, shut and bolted it just
+as my mother-in-law ran in across the lawns. I gathered that she'd been
+there earlier to get those three leaves out of the diary that you were
+so interested in, Boyne; had just read them and come back to have it out
+with old Tom. She hung around for five minutes, I should say, beating on
+the door, calling, asking if anything was wrong.
+
+"My one big mistake in the study was that diary of 1920. It lay open on
+the desk where he'd been writing. It did tell of his having identified
+me as Clayte. I'd not expected it, and so I didn't handle it well. Time
+pressed. I couldn't carry it with me; I tore out the leaf, stuck the
+book into the drainpipe, and ran.
+
+"And after all," he summed up, "my plans would have gone through on
+schedule; you never could have touched me with your clumsy,
+police-detective methods, if it hadn't been for the girl."
+
+He dropped his head and stood brooding a moment, demanded another smoke,
+got it, shrugged off some thought with a gesture, and finished,
+
+"I was in too deep to turn. It was her life--or mine. Things went
+contrary. We couldn't get her to come out to the masquerade, where it
+would have been easy. With those two Mandarin costumes, Fong Ling in my
+place, I had my time from the hour we put on the masks till midnight.
+Another perfect alibi. Well--it didn't work. They say you have to shoot
+a witch with a silver bullet. And she's more than human."
+
+A siren's dry shriek as the Sheriff's gasoline buggy made its way
+through the crowded street outside. Cummings raised his brows at me, got
+my nod of permission, and shot his first question at the prisoner.
+
+"Vandeman, where's the money?"
+
+"Not within a hundred miles of here," instantly.
+
+"You took it south with you--on your wedding trip?" Cummings would
+persist. But our man, so expansive a moment ago, had, as I knew he would
+at direct mention of his loot, turned sullen, and he started for the San
+Jose jail, mum as an oyster.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXI
+
+THE MILLION-DOLLAR SUITCASE
+
+
+The Sheriff had gone with his prisoner; Cummings left; and then there
+came to me, in the street there before the lock-up, riding with Jim
+Edwards in his roadster, a Worth Gilbert I had never known. Quiet he had
+been before; but never considerate like this. When I rushed up to him
+with my triumph and congratulations, and he put them aside, it was with
+a curious gentleness.
+
+"Yes, yes, Jerry; I know. Vandeman turned out to be Clayte." Then,
+noticing my bewilderment, "You see, Jim let it slip that Barbara's hurt.
+Where is she?" And Edwards leaned around to explain.
+
+"When we came past Capehart's, and she wasn't there, I--"
+
+"Oh, that's only a scratch," I hurried to assure the boy. "Barbara'll be
+all right."
+
+"So Jim said," he agreed soberly. "I'm afraid you're both lying to me."
+
+"All right," I climbed in beside him. "We'll go and see. She's up at
+your house--waiting for you."
+
+As we headed away for the other end of town, he spoke again, half
+interrogatively,
+
+"Vandeman shot her?" and when I nodded. "He's on his way to jail. I'm
+out. But I'm the man that's responsible for what's happened to her.
+Dragged her into this thing, in the first place. She hated those
+concentrating stunts; and I set her to do one at that woman's table. To
+help play my game--I risked her life."
+
+I listened in wonder; sidelong, in the dimness, I studied the carriage
+of head and shoulders: no diminution of power; but a new use of it. This
+was not the crude boy who would knock everybody's plans to bits for a
+whim; Worth had found himself; and what a man!
+
+"How does it look for recovering the money, Boyne?" Edwards questioned
+as we drove along.
+
+I plunged into the hottest of that stuff Clayte-Vandeman had spilled,
+talked fascinatingly, as I thought, for three minutes, and paused to
+hear Worth say,
+
+"Who's with Barbara at my house?"
+
+"Mrs. Bowman," I said in despair, and quit right there.
+
+We came into Broad Street a little above the Vandeman bungalow which lay
+black and silent, the lights of Worth's house showing beyond. As we
+turned the corner, a man jumped up from the shadow of the hedge where
+the Vandeman lawn joined the Gilbert place; there was a flash; the
+report of a gun; our watchers had flushed some one. I'd barely had time
+to say so to the others when there was a second sharp crack, then the
+whine of a ricochetting chunk of lead as it zipped from the asphalt to
+sing over our heads.
+
+"Beat it!" I yelled. "Stop the car and get to cover!"
+
+Edwards slowed. A moment Worth hung on the running board, peering in the
+direction of the sounds. I started to climb out after him. There came
+another shot from up ahead, and then a shout. As I tumbled to my feet in
+the dark road, Worth had started away on the jump. And I saw then, what
+I'd missed before, that the man who had burst from the hedge, was
+running zig-zag down the open roadway toward us. He was making his legs
+spin, and dodging from side to side as if to duck bullets. Worth headed
+straight for him, as though it wasn't plain that some one out of sight
+somewhere was making a target of the runner.
+
+Not the kind of a scrap I care for; in a half light you can't tell
+friend from foe; but Worth went to it--and what was there to do but
+follow? I shouted and blew my whistle, hoping our men would hear, heed,
+and let up shooting. At the moment of my doing so, Worth closed with the
+man, who dropped something he was carrying, and tackled low, lunging at
+the boy's knees, aiming I could see to let Worth dive over and scrape up
+the pavement with his face.
+
+No dodging that tackle; it caught Worth square; he even seemed to spring
+up for the dive; and somehow he carried his opponent with him to soften
+the fall. They came down together in the middle of the hard road with
+the shock of a railway collision; rolled over and over like dogs in a
+scrap, only there wasn't any growling or yelping. It was deadly quiet;
+not for an instant could you tell which was which, or whether the
+whirling, pelting tangle of arms and legs was man, beast or devil.
+That's why, even when I got near enough, I didn't dare plant a large,
+thick-soled boot in the mess.
+
+The fight was up to Worth; nothing else for it. Capehart came rolling
+from the hedge where I had seen the pistols flash; Eddie Hughes,
+inconceivable in pink puffings, bounded after; Jim Edwards chased up
+from his car; but all any of us could do was to run up and down as the
+struggle whirled about, and grunt when the blows landed. These sounded
+like a pile-driver hitting a redwood butt. Out of the melee an arm would
+jerk, the fist at the end of it come back to land with a thud--on
+somebody's meat.
+
+"Who the devil is it?" I bellowed at Capehart, as the two grappled,
+afoot, then down, no knowing who was on top, spinning around in a
+struggle where neither boots nor knees were barred.
+
+"He sneaked out of the bungalow just now," Capehart snorted. "We'd
+searched the place. Didn't think there was room for a louse to be hid in
+it. Got by the boys. I stopped him at the hedge and drove him into the
+open. Now Worth's got him. That is Worth, ain't it? Fights like him."
+
+"Yes," I said, "It's Worth." But in my own mind I wasn't sure whether
+Worth had the fugitive, or the fugitive had Worth. And Jim Edwards
+muttered anxiously, as we skipped and side-stepped along with the fight,
+
+"That fellow may have a knife or a gun."
+
+"Not where he can draw," I said, "or he'd have used it before now." And
+Capehart sung out,
+
+"Sure. Leave 'em go. Worth'll fix him."
+
+Edging in too close, I got a kick on the shin from a flying heel, and
+was dancing around on one foot nursing the other when I heard sounds of
+distress issue from the tangle in the road; somebody was getting breath
+in long, gaspy sighs that broke off in grunts when the thud of blows
+fell, and merged in the harsh nasal of blood violently dislodged from
+nose and throat. For a while they had been up, and swapping punches
+face to face, lightning swift. Sounds like boxing, perhaps, but there
+wasn't any science about it. Feint? Parry? Footwork? Not on your life!
+Each of these two was trying to slug the other into insensibility,
+working for any old kind of a knock-out.
+
+I began to be a little nervous for fear the boy I was bringing home from
+jail as a peace offering to Barbara might arrive so defaced that she
+wouldn't recognize him, when I saw one dark form pull away, leap back,
+an arm shoot out like a piston-rod, and with a jar that set my own teeth
+on edge, connect with the other man's chin. He went down clawing the
+air, crumpled into a bunch of clothes at the side of the road.
+
+"You wanted the Chink, didn't you, Bill?" This was Worth, facing Jim
+Edwards's torch, fumbling for his handkerchief. "I heard you, and I
+thought you wanted him."
+
+"It's Fong Ling!" bawled Capehart. "Sure we wanted him--and whatever
+that was he was carrying. Where is it? Did he drop it?"
+
+"Sort of think he did," Worth was dabbing off his own face with a
+gingerly, respectful touch. "I know he dropped some teeth back there in
+the road. Saw him spit 'em out. Maybe he left it with them. You might go
+and look."
+
+The four of us drifted along the field of battle, Capehart's assistant
+having taken charge of the unconscious Chinaman, whom he was frisking
+for weapons. Halfway back to the hedge Bill stumbled on something,
+picked it up, and dropped it again with a disgusted grunt.
+
+"Nothing but a Chinaboy's keister," he said contemptuously. "Not much
+to that. Why in blazes did he run so?"
+
+"Because you were shooting him up, I'd say," Jim Edwards suggested.
+
+"Naw. Commenced to run before we turned loose on him," Bill protested.
+
+"Hello!" I had pounced on the unbelievable thing, and called to Edwards
+for his light. "Worth, here's your eight-hundred-thousand-dollar
+suitcase!"
+
+"That!" he followed along, dusting himself off, trying out his joints.
+"Oh, yes. I left it in my closet, and it disappeared. Told you of it at
+the time, didn't I, Jerry?"
+
+"You did not," I sputtered, down on my knees, working away at the
+catches. "You never told me anything that would be of any use to us. If
+this thing disappeared, I suppose Vandeman stole it to get a piece of
+evidence in the Clayte case out of the way."
+
+"Likely." Worth turned, with no further interest, and started toward his
+own gate.
+
+"Hi! Come back here," I yelled after him. For the lock gave at that
+moment; there, under the pale circle of the electric torch, lay
+Clayte-Vandeman's loot!
+
+"My gosh!" mumbled Capehart. "I didn't suppose there was so much money
+in the known world."
+
+Eddie Hughes, breathing hard; Jim Edwards, bending to hold the torch;
+Capehart, stooping, blunt hands spread on knees, goggle-eyed; my own
+fingers shaking as I dragged out my list and attempted to sort through
+the stuff--not one of us but felt the thrill of that great fortune
+tumbled down there in the open road in the empty night.
+
+But Worth delayed reluctantly at the edge of the shadows, looking with
+impatience across his shoulder, eager to be on--to get to Barbara. Yet I
+wanted that suitcase to go into the house in his hand; wanted him to be
+able to tell his girl that she'd made him a winner in the gamble and the
+long chase. Roughly assured that only a few thousands had been used by
+Vandeman, I stuck the handles into his fist and trailed along after his
+quick strides. Edwards followed me. Laura Bowman opened the door to us;
+she stopped Edwards on the porch.
+
+And then I saw my children meet. I hadn't meant to; but after all, what
+matter? They didn't know I was on earth. Creation had resolved itself,
+for them, into the one man, the one woman.
+
+The suitcase thumped unregarded on the floor. She came to him with her
+hands out. He took them slowly, raised them to his shoulders, and her
+arms went round his neck.
+
+
+ THE END
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | Transcriber's notes |
+ | |
+ | Page 26, word "sowly" changed to "slowly" (Slowly he brought that) |
+ | |
+ | Page 26, duplicate "the" deleted (followed it with the other) |
+ | |
+ | Page 134, word "inconspicious" changed to "inconspicuous" |
+ |(inconspicuous eye on Edwards) |
+ | |
+ | Page 156, word "expaining" changed to "explaining" (explaining |
+ | how I'd have run) |
+ | |
+ | Page 172, word "Warf" changed to "Wharf" (land me at Fisherman's |
+ | Wharf) |
+ | |
+ | Page 315, word "Los Angles" changed to "Los Angeles" (I bought |
+ | in Los Angeles) |
+ | |
+ | Page 315, word "nonenity" changed to "nonentity" (to deduce that a |
+ | nonentity) |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------------+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Million-Dollar Suitcase, by
+Alice MacGowan and Perry Newberry
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